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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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Thy Heritage Thou retainest not Thy Anger for ever Jer. because Thou delightest in Mercy And I am the Lord which exercise Loving-Kindness Judgment Righteousness in the Earth for in th●se things I delight saith the Lord. 2. Because of that Delight which God hath to be actively glorified by His Creatures voluntary Service and Subjection John 10.18 Ezek. 33.11 Herein is My Father glorified if ye bear much Fruit and I have no Pleasure in the Death of the Wicked but that he turn from his Way and live He delighteth most in unbloody Conquests when by His Patience and Goodness and Forbearance He subdueth the Hearts Affections and Conscienc●s of Men unto Himself He esteemeth Himself more glorified in the Services than in the Sufferings of Men and therefore in this Eternity he resolves not to destroy all Men lest there should be no Religion upon the Earth When the Angels fell they fell not all many were still left to glorify Him actively in their Service of Him but when Adam fell all Mankind fell in him so that there was no Tree in all this Paradise lest to bring forth any Fruit unto God And this is most certain that God would rather have His Trees for Fruit than for Fewel Hence He resolves that Mankind notwithstanding Sin should not be utterly destroyed Hereupon the Trinity calls a Counsel and the Question is What is to be done with poor Man The Learned here frame a kind of Conflict in God's holy Attributes by a Liberty which the Holy-Ghost from the Language of Holy Scripture doth allow them they speak of God after the manner of Men as if he were reduced unto some Straits and Difficulties by the cross Demands of His several Attributes Justice calls upon Him for the Condemnation of a Sinful and therefore worthily Accursed Creature which Demand is seconded by His Truth to make good that Threatning In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the Death Mercy on the other side pleads for Favour and Compassion towards Man wofully seduced and overthrown by Satan and this Plea is seconded by Love and Goodness and the like Attributes at last when the Business comes to Determination Wisdom finds out a way which the Angels of Heaven gaze on with Admiration Astonishment how to reconcile these different Pleas of his Attributes together A Jesus is resolved on One of the same Blessed Trinity who by His Father's Ordination His own voluntary Susception and the Holy Spirits Sanctification should be fitted for the Business To this purpose this Jesus should be both a Surety and an Head over sinful Men a Surety to pay Mens Debts unto God and an Head to restore God's Image unto Man And thus in Him Mercy and Truth have met together Righteousness and Peace have Kissed each other Psal 83.10 This is the great Mistery of the Gospel this is that which the Angels as I tell you pry into nay this is that which the Angels and Saints too shall admire and bless God for to all Eternity this is that which set the infinit Wisdome of God on work from all Eternity If all the Angels in Heaven and all the Men in the World had been put to it to find out a way to answer this question how shall sin be pardoned the sinner reconciled and God glorify his justice they could never have done it this cost God dear it cost him the heart-blood of his own Son and that 's a sure sign that Gods heart was much in it and indeed we are not Christians until in some measure we see and have our hearts taken with the glory of God in this mistery O the wonder of Heaven and Earth here 's the case man is fallen through sin and ever since the fall man and sin are as inseparably joyned together as fire and heat yet God will have mercy on the man and he will take vengeance on the sin the Eternal Wisdome of God hath found out a way to translate this mans sins on another Person who is able to bear them and to interest this mans person in anothers Righteousness which is able to cover him so that now all 's one in regard of man as if the Law had been utterly abrogated and all 's one too in regard of God as if the creature had been utterly condemned And all this is done in our Jesus on him was executed the curse of the Law by him was fulfilled the righteousness of the Law for him was remitted the sin of man and through him were all things made new again the world was in Christ as in its Surety making satisfaction to the Justice of God and God was in Christ as in his Embassadour Rom. 11.33 reconciling the world unto himself again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the depths of the riches both of the Wisdome and Knowledge of God how unsearchable are his judgements and his ways past finding out You have seen the Project and the counsels of God for mans salvation before all worlds Rom. 11.34 it is but dimly for who hath known the mind of the Lord or who hath been his Counsellour SECT VI. The foreknowledge OF the knowledge of God in this respect we read in Scriptures Acts 2.23 Rom. 8.29 Rom. 11.2 1 Pet. 1.2 Christ is said to be delivered by the determinate Counsel and foreknowledg of God And it is said of Christs members the called according to his purpose whom he did foreknow and elsewhere in the same Epistle God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew And Peter writes to the strangers Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father Understand that foreknowledge is ascribed to God in respect of the creature properly but in respect of God there is nothing past nothing to come all things past and all things to come are present to him and therefore in that sense he cannot be said to foreknow any thing Now the Lord in respect of us is said in Scripture to foreknow things or persons two wayes Psal 139.16 1. Generally by a general knowledge of which Davids speaks thine eyes did see my substance yet being unperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them 2. Specially by a more special foreknowledge which is a knowledge with love and approbation the very same which barely comprehendeth that we call Election Rom. 9.13 2 Tim. 2.19 Rom. 11.2 so Gods choosing is expressed by loving Jacob have I loved and Esau have I hated And this is that which the Apostle speaks of the Lord knoweth who are his i.e. the Lord from everlasting knoweth his with love and with approbation hath God cast away his people which he foreknew i. which he before loved and approved hence we gather that after the Project was laid and the Councels of God were agreed upon it then God foreknew or foresaw whom to embrace in his eternal love as his own
counsel of his own will Ephes 1.11 And elsewhere the Apostle speaks of the manifold wisdom of God according to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord. And again he hath saved us and called us with an holy calling Ephes 3 1 2 Tim. 1.1 not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began All these hold forth this truth That God purposed in himself from all eternity to bring them whom he foreknew to life and to salvation This purpose of God in order of nature comes before predestination Ephes 1.11 in that we are said to be predestinate according to his purpose and yet it must needs follow after his foreknowledg and counsel for first he loves before he will purpose and every purpose is established by counsel yea without counsel purposes saith the wise man are disappointed why then first he counsels I speak after the manner of men and then he foreknows Prov. 20.18 P●ov 15.22 i.e. either he knows whom he will choose for God doth not blindly choose he knows not whom or else he sets his love to life on some he knows them with a knowledg of approbation and then he settles a purpose to bring them to life whom he so foreknows in that especial and unspeakable way This purpose of God speaks our stability and certainty of salvation in Christ when God once purposeth it is past altering Surely as I have thought so shall it come to pass and as I have purposed saith God so shall it stand Isa 14.24 you may write upon it that Gods purposes are immutable Would not Paul lightly alter purposes taken up by him when I therefore was thus minded saith he did I use lightness or the thing that I purpose 1 Cor. 1 1● do I purpose according to the flesh that with me there should be yea yea and nay nay would not Paul I say alter his purpose and will God think you alter his methinks this word speaks to me as if I heard God say from all eternity it is my purpose to save a remnant of mankind though all are lost by sin yet my wisdom hath found out a way to choose out some and though those some those few I have purposed to save stand in very slippery places yet I will be the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13 8 I foresee indeed many thousands of failings and exasperations to alter the purpose that I have towards my people I foresee their daily provocations of my justice I foresee their many lusts within and their many enemies without I foresee that grace inherent I will give them to be as mutable to all the progeny as in their father Adam and if I leave them in the hands of their own councel they cannot but depart daily from me even as water though it could be made as hot as fire yet being left unto it self it will quickly reduce work it self to its own original coldness again I foresee them in their best condition at full Sea at their highest tyde of grace to be as changeable and movable several ways as wheels to be as perplexed hindered and distracted in themselves as cross wheels in one another grace swaying one way and flesh another way and what stability can I think in such why yet says God yet I purpose to bring this little flock to heaven my purpose is in and from my self and I am God and not man and therefore I cannot repent nor call in the purpose which now I have have I said and shall not I do it have I spoken Numb 23.15 and shall I not make it good yes yes my purposes must stand and for this purpose I will set my Son betwixt my people and my self so that if they sin I will look on him and by that means I will see no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel and for this purpose I will joyn to the wheels the living creatures that when the living creatures go the wheels shall go Numb 23.21 and when the living creatures stand they shall stand and when the living creatures are lifted up from the earth the wheels shall be lifted up against them Ezek 1.21 for the spirit of the living creatures shall be in the weels my meaning is that my Saints shall not have their stability from themselves for they are like wheels but they shall have it from me and from my Son unto whom by the same spirit of life they shall be united Thus may I imagine the Lord from all eternity to say and speak and purpose with himself and surely his purposes must stand upon this account Rom 11.29 for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance SECT VIII The Decree THE Decree of God concerning mans salvation before the foundation of the world appears in these texts I will declare the decree saith God what was that why concerning Christ Psa 2.7 8 and concerning the Church thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee ask of me and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession It was Gods Decree to give out of Jews and Gentiles a Church to Christ and this Decree was made in that day of eternity when the Son of God was begotten of his Father This Decree in Scripture-phrase hath several titles 1. It is the very same with that which we usually call predestination for what is predestination but a Decree of God concerning the different preparations of Grace whereby some are guided infallibly unto salvation predestination is a Decree both of the means and end a Decree of giving Grace effectual unto some persons here and of bringing the same persons unto glory hereafter This Decree this predestination this golden chain of the means and end Rom. 8 30 is set down by the Apostle Whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified As God hath predestinated some to life and glory so he hath predestinated them to be called and justified before they be glorified whomsoever the Lord hath decreed to save them hath he also decreed to sanctifie before they come to injoy that salvation Eccles 1.4 God have chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world that we should be first holy and then hapy 2 Thes 2 13. See how these are twisted by the Apostle once and again God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth I have heard of some blasphemous reasonings if we are predestinate to be saved we may live as we list for howsoever we live though never so wickedly yet we shall be saved O fearful O devilish reasoning surely this comes from the Devil and not from God or his
Barak and Samson and Jephtah and David and Samuel and of all the Prophets who through Faith did marvellous things as it there appears Surely they had the same Doctrine of Grace as we have it is the very same for Substance without any difference 2. Wherein is the Difference then betwixt the Old and New-Testament or betwixt the Old and New Manner of the Dispensation of the Covenant of Grace They are one for Substance but in regard of the manner of Dispensation and revealing in the several Times Ages States and Conditions of the Church there is a difference I shall reduce all to these Particulars They are distinguished 1. In the Object In the Old Administration Christ was promised but in the New-Covenant Christ is exhibited It was meet the Promise should go before the Gospel and be fulfilled in the Gospel that so great a Good might earnestly be desired before it was bestowed 2. In the Federates Under the Old Dispensation they are compared to an Heir under Age needing a Gardian Tutor or School-master little differing from a Servant But in the New-Testament they are compared to an Heir come to ripe Years see Gal. 4.1 2 3 4 5 6 7. 3. In the Manner of their Worship In the Old-Testament they were held under the Ceremonial Law and Oh What an heap of Ceremonies Rites Figures Shadows did they use in their Worship Certainly these declared the Infancy and Non-age of the Jews who being not capable of the high Mysteries of the Gospel they were taught by their Eyes as well as their Ears These Ceremonies were as Rudiments Introductions fitted to the gross and weak Senses of that Church who were to be brought on by little and little through such Shadows and Figures to the true Image and thing signified But in the New-Covenant or Testament our Worship is more spiritual Our Saviour hath told us 〈◊〉 4.23 24. That as God is a Spirit so They that worship Him must worship Him in Spirit Truth The Hour cometh and now is saith Christ when the true Worshippers shall worship the Father in Spirit and in Truth for the Father seeketh such to worship Him ●ts 15.10 4. In the Burthen of Ceremonies Peter calls the Ceremonies of old A Yoak which niether our Fathers nor we saith he were able to bear And no wonder if we consider 1. The burthen of their costly Sacrifices if any had but touched an unclean Thing he must come and offer a Sacrifice as sometimes a Bullock and sometimes a Lamb You that think every thing too much for a Minister of Christ if for every Offence you were to offer such Sacrifices now you would count it an heavy Burthen indeed 2. They had long and tedious Journeys to Jerusalem the Land lay more in length than bredth and Jerusalem stood almost at one End of it ●ut 16.16 and thither Thrice a Year all the Males were to go and appear before God 3. They were tyed to the Observation of many Dayes the New Moons and many Ceremonial Sabbaths and they were restrained from many Liberties as in Meats and the like Oh What Burthens were upon them But in the New-Covenant or Testament the Yoak is made more easie We are bound indeed to the Duties of the moral Law as well as they yet a great Yoak is taken off from us and therefore Christ inviting us to the Gospel He gives it out thus Take My Yoak upon you saith He for My Yoak is easie 〈◊〉 11.29 and My Burthen light 5. In the Weakness of the Law of old The Law then was unable to give Life to purge the Conscience 〈◊〉 7.18 to pacifie God's Wrath and therefore saith the Apostle There is verily a dis-annulling of the Commandment going before for the Weakness Vnprofitableness thereof Hence they are called weak and beggarly Rudiments 〈◊〉 4.9 in comparison of the New-Testament there was then a less forcible Influence of the Spirit accompanying that Dispensation of the Covenant 〈◊〉 7.39 The Spirit was not then given in that large Measure as now Because Christ was not then glorified It appears in these Particulars 1. There was less Power of Faith in the Saints before Christ when the Doctrine of Faith was more fully revealed then was Faith it self more fully revealed in the hearts and lives of God's People 〈◊〉 3.23 Before Faith came saith the Apostle we were kept under the Law shut up unto the Faith which should afterwards be revealed Surely this implies there was a Time when there was less Faith in God's People and that was the Time of the Law 2. There was less Power of Love in the Saints before Christ according to the measure of our Faith so is our Love The less they knew the Loving-kindness of God towards them in Christ the less they loved It may be they were more drawn by the Terrours of the Law than by the Promises of Grace and therefore they had less Love in them 3. They had a less Measure of Comfort to carry them on in all their Troubles Christ exibited is called the Consolation of Israel and therefore the more Christ is imparted Luk 2.25 Acts. 9 31 the more means of Comfort Hence the Primitive Saints after Christ are said to walk in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost Certainly the Spirit was poured in less plenty on the faithful in the Old Testament because that benefit was reserved to the times of Christ who was first to receive the Spirit above measure in his humane Nature and thence to derive Grace to his Saints 6. In the darkness of that administration of Old Christ was but shadowed out to the Fathers in Types and Figures and dark Prophesies but now we see him with open Face 2 Co. 5.18 Observe the difference in reference to the person of Christ and to the Offices of Christ and to the benefits that come by Christ 1. Concerning the Person of Christ it was revealed to them that he should be God Isa 9 6. And that he should be man Isa 9.6 Isa 9.6 The same verse speaks of a Child that is born and of a mighty God But how he should be God and man in one person it was very darkly Revealed 2. Concerning the Offices of Christ his Mediatorship was Typed out by Moses his Priesthood was Typed out by Melchizedeck among the Canaanites and Aaron among the Jews his Prophetical Office was typed out by Noah a Preacher of Righteousness his Kingly Office was typed out by David but how dark these things were unto them we may guess by the Apostles who knew not he should Die who dreamed of an earthly Kingdom and till the Holy Ghost came were ignorant of many things pertaining to the Kingdom of God 3. Concerning the Benefits that come by Christ Justification was signified by the sprinkling of Blood and Sanctification by the water of Purification Heaven and glorification by their Land flowing
ruddy Cant. 5.10 the chiefest of ten thousands As in the fairest beauty there is a mixture of these two colours white and ruddy so in Christ there is a gracious mixture and compound of all the graces of the Spirit there is in him a sweet temper of gentleness purity righteousness meekness humility and what not In him are hid all the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge Col. 2.3 and I may add of all other gifts and graces not a grace but it was in Christ and that in an higher way than in any Saint in the World and therefore he is called fairer than all the children of men Observe There was more habitual grace in Christ than ever was or is or shall be in all the Elect whether Angels or Men. He received the Spirit out of measure there was in him as much as possibly could be in a creature and more than in all other creatures whatsoever As the Sun is the Prince of Stars as the Husband is the head of the Wife as a Lion is the King of the Beasts so is this Sun of Righteousness this Head of the Church this Lion of the Tribe of Judah the chiefest of ten thousands if we look at any thing in Heaven or Earth that we observe as eminently fair by that is the Lord Jesus in respect of his inward beauty set forth in Scriptures he is the Sun of Righteousness the bright Morning-Star the Light of the World the Tree of Life the Lilly and the Rose fairer than all the Flowers of the Field than all the precious Stones of the Earth than all the Lights in the Firmament than all the Saints and Angels in Heaven You will say What 's all this to us Certainly much every way the Apostle tells you That the Law of the Spirit of Life which is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 hath freed me from the Law of sin of Death let us enquire into these words the law of the Spirit of life the Spirit of life is here put for life as else where After three dayes an half Rev. 11.11 the Spirit of life coming from God shall enter into them Now life is that whereby a thing acteth and moveth it self and it is the cause and beginning of action and motion and this Spirit of life or life it self being here applied to Christ it is that in Christ which is the beginning and cause of all his holy actions and what was that but his Original holiness or the holiness of his humane Nature But why is the holiness of Christs nature called the Spirit of life I answer 1. Because it was infused into his manhood by the Spirit of God The holy Ghost shall come upon thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee Luke 1.35 shall be called the Son of God 2. Because it is a most exact and absolute and perfect holiness the Scripture-phrase setting out things in perfection or fulness usually adds the word Spirit unto them as the spirit of pride the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of error so then the meaning of the Spirit of life is all one with the most absolute and most perfect purity and holiness of the nature of Christ It is briefly as if the Apostle had said the law of the Spirit of life or the power of the most absolute and perfect holiness of the nature of Christ hath freed me from the law of sin and death hath acquitted me from the power of my sinful nature and from the power of death due to me in respect of my sinful and corrupt nature We might draw from hence this conclusion that The benefit of Christ's habitual righteousness infused at his first conception is imputed to believers to their justification As the obedience of his life and the merit of his death so the Holyness infused at his very conception hath its influence into our justification it is by the obedience of his life that we are accounted actually holy and by the purity of his conception or habitual grace that we are accounted personally holy But I must not stay here Thus much of the Holiness of Christ's Nature SECT IV. Of the Holiness of Christ's Life Rom. 5.19 2. FOr the holiness of Christs life the Apostle tells us that by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous here 's the obedience of Christ and its influence on us 1. The obedience of Christ is that whereby he continued in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Matth. 5.17 John 8.29 Acts 3.14 Observe Christ's life was a visible commentary on Gods Law For proof Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets saith Christ but to fulfil them And the Father hath not left me alone saith Christ for I do alwayes those things that please him Hence Christ in Scripture is called Holy and Just and the Holy One Acts 2.27 The most Holy Dan. 9.24 by his actual holiness Christ fulfilled in act every branch of the Law of God he walked in all the Commandments of God he performed perfectly both in thought word and deed whatsoever the Law of the Lord required I do not cannot limit this obedience of Christ to this last year of his Ministry for his whole life was a perpetual course of obedience he was obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even until his death and yet because we read most of his holy actings this year and that this was the year wherein both his active and passive obedience did most eminently shine and break forth the year wherein he drew up all the dispersions of his precepts and cast them into actions as into sums total therefore now I handle it and I shall make it out by the passages following only in this one year As 1. Now he discovered his charity in feeding the hungry as at once five thousand men with five Loaves and two Fishes John 6.9 10 11. John 6.9 10 11. and at another time four thousand men with seven Loaves and a few small Fishes Matth. 15.32 Matth. 15.32 2. Now he discovered his self-denial and contempt of the World in flying the offers of a Kingdom when the people were convinc'd that he was the Messiah from that miracle of feeding five thousand men with five Loaves presently they would needs make him a King but he that left his Fathers Kingdom for us he fled from the offers of a Crown and Kingdom from them John 6.15 as from an enemy When Jesus perceived that they would come and take him by force to make him a King he departed again into a Mountain himself alone 3. Now he discovered his mercy in healing the Womans Daughter that had an unclean spirit Mar. 7.26 27. the Woman was a Greek a Syrophenician by Nation and in that respect Christ called her a Dog and yet Christ gave her the desire of her soul O the
cast out of God's favour As Christ once died but rose again never to die more death hath no more power over him so a justified man once allyed to God through Jesus Christ doth from that time forward as necessarily live as Christ himself by whom he doth live there is an immortal and indissoluble union betwixt Christ the Head and every Believer our justification depends not on our own strength but it is built on Christ himself who is the same yesterday and to day and for ever and hence it is that a justified man can no more cease to live in this state of justification than Christ can cease to live in Heaven 4. It is a life of new relations this immediately follows our state if once we are justified then we are related to God and Christ and to the Covenant of Grace 1. To God Before we were vivified God and we stood at a distance God was our enemy and we were his enemies At that time saith the Apostle ye were without God in the world Eph. 2.13 but now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were afar off are made near by the blood of Christ God that was a stranger stands now in near relation he is a Friend a Father a God Alsufficient to us 2. We are related to Christ before vivification we were a Christless people Eph. 2.12 At that time ye were without Christ but now we are united to Christ and which is more now we make use of Christ with the Father O the comfort of this relation A troubled spirit looks on his sins and they thrust him away from God What communion hath light with darkness but then comes the Lord Jesus and takes him by the hand and leads him to the Father and says Come soul come along with me and I will carry thee to the Father wilt thou make use of me Eph. 1.18 1 Pet. 5.18 It is the Apostles saying that through him we have an access by one spirit unto the Father we have a leading by the hand Christ hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God By nature we are severed from God and if he manifested himself Isa 59.2 he is dreadful to us Your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you that he will not hear but in Christ we approach boldly before him because Christ hath took away our sins which are the mountains of separation in Christ we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him Eph. 3.12 Here is the difference betwixt a man related to Christ and a meer stranger the stranger knows not how to go to God God stands as a Judge he is as a Malefactor the Law an Accuser Sin his Indictment and what is the issue Every mouth is stopped Rom. 3.19 and all the world is guilty before God But he that is related to Christ Christ takes him by the hand and so he goes with boldness and confidence and pleads his righteousness before the Father Rom. 8.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyeth yea rather that is risen again In the very matter and cause of justification wherein no man can stand or dare to appear or shew his face a Christian coming with Christ his Advocate he dares to appear and to plead his case and to stand upon interrogatories with God himself yea and to ask God himself humbly and with reverence what he hath to lay to his charge what more he will or can in justice require for satisfaction than his Surety hath done for him 3. We are related to the Covenant of Grace before vivification we had no such relation Eph. 2.12 At that time ye were without Christ being aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers from the covenant of promise But now the Covenant is ours that fountain or bundle of promises is ours God is our God and we are his people Psal 144.15 O the blessedness of this priviledge Happy is the people that be in such a case yea happy is the people whose God is the Lord. The Covenant is reckoned all happiness it contains in its bowels all benefits in Heaven or under Heaven as a man may say of any thing he hath in possession This is mine so may they who are in covenant with God say He is mine I have God himself in my possession How might we try our vivification even by this communion we have with God and Christ and the Covenant of Grace Christians look into your own hearts have you not felt in your approaches to God some raisings or workings of the Spirit of the Lord concluding the pardon of your sins hath not Christ taken you by the hand and led you to the Father it may be your own guilt made you afraid but the discovery of Jesus your righteousness made you bold to go to God you felt boldness coming in on this ground because all your approaches or drawings near to God were bottomed on Jesus hath not God married you to himself hath he not conveyed himself through his holy Spirit into your own hearts by way of covenant Hath he not sometimes whispered to your souls Thou art mine and have not your souls ecchoed back again unto the Lord Thou art mine much of the truth of all this would appear if Christians would but daily observe the movings of their own hearts for as he that hath the Spirit of Satan shall ever find him putting on and provoking to evil so he that hath the Spirit of God shall most-what or at least frequently find and feel it active and stirring in the heart to the reforming of the whole man the holy Spirit is not idle but he rules and governs and maintains his Monarchy in us and over us in spite of the power of Satans and privy conspiracy of a mans own flesh 5. It is a life of a new in-come I mean of a saving in-come as of Grace Power Light c. Before vivification there was no such in-come A man be●ore his conversion might hear and pray and do all duties but alas he feels no sweet no power no vertue no communion with Christ If I might appeal unto such I beseech you tell me you have been often at prayer what have you gotten there what in-come hath appeared if you answer truly you cannot but say I went to prayer and I was satisfied that I had prayed I never observed whether I had got any power or strength any thing of mortification or vivification I never found any lively work of God on my soul either in prayer or after prayer or you have been often at this Ordinance of hearing the Word what have you gotten there what in-come hath appeared Why truly nothing at all it may be a little more knowledg but nothing that I can
whence all those rivers of living waters flow And therefore saith the Evangelist expresly This spake he of the Spirit which they that believe should receive of what Spirit even of the Holy Ghost which in full measure was not yet given because that Christ was not yet glorified it is the same spirit which believers receive whence all these rivers of living waters flow but those rivers flow not from habital grace nor from any of the graces of the Holy Ghost but from the Holy Ghost himself Again When the Spirit of truth is come he will guide you into all truth John 16 1● and he will shew you things to come Now the habits of grace cannot guide or teach or shew a man things to come the habits of grace cannot speak and hear as it is there written He shall not speak of himself but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he speak This can be no other than the spirit in his own Person this is the Comforter that hears and speaks and guides into all truth and shews us things to come Again The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Besides the grace of the Spirit which is the love of God the Holy Ghost Rom. 5.5 or the Spirit it self is said to be given unto us And Ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit Rom. 8.9 If so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you Here 's a plain distinction betwixt the new man our being in the Spirit and the Spirit dwelling in us Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ i.e. the same holy Spirit which dwelleth in our head and Saviour Jesus Christ he is none of his But if the spirit of him that raised Jesus from the dead dwell in you v. 11. he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you This Spirit cannot be meant of habitual grace for habitual grace did not raise up Jesus from the dead no no it was the same Spirit that dwelt in Christ and that dwels in us Again Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Cor. 6.19 and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you And know ye not that your body is the Temple of the holy Ghost which is in you now gifts and graces are not properly said to dwell in Temples this belongs rather to persons than qualities and therefore it is meant of the holy Ghost himself Ye are the Temples of the living God surely graces are not the living God 2 Cor. 6.16 But ye are the Temples of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall be my people 2. The arguments to confirm this are such as these 1. Actions are ascribed to the Holy Ghost as given unto us or dwelling in us Joh. 16.8 13. Rom. 8.15 16 When the spirit is come he will reprove the World of sin And when the spirit of truth is come he will guide you into all truth And yea have received the spirit of adoption whereby ye cry Abba Father And this spirit beareth witness with our spirits that we are the Children of God These actions are usually given to the Holy Ghost I mean to that Holy Ghost which we receive and dwelleth in us it reproves it guides it helps it satisfies it witnesseth now actiones sunt suppositorum actions are of persons and not of qualities habitual grace cannot reprove or guide or teach or help our infirmities these are the actions of the Spirit himself in his own person 2. The spirit it self is the bond of our mistical union with Jesus Christ and therefore it is the Spirit it self that dwelleth in us Look as it is in our body there is head and members yet all are but one natural body because they are animated and quickned by one and the self-same soul so it is in the mistical body Christ is our head and we are his members and yet both of us are but one mystical body by reason of the self-same Spirit dwelling in both And hence it is said that Christ dwelleth in us by his spirit 2 Cor. 13.5 John 6.26 Know ye not that Christ Jesus is in you except ye be reprobates he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him And I live saith Paul yet not I Gal. 2.20 but Christ liveth in me How in me not corporally for in that sense The Heavens must receive him untill the time of the restitution of all things but spiritually according to the testimony of the Apostle Acts 3.21 because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into your hearts Gal. 4.6 This is the mystery that should be known among the Gentiles the glorious mystery yea the rich and glorious mystery Col. 1.2 the Apostle gives it all these Epithetes the riches of the glory of this mystery which is Christ in you the hope of glory 3. As Satan keeps his residence in wicked men working them unto all manner of sin and holding them captive to do his will so the spirit of God coming and thrusting him out of possession dwelleth in us leading us into all truth replenishing us with all graces and enclining us to all holy Obedience There is little question but whilest men remain in the state of infidelity the strong man Satan keeps possession and dwelleth in them though not after a gross and sinsible manner as in Demoniacks yet invisibly and spiritually ruling and reigning in them and making them his slav● to do his will and therefore by the same reason when a stronger than he cometh even the good spirit of God he casts him out and takes possession and dwells and reigns and rules in our souls and bodies If the spirit it self dwell not in us then how would there be three that bear witness the Apostle tells us 1 John 5.8 There are three that bear witness in earth or in our hearts the Spirit the water and blood now by water is meant sanctification it is our sanctification that bears witness with us that we are the Children of God and this sanctification consists either in the habit of grace or in the actings of grace if therefore the spirit of Christ in a believer were nothing else but grace then it were all one with the testimony of water but there are three that bear witness there 's the testimony of the spirit of blood and of water not only justification and sanctification which are but two witnesses but the spirit is superadded and that also bears witness in our Consciences that we are the Children of God and that Jesus Christ is the Son of God Christians think me not tedious in these proofs these are not speculative notional poynts that tend not to edification but are
grace well may we cry come holy Spirit Oh what a comfortable condition would it be if our Spirits never lay still but we were alwayes hungring thirsting or moving after God and goodness 6. That the holy Ghost might according to his Office comfort his Saints amidst all their afflictions this was that which Christ had so often told his Apostles John 14.16 V. 18. V. 26. John 15.26 I will not leave you comfortless I will come unto you And I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name he shall teach you all things But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me John 16.17 If I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you But how is it that the spirit comforts Saints I answer in these particulars † See at large Dr. Reynolds on Psal 116. 1. The Spirit discovers sin and bends the heart to mourn for sin and such a sorrow as this is the seed and matter of true comfort as Josephs heart was full of joy when his eyes poured out tears on Benjamin's neck so there is a certain seed and matter of joy in spiritual mourning I know they are contrary but yet they may be subordinate to each other as a dark and muddy colour may be a fit ground to lay gold upon Certainly there is a sweet complacency in an humble and spiritual heart to be vile in its own eyes But especially the fruit of it is joy and great joy John 16.21 A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow because her hour is come but as soon as she is delivered of her Child she remembreth no more the anguish for joy that a man is born into the World 22. and ye now therefore have sorrow but I will see you again and your heart shall rejoyce and your joy no man taketh from you 2. The Spirit doth not only discover but heal the corruptions of the soul and there is no comfort to the comfort of a saved and cured man the lame man that was restored by Peter expressed the abundant exaltation of his heart by leaping and praising God Act. 3.8 and for this cause the Spirit is called the Oyl of gladness because by that healing vertue that is in him he makes glad the hearts of men 3. The Spirit doth not only heal but renew and revive again when an eye is smitten with a sword there is a double mischief a wound made and a faculty perished and here though a Chirurgeon can heal the wound yet he can never restore the faculty because total privations admit no regress or recovery But the spirit doth not only heal and repair but renew and re-edifie the spirits of men as he healeth that which was torn and bindeth up that which was broken so he reviveth and raiseth up that which was dead before Hos 6.1.2 And this the Apostle calls the renovation of the Spirit Tit. 3.5 Now this renovation must needs be matter of great joy for so the Lord comforts his afflicted people O thou afflicted tossed with tempest Isa 54.11 12. and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with fair colours and lay thy foundations with Saphyres and I will make thy windows of Agates and thy gates of Carbuncles and all thy borders of pleasant stones The meaning is that all must be new and new built up as for a goodly costly and stately structure 4. The spirit doth not only renew and set the frame of the heart aright and then leave it to it self but being thus restored he abideth with it to preserve and support it and to make it victorious against all tempests and batteries and this further multiplyeth the joy and comfort of the heart victory is ever the ground of joy Isa 9.3 They joy before thee as men rejoyce when they divide the spoyle And the spirit of God is a victorious spirit A bruised reed shall he not break and smoaking flax shall he not quench Mat. 12.20 till he send forth judgment unto victory 5. The spirit doth not only preserve the heart which he hath renewed but he makes it fruitfull and abundant in the work of the Lord. And fruitfulness is a ground of comfort Sing O barren thou that didst not bear break forth into singing Isa 54.1 and cry aloud thou that didst not travail with Child for more are the Children of the desolate than the Children of the married Wife saith the Lord. 6. The Spirit doth not only make the heart fruitful but gives it the hansel and earnest of its inheritance and thereby it begets a lively hope an earnest expectation a confident attendance upon the promises and an unspeakable peace and comfort thereupon Oh when I feel a drop of heavens Joy shed abroad into my soul by the Holy Ghost and that I look upon this as a taste of glory and a forerunner of happiness how should I but rejoyce with joy unspeakable in all these respects the Spirit is our Comforter and this is another reason why the Holy Ghost is sent I will not leave you comfortless saith Christ no no for I will come unto you by my spirit Eph. 4.30 7. That the Holy Ghost might according his Office seal us unto the day of redemption By sealing is meant some work of the Spirit by which he assur●s a believer that he is Gods it is all one with the spirits witnessing only under that notion I shall speak of it another time But all the question is what is that work of the spirit by which he assures I answer this work is many-fold As 1. There is a reflex work of faith and this is the work of the Spirit too assuring our souls of our good estate to God-ward 1 John 5.10 and Christ-ward He that believeth hath the witness in himself he carries in his heart the Counterpane of all the promises this is the first seal or if you will the first degree of the Spirits sealing the first discovery of our election is manifested to us in our believing as many saith the Text as were ordained to eternal life believed Acts 13.48 2. There is a work of sanctifying grace upon the heart and this is a seal of the Spirit also 2 Tim. 2.19 for whom the Spirit sanctifieth he saveth The Lord knoweth who are his saith the Apostle ay but how should we know it why by this seal as it follows Let every one that Nameth the Name of the Lord depart from iniquity none are children of God by adoption but those that are Children also by regeneration none are heirs of Heaven 2 Pet. 1.3 4. but they are new born to it Blessed be
Christ's intercession why this is the most perfect and consummate act of Christ's Priestly office this argues thy Christ to be a perfect Mediator and being a perfect Mediator no condition can be desperate And being made perfect saith the Apostle he became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him Heb. 9.5 now therefore lead up thy faith to this blessed object and thou hast under consideration the whole of Christ and the total of Christ's actings in this world from first to last in respect of mediation this is the Coronis the up-shot the period the consummation the perfection of all 8. Faith in going to Christ as interceding for us it is principally and mainly to look to the purpose end intent and design of Christ's intercession now the ends of Christ as in the reference unto us are these 1. That we might have communion and fellowship with the Father and the Son I pray for these that as thou Father art in me and I in thee John 17.21 they also may be one in us 2. That we might have the gift of the Holy Ghost I will pray the Father John 14.16 17. and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the Spirit of Truth 3. That we might have protection against all evil John 17.15 I pray saith Christ that thou wouldst keep them from the evil Some may object are not the faithful Subject to evils corruptions and temptations still how then is that part of the intercession of Christ made good unto us I answer the intercession of Christ is presently available only it is conveyed in a manner suitable and convenient to our present condition so as there may be left room for another life and therefore we must not conceive all presently done it is with us as with Malefactors doomed to death suppose the Supreme power should grant a pardon to be drawn though the grant be of the whole thing at once yet it cannot be written but word after word and line after line so the grant of our protection against all evil is made unto Christ at first but in the execution thereof there is line upon line and precept upon precept here a little and there a little we know Christ prayed for Peter I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not yet Peter's faith did shake and totter the prayer was not that there might be no failing at all but that it might not utterly and totally fail and in that respect Peter was protected Heb. 4.14 16. 4. That we might have free access to the Throne of Grace So the Apostle Seeing then we have a great high-Priest that is passed into the heavens Jesus the Son of God let us hold fast our profession Heb. 10.23 and come boldly to the Throne of grace And again Having therefore boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus and having an high Priest over the House of God let us draw near with a true heart in a full assurance of faith 5. That we might have the inward interpellation of the Spirit which is as it were the Eccho of Christ's intercession in our heart Rom. 8.26 The Spirit maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered It is the same Spirit groans in us which more distinctly and fully in Christ John 17.13 prayeth for us These things I speak in the world saith our Saviour that they might have my joy filled in themselves q. d. I have made this prayer in the world and left a record and pattern of it in the Church that they feeling the same heavenly desires kindled in their own hearts may be comforted in the workings of that Spirit of prayer in them which testifieth to their souls the quality of that intercession which I make for them in the Heaven of Heavens certainly there is a dependance of our prayer on Christ's prayer as it is with the Sun though the body of it abide in the Heavens yet the beams of it descend to us here on earth so the intercession of Christ though as tyed to his person it is made in Heaven yet the groans and desires of the touched heart as the beams thereof are here on earth 6. That we might have the sanctification of our services of this the Levitical Priests were a type Exod. 28.38 Rev. 8.3 For they bear the iniquity of the holy things of the children of Israel that they might be accepted and he is the Angel of the Covenant who hath a golden Censer to offer up the prayers of the Saints Some observe a three-fold evil in man of every of which we are delivered by Christ First an evil of state or condition under the guilt of sin Secondly an evil of nature under the corruption of sin Thirdly an evil in all our services by the adherency of sin for that which toucheth an unclean thing is made unclean thereby Now Christ by his righteousness and merits justifieth our persons from the guilt of sin and Christ by his Grace and Spirit doth in measure purifie our faculties from the corruption of sin and Christ by his incense and intercession doth cleanse our services from the adherency of sin so that in them the Lord smells a sweet favour and both we and our services find acceptance with God 7. That we might have the pardon of all sin It is by vertue of Christ's intercession that a Believer sinning of infirmity hath a pardon of course for Christ is his Advocate to plead his case or if he sin of presumption and the Lord give repentance he hath a pardon at the hands of God the Father by vertue of this intercession in a way of justice And to this end rather is Christ called an Advocate than a Petitioner 1 John 2.1 If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father The work of an Advocate differs from the work of a Petitioner an Advocate doth not meerly petition but he tells the Judge what is Law and what ought to be done and so doth Christ O my Father saith Christ this soul hath indeed sinned but I have satisfied for his sins I have payed for them to the full now therefore in a way of equity and justice I do here call for this mans pardon If this were not so our estate would be most miserable considering that for every sin committed by us after repentance we deserve to be cast out of the love and favour of God our Father for ever and ever 8. That we might have continuance in the state of grace I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not Luke 22.32 Some that dissent from us in the point of perseverance object that in our Saviour's Prayer for Peter there was somewhat singular but we say that in this Prayer there is nothing singular which is not common to all the faithful and unto such as are given unto Christ of the Father they
even to them neither can a Sparrow fall to the ground nor an hair from thy head nor a leaf from the tree without the providence of our heavenly Father 3. Thou sayest I dare not believe I am astonished at Mat. 10.29 30. confounded in these thoughts of Gods eternal love it is too high for me I cannot believe it I answer herein thou sayst something I know it is an hard thing to believe these great things in reference to thy self But see now how God and Christ stoop and condescend to make thee believe God stands much upon this that the hearts of Saints should confide in him he accounts not himself honoured except they believe and therefore mark O my Soul how Christ suits himself to thy weakness what is it that may beget this Faith this confidence in thy Son what is it saith God that you poor creatures do one to another when you would make things sure between your selves why thus 1. We engage our selves by promise one to another And so will I saith God poor soul thou hast my promise my faithful promise I have made a promise both to Jews and Gentiles and thou art the one of these two sorts the promise is to you and to your children Acts 2 39. and to all that are afar off even as many as the Lord our God shall call Be only satisfied in that ground of thy hope that thou art called of God and then every promise of Eternal life is thine even thine Thou mayest find a thousand promises scattered here and there in the book of God and all these promises are a draught of that promise which was made from all Eternity and therefore it is so much the more sure it is as if Christ should say wilt thou have engagement by promise this is past long agoe my Father hath engaged himself to me before the World began yea and I have made many and many a promise since the World began Read in the Volume and thou wilt find here and there a Promise here and there a draught of the first Copy of that great Promise which my Father made unto me from all Eternity 2. When we would make things sure to one another we write it down And so will I saith God thou hast the Scripture the Holy Writ those Sacred Volumes of Truth and Life and therein thou hast the golden Lines of many gracious Promises are they not as the Stars in the Firmament of the Scripture thou hast my Bible and in the Bible thou hast many blessed glorious Truths but of all the Bible methinks thou shouldst not part with one of those promises no not for a World Luther observing the many promises writ down in Scripture expresseth thus the whole Scripture doth especially aim at this that we should not doubt but hope confide believe that God is Merciful Kind Patient and hath a purpose and a delight to save our souls 3. When we would make things sure to one another we set to our Seals And so will I saith God thou hast my Seal the Broad-Seal of Heaven my Sacraments the Seals of my Covenant and thou hast my privy Seal also the Seal of my Spirit Grieve not the Holy Spirit Ephes 4.30 whereby ye are Sealed unto the day of Redemption 4. When we would make things sure to one another we take Witnesses And so will I John 5.7 8. saith God thou shalt have witnesses as many as thou wilt witnesses of all sorts witnesses in heaven and witnesses on earth for there are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one And there are three that bear witness in earth the spirit and the water and the blood and these three agree in one 5. When we would make things sure to one another we take an oath And so will I saith God He. 6.17 God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath q. d. there is no such need of an oath but I will be abundant to thee because I would have thee trust me and confide in me throughly and as I swear saith God so will I swear the greatest Oath that ever was I swear by my self God swears by God he could swear by no greater and therefore he swear by himself and why thus but for their sakes who are the heirs of promise Heb. 6.13 he knows our frame and members that we are but dust and therefore to succour our weakness the Lord is pleased to swear and to confirm all by his Oath 6. When we would make things sure to one another we take a pawn And I will give thee a pawn saith God and such a pawn as if thou never hadst any thing more thou shouldest be happy it is the pawn of my Spirit Who also hath sealed us 2 Cor. 1.22 and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts q. d. I will send my Spirit into your hearts and this Spirit shall be a pawn an earnest in your hearts of all the good that I intend to do for you for ever 7. When we would make things sure to one another something it may be is presently done as an ingagement of all that which is to come And thus will I deal with thee saith God who livest in these last of times why thou seest the greatest part of thy Salvation already done I made a promise from all Eternity of sending my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin yea and if thou believest for thy sin and this is the greatest work of all that is to be done to all Eternity Surely if I would have failed thee in any thing it should have been in this it is not so much for me now to bring thee to Heaven to save thy Soul as it was to send my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin but when I have done so great a work have been already faithful in that Promise how shouldst thou but believe my faithfulness in making good all other promises If a man should owe thee a thousand pound and pay thee nine hundred ninety and nine thou wouldst think surely he would never break for the rest why God hath paid his nine hundred ninety and nine and all the Glory of Heaven is but as one in comparison of what he hath done we may therefore well believe that he who hath done so much for us will not leave the little undone Come then rouse up O my Soul and believe thy interest in those eternal transactions betwixt God and Christ is not here ground enough for thy Faith if thou art but called the promise of God is thine or if thou darest not rely on this promise which God forbid thou hast his Indenture his Seal and Witnesses of all sorts both in Heaven and Earth or yet if thou believest not thou hast an Oath a Pawn and the
to God You see now what we mean by this writing of the Law within us 5. How are we taught of God so as not to need any other kind of teaching comparatively I answer 1. God teacheth inwardly In the hidden part thou hast made me know wisdom Psal 51.6 Psal 16.17 saith David and again I thank the Lord that gave me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season The reins are the most inward part of the Body and the night season the most retired and private time both express the intimacy of divine teaching man may teach the brains but God only teacheth the reins the knowledge which man teacheth is a swimming knowledge but the knowledge which God teacheth Cathedram habet in coelis qui corda doces Aug. is a soaking knowledge God who commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts Mans light may shine into the head but Gods light doth shine into the heart His Chair is in Heaven that teacheth hearts saith Austin 2. God teacheth clearly Elihu offering himself instead of God to reason with Job he tells him My words shall be of the uprightness of my heart Job 33.3 and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly If ever the Word come home to an heart it comes with a convincing clearness So the Apostle Our Gospel came unto you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much full assurance The word hath a treble Emphasis 2 Thes 1.5 assurance full assurance and much full assurance here is clear work 3. God teacheth experimentally the soul that is taught of God can speak experimentally of the Truths it knows I know whom I have believed saith Paul 2 Tim. 1.12 I have experienced his faithfulness and all-sufficiency I dare trust my all with him I am sure he will keep it safe to that day Common knowledge rests in generals but they that are taught of God can say As we have heard so we have seen they can go along with every truth and say It is so indeed I have experienced this and that Word upon my own Heart In this case the Scripture is the Original and their Heart is the Copy of it as you have heard they can read over the Promises and Threatnings and say Probatum est David in his Psalms and Paul in his Epistles speaks their very Hearts and feels their very temptations and makes their very objections they can set to their Seal John 3.33 that God is true they can solemnly declare by their lives and conversations that God is true and faithful in his word and promises 4. God teacheth sweetly and comfortably Thou hast taught me saith David Psal 119.102.103 and then it follows How sweet are thy words unto my taste Yea sweeter than the Honey to my Mouth He rolled the word and promises as Sugar under his Tongue and sucked from thence more sweetness than Sampson did from his Honey-comb Luther said he would not live in Paradise if he must live without the Word Cum v●rbo in i●s●rr●●e ●●e est ●ie●re Luth 4. tom op●r ●a● but with the Word said he I could live in Hell When Christ put his hand by the hole of the door to teach the heart her bowels were moved and then her fingers drop upon the handles of the Lock sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.5 The teachings of Christ left such a blessing upon the first motions of the Spouses heart that with the very touch of them she is refreshed her fingers drop myrrhe and her bowels are moved as the very monuments of his gracious teachings So in Cant. 1.3 Cant. 1.3 Because of the savour of thy Oynement thy Name is as an Oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Christ in Ordinances doth as Mary open a Box of Oyntments which diffuseth a spiritual savour in Church-Assemblies and this o●ly the spiritual Christian feels Hence the Church is compared to a Garden shut up a Fountain sealed Cant. 4.12 wicked men are not able to drink of her delicacies or smell of her sweetness a spiritual Sermon is a Fountain sealed up the spiritual administration of a Sacrament is a Garden enclosed Sometimes O Lord thou givest me a strange motion or affection said Augustine which if it were but perfected in me Aug. l. 16. Confes c. 40. I could not imagine what it should be but eternal life Christians these are the teachings of God and in reference to this we shall no more teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord. Gods teaching is another kind of teaching than we can have from the hands of men there is no man in the world can teach thus and therefore they whom God teacheth need not any other kind of teaching respectively or comparatively 6. What is the universality of this knowledge They shall all know m● from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord The meaning is that all that are in the Covenant of grace shall be so taught of God as that in some measure or other they shall every one know God inwardly clearly experimentally sweetly and savingly I know there are several degrees of this knowledge God hath several Forms in his School there are fathers for experience 1 Joh. 2.12 young men for strength and babes for the truth and being of Grace as one Star differeth from another in glory so also is the School of Christ But here I am beset on both sides 1. Many are apt to complain alas they know little of God! sweet babes consider 1. It is free grace you are stars though you are not stars of the first and second magnitude it is of the Covenant of grace that God hath let into your souls a little glimmering Case Correc instruct though not so much light as others possibly may have in point of holy emulation as one notes well we should look at degrees of grace but in point of thankfulness and comfort we should look at the truth and being of grace 2. If you know but a little you may in time know more God doth not teach all his lessons at first entrance Psal 119.130 it is true The entrance of thy Word giveth Light but this is as true that God lets in his Light by degrees it is not to be despised if God do but engage the heart in holy desires and longings after knowledge so that it can say in sincerity My Soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times Psal 119.20 Others on the contrary ground themselves so learned from this very promise that they exclude all teachings of men The anointing say they teacheth us all things and we need not that any man teach us and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother 1 Joh. 2.27 Jer. 31.34 saying know the Lord for they shall all c. I
these words we find first a meeting of Gods blessed Attributes and secondly this meeting at a birth the birth of Truth at which meeting thirdly was that glorious effect that Righteousness looked down and indeed came down from Heaven I desire a little to invert the words and shall first speak to Christs Birth secondly to the effects of his Birth of Righteousness looking down from Heaven thirdly to the meeting and agreement of all Gods Attributes as the issue and effect of all When Mercy and Truth met together and Righteousness and Peace kissed each other 1. For his Birth our Vine doth Bud Truth shall Bud out of the Earth i. Christ shall be born upon the Earth or Christ shall be born of a Woman for Truth is Christ Bud is born and the Earth is a Woman 1. Truth is Christ I am the Way and Truth John 1.4 6 said Christ he is the truth of all Types and the truth of all Prophesies and the truth of all promises for in him are all the Promises Yea and Amen 2. Bud is born the Vine budding is the first putting forth of the Grape so Christ being born was Truth budding out of the Earth he then first shewed himself to the World and was first seen like the Vine springing forth above ground 3. The Earth is the Woman Isa 45.8 thus some render that Text Let the Earth bring forth a Saviour look how the Field-flowers spring forth of themselves without any Seed cast in by the hand of Man so the Virgin brings forth Christ It is observable that in the Creation of Adam was laid the Prognosticks of this future birth begin with the first Man Adam and you may see him parallell'd in this second Adam Christ Adam was created of the Virgin-Earth Christ was born of a Virgin-Mother the Earth had no Husbandman yet brought forth without Seed Mary had no Husband yet brought forth without Seed of Man in the Creation God said Let us make Man and now saith the Holy Ghost the Word is made flesh Gen. 1.26 John 1.14 or the Word is Man indeed those were but Types but Christ is the Truth he is the Vine that Buds the Messias born the Angels own him the Star designes him the Prophets foreshew him the Devils confess him his Miracles declare him the Sages seek him and Heaven and Earth Rings with the News that Truth is Budded out of the Earth 2. For the effect of this Birth Righteousness shall look down from Heaven No sooner Christ born but Righteousness looked down from Heaven she cast her eye upon Earth and seeing Truth freshly sprung there she looked and looked again certainly it was a sight to draw all the eyes of Heaven to it It is said of the Angels that they desired to look into these things they looked wishly at them 1 Pet. 1 12● as if they would look through them no question but Righteousness looked as narrowly and piercingly as the Angels Some observe that the Hebrew word she looked down signifies that she beat out a window so desirous was Righteousness to behold the sight of the Vine Budding of Christ being born that she beats out a Window in Heaven before this time she would not so much as look down towards the Earth Righteousness had no prospect no window open this way she turned away her eyes and clapt to the Casement and would not abide so much as to look on such sinful wretches forlorn sinners as we are her eye was purer than to behold Iniquity she abhorred it and us for it and therefore would not vouchsafe us once to cast off her eye O but now the case is altered no sooner doth our Vine Bud upon the Earth but she is willing to condescend and so willing that she breaks a Window through the Walls of Heaven to look down upon this Bud and nomarvail for what could Righteousness desire to see and satifie her self in that was not to be seen in Jesus Christ He was all righteous there was not the least spot of sin to be found in him his Birth was clean and his Life was holy and his Death was innocent both his Soul and Body were without all sin both his Spirit and his Mouth were without all guile whatsoever satisfaction Righteousness would have she might have it in him lay Judgment to the Line and Righteousness to the Balance and there is nothing in Jesus but Streight for the Line and full Weight for the Balance 3. For the meeting and agreement of all Gods Attributes as the issue and the least effect of this budding Vine the Verse before tells us that Mercy and Truth are met together Righteousness and Peace have kissed each other This meeting presupposeth a distance before they met for they that meet come from divers coasts Here then are two things considerable first the distance and secondly the meeting But you will say how came this distance Are they not all the Attributes of Gods undivided essence are they not all four in the bosom of God from all eternity I answer Yes they are undivided in themselves but they were divided about us it was Adam's sin and ours in him that first divided Heaven yea the very Attributes of God and in a sort God himself I shall speak to both these that you may first see the Differences and then the Agreement and blessed Harmony of these glorious Attributes 1. The Difference immediately after the Fall the great question which before you heard of in the Decree and Councils of God was actually propounded What should be done with sinful Man in this case we must speak of God after the manner of men and I hope you will give me the liberty that others I suppose warrantably take Come saith God What shall be done with sinful Man He hath violated my Law broken my Command and as much as lies in him unpinn'd the Fabrick of the World spoiled my Glorious Work of Heaven and Earth and Sea and all therein undone himself for ever and ever and ever O what shall be done with this sinful rebellious forlorn unhappy Creature Man Silence being a while in Heaven and all struck into amaze to see the great God of Heaven stirred up in wrath at last Mercy and Peace stand up and they seek with sweet gentle intreaties to pacifie Gods Anger but Righteousness and Truth are on the contrary side and they provoke God Almighty to go on and to manifest himself as he is indeed a consuming Fire a sin-revenging God The Plea is drawn up and reported at large by Bernard Andrews and others 1. Mercy began for out of her readiness to do good she is ever formost her inclination is to pitty or rather she her self is an inclination to pity those that are in misery and if she can but relieve them let them deserve what they will be sure she will relieve them for she looks not to the party what he is nor what he hath done nor what he he
deserved but which is the comfort of us miserable sinners she looks at what he suffers and in how woful and wretched a case he is Her Plea was thus What Lord hast thou made all Men in vain wilt thou now destroy him for whom thou madest the World shall the housholder be cast out and thrown into prison and there remain till he hath paid the utmost Farthing shall all the Men and Women in the World from first to last be damned for ever and ever alas What profit is in their Blood What will it avail to crowd Men and Devils together in Hell-flames Will not those Devils the grand Enemies of God rejoyce at this And what then will become of thy great Name on Earth Is not this thy Name The Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions and Sins What will the Lord undo his Name Will the Lord cast off for ever And will he be favourable no more Is his Mercy clean gone for ever Will he be no more entreated hath God forgotten to be gracious Hath he in Anger shut up his tender Bowels With these and such like holy whisperings or mutterings did Mercy enter into Gods bowels and make them yern and melt again into compassions But 2. Truth must be heard as well as Mercy and she layes in matter of exception and her Plea was thus What is God but his Word Now this was thy word to Adam In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death and this was thy word to all the Sons of Adam 〈◊〉 17. 〈◊〉 8.10 the soul that sinneth that soul shall die And God may not falsifie his word his word is truth falsifie truth That may not be all men are liars but God is true even truth it self This Plea of Truth is seconded by Righteousness and thus she bespeaks God shall not the Judge of all the world do right Thou hast declared thy self over and over to be just and righteous 〈◊〉 15. 〈◊〉 19.13 〈◊〉 6.5 7. 〈◊〉 ●5 17 O Lord God of Israel thou art righteous Righteous art thou O Lord and upright are thy Judgments Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shall be Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy Judgments Yea the Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works and wherein consists this righteousness but in rendring to every one according to his due And what is the sinners due 〈◊〉 ● 23 but Death The wages of sin is Death What shall not those sinners die the Death That were as before to make Truth false so here to do Right Wrong These were the Controversies at that time so that Peace could not tell how to speak a prevailing word amongst them nay the controversie grew so high that they made it their own cases what shall become of me said Mercy if God spare not sinners and what shall become of me said Justice if God do spare sinners what shall become of me said Mercy If God will shew no mercy And what shall become of me said Justice if God will do no Justice why alas perish said Mercy if thou wilt not pity if man die I die also and I perish said Justice if thou wilt have mercy surely I die if man die not To this it came and in these terms brake up the Assembly and away they went one from another Truth went to Heaven and was a Stranger upon Earth Righteousness went with her and would not so much as look down from Heaven Mercy she staid below still for where should Mercy be if not with the miserable As for Peace she went between both to see if she could make them meet again in better terms in the mean while our Salvation lies a bleeding the Plea hangs and we stand as Prisoners at the Bar and know not what shall become of us for though two be for us yet two are against us as strong and more stiff than they so that much depends upon this meeting for either they must be at peace between themselves or they cannot be at peace with us nor can we be at peace with God Many means were made before Christs time for a blessed meeting but it would not be Sacrifice and Burnt-Offering thou wouldst not have Heb. 10.5 these means were not prevalent enough to cause a meeting Where stuck it you will say Surely it was not long of Mercy she was easie to be intreated she looked up to Heaven but Righteousness would not look down and indeed here was the business Righteousness must and will have satisfaction or else Righteousness should not be Righteous either some satisfaction for sin must be given to God or she will never meet more better all men in the World were damned than that the Righteousness of God should be Unrighteous And this now puts on the great transaction of our Saviours Birth Well then our Saviour is born and this birth occasions a gracious meeting of the Attributes such an attractive is this Birth this Bud of Christ that all meet there indeed they cannot otherwise but meet in him in whom all blessed Attributes of God do meet It is Christ is Mercy and Christ is Truth and Christ is Righteousness and Christ is Peace 1. Christ is Mercy thus Zacharias prophesied Luke 1.78 That through the tender Mercy of our God the day-spring or Branch from on high hath visited us And God the Father of Christ is called the Father of mercies as if Mercy were his Son who had no other Son but his dearly boloved Son in whom he is well pleased 2 Cor. 1.3 John 14.6 2. Christ is Truth I am the Way and the Truth and the Life That Truth in whom is accomplished whatsoever was prefigured of the Messiah God shall send forth his Mercy and his Truth Psal 57.3 Psal 64.7 Exod. 34.6 Deut. 32.4 Psal 86.15 John 1.14 17. Jer. 23.6 Mal. 4.2 1 Car. 1.30 Heb. 7.2 Isa 9.6 Eph. 2.14 2 Thes 3.16 And O prepare Mercy and Truth And this is his Name the Lord the Lord abundant in Goodness and Truth He is a God of Truth saith Moses plenteous in Mercy and Truth saith David full of Grace and Truth saith John for the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ He is Truth by Name and Truth by Nature and Truth by Office 3. Christ is Righteousness This is his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness And unto you that fear my Name shall the Son of Righteousness arise with healing under his Wings And Christ of God is made unto us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption And according to his Type Melchisedech this was his Style King of Righteousness 4. Christ is Peace This is his Name wherewith he is called wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of Peace And Christ
At the opening and discovery of Jesus Christ the kindness and pity and love of God our Saviour towards man appeared 3. Because this manifestation hath something in it of the removal of sin it is the voice of Christ unto such as are in sin Isa 65.1 Behold me the first step towards the remission of Sins is the beholding of Christ now we cannot behold him that will not come into view 1 John 3.5 and therefore saith the Apostle ye know that he was manifested to take away our sins 4. Because this manifestation hath something in it to the overthrowing of Satan for the while that Christ hid himself Satan blinded the minds of men but when once Christ the Image of God shone forth then Satan like Lightning fell down from Heaven 1 John 3.8 for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devil 5. Because this manifestation tends to our believing in Christ and by consequence to our Salvation through Christ John 20.30 31. Many signs Christ did in the presence of his disciples which are not written but these are written saith John that ye might believe that Jesus is Christ the Son of God and that believing ye might have life through his Name Well but wherein was this first manifestation of Jesus I answer in those several witnesses that held him forth John 8.17 It is written in the Law saith Christ that the testimony of of two men is true but to manifest Christ were many witnesses As 1. From Heaven the Father is witness John 8.18 John 8.14 for see saith Christ the Father that sent me beareth witness of me and the Son is witness for so saith Christ I am one that bear witness of my self and though I bear record of my self yet my record is true for I know whence I came and whither I go Heb. 10.19 and the Holy Ghost is witness so faith Paul The Holy Ghost also is a witness to us and to that purpose he descended like a Dove and light upon him 2. On Earth John the Baptist is witness Mat. 3.16 John 5.33 John 1.7 for so saith Christ ye sent unto John and he bare witness unto the truth he came for a witness to bear witness of the Light that all men through Christ might believe No sooner was John confirmed by a sign from Heaven that Jesus was the Christ but he immediately manifests it to the Jews and first to the Priests and Levites sent in legation from the Sanhedrim he professed indefinitely in answer to their question that himself was not the Christ nor Elias nor that Prophet whom they by a special tradition expected to be revealed though they knew not when and secondly to all the People he professeth definitely wheresoever he saw Jesus Christ this is he yea he points him out with his finger John 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the World Then he shews him to Andrew Simon Peter's Brother and then to another Disciple with him who both followed Jesus and abode with him all night John 1.39 Andrew brings his Brother Simon with him and Christ changes his Name from Simon to Peter or Cephas which signifies a Sone Ver. 42. Ver. 43. Ver. 44. Ver. 47. Then Jesus himself findes out Philip of Bethsaida and bade him follow him and Philip finds out Nathanael and bids him come and see for the Messiah was found when Nathanael came to Jesus Christ saw his heart and gave him a blessed Character Behold an Israelite indeed in whom there is no guile Thus we see no less than five Disciples found out at first which must be as so many witnesses of Jesus Christ And yet we find more witnesses The works saith Christ that I do in my Fathers name they bear witness of me These Works or Miracles of Christ were many John 10.25 but because we are speaking of his first manifestation I shall instance only in his first work which was at a Marriage in Cana of Galilee The power of Miracles had now ceased since their return out of Captivity the last Miracle that was done by man till this very time was Daniel's tying up the mouth of the Lions and now Christ begins He that made the first Marriage in Paradise bestows his first Miracle upon a Marriage-Feast O happy Feast where Christ is a Guest I believe this was no rich or sumptuous Bridal who ever found Christ at the magnificent Feasts or Triumphs of the great The state of a Servant in which state Christ was doth not well agree with the proud pomp of the World This poor needy Bridegroom wants drink for his Guests and assoon as the Holy Virgin hath notice of it she complains to her Son whether we want Bread or Water or Wine Necessaries or Comforts whether should we go but to Christ The Lord is my Shepherd and if that be so it wall surely follow I shall not want Psal 23.1 John 2.4 But Jesus answered her Woman what have I to do with thee mine hour is not yet come This shews that the work he was to do must not be done to satisfie her importunity but to prosecute the great work of divine designation In works spiritual and religious all outward relation ceaseth Matters of Miracle concerned the Godhead only and in this case O Woman what have I to do with thee We must not deny Love and Duty to Relations but in the things of God natural Endearments must pass into spiritual and like Stars in the presence of the Sun must not appear Paul could say Henceforth know we no man after the flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh 2 Cor. 5.16 yet now henceforth know we him no more At the Command of Jesus the water pots were filled with water and the water by his Divine Power is turned into Wine where the different dispensation of God and the world is highly observable Every man sets forth good Wine at first and then the worse But Christ not only turns water into Wine but into such Wine that at the last Draught is most pleasant the world presents us with fair hopes of pleasures honours and preferments but there 's bitterness in the end every sin smiles in the first address but when we have well drunk then comes that which is worse only Christ turns our water into Wine if we fill our water-pots with water if with David we water our Couch with our tears for sin Christ will come with the Wine of gladness sooner or latter and he will give the best wine at the last O how delicate is that new Wine which we shall one day drink with Christ in his Fathers Kingdom These were the first manifestations of Jesus you see he had several witnesses to set him forth some from Heaven and some on earth the Father Son and Holy Ghost witness from Heaven The Baptist Disciples and his works
revelling and dishonouring of God hath made them so pensive Why sinners your carriage grieves the very Spirit of God Gen. 6.6 You grieve God at the heart as it is expressed Gen. 6.6 and therefore no wonder if the godly cannot rejoyce in your sinful society you are the cause of their sadness but admit them once into the company and fellowship of the Saints and they know how to be joyful 4. If it be so that usually they are pensive and sad it is not because of Religion but because they are not more Religious because they find so much want of godliness in their own hearts Rom. 7.24 this was the cause of Pauls heaviness O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death And yet know that all these sadnesses are true preparatives to joy and therefore in the very next words the Apostle breakes out into that sweet Doxology I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Never was true sorrow for sin but it ended in rejoycings and praises and thanksgiving to God Why then be convinced Ah deceived souls say not that God is an hard Master reaping where he sowed not and gathering where he strawed not say not that his wayes are tedious and irksome and uncomfortable wayes but rather taste and see and try how good the Lord is experience the truth of these words My Yoak is easie and my Burthen is light What is lighter than that Burthen which instead of burthening Chears up the party on which it is laid Just like those burthens of Cinnamon that refresh those that carry them through the deep sands of Arabia An holy Divine once endeavouring to convince men of the sweetness and pleasantness of Gods wayes by his own experiences I call H●aven and Earth to Record saith he that these things are truths of God they are not notions or conceits but certain realities Another flyes somewhat higher If men would in earnest sayes he abandon the Devils service and give up their names to Christ in truth and try I dare assure them in the Word of Life and Truth they would not exchange the saddest hour of all their life afterward with the prime and flower of all their former sensual pleasures Prov. 3.17 might they have ten thousand worlds to boot her wayes are wayes of pleasure saith Solomon Vse 2. Psal 1.1 2. Psal 119.1 Psal 40.8 2. You that are so convinc'd I beseech you carry on the work of God sweetly comfortably and with delight the Psalmist sayes Blessed is the man that delights in the Law of the Lord. And Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk chearfully in the Law of the Lord. And blessed is the man that delighteth greatly in his Law And it is written upon the heart of Christ I delight to do thy will O my God yea they Law is within my heart as God loves a cheerful giver so a chearful server Come take my Yoak upon you saith Christ for my Yoak is easie it is not an Iron Yoak of Bondage but a Chain of heavenly Pearls to adorn your souls Quest 1 Oh but how should we carry on the Work the Yoak the Duty the Practise of Piety and of Religion pleasantly I answer Answ 1. Be sure to keep the heart right and upright within let all we do be in sincerity and let all we are in respect of the inner man be at peace within sence and reason can tell us that according to the tempter within so there is the relishing of things without he that acts in sincerity and hath peace within can easily go through the duties that are required without with joy and comfort 2. Exercise saith in the work and office of the Holy Ghost I mean that work and office to which the Holy Ghost is designed by the Father and the Son both to help his people and to be the Comforter of his people 1. The holy Ghost is designed to help his people Likewise the Spirit helpeth our infirmities the word in the Original † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 14.26 and 15.26 doth properly imply such an help Rom. 8.26 as when another man of strength and ability steppeth in to sustain the burthen that lyeth upon weak shoulders why this makes Christs Burthen light we do not bear all the weight for the holy Ghost puts under his shoulder 2. The Holy Ghost is designed to comfort his People Christ calls him the Spirit the Comforter because he brings in a kind of spiritual joy and spiritual comfort Mark it is not a natural but a spiritual joy Oh what a vast difference is there betwixt the comforts of a carnal heart and the comforts of the godly The one comes from a little meat or drink or creature vanity but the other comes from the exercise of Faith about the office of the Holy Ghost who is designed to this work surely here is the way to carry on duty sweetly and comfortably and with delight i.e. to be in the exercise of faith on the work and office of the Holy Ghost as he is our Helper and Comforter 1 Pet. 2.9 1 Pet. 2.9 3. Understand what is in Christian Religion and in the practise of it to cause delight As. 1. In every duty and gracious acting of it there is more of the Glory of God than in the whole frame of Heaven and Earth besides Herein is my Father glorified that you bear much Fruit John 15.8 Oh if we but thus looked at the profession and practice of Christian Religion we could not but take pleasure in it 2. In every duty and gracious acting of it there is the seed of glory and eternal life sometimes there breaks out in the very exercise of duty a joy in the Holy Ghost a foretast of Glory but howsoever there is the seed of Glory and though the seed of Glory be not seen but lye as it were under ground dead and unseen yet in time it will spring up unto eternal life why thus look at the practice of Religion and it will be sweeter to us than Honey and the Honey-Comb it will be more precious than Gold yea than much fine Gold But how should we know the difference betwixt the natural pleasantness and this Quest 2 spiritual pleasantness in Religion I know Christians may put a lustre upon the wayes of God by their natural pleasantness and chearfulness of spirit but because we speak of a spiritual joy and comfort and not of a natural wherein lies the difference I answer 1. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it will be serious I have said of laughter it is mad Answ Eccles 2.2 and of mirth what doth it There is much lightness and vanity in such breakings out of natural pleasantness but in spiritual pleasantness all is grave and sober and exceeding serious 2. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it can stand with repentance and humiliation and the fear of God rejoyce with trembling saith the Psalmist
me 10. Now he discovered his obedience to his Father in preaching the Gospel up and down He foresaw that the night drew on in which no man could work and therefore now he hastned to do his Fathers business now he pours out whole Cataracts of holy Lessons and still the people drew water from this Fountain which streamed out in continual emanations he added wave to wave and line to line and precept to precept and at last he gave them his farewel Sermon which is the most spiritual and comfortable piece that ever was uttered it comprehends the intentions of his departure to prepare places for his Saints in Heaven and in the mean while he would send them the holy Ghost to supply his room to furnish them with proportionable comforts to enable them with gifts to lead them into all truth and to abide with them for ever In conclusion of all he gave them his blessing and prayed for them and then having sung an hymn he goes away and prepares for his sufferings Rom. 5.19 2. Hitherto of the obedience of Christ what was it but a visible commentary of Gods Law but now for its influence on us By the obedience of one many shall be made righteous Observe The righteousness of the Law fulfilled and fully accomplished in the person of Christ is as truly ours if we believe in Christ as if it were in our selves or as if the Law had been fulfilled in our own persons Rom. 10.4 Thus Christ is the end of the Law saith the Apostle for righteousness to every one that believeth Christ hath not only determined and put an end to the Ceremonial Law but he is also the end of the moral Law he hath perfectly in his own person accomplished the Moral Law and that not for himself but for righteousness to every one that truly believes in him Rom. 8.4 And God sent his Son that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us These words in us much trouble Interpreters for though we believe yet are we imperfectly holy how then should the Law be fulfilled in us But 't is answered that the righteousness of the Law is fulfilled in us not by inhesion or sanctification but by imputation and application i.e. in our nature which Christ took upon him it was in Christ and is imputed unto us and so the righteousness of the Law is fulfilled in us It is well observed of Beza that the Apostle saith not That the Righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled by us or of us or by any Righteousness inherent in our own persons but in us because it is to be found in Christ whose members we are who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit The point is sweet but I cannot stay on it In reference to what I have spoken of the righteousness of Christ habitual and actual a great controversie is risen in our dayes of which in the next Section SECT V. Of the great controversie whether we are not justified by the passive righteousness of Christ only without any consideration had to the righteousness of Christ either inherent in him or performed by him FOr my part I am for the negative upon these well known grounds Argu. 1 1. By what alone the Law is not fully satisfied by that alone we are not justified but by the passive obedience of Christ alone the Law is not fully satisfied therefore by his passive obedience only we are not justified Thus far I grant that the Law is fully satisfied by his passive obedience in respect of the penalty therein threatned but not in respect of the Commandment for the obtaining of the blessedness therein promised and the righteousness of the Law is thus described Rom. 10.5 that the man which doth these things shall live by them Against this are divers exceptions of the Adversaries As 1. That the Law is satisfied either by doing that which is commanded or by sufferring the punishment which is threatned Answ It is true in respect of the penal Statutes of men but not in respect of the Commandments of God in which there is not only a penalty threatned but a blessedness promised if man had continued in his integrity the Law might have been satisfied by obedience only but being fallen into a state of disobedience two things are necessarily required to the fulfilling of the Law i.e. the bearing of the penalty and the performing of the Command the one to escape Hell and the other to obtain Heaven 2. They except that whosoever are freed from Hell are also admitted to Heaven Answ The reason thereof is because Christ who did bear the punishment to free us from Hell did also fulfil the Commands to bring us to Heaven but howsoever these two benefits of Christ do alwayes concur in the party justified as the causes thereof concurred in Christ who not only did both obey and suffer but in obeying suffered and in suffering obeyed yet both the causes between themselves and the effects between themselves are carefully to be distinguished for as it is one thing to obey the Commandment and another thing to suffer the punishment so it is one thing to be freed from Hell by Christ his suffering the penalty and another thing to be intitled to Heaven by Christ his fulfilling the Commandments 3. They except that God is a most free Agent and therefore he may if he will justifie men by the passive righteousness of Christ only without fulfilling of the Law Answ What God may do if he will I will not dispute but sure I am that he justifieth men according to his will revealed in his Word and there we find that as we are justified from our sins by the Blood of Christ so also we are made just by the active though not only by the active obedience of Christ For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous And if when we were enemies Rom. 5.19 we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Rom. 5.10 by his life which he lived before his death and by his life which he lived and doth live after his death by the acts of his life before his death meritoriously and by the acts of his life after his death as by his resurrection ascension session and intercession effectually Christ is made unto us of God saith the Apostle both redemption and righteousness redemption to deliver us from sin 1 Cor. 1.30 Dan. 9.24 and righteousness to bring in everlasting righteousness 4. They except that if we are justified by Christ his fulfilling the Law then we are justified by a legal righteousness but we are not justified by a legal righteousness but by such a righteousness as without the Law is revealed in the Gospel Answ The same righteousness by which we are justified is both legal and evangelical in divers respects
manner of conversation Then is Christ's life mine when my actions refer to him as my Copy when I transcribe the Original of Christ's life as it were to the life Alas what am I better to observe in the life of Christ his Charity to his Enemies his Reprehensions of the Scribes and Pharisees his subordination to his heavenly Father his ingenuity towards all men his effusions of love towards all the Saints if there be no likeness of all this in my own actions The Life of Jesus is not described to be like a Picture in a chamber of Pleasure only for beauty and entertainment of the eye but like the Egyptain Hieroglyphicks whose very feature is a precept whose Images converse with men by sense and signification of excellent discourses to this purpose 2 Cor. 3.18 saith Paul we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed in the same Image from Glory to Glory Christ is the Image of his Father and we are the Images of Christ Christ is Gods Masterpeice and the most excellent device and work and frame of heaven that ever was or ever shall be now Christ being the top-excellency of all he is most fit to be the the pattern of all excellencies whatsoever and therefore he is the Image the Idea the Pattern the Platform of all our sanctification Come then O my soul look unto Jesus and look into thy self yea and look and look till thou art more transformed into his likeness Is it so that thou art changed into the same image with Christ took into his disposition as it is set forth in the Gospel look into his carriage look into his conversation at home and abroad and then reflecting on thy self look there and tell me canst thou find in thy self a disposition suitable to his disposition a carriage sutable to his carriage a conversation sutable to his conversation art thou every way like him in thy measure in Gospel allowance in some sweet resemblance why then here 's another ground of hope O rejoyce in it and bless God for it 3. If Christs life be mine then shall I admire adore believe and obey this Christ All these were the effects of those several passages in Christ's life respectively 1. They admire at his Doctrine and Miracles Luke 4.22 Matth. 15.31 For his Doctrine all bear him witness and wondered at those gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth and for his Miracles they wondred and they glorified the God the God of Israel yea sometimes their admiration was so great that they were sore amazed in themselves beyond measure and wondred Mark 6.51 Luke 9.43 They were amazed at the mighty Power of God and they wondred every one at all things which Jesus did 2. And as they admired so they adored there came a Leaper and worshipped him Matth. 8.2 Matth. 9.18 Matth. 14.33 saying if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and there came a Ruler and worshipped him saying My Daughter is even now dead come lay thy hand on her and she shall live and they that were in the Ship came and worshipped saying of a truth thou art the Son of God The very worshipping of Christ confesseth thus much that he is the Son of God 3. And as they adored so they believed If thou canst believe said Christ to the Father of the possessed Child all things are possible to him that believeth Mark 9.23 24. and straight way he cried out and said with tears Lord I believe help thou my unbelief And when many of his Disciples fell away then said Jesus to the twelve will ye also go away Peter answers for the rest to whom shall we go Why Lord we believe John 6.66 69. and are sure that thou art the Christ the Son of the living God not only worshipping of Christ but believing in Christ is a right acknowledgment that Christ is God Rom. 6.17 Mat. 4.19 20 22. 4. And as they believed so they obeyed ye have obeyed from the heart said Paul to the Romans that form of Doctrine which was delivered to you no sooner Peter and Andrew heard the voice of Christ follow me but they left all and followed him and no sooner James and John heard the same voice of Christ follow me but they left all and followed him Matth. 9.9 John 8.31 and no sooner Matthew sitting at the receipt of custom heard that voice of Christ follow me but he rose and followed him Why then are ye my Disciples indeed said Christ to the believing Jews if ye continue in my word Come then put thy self O my soul to the test thou hast seen and heard the wonderfull passages of Christ's Life the Baptism of Christ the Fasting of Christ the Temptations of Christ the Manifestations of Christ the Doctrine of Christ the Miracles of Christ the Holiness of Christ and is this the issue of all Dost thou now begin to admire and adore and believe and to obey this Christ is thy heart warmed thy affections kindled Forbs tells us that the word of God hath three degrees of opperation in the hearts of his chosen first it falleth to mens ears as the sound of many waters a mighty great and confused sound and which commonly brings neither terrour nor joy but yet a wandering and acknowledgment of a strange force and more than humane power this is that effect which many felt hearing Christ when they were astonished at his Doctrine as teaching with authority Mat. 1.22 27. Luke 4.32 John 7.46 what manner of Doctrine is this never man spake like this man the next effect is the voice of thunder which bringeth not only wonder but fear also not only filleth the ears with sound and the heart with astonishment but moreover shaketh and terrifieth the conscience the third effect is the sound of harping while the Word not only ravisheth with admiration and striketh the Conscience with terror but also lastly filleth it with sweet peace and joy In the present case give me leave to ask O my soul art thou struck into a maze at the mighty Miracles and divine Doctrine of Jesus Christ dost thou fall down and worship him as the Lord and thy God dost thou believe in him and relie on him for Life and Salvation dost thou obey him and follow the Lamb which way soever he goes dost thou act from Principles of Grace in newness of life and holiness of conversation dost thou walk answerably to the commands of Jesus Christ or at least is there in thee an earnest endeavour so to walk and is it the sorrow of thy soul when thou observest thy failings and dost thou rejoyce in spirit when thou art led by the Spirit why then here 's another ground hope that virtue is gone of Christ's life into thy soul 4. If Christ's life be mine then I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 Paul speaks out this evidence I am crucified
saw thee in danger of death through thy own unbelief for except thou sawest in his hands the print of the nails and put thy finger into the print of the nails except thou hadst clear manifestations of Christ even to thine own sense thou wouldest not believe he condescends so far to succour thy weakness as to manifest himself by several witnesses three in heaven and three on earth yea he multiplies his three on earth to thousands of thousands so many were the signes witnessing Christ that the Disciple which testified of them John 21.25 could say If they should be written every one the world could not contain the Books that should be written 4. When he saw the buying and selling in the Temple yea making Merchandize of the Temple it self I mean of thy Soul which is the Temple of the holy Ghost he steps in to whip out those Buyers and Sellers those Lusts and Corruptions O cries he will you sell away your souls for Trash O what is a man profitted though he gain the whole world and lose his own Soul Prov. 30.2 3. 5. When he saw thee like the horse and mule more brutish than any man not having the understanding of a man thou neither learnedst wisdom nor hadst the knowledge of the most holy he came with his instructions adding line unto line and precept on precept teaching and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and sealing his truths with many Miracles Mat. 4.23 that thou maist believe and in believing thou mightest have life through his Name and Oh! what is this but to make thee wise unto salvation 6. When he saw thee a sinner of the Gentiles a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and without God in the world he sent his Apostles and Messengers abroad and bad them preach the Gospel to thee q. d. Go to such a one in the dark corner of the world an Isle at such a distance from the Nation of the Jews and set up my Throne amongst that people open the most precious Cabinet of my Love there and amongst that People tell such a Soul that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom he is one O admirable Love 7. When he saw thee cast down in thy self and refusing thy own Mercy crying and saying what is it possible that Jesus Christ should send a Message to such a dead Dog as I am why the Apostles Commission seems otherwise Go not into the way of the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 6. or into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not but go rather to the lost sheep of the House of Israel O I am a lost sheep but not being of the House of Israel what hope is there that ever I should be found He then appeared and even then he spred his arms wide to receive thy soul he satisfied thee then of another Commission given to his Apostles Go teach all Nations And he cried even then Come unto me thou that art weary and heavy laden with sin and I will receive thee into my bosom Mat. 28.19 and give thee rest there 8. When he saw thee in suspence and heard thy complaint But if I come shall I find sweet welcome I have heard that his ways are narrow and straight Oh it is an hard passage and an high ascent up to heaven Many seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.24 Oh! what shall become of my poor Soul why then he told thee otherwise Prov. 3.17 that all his ways were ways of pleasantness and all his paths peace he would give thee his Spirit that should bear the weight and make all light he would sweeten the ways of Christianity to thee that thou shouldest find by experience that his yoke was easie Mat. 11.29 and his burden was light 9. When he saw the wretchedness of thy Nature and original pollution he took upon him thy Nature and by this means took away thy original sin O here is the lovely Object What is it but the absolute holiness and perfect purity of the Nature of Christ This is the fairest Beauty that ever eye beheld this is that compendium of all Glories now if Love be a motion and union of the Appetite to what is lovely how shouldst thou flame forth in loves upon the Lord Jesus Christ this is rendered as the reason of those sparklings Thou art fairer than the children of men Psal 45.2 10. When he saw thee actually unclean a transgressor of the Law in thought word Heb. 10.9 and deed then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God and wherefore would he do Gods will but meerly on thy behalf O my Soul canst thou read over all these passages of Love and dost thou not yet cry out O stay me comfort me for I am sick of Love Can a man stand by an hot and fiery furnace and never be warmed Oh for an heart in some measure answerable to these Loves Surely even good natures hate to be in debt for love and is therein thee O my soul neither grace nor yet good nature O God forbid awake awake thy ardent love towards the Lord Jesus Christ why thou art rock and not flesh if thou beest not wounded with these heavenly darts Christ loves thee is not that enough fervent affection is apt to draw love where is little or no beauty and excellent beauty is apt to draw the heart where there is no answer of affection at all but when these two meet together what breast can hold against them See O my soul here is the sum of all the particulars thou hast heard Christ loves thee and Christ is lovely his heart is set upon thee who is a thousand times fairer than all the children of men doth not this double consideration like a mighty loadstone snatch thy heart unto it and almost draw it forth of thy very breast O sweet Saviour thou couldst say even of thy poor Church though labouring under many imperfections Thou hast ravished my Heart Cant. 4.9 10. my Sister my Spouse thou hast ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck how fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse how much better is thy love than wine and the smell of thy oyntments than all Spices Couldst thou O blessed Saviour be so taken with the incurious and homely features of the Church and shall not I much more be enamoured with thy absolute and divine Beauty It pleased thee my Lord out of thy sweet ravishments of thy heavenly love to say to thy poor Church Turn away thine Eyes from me for they have overcome me but Oh let me say to thee Turn thine eyes to me that they may overcome me my Lord Cant. 6.5 I would be thus ravished I would be overcome I would be thus out of my self that I might be all in thee Thus is the Language of true love to Christ but alas how dully and flatly do I speak
man have a quarrel against any even as Christ forgave you so also do ye 1 Pet. 1.15 16. And as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy Against this some object how can we be holy as Christ is holy first the thing is impossible and secondly if we could there would be no nee● of Christ But I answer to the first the thing if rightly understood is not impossible we are commanded to be holy as Christ is holy not in respect of equality as if our holiness must be of the same compass with the holiness of Christ but in respect of quality our holiness must be of the same stamp and truth as the holiness of Christ as when the Apostle saith That we must love our neighbor as our self the meaning is Rom. 13.9 not that our love to our neighbor should be Mathematically equal to the love of our self for the Law doth allow of degrees in love accordingly to the degrees of relation in the thing beloved Rom. 12.9 Do good unto all men specially to those of the houshold of faith love to a friend may safely be greater than love to a stranger or love to a wife or child may safely be greater than to a friend yet in all our love to others it must be of the self same nature as true as real as cordial as sincere as solid as that to our selves We must love our neighbor as our selves i.e. unfeignedly and without dissimulation Again I answer to the second Christ is needful notwithstanding our utmost holiness in two respects 1. Because we cannot come to full and perfect holiness and so his grace is requisite to pardon and cover our failings 2. Because that which we do attain unto it is not of or from our selves and so his spirit is requisite to strengthen us unto his service We must be holy as Christ is holy yet still we must look at the holiness of Christ as the sun and root and fountain and that our holiness is but as a beam of that sun but as a branch of that root but as a stream of that fountain For the third how we must conform to this life I answer 1. Let us frame to our selves some Idea of Christ let us set before us the life of Christ in the whole and all the parts of it as we find it recorded in God's Book It would be a large picture if I should draw it to the full but for a taste I shall give it in few lines Now then setting aside the consideration of Christ as God or as Mediator or as Head of his Church 1. I look at the mind of Christ at his judgment will affections such as love joy delight and the rest and especially at the compassions of Jesus Christ O the dear affections and compassions which Christ had towards the sons of men this was his errand from Heaven and while he was upon the earth he was ever acting it I mean his pitifulness Luke 4.18 Psal 147.3 I mean his affections and compassion in healing broken hearts so the Psalmist He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds it is spoken after the manner of a Chirurgion he had a tender heart towards all broken hearts he endeavoured to put all broken bones into their native place again nor speak I thus only of him in respect of his office but as he was man he had in him such a mind that he could not but compassionate all in misery O what bowels what stirrings and boylings and wrestlings of a pained heart touched with sorrow was ever upon occasion in Jesus Christ Matth. 14.1 Mark 6.34 peruse these texts and Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude and he was moved with compassion towards them and he healed their sick And Jesus when he came out saw much people and was moved with compassion towards them because they were as sheep not having a shepherd Mark 1.40 41. And there came a leper to him and kneeling down to him and saying to him if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and Jesus moved with compassion put forth his hand and touched him saying I will be thou clean Then Jesus called his disciples unto him Mat. 15.32 and said I have compassion on the multitude And for the two blind men that cried out Have mercy on us O Lord thou son of David Matth. 20.34 Luke 15.20 it is said that Jesus stood still and he had compassion on them and touched their eyes And the poor prodigal returning When he was yet a great way off his Father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him How sweet is this last Instance that our sense of sinful weakness should be sorrow and pain to the bowels and heart of Jesus Christ you that are Parents of young Children let me put the case if some of you standing in the relation of a Father should see his Child sweat and wrestle under an over-load till his back were almost broken and that you should hear him cry Oh I am gone I faint I sinck I dye would not your bowels be moved to pity and would not your hands be stretched out to help or if some of you standing in the relation of a Mother should see your sucking Child fallen into a pit and wrestling with the water and crying for help would you not stir nor be moved in heart nor run to deliver the Child from being drowned Surely you would and yet all this pity and compassion of yours is but as a shadow of the compassions and dear affections that were and that are in the heart of Jesus Christ O he had a mind devoid of sin and therefore it could not but be full of pity mercy and tender bowels of compassion 2. I look at the grace in Christ O he was full of grace yea full of all the graces of the Spirit Cant. 1.13 14. A bundle of Mirrh is my well-beloved to me My Beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi a bundle of Myrrh and a cluster of camphire denote all the graces of the Spirit as many flowers are bound together in a nosegay so the variety of the graces of the Spirit concenter'd in the heart of Jesus Christ ex gr Matth. 21.5 1. In him was meekness He cometh unto thee meek he had a sweet command and moderation of his anger Num. 12.3 he was meek as Moses nay though Moses was very meek and very meek above all the men that were upon the face of the earth yet Christ's meekness exceeded Mose's as the body doth exceed the shadow 2. In him was humility he saved not the world by his power but by his humility in his incarnation Christ would be humble and therefore he was born of a poor Virgin in a common Inn in his
the Day of his espousals And this we shall do the next hour SECT V. Of Christ brought forth and sentenced ABout ten Christ was brought forth and sentenced 1. For his bringing forth I shall therein observe these particulars As 1. We find Pilate bringing forth Jesus out of the common Hall and shewing this sad spectacle to all the People John 19.5 Then came Jesus forth wearing the Crown of Thorns and the purple Robe and Pilate saith unto them behold the Man he thought the very sight of Christ would have moved them to compassion they had lash'd him almost unto death they had most cruelly divided those azure channels of his guiltless Blood they had cloathed him with Purple crowned him with Thorns and now they bring him out by the hair of the head say some and expose him to the Publick view of the scornful company Pilate crying unto them Behold the man q. d. Behold a poor silly miserable distressed man behold I say not your King to provoke you against him nor yet the Son of God which you say he makes himself to be but behold the man a mean man a worm and no man behold how he stands disfigured with wounds behold him weltring and panting in a crimson river of his own gore blood and let this sufficient yea more than sufficient punishment suffice to satisfie your rage what would you have more if it be for malice that you are so violent against him behold how miserable he is if for fear behold how contemptible he is As for any fault whereby he should deserve his death I find no fault in him he is a Lamb without spot a Dove without gall O come and behold this man I can find no fault in him Some Doctors affirm that while Pilate cryed out behold the man his servants lifted up the purple robe that so all might see his torn and bloody and macerated body he supposed his words could not so move their hearts as Christ's wounds and therefore said he Behold the man as if he had said again Look on him and view him well is he not well paid for calling himself King of the Jews now see him stript and whipt and crowned with thorns and scepter'd with a reed anoynted with spittle and cloathed with purple what would you more 2. We find the Jews more inraged against Jesus John 19.6 When the chief Priests and Officers saw him they cryed out saying crucifie him crucifie him The more Pilate endeavours to appease them the more were the people enraged against him and therefore they cry away with him away with him crucifie him crucifie him Ver. 15. Jer. 12.8 Now was fulfilled that prophesie of Jeremy My heritage is unto me as a Lion in the forrest it cryeth out against me The Naturalists report of the Lion that when he is near to his prey he gives out a mighty roar whereby the poor hunted beast is so amazed and terrified that almost dead with fear he falls flat on the ground and so becomes the Lions prey indeed And thus the Jews who were the heritage of the Lord were unto Christ as a Lion in the forrest they hunted and pursued him to his death and being near it they give out a mighty shout that the earth rung again Away with him away with him crucifie him crucifie him O ye Jews children of Israel seed of Abraham Isaac and Jacob is not this he concerning whom your fathers cryed O that thou wouldst rent the heavens Isa 64.1 that thou wouldst come down that the mountains might flow down at thy presence How is it that you should despise him present whom they desired absent How is it that your cry and theirs should be so contrary The Panther say they is of so sweet a savour that if he be but within the compass of scent all the beasts of the field run towards him but when they see his ugly visage they fly from him and run away so the Jews afar off feeling the sweet savours of Christ's Oyntments they cryed Draw me Cant. 1.2 we will run after thee come Lord Jesus come quickly but now in his passion looking on his form they change their note He hath no form or comeliness there is no beauty Isa 53.2 that we should desire him away with him away with him 3. We find Pilate and the Jews yet debating the business Pilate is loath to pronounce the sentence and the chiefest of the Jews provoke him to it with a threefold argument As 1. They had a law and by their law he ought to dye John 19.7 Ejus absolvere cujus est condere legem because he made himself the Son of God thus the Doctors of the Law do accuse the Author and Publisher of the Law but they consider not the rule concerning Laws He may lawfully abolish who hath power to establish nor did they consider that this Law concerned not himself who is indeed and in truth the Son of God the Text tells us that Pilate hearing this argument was the more afraid Pilate saith Cyril was an heathen idolater and so worshipping many Gods he could not tell but that Christ might be one of them and therefore in condemning Christ he might justly provoke all the Gods to be revenged of him This was the meaning of Pilate's question Whence art thou what is thy Off-spring of what Progenitors art thou sprung And from thence forth Pilate sought to release him 2. The Jews come with another Argument they threaten Pilate John 19.12 If thou let this man go thou art not Cesar's friend a forcible reason as the case then stood it was no small matter to be accused by so many audacious impudent men of high treason against Cesar and therefore under this obligation Pilate seems to bend and bow whom the fear of Christ's Divinity had restrained him the fear of Cesar's frown provoked to go on to sentence and condemnation Oh he was more afraid of man whose breath is in his nostrils than of God himself who made the heavens and framed the world Matth. 27 24. And yet before he gives sentence he takes water and washeth his hands before the multitude saying I am innocent of the blood of this just person see ye to it 3. In reference to this they engage themselves for him which was their last argument Matth. 27.25 His blood be upon us and our children q. d. act thou as Judge let him be condemned to dye and if thou fearest any thing we will undergo for thee let the vengeance of his blood be on us and on our children for ever Thus far of the first general John 19.13 2. For the sentence it self When Pilate heard that he sate down in the judgment seat in a place that is called the pavement because erected of stones but in the Hebrew Gabbatha This word signifies an high place and raised above it was so on purpose that the Judges might be seen of men when
not ascended into heaven whence the Spirit should come q. d. forbear Mary if this be the meaning of thy complement hands off O touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father 2. Others think that Mary was forbidden to touch because of her unbelief she had not the least thought till just now that Christ was risen or that he should ascend and therefore she deserved not the least favour at his hands q. d. Touch me not Noli me tangere quia in fide tua nondum resurrexi ad gloriae statum perveni Hieronym Epist 95. c. ad-Hedibiam for in thy faith I am not risen nor shall I ascend unto my Father thou complainest of men they have taken away my Lord thou seekest for the living among the dead and therefore thou art unworthy of a touch or any approach O touch me not 3. Others think that Christ forbade Mary's touch because she looked upon it as the most manifest confirmation of her faith touching Christ's resurrection There was a more sure and certain evidence of this thing than touching or feeling and the discovery of that was to be after his ascention when the holy Ghost should be given q. d. touch me not for I would not have my resurrection chiefly approved by the judgment of sense Noli me tangere noli meam resurrectionem judicio sensuum comprobare sed parumper expecta tempes meae ascensionis missionis spiritus sancti tunc longe melius tenacius percipies veritatem resurrectionis meae quam modo me contingens Bern. Ser. 28. in Cant. rather expect a while till I ascend to my Father in heaven for then I will send the holy ghost and he shall declare the truth and certainty of my resurrection far surer and better 4. Others think that this touch was forbidden Mat. 28.9 Vt ostenderet manifestum castitatem sanctimoniam persanctificationem dixit Mariae ne me attingas Epiphan haeresii 26. propefinem that Christ might shew his approbation of chastity and sanctity and inward purity Mary was now alone with Christ and that he might give an example of most pure chastity he forbids her touch which afterwards in presence of others he admits her and other women too for so it is said that they came and held him by the feet and worshipped him And to this exposition the reason affixed doth well agree for I am not yet ascended to my Father q. d. for an example of holy chastity touch me not now but hereafter in heaven I will give thee leave when men and women shall be as the holy Angels and shall neither marry nor be given in marriage then mayest thou touch there will be no need of the like example then as now then I will not forbid thee but till then especially if thou art alone Oh touch me not 5. Others think that Mary too much doated upon that present condition of Jesus Christ she looked upon it as the highest pitch of Christ's exaltation she desired no more happiness than to enjoy him in that same condition wherein now she saw him Ne pristina illa familiaritate qua eum in carne mortalem intuebatur per tractaret judicans post resurrectionem gloriam reverentius gravius cum illo agendum esse Chrisost hom 58. in Johan and thereupon said Christ touch me not for I am not yet ascended q. d. O Mary fix not thy thoughts so much upon my present condition in as much as this is not the highest pitch of my exaltation I am not as yet attained to that nor shall I attain to it untill I ascend the degrees of my exaltation are first my resurrection 2. My ascension 3. My session at Gods right hand but that is not yet 6. Others think that Mary carryed it with too much familiarity towards Christ she looked upon Christ as she did formerly she had not that reverence or respect of Christ as she ought to have had she differenced not the mortal state of Christ from his new glorified state after this resurrection whereas with him the case was quite altered he is risen in a far otherwise condition than he was for now his corruptible hath put on incorruption and his mortal hath put on immortality he dyed in weakness and dishonour but he is risen again in power and glory and as in another state so to another end he was not now to stay upon earth or to converse here any longer but to ascend up into heaven q. d. though I be not yet ascended to my Father yet I shall shortly ascend and therefore measure not thy demeanor towards me by the place where I am but by that which was due to me and when thou wilt rather with reverence fall down a far off than with such familiarity seem to touch me Thus touch me not 7. Others think this prohibition was only for that time and that because he had greater business for her in hand Christus non aliud prohibivit Magdalenae quam ne nimium temporis absumeret proututea solebat ad pedes ejus sed quam citius inde se expediret ut de ejus resurrectione certiores faceret fratre suos Card. Tolet. sup Cap. 20. Joh. Christ was not willing now to spend time in complements but to dispatch her away upon that errand Go to my brethren c. And the reason following suits with this comment for I am not yet ascended to my Father q. d. thou needest not so hastily to touch me now for I am not yet ascended though I be going yet I am not gone another time will be allowed and thou mayst do it at better leasure only forbear now and the first thing thou dost go to my brethren it will do them more good to hear of my rising than it will do thee good to stand here touching and holding and embracing and therefore in this respect now touch me not Christus loquitur de tactu de ascensione non corporali sed spirituali Etexinde Magdalena a Christ Domino illuminata fuit ut deinceps non solum credideret sed alias feminas ad credendum instruerit vid. Aug. Tract 21. in Ioh. Serm. 60. de verbis Domini 252. 155. de tempore Ambros Luc. Ultim lib. de Isaac anima c 5. Ser. 58. 8. Others think that Christ in these words meant to wean her from all sensual touching and to teach her a new and Spiritual touch by the hand of faith and to this sense the reason agrees well for I am not yet ascended or I shall quickly ascend unto my Father till Christ were ascended she might be touching with a sensual touch but that would neither continue nor do her any good but if she would learn the Spiritual touch no ascending could hinder that one that is in heaven might be touched so and hence it is that if now we will but send up our faith we may touch Christ to
where they were sitting to signifie that all the other houses in Jerusalem felt none of this mighty rushing wind there was no assembly of Saints in any part of the City but only in this house or if any other assembly might be this Spirit blew upon none of them where these men were not that and only that house is filled where they were sitting And this point of blowing upon one certain place is a property very suitable to the Spirit of God the wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof John 3.8 but canst not tell whence it cometh nor whether it goeth so is every one that is born of the Spirit The Spirit blows where it will and upon whom it will and they shall plainly feel it and others about them not one jot have we not sometimes the experiences of this in our very congregations one sound is heard one breath doth blow and it may be one or two and no more hears the sound or feels the breath inwardly savingly it may be one here and another there shall feel the Spirit shall be affected and touched with it sensibly but twenty on this side them and forty on that side them sit all becalmed and go their way no more moved than when they came into Gods presence Oh that this Spirit of the Lord would come daily and constantly into our congregations Oh that it would blow through them and through them O that it would fill every soul in the assembly with the breath of heaven come holy Spirit awake O North-Wind Cant 4.16 and come thou South-Wind and blow upon our Gardens that the spices thereof may flow out 6. He came down in the form of Tongues As one saith well This Wind brought Tongues even a whole showre of Tongues The Apostles were not only inspired for their now benefit but they had gifts bestowed on them to impart the benefit to more their themselves But why did the holy Ghost appear like Tongues I answer 1. The Tongue is a symbole of the holy Ghosts proceeding from the Word of the Father as the Tongue hath the nearest affinity with the word and is moved by the word of the heart to express the same by the sound of the voice so the holy Ghost hath the nearest affinity that may be with the Word of God and is the expresser of his voice and the speaker of his will 2. The Tongue is the sole instrument of Knowledge which conveighs the same from man to man though the Soul be the Fountain from whence all wisdom springs yet the Tongue is the Channel and the conduit-pipe whereby this Wisdom and Knowledge is communicated and Tansferred from man to man in like manner the holy Ghost is the sole Author and Teacher of all Truth though Christ be the Wisdom of God yet the holy Ghost is the Teacher of this Wisdom to men And hence it is that the holy Ghost appeared in the form of Tongues And yet not meerly in the form of Tongues but thus qualified 1. They were Cloven Tongues to signifie that the Apostles should speak in divers Languages if there must be a calling of the Gentiles they must needs have the Tongues of the Gentiles wherewith to call them if they were debtors not only to the Jews Rom 1.14 but to the Grecians nor only to the Grecians but to the Barbarians also then must they have the tongues not only of the Jews but of the Grecians and Barbarians to pay this debt and to discharge this duty of go and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 Surely this gift was bestowed for the propagating of the Gospel far and wide The tongues were cloven that the Apostles might speak all Languages and that all Nations of the World whithersoever they came might hear them and understand them speaking in their own Tongues 2. They were fiery Tongues to signifie that there should be an efficacy or fervour in their speaking the World was so over-whelmed with ignorance and errour that the Apostles lips had need to be touched with a coal from the Altar Tongues of flesh would not serve the turn nor words of air but there must be fire put into the Tongue and Spirit of life into the words they speak with such a tongue Christ speak himself when they said of him did not our hearts burn within us Luke 24.32 while he spake unto us by the way and with such a tongue Peter spake at this time Acts 2.73 something like fire fell from him on their hearts when they were pricked in their hearts and said men and brethren what shall we do Oh that we of the Ministry had these fiery Tongues O that the Spirit would put his live-coal into our speeches Oh that our Sermons were warming Sermons may we not fear that the Spirit is gone whiles the people are dead and we are no more lively in our Ministry it is said of Luther that when he heard one preach very faintly cold cold sayes he this is cold preaching here 's no heat at all to be gotten Oh when the Spirit comes it comes with a tongue of fire instead of words sparks of fire will fall from us on the hearts of hearers 3. These cloven tongues sate upon each of them to signifie their constancy and continuance they did not light and touch and away after the manner of butterflies but they sate they abode still they continued steddy without any stirring or starting This was the privy sign by which John the Baptist knew Jesus to be Christ upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him John 1.33 the same is he which Baptiseth with the holy Ghost It was not only the Spirits descending but the Spirit 's remaining on him Psal 51.10 that was the Sign The Spirit of God is a constant Spirit it abides on the Soul to whom it is given and therefore the Psalmist describes these great Transactions of Christ to this very end that the Spirit might dwell with us thou hast ascended on high Psal 68.18 thou hast led Captivity Captive thou hast received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell among them Not only that he might stay and lodg for a night as a way-fairing man that comes to his Inn and then is gone in the morning no no but that he might take up his residence and dwell in them I know it is a question whether the holy Ghost may be lost but certainly of the Elect he is never totally or wholly lost only I dare not say but as touching many gifts he may be lost even of the Elect themselves David after his sins was forced to cry Psal 51.11 12. cast me not away from thy presence O Lord and take not thy holy Spirit from me restore unto me the joy of thy Salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit we find here that in respect of some gifts even of regeneration the
Spirit is sometimes lost but that the godly should retain no remnants of the Spirit in their worst declinings I cannot imagine John teacheth expresly whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin 1 John 3.9 a sin unto death for his seed remaineth in him neither can he sin because he is born of God David in his fall lost the joy of his heart the purity of his conscience and many other gifts which he desired to have restored to him but the holy Ghost he had not utterly lost for if so how could he have prayed cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me I have done with the manner of the Spirits mission SECT X. Of the measure of the Holy Ghost now given 4. FOR the measure what or how much of the Spirit was now given this question is necessary because we bring in the Spirits mission after Christ's ascension as if the holy Ghost had not been given before this time That this was the time of the coming of the holy Ghost is very plain but that the holy Ghost was not given before this time we cannot say certainly the Prophets speak by him and the Apostles had him John 20.22 not only when they were first called but more fully when he breathed on them and said unto them receive yea the holy Ghost So that if ye study the reconciliation of these things I know not any way better than to put it on the measure or degrees of the Spirits mission I know some go about to reconcile it thus that the holy Ghost was given before secretly with grace but now he was given in a visible shape with power Others thus that the holy Ghost was before given in respect of Grace and Ministerial gifts but now he was given in respect of vertue or Ghostly ability to work Wonders and to speak with divers Languages But we find that the Prophets and Apostles before this had not only Grace and Ministerial gifts but a miraculous vertue even the Spirit of powerfull and extraordinary operation only here was the difference that before this the Spirit was but sprinkled as it were upon them but now it was poured upon them before this they were gently breathed on and refreshed with a small gale but now they were all blown upon with a mighty wind without controversie a difference there is in the Spirits mission And that some lay down chiefly in these three things As 1. In the manner of the Spirits mission to the old Church the Spirit came usually in dreams or visions or in a low still voice or in some latent ways but now he came in power in evidence and demonstration and therefore it is called Eph 1.17 1 King 19.11 12. the spirit of revelation and knowledge At the apparition of God to Elijah it is said that the Lord passed by and a great and strong wind rent the mountains and break in pieces the rocks before the Lord but the Lord was not in the wind and after the wind an earth-quake but the Lord was not in the earth-quake and ●fter the earthquake a fire but the Lord was not in the fire and after the fire a still small voice and then Elijah wrapped his face in his mantle as knowing the Lords presence was therein the Spirit came not of old save in a vision or dream or in a still small voice but now the Spirit came in a rushing mighty wind in fiery tongues in earth-quakes in so much Acts 4.31 that the place was shaken where they were assembled and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost the Spirit now made choice to come in such apparitions as should have in them a self-discovering property which would not be hidden and here is one difference 2. Another difference is in respect of the Subjects unto whom he was sent before now he came only upon the inclosed garden of the Jews but after the assension of Christ The Spirit was poured upon all flesh now every believer is of the Israel of God every Christian is a Temple of the holy Ghost now we receive the Spirit too or else it is wrong with us for If any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Act. 10.44 45. At Peters Sermon to Cornelius it is said that the holy Ghost fell on all them which hear the Word and they of the Circumcision which believed were astonyed because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Ghost It was some wonder at first even to the Apostles themselves but in this Sermon Peter acknowledges Act 10.34 35. Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of Persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is accepted with him Mark In every Nation upon all flesh I will pour out my spirit Here 's another difference 3. One difference more is in the measure of his mission At first he was sent only in drops and dew but now he was poured out in showers and abundance The holy Ghost saith Paul was shed on us abundantly through Jesus our Saviour Tit. 3.6 As there are degrees in the wind aura ventus procella a breath a blast a stiffe gale so we cannot deny degrees in the Spirit the Apostles at Christs resurrection received the Spirit but now they were filled with the Spirit then it was but a breath but now it was a mighty wind And indeed never was the like measure of the Spirit given to men as at this time the Fathers before this and we and our Fathers since this have but as it were a hint of the Spirit to their Epha such a pentecost as this never was but this never the like before or since it was Christ's Coronation-day the day of placing him in his throne when he gave these gifts unto men and therefore that day was all magnificence shewed above all other days Thus for the measure of the Spirit now given to the Church of Christ SECT II. Of the Reasons why the Holy Ghost was sent 5. FOR the Reasons why the Holy Ghost was sent they are several As 1. That all the prophesies concerning this mission might be accomplished Isa 32.15 Isaiah speaks of a time when the spirit should be poured upon us from on high and the wilderness should be a fruitfull field And Zachary Prophesies Zach. 12 10. that in that day I will pour upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem Joel 2.28 29. the spirit of grace and supplication And Joel prophesies yet more expresly It shall come to pass that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your old men shall dream dreames your young men shall see visions and also upon the servants and upon the hand-maids in those days I will pour out my spirit and they shall Prophesie This very Prophesie was cited by Peter
the sprrits of all just men made perfect with God if there be enough in God for Angels whose capacities are greater than the Saints if there be enough in God for Jesus Christ whose capacity is yet far wider than the Angels if there be enough in God for God himself whose capacity is infinitely greater than them all then there must needs be satisfaction enough in God to any one poor soul Here is another thing wherein God is our all in all we shall enjoy him fully 3. It consists in our enjoying God solely Not as if there were nothing else in Heaven but onely God but that God in Heaven shall be all in all and instead of all it is God in Heaven that makes Heaven to be Heaven the Saints blessedness and Gods own blessedness doth consist in the enjoyment of God himself the Schoole-men tells us that we shall not properly enjoy any thing else but only God we may have some use of the Creatures but no fruition and therefore is God said to be all or as good as all And indeed what can we imagine to be in Heaven which is not eminently in God himself if it be greatness power and glory and victory and majesty all these are his if it be joy or love or peace or beauty or any thing amiable or desirable all these are in him Hence some take it to be David's meaning when he said he had none in Heaven but God Psal 73.25 that the sole enjoyment of God of God and of nothing else but God is the souls true happiness when it is at highest whom have I in heaven but thee whom why there are Angels there are Saints there are the spirits of just and perfect men are these nothing with David O yes all these are good but they are not able to satisfie a soul without God himself Whether God will make use of any Creatures for our service then or if any of what Creatures and what use is more than I yet know but to make up a full enjoyment there is required a gracious-glorious presence a sweet effusion or communication of that presence a just comprehension of the excellency of that communication a perfect love and a perfect rest in the love of whatsoever it is we comprehend now this is proper only to God it is he only that fills the whole capacity of the Soul it is he that so fills it that it can hold no more it is he only that is the object of love intended to the utmost and therefore he only is properly enjoyed he only is possessed with a full contentment as portion enough and as reward enough for the soul for ever But shall not the Saints have to do with something else in Heaven but only with God O yes I believe there shall be in Heaven a communion of the blessed Spirits in God an association of the Saints and Angels of God yet this shall not take away the sole enjoyment of God that he should not be their all in all For they shall not mind themselves or their own good as created things but altogether God they shall not love them or one another as for themselves but only for God here we love God for himself and it is a gracious love but there we shall love our selves for God and 't is a glorious love why this is to enjoy God solely in this respect he is all and in all whom have I in Heaven but thee Here 's a point enough to wean us to the World Alas the time is coming on a pace Vse that all this World shall be dissolved and then God shall be all in all here lies the Saints happiness to have God immediately God fully and God solely and will not Saints prepare themselves for such a condition as this you that have the World use it as if not 1 Cor. 7.31 for the fashion of this World passeth away and you that have but a little to do with the World improve that condition surely 't is your own fault if you have not more to do with God for you have little else to take up your hearts God may dwell and walk in your hearts without disturbance give me neither poverty nor riches saith the wise man upon that account a mean condition is more capable of happyness than that which over-loads us with outward things whilst others are casting up their accounts you may say with David how precious are thy thoughts unto me O God Psal 139.17 how great is the sum of them whil'st others are following their suits at courts of Justice you may follow all you have at a Throne of grace whil'st others are numbring their Flocks and Heards all your Arithmetick may be imployed to number your days whilst others cannot get out of the clutches of the world you may get into the embraces of your God why this is to prepare your selves for fuller and fuller enjoyments of God it is God will be all in all and this is the very top of Heavens happyness surely the less you have of the World now if you can but improve it the more you may have of Heavens happiness even upon earth for what is the happiness of Heaven but the sole enjoyment of God Christians if you feel any inclinations pantings breathings after this world give me leave to tell you that you will never be happy till you have lost all till you have no friends nor estates no enjoyment but God alone when all his done when this world is nothing when means shall cease both for bodies and souls and when Christ shall cease his Mediators office and the Son of man be Subject to his Father then God shall be all in all SECT X. Of Christs notwithstanding this being all in all to his blessed saved redeemed Saints to all Eternity 10. FOR Christ's being all in all to his blessed saved redeemed Saints to all Eternity we shall dilate in this Section Some may object if God be all in all what then becomes of Christ is not this derogatory to Jesus Christ I answer no in no wise for 1. It is not the Father personally and only but the Deity essentially and wholly that is our all in all when we say God is all in all we do not exclude the Son and holy Ghost for the whole God-head is all in all to all the Saints as well as the first person in the Trinity the Father is all and the Son is all and the holy Ghost is all and in that Christ is God and the Son of God we may say of Christ that he is all in all only the truth of this position is not from the humane nature but from the divine nature of Jesus Christ 2. It is not derogatory to Christ but rather it doth exceedingly advance Christ in the thoughts of all his Saints while it was necessary Christ veyled his Deity and when his work of Mediation is fully finished Christ then shall reveal his Deity
Christs Resurrection and the coming down of the holy Ghost What was the meaning of this but to hold harmony and to keep correspondency with those memorable things as on the day of Pentecost fifty days after the feast of the Passeover the Israelites came to mount Sinai there received they the Law a memorable day with them and therefore called the feast of the Law so the very same day is accomplished that prophesie Out of Zion shall go forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem Isa 2.3 now was the promulgation of the Gospel called by James the Royal Law Jam. 2.8 as given by Christ our King and written in the hearts of his servants by this holy Ghost it seems to shadow out the great difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel the Law was given with terrour in lightning and thunder it discovers sin declares God's Wrath frights the Conscience but the Gospel is given without terrour there was no lightning and thunder now no no the holy Ghost slides down from heaven with grace and gifts and with great joy sits on the heads and in the hearts of his Saints 2. On the Jubilee or fiftyeth year was a great feast whence some observe that the Latines made their word Jubilo to take up a Merry Song though the word be derived from the Hebrew Jobel which signifies a Rams horn for then they blew with Rams horns as when they gathered the people to the Congregation they blew their Silver Trumpets There were many uses of this feast 1. For the general release of Servants 2. For the restoring of Lands unto their first owners who had sold them 3. For the keeping of a right chronology and reckoning of times for as the Greeks did reckon by their Olimpiads and the Latine by their Lustra so did the Hebrews by their Jubilees this falls fit with the proclaiming of the Gospel which is an act or tender of Gods most gracious general free pardon of all sins and of all the sinners in the World now was the sound of the Gospel made known unto all Acts 2.5 out of every Nation under heaven now was that spiritual Jubilee which Christians enjoy under Christ now was the remission published which exceeded the remission of the Jubilee as for as the Jubilee exceeded the remission of the Seventh year i.e. not only seven times but seventy times seven times Mat. 18.22 Lev. 23.17 20 3. On the day of Pentecost they offered the two wave-loaves called the bread of the first fruits unto the Lord. In like sort this very day the Lord of the harvest so disposing it the Apostles by the assistance and effectual working of the Spirit offered the first-fruits of their harvest unto the Lord Act. 2.41 for the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls We see the circumstance of time hath its due weight and is very considerable when the day of Pentecost was fully come then came the holy Ghost SECT VIII Of the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent 2. FOr the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent it is said to all that were with one accord in one place Act. 2.1 who they were it is not here exprest yet from the former chapter we may conjecture Acts 1.13 14. they were the twelve Apostles together with Joseph called Barsabas and the Women and Mary the Mother of Jesus and his brethren these all continued with one accord in one place for so was Christs command that they should not depart from Jerusalem but wait for the promise of the Father which saith he ye have heard of me This promise we read of in the Evangelists Act. 1.4 when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father John 15.26 even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he will testifie of me Luke 21.49 And behold I send the promise of the Father upon you but tarry ye in the City of Jerusalem until you be indued with power from on high It was the great promise of the Old Testament that Christ should partake of our humane Nature and it was the great promise of the New Testament that we should partake of his divine Nature he was cloathed with our flesh according to the former and we are invested with his Spirit according to the latter promise For this promise the Apostles and others had long waited and for the accomplishment they were now fitted and disposed 1. They had waited for it from the Ascention day till the feast of Pentecost he told them at the very instant of his Ascention that he would send the holy Ghost and therefore bid them stay together till that hour upon which command they waited Isa 28.16 and continued waiting until the day of Pentecost was fully come He that believeth shall not make hast saith Isaiah surely waiting is a Christian duty for the Vision is yet for an appointed time Hab. 2.3 but at the end it shall speak and shall not lye though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry Well may we wait and wait for him if we consider how God and Christ have waited for us and our conversion and especially if we consider that the Comforter will come and when he comes that he will abide with us for ever But 2. John 14.16 As they waited for the Spirit so they were rightly disposed to receive the Spirit for they were all with one accord in one place Mark here the qualifications of these persons they were all with one accord c. To those that accord in the Spirit given where is nothing but discord jars divisions fractions there is no Spirit of God for the Spirit is the Author of concord peace unity and amity he is the very essential unity love and love-knot of the two persons the Father and the Son even of God with God and he was sent to be the union love and love-knot of the two natures united in Christ even of God with man and can we imagine that essential unity will enter but where there is unity can the Spirit of unity come or remain but where there is unity of Spirit verily there is not there cannot be a more proper and peculiar a more true and certain disposition to make us meet for the Spirit then that quality in us that is likest to his nature and essence and that is unity love concord do we marvel that the spirit doth scarcely pant in us Alas we are not all of one accord the very first point is wanting to make us meet for the coming of the holy Ghost upon us We see the persons to whom the holy Ghost was sent they were they that were together with one accord in one place SECT IX Of the manner how the holy Ghost was sent 3. FOr the manner how he was sent or how he came to these Apostles we may observe these
particulars 1 He came suddenly which either shews the Majesty of the Miracle that is gloriously done which is suddenly done or the truth of the miracle there could be no imposture or fraud in it when the motion of it was so sudden or the purpose of the miracle which was to awake and affect them to whom it came usually sudden things startle us and make us look up We may learn to receive those holy motions of the spirit which sometimes come suddenly and we know not how I am perswaded the man breathes not amongst us Christians that sometimes feels not the stirrings movings breathings of the spirit of God Oh that men would take heed of despising present motions Oh that men would take the wind while it blows and the water while the Angel moves it as not knowing when it will or whether ever it will blow again 2. He came from heaven the place seems here to commend the gift as from earth earthly things arise so from heaven heavenly spiritual eternal things And this is one sign to distinguish the spirits Beloved believe not every spirit 1 John 4.1 but try the spirits whether they are of God If our motions come from heaven if we fetch our grounds thence from heaven from Religion from the sanctuary it is the spirit of God or if it carry us heaven-ward if it make us heavenly minded if it wean us from the world and if it elevate and set our affections on heavenly things if it form and frame our conversations towards heaven we may then conclude the motions are not from below but from above O that Christians would be much in observation of and in listning to the movings workings hints and intimations of that Spirit that comes from heaven Certainly that Spirit is of God that comes down from heaven and that lifts up our Souls towards heaven 3. He comes down from heaven like a wind The comparison is most apt of all bodily things the wind is least bodily it is invisible and comes nearest to the nature of a Spirit it is quick and active as the Spirit is But more especially the holy Ghost is compared to a wind in respect of its irresistable workings as nothing can resist the wind it goes and blows which way soever it will so nothing can resist the Spirit of God wheresoever it hath a purpose to work efficaciously I will not say but the heart of a man may resist and reject the work of the Spirit in some measure Act. 7.51 2 Cor. 10.5 and in some degrees Stephen told the Jews they had always resisted the holy Ghost and the Apostle tells of strong holds and of every high thing that exalteth it self against God so there is a natural contrariety a constant enmity and active resisting of Gods Spirit by our spirits we must therefore distinguish between a prevalent and a gradual resisting the spirit in conversion so works that he takes away the prevalent but not the gradual resisting A man before he be converted is froward and full of cavils and prejudices he is unwilling to be saved he cannot abide the truth he doth what he can to stifle all good motions yet if he belong to the election of grace God will at last over-master his heart and make him of unwilling willing he will omnipotently bow and change the will and work on his soul by his mighty power efficaciously insuperably and irresistably Again the holy Ghost is compared to wind John 3.8 in respect of its free actings the wind bloweth where it listeth saith Christ and so the Spirit bloweth where it listeth who can give any reason why the Spirit breathes so sweetly on Jacob and not on Esau on Peter and not on Judas is it not the free grace and good pleasure of God springs it not from the meer freedom and pure arbitrariness of his own only workings to you it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of heaven saith Christ but to them it is not given Mat. 13.11 And I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent Mat. 11.25 26 and hast revealed them unto babes even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight These and the like Texts are as so many hammars to beat in pieces all those Doctrines of free-will and of the power of man to supernatural things grace makes no gain of mans work free-will may indeed move and run but if it be to good it must be moved and driven and breathed upon God's free grace The Spirit blows where it listeth 4. He came like a rushy mighty wind as the wind is sometimes of that strength that it rends and rives in sunder Mountains and Rocks it pulls up trees it blows down buildings so are the operations of the holy Spirit it takes down all before it it brings into captivity many an exalting thought it made a Conquest of the World beginning at Jerusalem and spreading it self over all the earth it is mighty in operation able to shake the stoutest and the proudest man and to break in pieces the very stoniest heart indeed our words without this spirit are but weak wind we may spend our selves and never waken Souls but if the Spirit blow he will amaze the consciences of the stoutest peers and drive away our sins as the wind drove away the Grashoppers and Locusts that over-spread the land of Aegypt Some Analogy there is betwixt this vehement wind and the spirits workings the spirit first comes as a spirit of bondage and then as a spirit of Adoption the spirit of bondage is as a vehement wind that terrifies to shew that we are not fit to receive the grace of God unless the door be first opened by fear and humiliation others say that the vehement rushing of this wind shewed how irresistably the Apostles should proceed in preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ they had a Commission to go into all the World and to teach all Nations and they had a promise that though many might oppose yet the gates of hell should not prevail against the Church the spirit should go along with them and he in them and they in him should prevail mightily like a rushing mighty wind 5. He filled all the house where they were sitting there were none there that were to filled with the holy Ghost this room contained a congregation of none but Saints All the men and women an hundred and twenty as some think in this room were visited from on high for the holy Ghost came upon them and dwelt in them well might David say Blessed are they that dwell in thy house I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God then to dwell in the Tents of wickedness They that abode in this house were under a promise that the Spirit should come and now was the promise accomplished for it filled all the house where they were sitting I say