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A87554 An exposition of the Epistle of Jude, together with many large and useful deductions. Lately delivered in XL lectures in Christ-Church London, by William Jenkyn, Minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The first part. Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1652 (1652) Wing J639; Thomason E695_1; ESTC R37933 518,527 654

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life death miracles were all expressions of mercy in teaching feeding healing saving men If there were any severity in his miracles it was not toward man but the swine and the barren-fig-barren-fig-tree Insensiblenesse of others miseries is neither sutable to our condition as men nor as Christians according to the former we are the same with others according to the later grace hath made the difference Mercy must begin at the heart Sic mens per compassionem doleat ut larga manus affectum doloris ostendat Greg. Luke 14.14 Gal. 6 9. but must proceed further even to the hand they whose hands are shut have their bowels shut also We are not Treasurers but Stewards of Gods gifts Thou hast so much only as thou givest The way to get that which we cannot part with is by mercy to part with that which we cannot keep Our good reacheth not to Christs person it must to his members Jonathan is gone but he hath left many poor lame Mephibosheths behinde him We must love Christ in his worky-day clothes We cannot carry these loads of riches to heaven It s best to take bils of exchange from the poor saints whereby we may receive there what we could not carry thither Especially should our mercy extend it self to the souls of others as soul-miseries so soul-mercies are the greatest They who are spiritually miserable cannot pity themselves though their words speak not to us yet their woes do Wee weep over a body from which the soul is departed and can we look with tearless eys upon a soul from which God is departed If another be not afflicted for sin grieve for him if he be grieve with him If thou hast obtained mercy thou dost not well as said the Lepers to hold thy peace Mercy must never cease till its objects do in heaven both shall Thus much for the first blessing which the Apostle prayes may be bestowed upon these Christians to whom he wrote viz. Mercy The second follows viz. Peace of which by way Of 1. Exposition Of 2. Observation Peace is a word very comprehensive and is ordinarily used to denote all kinde of happinesse welfare and prosperity And 1. I shall distribute it into severall kindes 2. Shew the excellency of that here intended 1. There 's Pax temporis or external among men 2. Pax pectoris or internal in the heart 3. Pax aeternitatis or eternal in heaven Or more distinctly thus 1. There 's a Peace between man and man 2. Between man and other creatures 3. Between man and or rather in man with himself 4. Between God and man 1. Peace between man and man and that is publick or private 1. Publick and that either Political of the Common-wealth when the politick State is in tranquility and free from forrein and civill Warrs 2 King 20.19 Jer. 29.7 There shall be peace in my dayes In the peace thereof ye shall have peace This is either lawful and so a singular mercy or unlawfull as when one People is at peace with another against the expresse wil of God as the Israelites with the Canaanites and Amalekites or joyn in any sinfull attempt as did the Moabites and Ammonites against the Israelites Or Ecclesiasticall and of the Church when its publick tranquility and quiet state is not troubled within by Schisms and Heresies or without by persecuting and bloody Tyrants Psal 122.6 Pray for the peace of Jerusalem Acts 9.31 The Churches had rest and Acts 4.32 1 Cor. 14.33 2. Private and that either between the good and the good or between the bad and the bad or between the good and the bad 1. Between the good and the good 1 Pet. 3.8 Love as brethren and Let brotherly love continue and Col. 1.4 The love ye have to all Saints 2. Hebr. 13.1 Between the bad and the bad 2 King 9.22 Is it peace Jehu And that either lawfully for their own preservation or wickedly against the people of God or to strengthen one another in some sinful attempt and to that end joyning hand in hand 3. Between the good and the bad which is either lawfull as Abraham's with Abimelech and commanded Rom. 12.18 Render to no man evil for evil but if it be possible have peace with all men So Psal 120.7 I am for peace And sometime caused by a work from God upon the hearts of wicked men as in the case of Daniel Chap. 1.9 and in Esan's love to Jacob according to that of Solomon Pro. 16.7 The Lord will make his enemies at peace with him c. Or unlawful when against the mind of God the godly make leagues with them or agree in any way of sin 2. There is a peace between man the faithful I mean and other creatures the good Angels are at peace with 2. Heb. 1.10 Ephes 1.14 and ministring spirits to them as Job 5.23 Thou shalt be in league with the stones of the field and the beasts of the earth shall be in peace with thee and Hos 2.18 Hujus foederis vigore mala hujus vitae sic laedunt pios ut non noccant non perdant sed prosint Ubi notandum est vocabulum foederis accipi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per similitudinem effectus Riv. in Hos 2.18 I will make a covenant for them with the beasts of the field and with the fouls of the heaven and with the creeping things of the earth The meaning is There shall be such a work of God upon the beasts and fouls c. for the good of the Church as if God had bound them to do them good by way of covenant There is mention Jer 33.20 of Gods covenant of the day and of the night that is the establishment of Gods decree upon the day and the night wherby they come to be in such and such a way from the creation to the end of the world so that although the beasts the fouls the stones c. may annoy them nay kil● them the true safety of the Church shall not be hindred by them yea All things shall work together for their good neither nakedness nor sword nor death nor any of these things shall separate them from the love of God in Christ and if God sees it for their good all the creatures in the world shall be so far from hurting the godly that they shall all agree to advance their temporall good and welfare 3. There is a peace in man with himself and that is either false or sound False peace is when sinners thinking themselves free from the fear of dangers falsly promise safety to themselves 1 Thess 5.3 When they shall say Peace and safety c. Sound peace in man with himself is twofold 1. Of Assurance when sanctified conscience ceaseth to accuse and condemn us speaking comfortably in us and for us before God 1 John 3.21 This sweet quietnesse and tranquility of conscience being the immediate fruit of our attonement with God that peace of God which passeth all
edge the soul the sting the malignity of every trouble is removed so that it hath little more then the notion of a misery Gods people are not delivered from evils as oppressive to nature but as satisfactory to Justice whatsoever they suffer though it be death it self they may say Christ hath laboured John 4. and we enter into his labours he hath born the heaviest end death lost its sting in his side There 's honey in the carcasse of this lion this Serpent is but a gentle rod being in his hand 2. This spirituall preservation of beleevers is from Sin and in the state of holinesse their grace being preserved and the image of God never totally obliterated in them God preserving the jewel oft when not the casket a mans self his soul though not his carcasse and from that which is the greatest enemy and evill sin so oft in Scripture call'd the evill John 17.15 Mat. 5.37 and that which makes the very Divel himself both to be and to be called the evil One he both having most and dispersing most of that evil the world to be call'd an evill world Luk. 6.45 1 Joh. 5.18 Gal. 1.4 and men evill men And so this priviledge of preservation from sin and in the state of holiness aptly follows Sanctification the elect being not onely made holy but kept holy Hence we read of him that is able to keep us from falling Jude 24. of Christ praying that his disciples should be though not taken out of the world yet kept from the evil Joh. 17.15 the world kept out of them though not they out of the world of the faithfull their being kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Of the evill one's not touching him that is born of God 1 John 5.18 and of his not sinning of Gods delivering of Paul from every evill work 2 Tim. 4.18 of preserving blamelesse to the coming of Christ of finishing the good work begun unto the day of Christ Eph. 1.6 All which places intend this spirituall preservation mentioned by Jude which is that gift of God whereby the elect being united to Christ by his Spirit and faith continue in him and can never totally and finally fall from holinesse Sundry wayes doth God preserve from sin and in holinesse 1. Somtime by keeping his people from the very outward tentation to sin if he sees it would be too hard for them often dealing with his servants as the people did with David 2 Sam. 21.17 who would not let him go down to battell lest the light of Israel should have been put out as Gideon dealt with his souldiers suffering not the fearfull to go to fight Judg. 7.3 as we use to keep in a candle in a windy night putting it into a lanthorn 2. Sometime by making them conquerors even for the present over the tentation he strengthens them so with his Spirit as that they break the strongest cords with Samson bearing away the very gates of the City and overthrowing whole troops of tentations Gen. 39. Thus was Joseph preserved as Chrysostom expresseth it in a fiery fournace even when it was heated seven times hotter then ordinary the power of God being put forth therein more then in preserving the three children Thus were the blessed martyrs preserved from sin we read in that holy Martyrologie Heb. 11 35. they were tortured not accepting deliverance How many have overcome fire with fire the fiery flame with love to Christ hotter then fire their holy resolution rising the higher the more opposition they had as a flood that meets with an obstacle or as a ball the harder it is thrown against the ground the higher it mounts in the rebound 3. Alway God so preserves his Saints from sinning Luk. 22.32 that they sin not finally they sin not away all their holinesse their faith fails not ther 's somthing in them that sins not the seed of God a grain of mustard-seed a principle of holinesse which Gratia nec totaliter intermittitur nec finaliter amittitur as it opposeth so it will overcome their distempers as a fountain works out its muddinesse when dirt is thrown into it as life in a man his diseases A Saint is not delivered fully from the being of sin but from the totall prevalency of it from finall Apostacy so that his soul still continues in the state of grace and hath the life of holiness for the essence though not alway in the same degrees he may aliquo modo recedere non penitus excidere Grace may be abated not altogether abolish'd he may peccare Actus omittitur habitus non amittitur actio pervertitur fides non subvertitur concutitur non excutitur defluit fructus latet succus jus ad Regnum amittunt demeritoriè non effectivè Pr.l. Effectus justificationis suspenditur at status justificationis non dissolvitur Suffr Br. p. 187. Secundùm quasdam virtutes spiritus recessurus venit venturus recedit Gr. Mor. l. 2. c. 42. not perire sin but not to death intermit the actings of of grace not lose the habit Faith may be shaken in not out of the soul the fruit may fall off but the sap not totally dry up 'T is true Grace in it self considered as a creature might totally fail our permanency is not respectu rei but Dei not from our being holy but from our being kept holy We are kept by the power of God and if so it will be to salvation Notwithstanding the power of sin in us and the power of Satan without us the frowns and the smiles of the world the musick and the fournace the Winde and the Sun the tide of nature and the winde of example holinesse though in the least degree shall never be lost to be of no degree Satan doth soli perseverantiae insidiari he only aims to take away grace he would never care to take away gold or names or comforts c. if it were not to make us sin He that offers to give these things to make us sin would not snatch them from us but for that end God was not delighted that Job should be tormented but that his grace should be tryed nor Satan so much that Job should be tormented as that his grace should be destroyed But though he winnow never so violently Luk. 22.23 he shall winnow never out all our grace All the power of hell shall never prevail against the God of heaven The immutable eternall decree of God is the foundation of perseverance Isa 46.10 Now the counsel of God shall stand The elect cannot be deceived Matt. 24.24 The impossibility of seduction is grounded upon the stability of election the foundation of God abideth sure 2 Tim. 2.19 it can never be moved out of its place The purpose of God according to election must stand Rom. 9.11 Of all that God hath given Christ by election he will lose nothing John 6.39 And
and examining what he hath not as well as what he hath what he hath lost as well as what he hath gain'd what he hath laid out as well as what he hath laid up Whether he stand how he hath fallen how far he hath gone and though he must account no loss irreparable yet none contemptible and though no gain so small as to be unthankfull for it yet none so great as to be contented with or proud of it 2. That they may make use of the helps the food and fuel which God hath appointed for the increase of their Grace Luk. 17.5 Pet. 2.2 As Reading Prayer Hearing Sacraments Meditation and he that neglects these is not a strong but a sick Christian Nundinae aeternitatis These are the Marts and Fairs wherein we trade for Grace a thriving Christian must keep constant traffick with heaven sending thither hearing thence in the former telling in the later taking in what he wants We must make growth the end of our feeding and thriving of our trading we must not trade to trade pray to pray hear to hear but to grow better thereby 3. That they may proportionably answer the worth and length of those opportunities God afforded them for the increasing of Grace That they might not devour fat enjoyments having mean while lean and barren or indifferent hearts He is not an abounding thriving Christian who hath but an ordinary growth under rich opportunities we must abound in returning as well as in receiving we must not be like the kidney in the beast lean in the midst of fatness Heb. 5.12 not heaths and wildernesses under the showers of salvation nay not content our selves in being but as good as others who haply enjoy less They who enjoy much from God and yet are no better than those who enjoy less are therefore worse because they are not better 4. That they may forbear and avoid whatsoever hinders and keeps down the thriving and growing in Grace That they may take heed of secret waies of spending that they may not privily delight in any known way of sin or beloved lust which makes the most glittering Christian abroad to be but a bankrupt at home Christians must cut off the Suckers that draw away their nourishment Love of the world pride uncleanness c cannot thrive with grace in the same heart as the one goeth up the other goeth down as the spleen swels the body decayes 5. 2 Pet. 1.5 That they may have an impartial increase in every grace in one as well as another That to one grace they might add another Psal 119.101 loving of every duty and loathing of every evil All graces have a Concatenation and an inseparability Col. 1.10 a holy band a divine league and as every Christian hath so he grows in every part of the new Creature 1 Tim. 5.21 He fructifieth in every good work he labours to keep an equability in his courses not strict in some things and slack in others He prefers not one before another he hath a pulse of grace that beats evenly and equally he is neither a maimed person who wanteth any limb nor a Monster who hath one limb so big that others want but hath a comely symmetry of part with part No one of his graces stands at a stay while the other grows he doth not go richly apparell'd in some one piece of his apparell and beggerly in the rest All his nourishment is not conveighed to some one part to the starving of the rest 6. That they may multiply in grace to an exercise acting and laying out of grace That grace might be augmented into action that the fountain full inwardly might overflow outwardly that as it was so it might appear grace that they might be free as well as full and fructifie in every good work that the hand as well as the heart might be fill'd with the fruits of righteousnesse as grace will be increased in the pouring out so must it be poured out when it increaseth The running water and the active Christian are both the sweetest the more a musicall instrument is used the sweeter is its melody Graces like garments will be the more we use them the more free from the moth the more we can the more we should do the more we do the more we can we love to do 7. That they may obtain a measure of grace sutable to their severall and particular exigences and occasions That they may not only have grace more than others but enough for themselves i. e. in some sutable measure to their own severall conditions and imployments Some men have stronger temptations to resist corruptions to subdue greater burdens to bear imployments to go through and these want more abundant graces than others Some man may better keep house with an hundred pounds a year then another who hath a great family and familiarity can do with a thousand A man who hath great revenues may yet be poorer than he who hath lesse if he have greater expences 8. That they may constantly abide and continue in the grace they had received The further obtaining of what grace we want necessarily implies a retaining and an holding fast of what we have By the same reason that we desire to get more we shall keep that which we have already gotten Decay is ever inconsistent with growth A Christian must not go aside much lesse go backward not lie still with the stone nor creep with the snail much lesse go back with the Crab not be a golden Christian in youth a silver one in manhood and a leaden one in old age Our fals into sinne must be but for a fit not so our forwardnesse in Christianity our goodnesse not like the morning dew Hos 6.8 Psal 78.57 we must not turn back deal unfaithfully and turne aside as a deceitfull bow It s hypocrisie to pretend that we are gone or going further in religion than others who are eminent and yet be behind what our selves once were and that when we were beginners If grace be not preserved it cannot be augmented fire cannot be made to blaze out if it be not kept from going out If the life of grace be gone the growth will follow If we continue not rooted in Christ Col. 2.7 we cannot be built up in him 9. That they may be boundlesse and unlimited in the progresse of grace that they may be ever making additions to what they have 2 Pet. 1.5 Christianity knows no enough the degrees of a Christians gracemust be like numbers the highest whereof being numbred a higher than that may yet be named 1 Thess 3.10 Even those worthy Thessalonians had something lacking● in their faith We must never cease growing till we be grown into heaven we must forget what 's behind Phil. 3.13 and presse forward toward the mark If perfection be our pattern proficiency is our duty 'T is true Ubi incipis nolle fieri melior
gratiâ sed naturâ suâ c. Greg. de Val. q. 14. punct 1. Aquin. 1. p. q. 63. Esti l. 2. d. 7. Etiamsi ab initio tales conditi fuissent quales nune per gratiam confirmationis facti sunt nec sic tamen ex conditione naturâ impeccabiles essent sed ex dono gratiae quod etsi hactenus naturale dici posset quia cum ipsa natura datum esset in natura insitum eâ dem tamen naturâ atque essentiâ salvâ posset auferri Solus Deus est qui non gratiâ cujuspiam sed naturâ suâ non potest nec potuit nec poterit peccare Aug. l. 3. cont Max. c. 12. or free from all possibility of sinning Some of them indeed determine it affirmatively but herein they oppose the Fathers Ambrose Augustine and Hierome The two former of whom teach that because it s said that God only hath immortality it follows that he only hath immutability and so by consequence only by nature impeccability The same argument is also used by the learned Junius who denyes that simply God could have made the Angels better then they are by nature because then they should have been most constant in their own perfect goodnesse by themselves which can only be attributed to God Also to the forecited Fathers agree the Schoolmen of the greatest note among whom Estius asserts That supposing that the Angels had been from their beginning created such as they are now made to be by the grace of confirmation yet even so they had not been impeccable or free from a possibility of sinning by the condition of nature but by the gift of grace which although it may be termed naturall as given with and implanted in their nature yet it might have been taken away and removed without the destruction of their nature And he saith It s no derogation from the power of God that a Creature cannot be made by nature impeccable for the thing spoken of is not in the number of possibles Res de qua agitur non est de numero possibilium Includit enim contradictionem ut quod creatum est i.e. ex nihilo productum deficere non possit Ideo non potest Deus facere creaturā ex natura impeccabilem quia facere non potest ut creatura non fit creatura Siquidem eo ipso quo creata est defectibilis est Deo potente subtrabere vel esse vel operari vel ipsius operationis rectitudinem ex quo manifestum est non negatione sed positione creaturae per naturam impeccabilis derogari potentiae Dei. Est in 2. sent Dist 7. § 9. and it is a contradiction to say that a Creature that is a thing made of nothing should not be able to change and that therefore God cannot make a creature by nature immutable because he cannot make that a creature should not be a creature which as such is defectible God being alwayes able to withdraw its being or the operation of its being or the rectitude of its operation Whereby saith he its manifest that not by the denying but by the granting that a creature may be impeccable by nature we derogate from the power of God But 2. I answer with Aquinas p. 1. q. 36. a. 2. that God appointing an inequality in the things which hee created hereby made the world after the best manner The perfection of the whole requires that there should be an inequality in the severall Creatures that so there might be all degrees of goodnesse made up and this is one degree of goodnesse that somthing be so good that there should bee an impossibility for it ever to swerve from its goodnesse and another degree of goodnesse is that some things should bee made defectible and in a possibility of leaving their goodnesse And as the perfection of the world requires that there be not only incoruptible but also corruptible creatures so likewise that there should be some things defectible from goodnesse If angels might have been made more excellent in themselves yet not in relation to that goodly order and admirable beuty which God hath caused in the world by making them in that capacity wherein they were created A Captain a Colonel are better then a common souldier in an army but yet it s better for the order and beuty of the army that some should be common souldiers and commanded than that all should be Officers and Commanders And God as * Aug. Ench. c. 11.27 Melius judicavit de malis bene facere quam mala nulla esse permittere Augustine saith thought it better to bring good out of that which was evil then not at all to suffer evil to be For he that is perfectly good would not suffer evil in his works unlesse he were so omnipotent as to bring good out of that evil 2. By way of explication of this second branch 2d Branch it may be enquired what was that first sin whereby this defection was made or this first estate of the angels not kept And here sundry opinions offer themselves Some falsly expounding that place of Gen. 6.2 Philo. Orig. Josephus Irenaeus Justin Mart. in Apol. pro Chr. Clem. Alex. strom l. 3 Tertul. l. de hab mul. Lactant. The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair and they took them wives c. imagined that the angels being taken with the love of women sinn'd by lust Strange it is that so many learned men among the ancients should embrace an opinion so flatly opposite to Scripture and reason For not to speak of the spirituall nature of angels whereby they are incapable of Carnall and sensible pleasures or of the different nature of their by some supposed bodies from ours theirs being if they be at all not compounded of the elements but so pure and thin that its impossible they should be fit for generation the Scripture plainly teacheth that the angels fel from their integrity before there were any daughters of men in being besides Christ tels us that the angels in heaven neither marry nor are given in marriage Mat. 22.3 Others conceive that the first sin of the angels was hatred of God Odium omne ex amore est Nascitur odium Dei tanquam prohibentis amantem ab eo quod inordinatè amat Est in 2. l. sent dist 6. §. 2. the adhering of the angels unto God being by love their departure from God they say must needs be by hatred but this opinion seems false because hatred of God must needs proceed from inordinate love of something else God being hated because he hinders the creature from something which it loves inordinately Hatred therefore could not be the first sin but the irregular affecting of something else or some other sin A third opinion is of those who hold that the first sin of these angels was envying the dignity of man in being created after the image of God but this is confuted by Augustine
fore-sight of sin Yet that the sight of sin was neither in order of nature or time before Reprobation nor after it but purely evenly and equally accompanying it That Gods decree to permit sin from whence comes prevision of sin and to condemn for sin were not the one subordinate to the other or of a diverse order as if the one were the end and the other the mean but co-ordinate and of one and the same order and means both accommodated to one and the same end God neither condemning that sin may be permitted nor permitting sin that he might condemn but permitting sin and condemning for sin that the glory of his justice might be manifested the glorious manifestation of his justice being not advanced only by permission of or only by condemning for sin but by both joyntly or together according to which apprehension sinne fore-seen could not bee the cause of Reprobation They conceive that God not depending upon any condition in the creature no other way fore-knew the futurition of sin than by his own decree to permit it And they further urge if consideration of sinne were before Gods decree of Reprobation then the decree of permission of sin should have been before the decree of Reprobation and so God should intend the permission of sin before he intended the damnation of man for it and then it would follow in regard that what is first in intention is last in execution that damnaton for sin should be in execution before the permission of sin for which men are damned And this is the Argument oft urged by D. Twiss to which he sometimes adds that whatsoever is first in intention hath the nature of an end in respect of that which followes it but the permission of sin cannot be considered as an end in respect of the damnation of men it being impossible that men should be damned to this end that sin should be permitted And they of this opinion assert that if because God decreed that condemnation shall onely be for sin it followes that sin is a cause of that decree it will also unavoidably follow because God hath decreed that salvation shall onely be in a way of good works that good works are a cause of that decree they conceiving that though good works do not go before salvation with the same efficacity wherein sin goeth before damnation good works being only dispositive causes of the one and sins meritorious causes of the other yet that they go before it Non eadem dispositionis e●icacitate sed tamen eodem necessitatis ordine with the same order of necessity And they adde that the Apostle removes both from the election of Jacob and the reprobation of Esau the consideration of all works either good or evill as well in respect of their prevision as actuall existence to the end that he might shew that the purpose of God according to election was not according to works but of him that calleth and so by the same reason that the decree of the reprobation of Esau was not of evill works but of him that cals and leaves whom he will 2. As to Reprobation in regard of the effect or rather consequent thereof the things decreed and willed or as God wills that one thing should be for another It is not doubted albeit Gods eternall volitions or decrees depend not upon any temporall object or causes as the prime motives therunto but that God by his eternall decree ordained that this or that event in the temporall execution shall not follow but upon this or that going before as that in those of years the actuall bestowing of eternall life shall depend upon beleeving repenting and persevering and that the actuall punishing with eternall death shall depend upon finall unbelief and impenitency This is not to make the eternall decrees of Election and Reprobation dependent upon the fore-seen contingent Acts of mans freewill but to make temporall events Acts or Things one to depend conditionally upon another for their being or not being in time And yet 1. The cause of Reprobation in respect of denying of grace external whether in regard of the outward means or internall either common or saving is the will and pleasure of God As it is the meer will and pleasure of God whereby in time men are reprobated from grace was from eternity for as God doth or doth not in time so it he purposeth to do or not to do from all eternity Now that in time the denyall of grace is from the will and pleasure of God is most evident from Scripture which teacheth that God calls to grace and gives the very means of salvation to whomsoever he will Act. 16.7 Mat. 11.24 25 Deut. 29.4 Nulla sunt tam detestanda facinora quae possunt gratiae arceredonum Prosp The Spirit suffered not Paul to preach at Bithynia To you it is given saith Christ to know the mysteries of the Kingdome of heaven and to them it is not given And because it seemed good in his Fathers sight he hid these things from the wise and prudent Tyre and Sidon would have made better use of the means of grace than the Jews yet God bestowed those means not upon the former but up on the later But 2. The cause of Reprobation in regard of Gods denyall of glory is not meerly from Gods will and pleasure but from the pravity and sin of men God in time denyes glory in regard of mens impiety and therefore he purposed to deny it for that Depart from me will Christ say only to the workers of iniquity Mat. 7.23 There shall enter into the new Jerusalem nothing that defileth The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God And 3. The cause of Reprobation in regard of blindnesse and obduration in sin in this life and eternal damnation in the life to come is from mans impiety God decreed that Condemnation should not be but for sin nor hardning but for preceding rebellion nor that the wages of death should be paid without the work of sin No man is ordained to a just punishment but for some sin but the with-drawing of grace the blindnesse and obduration of sinners are the punishments of preceding sin as appears Rom. 1.27 God gave them up c that they might receive the recompence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of their error which was meet To crown or to damn is an act of judiciary power and proceedeth according to the tenour of the revealed Gospel The eternall dedecree of the damnation of the very Devils was never determined to be executed otherwise than for their own misdeeds 2. This expression of old notes the immutability and unchangeableness of this Ordination the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De ration● aeternitatis est immutabilitas Aug. Cons l. 12. c. 15. the immutability of his counsell that which is eternall is unalterable This Ordination is like such a booking and writing down of a thing as shall unfailingly be performed Nor can this book or
enemies A greater punishment undoubtedly to those proudest of creatures then was that to Bajazet whose back famous Tamberlane used for an horsblock to raise him up to his Steed when he caused him to be carried up and down as a spectacle of infamy in all his triumphant journeys 2. By the last judgment there shall be an accession of punishment to these angels in respect of their restraint because then they shall be unable to seduce the wicked or to hurt the elect any more Their chain now more loose shall then be so strait that they shall never come neer nor among the Saints of God A vehement vexation to those malicious spirits whose element is mischief and their torment restraint from doing hurt They now deem it some lessening of their torment to be suffered to tempt men to sin They think themselves hereby somewhat revenged on God as he that defaceth the picture of his enemy when he cannot come at his person easeth his spleen a little or as the dog somewhat breaks his rage by gnawing the stone when he cannot reach the thrower They now walk abroad as it were with their keeper but then they shall be closely confin'd yea dungeon'd Now they contain their hell then their hell shall contain them In short As the punishment of wicked men shall be at the full when their souls and bodies are reunited and both cast into hell so the torment of these angels shall be compleated when at the last day they shall be so fettered in their infernall prison as that there will be no possibility of stirring forth They are now entred into divers degrees of punishment but the full wrath of God is not powred out upon them till the day of judgment OBSERVATIONS 1 No secrecy can shelter sin from Gods observation Observ 1. He who will make sins known to conscience and all spectators must needs know them himself Sins are undoubtedly written in if they be read out of the book God need not wrack no nor ask the offender to know whether he hath sinn'd or no he searcheth the heart Jer. 17.10 Psal 11.4 he tryeth the reins his eyes behold his eye-lids try the children of men He compasseth he winnoweth our paths and is acquainted with all our wayes Psal 139. Whither shall we flie from his presence He understands our thoughts afar off knows them long before they come into us and long after they are gone away from us All the secrets of our hearts are dissected anatomized and bare-fac'd in his eyes He who knew what we would do before we did it must needs know what we have done afterwards There 's nothing existing in the world but was before in Gods knowledg as the house is first in the head before erected by the hand of the Artificer He made us and therefore knows every nook and corner and turning in us and we are sustained and moved by him in our most retired motions How plainly discerned by him is the closest hypocrite and every Divel though in a Samuel's mantle We can onely hear but God sees hollownesse We do but observe the surface but Gods eye pierceth into the entrails of every action He sees not as man sees Man looketh on the outward appearance but God looketh on the heart How exact should we be even in secret walkings we being constantly in the view of so accurate an observer We should set the Lord always before us The eye of God should ever be in our eys the presence of God is the counterpoyson of sin Whensoever thou art sinning remember that all thou dost is book'd in Gods omniscience Latimer being examined by his Popish Adversaries heard a pen walking behind the hangings to take all his words this made him wary how he express'd himself but more cause have we to fear sin since God writes down every offence and will one day so read over his book to Conscience that it shall be compell'd to copie it out with infinite horror God did but read one page one line of this book one sin to the conscience of Judas and the terror thereof made him his own executioner 2 How foolish are sinners Observ 2. who are so despairing at and yet so fearlesse before the pronouncing of the last sentence Most irrationall is that resolution Because sentence against an evill work is not executed speedily therefore to be fully set to do evill Eccles 8.11 How wise were it to argue contrarily Because the sentence is deferr'd therefore let us labour to have it prevented and to say with the Apostle 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we to be The deferring of judgment is no signe of its prevention the speedy repentance of sinners would be a much more comfortable prediction Wrath when it is to come may be fled from when once it is come it is unavoidable Christians be as wise for your souls as the Egyptians were for their cattel who fearing the threatning of bail took them into houses Faith in threatnings of judgment may prevent the feeling of judgments threatned For your souls sake be warned to get your pardon in the blood if ever you would avoid the sentence of the mouth of Christ If the Judg give you not a pardon here he will give you a sentence hereafter It 's onely the blood of Christ which can blot the book of Judgment Judg your selves and passe an irrevocable sentence upon your sins if you would not be sentenc'd for your sins Repent at the hearing of Ministers in this your day for if you put off that work till God speaks in his day Repentance it self will be unprofitable If you harden your hearts here in sin the heart of Christ will be hardened hereafter in his sentencing and your suffering The great work of poor Ministers is the prevention of the dreadfull sound of the last Sentence Knowing the terror of the Lord they warn you All the hatred we meet with in the world is for our loving plainness herein but we will not cease to warn you with tears as well as with sweat we can better bear your hatred here then either you or we bear Gods hereafter and we had rather your lusts should curse us here then your souls to all eternity If our voyce cannot make you bend Gods will make you break If you will not hearken is it not because the Lord will slay you 3 Great is the sinfulness of rash judgment Observat 3 It 's a sin that robs Christ of his honour whereby a man advanceth himself into Christs Tribunal and which takes the work of judgment out of Christs hand and therefore the Apostle Rom. 14.10 1 Cor. 4 5. strongly argues a-against it from the last judgment Christians commit this sin both by a curious inquisition into the wayes of others for this end that they may finde out matter of defamation and principally by passing of sentence or giving of censure against the persons and practices of others without a
salvation 4. 2 Pet. 3. Obs 4. Great is the hainousnesse of sin that can provoke a God of much mercy to expresse much severity That drop of gall must needs be bitter that can imbitter a sea of honey How offensive is sin that can provoke a God to whose ocean of pity the sea is but a drop Ephraim saith the Prophet provoked God to anger most bitterly Hos 12.14 or with bitternesses God afflicts not willingly he gives honey naturally but stings not til provoked Every sufferer coyns his own calamities There is no arrow of judgment which falls down upon us but was first in sinning shot upwards by us no showr of miseries that rains down but was caused by the ascent of the vapours of sin no print of calamity upon the earth but sin was the stamp that made it What a folly is it in our sufferings to be impatient against God and to be patient towards sin to be angry with the medicine and in love with the disease Let us justifie God in all our sufferings and condemn our selves God commands that if a man were found dead the City that by measure was found to be neerest to the place where he was found Deut. 21.2 should offer up a sacrifice In all our deaths and woes would we measure impartially we should finde sin neerest let us sacrifice it 5. Obs 5. It should be our care to obtain the best and choycest of mercies God hath mercies of all sorts wicked men are easily put off with the meanest their enquiry is Who will shew them any good But O Christian let nothing please thee but the light of Gods countenance so receive from God as that thou thy self mayst be received to God Desire not gifts but mercies from God not pibbles but pearls Labour for that which God alwayes gives in love There may be angry smiles in Gods face and wrathful gifts in his hand the best worldly gift may be given in anger Luther having a rich present sent him profess'd with a holy boldnesse to God That such things should not serve his turn A favourite of the King of heaven rather desires his favour than his preferment We use to say when we are buying for the body that the best is best cheap and is the worst good enough for the soul The body is a bold beggar and thou givest it much the soul is a modest beggar asketh but little and thou givest it less O desire from God that thy portion may not he in this life Psal 17.14 that what thou hast in the world may be a pledg of better hereafter that these things may not bewitch thee from but admonish thee what is in Christ The ground of Pauls thanks-giving was Ephes 1.3 that God had blessed the Ephesians with spirituall blessings in Christ. 6. Obs 6. How little should any that have this God of mercy for theirs be dismayd with any misery Blessed are those tears which so merciful a hand wipes off happy twigs that are guided by so indulgent a father Psal 25.10 All his severest wayes are mercy and truth to those in covenant if he smiles 't is in mercy if he smites 't is in mercy he wounds not to kill thee but sin in thee the wounds of mercy are betthan the embraces of anger if sicknesse poverty dishonour be in mercy why dost thou shrink at them Wrath in prosperity is dreadfull but Mercy makes adversity comfortable It s the anger of God which is the misery of every misery Peter at the first was not willing that Christ should wash his feet but when he saw Christs mercifull intent therein feet and hands and head are all offered to be wash'd A child of God when he sees the steps of a father should be willing to bear the stripes of a child God will not consume us but onely try us He afflicts not for his pleasure but for our profit Heb. 12.10 Psal 89. God visits with rods yet not with wrath He takes not away his loving-kindnesse Mercy makes the sufferings of Gods people but notions It would do one good to be in troubles and enjoy God in them to be sick and lye in his bosome God gives a thousand mercies to his people in every trouble and for every trouble He burdens us but it is according to our strength the strokes of his flail are proportioned to the hardnesse of the grain Is● 28.27 and merciful shall be the end of all our miseries There 's no wildernesse but shall end in Canaan no water but shall be turn'd into wine no lions carcass but shall be a hive of honey and produce a swarm of mercies The time we spend in labouring that miseries may not come would be spent more profitably in labouring to have them mixt with mercy nay turned into mercies when they come What a life-recalling cordial is the apprehension of this mercy of God to a fainting soul under the pressure of sin Mercy having provided a satisfaction and accepted it nay which is more it beseeching the sinner to beleeve and apply it That fountain of mercy which is in God having now found a conveyance for it self to the soul even Jesus Christ through whom such overflowing streams are derived unto us as are able to drown the mountains of our sins even as easily as the ocean can swallow up a pibble O fainting soul trust in this mercy Psal 33.18 and 147.11 If the Lord takes pleasure in those that hope in his mercy should not we take pleasure to hope in it Mercy is the onely thing in the world more large than sin It s easie to presume Exod. 34.7 Psal 77.7 but hard to lay hold upon mercy Oh beg that since there is an infinite fulnesse in the gift and a freenesse in the giver there be a forwardnesse in the receiver 7. Obs 7. It s our duty and dignity to imitate God in shewing mercy Obs 7. 1 Pet. 3.8 Matth. 5.45 Luke 6.36 Col. 3.12 Rom. 12.15 Plus est aliquando compati quàm dare nam qui exteriora largitur rem extra se positam tribuit qui compassionem aliquid sui-ipsius dat Gr. Mor. 20. A grace frequently commanded and encouraged in the Scripture Mercy we want and mercy we must impart As long as our fellow-members are pained we must never be at ease When we suffer not from the enemies of Christ by persecution we must suffer from the friends of Christ by compassion When two strings of an instrument are tuned one to the other if the one be struck upon and stirred the other will move and tremble also The people of God should be so harmonious that if one suffer and be struck the other should be moved and sympathize Jer. 9.1 Luke 19.41 2 Cor. 11.29 Holy men have every been tender-hearted Grace not drying up but diverting the streams of our affections Christ was mercy covered over with flesh and blood his words his works