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A61501 Trias sacra, a second ternary of sermons preached being the last (and best) monuments that are likely to be made publique of that most learned, pious and eminent Dr. Richard Stuart ... Steward, Richard, 1593?-1651. 1659 (1659) Wing S5528; ESTC R34608 46,631 180

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to what he doth not yet possesse and a man may wrongfully possess that to which he hath no just Title Nabouh had to his vineyard to wit Title of inheritance the Lord forbid saith he to Ahab that I should give the Inheritance of my Fathers unto thee 1. of Kings 21. Yet at length Ahab possest it without a Title for ought we find unlesse perhaps it were some new Law of Iezabels enacting that the Husband should succeed him whom the Wife had murthered We may get a right of Title by others for so Isaack had it to his Inheritance because he was the Son of Sarah the wife of Abraham and Mephibosheth to his possession because he was the Son of Ionathan the Friend of David But 't is the Act of their own Body usually whereby men take possession Possessio quasi pedis positio say the learned Lawyers 't is gotten by setting our foot and seeming to take up our rest upon the ground which we meant to possesse You may remember Ahab went down in person to take possession of Nabaoths vineyard in the Text before cited So then we may get a right of Title from the bounty of others but possession is the Fruit of our own endeavours I apply it the practice of this legal course is no lesse observable in the attainment of the Everlasting Kingdom for to have a Title to it is one thing the manner of possessing it another If we be Sons then are we also heirs Saith the Apostle there 's our Title 't is by a right of Inheritance Well done good and faithful Servant enter into thy masters joy there 's the manner of possessing it 't is per pedis positionem by setting our feet and putting our selves resolutely into that narrow way which leadeth unto life by bringing forth the Fruits of Faith which may abound and advance us unto this possession Calvin himself hath intimated what I now observed in his third Book of Institutions chap. 17. In his locis in these Texts saith he where Eternal life is called the reward of good works the Holy Ghost speaks not of life it self but of the form of enjoying it that is as I understand him he speaks not of our Title to the Kingdom but of the manner how we must possesse it Without Fruits then our Account will not be taken or to speak plainly and leave this Metaphor without good works there 's no Salvation They are not indeed the cause but they are the way to life They are not the Title whereby we lay claym to Heaven but yet they serve instead of that legal form whereby we must take possession of Heaven Nor is my Text any way injurious to Faith while it holds good works in so great esteem for if you observe the word here used by my Apostle when he mentions the one he implyes the other yea and chiefly extolls Faith though he doth not name it {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} he saith not I desire good works but I desire Fruit They are not esteem'd then for their own sakes but because they grew upon the Stemm of Faith He that loves an Israelite because he is the Son of Abraham loves Abraham more than he doth the Israelite and so he that desires good works because they are the Fruits of Faith honours Faith more than he doth good works For our affection looks chiefly at that which first moves it and therefore the cause why we respect any thing is still more in our account than the Thing it self Names of Relation alwayes busie our understanding and by a silent kind of Command make us to search farther than the Thing we hear If we call the Rechabites no more but good men our apprehension confines it self unto their persons only but when we Stile them obedient Sons we can hardly abstain from making some farther enquiry touching their Father Ionadab So had it been here said Good works abound we might perhaps have sought no further than into their desert but the name of Fruit which is given them makes us enquire for the Tree on which they grow and silently enformes our understanding that good works do therefore abound to our account because they are the Fruits of Faith that saves us So then 't is Faith that justifies both our selves and our works too it makes us of Sinfull men become the children of God and it makes our works of unprofitable Actions become Fruits abounding unto our Eternal Freedome Where 's now the forehead of that Romish strumpet who dares affirm that our Doctrine hinders good works and that without blushing too Indeed we must not say they merit that were as false as dangerous and the ready way to make us men become rather proud than honest yet we averr without good works there 's no Salvation and in mine Apostles phrase that without such Fruit we shall fail in our account our Master will be wroth with us and deliver us over to the Tormentor to lye in prison till we pay all that 's due to him which will be to eternity If this be not a sufficient inducement to good works what is who can move him that regards neither the losse of Heaven nor the gaining of hell nor do I well see how our adversaries themselves should present us with a greater motive unlesse perhaps they will have the confidence to tell us that the Fire of Hell is not so hot but burns more gently and softly than that of Purgatory 'T were to be wished indeed that in this point our lines were as well able to give Rome the lye as our Doctrine is she might then see as well as read that the reformed Church can be both good and humble too and knows both to be rich in the Fruits of Faith and yet to rely onely upon Christs satisfaction I conclude with that of Saint Austin in the 23th chapter of his Confession Germinet anima nostra opera misericordiae Let our souls Bud and Bring forth the works of mercy pitty the Fatherlesse have compassion on the poor relieve those that are in distresse lend a tender and favourable ear to the widdows groanes Be ye members one of another by compassion and a lively sense of your Brethrens sufferings and be ye members one to another by the free help of your Benevolence and Chatity Be Eyes to the blind be Feet to the lame be Hands to them that cannot through age or other impotency labour for themselves In a word give Almes every man according to his Estate liberally frequently constantly worship God humbly and devoutly do all kind of good works with Diligence Faithfullnesse and Sincerity So shall your Fruit abound not onely to your own but to the Churches account the Church shall have wherewith to answer her Adversaries in this world and your selves wherewith to satisfy that great Judge of account in the world to come which God of his mercy grant c. The Second SERMON MARK 6. 20. For Herod feared Iohn knowing
these may love our Nation perhaps they may build or endow Synagogues they may give gifts even beyond the lists of a free mind and become prodigal in their charity and yet when their goodly buildings fare now finished their large possessions firmly conveigh'd in stead o being the Serv●…ants of God become no better than the Slaves of their own ●…ain Glory with those founders of Babel Come let us build and get a name say they I they respect their name more than God and desire more to live in the peoples applause than with Gods approbation But can such a mans works do good to others and yet in themselves be evill may a man erect Temples to the honour of God houses for the education of his Prophets may he give his bread to the hungry and clothes to them who are naked and yet all these goodly deeds be counted reprobate not so much as to be termed good works Can a man in the same Act be both a Benefactour and a Sinner My Text decides it so for it expects in our good works that they be as well fruits as gifts as well the fruits of faith as the gifts of fortune If a man give Almes to the poor not so much to expresse his duty to God as to winne applause from spectatours this Action may possibly be termed a good gift but it is no good fruit T is a good Gift because it gave ease perhaps to his poverty who received it 'T is no good Fruit because the tree was evill it grew not upon a right stock it proceeded not from his faith but his vain Glory 'T is an old rule and allowed by him who is Truth it self the tree is known by his fruit but I must now invert the Maxim and tell you the fruit is known by the tree For here it is so Would ye find the difference between Cains offering and that of Abels look not so much upon their Sacrifices as upon themselves The elder brought the encrease of his ground the younger of his Cattell both alike perhaps in worth and estimation had they been to have been sold in the market And yet there was as great a difference in their works as in their persons as great a disproportion in their Religious offices as there was between Abel a Saint and Cain a murtherer My Apostle hath penn'd the difference in the 11th to the Hebrew●… at the 4th verse And as the example is there related it seems as happily suitable to this point as to his conclusion By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent Sacrifice than Cain See here the exact perfection of a true good work He offered Sacrifice a Gift there 's the matter whereof it consisted but he offered it by faith saith the Text and therefore it was fruit too and that 's the root from whence it took life His Cattel made the work a gift but his faith made it fruit In Cains Sacrifice the case was otherwise He came to the Altar like him in the Gospell unto the Kings Table who came in as a man onely not as a guest for his marriage-robe was wanting he had not on a wedding garment so Cain brought of the fruit of the ground and probably his Sheaves might be as well grown in their kinds as Abels Lambs how be it his Sacrifice proved a gift onely it was no fruit why because he who wants the root of faith can never offer the fruit of good works Cain a reprobate may seem perhaps liberal before men he cannot be fruitfull before God That of David at first hearing may seem harsh and improbable Thou desirest no Sacrifice else would ●… give it thee thou delightest not in burnt-offerings 't is in the 51 Psalm at the 16. verse What is God himself now become mutable is his mind changed doth his law so strickly enjoyn Sacrifices and yet in Davids time doth he not desire them was the priesthood of Aaron at an end before that of Christ began The sequel answers and Satisfieth the doubt The Sacrifices of God are a broken Spirit For now me thinks he speaks there in the Kingly Prophet neither more nor lesse than what he hath here intimated by his great Apostle I desire no Sacrifice that is I desire not a bare gift onely what make your Cattel at the door of my Sarctuary while your hears run on whoring after strange Gods Indeed I have commanded that beasts should beslain but whiles their bodies are ●…orn your hearts should be rent too I desire not those naked Gifts but I desire Fruit a broken and contrite Spirit I desire repentance the fruit of faith Adde this Salt unto your Sacrifice and then come offer as much sacrifice as you will make my Altars grow fat with offerings weary my Levites let my Priests faint through the multitude of your oblations offer up the fruit of your ground the encrease of your Cattel Tythe mint and cumins 'T is acknowledged these gifts ought to be done but withall remember Iustice and Iudgment remember to break and rent your hearts these fruits must not be left undone Will you see the Gospell exemplifie this truth attend our Saviour into the Temple and with him behold the Jews casting into the Treasury you may there fix your eye upon some long-rob'd Pharisee whose Phylacteries are so Spacious that they scarse leave any room for goodnesse and suddenly perceive his pride so super●…uously bountifull as if he came not to adore but to purchase a deity you may then descry a poor yet pious widdow whose bounty and living are of the same extent they both make but a farthing And then hear Christs censure of the oblations {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} This poor widdow here hath cast in more than they all How more than the Pharisee Can the truth it self be found at such a fault Can a farthing be more than thousands yes very well in account though not in quantity That which she did was a perfect good work her farthing was but a gift but the good intent the good mind wherewith she gave it was fruit That namely her farthing was the body onely but this to wit her true devotion was the soul of her Action This crown'd her good work Each of the rest gave a gift indeed perhaps rich and goodly but that was onely the carcase of a good work one to winne an opinion of Holinesse another of Magnificence but for fruit you can there expect none where there 's no Integrity And now Beloved judge ye whether is better living David then dead Goliah David is little but yet a perfect man Goliah is large and vast of bulk but yet no more than a Trunk So a Pharisees works may be goodly indeed and great in outward shew but yet dead in themselves because their hearts are uncircumcised Those of the widdow are lively and full of faith little but good works Didiciate Deus meus inter datum fructum discernere sayes S. Austin
Dr. Stewards Sermons TRIAS SACRA A Second Ternary OF SERMONS PREACHED Being the last and best Monuments that are likely to be made publique of that most learned pious and eminent Dr. Richard Stuart DEAN of St. Pauls afterwards Dean of Westminster and Clark of the Closet to his late Majesty King CHARLES Being Dead he yet speaketh LONDON Printed by T. L. for Hen. Brome at the Gun in Ivy lane 1659. TO THE READER Courteous Reader I Have almost protested against Printing in such a Time as this wherein a most ingenuous invention was never more abused and 't is doubtful whether this or that of Powder have hurted the modern world most I dare believe had the Founders of them had so much of Providence as Invention they had stifled their {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} in the birth and never bequeathed such dangerous VVeapons into the hands of such mad men as we are who abuse both the Powder and the Press as that cursed Assasine to kill body and soul too But since the soul must have her Mess without which she cannot live and that is best and soonest carved out to her from the shops of Intellectuall provisions And since too many sawcy and capricious Peasants have kickt down her dishes as they were serving in and most of her entertainment has contracted much dirt about it and is rendered unfit for her Table Reader take this as a part of the cleanest Divinity that is left us being I think disht out to thee before the s●…uffle began and is sent to thee by A Steward who when alive loved to serve those of the houshold with clean dyet and well drest and now dead is entred into the joy of his Lord It has no other plot upon thee but to save thee there be other Tables spread for thee in the world but 't is foul meat ill drest hard to digest will lie heavy on thy Stomack which thou must disgorge or die for it and a very hard reckoning at last Use the Steward God hath sent thee who brings thee this Angels food and bread from Heaven and taking what is carved thee go on eating till thou come where thou shalt read all in God A Table of the Texts PHILIP 4. 17. Not because I desire a gift but I desire Fruit that may abound to your account MARK 6. 20. For Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a just man and an holy and observed him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly HEBREWS 10. 1 2. For the Law having a shadow of good Things to come and not the very Image of the Things can never with those Sacrifices which they offered year by year continually make the commers thereunto perfect For then would not they have ceas'd to be offered because the worshippers once purged should have had no more conscience of Sin The First SERMON PHILIPIANS 4. 17. Not because I desire a gift but I desire Fruit that may abound to your account GODS vineyard had for some certain years been now planted at Philippi and therefore no marvail if the labourers did both desire and expect fruit Indeed should those Disciples have believed onely it would have argued that the vines had taken root but yet except they also bring forth fruit with patience the Apostle who cultivated them might well conclude the ground of their hearts was but unprofitable The Philippians then must be working and their works must be fruits too answerable to those rootes of Faith which they had received by Saint Pauls plantation For if a Christian soul bring forth the works of darknesse being himself a child of light it is no lesse unnaturall than for a vine to be●…r Thorns or a Fig tree Thistles If it yeeld works in themselves good yet without the culture and help of faith it is but like some hollow stump which the bees have chosen to be their store house it may afford honey a gift perhaps and yet in it self be both dead and fruit That the Philippians were to abstain from works of impiety both nature and Saint Paul had taught them My Apostle here becomes more punctual and admits not of all those works which yet in mans judgment perhaps might seem approvable he is more curious in his choice and like those Fishermen in Saint Matthews Gospell Chap. 13. He accepts not of all that comes to hand but takes the good and refuseth the bad I desire fruit saith he thus with them he puts the good into vessels but I desire not a gift saith he again so he casts the bad away In the whole there are these things considerable First A distinction of works they are either gifts or fruits or to speak more properly to this text a division of paris within the same good work For either we consider the matter whereof it consists and so 't is a gift or else the root from whence it takes life and so 't is fruit Secondly A direction for our practice The Axe is laid to the root of the tree bring forth therefore fruits not gifts onely And this truth stands here Armed with a double weapon the first is the judgment of mine Apostle I desire not a gift but I desire fruit The Second is the nature of ●…he things themselves fruits abound to your account saith my Text and thereby intimates that what is but gift onely comes not into the reckoning My discourse then must consist of these three parts First I am to shew you the conditions requisite to the perfection of a good work it must not onely be the gift of the man but the fruit of his Faith Next I must inform you how to esteem of a good work you must not so much respect the gift it self as the Faith of him that gives it for so my Apostle is resolute I desire not a gift c. He was in want and penury at this time and yet takes more delight that his Philippians are good than that they are liberal joyes more to see their Faith than to feel their bounty In the last place I must acquaint you with the value and price of good works We have an account to make with the King of Heaven and at his great Audit such ●…oyn as this good works will be passable Strengthen me O Lord while I treat of these particulars in their order and you my beloved Here and 〈◊〉 likewise Not because I desire a gift but I desire fruit c. Gifts and fruits As the man is so is his strength was the Speech of those Midianitish Princes unto Gideon the revenger of Israel Iudg. 8. 21. And 't is no lesse true in the Acts of Religion than those of valour as is the man so are his works There are some you know who want as much Faith as they have Hypocrisie men that desire not so much to be as to be accounted Religious in whose mouths there is a God sometimes but their hearts are farre from him Such as
in his last book of Confessions at the twenty sixth chap. I have learned it of thee O my God to put a difference betwixt gifts and fruits What may the difference be good Father Datum est res ipsa quam dat qui impartitur hae●… necessaria Fructus recta voluntas Datoris est A gift is no more than the bare thing it self which is bestowed Fruit is the good intent o●… him that gives it To afford a Disciple a cup of cold water is a gift But to do it in the name of a Disoiple that argues a Religious inclination and then 't is fruit too To sustain a prophet that 's a gift and so the Ravens did feed Eliah But to give him entertainment in the name of a Prophet because he is a man of God This is fruit it self and so he was nourished onely by the good widdow of Zarephah Didici a te Deus meus saith the devout Father this have I learn'd of thee my God He thought it worth the registring that he had received so usefull a Doctrine from so great an Authour For throughout the various passages of our doubtfull life what more universally profitable what more applyable Each humane Action admits of this mixture there 's a gift and there should be fruit in it your very approach into these Assemblies what is it but a gift you give unto God your paines you give him your presence you afford him the knee the eye the hand with those other complements of Religious honour If these be done onely upon some false respects as either to purchase an opinion of Holinesse or to avoid the threats of the law if they be done either for fear of Superiours or to keep correspondency with those of your own Rank they make but a bare gift onely and are as farre from the nature of a good work as truth is from hypocrisie That these gestures may become fruits too make Religion the Mistresse of your outward Actions let her prompt your feet to go your eyes to look upward subject all your members unto the Scepter of her direction Be indeed what you would seem to be For 't is a shame that your bodies should be more Christian than your soules that your tongues should be more ready to praise than your hearts to conceive the Lord Your knees more officious to bow to him than your souls to adore him Let that Kingly votary be your guide and instruction Come says he let us worship and fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker First worship that 's the Fruit of a Religious intent and then fall down and kneel those are the gifts of our outward Actions and therefore that the service of your knees eyes hands may be acceptable first take order that your Souls do worship My Text commands yet further and will needs sit in judgment even with this exercise at which we are present it claimes rule in the Pulpit too and requires that our Sermons be composed of its two ingredients that they have in them both gift and fruit They must be gifts to others and fruits to our selves If we preach rather to insnare mens ●…ares than to correct their affections if in stead of censuring mens sins we defame their persons if our intent be not so much to winne Souls as followers and that we preach ac si deus numeraret tantum non aestimaret as if God were able onely to number our Sermons but not to weigh and judge of them if thus we offer gifts only and those as displeasing in the eyes of the eternal God as they are oft times ridiculous unto the eares of a mortal Auditor But when with an upright and pure heart we intend and endeavour the health of Israel when our reprehensions do as much move our selves while we meditate them as we desire they should work upon our hearers when we deliver them if Iudah hear of her sins not from our passion but our conscience and the house of Iacob of their transgressions not to vilifie but to reform her people then our discourses and exhortations to you become Fruits too and then are they no lesse pledges of our own salvation than they are the means of yours Happy Preacher who endeavours this composition who affects that his Sermons may appear to be as well the Fruits of faith as the Gifts of learning for in so doing he shall both save himself and them that hear him The word {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} is yet more Doctrinal Good works are here called Fruits 't is to let us understand that as fruits keep a due proportion to the tree that beares them so should our works be still answerable to our ability In this way to heaven the blind mans fight as it is expressed in the Gospell must be our direction I see men as trees walking we must walk like trees you know 't were unnatural for a pomegranate to bear fruits no bigger than a grape and 't is no lesse unseemly for a man of large Revennew to give Almes like his meaner neighbour Neither must our charity exceed our Estate for when a man grows liberal beyond his means t is as if a vine in stead of its proper grape should bring forth a gourd We read Exod. 35. 20. at the building of the Tabernacle some brought Gold and precious Stones some Purple and Fine twined linnen others Badgers skins and Goats hair to the Sanctuary all these were Fruits Gold and precious Stones fit for the Nobles of Israel to bear Purple and Fine linnen for persons of middle rank Skins and Goates haire for the poorer sort Iael may give Milk to drink and bring forth butter in a Lordly dish 't is well if the poor widdow can give a little Cake and a draught of water to Eliah Thus let each tree bring forth its own Fruit let each mans wisdome proportion his contribution to his Estate Great men must do great works and God may as well expect that a rich man should build a Church where there is need as that another should adorn it Should Caithas have cast in those Two mites into the Treasury men might rather have scorn'd his basenesse than commended his charity mites did well become the widdow but the high Priest must bring a larger offering I know 't is not our substance but our Faith which commends the work but yet we may well suspect the Niggards faith when he gives too little of his substance and he 's to be counted a very weak Christian whose covetousnesse shuts his purse so close that his Faith cannot open it There are some that can speak great store of charity they can give good words to people in want Alas my brother Alas poor man I am sorry for you yea they can be content to pray sometimes that God would help them but it is with reservation so that they be not his instruments But such Trees as these bear not fruit but leaves and as you
know it follows their end is to be burnt If our good works be fruit it follows they ought not to make us proud nor to puff us up with any vain imaginations as though they had deserved that God should favour us For tell me when Noah had bestowed great paines in planting a vineyard do you think he was beholding to his slips that they brought forth graps Beloved we are Gods vineyard he hath planted us he hath set an hedge about us and therefore to bring forth the fruits of a Godly life is not our kindnesse but our duty This truth is yet further manifested by the verse next following My Apostle had lately received a contribution from Philippi and yet thus he speaks of it {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} I have received all things {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} is a word very emphatical it signifies to receive by way of due debt as a Prince receives his Tribute or a Lord his rent for so 't is expounded by Saint Chrysostome a Greek Father and therefore one that knew well the property of my Apostles language Observe hence when you minister ●…nto the Saints necessities you do but pay what you owe and such works I hope you will confess are not to be accounted as your liberality but as Gods Tribute You have heard the difference between Gifts and Fruits and I doubt not but the bare Narration of it hath soon taught you which to practise For Iacob needed no other inducement to chuse Rachel before her Sister Leah than that the one was bleare-eyed but the other beautifull The disproportion here is of a farre greater consequence bare Gifts are dead and unprofitable but Fruits are of a weighty value the Testimonies of our Faith and the pledges of our Salvation If neither Grace nor yet Reason hath taught you which to chuse learn at least to rely upon Saint Pauls Authority I desire not a Gift but I desire Fruit which I call'd my Second part and I must now explain it to you I desire not a Gift but I desire Fruit To know the true worth of this Apostolique assertion we must as well enquire how Saint Paul then liv'd as what he wrote we must look as well into his life as his Epistle You must understand therefore that he was now at ●…ome a prisoner under Nero the Emperor whither the Jews malice constrained him to appeal as Saint Luke relates it from his own confession in the last of the Acts at the 19th verse He was now indeed in a very Strange Land forc'd to converse with Romans Strangers to his person with Gentiles Strangers to his Religion and which makes his case farre more lamentable There was a Nero and a Paul together the most Zealous Apostle under the most Savage Tyrant You see Beloved he is a miserable object his condition and in all likely hood his wants also not unfit for a whole Church to exercise their charity upon Here 's an Apostle in necessity in prison and that under a cruel Prince among Strange people The Philippians hear news of his Estate and presently in a Religious bounty they make Collections for him and dispatch them to him by Epaphroditus who in their names was both to Salute and relieve the prisoner It may be thought nothing could be more welcome to the Apostle at this time nothing more welcome than wealth in stead of want than the Almes of Philippi in the midst of his great extremity But men of that opinion are ignorant of Saint Pauls abundance He could truely say of himself what the Comaedian put into the mouth of his Actor omnia habeo nec quicquam habeo nihil cum est nihil deest tamen I have all things and yet possesse nothing there 's nothing about me and yet I want nothing For contentment is a large possession and the man truly full is not he that hath eaten most but he that 's satisfied They are his own words in this present Chapter I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me How all things hear ye Elders of Philippi what need is there of your Churches bounty Saint Paul wants nothing he hath already all the wealth he desires and 't is but a Thanklesse expence to enrich a man beyond his wishes Indeed had these Philippians in a seeming Holinesse sent but their wealth a bare Gift onely his chain had been more welcome than their Benevolence Saint Paul would have more esteem'd the bonds of Christ than the riches of hypocrisie But when under the shadow of this outward bounty he descryes the inward Truth of a Sincere affection when he perceiv'd it an odour of a sweet smell a Sacrifice acceptable well-pleasing to God then he breaks out I rejoyced in the Lord greatly that your care of me hath Flourished not because I desire a Gift but I desire Fruit not that I cove●… my own wealth but your Salvation A generous mind you see and fit for an Apostles breast he scorns to be relieved but by the hand of Faith and can be as well content with the pangs of hunger as the Gifts of Infidelity Indeed had the Philippians been yet but hypocrites my Apostle might with a good conscience have used their bounty for it came to him by deed of Gift and there is no fairer Title to any possession But he is not so content to please him they must send as well Fruits as Gifts they must send such presents as may abound no lesse to their accounts than to his necessity otherwise they may satisfy his wants perhaps but not his desire 'T is a rule in the Mathematicks that Rectum est index curvi the best way to discover a Crooked line is to compare it with one that is straight You know 't is a straight square that must tell the workman whether his timber be straight or uneven The case is with us as with Lines Beloved Men of a crooked disposition are then best known when they are compared with others of an upright heart and the onely way to discover a false Philippian is to examine his Actions by Saint Pauls example He was in want you heard and yet desires not Gifts except they were Fruits too How farre then do those poor decline from the straight steps of his Apostle who scarse either desire the one or respect the other but had rather be beholding to their own theft and cousenage than either to the Fruits of other mens Faith or to the Gifts of their vain Glory Indeed such men may usurp upon that speech of Saint Paul these hands minister to my necessities but 't is not of their own but their neighbours goods The covetous person may here examin himself and strait way discover the errour of his life Saint Paul was poor and yet desires not wealth
that he was a just man and an holy and observed him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly EXamples give life to precepts for as they usually make us conceive with ease what otherwise we should hardly understand so do they cause us to practise with encouragement what without them perhaps we should scarse attempt Precepts indeed may command but it is their examples that perswade obedience with greatest facility the reason is because they both imply matter of Emulation which is as a spurre in many cases unto mens spirits and likewise exclude impossibility by shewing that the thing which is commanded us may be performed That we must in all things obey the voice of the Lord our God is a precept better known than observ'd and what can be more availeable to enforce our performance of this command than the consideration of Abrahams example For canst thou stick to abandon the company of thy vitious Associates when he to avoid occasion of sinne leaves both his kindred and his Fathers house Canst thou forbear strangling thine in ordinate affections and lusts when thou seest him in obedience to the command of that great Law giver turn Executioner to the Fruit of his own loynes and rather than not to be the child of God is content to be no longer the Father of his dearest Isaack But amongst all the several kinds of Inducements that are apt to work upon us and to move us to do this or that there is none that more effectually stirs our affections than the good examples of those who seem most exposed to ignominy and disgrace For we can hardly brook the worthy Atchievements of our Equals in any kind but we disdain and are vexed to see our selves out-stript by our inferiours And therefore that fabulous Philosopher Aesope I mean did very wisely who being desirous to incite and bring his Auditours to a more vertuous course of life chose rather to acquaint them with the Annals of Beasts than men to the end that they might be ashamed to see sense out go reason and to observe those silly creatures performing the offices which either sluggish negligence made them unable or their crooked and perverse dispositions unwilling to execute This one example which my Text proposeth affords variety of such inducements For if thou beest possessed with a generous Spirit and apt to emulate the Actions of great men Behold here is Herod a Prince to be imitated but if thy drowsie affections permit thee not to look up nor to be awaked with such Alarmes yet blush notwithstanding to see thy self outstript by Herod a man whom the Gospel hath noted out as notoriously infamous an incestuous person and a murtherer Is it not a shame then for thee to contemn the Ministers of God or to abuse his servants to whom in this place Herod himself doth reverence To be backward and slothfull in attending to his word which Herod here again and again receives with gladnesse lastly would it not argue great want of Grace in thee to be an idle hearer onely when we in this Text find Herod himself doing readily doing and performing many good deeds Consider I say and blush at these circumstances thou who ever thou art that hast not as yet attained to Herods perfection Think how farre short thou comest of those duties which that last and great day shall exact of thee Seeing that the charity of our best Divines cannot so farre o'rerule their judgments as to make them think this Galilaean Prince throughout all these Actions to have gone any whit beyond a reprobate For although considered in their own nature the many things which he is here said to have done were doubtlesse good and truly commendable before men yet being stain'd with infidelity and corrupted by the ill manner of the performance of them they were as farre from the perfection of a true good work in the sight of God as himself was in person from the privilege of a true-born Israelite to which yet as some say he was not unwilling to pretend The Actions here specified are Three First the respect which Herod shewed to the Ministers of the word and withall to the line of Aaron for Iohn was heir to the course of Abia being as the Gospel shews and calleth him filius Zachariae the Son of Zachariah the Priest He feared Iohn and observed him Secondly the entertainment the joyfull entertainment which Herod gave to the word it self which Iohn preached And when he heard him c. he heard him gladly Thirdly the Reformation or good effect which Iohns Sermons or preaching wrough upon Herod He did many things c. Each of these apart in their order together with a particular discovery of their several imperfections are to be the subject of my present discourse it being my desire and intent principally to acquaint you with the fair progress which a Reprobate may seem to make in godlinesse and yet how farr he comes short of true Grace and Salvation Part I. You may thence conjecture that our fore-Fathers did highly esteem the Priests office because it was so often in their time united unto the Kings Authority Majorum haec erat consuetudo ut Rex esset etiam Sacerdos pontifex 'T was a custom among the Antients that he that was King should be likewise Priest as Isidore Hispalensis observeth in the 7th of his Etymoligicks at the 12th chapter This was practised by the Patriarks themselves as we may read Heb. 7th There Melchisedech partakes of both Tit●…es he received Tyth●…s of Abraham as Priest of the most high God and questionlesse he took Tribute of his own people as being King of Salem Also the Scripture tells us of Eli and Samuel both Judges successively invested with the same Soveraignty and yet the first a Priest the second both a Priest and Prophet in Israel The Gentiles though as yet they had not attayned to the Faith of Israel that is unto the true knowledge of Almighty God and his Law yet in this particular they thought not amisse to imitate the custom of Israel among them there was Rexidem hominum Phaebique Sacerdos As Virgil speaks of Anius who was both King and Priest a King to Delos and a Priest to Apollo who was there worshipped And 't is not unworthy of observation that Moyses Gen. 41. Stiles Potipherah his Father in Law {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} On Cohen which you may render either Prince or Priest of On. Probably 't was to let us understand that Aegypt liked well of the old conjunction between the Sacerdotal and Princely dignity Thus did those elder times think Holiness the chiefest policy and therefore held him as most able to Reign whom they saw to be most fit to Sacrifice This Antient practice seems not a little to justifie a Maxime of our own times Rex lay we est persona mixta cum Sacerdote the King himself is partly a Clergy-man his office then
the name of their office and for their office sake What though his bodily prefence be but weak and his speech contemptible as some said of that great Apostle Saint Paul Yea what though his conversation be in some things faulty and his life not altogether unblameable indeed it should not be we ought to be lights to the world as well by our conversation and good example as by our Doctrine but I say what though it happens sometimes to be otherwise yet know thou who ever thou art that stumblest at this s●…one God is able out of the mouths of Babes and Sucklings to ordain strength unto his own praise and can even out of the tongues of reprobates themselves when he please bring forth Salvation Else why was Iudas employed in the publication of the first good newes of the Gospel as well as the other Apostles Iudas I say that Traytor and reprobate why was he sent to preach if the poison of his wicked heart could have envenom'd his Doctrine or that his treacherous intentions could have done his Auditours as much hurt as they did his Master yet Iudas we see was one of the twelve Iudas was one of them whom it pleased our Saviour to send out with that Solemn Affidavit and encouragement of his in the eleventh of Matth. He that receiveth you receiveth me Else why did our Saviour enjoyn his Auditory to observe the preaching Pharisees if the wickednesse of their works and manner of living could have been an absolute hinderance to the successe of their Doctrine They sit in Moses Chair Whatsoever therefore they bid you observe namely out of the Law and according to it That saith he do but after their works do not Matthew 23th at the 3d. verse Away then with that affected parity of some amongst us that thinks it self in danger to be stained by the word it self if it comes from the mouth of a polluted Messenger 'T is a proud fancy long since condemned by Saint Austin in the Donatists in his second Book against Petilians letters and the 30th chapter Non d●…scernimus vitium quod homo habet veritatem quam non suam sed Dei habet Can we not distinguish saith the Father betwixt the Fault of the man and the truth of God can our dullnesse make no difference between Iacob and Esau because they were both of them nourished in the same Family can we make no distinction between sincerity of Doctrine and corruption of manners because they are both found in the same person if the meanest capacity here present scorn to be accounted so grosse let it shame us to forbear the Assemblies of the Church for no better reasons but only that the Preachers are not Holy let us remember that though it be the same mouth the same tongue which now Preacheth and anon wi●…l swear curse yea perhaps blaspheme yet that God is Author of the first his Doctrine but himself onely of his impiety and sacrilege In the first chapter of the Epistle to Titus the Apostle cites an Authority from a Cretian Poet {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} from a Cretian Poet I say a liar both by Country and profession and yet what he saith in this case is both heard and allowed {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} This witnesse is true saith Saint Paul verse 13th If therefore the Apostle gives ear to this Moral verity though vouched by Epimenides an Idolater and Infidel how much more 't is Saint Austins argument still in the place formerly cited should you willingly accept of the word of life though it proceed from a Minister of blameable conversation Nor do I endeavour Apologies for these shames of Levi woe to them that separate Holinesse from the Priesthood woe I say to them whosoever they are But what I speak is for your sakes Take heed I pray lest while you seek a man whose spotlesse life may answer your expectation you carelessely neglect that Doctrine which would lead you forth to everlasting happinesse even without humane sufficiency For if you gladly hear them onely who are just and holy what great thing do you did not even Herod the same you shall see it plainly in my second part which I am now to handle Part 2. And when he heard him c. he heard him gladly This Action of Herod I find diversly censur'd Some think it feigned and Hypocritical so Lyra others true and sincere as Beza with some other of our own Divines I desire to give Herod his due and am therefore willing to account him at least an ingenuous A●…ditor of the Baptist the rather because I see him well countenanced not onely by the judgment of the forenamed Authors Beza and others but by the Circumstances of the Text For my Evangelist if you observe him makes the Kings good inclination towards Iohn the only advocate to plead for him against the wicked suggestions of Herodias who did not more passionately desire the pleasure of her incestuous bed then she did the destruction of him who durst control her Herod then must needs be truely of himself well inclined towards Iohn otherwise he neither would nor could have so often resisted her entreaties whose affections had enthralled him and who desired nothing of him but the silencing of that tongue whose publike reprehensions were as prejudicial to his own honour as to her contentment But if we admit Herod to have been indeed a joyfull receiver of the word we must acknowledge also some congruous and little cause of this his gladnesse and so necessarily allow him Faith no lesse free from hypocrisie than his joy was from dissimulation and fiction For otherwise it were a strange prodigie and as contrary to nature as to see Grapes grow upon Thornes or Figs on on Thistles Joy or rejoycing in good things if it be true is a Fruit of the Spirit and therefore necessarily supposeth Faith which is the first work of Spirit in us and the root and fountain of all others And granting this what other thing do we but plead for Arminius and bring in this Eastern Prince to grace his Triumph For here 's Herod a man truely Faithfull you say because truely glad or truely affected with the preaching of the word and if Faithfull justified also for who dares deny the consequence and yet I fear his Absolution is now cancelled and that whatsoever he once was he is now no better than a reprobate Hence therefore namely by granting that Herods gladnesse at the Preaching of the word was Sincere and unfeigned it may seem to follow what Arminius labours to conclude to wit that a man truely justified may afterwards full from Grace and become a reprobate But the inconvenience is well avoided by distinguishing between Truth and Goodnesse we must know that an Action is not presently void of Sin because 't is free from hypocrisie Ahab I doubt not did truly joy at the death of Nabaotb yet that Gladnesse of his was damnable and
Herod might indeed truly rejoyce at the Preaching of Iohn but I shall detect his joy and shew it to have been meerly carnal and so wholly set upon the respects of this life that it had no dependency at all on that to come And to begin the discovery aright we must first observe his Faith which I take or rather find to be Temporary the fame that Saint Mark describes chap. 4th at the 17th verse They have no root in themselves and endure but for a time my Authority is Beza ●…adebat hic semen in saxosa loca saith he The sowers seed sell here upon stony ground The servant must not be above his Master and therefore as Christ sometimes Preached to hard and obdurate hearers that received not the word so kindly into their hearts as that it could take due root in them so must Iohn be content to do Now this Temporary Faith although we may well enough stile it true Faith as Truth is opposed to Hypocrisie because it was not feigned yet doth it as much differ from the nature and excellency of that which justifieth as Ismael did from Isaak he was no counterfeit child of Abraham but yet begotten upon a bond-woman So these Faiths the Temporary and Iustifying Faith do both proceed from the same Spirit as from the same Father or Author of them But you know that Sun the Holy Spirit I mean imparts his influences diversly unto men and after different measures viz. according as he stands affected to the subject which he works upon No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost saith Saint Paul 1 Cor. 12. and yet the devils themselves constrained no doubt thereto by the evident power of Gods Spirit non dicunt tantum sed vociferantur as one saith they do not onely speak it but proclaim it I know who thou art saith the unclean spirit in Saint Mark chap. the 3. even the holy one of God Here are different works of the Spirit you see even upon reprobate and damned creatures But Spiritus Paracletus erit vobiscum saith Christ of the elect Iohn the 14th They shall receive the Spirit not of Illumination only but of Comfort The Scripture 't is confessed stiles them both by the name of Faith but the one is a bare assent only unto the Doctrine preached the other is a confident application of it wee saith that elect Apostle have confidence by Faith in him Ephes. 3. at the 12th verse Lastly they both produce a gladnesse this pure and Spiritual out of a sense of the forgivenesse of Sins being justified by Faith we have peace with God Rom. 5. at the 1. that other impure carnal and only stirr'd up by the force of some Worldly motives So were the Philosophers at Athens most gladly desirous to hear the Doctor of the Gentiles not because their Souls were joy'd with the soundnesse of his Doctrine but because their ears listened after Novelties 'T was a story to them that seem'd to deserve attention to hear of a Deity Incarnate of a God crucifyed and that to the Immortality of the Soul which they had learn'd from nature the Gospel now added the Resurrection of the Body The strangenesse of such Doctrine as this must needs delight and give satisfaction no lesse to a Curious than to a Godly Auditour How could the Doctrine of Christian liberty but be welcome to many irreligious and loose people in Hierusalem how could that news want ready entertainment that promised such absolute and present freedom both to themselves from the bondage of those annual ceremonies and to their children also from the pain and peril of Circumcision Iustification by Faith must needs joy them that are loath to be at the charge of good Works and free remission of Sins is so plausible a Theme that I fear it makes many think they are scarse put to the trouble of Beleeving How many joyful hearers do these times afford who yet never in their life desired much lesse laboured to attain a sense of the forgivenesse of Sins Their joy imployes it self about other matters The Preacher 's eloquent perhaps and then his pleasing periods command their attention Perhaps he 's bitter and then they are tickled with the display of their Neighbours vices and begin to take it for a kind of Innocency that other men are as bad as themselves Nay are they not those that presse with eagernesse into these Assemblies only that they may find wherewith to busie their detracting humours Here he wanted Art there diligence these lines were too carelesse that strain too affected Quibus plus Displices si ominem sine aspiratione dixeris saith St. Austin quam si hominem oderis men that had rather you should break a Commandement than offend a Grammar rule and think it a greater fault to mispronounce a mans name than to murther his reputation But let such Auditours know animis non auribus loquimur as Seneca hath it we speak to your consciences not to your ears and desire not so much to please as to save your Souls I much wonder therefore at our English Arminius I mean Thompson in the 5. chapter of his Diatriba that makes the difference according to Scripture as he pretends between the wavering or Temporary and Iustifying Faith to be only temporis tantum aut gradus non rei et essentiae that is that they differ not essentially and in nature one from another but gradually and in respect of time durance and perseverance only So that Temporary Faith with him so long as it continues is as true Faith as that which continues for ever And hence indeed it follows easily that a man though qualifyed only with that fading imperfection of a Temporary Faith yet for the time that such Faith continueth in him must needs be justified before God and when it fails that his Iustification also ceaseth and is broken off and so the Title of his Diatriba is made good de interscisione Gratiae c. But surely the Truth is farr otherwise Those things are distinguish'd essentially and in nature that differ as I have shewed these to do that is to say first in the cause The Temporary Faith proceeding only from some general and inferiour operation of the Holy Spirit commonly incident unto reprobates and wicked men who doubtlesse feel many times Impulses and as it were Knockings of the Spirit at the dore of their hearts which yet are never opened to any true Conversion whereas Iustifying Faith proceeds from that supreme and most special working of the Spirit which is proper to the Elect and alwayes effectual to Salvation Secondly they differ in the things themselves or in their Definition That viz. Temporary Faith being only a bare assent unto the Doctrine preached This a confident and lively application of it to ourselves and to our own Souls Thirdly in their effects This to wit Iustifying Faith being the Fountain and Source of true Spiritual joy and comfort
that other only of what is false and carnal We need not fear then to confesse Herod a reprobate and yet acknowledge him to have given most joyful entertainment to Iohns preaching and that unfeignedly and in good earnest For as Temporary Faith may be the Mother of an unfeigned joy which yet is not presently to be thought commendable only because it is not counterfeit For Herod might take delight in some carnal circumstances more than in the principal matter preached as to hear him tell of a Messiah that was to come of his strange Baptism that he would Baptize men with fire of the excellency of the Messiah's person seeing Iohn whose grave Aust●…rity freed him from all suspicion of any complemental excesse confessed himself not worthy to untye the the latchet of his Shooe He might be affected with his grave discourse and Treatings of Justice Temperance Fortitude and other Princely qualities wherwith doubtlesse the Baptist knew very well how to entertain him For virtue loves to shew its lustre and will seem admirable sometimes even in the eyes of vice it self Now how could it but rejoyce a King to hear those no lesse politique than Divine instructions copied out in the third of Luke where in at once he taught the people charity the Publicars conscience the Souldiers contentment and modesty Thus did he ease Herod in governing and make Religion supply that which otherwise would require the Princes Authority There is then a twofold Truth to be considered in our joy rei personae Herods Person was truly glad but his joy had made choise and fix●…d it self upon a false object and therefore false because 't was fading For we may not think he rejoyced in any sense which he had of the remission of his Sins for then we should have read him likewise partaker of Iohns Baptism which was preambulatory to it nor that he put any confident assurance in the preached Messias for then he would not have arayed him in white and so mocked and despised him as he did no cadebat hic semen in terram petrosam all this seed fell upon stony ground and that you may know that it did so indeed by and by it Sprung up you may see a blade of it almost as soon as it is sowen for so the Text addeth He did many things and that was my third and last part which I now come to consider and un●…old to you Part 3. He did many things c. Faith argueth our birth but good works our growth in Religion and as we may well su●…pect the child is abortive if it lives onely but encreaseth not so may we justly condemne that Faith for degenerate that beleeves onely but works n●…t But Herod seems Religious beyond censure who to manifest the Truth of his Fai●…h adds also the integrity of a good conversation And because one Action or two onely are scarse able to prove a man Good he claimes the Title by a multitude he doth many things perhaps feed●… the hungry clothes the naked that were in Israel Fasts twice every week perhaps gives Tythe of all his possessions precisely and becomes as Ceremonial and formal as any Pharisee in the crue But we must learn from Saint Austin lib. 1. Confess cap. 17. Non uno modo sacrificatur transgressoribus Angelis The devils Altars admit of more than one kind of sacrifice and though perhaps Herod might do him at this time no worship by way of oppression or covetousnesse or Idolatrie yet so long as he kept Herodias he was a true votary and servant of Satan and his Incest with his brother Philips wife a welcome oblation This then is but another progresse of a reprobate a second step which such a one may make in the way of salvation and yet never attain it He may do many goodly works and his charity may seem though not more true yet more specious splendid and bountifull than that of the Elect themselves for enquire but a little wherein the strength of his devotion lyeth you will find he had rather behead a Prophet than displease a Minion he had rather hazzard the losse of Religion it self than forgoe the pleasures of a beloved si●… This is Herods pietie Thus did this dyi●…g Tree shed all its fair fruit at the blast of a woman Those many things which he did must all end in one Herodias So inconsiderately wicked was t●… is Galilaean that he staines the beauty of all his former Actions and incurres the censure or penalty of the whole law by giving consent to that one transgression For this we must know the Gospel hath glo●…s'd upon both the Tables of the law farre beyond the strictnesse of Phari●…aical Interpreters teaching us by eff●…ct as well as report that Christ came not to destroy the law but to explain it and to take away ●…ot its Authority but its sting onely Thoughts were held free till he taught that but lusting was a breach of the seavent●… commandement A riddle till then beyond Sampsons subtilty H●…c u●…i vir non est ut sit adulterium as the Poet sc●…ffingly expresseth it that a woman should be an Adultresse that never entertained a paramour that Herodias in the Court of Galile should commit sin with Herod absent from her perhaps as farre as Hierusalem 'T is strange likewise that Achan because guilty of Theft should be arraigned and made liable to the law of Murther or that even Herod because incestuous should be counted as him that impiously blasphemes and curseth God And yet it is the Doctrine which Saint Iames in his Epistle teacheth chap. 2. at the 10th verse He that transgresseth in one commandement is held guilty of all Not that all sins are therefore equal or that an incestuous person is ipso facto as we say really and indeed made thereby a Blasphemer to think so were perhaps little lesse than to blaspheme and to accuse the justice of God of a strange iniquity but the sense is this He offends the same Majesty in the breach of the seventh commandement who lustfully climbeth up into his neighbours bed which he doth in the breach of the third who sacrilegiously Blasphemes and curseth his Creator The same Divine Majesty is offended by the breach of any one Commandement that is offended by the breach of all and we lose the love of God and become lyable to eternal damnation by the breach of one as really and assuredly I say not so deeply perhaps or h●…inously in regard of punishment as if we had transgres●…ed them all Herod then may well do many things and yet come farre short of that goodnesse which becomes Religion For as that mans joy is but carnal that looks not chiefly upon remission of sin though he be otherwise entertained with never so great variety of guest and delight so are not his works to be counted otherwise than most imperfect and vitiated who gives himself the liberty of any one sin yea though he should be supposed
even from his youth up with that rich youngster in the Gospel to have kept the Tenour of all the other nine Commandements very strictly Now Herodem omne fert tempus as the Oratour said of Clodius There are a multitude of Herods in all ages our works are no better than his imperfect for the most part few there are that go beyond this Galilaean in Holinesse go beyond do I say nay may I not wish we did but equal him and came up to him he heard and did many things we hear and do just nothing The voice of our Preachers now is as the voice of the Prophets were of old Ezek. 32. 32. we detain your eares our Sermons are perhaps unto you as a lovely Song of one that hath a pleasant voice you are content to hear our words but the world sees and your own conscience telleth you you do them not I speak this of the greater part of our hearers in these daies And as for them who think they ought to be excepted out of the list as being neither idle nor curious nor unprofitable hearers but doers of the word Alas how uncontroulably true is that of Bion in Seneca of us omnia hominum negotia simillima sunt initiis all cur doings what are they but as it were beginnings to do asla●…es rather than a●…chievements endeavours at least as we make our selves believe and God grant we do not in that thing very often deceive our own soules endeavours I say rather than performances This man perhaps goes so farre in Religion as to check all Temptations of unbeleeving thoughts yet gives no check to his lust but cherishes that and gives it the reigns of liberty even to excesse and scandal if this man be a hearer as there are such not a few what doth he but at the same time confesse God and provoke his Maker Another perhaps goes further and with a Godly fortitude resists the assaults of those carnal and brutish lusts but in the mean time yeelds to pride and busies himself perpetually with the fancy of his own perfections or to covetuousnesse and instead of worshipping stocks and stones worships his Golden wedge Such hearers as these wherein are they better than Herod either Herod Antipas here in the Text who did many things as good as any they do or Herod Agrippa in the Acts chap. 26. who professeth himself but half a Christian Not that I hold an absolute perfection in all good works necessary to the attainment of that saving Title for then the Disciples of Christ must have been called Christians in Heaven onely not at Antioch but I require the absence of all darling and beloved sinnes I require that no Sin that is no kind of sin reign in your mortal bodies I require that you give not your selves up to any ev●…l customes of vice in w●…at kind soever whether of pride sensuality covetousnesse revenge detraction lying envy or the like I require that you mortify and resist all inclinations and pronenesse unto sin in every kind and that with all possible care faithfu●…lnesse and diligence because hee 's no lesse a slave that is commanded by some one than he that groanes under the Tyranny of many Masters Be perfect therefore as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect Reverence his Ministers not so much because thou seest them wise or honoured by the State or rich but because they are the Embassadors of that great peace which the God of Heaven hath granted and by them publisheth and confirmeth unto the inhabitants of the earth Hear his word gladly not because it is sometimes attended with the content of temporal and carnal allurements but because it brings promise of remission of sinnes and eternal life to penitent sinners And to those many things which I presume the worst of you all does perform in the service of God and in order to your everlasting happinesse at some time or other adde the forbearance the diligent carefull and conscientious forbearance of all beloved and customary sinne So shall he who vouchsafed this Herod in the Text the honour of a temporal kingdome make you partakers of his own kingdome which is eternal and Crown you with that immarcessible Crown of Glory which he hath prepared for all that love him He grant it us to all who hath so dearly bought us Jesus Christ c. The Third SERMON HEBREVVS 10. 1 2. For the Law having a shadow of good Things to come and not the very Image of the Things can never with those Sacrifices which they offered year by year continually make the commers thereunto perfect For then would not they have ceas'd to be offered because the worshippers once purg'd should have had no more conscience of Sin TO confute Jewish Blasphemies in a Christian Assembly were to give Medicines for a Fever to cure the Palsie which promiseth I think as little health to the Patient as it doth credit to the Physician Indeed my Author who here b●…speaks these Hebrews a Nation that strangely doted on their legal Ceremonies did most profitably make the imperfection of their Law the subject of his discourse it being the most proper and persuasive argument to win them from those servile Elements unto the glorious libertie of the Sons of God But the contrary distempers of our Auditories require Treatings of another nature Here 's none that expect their part in the Covenant should be seal'd to them by the Sacrament of Circumcision none that pretend to R●…mission of Sins by virtue of any Oblations of Levi Lastly I dare be confident here 's none that looks for Iustification by the works of the moral Law although perhaps it might be wished our practice therein were a little more Jewish so our Faith con●…inued Christian In these points it may not be denyed but our understandings enjoy a very Health of Truth only we languish in our other faculties and our Actions are farr unanswerable to our Belee●… We have those whose consciences are already dead in their Sins and they must be quickened we have others who groan under the burthen of an accusing conscience and they must be comforted My Text considered in it self gives occasion of many such particulars I shall therefore by your patience first briefly repeat the Argument wherein it hath pleased my Apostle to place his grand Proposition and then handle ●…t singly and alone without relation to its other circumstances He disputes t●…u●… Those worshippers who have been once purg'd are no more troubled with a conscience of Sins That 's his Major proposition But the Jews after all their Sacrifices were still burthened with a conscience of Sins for otherwise what needed those annually repeated oblations for the same offences There 's his Minor The Conclusion Therefore they were not throughly purged by their legal Sacrifices and consequently the Sacrifices themselves unperfect because not able to bring the worshippers or those who offered them to perfection You see then my Text contains a Maxime