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A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

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into the world to have his ease and pleasure and outward glory but to Work This obedience of his it was both active and passive 2. Here is the description of the nature or quality of this work that which was given him by the Father to do so that in all this there was a stipulation and an agreement with the Father 3. There is his discharge of it I have finished it He did not leave it half done there is nothing more can be required of Christ This is a comfortable truth for wo be to us if Christ had not discharged all if there had been any supply to be made by us If you say How could Christ say he had finished his work when yet the dregs of the cup were to be drunk up the worst seem'd to be behind viz. all that agony and sorrow he was to suffer First Austin answers it by reading it in the future tense I will finish thy work but that cannot be The best answer is that Christ thus speaks because all was now at hand to be finished he was in a prepared and ready disposition to consummate all as we reade he said a little before his death It 's finished consummatum est Now the Scripture accounts that as done which is immediatly to be done and the man is ready to do it Thus Abraham Heb. 11. is said to offer up his sonne Isaac and to receive him from the dead when yet actually he did not offer him but he was immediatly fitted for it Obs Christ did fully and perfectly finish that work the Father gave him to do John 4.34 see what a notable expression our Saviour useth to this purpose My meat is to do the will of him that sent me My meat i. e. my joy my refreshing never any hungry man was more refreshed by food then I am in doing my Fathers will and what was that will to obtain pardon and salvation for a poor humbled sinner Oh why should the godly soul be dejected with doubts whether Christ will receive him or no it 's his meat to be communicating grace and mercy to thee Thou canst not so much desire him as he doth thee Again he addes To do my Fathers will and to finish his work for if Christ had begun it and not compleated it we had been still in our sinnes and without all hope this is the fountain of all our hope and joy Christ finished his work he did not leave any thing for me to do Indeed duties are required of us but not as additaments or suppliments to his mediation but as qualifications fitting us to partake of the fruit of it Let us dive into the Divinity of this Point And 1. Consider That Christ might have come into the world as a glorious Lord and Lawgiver only to rule and to give Laws but coming into the world as a Mediator and a Surety it behoved him to be under a Law and to discharge that work he undertook That Christ might have been in the world not subject to the Law or obliged to do any thing for our good is plain because his Incarnation was not necessary he was not compelled to it he might have chosen whether he would thus undertake for man or no therefore the Scripture saith Phil. 2. He made himself of no reputation and He became obedient to the death of the crosse It was wholly at his own good pleasure but suppose this will and purpose of his then there was a duty and charge laid upon him to perform all he was betrusted with he would have been found unfaithfull had he not done every thing to the uttermost 2. There was a holy and admirable agreement between God the Father and the Sonne to be a Mediator for those his Father had given him Hence it is that he saith so often his Father had sent him and I came to do the will of him that sent me Although the Covenant of grace be made with beleevers yet there was a previous and antecedent Covenant or agreement between the Father and the Sonne to be a Mediator and the agreement was that if Christ would lay down his life for such then the Father would give them to him as his seed and glorifie them as also reward him with all honour and glory That Christ was rewarded with all honour appeareth Phil. 2. and in other places and that because of his work done as a Mediator and that he had a seed given him appeareth in that it 's said he should see of his seed and be satisfied Isa 53.11 The Arminian doctrine therefore that holds an Universall Redemption in imputation only and not application maketh it possible that his soul might be in all that travell and yet he not be satisfied for not one might be saved There was then this admirable agreement between the Father and the Sonne transacted in heaven they were purposing good to beleevers even before they had a being or could have any desires for their own good 3. From this Covenant and agreement it is that Christs work is truly and properly obedience for it may be asked How could Christ be said to obey seeing he could not but do Gods will there was an inward necessity from the Hypostaticall union and as we do not say the service that Angels and Saints do in heaven is properly obedience for then that should be rewarded with a new heaven and so in infinitum Why then can it be said that Christs doing and suffering is obedience To this we Answer The Scripture doth expresly call it obedience and such an obedience as hath a reward annexed to it Hence John 10.8 Christ cals it the Commandment which he had received from his Father And whereas it 's said Christ necessarily obeyed and so it could not be otherwise it 's true supposing his will to be a Mediator then such was his holinesse that he could not but be faithfull yet this was not a naturall necessity as the fire burneth but a necessity of immutability arising from the perfection of his nature neither is to sinne of the essence of liberty but it 's a defect and doth accompany only a mutable liberty in what is good Let it therefore be firmly beleeved that all which Christ did it was truly and properly obedience to the Law of God Rom. 5.19 By the obedience of one c. 4. This was not meerly obedience but a meriting obedience so that our salvation and his glory was not due to him meerly as such by vertue of a promise or by congruity but from condignity although concerning the later viz. meriting his own glory many sound Divines think otherwise There was an intrinsecall worth and excellency in Christs obedience answering to our salvation Hence though we have our Justification and Salvation of grace and meer grace yet in respect of Christ it was of justice and debt so that in Christ the Covenant of works was fulfilled though in us
CXLV Expository Sermons UPON The whole 17th CHAPTER OF THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO St JOHN OR CHRISTS PRAYER Before his PASSION Explicated AND BOTH Practically and Polemically Improved By Anthony Burgess Minister of the Gospel sometime Fellow of Emanuel-Colledge in Cambridge and now Pastour of the Church of Sutton-Coldfield in Warwickshire LONDON Printed by Abraham Miller for Thomas Underhill at the Anchor and Bible in St Pauls Church-yard MDCLVI TO The Christian READER THe Evangelist John because of that admirable usefull and excellent matter which he hath left on Record for the good of the Church is dignified with some remarkable Titles That which is the principall and most to be observed is the name Christ himself gave him Mark 3.17 He with his brother James are called Sons of Thunder When our Saviour changed Peters Name there is the reason of that mutation expressed but because here is none given therefore the conjectures of Interpreters are various As for the application of it to John Some say It was because of the greatnesse and vehemency of his voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is hard to prove that Grotius thinketh our Saviour doth allude to that of Haggai chap. 2.6 Yet once it is a little while and I will shake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from which he makes Boanerges though other Criticks judge much otherwise the Heavens and Earth c. This Promise was fulfilled in the great Mutation and Change which was made by the Gospel in which this Evangelist was an excellent Instrument Some attribute it to the Secrecy and Sublimity of that matter which he delivereth as having more familiarity with Christ then others for he used to lean on his Breast and so might receive some peculiar instruction from Christ Thus Heinfius making Thunder to be no more then the Hebrew Shechina Gods Presence and Majesty applying that place Psal 81.7 I have heard thee in the secret place of Thunder But that which is most probable is Because of the admirable gravity and weight in the matter delivered as also the short and sudden expressions thereof Those Sentences in the beginning of his first ●hapter are like so many thunderbolts insomuch that if you do regard the Matter and Manner of his expression he might more truly be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then Pericles in his Orations Whatsoever therefore we finde delivered by this Divine Pen-man we are with much reverence and awfull respect to receive it Antiquity also hath in a peculiar manner honoured him with some other names He is called the Heavenly Eagle and that because of the sublime Mysteries manifested by him in reference to the Godhead of Christ And to this purpose he is likewise styled Theologos the Divine where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not used in that sense as afterwards it was in the Church of God for it is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hence they say the other Evangelists do deliver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Christ the manner of his Humane Nativity but this Evangelist doth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature of Christ although the Socinians have sacrilegiously perverted the beginning of that first Chapter of John to another sense then of Christs Eternal Deity which yet was used instrumentally to convert Junius from his Atheisme Now although the whole matter delivered thus by this Evangelist be so admirable and excellent yet this Seventeenth Chapter wherein is related the Prayer of Christ for believers not long before his Death and mentioned onely by him hath some appropriated Reasons for a more peculiar Attention and Affection towards it Hence it hath alwayes had a peculiar Presidency in the hearts of Believers So that the opening of this precious Box of Ointment must needs send forth a refreshing fragrant smell to those that are spiritual For it is truly said by Melancthon concerning this Prayer Nec digniorem necsanctiorem nec fructuosiorem nec magis patheticam vocem in Coelo ac Terrâ unquam fuisse auditam quam hanc ipsius Filii precationem There was never a more excellent more holy more fruitfull and more affectionate voice ever heard in Heaven or Earth then this Prayer So that we may call this Chapter as some of the Psalms are A Chapter of Degrees If this reason may be admitted of that Inscription because they did surpasse other Psalmes in Excellency as also thereby the soul was like Elijah carried up in a fiery Chariot to Heaven At the end of every verse we may write Selah There was a very superstitious Custome among Christians in Chrysostome's time which he doth severely inveigh against that they would hang this Gospel of John or part of it about their necks as an Anulete nor a Spell against malignant things But certainly a gracious heart preserving this Prayer of Christ and making a wise and skilfull improvement thereof will finde it wonderfully advantagious both for the increase of Godlinesse and Comfort here will be both Bread to nourish and Wine to refresh and comfort Although therefore multitude of Books be complained of as glutting the world So that we may justly think there are more Books then Readers yet the Excellency perpetual Usefulnesse and ravishing Consolations of the matter delivered by our Saviour in this Valedictory Prayer have prevailed with me to publish these Expository Sermons to the world and the rather not knowing of any English Writer who hath purposely made it his businesse to explicate and practically improve this Chapter whereas some other parts of Scripture have been diligently discussed In the managing of this Work I have occasionally entered into some Socinian and Arminian Disputes some Verses in this Chapter being the proper subject for them Although the greatest part of my Work is to make Honey rather then to sting to informe us how to believe and walk in a Christian life then to dispute and digladiate about Controversies for we seldome gather Grapes from such Thistles Yea sometimes in stead of Conviction they work confirmation in those Errours the mindes of men are prepossessed with And here I shall take leave to enter into a short Digression which would have come out more seasonably long before this time but I had no opportunity till this occasion was offered to me Not long since I published The Second Part of the Treatise of Justification wherein among other particulars my Work was to prove That Works though done by Grace are not the Condition of our Justification but that we are justified alone by Faith as the Means or Instrument receiving of it These two kindes of Justification viz. by Faith receiving or Faith and Workes as a Condition I conceive to differ specifically one from the other and that he who is justified the one way cannot be the other The former way as the Scripture doth maintain so generally the Reformed Churches have readily insisted in The latter way the Remonstrants have vehemently pleaded for opposing Faiths instrumentality in
Justification with whom Vorstius and Grotius in this Opinion associate themselves as also one or two late English Writers Doctor Hammond Pract. Catech. lib. ● Sect. 3. Now when I had endeavoured to state the Question in a most candid and fair way between those that deny Works to be a Condition sine quâ non of our Justification and those who affirme A Reverend and Learned Brother judging himself to be concerned in this Opinion likewise doth complain of the want of candor and truth Confess Preface in my stating of the Question wherein I rather expected thanks for my ingenuity For first I said All Merit and Efficiency was with great distaste removed from these works of Grace in our Justification Therefore the Question was Upon what account these are required in Justified persons Whether in some Causality or Concurrence as Faith is onely not with such a Degree of Excellency Now let any Judicious Reader that is acquainted with this Controversie decide wherein any candour or truth may be desired herein For I say Causality which is a general word not Efficiencie or Merit Againe I say Some Causalitie Causalitas quaedam which is Terminus diminuens Yea I added the word Concurrence which might easily satisfie any how low I brought the Question Yea as if this had not been enough I propounded it in other termes Whether good Workes be required as well as Faith Yet when I had done all this he complaineth as if wrong were done I am still more confirmed and that by this instance in what I delivered in that Preface That it is not a compendious or proper way to finde out truth and discover an Errour by dealing with persons according to their particular expressions or to attend to personall reflexions but to abstract the Question and to handle it in Thesi For how many words upon words may be multiplied in this very particular My Reverend Brother saith He vehemently disclaimeth all Causality of Workes in Justification Surely his meaning is all Proper Causall Efficiency and so did I in the stating of it but to deny Causality in a large sense is plainly to contradict himself For in his Aphorisme 74 Thesis They both viz. Faith and Works justifie in the same kinde of Causality viz. as Causae si●e q●ibus non or m●d●ate and improper Causes Or as Doctor Twiss Causae di●positivae but with this difference Faith as the principall part Obedience as the lesse princ●pall Here is Causality though improper Here is a Causa dispositiva and yet shall I be blamed after I had removed Efficiency and Merit to sta●e it with a Causalitas quaedam some Causality or Concurrence And therefore all the Arguments I produce are not against any supposed Causality but that Faith onely is that which justifieth and that good Works quâ Workes let them be Meritorious Efficient or Conditions onely are excluded as to the Act of Justification Grotius in cap. 2. Jacobi who maketh this Promise of Justification and Salvation Ad donationem sub conditione quam ad proprie dictam locu●ionem conductionem propius accedere happily this may occasion such great recourse to the Lawyers about the Nature of Conditions doth yet notwithstanding on the 2●th verse of the 2d Chapter of James from that expression of the Apostle Faith did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inferre Docemur non male fidem opera fidei posse dici causam Justificationis modo non intelligamus cau●am primariam sed conditiones quae saepe cau●ae sine quibus non aut sui generis causae dicu●tur But I need not runne to this for my Arguments militate against Workes as Workes justifying under any pretended Notion whatsoever And this maketh me admire how my Learned Brother could let ●f all one Passage wherein he may be so p●lp●bly and ocularly convinced to the contrary by the first looking upon my Arguments That which he saith is The strength of my Arguments lieth upon a supposition That Conditions have a moral Efficiency not to examine how freely he manageth his Answer to such a supposition Now this is that which I aff●rme That there is not one o● these ten Arguments brought against Justification by Workes as a Conditio sine quâ non that is built upon this su●position or hath any dependance on it onely in the fourth Argument after the full strength thereof is delivered then I do ex abun●anti and by way of amplification shew that a Condition in a Covenant strictly taken I put in that limitation hath a moral Efficiencie and is a causa cum quâ not a causa sine quâ non But this is onely by way of addition The Argument did not depend on this Assertion And my Learned Brother saith Some conditions and most among men are Morall Impulsive causes I finde another thing urged likewise as not fair dealing and that is To fasten upon his Opinion that we may say a Justifying Repentance as well as Justifying Faith and also Justifying Love Indeed in my Book it is Law and that was the Printers fault which I am sorry for because I see my Learned Brother so much moved at that as if he were charged to hold a justifying Law it should have been Love But why doth this offend my Reverend Brother He doth not say It is not true to say justifying Repentance or justifying Love but it is not fit to say Confess in the Pref. Why is it not fit if it be true It may be such an expression would be offensive to godly eares and therefore not fit Can Love be a Condition of Justification and yet not Justifying Love as a Condition This seemeth very strange But it 's said Faith hath a peculiar fitnesse and aptnesse to receive Christ which Love hath not It is true and therefore Faith onely Justifieth and not Love Thus it maketh against him and not for him Besides with him Faith justifieth as a Condition not from its peculiar aptnesse and therefore Love and Repentance being Conditions must justifie aequè with Faith though not aequaliter Faiths aptnesse is the remote reason as it is a Condition that is the proxime and formall reason Now Repentance and Love have this formall reason for they are Conditions Certainly if Brutum were Animal rationale he would be Homo as well as man is Some other minute and inconsiderable Objections are also brought in but they are not worthy of a contest I therefore return again from this Digression to the Subject in hand which is to take notice of the great Usefulness and Excellency of the matter contained in this Prayer of Christs Luther did justly call John the Evangelist for this Book Malleus Pelagianorum the hammer of Pelagians we may adde also of Socinians and Arians Hence Sixtus Senensis speaketh of some Heretiques called Alogi a name that Epiphanius did justly put upon them because they rejected this Gospel of John and could not endure this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word so often mentioned by
the Covenant of grace and this consideration laieth a firm and sure foundation for our peace and comfort For our salvation is not grounded upon our works but Christs works it 's not upon any perfection or fulnesse in us but on Christ Though therefore our sinnes and frailties may humble us yet they may not drive us from our anchor of hope in Christ 5. This work Christ was to do it was in it self very heavy and grievous though his readinesse made it easie If we consider the particulars of his work viz. to obey the Law of God and to suffer all the wrath that was due for our sins we may easily then conclude that Christ had a bitter cup to drink off And those praiers and agonies which he poured out saying If it be possible let this cup passe away Matth. 26.39 abundantly shew that to the humane nature it was a very hard and difficult task yet for all this his love and desire of our salvation was so great that at another time he saith I have a baptism to be baptized with and how am I streightned till I come and when Peter advised him to save himself with what indignation doth he refuse it Matth. 16.23 so that we should with serious and affectionate hearts hear of this work of Christ oh how full of agonies and conflicts was he insomuch that an Angell from heaven came to comfort him yet all this was his meat his refreshment in respect of our good Do not thou then say of any duty he commands if it be to pull out thy right eye to cut off thy right hand to part with thy dearest lusts and comforts for his sake This is hard work who can do it for did not Christ willingly and joyfully do harder for thee 6. This work he finished and compleated as you hear in the text it 's the end that Crowned this great work Now his finishing of this work was in these particulars 1. He did it wholly and universally there was not one Iota or tittle of the Law which he did not accomplish though all our obedience be imperfect and we fail in many things this we omit and that we omit yet Christ left nothing undone Oh what blessed and comfortable doctrine is this to the loaded and burdened soul that sits mourning like deflowred Tamar and I whither shall I go if the Lord enquire about this duty and about that command thou canst not answer thy omissions are too palpable thou canst not hide them from thy own eyes yet remember Christ failed in nothing Cursed is he that abideth not in all things so the Law runneth if thou wert able to do all the Law requireth and yet fail but in one word in one thought that matters not all thy other duties for this one thing it will condemn thee and therefore the Law brings every man under condemnation it makes the most holy of men see their damnable condition but Christ answereth the Law to the utmost As Christ said to his enemies Which of you can charge me with sinne so he may say to greater then they even to the Law even to the justice of God wherein can you finde any spot in me demand to the utmost farthing abate nothing I am ready to discharge all 2. He finished it universally for parts and not only so but fully for degrees He did not only do every duty the Law required but every duty in every degrees he did not only love God but he loved him as much as the Law required The Law was possible to him though to us it be impossible all that he did was so fully done that there wanted not the least degree of grace in any duty As he had not the Spirit in measure so neither was his obedience in measure thus farre as is with us to whom God giveth not such a measure of grace as to be able perfectly to conform to the Law in this life and here again the godly heart may lift up it self and be comforted for what though thou come short many degrees of what the Law requireth yet Christ did not What though all thou dost may be better yet Christ did all things so that they could not be better Perfectum est cui nihil deest Now nothing was wanting to Christs obedience otherwise Christ himself would have needed a Mediator as well as we if he had failed in his trust he had been guilty of sinne and so needing of pardon now it were blasphemy to say so of Christ for the Apostle Heb. 7.27 aggravateth and preferreth Christ our Highpriest above the legall Highpriest in this because such an one was to offer for his own sinnes as well as the sinnes of the people Oh then it 's no wonder if Paul be thus affected with Christ and his righteousnesse seeing all fulnesse and perfection is in it 3. Christ finished his work because he had not only an objective perfection in parts and degrees but also a subjective perfection all within him was throughly and perfectly holy so that whereas we are both originally and actually polluted he was originally and actually holy so that the Law had no fault to finde with him for his originall and native holinesse it 's plain because he was not born of man in an ordinary way but the holy Ghost overshadowed the Virgin Mary and therefore he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that holy thing which was to be born of her Luke 1.35 and thus the Apostle It behoved us to have an Highpriest holy and separated from sinners Heb. 7.26 and indeed this is the foundation and root of all for the tree must be good before the fruit can the fountain must be clean ere the streams and so the nature must be holy ere the actions are Christ then had an holy and pure nature wherein was not the least spot or wrincle of sinne and then his actuall holinesse did fill up the faculties of his soul as he had a soul and the naturall properties thereof an understanding and a will so these were sanctified to the highest we speak not of the holinesse of his Divine nature as he was God for so it was infinite even as God himself but of his humane nature habitually and actually Hence the Apostle He knew no sinne 1 Cor. 5. and he was made like unto us sinne only excepted Heb. 4.15 Now here also the godly may rejoyce for those reliques and remainders of sinne are such as prove thorns in the side of the godly The experimentall sense of this made Paul cry out Oh miserable man that I am Well though in thee there be the stubs of sinne yet in Christ there are none and now God dealeth not with us in our persons but as in Christ being found in him saith the Apostle as the malefactour was in the City of refuge Phil. 3. 4. Christ finished his work in respect of duration for even the Law required continuance though there were perfection of parts and
heed of spiritual wantonesse and luxury to make the Bible the argument of thy opinions or notions thereby to get applause and esteem No thou are to prize it for the spiritual effects of it That it cureth thee of thy blindenesse spiritualizeth thee against thy carnality quickens thee against thy formality 2. We are to prize it for the necessity of it because that containeth the words of eternal life we cannot think a thought or step a step without the guidance of it This is able to make thee wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 A man cannot have any wise thought or purpose towards heaven but by this This made Job as you heard prize it more then his necessary food for the soul needeth this bread of life as much as the body doth material bread If we set up any other principle to walk by but this we run our selves into the mouth of hell 3. For the usefulnesse of it The Scripture is profitable for instruction exhortation and to make a man perfect for every good work 2 Tim. 3. There is no sin to be avoided no duty to be done but the Word of God will direct thee therein There is no temptation so subtle but this will discover it If at any time thou art unprepared and indisposed for such or such a duty thou hast no heart to pray no spirit to beleeve on the promise Come to this and it will quicken thee for it's eyesalve to thy blindenesse It 's an hammer against thy corruptions It 's fire to consume thy drosse It 's oyl for thy wounds It 's a Catholicon an universal Shop of all spiritual medicines The rich man the poor man the husband the wife all may learn from hence what to do 4. The preciousnesse and dignity of it The Word of God is full of heavenly and supernatural excellency especially the Gospel or the will of God revealed for the salvation of man Oh how welcome must these glad tidings be to the troubled sinner that hath received the sentence of condemnation upon his soul Christ with his benefits discovered are the onely treasure to a tender broken heart The Scriptures they are the Mine wherein this treasure is to be found They are the Field wherein this pearl is hid To you that beleeve Christ is precious 1 Pet. 2.7 and it must needs be so for he is the Mediatour between God and them he hath fulnesse for all their wants and necessities He is made wisedome righteousnesse and sanctification 1 Cor. 1. It 's not what they are but what Christ is Lastly They keep the Word who persevere in it notwithstanding all the temptations and difficulties It 's both against the flesh and the devil for any man to keep Christs Word and how many have begun well but at last have given over to their great destruction Therefore John saith If ye continue in my word and Mat. 13. The good ground is said to hold fast the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifieth so to hold as that many are striving to take it out of our hearts again and they are said to bring forth fruit in patience because there is great contrariety and opposition unto Gods Word if possible the fowls of the air will take away this seed as soon as it is sown The Apostle James speaks of a forgetful hearer Jam. 1.24 and therefore would have us abide looking into the glasse of the Word Oh take we heed that we be not in the number of those whose latter end is worse then the beginning Take heed it be not said They are turned out or gone from us because they were not of us Vse of Instruction what they may judge of themselves who though living long under the means of grace finde the Word hath no place in their hearts their lives their conversation proclaim to all that they care not for Gods Word Oh what a sad Symptome is this of thy obstinate incurable condition oh men to be mourned over as dead and buried in the grave of sin If ye were of God you would hear his Word It 's said of many they did not hear the Word of God because it was of the Lord to destroy them O take heed this be not true of thee Vse of Exhortation to the godly keep close to Gods Word let your thoughts your affections your actions be according to that you never wound your consciences you never bring woe to your selves you never are at a distance from God but when you go astray from this rule Keep to this as in an Ark be in all your relations by it live by it die by it you are like a tree planted by the water-side while attending to this and if you keep the Word of God Gods Word will keep you 1. In the hour of temptation that you sin not 2. At the hour of death that you sink not It will be a tree of life to you that we through the Scriptures might have consolation The Word that was your rule will now be your comfort it will speak nothing but consolation to thee It will be more then all friends all comforters whatsoever 3. It is everlasting it will abide for ever the consolations of it will be eternal SERMON XXXIV Of Growth in Grace The Duty Necessity and Glory of it JOH 17.7 Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee OUR Saviour doth still relate those commendable considerations that were in his Disciples that thereby God should hear his praier for them It was not for worldly wicked sinners but such as knew and obeyed him that he praied for This is the more to endear them to God Now as before he had commended them for their obedience so here for their faith in him as a Mediatour and this faith is necessary to all Christian obedience For without it a man by his Legal righteousnesse becomes a confident presumer trusting in his works that he doth or else despaireth Seeing it impossible that ever he should attain to such a righteousnesse that is required Therefore when we have done all and got up to the very pinacle of grace we are in matter of Justification to leave our obedience and fly to faith so then we have the disciples Faith in Christ as a Mediatour described and commended 1. By one main particular act which doth synecdochically contain the whole They have known By the next Verse it appeareth that beleeving and knowing are all one 2. There is the Object of their faith which is twofold 1. All things that the Father had given Christ 2. That they were of him the sence is They knew whatsoever Christ had it was given him of the Father and that he had these things from him to be a Mediatour Here then you see what an acceptable thing it is to God to beleeve in Christ as sent by him The poor humbled sinner he trembleth and doubteth whether he may come to this Mediatour or no
as those Spies did of the Land of Canaan saying It 's impossible for any man ever to come thither and with the Disciples to say Who then can be saved but with God nothing is impossible To open this Doctrine consider that there is a fourfold principle which is operative to the conservation of the believers First There is an inward vital and vivifical principle of grace abiding in the godly which will never fail Not but that of it self it would as in Adam and Angels but as God could confirm and establish the grace of Angels that it never shall perish so doth God that supernatural principle of holiness put into his people 1 John 3.8 He that is born of God he neither doth sinne or can sinne viz. so as to be given up wholly to it and that because the seed of God abideth in him Though there be different thoughts about this seed what it is I do now suppose it to be that inward principle of supernatural life from whence all gracious operations do flow This God hath set in the heart and inward parts of his people never to be rooted out Thus John 4 14. The believer is said to have in him a well of water springing up to eternal life Here is a fountain that cannot be dried up Therefore it 's said He shall never thirst more viz. with a thirst of a total indigence and want Even in the greatest deficiencies and barrenness of Gods people there hath been sap in the root when the branches seemed dead A second principle thus conserving is That daily help of grace quickning and corroborating the soul in all holinesse The former grace is permanent and habitual this transien t actual and by way of motion This latter doth compleat and actuate the former For as it 's not enough to have a naturall life unlesse there be a further concourse of God by which we actually move and stirre So in our supernatural life it 's not enough to have that principle of life infused but we are to receive the daily impressions and powerfull quicknings of his holy Spirit and this is to have both the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 posse and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 operari the will and the deed These are the two internal principles of our conservation for the Lord Christ doth not keep us immediately but by means in a subordinate manner In the next place there is a two-fold principle extrinsecal of our preservation And The first is Our Election that is the fountain of all our perseverance This is the first round in that ladder by which we ascend to Heaven Rom. 8. It 's from Predestination that nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Rom. 11. It 's Election hath obtained that elected remnant shall never perish and thus in this prayer of our Saviours all security of the godly it 's because the Father had given them to Christ viz. by Election as the root and source of all their good This is so cogent a truth that many who hold a falling away from true grace do yet maintain That no Elect man can ever perish finally because then God should be frustrated of his purpose and the counsel of man should make void the counsell of God This Election of God is the vivificall cause of all Preservation As by this they were Called and Converted from a state of sinne Election did bring them in so the same Election when they are Converted doth protect and keep them if they fall doth raise and repair them whereby they safely at last arrive at Eternity so that their Perseverance is not a merit or reward of their former holinesse but it 's a free gift of God and an effect of Election as their effectual Vocation was The second externall Principle is The Covenant and Promise of God made in Christ to the Godly So that the Covenant of Grace being confirmed by Christs death In whom the Promises are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.20 being among other glorious ends to perpetuate and continue the work of Grace in them it 's impossible that hell or the world should quite put them out of the way to Heaven Jerem. 32.40 God there promiseth an Everlasting Covenant a Covenant that shall abide for ever And what is the Priviledge vouchsafed in that Deed of Gift It 's the putting his fear in their heart that they shall not depart from him You see by this notable place That it 's not we our selves but God who keepeth us and for this we have his Promise So that the godly may triumph in an holy Confidence because of it Many other Promises that are branches of this Covenant the Scripture declareth which should be sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb For what can be more precious to hear then that God will safely preserve thee in the way to Heaven so that no fraud or force without nor any lust or corruption within shall hinder thee of the Crown of Glory Isai 40.29 30 31. He giveth power to the faint and to them that have no might he increaseth strength c. God in the verse before is said Himself not to faint or to be weary Though he created the Earth and doth still preserve it yet he is not weary and because he is thus he will make his people so They in themselves may be fainting and weary but he will renew strength And he illustrateth this from natural strength Though young men in their full strength may be weary yet these shall not And again he compareth their strength to the Eagle that mounteth up with wings to the Heaven and is not weary Thus God will enable the godly soul Though they runne or walk they shall not be weary What a reviving place should this be to the dead dull and languishing believer Why do I lie groveling on the ground Let me flie up to Heaven like an Eagle We have also a remarkable Promise of Divine Protection Isai 4.5 6. where God by two similitudes doth notably declare it First by an allusion to that wonderfull Preservation of the people of Israel It was not enough that God had brought them out of Aegypt they would have perished for all that without his Protection Therefore we may reade the History Exod. 13. how God created a directive Protection for them both by day and night In the day time there was a Cloud and smoak and a shining flaming fire by night Thus God promiseth he will do upon every dwelling-place in Zion and upon her Assemblies by these are figured the several Churches that are assembled to serve God For upon all the Glory shall be a defence By Glory is meant the Ark which is here made a Type of Gods people and they may be called Gods Glory both because they glory in God and God is glorified by them So that the meaning is Look what care and defence God did once show to the Israelites to preserve them from
then the hour of his mercy The night is not so long as the day Isa 54.7 8. and Mat. 24. Christ speaking of the calamity which should fall on the Jews he saith For the Elects sake those daies shall he shortned the meaning is that whereas those publique calamities might have been greatly prolonged if we regard second causes God out of compassion to his people did shorten them Secondly Are they the hours of grace and Gods mercy then 1. Be thankfull to him he might make it alwaies a day of blasphemy of reproach and rebuke unto thee but he causeth a comfortable day to shine upon thee but 2. Do thou improve the day of grace and Gods mercy Oh say this is Gods hour this is mine hour what I will do for my soul what I will lay up for Eternity must be now done or never Oh remember it 's but an hour but a day and this will quickly passe away In what despair and torment will many wish for these hours again SERMON V. Of the Nature and Manifestations of that Glory which Christ praied for and is invested with And how comfortable it is to all his Members JOH 17.1 Glorifie thy Sonne that thy Sonne also may glorifie thee WE take the words as they lie in order The two former Arguments to enforce Christs Petition have been dispatched We come now to the Petition it self Glorifie thy Sonne and here it will be at first objected How Christ who is also God can be glorified It may seem that he can no more need glory being the fountain of it then the Sunne light or the Sea water To open this Consider First That to glorifie is taken two waies in the Scripture 1 By any testimony of words or otherwise to acknowledge the greatness and honour of another and in this sence only are we said to glorifie God for we cannot indeed adde any thing to his glory he is essentially glorious though there bad never been any creature to acknowledge it only we manifest and celebrate that glory which God had before Thus gloria is said to be clara notitia 2. To glorifie is by reall exhibition and vouchsafing of honour and glory to those who had it not already and thus God glorifieth us Whom he justifieth he glorifieth Rom. 8. 1 Joh. 2. Those that honour me viz. by declaration or manifestation God will honour by reall exhibition Now if we look on Christ as God having the same honour with him then when he praieth God would glorifie him it must be only in manifestation That whereas he had been in outward appearance the meanest of men now God would manifest that he was the naturall Sonne of God But this is not all In the next place we may say Christ hath a twofold glory 1. That which was essentiall and eternall which he had from the beginning with God for being God he could not really be divested of that glory 2. There is his Mediatory glory That which he hath not as God but as Mediatour This God bestowed upon him after he had been in the state of humiliation for after all that debasement and misery he willingly undertook God did exalt him to glory and gave him a name above all principalities and powers yea giving all power in heaven and earth to him The government of the whole Church and a command over all Ordinances and duties therein to blesse and give successe to them of which the Scripture speaketh often 3. It hath been greatly disputed Whether this glory and exaltation was by Christ truly merited at Gods hands whether from his sufferings he merited at Gods hand all that glory he speaks of All confesse he did not merit to himself the hypostatical Union nor his habituall grace or the happinesse of his soul because no merit could precede these only this is disputed Whether all that honour and glory which accrewed to him after his birth and before and after his death he did truly merit at Gods hand by his active and passive obedience Some not only of the Papists but of the Orthodox as Zanchy contend he did truly merit this though here he praieth for it Others as resolutely deny it because Christ had no respect to him but to us only in this work of redemption Others think it is but rashnesse and curiosity to busie our selves in the Point but I have spoken to this more fully in the doctrine of Justification and shall ere we come to the end of this Chapter more particularly consider the Socinian errours in this Point This is plain the Scripture affirmeth God hath appointed such an order that first he must suffer and then enter into glory as Phil. 2.8 Luk 24.26 Rom. 5.9 Here is an order but whether it be of meer antecedency or causality and merit that is not expresly said I shall not trouble you in it it 's enough that we see God did answer this Petition he praieth for and that in every respect to the highest degree Father glorifie thy Sonne Obs That it was the holy and wise will of God the Father to exalt and glorifie Christ Gods great purpose from all Eternity was to give honour and glory to Christ Indeed Christ while he was here on the earth had some beamlings of this glory some irradiations now and then Joh. 12.28 Therefore the Father told Christ he had both glorified his Name and would glorifie it Gods purpose to glorifie Christ was above that purpose to glorifie men for they are but members and he is the head yea some say this design to glorifie Christ is so immutable and absolutely intended by God that though man had not fallen yet they say Christ would have been incarnated and exalted by the Father But if we consult with Scripture we have no other reason there assigned of Christs coming into the flesh but of saving sinners Now lest it should be thought that while we preach of Christs glory this is nothing to us and what comfort or profit is that to us to hear that Christ in his own person is invested with such glory you must know that this redounds to our profit and advantage much every way For 1. Christs glorification is a plain demonstration of his Conquest over all our Enemies For had death and the grave or the Prince of this world been prevailing over him still he could not have been glorified and so that would have been true he did not save himself and therefore could not save others Therefore it 's a most comfortable saying and worthy of all acceptation to hear that Christ is glorified for this proclaimeth to all that no enemy could have any power over him that all our adversaries are vanquisht That our David hath killed the Goliah so then hear this Truth with comfort with attention it concerneth all the godly It 's blessed news to hear Christ is glorified for then thy sinnes thy guilt thy death and every thing thou fearest is conquered If any of
degrees and subjective perfection also yet Cursed is he that doth not continue therein Gal. 3.10 as you see Adam did not but Christ from the beginning to the end of his daies held it out yea his love did most appear at the later end for then was the greatest and hardest parts of his work to undergo but though in all that reproach contempt and scorn yet he was not weary he did not give over his work he did not fail or faint in the later end Thus Christ was our David fighting against Goliah and in his conquest we did overcome Lastly He so finished it that he hath left nothing to be done either by Angels or men in that way and kinde as he did Therefore all these doctrines that maintain free-will that hold the mediation and intercession of Saints in heaven that maintain merits and satisfactions all these blaspheam the sufficiency of Christ and say Christ hath not finished his work for either Christ was a totall and perfect Mediator or else a partiall if a totall and perfect then there needeth no more one Sun is sufficient all things added are superfluous if a partiall Mediatour then he did not finish his work then he did it by halves and so Angels and Men are to share with him in his glory It 's true they have many distinctions to mince the matter but these fig-leaves cannot cover Adams nakednesse and it 's made the sinful property of man fallen to seek out many inventions God made man upright but they have sought ●ut many inventions Eccl. 7.29 They have many colours and pretences many distinctions and excuses to cover their sins with But you will say If Christ hath done all and we are to doe nothing then what need we be diligent and zealous in the waies of godlinesse Sin or not sin it will be all one Christ hath done all therefore we may eat and drink and rise up to all excesse of riot No that is a Non sequitur For our duties are not required to that end which Christs was but yet they are necessarily commanded for other ends Though Christ did work and finish his work yet thou must work and endeavour to finish thy work too But how It 's good to understand this for here Popery and the true Religion part here they oppose one another We pleade the necessity the presence the command of good and holy works as well as they only we differ in the end They presse them for such an end as Christ did his work for us for merit for justification for our salvation This we say is to derogate from Christ This is to make Christ of no effect whosoever repents beleeveth doth any holy duty for this end is guilty of spiritual Idolatry he maketh another Christ to himself besides the true Christ but then there are other ends for which we do these duties partly because God hath commanded them as the way to walk in if ever we will be saved so that though our holy life deserve not heaven yet our wicked and ungodly life deserveth hell and then partly to glorifie God and to testifie our thankfulnesse and love to him yea there is an inseparable connexion between a man interested in Christ and a holy life as there is in the fire with heat and light In the next place Consider the properties of this work Christ ●●●nished And 1. It was a work of infinite value and worth whatsoever Christ did it had a transcendent excellency because he was God as well as man so that we are not to consider those works he did as of a meer man though never so holy but as one of a divine nature 2. They were Mediatory works all that he did and suffered tended to a propitiation and reconciliation with God so that as the nature of them was infinite so the end of them was precious and admirable what should man have done if Christ had not done thus 3. It was not only his work but our work Alas Christ was not obliged to these duties for his own sake but it was for our sake so that the godly with great affection may consider of these works of Christ for they concern thee They are our works both impetrativè they merit for us they procure good for us and imputativè we are made the righteousnesse of God as our sins were accounted his 4. The necessity of this working and working so perfectly and that doth appear from the justice of God and purity of the Law and partly from our impotency from the justice of God for that being infinite nothing could satisfie him but what was of infinite worth It would have been injustice in God to have given us heaven otherwise and then partly from the holinesse of the Law that admits of no works but perfect pure and holy Therefore to say God accepts of imperfect holinesse and accounts that as compleat which is not so is to attribute false judgement unto God and lastly our own impotency proclaimeth the necessity of Christs perfection for take us as we are in our selves so we are nothing but sin and a curse In stead of working Gods work we do the devils and take us as regenerated then though we be partakers of Gods grace yet the remnant of corruption within us doth staine and infect all that we do Lastly Here is the glorious visibility of Christs perfect working in his resurrection ascension and now sitting at the right hand of God in glory which could not have been had not Christ perfected his work for what is the reason the devils and damned in hell are detained to Eternity in those prisons of darknesse Is it not because of their insufficiency to perfect their sufferings to make them adequate to Gods justice to bring as great glory to God as ever sin did evil or dishonour In that therefore Christ hath overcome the grave and the bonds of death we have an infallible evidence of his perfect working Vse of Instruction how dangerous all those doctrines are which proclaim free-will merit under any notion whatsoever As they give that to man which belongs not to him so they take that from Christ which is due yet this is a most natural sin in all either in whole or in part to take off from Christ not to be beholding to him only God hath commanded us to come out of our sins by repentance and our own works by faith and the Apostle doth not only exclude sins but even working also from Abrahams Justification Rom. 4. There is a danger of being a Pharisee when thou ceasest being a Publican Vse 2. of great Consolation to the broken-hearted sinner This is the glad tidings of the Gospel to those who sit under the sentence of eternal death Christs works will abundantly answer all the temptations about thy own works Two things lie like two Mountains upon the godly The weakness of their graces and the strength of their corruptions If
neither of these were to bow their souls down with what joy and gladnesse could they live and die Now Christs works have a two fold remedy to this twofold grievance His works have a satisfaction in them and therefore whatsoever failings and corruptions there are if humbled for and endeavouring to be reformed they are sufficiently conquered and his works have a meriting nature in them and therefore though thy work be weak his work was perfect and compleat say not then who shall go up to heaven this is to bring Christ back It is an excellent place Rom. 10.7 where the beleever is forbid to doubt or say in his heart Is Christ ascended or was he made a curse for us or how shall we be able to ascend to heaven or to be delivered from hell Vse 3. Did Christ perfect and finish his work Do thou imitate and follow him Christs working excludes ours for justification but not for a duty and way to heaven None but doers and workers shall have heaven though not for their works Now thy work is first as a Christian so the Law of God in the purity and exactnesse of it is a rule of all thy works What the Law bids thee do doe though not to have life by it 2. The work of thy relation as a Magistrate Minister Husband or Wife finish this work It 's not enough to be good in the general unless good in relation 3. The work of thy condition as a rich man as a poor man when the Master gave talents to all this was his command Work ye trade ye be in constant improvement SERMON XXIII Of a Holy Working Life the Excellency Equity and Necessity thereof in order to Glory JOH 17.5 And now O Father glorifie me with thy own self c. THis fifth Verse containeth a repetition of the matter praied for v. 1. and enforced by divers arguments in the former Verses wherin observe 1. The object matter of Christs Petition Glorifie thou me I shall not consider that because spoken to before Only in that we see our Saviour twice within so little a space praying for this glory though appointed and promised to him We may observe two particulars 1. That all repetition and ingemination of the same matter in praier is not unlawful but sometimes is useful and necessary 2. That even those things that God hath appointed and promised to his people must yet be obtained by praier In the next place we have the description of this glory 1. It must be an heavenly glory such as God approveth of Glorifie thou me with thy own self This may be spoken exclusively to all humane glory which he regarded not or else in opposition to his work he had done I have finished thy work on earth and now let me have my reward in heaven 3. From an external adjunct It 's the glory which he had before the world was That admits of some difficulty to be dispatched in its proper place Lastly There is the causall inference from what was said before and now Father glorifie me this is a causall conclusion from the work finished by Christ and of this because first in order at this time And now glorifie me as if he had said Hitherto I have been finishing my work all the while I was doing that I looked for no reward I expected no glory but now all is completed I pray for and expect the glory due unto me From whence observe That as Christ so all the people of God when they have finished their work and not till then may look for and desire the glory prepared for them 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth is laid up for me a Crown of Glory Henceforth he expects now his fight is over but not before Let us consider this briefly in Christ and then in our selves First Concerning Christ God had so ordained and appointed That he should first be eminent in doing and suffering and then should have a reward It behoved him first to suffer and so to enter into glory Luk. 24.26 Ought not Christ to have suffered these things There was a debt and duty upon Christ to wear the Crown of thorns before he put on the Crown of glory To be debased more then all before he was exalted above all so that the stipulation and agreement which the Father made with the Sonne contained in it both duty to be done by Christ and a reward to be vouchsafed to him He was to drink of the brook and so to lift up his head Psa 110.7 This was the order that God had indispensably commanded and nothing could hinder it though all this was supposing Christs willingnesse to undergo the office of a Mediatour for otherwise though he had become man yet he might alwaies have kept up the manifestation of his divine glory and hence it is that the Scripture saith he ought to have suffered There was a necessity from the justice of God which will punish sinne in the offender or in the Surety and he ought to do it because of his own faithfulnesse and trust he should not discharge that which had undertaken unlesse he became thus obedient 2. The order that is between Christs work and reward is far different from ours and of another nature for that is an order of merit and causality but ours only of antecedency and by a promise Therefore when Christ looks for his glory it 's upon farre other grounds then when Paul expects his Crown of glory for Christ looks for his glory upon his work as a cause and a merit it being fully perfect and more then he was bound unto if absolutely considered though when once he became our Surety it behoved him to perform all so that Christ had his glory by the Title of justice and desert though in respect of the personal Union he had alwaies a right to all glory But Paul and all the godly have it by meer grace and favour for when the Children of God have done all they can yet such is their imperfection that they need a pardon and so their salvation and glory is of meer grace Therefore though there be a similitude between Christs work and his glory and ours yet there is not an equality The one is of justice and merit the other of grace and favour The more inexcusable then are all these Popish doctrines that would puff up a man to such a conceit of himself and Christ together of his free-will and grace together not Christ and grace alone that hence they will pleade their Title to heaven Christs merits and their own In the next place let us consider this doctrine as true in our selves for hereby our security and carelesnesse especially our prophanesse shall be greatly confounded when we shall know that without our working there cannot be glory we must look to labour in the Vineyard before we come to have our wages And 1. God the Father who appointed such an order for Christ hath also decreed
death but these works of God they are living works partly because they proceed from a life of grace and partly because they will live for ever they will go to the grave with thee to heaven with thee they will never forsake thee 2. It 's our duty to work because God hath made them the necessary way to walk in if we will be saved Without holinesse no man shall see God Labour for the meat that perisheth not Hence if we consider every gracious work of patience love meeknesse we shall see blessednesse is promised to them Not that these justifie only the person justified cannot be without them They are the media ordinata ordained mean in the use whereof we are to arrive at eternal happinesse It 's faith only that receiveth Christ and his righteousnesse yet this faith cannot be separated from an holy walking It 's the eye only that seeth yet the eye cannot be separated from the other parts of the body and thus the Apostle doth immediatly oppose Rom. 4. beleeving working grace and works in respect of Justification yet he doth at the same time presse the Children of God to all holinesse and the fruits of righteousnesse 3. Working is necessary by way of gratitude and thankefulnesse to God and Christ If there were nothing else but this this might pour coals of fire upon thee for how many works of Gods grace hast thou been partaker of If Gods grace did not work all the day long for thee thou couldst not be a moment preserved out of hell and as for Christs working reade the History of his Life he was alwaies finishing the work of thy Redemption and Salvation he had nothing to do for himself all was in reference to thee Oh then how unworthy wilt thou shew thy self of all that love and kindenesse which God and Christ have done for thee If thou like the Sluggard let the Field of thy Soul grow full of briars and thorns Oh how can thy heart be so cold and slothful When thou considerest grace is working for thee all the day long if Christ had no more zealously and earnestly wrought my peace for me then I do perform his duties my soul had perished irrecoverably Lastly Therefore it 's necessary we should work Gods work because we have for a long time spent our selves in the Service of Satan and doing the works of the devil Oh this should be a perpetual goad in thy side this should be fire in thy bosome to consider that there was no hour no day no season but thou didst take the opportunity to satisfie thy lusts Thou never couldst have enough of sinne No thirsty man did more greedily swallow down water then thou didst sinne yea how active to draw on others to infect others with the same plague thou hadst I tell you this will lie heavy upon the godly soul If I were to live Methusalems age it would not be time enough to do God service for the dishonour I have put upon him Thy time is short and thou hast much to do because thou hast undone so much In the next place Consider That it 's lawful for the people of God in all the work they do for God to encourage themselves with this that there is an everlasting glory laid up for them Even as Christ had an eye to this glory so it 's lawful for us Thus Moses had an eye to the recompence of the reward Heb. 11. The godly Rom. 2. are said to be such as seek for immortality and glory Rom. 5.2 They rejoyce in hope of the glory of God and Paul accounted all these sufferings but light in respect of that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 Indeed Gods glory is to be sought in the first place and then our glory so that it 's a shame if in all our doings and sufferings for God we are not full of joy because of that unspeakable glory apprehended by faith Faith makes it present as if we already were partakers of it So that whatsoever temptations and discouragements are in the work of the Lord this glory will abundantly make amends for it Are there reproaches and disgrace in the world All the while thou didst sin and the devils work thou hadst the love and good-will of the world but since thou hast betaken thy self to the service of God thou art the scoff and reproach of all O think of the glory God will crown thee with before all the world Again are all the works of God painful difficult and contrary to flesh and bloud thou must strive and wrastle much in praier be alwaies in a combat and conflict Remember this everlasting glory yea God therefore doth many times put his Children upon all exercises and sad temptations which make them ake at the very heart and all is to encrease their glory the more Thus Job thus Paul they had extraordinary trials that they might have extraordinary glory Furthermore is there self-denial required in Gods work Must thou part with thy pleasures with thy profit thy delights still remember this glory will make thee no loser for alas what proportion is there between these petty things thou leavest and those everlasting treasures God hath provided for thee In the sixth place That the glory of Gods people may be full he giveth them time and large opportunities of working for him and keeps thee in this world not for any earthly and outward advancement of thy self but to serve him in thy generation as it 's said David served God in his generation Act. 13.36 and God calleth Moses his servant Whatsoever thy relation thy place thy office be God hath appointed thee to work and therefore he prolongs thy life till thy work be done This is a comfortable consideration which all the godly may take that death shall not seize on them while thay have work to do for God and when that is finished then this summons to everlasting glory As for Infants this Truth reacheth not to them and if any like the Thief on the Crosse are called at the last hour and so are not able to work in the Vineyard yet even such have an habitual prepared heart for it if they had the opportunity But for others whose daies are prolonged they are thus to think with themselves I have this day this week longer to adde to my work God hath for me to doe Take heed of mispent time take heed of losing daies and weeks The night is coming when none can work Vse 1. How much comfort and joy the godly may take at the hour of death Their work is done now they have nothing but the Robes of glory to put on That fulnesse of glory they are immediatly to possesse should swallow up the fears of death and the love of the world With what joy should they cry out Farewell Friends Wife and Children welcome God welcome eternal glory Alas thou hast no glory here Thy body is a vile body thy soul a
to know this that he is now the Lords he hath cause with astonishment and amazement to fall down and admite the grace of God we did not make our selves his we could not become his people of our own strength 2. There was the power of God also greatly discovered for seeing by sinne we become the devils and he had a right to us he is the god of the world and he rules in the hearts of those that are disobedient Eph. 2. seeing I say he is their Father and they are of him and his works they do it 's impossible we should be recovered out of his hands till God who is stronger then he sets us free As our Saviour implieth in that Parable when a strong man keepeth the house all things are quiet till a stronger then he cometh Luk. 11.22 It was not then in the power of Man or Angels to expedite himself out of that bondage and slavery till God did wonderfully shew his power and as it was not in their power so neither in their will or heart Though it be such an unspeakable happ●nesse to be the Lords yet no man naturally is willing to this he had rather be the devils and sins then the Lords such cursed wickednesse is in every mans heart and such enemies are we to our selves Fifthly Though this expression be short Thine they are yet it comprehends very many precious and excellent particulars For we are the Lords upon several and various titles therefore are we sure to continue his It 's good the godly man should know how many waies he is the Lords that his heart may be enlarged upon every particular For 1. He is the Lords by Election from all Eternity Thou wast the Lords before thou wast born before thou hadst a being when thou couldst have no thoughts of thy self he had thoughts of thee The Scripture doth often Eph. 1. Rom. 9. comfort the people of God and quicken up their hearts with this particular and certainly it 's a deep and overwhelming Meditation Who am I Lord when in the womb of nothing or when born yet wallowing in my bloud thinking speaking and living against thee and thou didst from all Eternity know this yet didst choose me to eternal life Oh how many thousands are past by and I am chosen Was it not enough Lord not to have created me It might have been mercy not to have created me that so I might not have been damned but positively to appoint me before the foundation of the world to such unspeakable glory this is that which astonisheth me Oh my Soul and heart is too narrow if I had the hearts of all the men in the world they would be too little to conceive of this goodnesse 2. We are the Lords or Christs for I make this all one by way of redemption and conquest We are bought with no lesse a price then the precious bloud of Christ and as the Apostle urgeth are therefore no more our own 1 Cor. 6.20 Oh then consider how great a matter goeth to make thee the Lords ere this propriety could be attained how dear did it cost Christ he therefore became man and did undergo all those evils and reproaches that we might be his It cost him more to redeem us then to create us so that it 's no wonder if the people of God may look upon themselves as the Lords peculiar for there is a good reason They are bought at an high rate Neither sin or the devil or the world have done so much for thee Oh then what shamefull ingratitude is it to live to them and not to God 3. We are his new creature and a spiritual Creation Thus he is said to create us and we are said to be his Children born of him We are Gal. 2.10 called his ●orkmanship created to good works so that in this particular the people of God are ramarkably his They have his Image put upon them They have a divi●● nature bestowed upon them It 's he that hath made us not we our selves even 〈◊〉 this sence Lev. 20.26 That ye should be mine severed from all other oh then know if there be no more in thee then what is in the world or what thou hast by nature thou art not yet the Lords Doth thy nature thy frame of heart discover an interest in God then thou maist take comfort there are many who desire to be the Lords by Redemption but not by Sanctification They would have Christs bloud theirs but not his Spirit 4. We are the Lords by Covenant and by Promise and this is no mean foundation of our propriety in him The Promise runneth I will be their God and they shall be my people Jer. 31.33 We have Gods Word as well as his work causing us to be his and in this sence God is said to be the God of Abraham and the God of his Faithfull Seed viz. by a gracious promise This is that which may bear up the heart how often do we by our sins and infirmities break off our propriety and lose our interest as much as lieth in us If there were no gracious promise of God that for his Names sake and words sake we shall be his then all those uncomfortable Arminian Positions would take place that we may be the Lords people to day and the devils slaves to morrow Thus our propriety would be mutable every hour and as our lives so our hopes and comforts would be like a vapour and a bubble but we are children of the promise Gal. 3. And as that gave Isaac life when the barren womb had no power so it 's the promise of God begins and continueth our spiritual life It 's for his truths sake that sin and Satan shall not quite overwhelm us and how comfortable is this to pleade Lord we are thine not by any merits of our own not by any gracious works of ours but by thy promise We do not beleeve love thee or persevere and therefore are thine but because we are thine therefore we beleeve and persevere 5. We are the Lords by several peculiar relations all which administer their peculiar comfort We are the Lords house in which he continually dwels and is present We are his Temple in a peculiar manner consecrated to him We are his branches and that denoteth our intimate Union with him as also our supply from him We are his Servants we are his Children we are his Wife we are the members of Christs body Oh these similitudes are full of worth they demonstrate not only the dignity but the blessednesse of his people and the rich supply of comfort and grace from him By these is signified that we are the Lords in his most indeared affections That no Father to a childe no husband to a Wife is as God to us Isa 43.1 I have called thee by Name thou art mine Vse 1 The practical Improvement of this is very great First It informeth us that besides the general acts of faith a
see many of the Christian Teachers and disciples were led away in this as appeareth by the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians What a great task hath the Apostle to take all off from works and the obedience to the Law and to give all to Christ They would give part to Christ and part to their works but not all to Christ so that it 's a very hard thing to pull this weed out of our breast We see all Popery and Socinianisme goeth this way also To doe something that they may be justified thereby 3. Thus they cannot think that it 's so acceptable to beleeve in a Mediatour because it 's chiefly their comfort and their good thereby so that they look upon it as self-seeking and immoderately desiring their own good and peace not as any waies tending to the glory of God But we shall shew you that Faith in the Mediatour doth not only bring comfort and joy to us but admirable glory to God even more then Martyrdom or the highest expressions of Obedience Do not therefore tempt thy self and be a Satan to thy own peace What though thy comfort thy salvation bound up in beleeving yet if God will be honoured and glorified this way Thou art rather joyfully to receive his grace then frowardly to dispute against it so that if this beleeving be a self-seeking it 's such as God would have thee to do and as he that will not eat or drink is guilty of bodily murder so he that will not beleeve on Christ which is called eating and drinking is guilty of soul-murder 4 This is strange and difficult to the godly a long while because our justification and acceptation by him is wholly of supernatural Revelation It 's like the doctrine of the Trinity or of Christs Incarnation As humane reason would never assent to such a Truth were it not for divine Revelation that overpowers all so that all our sins are pardoned through Faith in Christs bloud is likewise of meer divine manifestation For see what nature doth incline us unto in all the heathens when they had sinned so as their Conscience condemned them they went to some solemn sacrifice or other extraordinary work thinking thereby to pacifie the wrath of God Adam was created in a state of Righteousnesse and so by his Obedience of works he was to be justified And upon his fall it became impossible that any should be justified by what he did unlesse sinne could justifie a man Therefore when God discovered a Christ and Justification by faith in him This is new doctrine from heaven Neither Men or Angels could have found out such a way so that it 's no wonder if man be thus averse to this Faith in the Promise because it 's a way that neither the state of Integrity or of man fallen was acquainted with insomuch that a godly man in the sence of his sins must bring such a faith in the Mediatour as he doth in other mysterious supernatural objects of Faith and his heart saith It 's unlikely such a sinner such an offender should finde mercy say O my Soul Are not the other supernaturall Points of Religion that I beleeve very unlikely also and incredible to flesh and bloud Lastly Therefore this seemeth hard to the godly broken hearted sinner because though Faith in a Mediatour be a duty yet it 's not to every one that live that wallow in their sins Christ is not a Mediator whether men repent or not repent You are not to think that it is all one godlinesse or no godlinesse If then such only may beleeve in a Mediatour as do truly and sincerely repent of sinne This will be hard to finde out for there are Ahabs tears and Judas's tears for sinne and indeed upon this depends all In this the godly are so much plunged Christ indeed bids those Come that are heavy laden that hunger and thirst after him But I have great cause to question my self whether I doe thus or not In the second place Why is it so that Prophane and ungodly men think it so easie to beleeve in Christ And they say they do it with all their heart when it 's plain by the Scripture they are not such to whom those glorious things of the Gospel do belong And 1. They think it so easie because they take presumption for faith They think they beleeve when they presume Now to presume is easie because it 's a work of the flesh it 's sutable to our corruptions that the Jews though they committed all lewdnesse yet the Prophet complaineth they would come and lean themselves upon the Lord and trust in lying words saying The Temple of the Lord c. That is not faith which most of the world have It 's presumption it 's carnal-confidence such as those had who said Lord have not we prophesied in thy Name Such as the foolish Virgins had Mat. 25. Such as Paul had before his Conversion when he said He was alive Rom. 7. Oh then tremble at that security and confidence thou hast Thou maist be sure it 's a sinne and of the devil it 's so easie whereas Faith is very difficult 2. They look upon Faith in Christ as easie because they divide the Object they take some things of Christ not whole Christ They think it 's only beleeving on him as a Saviour for pardon of sinne They do not choose him as a Lord to whom in all obedience they resign themselves This is indeed the rock that splits many tell them of beleeving in Christ and they think that is only to rest for salvation They attend not that it 's the receiving of Christ for all the ends and purposes God sent him into the world Now one main end besides our justification and salvation is our Sanctification To redeem to himself a people zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 To communicate his Spirit for to make holy as well as his merit to make happy Lastly They think it easie because they never think on any qualifications which are required in those who partake of Christ It 's true there are the Antecedent Conditions of merit or worth Let that Popery be abandoned but yet the Scripture tels who and what kinde of persons they are that must claim an Interest in Christ They are blessed that hunger and thirst for such shall be satisfied Mat. 5. Every one that is athirst is to Come Rev. 22.17 Repent that your sins may be blotted out Act. 3.19 Now prophane secure people they never think of these qualifications They say God is merciful They say Christ is a Saviour but then they never consider of whom They think not that many are called but few chosen They love not those places The way to heaven is a narrow and straight way Not all that say Lord Lord shall finde the gate of heaven opened to them If they thought seriously of these things it would cause an holy trembling in them These things premised Let us consider Why it
also in Divinity our own Righteousnesse our own good thoughts they cleave so close to us and so we are not able to put forth any spirituall sence But as even the Ethiopians think the flattest nose and the blackest colour to be the best beauty and the Persians the contrary and all because that they are so It 's a National property So it is here because our heart is ours our works ours our duties ours therefore we think them good and so put secret hopes therein and though in this high bloudy sinne yet our Consciences do not cannot smite us therefore fear Security more then all despair and trouble of Conscience for this is felt and discovered and thereby the better prevented but the other is a secret Impostume never manifesting it self but when immediatly killing 2. As it is a secret sinne hardly perceived so it 's a deep radicated one It 's our very nature and essence almost You see by these many disputes that Paul had against those who would joyn the works of the Law with the Lord Christ that it is not only imbred in us to put confidence in them but even to pleade for it and to justifie this doctrine and this was not only amongst the unbelieving Jews but even such as did acknowledge Christ also The danger therefore is that when we can cast away other sinnes yet this will cleave the faster to us The more we abstain from iniquities the more trust we are apt to put in our selves This our Saviour urged when he said unlesse a man become like a little childe he cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 18.4 And when he spake a Parable to this purpose that when we had done all we should say we were unprofitable Servants Oh then take heed of this sweet poison within thee Do not say within thy heart Such and such sinnes I have left I am none of the prophane ones of the world I have a constant care about all holy duties for if thy heart be hereby confident in these things it is Idolatry Though it be more subtle yet he that fals down before a stock or stone and worshipeth Idols is no greater an Idolater then thou art for thou makest thy self a Saviour and saist of thy duties as they did of the golden Calf These are the Gods that brought thee out of Egypt 3 This trusting in our own Righteousnesse and not in Christ solely is a Spirituall sin It 's a sicknesse not of the body but of the soul and so the greater sinne All sinnes that are immediatly subjected in the soul have the greater guilt and defilement ceteris paribus more then any bodily sinnes As the Schoolmens Rule is The sinnes of the Spirit are maioris reatus but bodily sinnes maioris infamiae We see it in the Devils Their sinnes are wholly sinnes of the Spirit and are therefore called vnclean spirits yet they are more sinfull then men Therefore they are called spirituall wickednesses in high places Eph. 6. Though then these sinnes of spirituall pride and secret confidence in our selves do not make a noise in the world and bring reproach as bodily sinnes doe yet in other respects they may be of a crimson colour 〈◊〉 ●loudy aggravation They are a corruption of the best and choicest part ●hin thee and therefore look not only to outward but inward heart-sins Lastly The grievousnesse of this sinne doth appear in the immediate contrariety and opposition it hath to Christ and the Gospel of grace There is no sinne doth so formally and immediatly reject Christ as a Mediatour as this self-fulnesse and self-righteousnesse as we may see by our Saviour and the Pharisees That which kept them from Christ was their self-justification They thought they had a Righteousnesse of their own which made our Saviour call them Blessed that did hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse That were heavy laden and burthened And indeed Reason will tell us that a false Righteousnesse set up against the true is more dangerous then open and plain sinnes and Christ must needs be more jealous of such a person Seeing therefore that God requireth a Righteousnesse there must be a Righteousnesse procured and this of Christs can onely be satisfactory it is an high sinne to set up thy Absalom King instead of this David Thou dost in effect say All that Christ did it was needlesse it was in vain for thou hast a Righteousnesse of thy own works thou wilt trust to and never think to wash thy self from this sinne because by thy words thou speakest the clean contrary There is none that professeth Christ will grosly and palpably own his works for Justification but there is an inward secret tickling of heart and confidence because of them so that God onely can charge this sinne upon men for he knoweth and trieth the hearts and reins of men But thus you will say If this Self-righteousnesse and trusting in what we doe be in some sence worse then all the grosse sinnes that are committed how should we become convinced of it and so forsake it Oh that we could tell how to get this Ivy from cleaving thus to us lest it consume all that is within us Now the ready and onely way for a man to be driven out of this self-righteousnesse is First Seriously convince and inform thy Judgement of that Originall pollution which cleaveth to thee as soon as ever thou hast a Being Remember those place In iniquity did my Mother conceive me Psal 51. The Imaginations of the thoughts of the heart are onely evil and that continuly Gen. 6. Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean We are by nature the Children of wrath Ephes 2.3 Oh the true apprehension of this loathsome contagion will quickly make us cry out of our selves and any thing that is ours Secondly Remember the purity and perfection of the Law what it is that requireth even the perfect actings of all grace so that if there be wanting but one duty yea one degree of grace The Law rejects all and curseth all There is no way but Hell and eternal damnation N●● the knowledge of this must needs make a man cry out of himself because he fails in all things Thirdly Consider the examples of those that have been most holy and godly how still they would go out of themselves They would not have their own life to be the Rule to be justified by David that is so highly commended and who breaths out such divine affections to God 〈◊〉 saith If thou enter into Judgement with thy Servant who can be Justified Psal 133. Oh it 's not for us to stand upon our works and duties when God cals to account and Job Though he pleade● his Integrity yet he humbled himself under his imperfections comparatively to God Paul likewise would not be found in his own Righteousnesse It would be shame to 〈◊〉 ●●d guilt to him to be found so Fourthly The reliques and remainders of corruption still cleave to us
are equal in Nature and Dignity they are all God and infinitely blessed for evermore yet the Scripture doth represent unto us an order in their operations ad extra to us-ward especially in the work of our Redemption one operation is appropriated to the Father another to the Son and another to the holy Ghost To the Father is constantly applied the sending of Christ his Sonne into the world as at the second verse of this Chapter Gal. 4.4 In the fulness of time God sent forth his Son and 1 John 4.9 it 's the Father that sends him So that the original of all our peace and salvation is the love of the Father 2. That which is appropriated to the Sonne is to be sent To be the Person that shall procure our Redemption And 3. To the holy Ghost that he is sent both by the Father and the Son for the application of those benefits which he shall procure for us Therefore the Father is said to send him Joh. 14.16 and Christ saith He will send him Joh. 16 7. Thus he is called The Spirit of Christ as well as the spirit of God because now he is sent by Christ as a Mediator The holiness in Adam was wrought by the Spirit of God as the third Person in the Trinity absolutely considered but now it causeth holiness in believers relatively as the Spirit of Christ So that in Gods dispensations about mans salvation there is an appropriated order in the operations of the three Persons Secondly The mission or sending of Christ here spoken of doth not relate to him as the second Person but as he is Mediator for so as he is the Son of God he is not sent but begotten And thus the Scripture when it speaks of him in that respect calleth him The only begotten Son of God but this mission is in time and of a voluntary dispensation whereas the other was natural and of eternity Christ was alwayes the Sonne of God but not alwayes sent to be the Mediatour of his Church unless in the purpose and decree of God So that this sending of Christ respects him as God and man and denoteth that incarnation of his with the discharge of all those duties that thereby he undertook Thirdly Gods sending of him doth signifie the authoritative Mission and calling of him to that work The Apostle diligently presseth this Heb. 5.5 that Christ glorified not himself but was called by God to his Priesthood called of God to be ● Priest after the order of Melohisedech yea Ch. 7.21 the Apostle presseth this that he was made an High-priest by an oath The Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever And certainly this must needs be of great comfort to us when we shall reade that Christ was so solemnly invested with this power to forgive sins to sanctifie our natures to procure our salvation Things that are done by those that have not a Call are said to be null and invalid they have not powerful efficacy and success but Christ was authorized by God to be thy Saviour he had his Commission to do it he would not take this work in hand till he was called unto it Fourthly The Father did not only call him thus to this wonderfull imployment but he did qualifie and fit him with all abilities for that work he poured out his Spirit upon his humane nature without measure So that as those in the Old Testament when called to any Office were anointed Thus Christ had not a temporal but a spiritual Unction Psal 45.7 there God is said to anoint him with the oyl of gladness Therefore Joh. 6.27 the Father is said to have sealed him to this work Thus Christ acknowledgeth when he saith a body thou hast prepared for me the meaning is he had an universal fitness for the work and this also is of great comfort that Christ is not only called to be our Saviour but he is qualified with all sufficiency thereunto there is nothing that a poor humbled sinner could desire in a Saviour but there is a treasury of it in him Col. 1. It pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Oh then why do not the people of God believe more firmly and walk more comfortably What do they want which is not in this Christ Shall Christ send his Officers to work and endue them with proportionable power and shall not the Father send him with all fitness and fulness to that work Fifthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that the fountain from which our salvation doth arise is the meer good-will and pleasure of God the Father So that although our Justification Sanctification and Glorification be to be attributed to the merits of Christ and it 's for Christs sake that we enjoy them yet the sending of Christ into the world and giving him to become our Mediator is wholly from the absolute good pleasure of God Christ did not merit his Incarnation he did not merit that he should be sent into the world No this is said to be Gods love Not that hereby we are to make comparisons as if the second Person loved us lesse then the first as the Socinian would divide but to admire the great love of either in their distinct operations That conceit also is vain of some that say God upon the fore sight of the will of Christs humane nature to become our Saviour and presupposing this determinate choice did therefore appoint him to be our Mediator This they think will reconcile Christs necessary Obedience and his free-will together but then the Scripture would not have attributed it to Gods love and to the Fathers love but Christs love as a man which yet it doth not Sixthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that he is under an Office and Obligation of faithfulness and trust So that as it lay upon the Apostles faithfully and diligently to accomplish their Office thus also it did upon Christ and therefore he doth so often call it the command that he had from the Father implying that if he did not accomplish all that for which he was sent he should be guilty of unfaithfulness and disobedience and here also is contained much consolation for why should the believer doubt of Christs willingness and readiness to pardon sanctifie or heal him seeing that Christ is under a command to do this he is betrusted with this work he would be found blame-worthy if he did not accomplish all that he was call'd unto As it 's thy duty to believe in him so he hath voluntaily submitted to make it his duty to give thee rest and ease Seventhly Though Christ be sent and be thus under command yet we are not to think that this is done against his will as if the Father did compell him to this work against his desire No how readily doth he profess his coming into the world Loe I come to do thy will O Lord thy Law is
come to Christ 5. This throws all merits to the ground II. In respect of Christ 1. A demonstration of the transcendent love of Christ 2. It shews the safety of the godly Vse Doct. Christ will give to those that are his Eternal life Eternal life considered I. Positively what it is 1. It consists in 1. The immediate fruition and enjoyment of God He is an universal and infinite object He is the Universal good He is an unmixed sincere good And a proper peculiar and convenient good 2. It consists in the perfect sanctifying the sou●●nd body thereby si●ting a man for the enjoyment of God 3. In a quick and lively apprehension of this happinesse And it hath these properties 1. A continued life of happinesse 2. It hath in it all desirable things 3. It is a glorious Life 4. A holy Life 5. A spiritual life Vse 6. It 's an eternall life II. Eternal Life considered comparatively with this present life 1. This life is but short 2. Full of troubles and miseries 3. Full of fears 4. Measured by time 5. Full of dissatisfaction· II. Eternal life considered oppositely to eternal death Eternal death lieth 1. In the deprivation of God 2. It is seen i● that it brings all the positive evil that can be feared or imagined 3. To all Eternity Life a gift death is deserved Why God for a transient sin will inflict eternal torments Vse 1. The great question that all ought to put is How may I have eternall life 2. We must take the right way to answer that question 3. Consider upon this little moment we have here depends all eternity 4. That most shall misse of eternall life 5. Desire such thoughts now as if thou wert already in eternity 6. Better a man had not been born then to misse of eternall life 7. Consider how unwilling thou art to bear any extream pains Helps to be affected with eternity The effects of lively meditations on eternity accompanied with firm faith 1. A low esteem of the world 2. A longing for the coming of Christ 3. Calm the soul under any troubles Arians and Socinians collection from the Text. The Text vindicated Observ 1. All men naturally ignorant of God in a saving manner 2. Imbred knowledge may be encreased by the contemplation of the creature 3. True knowledge to be had only within the Church 4. All true knowledge is not presently saving 5. Without knowledge no Salvation 6. The great ignorance of most to be lamented 7. We must have personal and explicit knowledge and not beleeve as the Church beleeves Reasons Why knowledge is so necessary to Salvation I. In respect of some duties we owe unto God which cannot be acceptably performed without knowledge II. From those duties we owe unto Christ III. Because grosse Ignorance is immediatly opposite to the means that bring the soul to God and Christ Obj. Answ The causes of Ignorance 1. Internal 2. External Vse Motives Observ The effects of saving knowledge I. Internall II. Externall Why knowledge that is not thus accompanied is ineffectuall Vse Observ There is one true God only to be known and served by men Explicatory considerations I. Though many Gods constituted by mans vanity yet there is but one true God II. God is known three waies III. Our knowledge of God is very imperfect IV. V. The insufficiency of naturall and acquired knowledge to guide us in the worship of God and way to salvation Inferences The sinfulness of Idolatry Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Vse 5. Observ The knowledge of the true God is not enough to salvation without the knowledge of Christ The Reasons of the Point Obj. Answ Obj. Answ Vse Obj. Answ Doct. It 's a blessed thing at death truly to say Lord I have glorified thee Consider I. There is a day of judgement when God will call every man to account II. The meanest persons have Talents to improve as well as the greatest III. None are perfect discharges of their duty IV. No merit or causality of salvation in the best work V. VI. Grounds of this blessedness At death all comforts vanish Then if ever Conscience is awakened and the devil is most busie to tempt and trouble Vse Who they are that cannot take comfort in this that they have finished the work God gave them to do 1. Such whose conversation is wicked 2. Those whose works are though not contrary yet differing from the command 3. The slothfull and negligent 4. The luke-warm What things will much diminish the joy and comfort of the godly at the end of their daies 1. Immoderate affection to worldly things 2. Formality and slothfulnesse 3. The not zealously improving opportunities 4. The doing Gods work upon constraint and not from filiall and voluntary principles 5. The more hypocrisie the lesse comfort 6. Ignorance or mistake in some points of Divinity Vse Doct. That our Redemption obtained by Christ is a glorifying of God· c. Wherein God was glorified by Christs Mediation for us Reasons Vse Obj. Answ Quest Answ Observ That Christ did fully and perfectly finish that work the Father gave him to do Observe these particulars 1. 1. 2. A Covenant between God the Father and the Sonne 3. Christs work truiy and properly obedience Quest Answ 4. Christs obedience was meriting obedience 5. Christs work heavy and grievous 6. He finished his work Obj. Answ The properties of the work which Christ finished 1. Of infinite value 2. Mediatory 3. His works are our works 4. Consider the necessity of his work 5. The visibility of it Vse Observ None may look for glory until they have finished their work Consider the Point in reference I. To Christ Glory the reward of Christs merit II. Consider the doctrine as true in our selves 1. God hath appointed this order The necessity of continual working· I. From Gods command II. God hath made them the necessary way to walk in if we will be saved III. Necessary by way of gratitude IV. Because we have so long time spent our selves in the way of Satan It 's lawful for the people of God in all they do for God to encourage themselves that eternall glory is laid up for them Doct. That Repetition of rhe same matter in praier is not alwaies sinfull Tautology but very necessary To open the Point consider these things In praier we must diligently attend to these things Why we must use our tongue in praier When Repetitions of the same matter in praier may be useful Quest Answ When repetitions are forbidden Doct. Things promised must be praied for Reasons I. Generall and common II. More proper and peculiar Reasons Quest Answ Observ That all Gods people are earnestly to pray for their glory above all earthly glory Things implied in the doctrine I. The nature of this glory viz. with God himself which implies 1. It is in the hands of God 2. God is the object of this glory 3. It 's a glory which God liketh and approveth of 4. Opposite to earthly