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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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heed then of going forth in the strength of your own Resolutions The Devil doth not fear us but the Guard that is about us Peter was a sad Instance Tho all Men do deny thee yet will not I deny thee At first he out-braveth a whole Troop and afterwards falleth by the accusation of one Damsel A bold Resolution doth not carry out a Man so far as an humble Dependence a silly Wench discourageth this stout Champion Every small Temptation is sufficient to overturn a Man puffed up with the confidence of his own strength the weak Blast of a Damsel's Question What poor Creatures are we when God leaveth us We cannot be without these Providences Audeo dicere saith Austin utile esse superbis cadere in aliquod manifestum opertum peccatum ut salubrius sibi displiceant The Saints fall so often that they may stand the firmer Nay if you do not fall fouly you will meet with a great deal of Uncomfortableness and Weariness in the ways of God our Strength will soon tire Learn this the best of you you that seem to have most reason to stand Peter had been with Christ on the Mount Mat. 17.1 in the Garden Mat. 26.37 assured of his Glory armed against his Sufferings and yet now denieth him 2. Observe How loyal faithful and tender Christ is over his Charge He is loyal to God I have kept them in thy Name faithful to his Flock he omitted no point of the Duty of a good Shepherd he was tender of them Whilst I was with them in the World I kept them and now he surrendreth his Charge into God's hands Judas was lost not out of any impotency and carelesness in Christ he was not in his Commission but through his own malignity Christ is faithful for he giveth an account to God none of them is lost just as he will at the last day it is but a Type of what he will do then He will present all the Faithful to God Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the Children which God hath given me And he will disclaim Hypocrites as he doth Judas Vse 1. Let us learn how safe it is to be in Christ's hands and keeping Christ was a faithful Shepherd when he was upon the Earth and tho his corporal Presence be removed yet it is supplied by the Spirit he hath still a care of his Flock the Lambs those that are most tender he carrieth them in his Bosom he hath a particular care of every single Believer tho there be so many Thousands in the World John 10.3 I know my Sheep by Name John Anna Thomas however called and distinguished in the World He is careful to provide good large Pasture to supply your Defects His Conduct is gentle and tender as the little ones are able to bear and to guide you with Dispensations suitable to your Work and Temptations are proportioned to your Growth and Experience Paul was not buffeted till his Rapture After ye were illuminated ye endured a great Fight of Afflictions Heb. 10.32 The Castle is victualled before it is besieged He is constantly watchful over you taketh notice of Decays of Grace and spiritual Languishments to reclaim and reduce his People when gone astray Isa. 30.21 Thine Ears shall hear a Voice behind thee saying This is the Way walk in it when ye turn to the right-hand and when ye turn to the left You may be confident of his keeping if you will but chuse him for a Shepherd and put your Souls as a Pledg in his hands Psal. 23.1 The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want Walk on in a Course of Obedience referring your selves to Christ's care Vse 2. We should learn of Christ to be faithful to our Charge We that are Ministers should keep those that are committed to us in God's Name that when we die or by Providence are called away from our People we may plead our Faithfulness Father I have kept them in thy Name If we give not warning to the Sinner His Blood will God require at our hands Ezek. 3.20 As under the Law if an Ox or Sheep were laid to pledg and it did miscarry the Party was to make it good So Heb. 13.17 They watch for your Souls as they that must give an Account that they may do it with Joy and not with Grief It is an heavy Charge and a great Trust the Account of lost Souls will be craved at your hands So also you that are called to a Family you have a Charge you are not only to provide for them corporally but spiritually that when you die you may commend them to God upon these Terms Whilst I was with them I kept them in thy Name 3. Observe God hath many ways of keeping mediate and immediate Immediate by his own Spirit this Christ beggeth for them mediate by Christ's corporal presence I have kept them by the Guides of the Church by Angels they are a part of our Guard Heb. 1.14 Are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth to minister to them that are Heirs of Salvation They have a great deal of Employment about God's Children Psal. 91.11 He shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy Ways Against bodily Dangers the Angels watch over us God against spiritual Dangers So by Grace in the Heart Prov. 4.5 6. Get Wisdom and she shall keep thee These are the inward Means of Preservation Vse 1. Admire the Providence of God about such a Creature as Man is It is counted a matter of great State to have at our Heels a long Train of Followers these mighty Peers of Heaven are our Attendants How many Guards hath he set upon us His Spirit his Angels glorious Angels they behold God's Face and watch over our Feet his Ministers the outward Supplies of Providence and Grace in the Heart If our Protection were visible all the Princes in the World would come short of it a Guard full of State and Strength Even little Ones have their Angels stand by their Cradles Vse 2. Learn to wait upon God tho you want an outward Guard and Vail of Safety Christ's corporal Presence was removed and supplied by the Spirit and if God can make us amends for Christ's Company certainly for an outward Comfort and Blessing Do not limit God to one way of keeping he hangeth the Earth upon nothing how doth he keep the Earth A Feather will not stay in the Air. Man liveth not by Bread alone but by every Word that proceedeth out of the Mouth of God Mat. 4.4 Not only by the outward Supply but the Promise and the Sustentation of Providence God can bring Water out of the Rock as well as out of the Fountain When we have outward Supplies we are many times worst Our well-being doth not lie in these things but in God's care which may be expressed in several ways Christ may put that Question to us that he did to the Apostles Luke 22.35 And he said unto them VVhen I sent you
servants of righteousness There is an order in our deliverance and one part conduceth to another for Righteousness and the Conference of our Duty can have no hold on us till the power of our Lusts be broken Assoon as we are freed from the slavery of sin we are in part righteous but when we are freed from the Being of sin we are altogether holy and righteous but where sin reigneth there is an obstruction of the Life of Grace there the Creature is valued above God Earth before Heaven the Body before the Soul neither Faith Love nor Hope can produce any thorow work in our Souls not Faith Joh. 5.44 How can ye believe which receive honour one of another and seek the honour that cometh from God only Nor Love 1 Joh. 2.15 Love not the world neither the things that are in the world if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him Nor Hope 2 Cor. 4.18 While we look not at the things that are seen that are but temporal but at the things that are not seen that are eternal The person that hath not his heart and hopes in Heaven and looketh not at that as his only Happiness and doth not make it the business of his Life to attain it but setteth his heart more upon the things of this Life is certainly unconverted 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this life only we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable This should be regarded by us that we may look more after this whether we have escaped the bondage of Corruption and that we do not return to Bondage again but that we maintain our liberty Gal. 5.1 Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made you free and be not intangled again in the yoke of bondage 6. He that is a Servant of Righteousness shews it by doing as much for Righteousness as formerly he did for Sin This is the end of the Apostles reasoning with them in this place therefore I shall a little insist upon it 1. That in Reason and strict Justice more might be required of us for the Reasons moving us to good are more than the Reasons moving us to evil if we consider either Master Work or Wages First The Master shall we not do as much for God as we did for Satan Whose are you Christians From whom did you receive your Beings And from whom do you expect your Happiness From God or the Devil Whom will you call Father or Master Pretences will do nothing in the case it will be tryed by your work Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do Joh. 8.34 He that committeth sin is of the Devil 1 Joh. 3.8 God be merciful to us we have done too much of the Devils work already it is time to give over the business is for the future whose work do you mean to do and how will you do it halfingly superficially perfunctorily or in the greatest earnest Secondly The Work Sin is a deordination a prostituting of the noble Faculties of our Souls to our base lusts and vain pleasures Tit. 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures whereas by Holiness we obey the rational Appetite the Will guided by the highest Reason which is the Law and Will of God 1 Pet. 4.2 That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God The business is whether for the future we will be Beasts or Men and imploy our remaining time in the service of the Flesh or in obedience to the Will of God Whether the Beast should ride the Man or Reason and Conscience be put in Dominion again over Sense and Appetite Thirdly The Wages Surely Reason will teach you that there should be greater care to secure your Life and Salvation than to ruine and damn your selves now you went on earnestly in a way of sin as if you could not soon enough or sure enough be damned the sure wages of sin is eternal death ver 23. determined by the righteous appointment of Gods Law and though t●rough the Patience of God it be not presently executed yet Conscience sheweth the justness of it and the Word sheweth you how that sin had made it your due and therefore should you not do as much for Salvation as you have done in order to Damnation especially when your eyes are opened and you begin to have eternal Blessedness in view and pursuit Well then Reason will inform that you should do more for God and more for Heaven and more for Holiness than ever you did for Sin so that it is an equitable Proposal or the Rule of our Duty expressed after a modest manner there is less than in strict Reason may be required of you Men are weak and cannot bear too much severity what shall we say then do as much for Righteousness as you did for Sin 2. That in exact proportion even this equitable Rule will not always hold good why because in corrupt Nature our Principles were intire but in our renewed Estate they are mixt Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit there is a counterpoise to the life of Grace therefore our evil works were meerly evil but the good we do is not meerly good Our Lord telleth us That the children of this world and such we were all by Nature are wiser 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their generation than the children of light Luke 16.8 We have the advantage of the World in matter of Motive and Reason but they have the advantage of us in matter of Principle Grace is a powerful thing but it is like a keen Sword in the hands of a Child The opposition of the flesh causeth weakness Our Motives are more noble but their Principles are more intire 3. Though the exact proportion will not strictly hold yet there is enough to distinguish the Servants of Righteousness from those that are not made free from sin as First The main bent of the Heart and Life is for Righteousness and not for Sin Where the main bent of the Heart and Life is still for the Flesh and the World they are far from Grace for there the Flesh and the World and by them Satan is superior still the influence of Corruption is more seen in their lives and actions than the influence of Grace but he whose main bent both of Heart and Life is for God he now serveth God as before he served Sin and therefore being made free from sin is become the servant of righteousness Secondly Because there is some proportion and resemblance between his activity in the new and spiritual Life and the former activity in a way of sin To clear this 1. I will shew wherein the Resemblance holdeth good 2. The Reasons why it must be so 1. The Resemblance holds good in these things First We may take notice of a care and solicitude to do evil Rom. 13.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
all persons and hath the hearts of Men in his own hands and performeth all things according to his own will He knoweth their Persons Necessities and Temptations and if we trust him for our Heavenly Inheritance we may trust him for our daily Maintenance which he vouchsafeth to the Fowls of the Air and Beasts of the Field yea to his Enemies while they are sinning against him dishonouring his Name oppressing his Servants opposing his Interest in the World he that feedeth a Kite will he not feed a Child He that supplieth his Enemies will he not take care of his Friends those of his own Family Indeed he chooseth rather to profit us than please us in his Dispensations but 't is your duty to refer all to his Wisdom and Love 3. Eternal Blessedness is also the fruit of this Adoption Rom. 8.17 If sons then heirs coheirs with Christ as soon as we are taken into Gods Family we have a right to the blessed Inheritance and the right and hope that we have now is enough to counterballance all Temptations Alas what are all the carnal pleasures and delights of Sin which tempt us to disobey our Father to those blessed things which he hath provided for us in Heaven 'T was Esau's Profaneness to sell his Birth-right Heb. 12.16 So all the fears and sorrows of the present Life Luk. 12.32 Fear not little flock 't is your fathers good pleasure to give you a kingdom if we have the Kingdom at the last 't is no great matter what we suffer by the way but hereafter we shall fully receive the fruits of our Obedience Rom. 8.23 We our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our bodies In Heaven we have the fullest and largest demonstration of Gods love and favour 'T is Love now and Grace now that he will take us into his Family and Imploy us in his Service But then 't is another manner of Love when taken not onely into his Family but Presence and Palace where we have not onely a Right but Possession not onely some remote service and ministration but everlastingly injoying delighting and praising God Second●y We now come to the proof and testimony of our Interest in this Priviledge The spirit beareth witness with our spirit Here let us 1. Open the double Testimony 2. What the one superaddeth above the other 3. The necessity of their conjunction to our full comfort 1. The Nature of this double Testimony and there first let us begin with that which is more known to us and understood by us and that is the Testimony of a renewed conscience Let us consider it as conscience and as renewed 1. As conscience There is a secret spy within us that observeth all that we think or speak or do Rom. 2.15 Their conscience bearing them witness and their thoughts in the mean time accusing or excusing Now this conscience must not be slighted partly in respect of our selves because 't is so intimate to us 'T is a spy in our bosoms and can give a better judgment of us and our actions than any thing else can The judgment of the world by way of applause or censure is foreign and grounded upon appearance therefore not so much to be valued 1 Cor. 2.11 The spirit of a man which is in him knoweth the things of a man Who knoweth more of us than we do our selves And this witness cannot be suspected of partiality and ill will for what is dearer to our selves than our selves Therefore if our hearts condemn us what shall be said for us 1 John 3.20 21. For if our hearts condemn us God is greater than our hearts and knoweth all things Beloved if our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God And partly because of its relation to God 't is called the candle of the Lord Pro. 20.27 'T is Gods Deputy Judg and in the place of God to us and therefore if it doth accuse or excuse it is to be regarded for it is before Gods Tribunal that it doth condemn or acquit us 'T is his sentence that we are to stand in fear and dread of to whom doth it accuse us but to God whose Wrath doth it fear but Gods even then when there is no outward cause of dread and fear Conscience is the Vicegerent of the supreme Judg partly because of the rule it goeth by which is the will of God by which good and evil are distinguished which is either revealed by the light of Nature or the light of Scripture the light of nature Rom. 2.14.15 For the gentiles who have not the law do by nature the things contained in the law these having not the law are a law to themselves which shew the work of the law upon their hearts their consciences also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another The Apostle proveth the heathens had a law because they had a conscience for conscience ever inferreth some rule and law by which good and evil are distinguished The light of Scripture comprehendeth either the Covenant of Works or the Covenant of Grace Works and so conscience condemneth all the world as guilty before God Rom. 3.19 and there is no escape from this sentence but a regular appeal and passage from Court to Court Psal. 10.3 4. If thou shouldest mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared Psal. 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified where poor condemned sinners may take sanctuary of the Lords Grace and humbly claim the benefit of the New Covenant Grace wherein the penitent believer and those that sincerely obey the Gospel are accepted The legal conscience condemneth all the world but the evangelical conscience aquitteth us if we sincerely and thankfully accept the new covenant that is if we take the priviledges offered for our happiness and the duties required for our work therefore 't is said 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism saveth not the puting away of the filthiness of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience toward God Not the bare Ordinance but the Covenant which is sealed by it And what doth the Covenant require Accepting the Lords offers and resolving to obey his commands 2. As renewed By nature conscience is blind partial stupid but by grace it 's made pure tender and pliant and more able to do its office The spirit is not said here to witness to our heart but to our spirit that is to conscience as renewed and sanctified now such a conscience implieth these things 1. Some knowledg of and consent to the new covenant for without knowledg the heart is not good Pro. 19.20 It erreth in point of law and rule and therefoe cannot well witness in the case And 2. Consent there must be for we cannot claim Priviledges by a Charter which we never accepted Therefore Isa. 56.4 And chuse the things
a more glorious heighth which is Heaven and there is a dismal depth which is Hell God can provide an harbour for his people turneth the Devils design quite contrary to his intention A TABLE of the principal Matters contained in this PART A ABsolute property of God alone Page 100 Abuse of the Creature to wrong ends is bondage Page 201 Act single do's not discover what men are Page 43 Accusers of Christians who Page 332 Abstaining from some sin and different motives and what are those motives Page 121 Adams principle was his rule also Page 36 State blessed yet terrene in Innocency Page 89 Mortal and how Page 90 Adam the First and Second Page 114 Accountable we are for all Page 101 And what this all Page Ib. Addictedness to worldly things hinders our Christian hope Page 234 Adoption consequent on profession of Faith Page 81 Full of love and delight in the law of God Page 157 158 State of Adoption what Page 160 Spirit of Adoption how differs from Spirit of Regeneration Page 162 Effect of spirit of Adoption Page 163 Tho 't is not it might be in all that hear the Gosspel Page 163 Not equally in all believers Page 164 Nor alike known to be in us Page Ib. In lowest degrees and what this in some Page 164 How conveyed to us Page 165 Seek it Motives and directions Page 166 Signs of it Page 167 Adoption a great priviledge Page 168 169 Adoption great support of Christians Page 170 By it we pray and apply the promises Page 173 Affections our Affliction Page 120 What. Page 129 Affections from self-love Page 129 Worldly impediment of Heavenly life Page 186 Anger mischievous Page 117 Afflictions for Christ ensure it that we are joint-heirs Page 175 Some longer some shorter to believers but their reward of equal duration to all Page 183 Under Afflictions do nothing unworthy of your hopes Page 243 But pray Page 244 All Afflictions work for our good if we love God Page 268 Exemplified Page 269 270 271 How certain this is Page 271 What good this is Page 271 272 How wrought Page 273 Wait on God in Afflictions and why Page 274 Be good by it so 't is a blessing Page 274 Our work is to bear and grow better by 't is God's work to put end to Afflictions Page 275 276 What gain by them Page 276 They teach us and how Page 277 278 279 In deepest Afflictions God with us and how Page 319 Increase Grace Page 364 Glorifie God Page 365 366 Agenda of Christianity less controverted than Credenda Page 361 All together work for good to believers Page 267 268 Yet not sin and why Page 269 All things with Christ given to believers Page 326 Animal Life must be put off Page 89 90 Answer to prayers unanswered Page 273 Appeal from Law to Gospel Page 3 338 344 From Iudge to Iudge Page 344 Appetite sensitive may in some things be pleased without sin Page 43 When this is Page ib. Arguings for sin Page 65 Against it for duty too weak Page 149 Assent of Faith renewed Page 86 Assurance cleared by our fulfilling our covenant with God Page 36 47 Assistance continually needful and why Page 134 246 Assembly general our encouragement to hope Page 235 Atheists convinced Page ib. They credulous Page 240 Foolish and venture on the worst side Page ib. B BAllancing Eternal-futures bears up the suffering Christians Page 368 369 Baptism Page 49 86 Implieth doing and suffering Page 392 Obligeth us to obey Christ. Page 102 10● 109 To mortifie the flesh Page 113 124 Too long forgotten by us Page 113 Baptism Consecrated Christ captain of Salvation and Satan presently assaulted him so Christians Page 362 Believers not united to the Church first so to Christ by the Church Page 4 5 How come to be in Christ. Page 5 6 Set themselves to Believe and are benefited Page 86 Sin but not of design Page 103 Well guided and guarded Page 151 Now hidden Page 189 And who Page ib. To whom Page 190 191 And why safety in Christs love Page 357 Beneficiaries must obey God Page 102 103 Benefits good gifts talents and to be used as such Page 101 Bind us to obey God Page 102 Bent and business of the soul for God Page 49 Birth new ground of Adoption Page 161 Body how to be denied or gratified in delights Page 71 Dead how Page 88 91 Therefore prepare for it Page 91 Overcared the soul neglected Page 91 Body sanctified Page 96 What we owe it Page 100 'T is subject to the soul. Page 108 Bondage in which all are till made free Page 20 And what both are Page ib. How came upon us Page 21 State of Bondage Page 153 154 It may bring on conversion Page 155 May remain Page 341 In part upon Believers Page 156 Whence 'tis whether state of Bondage be good or bad Page 156 Bondage of the creatures Page 201 Bordering on carnal World mischievous to us Page 47 Yet we do so Page 190 Borrowing above what we can pay is specious Robbery Page 17 Broken spirit under terrors not to be slighted desired chosen or rested in Page 157 This spirit of Bondage on us while love is imperfect Page 159 Yet over-ballanced by spirit of love Page ib. Business of Believers with and his happiness in God Page 75 Common good by Christians be managed by best principles Page 78 C CArnal minded what Page 54 55 56 57 Carnal men know not God Page 55 Are not affected with what they do know Page ib. Think meanly of Christians Page 77 Calvin hardly spoken of Page 5 Calling twofold and what Page 287 288 Call by the word twofold and what ineffectual what effectual Page 288 Its properties Page 289 The ends of it Page ib. To shew God's Wisdom Power Goodness Page 289 Discovery of Gods love Page 290 To our profit Page 291 Obeying this Call what Page 292 This Call effect of Predestination Page 307 Checks of Conscience to be regarded Page 115 Differ from repugnancies of new Nature and how Page 134 Child-like love obedience and dependence on God Page 163 Carriage toward God our Father Page 250 169 Prove us Children Page 179 Christs satisfaction Page 324 And effects of it Page 3 To be in Christ what Page 4 Lord of new Creation Page 11 12 14 356 A head to his Page 17 Died because we could no other ways be delivered Page 26 27 He was true man Page 28 And why Page ib. 29 A Sacrifice for sin Page 30 31 He healeth our natures Page 34 36 Mortifies sin Page 124 Is fittest example for us to follow Page 78 Is in Believers what and how Page 88 301 328 Ruleth Page 88 Love to Christ constrains and how Page 128 It mortifies sin Page 134 So doth his Death Page 136 Christ whole not by parts enjoyed by belivers Page 140 Hath double inheritance and what 't is Page 178 Died to expiate our sins Page 178 Hath preeminence Page 298 Openeth the
about our interest Thirdly What reasons there are why we should attend upon this work with all diligence that we may come to a full confidence 1. What are the qualifications of those who shall have this Blessed Estate 'T is the most Important Question which we can put to our Souls Psal. 24. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord And who shall stand in his Holy Place Who shall be admitted into the place of his special residence I anwer 1. Sometimes they are described by their faith in Christ As Joh. 11.25 26. He that believeth and liveth in me though he were dead yet shall he live and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never dye or not dye for ever as the word may be rendred The true believer that so believeth in Christ that he liveth in him that is who hath accepted of Gods Covenant and is become Christs disciple observing his strict spiritual laws and running all hazards for his sake united to Christ so as to live in him Bodily death shall not extinguish the life which is begun and maintained by faith in Christ Joh. 6.40 This is the will of him that sent me that every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day This is Gods express will The poor sinner needeth not doubt of it if you do see the Son and believe on him that is see him and know him Spiritually see him in the light of the Spirit Heretofore men saw him bodily and had no benefit And now many see him in the Common report and Tradition by the light of humane credulity that have no benefit by him But those that see him in the Promise have a Right and Title that see him so as to see beauty in him that they can trample upon all things as Dung and Dross renounce themselves and all worldly and fleshly lusts and flee to him as their All-sufficient Saviour and can venture their Souls in his hand and give up themselves to keep his Commandments and abide in his Love In short those who so believe in him as to live in him and to him 2dly They are described to be new Creatures or the sanctified Joh. 3.3 5. Except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God And again v. 5. Cannot enter into the Kingdom of God Heaven is the Inheritance of Saints Col. 1.12 Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in light And Acts 26.18 That they may receive Forgiveness of Sin and Inheritance among them which are Sanctified by Faith that is in me Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are Sanctified No unclean thing shall enter there If thou hast the Heavenly Birth will he deprive thee of thy Birth-right to which he himself begot thee of incorruptible seed 1 Pet. 1.3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead If Holy he will place thee among his Holy ones These are the Terms to which we must unalterably stand If we be not born again it is but self flattery that filleth us with vain conceits like the Mad-man in Athens who Challenged all the ships which came into the harbour to be his own 3dly They are described by their Heavenly mind affections and conversations Mat. 6.19.20 21. They who make it their work to lay up treasure in Heaven have chosen Heaven for their Portion That seek it in the first place Matth. 6.33 That groan long wait for it In the verses next the Text whose conversation is in Heaven Phil. 3.20 Deus nihil facit frustra If he hath given thee an Heavenly mind and affections he will give thee Heaven its self He would not stir up these desires in vain set his servants a longing after that which he never meaneth to give them or bestow upon them when there is a suitableness between the person and the state when our affections are weaned from the world and set upon Heavenly things This House is fitted for us if we are fitted for it Rom. 9.23 That he might make known the riches of his Glory on the Vessels of Mercy which he had afore prepared unto Glory There is a meetness Col. 1.12 Assoon as we are new born and do believe in Christ we have a Right and Title In short If your whole lives be a continual motion and nearer approach towards this state of rest 4thly They are described by their fruitfulness in good works and acts of self denying obedience Matth. 25.34 35. c. 1 Tim. 6.18 19. That they do good that they be rich in goodworks ready to distrib●te willing to Communicate laying up in store for themselves a good Foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on eternal life 1 Joh. 3.19 Hereby we know that we are of the Truth and shall assure our Hearts before him Hereby By what If we love not in word and tongue only but in deed and in Truth Heaven is esteemed but a fancy to them that men will venture nothing for the hopes of it What have you done to shew your thankfulness for so great a mercy tendred to you A Religion that costs nothing is worth nothing I am sure it will yield you no comfort and hope good words are not dear and a Cold profession costs little or nothing Do you think Religion lyeth only in Hearing Sermons or a few Cursory Prayers or drowsy Devotions We should mind those things about which we shall be questioned at the day of Judgment have you visited have you cloathed owned the Servants of God when the Laws frown upon them comforted them in their distresses Wherein really have you denyed your selves for the hope of Glory 2dly The several dispositions and perswasions in point of certainty as to their Interest in this state of Blessedness To some 't is but a bare possibility To others there is a probability A third sort have gotten so far as a Conditional certainty Others have an actual certainty or firm perswasion of their Interest 1. To some the hope of Heaven is but a bare possibility As to the careless Christian who is yet intangled in his lusts but God continueth to him the offer of Salvation by Christ. These may be saved if they will accept this offer 'T is impossible in the state wherein they are but their Hearts may be changed by the Lords grace Mark 10.27 With men it is impossible but not with God for with God all things are possible He can make the filthy Heart to become Clean and Holy the sensual Heart to become Spiritual and Heavenly There are many bars in the way but grace can break through and remove them 'T is night with them for the present but we cannot say it
in their mouths As for this Custom I shall give you some passages in Scripture That the Weddings were in the Night-time we read Gen. 29.23 It came to pass in the evening that Laban took Leah his Daughter and brought her to Jacob. That the Bridegroom had his Companions we read Judg. 13.11 Sampson had thirty Companions brought to him That both had their Companions we read of the Children of the Bride-Chamber Matth. 9.15 the special guests invited to the Marriage-feast who were by Custom to fetch the Bridegroom and wait upon him These are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Friends of the Bridegroom Joh. 3.29 That the Bride had her Companions 't is said in Psal. 45.14 the Spouse shall be brought to the King in a Rayment of Needle-work the Virgins her Companions that follow her shall be brought unto thee And their fashion was to take Hand-lamps then in use and fit to carry abroad for Night-lights The Scripture frequently alludes to that Rev. 18.23 And the light of the Candle shall shine no more at all in thee and the voice of the Bridegroom and of the Bride no more at all shall be heard in thee And thus the Bridegroom was met by Virgins with Lamps as he grew near the Brides house he was met by Servants with Candles returning to the Marriage Therefore 't is said Luke 12.35 36. Let your loins be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selves like unto men that wait for their Lord when he will return from the Wedding This was the custom which I the rather observe that you may see how fitly our Lord layeth down things Now those that accompanyed the Bridegroom and the Bride were Children of the Bride-chamber and admitted into the Marriage Room and Supper and those that came after that when once the door was shut were surely kept out Now here is a fit representation of the spiritual Mystery laid down by Christ and therefore let us 1. See the thing compared The Kingdom of Heaven that is the state of the Church wherein God reigneth in the person of the Messiah of the Kingdom of Glory it cannot be meant for there are no foolish Virgins and in the internal Kingdom of Grace none But in the external Kingdom of Christ in this World And this is not considered simply and restrainedly to that point of time when Christ is coming to Judgment but respects and should affect us all for such as we depart out of the world now such shall we be found to be at the day of Judgment It concerneth all Ages not only those that shall be found alive at that time but every one in successive Ages 2. The Comparison must be explained the Bridegroom is Christ and the Bride is the Church the whole Church is the Spouse of Christ and each particular Believer a Virgin attending upon this Spouse the Marriage is mutually promised the Espousals are in this Life Hos. 2.19.20 I will betroth thee to me for ever and to be solemnized and compleated at the coming of our Lord Rev. 19.7 Let us be glad and rejoyce and give honour to him for the Marriage of the Lamb is come and his Wife hath made her self ready Here is the betrothing in the Covenant of Grace A nobis accepit arrhabonem carnis c. saith Tertullian he took the token of our flesh and carried it to Heaven to prepare Heaven for us and left with us the token of his Spirit to prepare us for Heaven he is not gone from us in discontent but will come again with all the Angels of Heaven with him to receive the Bride unto himself 1. The Companions of the Bride are here represented under the Name of Virgins for so Christians are called for the Purity of their Faith and Worship and also for their blameless Conversations 1. Virgins for the purity of their Faith that keep themselves free and untainted from the corrupt and rotten Opinions of the World 2 Cor. 11.2 I have espoused you to one Husband that I may present you as Chast Virgins to Christ he meaneth it here in respect of the purity of their Faith that they might not be corrupted by false Teachers 2. Virgins for the purity of Worship Idolatry and Corruption of Worship is often expressed by Harlotry and therefore the Prophet to figure out Israels Apostacy and Corruption in Worship is bidden to take a Wife of Whoredomes Hos. 3. And those that followed the Lamb are said to be Virgins not defiled Rev. 14.4 not polluted with Idolatry which is spiritual Fornication 3. Virgins for purity and blamelesness of Conversation The Apostle speaketh of some that had escaped the pollutions of the world through the Knowledge of Jesus Christ who might be again intangled and overcome therein 2 Pet. 2.20 Well then these were all Virgins even the foolish as well as the wise not tainted with Errour nor defiled with false Worship nor prophane corrupt or scandalous in their Conversations they were such as had escaped the Corruptions of the World and had as glorious a form of Godliness as any others 2. They are described by their Number Ten this is mentioned either because Ten is a number of perfection or because usually the number of those Companions of the Bride never exceeded Ten. 3. They are set forth by their Distribution into two ranks some Wise some Foolish five of the one sort and five of the other the number is not exactly to be stood upon as if the number of the saved and damned were equal as in the Parable of the Marriage-feast one had not a Wedding-garment 't is not to be understood as if only one were damned of all that are invited to the Profession of the Gospel it only signifyeth that all the Virgins are not alike careful to prepare for the coming of the Lord By the wise are meant provident and diligent Christians by the foolish the Improvident and negligent among those that bear the name and keep up the reputation of Christians some will be found not to fill up their Profession with answerable Duty not to make serious Provision for the coming of Christ. 4. They are set forth by their Work and Imployment they went forth to meet the Bridegroom that is they expected the coming of Christ and Happiness by him The foolish and the wise did both agree in this indeed this is the whole business of a Christian. 5. They are set forth by their preparation for this work they took their Lamps that is made open profession of their hope Matth. 5.16 Let your light so shine among men for external shining profession they were both alike All are called Christians all are Baptized and all profess faith in Christ and an expectation of his second coming with eternal Life to ensue upon it all are Virgins all have Lamps all are devoted to the Bridegroom goe forth to meet him and yet some were wise and some foolish some made preparation that whenever the Bridegroom should
some special way of operation Rom. 5.5 And 1 Cor. 2.12 Now we have not received the spirit of the World but the Spirit of God that we may know the things that are freely given us of God And Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you A believers Body and Soul is the Spirits Mansion-house and those that have the Spirit to dwell in them not to come upon them at times are in an abiding state of Grace The Spirit came upon Balaam at times Num. 24.34 but in his People he makes his abode He doth act in others as a Spirit assisting but not as a Spirit inhabiting He dwelleth in his people The Spirit is often promised to dwell in our Hearts not only for a season but for ever John 4.14 The water that I shall give him shall be a Well of water springing up to everlasting Life Mark the Spirit doth not give a Draught but the Spring not a Dash of rain that is soon dryed up but a Well not a Pond that may be dryed up at length but a Fountain that ever keepeth flowing so that we shall never thirst more it shall quench his thirst after worldly Vanities and Delights These things grow tastless the more of the Spirit we have The Spirit of Christ as the Fountain doth make this Grace enduring in its self and in its effects a Well of inexhaustable fulness and refreshment So John 7.38 He that believeth in me out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living water Not a petty refreshment for a season but his Spirit to dwell in us as a full Fountain to flow forth for the refreshment of himself and others Though the Ocean be in God yet there is a River in the Saints in Christ there is plentitudo fontis in us plentitudo vasis if we find any remission of the Comforts of this Spring it 's through our own Pride and Unbelief and Idleness John 14.16 17. I will give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever The Spirit will not change his dwelling place This is such a degree of Grace as the unregenerate World cannot receive 4. This inward Principle is expressed with respect to the Instrument which is the Word of God so 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 1.21 the ingrafted Word The root of the matter is within 't is not the word heard only or the word obeyed only will save us but it must be an ingrafted Word 't is not bound on but ingrafted 't is not enough to yield some present Obedience to it but it must be rooted in us So in that notable Promise Heb. 8.10 I will put my Laws in their minds and write them upon their hearts The Writing is the Law of God the Tables are the Minds and Hearts of men that is the understanding and will and rational Apetite and this is written by the Finger of God there where is the Source and Original of all moral operations of all thoughts and affections and inward motions there is the Law of God written in those parts of the Soul where the directive Councel and the imperial commanding power of all humane actions resideth there will God write his Laws in lively and legible Characters and what is the effect A man becometh a Law to himself he carryeth his Rule about with him and hath a ready and willing mind to obey it Psa. 37.31 The Law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide The truth is rooted in him and his heart is suited and inclined to it he unfeignedly loveth what is commanded of God and hateth what is forbidden by him 5. The work its self is sometimes generally expressed by these Notions 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the New Creature 2 Cor. 5.17 when a man is thoroughly framed anew in all his Faculties And 1 Joh. 3.9 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the abiding Seed not a vanishing affection but a remaining seed and 't is called a good Treasure Math. 12.35 There is a stock that supplyeth holy Thoughts Words and Actions As a man that hath a bad Treasure of Corruption the more he spends the more 't is encreased so a man that hath a good stock he bringeth forth holy Thoughts Words and Actions And 't is called a new Heart and a right Spirit Psal. 51.10 Ezek. 36.26 27. and 't is called a sound heart Psa. 119.80 There is a slight heart and a sound heart which is not only opposed to the shows of Hypocrites but to the suddain pangs and half dispositions of Temporaries when Grace beareth an universal soveraignty over us inclining the heart to love and please and serve God 6. Sometimes the work is particularly expressed by the several Graces of the Spirit all which are comprized in Faith and Repentance Acts 20.21 Teaching them Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ Repentance towards God because by it we return to the Duty we owe to our Creator and Faith in the Gospel notion doth principally respect our Redeemer and his mediation for us By Repentance we return to the Duty injoyned by the Law from whence we are fallen and by Faith we apprehend the Love of Christ and what he hath done for us By Repentance we are set in joynt again as to our Obedience to the Law-giver and by Faith we close with and are united to our Redeemer without which we cannot be accepted with God Both are the Principles of all sincere Obedience and subjection to the Gospel-law or Covenant If you ask me What is this Oyl in the Vessel that we must have to qualifie us to meet the Bridegroom at his coming Answ. 'T is Repentance mortifying our inward Lusts and Faith working by Love 1. Repentance mortifying our inward Lusts that in newness of Life we may glorifie God therefore called Repentance from dead works Heb. 6.1 By common Grace men may cast off all outward evils escape the pollutions of the World but are never really and inwardly changed in their natures 'till the Spirit of Christ worketh this Grace in the Heart they are but as a Sow washed 2 Pet. 2.22 there is an inclination to wallow in the Mire of carnal delights again 'T is possible a man may see such an excellency in Christ and be so affected at the hopes of his Mercy and melted at the thoughts of his Love as to cast off outward gross evils which the World liveth in but this is but the Sow washed the heart is not changed Lust for a while may be benummed seem quenched but 't is not deadned 't is not weakned If ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the Body Rom. 8.13 as appeareth by its breaking out again with the more violence 2. Faith working by Love that is the great principle of Gospel-obedience True Grace doth not lye hid in the Soul in lazy habits but sets the Soul awork for God upon the apprehension of
of our Mercies we should bless God for our Relations Our Relations are the Sphere of our Activity 2. The Duty of our Vocation and Calling Every Christian hath his way and place some work which God gave him But of this see more by and by 7. When God is the great Scope and End of our Lives and Actions of all that we are all that we do all that we desire God must be the ultimate End In our ordinary Actions 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether ye eat or drink or whatever ye do do all to the Glory of God Not offer a Meat-Offering and Drink-Offering to Appetite The Apostle instances in these things partly because in these natural Actions we are most apt to offend Such is the unthankful Nature of Man that we forget God when he remembers us most when he is most present in the fruits of his Bounty then he is usually banished from our Hearts Corruptions are most stirring when we are warmed with the liberal use of the Creatures Job sacrificed when his Children feasted Job 1.5 And it was so when the Days of their Feasting were gone about that Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the Morning and offered Burnt-Offerings according to the number of them all For Job said It may be that my Sons have sinned and cursed God in their Hearts The Devil bringeth his Dish usually to our Tables Disdain of the slenderness of our Provision Quarrels Contentions Censures of the People of God c. Partly for greater Emphasis If in common Actions we are to design God's Glory as our End much more in such Actions as we make a business of So in Acts of Grace the Creature cannot be the ultimate End and God's Goodness only a Means thereunto There is a great deal of learned Folly and Atheism vented branding those as mystical Divines that call upon Men to mind things as God minded them who aims at his own Glory as his ultimate End Eph. 1.6 They say Man's ultimate End is his own Happiness some cry up the Principle of Self-Love then belike all the Goodness of God is to be estimated by the Felicity of Man this were to make Man his own Idol and to measure all good and evil by his own Interest The fulfilling of God's Will and promoting his Glory should be the end of all Obedience otherwise we make not the Creature for God but God for the Creature and so make the Creature better than God as being the ultimate End of God himself at least to us as if the highest End of all his Goodness were the Felicity of the Creature Secondly Vbi Where On Earth I have glorified thee on Earth 1. Where so few mind God's Glory where all seek their own Things their own Honour their own Profit their own personal Contentment A Christian should walk in counter-motion to the generality of the World Phil. 3.20 But our Conversation is in Heaven Mal. 4.1 2. The day cometh that shall burn as an Oven and all the proud yea and all that do wickedly shall be stubble c. But unto you that fear the Lord c. He is an Exception from the common use and practice of Mankind 2. On Earth which is the place of our Trial where there are so many Difficulties and Temptations to divert us We must glorify him on Earth if we expect that he should glorify us in Heaven Many expect to glorify God in Heaven but take no care to glorify God here on Earth The Saints in Heaven glorify God but without any Difficulty Strife and Danger it costs them no Shame no Pain no Trouble no loss of Life or Limb but here where the Danger is there is the Duty and Trial. Mat. 10.32 Whosoever therefore shall confess me before Men him will I confess also before my Father which is in Heaven Christ will remember them and their labour of Love When he cometh in his Majesty he is not ashamed of his poor Clients and Friends these owned me in my Abasement and I will own them in my exalted State You cannot honour Christ so much as he will honour you Mat. 19.28 Ye which have followed me in the Regeneration when the Son of Man shall sit in the Throne of his Glory ye also shall sit upon twelve Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel Ye who are here exposed to Sorrows and Sufferings for his Sake It is fond to think of glorifying God in Heaven and singing Hallelujahs to his Praise when thou dost not stand to his Truth on Earth Esse bonum facile est ubi quid vetat esse remotum The Trial of Duty is Self-Denial Thirdly Quomodo I have finished the work which thou hast given me to do 1. It is Work that glorifieth God It is not Words and empty Praises but an holy Conversation Job 31.20 If his Loins have not blessed me and if he were not warmed with the Fleece of my Sheep Mat. 5.16 Let your Light so shine before Men that they may see your good Works and glorify your Father which is in Heaven Psal. 50.23 Whoso offereth praise glorifieth me and to him that ordereth his Conversation aright will I shew the Salvation of God John 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much Fruit so shall ye be my Disciples A godly fruitful Life is the real Honour the other is but empty Prattle It is our Work and Actions not our bare Profession only you may pollute God else Ezek. 36.20 You may exalt him in Profession and pollute him in Conversation Many Christians Lives are the Scandal of their Religion Again it is not Wishes that glorify God but Practice We would have God glorified but do not glorify him We would have him glorified Passively but do not glorify him Actively and are more careful of Events than Duties We are troubled about God's Name and are more ready to ask Lord what wilt thou do for thy great Name than Lord what wilt thou have me to do A Christian should rather be troubled about what he should do than about what he should suffer 2. That every Man hath his Work Life was given to us for somewhat not meerly that we might fill up the number of Things in the World as Stones and Rubbish not to grow in Stature so Life was given to the Plants that they might grow bulky and increase in Stature nor meerly to tast Pleasures that is the happiness of the Beasts to enjoy Pleasures without remorse God gave Men higher Faculties of Reason and Conscience to manage some Work and Business for the Glory of God and his own eternal Happiness The Rule is general that all Adam's Sons are to eat their Bread in the sweat of their Brows to follow some honest Labour and Vocation Adam's two Sons were Heirs Apparent of the World the one imployed in Tillage the other in Pasturage The World was never made to be an Hive for Drones and Idle Ones It is true there is a difference between Callings
some live by Manual Labours others by more Noble Employments as Magistrates Ministers who study for Publick Good Manual Labour is not required of all because it is a thing that is not required propter se as simply good and necessary but propter aliud as for Maintenance and Support of Life to ease others and to supply the Uses of Charity Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands the thing that is good that he may have to give to him that needeth When the Ends of Labour cannot otherwise be obtained then Handy-Labour is required All others are to serve their Generation according to the Will of God Acts 13.26 As Instruments of Providence to serve the Common Good to promote the Welfare of their Family Neighbourhood Country Those that spend their whole Life in Eating Drinking Sporting and Sleeping are guilty of brutish Idleness one of Sodom's Sins Ezek. 16.49 Behold this was the Iniquity of thy Sister Sodom Pride Fulness of Bread and abundance of Idleness was in her and in her Daughters And therefore those that are freed from Service and Handy-Labour are not freed from Work and Business If any Man must be allowed to be Idle then one Member must be lost in the Body Politick A Man is born a Member of some Society Family or City and is to seek the good of it he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We see in the Body Natural there is no Member but hath its Function and Use whereby it becometh serviceable to the whole All have not the same Office that would make a confusion but all have their Use either as an Eye or as a Hand or as a Tooth So in the Body Politick no Member may be useless they must have one Function or another wherein to imploy themselves otherwise they are unprofitable Burdens of the Earth Again every Man is more or less intrusted with a Gift which he is to exercise and improve for the good of others and at the day of Judgment he is to give up his Accounts as you may learn from the Parable of the Talents Mat. 25. If he hath but one Talent it must not be hidden in a Napkin Well then if every Man hath a Gift for which he is accountable to God he must have a Calling 1 Cor. 7.17 But as God hath distributed to every Man as the Lord hath called every Man so let him walk and chuse his state of Life Besides a Calling is necessary to prevent the Mischiefs of Idleness and those Inconveniences that follow Men not employed Standing Pools are apt to putrify but running Waters are sweetest an idle Man is a Burden to Himself a Prey to Satan a Grief to the Spirit of God a Mischief to others He is a Burden to himself for he knoweth not what to do with his Time in the Morning he says Would God it were Evening and in the Evening would God it were Morning The Mind is like a Mill when it wanteth Corn it grindeth upon it self He is a Prey to Satan the House is emptied swept and garnished And then he goeth and taketh with himself seven other Spirits more wicked than himself and they enter in and dwell there Mat. 12.44 45. The Devil findeth them at leisure When David was idle on the Tarras he was tempted to Adultery Birds are seldom taken in their Flight but when they pitch and rest on the Ground He is a Grief to God's Spirit Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands that he may have to give to him that needeth with Vers. 30. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Idle Men quench the vigor of their Natural Gifts and lose those Abilities that are bestowed on them He is a Mischief to Others 2 Thess. 3.11 For we hear there are some that walk among you disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all but are busy-bodies They that do nothing will do too much no Work maketh way for ill Work or for Censure and busy inquisition into other Mens Actions and so they prove the Fire-brands of Contention and unneighbourly Quarrels There must be a Calling and a Work to do 3. This Work is given them by God He appointeth to every one his Task and will be glorified by no Works but what are by himself assigned to them in their Station 1. By his Word 2. By his Providence 1. By his Word There is no calling and course of Service good but what is agreeable to the Word of God Psal. 119.105 Thy Word is a Light unto my Feet and a Lamp unto my Paths We must not settle in a sinful course of Life Men may tolerate Evil Callings but God never appointed them As for instance if any Calling and Course of Life be against Piety Temperance Justice it is against the Word Titus 2.12 Teaching us that denying Vngodliness and Worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Against Piety as to be an Idolatrous Priest or to make Shrines for Idols which was Demetrius his Calling in Ephesus and Tertullian in his Book de Idolatria sheweth this was the practice of many Christians to get their Livings by making Statues and Images and other Ornaments to sell to Heathen Idolaters Against Justice as Pi●●cy Usury and other oppressive Courses Against Sobriety as such Callings as meerly tend to feed the Luxury Pride and Vanity of Men so Mountebanks Comedians Stage-Players It were endless to instance in all In general the Calling must be good and lawful 2. By his Providence which ruleth in every thing that falleth out even to the least Matters especially hath the Lord a great Hand in Callings and appointing to every one his Estate and Condition of Life In Paradise God set Adam his Work to dress and prune the Trees of the Garden Gen. 2.15 And still he doth not only give Abilities and special Inclinations but also disposeth of the Education of the Parent and the Passages of Mens Lives to bring them to such a Calling Isa. 54.16 Behold I have created the Smith that bloweth the Coals in the Fire and that bringeth forth an Instrument for his Work Common Trades and Crafts are from the Lord. The Heathens had a several God for every several Trade as the Papists now have a tutelar Saint but they rob God of his Honour he giveth the Faculty and the Blessing Isa. 28.24 to the end His God doth instruct him to discretion and doth teach him c. He giveth the State and appointeth the Work Your particular Estate and Condition of Life doth not come by Chance or by the Care Will and Pleasure of Man but the Ordination of God without whom a Sparrow cannot fall to the Ground In the higher Callings of Ministry and Magistracy there is a greater solemnity But how should a Man glorify God in his Place and Station wherein God hath set him Answ. 1. Be
Christ and yet run after such low things SERMON XXIV JOHN XVII 15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the World but that thou shouldest keep them from the Evil. CHRIST having enforced his Request explaineth it not to inform God but to comfort the Disciples as Explications in Prayer are for our benefit Our Heavenly Father can interpret our Sighs and Breathings but formed and explicite words have a greater force and efficacy upon our Hearts This Explication is delivered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not that thou shouldest take them out of the World that is presently glorify them either by an ordinary Death or by an extraordinary translation as Elijah and Enoch were translated Christ was not ignorant of their danger yet he would have them ride out the Storm he would not carry his Disciples to Heaven with him nor doth he pray his Father to do it tho he loved their Company and they his that they could be content to die with him as John 11.16 Let us also go that we may die with him yet I pray not that thou wouldst take them out of the World 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that thou shouldest keep them from the Evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may be rendred from the Evil One or from the Evil Thing as referring to a Person or Thing To a Person the Evil One is often put for the Devil Mat. 13.19 VVhen any one heareth the VVord of the Kingdom and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked One 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and taketh away that which he heard 1 John 2.13 I write unto you young Men because ye have overcome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wicked One. 1 John 3.12 Not as Cain who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that wicked One and slew his Brother Or else to the evil Thing Mat. 6.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deliver us from Evil. Mat. 5.37 VVhatever is more than this cometh of Evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 5.19 The whole VVorld lieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in wickedness Which shall we prefer I Answer Since the Words lie so indifferently for either sence we may interpret them of both keep them from the Author of Evil and from Evil it self from Sin from the Power and Snares of the Devil from Destruction till their Ministry be accomplished Satan he is the Author the World is the Bait Sin is the Hook Keep them from the Devil that they may not come under his Power from the World that they may not be deceived by its Allurements Briefly this keeping may be referred to their Life or to their Souls keep them alive as long as they have work to do keep their Souls that they may neither by the World or by the Devil be drawn to do any thing unseemly and unbecoming their Profession 2 Cor. 13.7 I pray God that ye do no Evil but that ye should do that which is honest And Rev. 3.10 I will keep them from the hour of Temptation which shall come upon all the Earth to try them that dwell upon the Earth It is meant of a Preservation in the time of a bloody Persecution under Trajan Christ prays for temporal and spiritual Safety temporal Safety so far as is necessary to carry on the Duty of their Calling Points 1. Obs. That it standeth with the VVisdom and Goodness of God to continue us in the VVorld notwithstanding the Dangers of it Christ loved his Disciples and knew they were exposed to the World's hatred yet I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the VVorld In Evil Times sometimes God taketh his Children out of the World and sometimes he continueth them in the World both Dispensations stand with his Wisdom and Goodness There are Reasons on both sides 1. For taking them away in Evil Times It standeth with his Goodness that they may not feel the smart of them Isa. 57.1 The Righteous perisheth and no Man layeth it to Heart yea the merciful Man is taken away none considering that the Righteous is taken away from the Evil to come When Corn is gathered in then the Beasts are turned into the Field God valueth his Saints so that he doth not count the World worthy of them Heb. 11.38 Of whom the VVorld was not worthy He sheweth his Jewels and then shutteth them up into the Casker And with his Wisdom that they may not be corrupted The Wisdom of Providence concurreth to our Preservation as well as the Power of Grace Enoch was translated and taken out of the World in a wicked Age. 1 Cor. 11.32 But when we are judged we are chastned of the Lord that we might not be condemned with the VVorld What judging and chastning was it not only by Sickness but by Death Many are sick and many weak and many fallen asleep 2. Christ continueth them in the World as the Disciples here partly because he hath need of them as the Disciples were to preach the Gospel Partly that they might have more experience and a more grown Faith they might try God and God might try them they might have experience of his Faithfulness and he of their Loyalty The World must have a time of trial and so must we Nay he dealeth thus with Believers they are continued in Evil Times either because God hath more work for them to do or that they may carry more experience with them to Heaven Vse To refer it to the Wisdom and Goodness of God either to go or tarry Christ knew there was Service for them to do therefore he was express I pray not that they may be taken out of the VVorld We that know not the Counsels of God must refer our selves to his Pleasure 2. Obs. That as long as we have a Ministry and Service to accomplish we should be willing to continue in the World Paul was at a strait Phil. 1.21 22 23. The Cause was Service For me to live is Christ and to die is Gain For if I live in the Flesh this is the Fruit of my Labour viz. bringing Honour to Christ yet what I shall chuse I wot not For I am in a strait betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better He is ravished with the Thoughts of it but then he considereth the profit of the Church Vers. 24. Nevertheless to abide in the Flesh is more needful for you and Service casts the Scale Paul's Case is the Case many times of mortified Christians after long experience of God and weanedness from the World they are in such a strait Natural Motion is swifter in the End the nearer they draw to the End the more vehemently do they long for Christ's company Some make it a Question which is hardest to bear Affliction or to wait for Glory the work of Patience or the delay of Hope Desire is a more restless Affection than Sorrow yet I should think the depth of Sorrow is more burdensome than
the Institution must be carefully observed if we would have the Blessing God is said to imploy not only those who are called extraordinarily but in the ordinary way The Elders of Ephesus had no extraordinary Call yet it is said The Holy Ghost had made them Overseers Acts 20.28 2. In respect of Satan He will soon spy out our want of Commission as he did in the Sons of Sceva Acts 19.14 15. Jesus I know and Paul I know but who are ye I know Jesus as the Lord Paul as an authorized Minister one that had a lawful Commission But who are ye And then the Devil fell upon them and wounded them Vers. 16. It is true we have not such visible Instances of the Devil's Power now as then because God rules the World now by Wisdom not by Power but yet we may observe the secret Power of the Devil upon those that run of their own accord and venture upon the Office of the Ministry without a Call None are more apt to be led aside into Errors and those of the grossest Nature than those that venture upon this Office without a Call Origen's Errors are by many ascribed to his neglect or want of Ordination And the Arrians saith the Synod of Alexandria were Fabrose vitro ●●ae creationis infamous for want of a right Call to the Ministry and therefore fell into that damnable Error 3. In regard of your selves that you may digest Difficulties with the more Patience You can never endure any thing with comfort but when you can thus say I am in God's way doing God's Work This is a great ground of Patience Conscience in a time of Danger will take hold of the least faulty Circumstance Vzzah had little comfort in his stroke because he was out of God's way Jude 11. Wo unto them for they have gone in the way of Cain c. and perished in the Gainsaying of Korah Korah was a sad instance 4. In respect of the Church This External Mission is necessary that the Church may receive you comfortably It is made a Character of Christ's Sheep not to hear the Voice of a Stranger John 10.5 nor of such as do not enter in by the Door Vers. 1. And in the Old Testament it is often said Hearken not to them for I have not sent them In the Primitive Church this was strictly observed When Chrysostom was banished and Arsanius unduly succeeded him the People would not so much as hear him Theodoret witnesseth that some of them would rather go into Banishment than join with him in Publick Worship So when Felix was set over Rome instead of Liberius against the Consent of the Church the People would not enter while he was present tho Felix was Orthodox and nothing could be objected against his Doctrine This Instance is approved by Luther in his Comment on the Psalms of Degrees and in his way of Expression he saith the same should be done to an Angel or Arch-Angel tho he came with never so good Tidings if we knew they came without lawful Commission Vse 1. Information in two things that the Ministry is an Office and a standing Office 1. The Ministry is an Office not a Work of Charity which every one must perform there must be fit Persons sent therefore it is said Acts 10.41 that Christ appeared Not to all the People but unto Witnesses chosen before of God whom he commanded to preach unto the People Therefore he that cannot say he is chosen of God for this work must not take this honour upon him lest he run before he be sent and so they do but prattle not preach for Preaching is an Ordinance So the Lord said to Ananias concerning Paul Acts 9.15 He is a chosen Vessel before me to bear my Name before the Gentiles and Kings and the Children of Israel He is called a chosen Vessel not in regard of Eternal Election but in regard of Designation to the Work of the Gospel Every one is bound by the Law of Charity to use his Gifts to the edification of others but still in a regular way A King hath many Subjects but all his Subjects are not Courtiers and special Servants All Members of the Church are Subjects of Christ's Kingdom but all are not Officers for these are chosen Members 2. That the Ministry is a standing Office When Christ was about to depart then he sendeth Apostles with a Promise that he would be with them to the end of the World He sendeth them that they may send others and so continue the Succession So that the Apostles are not only sent by Christ but the Ministers of the Gospel virtually being sent by Christ's Deputies as they are the King's Officers that are not only immediately created by the King but by his Power Still God hath ever had an ordinary standing Ministry in the Church In the Old Testament there were not only Prophets that were immediately called to deliver God's Message and to write Scripture but an ordinary Ministry to open the Law and the Prophets and to preserve Knowledg in the Church Mat. 2.6 7. The Law of the Truth was in his Mouth and Iniquity was not found in his Lips c. For the Priest's Lips should keep Knowledg and they should seek the Law at his Mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts Therefore the ordinary Levites are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Teachers of the Law In the New Testament Christ gave not only Apostles to write Scripture but Pastors and Teachers to open Scripture Ephes. 4.11 He gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists ad some Pastors and Teachers The Bible is not enough for your Edification without this Institution the same Christ that instituted Apostles to write Scripture instituted Pastors and Teachers to open and apply Scripture This is always necessary tho Religion be never so throughly planted in a Nation for we need continual Remembrance●s And the end of Preaching is not only to learn what we knew not before but that we may have Spiritual Things always before our Eyes and in the view and consideration of Conscience and that the Heart be always kept lively and soft and tender by the frequent droppings of the Word and that we may receive new Influences of Grace in God's Way Yea for Nations how soon would they degenerate without a Monitor and standing Ministry and all Things would be wrapt up in Error and Darkness This was the first occasion of Idolatry among the Nations when their Monitors ceased and Religion began to be confined to a few Families Experience will best shew the necessity of such a standing Office in the Church Vse 2. Reproof of those that invade the Minister's Office and of those that countenance them Jude says of them They perished in the gainsaying of Corah Jude 11. God's Judgments will overtake them Corah's Sin was levelling of Offices in the Church All the Lord's People are holy why should any take a special Office
Love towards him was infinite his hatred to Sin infinite his apprehension of his Father's Displeasure clear all which made his Soul heavy to the Death Our Sins were more burdensome to him than his own Wounds No Man's Understanding is so great as to apprehend what Christ felt Christ himself can only give us an account of the greatness of his Sufferings David confessed that his Sins were more than the Hairs upon his Head yet he saith cleanse me from secret Sins implying many had escaped his notice and knowledg How great was the Burden of Christ that was the Lamb bearing the Sins of the whole World Neither did Christ suffer Pains only for Sins but to make a purchase of Spiritual Blessings and yet the price exceeded the value of that which was bought 2. His willingness to suffer for us Christ was so set upon his Passion that he called Peter Satan for contradicting it Mat. 16.23 Get thee behind me Satan for thou art an offence to me When Jonah saw the Storm he said Cast me into the Sea this Storm was raised for his own sake but when Christ saw the misery of Mankind he said Let it come on me We raised the Storm Christ was cast in to allay it As if a Prince passing by an Execution should take the Malefactor's Chains and suffer in his stead Christ bore our Sorrows he would have this Work in no other Hands but his own His earnestness to partake of the last Passover sheweth his willingness he had such a desire to see his Body on the Cross that Judas seemed too slow not diligent enough Christ saith John 13.27 That thou dost do quickly It is not an Approbation of his Sin but a Testimony of his Love every day seems long If Christ had been to suffer so much for every Man as he did for all Mankind he would have done it there wanted but a Precept there wanted not Love his Heart was much beyond his Sufferings as the Windows of the Temple were greater and more open within than without 1 Kings 6.4 If Paul that had but a drop of Grace could wish himself accursed from Christ for his Brethren his Kindred according to the Flesh Rom. 9.3 How much more willing was Christ Surely then we should as readily consecrate our selves to his Service Christ saith Lo I come to do thy Will O God Heb. 10.9 and it becometh every Christian to make an unbounded resignation of himself to God Acts 9.6 Lord what wouldst thou have me to do Secondly The Act 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I sanctify Things are said in Scripture to be sanctified when they are set apart and fitted and prepared for some holy Use. 1. As it signifies to separate or set apart from a common to a holy Use as the Sacrifices under the Law were separated and chosen out of the Flock or Herd the best and the fairest such as were without spot and blemish and then designed for this holy Use of being an Offering to God So was Christ separated for this use to be the great Sin-offering or Sacrifice of Atonement for the whole Congregation 1 Pet. 1.19 20. Ye were redeemed with the precious Blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot When was Christ so sanctified He did sanctify himself when he accepted the Conditions of the Covenant of Redemption Isa. 53.10 11 12. And visibly at his Baptism he did present himself among Sinners as our Surety and offer himself to the Father to pay our Ransom which God accepted for he declared himself well-pleased with Christ as standing in our room Mat. 3.17 Lo a Voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased Ordinary Baptism is a Dedication to God So Christ's Baptism was a Dedication of himself to the recovering of the lost World to God And then a little before his Death in this Prayer I sanctify my self Afterwards in his Agonies Not my Will but thine be done At his Death he offered up himself Heb. 9.14 Who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God 2. It signifieth his Qualification and Fitness he did fit the Humane Nature with all habitual and actual Holiness in this sense Christ did sanctify himself as God he fitted himself for this Work 1. There was the Innocency and Purity of his Humane Nature without any stain of Corruption and therefore he is called that holy Thing Luke 1.35 This Holiness was necessary in regard of himself otherwise his Humane Nature could not be assumed into the Unity of his Person for God can have no Communion with Sin no more than Light and Darkness can agree together It was necessary in regard of his Office that he might satisfy for our Sins Heb. 7.26 Such an High Priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled separate from Sinners The Priest of the Gospel must be sinless because of the excellency of the Sacrifice that the Priest may not be worse than the Sacrifice While things were carried in Type and Figure and a Beast was offered in Sacrifice a sinful Man sufficed But now the Satisfaction was really to be made for us and Sin done away and we were to be made really Holy our Priest was to be holy harmless undefiled It is for our Comfort that Christ was Sanctified his Original Sanctity is a Remedy against our Original Sin and Impurity When we are troubled with our Natural Deformity it is comfortable to think that God looketh upon us in Christ who was Holy by Nature it is a comfortable Hope that the Corruption of our Nature is covered in God's Eyes and shall be diminished more and more 2. His Actual Holiness in his Conversation The Business of the Mediator was to commend Obedience and he hath done it by his own Example and the way that he took to recover us to God Rom. 5.19 As by one Man's Disobedience many were made Sinners so by the Obedience of one shall many be made Righteous Phil. 2.5 Let the same Mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus Some dislike such a particular Application we have need of all Christ's Properties and we should make use of all Why doth the Scripture set it down but to shew that he is fit to remove Sin Original and Actual As a covetous Man looks on a piece of Gold or we on a thing that we delight in we turn it on every side The first Adam was by God's Institution a common Person in him sinning the World sinned the second Adam was a publick Fountain of Holiness who is an infinite Person as well as a publick Person Thirdly The Object I sanctify my self not an Angel to do this Work for us but Himself Under the Law the Priests offered Bulls and Goats while they themselves remained untouched but Christ offered himself As God he was Priest as Man the Sacrifice As there was Love in the Priest so there is worth in the Sacrifice Christ was both Priest and Sacrifice it was
While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are Temporal but the things which are not seen are Eternal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is your Heart set upon and what do you make your Scope and Aim A Child of God prayeth professeth in order to Eternity A Man shall know his general Scope by what satisfieth him Are you contented with the World to have your Names written in Earth to have your whole Portion in this Life for other things you will give Goda Discharge Luther would not give God an Acquittance Valde protestatus summe nolle sic à Deo satiati Grace must have Eternity for it would fain answer God's Love it would live for ever for ever to praise God and serve God All the World will not satisfy it without this eternal enjoiment of God 2. Have you an Eternal Principle Is there a Life begun that cannot be quenched Is the Immortal Seed conveyed into your Hearts 1 Pet. 1.23 Being born again not of Corruptible Seed but of Incorruptible by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever Then certainly thou art loved from Eternity for thou hast a Pledg of it First or last there is a Work wrought in their Souls that can never be undone and disannulled something that is of an Everlasting Nature And therefore what Seeds of Eternity hath God planted in your Hearts Common Graces and Moral Vertues these are of no long continuance the Soul must have an abiding Work an immortal Work 3. You may know it by this you will be much in Trial whether this be wrought in you or no whether there be such an Eternal Principle conveyed into your Hearts Morality is puffed up never suspects it self and common Grace puts us into good Moods now and then gives some tasts and flashes Heb. 6.4 5. They were once enlightned and have tasted of the Heavenly Gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost and have tasted the good Word of God and the Power of the World to come Morality doth not labour to see that all is sure and safe and Common Grace only gives us some Taste and Flashes But a Child of God is looking after the Unction that will abide the Seed that remaineth and is careful to see that there is Grace and to be increasing in Grace and is always examining whether it be real SERMON XLIII JOHN XVII 25 O Righteous Father the World hath not known thee but I have known thee and these have known that thou hast sent me OUR Lord had laid down the Object of his Prayers and the Matter of them and now he comes to the Reasons tho in such affectionate Addresses to God we should not be anxious in stating the Method Some conceive this a Doxology as Mat. 11.25 26. I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the Wise and Prudent and hast revealed them unto Babes Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight He had fully discharged his Office as a Prophet and therefore giveth Thanks But I rather look upon it as a part of Supplication He had made his Will and Testament and now alledgeth the Equity of it Here First A Compellation O Righteous Father Secondly The Qualification of the Disciples for that Glory which he sought for them Saving Knowledg Which is illustrated I. By its Opposite the affected and obstinate Ignorance of the World The World hath not known thee II. By its Efficient and Exemplary Cause but I have known thee First A Compellation Righteous Father In which there is an Argument secretly couched For always Titles of God are suited to the Matter in Hand It is brought to shew the Reason why the World is excluded the participation of Heavenly Glory and the Equity in bestowing it upon the Elect. He had before called him Holy Father now Righteous Father God is Just and Righteous two manner of ways in a Legal and in an Evangelical Sense In a Legal Sense his Justice is rewarding Men according to the Merit of their Actions Thus he dealeth with the Reprobate lost World In the Evangelical Sense God's Righteousness doth not regard the Merit of their Actions but the State of the Person and judgeth them rather according to what they have received than what they have done And so God dealeth with the Elect and Reprobate the one are rewarded according to their Works the other according to their State evidenced by their Works to both God is just So that I might 1. Observe That in the Condemnation of the World God is just tho they remain in blindness 1. Because God hath done enough God is aforehand with them they have more Means than they use well The Gentile World had Light enough from the Creatures to convince them of the True God Rom. 1.19 20. Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it unto them For the invisible things of him from the Creation of the World are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his Eternal Power and Godhead so that they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without excuse Yet they would not acknowledg the True God The Jewish World had Miracles enough to convince them of the true Messiah Joh. 15.24 If I had not done among them the Works that no other Man did they had not had Sin but now they have both seen and hated me and my Father The Carnal World within the Pale of the Church have had means enough to be better and tho it be blind in the things of God yet the Lord is clear Isa. 5.4 What could I have done more for my Vineyard than I have done in point of External Administration The Lord loveth to be clear when he judgeth Psal. 51.4 compared with Rom. 3.26 In all Debates he loveth the Victory Isa. 65.2 I have spread out my Hands all the day unto a rebellious People which walketh in a way which was not good after their own Thoughts None goeth to Hell for want of warning Mat. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee how often would I have gathered thy Children together as a Hen gathereth her Chickens under her Wings but ye would not 2. They have not done their part They dally with Means scorn Wisdom their Weakness is wilful and their Blindness affected The Things of God must be spiritually discerned but they are folly to them 1 Cor. 2.14 For the natural Man receiveth not the Things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can be know them because they are spiritually discerned There is not only an Impotency but a Scorn there is a positive Enmity as well as an Incapacity John 3.19 This is the Condemnation that Light is come into the World and Men loved Darkness rather than Light because
they which when they have heard the word go forth and are choaked with cares and riches and pleasures of this life and bring forth no fruit to perfection It makes our abode in the World dangerous 2 Pet. 1.4 Having escaped the corruption that is in world through lust It maketh us lazy and negligent in our callings It turneth our table into a snare while we glut our selves with carnal delights and oppress our bodies when we should refresh them and maketh us inordinate in all that we enjoy and do Therefore to get rid of such an enemy surely is a great mercy 6. Till you get rid of sin there is a thorn in your foot so that you will have no ease nor comfort till you set your selves to destroy every sin of heart and life and make it your principal care and daily business For if you live in wilful sin and negligence you are unwilling to be delivered and so lose all comfort of Justification and Hope by Christ. While you cherish sensual lusts which you should mortifie all the Promises in Gods Book will not yield you one dram of comfort nor help you to assurance you may complain long enough before you have ease for this still lyeth against you You regard iniquity in your hearts Psal. 66.18 Conscience must be better used before it will speak peace to you They only that have cast off the yoke of sin are freed from the guilt of it they that give way to sin are not justified Justification is opposed both to the condemnation of a Sinner and to the condemnation of an Hypocrite A Sinner is justified from his sin by Faith in Christ only if his Faith be sincere if he still indulge sin in his heart and be a servant of sin he is still liable to be condemned both as a Sinner and an Hypocrite For he remains a Sinner still and is an Hypocrite inasmuch as he pretends to that Faith by which he should be justified from all his other sins while he hath it not IV. How is it a Consequent of our dying with Christ There are two sorts of men that profess Communion with Christs Death 1. Those that are visibly baptized into his Name 2. Those that are really converted to God The professed or penitent Believer or the nominal and real Christian. 1. The visible Professor it is his duty to look after freedom from sin All Christians do visibly profess by virtue of Christs Death to dye unto sin they are dead by Profession they are dead by their Baptismal Vow and Undertaking but this is but in word and in deed in shew not in power if they do not mind these things The careless Christian forgets the obligation of Baptism though he doth not renounce it 2 Pet. 1.9 He is blind and cannot see afar off and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins Christianity calleth him out of those pollutions that he walloweth in and affordeth him great helps to avoid them but he undervalueth all and is little affected with that Pardon and Life which is offered in the new Covenant and which by his Baptism he seemed and was esteemed to have a right unto and as a purblind man cannot see things at a distance they are so intent upon things worldly and sensual that they forget the purification of their Souls or due preparation for the World to come Now we cannot say de facto that such a man is actually freed from sin for he is not truly dead with Christ but de jure of right he should mind this dying to sin that he may no longer serve sin he cannot comfortably conclude himself to be pardoned or sanctified or one who is made a partaker of this Grace it is not his Priviledge to be freed from sin but because of his ingagement to Christ it is his duty 2. The next sort is the real Convert or penitent Believer who is indeed dead with Christ it is both his duty and his priviledge he hath not only undertaken to dye unto sin and to renounce his former course of life but hath seriously begun it and by the power of the Spirit of Christ carrieth on this work daily so that by virtue of Christs dying he is dead and so really is and is also reckoned to be one that is freed from the dominion of sin So the Apostles speech in the Text is exactly parallel with that 1 Pet. 4.1 He that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin he that is dead that is spiritually dead here is the same with him that hath suffered in the flesh freed from sin that is is absolved from sin not in regard of guilt but power is the same with hath ceased from sin there so that one place doth explain another But let me prove 1. It is his duty to be cleansed from sin or freed from the dominion of sin for it is brought to prove that he must no longer serve sin 1. All our Communion with Christ is by the Spirit of Christ now where-ever the Spirit comes to dwell he doth infuse a Principle of Grace which doth not only strive against sin but conquer sin at least so far as to take away the dominion of it Gal. 5.16 17. Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh therefore they cannot serve sin as they did before There are two Principles in us and accordingly there are two Desires the one proceeding from the Flesh the other from the Spirit which are so opposite one to another that what the one liketh the other disliketh and whatsoever you do in compliance with the one you do it in opposition to the other But that which is in predominancy is the Spirit which rebuketh the carnal Nature and Principle in us 2. In our Conversion to Christ there is included an aversion from sin and therefore it must not bear sway and command and influence our actions as it did formerly It is called Repentance from dead works Heb. 6.1 not for them only but from them it breedeth not only a sorrow but a loathing and forsaking of the sin we repent of Many will say they are sorry and do repent for sin which they have committed but all kind of sorrow doth not evidence true Repentance there is a sort of repenting and sorrow for sin in Hell all do repent and are sorry for sin at last when a sinner hath sucked out all the carnal sweet that is in sin and the sting only is left behind no wonder if he be troubled this is Attrition not Contrition not a sorrow that ariseth from love to God a sorrow that doth not break the force of sin they go on still there is no change of heart or life 3. There must be a difference between a man carnal and regenerate and what is the difference since sin remaineth in both The one serveth sin and the other serveth God
his Offices John 15.26 But when the comforter is come whom I will send to you from the father even the spirit of truth that proceedeth from the father he shall testifie of me And John 16.14 He shall take of mine and glorify me He revealeth the tenor of Christs Doctrine and attests the truth of it by his gifts and graces bestowed upon the Church and to every one of us in particular by his powerful effects in our hearts Therefore 't is said We are witnesses of these things and so is the holy ghost which he hath given to them that obey Acts 5.32 Christ that taught us the Christian Religion doth work it in us by his Spirit and so doth confirm it to us and partly Because by this means all the Divine persons have their distinct work and share in our recovery to God 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the fore-knowledg of God the Father through the sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Christ. The Father concurs by Electing the Son as Purchasing the Spirit as Sanctifying and inclining us to God As the Father must not be without the Glory of his free grace nor the Son of his infinite merit so neither the Holy Ghost of his powerful and effectual application and partly also because this is agreeable to the Oeconomy or Dispensation that is observed among the Divine persons The Spirit is the effective power of God therefore he it is that causeth our life or by regeneration infuseth a new Life into us Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit into you and cause you to walk in my ways I prove it by three Arguments The first is taken from the nature of the thing it self certainly we cannot live independently without the influence of God for all Life is originally in him and from him conveyed to us and that by his Spirit In life natural 't is clear all that God did in Creation was done by his Spirit Job 26.13 By his spirit he hath garnished the Heavens his hands hath formed the crooked serpent The Spirit is the immediate worker in the Creation of the World by his concurrent operation with the Father and the Son all things were produced he speaketh there of the Heavenly Bodies and Constellations And again in Psal. 114.30 Thou sendest forth thy spirit and they were created And when the Creation of man is spoken of Mal. 2.15 Did he not make one yet had he the residue of the Spirit 'T is true also of Spiritual life which is called a new Birth and no man can enter into the kingdom of God but he that is born of water and the spirit John 3.5 and 't is called a new Creature All Creation is of God 2 Cor. 5.17 18. A resurrection to life or a quickning dead Souls Eph. 2.1 5. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Even when we were dead in sins hath he quickened u● together with Christ. And therefore the Spirit of Life is from God Now if God effecteth all these things by his Spirit to whom but him alone is our Salvation to be ascribed as the Scripture doth frequently mention My second Argument is taken from our incapacity to help our selves and recover our selves from the Devil the World and the Flesh to God so blind are our minds so depraved are our hearts so strong are our Lusts and so many are our Temptations and so inveterate are our evil Customs that nothing will serve the turn but the Spirit of God who doth open the eyes of our mind Eph. 1.18 Change our hearts Titus 3.5 reconcile our alienated and estranged affections to God that we may return to his Love and live in Obedience to him and finally be presented before him as fit to live for ever in his Presence 1 Cor. 21.22 And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your minds by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death to present you holy and unblameable and unreprovable in his sight All this doth the powerful and All conquering Spirit of God by vertue of the meritorious purchase of Christ. In short he findeth in us such addictedness to Sin such a love to the present World such indulgence to the Flesh as beareth down both reason and the authority of God that no less Agent can do the work My third reason is taken from the subsequent effects If this life be strengthned by the spirit 't is much more wrought and infused by the spirit at first when all is against it Now the Scripture is copious in asserting the supply of the Spirit of Christ as necessary to do and suffer the Will of God Eph. 3.16 Strengthned with all might in the inner man from the spirit 1 Pet. 4.14 The spirit of God and of glory resteth upon you Surely he that must help us when we are living mus● quicken us when we are dead and he that is necessary to break the force of our carnal affections still after they have received their Deaths Wound was absolutely necessary to overcome them at first when in full strength the necessity of strengthning grace doth much more shew the necessity of renewing grace for there needs much more power to overcome the corruptions of nature than to heal or prevent the infirmities of the Saints 2. The new nature is the product of the Holy Ghost John 3.6 That which is born of the spirit is spirit Men become spiritual in their dispositions inclinations actions and aims from the effects of the spirit of Regeneration which may be considered with respect to God or to man First How the converted Person or new Creature standeth affected to God seemeth to be set forth by the Apostle in that place 2 Tim. 1.7 For we have not received the spirit of fear but of love and power and a sound mind I shall explain it Observe in the negative description but one part only of Mortification is mentioned deadness to the fears of the World but that defect may be supplied from another Scripture The spirit lusteth against the flesh Gal. 5.17 he deadneth us to the delights and hopes of the world as well as the fears and sorrows but the one is understood in the other for this spirit causeth us to prepare for sufferings in the world and to look for no great matters here but to expect crosses losses wants persecutions injuries painful sicknesses and death and doth fortifie us against all bodily distresses that we are not greatly moved by them considering our relation to God and Interest in blessedness to come which doth weigh down all so 't is not a spirit of fear But then you must enlarge it by considering the main work of the spirit which is to subdue the lusts of the flesh that the government of God may be set up in our Hearts for the flesh is the great rebel against God and sanctified reason Therefore we must obey the spirit and take
obtaining pardon till regeneration and conversion for God doth not pardon while we are in our sins and Life and Heaven we cannot have till sin be quite done away for we are not introduced into the presence of God till we be compleat in holiness Eph. 5.27 That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish Col. 1.22 to present you holy and unblamable and unreprovable in his sight Jude 24. and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory During life obedience is but imperfectly begun but when 't is compleated and finished we do not stay out of Heaven one moment then are we fully made free from sin VSE 4. Is to put us upon tryal and self-reflection Is the righteousness of the Law fulfilled in us 1. We begin to fulfil it when we set our selves to obey the will of God taking his Law for our Rule and his promises for our encouragement This resolution is the fruit of regenerating Grace if it be sincere and it argueth a renewed heart and conscience Heb. 13.18 Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience and hath in it perfection of parts tho not of degrees 2. This must be seconded with answerable endeavours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth a continued act to have the righteousness of the Law fulfilled in us is not the work of one day but implieth a constant walk and obedience to motions after the Spirit 3. We must endeavour to be more compleat every day Luke 1.6 They were righteous before God walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless And Col. 4.12 Labouring for you that you may stand compleat in all the will of God So we read of some that were full of all goodness Rom. 15.14 and full of good works Acts 9.36 as we find in Dorcas It is the fault of most Christians that they beat down the price of Religion as low as they can and so make an hard shift to go to Heaven 4. Our begun-sanctification shall be perfected before Christ hath done with us Col. 1.28 that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus Here we are very imperfect but it shall be perfectly fulfilled SERMON VI. ROM VIII 5 They that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh and they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit THIS Scripture containeth a notable character of those that are interested in the Priviledges of the Gospel and will help you in your assuring-work or making out your claim and title In the words you have 1. An intimation of two sorts of persons they that are after the flesh and they that are after the spirit 2. Their different Disposition and Practice is compared and set forth 1. By the Act They both mind their several Affairs 2. By the Object things of the flesh and things of the spirit Different Persons different Objects and different Affections Thus you may in one View and Prospect discern the scope and intent of the place I shall lay it before you in several Propositions and then apply all together 1. There are two sorts of men in the World some after the flesh and some after the spirit 2. That these two sorts of men have two different objects the things of the spirit and the things of the flesh 3. That men discover their temper and constitution of soul by their savour or affection to either of these objects I. Doct. There are two sorts of men in the world some after the flesh and some after the spirit So it must be There is a twofold Original which produceth a twofold Principle which is acted by a twofold assisting power and this bringeth them under a twofold covenant which maketh way for a twofold final estate into which all the World issueth it self 1. There is a twofold Original some are only born others new born the renewed and the unrenewed John 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the spirit is spirit Some remain under the power of corrupt Nature others are regenerate and renewed by the spirit 2. This twofold Original produceth a twofold Principle that men are led by flesh and spirit which are always contrary one to another Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit lusteth against the flesh and these two are contrary one to the other Men if they be merely such as Nature hath left them are governed by the flesh or their own carnal inclinations Others are led by the spirit walk after it as ver 1. They that are born again have a new Principle set up in their Natures to incline them to God 3. These Two Principles are supported and assisted with contrary powers They that are governed by the flesh are also acted by Satan he rules and works in them Eph. 2.23 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the prince of the power of the air the spirit that now ruleth in the children of disobedience among whom also we had our conversation in times past in the lusts of the flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind There are all the enemies of our salvation They that follow inbred corruption as their guide fall to the Devil's share who hurrieth them on in a way of sin more vehemently than otherways they would do But now those that are led by Grace or a new Principle or the new Nature as their guide they are assisted and acted by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sons of God The Spirit is their Guardian and Keeper he exciteth and worketh up the Habit of Grace into greater power and activity Now being under such contrary powers no wonder that they are so different in their courses and so contrary one to another It is said Prov. 29.27 The wicked is an abomination to the just and he that is upright in his way is an abomination to the wicked Their Birth is different the inward Principle by which they are guided is different Nature and Grace and they are under different assisting powers either under the power of Satan or under the power and conduct of God's holy Spirit and therefore no wonder that their course is different and that there is enmity between both the Seeds A godly man cannot delight in a wicked man and a wicked man cannot abide the godly The ground of Friendship is eadem velle nolle Similitude and likeness of mind and disposition only the enmity and contrariety is carried on with some difference The godly pity the wicked but the wicked hate the godly because they are against that course of life that they chuse They think strange they do not run with them to the same neglect of God and carelesness of heavenly things and therefore
men know not God nor Christ nor the things of the Spirit it is a sottish people of no understanding Isa. 27.11 And generally the fear of the Lord giveth a good understanding Psal. 111.10 A blunt Iron that is red hot will pierce further into a board than a sharp Tool that is cold Love to God inlivens our notions of God and Christ and the world to come and perfects them but then 't is true that carnal men may be well stocked with literal knowledg they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 2.20 A form of the knowledg of the law But they have not those piercing Apprehensions and Heart-warming thoughts of danger duty and Blessedness as the spiritual man hath the lively light of the spirit leaveth a greater power and impression upon the heart than this cold knowledg doth or can do Some carnal men may have more of the Notions Words Forms Methods than the unlearned Saints have but they want the Thing these were made for they may dress the meat as Cooks but the Godly feed on it and digest it and are most capable savingly to understand the things concerning the spiritual life 2. The next act of the mind is cogitation and so they are said to mind the things of the flesh whose hearts are continually haunted and exercised with carnal thoughts or thoughts about sensual worldly and earthly Things To make this evident let me tell you there are Three Sorts of Thoughts exprest by Three distinct Words in Scripture 1. There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Discourses and Reasonings 2. There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 musings or imaginations 3. There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 devices all these Ways doth the Flesh or Spirit bewray it ●elf 1. Sometimes in our Discourses Debates and Reasonings The spirit is seen in debating with our selves about our eternal condition Acts 16.14 She attended to the things that were spoken That is weighed them in her mind And Luke 2.19 Mary pondered them in her heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 compared thought with thought Rom. 8.31 What shall we say to these things Now the fleshly minding is seen partly in justling out these thoughts and opposing these Discourses of the mind that we have no profit by them and partly by filling and stuffing the mind with carnal thoughts and discourses that there is no room for better things 2 Pet. 2.14 An heart they have exercised with covetous practices Their hearts are always busied with low carnal and base thoughts Therefore 't is said The heart of the wicked is nothing worth Prov. 10.20 All the debates and discourses of their minds are of no value and tend to no serious and profitable use 2. Musings admiring their excellency and blessing and applauding themselves in what they have and hope for in the World Dan. 4.30 Is not this great Babel that I have built for the house of the kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my majesty And Psal. 144.15 Happy is the people that is in such a case This self-blessing is a sign of carnal minding They never set their minds a work upon spiritual and heavenly things Surely one that believeth Heaven and looketh for Heaven and longeth for Heaven will be thinking of it Shall an ambitious man find such a savour in thoughts of preferment a covetous man in the thoughts of wealth and riches a vain-glorious man in the ecchoes and supposition of applause the voluptuous man in revellings and eating and drinking so that his heart is always in the house of mirth the unclean person in personating the pleasure of sin by imaginations Matth. 5.28 an envious man in thoughts of revenge and shall not a spiritual disposition discover its self in our musings Faith and Hope will send the thoughts as Spies into the land of promise Heb. 1.1 Love will be thinking on the Object loved The Treasures will take up the mind and heart Mat. 6.21 Can a man love God and Christ and never think of them Our pleasant musings should be regarded A Third sort of Thoughts are 3. Counsels and Contrivances or Devices Rom 13.14 Make no provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof They wholly bend their minds how to compass their worldly ends and how to advance themselves in the world carking and caring for these Things but God is not in all their thoughts Psal. 10.4 Care not whether God be pleased or displeased honoured and glorified or dishonoured nor how to come to injoy him and carry on the spiritual life with more success and assure their interest in eternal happiness The spiritual life is not a thing of hap-hazard and peradventure but to be carried on with contrivance and heedfulness ponder the path of thy feet Prov. 4.26 Now men imploy their Time and Wit upon other projects than how to mortifie sin or perfect holiness in the fear of God Thus Thoughts being the first issues of the mind discover the temper of it Those that are after the flesh are thorough and true to their principle they can freely imploy their minds about things which are agreeable to their constitution of soul and can hardly take them off for any serious and grave purpose they do most readily and delightfully entertain these Thoughts mind the Worlds Weeks Years Days but never find leasure or time to mind life to come They never shut the door against vain Thoughts but thoughts of God Christ and Heaven and Hell sin and holiness what strangers are they And when they rush in upon us are thrust forth as unwelcome guests Any thing relating to the flesh is pleasing and welcome but how to get our hearts washed and cleansed by the Blood or Spirit of Christ is not regarded by them how to be more holy to be at peace with God to keep that peace unbroken by an uniform course of obedience this is not thought of nor discoursed of in the mind nor the happiness mused on nor our care and contrivance imployed about it 2. The word also compriseth the will and affections desires purposes choices what we now read mind is in other translations savour the vulgar reads Sapiunt Erasmus reads Curant valla sentiant have a sense or gust so in these things we translate it savour Mat. 16.33 Thou savourest not the things that be of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We translate it elsewhere Col. 3.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Set your affections upon things above and not on things on earth But the Word as it standeth in our Translation will bear it for when men men say they have a mind to it Neh. 4.6 We built the Wall for the people had a mind to the work So here 't is true of the carnal minding and the spiritual minding the relish and tast which is in the will and affections floweth from the apprehension of the mind we relish and delight in objects suitable to that nature which we
love to God as the consequent of it it is but the carcase of a good work and so not acceptable to God the life and soul of it is wanting that obediential confidence which should enliven it Certainly there is no bringing forth fruit unto God till married to Christ Rom. 7.4 As children are not legitimate who are born before marriage 't is a bastard off-spring so neither are works acceptable till we be married to Christ. 2. It is also requisite that the person be renewed by the Spirit of Christ for otherwise he cannot have his spirit affections and ways such as to please God Nature can rise no ●igher than it self 't is grace carrieth the soul to God there needeth renewing grace Heb. 12.28 Let us have grace whereby we may serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear To serve him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an acceptable manner and with that reverence and seriousness as it necessary is a work above our natural faculties till God change them we cannot please him So also actual grace Heb. 13.21 Working in you that which is pleasing in his sight The best actions of wicked men please him no more than Cains Sacrifice or Esau's tears or the Pharisees prayers 't is but a shadow of what a man reconciled and renewed doth or an imperfect imitation as an Ape doth imitate a man or a violent motion doth resemble a natural 1. VSE is To shew us what to think of the good actions of carnal men they do not please God they are for the matter good but there are manifold defects in them 1. There is a defect in their state they are not renewed and reconciled to God by Christ and therefore God may justly say Mal. 1.10 I have no pleasure in you neither will I accept an offering at your hands They live in their sins and therefore he may justly abhor and reject all their services they live in enmity to him and a neglect of his grace and will not sue out their atonement 2. There is a defect in the root of these actions They do not come from faith working by love which is the true principle of all obedience Gal. 5.6 Without love to God in Christ we want the soul and life of every duty Obedience is love breaking out into its perfect act 1 Joh. 2.5 If we keep his word herein is love perfected 3. There is a defect in the manner They do not serve God with that sincerity rever●nce seriousness and willingness which the work calleth for they shew love to him with their lips when their hearts are far from him Matt. 15.8 there is an habitual aversation whilst they seem to shew love to him All their duties are but as flowers strowed upon a dunghill 4. There is a defect in the end They do not regard Gods glory in their most commendable actions they have either a natural aim as when they are frighted into a little religiousness of worship in their extremities Hos. 7.14 They howl upon their beds for corn and wine And then they are like Ice in thawing weather soft at top and hard at bottom Or a carnal aim out of bravery and vain glory Matt. 8.2 Or a legal aim when they seem very devout to quiet conscience or to satisfie God for their sins by their external duties Mic. 6.6 7 8. Wherewith shall I ●ome before the Lord and bow my self before the high God Shall I come before him with burnt-offerings and calves of a year old Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousand rivers of oil Shall I give my first born for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul But Solomon telleth us Prov. 21.27 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord much more when he bringeth it with an evil mind At best 't is an abomination much more when 't is to buy an indulgence in some licentious practice by performing some duties required a sin offering not a thank offering But this cannot please God so as to obtain an eternal reward God temporally rewardeth moral obedience to keep up the government of the world as Pagan Rome while it excelled in Virtue God gave it a great Empire and large Dominion And Ahab's going softly and mourning was recompenced with a suspension of temporal judgments 1 King 21.29 Because he humbleth himself before me I will not bring the evil in his days Again there is a difference between a wicked man going on in his wickedness and a natural man returning to God When wicked men pray to God to prosper them in their wickedness as Balaam's Altars were made or to beg pardon while they go on in their sins so the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 Namely as they rest in external performances and think by their prayers or some other good duties to put by the great duties of Faith Repentance and new Obedience so these prayers and good things are abominable but in sinners returning to God and using the means and expressing their desires of Grace tho but with a natural fervency and with some common help of the Spirit tho the action doth not deserve acceptance with God and the Person is not in such an estate that God hath made an express promise to him that he will accept him yet he hath to do with a good God who doth not refuse the cry of his creatures in their extremities and 't is a thousand to one but he will speed the carnal man is to act these abilities and common Grace he hath that God may give more 2 VSE is to Exhort us 1. To come out of the carnal estate into the spiritual life for whilst you are in the flesh you cannot please God Now what is more unhappy than to do much to no good purpose To be acquainted with the toil of duties and not to be accepted in them Men are apt to rest in some superficial good actions and so neglect the Grace of God in Christ we cannot sufficiently beat men from this false Righteousness wherewith they hope to please God certainly while you are ruled by the world the flesh and the Devil you are unfit to obey God therefore you must renounce the flesh the world and the Devil and give up your selves to God the Father Son and Holy-Ghost as Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier All after-duties depend on the seriousness of the first 2 Cor. 8.5 They first gave themselves to the Lord then unto us by the will of God And Rom. 6.13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The more heartily you give up your selves to obey God and look for his favour upon the account of Christs Righteousness and wait for the healing Grace of his Spirit in the use of fit means the more easily
The Lord shew me favour in the sight of this man for I have been the kings cupbearer 3. Pray God to bless you and ever keep in remembrance the former debt 1 Cor. 6.15 Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid SERMON XVI ROM VIII 13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die HERE is another Reason rendred why Christians should not live after the flesh before a debito now a damno or if you will take the whole Verse you have the danger of the carnal life and the benefit of the spiritual both Propositions are hypothetical or conditional both include perseverance in either course The Apostle saith not If you have lived after the flesh ye shall die All have lived after the flesh before they lived after the spirit and in the other part if ye go on to mortifie in the one branch the doom is heavy death not only temporal but eternal in the other the boon or benefit is as much as we can desire and far more than we can ever deserve or requite both have their use for man is apt to be moved by hope or fear if honesty and duty will not perswade us yet danger and benefit may have an influence upon us Let us now consider the first clause where death is propounded as the necessary consequent of carnal living we need not only milk but salt as milk to nourish the new creature so salt to fret out the corruption of the old man A sore penalty is threatned to them that fulfil the desires and inclinations of the flesh we buy carnal delights at too dear a rate when we must die eternally to enjoy them Doct. That God threatneth those that live after the flesh with eternal death and destructiion I shall speak to this Point 1. By way of Explication 2. By way of Confirmation In the Explication I shall shew you 1. What is meant by flesh 2. What by living after the flesh 3. What is the death threatned 2. By way of Confirmation 1. That this threatning is every way consistent with the Wisdom and Goodness of God Secondly The certainty of its being accomplished and fulfilled First by way of Explication 1. What is meant by flesh 1. The flesh is sometimes taken for the natural bodily substance that corporeal mass we carry about us so 't is said No man ever hated his own flesh but nourisheth it and cherisheth it Eph. 5.29 The body is a part of us and deserveth due care that it might be an holy Temple for the Spirit to dwell in and sanctifie and make use of it for God 2. For corruption of nature which inclineth us wholly to things grateful to the body and bodily life with the neglect of God and our precious immortal souls John 3.6 That which is born of flesh is flesh Now flesh in this latter sense is taken 1. Largely 2. Strictly First Largely For the whole dunghil of Corruption in whatever faculty it is seated in the Understanding Will or rational Appetite so Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit that is corrupt nature 2. Strictly Or in a limited sense for the corruption of the sensual Appetite 1 John 2.16 All that is in the world is either the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye or pride of life Sensuality is expressed by the lust of the flesh and Eph. 2.3 Fulfilling the wills of the flesh and of the mind As 't is taken more generally for natural corruption both in Will Mind and Affections so more particularly for the disorder of the sensual Appetite which carrieth us to Meats Drinks Riches Pleasures Honours therefore there are two Branches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Flesh must not be confined to this latter sense but taken in the latitude of the former we read of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wisdom of the flesh Rom. 8.7 and of a fleshly mind Col. 2.18 Man is a corrupt carnal creature in all his faculties of the soul even those which are more noble the Understanding and Will and when the Apostle reckoneth up the works of the flesh Gal. 5.19 He doth not only reckon up Fornication and Adultery Uncleanness Wantonness which belong to the sensual Appetite but Idolatry and Heresie which are the fruits of blind and corrupt Reason and Witchcraft Hatred Variance Emulations Wrath Strife Sedition Envyings Murther which belong to the depraved Will we must take flesh then in the largest sense Secondly What it is to live after the flesh Living doth not note one single action but the trade course and strain of our conversations they are said to live after the flesh where the flesh is their principle their work and their scope 1. Where it is the governing principle or that spring which sets all the Wheels a going Once it was thus with us all we were wholly acted by the inclinations and desires of the flesh and did nothing but what the flesh moved us unto and therefore natural men are said to be in the esh Rom. 8.8 and after the flesh v. 5. and to serve divers lusts and pleasures Tit. 3.3 But when our cure is wrought we are acted by another principle the spirit or new nature Rom. 8.1 and Gal. 5.16 Not that the old principle is quite abolished 't is in us still Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit lusteth against the flesh And 't is in us not as dead but as working and operative and there is a mixture of the respective influence and efficacy of these two principles in every action yea in some actions a prevalency of the one above the other The worser part in a particular conflict may get the upper hand yet there is a sensible difference between the people of God and others the better principle is habitual and constant and in predominancy and doth not only check and thwart the other but overcome it and the interest of the flesh decreaseth and that of the spirit prevaileth and keepeth the carnal part in subjection but when the flesh is the chiefest principle that beareth rule in our hearts and we are acted and guided by it in our course of life we live after the flesh 2. Their work and trade or the business of their lives men are said to live after the flesh that wholly mind the things of the flesh Rom. 8.5 That take no other care but to spend their time wit and estate upon the service of their own fleshly lusts their whole life study and labour is to please the flesh and satisfie the flesh If God gets any thing from them 't is but for fashion sake and 't is only the flesh's leavings so Gal. 5.8 To sow to the flesh there is their business To make provision for the flesh Rom. 13.14 Neglecting God and the eternal welfare of their precious and immortal souls be it in the way of sensuality or be it
Father speaking in the law to resist the Son speaking in the Gospel offering our remedy but to resist the Holy-Ghost who would help us to accept this remedy there is no other relief for us no other divine person to give it us The mission of the Holy Ghost is the last offer for the recovery of mankind there is nothing more to be expected if we submit not to his inspirations and wilfully refuse to give ear to his counsel our salvation is hopeless Secondly let me now open the priviledg they are the sons of God this priviledg may be considered 1. As to the real grant on Gods part 2. As to their own sense of their adoption on the believers part First As to the real grant on Gods part It was intended to the elect from all eternity Eph. 1.5 Being predestinated to the adoption of children In time 't is brought about by Christs death or the work of redemption Gal. 4.4 5. But actually instated upon us when we are regenerated and do believe John 1.12 13. To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God even to them that believe in his name which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God They are born of God and so made the sons of God being called out of nature to grace in their effectual calling they are made sons and daughters to the most High God first he doth renew their natures and make them Holy then reconciled to God as their Father in Christ this is the first grant 2. As to their own sense of their adoption that is spoken of here they shew themselves to be Gods Children and so may know themselves to be Gods Children 1. Because they have the certain evidence that they are received for children by God through faith in Christ and that is holiness If our carriage be suitable to our estate and priviledges why should we doubt Eph. 1.4 5. Elected to be holy without blame before him in love having predestinated us to the adoption of children They have the true pledg of Gods love and that is the spirit and they shew the true fruit of their love to God and that is obedience to his sanctifying motions they are led by the Spirit and so without blame before him in love as they have a greater measure of the fruits so 't is every day more clear to us 2. The same spirit that leadeth them doth assure and ascertain them for our sanctifier is our comforter And the more a Sanctifier the more a Comforter first in a darker way leaving a Child-like impression upon them inclining them to go to God as a Father tho their adoption be not so explicite and clear v. 15. Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Aba Father and Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father The Children of God deal with God as a Father cry to him as a Father cannot keep away from him when they dare not so expresly intitle themselves his Children Secondly in a clearer way when he manifests his presence by a supernatural and powerful change wrought in the heart and discovered whereby they conclude their own gracious estate v. 16. The spirit its self beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God the spirit helps to discern his own work or the image of Christ stampt upon them in a fair and bright character 3. This is a great priviledg that will appear if we consider our present relation to God or our future inheritance 1. Our present relation to God 1 John 3.1 Behold what love the father hath shewed us that we should be called the children of God We are his Children and God is as our Father pleased to own us as his children we are not born sons but made so by grace by nature we are Children of wrath Eph. 2.3 The very term adoption implieth it A Child by adoption is opposed to a Child by nature for men are not said to adopt their own children but strangers now that strangers and enemies should not only be reconciled but also be called the sons of God Oh what unspeakable mercy is it to have the blessed God whom we had so often offended to become our reconciled Father in Christ it is not an empty title that he assumeth but hath more abundant love and tenderness to our welfare than any title can make us understand 2. Our future inheritance our right floweth from our sonship Rom. 8.17 And if children then heirs heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. Titus 3.5 6 7. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost which he hath shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour That being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for you Luke 12.32 Fear not little flock 't is your Fathers good pleasure to give you a Kingdom What may we not expect from the bounty of such a Father Surely he that would pardon his enemies will bless his Children and that for evermore 1. USE Is to inform us 1. of the nature of the spirit's conduct 't is sweet but powerful it accomplisheth its effect without offering violence to the liberty of man we are not drawn taken or driven as beasts but led guided to happiness not forced thither against our wills or without our consent the inclinations of man are free there is not a violent impulsion but a sweet guidance and direction yet he is subject to the leading government and drawing of the Spirit 2. It informeth us of the great condescension of God to new creatures 1. In his care over them They are led by the spirit during their pilgrimage well guided and well guarded Heb. 1.14 Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation They have the spirit for direction and the Angels for defence their charge is not cura animarum but custodia corporis 2. In the great honour he puts upon them and reserveth for them Now these are the Children of God hereafter they shall have the inheritance then is adoption compleat Rom. 8.23 Even we our selves groan within our solves waiting for the adoption the redemption of our bodies If annihilated after death or drawn out their life to all eternity upon earth allowing them so tolerable contentment there had been a savour
this actual joy for 't is possible a man may be perswaded of his sincerity or have no doubting of it and have too much deadness and dulness of soul not so comforted Well then 't is not an Oracle as to Christ Matth. 3 17 Nor an internal suggestion thou art a child of God we have no warrant for that from Scripture 't is not only to but with conscience Now conscience goeth upon rational evidence and we reason and argue from what we feel or find in our selves and 't is ascending to the covenant where Priviledges are assigned to the believer 1 John 1.2 To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God to the penitent Acts 2 38 Repent and you shall receive the Holy ghost To the obedient He is become the author of salvation to all that obey him 2. The one superaddeth to the other Not the priviledg without the qualification that is sufficiently done by the word not the conscience by discourse and the spirit immediately no they concur to produce the same conclusion the spirits testimony superaddeth certainty authority and overpowering light 1 Cor. 4.4 For I know nothing by my self yet am I not hereby justified but he that sudgeth me is the Lord and Rom. 9.1 I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy ghost As the influences of the Heavens work strongly but imperceptibly while they mingle themselves with the motions of the creatures so doth the spirit with our spirit it fortifieth and strengthneth the testimony of a mans own heart and so doth with more authority and power perswade us that we are the children of God 3. The necessiry of this to our full comfort 1. We cannot pray without it For the Text is brought to prove that they have a spirit within them which inclineth them to cry Abha Father surely 't is a great advantage in prayer to be able to say Psal. 63.26 Doubtless thou art our father and again Isa. 64.8 But now Lord thou art our father But how will you do unless you be Gods children and how will you know you be Gods children but by the spirit bearing witness to and with your spirits I know all Gods children have not the comfort of the spirit but they have the spirit of comfort and in some measure can come to God as a Father 2. We cannot apply the promises without it For the promises are childrens bread unless we be the children of God what comfort can we take in the promises unless we have an interest in them priviledges have their conditions annexed the right is suspended till the condition be performed that is till we know our selves to be true believers the promises are in vain and of no effect if to all you deceive the most for tho some are of Gods Family the whole world lieth in wickendness the most are the children of the Devil If to some they have their characters which occasioneth the restraint and you are told here this is known by the spirits bearing witness to our spirits But what shall poor creatures do that have not yet this clear testimony 1. Disclaim all other confidence When you cannot apply Hos. 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the works of our hands Ye are our gods for in thee the fatherless findeth mercy 2. Own God in the humbling way Creep in at the back door of the promise 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners If Christ came to save sinners I am sinner enough for Christ to save Luke 15.18 19. I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee and am no more worthy to be called thy son make me as one of thy hired servants 3. Come to him as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Certainly God will love and accept all those that come to him by Christ. 4. There is a child-like inclination when there is not a childlike familiarity and boldness The soul cannot keep away from God and that is an implicite owning of him as a Father Jer. 3.19 Thou shalt call me father ond shalt not turn away from me We call him Father optando si non affirmando unspeakable groans discover the spirit of adoption as well as unutterable joys we own him by way of option and choice tho not by actual assurance of our special relation to him and interest in his fatherly love there may be a child like love to God when we have no assurance of his paternal love to us 5. There is a childlike reverence and awe when not a childlike confidence Their heart standeth in awe of as the Rechabites their fathers command dare not displease him for all the world these in time will overcome in short God hath a title to our dearest love when we cannot make out a title to the highest benefit SERMON XXV ROM VIII 17 If children then heirs heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified together THE Apostle had shewed v. 13. That if we through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body we shall live He proveth it by this medium and argument That as many as obey the sanctifying motious of the spirit are children of God and children may look for a childs portion He proveth they are children because the spirit accompanieth the dispensation of the New Covenant whereby we are adopted into Gods family and this spirit acts suitably as is evident by his impression v. 15. By his Testimony and Witness v. 16. Now he goeth on further and proveth That if we be children we are heirs and that we shall live if we mortifie the deeds of the body is more abundantly proved for our inheritan●e is eternal life and glory And if children then heirs c. In the Words observe 1. A Dignity inferred from our Adoption 2. The Amplification of it from the excellent nature of this inheritance Heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. 3. 'T is applied as a comfort against adversities If so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified together 1. The Dignity inferred is that we are Heirs The Inheritance belonging to Children jure nascendi all Children are not necessarily heirs but only males and among them the first born but jure Adoptionis they that are Adopted are adopted to some Inheritance so here if Children then heirs be they Sons or Daughters begotten to God sooner or later Male are Female are all one in Christ Gal. 3.18 they are not debarred from the Inheritacce 2. The amplification of it Or the greatness and excellency of this Inheritance in two expressions Heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ.
come We hear the creature groaning as it offereth matter to us to sigh and groan and long for a better estate that we may be at home with God and free from the miseries of the present world 3. They are instructive groans For they teach us many good lessons 1. They teach us the vanity of the creature which is now often changed and must at length be dissolved to a common eye this world seemeth to be in its highest splendor and beauty because worldly men judg of things by their carnal affections Psal. 49.11 Their inward thought is that their houses shall continue for ever and their dwelling places to all generations They think their heritages and honours shall for ever continue in their Name and Family and carry themselves accordingly their carnal complacency possesseth them with vain conceits and when their posterity are swept away and shifted new comers that are established in their room are as vain as they but now if we bring the word to the creature and God by his Spirit giveth us an heart to observe these things we shall see that all is passing and perishing that the whole world hath a great evil that burdens it and will at length prove its destruction namely sin that the groaning Universe doth in effect say to us Arise depart this is not your rest Micah 2.10 'T is spoke● to the Jews the Land of Canaan was given for a rest at first but by their sin it had lost much of that use the frequent changes of estate they met with there for their sins was a summons to remove and look higher 't is true of all the world 't is not our resting place since 't was defiled by sin therefore the groaning creature should wean us from the world and inflame us with a desire of Heaven where is perfect and eternal happiness 2. It teacheth us the evil of sin 'T is the burden of the whole Creation of which it would fain be eased all the vanity that is upon the creature and all annoyance which we have from the creature is the fruit of our rebellion against God which should make us more humble for sin past and more cautious for the time to come so much sin as you introduce so much you disturb the harmony of the Creation and are accessary to the many destructive changes wrought in the world 3. It readeth us a lecture of patience We live in a groaning world and must expect to beat our share in the common consort the world is a valley of tears now to seek for joy in a valley of tears to affect an exemption from groaning 't is to be singular and to be out of tune from the rest of the Creation What is in Psal. 84.6 the Valley of Bacha the Septuagint renders the valley of weeping it means the scorched weeping ground they past thorough and because their going to Jerusalem to worship was a figure of our progress or journey towards Heaven therefore many apply it to the world resembled by a valley as Heaven is by a Mountain like Mount Sion and a valley of tears because we frequently meet with mourning occasions Now it should not trouble us to be put upon groaning in a groaning world we have company with us in our mourning not only our fellow Saints the Apostle urgeth 1 Pet. 59. These things are accomplished in your brethren which are of the flesh Every one of Gods children have their share of hardships in the world we think no sorrow like to our sorrow and that none are so hardly dealt with as we are Others have their sorrows and hardships the measure and weight of others sorrows we know by guess but our own by feeling All things considered you will find your lot no harder than the Saints of God who went to Heaven before you but here is more company offered the whole Creation groaning for a burden brought upon them not by their fault but ours yet submitting to that appointed service till it be the Will of God to ease them 4. A lecture of long suffering Which is patience extended When we are oppressed with many persecutions and afflictions and these continue long and we see no end we despond The creature groaneth and travelleth in pain until now That is from the time sin entred into the world until the whole be dissolved the continuance of the Universe is much longer than the continuance of our lives therefore let us not repine at so short a time for the creature hath been in a groaning condition these six thousand Years or there about Surely the softness and delicacy of our flesh is too great if we must see the end of our troubles assoon as we enter into them If the creature is obedient to the Creator in bearing the burden he lays on it tho it groan under it then surely we should submit to his disposing will so long as he will have us in a suffering condition Jam. 1.4 Let patience have its perfect work 5. A lecture of repentance and solemn humiliation If the creature groan under original vanity and corruption brought upon it by the first sin sin being wonderfully increased the world is ready to sink under the weight of it therefore when sin increaseth 't is a groaning time the multitude of the wicked are a burden to the countreys where they live the Heathens would call a wicked man The burden of the earth The Word of God sheweth it more plainly therefore when the wicked increase and walk on every side and they increase in wickedness 't is time to look about us and seriously and heartily humble our selves before God Lev. 18.25 And the land is defiled therefore I do visit the iniquities thereof upon it And the land it self vomiteth out her inhabitants Micah 2.10 Because it is polluted it shall destroy you with a soar destruction and Jer. 9.18 Our dwellings have cast us out The land doth as it were loathe to bear and feed them that so grosly dishonour God 6. A lesson of hope in long sorrows We should keep up hope and expectation the creature groaneth till now Yea but yet still it expecteth its final deliverance 't is an expression of great rebellion distrust and contempt to say Why should I wait on the Lord any longer 2 Kings 6.33 God can bring the bitterest condition to a most comfortable issue consider how he dealeth with other creatures the creature groaneth and travelleth in pain but the birth will ensue The groaning of the creature is like a travelling in birth and so the calamities of the Saints John 16.21 22. A woman when she is in travel hath sorrow because her hour is come but assoon as she is delivered of child she is no more in anguish for joy a man is born into the world and ye now are in sorrow but I will see you again and your hearts shall rejoice and your joy no man taketh from you The throws of our sorrow may be very sharp and
have found a ransom From the beginning of the world Christ was known to be a Redeemer who saved the world by a ransom paid no other way could the effects of the Lords grace be communicated to us we receive mercies freely but they were dearly purchased by Christ. The second notion is that of a Mediatorial Sacrifice Isa. 53.10 He shall make his soul an offering for sin So Eph. 5.2 He gave himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Sin is a wrong done to God and therefore there must be something offered to God in our stead by way of satisfaction before he would quit his controversie against us this Christ hath done all that was signified by the Ancient Sacrifices and offerings was accomplished by him They were flayed killed burned all which are but shadows of what our Lord endured He is the true and real Sacrifice wherein provoked justice doth rest satisfied his wrath appeased and we that were loathsome by reason of sin made acceptabl●●nd well-pleasing unto God The third notion is that of a propitiation 1 John 2.2 He gave himself a propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world And Rom 3 25. Whom God set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood This implyeth Gods being pacified and appeased so as to become propitious and merciful for ever to sinful m●● in which sense he is also said to make reconciliation for the sins of his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2.17 whereby is meant Gods being reconciled to us This was the great end why Christ dyed for us to appease Gods wrath and displeasure and to reduce us into grace and favour with him again by tendering a full compensation to God for all our sins 2. The effects ascribed to it 1. Sin is expiated or purged out Heb. 1.3 When he had by himself purged our sins he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high As God would not be appeased without a Ransom Sacrifice or Satisfaction so could not sin be purged out without bearing the punishment so the conscience is said to be purged from dead works by the blood of Christ Heb. 9 4. and Revel 1.5 He hath washed us from our sins in his blood That is done that which will remove the guilt and pollution of it when 't is rightly applyed to us and so he is said to finish transgression and make an end of sin Dan. 9.24 That is to destroy the reign of sin and to seal up the role and hand-writing that was against us that it may not be imputed and brought into the judgment 2. The sin is pardoned and the sinner justified Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption in his blood the forgiveness of sins That 's the great benefit which floweth from the death of Christ which is offered in the New Testament Acts 10.41 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And 't is sealed and represented in the Lords Supper Matth. 26.28 This is my blood of the New Testament which was shed for the remission of sins 3. The sanctifying the sinner to God Heb. 13.12 Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate Heb. 10.10 By the which will we are sanctified by the offering of Jesus Christ once for all So Eph. 5.26 That he might sanctifie and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word So John 17.19 That they also might be sanctified through the truth In these and many other places is meant both our dedication to God and the renovation of our natures that qualifieth for communion with him 4. The consummation or the perfecting of the sanctified as Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected the sanctified for ever The priests of the law were forced to renew their Sacrifices because they could not compleatly take away sin for the law made nothing perfect Heb. 7.19 Could not yield us sufficient expiation for sin to justifie and sanctifie the person so as to open Heaven to him and a free access to God but Christ hath fully done this perfected us for ever by one offering There needeth no other Sacrifice no other satisfaction to remove the guilt and eternal punishment John 19.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all is finished or perfected all is undergone that was necessary for the redemption of the Elect there needed no more to satisfie justice or procure salvation for us 3. The sufficiency of it to these ends and effects 1. From the Dignity of the person He had all fulness in him a fulness of holiness Col. 1.9 a fulness of the Godhead Col. 2.9 He was holy and innocent and also God and will not the blood of God cleanse us from all our sins 2. The unity of his office and Sacrifice There is but one Redeemer and one Sacrifice and if but one this is enough 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediator between God and Man the Man Christ Jesus One Sacrifice Heb. 10.12 But this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever sat down at the right hand of God Heb. 9.26 But now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself And Rom. 5.18 The free gift came upon all to the justification of life The Scripture much insists upon this 3. The greatness of his sufferings Isa. 53.4 5 6. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows yet did we esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed All we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all Phil. 2.7 8. But made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the liken●●● of men and being found in fashion as a man ●e humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the cross And Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now Christians all this is offered to our Faith The notions the effects or ends the sufficiency of it to these ends and purposes The price is paid by Christ and accepted by God We partake of these benefits as soon as we perform the conditions of the Gospel but we triumph when more explicitely we declare our selves to be true and sound Christians God doth not look for an Expiatory Sacrifice at our hands but a thorough application of what he hath found out for us This broad foundation laid is not only free for God to build upon but for us to build
Body and so remaineth a widdow as it were till the Body be raised up and united to it 'T is without its mate and companion so that it remaineth destitute of half its self which though it may be born for a while yet not for ever 2dly 'T is agreeable to the Wisdom Justice and Goodness of God that the Body which had its share in the work should have its share in the reward 'T is the Body which is most gratified in sin and the Body which is most pained in obedience What is it that was wearyed and tyred and endured all the labours and troubles of Christianity Therefore the Body that is the Souls Sister and Coheir is to share with it in its Eternal Estate whatsoever it be before that the wicked are but in part punished and the Godly in part rewarded There is a time when God will deal with the whole man 3dly The state of those that dye will not be worse then the state of those that are only changed at Christs coming The Bodies are not destroyed but perfected the substance is preserved only endued with new qualities Now there would be a disparity among the glorified if some should have their Bodies others not 4thly In the Heavenly estate there are many objects which can only be discerned by our Bodily senses The Humane Nature of Christ the beauty of the Heavenly place or Mansion of the Blessed with other the works of God which certainly are offered to our contemplation Now if God find objects he will find faculties How shall we see those things which are to be seen hear those things which are to be heard unless we have Bodies and Bodily senses 5thly As Christ was taken into Heaven so we For we shall bear the Image of the Heavenly He carryed no other flesh into Heaven but what he assumed from the Virgin that very Body which was carryed in her womb which was laid down as a sacrifice for sin that very Body was carryed into Heaven Phil. 3.21 The Body that is subject to so many infirmities that is harrassed and worn out with labours exposed to such pains and sufferings even that Body shall be like Christs Glorious Body 1 Cor. 15.43 44. It shall not be decayed with Age nor wasted with sickness nor need the supplies of meat and drink nor be subject to pains and Aches c. Well then let us serve God Faithfully 1 Cor. 15.58 Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your Labour is not in vain in the Lord. SERMON VII 2 Cor. 5.5 Now he that hath wrought us for this self same thing is God who also hath given unto us the Earnest of his Spirit HAving shewed 1. The Persons who desire Eternal Glory v. 3. 2. The Manner of desiring not simply to be unclothed v. 4. 3. He now shews the grounds of desiring in this verse They are two 1. God hath fitted us for this very thing 2. He hath given us the Pledge and Earnest of this Glorious estate All the business will be 1. To open the Expressions 2. To shew how these are grounds of the Desire First To open the meaning of the Expressions 1. God's forming us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is that self same thing he speaketh of A groaning and an earnest desire after Immortality say some We would gladly be rid of our Burthen here and be in Heaven and surely the sense of Nature would not incline us to so holy an Affection No God hath wrought us for this self same thing hath framed such a desire in us We know and are assured that when this earthly Tabernacle is dissolved we have a Building c. say others Surely this persuasion is of God created and produced in the hearts of his People by his Special Grace Flesh and Blood hath not shewed it to us Still good Others carry it higher That we eye things unseen and make them our scope still this is from Grace not from Nature for Nature looketh only to things before us to present welfare That we are contented though our outward man perish so that our inward man be renewed Surely all this is from God A man may admire Coelestial Happiness but not industriously desire it and self-denyingly seek after it to the loss of the Contentments and Interests of the bodily life unless God move his heart and supernaturally bestow such a disposition towards himself All this is true and good but 't is a part of this sense The Apostle speaketh not of the Desire but of the Happiness its self that we may be capable of it He first formeth us and frameth us for this very thing 1. Here in this World he fits us and prepareth the Soul by Sanctification or Regeneration purifying and cleansing us from sin 2. For the Body the Spirit that now dwelleth in us will at last raise our mortal Bodies Rom. 8.11 and prepare us for that Immortality God now frameth the Souls of his People hereafter their Bodies They are wrought to this thing Man must be new made before he is capable of entring into glory There is a new work on the Souls and on the Bodies of his Saints they must be new moulded and transformed before they are brought into this Blessed estate The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth a powerful work and an exact work None who are unfit or unmeet for Heaven get an access to it no we are framed for this very thing II. Given us the Earnest of his Spirit This better life is sealed and confirmed to us by Earnest Dona gifts that is one thing As we give a shilling to a Beggar Pignus a pawn or pledge is another As when a poor man layeth his Tools at pledge with an intent when he can make up the money borrowed to fetch it away again But Arrha earnest is a part of the bargain till the whole be performed God will not deal with us by bare Covenant but give Earnest to assure us the more of that life which he hath promised in his Covenant we have a tast and experience of it in the present work of his Spirit Secondly How these are grounds of this Desire There are Two things considerable in that glorious estate which we expect according to promise the Certainty and the Excellency both are confirmed by God's working us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And giving us the Earnest c. 1. The Certainty of it is confirmed by both these by things the frame of the New Creature and Earnest of the Spirit 1. By the Frame of the New Creature If a Vessel be formed 't is for some end and what doth not attain its end is vain and lost A man may make a thing useless and short of its end but God cannot for he cannot mistake in the forming nor change his mind and therefore if God had made us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the end is sure to be
to presume upon the indulgence of that day are such who make a fair profession injoy many outward priviledges As suppose the Jew above the Gentile the Christian above the Jew the Officer or one Imployed in the Church above the common Christian. The priviledge of the Jew was his circumcision the knowledge of the Law and outward obedience thereunto or submission to the rituals of Moses because they were exact in these things they hoped to be accepted with God and to be more favourably dealt with than others The priviledge of the Christian is baptism the knowledge of Christ being of his party and visibly owning his interest in the World they have eaten and drunk in his presence he hath taught in their streets and they have frequented the assembly where he is ordinarily present and more powerfully present Luke 13.26 'T is possible they have put themselves in a stricter garb of religion forborn disgraceful sins been much in external ways of duty given God all the cheap and plausible obedience which the flesh can spare But if all this be without solid godliness or that sound constitution of heart or course of life which the principles of our profession would breed and call for these priviledges will be no advantage to him Well then let the Officer come the Apostle Prophet Pastour or Teacher by what names or titles soever they be distinguished who have born rule in the Church been much in exercising their gifts for his glory have taught others the way of salvation this is their priviledge Mat. 7.22 Lord have we not prophesyed in thy name and in thy name cast out Devils and in thy name done many wondrous works Then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity Well now if no mans person shall be accepted if not for his profession if not for his Office if not for his external ministrations surely we ought to be strict and diligent and seriously godly as well as others And if we shall all appear before this Holy Just and Impartial Judge we should all pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 2. T is a strict and a just Judgment Acts. 17.30 31. He commandeth now all men every where to repent Because he hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness Now God winketh at every mans faults and doth not take vengeance on them judgeth the World in patience but then all men must give an account those who have refused the remedy offered to lapsed mankind shall have Judgment without mercy And how terrible will that Judgment be when the least sin rendreth us obnoxious to the severity of his revenging justice But those who have heard the Gospel and accepted the redeemers mercy shall also be judged according to their works in the manner formerly explained there is a remunerative Justice observed to them we must give an account of all our actions thoughts speeches affections and intentions that it may be seen whether they will amount to sincerity or a sound belief of the truths of the Gospel and therefore we should be the more careful to walk uprightly before him Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that for every idle word that men shall speak they shall give an account thereof in the Judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned Words must be accounted for especially false blasphemous words and such as flow out of the evil treasure of the heart and sadly accounted for For in conferring rewards and punishments God taketh notice of words as well as actions they make up a part of the evidence certainly in this just judgment we shall find that 't is a serious business to be a Christian. But those who have owned the redeemer must esteem him in their hearts above all wordly things and value his grace above the allurements of sense and count all things but dung and dross for the excellency of the knowledge of their Lord Phil. 3.7 8 9. And glorify him in their lives 1 Thes. 1.11 12. And pass through the Pikes To him that overcometh Rev. 2.26 And resist the Devil and subdue the flesh and vanquish the World There must be doing and there must be suffering there must be giving and forgiving giving out of our estates and forgiving wrongs and injuries visiting the sick and clothing the naked feeding the hungry there must be believing loving mortifying sin perfecting holiness And this is the tryal of those who come under the Gospel covenant which might be easily proved if the thing were not evident of its self Now judge you whether all this should not beget the fear of reverence or caution at least which fear of God should always reign in the hearts of the faithful 3. Gods final sentence is to be passed upon us upon which our eternal estate dependeth Therefore the great weight and consequence of that day maketh it matter of terrour to us We are to be happy for ever or undone for ever our estate will be then irrevocable Where a man cannot err twice there he cannot use too much solicitude According to our last account so shall the condition of every man be for ever What is a matter of greater moment than to be Judged to everlasting joy or everlasting torment Matters of profit or disprofit credit or discredit temporal life and death are nothing to it If a man lose in one bargain he may recover himself in another credit may bewounded by one action and healed in another though the scar remain the wound may be cured If a man die there is hope of life in another World but if sentenced to eternal death there is no reversing of it Therefore now we knowing the terrour of the Lord sue out our own pardon and perswade others to sue out their pardon in the name of Christ to make all sure for the present 4. The execution in case of failing in our duty is terrible beyond expression Because this is the main circumstance and is at the bottom of all I shall a little dilate upon it not to affright you with needless perplexities but in compassion to your souls God knoweth I shall take the rise thus The object of all fear is some evil approaching now the greater the evil is the nearer it approacheth the more certain and inevitable it is and the more it concerneth our selves the more cause of fear there is all these concur in the business in hand 1. The execution bringeth on the greatest evil The Evil of punishment and the greatest punishment the wrath of God the wrath of the eternal Judge who can and will cast body Soul into eternal fire This was due to all by the first covenant will be the portion of Impenitentsinners by the second Heb. 10.31 It s a fearful thing to f●ll into the hands of the living God Mark first obstinate and impenitent-sinners do Immediately fall
bringeth forth sin Jam. 1.15 It hath produced its consummate act and discovered its self to the full 3. It bendeth and inclineth the heart to the thing loved Amor meus est pondus meum 〈◊〉 feror quocunque feror 'T is the vigorous bent of the Soul and it so bendeth and inclineth the Soul to the thing loved that it is fastened to it and cannot easily be separated from it We are brought under the power of what we love as the Apostle speaketh of the Creatures 1 Cor. 6.12 But I will not be brought under the power of any 'T is deaf to counsel in its measure 't is true of our love to Christ if we love him we will cleave to him A man is dispossessed of himself that hath lost the Dominion of himself as Sampson like a Child led by Dalilah So is a man ruled and governed by his love to Christ. 4. To a most kindly principle to do a thing for another out of love What is done out of love is not done out of slavish compulsion but good will Not an act of necessity but choice 1 John 5.3 This is love that we keep his Commandments and his Commandments are not grievous That 's bad ground that bringeth forth nothing unless it be forced Natural Conscience worketh by fear but Faith by love Love is not compelled but it worketh of it self sweetly kindly it taketh off all irksomness lessens difficulties facilitates all things and maketh them light and easie So as we serve God cheerfully Where love prevaileth let it be never so difficult it seemeth light and easie Seven years for Rachel seemed to Jacob as nothing made him bear the heat of the day and cold of the night Gen. 29.10 But where love is wanting all that is done seemeth too much 5. 'T is a most forcible compelling principle non persuadet sed cogit one glosseth the Text so It cometh with commanding intreaties reasoneth in such a powerful prevailing manner as it will have no denyal Titus 2.11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly l●sts we should live soberly righteously and godly in the present World Nothing will 〈◊〉 your hearts to your work so much as love Lay what bands you will upon your selves if a temptation cometh you will break them as Sampson did his cords wherewith he was bound Promises Vows Covenants Resolutions former experiences of comfort when put to tryal all is as nothing to love But now let a mans love be gained to Christ that 's band enough quis legem dat amantibus major lex amor sibi est Love so far as love needeth no Penalties nor Laws nor Enforcements for it is a great Law to its self it hath within its bosom as deep obligations and ingagements to any thing that may please God as you can put upon it Indeed if there were not an opposite principle of aver●eness this were enough but I speak of love as love fear and terror is a kind of external impulse that may drive a Soul to a duty but the inward impulse is love that will influence and over-rule the Soul and ingage it to please Christ if it beareth any mastery there 6. 'T is laborious it requireth great diligence to be faithful with Christ. Now love is that disposition which puts us upon labours this if any thing will keep a man to his work Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love And 1 Thes 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work of Faith and labour of Love 'T is not an affection that can lye bashful and idle in the Soul So Revel 2.4 Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee because thou hast left thy first love Till love be lost our first works are never left Our ●ord when he had work for Peter to do gageth his heart John 21.15 Simon Peter lovest thou me Love sets all a going 7. It dilateth and inlargeth the heart and so 't is liberal to the thing loved I will praise him yet more and more I will not serve the Lord with that which cost me nothing Other things will not go to the charge of obedience to God It will be at some cost for God and Christ and maketh us obey God against our own interest and carnal inclination It was against the hair but the young man deferred not to do the thing because he delighted in Jacobs Daughter Gen. 34 19. 8. 'T is an invincible and unconquerable affection Cant. 8.6 Love is strong as death ●ealousy is cruel as the grave The coals thereof are as the coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Many waters cannot quench love Neither can the floods drown it if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned There is a vehemency and an unconquerable constancy in love against and above all afflictions and above all worldly baits and profits The business is of whose love this is to be interpreted of Christs or ou●s If we understand it of Christs love then 't is really verified Christs love was as strong as death for he suffered death for us and overcame death for us he debased himself from the height of all Glory to the depth of all misery for our sakes Phil. 2.7 8. And 2 Cor. 8 9. Overcame all difficulties by the fervency of his love despising the cross and enduring the shame on the one hand Heb. 12.2 on the other refusing the offers of preferment Matth. 4.9 10. The Devil maketh an offer of all the World to Christ. Of ease Matth. 16.22 23. And Peter begun to rebuke him saying be it far from thee Lord. Of honour Matth. 27.40 43. Thou that destroyest the Temple and buildest it in three days save thy self if thou be the Son of God He trusted in God let him deliver him now if he will have him for he said I am the Son of God But is also verified of Christians in their measure who love not their lives to the death overcome all difficulties Acts 21.13 Willing to die at Jerusalem Indure all afflictions Psa. 44.17 All this is come upon us yet we have not forsaken thee And suffer the loss of all worldly comforts Matth. 19 27. Behold we have forsaken all and followed thee And Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Brethren and Sisters and his own life also he cannot be my disciple But rather I apply it to the latter for 't is rendred as a reason why they beg a room in his heart the love that presseth us is of such a Vehement Nature that it cannot be resisted no more than death or the grave or fire can be resisted Nothing else but Christ can quench it and satisfy it such a constraining power it hath that the persons that have it are led captive by it an ardent affection and love to Christ
Christ His former Love is really condemned and thereby Christ is disesteemed as if not worthy to be beloved with all the Soul and all the might and all the strength And Partly Because as our love decayeth so doth our work either 't is wholly omitted or else we put off God with a little constrained compulsory service which we had rather leave undone than do our delight in our work is lessened As when the root of a tree perisheth the leaves keep green for a while but within a while they wither and fall off So love which is the root and heart of all other dutys when that decayeth other things decay with it The first works go off with the first love at least are not carryed on with that care and delight and complacency as they should be And Partly Because of the punishment which attendeth it Christ is jealous of his peoples affection and cannot endure that he should not beloved again by those whom he so much loveth and therefore hasteneth to the correction of this distemper and those that allow themselves in it Rev. 2.5 Behold I will come against thee quickly He threatneth to that Church a removal of their candlestick when their zeal of Christianity was abated When a People grow weary o● Christ they shall know the worth of him by the want of him So when particular Christians grow weary of God and suffer a coldness and indifferency to creep upon their hearts he cometh by some smart Judgment to awaken them and will make them feel to their bitter cost what it is to despise or neglect a loving Saviour 2 Chron. 12.8 2. 'T is a common evil For 't is an hard matter to keep up the fervency of our love therefore are there so many exhortations even to the best The commended Thessalonians are thus prayed for 2 Thes. 3.5 And the Lord direct your hearts to the love of God And Jude 21. keep your selves in the love of God The best are apt to remit something of their delight in God and their constant study to please him And our watchfulness is mainly to preserve this grace There is so much self-love in us love of our own ease and carnal satisfaction so much love of the World and such a constant working warring principle to draw us off from God and Heavenly things that we cannot sufficiently stand upon our guard and take heed to our selves that we do not quench this heavenly fire that should always burn in our bosoms The generality of Professors have no such care if they do not wholly cast off Religion they are satisfied though their love to God be exceeding cold and as the Hen as long as she hath 1 or 2 of her brood to follow her doth not mind the loss of the rest so they as long as they do a few things for God mind not the loss of many degrees of grace 3. Many that are surprized with it are little sensible of it Because spiritual distempers are not laid to heart till they openly appear in their effects and fruits a man may be much in external dutys and yet his love may be cold the life of his dutys may be decayed though the dutys themselves be not left off as the Pharisees tithed Mint and Cumin and all manner of herbs but passed over Judgment and the love of God Luke 11.42 Some small thing the flesh may spare to God when as yet the heart is in a great measure withdrawn from him There may be a decay in the degree of love when there is no total falling from former acts he may continue his course of outward duty though he doth not act so vigorously from love as he was wont to do he is colder in obedience and his delight in God is not so great as formerly his work is carryed on with more difficulty and regret and 't is more grievous to obey the acts and fruits are fewer though they do not wholly cease are not animated with such a working active love Therefore many times men are so insensible that they throw off all e're they mind their distemper As the Glory of God in Ezekiel removed from the Temple by degrees first from the holy place then to the Altar of burnt offerings then to the outer Court then the City then rested on one of the hills which encompassed the City to see if they would bring him back again So in this case men grow cold towards God God is first cast out of the heart then out of the closet then out of the family then more Indifferent as to publick dutys then sin beginneth to hurry us to practices inconvenient first we sin freely in thought then foully in act and all because we did not observe the first declinings 4. The decay of love is seen in two things The remission of degrees or the intermission of acts 1. The remission of degrees of our love to Christ or to God in Christ. To understand this we must know what is the essential disposition of love 'T is an esteeming valuing and prizing God above all things which is manifested to us by a constant care to please him a fear to offend him a desire to injoy him and a constant delight in him Now when any of these are abated or fail as to any considerable degree your love is a chilling or growing ●old 1. Our constant care to please him They that love God and prize his favour and have a sense of his mercy in Christ deeply Impressed upon their hearts they are always studying how they shall appear thankful for so great a benefit Psa. 116.12 What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me Therefore their business and work is to please God Col 1 10. Walk worthy of the lord unto all pleasing And Isa. 56.4 That choose the things that please thee and take hold of thy covenant And 1 Thes. 4.1 As you have learned how to walk and how to please God so abound therein more and more A study to please is the true fruit of thankfulness Whilst love is in vigour and strength this disposition beareth sway in the heart But now when 't is a more Indifferent thing whether God be pleased or displeased or not so greatly minded when a man beginneth to please his flesh or men and can dispense with his duty to God and our intention is less sincere not so much to please and honour God as to gratify our selves then love is decayed 2dly The next is like it a fear to offend If you can be content to do any thing and suffer any thing rather than displease God and lose his favour Gods love is dearer than life his displeasure more formidable than death its self Love is strong Gen. 39.9 How can I do this wickedness and sin against God Put when this fear to offend is weakned your love decayeth 3dly A desire to injoy him in Christ. A strong bent and tendency of heart towards God argueth a
If Christ came to save sinners I am sinner enough for Christ to save creeping in at the back-door of a promise God hath opened the way for all if they perish 't is through their own default He hath sent Messengers into the World Mark 16.16 He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned And if you are within hearing the Gospel you have more cause to hope than to scruple Acts 13.26 To you is the word of salvation sent Not brought but sent Know it for thy good Job 5.27 And rowse up your selves what shall we say to these things Rom. 8.39 If God be for us who can be against us 4. Though weak in faith and love to God yet Christ died one for all The best have not a more worthy Redeemer then the worst of sinners Go preach the Gospel to every creature Exod. 30.15 The Rich and Poor have the same ransom 1 Cor. 1.2 Jesus Christ theirs and ours And Rom. 3.22 Even the righteousness of God which is by faith in Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe for there is no difference And 2 Pet. 1.1 To them who have obtained like precious faith with us A Jewel received by a Child and a Giant 't is the same Jewel So strong and weak faith are built upon one and the same righteousness of Christ. 2. Let us devote our selves to God in the sense of this love to walk before him in all thankful obedience Christ hath born our burden and in stead thereof offered his burden which is light and easie he took the curse upon him but we take his yoke Mat. 11.29 He freely accepted the work of Mediatour Heb. 10.7 Will you as freely return to his service SERMON XXVIII 2 Cor. 5.14 Then were all dead WE have handled the intensiveness of Christs love he died the extent how for all is to be interpreted now the fruit dying to sin and living to righteousness The first in this last clause Then were all dead not carnally in sin but mystically in Christ dead in Christ to sin In the Original the words run thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not dead in regard of the merits of sin but dead in the merits of Christ for the Apostle speaketh here of death and life with reference and correspondence to Christs death and resurrection as the original pattern of them in which sense we are said to die when Christ died for us and to live when he rose again 2. He speaketh of such a death as is the foundation of the Spiritual life he died for them then were all dead and he died for them that they might live to him that died for them and rose again Our translation seemeth to create a prejudice to this exposition were dead in the Greek 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all died or all are dead that is to sin the World and self interes●s And besides it seemeth to be difficult to understand how all Believers were dead when Christ died since most were not then born and had no actual existence in the World and after they are converted they feel much of the power of sin in themselves Ans. They are comprized in Christs act done in their name as if they were actually in being and consenting to what he did In short they are dead mystically in Christ because he undertook it Sacramentally in themselves because by submitting to baptism they bind themselves and profess themselves ingaged to mortify sin Actually they are dead because the work at first conversion is begun which will be carryed on by degrees till sin be utterly extinguished Doct. That when Christ died all Believers were dead in him to sin and to the World 'T is the Apostles inference then were all dead The expression should not seem strange to us for there are like passages scattered every where throughout the Word 1. Therefore I shall shew you first that this truth is asserted in Scripture 2. I will shew you how all can be said to be dead since all were not then born and had no actual existence in the World 3. How they can be said to be dead to sin and the World since after conversion they feel so many carnal motions 4. What use the death of Christ hath to this effect to make us die to sin and the World 1. That this truth is asserted in Scripture To this end I shall propound and explain some places The first is Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should no longer serve sin In that place observe 1. The notions by which sin is set forth 'T is called by the names of the old man and the body of sin and simply and nakedly possibly by the old man natural corruption may be intended by the body of sin the whole mass of our acquired evil customs by sin actual transgression Or take them for one and the same thing diversly expressed in-dwelling sin is called an old man A man it is because it spreadeth its self throughout the whole man The Soul for Gen. 6.5 't is said every Imagination of the thoughts of his heart is only evil continually The Body Rom. 6.19 As you have yielded up your members Servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity And 't is called an old man as grace is called a new man and a new creature and it is so called because it is of long standing it had its rise at Adams fall Rom. 5.12 Whereas by one man sin entred into the World and death by sin so that death passed upon all because all had sinned And it hath ever been conveyed since from Father to Son unto all descending from Adam Psa. 51.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my Mother conceive me So that 't is born and bred with us And Partly because in the godly 't is upon the declining hand and draweth towards its final ruine and expiration De jure 't is an old antiquated thing not to be cherished but subdued De facto 't is upon declining and weakning more and more And this old man is afterwards called the body of sin the whole Mass of habitual sins composed of divers evil qualities as the body of divers members this is our enemy 2. Observe in the place the priviledge that we have by Christs Death That our old man was crucified with him That is when Christ was crucified And the Apostle would have us know this and lay it up as a sure principle in our hearts the meaning is then there was a foundation laid for the destruction of sin when Christ dyed namely as there was a merit and a price paid and if ever our old man be crucified it must be by vertue of Christs death 3. Observe the way how this merit cometh to be applyed to us Something there must be done on Gods part in that expression that the body
solid comfort but in being real Disciples others are but Christians in the letter not in the Spirit Those that are in the letter have notions of God and Christ and Heaven and Hell but they have but names and notions of these things But feel nothing of the power and life that accompanieth these things A man may profess himself a Christian and yet perish with unbelievers yea be as great an enemy to Christ as the Jews that crucified him and the heathens that worshipped other Gods a grieving of his Spirit a despising the fruits of his purchase a refusal of his holy Ordinances and an hatred of his Servants is no less offensive to him and may argue as little affection in us as either the spight of the Jews or Idolatry of the Heathens did in them to Christ. I call this profession of careless lawless Christians a knowing Christ after the flesh because 't is a meer carnal humane natural respect to Christs memory such as a man beareth to his famous Ancestours or the deceased Hero's of his Country not befitting him who is our Mediator and Lord of all things who is best remembred when our hearts are converted to him and when his Laws are obeyed such as the Jews did bear to Abraham the founder of their Nation or Moses the Law-giver of their Country Surely Abraham and Moses were as dear to the carnal Jews as Christ can be to us but Christ telleth them if you were Abrahams seed you would do the works of Abraham Joh. 8.39 And Joh. 5.46 If ye had believed Moses ye would have believed me They were Abrahams seed after the flesh not after the Spirit they were Abrahams seed after the flesh but that did avail them nothing since they did not follow his example but sought to kill him which was far from Abrahams Spirit and temper A little of mens practice is a surer rule to try by than all their fair language and complemental respect John 9.28 29. Then they reviled him and said Thou art his disciple we are Moses his disciples we know that God spake to Moses but as for this fellow we know not whence he is However he or such as He were so fully resolved to become disciples to Christ yet they would cleave to Moses John 9.28 Thus are the best of men mistaken and abused by their carnal Successours They made use of Moses his name to excuse their disobedience to Christ. It is an old trick of degenerate men to cry up the names of pious Ancestours and externally to adore the memory of Saints departed But such motives of love are but carnal when there is an apparent inconformity between you and the persons whom you would magnify We detest the memory of Annas and Caiphas Judas and such others as conspired to take away the life of Christ so did they of Corah Dathan and Abiram Ahab was accounted as wicked by them as Pilate by us Therefore to rest in a naked historical belief and meer profession of the name of Christ when there is such an apparent insubjection to his Laws 't is but a knowing Christ after the flesh owning him as the God of the country upon custom and tradition Well then Christ is never rightly entertained but when his Doctrine is received and intertained by faith though there should be an hatred of his persecutors a quarrelling for his religion you put him to more shame in your conversations and crucify him afresh every day Heb. 6.6 Seeing they have crucified to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to open shame A quarrelling ruffian may be ready to fly in the face of him that shall speak a disgraceful word against his Father when his own dissolute and ungracious wicked courses grieve his Fathers Spirit and shame him more than all their reproaches so many will pretend much love to Christ and in an heat quarrel be ready to venture their lives for their religion No man would have his religion despised but yet he shameth and bringeth it most into contempt that matcheth it with disproportionate practices as those are called enemies to the cross of Christ that preached Christ but yet lived in a sensual and earthly manner Phil. 3.19 2. By acts of sensitive affection in the reading or meditating on the story of Christs sufferings or when you hear his Passion laid open in a Rhetorical fashion Men at such occasions find that there is stirred up in themselves some fond pitty at his sufferings and indignation at the Jews and are ready to fly in the face of Judas that betrayed him and the Rulers and those that put him to death All this is but an humane natural respect such as we will find in our selves at any tragical representation true our false let a man but read the sad preparation of Abraham when he went to sacrifice his Son Isaac or the pittiful words and moans of Jacob when they told him that some Beast had devoured Joseph and shewed him his coat The sacking of Jerusalem by the Babylonians or how they handled that miserable King Zedekiah when they had first slain his Children before his face and then put out his eyes Or the Lamentations of Dido for Aeneas when she slew her self These storys will draw as many tears from our eyes as the story of Christs sufferings things of small importance well represented to the fancy may thus affect us And besides these light affections do not comply with Gods end in the Mystery of Redemption we are not to reflect upon the death of Christ as a tragical accident or sad story but as a well-spring of Salvation and God looketh for more noble and spiritual motions namely that we should be affected with the horror of our sins that crucified the Lord of Glory and the terror of that dreadful severity which God manifested on his own Son when he took our burden upon him and the admiration of his incomparable wisdom which could joyn his mercy with his justice the unspeakable joy of Salvation which is derived thence to us and the ardent love which we should bear to the Father who hath given his Son to die for us These are the true resentments of the death of Christ even that we may raise our hopes of mercy upon the foundation of his merit and satisfaction as the price of our blessings and ingage our selves to God in a way of thankfulness for his great love and mercy and increase our hatred of sin having such a glass wherein to view our hatefulness now these are spiritual respects the other are but carnal such as we would shew to man pitifully handled 3. By expressing our respects more in the pomp and pageantry of outward complements rather than serious devotion or an hearty obedience to his Laws or worshipping him in Spirit and in truth This is also a knowing Christ after the flesh or a carving out a respect to him that rather suiteth with our carnal minds than his glorious estate now in
New Creation there is a perfection of parts though not of degrees for a defect of parts cannot be supplied by an after-growth a new creature is made all new there is an universality in the change God worketh not his work by halves no man had ever his heart half new and half o●d no though his work be not perfect yet 't is growing to its perfection if any one corrup●ion remain unmortified or unbroken or allowed in the Soul it keepeth afoot the Devils interest and will in time spoil all the good qualities we have 3. No change amounteth to the new creature but what introduceth the life of God and likeness to God 1. Where the New Creation obtaineth there is life ●alled sometimes the life of God Eph. 4.18 because it came from God and ●endeth to him Sometimes spiritual life Gal. 5.25 And 1 Pet. 4.6 because the Spirit is the author of this change Sometimes a Scriptural life because the word of God is the rule and food of it Phil 2.16 Holding forth the word of life Sometimes an Heavenly life because of its end and tendency Phil 3.20 But our conversation is in Heaven But call it what you will a life there is the Soul that was dead in sin becometh alive to God yea the Spirit its self becometh a principle of life in us so that they are really alive to God and dead to sin and the World Now would you know whether a man be alive or dead Observe him in his desires and endeavours after God and there you shall see by his actions and earnestness that he is alive But if you would try whether a carnal man be alive or dead you must see by his desires and endeavours after the flesh that he is alive for by any that he hath after God you cannot see it Sense motion and affection are the fruits of life stirrings and activity and sensible feelings are uncertain things to Judge by but the scope tendency and drift of our endeavours will more certainly discover it He that is regenerated by the Power and Spirit of Christ doth no more seek his happiness in carnal things but the bent drift and stream of his life and love doth carry his love another way 2. Where the new creation obtaineth there is likeness and to be new creatures is to be made like God or to have the Soul renewed to Gods Image 2 Cor. 3.18 Beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord we are changed into the same image from glory to glory Christ is formed in you Gal. 4.19 Made partakers of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 'T is for the honour of Christ that his people should bear his Image and Superscription that he should do as much for the renovation of the Soul and the restitution of Gods image as Adam did for the deformation of the Soul and the forfeiture of it Therefore in the New Creation his great work is to make us holy as God is Holy the Spirit is sent by him from the Father to stamp Gods Image upon the heirs of promise whereby they are sealed and marked out for Gods peculiar ones they are sanctified cleansed and made more like God and Christ and are in the World such as he was in the World Nothing under Heaven so like God as an holy Soul 4. This new state of life and likeness to God is fitly called a new creature Partly to shew that 't is Gods work for he only can create and therefore in Scripture always ascribed to him Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship in Christ Jesus created unto good works So Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which is created after God So Jam. 1.18 He hath begotten us by the word of truth that we should be a kind of first●fruits among his creatures We are so far dead in trespasses and sins that only an Almighty Creating Power is requisite to work this change in us nothing less will serve the turn And partly because this change thus wrought in us doth reach the whole man the Soul and all the faculties thereof the body and all the members thereof are also renewed and changed 1 Thes. 5.23 I pray God sanctify your whole Body Spirit and Soul A man hath a new Judgment esteeming all things as they tend to promote Gods glory and our eternal happiness A New Will and Affections inclining to and desiring all things to this end that we may please glorify and enjoy God And the Body is more ready to be imployed to a gracious use and purpose there is a change wrought in our whole man and the inclination and bent of our lives is turned another way so that the good we once hated we now love and the sin that we loved we now hate the duty that was tedious is now delightful 2. How are we united to Christ If a man be in Christ 't is said in the Text. In the Scripture Christ is sometimes said to be in us Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory Sometimes we are said to be in him as here as he is also said to live in us and we in him Gal. 2.20 Being in Christ noteth our union with him and interest in him Now a man is united to Christ two ways 1. Externally 2. Internally 1. Externally by Baptism and Profession John 15.2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away These branches are in him only by external covenanting and professing relation to him and visible Communion with him in the Ordinances 2. Internally when we are ingrafted into the mystical body of Christ by his Spirit and have the real effect of our Baptism and Profession 1 Cor. 12.13 By one Spirit we are all Baptized into one Body These two unions may be resembled by the Ivy that adhereth to the Oak and the branches of the Oak it self which live in their root the Ivy hath a kind of life from the Oak by external adhesion but bringeth forth fruit of its own The branches grow out of the root and bear fruit proper to the tree All that are in Christ by external adhesion are bound de jure to be new creatures but those that are in Christ by mystical Implantation not only ought to be but are new Creatures 3. How the new Creaion floweth from our Vnion with Christ. 1. They that are ingrafted into Christ are made partakers of his Spirit And therefore by that Spirit they are renewed and have another nature put into them Titus 3.5 6. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy-Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Are fitted to live a new life 'T is not meet the Spirit of Christ should work no otherwise than the bare Spirit of a man if one had power to put the Spirit of man into a bruit beast that bruit beast would discourse ratitionally All that are
Christ hath suffered those punishments which are due to us That which is equivalent to what we should have suffered He hath suffered all kinds of punishment In his body 1. Pet. 2.24 Who his own self bare our sins in his own Body on the Tree that we being dead to sins should live unto Righteou●●●●● whose stripes ye were healed In his Soul in his agonies His Soul was heavy to 〈◊〉 Matth. 26.38 As a little before the shower falls there is a gloominess and blackness so in Christs spirit he suffered privative evils or poena damni in his desertion positive evils or poena sensus when he sent forth tears and strong cryes unto him that was able to save him from death and was heard in that he feared Though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5.7 8. He hath suffered from all by whom evil could be inflicted Men Jews and Gentiles strangers and his own disciples The powers of darkness who were the Authors of all those evils which Christ suffered from their Instruments Luke 22.53 He suffered from God himself the full cup of whose wrath he drunk off Such a broad foundation hath God laid for our peace He suffered in every part sorrows being poured in upon him by the conduit of every sense hunger thirst nakedness spittings stripes they pierced his hands and feet 2. Propound it to your Love 1. How much we are bound to acknowledge the unspeakable mercy of God who knowing our sad condition pitied us and resolved to save us and to reconcile us to himself by such a Priest and Sacrifice as was convenient for us But we unworthy wretches being ignorant and sensless of our sin guilt and misery do not understand what need we have of Christ nor praise God for his great love in providing him for us Our condition was sinful and so miserable We are guilty polluted with sin and liable to death can have no access to God nor Eternal Life And which is worst of all are sensless of this sad condition and if we once know it we are hopeless helpless and so should have perished utterly if the Lord had not found out a Remedy and a Ransom for us Rom. 8.32 2. How miserable would it have been if every man should bear his own burden how light soever any sins seem when they are committed yet they will not be found light when they come to reckon with God for them Sin to a waking Conscience is one of the heaviest burdens that ever was felt If God had laid sins upon us as he laid them all upon Christ they would have sunk us all to hell The little finger of sin is heavier than the loins of any other sorrow if God give but a touch of it Psal. 39.11 When thou with Rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth The Rod if it be dipt in guilt smarts sorely If a spark of his wrath light into your Consciences what a combustion doth it make there Psal. 38.4 My iniquities are gone over my head they are a burden too heavy for me Assoon as we do but taft of this Cup we cry out presently my heart faileth You may know what it is Partly by what Christ felt He lost his wonted comforts he was put into strange agonies and a bloody sweat Now if this be done in the Green Tree what shall be done in the dry If his Soul were exceeding sad how soon shall we be dismayed Partly In the Saints when they feel the weight of Gods little Finger all life and power is gone if God set home but one sin upon the conscience Psa. 40.12 Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me therefore my heart faileth Job saith The arrows of the Lord like porson did drink up his Spirits Job 6.4 Partly by your own experience When the conscience of sin is a little revived in you what horrours and disquiets do you feel in your selves Prov. 18.14 The Spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded Spirit who can ●ear Then thousands of Rams and Rivers of Oil any thing for the sin of the Soul Partly By the state of the Reprobate in the World to come and what the threatnings of the word say concerning those who dye in their sins Heb. 10.31 It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God And Mark 9.44 Where their worm dieth not and their fire is not quenched This is the portion of them that bear their own burden and their own transgression 3. The happiness which redoundeth to us by Christs bearing it for us It is not a thing inconsiderable or a matter of lesser moment to be made the Righteousness of God in him Our whole welfare and happiness dependeth upon it our freedom from the curse our Title to Glory 1. Freedom from the curse For this is such a Righteousness as giveth us exemption from the penalty threatned in the Law We have the comfort of it for the present a freedom from the sentence of condemnation Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus c. So that we may go chearfully about our Service But much more shall we have the comfort of it when the great God of recompenses cometh to execute the Threatning In the general Judgment there is no appearing before God in that great day with safety and comfort without some Righteousness of one sort or another our own or our Sureties Now no Righteousness of ours can secure us from the dint of Gods anger and the just stroaks ' of the Law-covenant Blessed they that are found in Christ not having their own Righteouness 2dly Our title to glory As it qualifieth us for the reward There is no getting the Blessing but in the garments of our elder Brother We have holiness given us upon the account of this Righteousness 1 Pet. 2.24 We are sanctified made personally holy and Righteous We have faith given us by virtue of this Righteousness 2 Pet. 1.1 All progress in grace is given us by virtue of the everlasting covenant Heb. 13.20 21. And at length glory Eph. 5.27 That he might present it to himself a glorious church not having Spot or Wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish 3dly Let us prize it and desire it Phil. 3.8 9. Every man is prone to set up a Righteousness of his own Luke 18.9 Partly Because naturally the Law is written upon our hearts And therefore Moral strains are more welcom then Evangelical Doctrine Every manis born under a covenant of works Partly out of Pride Every man would be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all for personal Merit A Russet Coat of our own is valued more then a silken one that is borrowed Rom. 10.3 For they being ignorant of Gods Righteousness and going about to establish their own Righteousness have not submitted themselves to the Righteousness of God But