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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes A father will teach his children the childe goes to his father Father Teach me my Lesson so David goes to God Psal 143.10 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God The Lord glories in this title Isa 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit Gods children have that anointing which teacheth them all things necessary to salvation they see those mysteries which are vail'd over to carnal eyes as Elisha saw those Horses and Chariots of fire which his servant did not see 2 Kings 6.17 The adopted see their own sins Satans snares Christs beauty which they whom the god of the world had blinded cannot discern whence was it that David understood more than the Ancients Psal 119.100 He had a Father to teach him God was his Instructer Psal 71.17 O God thou hast taught me from my youth Many a childe of God complains of ignorance and dulness remember this thy Father will be thy Tutor he hath promised to give his spirit to lead thee into all truth John 16.13 And God doth not only inform the understanding but incline the will he doth not only teach us what we should do but enable us to do it Ezek. 36.27 I will cause you to walk in my statutes What a glorious priviledge is this to have the star of the world pointing us to Christ and the load-stone of the Spirit drawing 7. If we are children this gives boldness in prayer Privi ∣ ledge 7 the childe goes with confidence to his father and he cannot finde in his heart to deny him Luke 11.13 How much more shall your heavenly Father give his holy Spirit to them that ask him All the father hath is for his childe if he comes for money who is it for but his childe If thou comest to God for pardon for brokenness of heart God cannot deny his childe Who doth he keep his mercies in store for but his children And that which may give Gods children holy boldness in prayer is this When they consider God not only in the relation of a Father but as having the disposition of a Father Some parents are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a morose rugged nature but God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Father of mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 He begets all the bowels in the world in prayer we should look upon God under this notion a Father of mercy sitting upon a Throne of grace we should run to this heavenly Father in all conditions 1. In our sins as that sick childe 2 Kings 4.19 He said unto his father my head my head assoon as he found himself not well he ran to his father to succour him So in case of sin Run to God My heart my heart O this dead heart Father quicken it this hard heart Father soften it Father my heart my heart 2. In our tentations A childe when another strikes him runs to his Father and complains so when the Devil strikes us by his temptations let us run to our Father Father Satan assaults and hurles in his fiery darts he would not only wound my peace but thy glory Father take off the Tempter 't is thy childe that is worried by this red Dragon Father wilt not thou bruise Satan under my feet What a sweet priviledge is this when any burden lies upon our spirits we may go to our Father and unload all our cares and griefs into his bosome Privi ∣ ledge 8 8. If we are children then we are in a state of freedom Claudius Lysias valued his freedom of Rome at an high rate a state of son-ship is a state of freedom this is not to be understood in an Antinomian sense that the children of God are freed from therule of the Moral Law this is such a freedom as Rebels take Was it ever heard that a childe should be freed from duty to his parents But the freedom which Gods children have is an holy freedom they are freed ab imperio carnis from the Law of sin Rom. 8.2 This is the sad misery of an unregenerate person he is in a state of Vassaladge he is under the tyranny of sin * Quamobrem dignitatem tuam abjicis teque servum peccati constituis Bern. Justin Martyr used to say It is the greatest slavery in the world for a man to be subject to his own passions A wicked man is as very a slave as he that works in the Gally look into his heart and there are Legions of lusts ruling him he must do what sin will have him a slave is at the service of an usurping Tyrant if he bid him dig in the Mine hew in the Quarries tug at the Oar he must do it Thus every wicked man must do what corrupt nature inspired by the Divel bids him if sin bids him be drunk be unchaste he is at the command of sin as the Ass is at the command of the Driver sin first enslaves and then damns But the children of God though they are not freed from the in-being of sin yet they are freed from the Law of sin all sins commands are like Laws repeal'd which are not in force though sin live in a childe of God yet it doth not reign Rom 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you Sin hath not a coercive power over a childe of God there is a principle of grace in his heart which gives check to corruption This is a believers comfort though sin be not removed yet it is subdued and though he cannot keep sin out yet he keeps sin under the Saints of God are said to crucifie the flesh Gal. 5.24 Crucifying was a lingring death first one member dyed then another every childe of God crucifies sin some limb of the old man is ever and anon dropping off though sin doth not dye perfectly it dyes daily this is the blessed freedom of Gods children they are freed from the Law of sin they are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 This Spirit makes them free and chearful in obedience 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 9. If we are children then we are heirs apparent to Privi ∣ ledge 9 all the promises the promises are called precious 2 Pet. 2.4 The promises are a Cabinet of jewels they are breasts full of the milk of the Gospel the promises are enriched with variety and are suited to a Christians present condition Doth he want pardoning grace there is a promise carries forgiveness in it Jer. 31.34 Doth he want sanctifying grace there is a promise of healing Hos 14.4 Doth he want corroborating grace there is a promise of strength Isa 41.10 And these promises are the childrens bread the Saints are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heirs of the promise Hebr. 6.17 There is Christ and heaven in a promise and there is never a promise in the Bible but an adopted person may lay a Legal claim to it and say This
Christian Why art thou troubled for wanting that which a reprobate have when thou hast that which the glorified Saints have Thou hast Christ with all his Perquisites and Royalties Suppose a father should deny his son furniture for his house but should settle all his Land upon him had he any cause to complain If God denies thee a little furniture in the world but in the mean time settles his Land upon thee he gives thee the field wherein the pearle of price is hid hast thou any cause to repine A Christian that wants necessaries yet having Christ he hath the one thing needful Col. 2.10 Ye are compleat in him what compleat in Christ and not content with Christ Luther saith the Sea of Gods mercy should swallow up our particular afflictions surely this Sea of Gods love in giving us Christ should drown all our complaints and grievances let the Christian take the Harp and the Viol and bless God Branch 6 6. If Christ be all see the deplorable condition of a Christless person he is poor he is worth nothing Rev. 3.17 Thou art wretched and miserable and poor c. The sadness of a man that wants Christ will appear in these seven particulars 1. He hath no justification what a glorious thing is it when a poor sinner is absolved from guilt and is declared to be rectus in curia but this priviledge flows from Christ all pardons are sealed in his blood Acts 13.39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By him all that believe are justified So then he who is out of Christ is unjustified the rea● us or guilt of sin cleaves to him he must be responsible to justice in his own person and the curse stands in full force against the sinner 2. He that wants Christ wants the beauty of holiness Jesus Christ is a living spring of grace John 1.14 Full of grace and truth Now a Christless person is a graceless pe●son he hath not one shred of holiness The siens must first be engrafted into the stock before it can receive sap and influence from the root we must first be engrafted into Christ before we can of his fulness receive grace for grace John 1.16 A man out of Christ is red with guilt and black with filth he is an unhallowed person and dying in that condition is rendred uncapable of seeing God Hebr. 12.14 3. He that wants Christ hath no true Nobility it is through Christ that we are akin to God of the blood-royal of heaven it is through Christ that God is not ashamed to be called our God Hebr. 11.16 But out of Christ we are looked upon as ignoble persons the Traytors blood runs in our veins a man out of Christ is base-born whoever is his natural father the Divel is his spiritual father John 4.48 4. He that wants Christ wants his freedom nihil durius servitute John 8.36 If the Son make you free you shall be free indeed A man out of Christ is a slave when he sins most freely 5. He that wants Christ hath no ability for service he is as Sampson when his lock was cut his strength is gone from him he wants a vital principle he cannot walk with God he is like a dead member in the body that hath neither strength nor motion John 15.5 Without me ye can do nothing The Organs will make no sound unless you blow in them so unless Christ by his spirit breath in the soul it cannot make any harmony or put forth strength to any holy action 6. He that wants Christ hath no consolation Christ is called the consolation of Israel Luk. 2.25 A Christless soul is a comfortless soul how can such a 〈◊〉 have comfort when he comes to dye he is in debt and hath no surety his wounds bleed and he hath no Physitian he sees the fire of Gods wrath approaching and hath no screen to keep it off he is like a ship in a tempest sickness begins to make a tempest in his body and sin to make a tempest in his conscience and he hath nowhere to put in for harbour oh the terror and anguish of such a man at the houre of death Isaiah 13.8 Their faces shall be as flames an elegant expression the meaning is such fear and horror shall seize upon sinners in the evil day that their countenances shall change and be as pale as a flame what are all the comforts of the world to a dying sinner he looks upon his friends but they cannot comfort him bring him his bags of gold and silver they are as smoak to sore eyes it grieves him to part with them bring him Musick what comfort is the Harp and Viol to a condemned man There are in Spain Tarantula's venemous spiders and those who are stung with them are almost dead and are cured with Musick * Tarantula icti tibiis aut tympanis curantur but those that dye without Christ who is the consolation of Israel are in such hellish pangs and agonies that no Musick is able to cure them 7. He that wants Christ hath no salvation Eph. 5.23 He is the Saviour of the body he saves none but them who are members of his body mystical a strong Scripture against the doctrine of universal redemption Christ leaped into the Sea of his Fathers wrath only to save his Spouse from drowning he is the Saviour of the body so that those who dye out of Christ are cut off from all hopes of salvation Use 2 2. It reproves them who busie themselves about other things with a neglect of Christ Reproof magno conatu nihil agunt Isa 55.2 Wherefore do you spend money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not If you get all the world you are but golden beggars without Christ The Physitian finds out noxious diseases but is ignorant of soul-diseases and while he gets Receits to cure others he neglects the receit of Christs blood to cure himself The Lawyer while he clears other mens titles to their Land he himself wants a title to Christ The Tradesman is busied in buying and selling but neglects to trade for the pearle of price like Israel who went up and down to gather straw or like the load-stone that draws iron to it but refuseth gold These who so mind the world as to neglect Christ their work is but spider-work Hab. 2.13 Is it not of the Lord of Hosts that the people shall labour in the fire and weary themselves for very vanity 1. If Christ be all then set an high valuation upon Use 3 Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 2.7 Exhort To you that believe he is precious If there were a jewel which contained in it Branch 1 the worth of all jewels would you not prize that such a jewel is Christ so precious is he that Saint Paul counted all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dung that he might win Christ Phil. 3.8 Oh that I could raise the appretiation of Jesus Christ prize Christ above
that this mourning will make us melancholy Hindr. 3 We shall drown all our joy in our tears but this is a mistake Lose our joy tell me what joy can there be in a natural condition what joy doth sin afford is not sin compared to a wound and a bruise Isa 1.6 David had his broken bones Psal 51. Is there any comfort in having the bones out of joynt doth not sin breed a palpitation and trembling of heart Deutr. 28.66 Is it any joy for a man to be a Magor-missabib a terror to himself Surely of the sinners laughter it may be said it is mad Eccles 2.2 Whereas holy mourning is the breeder of joy it doth not eclipse but refine our joy and make it better * Homine ad Deum converso mutatur ga●dium non tollitur Aug the Prodigal dated his joy from the time of his Repentance Luke 15.24 Then they began to be merry 4. Checking the motions of the Spirit the Spirit sets Hindr. 4 us a mourning it causeth all our spring-tides Psal 87.7 all my springs are in thee Oft we meet with gracious motions to prayer and repentance now when we stifle these motions which is called a quenching the Spirit 1 Thes 5.19 then we do as it were hinder the tyde from coming in When the dew falls then the ground is wet when the Spirit of God falls as dew in its influences upon the soul then it is moistned with sorrow but if the Spirit withdraw the soul is like Gideons dry fleece a ship can as well sail without the wind a bird can as well flie without wings as we can mourn without the Spirit Take heed of grieving the Spirit do not drive away this sweet Dove from the arke of thy soul The Spirit is res tenera delicata if it be grieved it may say I will come no more and if it once withdraw we cannot mourn 5. Presumption of mercy Who will take pains with Hindr. 5 his heart or mourn for sinne that he may be saved at a cheaper rate How many Spider-like suck damnation out of the sweet flower of Gods mercy Jesus Christ who came into the world to save sinners is the occasion of many a mans perishing Oh saith one Christ died for me he hath done all What need I pray or mourn Many a bold sinner plucks death from the tree of life and through presumption goes to hell by that ladder of Christs blood by which others go to heaven It is sad when the goodnesse of God which should lead to repentance Rom. 4.2 leads to presumption O sinner do not hope thy self into hell take heed of being damned upon a mistake Thou sayest God is merciful therefore goest on securely in sinne But who is mercy for the presuming sinner or the mourning sinner Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and return to the Lord and he will have mercy upon him no mercy without forsaking sinne and no forsaking sinne without mourning If a King should say to a company of Rebels Whosoever comes in and submits shall have mercy such as stood out in rebellion could not claime the benefit of the Pardon God makes a Proclamation of mercy to the mourner but such as are not mourners have nothing to do with mercy The mercy of God is like the Arke which none but the Priests were to meddle with none may touch this golden Arke of mercy but such as are Priests unto God * Rev 1.6 and have offered up the sacrifice of tears 6. A conceit of the smalnesse of sinne Gen. 19.20 Is Hindr. 6 it not a little one the Devil holds the small end of the Perspective-glasse to sinners To fancy sinne lesse than it is is very dangerous an opinion of the littlenesse of sinne keeps us from the use of means Who will be earnest for a Physitian that thinks it is but a trivial disease and who will seek to God with a penitent heart for mercy that thinks sinne is but a slight thing But to take off this wrong conceit about sinne and that we may look upon it with watry eyes consider 1. Sinne cannot be little because it is against the Majesty of heaven there is no treason small it being against the Kings person 2. Every sinne is sinful therefore damnable a Pen-knife or Stilletto makes but a little wound but either of them may kill as well as a greater weapon there 's death and hell in every sinne Rom. 6.23 What was it for Adam to pluck an Apple but that lost him his crown 'T is not with sinne as it is with diseases some are mortal some not mortal the least sinne without repentance will be a lock and bolt to shut men out of heaven 3. View sinne in the red glasse of Christs sufferings the least sinne cost the price of blood Would you take a a true prospect of sinne go to Golgotha Jesus Christ was fain to vail his glory and lose his joy and pour out his soul an offering for the least sinne read the greatnesse of thy sin in the deepnesse of Christs wounds Let not Satan cast such a mist before your eyes that you cannot see sin in its right colours Remember not only great rivers fall into the Sea but little brooks not only great sinnes carry men to hell but lesser Hindr. 7 7. Procrastination or an opinion it is too soone yet to tune the penitential string When the Lamp is almost out the strength exhausted and old age comes on then mourning for sinne will be in season but it is too soone yet That I may shew how pernicious this opinion is and that I may rowle away this stone from the mouth of the Well that so the waters of repentance may be drawn forth let me propose these four serious and weighty considerations 1. Dost thou know what it is to be in the state of nature and wilt thou say it is too soone to get out of it Thou art under the wrath of God John 3.36 and is it too soone to get from under the dropping of this Vial Thou art under the power of Satan Acts 26.18 and is it too soone to get out of the enemies quarters 2. Men do not argue thus in other cases they do not say It is too soon to be rich they wil not put off getting the world till old age no here they take the first opportunity Is it not too soone to be rich and is it too soon to be good is not repentance a matter of the greatest consequence Is it not more needful for men to lament their sinne than augment their estate 3. Gods call to mourning looks for present entertainment Heb. 3.7 8. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts A General besieging a garrison summons it to surrender upon such a day or he will storme it Such are Gods summons to repentance To day if ye will heart his voice sinners when Satan hath tempted you to any wickednesse you have not said It
The bitter herbs of repentance he that tasts the gall and vineger in sin hungers after the body and blood of the Lord. 2. Affliction God oft gives us this sawce to sharpen our hunger after Grace Reuben found Mandrakes in the field Gen. 30.14 The Mandrakes are an Herb of a very strong savour * Herba magni odoris stomacho labora●tibus tribuit medelam and among other vertues they have they are chiefly medicinable for those who have weak and bad stomacks Afflictions may be compared to these Mandrakes which do sharpen mens desires after that spiritual food which in time of prosperity they began to loath and nauseate penury is the sawce which cures the surfeit of plenty In sicknesse people hunger more after righteousness than in health The full stomach loaths the honey-comb Christians when ful-fed despise the rich cordials of the Gospel I wish we do not slight those truths now which would taste sweet in a prison how precious was a leaf of the Bible in Queen Maries dayes The wise God sees it good sometimes to give us the sharp sawce of affliction to make us feed more hungrily upon the bread of life And so much for the first part of the text Blessed are they that hunger MATTH 5.6 For they shall be filled CHAP. XV. Shewing that the spiritual hunger shall be satisfied 2. The Promise annexed I Proceed now to the second part of the text a Promise annexed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall be filled A Christians fighting with sin is not like one that beats the aire 1 Cor. 9.26 and his hungring after righteousnesse is not like one that sucks in only ayre Blessed are they that hunger for they shall be filled Doctr. Doctr. Those that hunger after righteousnesse shall be filled God never bids us seek him in vain * Isa 45.19 here is an hony-comb dropping into the mouths of the hungry they shall be filled Luke 1.53 He hath filled the hungry with good things Psal 109.7 He satisfieth the longing soul God will not let us lose our longing here is the excellency of righteousnesse above all things a man may hunger after the world and not be filled the world is fading not filling Cast three Worlds into the heart yet the heart is not full but righteousness is a filling thing nay it so fills as it satisfies a man may be filled and not satisfied a sinner may take his fill of sin but that is a sad filling it is far from satisfaction Prov. 14 14. The back-slider in heart shall be filled with his own wayes he shall have his belly full of sin he shall have enough of it but this is not a filling to satisfaction this is such a filling as the damned in hell have they shall be full of the fury of the Lord But he that hungers after righteousness shall be satisfyingly filled Jerem. 31.14 My people shall be satisfied with goodness Psal 63.3 My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow Joseph first opened the mouth of the Sacks and then filled them with corn and put money in them Gen. 42.25 So God first opens the mouth of the soul with desire and then fills it with good things Psal 81.10 For the illustration of this consider these three things 1. That God can fill the hungry soul 2. Why he fills the hungry soul 3. How he fills the hungry soul 1. That God can fill the hungry soul he is called a fountain Psal 36.9 With thee is the fountain of life The Cistern may be empty and cannot fill us Creatures are oft broken Cisterns Jer. 2.13 But the fountain is filling God is a Fountain if we bring the Vessels of our desires to this Fountain he is able to fill them the fulness in God is 1. An infinite fulness though he fill us and the Angels which have larger capacities to receive yet he hath never the less himself as the Sun though it shines hath never the less light Luke 8.46 I perceive that vertue is gone out of me Though God lets vertue go out of him yet he hath never the less the fulness of the creature is limited it ariseth just to such a degree and proportion but Gods fulness is infinite as it hath its Resplendency so its Redundancy it knows neither bounds nor bottom 2. It is a constant fulness The fulness of the creature is a mutable fulness it ebbs and changeth I could saith one have helped you but now my Estate is low the blossoms of the Fig-tree are soon blown off creatures cannot do that for us which once they could but God is a constant fulness Psal 102.27 Thou art the same God can never be exhausted his fulness is over-flowing and ever-flowing then surely it is good to draw nigh to God Psal 73.28 it is good bringing our Vessels to this spring-head 't is a never-failing goodness 2. Why God doth fill the hungry soul The Reasons are 1. God will fill the hungry soul out of his tender compassion he knows else the Spirit would fail before him and the soul which he hath made Isa 57.16 If the hungry man be not satisfied with food he dyes God hath more bowels than to suffer an hungry soul to be famished when the Multitude had nothing to eat Christ was moved with compassion and he wrought a miracle for their supply Matth. 15.32 Much more will he compassionate such as hunger and thirst after righteousness When a poor sinner sees himself almost starved in his sins as the Prodigal among his husks and begins to hunger after Christ saying There is bread enough in my Fathers house God will then out of his infinite compassions bring forth the fatted Calf and refresh this soul with the delicacies and provisions of the Gospel oh the melting of Gods bowels to an hungry sinner Hosea 11.8 My heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled We cannot see a poor creature at the door ready to perish with hunger but our bowels begin to relent and we afford them some relief and will the Father of mercies let a poor soul that hungers after the blessings of the Gospel go away without an Alms of free-grace no he will not he cannot let the hungry sinner think thus Though I am full of wants yet my God is full of bowels 2. God will fill the hungry that he may fulfill his Word Psal 107.9 Jer. 41.14 Luke 6.21 Blessed are ye that hunger now for ye shall be filled Isa 44.3 I will poure water upon him that is thirsty I will poure my Spirit upon thy seed c. Hath the Lord spoken and shall it not come to pass promises are obligatory if God hath passed a promise he cannot go back Thou that hungerest after righteousness hast God engaged for thee he hath to speak with Reverence pawned his truth for thee As his compassions fail not Lam. 3.22 so he will not suffer his faithfulness to fail Psal 89.33 If the hungry soul should not be filled the
not like the Medlar which is never good till it be rotten A covetous man may be compared to a Christmas-box he receives money but parts with none till death breaks this box in pieces then the silver and gold comes tumbling out Give in time of health these are the Alms which God takes notice of and as Calvin saith putteth into his book of accounts 6. Give thankfully They should be more thankful Rule 6 that give an Alms than they that receive it We should saith Nazianzene give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a thank-offering to God that we are in the number of Givers and not Receivers Bless God for a willing mind to have not only an Estate but an Heart is matter of gratulation MATTH 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God CHAP. XVI Describing Heart-purity THE holy God who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity calls here for heart-purity and to such as are adorned with this jewel he promiseth a glorious and beatifical Vision of himself they shall see God Two things are to be explained 1. The nature of Purity 2. The subject of Purity The nature of Purity 1. The nature of Purity Purity is a Sacred refined thing it stands diametrically opposite to immunditia or whatsoever defileth we must distinguish of purity 1. There is a Primitive Purity which is in God Originally and Essentially as light is in the Sun Holinesse is the glory of the Godhead * Septuag Exod 15.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glorious in holiness God is the Pattern and Prototype of all holinesse 2. There is a created Purity Thus holinesse is in the Angels and was once in Adam Adams heart had not the least spot or tincture of impurity We call that wine pure which hath no sophistication and that gold pure which hath no drosse mingled with it Such was Adams holinesse it was like the wine which comes from the grape having no mixture but this is not to be found on earth we must go to heaven for it 3. There is an evangelical purity when grace is mingled with some sin like Gold in the Oare like aire in the twilight like wine that hath a dash in it like fine cloth with a course list like Nebuchadnezzars image part of silver and part of clay Dan. 2.35 This mixture God calls purity in a Gospel-sence as a face may be said to be fair which hath some freckles in it Where there is a study of purity and a loathing our selves for our impurity this is to be pure in heart Some by pure in heart understand chastity others sincerity Psal 32.2 But I suppose purity here is to be taken in a larger sence for the several kinds and degrees of holiness they are said to be pure who are consecrated persons having the oyle of grace poured upon them This Purity is much mistaken 1. Civility is not Purity a man may be cloath'd with moral vertues justice prudence temperance yet go to hell 2. Profession is not purity a man may have a name to live and yet be dead Rev. 3.1 He may be swept by civility and garnished by profession yet the Divel may dwell in the house The blazing Comet is no Star The Hypocrites tongue may be silver yet his heart stone Purity consists in two things 1. Rectitude of minde a prizing holinesse in the judgment Psal 119.30 2 Conformity of will an embracing of holinesse in the affections Psal 119.97 A pure soil is cast into the mould of holinesse holinesse is a blood runs in his veines The subject of Purity 2 The subject of purity The Heart Pure in heart Purity of heart doth not exclude purity of life no more than the pureness of the fountain excludes the purenesse of the stream But it is call'd Purity of heart because this is the main thing in Religion and there can be no purity of life without it A Christians great care should be to keep the heart pure as one would especially preserve the spring from being poysoned In a Duel a man will chiefly guard and fence his heart so a wise Christian should above all things keep his heart pure take heed the love of sin doth not get in there lest it prove mortal Doctr. Christians should above all things breath after heart-purity 1 Tim. 3.9 Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience justification causeth our happinesse sanctification evidenceth it Reasons for 1. Purity 2. Heart-purity 1. Reasons for Purity The Reasons for Purity are 1. Purity is a thing called for in Scripture 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy It is not only the Minister bids you be holy but God himself calls for it what should the holy God do with unholy servants 2. Because of that filthy and cursed condition we are in before purity be wrought in us we are a lump of clay and sin mingled together sin doth not only blind us but defile us it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filthiness James 1.21 And to shew how befilthying a thing it is 't is compar'd to a plague-soar 1 Kings 8.38 To spots Deut. 32.5 To a vomit 2 Pet. 2.22 To the infants tumbling in blood Ezek. 16.6 To a menstruous cloath Isa 30.22 which as Hierom saith was the most defiling thing under the Law All the legal washings which God appointed were but to put men in mind of their loathsomnesse before they were washed in the blood of Christ If all the evils in the world were put together and their quintescence strain'd out they could not make a thing so black and polluted as sin doth a sinner is a Divel in mans shape When Moses his Rod was turn'd into a Serpent he fled from it would God open mens eyes and shew them their deformities and damnable spots they would be afraid and flie from themselves as Serpents This shews what need we have of Purity When grace comes it washeth off this hellish filth of Ethiopians it maks us Israelites it turns Ravens into Swans it makes them who are as black as hell to become white as snow 3. Because none but the pure in heart are interested in the Covenant of Grace covenanted persons have the sprinkling with clean water Ezek. 36.25 Now till we are thus sprinkled we have nothing to do with the new Covenant and by consequence with the new Jerusalem If a Will be made only to such persons as are so qualified none can come in for a part but such as have those qualifications So God hath made a Will and Covenant that he will be our God and will settle heaven upon us by entaile but with this clause or proviso in the Will that we be purified persons having the clean water sprinkled upon us Now till then we have nothing to do with God or mercie 4. Purity is the end of our election Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us that we should be holy not for holinesse to holinesse Rom. 8.29 Whom he did foreknow he also
golden chain of Gods commands but they cannot break the iron chain of his punishments * Vincula insoluta manent Bern. 'T is as impossible for them to file this chaine as to scale heaven And are not Gospel-commands easie in comparison of hell-torments what doth Christ command he bids you repent is it not better to weep for sin then bleed for it Christ bids you pray in your families closets is not praying better than roaring he bids you sanctifie the Sabbath is it not better to keep an holy rest to the Lord than to be for ever without rest Hell is a restlesse place there is no intermission of torment for one minute of an hour I appeal to the consciences of men Are not Christs commands sweet and facil in comparison of the unsupportable pains of reprobates is not obeying better than damning are not the cords of love better than the chains of darknesse 4. Gospel-commands are not grievous compared with Compari 4 the glo●y of heaven What an infinite disproportion is there between service and reward What are all the Saints labours and travels in Religion compared with the crown of recompence The weight of glory makes duty light Use 1. Behold here an encouraging argument to Religion Use 1 how may this make us in love with the wayes of God! his commandments are not grievous Inform. believers are not now under the thundring curses of the Law no nor the ceremonies of it which were both numerous and burdensome the wayes of God are equal his statutes eligible he bids us mourn that we may be comforted He bids us be poor in spirit that he may settle a Kingdom upon us God is no hard Master his commandments are not grievous O Christian serve God out of choice * Psal 119.30 Think of the joy the honour the reward of godlinesse never more grudge God your service whatever he doth prescribe let your hearts subscribe Use 2. It reproves them that refuse to obey these Use 2 sweet and gentle commands of Christ Psal 81.11 Reproof Israel would none of me We may cry out with Austin the generality of men choose rather to put their neck in the Divels yoak than to submit to the sweet and easie yoak of Christ * Plurimi durissimum peccati jugum volunt ferre dulce jugum Christi nolunt suis humeris imponere Aug. What should be the reason that when Gods commandments are not grievous his wayes are pleasantnesse his service PERFECT FREEDOME yet that men should not vail to Christs Scepter nor stoop to his Lawes Surely the cause may be 1. That inbred hatred which is naturally in mens hearts against Christ Sinners are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-haters Rom. 1.30 Sin begets not only a dislike of the wayes of God but hatred and from disaffection flows disloyalty Luke 19.14 His Citizens hated him and sent a message after him saying we will not have this man to reign over us 2. Besides this inbred hatred against Christ the Divel labours to blow the coals and encrease this odium and antipathy He raiseth an evil report upon Religion as those Spies did on Canaan Numb 13.32 They brought up an evil report of the Land Satan is implacably malitious and as he sometimes accuseth us to God so he accuseth God to us and saith he is an hard Master and his commandments are grievous 't is the Divels designe to do as the sons of Eli who made the offering of God to be abhorred 1 Sam. 2.17 If there be an hatred and prejudice in the heart against Religion an enemy hath done this † Matth. 13.38 The Divel raiseth in the hearts of men a twofold prejudice against Christ and his wayes Prejudice 1 1. The paucity of them that embrace Religion The way of Christ is but a path-way Psal 119.35 whereas the way of pleasure and vanity is the road-way many ignorantly conclude That must needs be the best way which most go Answ 1. There are but few that are saved and will not you be saved because so few are saved a man doth not argue thus in other things There are but few rich therefore I will not be rich nay therefore he the rather strives to be rich Why should not we argue thus wisely about our souls There are but few that go to heaven therefore we will labour the more to be of the number of that few Ans 2. What a weak argument is this There are but few that embrace Religion therefore you will not Those things which are more excellent are more rare there are but few Pearls and Diamonds in Rome few Senators the fewnesse of them that embrace Religion argues the way of Religion excellent Non cuivis contingit adire Corinthum Answ 3. We are warned not to sail with the multitude Exod. 23.2 Most fish goes to the Divels net 2. The wayes of Religion are rendred deformed and Prejudice 2 unlovely by the scandals of Professors Answ I acknowledge the lustre of Religion hath been much eclipsed and sullied by the scandals of men this is an age of scandals many have made the pretence of Religion a Key to open the door to all ungodlinesse never was Gods name more taken in vain this is that our Saviour hath foretold Matth. 18.7 It must needs be that offences come But to take off this prejudice Consider 1. Scandals are not from Religion but for want of Religion 2. Religion is not the worse though some abuse it To dislike Religion because some of the Professors of it are scandalous is as if one should say Because the servant is dishonest therefore he will not have a good opinion of his Master Is Christ the lesse glorious because some that wear his livery are scandalous Is Religion the worse because some of her followers are bad Is wine the worse because some are intemperate Shall a woman dislike chastity because some of her neighbours are unchaste Let us argue soberly judge not according to the appearance but judge righteous judgment John 7.24 3. God sometimes permits scandals to fall out in the Church out of a design 1. As a just judgment upon Hypocrites these squint-ey'd devotionists who serve God for their own ends the Lord in justice suffers them to fall into horrid debauched practices that he may lay open their baseness to the world and that all may see they were but py-bald Christians painted Divels Judas first a sly Hypocrite afterwards a visible Traytor 2. Scandals are for hardning of the profane some desperate sinners who would never give God a good word they would not be won by Religion they shall be wounded by it God lets scandals be to be a breakneck to men and to ingulph them more in sin Jesus Christ God blessed for ever is to some a Rock of offence Rom. 9.33 His blood which is to some balm is to others poyson if the beauty of Religion doth not allure the scandals of some of its followers shall
nothing to do with us we are not in his Commission he is not sent to such sinners as we then we might despair but he is willing that we should have him he calls Come unto me all ye that are weary he would fain have the match made up between us and him oh that we were but as willing as Christ is Now then if there be all this variety of excellency in Jesus Christ * Multifaria suav●tatis dul cedo exube●at in pectore Domini Jesu Bern. it may make us ambitiously desirous of an interest in him Quest But how shall I get a part in Christ Answ 1. See your need of Christ know that you are undone without him How obnoxious are you to Gods eye how odious to his nature how obnoxious to his justice O sinner how near is the Serjeant to arrest thee The Furnace of hell is heating for thee and what wilt thou do without Christ 't is only the Lord Jesus can stand as a screen to keep off the fire of Gods wrath from burning thee Tell me then is there not need of Christ though Christ be offered to sinners yet he will not have his love abused he will not throw away himself upon such as see no need of him see thy self wounded and then Christ that good Samaritan will poure in wine and oyle into thy wounds think often of that Scripture John 3.18 He that believeth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is condemned already He that dies in his sin not laying hold on Christ by faith is as sure to be condemned as if he were condemned already 2. Be importunate after Christ Lord give me Christ or I die As Acsah said to her father Caleb Josh 15.19 Thou hast given me a South land give me also springs of water So should a poor soul say Lord thou hast given me an estate in the world but this South-land will not quench my thirst give me also springs of water Give me those living springs which run in my Saviours blood Thou hast said Let him that is athirst come and whosoever wil let him take the water of life freely Rev. 22.17 18. Lord I thirst after Jesus Christ nothing but Christ will satisfie me I am dead I am damned without him oh give me this water of life When the blind man was importunate Jesus stood still Luke 18.40 and wrought a cure upon him verse 42. Christ cannot deny a praying soul As the tender mother opens the breast when the child cries for it so when an humble thirsty sinner cries importunately to heaven God will open the breast of free-grace and say Here take my Christ be satiated with him let him be to thee all in all both for food and medicine 3. Be content to have Christ as Christ is offered a Prince and a Saviour Acts 5.31 Be sure you do not compound or indent with Christ Some would have Christ and their sins too Is Christ all and will you not part ●●th something for this all Christ would have you part with nothing but what will damn you if you keep namely your sins Vomit up this poyson by repentance and Christ will pour in the wine of his blood to chear your heart There are some bid fair for Christ they will part with some sins but keep a reserve Jacob would let all his sons go but Benjamin whereas if you leave but one sin in your heart it will be as an Egge for Satan to brood upon If a man part with many lovers and retain the love but of one Harlot he is an Adulterer so if thou partest with many sins and dost retain the love but of one sin thou hast an adulterous heart and Christ will not make up a match with thee Doth that man think he shall have Christs love that feeds sinne in a corner O part with all for him who is all Part with thy lusts nay thy life if Christ calls 3. It exhorts us not only to get Christ but to labour Branch 3 to know that we have Christ Exhort 1 John 2.3 hereby we know that we know him This reflex act of faith is more than the direct act Some Divines call it sensus fidei the perception or sensible feeling of faith now concerning this knowledge that Christ is ours which is the same with assurance I shall lay down these four Corollaries or conclusions 1. That this knowledge is feasible it may be had 1 John 5.13 These things have I written to you that believe that ye may know ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God The meaning is the Apostle wrote to these believers that they might know they were believers and might be assured Christ was theirs Indeed the Papists deny this certainty of knowledge it is inserted in one of their Canons Anathema sit Let him be Anathema who holds assurance But that we may arrive at it I shall evince by these demonstrations 1. Why else doth God bid us make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 if assurance may not be had and to prove our selves whether we are in the faith 2 Cor. 13.5 if we cannot come to this knowledge that Christ is ours The Greek word there for proving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to boar or pierce thorow a piece of mettal to see whether it be gold within or no a Christian may thus pierce his heart by examination and self-reflection to see whether Christ be formed within him or no. 2. What are all the signes which the Scripture gives of a man in Christ but so many ciphers if the knowledge of this interest may not be had 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the brethren and 1 John 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit Here are two 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 evident characters of a man in Christ now these signs are in vain if assurance may not be arrived at 3. There are some duties enjoyned in Scripture which to perform is utterly impossible if the knowledge of an interest in Christ be not attainable we are bid to rejoyce in God Phil. 4.4 and to rejoyce in tribulation 1 Pet. 4.13 How can he rejoyce in suffering who doth not know whether Christ be his or no 4. Why hath Christ promised to send the Comforter John 14.16 whose very work it is to bring the heart to this assurance if assurance that Christ is ours may not be had Therefore in Scripture we read of the seal of the Spirit Ephes 1.13 The earnest and first-fruits 2 Cor. 1.22 Rom. 8.23 The promise of the Comforter were in vain the earnest and witness of the Spirit were but phantasmes and nullities if the assurance of union with Christ be not feasible 5. Some of the Saints have arrived at this certainty of knowledge therefore it may be had Job knew that his Redeemer lived Job
is a foolish loss 2. It is a fatal loss to lose the soul 1. It is an unparallel'd loss because in losing the soul there are so many things lost with it as a Merchant in losing his ship loseth many things with it his money plate jewels spices Thus he that loseth his soul he loseth Christ he loseth the Comforter he loseth the Society of Angels he loseth Heaven 2. It is an irreparable loss other losses may be made up again if a man lose his health he may recover it again if he lose his Estate he may get it up again but if he lose his soul this loss can never be made up again Are there any more Saviours to dye for the soul as Naomi said to her daughters Are there yet any more sons in my womb Ruth 1.11 Hath God any more sons or will he send his Son any more into the world oh no if the soul be lost Christs next coming is not ●o save it but to judge it Christian remember thou hast but one soul and if that be gone all is gone God saith Chrysostom hath given thee two eyes if thou losest one thou hast another but thou hast but one soul and if that perish thou art quite undone The Merchant that ventures all in one ship if that ship be lost he is quite broken 3. The loss of the soul is an eternal loss the soul once lost is lost for ever he that loseth his soul may say as that wicked Doctor of Paris on his death-bed Parcite funeribus mihi nil prodesse valebit Heu infaelicem eur me genuere parentes Ah miser aeternos vado damnatus ad ignes The sinner and the furnace shall never be parted Isa 33.14 As the sinners heart will never be emptied of sin so Gods Vial shall never be emptied of wrath 't is an eternal loss Branch 3 3. Do what you can to secure the main chance to save these precious souls In times of danger men call in their debts and labour to secure their Estates let me tell you all you who are yet in your natural Estate your souls are morgaged if your Land were morgaged you would endeavour to redeem it your souls are morgaged Sin hath morgaged them sin hath laid your souls to pawn and where do you think your souls are The pawn is in the Divels hand therefore a man in the state of nature is said to be under the power of Satan Acts 26.18 Now there are but two wayes to fetch home the pawn and both are set down Acts 20.21 Repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ Unravel all your works of sin by repentance honour Christs merits by believing Divines call it fidem salvificam saving faith because upon this wing the soul flies to the Ark Christ and is secured from danger LUKE 5.31 They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick The Souls Malady and Cure THE occasion of the words is set down in the context Levi was called from the receit of custome he was a Custome-house man but Christ called him and there went out power with the word he left all rose up and followed him ver 28. Levi did not consult with flesh and blood he did not say What shall I do for the hundred Talents * 2 Chron. 25.9 how shall I live and maintain my charge I shall lose many a sweet bit at the Custom-house poverty is like to be my patrimony nay in case I follow Christ I must espouse persecution he doth not reason thus but having a call he hastens away after Christ He rose up and followed him and that he might give Christ a pledge and specimen of his love he makes him a feast ver 29. And Levi made him a great feast in his own house a better guest he could not invite Christ alwayes came with his cost Levi feasted Christ with his chear and Christ feasted him with salvation Well Christ being at this feast the Pharisees begin to murmur ver 30. Why do ye eate and drink with publicans The Pharisees 1. were offended at him that he should go in and eate with Publicans The Publicans were counted the worst of sinners sinners of the deepest dye yet the Pharisees were not so much offended at the sins of the Publicans as they had a mind to pick a quarrel with Christ He who was the Horne of salvation to some was a Rock of offence to these Jews others did feed on him these did stumble at him 2. They accuse Christ for these words carry in them a Charge and Accusation Why do ye eate with Publicans and sinners The Pharisees impeached Christ for eating with sinners malice will never want matter of accusation Though the Divels proclaimed Christs holinesse Luke 4.34 Let us alone I know thee who thou art the holy one of God Yet the Pharisees tax him for a sinner see what malice will do it will make a man speak that which the Divel himself will not speak The Divels justifie Christ the Pharisees accuse him And if Christ who was a Lamb without spot could not scape the worlds censures no wonder if his people are loaded with the calumnies and censures of the wicked But let us examine the master of the Charge they bring against Christ and see how groundlesse it was They indite Christ for going in with sinners First Christ did nothing but what was according to his Commission the Commission he received from his Father was that he should come to save sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 Secondly Christ went in with sinners not to joyn with them in their sins but to heale them of their sins to accuse Christ was as Austin saith as if the Physitian should be accused because he goes among them that are sick of the Plague This groundlesse accusation Christ over-hears and in the text gives these envious Pharisees a silencing answer Th●y that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick As if Christ had said you Pharisees think your selves righteous persons you need no Saviour but these poor Publicans are sick and ready to die and I come as a Physitian to cure them therefore be not angry at a work of mercy though you will not be healed yet do not hinder me from healing others They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick In the words there are two general parts 1. The dying Patients 2. The healing Physitian 1. The dying Patients Them that are sick Whence observe Doctr. 1. That sin is a soul-disease Psal 103.8 Isa Doctr. 1 53.4 He hath born our griefs in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our sicknesses Man at first was created in an healthful temper he had no sicknesse of soul he ayled nothing the soul had its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its perfect beauty and glory The eye was clear the heart pure the affections tuned with the finger of God into a most sweet harmony God made man upright Eccles
an infinite mercy is it for a man to be made sensible of sin and seeing himself sick to cry out with David 2 Sam. 12.13 I have sinned against the Lord. Were it not a mercy for a person that is distracted to be restored to the use of his reason so for him that is spiritually distempered and in a lethargy to come to himself and see both his wound and his remedy Till the sinner be made sensible of his disease the medicine of mercy doth not belong to him * Non moris ●●t membrum non percussum plaugere nondum suscepto ictu admovere manum fovere unguento ubi non dolet emplastrum adhibere ubi caesura non ost B●rn in Apologe● Branch 6 6. If sin be a soul-sicknesse then labour to get this disease healed if a man had a disease in his body a Plu●i●ie or Cancer he would use all means for a cure the woman in the Gospel who had a bloody issue spent her whole estate upon the Physitians Luke 8.43 Be more earnest to have thy soul cured than thy body Make Davids prayer Psal 41.4 Heal my soul for I have sinned Hast thou a consumptive body rather pray to God to heal the Consumption in thy soul go to God first for the cure of thy soul James 5.14 Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him The Apostle doth not say Let him call for the Physitian but the Elders that is the Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Physitians are to be consulted in their due place but not in the first place Most men send first for the Physitian and then for the Minister which shews they are more desirous and careful for the recovery of their bodies than their souls but if soul-diseases are more dangerous and deadly then we should prefer the spiritual cure before the bodily heal my soul for I have sinned let us consider 1. Till we are cured we are not fit to do God any service A sick man cannot work while the disease of sin is violent we are not fit for any heavenly employment we can neither work so God Opera●to animi secundum virtutem nor work out our own salvation The Philosopher defines happiness the operation of the minde about vertue To be working for God is both the end of our life and the perfection Would we be active in our Sphere let us labour to have our souls cured So long as we are diseased with sin we are lame and bed-rid we are unfit for work We read indeed of a sinners works but they are dead works Heb. 6.1 2. If we are not cured we are cursed if our disease abides on us the wrath of God abides on us Quest But how shall we get this disease of sin cured This brings to the second thing in the Text The healing Physitian The whole need not a Physitian Whence observe Doctr. 2. That Jesus Christ is a soul-physitian Doctr. 2 Ministers as was said before are Physitians whom Christ doth in his Name delegate and send abroad into the world He saith to the Apostles and in them to all his Ministers Lo I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28.20 That is I am with you to assist and bless you and to make your Ministry healing but though Ministe●s are Physitians yet but under-physitians Jesus Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chief Physitian he it is that teacheth us all our Receits and goes forth with our labours else the physick we prescribe would never work all the Ministers under heaven would not do any cure without the help of this Great Physitian For the Amplification of this I shall shew 1. That Christ is a Physitian 2. Why he is a Physitian 3. That he is the only Physitian 4. How he heals his Patients 5. That he is the best Physitian 1. That Christ is a Physitian it is one of his titles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee He is a Physitian for the body he anointed the blinde cleansed the Lepers healed the sick raised the dead Matth. 8.16 He it is that puts vertue into physick and makes it healing and he is a Physitian for the soul Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart We are all as so many impotent diseased persons one man hath a Feaver another hath a dead Palsie another hath a bloody issue he is under the power of some hereditary corruption now Christ is a soul-physitian he healeth these diseases * Medicus aegrotis Jesus Bern. therefore in Scripture the Lord Jesus to set forth his healing vertue is resembled 1. By the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 Those who were stung were cured by looking on the Brazen Serpent so when the soul is stung by the old Serpent it is cured by that healing under Christs wings 2. Christ is resembled by the good Samaritan Luke 10.33 34. A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves which stripped him of his rayment and wounded him and departed leaving him half dead but a certain Samaritan as he journyed came where he was and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound up his wounds pouring in wine and oyle c. We have wounded our selves by sin and the wound had been incurable had not Christ that good Samaritan poured in wine and oyle 3. Christ as a Physitian is resembled by the Trees of the Sanctuary Ezek. 47.12 The fruit thereof shall be for meat and the leaf thereof shall be for medicine Thus the Lord Jesus that Tree of life in Paradise hath a sanative vertue he heals our pride unbelief c. As he feeds our graces so he heals our corruptions 2. Why Christ is a Physitian 1. In regard of his Call God the Father called him to practice Physick he anointed him to the work of healing Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Christ came into the world as into an Hospital to heal sin-sick souls this though it were a glorious work yet Christ would not undertake it till he was commissionated by his father The Spirit of the Lord is upon me he hath sent me Christ was anointed and appointed to the work of a Physitian this was for our imitation we are not to meddle in any matters without a call that is acting out of our sphere 2. Jesus Christ undertook this healing work because of that need we were in of a Physitian Christ came to be our Physitian not because we deserved him but because we needed him not our merit but our misery drew Christ from heaven had not he come we must of necessity have perished and dyed of our wounds our disease was not ordinary it had seized on every part it made us not only sick but dead and such Receits
never thinks he hath fully healed us till he hath drawn his own beautiful image upon us Cant. 2.13 Arise my fair one fair with justification fair with sanctification Christ doth not only heal but adorn he is called the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4.2 Not only because of the healing under his wings but because of those Rayes of beauty which he puts upon the soul Rev. 12.1 12. And lastly Christ is the most bountiful Physitian Other Patients do enrich their Physitians but here the Physitian doth enrich the Patient Christ prefers all his Patients he doth not only cure them but crown them Rev. 2.10 Christ doth not only raise from the bed but to the Throne he gives the sick man not only health but heaven 1 Good Newes this day there is balm in Gilead Use 1 there is a Physitian to heal sin-sick souls the Angels that fell had no Physiti●● sent to them we have there are but few in the world to whom Christ is revealed they that have the gold of the Indies want the blood of the Lamb but the Sun of righteousness is risen in our Hemisphere with healing in his wings If a man were poysoned what a comfort would it be to him to hear that there were an herb in the Garden could heal him if he had a gangrene in his body and were given over by all his friends how glad would he be to hear of a Chyrurgion that could cure him O sinner thou art full of peccant humours thou hast a gangren'd soul but there is a Physitian that can recover thee There is hope in Israel concerning this though there be an old Serpent to sting us with his tentations yet there is a Brazen Serpent to heal us with his blood Use 2 2. If Christ be a Physitian then let us make use of this Physitian for our diseased souls Luke 4.40 When the Sun was setting all they that had any sick with divers diseases brought them unto him and he laid his hands on every of them and healed them You that have neglected a Physitian all this while now when the Sun of the Gospel and the Sun of your life is even setting bring your sick souls to Christ to be cured Christ complains that though men are sick even to death yet they will not come or send to the Physitian John 5.40 Ye will not come to me that ye might have life In bodily diseases the Physitian is the first that is sent to in soul-diseases the Physitian is the last that is sent to But here there are many sad Objections that poor souls make against themselves why they do not come to Christ their Physitian Object 1 Obj●ction 1. Alas I am discouraged to go to Christ to cure me because of my unworthiness just like the Centurion who sent to Christ about his sick servant Luke 7.6 Lord trouble not thy self for I am not worthy that thy thou shouldest enter under my roof Christ was coming to heal his servant but the Centurion would have slaved off Christ from coming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not worthy So saith many a trembling soul Christ is a Physitian but who am I that Christ should come under my roof or heal me I am unworthy of mercy as Mephibosheth said to King David 2 Sam. 9.8 What is thy servant that thou shouldest look upon such a dead Dog as I am Now to such as have their hearts broken with a sense of their unworthiness and are discouraged from coming to Christ to heal them let me say these five things by way of reply 1. Who did Christ shed his blood for but such as are unworthy 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners Christ came into the world as into an Hospital among a company of lame bed-rid souls 2. Though we are not legally worthy we may be evangelically it is part of our worthiness to see our unworthiness Isa 41.14 Fear not thou worme Jacob. Thou mayst be a worme in thy own eye yet a Dove in Gods eye 3. Though we are unworthy yet Christ is worthy we do not deserve a cure but Christ hath merited mercy for us he hath store of blood to supply our want of tears 4. Who was ever yet saved because he was worthy What man could ever plead this title Lord Jesus heal me because I am worthy What worthiness was there in Paul before his conversion what worthiness was there in Mary Magdalen out of whom seven Divels were cast but free-grace did pity and heal them God doth not find us worthy but makes us worthy 5. If we will never come to Christ to be healed till we are worthy we must never come and let me tell you this talking of worthiness savours of pride we would have something of our own had we such preparations and self-excellencies then we think Christ would accept of us and we might come and be healed this is to see our Physitian oh let not the sense of unworthiness discourage * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 go to Christ to be healed Arise he calleth thee Mark 10.49 Object 2 2. Objection But I fear I am not within Christs Commission I am not of the number of those that shall be saved and then though Christ be a Physitian I shall not be healed Answ 1 Answ 1. We must take heed of drawing desperate conclusions against our selves 't is high presumption for us to make our selves wiser than the Angels All the Angels in heaven are not able to resolve this question Who are elected and who are reprobated Answ 2 2. Thou that sayest thou art not within Christs Commission read over Christs Commission see who he comes to heal Luke 4.18 He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Hath God touched thy heart with remorse dost thou lay to heart thy Gospel-unkindnesses dost thou weep more out of love to Christ than fear of hell then thou art a broken-hearted sinner and art within Christs Commission a bleeding Christ will heal a broken heart Object 3 3. Objection But my sins are so many that sure I shall never be healed I am sick of many diseases at once Answ Answ Thou hast the more need of a Physitian one would think that was a strange speech of Peter to Christ Luke 5.8 Depart from me for I am a sinful man O Lord rather Lord come near to me Is it a good Argument to say to a Physitian I am diseased therefore depart from me No therefore come and heal me Our sins should serve to humble us not to beat us from Christ I tell you if we had no diseases Christ would have no work to do in the world Object 4 4. Objection But my disease is inflamed and grown to a Paroxysme my sin is greatly heightned Answ Answ The playster of Christs blood is broader than thy sore 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin The blood of the Lamb takes away the poyson of the Serpent all diseases are alike
with and the son breaks the father is not bound to set him up again God gave Adam a stock of grace to begin the world with Adam did break and make all his children Banquerupts God is not tyed to give him grace again 2. God may justly deny his grace to every wicked man because he is a despiser of grace he tramples this pearle under foot Prov. 1.7 Is God bound to give grace to them that despise it If a Kings pardon be rejected once he is not bound to tender it any more but I shall not launch forth any further into this 4. The cogency and necessity of grace it is most needful because it fits us for communion with God 2 Cor. 6.14 What communion hath light with darkness God can no more converse with an ungracious soul than a King can converse with a Swine it is by grace that we keep a constant intercourse with heaven 1. Let me with the greatest zeal and earnestness perswade Use 1 all who have souls to save Exhort to endeavour after grace this is the Unum Necessarium grace will be desirable at death it is as useful now and more seasonable to look after Prov. 4.7 With all thy getting get understanding Alexander being presented with a rich Cabinet of King Darius he reserved it to put Homers works in as being of great value The heart is a spiritual Cabinet into which the jewel of grace should be put we should desire grace above other things above the gifts of the Spirit nay above the comforts of the Spirit Comfort is sweet but grace is better than comfort bread is better than honey we may go to heaven without comfort not without grace it is grace makes us blessed in life and death I shall shew you twelve rare Excellencies in grace I shall set this fair Virgin of grace before you hoping that you will be tempted to fall in love with it Excellency 1 1. Grace hath a soul-quickning excellency in it Hebr. 10.38 The just shall live by faith Men void of grace are dead they have breath yet want life they are walking ghosts Eph. 2.1 The life of sin is the death of the soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A sinner hath all the signs of one that is dead he hath no pulse the affections are the pulse of the soul his pulse doth not beat after God he hath no sense Eph. 4.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who being past feeling Dead things have no beauty there 's no beauty in a dead flower dead things are not capable of priviledge the dead heir is not crowned but grace is the vital artery of the soul it doth not only irradiate but animate therefore it is called lumen vitae the light of life John 8.12 And believers are said to have their grave-cloaths pulled off and to be alive from the dead Rom. 6.13 By grace the soul is grafted into Christ the true Vine John 15.5 and is made not only living but lively 1 ●et 1.3 Grace puts forth a Divine Energy into the soul 2. Grace hath a soul-enriching excellency 1 Cor. 1. Excellency 2 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye are enriched in all knowledge As the Sun enricheth the world with its golden beams so doth knowledge bespangle and enrich the mind * Vera divitiae non opes sunt sed virtutes Bern. Faith is an enriching grace Jam. 2.5 Rich in faith plus fulget fides quam aurum faith brings Christs riches into the soul it intitles to the promises the promises are full of heavenly riches Justification Adoption Glory Faith is the key that unlocks this Cabinet of the promises and empties out their treasure into the soul The riches of grace excell all other riches the merchandize of it is better than the merchandize of silver Prov. 3.14 1. These riches make a man wise wisdom is the best possession * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand other riches cannot make one wise A man may ditescere delirare he may have a full purse and an empty brain Many a rich heir though he lives till he be of age yet he never comes to years of discretion But these riches of grace have power to make a man wise Psal 111.10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom The Saints are compared to wise Virgins Matth. 25. Grace makes a man wise to know Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his devices and subtilties 2 Cor. 2.11 It makes him wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 Grace gives the Serpents eye in the Doves head 2. These spiritual riches sanctifie other riches Riches without grace are hurtful they are not divitiae but insidiae they are golden snares they are the bellows of pride the fuel of lust they set open hell gates for men * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand they are unblest blessings but grace sanctifies our riches it corrects the poyson it takes away the curse it makes them beneficial to us riches shall be Certificates of Gods love wings to lift us up to Paradise Thus grace by a Divine Chymistry extracts heaven out of earth and gives us not only the venison but the blessing 3. Grace satisfies other riches cannot Eccles 5.10 Riches can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle but grace fills up every chink and hiatus of the soul it dilates the heart it ravisheth the affections with joy Rom. 15.13 which joy as Chrysostom saith is a foretaste of heaven Excellency 3 3. Grace hath a soul-adorning excellency it puts a beauty and lustre upon a person 1 Pet. 3.4 5. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plating the hair and of wearing of gold but let it be the hidden man of the heart even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price for after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves If a man hath Plate and Jewels Cloth of Gold Hangings of Arras these adorn the house not the man the glory of a man is grace * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chaysost Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace The graces are a Chain of pearle that adorns Christs Bride the heart inlaid and enamel'd with grace is like the Kings daughter all glorious within * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Psal 45.13 A gracious soul is the image of God curiously drawn with the Pensil of the Holy Ghost an heart beautified with grace is the Angels joy Luke 15.7 and is Gods lesser heaven Isa 57.15 Eph. 3.17 Reason doth not so far exceed sense as grace doth reason grace changeth corruption into perfection nothing so graceth a man as grace doth grace is the purest complexion of the soul for it makes it like God Grace is the flower of delight which Christ loves to smell to grace is to the soul as the eye to the body as the Sun to the
world as the Diamond to the Ring it doth bespangle and beautifie A soul decked with grace is as the Dove covered with silver wings and golden feathers Excellency 4 4. Grace hath a soul-cleansing excellency By nature we are defiled sin is an impure issue 't is a be filthying thing 2 Cor. 7.1 A sinners heart is so black that nothing but hell can pattern it but grace is lavacrum animae a spiritual lavor therefore it is called the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 The grace of Repentance cleanseth Maries tears as they washed Christs feet so they washed her heart faith hath a cleansing vertue Acts 15.9 Having purified their hearts by faith Grace layes the soul a whitening it takes out the Leopards spots and turns the Cypriss into an azure beauty Grace is of a Celestial nature though it doth not wholly remove sin it doth subdue it though it doth not keep sin out it keeps it under though sin in a gracious soul doth not dye perfectly yet it dies daily Grace makes the heart a spiritual Temple which hath this inscription upon it Holiness to the Lord. 5. Grace hath a soul-strengthning excellency it enables a Excellency 5 man to do that which exceeds the power of nature it hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Grace teacheth to mortifie our sins to love our enemies to prefer the glory of Christ before our own lives Thus the three children by the power of grace marched in the face of death neither the sound of the Musick could allure them nor the heat of the Furnace affright them Dan. 3.17 They did bear up infracto animo prorsus chalybeo Grace is a Christians Armour of proof which doth more than any other Armour can it not only defends him but puts courage into him Tertullian calls Athanasius Adamas Ecclesiae an invincible Adamant * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Gen. hom 3. grace makes a Christian not only bear suffering but glory in suffering Rom. 5.3 A soul steeled and animated with grace can tread upon the Lyon and Adder Psal 91.13 and with the Leviathan can laugh at the shaking of a Spear Job 41.29 Thus doth grace infuse an heroick spirit and derive strength into a man making him act above the Sphere of nature Excellency 6 6. Grace hath a soul-raising excellency it is a divine sparkle that ascends when the heart is divinely touch'd with the load-stone of the Spirit it is drawn up to God Prov. 15.24 The way of life is above to the wise Grace raiseth a man above others he lives in the altitudes while others creep on the earth and are almost buried in it a Christian by the wing of grace flies aloft the Saints mount up as Eagles Isa 40.31 A believer is a Citizen of heaven there he trades by faith grace shoots the heart above the world Psal 139.17 Phil. 3. ult Grace gives us conformity to Christ and communion with Christ 1 John 1.3 Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus A man full of grace hath Christ in his heart and the world under his feet grace humbles yet elevates Excellency 7 7. Grace hath a perfuming excellency it makes us a sweet odour to God Hence grace is compared to those spices which are most odoriferous and fragrant Myrrhe Cinamon Frankincense Cant. 4.13 There is a double perfume that grace sends forth 1 It perfumes our names Hebr. 11.2 By faith the Elders obtained a good report Grace was the spice which perfumed their names How renowned was Abraham for his faith Moses for his meekness Phineas for his zeal what a fresh perfume do their names send forth to this day The very wicked cannot but see a splendent Majesty in the graces of the Saints and though with their tongues they revile grace yet with their hearts they reverence it Thus grace is aromatical it embalms the names of men a gracious person when he dies carries a good conscience with him and leaves a good name behinde him 2. Grace perfumes our duties Psal 141.2 Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense Noahs sacrifice was a perfume Gen. 8.21 The Lord smell'd a sweet savour The sighs of a wicked man are an unsavoury breath his solemn sacrifice is dung Mal. 2.3 There is such a noisom stench comes from a sinners duties that God will not come near Amos 5.21 I will not smell in your solemn Assemblies Who can endure the smell of a dead Corps but grace gives a fragrancy and redolency to our holy things Heb. 11.4 By faith Abel offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain God testifying of his gifts Abels sacrifice was better sented God smell'd a sweet savour of it for he testified of his gifts If it be asked what this testimony was God gave of Abels sacrifice Hierom saith Deus inflammavit God set his sacrifice on fire * 1 King 18.38 so from heaven testifying his acceptance of Abels offering and if grace doth so perfume you wear this flower not in your bosomes but your hearts 8. Grace hath a soul-ennobling excellency it doth ennoble Excellency 8 a man Grace makes us vessels of honour * Summa apud Deum nobilitas clarum esse virtutibus Hier. it sets us above Princes and Nobles Theodosius thought it more dignity to be Christs servant and wear his Livery laced with the silver graces of the Spirit than to be great and renowned in the world Isa 43.4 Since thou wert precious in my sight thou hast been honourable Sin doth debase a man Christ tells wicked men their Pedigree John 8.44 Ye are of your father the Divel They may put the cloven foot in their Scutchion an ungracious person is a vile person Nahum 1.14 I will make thy grave for thou art vile the Hebrew word for vile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to be lightly esteemed There is nothing so vile but an ungracious man will do he is ductil and facil to any thing like wire which will be bent awry he will snare his conscience stain his credit run as a Lackey after the sinful injunctions of men but grace ennobles he who is divinely inspired as he is high-born 1 John 3.1 so he acts sutably to his birth he hates whatever is disingenuous and sordid The Saints are Called Kings and Priests for their dignity Rev. 1.6 and jewels for their value Mal. 3.17 Excellency 9 9. Grace hath a soul-securing excellency it brings safety along with it You all desire to be safe in dangerous times if sword or pestilence come if death peep in at your windows * Jer. 9.21 would you not now be safe nothing will secure you in times of danger but grace grace is the best life-guard it sets Christians out of Gun-shot and frees them from the power of hell and damnation Prov. 10.2 Righteousness delivers from death Do not righteous men dye yes but righteousness delivers from the sting of the first death and the fear of the second It was the
are slow-paced in Religion who creep but do not run their motion is like the motion of the eighth Sphere slow and dull they should be like the Sun in the firmament which is swift when they are like Sun on the Dial which moves very slow many Christians move so heavily in the wayes of God that it is hard for standers by to judge whether they make any progress or no they are hasty in their passion but slow of heart to believe Luke 24.25 what haste did Israel make in their march when Pharaoh was pursuing them what need have Christians to expedite their race when the Divel is behind pursuing and ready to overtake them and make them lose the prize we read in the Law that God would not have the Asse offered in sacrifice he hates a dull temper of soul the Snaile was accounted unclean Levit. 11.30 the slow-paced Christian will be taken tardy at last and misse of the prize Branch 4 4. It reproves those who begin the race of Christianity but do not persevere to the end of the race they faint by the way Ye did run well who did hinder you that ye should not obey the truth Gal. 5.7 the Crown is set upon the head of perseverance he that runs half the way and then faints loseth the Garland 'T is sad for a man to come near to heaven and then tyre in the race as it is to see a ship cast away in sight of the shore Nay what shall we say to them who do worse than tire in the race they run backward into the way of profanesse as Julian Gardner and others there is no going to heaven backward such do cast reproaches upon the wayes of God better never begin the race than run back 2 Pet. 2.21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness then after they have known it to turn from the holy Commandement A Souldier that runs from his Colours and lists himself in the enemies Regiment if he be taken must expect Martial Law Heb. 10.38 If any man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him God will bear with infirmity but he will punish treachery wrath shall smoak against the Apostate fury will display itself in its bloody colours indeed in War there is a retreating sometimes which if it be done politickly and to the enemies disadvantange it is called an honourable retreat but in a race to heaven there must be no retreats these are not honourable retreats but damnable retreats whosoever draws back it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to perdition Heb. 10. ult 3. Let all Christians be exhorted to run this heavenly Use 3 and blessed race of Religion Exhortat what Arguments shall I use to perswade look upon other creatures wing'd with activity and then Christian shame thy self Look into the firmament and see the Sun as a Gyant running his race Psal 19.5 and dost thou stand still look into the Aire see the birds soaring aloft and mounting towards heaven look into the earth see the Bees working in the Hive look upon the Angels they are swift in obedience look upon other Christians near thee thou shalt find them their race reading at praying weeping and hast thou nothing to do look upon thy precious time time runs and dost thou stand still look upon the wicked how quick are they in sin and shall they run faster to hell than thou dost to heaven nay look upon thy self how industrious art thou for the world rising early compassing Sea and Land and yet how stupid and heartless in the matters of salvation wilt thou run for a feather a bubble and not run for a Kingdom To quicken your pace in godliness consider what the prize is we run for it is a Crown of glory * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This incircles all blessedness within it there will soon be an end of our race but there will be no end of our Crown this blessed reward should quicken u● in the race but how shall we run the race so as to obtain 't is sad to run in vain Phil. 2.16 this brings to the next Use 4 Direction 4. I shall prescribe some Directions about this heavenly race 1. Take heed of those things which will hinder you in your race As 1. Shake off sloth idleness is pulvinar Diaboli the sluggish Christian will never win the race he is asleeping when he should be running sloth is the rust of the soul 't is the disease of the soul a sick man cannot run a race Prov. 12.27 The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting he will rather fast than hunt for Venison oh shake off sloth abandon this idle Div●l if ye intend a race 2. Throw off all weights There are two sorts of weights we must throw off 1. The weight of sin Heb. 12.1 Let us lay aside every weight and the sin that doth so easily beset us and let us run the race The Prophet David felt this weight Psal 38.4 Mine iniquities are gone over mine head as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me If we do not throw off this weight by repentance it will sink us into hell A man cannot run a race with a burden upon his back an unclean person cannot run the race of holiness a proud man cannot run the race of humility a self-willed man cannot run the race of obedience O Christian unburden thy soul of sin through off this weight if thou intendest to lay hold on the Crown 2. The second weight the Spiritual Racer must throw off is the world This is a golden weight which hath hindred many and made them lose their race So far as the world is a weight throw it off I say not lay aside the use of the world but the love of it * 1 Joh. 2.15 When the golden dust of the world is blown in mens eyes it blinds them that they cannot see their race 3. Discard false Opinions about this race as 1. That the race is easie many a man thinks he can run the race from earth to heaven on his death-bed O sinner thou that say'st the race is easie art a stranger to the Christian race Thou art dead in sin till a supernatural Principle of grace be infused Ephes 2.1 is it easie for a dead man to run a race to run the way of Gods Commandements is against nature and is it easie for a man to act contrary to himself is it easie for the water to run backward in its own channel is it easie for a man to deny himself to crucifie the flesh to behead his beloved sin oh take heed of this mistake that the Christian race is easie Do you know what Religion must cost you and what Religion may cost you 2. The second false Opinion we must beware off is that the race to heaven is impossible there is so much work to do that sure we shall never win the race Cyprian
the nature of the Sun is light so Gods nature is love The three persons in the Trinity are all love 1. God the Father is love Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that God should part with Christ out of his bosome the Son of his love and lay this jewel as it were to pawn for our salvation oh unparalleld love never was such love showed to the Angels 2. God the Son is love how did Christ love his Spouse when he died for her his sides drop'd blood his heart drop'd love such a vein of love was opened in him that our sins could not stench love was the wing on which Christ did fly into the Virgins womb Christ incarnate hre was love covered over with flesh and Christ on the Cross here was a book of love laid open before us to read in Per vulnera viscera 3. God the Holy Ghost is love his appearing in the likeness of a Dove show'd his nature the Dove saith Pliny is an amicable creature it is without gall what are all the motions of the Spirit but tenders of love what is the Zeal of the Spirit but the print of love why doth this blessed Spirit as a suitor come a woing to sinners but that they may know he is in love thus all the persons in the Trinity are love and the more we shine in the grace of Love the more we resemble the God of Love 6. Argument enforcing love is from the sweet Relations we stand in one to another we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-Citizens Ephes 2.19 we all expect one heaven we shall shortly live together and shall we not love together we are souldiers of the same band 2 Tim. 2.3 ours must be the fight of faith not the fight of contention our strife must be who shall love most we are branches of the same Vine and shall we not be united we are stones of the same building and shall we not be cemented with love nay we are brethren Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are brethren why do ye wrong one to another Use 1. I might here take up a lamentation and steep my Use 1 words in tears to consider the decay I had almost said the funerals of this grace among Christians Terras Astraea reliquit the fire of brotherly love is almost ready to go out instead of the fire of love the wildfire of passion I have read of one Vitalis who hazarded his life to succour his distressed friend but sure such Vitales are dead in this age fratrum quoque gratia rara est The Text saith See that ye love one another but our times have made a bad Comment upon this Text how do Christians reproach censure maligne one another the Text saith love fervently but they hate fervently instead of the bond of love behold the apple of strife we live in the frigid zone the love of many waxeth cold Many live as if they had been born upon the Mountains of Bether the Mountains of division and as if they had been baptiz'd in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Do the wicked unite nay do the Divels unite there was in one man a Legion which is according to Varro seven thousand six hundred twenty two shall there be more harmony among Divels than among Christians For these divisions of the godly there are great thoughts of heart Oh Christians turn your hot words into salt tears how do the enemies of Religion insult to see not only Christs Coat but his Body rent for these things let our eyes run down Consider the ill consequence where love is wanting the absence of this grace brings forth divisions and they are dangerous For 1. Divisions bring an opprobrium and scandal upon Religion they make the wayes of God evil spoken of as if Religion were the fomenter of envy and sedition Julian in his Invectives against the Christians said that they lived together as Tigers rending and tearing one another and shall we by our animosities and contentions make good Julians words this will make others affraid to embrace the Christian Faith There is a story in Epiphanius of Miletius and Peter Bishop of Alexandria both Confessors of the Orthodox Religion both condemned to suffer who being together in prison upon a small difference sell into so great a Schisme that they drew a partition between each other in the prison and would not hold communion in the same worship of Christ for which notwithstanding they both suffered which division grew scandalous and did more hurt than their persecution did good 2. Divisions advance Satans Kingdom The Divel hath no hope but in our discords * Nibil spei nisi per discordias Cornel. Tac. St. Chrysostom observes of the City of Corinth when many zealous converts were brought in Satan knew no better way to damme up the current of Religion than by throwing in a bone of contention and dividing them into parties one was for Paul and another for Apollo but few for Christ Use 2. Be Exhorted to cordial and fervent love See that Use 2 ye love one another Exhort Oh that this sweet spice might send forth its fragrant smell among Christians Oh that the Branch 1 Lord would rain down some of these silver showers of love upon the hearts of Christians which are for the most part like the Mountains of Gilboa which have none of this heavenly dew upon them They say of the stones of the Temple they were so closely cemented as if there had been but one stone in the Temple it were to be wished that the hearts of Christians were so sweetly cemented in love as if there were but one heart Let me commend this grace of amity and love to Christians under a double notion 1. As you are members of a body politick The whole nation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Political body now it should be with the body Politique as it is with the natural body all the members of the body have a sweet sympathy they all work for the good of the whole that there be no Schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12.25 So it should be in the body politique 2. You are membra Ecclesiae members of the Church of God you bear Christs Name you wear his Livery therefore you must be sodred together in affection It is a sad Omen and presage when the joynts of the same body shall be loosed and the knees shall smite one against another If yet men will live at variance nourishing a Viper in their bosoms I shall offer two things to their serious consideration 1. An uncharitable person is an unregenerate person Titus 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts living 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in malice and envy as if he had said Before grace came we were fill'd and ready to burst with this poyson of malice the Apostle describing a natural condition calls it the gall of bitterness Acts 8. He that lives in bitter strife is in the gall bitterness A
destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood in the breach to turne away his wrath Let us never leave imploring our heavenly Physitian till he lay a Fig on ENGLANDS Boyle and cause it to recover 1 PET. 1.2 Grace unto you and Peace be multiplyed The beauty of Grace THE blessed Apostle having felt the Efficacy and Soveraignty of grace is taken up with the thoughts of it and so sweet is this wine of Paradise that he commends it to these dispersed Christians to whom he writes wishing them all encrease Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied The words run in the forme of a Salutation Grace unto you and Peace When we salute our friends we cannot wish them a greater blessing than Grace and Peace Other mercies lie without the Pale and are dispersed in common to men but Grace is a special Congiary and Gift bestowed on them who are the Favourites of heaven In the words observe 1. The Connexion 2. The Order 1. The Connexion Grace and Peace 1. The Connexion The way to have peace is to have grace grace is the breeder of peace the one is the root the other the flower peace is the sweet water that drops from the limbeck of a gracious heart 2. The Order 2. The Order First grace then peace grace hath the priority Grace and peace are two sisters but grace is the elder sister * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. and give me leave at this time to prefer the elder before the younger Grace unto you be multiplied For the illustration consider 1. What is meant by grace 2. The Authour of it 3. Why it is called grace 4. The Cogency of it 1. What is meant by grace This word GRACE is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it hath various acceptions in Scripture 1. Grace is sometimes taken for the favour of God Gen. 6.8 Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord God did cast a gracious aspect upon him 2. Grace is taken for beauty as we say such a thing is graceful Jam. 1.11 The flower falleth and the grace of the fashion of it perisheth 3. Grace is taken figuratively and improperly for the shew of grace as we call that a face in the glass which is but the idaea and resemblance of a face so John 2.23 Many believed in his Name that believing was but a shew of faith as Austin and Theophilact note 4. Grace is taken in a genuine and proper sense so in the Text Grace be multiplied it may admit of this description Grace is the infusion of a new and holy principle into the heart whereby it is changed from what it was and is made after Gods own heart Grace makes not only a civil but sacred change it byasseth the soul heaven-ward and stamps upon it the image and superscription of God 2. The Authour or Efficient of grace namely the Spirit of God who is therefore call'd the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 The Spirit is the fountain from whence chrystal streams of grace flow * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Man as Clemens Alexandrinus observes is Gods Harp or Timbrel the Harp will not sound unless touched with the finger so the heart of man cannot put forth any gracious harmony till first it be touched with the finger of Gods Spirit this blessed Spirit works grace in the Subject 1. Universally 2. Progressively 1. Universally 1 Thes 5.10 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly The Spirit of God infuseth grace into all the faculties of the soul though grace be wrought but in part yet in every part in the understanding light in the conscience tenderness in the will consent in the affections harmony therefore grace is compared to leaven Matth. 13.33 because it swells it self into the whole soul and makes the Conversation to swell and rise as high as heaven 2. The Spirit of God works grace progressively he carries it on from one degree of another The Pelagians hold that gratia operans the beginning of grace is from God but gratia cooperans the progress of grace is from our selves so God shall be the Authour of faith and we the finishers God shall lay the first stone and we the Superstructure but alas there needs the continual influence of the Spirit to the carrying on the work of grace in our hearts Should God withdraw his Spirit from the most holy men their grace might fail and annihilate † * Sublata causa tollitur effectus If the Sun withdraw its light though never so little there follows darkness in the Ayre we need not only habitual grace but assisting exciting subsequent grace The Ship needs not only the Sails but the winde to carry it there needs not only the Sailes of our Abilities and Endeavours but the winde of the Spirit to blow us to the heavenly Port. 3. Why the work of holiness in the heart is called grace Answ 1. Because it hath a super-eminency above nature * Caelitus delapsa Beza it is a flower which doth not grow in natures garden 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a Divine extraction Jam. 3.17 By reason we live the life of men by grace we live the life of God 2. It is called grace because it is a work of free-grace * Gratia quasi gratis data every link in the golden chain of our salvation is wrought and enamel'd with free-grace That one should be sanctified and not another this is of grace that God should pass by many of the Noble Rich Learned and graft his heavenly endowments upon a more wilde luxuriant Stock a crabbed nature weaker parts well may it be called grace Quest Quest But why is not grace bestowed upon all Answ Answ We must hold with Zanchy there is alwayes a just reason of Gods will but in particular I answer 1. God gives grace to one and denies it to another to shew his Prerogative God is not bound to give grace to all Rom. 9.15 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Suppose two Malefactors brought before the King one he will pardon but not the other if any demand the reason he will answer 't is his Prerogative So God will give grace to one not to another he will make one a vessel of mercy the other a vessel of wrath this is his Prerogative The Apostle hath silenced all disputes in this kinde Rom. 9.20 21. Who art thou that replyest against God hath not the Potter power over the clay If we could suppose a Plant to speak Why was not I made a Bird or a Beast Why should not I have reason just so it is when vain man enters into contest with God Why should not I have grace as well as another Dispute not against Prerogative let not the clay syllogize with the Potter 2. I answer God may justly deny his grace to any wicked man for two reasons 1. Because once he had grace and lost it if a father give his son a stock to trade