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A30242 The Scripture directory for church-officers and people, or, A practical commentary upon the whole third chapter of the first Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians to which is annexed The godly and the natural mans choice, upon Psal. 4, vers. 6, 7, 8 / by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1659 (1659) Wing B5656; Wing B5648_CANCELLED; ESTC R3908 509,568 411

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Peter commends believers That they did give heed to the Word of God as a light shining in darke places 2 Pet. 1.19 So then the Scripture or written Word of God is one instrumental Cause of all our Faith and Godlinesse It 's the Rule God hath tied us to we are not to receive Angels from Heaven Galat. 1.8 much lesse men on earth against Scripture A second Instrumental Cause of Grace is The Ministry appointed in the Church of God It would be in vain to reckon up the places that speake of its usefulnesse and necessity What is Paul or Apollo but instruments or Ministers by which ye believe 1 Cor. 3.5 Though they are not principals yet they are instruments Ephes 4.11 God hath given gifts to men Pastours and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints That they be not carried away with every wind of Doctrine Yea they are called Fathers because they beget men to Christ and they are said to save men and convert men because they are instruments Yea they are called Workers with God 2 Cor. 6.1 What a great expression is this So that you see the Ministry is an instrumental cause Lastly There are the Sacraments when duely administred and received There are many great expressions given to them Bread and wine 1 Cor. 10. is the Communion of the Lords body and blood Baptisme is the putting on of Christ Now the truth is the greatest error that ever was by putting too much in Instruments hath been about the Sacraments In Popery the Scripture was farre enough from being set up too much they disparaged that making it insufficient and imperfect but then for the Sacraments they maintain The very Act of receiving is to work grace and in this Popery many people do still remain not considering that unworthy receivers receive their damnation as well as the worthy Christ and his benefits but when the Devil cannot destroy the power of godlinesse by tempting men to put too much confidence in instrumentals then he brings about Atheism and irreligion by a total rejecting of them opposing them to Christ Therefore Secondly There have been Enthusiasts or Illuminatists who have thought themselves spiritual onely That have either in whole or in part rejected these instrumentals A dangerous delusion it is and hath many times surprized those who have been hopefull in the wayes of godlinesse and had many parts and religious abilities but wanting a sure and sound foundation they living against the knowledge of truth God hath given them up to such delusions neither have they stayed in denying the Ministry and Ordinances but some of them have gone so farre as to neglect the Scripture also calling it the dead letter and saying a godly man is above the Scripture and the Bible Thus subtil is the Devil that when he cannot destroy by open prophanenesse he makes them decline too much on the right hand lifting them up to some pinnacle and then afterwards throwing them down by some dangerous temptation But this is a great sinne so to advance Christ and the Spirit as to oppose his instituted means and Ordinances First Because it 's a presumptuous tempting of God For as in providential things if a man should argue thus Man liveth not by bread but the Word of Gods mouth Cloathes and food are nothing if God do not give the blessing If a man upon this Argument should neglect all secondary helps Would it not be a presumptuous tempting of God You know how angry God was with Ahaz The Prophet promised unexpected deliverance to Israel and profered a signe to confirme this No saith Ahaz I will not tempt God I will aske no signe Isai 7.12 You might think this had been great faith but it was great presumption he tempted God while he said he would not Thou mayest think this is high and raised Godlinesse to have Christ onely and the Spirit onely thy teachers but if thou doest this to exclude his instituted meanes thou doest tempt God Secondly It 's great pride of heart and disobedient unthankefulnesse to God and that against his goodnesse and wisdome It 's Gods great goodnesse that he hath appointed men of the same mould with us to deliver his Embassage The people of Israel when the Law was given could not bear the expressions of Gods Majesty and if God had appeared at any time they thought they should die presently Now God knowing our frailty and weaknesse did appoint men of the same nature and passions with us and for thee to neglect this is to be horribly unthankfull And then the wisdome of God is much magnified by the foolishnesse of preaching as the Apostle cals it in the account of humane wisdome to save them and thereupon he amplifieth Gods wisdome that chuseth vile and contemptible things to confound the mighty and wise things of the world 1 Cor. 1. Take heed then of the neglect of the Ministry and means of grace it doth arise from that carnal pride that cannot condiscend to the seeming low means in Christs way Thirdly And I will name no more other matter belonging to this will come in afterwards It 's the immediate furthering of the kingdom of Satan Oh what a sad thing is it that which the prophane enemies and Antichristian adversaries did formerly endeavour to overthrow to wit the godly Ministry and means of grace that thou shouldst in another way do it For the preaching of the Word and the Ministry thereof how low soever it be with thee yet the Scripture cals it The Kingdom of Heaven often and that is in a great measure the Kingdome we pray might come And therefore tremble and again tremble left the Devil begin to undo thy soul by withdrawing thee from the Ministry of Christ Alas thou thinkest to set against that and overthrow that But poor man thou settest against thy soul and overthrowest thy owne soul Doe not then entertain any opinion or practice which opens a way to set Satan up in his Throne Vse of Admonition To you who have knowledge and parts and a repute of Religion take heed of Satans temptation in this kinde It 's a pleasing delusion he hath seduced many this way Lay therefore up a good foundation Shake off such suggestions as Paul did the Viper upon his hand walk humbly take heed of pride self-conceit affecting to be some extraordinary person Oh be not ignorant of Satans devices and subtilties in this kind Remember if thou art godly how usefull profitable and comfortable a godly Ministry hath been unto thee Vse 2. To rebuke with all severity those atheistical prophane men that neither regard Christ the principal nor the Ministers as Instruments They are neither for Paul nor Apollo nor for Christ but they are for their lusts their pleasures their mammon as for matters of Religion either Christs teaching or the Ministers teaching they make no matter of Verse 5. Who then is Paul and who is Apollo THese words are an argument to prove why they should not set
the things of this world yet if foolish in heavenly things that earthly wisdome cannot help thee Say then to thy self Oh foolish and unwise sinner Why do I take this moment of pleasure for an eternity of torment Oh foolish and blind man Why do I let the day of grace and the precious time of salvation passe away Will not this be bitternesse in the later end Verse 19. For the wisdome of this world is foolishnesse with God c. THis Verse is brought in as a Cause or Reason why a man should renounce earthly and worldly wisdome because it 's foolishnesse with God See here the different thoughts of God and man the great admired worldly wisdome among men is but foolishnesse with God and that which God cals true and real wisdome men account foolishnesse but it 's quickly decided whose thoughts shall prevail Gods or mans The words of the Text being a Reason asserted in a Proposition we may consider 1. The Subject 2. The Predicate or Attribute The Subject is The wisdome of this world by that you heard was meant all the knowledge learning and prudence which is attained in this world by meer humane industry This is the choice and most excellent pearl that the world hath if their wisdome be thus folly what then is their folly 2. There is the Attribute It 's foolishnesse with God Though the wise men of this world have written several Books as the Encomium hujus moriae the praise of this folly yet God abhorreth and rejecteth it It is foolishnesse with God who is the only wise God who is only able to judge and discern what things are There are many wise learned men in the world whose naked propositions we do more regard than other mens demonstrations But how much more should we acquiesce in Gods assertions We may justly call all humane wisdome meer foolishnesse because God doth so Now when the wisdome of the world is said to be foolishnesse with God that is to be understood two wayes First Actively it is onely contriving plotting and accomplishing foolish things Secondly Passively God turneth it all to foolishnesse as David prayed God would turn Achitophels counsel into folly 2 Sam. 15.31 And as 1 Cor. 1. He hath chosen foolish things to confound the wise things of the world And this passive sense is a great part of the meaning as appeareth by the two-fold testimony taken out of the Old Testament which are to shew that God doth befool and as easily destroy all the wisdome and counsels of meer worldly men as we blow down the houses of clay that little children make in sport Observe That all the admired wisdome of a meer worldly man is nothing but contemptible folly before God The worlds wise man is Gods fool he whose words and counsels in worldly matters are as Achitophels in his dayes like the oracles of God they are by God turned into meer foolishnesse I shall first begin with that active foolishnesse demonstrating by several particulars That all worldly wisdome is meer folly And First This is abundantly seen in all that Idolatry and superstition which the wisest of men are prone unto and wherein they do greatly applaud themselves What more foolish ridiculous and absurd instances have we of folly then of the Idolatry and superstitious worship that the Oracles of their dayes have decreed The Apostle Rom. 1.21 speaketh excellently to this purpose Professing themselves wise they became fools for their foolish heart was darkned And wherein was this seen In turning the glory of the invisible God into an image of an Ox that eateth hay This doth especially relate to the Aegyptians who boasted of their great wisdome and indeed they were the seminary of learning it 's said to all the world yet who more foolish in their Idolatry than they worshipping an Ox yea Mice and Cats and Crocodiles This also might be demonstrated of the Grecians and Romans while applauded for the wise men of the world How absurd and foolish were they in their worship Insomuch that Socrates was called an Atheist meerly because he derided their many gods and Austin relateth a great deal of excellent discourse which Seneca hath against the Idolatry and Superstition than in use though that Tractate be not now among his Works But these are Heathens and so no wonder if we shall find even in the Church of God when men have followed their humane wisdome in prescribing the worship of God by that they become vain and ridiculous witnesse all that heap of foolish and superstitious Ceremonies which Popery brought into the Church by degrees That as the ridiculous deformity of an Ape lieth in imitating or being like a man and yet not a man So the absurd folly of all that superstitious worship did appear in the affectation of Religion and Devotion when indeed it was not so Now this great folly of Idolatry the Scripture doth often aggravate They have eyes and see not c. And they that make them are like unto them They are even such stupid Idols as their Idols are And what holy derision doth the Prophet Eliah put upon Baals Priests launcing and cutting themselves crying O Baal hear us 1 King 18.26 Especially the Prophet Isaiah describeth this bruitish folly when he telleth us of the workmen that with one peece of wood he makes a fire and with another a god Isa 44.19 If you ask then Wherein the great wisdome of the world is foolishnesse I answer in their Worship in their Religion All the golden Images all the curious ornaments and vestments in worship are but beggarly things if compared with the pure spiritual worship of God Thus when the Galatians apostatized from the pure Gospel-worship of Christ and turned to antiquated Ceremonies he cals them Foolish Galatians Chap. 3.1 We doe not breake Christs command when we call such fooles because it 's not from a causlesse anger but a judicious zeal Secondly Worldly wisdome is meer foolishnesse because such men contrive and plot and think to accomplish all their counsels by their own strength and way Now this is a very foolish and absurd thing for the thoughts of a man are in some respect from man but the ordering and disposing of all things is from God Jer. 10.23 I know Lord it is not in man to order his own way Thus you see Achitophel was a meer fool in the issue And thus the Prophet Isaiah cryeth out The princes of Zoan are fools Isa 19.11 even they that boasted in their wisdome We reade of some Romane Emperours and others that did most foolishly affect a Deity especially Caius Caesar for which some thought him the Antichrist Yea some of the Christian Emperours did affect the attribute of God as Constantius the Arian that denied Eternity to the Sonne of God yet would have men salute him with Aeternitas vestra What blasphemous folly was this for a man who was to be worms meat presently Now in some respects all the great wise
can be expected from a Church consisting of such Men speak of Houses where the Devils walk where spirits haunt men dare not dwell there I tell thee That a Family where ignorance and prophaneness is nourished is an house not only haunted but even possessed by Devils And how canst thou eat sleep and live in such a place Fourthly In the primitive times there were a rank of people that were called Catecumini as we said before Candidati or Competentes such who being converted from Paganism were not yet fully instructed in the matters of Religi●n and therefore they had time to get knowledg before ever they were admitted to Church-Communion And answerable to this there was a Catechist one whose work and office it was to instruct such before they were Baptized Thus you see how carefull in Antiquity they were that they might have no ignorant persons among them And certainly as in all Arts there are Principles which must be learned before they can come to Conclusions so it 's here in Religion And oh that we could see this Knowledge brought in amongst people To be a Christian is to be anointed and this Vnction teacheth us all things Joh. 2.20 viz. necessary to salvation Fifthly Principles of Religion largely so called are of two sorts either Corrupt Idolatrical and Heretical or true Sound and Consonant to the Scripture Now there are many in the world are too forward to infuse poysonous and dangerous Principles so great a matter is it to consider what men are seasoned with at first either privately or publiquely Thus many are infected with Popish and superstitious Principles many with erroneous and false Doctrines and these foundations being laid it 's very difficult ever to remove them As the vessel is first seasoned or the tree at first planted so it is likely to continue The Apostle cals those Jewish Ceremonies the beggerly elements Gal. 4.9 or Principles of the world Why so because the superstitious Teachers made them the first Elements the Principles the foundation of all and therefore they thought all Religion was taken away if they were removed And thus you have divers persons they have indeed some Principles of Religion but they are Popish and Superstitious such as put out the Knowledge of Christ and the Scriptures And It 's a two-fold labour as Socrates said to a perverted Disciple of his to teach them for they must first be untaught their erroneous Principles and then must be instructed in the truth Oh then look to this that thy Principles about Religion be not false ignorant and superstitious ones Sixthly The true Principles of Religion are reduced to severall heads and are both short and easie but necessary to be known The Doctrine about God and Christ and our selves which is the Credendum The Doctrine about Faith and Repentance which is the Agendum And about things to come which is the Sperandum About God we are to believe That he is and a rewarder of those that seek him About Christ This is eternal life to know Jesus Christ Joh. 17.2 and the holy Ghost for we are Baptized in his Name About our selves the desperate pollution of our natures the hainousness of sinne the aggravation of the curses of the Law The things to be done are Repentance which driveth out of our sins and Faith which driveth out of our own righteousness But because these are Divine Works therefore a man must be regenerated and born again And this Principle Christ insisted on to Nicodemus Joh 3. The things to come are The Resurrection of the Body The immortality of the Soul The Day of Judgment The He●ven and Hell provided for the godly and the wicked These Principles are plain and easie not to flesh and blood but in respect of the manifestation of them They are laid down clearly in Scripture None without horrible impudency can deny them Indeed there are many sublime Disputes about the Trinity and about Christs Incarnation but these are not necessary to be believed by every one Oh then how great is thy ingratitude God hath made the necessary things easie and plain and yet thou art not acquainted with them If God had commanded some greater matter of thee If he had required all thy time all thy study thou wast obliged to have done it How much rather in things of so easie apprehension But now when we say These divine Principles are easie you must take heed of two mistakes 1. We do not mean that the divine Faith and Belief of them is easie to flesh and blood no but they are easie supposing the grace of God in respect of other particulars in Religion For otherwise To believe with a Divine Faith viz. by the Spirit of God inabling upon divine Authority which is only true Faith is the immediate work of Gods Spirit Therefore Faith though it be but Historicall and not saving is the gift of God When we desire a Knowledge and Faith of these Principles we mean not such a Faith as most men have a Faith of custom and humane education a Faith because they are brought up in such a Religion but upon Judgment and Knowledge grounded upon the Scripture That which is usually called the Colliars Faith To believe as the Church believes Is the Husbandmans and the Tradesmans and the rich mans and the poor mans Faith too much in the world So that as Christ saith His yoke is easie and yet also it is very hard Easie to the heart sanctified but grieveous to the unregenerate So it is here The Principles of Religion are easie and plain to the mind inlightned but they are either foolishness or absurdities to the greatest Scholar that is if h●s heart be not opened And thus Paul found himself derided and called a Babler amongst the Athenians 2. We do not mean that the bare saying of the Principles of Religian by heart and rote is the true believing and knowing of them As the Child is not said to be fed with milk unless it swallow it down and be nourished by it So neither can they be said to believe the Principles of Religion unless they do with understanding apply them and receive them into their hearts But this is all that most attain unto they can tell you God made them That Christ is their Saviour That they must repent of sinne But these things are by meer rote They learn them as formerly in Popery they learned their Prayers in Lattin they knew not what they prayed for so neither these what they do believe Now the Groun●s for Instruction in these Principles are First Because God accounts of no zeal nor devout affections if they be not the fruit of Knowledge Thus Christ told the woman that was so zealous for her Fathers worship Ye worship ye know not what Joh. 4 22. Though God once accepted bruit beasts as a S●rifice to him Yet now saith the Apostle let 's offer up our selves a reasonable Sacrifice Rom. 12.1 The Jew had a zeal but
to grow in knowledge and mind the things of Religion but still we must be sensible of our own weaknesses If any man think he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know 1 Cor. 8.2 Oh it 's a dangerous thing when a man that is weak doth not know his weaknesse but thinketh he doth know as much as others Thirdly The last efficient are for these will come in better in the after verses Worldly hopes and desires of carnal advantages What made Judas cause such a sad breach among the Disciples but earthly gain The Apostle chargeth this upon many false Apostles this made the shipwrack of their faith and a good conscience when men judge gain godlinesse judge gain Religion and measure all things by this it cannot but make great divisions Many of those Hereticks in former times were so discontent they missed that worldly greatnesse and pomp they expected which made Austin put this in the definition of an Heretick that he doth beget or follow new opinions Alicujus temporalis commodi gratiâ for the sake of some temporal advantage Lastly There is an occasional cause but not efficient and that hath been the tyranny and scandalous lives of Church-officers This hath many times made sad rents Church-officers by their loose lives and rigid cruelty have made schismes and then they cry out of them and punish them One cause of Tertullians Montanizing was the loose lives of the Roman Clergy We see by Christs Parable Luke 12.45 it 's no new thing for such Officers to rule in Christs house as shall drink and be drunk and beat their fellow-servants putting off the thoughts of their Masters coming Therefore the bloody cruelty or licentious prophane lives of those that have ruled in the Church have made a just cause of troubles and divisions neither are those that make the division then to be blamed if it be in that which is good and after a good manner but the actings and lives of such Church-officers I should speak of the final causes but they will come in afterwards Vse 1. Of Instruction That Vnity and Catholick consent is not a sure mark of a Chu●ch or divisions a note of a false oxe The Papists they think they strike us to the ground by this You Protestants are fallen into manifold Sects they will reckon up fourscore factions Now this indeed is a very plausible objection but it might have been cast upon the Church of Corinth and upon the primitive Churches As for the Protestants they that take themselves to be so indeed for Socinians and others we own them not they differ not in fundamentals In matter of Church-goverment or Rites of Religion there may be some discrepancy but in fundamental Articles they consent And as for Papists themselves their Writers have factions and bitter strifes one with another as might be shewed at large They have no such consent as the vulgar people are made to believe Do not therefore be scandalized to see diversity of factions and opinions What grief is it to hear people say one is of this way and another is of that way who can tell what is true and so they grow very Atheists If thy faith were sound this would not stagger thee God hath wise ends in suffering of these breaches Vse 2. Take heed whom you call factious and seditious for if men go no farther than to strive for the true Doctrine against errors or the power of godlinesse against prophanenesse and that in a prudent and orderly way this is no faction but zeal Christ himself made these divisions Father against sonne and son against father to disquiet Satans kingdome to bring sinne to a due punishment to make a cord as Christ did to cast out all prophanenesse and superstition out of the Church of God This is still no faction but true zeal and love to God Vse 3. Of Admonition to those that are or would be accounted godly be humble modest keep your places God hath put you in Oh think it had been better thou hadst never been born than to make any sinfull divisions in the Church I say sinfull For to divide from sinne and Idolatry is a necessary duty onely be sure hat be sinne and Idolatry which thou callest so All that reproach and scandal which comes to Religion and godlinesse by divisions will in a great measure fall on thee Take up Jonahs resolution when he saw the tempests and winds did rise because of him Take and throw me into the sea for I have sinned If godly men cannot be of one mind yet humility moderation pure ends and love to the Word and Ministry will much further it for the divisions of Reuben were great searchings of heart Cursed be their fury for in their anger they dug down a wall yea they tore the body of Christ Are ye not carnal and walk as men The Apostle had proved they were carnal and so incapable subjects for the sublimer Mysteries of Christ by an enumeration of severall sinnes that did necessarily demonstrate this upon which he makes a repetition or re-inforcement of the Conclusion to be proved Are ye not carnal Where the Interrogation doth put more quickness and sharpness into his words And for the further amplification and shame of them he addeth Do ye not walk as men As if he had said What a reproach and dishonour is it to you who are called of God who have put on Christ who are sanctified by his Name to be as other men of the world Passionate as they are Covetous earthly envious and quarrelsome as they are In the Scripture the word man or according to a man hath severall significations Sometimes it is put for love and mildness Thus God said in Hosea Hos 11.4 He drew them by the cords of a man that is love And so to chastise with the rod of man 2 Sam. 7.14 is to do it moderately and mercifully At other times the Phrase to speak after a man denotes to use any similitude or Comparison from matters used amongst men Gal. 3.15 But most frequently the word is used in a debasing way Either for frailty and misery As What is man And That they may know themselves to be but men Psal 9.20 Ye shall die like men Or else for that which is sinfull and wicked because man is wholly corrupted and plunged into all sin Rom. 6.19 Hos 6.9 So that to call one a man or to say a man you name all sinne and misery at the same time Oh how should this debase and vilifie the proudest and higest of men How should this make them look upon themselves as worse then Toades or Serpents in many respects And in this sense it is used here Walk ye not as men in opposition to God his Power and Holiness which he demonstrated in all Believers Doct. That all those who are named Christians and would be accounted so yet walke and live as those that are more than meer men They must not
live according to the wayes ignorance folly and customes of the world They are to shine as lights amongst a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.14 Pure Religion is said to keep it self unspotted from the world Jam. 1.27 All the wicked and ungodly wayes in it are not to defile and soil him As they speak of a River called Alpheus that emptieth it self in the Sea yet even in the very Sea it keepeth its sweetnesse and is not made salt and brackish as the waters of the Sea are They are in the world but not of it Hence Rom. 12. Be ye not conformed unto the fashion of the world but be transformed in your minds Here you may see who are men of the best fashion in a place not men of the greatest wealth honours or earthly dignity but who do not conforme to the fashion of the world that hath not the cursing swearing lying uncleannesse and all the works of darknesse that the world is said to lie in Let us improve this Doctrine and I know no truth a sharper sword to enter into your bowels than this For generally men think it a disgrace not to live as most men do what to grow so precise and strict as not to do as others do They are afraid to own such to be thought such Oh what Antipodes are such men to the Scripture Either lay down the name of a Christian or else live above what men of the world do As Alexander said to a souldier named Alexander Either lay aside his name or else do valiant acts Matth. 5. If ye love them that love you what singular thing do ye do not even the publicans the same Mark that there is a godly singularity and the people of God must be singular not do so or live so as most men in the world do The Apostle in this phrase To live as men or According to man may imply these things First Meer men have no divine faith in the matters of Religion wrought in them by the Spirit of God but walk according to the natural dictates of conscience and education and so are for that Religion which they have been brought up in and accustomed to whether it be right or wrong whether good or bad This our Saviour cleareth when Peter made that excellent Confession of Faith That Christ was the Sonne of God our Saviour graciously accepts of it and tels him Flesh and bloud hath not revealed this to him Mat. 16.17 So that then men walk as men in all matters of Religion when they have no more than custome or the countenance of the Laws of the Land where they live no more than flesh and blood hath made known to them Thus we see the Jews the Turks the Papists they all wilfully adhere to the Religion they have been used to and so many Christians believe in Christ upon no better grounds than they do in their falsehoods Be not then any longer such men and servants of men as the Apostle cals it that is to believe the tru●hs of Religion upon humane authority humane motives That our Saviour meaneth when he bids us Call no man master on earth because Christ is the only Master Mat. 23.8 Not that the instruction and teaching of Church officers is to be rejected as some absurdly would inferre from those places for we are commanded to hear them and to enquire for the truth at their mouth only it 's not a divine faith till it be upon divine grounds Not as the word of men but as the word of God 1 Thess 2.13 It 's a sad thing to consider how many walk as men in this respect being in matter of Religion without any eyes of their own as if another mans faith were to justifie them and not their own Secondly To walk as a meer man is to propound some outward inferiour comforts as the ultimate end and chief felicity of our souls Take a man as a meer man and the utmost end for which he labours and strives in this world is some earthly advantages Oh but what saith the Apostle of true Christians We walk not by sense but by faith 2 Cor. 5.7 And we behold not the things that are seen but the things that are not seen What made Moses deny all that earthly greatnesse he might have had in Pharaohs Court Who would have made such a choise as he did To suffer reproaches for Christ rather than the pleasures of Aegypt Why is this Because he saw him that was invisible and had an eye to the recompence of reward Heb. 11. See then Moses more than a man he propounds to himself as the greatest happinesse the enjoyment of God and communion with him And as the Sunne puts out the lesser light of the starres so this good in God obscured that in all earthly things Then therefore men walk as men when they look no further than the good things of this life riches honours earthly pomp and greatnesse and as for the enjoyment of God which is indeed the true end that they come short of Oh do not then walk as men any longer placing all your affections thoughts and desires in inferiour comforts Is this to have your conversation in Heaven Is this to sit with Christ in heavenly places Is this to make God your portion Is not this rather to have the Serpents curse upon you to lick up the dust of the earth and to mind earthly-things Thirdly To walk as meer men is to put confidence and hope onely in second causes and visible instruments not trusting the promise of God or believing his power that he reigneth and ruleth in Heaven and earth doing what he pleaseth This is not only to walk as men but as the wise men and most admired men in the world The Scripture brings in the thoughts of the wise men as if God sate in Heaven and did not judge all things as he pleased The fool hath said in his heart and that fool is every meer man there is no God Psal 14.1 No Judge no Governour Therefore they look only to instruments to second causes and they puff up themselves and grow insolent when they have these bladders to swim with As on the other side they sink even as Pharaohs hoast into despair when such outward props are taken away Know then that all thy dedejections cares and doubtfull thoughts either about thy self or the publick they argue thee to walk as a meer man Our Saviour doth excellently shame his Disciples for this when using several Arguments to the Disciples against their distrust and carefulnesse he tels them Such things the Gentiles and Heathens seek after Mat. 6.7 So that to walk as men is to be affected in our own particular or in the publick good as if there were no promise no God as if men were Omnipotent as if men brought about all things When Melancthon was often dejected about the affairs of the Church being prone to distrust and fears Luther told him That God had bound
Apostle Paul though he be an eloquent Apollo More spiritual matter this Text will also afford only I must first answer that Question Whether the Corinthians did indeed set up these eminent godly men as Heads of Parties or whether his meaning was that they set up many false Apostles and became factious Disciples to such only the Apostle spareth to name them thinking it wisdome to do so and instanceth in himself and other Pillars teaching them hereby that if such as were faithfull and godly ought not to be exalted how much less corrupt and false Teachers Some are for the Affirmative and some for the Negative but I think both Expositions may well be joyned together For the Corinthians some of them did too much glory in Paul and Apollo and set them up Otherwise Why should Paul bless God so much for that Providence that he had baptized so few For men were apt to set up those that baptized them as if they had been baptized into their name Therefore certainly the Corinthians did sinfully rest and glory in such as Paul Wherfore he takes them off and excellently concludes Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord 1 Cor. 1.13 Thus the first Exposition is true Then that the other also is true that although Paul instanceth in himself and others yet therby meaning other ambitious Teachers that affected Disciples appeareth also 1 Cor. 4.6 where he saith He had by a Figure transferred those things to himself and Apollo for their sakes That is for their Instruction to teach them that they must not think of Paul and Apollo above what they should as many of them did much less of false ambitious corrupt Teachers as many others also did This explained we may observe two more Doctrines 1. That it is not lawfull for Christians to call themselves by the Name of any men though never so Eminent so as to build on them Christ and his Truth are the foundation we must build upon The Apostles indeed are called the foundations Rev. 22.14 but they were immediately inspired and they were but secondary foundations fundamenta fundata not fundamemta fundantia as Divines say So that we are not Believers in Paul or Peter We are not the Apostles Believers much less the Fathers or any Doctors and Teachers in the world That is our Saviours meaning when he saith Call no man Master but Christ Mat 23 8. It is true this Doctrine is abused by some as is to be shewed when I come to speak of those who said they were of Christ viz. in a sinfull factious way They were not for Paul or Apollo or any Ministers they cryed down all the Ministry They are for Christ to teach them immediately But thus farre the Doctrine is true we may not be called after any mans name We are not to set up any Persons or Councils in Christs stead We are not to believe in them Homines non debent aedificari super homines said Austin For the opening of this let us Consider First The Names that Christians have had in the New Testament and afterwards in the Church For by wise Names we come to know the nature of things And First Christ did often call those that followed him his Disciples Thus He that would be his Disciple must hate Father and Mother for his sake And when the Apostles are sent out their Instruction is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples Indeed there are the seventy Disciples who were in a Church-Office next the Apostles but every follower of Christ his Doctrine and way was called a Disciple but it is Christs Disciples They were never called the Apostles Disciples or any mans Disciples And certainly this doth excellently denote what Christians should do viz. Take that duty which God from Heaven commanded us concerning Christ Hear him Mat. 17.5 a Disciple is not to dispute but to believe A Disciple is wholly to learn and receive from his Master And oh how excellent would this be if every Christian would thus hearken to what Christ saith If thou art Christs Disciple learn of him how to live how to walk how to obey Lean not to thy own understanding Lean not to others for only Christ is Truth Another Name and that most frequent was Believers Christians are often called by this title None more frequent And this also doth difference Christians from all other sects in the world All the Philosophers they affected to be knowing men not believing Averroes by scorn called Christians credentes Believers For such as he affected to know the Causes of things and to inquire in the hidden secrets of Nature counting it a disgrace to believe upon meer Authority Thus Julian upbraided Christians with their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 believe only Hence Rom. 1. The preaching of Christ was accounted foolishness to the Gentiles They sought for wisdome for strong demonstrations but the Apostles meerly declaring and preaching such Doctrines were accounted foolish bablers So that to be a Believer doth denote the captivating of our understandings unto the Word of God and every sublime thought or reasoning that doth exalt it selfe And certainly if a Christian would think how much he is to submit his understanding to believe the Doctrines of the Scripture it would much inable him also to believe the Promises for the Church in general or in particular for his own self Faith of assent would breed Faith of fideucial adherence Should it be so great a matter to believe that God will raise up the Church when it hath no help Or subdue thy corruptions when thou believest greater matters in Doctrine As the Trinity That God was made man the resurrection of the body This is an excellent point to be pressed though not so proper here Another Name often attributed to Christians is Saints The Saints at Corinth and in many places Oh the very Name of this title should strike blasting and confusion into man Art thou a Saint-lyer a Saint-drunkard a Saint-Blasphemer All that are Christians should be Saints and Holy And therefore the Scripture cals them by that Name Not that all will be holy in a Church no There will be tares as well as Wheat Nor that we are to depart from a Church where wicked men are not cast out Or that the Sacraments are to be administred to none but who are truly godly though they be free from gross sinnes These things cannot be inferred only Christians are called to be Saints and are Saints by Calling and so should be in their lives Oh consider this you who are prophane Beasts and tremble at it But the most famous and distinguishing Name of the people of God is Christians They were first called so at Antioch saith the Scripture Act. 11.26 Some have questioned whether others did not then put this Name upon them by scorn and reproach because Christ was crucified or whether they themselves did not voluntarily take upon them this Name as being a glory and honour to
them I rather think the latter because it 's used as a Name of honour If any man suffer as a Christian saith Peter 1 Pet. 1.3 Now this title Christian is of great importance Many are apt to say As they are a Christian when there is no reall Christianity in them For to be a Christian is as much as to be one anointed For as Christ was so called because annointed with all Graces in an unlimited manner so every Member of Christ is called a Christian because anointed with Graces Oh then thou that gloriest in that thou art no Heathen no Infidel no Jew but a Christian consider whether this be not a vain boast For is thy prophaneness thy wickedness thy impieties the anointing of Gods Spirit So that to have the reall power of Christianity is a difficult and straight work In after times the title Christian still continued And although they were sometimes called Cornelians from Cornelius Cyrillians from Cyrillus and Joannitae from John Chrysostome Eustathiani from Eustathius yet they did not own these Names And as Heresies began to rise up in many places some teaching one thing some another the Christian that kept to the true Faith that was constantly and universally believed in all the ages of the Church beginning from Christ and the Apostles times was called Catholique or universall in which sense he said Christianus mihi nomen Catholicus cognomen So that to be a Catholique was to believe that Faith which had been universally taught first by Christ and the Apostles afterwards by faithfull men in all ages And for the Papist to call himself a Catholique when the Roman Church hath so manifestly degenerated from the Apostolical and Scripture Doctrine and for them to make the Roman and the Catholique Church all one is as absurd as if a man should call London or England all the world The Papist therefore is no Catholique in a true sense because he cannot prove his Faith by the Apostolical Doctrine in the Scripture yea accuseth the Scripture as insufficient And some of their learned men have confessed that if they should try thir cause by the Scripture meerly it was gone I shall instance in one famous Name given to such who truly own Christ and his Truths and that is Protestants They were called thus not many years since in Luther's time whereas the Orthodox had got some indulgence for the profession of their true Religion and pure worship The Popish party did importune the Emperour of Germany to make an Edict at Worms and afterwards at Spires That no Religion should be publickly professed and owned but the Roman The Lutheran Party both Noblemen and others made a Solemn Protestation against that unjust Decree and ever since all that reformed from Popery have been called Protestants So that all those who have a compliance with Popery that admire their way in their heart or act by their principles cannot truly be called Protestants Thus you have heard the chief names by which Christians are called And still after no mans name And whereas Papists call us Lutherans Calvinists c. we indeed own Luther and Calvin and such men for worthy and famous instruments of Gods glory in their time but it is their calumny to call us after their Names It is true a man by way of difference or distinction he may say a Lutheran and Calvinist to denote some peculiar opinion but to own any man as an Author of our Faith or the foundation of Religion is not consistent with true Christianity There are pregnant Reasons for this First Because as our faith in regard of the efficient cause is the gift of God so the object and motive of it must be Gods authori●y because he speaks and revealeth such things Humane faith is because a man sa●●h such a thing divine faith because God saith so Now see how carefull the Apostle was that the Churches faith should not be in humane wisdome but in the mighty power of God And so the Thessalonians received it not as the word of man but as the word of God 1 Thess 2.13 The Apostle saith They had not dominion of their faith 2 Cor. 1.24 They were not able to make any Articles of Faith necessary to be believed You see then none may be called after men we are not their Disciples their believers for that which resteth on men is but an humane faith and we ought to have a divine faith Men indeed may be instruments to propound the things to be believed but the motive is a divine testimony because God saith so Solomon by his wisdome declared to which woman the childe belonged to but he did not cause the affections of the mother to the child So faithfull Officers of the Church may declare the truth of God but they cannot work faith in thee Secondly Therefore we may not be called after men to build on them because we are not baptized into any mans name and we are onely to professe those in whose name we are baptized into 1 Cor. 1.13 Paul doth powerfully urge this Argument why they might not say they were of Paul because they were not baptized into the name of Paul So then his Disciple thou art and his badge thou onely art to wear in whose name thou wert baptized and that is not into the name of a man but the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost Thirdly The Apostle presseth another Argument Was Paul crucified for you Did Paul die for you 1 Cor. 1.13 His meaning is In him onely we are to believe who is able to make our reconciliation with God who hath wrought our Redemption for us And therefore it 's a very high sinne to build your faith on a man It 's to make him a Saviour it 's to put him in Christs room Fourthly Our Apostle urgeth a further Argument in the same Chapter He that glorieth let him glory in the Lord And Christ is made unto us Wisdome So all boasting in men is to be excluded as well as boasting in works Oh but what is the cause of so many errors of so many divisions It 's from boasting in men such a man and such a man and by this meanes the glory due to God is taken away Fifthly The Scripture makes it a great sinne in matters of Religion and the worship of God to be servants of men 1 Cor. 7.23 Now what is it to be a servant of men when as bruit beasts we are wholly led at the command of others believe what they bid us believe worship with such worship as they command yet this hath been an universal sinne in all ages of the Church Men nuzzled in ignorance and pleasing themselves in their folly have without any judgement or information from Gods Word taken such a Religion and followed such a Worship as hath been imposed upon them Hence they have been sometimes of one Religion and sometimes of another because they have been servants to men and not Disciples of Christ
their ministerial actions to plant and to water To begin the foundation of Christianity and afterwards to build a superstruction So that Pauls planting supposeth the Corinthians to be a barren untilled and confused people like the world at first a Tohu and a Bohu a meer horrid wildernesse till the Gospel being planted among them they become a pleasant Garden and a fruitfull Field From whence we may observe That it's Gods unspeakable goodnesse sometimes to send his Word and plant his Gospel among a people that never heard or knew any thing before If you consider all the Countreys and Kingdomes wheresoever the Gospel hath taken effect since Christs time you shall find that they were thrones of Satan places where Idolatry reigned They were like those desolate places the Prophet speaks of where the Satyr and screech-Owl even all black and Heathenish confusion did exalt it self So that where God doth out of stones raise up children to Abraham turn a Paganish Heathenish people into a Church there is wisdome power and goodnesse no lesse yea more wonderfull than when he did out of that deformed confusion and chaos make a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a beautifull adorned world Even this England this ancient Britain was once a place of horrible Idolatry Paganism no knowledge of Christ nor his Gospel But served dumb Idols and walked according to the course of this world having the Prince of darknesse ruling over us as in other places So that the Gospel that is like the glorious Sunne and every Kingdome or Nation is like a do●esome black dungeon yea like an hell where Legion of Devils are till the beams of this light do enlighten them To amplifie this Doctrine many things are observable First That when the Apostle saith That he planted the Gospel it doth suppose all people to be a wilde barbarous people till the Gospel both civilizeth and sanctisieth them To plant is properly of Orchards and Gardens and Vineyards and supposeth the great care and skill of him that plants Thus God is said to plant Eden Gen 2.8 And so a people are made the Church and people of God by plantation by Gods goodnesse and power of themselves they are like wilde beasts not knowing the way of happinesse It was the custome of the Grecians and Romans because they had the culture of Arts and good Civil Government to call other people Barbari Barbarians And thus the Apostle opposeth the Grecians and Barbarians together Col. 3.11 Barbarous comes from the Hebrew Bar g●minated that signifieth a field untilled a desart so they looked upon all other men in the world But indeed even the Grecians and Romans were barbarous wild people comparatively till the Gospel came among them They had no true knowledge or understanding till the Word the Rule of all wisdome was discovered to them Oh how should this make us of England magnifie the goodnesse of God to this Land who once had no Ministry of Christ who were like so many lumps of earth that worshipped the Devil and the Idols of the world They had their Dryades wh●ch Julius Caesar speaks of that were like Witches serving for their Priests that lived up and down in woody places Why might not we have been born in those days while Britany was Paganish and Heathenish Antiquity in Religion is no good plea for here was Idolatry and the worship of the Devil before any knowledge of Christ It 's a great mercy to be born in such times in such an age and in such places where the name of Christ is published for this is wholly in Gods disposal he hath determined to all men the times of their life and habitations Secondly Consider That in the Old Testament God did limit his gracious presence to the Jews only In Judea only was salvation and the knowledg of God John 4 That was the Goshen where light was all the world else was darknesse Indeed some few particular persons that were forrainers and strangers became proselytes and gave up their names to God but there were no Countreys or Nations received the Word of God but Judea onely But when Christ came then that partition wall was broken down and after his death he gave a Commission to preach the Gospel to all the world And thus the Word like the Sunne in the Heavens went from one end of the world to another and none could hinder the course thereof Yea where Roman Emperours power and sword could not get dominion there the Apostles and their Successours conquered and prevailed And this and no other is the Universal Grace the Scripture speaketh of whereas formerly it was particular Then Christ the strong man came and bound the Devil who had possessed the earth and kept it in quiet slavery to him so that under the times of the Gospel Christ hath been made known where God hath sent his Word though it were into the utmost parts of the earth Thirdly Therefore that there might be spiritual plantations and holy Colonies the Lord Christ appointed extraordinary Officers furnished with extraordinary abilities to propagate the Gospel These were called Apostles It was for the Apostles and not ordinary Officers to plant Churches so that they had a Commission to go and preach to any people in the world They were not bound to keep residence at any one place but to go from Nation to Nation to disseminate the spiritual seed of the Gospel and that like mustard seed at first small and little presently grew up to a tall tree and spreaded its branches through the whole world And as the Apostles had this universal commission so they were endued with power to work wonderfull miracles for miracles were because of the Heathens and unbelievers By these they confirmed their Doctrine and calling to be of God immediately yet this was not so tied to the Apostolical Office but that in af●er ages many Countreys have received the Gospel by other means especially persecution and the patient sufferings of Christians did much help thereunto That as a captive Maid was a means to bring Naaman to the knowledge of God and his Worship so captive persons have been instrumental to make whole K●ngdoms acquainted with the Gospel of Christ Thus God hath alwayes disappointed the hopes of wicked men and that very way whereby they have thought to destroy the Gospel it hath flourished more It 's the Vine that by pruning hath increased As the grain of corn except it die cannot bring forth any fruit so is it with the Gospel These precious herbs the more they are pressed and pounced the sweeter smell they make Fourthly Gods severity and mercy hath been observable about the first planting of the Gospel For when a people have lived rebelliously and sinfully under it a long time then he takes it away and gives it to another Nation Thus God began with the Jews told them That to them the Word must be fi●st preached but seeing they had rejected the counsel of God they were to go
they shall have more gracious strength that they shall grow up into further Communion with Christ that their hearts and graces shall be better Oh! How heartily doth the soul pray for these things and grieve when it finds a defect Now God hath promised this to those that abour in his work Lastly They are sure to have Gods Protection and Presence to support them in all their labour The Apostle cals it labour and that which is accompanied with painfulnese And indeed the whole work of grace is very troublesome to flesh and blood their Combates and Conflicts within and then very troublesome to man without in the world which makes the world hate and oppose them Now then the work of God being thus opposed within and without did not God protect did not he draw nigh with his support and deliver or strengthen none were able to abide Thus you see a three-fold encouragement the godly have to labour for the Lord even in this life Oh! Why then should any be so diffident as to think they shall lose by God that godliness will be an hinderance to them Do but be sure that thy work is Gods work and thou doest it in Gods manner and never fear the issue of things God is not unrighteous saith the Apostle to forget your sufferings Heb. 6.10 You read that God put up all Davids teares into his bottle As Christ would not have the least fragment of bread lost so God will not let thee lose one mite for him Thou shalt never say God hath hindered thee When Abraham for Gods glory would take none of the King of Sodoms wealth God presently said to him I am thy exceeding great reward Gen. 15. In the next place consider What is the eternal Reward and how eye hath not seen nor hath it entred into the heart of man to conceive If the Queen of Sheba's spirit fainted within her to see all the glory of Solomon what then would it do to behold all the glory of God laid up for those that love him This is like Ezekiel's waters that rise up higher and higher God by reason of the sovereignty he hath over us and because we are his creatures having all from him might have commanded all our work and labour and given us nothing when we had done yea he might have annhilated us immediately into our first nothing for we were his servants more then any can be servants to men And our Saviour saith What Master though his Servant hath been at work will bid him sit down presently and not rather command him to wait on him Doth he thank that servant after he hath done what is commanded Luk. 17.9 Now then if God who might have given us no reward shall yet out of his bounty give us a recompence and that not only in this life but so glorious an one in the life to come Here the soul may be amazed and cry out It 's streightned It 's streightned within it self not able to speak of the bounless love of God! For consisider how great a Reward it is First It is God himself communicating his goodness and comfort to him that hath done his work Then shall we be with the Lord for ever This is called seeing of God and seeing him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 No longer as in a glass It 's disputed Whether formal Happiness consists in the acts of the understanding as knowing of God or in the acts of the will loving of him and embracing of him But we conclude in both So that this reward being God himself as he told Abraham it is infinite as he is and as God himself is inestimable Et tunc dignè eum aestimans quando inaestimabilem dicimus quicquid de Deo dici potest eo ipso est indignum quia dici potest Thus it is of the reward The great mercy covenanted in the Promise is That God will be our God and this is compleated in Heaven Secondly This reward lieth in the full glorification of the soul in all the faculties thereof and body in all the parts thereof The spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12. There needs no more grace no more holiness There is no more sin or remorse about it It 's like the higher Region where no troublesome meteor's are Oh! What a bottomless subject is this That thy understanding should have no more darkness in it Thy will no more disobedience in it Thy heart no more dulness or sluggishness in it Oh! you would think we were speaking of some Platonical Idea or metaphysical abstraction and not of a reallity indeed But yet the Scripture assures the godly of this Reward And then for the body it 's made a glorious body all vileness and loathsomeness is removed It 's an immortal body No more death paines or any distempers This Honour will God put upon those that labour for him Thirdly The Eternity of this happiness that is astonishing also We shall be with the Lord for ever 1 Thes 4.17 Come ye blessed inherit everlasting glory Oh! Who would think much of the present service or labour for God when it will bring an eternal weight of Glory Think what eternity is if we poor mortals that measure all things by time can tell how to think about it Fourthly The fulness of this happiness an aggregation of all things that may make happy either within or without Therefore in the Scripture it 's represented by all those things that are glorious in the world a Kingdom a Crown a great Feast Jerusalem from above is paved with all precious stones This is only to lift up our hearts and to say of all earthly glory Alas what is this to heavenly If the taste of this if drops be so much what then is the Ocean Fifthly Consider the vast disproportion of this to those works thou dost for God What equality is there between God and all those glorious Priviledges and those duties thou doest How can any plead merit or worth Where can there be any trusting in our selves Oh! you that think to be saved for your Prayers Alms-deeds you know not what a great and glorious thing salvation is If a man should have all the world given him for lifting up a straw it 's no such disproportion as here is For 1. The one is infinite and thou art a finite limited creature The Angels are not found pure in his sight and what hope hast thou 2. What work thou doest for God God he first works it in thee so that thou labourest for him of his own and yet he rewards it 3. What thou doest for him it 's accompanied with much evil and many imperfections Bona meaneque mea sunt neque purè bona sunt There is four leaven still abiding in thee 4. Thou hast formerly been a servant to Satan done his work so that God might damn thee upon the old score though thou wert now able to do all things perfectly 5. Whatsoever thou hast
Ministry he would gather a people to himself And First This is a fit and an accommodated way to our natures When God sends men of the same mould and subject to the same affections this may the more easily draw us When God delivered the Law himself it was with such terrour and majesty that they desired that God would not himself speak any more to them so that meer men would not be able to bear the immediate approaches of the Divine Majesty to them Hence in the Old Testament when any divine apparition was made they presently concluded they should die immediately Can any see God and live Thus then it 's Gods goodnesse and love to appoint men of the same mould to be his messengers to importune you in his stead This is more sutable to you As the Fowler catcheth many birds by one decoy a bird of the same feather or rather as the Apostle argueth concerning Christ It became us to have such an High-priest that could be sensible of our condition and compassionate with us Heb. 7. Thus it is here it becometh us to have such to bring us home unto God that are affected with our estates that have the same temptations in them as other men Hence the more experience Gods Ministers have of the work of grace the temptations of Satan the deceitfulnesse of sinne the more fit they are to comfort others or to deliver them out of snares As face answereth face so the heart of man answereth another Prov. 27.19 Secondly He may do it to oblige us and tie us to his instituted means It 's a great caveat in the Scripture and frequently urged No man must follow the imagination of his own heart And in the New Testament many Commands To obey them that watch over them in the Lord and to submit to them for their workes sake Heb. 13. Thus also in the Sacrament God though he be not bound to them he can work grace as he pleaseth yet he hath bound us Therefore that no man might neglect or despise the Ministry thinking What needeth this preaching I may have grace by immediate revelations God is not tied to these externals Now God would prevent such loose principles and bind us up to his instituted way he will bind us though he is not bound Thirdly Her●by God would exercise the humility meeknesse and obedience of men Oh it 's a great matter for men to submit to Gods institution These are Sh●pherds they are Guides they are Watchmen they are to instruct to exhort to rebuke and that sharply as occasion may serve Now how many men do abhorre and disdain this thinking all such Church-subjection worse than Turkish slavery The Scripture indeed commends to the Ministers of God much patience much meeknesse and that they should not Lord it over Gods heritage 1 Pet. 5.3 But it 's hard to discharge all ministerial duties especially that of powerfull reproving of sinne and Church-censures and not to have this accounted pragmatical lordlinesse As they said to Lot He will needs be a Judge over us Gen. 19 9. because he opposed them in their wickednesse Hereby then God will try thy humility and exercise thee if thou canst submit to those wayes God hath instituted in his Church not scorning to be either instructed or rebuked by such Fourthly That men might be the more inexcus●ble For if thou art not now converted and turned from thy sinne who shall plead for thee We may take up that of the Apostle you need not say Who shall ascend up into Heaven or descend into the lowermost parts of the earth For the Word is near you and nigh unto you Yea the Scripture maketh it a mercy when we have men of our own tongue and not a strange one that delivereth the Word unto us Oh then how speechlesse wilt thou be at the great day when God shall arraign thee Why hast thou not left thy sinnes Why hast thou not forsaken thy evil wayes Did I not send Messengers of thy own flesh and bloud Did they not speak in a tongue thou knowest and understoodest Why then have ye been rebellious Oh think of this for there is no sinne that God will punish so severely as that his Messengers have come away doing no good to a people God will one day make you know what it is to have a labourer for him amongst you Then shall they know they had a Prophet among them Ezek. 33.33 Then when they shall be punished more than any other people in the world Then when in their own consciences they shall be convinced Oh we heard these things we were told of these things but rejected them Fifthly God will hereby declare his power so much the more For God to have labourers with him doth not derogate from his power but advanceth it the more for when you see him work those divine and admirable effects by such a contemptible way in the judgment of flesh and bloud hereby God is the more set up We have this treasure in earthly vessels that the power may be of God 2 Cor. 4.7 Hence Paul cals it The foolishnesse of preaching 1 Cor. 1.21 that which is so mighty through God to confound the great things and wise things of the world he cals it The foolishnesse of preaching because in carnal reason it is so both in regard of the matter and the means or messengers thereof God could have immediately and suddenly destroyed Jericho with his command but he would have them compasse the City seven times and blow with Rams horns and then the wals must fall down Now Gods using such unlikely means made his power the more apparent which made the Apostle say Our weapons are not carnal but spiritual but because they are spiritual may they not be despised No they are mighty to the casting down of the strong holds of sinne and whatsoever doth lift up it self 2 Cor. 10.5 Now to this there needs one Caution to be added viz. That this connexion between the labour of the Minister and Gods working is not natural necessary and perpetual Paul may plant and Apollo may water yet God give no increase We may work and yet neither the presence or power of God be therein It 's not here as in the works of nature there God hath made a perpetual and unalterable Decree where such and such causes work he will also work but this is not so As for the Lutherans who will not acknowledge that the Ministry and Gods Spirit are ever divided neither in the Sacraments Baptism for example will allow a Baptismus externus and internus I know not how to understand them much lesse consent to them Now if you ask When may it fall out that though the Ministry laboureth yet God doth not work with it I have spoken to this already Reasons may be on Gods part the Ministrers and the peoples I shall onely speak to the hearers this two-fold duty if they would have God work with us if you would
this means they who are indeed of this building of this field they are more happy then all others in the world for God is in covenant with them To them only God is their God and they his people And when the Psalmist had spoken of all external felicity saying Happy are the people that are in such a case he addeth Yea happy are the people whose God is the Lord Psal 144.15 So then we cannot name a greater Prerogative and Priviledge then to be in such a relation all that God hath is their's his wisdom power and goodness Only by the way take notice that many are externally of this husbandry this building that are not internally and therefore such have not the Promises made good to them in all respects How hardly can we say of many people They are Gods building Yea they are rather the Devils Den and his Hell But more of this hereafter Fourthly It supposeth care love and protection This floweth from the other Propriety causeth care and love among men What cares a man for another mans Field another mans Corn but he looketh to his own He weedeth that he fenceth that he keepeth that from all violence And this certainly should encourage the godly in their conflict with sinne Oh! they complain of the weeds thornes that grow up in their heart that choak the good seed let them remember they are Gods as well as their own and it belongs to him It 's for his honour and glory to have these thornes pulled up It makes for Gods praise that thy heart be a room swept and kept clear for him to lodge in Oh! urge this in Prayer O Lord am I not thy husbandry Is not my soul thy building Why then lieth it thus ruinous Why is it neglected by thee It 's not only my comfort my happiness but thy glory and honour is interested in this Come we in the next place to consider the several similitudes And First Ye are Gods Husbandry Take notice that he doth not here speak of the invisible and mystical Church of Christ but as they were a visible Church at Corinth As there was a visible company of men openly and publiquely professing the Faith of Christ and joyning together in an external Communion in holy Ordinances Here is much in this for it sheweth how all our particular Congregations should be what manner of Societies even such as are Gods Husbandry Gods Tillage Building and House This is the great truth that people should hearken after that they walk worthy of such glorious Titles and Relations This Relation of being Gods Husbandry implieth something on his part and many things on ours On his part First That he finds all people of themselves like a barren wilderness and fruitless desert The Curse upon the ground is fulfilled in them to bring forth nothing but briers and thornes All the things of grace and godliness are not only above our natures but contrary to them Even as if a man should see a piece of ground like the very rocks that no Husbandry could ever do any good on it The same are all people when the Word comes at first to them In other expressions it 's called raising up Children to Abraham out of stones And as wild beasts delight to be in the wilderness that is their habitation Thus are all men till converted by the Word so many wild beasts carried away with bruitish lusts in the wilderness of the world which makes the Scripture compare them so often to such things Oh then bewail the roughness and obstinacy in thy heart to what is godly Secondly It supposeth that grace and godliness is wholly planted by God in their souls for this floweth from the other Seeing we are such a barren wilderness what fruit can ever be expected from us All the fruit then of righteousness and godliness doth come wholly from him We of our selves stand like so many rotten fruitless trees to be cursed by God and cut down for the fire but it 's the grace of God that works the beginnings and increase of all godliness in them Marvell not then if you see a people under the sweetest and best seasons of grace to be yet barren and unprofitable for this fruitfulness is only of God Oh we would wonder that a people who know so much who hear so much that have clouds so often raining on them should yet be like so many stones and rocks Oh this is the wrath and judgment of God to be trembled under it For he makes one to grow and not another He causeth grace to spring up in one and not another Thirdly This supposeth that God likewise giveth all the seasons and opportunities of growth and fruitfulness As the Gardiner he looketh to his times when he must water the Plants lest they die The season of the year helpeth to grow as well as the nature of the soil Annus non ager fructificat Hence God when he is angry he threatneth that he will command his clouds not to rain Isa 5. God threatens it as the greatest judgment to deprive a people of the Ministry and s●ason of grace how low and slight thoughts soever people have of it Observe that place Ezek. 7.26 Mischief shall come upon mischief one calamity upon another And what then They shall seek for a Vision of the Prophet but the Law shall perish from the Priest Thus Amos 8.11 When God will make a people a barren and desert Nation then he makes those spiritual heavens like brasse and iron Oh then know that as the natural seasons and times are of his appointment so much more the gracious ones On our parts who are the field to be tilled there are these things First A willingness to have the Word of God prepare and wound our souls even tearing our heart to pieces that so the Word as seed may fructifie This is that the Scripture cals plowing up the fallow ground Jer. 4.3 That is when the Law and Threatnings of the Word enter into our very bowels is like the Plough that makes deep furrows in the heart Oh then that the secure confident and quiet heart that hath thus many years layen quiet and at ease feeling no grief nor trouble may at last be wounded and cut assunder This is not an acceptable pleasing work to you but very necessary it is Could the ground be sensible it would feel the plow making torments and rents in the bowels of it Thus it is here the Law of God the Word of God that comes like a two-edged sword in thy bowels that bloweth like a strong tempest and shakes thy sinnes at the very root Oh expect not healing and peace and comfort till you have been thus disquieted Do not then quarrell at the Word of God but rather bless him for the power of it when it changeth the whole face of a Congregation filleth thee with many sad and anxious thoughts sends thee home enquiring Lord what shall I do What will
of the tongues observation of the peculiar phrases For whereas the matter is sometimes wholly new and supernatural so the words are not alwayes used in the same sense as humane Authours do Comparing also the Context is very usefull and parallel places consulting also with the gifts and abilities of others When Philip asked the Ethiopian Vnderstandest thou what thou readest How can I said he unless I have a guide Act. 8.31 Vse of Admonition to all who take upon them to give the sense and meaning of the word of God let this Text be as a pillar of salt to season thee it 's a dangerous thing to wrest Scripture Thou that puttest it upon the rack God will put thy conscience upon the rack Why dost thou so proudly so arrogantly so boldly meddle in this matter The people of God are not to be kept in ignorance that is a Popish principle but yet they must learn with humility and self-denial with the use of all means necessary He must not be his own master he that is so ●ath a fool to his scholar say the Rabbins and yet this must not be so interpreted but that he who brings truth may resist the whole world as one Paphnutius did an whole Council Vse 2. That it 's not enough to bring Scripture to name many Texts unless we find out also the true and proper sense This makes for the honour and dignity of the Scripture that all would fain authorize their tenents by that It 's no derogation to the Scripture neither may it be called a nose of wax therefore but it exalteth the Scripture the more Vse 3. Of Exhortation to you people as we are to take heed what we deliver so also what you receive what you believe It 's a very hard thing to reconcile these two things To give all the respect and obedience that is due and called for by God to your spiritual guides and teachers and yet to exercise your own faith and judgment likewise He that doth not run into one of these extreams either to neglect the Ministry and to use his own eyes only or else to put out them and rest only upon the eye of his guide is a wise and a solid man Be thou carefull to split upon neither of these rocks but be wa●y what you receive and how you believe Verse 11. For other foundation can no man lay then that is laid which is Jesus Christ THis Text is a Reason of that Caution delivered in the verse before Every man must take heed how he buil●eth Why Because there is no other foundation but Christ To set up any thing in Christs stead or to deliver any thing contrary unto Christ this is here reproved So that in the words Christ is described secondly the Ministers duty about him declared Christ is described 1. By his proper Name Jesus a Saviour of his people 2. By his Office Christ the Messiah the anointed one 3. Metaphorically the foundation sometimes Christ is called the foundation and sometimes the corner stone and all is to one sense to shew that he only supports the spiritual building whether we mean the Church in general or every soul in particular Now it 's true the Apostles Ephes 2. and Rev. 21. are called the foundation also but theirs is Fundamentum fundam●ntorum as Austin or fundamentum fundans and fundamentum fundatum The Apostles are only foundations that are built upon another foundation viz. Christ Or else the Apostles might be called a foundation because of their Doctrine in which sense Peter is called a rock And Christ saith he would build his Church on him viz. upon that Doctrine confessed by him Mat. 16.18 Though Cameron understandeth it of the person of Peter yet not in the Popish sense but because Peter was to be used as the first Person who should preach the Gospel to the Gentiles so that he is the rock of the Church because on his preaching first was built the declaration of the Gospel to the Gentiles But this I affirm not For you see here he is not only the foundation but the solitary foundation No other Secondly Their is the duty of the Minister Any other can no man lay Can none that is none ought Illud possumus quod jure possumus Observe That the Ministers of God ought to lay no other Foundation then Christ They are to build their people upon no other rock All is to referre to Christ All Threatnings all Promises all Commands all Duties they are to bring to Christ As every thing in the Temple was covered with gold so Christ is to cover all things To be in all things But how is this to be unnderstood We shall shew how many waies Christ is to be preached as a Foundation and you the Hearers are to make use of him in that sense First therefore He is to be laid down as the only foundation in respect of knowledge and instruction We are to preach and set up him as the great Prophet and Teacher of his Church He cals himself the light that came into the world Joh. 8.12 The Ministers they are light but as the Starres do lucere luce alienâ with a borrowed light from the Sunne so neither do the Ministers of the Gospel enlighten any other way but by light from Christ Hence he was prophesied of betimes as the great Prophet whom God would raise up for his Church and for this end he is so often called the Word because he doth reveal unto us Gods will and God from Heaven commanded all to hear him Mat. 17.5 All the Prophets were the Prophets of Christ all the Officers in the new Testament are the Officers of Christ So that we are to declare that all people who expect Instruction Reformation and any profit by the Ministry must not build on man but Christ And this is the chief scope here No man may lay any other foundation No man may set up any other Doctor or Teacher viz. principal but him as is to be seen in the former Chapter And that is the reason say some why Paul doth so often name Jesus Christ in that Chapter And no marvell if he be the foundation for none Teacheth as he both objectively and subjectively We all reveal the Object and propound the Doctrine to your ears though none did so objectively as he did but subjectively none can teach as he He giveth the understanding heart he opens the eyes to see and the ears to hear Never therefore expect the powerfull effect of the Ministry unless thou build on Christ more then the parts of a man The abilities of the man these are but like Gehazi with the Prophets staff they will not raise the dead Child unless Christ come himself It 's true we must not set up a teaching of Christ in opposition to the Ministry as some did They would have no Ministry at all but expect to be taught by him yet as we must necessarily use it so it
gold and silver is there we must dig thence we must replenish our selves Teirdly There is implied the durablenesse and constancy of it Gold will not melt away in the fire or be consumed as hay and stubble will And thus the Apostle alludeth to afterwards He shall be saved so as by fire and the fire shall try every mans work He speaks of a probatory and not a purgatory fire that is afflictions or the light of Gods word shall burn all this stubble So that the truths of God they are so constant and abiding that when a man comes to be afflicted to be persecuted to be undone for the truth of God this will abide What is the chaff to the wheat Jer. 23.28 When a wind comes the chaff is blown away And therefore this should make all very carefull herein both Pastor and people God will have his fire there will be winds and tempests whether it be gold or stubble wheat or chaff then it will be discovered whereas divers and strange erroneous Doctrines they have not been willing to come to the fire Every Heresie in the Church went up and down like Cain trembling left every place of Scripture that met it should kill it Fourthly The truths of Christ are compared to gold and silver Because of the solidity and ponderosity of them they are weighty and heavy Whereas errors are compared to hay and stubble what is lighter than these And therefore such as give way to falshood they are said to be carried away with every wind of Doctrine Ephes 4.14 as if they were so many feathers or straws Whatsoever opinion then is accompanied with vanity levity and emptinesse it 's not solid grave and substantial refuse that It is said Solomons ships they went for gold of Ophir and they brought home pearls Thus do many men they make us if they sought out the admirable and solid truths of God and they bring Peacocks empty gaudy flourishings of wit or curious opinions This is not the weighty and solid truth of God Fifthly They are compared to gold Because of the purity and sincerity in them The truths of God they have an holy simplicity and sincerity and therefore false Teachers are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 2. to corrupt the pure word of God as hucksters do their wine David compareth Gods word to pure gold even seven times refined Psal 19 And hereby it becomes a very dangerous sinne for any to counterfeit it or corrupt it If among men their Laws make it a capital crime to counterfeit or clip their coin certainly God will account it no lesse hainous a sinne to do so with his truths As it's gold for sincerity so it 's compared to the water of life for its purity And as Isaac complained of the Philistims as the greatest injury that could be to stop up his wels with earth and it 's a matter of death to poison a fountain or spring where men use to drink so destructive and hainous a sinne it must be to infect the pure streams of the Sanctuary that people should thereby suck down their own poison Sixthly It 's compared to gold for the efficacy and choice vertue thereof Gold is not only of price and esteem but it hath it's powerfull operations in medicinal wayes against bodily diseases And thus certainly the truths of God are when received by faith they are mighty to the casting down of all the strong holds of sinne they are powerfull to overthrow the greatest oppositions Sanctifie them by thy truth thy word is truth John 17. Thus it 's said Psal 19. To convert the soul as the learned there interpret it is revive the soul to bring life again when a man by discouragements and dejections is even swooning away Oh then these golden truths of Christ they have a special influence upon the heart of a man to revive against faintings to dispel all distempers and to preserve against all languishings Seventhly They are compared to gold and silver For the usefulnesse and profitablenesse to all things Money answereth all things saith the Wiseman Eccles 10.19 Many outward comforts in this world may be had for gold and silver you may have friends food raiment Hence the Heathens made Pluto wealth a god because it wrought all things among men Clausum aur â custodit Jovem Horace spake of the covetous man He keeps his god in his chest And covetousnesse is called Idolatry Col. 3.5 Thus gold and silver prevail in the world And therefore Balaam to expresse his resolvednesse not to curse Israel said Though Balaak would give him an house full of gold yet he would not curse them But alas what are these to the truths of Christ They are profi●able for such things which material gold and silver cannot do Judas when tormented in in his conscience foa sinne What could his thirty pieces of silver comfort him Could that ease his conscience Give gold and silver to the damned men in hell will that comfort them There are many mercies that all the gold and silver in the world cannot help us unto but now there is no condition no doubt no affliction no want but the truths of Christ are very profitable unto The truth of Justification by faith in Christ Is not that more worth than the gold of Ophir What precious and powerfull operations hath it upon the hearts of the godly Eighthly The truths of Christ are compared to gold and precious stones Because they are able to enrich a man with all graces There is spiritual and heavenly wealth as well as earthly and temporal and the truths of God are of the first sort Thus the poor of this world are said to be rich in faith Jam. 2 5. And Christ became poor to make us rich 2 Cor. 8.9 not in outward respects or external greatnesse but in internal and spiritual riches Mark that counsel Revel 3.18 to the Church who thought her self rich and needing nothing I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire that thou mayest be rich Oh that people were spiritual You see here is gold offered to all and he is indeed foolish that refuseth this There is many a man with gold and silver and much wealth in this world and yet is very poor towards God When our Saviour had declared that Parable of Dives and the eternal torment he had after his great pleasures he concludeth So is every man that is rich in the treasures of this world and is not rich towards God Luke 12.21 In the second place To build gold and precious stones on this foundation is not onely to preach sound and pure matter but this matter in a pure and exact way Now this golden way of preaching to be Chrysostoms and Chrysologues indeed consi●eth First In preaching of them after Scripture Authority when they are conveyed unto you as having the stamp and Authority of God The Prophets came with Thus saith the Lord and this like thunder may make the
this is a very deep and secret work but God will manifest it Policy is no policy if the design be not laid deep and secret Therefore Isaiah reproving carnal Politicians saith Woe to them that take deep counsel Isa 29.15 And in other places That cover with a covering but not of my Spirit God hath his time that he will discover the thoughts of the worldly wise to be vain he will make known all the secrets and crafty consultations against his truth and people and he will be avenged for all the Atheism and prophane boldnesse and hardnesse of heart such carnal policy hath been accompanied with For he said well That a Politician was a man that stood upon his head with his heels upwards shaking them against Heaven Well then it 's good for such to remember that ●very work shall be made manifest and when the storm ariseth those cob-webs will be driven away Sixthly Dissimulations and inconstancies in matter of Religion This is a secret work God will manifest Divines call it to be a Nicodemite He came to Jesus by night John 3.2 and durst not openly professe Christ for fear of the Jews There were some who have held That they might do any external acts of Idololatrical worship be at Masse say they believe any thing so that they keep their consciences and minds pure The Priscillianists are noted for wicked dissimulations herein In Ezekiel we reade the Prophet is commanded To dig through the wall to see the women and men committing their religious abominations in private Ezek. 8.8 Now God will bring this hypocrisie to light External profession is nectssary to salvation when the command requireth it as well as inward faith With the heart man believeth and with the mouth confession is made to salvation Rom. 10.10 So that in case of confession it is damnable not to acknowledge the truths of God God gives a great commendation of seven thousand in Ahabs time that had not bowed their knee to Baal 1 King 18.19 They would not dissemble that outward worship commonly there are never more subtil and secret shiftings then in matters of Religion But of that more in time In the next place Consider the aggravation of those sinnes that are secret and hidden For although to be an open bold sinner is in some respects a greater sinner than a close private sinner because hereby there is more dishonour to God more scandal to others and more impudency in the sinner which happily might be the cause of that speech attributed to Athanasius Vtinam omnes essent hypocritae Hence some are reproved for having an whores fore head that they were not ashamed when they had sinned that they b●asted of it yet in many respects these secret sins have terr●ble aggravations 1. It argueth a m●n hath more consciousnesse to himself that he doth not wel● therefore he wou●d not have the world know Now when any man sins with a consciousnesse to himself that he doth sinne this is a bloody aggravation Tremble at this you who live in secret wickednesse Why doest thou keep it so close Why art thou so fearfull Why doest thou as Rachel make a● excuse to cover thy Idols All this argueth the more consciousnesse the more gu●●t in thee Thy conscience is awakened thou hast ●●ruglings and conv●ctions within thee this is to rebel against light this is to stop the mouth o●●hy monitour thy conscience within which the very Heathen could say was a god to every man I tell thee sinning thus against conscience more have despaired than upon any other ground Oh they did thus and they lived thus but all this while they had a consciousnesse to themselves they should do otherwise This hath made them so deep●y possessed though happily upon false grounds that they have sinned against the holy Ghost 2. This secret sinning puts farre more respect and fear upon men than God Thou wilt be unjust in secret thou wilt be unclean in secret Why thou art afraid such men know it Oh thou wicked wretch Art thou afraid of the eye of a man and not of a great God Carest thou not though God see thee whereas thou wouldst hide thy self if man come near thee Thus thou art a coward to man but thou bravest it to God Thou doest in effect say Though God behold though God know though God be acquainted with it I matter it not Oh foolish and unwise Can man damn thee Can man fill thy conscience with terrours Can man bid thee depart into everlasting howlings Why then art thou afraid of man and not God 3. The more secret any wickednesse is it argueth the heart is more studious and industrious ●bout it how to contrive it how to bring it about Of all Davids sins that in the matter of Vriah the Scripture giveth the greatest b●and on it because it was done with such secrecie David did that which was right in the sight of the Lord save in the matter of Vriah 1 King 15.5 and premediation Mark Josh 7.11 how Joshua in Achans sinne observed the secresie and the dissimulation and craft used in it Oh that men and women would consider this thing God takes notice with how much craft and subtilty you commit your sins and none never know it Vse of Admonition Take heed of secret hidden sins God will one day manifest what thou hast been Oh it may be the world thought of all the men that lived thou wouldst never do such and such things but God knoweth thy down-sitting and uprising Whither can you flie from his presence Oh let every one then bewail the plague sore of his own heart When Christ convinced the woman of Samaria of the secret sinne she lived in she crieth out Come and hear one that hath told me all that ever I did John 4. Prevent confusion hereafter at the day of judgment by humble confession of all thy secret sins unto God and he will not then upbraid thee Every mans work shall be made manifest This Proposition hath been handled as a general truth and so is a thunder-bolt against all secret sins what they do in secret God will reward openly The more secresie the more guilt Now I shall consider this Proposition in its limited and restrained sense as it relates to false Doctrines to those that build ha● and stubble where the very expression That it shall be made manifest denoteth That errour for a long time may go undiscerned it may have a counterfeit passe even hay and stubble may be thought gold The false Prophet may get Elijah's mantle and hide himself in it but it shall be made manifest first to the builder and then to the whole world To the builder it may be a manifestation for Direction and Illumination he shall see he was in errour he shall confesse he was seduced and built unprofitable stubble or a mani●estation of confusion He shall be confounded with shame when his nakednesse shall appear and like Adam shall hide himself because of
more A poor man thinketh a little summe of money great treasures For the day shall declare it c. This Text you heard containeth the proportionable Effects or successe which builders wise or foolish have in Gods house And the Apostle first layeth down a general Proposition Every mans work shall be made manifest which hath already been dispatched We therefore now proceed and for this manifestation the Apostle informeth us of the time first and then the manner how The time first in these words For the day shall declare it and of this at this present All the doubt is What the Apostle doth mean by the Day There are some understand it of the Day of death when every man receiveth his particular judgement he shall then know whether his building will abide or no. Others understand it of the Day of Judgement which is called the day of the Lord and that day by an emphasis Bellarmine indeed is positive in this because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used with an Article which signifieth the Day of Judgment but that is false For the time of the Gospel is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 13.12 The night is past the day is at hand c. So that we cannot close with this interpretation because the Apostle carrieth it all the way for this life while we are in this world as will be shewed when we come to explain what is meant by the fire We take therefore Day for no more than Time such a day hath God in his wisdome appointed for the blowing away all this chaff As we see a covering of thatch doth not ordinarily hold long but fire or winde ariseth and cosumeth all Thus the Septuagint sometimes render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Time So that the meaning is Howsoever these errours and false Doctrines may continue yet time at last will discover the vanity and weaknesse of them The Grecian said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Time was the Touchstone the trial of all things And the Latines say Veritas est temporis filia Truth is the daughter of Time The day will declare it that is time will make them manifest onely the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Day doth denote the appointed and set time which God hath for the taking of all such disguises whereas it is the clean contrary with truth The longer that lasts the more it is believed the sufficiency and evidence of it is the more entertained Now although we thus understand it of time in this world yet it cannot be denied but at the Day of Judgement there will be a full discovery of all the works and Doctrines of men Observe That God hath his time when he will discover the errours and falshoods of mens Doctrines A day shall declare it You have a parallel expression Their folly shall be made manifest and they shall proceed no further 2 Tim 3.9 he compareth false teachers to Jannes and Jambres as they did miracles like Moses for a while but at last their folly and sorcery were discovered So it 's here God will put a stop to the torrent of errours he will shew a great difference between his truth and mens inventions the one shall be received and the other rejected This Gangrene that spiritual Physician can stop from further contagion God that could stop the infection of the plague on a sudden that the arrow should kill no more at mid-day hath done this also wonderfully in his Church The day did declare Arianism Pelagianism Nestorianism and the like To enlarge this Doctrine consider these things First In that the Scripture cals the time of manifestation a Day wherein is light and the Sunne beams it doth excellently imply That all the while there are corruptions in Doctrine and Worship that time is a time of darknesse Let men never so much rejoyce in them and count them happy times yet the Scripture cals them dark times So that to take away the truths of God the pure worship of God is indeed Solem è mundo tollere to take the Sunne out of the firmament All the while the Church of the Jews was without the Law and the Prophet without true teaching of the Word of God they were in a worse condition than the Egyptians in their Egyptian darknesse for that hindred them onely in their bodily motions and outward accommodations but this tends to the destruction and damnation of soul and body The true Ministers of Gods word are compared to light and to salt Matth. 5 13. Nihil Sole sale utilius both are necessary and usefull They are called the Starres and it must needs be a dark night when no starres shine Since the Apostles times the Church of God hath many times come under such dark times that it hath been like the old Chaos when darknesse covered the deep Take we heed then of calling darknesse light there is a woe to those that do so Isa 5.20 as some do the times of Reformation the times of Deformation If these corrupt Doctrines which come from the prince of darknesse thou callest light as coming from the Father of lights Thou intitlest God to the Devils work and that is no mean ●in This should teach the godly what to think under the overflowing of errours to account them dark and sad times Secondly There are no foolish builders that thus deform Gods Temple but they are by Gods permission in his wrath and anger because men have abused his truth and waxed wanton under it therefore hath he sent the spirit of delusion and errours amongst men 2 Thess 2.10 For this you must know though God be not the Authour of any evil and it were blasphemy to ascribe sinne to him as the cause of it yet as a just Judge he doth not onely suffer but also order that heresies and corruptions shall be in the Church They are of the Lord by permission and ordination though not efficiency and approbation Thus in Deut. 13.3 If there arise a false Prophet I the Lord do it to try you And in Ahabs time you may reade of many lying spirits in the false Prophets yet they could not goe to delude such or such till God gave them leave 2 Chron. 18.21 Thus 1 Cor. 11. There must be heresies Why must there be so God to punish mens corruptions their pride their ignorance their wilfull abuse of his knowledge will suffer such things to be Though he hath a gracious end That the approved may be made manifest That as all the persecutions which have been in the Church were from God as a just Judge to exercise the patience of it So all the heresies and errours which have been were to exercise the wisdome and true faith of the Church So that howsoever times of overflowing of errours be dark and uncomfortable times yet to consider the cause is farre more uncomfortable for these came from mens corruptions and Satans instigations as also from a provoked God in Heaven who punisheth our former
Manners are a pollution of this spiritual Temple So that in the words you have a strong Argument against all Church pollutions whether doctrinal or practical from a similitude or comparison the Apostle useth Those that are the Temple of God must be dedicated to him and not polluted with any unclean thing but the Church of Corinth is the Temple of God And that this Argument might pierce the more he puts the sting of a sharp Interrogation upon his words Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God Know ye not as if he would have said This is a confessed Principle a truth acknowledged by all none can or ought to be ignorant of it Now for the explication of the word Temple and the Reason to prove they were the Temple as followeth in the words I referre it till we come at it For truly this Text is a Mine of gold every word hath precious matter in it Only consider at this time the interrogative Introduction Know ye not One great cause why they admitted such prophanensse and corruption in the Church was the ignorance of or the not attending to those Priviledges and Relations they were called unto If they had duely considered they were Gods Temple they would not have suffered strange Doctrines or strange manners to come in amongst them as no strange uncircumcised might enter into the Temple Observe That the consideration of those Priviledges and Relations which all the People that professe God are put into would be a great Argument against all kind of Pollutions In the 1 Cor. 6.19 the Apostle argueth against all libidinous and unclean waies because their bodies were the Temple of the Holy Ghost now here the Apostle doth not so much speak of every man as their Assembly united together as they were a spiritual Society joyned together As is more largely to be shewed The Apostle argueth chiefly though not excluding sinnes of practice against corruptions in Doctrine and the Ordinances instituted in the Church by which we may see the Scripture puts corruptions in Doctrine through errours and in our lives through ungodlinesse in the same guilt both are unclean and so may not be admitted into the Temple even as the Apostle in the first Chapter verse 5 6. and Gal. 59 useth a Proverbial speech A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump against corruptions in life and in Doctrine but of this more afterwards That which at this time I insist on is To shew what a goade and spurre to all purity and holinesse in Doctrine and Manners the consideration of Church-Priviledges Church-Titles and Relations a●e Thus Rom. 6.3 Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death Ignorance of the extent of their baptism what it did signifie and oblige to made them live in sinne I know nothing more to be complained of then that people generally rest in this They are the Church of God They are Christians They are baptized but they do not understand what these things mean nor what they oblige them unto It would make us all tremble to consider the vast disproportion between our Names our Relations and our lives This hath occasioned many to runne into an extremity to say We have no true Churches no true members of a Church amongst us because the ignorance corruption and prophaneness is so great amongst us though therein they go beyond bounds For this Church of Corinth was not unchurched by the disorders and corruptions amongst it To enforce this Doctrine upon us consider some of the chief and notable Titles or Relations the people of God have and see if rightly considered they would not work like fire to consume all our drosse As First The very word Ecclesia Church This is given to all the spiritual Societies and Assemblies that we read of in the Scripture converted to the true Faith Thus the Church of Corinth the Churches in Asia Now how great a matter is this very word Church For a people to be a Church the word signifieth as much as a company of people called out of the ignorance idolatry and prophanenesse of the world to worship and serve God in his way and to obey his Laws So that when men come to be of this body they are to renounce all their former prophanenesse and wickednesse and live a life conformable to the Word which is the Churches Charter and by which it walketh Thus all our Congregations should be men called out of the ignorance and prophanenesse of the world to live according to Gods Rule But where are the persons or the Societies that do this Are not many of our Assemblies in the world and of the world still in respect of conversation There will be scandals and offences in the Churches of God too often but woe be to such who by their prophanenesse idolatry and wickednesse give so many scandals as to make us accounted a Babylon a Sodome or as the world Indeed they who do thus charge us go beyond their line for we have a true Church and a true Ministry and true Ordinances only the lives of men are generally so corrupt and wicked so ignorant and beastly that they are spots in our Assemblies and a grievous reproach to that holy Profession which we have taken upon us So then if we would have our Congregations and persons freed from all these defilements remember what the word Church is a company called out of the world And as for ignorant and prophane men the orders of Christ are to endeavour their reformation but if they continue obstinate then they are to be cast out As the Clouds that are exhaled from the earth which though terrestrial in nature yet follow the motions of the Heavens so though in our original we be of the world and are dust and ashes yet by this heavenly call we are wholly to live a heavenly conversation Is it for Starres to be like the dung of the earth Is it for a Church to be a prophane ignorant and worldly people Oh this very title should raise up your hearts Are we not a Church persons called out of wickednesse Why then are we such Apostates as to degenerate from our Titles and Names If Christ complained of those that had made the material Temple a den of thieves Mat. 21.13 will he not also of such who shall make his Church a stew a dunghill a place of wickednesse and ungodlinesse I beseech you know these things and consider them better If you would have the Name of a Church have the nature Life and operations of a Church Secondly The consideration that we are the people of God in a more peculiar manner then all the Nations of the world that do not know God This also should affect us This is that Covenant of Grace God enters into I will be their God and they shall be my people Jer. 7.23 2 Cor. 6.16 Yea a peculiar people Gods Jewels Gods Treasure Deut. 26.18 Psal 135.4
thus truly with thee if thou runnest into any excesse of ryot that the world greedily pursueth Thou hast made thy self like a Dunghill not Gods Temple Thirdly The Temple was full of external glory A magnificent place admired by Heathens And we see what weeping there was of the old men that the glory of the latter Temple was not like that of the former Ezra 3.10 Now the glory of Christians is likewise great but in a spiritual and heavenly way The Church is all glorious within Psalms 45 13. The Gospel that is preached is stiled a glorious Gospel 1 Tim. 1.11 And the Spirit of God The Spirit of glory 1 Peter 4.14 It 's promised That the glory of the second Temple should farre exceed that of the first Hag. 2.9 Now how was that made good not in any outward glory but because Christ in a spiritual manner did reform all those corrupt Doctrines and did sit as a refiner to purifie the Sonnes of Levi. This was glory to have the spiritual worship of God It 's true this is not the glory of the world which the Devil sheweth and so many do fall down and worship it but to a spiritual eye that judgeth spiritually these things are the greatest glory Who would think that the Preaching of of the Gospel deserved such a Title as a Kingdom and a Kingdom of Heaven The most sublime and transcendent perfection that can be Yet What is more ordinary in Scripture then to dignifie it by that Name Do not then account the glory of the Church to lye in goodly Edifices in glorious Ornaments in stately Images but in pure Doctrine Godly Government and an Holy life Such times are glorious times such Administrations use to ravish a godly heart David cryed out How amiable were the Tabernacles of the Lord of Hosts Psalmes 84.1.10 And one day there was better then many any where else And all because of the Spiritual enjoying of God in them It 's the excellency of a Pearl to be in its native lustre to paint that would disgrace it so it 's the excellency of all spiritual Ordinances and Institutions to be in their pure native appointment and to adde to them by goodly Inventions is but to disparage them Jesus Christ had no external glory yet to the Spiritual Believer Christ is precious as Peter saith 1 Peter 2.7 Fourthly The Temple was in a peculiar manner holy in respect of other buildings as the Apostle saith in the next verse Now when we say it was Holy we do not mean an holinesse inherent as Angels and men are holy but of Dedication and Consecration a relative holinesse being set apart by Gods special Command to such an use And therefore the Synagogues of the Jews neither our material Churches have such an holinesse as is to be shewed when we come to the 18 verse For that is a necessary point to handle to take of men from superstitious thoughts about holy places Among the Jews there was a relative or typicall Holinesse The Temple was an Holy Temple Jerusalem is called the Holy City yea every Jew is called an Holy person Mat. 4.5 and Gentiles are unclean as appeareth by that Vision to Peter Call no man unholy or unclean Acts 10.38 But of this more This is enough to shew that the Temple was peculiarly dedicated to God and had a relative Holinesse Thus all Believers they are in a spiritual manner Dedicated to God They are separated from the world and sinne They are not to live in the same wickednesse and impiety as men of the world do Oh Beloved What a strong Obligation is this to us all to live holily We are separated from the world We are not to have such thoughts such lives such affections as the world hath Procul O Procul esse prophani they would cry in respect of their heathenish Temples and this is much more true of the Church of God Moses was commanded to pull off the shooes of his feet because the place was holy Exodus 3.5 Oh much rather must thou pluck off thy sinfull lusts thy carnal pleasures For God is holy and the Ordinances are holy about which thou art conversant Fifthy Because of this relative Holinesse it was a Capitall crime to defile this Temple There were Porters set at the Gate to keep out all unclean things 2 Chron. 23.19 No unclean thing might be brought therein and so it is here because the people of God are a company joyned in such an holy manner for such holy ends Therefore they are commanded to cast out all unclean persons 1 Cor. 5. ult Here comes in the Necessity of godly Discipline and Excommunication which is meerly medicinal not vindicative for edification not destruction Thus the incestuous person an unclean vessel in this Temple he was to be cast out Cast out from among you that wicked person 1 Corinth 5. The Church should be like an excellent disciplin'd Army Therefore if any man walk 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disorderly note such a man and withdraw from him that he may be ashamed 2 Thessalonians 3.11 14. 1 Corinth 5.7 the Apostle commands them to purge out the old leaven the wicked person that they might be a new lump a choice and holy company worshipping God in Spirit and Truth This spiritual Sword is in the Church as the temporal one in the Common-wealth Neither is this power given in vain but that men who do ill might be afraid In the Primitive times this godly Discipline was admirably executed as appeares by Tertullian and Cyprian but when this weeding-hook was laid aside or abused Gods Garden was runne over with weeds Lastly That which was the glory of the Temple and the life of it was Gods gracious presence From thence he did hear prayer there he accepted Sacrifices thence he commanded blessings His promise was that he would put his Name there and this still continued in Gods Church When two or three are gathered together in my Name I will be there in the midst of them Mat. 18.20 Though God be every where in the world yet his gracious presence is only in his Church This is the Closet or Privy-Chamber this is the Garden wherein he walks Now Gods gracious presence in his Church is discovered these waies First Here only are the Priviledges of grace Here only is Justification Adoption Sanctification This is the Pool of Bethesda wherein the Angel comes down Through all the world be Gods yet his Church is the place of his gracious favoures This is the Ark in which salvation only may be had There is no pardon of sinnes among Heathens God indeed doth many times differ his temporal judgments upon Heathens and he heareth their prayers and groanes as their natural desires even as he doth the young Ravens but their is no gracious answer of any Prayer nor any pardon of the least sinne Thus they are as some places of the earth where they say it is alwaies night Ice and cold alwaies
of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 To be baptized into the name of one argueth that one to be a Person And how absurd would it be to say the Father and the Sonne are Persons but the holy Ghost is an attribute or operation So There are three that dear witnesse in Heaven the Father the Sonne and the Spirit 1 John 5.7 Three he doth not say three things but three viz. Persons as appeareth by the personal operations These bare witnesse in Heaven Some reade The Spirit of God descended in the shape of a Dove which plainly denoteth a thing subsisting not an attribute We are said To sin against him which must needs imply a person Thou hast lied to God Act 5.4 That which is here said to be God is called the holy Ghost vers 3. Thou hast lied to the holy Ghost And the sinne against the holy Ghost shall never be forgiven Matth. 12.31 Lastly There is attributed understanding and will to him Vnderstanding the Spirit of God searcheth the deep things of God and the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.11 And Will 1 Cor. 14. where he reckoneth up several operations Even as the same Spirit giveth to whom he pleaseth So that you see the Texts are so clear that were not men sadly forsaken by God they could not deny these things In the second place Let us prove that it 's not a chief spirit among Angels but in deed and in truth of the same Nature with God Now some choice Arguments to prove this may be reduced into these heads First The Name of God is directly and properly not metaphorically attributed to him Thus God is said to speak by the holy Prophets which have been ever since the world begun And if you ask What Person it is in the God-head 2 Pet. 1.21 The Prophets spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost So that the holy Ghost was that God who enlightened and moved all the Prophets that were from the beginning of the world Thus Acts 5.4 Why hath Satan filled thy heart thou hast not lied to man but to God Ananias he thought he had only to do with men but mark the opposition not man but God especially 1 Cor. 12.3 4. There are diversities of gifts but the same spirit the same Lord the same God Spirit Lord and God So that by what Texts we can prove God the Father to be God the same we can prove the holy Ghost to be God Secondly The holy Ghost hath those works attributed to him which do onely belong unto a God Such as God only can do as Creation Sanctification and Redemption and miraculous operations These things do demonstrate and prove a God Creation Psal 33 6. By the word of the Lord the Heavens were made and by the Spirit or breath of his mouth th●y were created Job 33.4 The Spirit of God made me Thus in the Creation at first The Spir●t moved on the waters as the Hen on the eggs giving vivifical influence For Redemption the holy Ghost concurreth to that in preparing and fitting the body of Christ and sanctifying it to be an oblation Hence Christ is said To be conceived of the holy Ghost which could not be an Angel for then an Angel would have been greater than Christ And secondly In the application of the Benefus of the Redemption to the godly The holy Ghost both applieth them and assureth thereof The Spirit of God that heareth witnesse with our spirit Rom. 8.16 And we are sealed by the holy Spirit of God Ephes 4.30 Thirdly In the works of miraculous operations So 1 Cor. 12. all those extraordinary and miraculous gifts are attributed to the holy Ghost Hence he is called The finger of God Luke 11.12 by which Christ is said to cast out Devils And on the Feast of Pentecost He descended in a mighty rushing wind and cloven tongues of fire filling all the Apostles with miraculous gifts Acts 2.3 4. Lastly The works of Sanctification Faith Repentance and all other graces are wrought by him Yea he is called The holy Spirit because that is his peculiar Office to work holinesse and to sanctifie men by the Ministry Now Divines say It is a farre greater work and argueth more power to sanctifie the natures of men then to make a new world yet this is constantly applied to the holy Ghost though not so as to exclude the other Persons in their order Hence likewise all the means of Sanctification viz. the Ministry and the gifts thereof are also given to the same Spirit Acts 25. Over which the holy Ghost hath made you overseers Thirdly The attributes and properties of a God as well as the works of a God are also in Scripture given to the holy Ghost omnipresence filling the whole world Whither shall I go from thy Spirit None can flie from it Psal 139.7 His Omniscience in that he searcheth the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.11 His Omnipotency as you heard His Eternity called the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9 14. Though some understand that of Christs Divine Nature and being before the world in that he made it Unity with the other Persons These three are one So that having the properties of God he must needs be God Lastly The religious worship that is given to the Holy Ghost doth not onely argue he is a Person but a Divine Person equal with God And 1. We have the Angels giving worship unto him whereas John when he would have worshipped the Angel he is forbidden Worship thou God Revel 19.10 So that religious worship is only to be given to God And thus the Angels in that glorious vision sang Holy holy holy unto God Now it 's worth your observing that this vision is attributed both to the Father to the Sonne and to the holy Ghost To the Father that is without doubt Isa 6. for there he is described as a glorious Judge in all Majesty To the Son John 12.41 This spake Esaias when he saw his glory and spake of him viz. of Christ as the Evangelist applieth it Lastly To the holy Ghost Act 28.25 That men also are to give religious worship to the holy Ghost appeareth in their baptismal profession Being baptized into the Name of the holy Ghost As also by that form of prayer and blessing The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ the love of God and communion of the holy Ghost sometimes ●sed in the Epistles Thus you see the Scripture clearly determining this matter of faith And if we cannot comprehend how there should be one God and three Persons eve●y one of them God and yet but one God you must remember That faith is the captivating of the understanding unto a meer t●stimony It 's not science but faith that Christians professe In humane things Argumentum facit fidem in divine things Fides facit argumentum Neither is it any wonder that we cannot in the creatures find an exact comparison to
we called an house of prayer In Solomons prayer 1 Kings 8.48 the captives of Israel carried into another Land are supposed in their captivity to pray unto God with their face towards the Land of Israel and also towards the Temple Fourthly But from this Temple to argue for such holinesse in our Churches Yea and with Bellarmine and others to plead for private praying in the Church more than in other places as if there were more holinesse therein and for the places sake to have more acceptance is unjustifiable by Scripture John 4.21 24. The time is coming when they shall not worship in this mountaine or in Jerusalem but they shall worship him in Spirit and truth There is no Jerusalem now nor any place like Jerusalem and now God would have us in every place lift up holy hands in prayer 1 Tim. 2.8 It 's therefore unwarrantable by Scripture to pray in a Church for the places sake to have the prayer the more acceptable as Bellarmine pleadeth And indeed because there is no such peculiar institution nor no such peculiar promise therefore there cannot be such a relative holinesse Private prayers in the Church though pretended not to be done for the places sake while we are at the publick Ordinances are also incongruous and unwarrantable partly because they are against the nature of private prayer prescribed by our Saviour When thou prayest shut thy door after thee Mat. 6.6 Private prayer must be done in a private manner and partly because the Church is for publick Ordinances We meet together in spiritual communion and while the society is singing for thee to be privately praying is unsuitable to the duty in hand where there ought to be one heart one mouth and consent Fifthly Because the Temple was so glorious and Gods promise was in a special manner made to it therefore the Jews put all their trust and confidence in this though their lives were full of wickednesse and grosse impieties yet because they had the Temple that made them think themselves happy Hence the Prophet severely reproveth them for it saying Trust no more in lying words saying The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord are these Jer. 7.4 Hence at last God was so provoked that he gave it up to idolatrous Heathens to be destroyed that a stone should not be left upon a stone For Hadrian the Emperor quite demolished it and in stead thereof built a place with a new name calling it Aelia and upon the gate set the Image of a Swine by way of scorn and derision to the Jews to whom that beast was unclean And thus truly God hath done with many glorious spiritual Temples under the Gospel Where are the seven Churches of Asia And where is the pure Church of Rome now The present Governours of that Church glory of their succession to their former Worthies Whose faith was spread over the whole world but they succeed them as vespae apibus Wasps many times do Bees or as night doth the day Lastly Our Churches therefore do not resemble the Temple an holy place dedicated to God but their publick Synagogues where they met together to pray and reade the Word and have it expounded Some find fault that we call this material building a Church but use of speech doth fully justifie this It 's an ordinary figure to put the place containing for the thing contained Thus it 's said All Jerusalem went out And Oh Jerusalem that killest the Prophets Mat. 23.77 which is meant of the Inhabitants thereof Thus we call a City or a Town the people of the Town But of this we have spoken formerly But though there is no such relative holinesse in these places as was in the Temple neither are the duties regarded for the places sake but the place for the duties yet there is a moral and civil decency or respect to be had to them as we do unto places appointed for solemn meeting and therefore are unfitly compared to barns or stables or to be polluted like them not because of any holinesse in them more than in other places but from a civil respect But these things only occasionally by the way The next main thing is That believers joyned in a Church way according to Scripture are Gods temple and that requireth these things First Purity and an undefiled life from the wicked wayes of the world Though they be in the world yet not of the world This is called pure Religion to keep a man defiled from the world Jam. 1.27 And we must not be conformed to the fashion of this world Rom. 12.2 We are to be as Lot in Sodome so farre from having fellowship with it that we are to grieve in seeing and hearing the evil deeds of others We are to be like the three Worthies in the midst of the fire and yet our hair not singed thereby Do not thou then judge of thy self as the Temple of God when thou art like a dung-hill thy heart is not a sacred Temple but an open Inne or Market-place all strange lusts may lodge in thee thou art to take Christ for an example not the world Secondly Dedication and giving up our selves wholly unto God Thy soul and body are to be one Temple onely thy soul is the Saxctum sanctorum there should only be admitted choice and sanctified thoughts and intentions Shall I take saith the Apostle the member of Christ and make it the member of an harlot 1 Cor. 6.15 Shall I take the Temple of God and make it a publick stew for all lusts As they said of their Temples Procul ô procul este prophani So do thou of all noisome and filthy sinnes As there were constant Porters to watch the Temple so do thou continually set a watch before thy heart and soul that no unclean thing enter in Thirdly Here is implied Vnion of the members of the Church together The Temple was not one stone or a few stones scattered up and down but exactly and curiously joyned together The Churches are compared to a body where there are several organized members and all usefull one to another Lastly Communion Not onely internal by faith and love which we have with Christ the Head and so with all the members For this communion is invisible but external in a visible society and fellowship one with another in the publique worship Hence they are greatly reproved That forsook the assembling of themselves together Heb. 10.15 Visible communion in Church-Ordinances brings much glory to God and great edification to our selves Vse of Instruction What kind of societies we should be who are Gods temple Gods house Gods Church What enjoyment of God What effectual participation of his presence The body by its senslesnesse doth quickly discover whether a soul be in it and the soul will quickly manifest whether God and Christ be in it if the Temple of God What holinesse and purity ought to be in our lives Oh this is the glory of the Church
farre surpasseth all their morality First then let us shew Wherein the faith of a Christian commanded by the Scripture doth farre surpasse all humane knowledge and science which men by nature do glory in And First Faith doth surpasse all humane sciences in the dignity of the subject The matter about which a Christians faith is exercised doth farre transcend all that about which humane knowledge doth exercise it self For the highest that they could reach unto is only to the knowledge of natural effects produced by natural causes And if any could prove these by the former this they called a demonstration Though some men say No man ever yet gave a demonstration à priori quoad se but quoad nos So then all the excellent wisdom of the world hath been only to consider the nature of sublunary things or to discourse about the nature of the heavenly bodies and their motions and if they did arise to consider of a God the Maker of these it was in a very uncertain doubtfull way Hence the Apostle speaks of them Acts 17.27 that they were as men in the dark feeling after a thing to find it as the Sodomites smote with blindnesse felt for the door This is all our humane wisdome can help us to but now by faith we have the supernatural mysteries of salvation revealed unto us The Scripture tels us Of a God in Christ reconciling man to himself of mans original misery of Christ the Mediator Alas how poor and contemptible are the highest notions even of Plato though called Divine when you come and read Paul There are such admirable and heavenly truths revealed in Gods word that all humane wisdome was no more able to find or apprehend such things then a dwarf could reach to the Heavens If we then consider the dignity and worth of that subject which the Scripture revealeth and faith is exercised about dirt is not more inferiour to precious pearls than humane knowledge to faith Secondly Faith differs from all their humane science in respect of the excellency of the end For the end of all Scripture wisdom is to bring us to eternal life The Scriptures are able to make us wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 The things of Christ are said to be written That believing we might have eternal life John 20 31. There was never any humane knowledge could teach a man to be eternally happy Platoes Divinity and Aristotles Morality though they have the words of happinesse and have large discourses about it yet wanted the thing it self Oh then let us blesse God for Scripture-wisdome for the treasures of knowledge revealed there Learn of David How wonderfully was he affected with Gods word What light and wisdome did he attain unto thereby The Scriptures will teach thee such a blessednesse and such a way to blessednesse that could not enter into thy heart to conceive before the light thereof came into thee Thirdly Faith doth surpasse all humane knowledge in its certainty and infallibility A man that believeth the truths of God revealed in the Scripture hath more certain knowledge then all the more wise and learned men of the world For the object of faith being Gods testimony and his Divine Authority it 's as impossible for faith to be deceived as it is for God to lie Hence it 's called The full assurance of hope Heb. 10.22 And we believe therefore we speake 2 Cor. 4.13 How could the holy Martyrs witnesse those divine truths even to death had they not been possessed with full and sure knowledge of those things they died for whereas if we look into all humane knowledge there is very little certainty insomuch that some have expresly affirmed Nihil scitur yea that that also was not known and what little certainty they have appeareth by the contrary and different opinions in all their main points Fourthly Faith doth more establish settle and quiet the heart of men then all humane wisdome Solomon observeth a vanity and vexation of spirit even in all humane knowledge but now faith doth establish settle and satisfie the soul Heb. 11.1 It is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Those that want faith are said to be double-minded men Jam. 1. inconstant as the waves of the Sea Oh the anxiety and perplexities that meer humane knowledge hath cast men into And so those who have no other bottome than the Authority of Church or the power of men to believe These are reeds shaken up and down with every wind Their faith is upon ambulatory and moveable considerations wheras faith makes a man like Christ The same yesterday and to day and for ever Lastly The Christian faith is above all philosophical knowledge Because of the strong and mighty effects it hath to convert the heart and reform the life Acts 15 9. Purifying their hearts by faith How can ye believe when ye seek glory one of another said our Saviour John 5.44 Yet these humane Gnosticks did only aim at glory though Philosophers call them the Liberal Arts yet they could not set them free from their lusts whereas Christ John 8.32 said If my Word abide in you you shall be free indeed Never did humane knowledge make such wonderfull converts and work so great a reformation as the Christian saith hath done And although we have now too many who say they do believe and yet do such things as many of the Gentiles would be ashamed of yet these men have not faith indeed but the name and title of it for as much as faith though but like a grain of mustard-seed would bid such mountains of lusts be removed into the Sea In the next place The moral or practical wisdome of the world cometh farre short of Scripture-wisdome For First The most knowing men were ignorant of original sinne which yet is the fountain of our calamity The Heathens indeed bewailed the mortality and misery of man but they know not our natural pollution the ground of all Yea we see Paul himself though a Pharisee was not acquainted with that Law of sinne within him till inlightned by the Word Rom. 7. Now if men know not their disease or the cause of it they can never be cured So that whatsoever precepts about living well they delivered yet they built on a sandy foundation they did not dig deep enough Secondly All humane wisdome and prudence knoweth not how to mortifie and forsake sinne upon true grounds because they were ignorant of Gods Spirit Rom. 8.13 If ye through the Spirit do mortifie sinne They did not crucifie the body of sinne nor bewail it because it was sinne but for humane respects as it did hinder the publique or as it was prejudicial to their glory and fame but they overcame one lust by another Thirdly All earthly prudence cometh short of this wisdome because it 's circumscribed within the bounds of this world and this life It looketh out no further whereas the Scripture giveth directions for
the world to come and for eternity So that as a mans sense comes farre short of reason because sense reacheth onely to the present objects but reason can compare past and future things together So the best worldly reason cometh short of Scripture-wisdome for that is limited only to the pleasures and profits of this world Vse of Reproof To all those who glory in their worldly wisdome speculative or practical Thou art wiser in thy generation than the children of light Thou art wise to do evil but to do good thou hast no understanding Who more crafty and politique than thou art in matters of profit and worldly respects But who more ignorant and foolish in heavenly things Oh that thou hadst the Scripture-wisdome for all thy craft and parts thou wilt die and be damned as a fool Boast not of thy self for the Day of Judgement will discover who is wise and who not If any man seeme to be wise let him become a foole that he may be wise We have considered the two diminishing expressions used by the Apostle concerning earthly and meer humane wisdome Now let us consider the preceptive part of this Text arising from the affective Seeing earthly wisdome doth deceive a man is but a seeming wisdome and a wisdome of this world only Therefore the Apostle cometh with this command Let him become a fool that he may be wise To become a fool is only in appearance and in the judgment of the world he speaketh by concession the world will judge all true Scripture and heavenly wisdom to be foolishnesse So that as the worlds wisdom is a real folly but a seeming wisdome So the Scripture-wisdome is a real wisdome but a seeming folly Let him be a fool that is as David said I will be more vile still 2 Sam. 6.22 It was a r●al honour and glory to David to dance before the Ark but a prophane scoffing Michel she calleth it vilenesse and basenesse Thus it is indeed the only true and sound wisdome to believe and live according to Christs Rule but with the world this is onely folly they mock and deride it Observe That true Christian wisdome is nothing but folly in the worlds account To believe Christs Doctrines to keep his Commandments makes a man very ridiculous and absurd in the worlds account You see what Paul said of the Apostles who were the eminent starres in this Christian Heaven They were the off-scouring of the world and a spectacle to men and Angels 1 Cor. 4.9 They were as contemptible as the dirt under the feet But as the starres in Heaven are of a glorious excellent nature though they have those ugly names of a Dog and a Bear So the Apostles and all true Christians are the seed of God and shine as lights in a dark night howsoever the dogs of the world do bark at them To prosecute this I shall remind you of Austin's division of the whole matter of Christian Religion or Wisdome viz. the Credenda Speranda and Agenda Things to be believed hoped for and practised and instance how all these particulars are a meer folly and reproach in the world And First For the things to be believed there are these seeming follies First The very way of Christianity that it is not a knowledge but believing This be the great wits of the world hath been accused as a foolish thing Indeed one Hebrew word for a fool comes from believing because it 's a simple childish thing to be too credulous a fool believeth every thing and in political wisdome that is a famous Apophegme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but in matters of Religion There cannot be any greater wisdome than to believe God speaking concerning himself For who can know any thing of God but by God himself As we cannot see the Sunne but by the light of the Sunne Howsoever therefore the great Heathen Philosopher called Christians Credentes by scorn yet indeed this is the most sure and infallible way Julian that wretched Apostate but a great admirer of humane learning Nazianzen saith of him he would brag and say The Heathens had all the learning but you Christians Vestrûm est infantia barbaries nec quicquam aliud quam crede vestra est sapientia See what a fit instance this is they said Christianity was infancy childishness barbarisme and they had no other wisdome but only believe Nazianzen first tels him That the Pythagoreans would abhorre that argument for they said of their Master Ipse dixit ulterius non est quaerend●m but our belief is not in men but in the word of God which truth was confirmed by signs and wonders So then take heed of this sinfull distemper curiosity and pride in knowledge to be wise above what is written It was Adams sinne at first to affect a knowledge not vouchsafed him Secondly The Matter believed that hath appeared a great folly to the wisdome of the world is That God should be made man that he should die be crucified and by this means work salvation for the poor sinner This whole Systeme of Gods dispensation seemed but an heap of foolish imaginations Lucian that prophane dog who they say was torne in pieces by dogs by derision called Christ The crucified God Therefore Paul hath that expression I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ Rom. 1.15 He was not ashamed of it though the Heathens the wise men of the world despised it and herein consider the unreasonablenesse of the Heathens that could and did believe such monstrous things about their gods even as those that committed all wickednesse Hence Austin well speaking of Seneca's advice to set some wise grave man as Cato before us that we may not sin said He must propound a man not any of their gods for every one of them was noted for some filthinesse or other Hence he in Terence encouraged himself to lusts because their gods did so The Heathens I say that could believe such monstrous and filthy things about their gods and worship them yet would deride at Christ crucified though risen with power working many miracles and teaching nothing but admirable holy duties But now in all this dispensation about Christ God shewed his manifold wisdome even farre above that which was in making the world Thirdly The Manner of propagating and spreading this faith through the whole world was very contemptible and foolish in the worlds account though mighty powerfull and confounding the wise things of the world At first Christ doth not raise an army of men or legions of Angels but only twelve men and those of a mean contemptible way and these served to leaven the whole world These were the light and the salt of the earth Here the mustard-seed lesse than other seeds grew bigger than any other What Caesars sword or the Philosophers knowledge could not do that this plain preaching did effect All the power of men and the gates of hell have been no more able to stop this preaching
in the powerfull effects of it than to binde the Sunne in chaines that it might not runne its race Now though this is mighty and powerfull yet it 's very foolish and despicable in the worlds account And thus you have the first part For the second The Matter of a Christian hope that also is very foolish A man must be the worlds fool that doth part with all for this hope even the Resurrection of the dead to eternal glory This was the incredible paradox Why should it seem incredible to you said Paul when he preached this Resurrection For this he was accounted a mad man The Athenians so famous for knowledge when Paul preached this they called him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a babler a trifler or as others a sacrilegious fellow Indeed to prove this Article of Religion by natural reason or by examples in nature is impossible though learned men bring pleasant illustrations of it but to those that denied it our Saviour said They erred not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Mat. 22.29 We see the Artificer can turn by his Art some kind of earth into curious resplendant glasse and cannot God mueh rather make this vile corruptible body glorious and incorruptible But Thirdly and that chiefly The Duties required by Christ and all that practical way of godlinesse which he enjoyneth carrieth with it a great shew of folly We shall instance in some things that so we may not be ashamed to be godly though accounted the worlds fools and mad men Many men have knowledge they are convinced that it 's their duty to live a more strict precise life but they are ashamed they cannot abide mocks and derisions which the power of godlinesse will expose us unto As First Christ requireth of all his Disciples to live contrary to the wicked wayes of the world Christs Disciples must live in a singular way to the world Pure religion is to keep a man unspotted from the world Jam 1.27 especially Rom. 12.2 Be not transformed to the fashion of the world See then whether these duties will not make a man the worlds fool He must not swear or curse as they do be unclean and runne in excesse of riot as they do be proud and earthly and unjust in their dealings as they are Now there is no man if he be thus carefull to avoid all the defilements of the world but he shall be like the Owl among other birds they are so strict so singular and this they deride when it 's no more than Christ hath commanded Who would put himself upon the scorns and contumelies of others were it not Christs command Take up this principle I must not live as most do most men are damned most men walk in the broad way to Hell there is therefore a narrow and strait way that I must strive to enter in at The world lieth in wickednesse hath many wicked bruitish superstitious eustoms it 's the place where the Devil reigneth And therefore whatsoever wicked men say do thou and thy family serve the Lord Let them make songs of thee raise lies and speak disdainfully do thou still persevere to be Christs fool Beza's name was Theodorus and Genebrard the Papist he by scorne calleth him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The fool of God it may be he spake as Caiaphas truly though he did not meane so for Beza desired rather to be a foole in the worlds account than be one of Romes wise men Secondly It is a folly in the world to be so fervent zealous and active in matters of Religion They like well enough a general profession of Christianity a lukewarm obedience unto all the duties thereof but this zeal is forwardnesse they cannot abide that is rashnesse indiscretion that 's madnesse and wilde fire Now it 's true there may be an ignorant and a rash zeal but men are apt to judge so of any more powerfull and forwarder practices of holinesse than they themselves use Whereas the Scripture is plain That no man can be saved that doth not make it his businesse his work his one thing necessary to do the work of God The kingdom of heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force Mat. 11.12 Doest thou think then by thy formality coldnesse and luke-warm moderation ever to attain Heaven Is not Christianity compared to striving in a mastery to running in a race Do ye not read of Pauls striving forward and forgetting all things that are behinde Phil 3 Did not the holy Ghost descend in the form of fire with a mighty rushing wind to signifie how active it is in those that are godly Doest thou therefore cry out of this forwardnesse and this zeal What is this but to open thy mouth against Heaven On thy death-bed it may be nothing will trouble thee so much as thy slothfulnesse and barrennesse that thou wast not as active for God as for the world thou wouldst then wish thy soul might fare as theirs shall who made it their imployment to serve God Thirdly That part of Christianity seemeth a foolish thing which presseth the life of faith and not of sense Thus the world knoweth not what to make of it That as the Heathens thought the Christians worshipped the clouds because they had no Idols or sensible Images but looked up directly to Heaven So worldly men think the godly please themselves with fancies and imaginations because they talk of the promise and living by faith and not walking according to the sensible principles of the world yet the just shall live by faith Rom. 1.17 A godly man like the earth is fastned upon nothing visible When Habakkuk said Habak 3.17 Though the fig-tree did not blossome c. yet he would rejoyce in God his salvation Would not worldly men think this was his folly rather than faith So when Paul said He was poor yet making many rich and as having nothing yet possessing all things 2 Cor. 6.10 Doth not the world count this folly When Paul said to the believers That all things were theirs would they not say like Festus not much learning but much ignorance had made him mad Lastly To acknowledge Christ and his way though to our outward undoing This seemeth great folly our Saviour therefore doth so fortifie his Disciples That they should not be offended at troubles that they should be hated of all men that they should account it an happy thing to be persecuted for his sake And we see the Apostles and Martyrs chusing the greatest torments rather than to deny any of Christs Truths Now what a foolish thing doth the world account this not to be any thing to do any thing to say and unsay to believe and disbelieve to save a mans estate and his life As the persecutour told Basil the great in this thing indeed great Why would he lose his life for meer neceties and words it was but saying so and so a little matter and all should be well Thus the matter of
who have got a Bird tyed to a string they make themselves sport with her and when she thinketh to fly here and there they pull her back again Thus God hath an over-ruling wisdome and an over-ruling power over all men their counsels and their actions Which made an Heathen call man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Tennis-ball that the Providence of God playeth withall and handeth hither and thither Thus the Scripture excellently expresseth it by putting an hook into mens nostrils and a bridle in their lips Isa 37.29 The Providence of God is the Rider or Sessor upon all the wise mens counsels and actions and they are over-ruled by God as we do our Horses to turn them this way and that way backwards and forwards And this is the chief scope of the Apostle in the words following as will then more particularly appear First therefore God makes this wisdome foolishnesse in a passive sense in that he did not vouchsafe to use it as an instrument to propagate the Gospel He disdained to take the wise and learned Oratours or Philosophers of the world Now wherein could a greater scorn be put upon the wisdome of the world then in this particular that God would not so much as own it or take notice of it in the plantation of the Gospel Paul doth often mention this 1 Cor. 1. It pleased God by the foolishnesse of Preaching to save men when the wise men of the world would not acknowledge God by the creatures And at another time Paul renounced the cunning and deceitfull waies of humane wisdome They did not come in such words And why That their faith might be in the power of God 1 Cor. 2.5 So then if you regard what Instruments God did at first choose to diffuse his Gospel truths you will find he slighted and passed over the great wise men of the world and chose the poor foolish and contemptible Instruments Herein God did demonstrate his wisdome that so all power and greatnesse might be acknowledged to be in and from him only What a reproach did Haman account it that all the Royal robes and honour should be put upon Mordecai his great enemy and he laid aside No lesse did this inrage the wise men of the world to see that by such contemptible Instruments so great and mighty changes should be wrought upon the hearts and lives of men This is the first instance Yet this is not so to be understood as if God did not sometimes use the wise men of the world for he chose Cyprian Nazianzen Basil to the latter whereof Libanius the great Scholar in those daies but an Heathen wrote that he did so admire his judgment that he did all over swete and tremble to think on that time when he should read his Epistle and passe his censure of it But though God did use such wise men yet this was not the chief and principall thing whereby they propagated Faith but rather the Gospel simplicity They did it not quà sapientes quà Oratores but quâ credentes As Sampson wrought those great and wonderfull things not by the strength of his armes but by his hair that so the effect might be attributed to God and not to Sampson Secondly Herein God make it foolishnesse that as he doth not use it for the enlarging of his Gospel so he taketh very few of such men to bestow on them spiritual and soul saving graces Few of such doth he call doth he justifie doth he sanctifie doth he reveal the mysteries of grace unto Oh what a wonderfull instance is this of the foolishnesse of this worldly wisdome There are few of that ranck to whom God will communicate grace and salvation That whereas of many prophane and grievous sinners he hath chosen many to salvation of worldly wise men very few The Apostle 1 Cor. 1.26 doth industriously take notice of this Not many wise men after the flesh hath God chosen Yea Christ solemnly gave thanks to God that he had not revealed heavenly mysteries to the wise but to babes Mat. 11.25 So that there is little cause for men to boast of their worldly wisdome and prudence that they are crafty and subtile in their generation for this is both a cause and a sign also that thou art not one to whom God will reveal himself Not that God calleth none of such but not many viz. comparatively to those of a more contemptible way whom he doth set apart for himself Take heed thou be not too wise too proud of thy parts and therefore God will passe thee by Thirdly Herein also God will make it appear to be folly in that he takes the foolish things of the world and makes them confound the wise things When Pharaoh said Let us deal wisely to suppresse the Israelites the foolish Midwifes did confound him so that he brought up one by his own bread and at his own charge who should be his ruine and deliver the Israelites If we read in the Scripture you shall find nothing more ordinary then God by foolish things to confound wise and by weak things to overcome strong And well may it be called the confounding of the wise for certainly there cannot be a greater astonishing and confounding of men worldly wise then by such foolish instruments As Abimelech was enraged at the heart that it should be said A woman had killed him Thus by Frogs and Lice and such contemptible vermine did God plague the great Pharaoh of Aegypt Fourthly Herein doth God make the wisdome of the world foolishnesse because all that wise men do is a vain work They are not able to acomplish their ends to bring about their designes especially those which are to overthrow the Kingdom of Christ and rooting out his Church and People This hath been often attempted by the wise men of the world but it hath been a vain thing Psal 2. you see it was of old prophesied Why do the Heathens rage and the people imagine a vain thing It 's applyed to the chief Priests and other Grandees among the Jews but it was a vain thing It could not be effected And truly for many hundred years the Devil hath been attempting this by all kind of Instruments and by all manner of waies to root out the faithfull ones of Christ his Truth and Gospel but it hath been to them as God said to Paul in the heat of his persecution Thou kickest against the pricks What wise man would with his bare heels kick against the sharp points of iron and yet all the wise men of the world that have set against Christ and Godlinesse have been such fools Fifthly God makes the wisdome of the world foolishnesse because what they work is not only a vain work but a deceitfull work They are wholly frustrated in their expectation They find the clean contrary to what they intended Such foolishnesse doth God make the wisdome of the world The wicked worketh a deceitfull work saith Solomon Prov. 11.18 Compared therefore
the only wise God he sees their thoughts to be vain He seeth that Ahitophels that Tullies that Pharaohs thoughts even when they intend to deale wisely are vaine Let men applaud them yet God derideth them 2. The Lord knoweth the thoughts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their reasonings their choisest acts of the understanding their best and most accurate Discourses all their Logick as it were to be a meer fallacy And then Lastly To be vain to be fruitlesse to be empty they make empty webs all the day long Domitian the Emperour is derided for spending time in catching of flies and yet as vain and foolish are all the thoughts and projects of every natural wise man So that what Motto the wise man would write upon every creature Vanity of vanity all is vanity So the same may be upon all the best thoughts meditations and counsels of the wisest men and if a mans mind be vain every thing else in him must needs be vanity for this is the salt that seasons a man and if that hath lost its seasoning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 become a fool all is likewise foolish Observe That the choisest and best thoughts of the wisest men are vaine We may consider man in a three-fold capacity 1. Politicè as a political creature endued with civil wisdome and so is part of a society and thus his thoughts are vain 2. Ethicè as he is to walk according to the Rules of reason which sound and rectified nature doth guide a man in and thus he is vain 3. Theologicè as he is to look up to Heaven to obey God and to aim at supernatural happinesse And in this sense especially he is a most vain empty man and to this the Apostle relateth To open the Doctrine let us consider In what sense the Scripture useth the word vain and you shall see them fitly applicable to the wisest mens thoughts that what is said of mans body may also be true of his soul Every man at his best estate is altogether vanity Psal 39.5 And First That is said to be vain which is empty and void of that worth and excellency which ought to be within Thus a fool is called often a vain person because he is empty of that solid judgement and reason which ought to be in a man Hence foolish persons are compared to empty straws that are blown up and down with every wind because they have no weight in them Nabals name and his nature agreed he was a fool The word comes of a root that signifieth to wither As the withered branch hath lost all its sap and juice so a fool hath And thus the thoughts of all men naturally are empty void and destitute of true wisdome They knew not wherein true happinesse doth consist or what is the way that looketh to it they do not provide for eternity they consider not that upon this moment depends eternity they look not out to the best and choisest things in the first place all that inward juyce and sap of spiritual wisdom is taken from them Secondly That is said to be vanity which seemeth to have great happinesse and content in it but indeed it 's the clean contrary A vain thing is that which hath a goodly appearance but inwardly hath no profit As those apples of Sodome so much spoken of Thus Eve called her son Abel vanity because she thought that before she had brought forth the man the feed that should break the Serpents head but finding him to be without the Image of God and devoid of all holinesse subject to mortality she called him Abel as deceived in her expectations And thus it is with all the thoughts of the wisest in the world they think at first they have possessed a man brought forth that which will accomplish all their desires but upon experience they see it is an Abel it 's vanity So that as Solomon tels us of a vanity in all earthly comforts in riches and pleasures because though they have a goodly appearance yet there is indeed no substance no solidity like the thorns which have white flowers but thorns Thus it is with the best and choisest thoughts and projects of the wisest men they have a goodly lustre you would think such wise men could not but be happy their expectations are raised but the issue doth deceive them Call us not Naomi but Marah may they say Thirdly Vanity in the Scripture is often applied to a lie Every man speaks vanity to his neighbour that is a lie Psal 12.2 And thus the thoughts of the most wise are a lie Let God be true and every man a liar Rom. 3.4 All thy thoughts are so many lies Now a man is a liar two wayes 1. To himself And then 2. To others To himself all his thoughts are a meer lie They promise such happinesse glory and felicity to themselves and in the mean while they are very lies they prove as the Land-flood as a reed a man leaneth on The rich man that said Thou hast many goods laid up his thoughts were so many lies Those proud thoughts of Tyre and Sidon that set her heart as God and said No evil should come near them were nothing but lies And if this were only in temporal and fading things the deceit would not be so dangerous but it 's in spiritual things also All mens thoughts naturally are concerning the goodnesse of their heart the purity of their wayes the happinesse of their condition but in all things they lie most damnably What a dangerous lie was that of Laodicea who said She was rich and cloathed and wanted nothing when indeed she was naked miserable and wanted all things Revel 3.17 All the Pharisees thoughts whereby they trusted in their own righteousnesse and justified themselves were nothing but lies And thus John Baptist reproved the Jews for their vain thoughts Thinke not to say within your selves we have Abraham to our father Mat. 3.9 The thoughts of men are never more dangerously vaine than when they please themselves about their good condition as to spirituals that all is well with them that God loveth them these are lying vain thoughts Again The thoughts of all men naturally are lies actively in respect of others They are full of falshood and dissimulation there is no truth or sincerity in men as David complaineth Psal 12. And the Prophet Isaiah complaineth Every one is an hypocrite the best is a liar Isa 9.17 That as the sheep runneth to the briars to shelter her self in a storm but they prove a lie because they tare her in stead of defending her Thus it is with all men therefore he is said to be cursed that puts his trust in men Jer. 17. For unlesse men have godlinesse and so are made sincere and unfeigned there cannot be any trust in them Hence are those Rules of wise men Nemini fidas in teipso spes tuas pone Fourthly Vanity is often in Scripture used for that which is
unprofitable without any benefit or successe Hence is that phrase To labour in vain And thus the Philosophers also define vanity A frustration of our intended end Now in every thing that a man doth till made wise in an heavenly manner there is nothing but vanity there is no true profit or good successe but in all things he labours with wind and brings forth wind The Prophet Hosea expresseth it well They sow the wind and reap the whirlwind Hos 8.7 If an husbandman in stead of committing seed to the ground should only cause a wind thinking to have a crop thereby would it not be folly but it 's not folly or losse only it 's destruction he reaps the whirlwind that is tempestuous and violent things arise on a sudden Oh this is a sad thing to consider when thou art dying I have lived in vain laboured in vain thought in vain spoke in vain I have no true good abiding by me of all that ever I did Fifthly Vanity is often used for that which is unstable uncertain and fading And thus the thoughts of wise men are vain subject to changes contradictions and at last vanish into nothing So that as our bodies are vain bodies and all the whole Creation is subject to vanity Thus are all the thoughts counsels and purposes of the wisest men subject to uncertainty only the creatures they groan under this vanity but so doth not man Do but observe your own thoughts Are they not as vain as the very dreams of feavourish men Mayest thou not say as the Prophet to the Church How long shall vain thoughts lodge in thee Jerem. 4.14 The Psalmist saith of some That they and their thoughts perish together Goe to the Graves and Tombes of the great men in the world who have been upon the earth like Leviathan in the waters and are not all their purposes and projects laid in the dust as well as their bodies Sixthly They are vain because they worke nothing but vain and absurd things What do vain thoughts produce but vain words vain gestures vain attire and fashions vain discourse in communication vain opinions and a vain worship Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts Mat. 15.19 They are the first sparks that flie out of this forge and from these vain thoughts cometh all the vanity that is in mens words gestures apparel yea and their Religion For in vain do they worship me saith our Saviour Matth. 15.9 And Idolatry is in a particular manner called vanity So that you see these vain thoughts are indeed ●he cause of all the outward vanity in the world Though they be subtil and insensible yet they produce and end in grosse actions As the vapours of the earth they are very subtil and hardly discerned yet turn into grosse and gloomy clouds Lastly They are vain because they are wholly wicked The imaginations of the thoughts of the heart are onely evil continually Gen. 6.5 And thus indeed God knoweth all the thoughts and imaginations of every man is only evil That as from the Spider and the Serpent come forth nothing but venome and poison so from every man floweth nothing but filthinesse and the more wise he is the greater enemy to God So that those thoughts of theirs are the irreconcilable enemy and adversary unto God they lift up themselves on high against him Vse of Instruction 1. That God doth not onely take notice of vain actions but vain thoughts yea these are as the fountain and the cause of all actions Thus Christ reproved the Pharisees for their thoughts and reasonings in their hearts Oh think not then that all wickednesse lieth in actions in external grosse sins No the thoughts of the heart are the womb to breed all thy wicked actions Do dot say they are free and none knoweth them for God knoweth them and will judge thee for them 2. Are all our thoughts vain Learn then Scripture-wisdome get Scripture-thoughts Alas thy own thoughts about God about Religion about salvation are altogether vain Lay them all aside We are not able to think one good thought of our selves What miserable wofull and wretched creatures are we of all those millions of thoughts not one is good Verse 21. Therefore let none glory in men for all things are yours THe Apostle in this Verse makes an heavenly and usefull improvement of his former doctrinal Discourse He was before upon the Didactical and Argumentative part now he is upon the Practical and Exhortatory The consequence is very genuine and natural Seeing all humane wisdome is thus earthly and vain abhorred so by God Therefore let no man glory in men In the words you have 1. A Duty injoyned And 2. The Reason of the Duty Of the Duty at this time which is expressed Negatively and by way of Prohibition Let no man glory in men Where you have 1. The Matter prohibited And 2. The Object of it The Matter prohibited is Not to glory What is implied in this will appear afterwards The word implieth such a glory that we make a boast and brag thereby The Object of the Matter is Not in men The Apostle before treated of a particular only humane wise men and his purpose is only concerning Doctors and Teachers in the Church yet he useth this general that his Argument may be the stronger Let no man glory in any Teacher or Doctor in the Church yea not in any man though never so great and so powerfull If you object that Paul saith 2 Cor. 1.14 That he was the Corinthians rejoycing or boasting for so the original word is and they were his yea that Paul often mentioneth his boasting of a people The Answer is That their boasting was principally and originally in God onely they rejoyced in men as instruments by which God did accomplish many comforts for them It was not men but God in men that was the motive of this boasting The Reason followeth of which afterwards Observe That it 's a great sinne to glory in men This sinne is not often preached upon yet no question Political and Civil Idolatry making men as gods to us hath done a great deal of hurt as well as Religious Idolatrie We may have in Heaven others beside God as the Papists Saints and Angels and we may have others in earth besides God as when we put our hopes and confidence in the great men of the world I shall treat on this subject as a General 1. Not in men Then 2. As a Particular Not in the Teachers of the Church Now these wayes we glory in men First When we joyn them with Christ as Mediatours and make them co-partners as it were in spiritual effects as well as temporal This is to glory in men even blasphemously And this kind of Idolatrical boasting reigneth in Popery Not only the Virgin Mary but several other Saints of the●r own canonizing are so exalted that those great effects which belong to Christ only are attributed to such What glorying in St. Francis
unknown tongues 1 Cor. 14. do fully reach to this Ministers may affect such obscure unprofitable and impertinent matter as that the people may no more be bettered then if all things were done in Latine The Apostle had rather speak five words to edification then five hundred other wayes Insomuch that a powerfull profitable way of preaching is a great gift of God a special blessing unto a people And though some Ministers partake of it more than others yet all are to bend themselves for the peoples profit Si non vis intelligi cur vis legi said he we may adde cur vis audiri we see the nurses care is to make the childs meat most conveniently eatable and fit for nourishment and Ministers that do otherwise are such unkind fathers that our Saviour speaketh of as not possible when the children aske bread they give them a stone when they aske fish they give them a serpent Thirdly In that all things are the Churches is implied That no Officers have an absolute dominion over their peoples faith neither may lord it over them according to their lusts and ambitions but to doe all things for their souls good Paul though an Apostle would not assume such dominion 2 Cor. 1.24 Not that we have dominion over your faith And 1 Pet. 5.3 forbids all lordship over Gods inheritance They are Gods inheritance they are his field that they are to dresse and till not for themselves but their Masters use The Pope of Rome with his Abettors do infinitely transgresse in this particular who though he style himself Servus servorum the servant of servants is yet the Lord of Lords whatsoever they give us to eat we must swallow without chusing All our Sacrifices must be without eyes the more ignorance in our faith the more devotion No all the power and authority of Church-officers is not Magisterial but Ministerial we must come with Thus saith the Lord As it is written That which we have received that we are to deliver and when they keep to this then He that heareth them heareth Christ and He that despiseth them despiseth Christ No man may adde to or detract from the last will of a man much lesse Gods Testament which is to be the rule to the Church while she is in this world Fourthly In that all Officers are the Churches there is implied That not onely finis operantis but operis also not onely the end of all Ministers but the end of the offices and gifts themselves are for the Churches good God when he set Pastours and Teachers he gave them for the perfecting of the Saints and compleating their graces and bringing them to a full stature in Christ Eph. 4.11 12 13. Now it 's good to consider the manifold ends why God hath given such offices and gifts to his Church And First It 's to multiply and gather in more to the Church even the whole number of the elect Thus they are called fishers of men Mat. 4.19 they cast in the spiritual net of the Gospel and out of the bitter waters of the world they take up many for Gods Kingdom Many thousands were taken at the beginning of the Gospel Thus they are also called Fathers because by the Word they beget many to eternal life So then the Officers of the Church are yours to bring you home to God of Wolfs to make you Lambs of Beasts to make you Saints Oh consider whether the Ministry hath ever been yours in this sense or no! Hath it removed those mountains those high Towers of sinne that exalt themselves against Christ Hath it reformed thee of thy lusts of thy beastlinesse Oh may you not say in a contrary sense to Paul You have ten thousand Instructers yet no Fathers you have had many preachers but no father none hath begot thee anew to a spiritual and heavenly life Secondly It 's to convince and reprove to trouble and disquiet the soul for sinne and thus they are yours though wretched man had rather be without them Paul was very sharp and severe against the errours and vices of believers All Ministers are commanded To reprove and rebuke with all authority Tit. 2.15 To lift up their voices like a trumpet and to tell Israel of their transgressions This is for your advantage more than all false and daubing delusions You see God himself would not spare Aaron or Moses though never any talked to God face to face as he did yet God reproved him for his rashnesse Because he did not sanctifie him before the people and therefore would not let him enter into the Land of Canaan Oh it 's a good sign when you can receive a sharp reproof and rebuking Sermons as yours as profitable to you desiring not to be spared Thirdly They are yours for quickning and increasing of grace To bring us to a full stature as you heard the Apostle calleth it Desire the sincere milk of the Word that you may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 There is watering as well as planting Paul reproveth these Corinthians as carnal that he could not speak to them as spiritual And Heb. 6. he speaketh terribly to those that are still in their first principles and are not carried on to further perfection Consider then here is the Ministry and all the gifts and Sermons you have enjoyed for your benefit and profit Is your understanding more enlightned your hearts more tender your lives more reformed Is your knowledge bettered your graces more quickened and your whole conversation more fervent and zealous Fourthly They are for consolation and comfort unto the tender and broken hearted for sinnes Hence they are the Ministers of the Gospel and they bring the glad tidings of peace We are sent to comfort and give rest to those that are loaden with sinne Oh that we could meet with a people that need this balm of the Gospel that want this oil of Gods grace in their wounds There are thousands of people to whom we must not we dare not dispense the comforts of the Gospel we cannot say these glad tidings are to be published to you Lastly Not onely their gifts and office but all events whatsoever do befall them Their honour or disgrace their life or their death their esteem or their persecution is for the Churches good 2 Cor. 5.13 Whether we be besides our selves or sober it is for you saith Paul And in another place he makes one end of all his sufferings to be for the Churches sake Col. 1.24 If the Ministers of the Gospel runne through good report or bad report life or death it 's for the Churches good And therefore Chrysostome understands that life and death after mentioned of the Ministers so that you are not only to learn by their Sermons but by all their mercies or by all their sufferings not only their tongues but all things else should teach you Vse of Exhortation Take heed that through thy unbelief and other sinnes the Ministry and all the abilities and gifts thereof
be not against thee Paul said He was the savour of death to some 2 Cor. 2.15 that perish Oh tremble that this Ministry this preaching should be for the good of others but not to thee They can say these are ours for conversion quickning and consolation but I stand like a dead tree under all the rain sending forth no fruit at all You would think it an heavy curse to have your bread not yours to nourish you your cloaths not yours to warm you but this is more terrible the Word preached is not thine to convert thee or reform thee What Shall God out of his great love provide these mercies for thee and thou go away with no advantage at all He is your Minister and that is your Sermon which is made yours in your life and obedience otherwise he is yours to accuse and condemn you at the last day Vse 2. Of Instruction How precious and dear the salvation of mens souls is that God hath appointed all things in the world and in the Church for this end All the creatures of God would teach thee this All the Ministers and Ordinances are for this end All thy mercies thy afflictions thy health thy sicknesse is for this Why then doest thou no more consider of it and lay it to heart Or the world all is yours We proceed to the second enumeration of those Goods the Apostle giveth an Inventory of and that is a very large and comprehensive one the world with all things therein The Devil once thought to tempt Christ by promising him All the glory of the world but here we see a gift made indeed of the whole world to every believer First All the things of the Church are given Then All the things of the world This is to have the fatnesse of heaven and earth together The word world as for the nature of it is wide so for the significations thereof it is also very large Sometimes we reade it in the plural number Heb. 1.2 Heb. 11.3 Christ is said to make the worlds not as if that fancy of some were true That there are many worlds but it supposeth the world in all the successive generations of it Now the world is sometimes used for the meer Fabrick of this universe with all things therein Heb. 4.3 Since the foundation of the world sometimes it 's used only for the Elect and godly as when it 's said John 12.47 I come not to judge the world but save it And John 6.33 he is said To give life to the world but this sense is very much questioned yet the Orthodox propugn it Lastly The world is used for the wicked inhabitants thereof Thus John 15. the world is said to hate the Disciples of Christ And 1 John 5.19 the whole world is said to lie in darknesse And well may the world be put for wicked men because they are farre the greater part and therefore the world is used in opposition to the Church 1 Cor. 5.10 because believers are called out of the world If you ask In what sense world is taken here I answer principally in the first for the fabrick of the world and all the contents therein the Cabinet and all the treasure in it this is a godly mans not in a political civil sense but a spiritual sanctified way And thus he that hath not where to lay his head or set the sole of his feet may yet be said to have the whole world as it was with Christ and Abraham Observe That the whole world with all things therein is for the spiritual advantage of a Godly man He may say of the whole Universe All this is mine for the advantage of my soul one way or other We have a pregnant place for this Rom 4.13 where you have a promise of being heir of the world and to whom is this made To Abraham and his seed What seed vers 12 Those that walk in the steps of the faith of Abraham So that you see the inheritance of the world i● made to Abraham and to all believers which is not true of the civil possession of it but of the sanctified use of it It 's true Interpreters do much dispute in what sense Abraham and so all believers can be said to be heirs of the world But certainly this Text is a good exposition of it Come we therefore to shew in how many particulars we may say the whole world is a godly mans it 's for his use And First It 's the godly mans School or Academy it is his study or library The Heavens and all things therein are so many books whereby he admireth the wisdome of God Rom. 1. If the very Heathens might make this use of the world How much rather the godly who from Gods making of the world do gather many excellent and solid supports As you may observe David never encourageth himself more about Gods support of the Church than from this Argument That he made Heaven and Earth He that did so great a thing what may he not do Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God viz objectively as an excellent book declareth the glory of the Author but as he who would understand the excellent sense of a book must peruse it and understand it So he that would make a true use of the world for the exalting of Gods wisdome and power must diligently meditate on it This is that which one man saith the world is a godly mans mentaliter in his mind because by that he takes the occasion to admire God and to be affected in all love and fear This is the right consideration of the Heavens not to prognostick future contingencies which God reserveth as a property to himself but thereby to advance the wisdome and power of God Thus every herb every creature is a tongue yea the whole world is but one great tongue proclaiming aloud that there is a God Let then the world be thy study all the creatures so many books Do ye look on a watch or some curious needle work and admire the workmanship and shall ye not much more the world as Gods work Arianus Epictetus speaketh well to this though an Heathen condemning the negligence of men herein How many goe farre saith he to see the workmanship of Phidias and judge themselves unhappy if they die before they have seen that sight and shall not we much rather admire this world that is made by God Secondly The world is a godly mans Because every thing therein is given him for his necessary use Though he hath not every thing yet he hath as much as is needfull to him Rom. 8. If he hath given us Christ how shall he not with him give us all things else If you take a man into your house and bid him call for what he will he may command every thing in the house though he doth not call for all things but what is for his use that is as if he had all And thus
was for his eternal torment They call such things the blessing of God and so indeed in themselves they are but to wicked men they are curses For as the godly mans afflictions come from Gods love Whom he loveth he chasteneth Heb. 12. so wicked mens mercies come from Gods anger Had God loved thee thou hadst had it may be more afflictions more wants and exercises Secondly Wicked men have not the world Because they are overcome by it the world hath them rather Therefore they are called as you heard the world as if their very souls as well as bodies were made of the dust of the earth whereas the godly have the world as if they had it not they have God and the world too they have Heaven and Earth too they do not pr●● the worse their duties are not the more thinne and distracted As Abraham and David these were rich and great men in the world yet if you reade Davids Psalmes you will finde his heart set on God above all these things Thirdly Wicked men have not the world Because they do not own and acknowledge God as the giver of all neither do they live to him but the things of the world are instruments to draw out their lusts to make them the more wicked They take the good creatures of God and abu●e them to wickednesse Therefore Rom 8. The whole creation is said to groan under them as being weary of them The very Air the very Earth is weary of them yea the timber in the house and the stones of the wall do witnesse against them they are by the things of the world made more wicked Lastly They have not the world Because they have not an holy contentation of mind They are not quiet or satisfied in their condition they have no true peace notwithstanding all their abundance and the reason is because they have not pardon of sinne and enjoyment of Gods favour with these and they are only blessed who are so Matth 5. Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth You see the whole earth is promised to a meek humble contented spirit whereas a wicked man is compared to the Sea that is alwayes foaming and never lieth still The Vse is two-fold 1. Of Comfort and Exhortation to the godly Comfort in what distresse and strait soever thou art in Say not I have not this I want this I am poor and miserable for thou hast Heaven and Earth onely set faith on work This is the hand to receive those treasures This faith is not a fancy it 's not a foolish imagination but a real investing of thee with all things But it 's of Exhortation also to have the world for thy spiritual use Take heed of the wickednesse of it We have not received the spirit of the world 2 Corin. 4. Oh it 's an excellent thing not to have the spirit of the world but of God! Vse 2. Of Instruction To shew the power and miserable estate of the richest and greatest men in the world that want godlinesse none is so poor so miserable as they Thou sayest this is thine and that is thine Alas because Christ and the Promise are not thine nothing is indeed thine If they be thine they are thy poison thy destruction thy damnation and thus they are thine Or Life We proceed to the third thing in order and that is the several Conditions or Estates we are in Life is yours and Death is yours Chrysostome and Grotius after him limit this to the life and death of the Ministers in the Church If they live enjoying their liberties and outward comforts it 's for you If they die if they lose their liberties and lives it 's for the Churches sake As Paul said He was willing to be a Sacrifice offered up for the Philippians faith Phil. 2.17 This is indeed a truth but as the world is a general so there is no reason but that we should take Life and Death in as General a sense And indeed this limited one may well come under the first enumeration Paul and Apollo all are yours At this time we shall treat of Life The Scripture speaks of a three-fold Life 1. Animal which is in beasts 2. Humane belonging to men as rational And 3. Supernatural or an heavenly life which onely deserveth the name of it The other being but shadows and dying lives Now we shall especially speak of this humane life being perfected with that supernatural life Observe That Godly men do onely live or The Godly onely doe make a spiritual use of their life Life is only theirs 1 Pet. 3.10 He that loveth life and would see good dayes let him refrain his tongue from evil let him eschew evil and do good Here you see the only way to live and to have good dayes is to avoid all evil and imbrace all good Hence Christ John 6. cals himself The bread of life and he giveth the water of life none liveth till they be united to him We shall insist on these things 1. That only godly men live 2. That wicked men though in the midst of all their jollity yet the Scripture doth not account of them as living persons And First The godly man only liveth Because he is united to God and Christ the fountain of life David doth often style God The fountain of life Psal 36.9 And in his favour there is life And in the New Testament especially by John Christ is made the Author of all life He is therefore compared to the Head and to the Vine If the members or branches be separated from these they die and wither presently as John 15. This is so frequent an assertion that we need not dilate on it If not a member of Christ there is no life in thee Aut es in membris aut in humoribus said Austin Thou art either among the members or the humours of the body of the Church Gal. 3.20 Paul said He no longer lived but Christ in him and the life he lived was by faith in the Sonne of God What did not Paul eat and drinke and enjoy the common Aire as we doe Yes this he doth not call his life Oh they live who no longer live but Christ in them Thy sense thy carnal reason thy corrupt affections thy worldly inclinations these no longer live but Christ in thee and his graces Secondly Onely the godly man liveth Because he hath a spiritual and a new life added to his animal life For as the soul is the life of the body so grace is the life of the soul Hence our Saviour cals all wicked men dead men Let the dead bury the dead Matth. 8.22 That is a strange expression but very true No dead corpse is more destitute of life and apprehension than their souls are of any heavenly motions any spiritual hungrings or thirstings All the merry and jolly men in the world they are dead men if living in their sinnes Therefore among the Pythagoreans who kept strict
Discipline amongst themselves if any of their company did commit any grosse sinne they did cast him out of their company and provided a coffin for him intimating hereby they looked upon him as a dead man This heavenly spiritual life whereby a man doth all things by supernatural and holy principles to holy and godly ends deserveth the name of life Hence Ephes 4.18 it 's called The life of God either because of the conformity and likenesse of it to Gods life or because God is the Authour and worker of this life in his children Tell us not then that such a man liveth richly and happily having a great Estate a glorious Seat large Revenues he liveth that liveth this spiritual life and without it as the Apostle saith of those wanton widows They are dead while alive 1 Tim. 5.6 Oh now thou wouldst weep over thy husband thy child if they were corporally dead why doest thou not much more for their spiritual death We reade of the Aegyptians what an outcry they made for the death of one in every family But how many families are there that have none but dead persons in them Alas thou must needs be dead for thou seest not with thy eyes the beauty of spiritual things Thou hearest not with thy ears the lively word of God neither canst thou walk with thy feet in the way to Heaven Thirdly The godly man onely liveth Because he only hath the true blessednesse and comfort of this life He onely hath true joy and peace of conscience and this not onely the Scripture cals life viz. a prosperous happy estate as when they said Live ô King but the Heathens also Vivamus mî amica vixit dum vixit bene vita non est vivere sed valere There are some men who live this life and yet Job saith they long for death Their life is a burden and a torment to them when it 's day they wish it were night and when it 's night they wish it were day This God threatens as a curse to every one that shall not keep the Law Now the godly man he onely liveth so as to have true joy real happinesse because his sinnes are pardoned God is only his portion and delight At thy right hand are pleasures for evermore said D●vid Psal 16.11 And although the godly may sometimes through their own sinne or for their exercise be deprived of this joyfull and blessed life yet that is for their good as Lazarus's death was that his Sisters faith and Gods glory may be the more magnified And besides as Christs body so their souls shall not alwayes be kept under the cords of this death This is therefore by accident The promise to godlinesse is joy and gladnesse of heart They are called upon to doe it they are commanded to it Lay this then downe for a sure Rule That thou doest not live thou hast not a prosperous joyfull and happy heart till thus sanctified Fourthly The godly only live or life is theirs Because they only know how to improve the dayes of their life for God They make the right u●e of their life and time here which is to provide for eternity to glorifie God and save their souls When Paul could say I have fought a good fight I have finished my course 2 Tim. 4 7. This was an argument he lived Our Saviour spake many Parables to shew how we should improve our Talents and be alwayes gaining till our Master come whereas if thou spendest thy time on thy losts and pleasures of sinne if thou art idle and negligent thou hast not lived Idlenesse is the burial of a man alive We do not account our time of sleep so properly part of our life because we do nothing then And this is a full proof that only godly men live because they only make honey while the Summer shines they onely husband their time while it's day calling upon God They onely accomplish that work and errand for which God sent them into the world Remember this he liveth that is active for God in his generation that moveth continually for the good of his soul Let it not be said of thee as Seneca of one who kept close in his house Hic situs est Bascia as if he were buried there Fifthly Life is onely the godly mans Because he hath an interest in eternal life John 5.24 He hath passed from death unto life He shall never die that liveth this life Now alas this temporary natural life doth not deserve the name of a life The very Heathens thought so and the Scripture cals it but a shadow not a substance What are a few evil dayes here and full of misery Shall we judge it a life No surely eternal life deserveth only that name where there is no fear of a change where no power or violence can overcome where mortality is swallowed up in immortality This is the life that the Scripture inviteth all unto Did Dives live though he boasted good things were stored up for him No This night thou fool thy soul shall be taken away Wilt thou call this a life to have a few pleasures of sinne for a season and then to go into eternal torments Do not the damned in hell wish they had never been born that this natural life had never been bestowed upon them Do not thou then matter this moment but set thy heart upon eternity Is not this life a vapour a bubble but the life to come that must make me happy When God promised several outward mercies to Abraham O saith Abraham that Ishmael might live before thee All these outward things are nothing if he live not this spiritual and eternal life Sixthly The godly man only liveth Because he taketh his life from God and referreth it to his glory Whether we live we live to the Lord said Paul Rom. 14.8 They receive their life thankfully from God and they live to his glory Now we say he hath a thing that knoweth how to make the right use of it and thus because the godly know how to receive their life from God and to return it again to him Therefore it is that they have life yea they have it because they can readily part with it at Gods Command I die daily said Paul 1 Cor. 15.31 And this is our Saviours sure Rule Luke 17.23 He that will lose his life shall save it and he that will save it shall lose it You see the way to have life is to part from it he hath it that hath it not as the Martyrs who as willingly laid down their lives as we our garments Seventhly The righteous only live Because they mortifie and subdue those sinnes that kill our bodies that take away our lives Wrath and quarrelling that depriveth a man of the peace of his life now he refraineth his tongue he is of a meek spirit whereas anger is like a fire burning in the bowels and so grief is a waster of the very bones Worldly sorrow worketh
death 2 Cor. 7. the godly therefore take heed of it as that which murders the body So inordinate and worldly cares we see how such do even devour men they have so many thorns in their flesh and what life do such live Impatience is a sudden Devil possessing a mans soul In patience possesse your souls Luke 21.19 A man doth not possesse himself he is not master over his own spirit that is passionate and furious So that men in such sins they live but as those that have been thrown to wilde beasts or serpents to be devoured by them Lastly The godly man only liveth Because even in the last breathings of this life his hopes and comforts do most remain The righteous hath hope in his death Prov. 14.32 And this hope is called A lively hope yea the godly die not at all because all live to God their very dead bodies if you regard the Covenant of Grace and Gods power are alive Luke 20 38. At that moment when all a wicked mans hope perisheth his life faileth him his comforts his friends all forsake him then are the godly to lift up their heads for their redemption draweth nigh Though they were dead they shall live Dives had the good things of this life but doth he not lose all with his soul at his death Lazarus may say Soul take thy ease when dying which Dives could not But In the second place How can it be said that the wicked do not live when they are said to have their portion chiefly in this life And David by many Psalmes informeth us they do not onely vivere but valere not onely live but flourish Their eyes stick out with fatnesse yet they doe not live because 1. They are dead in their sins And hereby their faith their Religion their Christianity is all dead as you heard 2. They do not live Because they are in a condemned estate they are appointed to wrath As Adam is said to die in the day he did eat of the forbidden fruit and as the Scripture cals some the sonnes of death or dead men because appointed thereunto Oh this should enter deep into thy heart As long as thou livest in thy sinnes thou art a dead man a damned man as the malefactor condemned to die is a dead man though he live a day or two before execution 3. They doe not live Because all their time is lost so all the time of a mans unreg●neracy is no life All those dayes were lost those duties lost all that time lost 4. They make every thing an instrument of death Their health their wealth their honours are all deadly herbs in the pot their tongue speaks the words of death their hands work the works of death Vse of Instruction to the Godly so live that your life may appear to be yours not the Devils not sinnes that thou doest not live to the world Let thy mouth be a Well of life Be thou a tree of life Prov. 11.20 as Solomon speaks of the righteous Do not thou only live but cause others to live Let thy life put life in others as one candle lightens another one candle kindleth another Vse 2. Of Terrour to wicked men You live not you rejoyce not you have no true mirth or gladnesse False joy is real misery A man that hath an estate of brasse for gold is not rich thou art a dead man as yet even condemned to Hell every day the sentence may be executed on thee and it 's plain thou art dead because thou feelest not thou complainest not under this heavy burden Or Death all things are yours We are upon the third part of the Apostles Enumeration and that is the different conditions which are in the world expressed under those two titles Life and death Not only life is yours but death also And in this later lieth the greater wonder For how Death which was inflicted at first as a curse and punishment for sinne and is the period of all outward comforts in this life should be for our advantage is hard to imagine and then that two contraries should meet in the same issue both life and death produce the like effects makes it still the greater paradox But the more unlikely and impossible it is to humane reason the easi●r it is to a divine faith In the Scripture Death admits of several senses 1 Sometimes it 's taken for the spiritual death of the soul in sinne Thus men are often said to be dead and well may this want of grace be called Death because such a man is like Lazarus buried and even putrified in the grave of sinne There is no sense no motion there is nothing but loathsomnesse they are putrifying carkasses and not living men though never so externally glorious in the world 2. There is an eternal Death often mentioned in the Scripture as the reward of every sinne who though they live yet it is a dying life 3. There is the natural Death viz. the dissolution of those two dear friends the soul and the body Lastly Death is put for any great extremity and misery in which sense God is said to raise the dead 2 Cor. 1. And the Israelites captivity is expressed under the similitude pf dead men dead bones and their restauration is a resurrection or living again Ezek 37.1 In these two later considerations we may take it as death comprehends all outward afflictions and miseries as also the separation of soul from body Observe That even Death which in it self is so terrible yet is for a godly mans advantage It 's his mercy it 's his gain as well as life is He may call it his death in a comfortable sense as well as he may call any mercy his To open this consider First That God created man at first after his own Image in righteousnesse and true holinesse and thereby he was immortal Not as God who is absolutely immortal and therefore said Only to have immortality 1 Tim. 6.16 Now as the Angels who are immortal from their intrinsecal constitution having no corruptible principles only God can annihilate them but he was made immortal conditionally had he continued in that state of integrity he had not been capable of death as appeareth by the commination In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die Gen. 2.16 And the Apostle Rom. 5. concludeth That by sinne death reigned over the world where by death is not only meant actual death but potential also or a state of mortality Now the original of death or how it came into the world was not known by the Heathens They called it a tribute that all must pay to nature but why men should die and how it came about at first that they were ignorant of Secondly Vpon Adam 's fall In quo uno omnes peccarunt whose sinne was the sinne of all mankind as Rom 5. Death was inflicted as a punishment upon all So that if we consider death in the abstracted nature of it it is
was shut out of his fathers blessing But this is farre greater to be shut out of Christs prayers Christs intercession and Christs expiation Thou canst not retain sinne and Christ too Thou canst not love the world and Christ too What hope then and refuge remains for thee If Christ cast thee off Is there any other remedy left Can any Angels help thee Are there any more Christs No thy case is altogether desperate who art cast off by him yet men sit and hear these things without fear or trembling And Christ is Gods We are now come to the last round in the Ladder à primo ad ultimum we are now at the last step we cannot go further to say God is any thing else beside himself for he is of himself and to himself All the other particulars may well be received without any difficulty but this seemeth to be a pill hardly taken down The expression seemeth hard Christ is Gods as if Christ were not God but made for God as the world is for the godly But Chrysostome saith well Though the words be the same yet the sense is much different The world is ours as being made for us we are Christs as being his creatures purchased but Christ is Gods as his most beloved Sonne This is true but yet this is not fully the Apostles meaning Therefore Christ is considered two wayes Either First As an absolute God in which sense he is said To think it no robbery to be equal with God Phil. 3.6 And thus though he be the Sonne of God yet he is equal with God Or Secondly As a Mediatour consisting of two Natures Divine and Humane Now if we consider Christ in respect of his Humane so that is a creature and wholly to be referred to God Or if we consider him as a Mediatour thus he is in reference to God the Father For a Mediatour is to bring us to him who is at distance from us Thus Christ both as a man and as a Mediatour in his whole Mediatory Office is not for himself but for God the Father as it is 1 Cor. 15.24 When the Sonne shall give up the Kingdome that God may be all in all We have two places like this 1 Cor. 11.3 The head of the woman is man and the head of Christ is God that is not in respect of his Divine Nature for the first Person cannot be said to be the Head or cause of the second but the beginning but in respect of his Mediatory Office So John 14.28 My Father is greater than I in respect of his Manhood and his Mediatory Office I shall not enter into these sublime Disputes about Christ as a Mediatour Whether that be Divine Worship that belongs to him as so And if Divine How there can be a primary Object of Religious Worship as God the Father and a secondary Object as Christ the Mediatour This though a noble Question yet because not so practical I wave onely some positive things I shall deliver in the point Observe That Christ as man and as a Mediatour is wholly Gods His Office and work as a Mediatour is to reconcile us to God the Father He is called The Saviour and the Mediatour The Saviour in respect of the end which is salvation that he obtaineth for believers and Mediatour in respect of the means and way by which this is accomplished To open this take notice First That Christ is a Person consisting of a Divine and Humane Nature not by mixtion or confusion or by meer inhabitation but by a Personal Vnion which is commonly called Hypostatical I shall not tell you how much that word Hypostasis troubled the Church The Latine Church having a clear contrary thought about the word to the Greek Church So that when they both agreed in the same thing yet the words and phrases they condemned in one another as heretical But the Scripture is very clear both that Christ was God and also man yet but one person not making two Christs and this is one main fundamental Article of Religion The Devil in former ages alwayes endeavoured to rob him of one of these Natures and some have raised these monstrous and damnable heresies again from hell but this foundation and pillar standeth sure Secondly By reason of this Personal Vnion though there be not a real communication of the Properties of each Nature yet there is a verbal one in the concrete both things are predicated of Christ As for example though the Divine Nature is not passible but the Humane Nature onely nor the Humane Nature omnipotent and omniscient but the Divine only yet of Christ we predicate that he suffered that he died that he is omnipotent and omniscient though this be true in respect of one Nature only Thirdly Christ being thus a Person that he may be our Redeemer he is cloathed with those three Offices which fit him fully for our Redemption He is first Medius in respect of his Person God and man Then he is Mediatour in respect of his Office His Office is three-fold a Prophet a Priest and a King This makes him the Trismegist the ter maximus Now we must not judge these things metaphysical curiosities No These are the Articles of our Christian Religion these are to be received by a divine and firme faith Yea in believing Christs Person and his Office lieth all the comfort and treasure of a Christian It 's Christ that should be our study our meditation day and night Quis sit qualis Who he is and what he is Now the Doctrine speaks of Christ both in respect of his Humane Nature and as he is a Mediatour not as God Let us see then How Christ as a man and as a Mediatour is Gods And First His Incarnation and coming into the world it was not for himself but for God He therefore took our Nature upon him that he might bring to God the Father his Elect people God so loved the world that he sent his only begotten Sonne John 3.16 And To us a Sonne is borne to us a Sonne is given Isa 9.6 So that this work of Incarnation this coming into the world from the bosome of the Father which is so stupendious a mystery is originally from the Father It was to do Gods work to obey his will and therefore Christ is called Gods servant Isa 52.13 Not that Christ came into the world against his own will or as if this were against his own desire but God the Father is the original of all Secondly That Christ is Gods appeareth in that he acknowledgeth his Doctrine and Truth not to be his but his Fathers taking all off from himself and making himself only a Minister or Embassadour coming in his Fathers Name and revealing his will See this notably John 8 26 28. I speak those things which I heard of him I do nothing of my self but as my Father hath taught me I speak these things So vers 42. I came not of
sheep run into bryers that consume more then shelter 1 Cor. 7. the Apostle calleth it The fashion of the world not the substance and he saith it passeth away Whereas God is said to be alwaies the same and to abide from everlasting to everlasting Therefore if thy heart were wise thou wouldest see the vanity of these things Seventhly This must needs be an hainous sinne because it 's a breach of the first Commandement it 's direct Idolatry Worse then when we worship the true God after a false and unlawfull manner yet how severely doth God punish this kind of Idolatry How often do the Prophets threaten because of this But now thou who givest thy heart licence to delight in these things below thou sinnest against the first Commandement Thou errest in the Object of thy worship and not in the manner And is God only zealous of outward worship not of inward Is he angry only when men bow the body to wood and stones and not when the soul is prostituted to the creature Maiest thou not justly expect that as God said to those Idolaters They should call and see if their Idol gods would hear and deliver them So the Lord may bid thee call to those creatures to see if they will save thee if they will deliver thee from Hell Do not then wonder at the folly of Micha who cryed They have taken away my gods If gods Why did they not save themselves And thus here it is death takes away thy gods The fire may take away thy gods Oh that men would at last be awakened out of there blindnesse and folly herein Eighthly This creature aff●ction is a wofull condition because it 's a debasing of a mans self and making of him a slave to that which he should rule over All the creatures they are made for his use God out of his rich abundance hath provided the●e things liberally for thee but they are given thee only to use As the belly is for meates and meates for the belly but God will destroy both the one and the other So all these creatures that are corruptible they are for thee who art also corruptible but God will destroy both the one and the other Therefore thou sinnest against that noble End why God made thee It was to enjoy him He did not give a reasonable immortal soul and made thee the master piece of his visible creatures that thou shouldst crawle on the dust Say rather with Austin Fe●●sti domine cor nostrum irrequietum est Thou madest our heart and it is restlesse till it come to thee again Vse of Admonition to every unregenerate man to inform himself throughly of his wretched and undone estate Thou canst not go beyond a creature and therefore shalt never partake of that infinite eternal happinesse which is in God himself Dost thou not plainly see the vanity and uncertainty of all other things Can any creature say I will justifie thee I will glorifie thee Consider how greately it is to thy losse to leave the Sun and go to the Starres To forsake the Ocean and take up a drop Oh will these things be ever as good as a God to thee And then in the next place Consider how dearly the enjoying of these things will cost thee Doth not our Saviour say What will it profit a man to winne the whole world and loose his soul Mat. 16.26 If now the whole world thou gainest would be no advantage thou wouldest be a wretched looser for all that Oh think I get a finite good and loose an infinite I loose an eternal good for a temporary a particular for an universal This will be thy complaint in Hell to all eternity for thy madnesse herein Antidotes and Meanes against this Creature-Affection I shall now conclude this first Doctrine with giving severall directive Antidotes and meanes against this creature-affection that so being loosened from the world our hearts may be fixed on God And First Let this consideration move you That you cannot addresse your selves unto God in Prayer while thy heart is not above the world Doth not our Saviour in that direction of his to Prayer give God that description of a Father in Heaven And why so but that we should lift up our hearts and affections thither So that as in Antiquity the Deacon cryed Sursum corda that they should not rest upon the element in the Sacrament but look up to Christ himself Thus also in every duty and performance a Sursum corda a lift up your hearts is necessary Therefore upon this ground it it that we may truly say No natural man did ever pray in his whole life did ever perform any one holy duty since he was born because he could never truly lift up his heart to God Prayer is called Ascensio mentis ad Deum Now a natual man can no more ascend upwards towards God then the earth can have an ascending motion Every creature that did creep upon the earth it was unclean And thus all thy duties and religious performances which creep and crawle upon the ground which soar not up high they make thee unclean and abominable before God Now should not this Argument be like a sword in thy bowels What live such a life wherein thou canst not pray no Prayer will do any good Continue in such an estate wherein thou art not able to draw nigh to God but art the Bird tyed by the snare that would fain fly up but is pulled back again Thus thou hast some sighes and some desires but presently thou art pulled down again with those clogs of creatures that are upon thee Secondly Consider Thy heart● it is the choicest and chiefest Treasure about thee It is too noble for any creature Thou doest dishonour thy self in making it serve the creature We see God himself calls for the heart of a man as the best Sacrifice My sonne give me thy heart Prov 23.26 And Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence So that as the heart naturally considered is the principle of all life and nature hath placed a wonderfull defence about it Thus the heart spiritually also considered is the chief fountain of all our happinesse and misery Therefore it 's sure destruction to let thy heart runne out upon the creature that is to make the chiefest of thy soul subordinate to that which is farre inferiour It 's as if thou shoudest let swine or such unclean creatures come into thy choicest Chamber It was a sad calamity to Pharaoh when the frogs and lice crept up into his Chamber and he could not be quiet in his most retired room no lesse yea farre greater an evil it is when thou sufferest these fading creatures to get into the heart Keep that for God alone Nothing is to possesse that place but God himself He that filleth Heaven and earth and makes that his dwelling place doth also require thy heart Hence it is that the Apostle James calleth those who love
whereby he is able to discern good and hate evil As if the sense of the Psalmist was this Why do the men of the world seek thus after earthly good things and are so uncertain in their affections for God hath placed the light of reason and conscience in every man whereby he is able to know there is the chiefest good Now although we do not refuse this interpretation upon Illyricus his Reason that there are no implanted principles of knowledge about God yet the context doth more evince the latter that it is by Prayer-wise to God And although Bellarmine saith the Hebrew may be pointed so as to make Signatum est and that the Septuagint know better then the M●sorites yet because it 's ordinary to put Samech for Sin and He for Alph as here Nesah for New we take it to signifie to lift up And although it should be from nes vixillum that could not overthrow the sense And the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not signifie an impression of any thing in us but a manifestation As in that place 2 Thes 3.14 Note such a man by an Epistle We therefore understand it of David's Prayer That God would give a manifestation of his gracious love to him A Metaphor taken from men who when reconciled do willingly turn their face and look pleasantly upon those whom they delight in Observe That a gracious heart doth more esteem the favour of God and the light of his countenance then any earthly thing whatsoever This light of Gods countenance is often spoken of by David Psal 44.3 The original of all the mercies God vouchsafed to Israel is said to be Gods power and the light of his countenance because he had a favour to them So Psal 99.15 Blessed are they that know the joyfull sound they shall walk in the light of thy countenance This favour of God is that which makes a glad and joyfull heart Hence in Antiquity it was a proverbial speech to expresse an happy man by Deus vidit God hath looked on such a man Though the light of Gods countenance doth sometimes signifie only his bare knowledge and omniscience as Psal 90.8 Thou hast put our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance as Gods face is sometimes upon a man for good and sometimes it 's said to be against man for his hurt but the summe is That as it is with a man when he is pleased with another he turneth his face to him looketh pleasantly and cheerfully as Job saith of himself Job 29.24 Thus when God is pleased with a man then the Believer apprehends nothing but love and favour from God He seeth not frowns but smiles in his face And he seeth God to be to him by the eye of Faith As Esau's face was to Jacob pleasing and therefore said to be like the face of God Let us consider what this phrase doth expresse And First It supposeth that all our iniquities and sinnes they are pardoned and blotted out For as long as our guilt is upon us and God seeth that he turneth his face from us He is an angry Judge He is of purer eyes then to behold such things Your iniquities divide between you and me Hence when sinne is said to be pardoned the expression is that it is covered Psal 32. implying that sinne of it self is loathsome and abominable to his eyes Not but that he seeth sin in every Believer only it 's pardoned in Christ and so not imputed to the Believer And though God see it so as to chasten for it yet not to adjudge to eternal destruction And this is so great a blessednesse that David Psal 32. doth only call this so Blessed is the man not whom God makes great rich and honoured in this world but to whom he imputeth no sinne at all This the humbled soul counteth a mercy and in its sad agonies prayeth for the light of Gods countenance All the world doeth him no good All the creatures that would comfort him do but as those that would give Christ vinegar and gall to drink David himself Psal 5 1. when in his great conflicts because of his sinne minds not his Kingdom or honours but prayeth that God would have mercy upon him according to his loving kindnesse Those tender mercies of God he flyeth unto Till therefore sinne be removed Gods anger and wrath belongs unto us Secondly In this is implyed Gods favour and love towards us that he is pleased and become reconciled with us If the wrath of a King be so terrible how much more is the wrath of God But when the light of his countenance is towards us then he is gracious then his eye his face are all pleasant and reviving When David is reconciled to Absolom then it 's no longer commanded that he should keep from his presence but his Fathers bowels long to see him him again Can there be a greater good in the world desired then that Gods face should be pleasant to us Then that he should become reconciled with us For as it is better to undergo all the wrath of all the most cruel Tyrants in the world then to lye under Gods displeasure so it is better to enjoy the favour and love of God then the advantage of all second Causes Gen. 4.14 Cain speaks of this as the height of his misery That he should be hid from the face of the Lord. To be in Hell it would not be a torment but because Gods face is hid Wheresoever God hideth his face there is the inlet of all woe and misery Then on the contrary when the face of God doth shine upon a Believer as David prayeth for this often then is that mans estate blessed and happy God is then at peace with him God is then reconciled Now as the Apostle argueth Rom. 8. If God be for us who shall be against us When the Sunne shineth there may arise many black and thick clouds there may be sad and gloomy daies but when the face of God doth shine on his children then no darknesse no tempests no sad temptations whatsoever can hinder a man from having the beautifull beames of Gods favour He can make the Sunne shine in the dark night If he giveth peace none can hinder it Thirdly This phrase doth imply the original and cause of all Gods gracious mercies in time It 's because of the light of his countenance that any good cometh to us For as the damned in Hell who are totally cast out from his face cannot receive so much as a drop of water so on the other side where the favour of God is towards a man there is a Treasure of all the goodnesse he can desire Therefore when David prayeth here he doth as I may so say ask the whole Kingdom of God Have this and have all if it be necessary for us When David prayeth for the light of Gods countenance he doth not ask for a single mercy It is not for one particular comfort
filled with God Thirdly Those can only desire the light of Gods countenance that do renounce their own righteousnesse That do not justifie themselves or put confidence in their own righteousnesse Commonly there are none more ignor●nt and stupid about this glorious priviledge then the civil pharisaical and formal men who placeth all their trust in the good works they do Those affections and that hope which should be placed on God they are apt to put upon their own seeming righteousnesse Hence Mat. 5.3 our Saviour pronounceth those blessed that are poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven And the Virgin Mary magnifieth God in her Song Luk. 1.53 He hath filled the hungry with good things and the rich he hath sent empty away Not only the prophane man who trampleth this Pearl under his feet but even the formall civil man is a great stranger to this petition This favour is wholly a strange thing to him and all because he is full of himself He makes his good heart his good workes a god a saviour to him and so no wonder if he seek not up to Heaven and desire light from thence Yea in godly men it is thus that the more debased and self emptyed they are the more is their fellowship with God The more do they place their happinesse in beholding of him As you see it was with Paul Who laboured more then he yet Who undervaluing all his graces more then ●e And all this was that Christ might be wholly exalted Oh then know that there is nothing doth so much bolt out this glorious light from shining into thee as self-confidence as self-righteousnesse And this is the reason why God doth so many times withdraw his gracious presence from his own Children that they are in the dark and cannot see any grace and the least spark of heavenly fire within themselves and all because they are apt to be lifted up They must have these thornes in the flesh else they would depend too much upon their own strength and their own graces And when they have been thus humbled then at last they come to esteem Gods favour more then ever as Paul's passengers after a stormy black time rejoyced to see the Sun more then ever Fourthly Such only can esteem the light of Gods countenance who are a spiritual and an heavenly people who have the holy Image of God repaired in them He that is of the earth is earthly and speaks earthly things Joh. 3. but he that is of Heaven is heavenly Such as we are in respect of our spiritual constitution such are our operations and our inclinations No wonder then the natural man desireth not the favour of God for he is in a corrupt and sinfull estate and so can desire nothing but what is suitable thereunto Whereas on the otherside he that is made heavenly he that hath an holy frame of heart the motions of his soul ascend upwards still As you see by David How often doth he professe the breathings the longings and thirstings of his soul after God He cryeth aloud that he hath nothing in Heaven and Earth but God He makes God his Portion his Shepherd his Refuge his Hope his all things unto him Whence is David thus carried out to the favour of God but because of an heavenly heart within There could not come such sweet fragrant smells but because his heart was like a spiritual Garden You see all like desireth and delights in that which is like And if a godly man love to see the face and have the company of another godly man how much more must he desire God himself Oh then complain of that heavy lumpish earthly heart of thine that doth not often say My heart breaketh for the longing after God at all times As the Hart desireth the waters so pants my soul after thee O God If thou complainest that thou hast affections for every thing but God thy heart is taken with every comfort but him Oh bewail this dull and sinfull frame Thou wantest heavenlynesse Thy heart and conversation is not in Heaven Fifthly Such only pray for the light of Gods countenance as live by Faith and are affected with things as revealed by the Scripture It 's as impossible for a man living wholly by sense and upon worldly Principles to rejoyce in the favour of God as a worm that crawleth on the ground to delight in the Sunne Faith is that noble grace which is like Wings to the soul to make it fly up to Heaven We see it in Paul What was that which so raised up his heart to Christ What is that which made him to sit with Christ in heavenly places What is that which is the substance of things hoped for to every Believer but Faith We are all lame cripples till Faith heal us And this is the reason why all worldly men have no more sense of this divine Benefit then the very bruit beasts because they are wholly strangers to the life of Faith For it 's not the bodily eye that can see the face of God neither hath God any bodily face or eyes but these things are wholly spiritual And therefore as the deaf ear cannot be affected with melodious musick so neither can a natural heart discern of this light of Gods favour Oh then acquaint thy self with Faith This is a Prospective-Glasse that will discover such Objects to thee that of thy self thou couldst not apprehend Faith makes us to behold the glory of Gods favour We are starke blind till Faith open our eyes Sixthly Such onl● can esteem the favour of God who have had the experience of the sweetnesse and excellency of it A man that hath not tasted Honey knoweth not how sweet it is Therefore David calls upon the men of the world to taste and see how good God is If the natural man ever had any experimentall feeling of Gods favour and his love then he would quickly have another heart be of another mind Then he would sell all to get this Pearl But all the while men are unregenerate they know no other good then that of the creature It hath never entred into their hearts to conceive what it is to have the face of God shine upon his people Insomuch that all the invitations and allurements are in vain untill God be pleased to come into the soul and discover his sweetnesse and consolations to him The experienced Christian that hath often drank of this Wine still remains thirsty and desirous after more For whereas the having of earthly things doth satiate and at last nauseate a mans heart so that he hath enough in this heavenly enjoyment of God he never hath enough but the more he hath tasted of it the more hungery he is still Alwaies praying with David Oh when will he come to me When those in the Canticles asked the Church which was so ravished with Christ preferring him above ten thousand What is thy beloved more then others it was an Argument they
much inordinate affections and desires even to lawfull things this makes God jealous And for this thou shalt not have the comfortable light of his countenance The Church appeared with the Moon under her feet All sublunary things ought to be under the heart of a godly man But as the Sunne is sometimes eclipsed by the interposition of the Moon so is the favour of God too often obscured by minding these earthly things You see then how difficult a thing it is to keep this fire alwaies upon the Altar To keep this Lamp from going out Therefore the prophane man who never watcheth to these things who doth not seek the Kingdom of Heaven in the first place cannot have this light of Gods favour Lastly Thy quiet and peaceable conscience is not from Gods favour but because never assulted by the Devil never checked by doubts and oppositions from within David had the comfortable beames of Gods favour shining upon him but he had also sad wrestling within How often did he chide and rebuke his soul for being so inordinately cast down within him It 's a saying acknowledged by all Divines He that never doubted never believed O Lord I believe help my unbelief Though doubts are not a duty yet they will be necessary companions as corruptions to our graces Of the Joy of Saints in God and heavenly things as one Effect of the Light of Gods Countenance The Nature of it and the Preeminences of it comparatively to all other Pleasures whatsoever PSAL. 4.7 Thou hast put more gladness into my heart then they have had when their Corn and Wine encreaseth THis text declareth a Reason why David desires the light of Gods countenance above any earthly things why his wish is contrary to those of the world And the Reason is deduced from that blessed and admirable effect of it upon David's heart God being reconciled put more gladnesse into his heart then all the pleasures of the world could amount unto So that in the words we are to consider the Benefit or Priviledge it self Gladnesse It 's a rule That Omnis vita est propter delectationem all life yea all operations are for delight So that Gladnesse and Joy is the soul in its highest felicity It 's the action of the soul in flourishing Characters It 's the soul in its glory It 's Arras unfolded and spread open 2. There is the Original and Efficient Cause of it God Thou hast put Gods comforts and joy they are like himself infinite pure unmixed there is no fear or sorrow accompanying such 3. There is the manner of participation Thou hast put it into my heart This sheweth the efficacy and irresistiblenesse of Gods comfort He puts it into the heart men cannot They can only suggest they cannot put into the heart If God puts comfort in all the troubles and sad temptations which arise in the soul cannot be able to withstand it no more then the night can hinder the day from dispelling of it 4. There is the Subject or Vessel receiving it My heart The worlds joy is but in the mouth or in the phansie this is in the heart Lastly There is the aggravation of it by a comparison with all earthly joy and that the greatest which can be More then when their Corn and Wine encreaseth Judea was a Land that abounded with Corn and Vineyards And the Scripture when it would expresse a great joy calls it the joy of Harvest Yet David's joy is greater then this Now though the text instanceth in these two yet we are to understand all kind of joy The joy of the rich man of the great man of the voluptuous Let the joy be what it can be in any earthly thing an heavenly heart hath from God a better joy It 's true some Interpreters make this the sense as if David did here professe his joy because his enemies whom he reproved in the beginning of his Psalm did thus encrease As if he would say Though they hate and oppose me yet I am so farre from bearing ill will to them that I rejoyce in their abundance Yea some Popish Interpreters make a mysticall meaning as if here were a Prophesie of the delight of Gods people because of the Sacrament consisting of Bread and Wine Yea Oyl is added in some Copies of their Translations as if their extream Unction were also intended But this is indeed to make the Scripture a Nose of Wax as they call it sometimes Therefore the Hebrew Preposition Min though it sometimes signifie Of yet in many places it 's to be interpreted comparatively For rather And thus it is here Observe That the godly have more joy from God and heavenly things then all the men of the world can have in their earthly delights If a wicked man did but know what the comfort and consolation is that doth accompany an holy life he would judge all his earthly pleasures to be like the Prodigals husk He would cry out of his madnesse Oh foolish and unwise that have left this spiritual joy to partake of humane and worldly 1 Pet. 1.8 It 's called unspeakable joy and full of glory Such a joy that it can never be expressed As a Father or a Mother cannot expresse their natural affections It 's a joy which the godly that feel it cannot declare unto another but when they have said all they can still they feel more Though out of their abundance the heart speakes yet it cannot speak all it's abundance And as a godly man cannot expresse it so neither can a natural man believe any such thing he cannot be perswaded that there is such joy in it As he that hath not tasted Honey cannot judge how sweet it is Neither can a blind man think what a glorious creature the Sunne is Let us therefore first open the absolute nature and dignity of this Joy then speak of it comparatively And in the first place The glory and dignity of this joy is from two particulars in the text First It is from the Original As there is a wisdome which comes from above that is heavenly and a wisdome fleshly and devilish so also there is a joy which comes from above that is pure and excellent and there is a joy that is of the world and the flesh and this is indeed devilish But the joy which a godly man receiveth it 's from Heaven from God himself and so hath a pure and choice excellency in it It differs from worldly joy as the elementary fire from the culinary The elementary fire needs no pabulum no wood to maintain it it will not perish but the kitchen fire that must have wood or coales it will not last any longer then this fewel Thus all worldly joy that must have daily sticks and coales put to it If Friends die if Wealth be lost Pleasures denyed this joy is gone but this joy from above abides the same As long as God abides in Heaven so long that continues unlesse we by our
sinnes provoke God to take it away All the world cannot give such a joy as this is Therefore Gal. 5.22 it 's called the fruit of Gods Spirit and often Joy in the holy Ghost Hence the Spirit of God is called the Comforter And God is stiled 2 Cor. 1.3 the God of all consolations because it is he alone that workes it Men may create the world as well as of themselves get such a joy as this Hence the people of God walk many times mournfully for the want of it And there is no Samaritan can put this Oyl into their wounds David cannot alwaies say God put such joy in his heart Yea he professeth the clean contrary sometimes That his soul was bowed down that he watered his bed with teares And Joh. was almost like a damned man in Hell But of the Reason of this desolatenesse we may speak hereafter It 's enough that this demonstrateth God to be the Author of all our joy And that as all the men in the world cannot make the Sunne arise in the morning did not God appoint it that natural course so neither are any able to bring this joy into their hearts Therefore in the second place The second discovery of this joy is from the manner of working it Thou didst put it into my heart That is an excellent expression It sheweth what dominion and soveraignty God hath over the heart He can as easily put joy into thy soul though afflicted though tempted though grieved with sinne as thou canst pour Wine into a Bottle He can with a word command waters to become Wine So that as the Orthodox maintain That Gods grace in converting the heart is irresistible it 's insuperable The heart cannot resist it with finall prevalency For à nullo duro corde respicitur quippe ad hoc datur ut tollat cor durum So it 's true also in spiritual joy The grieved heart the sad heart cannot reject it because it 's given to take away the sad heart Hence we read of the people of God the Martyrs and others that they have rejoyced under their tribulations more then their Persecutors did under all their abundance How was this possible but that God did so fill their hearts that no outward or inward misery could have any room there This should teach the people of God to walk so exactly that they may not on the contrary say God hath put more bitternesse into their heart then any can have in their worldly miseries For as the joy of God is more then all earthly joy so the sense of Gods anger and wrath causeth more sorrow and anguish of spirit then all outward calamities can do A wounded spirit who can bear Thirdly This Joy which God puts into our hearts followeth upon a true godly sorrow and mourning for sinne All the joy of thy heart which doth not flow from humiliation and deep sorrow for sinne it 's but a blaze it 's like the crackling of thornes And this is necessary to be observed for the Hypocrite who never had any true sound grace yet he may have some transitory joy So Mat. 13. They received the Word with joy And some rejoyced in John Baptists light but it was for a season only And thus many in some fits yea in some holy duties find a gladnesse and inward joy upon their hearts but this never had a true sorrow go before Before Paul was admitted into Gospel joyes he was striken to the ground and had a deep sense of his former guilt Therefore the Promise is Blessed are they that mourn for they shall rejoyce Mat. 5. Therefore as the Psalmist speaks concerning afflictions it 's true also of godly sorrow They that sow in teares shall reap in joy Many desire joy they are willing to hear of a Sermon that may cause gladnesse in their hearts but then they cannot endure the preparatory unto it They do not love the Law should wound them before the Gospel heal them But this is the nature of all heavenly joy it 's a daughter to godly sorrow Verus paenitens de peccato doler de dolore gaudet And this is it which makes godly joy so welcome and so precious because the heart was mourning and humbled before thinking it self unworthy of any joy in the least manner Though others might rejoyce yet not they This then is the method God takes First the Spirit of God is a Spirit of Supplication and mourning then it 's a Spirit of Joy and consolation Fourthly This joy which God putteth in the heart it 's from spiritual and heavenly motives Therefore the duty is so often called for to Rejoyce in the Lord And it 's called Joy in the holy Ghost It ariseth from Gods favour from Gospel-Priviledges because God is reconciled because sinne is pardoned because we are justifica through the blood of Christ So that the joy of a godly man and of a natural man differ as much as Heaven and Earth For what makes thee rejoyce at any time Is it some worldly pleasure Is it not some earthly content Is it not because such and such earthly advantages befall thee Thy heart is never cheerfull and merry but from such considerations Now how different and poor and contemptible are these to this heavenly Joy For the gladnesse of their heart ariseth from the love of God from an Interest in Christ from the consideration of eternal glory These sublime and spiritual Objects do ravish the godly soul So that the delights of a beast are not more inferiour to the delights of a man as a rational man then the delights of a man are to him as a Christian What the Apostle speaketh concerning the thoughts and words of a Child comparatively to a man the same is true also in respect of joy 1 Cor. 13. Children have their joy they laugh as Children they rejoyce in their Babies as Children but when they come to be men they cannot rejoyce as Children they cannot delight to play as they did when little Boyes Thus when thou art once made godly and hast tasted of more excellent Joy thou canst not delight in the pleasures of sinne nor in the greatest advantages of the world They are below thee Thou saiest to thy self when inordinately rejoycing in these things as she did but falsly to David Thou hast made thy self like one of the vile fellows to day The godly mans joy comes from an higher Spring then the worlds doth Fifthly Hence in the next place No man can have this spiritual joy but such who are regenerated and born of God Who have a spiritual and supernatural life We see in nature that according to the several kinds of life so there are several delights and proportionable thereunto the natural and animal life the rational life the sense hath its delights and reason hath its delght Thus when a man is born again he hath his joy and his delight Do not ye read often of David that professeth the Word of God
the whole world is for a godly man What wealth what honours what health is necessary and needfull he is sure to have He that dwelleth by the Ocean he hath all the water in the Sea for his use though it 's not necessary he should make use of it all He that hath the use of any thing hath the thing Again if a man have never so many things and do not use them he hath them not As the great rich men of the world Habent ne fruantur non ut fruantur The having of them keeps them from enjoying of them as he said In opem me copia fecit and they are not theirs for use because they are theirs in possession Thirdly The world is a godly mans as his shop and place of service It 's that wherein he works and labours for God It 's the great shop for mankind to do that work God hath appointed them It 's the great vineyard in which God hath set every man to work This is the via the other is patria This world is for doing the world to come for receiving And our Saviour spake many Parables to this purpose that he giveth all talents he be ru●●eth every man with several oportunities and they must improve them they must be merchants in making the best for God And we are the more to attend to this because we have but a day the night cometh and none can work Oh that this were considered by us The world is a working place for Heaven all that is to be done must be done here when thou art taken out of this world all thy work is done for Heaven Then thou art to receive a reward Take heed either of spe●●ing thy talent upon sinne and in the service of Satan or hiding it in a napkin to do nothing with it We see what toil and labour men take for the things of this world But labour for the meat saith our Saviour which perisheth not John 6.27 There are eternal riches and treasures Oh that our hearts were more upon these things One thing is necessary they chuse the better part who neglect all things to enjoy God Fourthly The world is a godly mans Inne or lodging place It 's a provision God makes for a season till they are ripe for Heaven Thus the godly are often compared to pilgrims and strangers and Abraham Heb. 11. with the Patriarchs though they had the promise of the world yet they were as pilgrims and declared it by all they did That they sought for a City of Gods own making which abideth for ever So that the whole world is but a with-drawing room for the godly They are as travellers in an Inne who are not inordinately affected with the good things there neither will they spend all they have there but still look to their homes And truly this sheweth the excellent frame of godly men though they are in the world yet not of the world John 17. As we see the vapours though they arise out of the earth yet they ascend and follow the motions of the Heavens Thus it is here though the godly are in the world yet their affections desires and motions of heart are according to heavenly directions The wicked are in the world as their proper place their center they would never goe out of it but the godly seek for another Countrey Fifthly The godly have the world as the Stage or Artillary-yard a place of Exercise wherein all their graces are to be drawn out by the opposition therein Even as Paul 2 Cor. 12. said There was given him a thorn in the flesh and it 's given to the godly to suffer How is that Because these exercises and oppositions they are to discover and draw out the godlinesse and power of believers As some among the Romans were put to many fights and exercises to prove their valour Thus the godly is in the world as a souldier in the camp or in the battel Our Saviour John 15.18 tels his Disciples of the hatred and opposition they shall meet with in the world if they were such as the world would have the world would love them but because they do not conform to their wayes therefore they are persecuted and driven up and down Look upon the world as a place of Exercise do not think to find it otherwise than an Aegypt to thee It will therefore be thy wisdome to get the rich spoils of it as from an enemy To be quickned to the height of all thy graces by how much more the comba●e and conflict thou hast is exceeding great The greatnesse of the tempest will discover the great art of the Pilot. Sixthly The world is a godly mans Because all things therein are sanctified and made clean to his use When Adam tell we lost our dominion and being our selves unclean every thing becometh unclean to us Tit. 1.15 To the pure all things are pure but to the unbelieving all things are defiled You see then that to wicked men nothing is pure though they have great estates great honours yet nothing is clean to them Though they have a civil right to such things yet wanting the sanctified use of them every thing becomes defiled to them So that every thing they touch is pitch every thing they eat is poison there is a spiritual leprosie upon them Because without faith it 's impossible to please God Oh if there were no other sense then this that all things to the godly are sanctified and clean in their use this were admirable Having faith thou art reconciled to God and so thy eating thy drinking thy buying thy selling all thy actions are accepted of Thus you see how the world is a godly mans The Objection then is Why have the godly the least possession of it if they have the sanctified use of it Doth not David complain That wicked men have the fatnesse of the earth Did not Christ tell those who profered their service That the Foxes had holes and the Birds nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Matth. 8.20 And can the Disciple be above his Master Doth not Paul tell us of his hunger nakednesse and all kind of straits How are these promises any thing but golden delusions To answer this you must know That even those wicked men who are said to have the world at their will yet they have not the world indeed they have it not as the godly men The little that the righteous hath is better than great treasures of the wicked Psal 37.16 For First Whatsoever the wicked man hath he hath it in wrath it cometh from Gods anger God is angry with the wicked all the day long And Heb. 11. Without faith it 's impossible to please God Those that are heirs of the world have it by walking in the faith of Abraham Think you Dives that fared so deliciously every day had all his wealth in a mercy No it was for his punishment it
the world Adulterers and Adulteresses Jam. 44. For the heart of a man should be kept as the chast Wife to Christ and love no other but him Therefore when it le ts loose her desires to the creatures then it becomes guilty of Adultery then God is jealous Oh then make more account where thy heart is placed Look to that more diligently for it 's not fit any creature should be placed nearer to that then God himself Doth not our Saviour say He that loveth Father or Mother or life it self more then me cannot be my Disciple Thirdly Meditate on this That all those who ever loved the creature immoderately have at last found the vanity and unprofitablenesse of it They have been wearied and glutted with it As he said to that Tyrant Satia te sanguine quem sitiisti He gave him blood enough at last So commonly God in anger doth give thee abundance of such things as thou desirest but they are for thy hurt Thou desirest them as the hydropical man water or as the feavourish man Wine which things if they obtain their disease is the more encreased and they become the more dangerous The wise man observeth it of riches Eccles Chap. 5.13 he calls it a sore evil That riches are kept for the owners thereof to their hurt Now then is not this very dangerous to thee to place thy heart upon that which will be poyson and bane to thee This is true of honours preferments any creature if excessively desired will do a man hurt It 's like surfetting upon Honey And this is the reason why God keepeth his own children in so many streights and difficulties he doth not give them the things they desire Yea commonly God doth crosse them in all their earthly affections and undertakings so that they cannot have those mercies they would have And the Lord is herein very mercifull to them for that which is inordinately desired would be also immoderately possessed and so like too much blood it would quickly breed mortal diseases in thee So that that very consideration which often makes thee grudging and discontented may justly put thee upon thankfulnesse Thou maiest blesse God that he doth these things for thee which are ad Sanitatem non ad voluptatem It's Gods goodnesse that I have not the mercies I would have for then I should be undone And that even the godly are apt to seek immoderately after these earthly comforts appeareth in that reproof to Baruch Jer. 45.5 Seekest thou great things for thy self Seek them not Baruch an eminent man in godlinesse even in those daies when there was nothing but destruction universal threatned even then he was apt to seek great things for himself Yea the Apostle complaineth of the whole Church of God almost at Philippi Phil. 2.22 For all seek their own and not the things of Jesus Christ. This disposition being thus in the godly did not the Lord both quench the fire within by sanctifying grace and remove the fewel from without he would quickly be all in a flame Fourthly Consider that therefore it is God hath mingled gall with the honey of every creature That therefore it is every thing is obtained with difficulty and possessed with cares that so we might not rest upon the creature As God made Aegypt a place of oppressiion and misery to the Israelites that so they might willingly go out and seek for Canaan Thus the Lord hath made the world a valley of teares He hath caused every relation every conditon to have its great exercise that so God might be all in all That as you see out of the same root groweth both the Rose and the Prickels about it so likewise out of same creature out of the same condition cometh both Honey and a sting both that which is comfortable and that which is molesting Now Gods end in this is to make thee not with Peter to say It 's good to be here but to seek out for a better good Thou must therefore be very foolish and bruitish if this experience doth not teach thee Hath not Solomon made this Motto upon all the creatures That they are vanity and vexation of spirit Not only vanity but vexation Wilt thou therefore lay thy self down to sleep when there are so many bryers and thornes under thee Oh say This is not my rest Here is not all good There is a better place then this world and a greater happinesse then the enjoying of the creature Even the wisest the richest and most potent in the world have not had their content but thornes have been in their sides and their hath been two drops of gall to one of Honey That Starre called wormwood hath fallen into our waters and made them bitter What then should we learn from this but that it 's our best wisdome and our safest undertaking to look up unto God as the fountain of all happinesse As of him in whom we shall not have any occasion of wearinesse There will never be cause to complain that I find not God so full of comfort and blessednesse to me as I expected Yea God will be unto us above all that we can expect For it cannot enter into the heart of a natural man to conceive the fulnesse and excellency of God And therefore the natural men of the world are commanded to taste and see how good God is It 's for want of this spiritual and heavenly experience that we are so apt to be affected too much with the creature and nothing at all with God Fifthly Remember That these creatures whatsoever they are for comfort they are not originally and of themselves so but are only Instruments and Conduit-Pipes And therefore they are defective in these Particulars 1. They cannot give them any comfort or content of themselves They are not able to satisfie and quiet the heart For how many have been under the greatest mercies in the world and have enjoyed all the outward abundance that their hearts could desire and yet for all that have an unquiet discontented spirit And the reason is because it 's God only that fashioneth the heart It 's he that formeth the spirit And therefore under the saddest afflictions that can possibly befall we see God made David of a quiet and satisfied ●pirit he could lie down and tak● his rest when his own Son was up in armes against him and ready to deprive him both of life and Kingdom at once So it 's said David encouraged himself in his God when he was in that sad distresse at Zicklag So that it 's not the conditions without but the framing of the heart within that makes miserable or happy Is it not then folly as well as sinne to look after this or that creature inordinately which of it self cannot adde one Cubit to thy contentation Thou maiest be in a Prison yea in Hell while thou livest in a vast and large Palace and all this is because it 's not the creature not the