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A25467 A Continuation of morning-exercise questions and cases of conscience practicaly resolved by sundry ministers in October, 1682. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1683 (1683) Wing A3228; ESTC R25885 850,952 1,060

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given is no other than the Will of the great God who made us all which Will must be made known and revealed unto man before it can have on him the force of a Law Now the Discoveries of God's Will are after a twofold manner for there are some other Discoveries than these that are by the Light of Nature What may be understood by the Light of Nature from the things made is done by the exercise of our Reason but what is revealed any other way is not received the same way with the former our knowledge of these Revelations depends not solely on the exercise of but principally on the exercise of Faith 'T is God who after an extraordinary manner has reveal'd his Will and therefore 't is on the Truth of his Testimony we must lean for the knowledge thereof that is we must Believe we must exercise Faith by the Exercise whereof we come to the knowledge of those things which we could not arrive unto meerly by the Exercise of our highest Reasonings and really God delights to try and exercise our Faith so that now especially since the Fall the Life and Heart of that Religion that is necessary to Salvation consists in the Exercise of Faith To be truly Religious and to be a sound Believer are expressions of one and the same import The Religion we are designed for and must now exercise if we will be saved is the Life of Faith which is a Life much higher than that of meer Reason for by Faith we know what by meer Reason we could never know If we consider the most momentous Points of our Religion we shall find that as they are adjusted to our own Capacities even so they are of Matters infinitely above us they are of Matters that are not within our view unto the knowledge of which we cannot come but by some special Revelation the certainty of which Revelations depend on the Veracity and Truth of God's Testimony and 't is our Faith alone by which we receive these Discoveries that are thus given us of God whence 't is said that the stronger our Faith is the more we glorifie God by believing the Truth of his Testimony And that we may thus glorifie God it hath pleased the Lord so to order the Revelations of his Mind and Will and so to dispose of things by his Providence as to pose our Reason and leave us in the dark at which time if we lean on the Veracity and Truth of Gods Testimony about the Doctrine and on his Wisdom and Righteousness about his Providence we discover the strength and firmness of our Faith to the Glory of God These things being so 't is manifest That the many profound Doctrines that are in Scripture and the many dark Providences that attend us do very much contribute to our living the more religiously i. e. to our walking the more by Faith to the saving the Soul This I conceive is one great End of the profoundness of the Doctrines of Religion and of the many difficulties in the Providences of God namely to raise us up to a Life above Sense and Reason even to the Life of Faith which is a high and a heavenly Life The more Difficulties that lie in the way of our Believing the more strong is the Faith that is exercised and the stronger our Faith the more God is glorified by us and the more is our Salvation furthered the which being so we have great reason to be abundantly quickned in our Thoughts If we consider the Nature of Faith we shall find that Mysterious Doctrines and Providences are very necessary for the engaging us to apply our selves to the Exercise of it 1. FAITH is the Evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 The Evidence not only of unseen future Glories but the Evidence of somewhat else not within the view of our Sence or Reason Faith doth evidence unto the Believer the Reality and Certainty of the Promises about Spiritual Blessings to be enjoyed in this Life and doth clearly shew unto him that these Blessings promised are real and shall most assuredly be enjoyed yea though there are in the eye of our Sence and our Natural Reasonings some Impossibilities between us and the inheriting the Promises yet even then Faith sees the Accomplishment not only possible but certain and sure By Faith we believe and receive those Truths which though clearly enough revealed yet are so much above our Capacity that we cannot otherwise embrace them By Faith we believe that the Promise shall be when we cannot see how it can be Thus was the Faith of Abraham exercis'd He believed when his Sight and Reason fail'd him Abraham was an hundred years old and as it were dead Sarah barren and now according to all Rules past Child-bearing notwithstanding all which the Promise being made that Sarah should bear a Son Abraham believes he could see how this could be by Faith though he could not see how it could be by his Reason According to his own Reasonings his Hopes were gone but being strong in Faith he staggered not at the Promise but had a hope above Hope being fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to perform Rom. 4. The like also when God commanded Abraham to offer up his Son his own his only Son Isaac whom he loved and of whom the Promise was for in Isaac shall thy Seed be called but nevertheless Abraham is commanded to kill him for a Sacrifice but here is the difficulty if Isaac be slain while so young as he then was even before he had any child how could the Promise be fulfilled Abraham must kill him and yet believe that he should live that he might be the Father of many Nations but how could this be Surely this transcended his Understanding but not his Faith for he believed That God was able to raise him from the dead therefore 't is said by Faith Abraham when he was tempted offered up Isaac accounting that God was able to raise him up from the dead Heb. 11.17 18 19. Time would fail to mention Jacob Joseph Moses David and many others who when surrounded with dark Dispensations by Believing gave Glory to God Then Faith is in a special manner acted and exercised when the Believer is compassed about with a cloud of difficulties when in the Doctrines that being plainly reveal'd are to be believed there is somewhat above our Reason and when in the Providences with which we meet there is somewhat very dark they seeming to thwart the doctrinal Discoveries that are made of the Will of God unto us then is the time to act Faith that is not Faith which does carry us no higher than our own scanty Reasonings To believe no more than we can comprehend with our own Reason is too low a thing to deserve the name of Faith Faith is a more noble and raised Grace by which a man believes when his Reason is at a Loss What is here said of Faith is a great Truth and
those terms for so it doth it is the scope and end of the Promise to secure Life and Glory to those that accept of it upon the terms propounded the Command directs in the way and the Promise makes over and conveys the blessing Believe and thou shalt be saved Act. 16.31 So Joh. 3.16 and Rom. 2.7 To them that by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and Immortality Eternal life is promised Now the Word and Promise of God not only as revealing Life to us and the way to it but as conveying it is the ground of our Faith and Hope though without the Word we might have some more general Knowledge of a State of Happiness in the other World yet without the Word we cannot know the way to it nor ever attain to an Interest in it nor have so full certainty of the very being of it as by the Word we have the certainty of Faith being greater than that of any natural Knowledge whatever we have no ground at all to believe we shall be saved but what the Promise affords us And that is sufficient ground to build our Faith upon and a better we cannot have than the Word of him that is the Truth it self and so can neither deceive nor be deceived God that cannot lie hath promised Eternal life Tit. 1.2 Upon the Infallibility and Veracity of that God in his holy Word the Faith of a Christian rests and a surer Foundation for it cannot be imagined and need not be desired As the certainty of any assent of the Mind to a truth depends upon the strength and firmness of the Reason or Argument which moves to and procures that Assent and is the Cause of it so likewise the certainty of Faith proceeds from the goodness and validity of the Authority which is the Motive to and Reason of our believing or which is the same the ground of it If we believe a man that belief is more or less certain according as the Person on whose Authority our belief is grounded is more or less credible and so when we believe God our Faith is such as its Foundation is the Effect imitates the Cause the foundation of that Faith Gods Veracity is the best and therefore the certainty of our ●aith is the greatest If a man be sure that what he believes is the Word of God he may be sure it is most true and never will fail And this no doubt may be sufficient to satisfie a Believer in his own mind or any one that receives the Scripture as the Word of God concerning the reality of the Faith he professeth that the ground of it is so certain but if he have to do with those that believe not the Scripture and so question the foundation of his Faith in that case he may have recourse to all those Arguments whereby we are wont to prove the Divine Authority of the Word and they all Confirm the Faith of a Christian and so the same account a Believer may give of the foundation of his Faith as of the Divinity of the Scripture if the Scripture be the Word of God and that Word be true his Faith built upon it is certain 3. The Actings of a Christians Faith are perceivable by himself Habits which cannot be discerned of themselves when they lye still yet may be known by their actings such an Habit Faith is which though it discover not it self or be not perceived when unactive yet may be discern'd in its exercise When a man actually believes he may know he believes reflect upon his own act as well as when he hears or sees or walks he may know he doth so and is not deceived in it Inward Sense hath as much certainty in it as outward and spiritual Sense as natural if a man therefore assent to the Truth of Gods Promise he may know he assents to it and if he accept of and close with the good Promised he may know he doth so though sometimes Temptations may be so strong and the Actings of Faith so weak and the Mind so clouded and distracted that a man may hardly be able to pass a right judgement on those Acts yet it is not always so but other whiles when the workings of Faith are more strong and vigorous and a man more clear of temptations he may do it In this therefore a man may give an account to himself of his Faith that it is reall he may know that he believes the Promise of Eternal Life as really as he believes any ordinary Truth proposed to him and that his believing and resting on Gods Word is no more a Fancy than his believing the word of a man As for others with whom he hath to do I know no reason why they should not believe him when he says he believes Gods Promise as well as when he says he believes their word or why one should be a Fancy any more than the other 4. The Effects of a Believers faith are evident to others in a good measure as well as to himself more fully As he may perceive his Faith purifying his heart taking it off from the World drawing it nearer to God so others may see his Conversation ordered correspondently to his believing they may see him Shie of Sin Diligent in Duty Conscientious in his Calling Patient in Sufferings Charitable to those that Need him Meek towards those that Offend him Profitable Spiritual Savoury in his Converse Just and Righteous in his Dealings and in a w●●d the main of his Course and Wayes such as is agreable to th● Faith he professeth and the Recompence he expects So that if the lookers on cannot be infallibly certain of the reality of his Faith or that such a Carriage proceeds from such a Faith yet they may not only have their Mouths stopped that they cannot reasonably object against it but they may be bound in Charity to believe his Faith to be true and real when they see so much in him answerable to it and what he professeth to be the effect of it when they see him live like one that expects eternal Blessedness well may they believe that his Faith concerning it and hope of it is not feigned They see him walking strictly mortifying his flesh denying himself as to his outward enjoyments and carnal liberties and generally acting at such a rate as none would do that did not expect Eternal Life and what ground can they then have to suspect the Faith he pretends to to be only a Conceit or Fancy 2. An account may be given of the Practice of a Christian his Obedience and Holy walking the strictness and as the World counts it singularity of his Manners his universality diligence and constancy in the most spiritual and difficult Duties his watchfulness over his words thoughts actions his mortification and self-denyal and whatever it is in a Believers life which the World is most apt to quarrel with and to look upon as the effect of Humour or
this in our selves and then How we may evidence it in others 1. How may a Believer experience in himself that that Serious Godliness he lives in the Practice of is more than a Fancy 1. See that your Religiousness came into you the right way was wrought in you by the Word of God the power of which ye have found changing your Hearts and reforming your Lives When men leap into Religion they know not how can give no account to themselves of their Conversion or Reformation that the Word which is the Ordinary means God useth in converting Sinners hath had any influence upon them in working such a change it is suspicious that what they take to be Godliness in themselves is not reall that which is unaccountable is most like to be a Fancy True a man may not know the just time when God did work Grace in his heart nor the particular Word which was the Seed of it or which did first draw the heart to a closing with the Promise and subjecting it self to the terms of the Gospel he may not know when the new man was first quickned in him not be able to discern distinctly the first vital motions of Grace in his Soul some may have been wrought on in their Education by which they have been restrained from more gross Sins and influenced to some diligence in Religious duties and in them the passing from one extream to the other from a state of Nature to a state of Grace may not be so remarkable and therefore not so easily discerned However a change they find and that the Word hath wrought it whch they have experienced Effectual in many things it hath been the means at one time or other of enlightning their minds melting their hearts exciting their affections directing their ways and refreshing their Spirits though they cannot say what truth wrought the first degree of Grace yet they can say such and such truths have had an influence upon them and promoted the work whenever it was wrought such a Command quickned them to their Duty another brought them off from some evil way another helped them when they were tempted such a Promise supported them when burdened eased them when troubled or comforted them when cast down and so what good they have done the Word hath put them upon it what evil they have escaped that hath kept them from it what refreshment they have had that hath brought it in They know they are in their journey to Heaven and that they do not Dream that they are so because if they cannot tell which was absolutely the first step they took in the way yet they are sensible of many Stages they have travelled many removes they have made what accidents have befallen them what difficulties they have met with what Guide they had what directions were given them their journeying agrees with the map of their way the Word hath been a light to their Feet and a Lamp to their Paths * Psal 119.105 that hath still gone before them and conducted them in their march and their steps have been ordered according to it † Psa 119.133 they have not taken up a Religion at a days warning not passed from being prophane and worldly to be even superstitiously strict all upon a suddain without being able to give a reason of so great a change Look therefore to the way of Gods working upon you and the means he made use of in it and though you cannot trace the workings of his grace in all the particular steps he hath taken yet ye may conclude it to be his Work and not your own fancy because it was wrought in his way and by his Word which is his usual Instrument in it 2. See to your Faith as to the Foundation of it and the Effects of it that it be rightly grounded and rightly qualified built upon the Word and fruitfull in good works 1. See to the Foundation of it that it be the Word it self and not your own mistakes about it When men misunderstand the Scripture and so believe it they Build on their own Errors not Gods Truth and then what they call Faith is but a Fancy as not being grounded on the Word of God but their own Conceits See therefore that ye rightly understand what ye profess to believe and know the mind of God in the Word and so indeed believe what he speaks not what you imagine See that your Faith respect Commands as well as Promises Duties as well as Priviledges what you are to do as well as what you are to expect God joyns both together and if you seperate them you set up a Conceit of your own instead of his Truth Take heed of believing Promises as absolute when they are conditional or when made with some limitations or restrictions or when they suppose the use of some means prescribed by the Command in such cases men may think they believe when they do not there being no right Object for their Faith they believe what God never spoke This fallacy appears when men apply Promises to themselves but overlook the Condition or the Command annexed as suppose believe they shall be Pardoned though they never desire to be purged shall find mercy though they do not forsake Sin contrary to the tenour of the Word Prov. 28.14 or that they shall see God though they do not follow after holiness contrary to Heb. 12.14 And so when they believe one promise and not another the Promise of Justification but not of Sanctification when yet there is a connexion between them and to whom one belongs the other belongs too In a word let your Faith take in its Object in the whole Latitude there being the same reason Gods Authority for your believing one truth as well as another 2. See to the Effects and Fruits of it the reality of it must be proved by the fruits of it a Barren Faith is a dead Faith and indeed if any Faith be a Fancy it is the Faith of those that live destitute of Holiness and under the Dominion of Sin and yet expect Eternal Salvation bring forth no Fruit to Holiness and yet hope the End will be Everlasting life Faith will work as long as it lives and where there is no Fruit you may be sure there is no Root if it Act not it lives not 3. Therefore look to your Obedience too not only that it be as in the former but that it be Right and such as it should be that is Regular Vniversal Spiritual for otherwise it is not reasonable 1. Regular such as the Word of God calls for and hath its warrant from thence whatsoever we do in the things of God and what we would have look'd on as Acts of Obedience should be done with a respect to Gods Commands and not of our own heads Obedience it is not if it be not Commanded Men may do many seemingly good things and place Religion in them and think they please God by
them with acting out of Fancy or humour or any thing but a fixed and stable Principle Besides what hath been spoken by way of Direction in answer to the Question some further Improvment of this Doctrine may be made Vse 2 1. By way of Information If true Christians may give an account of their Christianity 1. They then are no true Believers no true Christians of whose Religion no good account can be given either how they came by it or whereon it is grounded 1. How they came by it when they pretend to be Saints but cannot in the least tell how they came to be Saints have found no real change in themselves are the same they have alwayes been they have they think loved God and believed in Christ and had hopes of Heaven ever since they can remember but know not how any of these things were wrought in them or by what means such a Faith I dare say is but a Fancy and so is their Hope and their Love and whatever Grace they pretend to 2. Whereon it is grounded 1. When their Faith is not rightly grounded it is no better than a Fancy When it is built on the Authority of a Church or the Traditions of men and not on the Word of God or on the Word misunderstood or misapplied or divided or maimed when they believe Promises without respect to Commands believe Christ is their Saviour and yet never receive him to be their Lord believe they shall See God though they be not pure in Heart follow not after Holiness and such indeed is the Faith and Hope of Prophane Worldlings and whoever live in Contradiction to Gods Commands and yet expect the benefit of his Promises 2. When their Practice is not rightly grounded it is no better than Folly how fair soever and plausible it may seem When men set up a Religion meerly of mans devising contrive new wayes of Worshipping God which he himself never appointed and so indeed impose upon him and prescribe to him what they think must certainly please him This is unreasonable for men to think that their Inventions or others Traditions can be more acceptable to God than his own Institutions that Sacrifice can go further than Obedience would have done They would themselves be served according to their own minds and not their Servants pleasure and why should not God They would not have their Commands neglected that their Servants Will might be performed and how foolish is it then to adhere to their own Inventions though with the slighting of Gods Institutions and yet how few be there that are so addicted to Humane Observances but they are careless of Gods Appointments Gods Commands being the Great and only Warrantable reason of all Divine Worship whatever Worship is uncommanded cannot be but unreasonable 2. How great is their sin that Question nay Deride the Grace that is in Believers as not being a real thing count the most Serious powerfull Godliness to be no better than Humour of Fancy All the Religion they own consists but in a few outward Forms or some moral Actions and whatever is above this they look upon as not real and so they leave us a Lamentably empty Religion when they condemn our Faith as Fancy our Practice as Folly and casheer all our Comforts as meer Delusions This usually proceeds either 1. From the Atheism and Infidelity of such mens Hearts some Question all Religion and so the true Religion among the rest they are themselves for none and therefore Quarrel with all they think all Religion is but Fancy or Policy and so the Christian Religion too They do not really believe the Grounds of Christianity and therefore laugh at them that do 2. Or from Pride and Conceitedness of their own Wisdom and Reason they magnifie their own Notions are in love with their own Wisdom and so contemn all else like the Athenians Acts. 17.18.32 that laugh'd when they heard of Jesus and the Resurrection The high Opinion they have of their Reason makes them deny the reality of Faith what they cannot themselves comprehend they will not believe nor allow others to do it they will scarce allow of any thing between Demonstration and Fancy and this makes them Innovate so much in Religion and Scoff at the Faith by which they should be Saved 3. Or from Ignorance of Spiritual things and their not Experiencing the Power of Grace in their own Hearts They will believe nothing in Religion but what they have themselves felt They never found the Light of Divine Truths shining into their dark Minds and overcoming their Carnal Reason nor the Power of Grace renewing their Wills and subjecting them to Gods Will breaking the force of their sinfull Inclinations mortifying their Lusts regulating their Affections changing the habitual temper and disposition of their Spirits nor the Efficacy of Faith in the Purification of their Hearts their resting upon the Promises cleaving to Christ and fetching in supplies of the Spirit from him nor the Love of God shed abroad in their Hearts enlarging them in Duties quickning them in his wayes supporting them under Burthens strengthning them against Temptations and comforting them under Afflictions and therefore they Question all these things and take them to be nothing else but canting Phrases and unaccountable Fancies A man that never was at Rome or Constantinople might at the same rate deny there ever were such places one that never tasted Honey might deny it to be sweet or a blind man laugh at Colours because he never saw them though contrary to the Experience of thousands that had with as much reason as they who live meerly by Sense and never Experienced any better pleasures deny a higher Principle by which Believers are acted and more Spiritual Comforts which they enjoy Vse 2 Of Exhortotion 1. Labour to Experience the reality of your Religion in your selves So live as that you may not be deceived and may know that you are not So act Grace as that you may feel it working and from thence conclude the Principle to be in you and may tast the sweetness of the comforts it brings with it Labour to be fully satisfied that you do not live by Fancy and act by Fancy think you believe and hope when you do not that Grace in you is as real a Principle as Reason is 1. This becomes you as reasonable Creatures as such you should know the reason of your own Actings upon what Grounds you do what you do and believe what you believe You would think a man very weak and foolish in the concernments of this present Life that could give himself no account of his own Actions or expectations should have high hopes of great things but not tell why he entertained them How unreasonable then is it for a man to hope for greater things in the other Life to engage in a Religious Course be diligent in Duties deny himself as to his Worldly Interest and yet not know why he doth so 2. It
to stay here There is more in the World to Wean us than to tempt us Is it not a valley of tears and do we weep to leave it Are we not in a Wilderness among fiery Serpents and are we loath to leave their company Is there a better Friend we can go to than God are there any sweeter Smiles or softer Embraces than his k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand Sure those who know when they dye they go to receive their Reward should neither be fond of Life nor fearful of Death the Pangs of Death to Believers are but the Pangs of Travel by which they are born into Glory Believe this Reward Vse 2 Exhortation look not upon it as a Platonical Idea or Fancy Sensualists question this Reward because they do not see it they may as well question the Verity of their Souls because being Spirits they Branch 1 cannot be seen where should our Faith rest but upon a Divine testimony we believe there are such places as Affrica and America though we never saw them because Travellers who have been there affirm it and shall we not believe the Eternal Recompences when 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God himself affirms it The whole Earth hangs upon the Word of Gods Power and shall not our Faith hang upon the Word of his Truth Let us not be Scepticks in matters of such importance The Rabbins tell us the great dispute between Cain and Abel was about the future Reward Abel affirmed it Cain deny'd it The disbelief of this Grand Truth is the cause of the flagitiousness of the Age. Immorality begins at Infidelity l Heb. 3.12 to mistrust a Future Reward is to question the Bible and to destroy a main Article of our Creed Life Everlasting such Atheists as look upon Gods Promise but as a forged deed put God to swear against them that they shall never enter into his rest m Heb. 3.18 If God be such an exceeding great Reward let us endeavour that Branch 2 he may be our Reward In other things we love a Propriety This House is mine this Lordship and Mannor is mine and why not this God is mine Go saith Pharaoh to Moses and Aaron Sacrifice to your God not My God The leaving out one Word in a Will may spoil the Will the leaving out this Word My is the loss of Heaven n Tolle meum tolle Deum Psal 67.6 God even our own God shall bless us He who can pronounce this Shibboleth My God is the happiest man alive How shall we know that God is our Reward Quest If God hath given us the Earnest of this Reward Answ this Earnest is his Spirit o Pignus redditur arrha retinetur Hierom. Ephes 1.14 Ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of Promise which is the earnest of the Inheritance Where God gives his Spirit for an Earnest there he gives himself for a Portion Christ gave the Purse to Judas not his Spirit Quest How shall we know we have Gods Spirit Answ The Spirit carryes influence along with it p Est Vehiculum influentiae it consecrates the Heart making it a Sacrary or Holy of Holyes it Sanctifies the Fancy causing it to mint Holy Thoughts it Sanctifies the Will strongly by assing it to good as Musk lying among Linnen perfumes it so the Spirit of God in the Soul perfumes it with Sanctity Object But are not the Unregenerate said to partake of the Holy Ghost Answ They may have the Common Gifts of the Spirit not the special Grace they may have the enlightning of the Spirit not the anointing they may have the Spirit movere not vivere move in them not live in them But to partake of the Holy Ghost aright is when the Spirit leaves lively impressions upon the Heart it softens sublimates transforms it q Implet Spiritus Sanctus organum suum tanquam fila Chordarum tangit digitus Dei corda Sanctorum Prosper writing a law of Grace there Heb. 8.10 By this Earnest we have a Title to the Reward 2. If God be our Reward he hath given us an Hand to lay hold on him this hand is Faith Mark 9.24 Lord I believe a Weak Faith justifies r Credo Domine languida fide tamen credo Cruciger As a weak hand can tye the Knot in Marriage a weak Faith can lay hold on a strong Christ the nature of Faith is assent joyned with affiance ſ Acts 8.37 Acts 16.31 Faith doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make God ours other Graces make us like Christ Faith makes us One with him and this Faith is known by it's Vertue No precious Stone saith Cardan but hath some vertue latent in it Precious Faith hath Vertue in it it quickens and enobles it puts worth into our Services t Rom. 16.26 it puts a difference between the Abba Father of a Saint and the Ave Mary of a Papist 3. We may know God is our Reward by our choosing him Religion is not a matter of Chance but of Choice u Psal 119.30 have we weighed things in the ballance and upon mature deliberation made an Election We will have God upon any Tearms have we sat down and reckon'd the cost what Religon must cost us the parting with our Lusts and what it may cost us the parting with our Lives Have we resolved through the assistance of Grace to own Christ when the Swords and Staves are up and to sail with him not only in a Pleasure Boat but in a Man of War x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignatius ad Tars This choosing God speaks him to be Ours Hypocrites profess God out of Worldly design not Religious choice 4. God is known to be our Reward by the complacential Delight we take in him Psalm 34.7 How do men please themselves with rich Portions what delight doth a Bride take in her Jewels Do we delight in God as our Eternal Portion y Hae sunt Piorum delitiae Deo pacato frui Indeed he is a whole Paradise of delight all excellencies meet in God as the Lines in the Center is ours a Genuine delight do we not only delight in Gods blessings but in God himself is it a Superior delight do we delight in God above other things David had his Crown Revenues to delight in but his delight in God took place of all other delights Psalm 43.4 God my exceeding Joy or as it is in the Original the Gladness z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Cream of my joy can we delight in God when other delights are gone Hab. 3.17 Though the Figtree shall not Blossom yet I will rejoice in the Lord. When the Flowers in a mans Garden dye yet he can delight in his Land and Money thus a Gracicious Soul when the Creature fades can rejoyce in the Pearl of price Paulinus when they told him the Goths had Sack'd Nola a Domine ubi sunt omnia mea tuscis and
then leave as some Guids do with poor Travellers deserting them in the midst of their Dangers no but he holds on repeats and lengthens out this Act to the very last True this depends upon Conditions on our part as ye have heard but yet these do not make the thing Vncertain and lyable to Intercision because 't is part of the Spirits Leading to direct encline and overpower to the performance of those Conditions So 't is secur'd as to the Continuance of it to all the Elect of God Every upright Christian may triumphantly say with David This God is our God for ever and ever he will be our guid even unto death Psal 48.14 The Cloud never left Israel till it brought them to the land of Promise so t is here 2. That it is managed and carryed on all along with Mixtures of all other Grace i. e. with the bestowing of inward Peace and Comfort and of all supplys necessary to the believing Soul 'T is not a bare naked Leading but such as is attended with the Conveyance of all Other Mercies According to that encouraging Text Isai 49.10 He that hath Mercy on them shall lead them even by the Springs of water shall he guid them Is not here Heb. 6.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong Consolation for all who are led by Gods Spirit In the Sixth and last place it might be enquir'd 6. Enquiry Since this Leading of the Holy Spirit is a Special and Discriminating Act what Inferences may be drawn from it as being such I might instance in several if I had not already exceeded the Bounds of a Sermon Therefore take but this One That 't is not a thing much to be wonder'd at that Saints and Sinners do so much differ and that Saints and Saints do so little differ The Difference 'twixt the two Former is great Light and Darkness Heaven and Hell do not more differ than they That which the One Loves the Other hates in their visible Practices there 's little but Sin in the ●●e there 's Holiness though imperfect in the other The One Curses Swears takes Gods Name in Vain lives a brutish Life minds not God the Other fears God avoids Evil desires to order Words Thoughts Actions by the Rule of the Word Prays Sanctifies the Sabbath does Good is not here a vast Difference There is indeed but can it be expected it should be otherwise they being led by Different and Contrary Spirits Oh upon this no wonder that their Actings and Courses are so different Men will and must Be and Do according to the Spirit which Guides and Governs them Therefore the Unregenerate and Wicked being under the Guidance and Power of the Evil Spirit they will do what suits with that Spirit e contra the Renew'd and Sanctifyed being under the Guidance and Power of the Holy Spirit they will do what suits with that Spirit And upon this Foundation there must be an Everlasting Difference and Contrariety betwixt them But then for Saints and Saints they do not thus differ As to lesser Matters there may be too much of Differences even amongst Them but as to the Fundamentals of Faith and Practice so there is an admirable Harmony Vnity and Consent amongst them Some live in one Age some in another some in one Place some in another yet there is a blessed Oneness and Agreement amongst them all They believe the same Truths performe the same Duties attend upon the same Worship walk in the same path of Holiness have and act the same Graces groan under the same burdens drive on the same Designs as Face answers to Face so do they to one another And whence is this why from this they are all led by one and the same Spirit Hence it is that they do so concurr in all the Necessary and Vital parts of Religion We having the same Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 There is one Body and one Spirit which actuates and animates all that Body Eph. 4.4 'T is One and the self same Spirit which worketh in all as the Apostle speaks in reference to Gifts 1 Cor. 12.11 As many as are led by the Spirit of God here are Many that are led but 't is but One Spirit that leads them all This is that which causes such an Vnanimity and Harmony in Gods people both in Matters of Faith and Practice Oh that the World might see more of the Thing and then the Reason thereof would be obvious SERMON XXVII Quest What advantage may we expect from CHRISTS PRAYER for Union with HIMSELF and the Blessings relating to it JOHN 17.20 21. Neither Pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me through their word V. 21. That they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the World may believe that thou hast sent me IN this Chapter we have the admirable Prayer of Christ offered up to the Father a little before his last and greatest Sufferings In this Prayer we may observe the design and the contents of it The design of it is to encourage his Disciples ver 1. These words spake Jesus c. He had spoke much in the former Chapters for their comfort and encouragement and in pursuit of the same design he lifts up his eyes to Heaven and pours forth this Heavenly Prayer in their hearing The contents that which he prays for is Union with him and the Father and the blessings relating thereto of which more particularly afterwards The words considered joyntly with the design and contents of the Prayer offer us this Observation Observ The People of Christ have great encouragement from his Prayer in reference to Vnion with God and the Blessings relating to it In the prosecution hereof 1. I shall give some account of the severals he prayed for And 2. Shew what encouragement we have to expect what he prays for For the first he prays for Vnion with Himself and the Father for Faith the bond of this Union for Holiness the effect of it for Perseverance that it may continue and not be dissolved and interrupted lastly for Glory the Consummation of this Union 1. For Faith that those may have Faith who did not or do not yet believe ver 22. That the World may believe that thou hast sent me He prays that those who were chosen to Glory as the end and so to Faith as the means may be brought to believe on Christ as sent of the Father to be the Mediator and so accept of him as their Prophet Priest and King 2. He prays for Holiness the growth and increase of it ver 17. Sanctify them through thy truth thy word is truth The word of Truth through the Spirit working with it and making impressions by it on the Heart is the instrument and mean both to begin Holiness in regeneration 1 Pet. 1.23 James 1.18 and to promote it where it is begun 1 Pet. 2.2
the true Religion Though I am far from so loose and extravagant a Charity as to judge that Men may be saved in any Religion whatever if they do but live suitably to the Principles and Rules of that Religion when there are so many false so many Idolatrous ones so many which deny fundamental truths or maintain damnable errors Yet on the other side I am not so uncharitable as to confine true religiousness and consequently final Salvation to any particular sect or sort or party of Men professing Christianity to the exclusion of all that dissent from them True Religion is more affection and Practice than Doctrine or Nation and is seated more in the heart than in the head Men may be really gracious and so in truth religious in Gods account who yet differ in some things from others who are no less truly religious too There is indeed but one true Religion in the World but in that we must distinguish between principles and conclusions and those either nearer or more remote between fundamentals and superstructures and those either which touch the foundation or are farther from it between substance and circumstances things necessary or not necessary to the being or to the well being of Religion In some things they that are wise and godly may differ without prejudice to the Salvation of either Every truth is not necessary to Salvation nor is every error de facto Damning All Mens Light is not alike cleer nor are all Mens Minds equally enlightened some see more than others and some more clearly nor is every degree of Light which shall be for the perfection of Saints hereafter necessary while they are here in order to their Salvation There may be the unity of Faith in the main and of Love too where yet there is some disagrement about some things believed It is confessed that there is but one way of Salvation that of Faith and Holiness from which whatever by-paths of error leads Men aside they do at the same time carry them off from the end of Faith the Salvation of their Souls whatever is inconsistent with either Faith or Holiness is inconsistent likewise with Salvation But every difference or mistake about such truths as are not necessarily saving must not presently be looked upon as a false way or an error certainly Damning The way to Life is called the narrow way but is it therefore indivisible Is there no Latitude in it may not Two or Three or Four or Five go abrest in it Must all go in the self-same Track or Path May not several Paths be in the same great Road or run along by the side of it and lead to the same place which if sometimes they decline a little from the Road yet before the end fall in again with it and for the main are parallel to it It is as certain that truth is simplex error is multiformis truth is but one and error is various and whatever in the least deflects from truth must be a degree of error as it is that there can be but one perfectly strait Line between any two Points But may not a Line that divaricates a little from the strait one and is so far crooked run in again to it Doth any Saint on Earth attain to the whole of truth without any mistake so much as in lesser things Doth any keep exactly to the strait Line so as never to take a crooked step never in any thing to go off from it Some indeed may miss it in fewer things some in more and yet both keeping to what is necessary hit it in the main Some may go to Heaven more directly and with fewer wandrings when others may go farther aside and fetch a greater compass and yet at last arrive at it 2. Positively by Religious I understand those 1. Who as to the Doctrine of Christianity hold the head Col. 2.19 keep to that only foundation which God hath laid the Lord Jesus Christ though perhaps they may build some things on it which are not suitable to it Wood Hay Stubble 1 Cor. 3.12 such whose works shall be burnt yet themselves saved though with difficulty and as by Fire verse 15. such I mean therefore as own so much truth as is necessary to the Life of Faith and Power of Godliness and maintain no error which is inconsistent with either 2. Those who as to the Practice of Christianity fear God and work righteousness Acts 10.35 they that not only believe in Christ but live in obedience to him not only have received Christ Jesus the Lord but walk in him Col. 2.6 All true Religion consists in Faith and Holiness it is nothing else but a glorifying God by believing and obeying a seeking Salvation in that way and method in which alone God hath determined to bring Men to it i. e. through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth 2 Thes 2.13 whoever therefore they are that do unfeignedly believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and live up to that Faith are truly Religious though in some lesser things they may dissent from others who have the same Faith and practice the same Holiness So that from being thus religious I exclude not only Atheists that have no Religion Idolaters damnable Hereticks and all those whose principles are inconsistent with or repugnant to the truth of the Gospel so are of a false Religion but even among those that profess the truth I exclude 1. Those that are grosly ignorant know not the first principles of Christianity understand not what they own and pretend to believe 2. Those that are profane scandalous vitious livers despisers of them that are good persecutors of powerful godliness These are not real Saints but a prophane generation the Seed of the Serpent not of God 3. Hypocrites masked professors that make a shew of Religion to serve a carnal interest that have a form of godliness but deny the power of it 2 Tim. 3.5 have unsound hearts though under never so smooth faces In a word all those that are destitute of true Faith and real Holiness that allow themselves in any way of known sins whether more often as the second sort or more secret and close as these last 2. How or in what respects the religious of a Nation are the strength of it In order to the stating of this I shall premise one distinction The Holy Seed or religious in a Nation may be considered either 1. As being actually in the World and actually in a state of Grace brought into Christs Fold engaged in Gods ways effectually called and sanctified 2. Or as being in the World but not yet converted though in Gods time to be converted elect unbelievers He that is a sinner at present may be a Saint in time a Publican may come to be an Apostle nay a persecutor of the Saints may be called to preach that Faith which once he destroyed Gal. 1.23 They that are Christs Sheep by election may in time nay certainly
the use of Speech but how do persons please themselves with teaching Birds to speak some few words which they cannot possibly furnish them with Reason to make use of and yet they are delighted to hear them speak what they understand not more than to hear the most edifying Discourse of a serious Christian How have others cryed up some Chymical Extracts to make men immortal when their own being cut off in the midst of their dayes unanswerably confuted their ill-grounded boasting How do others prate of governing the world by Stars as if they would ease God of the trouble of it while they know not one Star of a thousand nor what 's their influence just as the old World would fence themselves against another Deluge when God did nothing to defeat them but let them forget their Mother tongue and so speak gibberish one to another that they run up and down like Persons distracted 'till they could find out any to understand them and run away from the rest as Salvages so true is that of the Psalmist Psal 39.5 6. Verily every man at his best state is altogether Vanity Selah Surely every man walketh in a vain shew We know but very little of the true Nature of things nor of our selves nor of our Temptations nor of our Interests and therefore we cannot find out that good that is possible to be had in the Creature there must be some distinct knowledge of these things or we can never find out what is best for us e. g. Let one that is utterly unacquainted with Materia medica go into a Physick-garden where are all manner of Simples and thence into an Apothecaries Shop where are all manner of Drugs and Compounds with which Medicines are made for all Diseases he knows not what to do with them his Disease may to him be incurable though surrounded with Remedies Job 8.9 We are but of yesterday and know nothing because our dayes upon earth are a shadow That little that we do know of any thing we come so droppingly to the knowledg of it that e're we can lay things together so as to compare them and separate them and sort them and compound them so as to make a judgment either things themselves or our circumstances are altered or upon alteration there is such a mutability both in persons and things and times that it is as if one would undertake to gather at the same time Primroses and Violets and Roses and Gilliflowers to make a Nosegay when some of these are withered e're the others be budded When we call in the help of wiser heads than our own there 's nothing more ordinary than when wise men give good Advice those they give it to want Wisdom to receive it suspecting some over-reaching Design and therefore dare not trust them and who can say how soon Psal 146.4 His breath goeth forth he returneth to his Earth in that very day his thoughts perish the Princes thoughts perish and the thoughts of him that trusted in him perish This is the way utterly to dispirit men from every thing Object and make them fit for nothing whither can such Doctrine as this tend but to put us into a maze and to confound us in our thoughts and endeavours Will nothing but Flatteries and Lies encourage you to the Duties Answ 1 of your several Stations must things be presented better than they are or you will needs be worse than otherwise you would be are you so ridiculously Proud as to delight to dress your selves by a false Glass John 8.45 Because I tell you the truth you believe me not will you only believe those Truths that humour you Answ 2 The true Discovery of the evils and dangers of every Condition is so far from discouraging men from their Duty that 't is the best way to bring them to the best resolutions for the well discharge of their Duty Cowards wink when they fight but the truly Valiant dare face their danger 'T was Christs method in the whole course of his Ministry to tell his hearers the worst they should meet with Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not his Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Brethren and Sisters yea and his own life also he cannot be my Disciple V. 27. And whosoever doth not bear his Cross and come after me cannot be my Disciple And Matth. 24.9 Ye shall be hated of all Nations for my Names sake Answ 3 Religion is best able to manage and master all the evils that are in any Condition and every thing on this side the Power of Godliness is too feeble to grapple with any one inconvenience let but Grace be asleep if I may so speak and how weak is the best How was Peter the forwardest of all the Disciples in a fright foyled by a Servant-maid But to Grace in exercise nothing is impossible Mark 9.23 Prop. II All things on this side Religion whereby men endeavour to get above Vanity encrease it The multiplication of Ciphers amounts to less than nothing Isa 40.17 All Nations the Persons and things of all Nations before him compar'd with God aye and in the esteem of the Godly are as nothing and they are counted to him and so far as they are gracious to them less than nothing and Vanity Happiness is that which every one aims at now that which can make us happy must supply all the Wants satisfie all the Desires fill all the Capacities of the Soul and above all these be of equal duration and continuance with the Soul it self now none of all these are to be found in any thing on this side serious Godliness but the quite contrary and therefore every thing that pretends to it doth but increase Vanity Can any thing of the World supply the Soul with Grace satisfie the desires in so much as any one thing or fill any one Faculty of the Soul to satisfaction can the World fill the mind with heavenly Light or the Will with heavenly Love or the Conscience with that Peace that passeth understanding But you will say this is to begg not prove forbear me a little 'till I have answered a By-question and I will in the Prosecution of the next Proposition prove this by little less than Demonstration Question What makes all sorts of Persons Dote so much upon Vanity and upon adding one vanity to another and upon heaping one Vanity upon another if they can be no better for them We see wise men as eager as others Solomon himself thô he had his extraordinary Wisdom given him in his Youth yet he continued trying Experiments till his old Age and thô he so much decryed the Vanity of all things yet he was scarce able to bear the thoughts of his Sons inability to carry on the search Eccles 2.18 23. To this several things may be said more Plausibly Answ than Satisfactorily if you but throughly consider the Allegations but to avoid Tediousness I 'l mix the pretended and real
because they think they do not live and act as they should do that believe such weighty Truths and expect such great things as they profess they do If therefore your Conversation be correspondent to your Faith you take away the great Cause of their cavilling with you and slandering your Profession 2. More particularly Be as much in acting for God as speaking for him Not only commend his wayes but walk in them not only plead his Cause verbally but really by being in your proper Sphere active for it not only speak well of them that are good but do good to them Many will speak for God and good men but when it comes to doing there is an end of their goodness they will not stir a step not part with a penny they can say as Jam. 2.16 Be thou filled and be thou warmed and yet not give them those things that are needful to the Body they will be Religious as far as good words will go which cost them nothing but are loath to be at the charges of doing any real good How many have their Tongues tipt with good discourse whose Lives are unfruitful as to good works See therefore that your actions keep pace with your words that your Religion do not consist meerly in talking that will be a sign it is either fantastical or hypocritical when the Fruit of it reacheth no further than the Tongue it is odds if the root reach any deeper than the head but when your Religion appears in action your Enemies themselves will confess the reality of it 3. Be as diligent in and make as much Conscience of the Duties of the second Table Righteousness and Mercy in their place and order as those of the first Without this your Religion cannot be real and then no wonder if men think it not real Jam. 1.6 Pure Religion and undefiled in the sight of God and the Father is this to visit the Fatherless and the Widdow in their Affliction c. In the sight of God God himself that searches the Hearts yet having given men such a Law as may govern their owtuard as well as inward man and influence them in those things which relate to their Neighbour as well as which relate to himself doth accordingly look to their outward Carriage toward men as well as the inward respect they bear to him and so expects the fruits of Righteousness in their Lives as well as the root of Piety in their Hearts That holy Principle he hath put within them is such as extends to their Conversation outwardly and not to the inward frame of their Hearts alone and so the reality of it in it self must be evidenced by the power of it in its effects Now if these external actings where opportunities and means are are requisite to ascertain the Truth of Godliness in the Heart as to its very being we may be sure they are no less necessary as indications of it in the sight of men The World which is apt to traduce you as Hypocritical or Fanatical in Religion will be best confuted by your Carriage in those things which relate to themselves and from which some benefit redounds to them If men see you Just and Righteous and Merciful in your dealings with and behaviour toward others Helpful toward them that want you Pitiful to them in their Misery c. what is in your Hearts and Minds they cannot see but they will be more ready to judge well of it because they see so good Effects of it what they see they will think is real because it is sensible True indeed the first place is due to the Moral Duties of Gods immediate Worship prescribed in the first Table but yet those of the second must accompany them or you will never be able to prove the reality of your Christianity or reasonableness of your Practice to your selves and much less to others They must and will judge of what is within by that which appears without of what they do not see as your Faith and inward Holiness they do not by that which they do see 4. Be most diligent in those Duties which all own to be Duties wheof the first or second Table those which are confessedly Moral and which your Enemies themselves cannot deny to be Duties Some Duties have an intrinsick Loveliness in them and are of good report † Phil. 4.8 even among those themselves that are but Carnal These carry Conviction along with them and if you be diligent in the Practice of them you will have the Consciences of your Adversaries take part with you and their Judgments to applaud you when perhaps their Malice censures you and their Lusts oppose you you will have something within them to bear testimony to you and when they do not love you yet they cannot condemn you 5. Labour to out do and excell others in the World in all those good things in which they excell most Whatever you see praise-worthy in any though Enemies do it and outdo them in it If they be just do you be more just either more exactly or more universally or more constantly so If they be temperate and sober if it be possible go beyond them in it if they be Charitable be you more Charitable if they be Humble Meek Gentle Courteous endeavour to excell them in each if you think that cannot be in some cases yet it is but in some and may you not exceed them as to the general course and whole of a moral Conversation Labour then to make it appear that a Nobler Principle out of which you act an higher End at which you aim and a more perfect Copy after which you write can raise and heighten you to a pitch above any thing not only that Fancy might do in you but natural Conscience or moral Virtue in them And though the best and highest of such moral performances in your external Conversation might be in themselves but insufficient arguments as to your own personal satisfaction of the truth of Grace in your hearts yet your overtopping others in what they excell most or in the main of your Life and Practice may be an argument ad hominem and be a means to silence Enemies and stop their mouths it may be convince their judgments or if it do not make them acknowledge what you do to proceed from a supernatural Principle it may however force them to own it as coming from something more than a Conceit or Fancy 5. Be diligent in those Duties the performanee of which hath least Connexion with a secular Interest So Christ commands Luk. 6.35 Love your Enemies and do good and lend hoping for nothing again Sowe good Seed though upon barren ground and which is like to yield but a poor Harvest Buy the Truth and never sell it though you should for the present be losers by it Nay follow it at the heels though it should kick out your teeth They that do good to others only from whom they expect good give
is a matter of great Consequence to you For 1. If you cannot give your selves an account of your Religion you will never enjoy the Comforts of it never take comfort in its Comforts The Comforts of true Religion are too Great too Sweet ●oo Precious to be vainly lost or but coldly sought after Joy unspeakable and full of Glory is well worth having but alas how shall you come by this Joy these strong Consolations if you are not satisfied in the reality of that Principle in your hearts upon which they depend You have no Joy or Peace but in Believing a Rom. 15.13 and Hoping b 12.12 and walking Holily c Psal 119 65 and if you know not but your Faith and Hope may be a meer Fancy and so your diligence in Holiness which is the Effect of Faith but the Effect of Fancy what Comfort can you have in one or other what pleasure can you have in reflecting upon your Sincerity when you question your Sincerity Or upon your Interest in Christ and the benefits of His Blood and priviledges of the Gospel when for ought you know the Faith upon which that Interest immediately stands is not a Grace of Gods Spirit but a Fancy of your own Heads 2. You will never be able to give an account of it to others What you understand not your selves you will not be able to make out to others that ask you a reason of it If you cannot tell why you believe how can you Evidence to others that you do believe And if you cannot tell why you Practise thus or thus how can you satisfie others that your Practice is reasonable If you would be able to answer them first see you be able to answer your selves when you can satisfie your own Conscience you may the better answer their Cavils or Check their Revilings or bear their Censures 3. You will never be able to suffer for your Religion if you cannot give at least your selves an account of it nor suffer for that the Reality of which is Doubtfull to you You will soon make shipwrack of a good Conscience if you be at uncertainties about that Faith which should help you to keep it Get well settled or you will be easily shaken you will very scarcely venture your All in the World in Expectation of Eternal Life when you are not sure there is such a thing or that you have a Title to it but rather fear that the hopes you had of it were no better than waking mens Dreams or pleasing Visions of an imaginary Happiness which had no Subsistence but in your own Fancies You are like enough to come into sufferings you had need see upon what Ground you stand that you may be able to hold out If you once come to Question the reality of your Faith you will soon come to forsake it And if you know not but your Practice hitherto hath been unreasonable you will think when troubles come upon you you have reason to alter it If your former Strictness and Zeal in Religion seem Folly to you you will count it your Wisdom to grow loose and cold and careless in it especially rather than hazard Estate or Liberty or Life for it What man of Sence would Hang or Burn rather than forgoe that which he himself took to be but a Fancy at least had no assurance that it was not 4. You shall not need to fear the Scorns or Censures of Enemies if you be fully satisfied in your selves that your Faith is really a Grace of Gods Spirit in you and not a Deceit of your own Heart and the Holiness of you● Conversation a well grounded Scriptural Practice not an unwarrantable Irrational Niceness Let the Prophane World Scoff its fill and call you Deceivers or count you Fools it is no shame to be called Fools for believing Christs Truth or doing Christs Will it hath been the Lot of others before you And so long as you Feel the Power of Faith in your own Souls you are sure it Purifies your Hearts makes you fearfull of Sin Conscientious and painfull in Duty Strong against Temptations Patient in Afflictions and so long too as you find Holiness growing and thriving in you your Spiritual Strength encreasing your Fruit abounding so long you may be sure you are not Fools and the Worlds Flouts or Scorns cannot make you so You would not be much concerned if those that bore you an ill will should make themselves sport with you and attempt to perswade you that you were Blind or Lame or Sick or asleep when in the mean while your Eyes were open and you saw all things about you as at other times you could walk and Excercise your Limbs discourse and Exercise your Reason perform all the Actions of men that are awake or in health If you experience the workings of an holy Principle in your Hearts and the Effects of it in your Lives neither the Sophistry nor Censures nor Jeers of those that are otherwise minded will be able to beat you out of the Conviction of your Spirtual Senses any more than of your Reason and Understanding or Bodily motions 2. Labour to Evidence the same to others and to be able to give a reason of your Faith and Hope and holy Obedience to them that demand it of you and if possible to satisfie them as well as your selves 1. This may be much for the Glory of God and Credit of the Gospel when it is seen that you are Men as well as Christians and act Reasonably as well as Religiously and never more reasonably than when most Religiously that that Divine Nature d 2 Pet. 1.4 you are made partakers of is a perfection and Elevation not the destruction of your Humane that you have great reason for that good way that Holy course in which you have been walking and that the greatest strictness in Religion is really your greatest Wisdom How may your Confession when joyned with a Godly Conversation which is a speaking Practice and the most forcible Conviction stop the mouths of Cavillers falsifie their Slanders make them know themselves to be Liars and own themselves to have had too hard thoughts of you and that they and not you have been in the wrong And if you come into sufferings it will be for the Honour of the Gospel so to demean your selves as to make it appear that you suffer not only not as Evil Doers d 1 Pet. 4.15 but not as Fools that there is enough in your Religion to justifie you before men not only in your greatest Preciseness but in your deepest sufferings and though you pass for Fools with the unbelieving World for exposing your selves to a thousand miseries and apparent present ruin in Expectation of an Invisible and only future Happiness yet your Faith is so well grounded your Hope so sure that you need not be ashamed of undergoing evil any more than of doing good 2. It may be a means to encourage the Hearts
to them for the knowledge of Mysteries unless a Mystery of Iniquity were more pleasing to them whose very Religion was that Great Mystery of Godliness God was manifested in the flesh justify'd in the Spirit seen of Angels preacht unto the Gentles believed on in the World received up into glory 1 Tim. 3.16 Now this Mystery he first more generally characterizes by calling it the Mystery of God a divine Mystery not made one by meerly humane fiction and then he very distinctly specifies it in the following words and of the Father and of Christ Where the former and needs not be thought copulative but exegetical and might be read even or to wit or it may be read both as 't is usual with the Greeks as well as Latines when the copulative is to be repeated so to read the former As if it were said by the Mystery of God I mean not of God alone and abstractly considered as if it were enough to you to be meer Deists and that the whole superadded Revelation concerning the Mdiatour might be look't upon with indifferency or neglect as by the Gnosticks it was known then to be and afterwards by some of their great leaders in the substance of it with downright hatred and opposition but that which I so earnestly covet for you and wherein I would have you unite and be all one is the acknowledgement of the whole Mystery of God i. e. both of the Father and of Christ 2. The Apprehensive Principle which we may by a general name call Faith and accommodately enough to the name here given us of its object a Mystery which is elsewhere called the Mystery of Faith 1 Tim. 3.9 or a Mystery to be believed Faith being the known Principle of receiving the Gospel revelation But he here expresses it by words that signifie knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereby intimating that the Faith of Christians is not to be a blind and unintelligent Principle but that though there were contained in the Gospel Mysteries never to be understood if God had not afforded a special Revelation of them on purpose yet being revealed we ought to have a clear and distinct as well as lively and practical perception of them By these two words and the other expressions he joyns in with the former he seems to intimate two sorts of properties which belong to that Faith of the Gospel which he wishes to them 1. The rectitude clearness and certainty of notion 2. The efficacy impressiveness and immediate aptitude to have influence upon practice which he would have it carry with it The latter properties supposing and depending on the former he there highly exaggerates the matter and heaps together expressions that might with most lively emphasis set forth the kind of that knowledge which he conceives would be of so great use to them He wishes them a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a clear perspicacious Knowledge and an Assurance even to a plerophory a fulness of assurance in their knowledge of the truth of the Gospel Yea he wishes them the Riches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea and all Riches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that full assurance or Plerophory of understanding and knowledge of that Truth apprehending that this would certainly fix them in their Faith and Profession so as they would never recede from it As when in Christs own daies many went back and walked no more with him Joh. 6.66 That which retained others so that when Christ asks Will ye also go away vers 67. they presently answer Lord to whom shall we go could entertain no such thought was that besides what they believed of him was of greatest importance to them thou hast the words of eternal Life vers 68. So their belief was with that assurance as to exclude all suspicion or doubt in the Case and we believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God vers 69. And therefore neither canst want Power to confer eternal Life as all thy words do import thy design and promise to do nor truth to make good thy own plain words And then he also knew that such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or knowledge would produce what he further wishes them an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an acknowledgement an inward vital owning a cordial embrace a lively perception of the same blessed Truths which must needs further most abundantly contribute to this their so much desired joynt and unanimous stability And now these are the two expedients by which he reckons they would be so closely compacted together as that no subtilty or violence could endanger them mutual love and a clear certain operative Faith of the Gospel if by the one they did cohere with each other and by the other adhere to God in Christ if the one might have with them the place power and bindingness of a cement the other of a continual inclination yieldingness and compliance to the magnetism of the center they would never so fall asunder as to give any enemies opportunity to be the succesful authors or the gratify'd Spectators of their ruine Thus therefore I would summ up the sense of this Scripture and the answer to the question proposed That the maintaining of sincere Love among Christians and the improving of their Faith to greater measures of clearness certainty and efficacy in reference to the substantials of Christianity are to be endeavoured as the best means to unite establish and preserve them against such as design the ruine of the truly Christian Interest The Case was at that time urging and important A great and numerous party was formed of such as did nauseate the simplicity of the Christian Religion and hate the true design of it All the care was what course was most proper and suitable to preserve the rest And you see what was then thought most proper Counsel was not taken to this effect and therefore Christians in a private capacity should not covet to have it so Let us bind them by certain devised preter-Evangelical Canons to things never thought fit to be enjoyn'd by Christ himself severely urge the strict and uniform observance of them make the terms of Christian Communion straiter than he ever made them adde new rituals of our own to his Institutions and cut off from us all that never so conscientiously scruple them No this was the practice of their common enemies and it was to narrow and weaken the too much already diminish't Christian Interest The Order mentioned vers 5. might be comely enough without things that were both unnecessary and offensive Nor was it consulted and resolved to agitate the Controversy about this power and practice in perpetual endless disputations and stigmatize them that should not be enlightned and satisfy'd in these matters as schismatical and wilful thô they never so sincerely adhered to the Doctrine and observed the Laws of Christ i. e. 'T was neither thought fit to urge the unsatisfy'd upon doubtful things
they may have thereby they will give them up to be an easie prey unto the other Designers And there are two Engines that are applied unto this purpose the one is Ignorance the other is Prophaneness or Sensuality of Life Whenever either of these prevails the Experience intended must necessarily be lost and excluded And the means of their prevailing are want of due Instruction by those who are the Leaders of the People and the encouragement of Sensuality by Impunity and great Examples This is the only formidable Conspiracy against the Profession of the Truth in this Nation without whose Aid all power and force will be frustrate in the Issue And as there is a great appearance in Divine Permission of such a state of things at present amongst us so if they be manag'd by Counsel also and that those ways of Ignorance and Sensuality are countenanced and promoted for this very End that the power of Truth being lost the Profession of it may be given up on easie terms there is nothing but Sovereign Grace that can prevent the Design For the Principle which we have laid down is uncontrollable in Reason and Experience namely That the loss of an Experience of the power of Religion will issue one way or other in the loss of the Truth of Religion and the Profession of it Whence is it that so many corrupt Opinions have made such an Inroad on Protestant Religion and the Profession of it Is it not from hence that many have lost an Experience of the power and efficacy of the Truth and so have parted with it Whence is it that Prophaneness and Sensuality of Life with all manner of corrupt Lusts of the Flesh have grown up unto the shame of Profession Is it not from the same Cause as the Apostle expresly declares it comes by 2 Tim. 4 2 3 4 5. One way or other the loss of Experience of the power of Truth will end in the loss of the profession of it But I proceed unto the Instance which I do design in the Church of Rome for the Religion of it at this day is nothing but a dead Image of the Gospel erected in the loss of an experience of its spiritual power overthrowing its Use with all its Ends being suited to the Taste of men carnal ignorant and superstitious This I shall make evident by all sorts of Instances in things relating to the Person and Offices of Christ the State Order and Worship of the Church with the Graces and Duties of Obedience required in the Gospel And in all my principal Design is to demonstrate what is the only way and means of securing our own Souls any Church or Nation from being insnared with or prevailed against by Popery 1. It is a general Notion of Truth that the Lord Christ in his Person and Grace is to be proposed and represented unto men as the principal Object of their Faith and Love He himself in his divine Person is absolutely invisible unto us and as unto his humane Nature absent from us For the Heavens must receive him until the time of the restitution of all things There must therefore an Image or Representation of him be made unto our Minds or he cannot be the proper Object of our Faith Trust Love and Delight This is done in the Gospel and the preaching of it for therein he is evidently set forth before our eyes as crucified amongst us Gal. 3.1 So also are all the other Concerns of his Person and Offices therein clearly proposed unto us yea this is the principal End of the Gospel namely to make a due Representation of the Person Offices Grace and Glory of Christ unto the Souls of men that they may believe in him and believing have eternal Life John 20.31 Upon this Representation made of Christ and his Glory in the Gospel and the Preaching of it Believers have an Experience of the power and efficacy of the divine Truth contained therein in the way before mentioned as the Apostle declares 2 Cor. 3.18 For we all with open face beholding as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Having a Spiritual Light to discern and behold the Glory of Christ as represented in the Glass of the Gospel they have experience of its transfo●ming power and efficacy changing them into the likeness of the Image represented unto them that is of Christ himself which is the saving effect of Gospel-power But this Spiritual Light was lost among men through th efficacy of their Darkness and Unbelief they were not able to discover the Glory of Christ as revealed and proposed in the Gospel so as to make him the present Object of their Faith and Love And this Light being lost they could have no experience of the power of Divine Truth concerning him changing them into his Image They could make no affecting discovery of him in the Scripture All things therein were dark and confused or at least seemed an inaccessible Mystery which they could not reduce to practice Hence those who had got the publick conduct of Religion drove the people from Reading the Scripture as that which was of no use but rather dangerous unto them What shall these men then betake themselves unto shall they reject the notion in general that there ought to be such a representation made of Christ unto the minds of men as to inflame their devotion to excite their Faith and stir up their affection to him This cannot be done without an open Renunciation of him and of the Gospel as a Fable Wherefore they will find out another way for it another means unto the same end And this is by making Images of him of wood and stone or Gold and Silver or painting on them Hereby they supposed he would be made present unto his Worshippers That he would be so represented unto them as that they should be immediately stirred up unto the embraces of Faith and Love And herein they found sensible effects unto their great satisfaction For their minds being dark carnal and prone to superstition as are the minds of all men by nature they would see nothing in the Spiritual Representation of him in the Gospel that had any power on them or did in any measure affect them In these Images by the means of sight and imagination they found that which did really work upon their Affections and as they thought did excite them unto the love of Christ And this was the true Original of all the Imagery in the Church of Rome as something of the same nature in general was of all the Image-worship in the World So the Israelites in the wilderness when they made the Golden Calf did it to have a representation of a Deity near unto them in such a visible manner as that their Souls might be affected with it so they expressed themselves Exod 32 1. Wherefore in this State under a loss of
that is the Body and Blood of Christ are really exhibited and communicated unto the Souls of Believers as the outward Signs are unto their bodily Senses the Signs becoming thereby Sacramentally unto us what the things signified are in themselves and are therefore called by their Names Herein there is a peculiar exercise of Faith and a peculiar paricipation of Christ such as are in no other Ordinance whatever Yea the Actings of Faith with respect unto the Sacramental Vnion and Relation between the Signs and Things signified by vertue of divine Institution and Promise is the principal Use and Exercise of it herein 4. There is a peculiar Exercise of Faith in the Reception of Christ as his Body and Blood are tendred and exhibited unto us in the outward Signs of them For though they do not contain carnally the Flesh and Blood of Christ in them nor are turned into them yet they really exhibit Christ unto them that believe in the participation of them Faith is the Grace that makes the Soul to receive Christ and whereby it doth actually receive him To as ma●y as received him even to as many that believe in his Name John 1.12 And it receives him according as he is propos'd and exhibited unto us in the Declaration and Promise of the Gospel wherein he is proposed it receives him by the gracious Assent of the Mind unto this Truth the choice of him cleaving and trusting unto him with the Will Heart and Affection for all the Ends of his Person and Offices as the Mediator between God and man and in the Sacramental Mysterious Proposal of him his Body and Blood that is in the efficacy of his Death and Sacrifice in this Ordinance of worship Faith acts the whole Soul in the Reception of him unto all the especial Ends for which he is exhibited unto us in this way and manner What these Ends are which give force and efficacy unto the actings of Faith herein this is not a proper place to declare I have mentioned these things because it is the great Plea of the Papists at this day in behalf of their Transubstantiation That if we reject their oral or carnal manducation of the Flesh of Christ and drinking of his Blood there cannot be assigned a way of the participation of Christ in the receiving of him in this Sacrament distinct from that which is done in the Preaching of the Word But hereby as we shall see they only declare their ignorance of this heavenly Mystery But of this blessed intimate Communion with Christ participation of him in the Divine Institution of worship Believers have Experience unto their satisfaction and ine●●able Joy They find him to be the spiritual food of their Souls by which they are nourished unto eternal Life by a spiritual incorporation with him They discern the Truth of this Mystery and have experience of its Power Howbeit men growing carnal and being destitute of Spiritual Light with the wisdom of Faith utterly lost all Experience of any Communion with Christ and participation of him in this Sacrament on the Principles of Gospel-Truth they could find nothing in it no Power no Efficacy nothing that should answer the great and glorious things spoken of it nor was it possible they should For indeed there is nothing in it but unto Faith as the Light of the Sun is nothing to them that have no eyes a Dog and a Staff are of more use to a blind man than the Sun nor is the most melodious Musick any thing to them that are deaf yet notwithstanding this loss of spiritual Experience they retained the Notion of Truth that there must be a peculiar participation of Christ in this Sacrament distinct from all other ways and means of the same Grace Here the Wits of men were hard put to it to find out an Image of this spiritual Communion whereof in their minds they could have no Experience yet they fashioned one by degrees and after they had greatned the Mystery in words and expressions whereof they knew nothing in its power to answer unto what was to be set up in the room of it until they brought forth the horrid Monster of Transubstantiation and the Sacrifice of the Mass for hereby they provided that all those things which are spiritual in this Communion should be turned into and acted in things carnal Bread shall be the Body of Christ carnally the Mouth shall be Faith the Teeth shall be the Exercise the Belly shall be the Heart and the Priest shall offer Christ unto God A Viler Image was never invented and there is nothing of Faith required herein it is all but a fortifying of Imagination against all Sense and Reason Because there is a singular Mystery in the Sacramental Vnion that is between the external Signs and the things signified whence the one is called by the Name of the other as the Bread is called the Body of Christ which Faith discerns in the Exhibition and Receiving of it they have invented for a Representation hereof such a prodigious Imagination of the real Conversion or Transubstantiation of the Substance of the Bread and Wine into the Substance of the Body and Blood of Christ as overthrows all Faith Reason and Sence also And in the room of that Holy Reverence of Christ himself in his Institution of this Ordinance in the Mystical Exhibition of himself unto the Souls of Believers in the demonstration of his Love Grace and Sufferings for them they have set up a wretched Image of an Idolatrous Adoration and Worship of the Host as they call it to the Ruine of the Souls of men And whereas the Lord Jesus Christ by once offering perfected for ever them that are sanctified appointing this Ordinance for the Remembrance of it having lost that spiritual Light whereby they might discern the efficacy of that one Offering so long since accomplished in the application of it by this Ordinance unto the actual perfecting of the Church they have erected a new Image of it in a pretended daily Repetition of the same Sacrifice wherein they profess to offer Christ again for the sins of the living and the dead unto the overthrow of the principal foundation of Faith and Religion All these Abominations arose from the loss of an Experience of that spiritual Communion with Christ and the participation of him by Faith which there is in this Ordinance by divine Institution This cast the thoughts of men on Invention of these Images to suit the general Notion of Truth unto the Superstition of their carnal minds Nor is it ordinarily possible to retrieve them from these infatuations unless God be pleased to communicate unto them that Spiritual Light whereby they may discern the Glory of this Heavenly Mystery and have an Experience of the Exhibition of Christ unto the Souls of Believers therein without these from innumerable prejudices and inflamed affections toward their Idols they will not only abide in their darkness against all means of
keep them A transgression of the Law is the endangering of a Subject He shall give his Angels charge ever thee to k●ep thee in all thy ways Their commission as large 〈◊〉 it is reaches no further when you leave that you lose your guard but while you keep your way Angels yea the God of Angels will keep you Do not so much fear loosing your Estate or your liberty or your lives as losing your way and leaving your way fear that more than any thing nothing but Sin exposeth you to misery So long as you keep your way you shall keep other things or if you lose any of them you shall get that which is better though you may be sufferers for Christ you shall not be losers by him Noah was a just man and perfect in his generation and walked with God and he was secured in the Ark before the world was drowned with the Flood Let the worst come that can it is not so bad as carnal reason represents it if a good man should be deprived of his temporal comforts it will commend spiritual ones the more to him so that he shall the better rellish and taste them Gods voice is never so sweet as when he speaks comfortably in a wilderness If a Child of God should be cut off by a violent stroak he is thereby brought the sooner to his Father such a death is the shortest way home If inraged Persecutors add to his sufferings in so doing t●●y add to his Crown and by making his burden heavy they make his glory the more exceeding weighty 3. Let Gods governing the World be the matter of your Faith no Truth will be a Staff of Support unless you carry it in a believing hand precepts will not prevail threatnings will not awe you and promises will not comfort you and the most pretious scripture-Scripture-Revelations will not chear you any farther than as they are believed Let a Minister of the Gospel present you with never so precious a Cordial made up of the most choice and excellent Ingredients it will do you no good unless it be mingled by you with Faith therefore believe that the management and ordering of all things is in the hand of God and pray that you may have a well confirmed and improved Faith hereof when the Faith is weak it affords but weak comfort do you strengthen your Faith and that will greaten your peace and raise your joy to this end Be careful of this that you do nothing to the prejudice of your Faith do not you weaken that which must support you what a madness was it for Sampson to let his Locks be cut when he knew he should lose his strength together with them Now there is nothing in the World so prejudicial to Faith as Sin is A guilty Conscience doth always make a palsey-hand which is tremulous and shaking whensoever it goes about to lay hold upon God and Christ and the Covenant or any promise Rebukes of Conscience are severe checks to Faith O! saith the poor soul when snib'd from within What! shall I look upon God as my God alass I have disobeyed and dishonoured him Shall I trust in Christ as my Saviour I have crucified him afresh and put him to an open shame Shall I rejoyce in the Covenant I have broken it and dealt falsely in it Shall I delight in the promise and live upon it where is the Condition I cannot find it in my self Such Reflexions as these produce inward Troubles and Disquiets and Fears so that the very sweet meats of the Gospel are imbittered to such an one He cannot rellish them because he questions his Interest in them What is all God to one that cannot say my God Guilt makes Faith and Comfort run low whereas Great Peace have they that love the Law and nothing shall offend them they have peace in trouble joy in sorrow calms in storms inward sedateness in the midst of outward Commotions If our hearts condemn us not then have we boldness toward God and if so then comfort comes in from every Prospect which we have of God Let us then Look upon him which way we will we shall see smiles and delights that very appearance which is dark to others will give Light to us Lastly Be very serious and frequent in your Meditations upon Gods Governing the World transient and fleeting thoughts make either none or but little and slight and short Impressions The Burning-Glass will not Fire any combustible matter unless it be held some considerable time with a steady hand in the beams of the Sun so it is here dwell therefore in your thoughts upon this Subject consider it and return to consider repeat the Work again and again and again 25. Ps 15. Mine Eyes are ever toward the Lord that is often and often at all times and upon all occasions Was he in straits he looked to God Was he in danger he looked to God Was he in fears he still looked to God and that supported him as you may gather from the next Words He shall pluck my Feet out of the Net though mine Enemies have got me in their Net and I am so entangled in it that I cannot make my own Escape yet God shall pluck me out from him I shall have my Deliverance and a Song And in such Cases and Conditions we should specially look to God under the notion of Supreme Rector and Governour of the World Are there confusions and distresses up and down in the World Are Foundations out of course yet comfort your selves with this that God sits at the helm and he is our refuge and strength a very present help in time of trouble you will find serious reiterated meditation will be exceeding influential upon you David remembred God upon his Bed and meditated upon him in the night-watches and called to mind his former mercies how he had been his help 63. Psalm and this greatly supported and comforted him therefore saith He in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce he would both hide under it and rejoyce Gods shadow should be both his shelter and his Paradise and so it may well be for his Name is not only a strong Tower but likewise an Ointment poured forth having in it strength and sweetness In the second Use I exhort and beseech you to evidence it unto the World That your Belief of Gods Governing the World doth really support and chear you in the midst of the present Distractions when many Mens hearts are failing for fear of those things which may come to pass The Truth is the day in which Providence hath cast us is a day of Distraction the World is stark mad wicked men are mad upon sin and vanity and superstition and idolatry and mad against Religion and Godliness Well Christians if they will be mad let them be so God knows how to tame them and how to chain and fetter them too he hath hooks for their Noses and bridles for their Jaws Only be
our principal perfections in Heaven and Earth These he recommends by the most affectionate and obliging the most warming melting Perswasives the superlative Love of God to us and our Communion with the Saints in Nature and Grace In the former Verse the Apostle argues for the reality of the effect as an evidence of the Cause Whoever believes that Jesus is the Christ that is the Saviour of the world foretold to the Prophets and expresses the truth of that Faith in a sutable conversation is born of God and every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him Grace is not less powerful in producing tender reciprocal affections between the off-spring of the same heavenly Father than the subordinate endearments of Nature The pretence is vain of Love to God without loving his regenerate Children And in the Text he argues from the knowledge of the Cause to the discovering of the sincerity of the Effect By this we know that we love the Children of God with a holy affection if we love God and keep his Commandments There is but one difficulty to be removed that the force of the Apostles reasoning may appear 't is this a Medium to prove a thing must be of clearer evidence than what is concluded by it Now though a demonstration from the Cause be more noble and scientifical yet that which is drawn from the Effect is more near to Sence and more discernable And this is verified in the Instance before us for the Love of God who is absolutely spiritual in his Being and Excellencies doth not with that sensible fervour affect and passionately transport us as Love to his Children with whom we visibly converse and who are receptive of the most sensible testimonies of our Affection Accordingly the Apostle argues He that loves not his Brother whom he hath seen how can he love God whom he hath not seen As the Motives to love our Brethren from our conjunction in Nature and familiar Conversation are more capable to allure our Affections and more sensibly strike the Heart than the invisible Deity who is infinitely above us by the same reason we may more easily judge of the truth of our Love to them than of our Love to God To this the Answer is clear the Apostle doth not speak of the Love of God as a still silent contemplative affection confined to to the superior Faculty of the Soul but as a burning shining affection like Fire * Lumine qui semper proditur ipso suo active and declarative of it self in those effects that necessarily flow from it that is voluntary obedience to his Commands and thus it becomes manifest to the renewed Conscience and is a most convincing proof of the sincerity of our Love to the Saints The Text being cleared affords this Doctrine Doctrine The sincerity of our Love to the Children of God is certainly discovered by our Love to God and Obedience to his Commands For the Illustration and Proof of the Point I will briefly shew 1. Who are described by this Title the Children of God 2. What is included in our Love to them 3. What the Love of God is and the obedience that flows from it 4. How from love to God and willing obedience to his Commands we may convincingly know the sincerity of our love to his Children To explain the first we must consider that this Title the Children of God is given upon several accounts 1. By Creation the Angels are called the Sons of God and Men his off-spring The reason of the Title is 1. The manner of their production by his immediate Power Thus he is stiled The Father of Spirits in distinction from the Fathers of the Flesh For though the conception and forming of the Body be the work of his secret Providence yet 't is by the hand of Nature the Parents concurring as the second Causes of it but the production of the Soul is to be entirely ascribed to his power without the intervention of any Creature 2. In their spiritual immortal Nature and the intellectual operations flowing from it there is an Image and resemblance of God from whence this Title is common to all reasonable Creatures and peculiar to them for though the Matter may be ordered and fashioned by the hand of God into a figure of admirable beauty yet 't is not capable of his likeness and image so that neither the Lights of Heaven nor the Beasts and plants of the Earth are called his Children II. By external Calling and Covenant some are denominated his Children for by this Evangelical Constitution God is pleased to receive Believers into a filial relation Indeed where there is not a cordial consent and subjection to the Terms of the Covenant visible Profession and the receiving the external Seals of it will be of no advantage but the publick serious owning of the G●●pel entitles a person to be of the Society of Christians and filius and foederatus are all one III. There is a Sonship that arises from supernatural regeneration that is the communicating a new nature to man whereby there is a holy and blessed change in the directive and commanding Faculties the Understanding and Will and in the Affections and consequently in the whole Life This is wrought by the efficacy of the Word and Spirit and is called by our Saviour Regeneration because it is not our original carnal Birth but a second and celestial 'T is with the new man in Grace as with an Infant in Nature that has the essential parts that compose a man a Soul endowed with all its faculties a Body with all its organs and parts but not in the vigor of mature age Thus renewed Holiness in a Christian is compleat and entire in its parts but not in perfection of degrees there is a universal inclination to all that is holy just and good and a universal aversion from sin though the executive power be not equal And regenerate Christians are truly called the Children of God for as in natural generation there is communicated a Principle of Life and sutable Operations from whence the Title and Relation of a Father arises so in Regeneration there are derived such holy and heavenly qualities to the Soul as constitute a Divine Nature in man whereby he is partaker of the Life and Likeness of God himself from hence he is a Child of God and has an interest and propriety in his Favour Power and Promises and all the good that flows from them and a Title to the eternal inheritance Secondly I will shew what is included in our Love to the Children of God 1 Pet. 1.22 1. The Principle of this Love is Divine The Soul is purified through the Spirit to unfeigned Love of the Brethren Naturally the Judgment is corrupted and the Will depraved that carnal respects either of Profit or Pleasure are the quick and sensible incitements of Love and till the Soul be cured of the sensual contagion the
prevent and cure Spiritual Pride SERMON XVI 2. COR. XII VII And least I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the Revelations there was given me a Thorn in the Flesh the Messenger of Satan to buffet me least I should be exalted above measure THE case that calls for resolution and falls under our present consideration is what we must do to prevent and cure spiritual pride Pride is said to be Spiritual in a double respect 1. In respect of its Object when that is something which is spiritual as gifts graces priviledges c. for it may be differenc't from fleshly pride which is conversant about more carnal objects as strength beauty riches honours or the like 2. In respect of its Subject which is the heart or spirit of man there is its proper Seat And so all pride whatsoever be the object of it may be said to be spiritual To prevent and cure are terms that may be thus differenc't the former respects more especially the actings of pride the latter the habit of it in the heart Pride is an evil and a sore disease some call it the tumor or timpany of the Soul it is dangerous to all it is deadly to some The scope of this discourse is to prescribe proper remedies against it M●rc 1 23. and 5 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is a man acted or agitated by a Diabolical Spirit These words of the Apostle Paul are the fundation upon which I shall build He speaks a little before of a man in Christ that had a wonderful Vi●ion or revelation from God B● a man in Christ he means either a man united to him or else a man that was extraordinarily acted and transported by him Some expound it by that passage in Revel 1 10. where the Apostle John says he was in the Spirit on the Lords Day That is he was extraordinarily acted and transported by the Spirit Farther by this man in Christ the Apostle means himself because he is speaking of his own priviledges and enjoyments he chuseth to speak in the person of another A good man is always backward to speak any thing in his own praise he knows it savours of pride and folly that it should come out of another mans lips and not his own therefore he never doth it but when 't is necessary for the hand of God and the vindication of his truth And as he is always backward to it for he is ever modest and self-denying in it therefore the Apostle speaks of another Person when he means himself I knew a man in Christ above 14 years ago Some think the Apostle had this rapture or revelation he here speaks of at the time of his first conversion then he lay 3 days and 3 nights in a kind of extasy and did neither eat nor drink Several at their first conversion to God have found such raptures and ravishments as they have had cause to remember all their life after and such as they have not experienc't again during the whole course of their lives Others for the good reasons to long here to insert are of opinion that the time of this revelation was after his conversion yea several Years after it During the time of this extraordinary Vision or revelation he was caught up to the third Heaven for he calls it as some think with respect to the Heavens under it The air in which we breath is the first therefore the Fowls of the air are call'd th● Fowls of Heaven the Starry Firmament is the second and the place of the Holy Angels and Glorify'd Spirits is the third Others don't like this distribution of the Heavens and indeed we can speak of them but conjecturally This third Heaven which the Apostle was caught up to he calls Paradice v. 4. for he doth not speak of two raptures but of one and the same only he doubles it to shew the certainty of it Heaven is elsewhere in Scripture call'd Paradice in allusion to that excellent and diligent Garden that Adam was put into before his Fall Our Saviour said to the repenting thief thou shalt be with me in Paradice The way and manner of this rapture he possesseth himself to be ignorant off Hence he says it that whether he was in the body or out of the body he could not tell That is whether he was caught up Soul and Body together or in Soul only The Soul is not so ty'd to the body but that for a season it may be separated from it and afterwards return again to it While he was in this condition he heard unspeakable words such as he neither could nor might utter it was not lawful for him possibly he was forbidden God saw not all that meet to be communicated to a world of Sinners which was allured and indulged to this one eminent Saint This divine rapture or revelation was like to be an occasion of self Exaltation to the Apostle he was in danger of being exalted above measure by means thereof This he mentions twice that it might be the better minded It is the nature of pride as it is of Fire to turn all things into fewel to feed its self The holyest Saint on Earth is not secure from spiritual pride if one should come down from the third Heaven and bring this imperfect nature with him he were still in danger of this Sin To prevent this Sin in the Apostle least he should be exalted in himself as he had been exalted by God there was given him a thorn in the Flesh this prick't the bladder of pride and kept him from being trust up through the abundance of revelations By whom was this given him By God himself it was by his wise ordination or permission The love of God to his People is wonderfully seen in his preventing mercies particularly in his preventing their falling into Sins as here by putting a thorn into Pauls Flesh he prevents the pride of his heart This is th●● mercy for which David prays and for which he also prayseth God T is as great a mercy to prevent our committing of Sin as it is to pardon it when it is committed But what was this thorn in the Flesh which was given the Apostle to prevent spiritual pride and self exaltation Various are the conjectures of Interpreters about it The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is but this once used in all the New Testament it signifies a sharp stake upon which malefactors of old were fastned when executed As also a pricking thorn that runs into a mans flesh or foot as he goes through woods and thickets Some think that this thorn in the flesh was a fleshly lust some evil concupiscence that the Apostle felt to be active or stirring in him Others think that we are thereby to understand some sore temptation of Satan a blasphemous or Atheistical suggestion or injection this is a pinching thorn indeed and hath made many of the Souls of Gods People to bleed Others understand it
industry bless thee in thy Basket and thy store bless God for it and as you but now heard labour to honour God with what thou hast but covet not inordinately these things Heb. 13.5 Be content with such things as you have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee 3. Seeing Providence hath placed you in that condition which is truly most eligible labour to answer it and evidence it to be so by your proficiency and progress in Holiness and Godliness I suppose thee at present to be in the way of Life if you be not whatever your Condition is whether in a poor rich or middle Estate● let me say to thee as the Angel said to Lot Gen. 19.17 Escape for thy life look not behind thee neither stay thou in all the Plain escape to the Mountain the Rock Christ Jesus lest thou be consumed But if thou art got into Christ then let me say As you have received Christ Jesus the Lord Col. 2.7 so walk ye in him rooted and built up in him and stablished in the Faith c. And remember thou in thy Condition hast fewer Hinderances and Temptations and more Helps and advantages from the very worldly condition that God hath set thee in Up and be doing and the Lord be with thee Quest How may we Graciously improve those Doctrines and Providences which transcend our Understandings SERMON XVIII ROM XI XXXIII Oh the Depths of the Riches both of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his Judgments and his Ways past finding out IN this Chapter the Apostle discoursing about the great Point of Election and Reprobation comes to an Instance in Gods wonderful Providence towards Jew and Gentile The Jews who were formerly Gods People are now under Unbelief and the Gentile a stranger to his Covenant hath now obtained Mercy This Doctrine and Providence of God both together doth fill the Apostle with Admiration and this Admiration breaks out into these words Oh the Depths of the Riches both of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his Judgments and his ways past finding out In this Text therefore we have exemplified our Subject in hand thus There are Doctrines and Providences which transcend our Vnderstandings Wherefore I shall first offer some Demonstrations by proposing to you some of those Doctrines and some of those Providences and then shall come to shew How they may be graciously Improved I will begin with the Doctrines 1. That there are some Doctrines contained in the sacred Scripture which transcend the largest create Capacity will with much conviction appear to any that will with any intention of mind fix their thoughts on those Doctrines which I single out and insist on 'T is true there are some Doctrines so plainly reveal'd in Scripture that he that runs may read 'em especially such as do principally concern Salvation but even these contain in them somewhat extraordinary and surprizing there are some necessary Points so plainly revealed in Holy Writ that to be acquainted with and believe the Scriptures and yet not believe the Truth of these is impossible but then there are also other Points which as they are not very clearly reveal'd so they are so deep and profound that the framing distinct Conceptions of them is beyond our reach Though we may be satisfied that 't is a Truth yet we cannot comprehend how it should be there is somewhat that lies deep out of our view which after the utmost study cannot be found out Not that Gospel-Truths contrad●ct our soundest reasonings but do transcend them There is a great difference between these two viz. a Contradicting and a Transcending our Reason What contradicts our Reason is not it cannot be received by us but what transcends may yea in many cases must be entertained and embraced That what contradicts our Reason is not to be received nor can it be a part of true Religion is manifest in that whatever is so has nothing of Reason in it 't is unreasonable and rather suted unto the nature of Brutes than unto that of Men which is Rational True Religion is designed for the regulation of the Rational Powers in their Actings and Exercises and therefore must be somewhat agreeable unto Reason and not what is contrary unto it What is contrary unto Reason must be rejected and by no means embraced as a part thereof In like manner all Contradictions must be exploded as unreasonable God lays no man under the Oligation of believing what cannot possibly be true and our soundest Reason assures us that to believe Contradictions is to believe what cannot be true But though what is contrary to Reason must not be received as an Article of our Creed yet what transcends it may What is above our Capacities may be true and from God though what is contrary unto our Reason is not true nor can be from God On this Distinction I do the rather insist as well to obviate what is suggested by Papists and others who receive for Articles of their Faith what is contrary unto right Reason as to anticipate the Socinians Objections who will believe nothing that transcends our scanty and narrow Capacities That this may be the more plain and convincing before I proceed to shew what are some of those Mysterious Doctrines which transcend our Intellects I will acquaint the Reader with some Notions received by many which being contrary unto our clearest and surest Reasonings are not to be improved but rejected I 'll mention but some 1. Transubstantiation 2. Merit quod Justitiam commutativam And 3. A Physical transition of Sins actually inherent in us from us unto Christ and of Christ's Righteousness unto us All which are to be rejected as Notions contrary to our Reason I. Transubstantiation A Doctrine asserted by the Papists to be contained in Holy Writ but really not so By Transubstantiation is meant the turning of the Elements in the Lords Supper into the very Substance of Christ's Body Though the Accidents which are proper unto Bread and Wine distinguishing them from every other Being be there yet the Substance of Bread and Wine the only Subject of the proper Accidents is not there That is 1. The Proper Accidents of Bread and Wine are Common unto these Subjects and a Humane Body which is a Contradiction 2. These Accidents namely the Colour and Taste of Bread c. whose whole Existence is Inexistence in a Subject do exist even when they do not inexist namely when they pass from the Bread unto Christ's Body Moreover the Body of Christ is asserted to be bodily under these Accidents even when there is not any one Accident proper unto an Humane Body These and many other Contradictions must be received as true if you will with the Papists put the Doctrine of Transubstantiation into your Creed But as this Conceit of theirs has not the least countenance of Scripture so 't is contrary unto our Reason as well as Common
entertain more awful Apprehensions of the greatness of God and lower thoughts of our selves What more manifest than that there are some Doctrines and Providences which transcend our Understandings or than that we are but feeble and impotent Beings who cannot search them out This is not only supposed in our Question but has been already evinc'd in this Discourse And is it so Is there such a Transcendency in the Doctrines and Providences of God Is there somewhat secret somewhat above us and yet shall we by an unjustifiable Curiosity in prying into these Secrets presume on God What! dost thou not consider that God is infinitely above thee that he dwelleth in that Light that no Eye can approach unto that his Throne is in the Heavens and that there are Clouds and Darkness round about him and that his Glory is inaccessible why then art thou not afraid to come too near him why darest thou to fix thine eye upon him The Transcendency of the Doctrines and Providences of God is his Glory which no Eye can see and live and yet presumest thou to desire a sight thereof Behold when a glimpse of the Glory of the Lord appeared but in the face of Moses the People could not bear it and therefore a Vail was put on his face and art not thou as unable to behold the Glory it self as the Israelites were to fix their Eye on a glimpse of it Consider the Shinings of Moses's face represent unto us the Beauty and Lustre and bright Glory that is in the Doctrines of God so great was the Light of Gospel-Doctrines then that the Children of Israel could not bear it and therefore it pleased the Lord in compassion to humane weaknesses to give them but the shadow of heavenly things the glorious Light of those Doctrines was under the Vail 't was hid under Types and Ceremonies so that they had but some darker representations such as they could bear and now though we are enabled to bear more and accordingly have clearer Discoveries of this glorious Light yet not being able to bear the Light it self the heavenly things themselves we have but the Image though the Vail is not such as hides from us so much of the Glory as the Jewish Types did yet the Vail that is over the Glory now is such as keeps us from seeing it as it is The Truth of which is confirm'd unto us by the Transcendency we now find in these Doctrines there is a Cloud between somewhat in them and us and therfore we cannot find them fully out the which being so it should teach us to consider our own State and condition how weak and feeble we are and what reason we have to be humble and modest in all our Enquiries about these things Could we but believe that the Transcendency that is in the Doctrines and Providences of God is what indeed it is an unanswerable Argument to confirm us in the Truth of this Point namely That there is an inaccessible Glory in those Doctrines and Providences even that Light which we are not able to bear or to behold and live we should see cause to entertain more grand august and awful Apprehensions of God as well as lower thoughts of our selves and then instead of dssputing boldly about these Transcendencies we should find reason enough to acknowledge our own frailty and weakness and in the sense thereof to be humble and modest in all our Disquisitions Alas what is man that he should come so near the Ark of God or dare make too near approach unto the Mount that burns and is covered with a Cloud of Smoke and great Darkness Whoever will duly consider How that man when in Innocency was mostly disposed to close with the Temptation of being like unto God in Knowledge and that the Lord ever since the Fall hath taken special care to keep us very much in the dark may easily see that the Use we are to make of the Transcendency of the Doctrines and Providences of God is to walk humbly before the Lord and to be afraid to enquire too curiously after his Secrets When Adam was first Created his Knowledge was much more full clear and distinct than afterwards it was and no question but that it afforded him sutable delight and satisfaction He saw so much Excellency in the Knowledge of God and his works that a Temptation to the doing any thing but what might encrease his Knowledge would with the greatest disdain be contemned and rejected This the subtil Tempter saw and therefore recommends the forbidden Fruit as what was rather to be chosen as a Means of enlarging his Knowledge than as what was pleasing to the Taste Ye shall be as Gods knowing Good and Evil. Adam finding so much pleasure in the Knowledge he already had is soon tempted to be inordinate in the desiring more yea so inordinate that assoon as he meets with the Temptation no Knowledge less than what was like unto Gods could satisfie him and so he fell So that the Sin of our first Parents was an ambition to be like unto God in Knowledge an inordinate desire of knowing what could not be known by any but by him whose Understanding is infinite and this Sin appears in all his Off-spring we would fain be like unto God and we are unwilling to be satisfied with such Measures as the Lord appoints and therefore are prying into the deep things of God Such are our low thoughts of God and such are the high thoughts we have of our selves that we think it not impossible to know God to perfection and therefore are so curious and strict in our enquiry after him But it has pleased the Lord to shew himself to be God and that we are but men by the wonders he hath wrought on Earth Hence proud man in aspiring after more Knowledge than was meet has lost what he formerly had his Understanding is darkned his Heart is blinded he cannot see the Faculties of his Soul though they remain yet not in their primitive strength and vigor they are greatly impaired and corrupted yea the enlightned Minds of the Regenerate have on them such remainders of old Corruption as unfits them for the receiving all that may be known of God And ever since the Fall the Methods God has taken in enlightning men is such as may convince us that we are but men finite worms who cannot comprehend the infinite Glories of the Lord. For it has pleased the Lord to give unto the Children of men some darker representations of himself and and in those Revelations that are most plain and clear there is enough to demonstrate that there is somewhat in every Doctrine and Providence that is above us God keeps his distance he will make us know that he is the Lord and that we are but men even vain Worms that cannot comprehend him and who therefore ought to submit our selves unto God and humble our selves before him and not come too near him for the nearer we come
and Doctrine for a special End that Extraordinary Guidance and Direction from the Spirit which no common Believers now have so They and They only became Infallible Wherefore although Saints now are partakers of a special Assistance and Guidance from the Spirit in Prayer and in their General Course of Life quoad veritatem rei yet this does not make them infallible in the One or impeccable in the Other it being vouchsaf'd to them but in such a Degree as is consistent with their present state and subservient to the End of the Spirit in his present Operations in them Which is but to guide them to necessary Truth and Holiness to help them in their Infirmities and the like but not to advance them to Apostolical Endowments Of which now the Evangelical Doctrine being published and sealed there is no Necessity And thus I have gone over the Doctrinal Explication of the Leading of the Spirit I come now to resolve some Practical Enquiries about it which will be in stead of the Application The First is this How may We as to Our selves or Others know 1. Enquiry whether We or They be led by the Spirit of God It highly concerns us to be very inquisitive about this Both because our Sonship to God must be evidenc'd by it for the Text is express As many and no more then as are led by the Spirit are the Sons of God and also because there are great Mistakes in Men about this The Most lay claim to it when yet God knows but very few partake of it in truth and reality How many please themselves with the thoughts of their being led by the Spirit when 't is most obvious they are not Every man in the World is acted by Some Spirit or Other Omnes Homines aguntur aliquo Spiritu Orig. Now there being different and contrary Spirits some Evil and some Good the Question is What that is which we are led and acted by There 's the Spirit of the World 1 Cor. 2.12 by which the Men of the World are led There 's the Corrupt and Sinful Spirit Do you think that the Scripture saith in vain Jam. 4.5 The Spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy by this all in the Unregenerate state are led There 's the Spirit of Whoredom Hos 4.12 the Spirit of perverseness Is 19.14 the Spirit of seduction 2 Tim. 4.1 under the Conduct of which too many are These are the Evil Spirits within Us which influence Men in their Actings And then there 's the Grand Evil Spirit without the Devil the Spirit that worketh in the Children of Disobedience Eph. 2.2 And Oh what an Heart-piercing Soul-afflicting thing is it to consider how the Generality of Men are led by this wicked Spirit All these Spirits are Evil. In Opposition to which there are Other Spirits that are Good And they are either the Renewed Spirit in Gods people the Heart as sanctify'd as having a Vital Supernatural Principle infus'd into it which leads and inclines to Holiness Or the Renewing Spirit Gods own Spirit of whom the Text speaks These Spirits are contrary to the Former both in Themselves and also in their Leadings For as They are all for what is Evil so These are all for what is Good And the Contrariety is such betwixt them as that they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incompatible in the same Subject in their full entire Power and Strength So as that a person can be led but by One of them Both cannot lead together I mean as to a Mans General Course and as to their Absolute Power and Dominion in Him The Text speaking of the Leading of Gods Spirit the Enquiry must be confin'd to that And so it s laid down How may we know whether we be led by the Spirit of God For the Resolution of which I must refer you to what I have been upon Having said so much in the Opening of the Thing it self by the comparing of your selves with that you will be able to determine your own Case whether it belong to you or not It would be superfluous for me to enlarge again upon those Heads in the Application which I have already been so large upon in the Explication Only therefore to give some brief Direction I would desire you to look back 1. To the Essential and Constitutive Acts included in the Holy Spirits Leading viz. Guidance Inclination of the Heart to Good Corroboration Gubernation Art thou One that art guided by this Spirit to and in the great Duties of Christianity One who art strongly inclined to what is good One that feelest an inward Divine strengthning for Doing and Suffering One that art ruled and governed by this Spirit Surely thou art led by Him But if it be otherwise thou art led not by This but by some Other Spirit 2. To the Matter or Terminus of the Spirits Leading Truth and Holiness Do thy Opinions carry Truth in them thy Practices Holiness Oh then thou art led by the Spirit But what shall we say to those who are led away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the error of the wicked 2 Pet. 3.17 or led away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with divers lusts 2 Tim. 3.6 why 't is a concluded Case these are not led by the Spirit The Course discovers the Guide The Fruits of the Spirit ever accompany the Leading of the Spirit Principiata respondent suis Principiis If the Action be Holy Spiritual and Good such as suits with the Holy Spirit it then proceeds from Him but if it be sinful and wicked Satan and thy own evil Heart are thy Leaders in it and to it Whoever doth not righteousness is not of God 1 John 3.10 nor led by his Spirit What live in Drunkenness Vncleanness Sensuality Injustice Malice Hatred And yet pretend to the Conduct of the good Spirit What a Delusion is this to thy self what a Reproach and Injury to the Blessed Spirit 3. To the Rule by which the Spirit leads the written VVord of God He Indited this Word and he Guides by it The Spirit and the Word go hand in hand together Is your Faith regulated by this Your Conversations steer'd by this hereby you may know that the Spirit leads you But if any Believe Live Speak not according to this VVord 't is because there 's no light in them Is 8.20 He that knoweth God heareth us he that is not of God heareth not us hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of Error 1 John 4.6 Oh let all take heed of fathering any thing upon the Holy Spirit which does not comport with nor is founded upon the Holy Scriptures The Enthusiast is very bold with the Spirit but his Arrogance and Folly shall be made manifest at one time or another 4. To the manner of the Spirits Leading He leads with Power and Efficacy Well what do you find of this what have you more than a bare directive Light is there a Power working in
the Divine Nature and Person of Christ which being infinite an answerable value and excellency is derived upon this Prayer So that though it be but finite in it self as it is the proper Act of a finite Being yet it is of infinite excellency and value relatively and so far of infinite efficacy Let us suppose that all the Angels and Saints in Heaven and Earth should agree to prostrate themselves before God and joyn together in one Prayer for us and that influenced with all the Holiness inforced with all the fervour and importunity that those Heavenly Spirits and Holy Souls are capable of we would conclude such a Prayer would be undoubtedly prevalent and yet we may believe upon unquestionable grounds that this one Prayer of our Blessed Redeemer is incomparably yea infinitely more prevalent and effectual In short this Prayer is nothing else but the Will and desires of him who is God offered in manner of a Supplication and there can be no question but that Will and those Desires shall be fulfilled to the utmost 3. This Prayer was founded on merit He prayed for nothing but what he was worthy to obtain sought nothing on our behalf but what he did purchase for us and deserve of his Father He might present this Supplication for his own righteousness as the best of his people could not durst not do Dan. 9.19 he might expect to obtain what he asked from the hand of Justice not as we only from meer bounty and free mercy Christ's obedience unto Death it was meritorious and did deserve for his people all that he prayed for All the ingredients of strict and proper merit concur in the Obedience and Sufferings of Christ as I might shew particularly but that I hasten they were of equal worth with the recompence which he prays for in the behalf of his people he thereby fully satisfyed the demands both of Law and Justice and though it was the Life and Pardon and Happiness of a World of condemned Persons that he prays for yet his Obedience and Blood is of more worth than all these for they are of infinite value being the Obedience and Blood of him who was God So that Christs Obedience Active and Passive is meritorious not only ratione pacti by reason of the agreement betwixt the Father and Him he having performed all the Conditions required in order to our Redemption but ratione pretii by virtue of the intrinsick value of what he paid and performed Now to use the Apostles expression Rom. 4. to him that thus worketh the reward is reckoned not of Grace but of Debt It is Grace to us but 't is Debt to Christ and so the plea on our behalf being for a just Debt it cannot but be most effectual with the righteous God 4. It is the Prayer of him for whose sake all other Prayers were heard We have direction if we would have our Prayers not fail of success to present them in the Name of Christ i. e. to beg what we desire for his sake and he gives assurance that what we so pray for in his name or for his sake shall be granted Joh. 16.23 and 15.16 and 14.13 14. Now if the Prayers of his people will prevail for his sake there can be no question but his own Prayer will be prevalent all our Prayers are accepted through him upon his account nor can they be acceptable otherwise 1 Pet. 2.5 There is that corruption in our Natures which depraves and vitiates our Spiritual Sacrifices our Prayers particularly there is more or less of a sinful tincture in them they cannot be well-pleasing to that Holy of God who is of purer Eyes than to behold Iniquity till they be purged and the guilt expiated nothing is sufficient for expiation but the great Propitiatory Sacrifice by virtue whereof this guilt is expiated and we are said to be Sanctifyed in a Sacrificial Sense that is purged from guilt Heb. 10.10 Thus himself purged our sins Heb. 1.3 and thereby that which was occasion of Offence to God being removed our Prayers became acceptable through Jesus Christ in this sense he saith ver 19. and for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also may be sanctified I sanctifie that is I offer my self an expiatory Sacrifice that they may be truly sanctifyed that is freed from guilt and so render'd well-pleasing and acceptable Now the Prayers of others being acceptable through the Mediation of Christ the Prayers of the great Mediator himself will undoubtedly be most acceptable most prevalent 3. As to the Persons prayed for they are such as on whom the Father is no less willing to bestow what is here desired than Christ was to seek them on their behalf This appears by several Expressions in this Chapter First They belonged to the Father in a special manner Thine they were ver 6. and thine they are ver 9. They were his in design and purpose before the Foundation of the World chosen Vessels set apart for him as his own peculiarly 2 Tim. 2.19 And his Actually by Effectual Calling they resigning up themselves unto him and he taking possession of them as his own ver 8. and Rom. 9.24 25. Now to whom is the Lord willing to grant these favours if not to those who are so much his own Secondly Those whom he prayes for are given to him as is many times expressed ver 2 6 9 11 12 24. and given to him that he might redeem and save them or as it is expressed ver 2. that he should give eternal Life unto them this comprizes all that he prays for on their behalf and that is the end why they are given him now the Father is as willing to promote his own end and design as the Son and so no less willing to grant what is desired in order thereto than the great Intercessour was to pray for them Thirdly Those for whom he prays are such as the Father loves with a transcendent a wonderful love ver 23. and hast loved them as thou hast loved me not with the same love which the Father hath for the Son nor with a love equal to it but a love so great as comes nearest to it of all others A greater love than any Creatures Men or Angels have for them or for one another a far greater love than he hath for any other Creatures in this World A demonstrative instance hereof we have in that he gave his Son for them which was the greatest expression of love that ever the World saw or heard of and greater than could ever have been believed if truth it self had not declared it that he should send his Son to reside on Earth not gloriously like himself but to take the form of a Servant and live as a man of sorrows and sufferings and die as a Sacrifice under the Sin and Curse of those for whom he was offered oh what manner of love was this Now as the Apostle argues Rom. 8.32 He that spared 〈◊〉 his
and unwise to endure so much and lose so much and say they have been losers by obeying God and by their holy walking for there is no happiness after Death to be hoped for wherefore I do repent that I did not take my pleasures while I might but did you ever here a serious godly man when dying utter such words But on the contrary on their dying beds do grieve and groan mourn and lament that they have been no more holy and obedient and in suffering times if they had Gold as Dust they would count it all as Dross and if they had a thousand lives they would lose them all to keep in the favour of God and to gain the Crown of Everlasting Life 4. Then would the Floodgates of sin and profaneness be plucked up to let in an Inundation of all manner of gross abominations for if men will not be afrighted from their sin with all the threatnings of the sorest pains of Hell nor allured to leave them with all the promises of the sweetest pleasures of Heaven if they were sure there were no torments of Hell to be adjudged to nor Glory in Heaven to be rewarded by they would run with greater greediness to the commission of the worst of sins that the Devil should tempt them or their wicked hearts incline them to Quest 2. How should we Eye Eternity or look at unseen Eternal things They are said to be unseen as they are not the objects of our external sense for in this sense they are not to be seen but we must look at Eternal things that are unseen with an Eye that also is unseen and the several things denoted by the Eyes in Scripture will give some light to see with what Eyes we must look at unseen Eternal things viz. with an Eye of Knowledge Faith Love Desire Hope Our looking at Eternal things comprehends these acts of the Soul 1. It includes a sure and certain Knowledge of them as things not understood are said to be hid from our Eyes so what we know we are said to see Eccles 2.3 I sought in my heart-till I might see what was that good for the Sons of men taking away of Knowledge is called the putting out of the Eyes Numb 16.14 and the inlightening the Mind the opening of the Eyes Acts 26.18 and Looking is put for certain Knowing Job 13.27 1 Pet. 1.12 and expressed by Seeing Act. 7.34 so that the Looking at and Eying of Eternal things with the Eyes of the Understanding includes 1. The bending of the mind to study them as when a man would look at any Object he bends his Head and turns his Eyes that way 2. The binding of the mind to them as a man when he looks earnestly at any thing fixeth his Eye upon it 3. The Exercise of the mind thus bent and bound to Eternal things that it is often thinking on the unseen Eternal God Christ Heaven and the Life to come 2. This Looking is by an Eye of Faith Looking is believing Numb 21.8 Make thee a fiery serpent and set it upon a pole and it shall come to pass that every one that is bitten when he looketh upon it shall live The Object and the Act are both expounded by Christ John 3.14 As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up 15. That whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Eternal Life 3. This Looking is with an Eye of Love Though in Philosophy the Affections as well as the Will are blind Powers yet in Divinity the Eyes are put for the Affections Prov. 23.5 Wilt thou set thine Eyes upon that which is not and the Eye of the Lord denotes his Love Psal 33.18 and Believers that love the coming of the unseen Saviour 1 Tim. 4.8 are said to look for it Phil. 3.20 ubi amor ibi oculus We love to look at what we love 4. This Looking is with an Eye of Desire which is exprest by the Eye Numb 15.39 That ye seek not after your own Heart and your own Eyes 1 King 20.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every thing desirable in thine eyes Job 31.16 If I have withheld the poor from their desire or have caused the eyes of the Widow to fail The Eye is an Index of the desires of the Heart 5. This Looking is with an Eye of Hope The Eye is put for Hope Job 11.20 Lam. 4.17 2 Chro. 20.12 Psal 145.15 and 25.15 and things not seen are looked for by Hope Rom. 8.24 25. and things hoped for are the Objects of our Looking Tit. 2.13 Looking for the blessed Hope In short the sum is as if it had been said While we have a certain knowledge of unseen Eternal things a firm belief of them fervent love unto them ardent desires after them lively hope and patient expectation of them we faint not in all our tribulations Having opened the Eyes with which we are to look at Eternal things I proceed to the manner of our Looking There is a Looking unto them Psal 34.5 Mic. 7.7 There is a Looking into them by studying the Nature of them to know more of the reality necessity and dignity of them 1 Pet. 1.12 Which things the Angels desire to look into If Angels do Men should There is a looking for them either as we look for things that we have lost look till we find as the Man for his lost Sheep or the Woman for her lost Silver Luc. 15.4.8 or to look for a thing that is yet to come Tit. 2.13 Isa 8.17 and there is a looking at them which is not an idle gazing at the unseen Eternal World but a practical lively affecting look in this manner following 1. We should look at Eternal things with such an Eye of Faith that should presentiate them unto us though they are yet to come Hence Faith is said to be the substance or subsistence of things not seen and the evidence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 Faith so looks at things that are far off that they have a kind of mental intellectual existence though absent as if they were present being promised as sure as if they were already possessed Faith convinceth and assureth the heart of a Believer most strongly of the truth of a thing while it looks to the Revelation and Testimony of God than any argument brought forth from Natural reason could do and doth give as firm assent to the certainty and reality of Eternal things though unseen as to any thing he beholdeth with his eyes or perceiveth by the apprehension of any Sense because our Eyes may be deceived but God neither can deceive nor be deceived Look then e. g. at the coming of Christ with such an Eye of Faith as if with your bodily Eyes you saw him descending from Heaven in flaming fire with glorious attendance as if you heard the Trumpet sounding and the Cry made arise ye Dead and come to Judgment at which command as if you saw the
with our hands to God in the Heavens When the heart is intensly elevated to God it carries the Hands and the Voice along with it it Acts all the Body from the Center as Tertullian Phraseth it bona conscientia eructat ad superficiem he lifts up his Soul Psal 143.8 and Body too to God as they lifted up the Mincah or Heav-Offering and waved it before the Lord the Soul will work the body into Simpathy when it is earnest indeed that which made the Veins of the Body to open their Mouths in drops of Blood as Christ his Prayer in his Agony did Luke 22.44 will certainly make us open our Lips Out of the abundance of the Heart the Mouth speaks Luke 6.46 4. This Vocal Amen is as it were the Epitome and summ of all our Petitions and Praises to God 't is the Center which all those Lines are drawn towards It is all the Duty vertually reduced to one word and point Yea it is the repeating and ecchoing or redoubling of all over again As the Mercury behind the Glass it reverterates the lively Image of all preceding Devotion It is a drawing the Arrow to the Pile by a strong ejaculation qua toto corde deum petimus in Bellarmines Phrase whereby the whole heart is darted up to God It is a stirring up our selves to take hold of God Isa 64.7 It is taking aim and directing our Prayer to him and looking up Psal 5.3 as if they would hand up Gods Praises to him and stand ready to receive his Mercies with open Hands and Mouths It winds up all together in one bundle many are willing to have God forgive their trespasses but cannot so readily forgive others we may be free for God to give us daily Bounty and Bread but cannot make it as Meat and Drink to do his Will Men will easily accept of Gods kindness not so roundly pay their tribute of Praises Such cannot roundly Pray nor say Amen Ah Lord and Amen are two long Prayers in few words managed by the whole Soul and thus it is an Amen with an Hallelujah when we seek God with all our hearts then we find him Jer. 29.13 5. Amen rightly pronounced is an intense Act of Faith or it involves a strong Faith The Hebrew Verb in Niphat signifies to be firm stable and strong and in Hiphil it signifies to beleive and trust and indeed we cannot beleive or trust to any thing but that which is stable invariable and immutable So that there are two Declarations made by this Amen 1. That God is firm and immutably true in himself and his word 2. That we will not only beleive his Truth but trust to his veracity and build upon it as the Prophet doth both Jer. 11.5 this is a laying hold on Gods Strength Isa 27.5 as we see Abraham Gen. 15.6 he beleived God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vehermen Gods Truth is beleived his veracity trusted to Israel twisted about both these as Abraham did he wrestled with God and prevailed The Jews say Amen habet tres nucleos hath Three Kernels the one is of an Oath the Second of Faith the Third of Confidence as Bunto says on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When we have confessed our Sins we do by our Amen say all is true and we have deserved Gods displeasure we beg pardon of them and so beleive God hath promised Pardon to the Penitent we trust our selves with God in Christ and beleive that he will Pardon our Sins as all others that cast themselves upon his promised Grace 6. The unanimous pronunciation of Amen is an assurance that God will accept our Praises and answer our Prayers So as the Soul comes off with Luther's Vicimus we have prevailed Mark 11.24 what things soever ye desire when you Pray beleive that ye receive them and ye shall have them nay 1 John 5.15 If we know that he heareth us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the Petitions we desired of him We ought to beleive we shall have them either in kind or value and infinite Wisdom and Goodness must be Judge in that Case alone Matth. 18.19 if two of you agree on Earth as touching any thing that they shall ask it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven If any single Soul Pray in Faith it shall be heard much more if two have a Symphony as the word imports they shall be answered how much more when the whole Congregation is in Harmony and unanimously cries Amen when the whole Congregation meets as one Man Ezra 3.1 and the multitude of Beleivers are of one Heart and Soul Acts 4.32 God will say Amen to such Amens They are as it were a bath col the Eccho and Voice of God from the Mercy-Seat Sanctorum vota sunt oracula Gods Spirit stirs up such Prayers and they shall not be denied The Soul like Luther says fiat voluntas mea as Men make their Wills in the Name of God Amen it shall be thus for once let my Will Oh Lord be done Heavens Gate is open to this united Knock. 7. And lastly This unanimous Amen of Faith strikes terror on the Enemies of the Church whether Devils or Men. When the Romans had Conquered Philip and the Grecians and Flaminius caused Peace to be proclaimed to the Grecians there was such a Shout says Plutarch that the very Crows and other Birds fell down to the ground the Air was so rent and shaken And when the Church of God Terrible as an Army with Banners gives her unanimous Voices of Amens not only Satan falls like lightning from Heaven Luke 10.18 but Simon Magus by Peters Prayer is fetch'd down when he attempted to flie in the Air as if he had been the Holy Dove and Power of God as Ecclesiastical Story relates And Socrates tells us that upon Theodosius his Prayers and his Armies the Barbarians Captain was smitten with a Thunderbolt and his Soldiers by Fire As the Turks Mined the Eastern Empire of the Romans by Fire Smoke and Brimston i e. by Guns and Gun-powder Rev. 9.17 when the Church is united in hearty Amens it is like the Shout that the Israelites gave when God and his Ark came into the Camp which was such a great sound that the Earth rang 1 Sam. 4.5 for then God is gone up with a Shout Psal 47.5 to answer the Prayers made for the Salvation of his People This makes the hearts of their Enemies to melt and tremble as the Philistins did As Hierom expresseth it the hollow Idols and their Temples that were empty did Eccho and Rebound the Churches Amens so as their Fabricks shaked Thus when the Shophar lovely Trumpet sounded the Seventh time upon the Seventh day Josh 6.20 the Walls of Jerico fell and so shall the Gates and Walls of Babylon by the Preaching of the Gospel on the Lords Days and the Prayers of the Saints The united Breath of Gods People sends a blast upon their Enemies the Trumpet blew and the
as to their being no delusions and then let Scoffers scoff on they shall never be able to laugh you out of those Comforts whereof you find such real effects in reviving your Hearts enlivening your Graces breaking the Snares of worldly Temptations abating the force of your Lusts and adorning even your outward Conversations I dare say they may as soon perswade you that Honey is not sweet when yet you tast it Snow not white when yet you see it is or not cold when you feel it so as perswade you either that these Comforts are not real or that holy Principle in you which is attended by them is but Fantastical To these Directions I shall add two general Rules by which you may best judge if you would pass a right Verdict on your selves as to your spiritual State 1. When you would judge of the reality of Grace in your Hearts Judge of your selves by what you are alone in the most secret Duties of Religion Closet-Prayer Meditation Self-Examination c. What men are when alone that usually they are for the main the Heart which may be awed or some way swayed when in Company with others is most apt to discover it self then if ever Grace be working at all it will be at such a time and if none appear then it is odds but there is none in the Heart As some Corruptions may be most apt to shew themselves such is the secret Atheism of mens Hearts and little sence of Gods Presence in secret when men are free from the restraint of Fear and Shame and such like motives which many times give check to and keep them under in the Company of others so likewise Grace may more readily act in secret where men may use such means and take such liberty for the awakening and exciting it as might not in the presence of others be so convenient and be rid withall of some Temptations which at least in some tempers may prove a hinderance to the more free actings of it If you would therefore take the just measure of your spiritual Stature and know what in you is real do it when alone when retired when your Hearts are most like to discover themselves fairly and have least Temptations to deceive you or impose upon you 2. Be curious and diligent in observing not only the inward workings of your Souls but the ordinary settled inclination and main bent of your Hearts observe them therefore as to what they are in the main and not only what they are by fits at some certain times or when it may be under Temptations The Heart of a carnal man may seem to be very good under a pang of Conscience or fit of Conviction or in relation to some more gross and scandalous sin which yet in the general is stark naught Ahab may humble himself and put on Sackcloth when under the apprehensions of threatned Judgments q 1 King 21.27 Pharaoh may cry God mercy when under his hand r Exod. 10.16 17. and Herod may do many things when convinced by John Baptists Ministry Å¿ Mark 6.20 and yet still they may continue the same they were And on the other side the Heart of a Saint may appear very wicked under a Temptation as David's did in the business of Vriah and of Numbring the People in both which Grace was for the present run down by a Lust and so many times Passion or carnal Fears or Distrust may lye uppermost in the Saints when yet there is Grace within and that which at present appears is not the ordinary settled frame of their Hearts and though whatever corruption at any time breaks out you may be sure it is within yet that may not make a discovery of the habitual temper and disposition of your Spirits nor argue that there is no Grace in you Judge therefore of your selves by your course and ordinary carriage and by that you may see what is most prevalent in you and if you find your Souls mainly looking to God and respecting his wayes and best pleased when ye keep closest to him you may be sure there is something more in you than a Fancy or humour you may in some particular go astray like lost Sheep and yet not forget Gods Commandments Psal 119. last 2. The Second part of the Case is How may we Evidence to others that serious Godliness in us is more than a Fancy In this there seems to be more difficulty than in the former we may more easily satisfie our selves concerning our inward workings and the temper of our own Minds than we can others we Judge of our selves by our inward actings and Principles of which by inspecting our own Hearts we have a more immediate knowledge and therefore are less liable to be deceived in our Judgment but when others have to do with us they can judge of what is in our Hearts only by our outward Carriage which is patent to them and so are liable to more Errors in their thoughts about us Here therefore if we cannot give so clear proofs and evident indications of a real Principle in us as may work a full Conviction of it in Gainsayers and Cavillers so as to force them to an acknowledgment of it it may be sufficient if we can go so far as to stop their mouths and put them to silence t 1 Pet. 2.15 that they may not be able reasonably to oppose what yet they are unwilling to grant and if it amount not to a demonstration which may over-power their Reason and compell it to yield us to be real in our Profession yet may as before was intimated lay an obligation upon their Charity to believe us to be so and in this we must especially have respect to that outward carriage of Professors which may make the best discovery of their inward frame and is most obvious to the sence and observation of those that are to be satisfied 1. In general Let men see that you live up to the Faith you profess that your Practice is agreable to your Principles and then they cannot deny the reality of your Faith when it is so powerful nor the reasonableness of your Practice when it is so answerable to it You profess before men to believe there is a God let them see that you walk as before him desire to approve your selves to him dare not sin against him you believe a Christ let your Conversations be an imitation of him Walk as he walked u 1 Joh. 2.6 You believe a future Judgment live as becomes those that would be able to stand in it and give an account of your selves to the Judge Let your carriage be such as not only your own Consciences but your Adversaries when they quarrel with you tell you it ought to be that is such as best suits your Faith and Hope even in their judgment as well as your own What is it makes the profane World question the reality of Godliness in Gods people but
if duely weighed will afford relief to such as are perplexed with the profoundness of some Doctrines c. For by this t is manifest That the Mysteriousness of the Doctrines the surprizing manner in which they are reveal'd the difficulties about the Hebrew Points and some Instances in Chronology the various Readings and the like they all serve as a spur to our Faith and a furtherance to our Salvation We have Arguments enough to convince us of the Truth of Scripture the certainty of a divine Providence and therefore we ought not to be unbelieving though we meet with some Difficulties that our Reason cannot overcome This should satisfy us that how great soever the difficulties may be how far soever they transcend our Understandings yet there is in 'em no Implication and if so they are in themselves reconcileable and although finite worms are not acquainted with the true Methods of Conciliation yet God who is Infinite in all perfections is These difficulties should not in the least stumble our Faith but rather engage us to be the more strong in believing 2. As by Faith we behold the Accomplishment of the Promises which are not comprehended by our Reason and can thorough the Mysteriousness of Doctrines and Providences see that they are of God so by Faith we are enabled to put our trust and Confidence in God even when under the darkest Dispensations Faith never appears so much in its lustre as when the greatest difficulties lie before it Then t is that the Believer puts his trust in the Power Wisdom Mercy and Faithfulness of God when under the obscurest Dispensations When there are some difficult Appearances in the Sacred Scriptures that relate to some Doctrines and when some Providences seem to be contrary to the discoveries that are made of God's Faithfulness c. then 't is that our Faith appears in its beauty for thereby we shew the just apprehensions we have of God's Power Wisdom Mercy and Faithfulness That God has promised to extend his Compassions to Believers that he will order all things to work together for their good is evident enough in Scripture but yet notwithstanding this all things seem to be against them they are afflicted and under sore temptations they lose their temporal Estates are deprived of their Liberty are sick weak and in great distress several thwarting Providences attend them all things are seemingly against them thus it was with good old Jacob he is bereaved of his Children Joseph is not S●meon is not and Benjamin must be taken away All these things sayes he are against me Gen. 42.36 But yet this was the time for Jacob to exercise his Faith as he did in the following Chapter ver 14. q. d. The Lord Almighty be with you with him I leave you to him I commit my Concerns if I am bereaved I am bereaved i. e. the will of the Lord be done Thus it was with Job God had suffered the Tempter to break in upon him God himself seemed as if he was resolved he should die and yet then could Job say Though he slay me yet will I put my trust in him Job 13.15 So with Habakkuk chap. 13.17 18 19. Although the Fig-tree shall not blossom neither shall fruit be in the Vines though the labour of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat though the slocks shall be cut off the Fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yet will I rejoyce in the Lord the Lord God is my strength he will make me to walk in mine high places Many other Instances might be given all which concur to evince That then is the time to put our trust in the Lord when we are in the dark and can see no light when there are in the Providences of God somewhat above us that we cannot reach unto then 't is that we are to look unto a Rock that is higher than our selves then are we called to put our trust in the Wisdom and Mercy and Faithfulness of him who hath promised to be with us to uphold and support us as said David At what time I am afraid I will trust in the Lord for though my Heart and my Flesh fail yet God will be the strength of my heart and my portion for ever On the other side when at the sight of the prosperity of the wicked the Believers feet were almost gone and his steps did well-nigh slip t is his Confidence in God that is then his stay The Providences of God in this Instance are remarkable for though God had said that the wicked shall not prosper nor live out half their days yet behold they live and their houses are safe from fear they prosper in the world they increase in riches How is this consistent with the threatning or how can the righteous see this and not be troubled Surely when they enter into the Sanctuary they see the End of all and are abundantly satisfied their Faith is hereby tried but yet they can say Good is God to Israel They begin to reason with God and will say Wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously but still conclude that the Lord is righteous Jer. 12.1 Though Clouds and Darkness are round about him yet Righteousness and Judgment are the Habitation of his Throne For notwithstanding all the dark Dispensations the Godly do still put their trust in the Lord they stay themselves on his Wisdom Power Mercy and Faithfulness the doing which all should endeavour when under dark Dispensations 2. Hereby the Grace of Patience is to the Glory of God held up in a continued exercise Patience is not to be consider'd to consist meerly in an enduring the conflict of Temptations and Afflictions with a quiet calm and sedate temper of Spirit but also in a quiet waiting for and expectation of the accomplishment of some great and glorious Promises in looking and patiently waiting for the End when we shall see with much clearness what now lieth in the dark and out of our view But if we hope for what we see not then do we with Patience wait for it saith the Apostle Rom. 8.25 Now there seems to be some inconsistency between Doctrine and Doctrine between some Doctrines and Providences yea and between Providences and Providences but yet we must conclude That 't is not so and that the time will come when our Lord will not speak any more in Parables unto us when the Vail shall be done away and when we shall find every thing to answer the Truth and Holiness of God no inconsistency in any of the Doctrines and Providences but the exactest Agreement and most excellent Harmony every one Doctrine and Providence concurring to the illustration of each other all which shall be seen with great satisfaction when we shall depart hence and be with the Lord. Now we know but in part we see but through a Glass darkly but then we shall know as we are known and see Face