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

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life by overruling conquering and subduing his enemies Christ though in heaven hath his enemies all those that are enemins to the Church to his Children they are enemies to Christ Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Act. 9.4 We oppose Christ while we oppose his members Do but hurt the feet and the head in heaven presently feels it But mark what is added It 's hard for thee to kick against the pricks Christ will reign his power will be exalted maugre all the malice in the world Psa 2.2 The rage of the Heathens and all their Imaginations were but a vain thing God will set his Sonne upon the holy hill of Sion therefore the Judges of the world are exhorted to kisse the Sonne to give him hearty and humble obedience for they are not able to bear though but a little of his anger Hence Rev. 2.27 Christ is said to rule the Nations with a rod of Iron and he will break them in pieces like a Potters vessell Christ can as easily break all the power and greatnesse that is lifted up against him as we can break an earthen pot with an Iron rod And if you say Why then is the power of Turk and Pope still lifted up against him The Apostle tels us 1 Cor. 15. and Heb. 2. All things are not yet in subjection to him he hath a Kingdom and power but as yet he is only Rex pugnans vincens then he will be Rex triumphans He will put down all Powers and Principalities There will be nothing but Christs power Oh then we proclaim aloud to wicked men As you love your souls as you would avoid this dreadfull power go on no longer in your rebellion and disobedience Christ hath indeed a Scepter of grace but he hath also a rod of Iron and thou wilt finde his blows when he cometh to judge his enemy and whosoever loveth and liveth in sinne he is Christs enemy O that mens eyes were opened and their hearts softened that the wrath of this Judge might not fall upon them SERMON IX Christ under the notion of a Head applied to the Terrour of his Enemies and Comfort of his Members JOH 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh c. THE several Instances or Acts of Christs power have been dispatched I shall only name one Title usually given him which will serve greatly to illustrate this power For although he be compared to many things that denote him the root of all our grace To the bread of life Joh. 6.35 To Manna To the Vine Joh. 15. To the Olive tree Rom. 11. In natural things so also things of power and love in civill things To an husband 2 Cor. 11.2 to a King to a Lord yea a King of Kings and Lord of Lords yet that which I shall pitch on as being most comprehensive and the Scripture most delighting in is That he is an Head to his Church The Apostle doth frequently use this property 1 Cor. 1.3 The head of every man is Christ Eph. 1.22 He is there set to be Head over all things Col. 2.20 The head of all Principality He is there made head of the Angels not properly for Angels cannot be called members of his body but improperly as head is used for the chief Governour Seeing then many places to expresse this transcendent power of Christ over all flesh use this word Head Let us consider what that implieth and the rest shall be spent in practicall improvement of this Point Christ then is appointed an head and so hath power over all things 1. In regard of his eminency and dignity for he is exalted above every name any thing that hath the greatest fame and glory either in this world or that to come Col. 1.18 That he might have the preheminence in all things So that we should account nothing great in comparison of Christ All the great men with their great power that in their generations have made such wonderfull changes in the world in respect of Christ should be but as a Mole-hill to the vast Heavens As God hath set him above every Name so should we We reade of some Christian Emperors and great Lords that they would not be called Domini Lords as being too great a Title only Domni by diminution yea it 's said of Augustus in whose Reign Christ was born that he prohibited himself to be called Dominus Some make a peculiar Providence of God in this because then Christ came into the world who was the Lord of the world The world was made by him and in this particular there is a great difference between a naturall head and this mystical for a natural head doth not make the other parts of the body but is made proportianably with them only this mystical head makes all his members he doth not only give nourishment but create their very being It 's true Christ in the state of his humiliation was a little lower or as the word is to be interpreted for a little while lower then the Angels Heb. 2. But after this he was lifted up above all principality and power and certainly this is a wonderfull thing that so great part of the world should set up that Christ as their God in whom they beleeve that was crucified dead and buried and though now ascended into heaven yet we see him not with bodily eyes neither is his Kingdom and power after an earthly and pompous administration yet for what a long season with so many thousands and millions of men rich men great men Learned men Kings and Emperours of the world hath he been worshiped This sheweth the Name God hath given him Only the Apostle Rom. 2. tels us of many that blaspheme this Name of our God by reason of the wickednesse of Christians You who professe your selves Christians and yet live in beastly and bruitish lusts you keep off Heathens and Pagans from coming in to owne Christ 2. Christ is an head in respect of his spirituall influence and powerfull communication of his grace and strength to those that are his members Col. 2.19 The Apostle there and in other places doth much dwell on this That as the head is the Fountain of all life and motion for the Scripture seemeth to go with them that make the head not the heart the Fountain of all life and motion From that every part hath its proper nourishment so it is with the Church of God so that this similitude affordeth many precious Meditations for is the godly man fearfull his sins will overcome this lust or that lust will be too strong for him he shall not have grace enough to conquer it Let him consider the Fulnesse of his head is there such a sinne that Christ himself is not able to subdue Again do the godly complain they cannot grow they continue dwarfs They do not finde any progresse Oh let them consider that Christ is the head and he will have his members grow up to their due proportion Further Is
are equal in Nature and Dignity they are all God and infinitely blessed for evermore yet the Scripture doth represent unto us an order in their operations ad extra to us-ward especially in the work of our Redemption one operation is appropriated to the Father another to the Son and another to the holy Ghost To the Father is constantly applied the sending of Christ his Sonne into the world as at the second verse of this Chapter Gal. 4.4 In the fulness of time God sent forth his Son and 1 John 4.9 it 's the Father that sends him So that the original of all our peace and salvation is the love of the Father 2. That which is appropriated to the Sonne is to be sent To be the Person that shall procure our Redemption And 3. To the holy Ghost that he is sent both by the Father and the Son for the application of those benefits which he shall procure for us Therefore the Father is said to send him Joh. 14.16 and Christ saith He will send him Joh. 16 7. Thus he is called The Spirit of Christ as well as the spirit of God because now he is sent by Christ as a Mediator The holiness in Adam was wrought by the Spirit of God as the third Person in the Trinity absolutely considered but now it causeth holiness in believers relatively as the Spirit of Christ So that in Gods dispensations about mans salvation there is an appropriated order in the operations of the three Persons Secondly The mission or sending of Christ here spoken of doth not relate to him as the second Person but as he is Mediator for so as he is the Son of God he is not sent but begotten And thus the Scripture when it speaks of him in that respect calleth him The only begotten Son of God but this mission is in time and of a voluntary dispensation whereas the other was natural and of eternity Christ was alwayes the Sonne of God but not alwayes sent to be the Mediatour of his Church unless in the purpose and decree of God So that this sending of Christ respects him as God and man and denoteth that incarnation of his with the discharge of all those duties that thereby he undertook Thirdly Gods sending of him doth signifie the authoritative Mission and calling of him to that work The Apostle diligently presseth this Heb. 5.5 that Christ glorified not himself but was called by God to his Priesthood called of God to be ● Priest after the order of Melohisedech yea Ch. 7.21 the Apostle presseth this that he was made an High-priest by an oath The Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever And certainly this must needs be of great comfort to us when we shall reade that Christ was so solemnly invested with this power to forgive sins to sanctifie our natures to procure our salvation Things that are done by those that have not a Call are said to be null and invalid they have not powerful efficacy and success but Christ was authorized by God to be thy Saviour he had his Commission to do it he would not take this work in hand till he was called unto it Fourthly The Father did not only call him thus to this wonderfull imployment but he did qualifie and fit him with all abilities for that work he poured out his Spirit upon his humane nature without measure So that as those in the Old Testament when called to any Office were anointed Thus Christ had not a temporal but a spiritual Unction Psal 45.7 there God is said to anoint him with the oyl of gladness Therefore Joh. 6.27 the Father is said to have sealed him to this work Thus Christ acknowledgeth when he saith a body thou hast prepared for me the meaning is he had an universal fitness for the work and this also is of great comfort that Christ is not only called to be our Saviour but he is qualified with all sufficiency thereunto there is nothing that a poor humbled sinner could desire in a Saviour but there is a treasury of it in him Col. 1. It pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Oh then why do not the people of God believe more firmly and walk more comfortably What do they want which is not in this Christ Shall Christ send his Officers to work and endue them with proportionable power and shall not the Father send him with all fitness and fulness to that work Fifthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that the fountain from which our salvation doth arise is the meer good-will and pleasure of God the Father So that although our Justification Sanctification and Glorification be to be attributed to the merits of Christ and it 's for Christs sake that we enjoy them yet the sending of Christ into the world and giving him to become our Mediator is wholly from the absolute good pleasure of God Christ did not merit his Incarnation he did not merit that he should be sent into the world No this is said to be Gods love Not that hereby we are to make comparisons as if the second Person loved us lesse then the first as the Socinian would divide but to admire the great love of either in their distinct operations That conceit also is vain of some that say God upon the fore sight of the will of Christs humane nature to become our Saviour and presupposing this determinate choice did therefore appoint him to be our Mediator This they think will reconcile Christs necessary Obedience and his free-will together but then the Scripture would not have attributed it to Gods love and to the Fathers love but Christs love as a man which yet it doth not Sixthly In that Christ is said to be sent there is implied that he is under an Office and Obligation of faithfulness and trust So that as it lay upon the Apostles faithfully and diligently to accomplish their Office thus also it did upon Christ and therefore he doth so often call it the command that he had from the Father implying that if he did not accomplish all that for which he was sent he should be guilty of unfaithfulness and disobedience and here also is contained much consolation for why should the believer doubt of Christs willingness and readiness to pardon sanctifie or heal him seeing that Christ is under a command to do this he is betrusted with this work he would be found blame-worthy if he did not accomplish all that he was call'd unto As it 's thy duty to believe in him so he hath voluntaily submitted to make it his duty to give thee rest and ease Seventhly Though Christ be sent and be thus under command yet we are not to think that this is done against his will as if the Father did compell him to this work against his desire No how readily doth he profess his coming into the world Loe I come to do thy will O Lord thy Law is
a Command yet withall sheweth the difficulty of it and whence it doth come to pass that the children of God sensible of their sins are so hardly brought to Beleeve As also why ungodly men think it so easie a thing SERM. XXXIX Further sheweth how acceptable it is to God to beleeve in Christ the Mediatour and setteth forth the dangerous nature of Trusting in our own Righteousness SERM. XL. Further setteth forth the Excellency and Necessity of pressing the Doctrine of Faith in Christ the Mediatour and of our being affected with it and invites the greatest sinners to come unto him for Salvation SERM. XLI JOHN 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me for they are thine Of praying both for the Godly and the wicked with the Reasons and Motives thereof SERM. XLII The Excellency and Efficacy of Christs Mediatory prayer set forth in many Aggravations of it for the Consolation of the Godly SERM. XLIII Of the Extent of Christs Mediatory Prayer and of his Death That he praied and died not for all and every one of mankinde but only for the Elect and that the Scripture expressions of Christs dying for all are to be understood indefinitely and not universally SERM. XLIV Reasons why the Scripture speaks thus universally about Christs death when yet but some were intended Also what Benefits Reprobates have by Christ with some Arguments further proving the point of Christs dying not for every man but some SERM. XLV The Application of the former Subject setting forth the Necessity of Faith and Repentance as to the interesting us in Christ The Freeness of Gods Love The Qualifications of those to whom Christs death is made advantagious and also their priviledges above all others SERM. XLVI Of Free-Grace opposite to Arminianism tending to raise the hearts of those that are Godly to Joy and Thankfulness SERM. XLVII Of Gods Propriety in his people as the ground of all the good that accrueth to them SERM. XLVIII JOHN 17.10 And all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them The Deity of Jesus Christ cleared and defended against the Socinians SERM. XLIX Of mans glorifying of Christ and how many waies that is done SERM. L. JOHN 17.11 And now I am no more in the world but these are in the world and I come to thee holy Father keep through thine own Name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as we are Of Christs tender care of all his people in the greatest of their care and afflictions SERM. LI. Of the great danger of Gods peoples being in the world chiefly from its tempting and seducing to sin SERM. LII Of the danger Gods people are in in the world in respect of its hating and opposing of them with Reasons why the Lord makes the world such a disquieting place such a valley of tears unto his own people SERM. LIII The Exaltation of Christ improved for the Joy of all Beleevers SERM. LIV. That all Civil Governours as well as Ecclesiasticall from the meanest Master of a Family to the greatest Monarch have from Christ a spirituall charge of those that are under them and are above all things to endeavour the good of their souls SERM. LV. The great Lord-keeper of Israel from inevitable Ruine both of body and soul extolled SERM. LVI That it 's not enough to be put into a state of Grace unless by Gods power we are kept therein How farre men may acknowledge Gods help and yet with the Pelagians Arminians and Papists not give him his due Glory And also sheweth how many waies the power of God keepeth his people SERM. LVII Reasons proving the Necessity of Gods preserving his children in Grace That God keeps them by Faith Also why and how Faith keeps them rather then other Graces SERM. LVIII The greatness of the mercy of being kept sound in the Truth and the damnableness of Errour demonstrated SERM. LIX That it 's a speciall Mercy for the Ministers of the Gospel to agree in one Wherein their unity should be and the Reasons of the differences that are among them SERM. LX. The great Pattern of Unity the Nature and Property of the Unity that is between God the Father and the Sonne against the Socinians That the Ministers of God should endeavour after a perfect Unity even to be one as the Father and Sonne are Also some Rules guiding thereunto SERM. LXI JOHN 17.12 While I was with them in the world I kept them in thy Name those that thou gavest me I have kept and none of them is lost but the son of perdition that the Scripture might be fulfilled The great changes that even a Godly man is subject unto in respect of the having and losing those sensible supports both outward and inward which God at sometimes vouchsafeth to them Also what those sensible injoyments are and why God doth so change the condition of his people SERM. LXII Sheweth how prone men are for to know Christ after the flesh and wherein it appears SERM. LXIII Of the Saints Lord-keeper shewing how safe the Godly are kept to Salvation by Christ as a trust committed to him SERM. LXIV Of the manner of Christs keeping those that are his Of a four fold principle that is operative to the preservation of Beleevers And of the excellent effects of the Lively Meditation of this Doctrine of being kept by Christ to Salvation SERM. LXV Of the Perseverance of the Saints The Question stated SERM. LXVI Of the Perseverance of the Saints SERM. LXVII Arguments proving that every one that is in the state of Grace shall be preserved to Eternall Life SERM. LXVIII Of the sonne of perdition Shewing that some persons are wilfully set for to damn themselves though they have never so many excellent Remedies and Means to the contrary And what are the Causes that move them thereunto and Characters of such persons SERM. LXIX Of the son of perdition Shewing more Causes and Symptoms of such wretched persons that are desperately bent to damn themselves SERM. LXX Of the sonne of perdition Sheweth from the example of Judas that men may be eminent for a while in the Church of God and afterwards prove desperate Apostates SERM. LXXI Of the sonne of Perdition SERM. LXXII Of the sonne of Perdition SERM. LXXIII The great stumbling-blocks of Religion removed SERM. LXXIV Of the Scripture SERM. LXXV Of the truth of Scripture-prophesies and against Judiciall Astrology and Witchcraft shewing the vanity and wickedness thereof and of seeking to them SERM. LXXVI John 17.13 And now I come to thee and these things I speak in the world that they might have my joy fulfilled in themselves The Joy of Saints handled both as a duty and priviledge as being one great end of Christs Prayer Command Promises and Ministry SERM. LXXVII Of Joy and Comfort shewing how many waies the Spirit of God works it in the hearts of his people SERM. LXXVIII The severall
necessary companion to the minding of heavenly things There is no externall duty of praying or hearing that will make the heart moderate and regular in the use of all comforts unlesse it be accompanied with mortification Let not then the waters overflow the banks Do not over-love over-desire over-grieve about these earthly comforts It 's an argument thou lovest them for their own sakes or thy own sake and not for God who art thus over-sollicitous about them so then to say I desire no temporall mercy but to honour God thereby requireth an heart mortified and crucified if we would speak the truth and not deceive our own souls Till therefore we be thus divinely qualified within You may as soon gather grapes of thorns and figs of thistles as the honour of God from such men In the next place take notice of the Reasons why we are to pray for all our comforts in reference to Gods glory And 1. Because God himself doth all things for his own glory His own actions are for it and therefore much more ought ours to be God made the world God saveth his people and all this is for his own glory and indeed as Gods wisedom is only able to comprehend himself so his own love is able to love him in quantum est amabilis yet we are commanded to be holy as he is holy Now as his holinesse is in willing of his own glory and all things in reference thereunto So our godlinesse consists in willing and procuring Gods glory and improving all we have for that purpose If God made the world for his glory do thou use it for his glory If God give thee parts and gifts to glorifie him oh do not abuse these against their good and lawfull end 2. From the nature of Gods glory and all these earthly comforts respectively that is the ultimus finis and these are the media and morall Philosophy teacheth us that media movent bonitate finis it 's not absolute goodnesse in the means but the relative goodnesse of the end in the means that excite and provoke the appetite It 's not Physick for Physicks sake though never so sweet but for healths sake that we take it Lay this as an undeniable argument upon thy own soul These good things are but the means they are not the end Now they are desired not in an unlimited but commensurated manner If a man would quench his thirst he doth not desire all the water in the Sea but as much as will quench his thirst If a man desire a garment to cover his nakednesse he would not have all the cloth in the world but what is proportioned for his body So it 's here Thou art not to will as much wealth as much honour and greatnesse as may be had but what will be serviceable to that great end the glory of God otherwise thou art in thy abundance as David in Sauls armour It was too great for him and in stead of being serviceable was cumbersome and truly hence ariseth the inordinate sinfulnesse of our sences in all earthly comforts we desire them for their own sake and so are infinite and never satisfied still saying Give whereas this regulated desire would much moderate us Appetitus non est regula concoctionis the appetite is not the rule of our concoction is in Divinity true as well as in Philosophy 3. Consider the greatnesse of Gods glory It 's more worth then all the world all thy wealth estate and greatnesse is nothing to this glory of God neither thy soul or body no nor all mens souls and bodies are to be compared to this Better we all perish then that God should lose his glory Oh then how should this make us whatsoever we do to do all to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 because the Sun is far above one Star the Ocean above one drop 4. If we desire not all things in reference to him we are guilty of spirituall Idolatry we set up another God besides him or we attribute that supreme dominion to another which belongs only to him unlesse we were God himself we might not do so how severe was God against that Jewish Idolatry in worshiping Idols his glory he would not have given to another Now this is not the lesse Idolatry because it 's not so bodily The more secret and hidden it is the more abominable Herod was eaten up with lice because he was not displeased when others said The voice of God and not of man Act. 12.23 He was tickled with it and received it well enough I tell thee such sins as this are committed when thou takest thy wealth thy honours and exaltest thy self thereby and not God Vse of Instruction How few then take notice of this doctrine who desire mercies only to serve God thereby riches and greatnesse to promote God therewith If this were so there could not be those immoderate and unsatisfied affections in thee Thou wouldst be more solliciuous bow to improve all for God Thy heart would tremble lest God receive not more glory by giving thee more mercies We give thee of thy own said David 1 Chro. 29 14. and certainly if we have any thing to glorifie God by both the gift and the good use of it is wholly of Gods grace What wilt thou do who takest the good mercies of God and usest them as weapons against him Thou servest thy own lusts and the devils Will the patience of God alwaies bear this SERMON VII The Text Vindicated from Arians Vbiquitarians and Papists And the power and dominion of Christ observ'd and applied to the comfort of his Disciples and terrour of his Enemies JOH 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him THe Verse before spake of the mutual glorification which is between the Sonne and the Father Now this second verse is specificative or declarative of that wherein or whereby the Sonne may and doth glorifie the Father viz. by the power that he hath in the whole world more especially in the Church of God giving eternal life to them that do beleeve So that this Text containeth one principall way or manner how the Sonne doth glorifie the Father All the wondrous works that are done in the world bring not so much glory to God as the spiritual works which are wrought by Christ in the Church In the words we may take notice of Christs power and the use or exercise of it The power is mentioned in the former part The exercise in the latter Concerning the former observe 1. The power expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which say some doth not signifie a meer power but a power with right and so difference it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if that signified any power this only is just and lawfull As among the Latines potentia and potestas are diversified but this is not universally true for 〈◊〉
Jew after the Spirit would farre esteem the latter Thus it is here No power or works are judged great but what are temporall visible and in civill outward things we are apt more to look upon Alexander the great or Constantine the great because of their civill power then Christ who is the King of Kings and Lords transcending all these but in a spirituall way 1 Tim. 6.15 Christ hath this magnificent Title King of Kings and Lord of Lords It 's observed by Drusius a Learned man that those Titles were usually given to the great Kings of Persia then which there were none assumed more to themselves then they did yet the Apostle attributeth this to Christ to inform us that as God hath exalted Christ above all earthly power so we should magnifie and glorifie him accordingly certainly if we Christians did put forth our faith and meditations about the greatnesse of this power it would work great joy and confidence in us It would work an holy fear and trembling The Apostle Eph. 1. Phil 2. Col. 1. is even transported with the expressions about it Now this power of Christ is no where more glorious then in sanctifying and preparing an holy people for himself To give them of the same Spirit with him They that were dead and noisome in sinne to make them live in holinesse and to adorn them with all the graces of his Spirit Oh then let not the people of God be dismai●d or discouraged with the apprehension of their own weaknesse and impotency how can they love God bear afflictions die in hope and comfort Alas thou thinkest on thy own weaknesse and not Christs power Remember Of his Fulnesse thou art to receive A thirsty man need not doubt whether the whole Ocean hath water enough to revive him Christ we reade gave wonderful power to his Disciples and other beleevers to work miracles This amazed and astonished all the world but certainly this power of changing mens hearts and reforming their lives is farre above this To open the eyes of the minde is more then to give bodily sight to say Ephatha to the heart is more then to say so to the ear To raise from the death of sin is more then to command out of the grave Austin said To make a man holy is more then to create a world Conversion is not usually called a Miracle yet it 's a greater wonder then a Miracle Let that soul then which hath found Christ thus powerfull upon him admire the unsearchable greatnesse of his Christ wonder at it as the most admirable expression of Gods power to thee Secondly Christs power is seen in that he doth not only give grace but he is able to bestow all that glory and happinesse the Scripture promiseth Now the reward or fruit of grace is either that inward peace and joy of heart here or eternal happinesse hereafter both which are in Christs power and munificence It was alwaies a flower in the chiefest power to be able to remunerate those that did great service and this is part of Christs Jus Regale For the first the peace of conscience and joy which accompanieth well-doing is exceeding great insomuch that if there were no heaven hereafter yet godlinesse brings a present sweetnesse and delight with it It hath present pay Now all this peace and comfort especially between God and the soul is wrought by Christ only who is called the King of Peace Isa 9. yea our peace Eph. 2.14 because he reconcileth God and man If those Peace-makers be blessed that make man and man to agree how much more is he that brings God and man to agreement But this Christ worketh Alas the heart troubled for sinne rageth and is like an hell till Christ bids it be quiet and still Hence he promiseth to send the Comforter and it 's his Spirit which is sent into our hearts making us to cry Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Oh then let the grieved and perplexed soul through the guilt of sin that can finde no rest no ease go to him that hath power indeed to command these waves to be still See with what love and power Mat. 11.28 this is expressed Come to me ye that are heavy laden and I will ease you Christ will give ease See how imperiously he speaks Let your sinne be never so terrifying your conscience never so disquieted The devils never so much troubling and tempting of you yet I will give you ease You shall finde rest for your souls No earthly power in the world can say thus truly Therefore this is to direct the godly in their black temptations They cry out It cannot be I should have peace I should have joy There may as soon come fire out of water as peace and quietnesse out of my heart Oh remember this Text The power Christ hath over all flesh Is thine excepted Christ can ease and quiet every mans heart but thine Be ashamed to think thy weaknesse more then Christs power Thy guilt more then his consolations The other fruit of a godly life is Eternal happinesse and this Christ doth also bestow upon those that are his At the day of judgement we reade of him putting them into possession Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you Mat. 25. Heb. 5.9 he is called The authour of eternal salvation he cals himself the bread of life he that eateth on him shall never die more so that all that happinesse and blessednesse which is in the life to come is attributed unto Christ both the purchase and authour of it It 's he that will say Well done good and faithfull Servant enter thou into thy Masters joy For those Parables that speak of a great King employing his Servants in such work and then so abundantly rewarding of them is Christ This should be a great encouragement in Christs service What a glorious and powerful Master do ye serve one who is able to requite thee with eternal glory and everlasting happinesse If we suffer with him we shall reign with him Rom. 8.17 The greatnesse and bounty of the Master doth quicken the Servant Haman was glad of Ahashuerus his emploiment because he could put such honour upon him But oh how should our hearts be enflamed to work for Christ what cannot such a Master do for us Ask any thing in earth or heaven he can bestow it on thee How unworthy is it when we grudge at the work Christ requireth when we repine at the Crosse he would have us take up This is not to attend whom we serve how great our Master is what Treasuries he hath out of which he can bountifully reward us Thirdly Christs power is seen in that he can forgive and pardon sinne Which is acknowledged by all that God only can do it Mar. 2.7 You have this power of Christ particularly opposed by his enemies but vindicated by him and that he hath power to forgive sinnes he proveth by his power to work Miracles Not that
then to think This Judge I have dishonoured I have wronged I have broken all his Commands Oh if it were any other Judge I could hope to speed better Oh if you have any love to your souls lay this to heart Thy wickednesse thy prophanesse it hath been against Christ It was he that commanded thee he sent his Ministers to perswade thee and thou saidst Give me my lusts rather then Christ the world rather then Christ and this Christ is now come to be my Judge What dost thou think or beleeve about these things Why dost thou stop thy ear Why dost thou stifle thy Conscience Why dost thou labour to suppresse these thoughts within If that all this power will not passe by thee though but one man Think not what care I for this power I will do well enough howsoever 3. Consider its power that one day will be expressed only in a dreadfull way Not the least drop of honey in this Ocean of gall As yet indeed Christ who hath all power emploieth much of it for the salvation of thy soul He sends his Ministers who entreat you to be reconciled with God and how should that melt you for what are you how despicable and unworthy that God should desire you to be reconciled to him he needeth you not he wants you not This is true but the time is coming when all his power will be manifested in a dismall condemning way Then he commands his Gaolers the devils to take and torment for ever Then he comes in flaming fire of vengeance cry then if thou wilt Lord where is thy power to save thy power to forgive and he will say there is no more time for such power any longer Expect no more blessings no more invitations but now prepare for those torments thou art adjudg'd unto Did we preach these things to Heathens and Pagans that do not beleeve the truth of them it would be no wonder if they did not regard them But how is it that you who say ye beleeve these things that you do not go out and weep bitterly 4. This power is spirituall it doth reach to the hearts and consciences of men Oh be afraid lest upon thy wickednesse he puts thee forth lest he make thee a Cain a Judas Oh it 's not all thy wealth all thy jollity all thy pleasures that are able to withstand these troubles and tempests if Christ raise them up in thee If he deliver thee to Satan as some were then Christ withdraweth all his comfort all peace and lets the devil be thy tormentor and thy heart an hell especially this is done sometimes in time of sicknesse under fears of death when nothing but outward calamity compasseth thee about then he commands those black and thick clouds to cover thy heart which are as a gulf between Gods mercy and thee There is no sinner so haughty so jolly so scornful but Christ can quickly turn his Sun into a black night Every thing shall bring thy sins and hell to thy minde oh be afraid to live so lest you provoke Christ to put forth this power 5. It 's a just and righteous power and therefore never expect impunity and freedom For what is the sweet poyson that undoeth thee Oh thou thinkest of mercy thou dreamest of mercy thou speakest of mercy but shall not the Judge of the world be just also And is it not the greatest justice in the world that as thou wouldst not hear him speaking in the day of grace so neither should he hear thee begging and crying in his day of justice Is it not a most just thing that thou who saidst Let me have my lusts though I be for ever separated from Christ that thy own desires should fall upon thy head What shall Christ be refused and that day after day for every lust and sinne and shall this alwaies be forgotten Will Christ never be avenged for it Lastly This power of Christ is to inflict eternall misery It 's everlasting fire and everlasting burnings It 's a fire that never goeth out worms that never die Now what power in the world is like this Can any make thee miserable for ever Can any say Be thou in torment to all Eternity but this is the power we speak of As the Apostle said We count not those short afflictions equall to that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 5.14 So ne●ther do thou judge those pleasures equall to that eternal woe A second Vse of Consolation For this Doctrine is like the Bee it hath a sting and honey Like the Ark that had Manna and a Rod Now what unspeakable comfort ariseth from this to the godly much every way 1. The Children of God they are subject to sad temptations about the weaknesse of their graces and the strength of their lusts David was not more fearful one day or other of being overthrown by Saul then they are at last to be destroied either by hypocrisie or apostacy Now what surer remedy what more precious cordial can there be then this Omnipotency of Christ this plenitude of power It was said of the Pope who pleaded for fulnesse of Church-power that it was not plenitudo potestatis but tempestatis But it 's otherwise with Christ his fulnesse of sufficiency is for every want of thine in any spiritual way he can as easily give thee spiritual things as temporal if thou wantst bread health thou thinkest it 's but Christs command and he can multiply the Loaves now he is as willing to do this in heavenly things It 's but a word from his mouth and thy proud heart is humbled thy unruly heart pacified thy grieved heart comforted yea he is more willing to give us spiritual things then Parents give Children their temporals how much rather will he give the holy Ghost to them that ask him Mat. 7. Oh then though all the world cannot help thee in this matter yet Christ hath power to do it and as for his willingnesse what cause of doubt seeing he was crucified and underwent voluntarily all that ignominy and curses that he might be exalted to this power to help thee Josephs Brethren were afraid because of their guilt that Joseph now so much preferred would not help them but he is Joseph and will forgive wrongs so also will Christ do to thee The second Temptation is about Pardon of sinne and Gods displeasure Oh this is a restlesse Sea in which the godly are tossed up and down This is the Whales belly that swalloweth up all Oh but here is a blessed haven here is one can command the windes and waves to be still here is one can say Son be of good comfort thy sins be forgiven thee 3. The outward exercises of the godly are very many They have many thorns in the flesh They have deep waters to go through Now what is an help but the power of Christ I can doe all things through Christ None but Christ None but Christ said the Martyrs
be so wellcome Had the Prodigall not met with husks and extream hardship he would not have resolved to go back to his Father again Think and practise these things so wilt thou be greatly affected with eternity And to encourage thee herein consider the blessed effects which a lively meditation of eternity accompanied with a firm faith will put thee upon For first Who so hath this eternity set upon his heart he will not be immoderatly and inordinatly desirous after these things below As the beams of the sunne will put out the fire so will the thoughts and affections about eternall things overcome temporall The Apostle 1 Cor. 7. presseth all upon an hard duty To marry as if we married not to buy as if we bought not Why so because the time here is short eternity is coming upon us And thus those holy Patriarchs mentioned Heb. 11. they accounted themselves pilgrims and strangers and they sought a City to come not built with hands Thou complainest thy heart is so full of deadnesse dulnesse so full of the world the cares and distractions thereof devour thee up there is nothing will help thee against this temptation then often thoughts and affections about eternity 2. As the thoughts of eternall life will thus moderate our affections so it will work in us 〈◊〉 longing for and hasting of the coming of Christ who then will bestow this eternall life upon us We wonder how Paul should be lifted up above all these earthly comforts as to desire to depart and to be with Christ Phil. 1. It seemeth very difficult to us that any hasten in their praiers and desires Christs coming but all this is because our hearts are not as full of hope and expectation of eternall life as theirs were Alas many of us know no better and so cannot desire any better then what may be had in this world and therefore the thoughts of death and the coming of Christ are unwelcome to us Whereas to The godly it 's the coming of the bridegroom and they are to lift up their heads with joy when that approaches Matth. 26. Let then that godly soul which doth so complain that it loveth life too dearly and feareth death too immoderately let that be strengthened and comforted with the sure hopes of this eternall life If an heavenly frame of heart were powerfull in us this very world would be a wildernesse it would be tedious to us to be kept so long from that home we have in heaven The Saints have a rest provided for them and who doth not desire to be at his rest Oh blame your selves more that you have not Davids exclamation and now Lord what long I for truly my soul waiteth for thee As the heart panteth after the water brooks so doth my soul after thee O God Psal 42.1 David spake this but of enjoying God in the Ordinances in this life Oh but how greatly must the soul be inflamed for the life to come 3. Powerful thoughts of Eternity will quiet and wonderfully calm the soul under any afflictions and troubles No such antidote as this Paul abundantly witnesseth that we account not the light afflictions of this life comparable to that eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4. so this Eternity made him not value or regard any temporary affliction It was this that made the Martyrs joyfully take the spoiling of their goods and the losse of their lives Thus in every affliction and exercise if sanctified to thee how sweetly and joyfully maist thou dwell in heaven while thou art on earth Thou maist be in heaven every day even while thy condition is beset with many troubles It 's thy sinne and unbelief if thou makest thy house a prison Thy self a torment to thy self if thou set faith on work about this Eternity it will put thee into heaven before thou comest to possesse it Eternal Life will give thee a better body a better house a better heart oh this Eternal life it 's the health of our bones the light of our countenance a continual Feast and a perpetual cordial Hence the godly even in this life are said to have Eternal life because of the right they have to it and partly because they have the beginnings and first fruits of it upon their souls Vse of Admonition Take this Subject more into your thoughts how many roving thoughts hast thou but if placed on Eternity it would be great profit How many thoughts hast thou unbeleeving disquieting and troubling if fixed on Eternity they would all vanish especially let the wicked man turn from all sinne saying There is an Eternity If it were only death that would not so much trouble thee but it 's Eternity after Death SERMON XIV The Necessity of Divine Knowledge And Arraignment of Ignorance JOH 17.3 And this is life eternall that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent IN the Verse before we had the great priviledge vouchsafed viz. eternall Life and the Subject to whom viz. Those that are given to Christ In this Verse our Saviour informeth of the manner or way how we may come to it For to speak of eternal life and not direct to the enjoying of it is to see Canaan but to want a pillar of fire to guide to it and although our Saviour had described such as should inherit eternal life yet because it 's a secret written in Gods Book which no man can reade who are given by the Father to Christ and who not Therefore it 's necessary we should be told the way and that is done in the Text. In the words you have then affirmed the way to this happinesse This is eternal life this will make you have eternal life None can ever attain it that take not this course for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may either relate to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or else after the manner of the Hebrews be put absolutely for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This phrase is like John 12.58 Now therein Consider 1. The way or duty enjoyned 2. The object of it The duty is To know Among other distinctions this is very obvious in Scripture to speak of a twofold knowledge 1. That which is meerly speculative and apprehensive If ye know these things happy are you if ye do them Joh. 13.17 2. Which is practicall and operative for it 's a known Rule that among the Hebrews Words of Knowledge are put for all the affections and effects that use to follow such Knowledge Thus God is said to know the way of the righteous Psa 1. That is so to know as to approve and preserve the righteous and in this sence To know the true God is taken so to know as to do all those things that are commanded by him and the reason why the Scripture comprehends all under knowledge is because this is the Introduction and gate to all practicall piety Although to know here is more particularly taken for beleeving for
in the latter sence God did not make it so Man wilfully sinning made it a wicked world so that the wickednesse of the world is not of God but by man as also death and hell is of man God onely inflicts them as just punishments upon ungodly offenders And thus likewise all the miseries pains and diseases that are in the world are by sinne The Ground was not cursed to bring forth nothing but briars and thorns till man had sinned So that the Principles of evil were the Apostate Angels and Apostate man Otherwise take we the world in an innocent sence for the Fabrick of it with the Creatures therein So it is wholly good and of God Therefore Gen. 1. God is said to look over all that he had made and they were very good Every daies work was good when they were put altogether then they were very good so that we are not to judge of every particular thing in the world by it self but in its Harmony and Union and so the world is like a curious peice of Arras or Tapestry admirably shewing the wisedom of the Creator Basil thought that before Adam fell the Rose did grow without any pricks and that there was no enmity between the creatures The Wolf and the Sheep the Lion and the Lamb and the Leopard and the Kid did dwell together c. But whether this be so or no is yet disputed Take heed of saying The world might have been better and this thing or that might have been made more compleatly this is to reproach God the Maker of it As that wretched Alphonsus King of Spain who said That had he been at the Creation of the world he would have ordered it better then now it is Vse 4 4. Is God the Maker of the world then it follows also he is the Preserver and governour of the world This must necessarily follow for the same power is required to preserve and govern as is to create And as it is grosse Athiesm to own any other Maker of the world but God so also any other Governour or Ruler Hence it is that God is so often called the Judge of the world that he is said to Reign that the hearts of Kings even the chiefest powers in the world are in his hand he can order them as he pleaseth That it is not as men think as they will or purpose but as the Judge of the world Faith in this Point while we live in this world is necessary The Lord reigneth let the world rejoyce Psa 97.1 said David And again The Lord reigneth let the world tremble Psa 99.1 There is matter of joy and matter of trembling because God governeth Matter of joy to the godly for he is a Supreme Ruler who is their God whose eye runneth up and down in their behalf who keeps up the world for their sake who takes care of every godly man so fully as if there were no creature else but he And it 's also of terrour to wicked men for God rules all who is an holy just and righteous God so that they must not think alwaies to hold up their heads They must not think God will be mocked but he will do righteously in the world For want of faith in this Point we see David Jeremiah and Habakkuk staggering exceedingly ready to commend the waies of wickednesse because they seem more prosperous in the world Vse 5 5. Is God the Authour of the world Then let us make that use of this world for which God created it As he had his holy and wise ends so do thou aim at them Now Gods ends in creating the world were such as these 1. To demonstrate his own glory Thus Psa 19. The heavens shew forth the glory of God They discover his wisedom his power his goodnesse and so there is not any one creature though never so little but we are to admire the Creator in it As a Chamber hung round about with Looking-glasses represents the face upon every turn Thus all the world doth the mercy and the bounty of God Though that be visible yet it discovers an invisible God and his invisible properties 2. God made this world so richly furnished for mans use And therefore man is to be enlarged in the consideration of this matter Think with thy self how comes there to be such a glorious Sun to wait on thee every day How comes the earth every Spring to be so richly cloathed for thy advantage Is not all this of Gods appointing He made a Summer and winter he hath given the appointed works of the harvest so that the world is nothing but Gods storehouse and great Granary that he hath given to man This is so great a matter that the Psalmist cried out Lord what is man that thou art so mindeful of him Psa 144.3 Thus Paul speaking of God the Creator of the world Act. 17. amplifieth it in this That he giveth us richly to enjoy all things 3. God made this world not for a d●elling place for thee Thou art not to abide here for ever He made the world as the Wildernesse to the Israelites They were to be Pilgrims in it and to seek after Canaan As Adam by his fault continued not in Paradise so neither by reason of death was he long in the world Therefore the Apostle saith We have here no abiding City Heb. 12. Oh then that we could remember to what end God made this world not to place our hopes and utmost desires here but to look upon this as the way and heaven as our journeys end But oh how much faith and heavenly mindednesse is required of every one to perform this Vse 6 Vse 6. Did God lay the Foundations of the world and that in time how greatly then are the people of God to be affected with his love in electing of them for God chose them before the Foundations of the world he loved them before the world was This sheweth the freenesse of Gods love This manifests his absolute tender bowels to his Children Alas his love to thee was not from yesterday or so many years but from Eternity Doubt not then of the efficacy of this love in all the effects of it He that hath chosen thee from Eternity will call thee will justifie thee will glorifie thee not that these are done from Eternity only God purposed to do them in time David would remember the kindenesses of the Lord that were of old but how old is this goodnesse of God in choosing thee to eternal glory Vse 7 Lastly Did God create the world out of nothing and that in six daies such glorious Heavens and all other parts from a dark Chaos and Abysse then this may teach us to depend on God in all publike straights of the Church or all thy Personal Temptations What a foolish thing was it in the people of Israel to say Can God provide a Table in the Wildernesse Cannot he that made this great world of nothing doe a lesse matter
thus it is alwaies any errour any false way is more pleasing to corrupt men then the truth and hence it hath many followers People will run out to see to gaze and hear some new thing If a man be a dwarf or a gyant every one will run to see him but not the man of ordinary stature Vse Is this the end of the Ministry of all our labour and preaching to bring you to the saving knowledge of God Oh then may we not take up the Prophets complaint That we labour in vain the bellows is burnt the lead is consumed but the reprobate silver is not purged away Jer. 6.27 Do not many Families and persons proclaim they know not God for in this it is seen that they call not upon God there are no Family-duties no worshiping of him whereas our houses should be like the Temple of the Lord they are slies of sin rather Christ is to come in flaming vengeance against those that know not God May not the Ministers of God cry with Isaiah Isa 6.5 Wo be to us we dwell among men of polluted lips and lives It 's a Wo to dwell there Isaiah was much affected with it SERMON XXXI That Gods People are not of though in this world Wherein is also shewed the vast difference between them and the men of the world JOH 17.5 I have manifested thy Name to those that thou gavest me out of the world THE next thing considerable is The description of the Subject about which Christ did thus imploy himself and they are set out 1. From their original descent and heavenly rise These God hath given Christ but of this we have already treated and shall say more before we come to the end of the Chapter it being often repeated 2. From the term from which they are given out of the world They are given to Christ out of the world The Scripture in this Chapter makes a distinction of being in the world and of the world The people of God even as Christ himself and his Kingdom are in the world but they are not of the world As a Stranger in a forreign Countrey he is in that Countrey but not of it he hath not the nature the Language nor doth he accustome himself to the fashion of that place Thus it is with the godly Though they are born and so live in the world yet their natures and affections and conversations are not worldly As the Fowls that were at first created out of the water yet did not continue there but flew up to heaven and continue for the most part there As clouds though of the earth yet are carried about after the motions of the heavens They are not then given out of the world so as if every good man were presently upon his godlinesse removed out of this earth to heaven but in respect of their nature affections and conversation localiter they are not but in respect of heart and affections in which sence Paul said he was crucified to the world and the world to him Gal. 6.14 Now you must know that the word world hath several significations in Scriptures Est mundus cujus Deus est creator est mundus cujus Deus est redemptor est mundus cujus Satan est seductor Sometimes it is taken for the whole Fabrick and Vniverse with the parts thereof as when the world is said to be made by God and Christ a Lamb slain from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 Sometimes it 's taken for the greater part of the world as they said all the world did run after Christ or the world said to be taxed by Augustus Luk. 2.1 Sometimes for the power riches pleasures and glory of the world but then most commonly fot the wicked men of the world Thus often by John The world hath not known thee if ye were of the world the world would love you and now wicked men are called the world because their whole heart and desires are fixed on worldly things No worms no Moles delighting more in earthly things then they do and therefore they are the Serpents seed which live on the dust of the earth And then they are called the world because they are the farre greater visible and more flourishing part of the world Alas take these that are godly and they are but a despicable and contemptible handful to those that ruffle it in the world Obs That the people of God they are called out of the world He that is truly godly is no more a man of this world as we say of a dying man he is not for this world his heart his thoughts his desires are quite taken off Thus the godly are said to be dead and crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 They have not those carnal worldly affections and dispositions as formerly and from hence the people of God are called Ecclesia the Church as much as persons called out of the world not bodily but in respect of their souls and hence the world and the Church is opposed 1 Cor. 5.10 The Fornicators of this world in opposition to the Church so that by this we see there is none in the Church of God but they should have renounced the waies customes and sinnes of the world To be a Christian and yet of the world is a contradiction as if we should say a black Sun yet how is the garden of God made a Wildernesse how is the Church become the world So much prophanesse wickednesse and carnal living as there is so much of the world there is Oh that men did consider what an holy obligation their Christianity brings upon them Art thou a Christian and yet the drunkard of the world the fornicator of the world the proud the earthly of the world this ought not to be no more then the Angel a worm no more then a Starre a clod of earth The Apostle cals those of the world without What have we to do to judge those that are without 1 Cor. 5 ult but those of the Church within Oh but how many ●●e● within according to Christs Rule ought to be turned out of Christs sheepfold To illustrate this necessary Truth let us observe those demonstrations or discoveries whereby it may appear that the godly are not of the world And first This makes it manifest because they have not the Spirit of the world but of God 1 Cor. 2.12 Now what is the Spirit of the world even a judgement and wisedom to discern only worldly things to see the necessity of them the excellency of them To be wholly affected with them To meditate on them day and night But the godly they have received the Spirit of God whereby they savour and discern spiritual things They have hearts alwaies depending upon God and they have hearts wholly fixed and placed upon God They see incomparable excellency in heavenly things above all earthly They say with David My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to God at all times
Such a man this world adoreth But if a man be never so wise so excellent yet if powerfully godly will not conform to the evil waies of the world this marreth all This makes him envied and hated Who art thou then that hast some desires to walk in the way to heaven but the opposition the hatred and violence that is used against that way makes thee draw back Oh foolish and deluded wretch was it not thus with Christ with his Apostles Were they not told they should be hated of all men for his Names sake There cannot be a more comfortable sign of thy grace then to have all the wicked men where thou livest either thy hypocritical Friends or thy open enemies Jerome thanked God that he was worthy to be such an one whom the world would hate The Serpents Seed cannot love the Womans Ismaell will persecute Isaac glory therefore and boast in this if the malicious wicked man hath his mouth alwaies open against thee If he be alwaies censuring and backbiting For if thou wouldest be prophane dissolute if thou wouldst be a Minister to prostitute the Ordinances of God to every prophane man thou wouldst be as good as any in the world but now it 's not for thy infirmities but thy graces they malice thee Sixthly They are not of this world because they are members of Christ and incorporated into him Now Christ himself was not of this world nor was his Kingdom of this world Joh. 18.36 he came not with any earthly worldly advantages Now the godly they are to be wholly conformed unto Christ As Christ was so are they They bear the Image of the heavenly so that what life what actions were by Christ the same they are exercised in so that if we would follow the example of Christ make him our patern as our Christianity obligeth us then should we overcome the world not only in the persecuting part of it but the inticing part of it The heart that is united to Christ findes more excellency and sweetnesse in him then in all the pleasures of the world as we see by Paul Lastly They are discovered not to be of the world because their life is a life of faith The Just shall live by Faith Rom. 1.17 We walk by faith and not by sence 2 Cor. 5.7 Now a worldly life is only by sence and carnal reason It moveth only upon sensible grounds coming as far short of faith as a beast doth of reason but the godly man he looketh into the Word of God he seeth the promises and embraceth them This life of faith is a mystery it is a Riddle yea it 's a madnesse to the world To part with all present advantages upon faith for eternal that are to come this is to them extreme folly and truly herein a godly man is discovered exceedingly Doth he not live by his sensible props but by the Promises Doth he overlook all creatures and fix his heart upon God this is more then the world doth If you ask the grounds why the people of God are out of the world though in it There are three pregnant Reasons in one verse Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for our sins that he might deliver us from this present evil world Observe first it 's an evil wicked world The whole world lieth in wickednesse saith John 1 Joh. 5.19 There is nothing but the works of sin and the devil in it therefore the devil is called the Prince of this world Joh. 16.11 because he reigneth in every mans heart Now how can those whose natures are made holy who will and love what God wils and loveth come to agree with sin how can they who are sanctified by the Spirit of God be where the devil ruleth 2. It 's the present world It 's but for the present the profits are present profits the pleasures are present pleasures whereas the godly man looketh to Eternity D●mas cleaveth to the present world 2 Tim. 4.10 but Paul to the eternal world the world to come 2. Christ died that we might be delivered from it This is a pregnant reason one main reason of the death of Christ was that thou shouldst not be as the world is if the shortnesse and vanity of these things and their fading nature do not move thee let the bloud and death of Christ prevail with thee He was crucified that thou shouldst be crucified to the world he died that thou shouldst be dead to the world Vse of Exhortation To come out of the world in respect of your affections and conversations you cannot abide there no more then Lot in Sodom and be saved yet are not the greatest part of men of the Church thus of the world Oh how unworthy is this that whereas thy Christianity thy Religion engageth thee not to be of the world thy conversation proveth thou art Well as thou art of this world so shalt thou perish with the judgements of the world That lieth in darknesse and will be cast in utter darknesse this will be thy Portion and know thou must go out of the place of the world though thou wilt not out of the wickednesse of the world the world cannot will not hold thee alwaies SERMON XXXII Of the peculiar Propriety Gods People have in him and he in them JOH 17.6 Thine they were and thou gavest them me and they have kept thy Word THE former part of this Verse related Christs care and work to his Disciple This latter part giveth a description of them and all particulars therein are very argumentative to prevail that God should hear praier for them Now here is a threefold description of them wherein indeed is laid down divinely the Cause of mans Salvation with the effects flowing from it The two Causes are these 1. The Eternal Election and absolute purpose of God to save such Thine they were 2. The meritorious cause in and by which all the mercies they are elected to are obtained and that is Christ Thou hast given them me viz. as a Mediatour 3. The blessed effects of these causes that are hidden or at least every one may pretend to them but this is a discovering sign that excludeth many They have kept thy Word At this time I shall treat only of the first cause which indeed may be called causa causae the cause of all causes of our Salvation and that is Gods Election or gracious purpose to take some out of mankinde and to make them his in a peculiar manner For a people may be said to be Gods divers waies 1. By right of Creation and dominion which he hath thereby and so all things are his Psa 69.11 Both the reprobate and the godly are his in this sence it 's impossible but that every creature should be his because he cannot alienate his dominion and property 2. A people may be said to be his by an outward dispensation of the Covenant of grace Thus the people of the Jews are all of them called his people
God draweth him out to hate it and in duties good because it 's good doth move him Now the least sinne is sinne and we kill young Serpents as well as old ones and the least good is acceptable to God and he will reward it Reasons 4 Lastly In respect of the privative part of the punishment of sinne all are equall which is the losse of God and Heaven The least sinne depriveth of the happy Vision of God as well as the greatest so that in this sence we may say there is no little sinne no more then there is a little God and so likewise for the good of any duty The least shall have heaven as well as the greatest though not such degrees Even a cup of cold water doth not lose its reward Mat. 10.42 Vse To discover that Hypocrisie and falshood in many men some sins they avoid others again they embrace Is not all sinne poison Is there any good sinne Were thy heart sound those beloved and customary sins of thine could have no more welcome in thy heart then toads in thy bosome SERMON XXXVII Sheweth That Gods People are ready and willing in Obedience Whence it is that they are so Tending to rouse men up from dulnesse and Formality in Gods service JOH 17.8 For I have given them the words which thou gavest me and they have received them THere remaineth two things more considerable in the description of the Disciples Obedience The next thing to be considered is their readinesse and willingnesse implied in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They did not cavill or dispute They did not draw back or maliciously oppose but they were like melted wax ready to receive any impression like white paper whereon Gods Will and Law might be immediatly written and indeed if you observe the Disciples all along from their first call to this present time there appeared much readinesse in them Christ did no sooner speak the word commanding them to follow him but immediatly they leave all and obey though it was so much to their outward disadvantage though it was to fall in the Whales mouth yet they readily resign themselves and although sometimes they shewed dulnesse to beleeve and unwillingnesse in his service yet our Saviour excuseth it saying The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak and certainly had there not been a ready free spirit in the Disciples to take Christ above all and to cleave to him only they could never have devoured these troubles with so much patience as they did Obs That it 's a sure character and property of the children of God to be a willing ready people in obedience They are not as hypocrites kept from sinne by constraint meerly from a principle of fear within but Psa 110. They are willingnesses in the day of Gods power To explain this a little First There may be the presence of dulnesse and unwillingnesse sometimes in the Children of God but this is not reigning nor is it habitually consented to but resisted and with much agony praied against There is no garden but hath some of this weed in it No gold but some of this drosse No godly man but now and then hath wearisomnesse and unwillingnesse to holy duties seizing upon him Thus we reade the Church when Christ knocked at the door though he had stood all night and his locks were wet with the dew yet the Church out of a dull sluggish humour doth refuse to open to him Cant. 5.2 3. So Rev. 2. There the Church is reproved for suffering her graces to decay and that her duties were not filled up with fervency and solidity yea we may reade of the Church complaining of this slothfulnesse and coldnesse when she said Draw us and we will run after thee Cant. 1.4 And at another time Why hast thou hardened our hearts from thy fear Isa 63.17 So that it 's too manifest the people of God have much coldnesse and negligence in them What is that which fils their hearts with so many complaints but this what makes them so full of fears and doubts about their spiritual condition Is it not want of life vigour and willingnesse Oh they finde their hearts can take delight and be willingly drawn out in earthly affairs but they are like so many lumps of earth in heavenly things when yet there is farre more excellency worth and dignity in holy things then in all the whole world to draw out the heart so then let the godly for their comfort distinguish between the presence of unwillingnesse and the power of it Between unwillingnesse in the command and power over the soul and the reluctancy and striving against it The Apostle speaketh generally of sinne Let it not reign in your mortal bodies Rom. 7. Non dixit non sit sed ne regret This stumbling-block removed let us consider why the people of God must needs be so willing and ready in their obedience And first The sence of their guilt and all the misery sinne hath brought upon them puts them into a melting yeelding frame while mens hearts are hardened and they are not apprehensive of the damnable estate they are in while they are not in the fire of Gods displeasure they are stubborn and untractable but when they are kindely humbled for sin then they will do anything Thus Paul He that was mad in his oppositions against Christ no sooner did the Lord touch his heart with the sense of his sins but he crieth out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Thus David when the Lord had humbled him and used afflictions for his sinne see how humbly and obediently he speaks If he say he hath no delight in me behold here I am let him do what he pleaseth 2 Sam. 15.26 and the Church Mic. 7. I will hear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him Nothing then will so humble and mollifie the heart to make a man do and be any thing as a deep sence of sinne Thus the cold hard Iron is put into the fire and it may be beaten into any shape Secondly As the sence of sinne so the sence of Gods goodnesse and grace in being reconciled notwithstanding all our provocations doth much more enlarge the heart to thankefulnesse and obedience The love of Christ saith Paul constraineth us We cannot hold we cannot keep in as you may see David upon the apprehension of Gods goodnesse to him resolving to take the cup of salvation and to praise God in the great Congregation Psa 116.13 Gospel grace doth not in a filiall spirit harden and make wanton but doth more soften and enflame to an active obedience This made Paul run like the Sunne in the Firmament You see it 's the grace of God which lieth kindling and warming of him This is like the Spirit in Ezechiels wheels the dejected unbeleeving soul is not so readily obedient An Evangelical frame of heart assured of Gods love carrieth out to filiall fruitful
desperate That the door of heaven is not absolutely bolted upon him is of great consequence 2. We who are the Ministers of the Gospel by Christs death finde a way so opened for all Gentiles that now we may promiscuously preach the Gospel to all As we cannot so neither indeed are we to let any such thoughts enter our hearts as whether such be reprobated or no But we are so to preach and exhort as if every one that we publish the Gospel to were within the Sphear of Christs Death And certainly if the Apostle writing to Churches wherein many were corrupt both for doctrine and manners did yet give them the Title of a Church and Saints and Beleevers not excluding any from the benefit of Christ We may also do so in our preaching and therefore this is to be observed That the Epistles are written to Churches already planted and therefore it 's no wonder if he use such universal phrases for that comprehends those that are within the Church already and in the judgement of charity we may speak so especially it being their Obligation and duty as Christians to repent and receive Christ But when we say that the Ministers by Christs death have a Commission to offer Christ to all You must know that is in a due order and method We do not propound Christ as a Saviour to them in the first place But we are to do as Paul when he preached to Felix Act. 24.25 who desired to hear of Christ he began first with temperance and righteousnesse and the world to come Felix being guilty of Injustice and unchaste courses Paul preacheth about those sinnes and hell laying open the wrath of God insomuch that he made Felix to tremble so that Christ must have a way made for him The mountains must be laid low and the valleys exalted and all flesh must be convinced to be grasse Before Christ can be entertained this ought to be our Method To men plunged in sinne we are to discover unto them the wrath and anger of God all the curses that are due to him who breaks the Law in the least iota To make men see their poverty and misery and when men are thus prepared and humbled then we exalt the brazen Serpent so that by Christs death the Ministers Commission is greatly enlarged and made more ample then in the Jewish administration 3. Even Reprobates have this advantage by Christ that they enjoy all the mercies they have That they have health wealth and the comforts of this world For seeing that by Adams sinne all was forfeited and a curse come upon every thing now by Christ who is the heir of all things they come lawfully to enjoy the mercies they have Heb. 1. It is Christ that beareth up the world if he did withhold his arm the whole world would fall into rubbish It 's true indeed if we speak of a sanctified use so wicked men have none of the comforts they enjoy but being impure all things are impure to them so that the curse of the Law is not taken off from them because they are not yet in Christ otherwise they have a lawfull right before God and man to the comforts they enjoy for that is not to be received though many pious men have preached it that wicked men have no right to the goods they have but are as Theeves and Robbers and shall answer for every bitt of bread they eat as Usurpers This is against the Scripture which saith God hath given the Earth to the Inhabitants thereof Psal 115.8 And that command Thou shalt not steal doth make it evident that both by Gods Law and mans Law what wicked men have in Righteous waies they are true and lawfull Possessors of and this say Divines cometh by Christ who restored the Forfeit Adam made else the world would not have subsisted a moment Although it must be granted that some Learned men attribute the enjoyment of Comforts which the ungodly have not to Christ but to the patient Providence of God whereby he doth not take the present Forfeiture But may not this Patience of God be attributed to Christs death seeing he did not use any such to the Apostate Angels but they were immediately chained up in the close Prison of utter darknesse 4. It is by Christs Death That many unregenerated men are partakers of the common gifts of Gods Spirit There are many that live within the Church of God though not regenerated yet have great gifts and abilities They have many admirable endowments Now how come these but by Christ as Eph. 4. So 1 Cor. 14. It is the Spirit of Christ that giveth severall gifts to men Christ is the Vine and so not onely Grapes but the very Leaves come from his Sap and Juyce So that what temporary Faith Joy Enlargements in Praier and common gifts of the holy Ghost any in the Church have it comes by Christs death Yea Lastly Christ by his Death is made Lord of the whole world And hath conquered all the Inhabitants that are therein So that they are Christs as a Lord that bought them by his Death Thus that place is to be understood 2 Pet. 1.1 speaking of ungodly men whose damnation would swiftly come upon them for the damnable heresies they brought in It 's said They denied the Lord that bought them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ bought them in that by his Death which was an Atonement only for the godly yet he thereby was made Lord over all So that although it cannot be said he is the Saviour of all in the strict sence of a Saviour Yet we may say he is the Lord over wicked men they are his Vassals and Servants and he can order and dispose of them as he pleaseth for his Churches good The last Notandum to be propounded is to see how different they are amongst themselves who have maintained universal Redemption For some go so farre that they are rejected and cried out upon by others though Universalists also And 1. Some have said and endeavoured to prove That so universall is the grace of God obtained by Christs Death that it 's not only sufficient but efficacious in all men as they are men They think that by Christs death every man by his own natural Reason and power may be able to save himself Thus Puccius wrote a Book wherein he glorieth of an hundred and twenty Reasons to prove this but this is so monstrous that others cry out of it For by this means all unbeleevers and heathens should be partakers of the grace of Christ whenas Joh. 3.24 He that beleeveth not the anger of God abideth on him 2. There are another sort called Huberians from Samuell Huberus who thought that Christ by his Death procured actuall Reconciliation with God without any respect to Faith or Repentance So that he saith Christ did as actually and applicatively bring Gods Reconciliation to all mankinde as Adam did actually condemnation And that therefore none are damned
Neither soul or body shall escape him if thou continue his Be thou awakened out of thy desperate estate If thou art not Gods Inheritance thou art the devils possession and thy tongue thy eyes thy body thy whole life proclaimeth to whom thou dost belong 2. In being the Fathers as we are no longer Satans so neither the worlds or mens in the world Hence we are commanded not to be Servants to men 1 Cor. 7.13 or please men and to call none Father on earth Mat. 23.9 The sense of such commands is that we are not to put our hopes and trust in men not to give up our selves to their commands when contrary to God yet this is a sinne that all are prone unto It 's the Favour of men the power and greatnesse of men that swayeth us more then God Alas thou wert not created or redeemed or regenerated to make man thus a God unto thee Whence is it that our fear is a mans fear yea our Religion a mans Religion but because we are not yet delivered from mans thraldom so neither are we the worlds For our Saviour saith We are given out of the world to Chrict Why then are we so immoderate in our cares and affections about these things It 's not the world that is ours The Church was seen clothed with the Sunne and the Moon under her feet Rev. 12.1 God hath made the earth under us and Gold and Silver to be in the bowels thereof implying the low esteem we ought to have of them and that we look not on the world as a resting place but seek for heaven Lastly We are none of our own in being the Fathers Thus the Apostle We are none of our own Therefore we are to glorifie God both in soul and body 1 Cor. 6.20 Our Tongues our Body our Affections are not our own We may not love as we list nor desire as we list It 's thset and Sacriledge thus to steal from God Why should it be a wound in thy Conscience to detain that which is another mans and not rather that which is Gods My Son give me thy heart If sinne hath it If the world hath it these are not the right owners Remember whose thou art and this will keep thee solely and wholly for God These things premised let us now see How the Propriety we have in God is the cause of all our good And in the generall there is no temporall or spirituall good we have but our propriety in God is the Foundation of it If the Apostle argue that because he hath given us Christ how shall he not with him give us all things else Rom. 8. How much rather if God give us himself shall he not give us all things The marrow and whole substance of the Covenant of grace lieth in this That God will be our God and we shall be his People God doth not finde us but make us his and when so made then all good things are bestowed on us We will select some choice particulars and that two waies 1. Of those good things we have from God 2. Of those good things we have by approaching to good our active and passive good And first Pardon of sinne in which the Psalmist speaks our blessednesse to consist is given us because we are hi● Thus Heb. 8. when God promised to be the God of his People in the Covenant of Grace Then followeth the Forgivenesse of their sinnes And he will remember their Iniquities no more And this they must necessarily enjoy For Guilt of sinne separateth between God and the sinner it makes him at a distance and in a state of Enmity But this propriety takes away all Ground of Condemnation Rom. 8. Because they belong to God therefore they are pardoned Davids sinnes were fouler then Sauls But besides that David had a better heart then Saul David had a propriety in God and so had not Saul Oh the Encouragement that Gods Children have upon this account to pray for pardon It 's more in God then in thy Repentance or Tears That is the surest Refuge they have they are the Fathers Therefore 2. Because they have more choice and intimate Fellowship and Communion with the Father then the world They have the Light of his Countenance assurance of his Love They have the hidden Manna They have a peculiar Enjoyment of him which is more as David saith Psal 4. then the wicked men have when their Wine and Oyle encreaseth They are called Friends in opposition to Servants by Christ Joh. 15.15 And therefore are admitted into that presence and those heavenly Secrets which wicked men know not which made the Church repeat this so often She was her well beloveds and her well beloved was hers Cant. 6.3 And from this followeth that holy and heavenly Communion with Christ which the Church hath Oh if the world did but know what the Godly have from God Other meat Other Riches Other Comforts then they understand How would they lament their distance from God They have Husks onely when there is the fatted Calf in our Fathers House Insomuch that though the Godly have not the good things of this Life alwaies yet they have the good yea the better things of Heaven and Happinesse as a Viaticum in their Journey thither 3. Because they have a Propriety in Christ therefore they are protected and preserved The Eye of God is said to runne up and down the Earth to stand in the behalf of the upright in heart They are Gods Treasure and so his heart and love must be towards them I am thine save me saith David Psal 119.94 Propriety engageth God all Creatures look to their own yea they venture their lives to save their young ones The cruell and most wilde Creatures are fierce to defend their own Now at the Psalmist argueth He that made the Eye shall not be see He that planted the Ear shall not he hear Thus he that hath put into the nature of all creatures to protect their young ones Will not he do the like This Argument the Church useth when she saith Isaiah 63 9. We are thine and are called by thy Name Insomuch that there is a wonderfull expression in Zech. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of my Eye How carefully hath nature defended that as being a precious and dear part in a man Yet thus God is pleased to account of those that are his And therefore he is said to be afflicted in all their afflictions Oh then that the Godly would improve this propriety more They fear this danger this Triall this Calamity Art thou not the Lords Will not he look to thee more then thou couldest thy self Thou art more his then thy own It 's indeed no such matter for thee to lose thy health thy Comforts thy Life but for God to lose his goods his Inheritance his Jewels would highly redound to his dishonour Therefore the Lord is said to know how to deliver those that are Righteous 2
Father then and the Son have the same gracious will have the same purposes of mercy and whom Christ doth invite the Father inviteth whom Ch●ist cals the Father cals So that in and by Christ we may see the gracious and glorious thoughts of mercy God the Father had from all Eternity to his people Indeed as he was man though his humane will was not contrary yet we see he speaks conditionally If it be possible let this Cup passe away yet not my will but thy will be done Matth. 26 39. Therefore his humane will if absolutely considered did desire freedom from death but if particularly considered in these circumstances then he emptied that particular stream of his humane nature in the Ocean of the divine 6. The Son and the Father have the same propriety in all the godly Those that belong to the Father belong also to the Son This was the occasion of this general Speech in the Text The Apostles are thine and all thine are mine So that the Father doth not abdicate his right by the donation of them to Christ Hence Joh. 20.17 I go to my Father and your Father by way of comfort putting us into some co-partnership with his propriety Those then that are Christs Sheep they have also Gods mark upon them They do belong to the Father by grace and to the Son by merit and purchase so that the Children of God are to proceed by degrees to evidence their propriety in Christ and then in the Father For saith Christ If ye had known me ye would have known my Father Joh. 8.16 Lastly They have the same power and strength and that in reference to the defence and preservation of his people Joh. 10. None can pull them out of my Fathers hand then he addeth I and my Father are one one as in nature so in that omnipotent power to govern and preserve his Children to everlasting happinesse so that this doctrine is not meerly speculative but tends to much practical edification In the next place consider how all that Christ hath is the Fathers and so reciprocally 1. By eternal generation The Socinians would grant the Son hath many transcendent prerogatives but not by eternal generation but by a temporal donation This cannot be so because the Psalmist long before Christ was born said This is my Son this day have I begotten thee Psa 2.7 And his out-goings are said to be of old Mic. 5.1 from the daies of Eternity So that Christ hath these things of the Father by nature even as the Sun beams had the light of the Sun as soon as ever there was a Sun though there be a great dissimilitude in this comparison The Son then is not of the Father as the world was by a voluntary Creation but by a natural generation 2. If we consider Christ as God and man yet even then by vertue of the hypostatical Union all that the Father hath is his The infinite Majesty of God Christ nor only as God but as God-man hath but how not as if the properties of the divine nature were communicated to that as the Lutherans hold saying the humane nature of Christ is infinite omnipresent that is absurd for how can it be eternal when it 's plain the humane nature had a being in a time but only by vertue of the personal union there is a communication of properties not to the Natures but to the Person Insomuch that the Apostle cals it the blood of God Act. 25. How can that be but by vertue of that personal Union the divine nature hath no bloud neither can it suffer and thus Christ said The Son of man which i● in heaven Joh. 3. that could not be because of his humane nature but by the personal Union so that although the Text doth principally intend Christs communion with the Father as God in the identity of his nature yet this may in some sence be extended to Christ both God and man The Vse of this Doctrine is very fruitfull 1. By doctrinall Information of the deity of Christ that he is truly God having all things God the Father hath therefore retain by a strong Faith this Article of Religion and the rather because so many have brought in damnable assertions about this Point Socinus doth impudently say that this doctrine of Christs Deity is so absurd that the Christian world will one day be so farre informed as to be ashamed to beleeve such a thing yea to hear such a thing and that the word Trinity may be in time as much abhorred as Transubstantiation and the Mass Fly from such persons as those that have a spiritual plague This hath been so often cleared by the Church in all ages that now there needs no more disputation in it we must not alwaies be proving but we must at last hold fast that which is good Remember your Baptism it was In the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost These you are with the same faith to acknowledge to these you are equally consecrated Vse 2. Is all that the Father hath Christs then how happy are the people of God who are admitted into some co-partnership with all this blessednesse For although though none but Christ as you heard can say All mine are thine essentially yet every godly man being made a co●heir with Christ he may by fruition and enjoyment say so Rom 8. Oh the infinite treasure of that expression a Son and co-heir with Christ Whatsoever Christ is heir to we are also co-heirs with him only here is the difference Quod Christus natura nos gratia what Christ is by nature that we are by grace Why then are the people of God so often dejected and cast down They consider not how rich how honoured how abounding they are All that the Father hath all that Chtist hath is theirs for their good and advantage and this deed of gift God made when he entred into Covenant with them to be their God and they to be his people By this means Paul can triumph and say I have all things I can do all things Phil. 4. The people of God are never established and confirmed till they be anchored here They are tossed up and down as so many waves like the wicked men of the world who live by sence and have no bottom or rock to stand upon For this end it is that God eithet takes away earthly comforts or casteth in many roots of gall and wormwood in every condition That you may know your treasure is in God and Christ not in these earthly contents Vse 3. Is Christ thus partaker essentially of all that God hath then take we heed how we refuse him speaking for God is not only with him but in him as God said concerning the Angel that led the people of Israel which was Christ that they should take heed how they did provoke him for his Name was in him Exo. 23.21 4. How compleat and
whom yet they fastened many impious actions upon for certainly nature would have told them That was God quo nibil melius cogitari potest Thus the God whom Christians according to the Scripture doe serve is the onely holy and true God Thirdly He is holy in respect of his will command and approbation His word is an holy Word The Scriptures are holy Scriptures They command They approve They encourage and comfort nothing but holinesse David Psal 19. compareth them to Gold often refined that hath no drosse and Hab. 1. God is of purer eyes then to behold Iniquity viz. by approbation Therefore he is said to be angry with the wicked all the day long Oh then though other men love thee and thou art in love with thy own self yet if not holy God doth not God cannot love thee Fourthly God is holy efficiently He is the Authour and cause of all the holinesse we have Iames 1.17 Every good and perfect gift comes from him We are his Workmanship created to good works He made the Angels holy He created Adam holy yea he infused all holinesse into Christs humane Nature and therefore much rather must he cause all the holinesse that is in us Therefore Christ by praying that God would sanctifie his Disciples doth thereby teach that none can make holy but God alone Let then the proud Patrons of free-will be confounded at this They that cannot make themselves Creatures will they say ' they make themselves holy Creatures Minus est te fecisse hominem quam justum Fifthly He is finally holy That is all our holinesse is to terminate in him Holinesse doth properly respect God as the Object and therefore though a man praieth heareth giveth alms yea his body to be burnt and doth not with a pure and chaste Intention look at Gods glory in all this it is not holinesse Hence it is that many have low thoughts about holinesse and grosly mistake in it taking copper for Gold and Samuels Ghost for Samuel himself Thou art not holy till thou canst truly say in some Degree at least though with much opposition Whom have I in Heaven but God and none on Earth besides him In Heaven Heaven it self would not be heaven to a gracious heart but because God is there Sixthly God is holy exemplarily He is the Rule Pattern and Example of holinesse 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as I am holy Levit. 20.26 So that if we would know how we are to be holy it must not be as men think or as the world prescribeth but as God is holy Not that we can attain to an equality but to a similitude onely So that the principle of the world must fall to the ground They will doe as others doe or as most doe Oh but rather Consider that God himself hath set down a Form for thee and because there is such fulnesse in him as in an Ocean therefore we have a necessity of growing every day No man is as holy as the patern therefore still he is to be perfecting Holinesse and Righteousnesse in the Fear of God 1 Cor. 7.1 Thus you have heard that God is holy But in the next place know it is our Duty to improve this Attribute for our Good For so our Saviour doth not look upon it as an absolute property in God but as that which may be profitable unto his Disciples So that we are to make use of this by Faith And that first Because when God becomes our God by the Covenant of Grace he is wholly ours and all his Attributes are for our benefit and advantage I will be their God Now God is not our God nulesse his Wisedome be ours his Holinesse be ours that is for our benefit For we cannnot separate God and these Oh then what an unwise and foolish thing is it in a Christian when he hath such a Treasure and yet will make no use of it Such a Mine and yet improveth it not In God there is holinesse for all Angels and men much more for thee Secondly God being thus absolutely good he is communicating of it and it is a Rule The more any thing is good the more diffusive it is of it self As we see in God who though glorious and happy enough in himself yet he created a world and ordained many to Eternall Glory out of his meer good pleasure and Fullnesse not that he needed or wanted any Oh then it is very acceptable and well-pleasing to God that we should come with thirsting Souls unto this Fountain and draw Water out of it That we should suck plentifully at these full Breasts and be refreshed Vse of Instruction to the People of God who are greatly afflicted under this great Temptation They are not an holy People Oh they finde sinne captivating them sinne prevailing over them but where is an holy heart holy affections and holy aims in what they doe Oh they say Could they finde they were more holy though they were poor and afflicted yet they should rejoyce Let such Consider It is their Unbelief and want of earnest Praier if they be not richly supplied and furnished in this for God is infinitely holy and he delights to communicate it The larger the Vessell is the more willing he is and will be to fill it and there cannot be any Prayer more acceptable then to begge for this above all things Vse 2. Is God thus holy Then let the most holy be humble in all their approaches to him for he is of such pure Eyes that he findes spots and blemishes yea damnable matter in thy most holy duties Angels holinesse is not proportionable to him Thirdly Of Reproof to wicked men who deride scoff and maliciously oppose holinesse What is this but to rise up against God himself Is not Holinesse the Glorious Attribute of God And do the Beams of this shining in his People offend thee This argueth thou art of a perverse and of a devilish Spirit for thou shouldest rather reverence and honour it saying Oh that I might live and dye like such holy men Indeed there are many would like Balaam die like a Godly man but not live like him as One said He would live like Croesus but die like Socrates Yet this is impossible There must be an holy Life else there will hardly be an holy Death SERMON LV. The Great Lord-Keeper of Israel from inevitable Ruine both of Body and Soul extolled JOH 17.11 Holy Father keep through thy own Name those thou hast given me c. WE have dispatched the Introductory Compellation and now proceed to the Petition it self and in that Consider 1. The mercy praied for and 2. The Amplification of it The mercy praied for is Keep The amplification is 1. From the Subject described by their Election from Eternity And 2. Actuall donation to Christ in time Those thou hast given me This is often repeated by our Saviour as being a main Argument why nothing should he denied them that were thus
rejoyce in other mens gifts and abilities with that success accompanying them as if they were our own As we see John did John's Disciples came with an envious spirit against Christ and said All men runne after him This was enough to leaven and sour John's heart but see his excellent temper I must decrease and he must increase John 3.30 he was willing that Christs light and glory should be exalted though it darkned and obscured his This is a good Reconciler and the latter is a tender forbearing of one another and suffering of one anothers weaknesses and a proneness to forgive others rashness if the stones of Jerusalem were thus polished and smoothed they would lie even and firm together A third Rule is Love to the publique good of the Church if this did reign in our hearts it would compose all differences The true mothers bowels would not suffer her to have the childe divided It must be selfish revenge that shall make two enemies desire to see the ship sink in which they are rather then they will agree to preserve it What self-denial was that in Jonah to give himself up to destruction rather then have the whole ship endangered Every one ought to say If I be the Jonah cast me out Among the Romans they had a Temple dedicated Jovi depositorio because there they would go and lay aside their mutual contentions before they entred into the Senate-house What a shame is it when many Heathens have laid aside their mutual quarrels for the common good and shall not the Ministers of the Gospel much more for the Churches safety A fourth Rule is Not to charge such consequences upon one anothers doctrine that are not natural and which they do abhorre This in doctrinal disputes hath been oil to the flame The Lutherans charge upon the Calvinists Doctrines about Predestination That they make God the autheur of sinne that they make him cruel and unjust worse then Pharaoh that commanded brick but gave no straw yea cruel like Nero who having a minde to put a vestal Virgin to death caused her to be ravished and then put her to death because she was ravished But the Calvinists detest and abhorre all such consequences and if they did see such conclusions did follow necessarily from their Doctrines they would publickly abjure them some gathered from Paul's preaching of free-grace that therefore men might sinne that grace might abound but Paul crieth God forbid at this and saith The damnation of such Logicians is just Rom. 3.18 Lastly So farre as men do agree with us in the fundamentals let them retain peace and concord The Apostle thus exhorts Phil. 3.16 Whereto we have already attained let us walk by the same rule It hath been Gods mercy that the Protestant Churches though differing in many opinions yet do not dissent in fundamentals For as for the Socinians I do not reckon them among the Protestants yea some place them not amongst Christians but as for other they keep the same foundation though some are purer Churches then others Now it 's a special preservative of charity to imbrace one another with hearty affections So farre therefore it 's an uncharitable and peevish thing in some Lutherans that will not call the Calvinists brethren or admit of reconciliation but professe they will rather do it with the Pope whom yet they maintain to be Antichrist Vse of Exhortation to run to the God of peace for to settle peace and truth The greater the mercy is and the more the devil doth oppose it the more do thou strive for it How many Unities doth the Apostle mention Ephes 4 And why then should we be many Blessed are peace-makers for they shall be called the Sons of God Mat. 5.9 SERMON LXI The great changes that even a Godly man is subject unto in respect of the having and losing those Sensible supports both outward and inward which God at some times vouchsafeth to them Also what those sensible Enjoyments are and why God doth so change the conditions of his People JOH 17.12 While I was with them in the world I kept them in thy Name WE have dispatched the prayer Christ put up for his Disciples We are now to consider other reasons and arguments he useth for his Petition Our Saviour expressed many before the Petition and some also after the Petition The words of the Text are brought in as a reason why he prayed for them now so solemnly and not before because formerly he had kept them in a visible manner by his corporall presence with them but now the manner of his presence being shortly to be changed he therefore commends them to God as if he should have said Holy Father ever since they became my Disciples I took a special charge of them the world was against them they could not keep themselves and I came as a Mediator appointed by thee to preserve them to eternal life which trust I have faithfully discharged and therefore seeing they have hitherto been kept let them not perish at last In this reason we may take notice 1. Of the Disciples mercy vouchsafed to them they were kept this implieth their own insufficiency and inability 2. The efficient cause of this I have kept them wherein also is implied his fidelity and diligence in that trust he took upon him as a Mediatour 3. The manner how In thy Name which mercy is illustrated from the circumstance of time While I was with ●●em 2. Of place while I was with them in the world First of the circumstance of time and place While I was with them in the world he speaks as if for the present he were not with them but that is because his departure was immediatly at hand Now when our Saviour speaks in this manner while I was with them I kept them 1. You must not think as if Christ by his bodily leaving of them did also spiritually leave them No this would contradict that promise Mat. 28. where Christ said he would be with them to the end of the world he did not change his presence but the manner of his presence it was before corporall and visible now spirituall and invisible 2. In that Christ said While I was with them it 's necessarily inferred that Christ is not corporally present every where that his body is not every where though Christ be every where That is true of Christ in the concrete which cannot be verified of each nature As his Divine nature did not suffer so neither can his humane be every where 3. By this expression saith Austin upon the place we must not understand as if there were a vicissitude in the Fathers and Sons keeping of us as if the Son had kept them a while excluding the Father and now the Father was to keep them excluding the Sonne but the Father kept them even while Christ kept them and Christ will keep them after his departure while the Father keeps them but not in the same manner before there
was a corporal visible keeping but now spiritual 4. We are to avoid the Socinian reason given why Christ speaks thus in the Text It is saith he because Christ had not yet obtained that power and soveraignty to keep them after an invisible manner for they say Christ had not that Divine power and authority till it was given him after his resurrection then God gave him the universall dominion over all say they But our Saviour had sufficiently before shewed that what the Father did he also did Lastly When Christ saith Hitherto I have kept them in thy Name attributing the power of keeping them to the Father it is not as if he were not also God but he speaks here as Mediatour as in the form of a servant and an Embassadour doing all things in the Fathers Name Hence in other places he saith it 's not his doctrine but his Fathers and so he seeketh not his own glory but the Fathers Thus much for explication Whereas then our Saviour for a while was in a corporall sensible manner with them providing for them and protecting of them but at last is to leave them to greater hardship and stronger temptations Observe That though God may afford his people for a while many comfortable and sensible supports yet they must not look to enjoy them alwaies As the childe must not think alwaies to hang on the breast or to be dandled on the knee so neither must Gods children alwaies think to have comforts mercies and whatsoever their souls desire but they must expect changes and severall trials Hence the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 4.12 they are not to think any fiery triall strange The godly are to be prepared in the midst of their mercies that if God on a sudden raise the clean contrary this should not seem a new or an hard thing to them John 21.18 Christ tels Peter when he was young he went whither he would but in his old age another should girt him and carry him whither he would not In his younger years he had liberty and freedom but in his old age he should meet with bonds and imprisonments Thus God saith to many in thy younger years thou hadst health comforts but afterwards thou shalt have diseases pains and many sad afflictions To open this Doctrine let us consider what those visible supports are that God for a while may vouchsafe to his people And 1. They may have for a while many outward comforts and mercies They may abound in wealth in riches and honours ●o that they want nothing they may have an heaven here and then at last God gathers black clouds and so there are sudden storms and lightnings that spoil their sun-shine day It was thus with Job he tels us in what plenty honour and ease once he lived in but God had made a sad change upon him Even as Jonah had got a gourd whereby he defended himself from the scorching heat and he began to think himself now very well and presently God prepared worms to devour this defence Oh then if there be any of Gods children on whom he thus smiles they have riches when others are in the depth of poverty they have plenty when others are pinched with want remember all thy wealth is but like a little dust if God breath on it it is scattered away All these things runne on a wheel and that which is uppermost may quickly be lowest As the Grecians say There are no beggars but their ancestours have been Kings and no Kings but their ancestours have been beggars such a change and mutation are all these earthly things subject unto 2. Gods children may for a while enjoy many sweet consolations and have good assurance of Gods love and this is a speciall sensible support When David hath no cause to complain that God hid his face from him when he said his mountain was strong when he could bless God because he had forgiven his sinnes so that he could with heavenly boldness call him his Lord and his God all this while David was happy but this fair weather doth not last alwaies God hideth his face and then he is troubled then he crieth out Why art thou cast down and troubled within me O my soul It is a gross error to say assurance cannot be lost yea we may lose it by our careless and lazy walking and God may deprive us of it for wise and holy ends If then God gives thee these soul-sensible supports that thou knowest and feelest his love upon thy soul make much of this mercy faith of evidence will not be alwaies There will be a time when faith of adherence and dependance will be all in all 3. Then have the people of God carnall and sensible supports when they are preserved from the outward malice and persecutions of men so that they live honoured and prosperous lives here below Such a time Joseph had at last David Mordecai Esther and many others yea we see in Ahabs daies when there was such an hot persecution of Eliah the Prophet and other godly Prophets yet Obadiah a godly man lived in great favour with Ahab so that although the rage and malice of the world be prepared against every holy man yet for a while they may be the worlds darlings they may have the Kingdoms the Powers and the Honours of the world so that we may sometimes say in this respect the servant is above his Master Christs Disciple above Christ only let them know there may come a time and then God depriveth them of all these for their honours they have disgrace for their glory reproach It 's much if God lets them have the good things of this life and of the life to come 4. They may have a calm and serene time in respect of soul-temptations and spirituall exercises Paul had not alwaies these buffetings of Satan These spirituall temptations whether entring from the blackness of our own hearts or injected by Satan are very terrible and bitter they have made the godly weary of themselves Hence they are compared to darts and fiery darts Ephes 6.16 to shew how mortall and how piercing they are Now although God may many times give his people a quiet setled composed spirit yet this is not enduring but the storms do arise the ship begins to sink and they cry out that they perish 5. They may have the comfortable presence and corporall direction of wise holy and godly persons but at last God may take them away Thus a godly people may have the ministry of a faithfull Pastor while he is with them the flock is kept no wolves have been able to get into the fold Children and servants may have a godly Father and Master wives gracious and wise husbands now these while they were enjoyed were wonderfull supports Hence Elisha is called the horsemen and chariots of Israel When Chrysostom was banished the people said The sun might have been better taken out of the firmament Thus God hath given his
of sinne but when it is turned into a stone and made like an adamant then it 's sensible of nothing Pharaoh though he had such wonderfull miracles wrought before him that never such things were heard of in the world before yet because his heart was hardened therefore doth he sinne presumptuously to his own ruine And thus it was with the Jews when that spirituall judgement spoken of Isa 6. was accomplished in them to have blinde eyes and hard hearts Thus all the Prophets at first and all the Apostles afterwards yea Christ himself with all his miracles did not mollifie them yea by these remedies as all incurable diseases do they grew worse and worse what motions relentings must we expect from stones Lapidi loqueris is a proverb Truly such is all preaching and the whole Ministry to men given up to a hard heart Though the Prophet when he spake to the Altar of stones crying O Altar Altar that immediatly rent yet the hearts of men are more sensless Pray therefore of all judgements not to fall into an hard heart Though thou mayest fall into hard times into hard dealings from others into many hard distresses yet as long as thou hast not an hard heart there are some hopes for thee Fourthly Inordinate and immoderate love to some lust or sinne When a man is once enslaved to some lust though he hath never so much light so much conviction yea though he have never so many afflictions upon him yet he will break thorow all to have his lust satisfied As Nero's mother said Occidat modo imperet Let him kill me so he may reign Thus let such sinnes damn me so that I may have my will and desire satisfied What made Judas though he had received so much love and kindness from Christ Yet so perfidiously betray him into the hands of those who had long sought to kill him but only he was a thief and had an immoderate love to worldly-gain It was thirty pieces that made him lose body and soul Oh it 's an heavy thing to be captivated to any one sin Thou must have such and such sins for thy darling sinne Oh this Dalilah will be thy ruine as it was to Sampson Who would have thought that Sampson a godly man as he is recorded Heb. 11. seeing what deadly enemies the Philistims were would have discovered where his strength was But this Dalilah can perswade him to his ruine And thus Herodias can prevail with Herod to kill John Baptist though he knew him to be a just man and had a reverential fear of him thy lust thy sinne thy whore thy unjust gain can make thee fall down and worship the devil without any trouble of conscience Fifthly Decayings from former expressions of holiness or quenchings and extinguishing of such motions as formerly have greatly affected us These commonly seek the Kingdom of darkness as Christ speaks of the Kingdom of Heaven by force and are violent for hell Heb. 6.4 2 Pet. 2.20 The Scripture speaks of some that have had great gifts of the holy Ghost and have escaped through the knowledge of Christ the pollutions of the world if such are intangled again they are worse then ever and there is no hope of recovery Therefore none are in such a desperate condition as those that once had greater workings of heart and hopefull movings of conscience but since are grosly apostatiz'd the prophanest men that live who never cast an eye towards heaven are in a more hopefull condition then such relapses are more dangerous in the soul then in the body Mat. 12.45 when that unclean spirit was cast out but returned again he brought seven other spirits more wicked then himself and so the last state of that man is worse then the first Look to this and tremble you who have had often checks of conscience and often wounds of heart take heed they plunge thee not into an incurable condition The water once heated if cold again is cooler then ever These frequent aguish fits will at last end in a consumption Take heed lest thou turn a derider and a persecutor of what once thou wert forward for SERMON LXIX Of the Sonne of Perdition Shewing more Causes and Symptomes of such wretched Persons that are desperately bent to damn themselves JOH 17.12 But the Sonne of Perdition THe Words have been Explained and the Doctrine gathered which was That there are some men wilfully and desperately set to damn themselves though they enjoy never such means to the contrary We gave in some Characters of such wretched persons and now proceed to instance in some more And the first in order shall be A long and constant Vnprofitablenesse under means of Grace When men have for a long time sate under the powerfull means of Grace yet are as ignorant as prophane and unreformed as formerly These men commonly are resolute in their damnation They have so often heard and heard they are so accustomed now to the remedies that they despise them and get no good by them This the Apostle affirmeth Heb. 6.8 The ground which often drinketh in rain and yet bringeth forth nothing but briars and thorns is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burnt This was the case even of the whole body of the Jews they being accustomed for many years to the threatnings of the Prophets were so farre from trembling under it that they made a scorn of it Jer. 23.33 because the Prophet Jeremy did so often tell them of the Burden of the Lord that is the heavy Sentence and Judgement of God threatned against them they did impudently and prophanely make a scorn of it Even as many hardened sinners will now adaies at the name of hell and damnation Oh then let all such who for many years together have been under the Sunne of the Gospel fear lest when we speak of a Son of Perdition it be said Thou art the man for as when the body that hath been accustomed to often Physick doth yet remain diseased it 's a great Argument of its incurablenesse Thus it is here When there are daily importunities of thee constant expostulations with thee and yet thou art averse and obdurate this may prove fatall and dreadful to thee 2. Sinful and ungodly prejudices taken up against those Prophets and Ministers of God that do in his Name admonish thee and warn thee against thy sinnes Oh when men instead of hearkening to their Counsels take occasion to slander them to oppose them these men have hastily tumbled into confusion Mat. 23. This Christ complained of O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets c. how often would I have gathered thee and thou wouldst not And it was of old the Jews wickednesse to persecute and oppose all such as came from God to admonish them of their sinnes and therefore at last they crucified the Heir even Christ himself The Wise man speaks peremptorily to this Prov. 29.9 He that being often reproved hardeneth his
things from us he dealeth plainly with us What sufferings troubles persecutions What difficulties and hardship we shall meet with in the way to heaven he tels us afore-hand of them The devil and the world they come with their pleasures for the present they tell us not how bitter they will be at the latter end But the Lord Christ he informeth us of the worst that may fall out 2. From this prediction we should arm our selves against all temptations whatsoever Being fore-warned we should be fore-armed Oh how blessed is that man who under the greatest affliction can say This I knew before It is not strange to me the Scripture gave me warning of it and hath furnished me with all due qualifications thereunto 3. From the evil fore-told being accomplished assure thy self also the good promised shall be fulfilled As the Scripture proveth true in all the troubles and miseries it speaks of so it will be as true in all the comforts honour and happines it speaks of This is our sinfull narrowness of heart we many times look to that evil threatned not to the good promised Oh we say Now all those texts I feared are fulfilled in me not remembring that all the promises shall also be accomplished What shall the Scripture be true in one part and not in the other Shall it be true to a wicked man and not true to a godly man Are they not called The sure promises of God As therefore thou art to prepare for all that hardship and difficulties which will be in the way of godliness so do thou as assuredly expect and look for all those joyes that peace and happiness which the same word of God affords to thee SERMON LXXIV Of the Scripture JOHN 17.12 But the Sonne of Perdition that the Scripture might be fulfilled A Second Doctrine from the reason alleadged in the Text That the Scripture might be fulfilled shall be That whatsoever the Scripture saith is sure to be made good Our Saviour saith Matth. 5. It 's surer then the heaven and earth and that every tittle of it is more enduring then the Heavens themselves It 's of great consequence to establish you in this point For if the Scripture be true and will be made good in every particular then the godly may lift up their heads with joy and the wicked bow down with fear and trembling To open this Consider the expression That the Scripture may be fulfilled The word of God is called the Scripture which is as much as the written Word The word of God in respect of the accidental communicating of it may be divided into that which is Traditum or Scriptum that which was immediately delivered either by God himself or inspired into the Prophets to be communicated to the Church or else that which was commanded to be written and so to be a perpetual standing Rule according to which the Church should walk in soever shall come to passe And herein it will infallibly prove true for as we read of many predictions of old they were accomplished at that time and in that manner as God had fore-told so we may justly conclude for the future that it will be in the like manner Whatsoever God hath fore-told by the Scripture concerning a day of Judgement and the everlasting torments of the damned that there shall be a Resurrection of the body and that every one shall give an account for what hath been done here Expect it and believe it as surely as if it were already done Oh what a deal of security and boldness is there in sinners because they believe not this Did they think they heard the sound of the Trump of the last day ringing in their ears Arise and come to judgement What holy fear and trembling would possess them whereas because they live for the present in jollity and so many years the world and all things have continued as they were therefore they think there will never be any change such were those mockers Peter speaks of 2 Pet. 3. saying Where is the day of his coming Know then that all those places of Scripture which speak of such a dreadfull time will one day be fulfilled never think that those Texts will fall to the ground thy lusts will prove a lie thy pleasures a lie to thee but Gods word will abide for ever Thirdly We have the promising part of the Scripture The Land of Canaan did not more richly flow with milk and honey then the Scriptures abound with all kinde of promises both for this life and that to come This heaven is full of such glorious starres The Apostle 2 Pet. 1.4 cals them precious promises precious both in respect of the things promised and also of the certainty and truth of them There is the grand promise of all the Charter of the Covenant of Grace I will be their God and they shall be my people and this is subdivided into many particulars so that there is not a good thing to be desired nor an evil thing to be avoided but we have a promise for it and certainly if the word and promise of a great man in place and power be able to refresh the heart of an indigent man how much more must the promise of the Almighty and holy God revive those that depend on it All the children of God are with Isaac called the children of the promise Gal. 4.28 so that they are the children of the promise efficiently as it was the meer promise of God that gave them a supernatural being all humane power being as impotent for that purpose as Sarahs womb was to conceive and further They are the children of the promise as I may say objectively because they live on that and are nourished by it and as they say in naturals so it is true in spirituals Ex eisdem constamus è quibus nutrimur The procreating and conserving causes are of the same nature hence we may read of the godly looking up to Gods promise in all their difficulties Psal 77.8 and when God stirreth up himself to do good to his people it 's because he remembers his holy promise Insomuch that heaven and salvation it self is called The hope of the promise Act. 26.6 Though therefore the people of God have not all the good things they desire in present possession yet they have them in promise and Gods truth is bond and security enough A man that hath not his estate at command yet if he have it in sure bonds and good security looks upon himself as a rich man Oh then the unbelief and vile doubtings of thy heart Are all the promises of God of no repute with thee Are they of no credit Should they not as much assure thee as if every thing were accomplished already Hence as the Scripture when it speaketh of a future thing useth the present tense to shew the certainty of it as the learned instance in many places so should the faith of a godly man turn the future
humbled for sinne would willingly have comfort as the lame man would to walk the blinde man to see but how to have true peace with God there is the difficulty As there were above an hundred Opinions amongst the Philosophers wha● was the summum bonum So there are great disputations about that Righteousnesse whereby we are justified the ground of peace So that it 's an heavenly skill to be directed into the right way for comfort Heb. 6. The babe is unskilfull in the word of Righteousnesse As the young Childe though it cryeth for the breast yet knoweth not how to come at it Before the Gospel was purely preached how many false waies were observed to comfort the afflicted conscience how many Pilgrimages devotional praiers and several penitential practises were enjoyned to comfort the timerated heart through sinne but all these were like Jobs miserable Comforters Physicians of no value The souls Mountebanks that instead of healing did enflame and enrage the wounds more Therefore as to the infant new-born it 's a great matter to fall into the hands of a good Nurse for the education of it and care about it No lesse is it for people when once awakened through the guilt of sinne and deeply wounded for their iniquities to have such spiritual Physicians that can prepare them the true Gospel-cordials and direct them into the right way for Consolation This is the Art of Arts Nothing being more tender and to be handled with more c●rumspection then a wounded Spirit These are therefore two distinct benefits to be convinced of the duty to walk comfortably and to be dire●●ed into the way of it for who is not here out of the way Doth not every one think to obtain comfort by working and not beleeving Do they not labour to qualifie themselves sufficiently first and then go to Christ Do we not think by works to come to Faith and not by faith to works To do enough to comfort our selves and then go to Christ for comfort This is the preposterous course that every afflicted soul doth naturally take Oh then as the wise men when they saw the Starre that directed them to Christ rejoyced with exceeding great joy so when the Spirit of God shall direct thee by the word into this supernatural way of rejoycing blesse God for thou mightst have wandred through dark and uncomfortable waies into hell it self 3. The Spirit of God is given by Christ to comfort us Causali●èr that is it doth by a mighty efficacious power work joy in the soul Is bids the heart rejoyce and it will rejoyce Neither greatnesse of sins sence of unworthinesse weight of Temptations oppositions of Satan shall discourage But as it 's said in Job when he speaks peace who shall make Trouble So it 's here When God commands the heart to be quiet and to rejoyce before him who can forbid it Hence Gal. 5.22 Joy and peace are made the fruits of the Spirit It 's only the God of all Consolation and Father of all comforts that comforteth us in tribulations 2 Cer 1. So that as the Almighty insuperable power of God goeth to make a gracious heart so also it doth to give a comfortable heart That God who made Iron to swim and the waters of Jordan to go backward he also and he alone makes the heavy heart to sing for joy Oh therefore pray for this work of Gods Spirit though thou canst not of thy self rejoyce yet the Spirit of God can make thee joyfull 4. The Spirit of God is a Comforter by witnessing and sealing unto us that we are the Children of God for then we have joy in the fulnesse of it when we have assurance not only resting on Christ for Salvation but assured that we are in him Now this is the proper work of Gods Spirit to witnesse unto us Rom. 8. and to seal unto us Eph. 4 30. when the Spirit of God doth thus assure then the Oyl of joy doth overflow On the contrary many of Gods Children do therefore walk in darknesse and are like the Passengers with Paul in his Voyage tossed up and down with waves and tempests not seeing the Sun for many daies and all because they have not this sealing and witnessing unto them had they this then they could with old Simeon say Lord let thy Servant depart in peace I can live and die comfortably when he hath thus seeen the Salvation of God Hence he is called the Spirit of Adoption which being sent into the hearts of the Godly makes them to cry Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Lastly The Spirit of God comforts them by blessing the Ordinances and making them successeful to them These are like Jonathans eating of honey like Elisha feeding himself to go a long journey The Gospel is a Gospel of comfort The Sacraments Seals of Comfort The Preaching of the Word instrumental to encrease joy Praier is an heaven to the Soul Now the Spirit of God blessing these to the godly soul doth thereby fill him with heavenly Consolations That as Christ in Praier had his countenance changed shining like the Sun and his garments with glorious Light and as Moses in his Communion with God had his face shining so as to dazle the eyes of his beholders Thus many times the children of God in these duties have soul-transfigurations and are so full of joy that they can scarcely bear it despising the pleasures of this world for such spiritual joy Thus you have heard it's Christs will we should have compleated joy in us because of the holy Ghost But in the next place if we consider Christ himself for what end he came into this world and what he hath wrought for us this makes it evident that Christ left nothing unwrought that might procure our joy for what are his three Offices but to procure our peace Did he not as Priest make an atonement for our sins Did he not as Prophet reveal the good pleasure of God about our Salvation Did he not as King subdue all our enemies Now what is the fruit of all this but joy and peace Therefore he is called our peace and the Prince of peace Isa 9. yea Is he not still our Advocate ever-living to make Intercession for us and can any other thing then honey distill from these sweet Combs Vse of Exhortation To the people of God Awe your selves with this Duty As Jonah said he did well to be angry so you think you do well to be thus immoderately grieved with Peter You bid Christ go from you because you are a sinner you pleade for your unbelief you argue for your troubles Is not this to oppose the comforting spirit of God within you Did not Judas murmure and cry but because there was no faith and holy joy therefore he became miserable 2 Cor. 7.10 you see there is a sorrow opposite to godly sorrow and that is when it is not in the manner God hath appointed There is a repentance to be repented of There
is a grief thou must be grieved for how many sad thoughts and tears will require more sad thoughts and tears Vse of Instruction on the contrary It 's Christs special will that all who live wickedly should have no comfort Wo to ye that laugh and there is no peace to the wicked Isa 57.21 SERMON LXXVIII The severall Sorts of Joy and the Nature of Spirituall Joy Shewing also how farre it transcends and differs from Worldly Joy JOHN 17.13 That they might have my Joy fulfilled in themselves THese words are the finall cause of Christs solemn prayer for his Disciples Wherein you have The Benefit it self described and the Manner of possessing of it The Benefit it self is My Joy This may be understood Actively and Passively Actively for that joy which Christ might take from his Disciples being preserved in purity of Doctrine and Unity amongst themselves Thus some understand it and parallel a like place Phil. 2 2· where Paul bids them fulfill his joy which was the joy he would take by seeing their happy agreement but because it 's said in the Text That this joy may be fulfilled in the Disciples themselves Therefore it is more consonant to understand it passively of that joy which the Disciples took in him and the benefits flowing from him So that it may be called Christs joy both effectively because he is the Authour and giver of it as also objectively because it is in him in divine and holy things not in the world much lesse in the pleasures of sin Now the Manner of possessing is that it may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled up that they might have a good measure of joy overflowing he would have every part of the soul filled with it and every kinde of joy yea degree of it some superficiall joy for the degree of it or some transient joy for the continuance of it doth not answer our Saviours prayer it must be filled up Lastly Here is the Subject recipient of it in themselves This say some is spoken oppositely to worldly joy to such as men take in the pleasures of the world these are but in the face in the countenance they are not cordial and hearty Observ 1. That there is a joy in Christ which his people are to have fulfilled in them As they are to be filled with grace so with consolations and one floweth from the other though not naturally It 's of great concernment to treat of this joy because the people of God look upon it as a thing above their reach They are convinced of repentance of humiliation but not of walking joyfully There is a three-fold Joy 1. A Naturall Joy which is an implanted affection in a man and of it self simply considered is not a sin 2. There is a Sinnefull Joy which runneth into two streams either when the Object is wholly unlawfull when it 's a forbidden Tree and we may not eat of it And thus to rejoyce in our evil doings to take delight in the wayes of wickednesse this is a wicked joy that will end in tormenting sorrow and it argueth a wretched distemper of the soul otherwise it would finde sinne to be terrible and bitter but through the corrupted constitution of the heart it comes about that they delight in sinne as distempered stomacks do in coales ashes or such drosse Again there is a sinnefull joy when the Object matter is lawfull but then we exceed in the measure in the bounds or limits we over-joy The water runnes over the bank and then it gets soyl and it 's as hard to rejoyce in these things and to sinne not as it is to be angry and sinne not 3. There is a gracious and an heavenly Joy when the soul delights it self in God and Christ in all heavenly Objects For though to wicked men these things are a burden yet to an heavenly heart they are the most connaturall Object They are the proper center of the soul as David often professeth his joy in the Lord It 's of this we are to speak of only we must inform you something of joy in the generall The Philosophers speak of a three-fold affection sutable to one another There is Love which is carried out to an Object that is good simply considered There is Desire which moveth to some good thing but absent and not yet obtained And then there is Joy which ariseth from the obtaining and possessing of it And answerable to these there are Divine Graces and supernatural works of Gods Spirit in the soul There is the Love of God which next to Faith is of the greatest glory and activity in the soul 2. There are Desires and earnest longings after God to which hunger and thirst a promise is made of being fully satisfied 3. There is Joy which ariseth from the enjoyment of God onely you must know there is Gaudium viae a joy we have while in the way to Heaven which admits of much increase and meeteth with much opposition and there is Gaudium Patriae a joy in Heaven where the soul will then be so filled that it cannot receive any more To know the nature of this Joy Consider First That the efficient cause of it is onely God The Spirit of God is called the Comforter as you heard because he alone poureth it into the heart as the Heavens onely give rain and it 's called Gal 5.22 The fruit of the Spirit which doth imply that it comes solely by Gods Spirit and that there is excellent sweetnesse in it Lusts are called the workes of the flesh but this with other Graces The fruit of the Spirit Hence it is that as in respect of Regeneration the Spirit bloweth where it listeth So also in respect of Consolation How many of Gods children walk with much consolation and abound in much joy And others again go bowed down and greatly tempted not obtaining comfort though they would give a world for it So that as the Husbandman cannot have rain when he would nor the Merchant winde when he would neither can the godly have comfort when they would as appeareth by David praying so earnestly for the Joy he had lost It 's the fruit of the Spirit Therefore joy doth not flow from Graces exercised as by a natural resultancy as heat doth from the fire and light from the Sunne but by Gods voluntary dispensation of it The Schoolmen use to say That a man doth not merit that is their proud phrase by rejoycing in God or good things but by his Love which was antecedent and from which joy they say floweth by a naturall necessity But the Scripture makes these two Love and Joy two distinct works of Gods Spirit and that they are separable experience confirmeth it for many men that are high in Grace are low in Comfort As the tall Mountains have few flowers on them or Mines of Gold little grasse covering them Secondly To this Christian Joy is required a knowledge of God and faith in him as revealed
till at last they put him to death in the most scornfull and reproachfull manner Consid I To open this consider That God out of his great love to mens souls hath appointed a Ministry and Officers in his Church that should be as Embassadours to intreat Reconciliation with God But because there could not be any commerce or communion between God absolutely considered and man fallen therefore the Lord Christ interposed and made peace but that what he had merited and purchased might effectually be applied to such as shall be saved among other instruments he set up Officers in his Church whose whole study and care should be to informe and reforme men So that people do enjoy the Ministers of God upon a two-fold special account First Gods great and special love to them That God hath taken care to send such is more then the creating of a world for you or vouchsafing all the temporal mercies you enjoy Hence it 's so often spoken of 2 Chron. ult and in other places that God sent his Prophets rising up early This is spoken as the great love of God to them And then Consid II The second Foundation of the Ministry is Christs Death and Resurrection his Ascending into Heaven as Ephes 4.11 He gave some Apostles some Pastours and Teachers Oh then how ingratefull and wicked is the world which doth no more regard this love of God and purchase of Christ in the Ministry Hence by the Prophet God promiseth That he would give them Pastours after his own heart Jer. 3.4 Though he feed them with the bread of adversity and drave them into corners Isai 30.20 Hence when God threatens a people with his uttermost wrath it is to remove the Candlestick and to make the Vision cease and to make no Clouds to rain upon them How much would people complain under a drought and want of Rain if for many years together there should not be so much as a Cloud seen But the gracious heart would think the removing of Christs Ministers not onely the taking away of Clouds but of the Sun and Stars in Heaven Secondly God and Christ who are thus the cause of their Office hath appointed them their worke and endowed them with abilities thereunto Their imployment is to publish the Word of God which is two-fold 1. The Word of the Law to convince men of sinne to inform of duty to make them sensible of their undone and damnable estate they are in Thus they are first to be wise Phisicians to detect and discover the disease the danger and cause of it Then secondly There is the Word of the Gospel which are the glad tidings of Gods favour and Reconciliation with those that are humble and contrite before him This is to publish the acceptable year of Jubilee to such as were spiritually indebted and under the thraldome of Gods wrath This is a work in it self absolutely necessary for what doth a sinner more want then these two things the Law in it's use and the Gospel in it's use Men in their temporal necessities respect the Physicians the Lawyers but soul necessities are not apprehended And as the necessity of it is so cogent so the dignity and excellency is admirable As the Soul and Heaven do farre exceed all earthly things so doth this subject all other Consid III Therefore in the third place God and Christ do justly expect that the world should with all gladnesse and obedience receive these his Messengers For shall God purpose so great love and Christ at so dear a rate purchase such Officers and must not the world set open the doors to receive them Shall not they cry Blessed are the feet of such as bring the glad tidings of the Gospel Are they not to be affected as the Galatians once to Paul To pull out their very eyes to serve him Certainly if David did so celebrate Gods goodnesse in creating Heaven and Earth and appointing the fowls of the air and the beasts of the field for mans use much more ought we in this great matter of the Church Consid IV Yet in the fourth place Though so much love be in this Institution and God expects so much thankefulnesse and obedience because of it it may make us tremble to see how little entertainment their Office and work hath in the world We speak not in regard of their outward honour and esteem For as Paul saith so ought we pray men might do no evil though we be accounted as reprebates 2 Cor. ult but we complain of the unsuccessefulnesse of it in respect of the divine operations of it We take up our Saviours complaint That light is come into the world and men love darknesse rather then light John 3. Oh this is that which the Scripture doth so bitterly complain of Who hath believed our report and I told them the wonderfull or great and honourable things of my Law and they accounted them a strange thing Psal 119. This sad usage in the world made Paul cry out That they were the off-scouring of the world worse then the dust of the feet and were made a spectacle to the world and Angels 1 Cor. 4.9 Consid V Fifthly The Devil knowing the excellent end and use of this Office and worke doth by himself and all his instruments oppose it He rageth and the world rageth when this work is set up So that as when Christ sent his Disciples to preach he saw Satan fall like lightning Thus if it were in his power he would have Christ and his Officers be thrown down As they are to destroy his works and dispossess him so he labours to do to them It being thus thou that in the Ministry we may see Gods great love and mans great wickednesse Let us consider the cause why it should thus stirre up the wrath of men that they should be moved like so many hornets And First This work of the Ministry is contrary to the Nature and inclination of the world That as the Sunne is burdensome to the Owl and other night-birds and sweet smels to swinish creatures Thus is the glorious Gospel and the precious favour thereof abominable to corrupt men They can no more love godly and holy preaching then fire and water can agree therefore the more thy heart and tongue is set against it the more thou discoverest that hell which is in the bottome of thy heart Now the true preaching of the Word of God is contrary unto the world in these respects 1. The very nature and frame of their hearts admits not of Christs word till regenerated The old house must be pulled down even with the very foundation of it Thus Jam. 1. God is said to beget by his Word and our Saviour here Sanctifie them by thy truth Now this is directly contrary to mans nature to account all that he is and all that he doth damnable to judge every thing he hath done fit fuell for hell so as to have no comfort in any thing he hath
they do to his Name they would Therefore the people of God may strongly and comfortably urge that it 's not their good their peace is the quarrell but because of something of God in them as the Basilisk hateth the picture of a man because it hateth a man himself 2. God hath put such a naturall storge into all Creatures that what is their own they will defend The Hen will save its own little ones and venture for them The Mother will save her own childe Now shall God put such a property in all Creatures to save their own to protect their own and shall not God much more Yea God maketh his affections to be more tender then a mothers such may forget even her sucking Infant Isa 49.15 but God will not yea doth not God shew his care in providing for all Creatures because they are his Creatures who feeds the young Ravens who preserveth the Sparrows Life Is not all by Gods Providence Oh then what specal care will he shew to his spiritual Creature which cost farre more then even the natural Creature did It would be a dishonour to God if he should not take care of such We see amongst men it 's counted matter of honour to remember them that have suffered for their sakes What said David to the Priest that escaped Sauls sword when so many were bloudily devoured by his Sword I have been the Cause of their death stay with me and thou shalt fare as I fare Thus will Christ say I have been the cause of all thy reproaches and miseries in the world Stay with me and I will protect you To forsake a man that hath been undone to maintain thy cause or thy credit would be great dishonour And doth it not more belong to Gods honour that such as have denied all their worldly comforts for him that he should regard them What will not God suffer any to seek him in vain and shall they suffer for him in vain Besides it would discourage all to stand for his Word Should he forsake them who would set out upon this spiritual Warre with the world upon his own charges It 's true we are to say after all is done We are unprofitable Servants and when we have suffered here we might suffer in hell hereafter but Gods Grace and goodnesse will not regard our merits but his fidelity and promise Vse of Direction to the people of God to order their Conversation so wisely and holily that if possible the hatred of the world may be for their godlinesse Let them slander reproach and pretend what they will yet do thou enjoy this comfort within O Lord it 's for my obedience to thee It 's because I own thy Commands I dare not comply with the evil waies of the world To be able to say as Christ For which of my good works dost thou stone me For what is it that thou reproachest me This is to shine as stars in a dark night Dogs may bark at the Moon but that stayeth not its course Go on in the midst of all the reproaches of the world Let thy holy life torment them let them be in a rage that they have nothing justly to charge thee with and then say with Jerome I thank God that I am worthy to be one whom the world hateth We know the worlds opposition engageth Gods protection and the Lord will account all that is done against thee as done against his own Majesty The last Doctrine In that Christ saith He had declared or given Gods Word to his Disciples Obs That the Ministers duty is to deliver only Gods Truth to his hearers Christ twice saith this I have delivered thy words and in another place My Doctrine is not mine but my Fathers which sent me Thus Paul 1 Cor. 11. That which I have received of the Lord deliver I unto you We should preach only Traditions in this sence not Popish unwritten Traditions but that doctrine which we have received Hence Paul so pathetically exhorts Timothy 1 Tim. 6.20 Keep that which is committed to thy Trust not that which he had invented not that which came out of his own heart but what was deposited in his hands Aurum accepisti aurum redde Religion is not res ingonii but doctrinae Now in this the Ministers of God are to deliver 1. His word his Truth in opposition to what is the word of man what is a lye and a falshood The false Prophets are often reproved for venting the Imaginations of their own hearts and in the New Testament some are severely taxed for bringing in damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2. Look we then that what we build be gold and silver not hay and stubble That what we preach be Wheat and not Chaff meat and not poison 2. We are to deliver it purely Some though they preach the Truth yet they defile it by their additions the Apostle Paul testifieth that he was not in the number of those 1 Cor. 2.17 who corrupt the word of God that use sophisticate and counterfeit waies to adulterate it as men do their wine and wares but as of God and in the sight of God Oh what holy trembling and fear should be upon us lest our preaching should be like N●buchadnezzars Image some part of gold and silver but the rest of Iron and Clay 3. They are to deliver it universally as Paul said he had not withheld from them the whole counsell of God Act. 20. 27. To speak all that God commands not to hide or withdraw any thing either for fear or flattery The threatning part as well as the promising to vent the Prophesie though it be the burden of the Lord. 4. They are to deliver it upon an holy end or motive That the truth might be beleeved the people edified To preach Gods Word as it is our Opinion our Interest our advantage is sinfull yet how apt are we to regard a Truth as it is ours more then Gods Vse of Exhortation to people to receive the Word of God with adoration and reverence how prone are people to entertain errors or corrupt Doctrines To be more affected with the wit and words of men more then the authority and divine nature of the Word SERMON LXXXII Of Wicked mens hating the Godly the Causes Effects and Properties of it JOH 17.14 And the world hath hated them because they are not of the world THe next thing to be considered is the Argument it self used by our Saviour in this Petition Keep them by thy speciall protection why because the world hateth them And I shall take in the second Cause into the Argument Because they are not of this world For I have spoken already about these things from vers 11. I shall adde what was not then mentioned In the Argument you may take notice of the Subject or persons that do hate and they are said to be the world that is wicked men called the world because they are the greater part of it and because they
called to controle sin and stop the current of it as publike Officers are Therefore let all such as intend to be godly in discharge of their trust not matter the hatred of wicked men Lay that down for a foundation for as the shadow will accompany the Sun so will malice and backbiting the godly actions of holy men yet some are more hated then others Obadiah could live in Ahabs Court for all Jezabels malice when Elisha's Life was greedily sought for Therefore 3. In the hatred of the world God hath a special regard to his Children he laieth no more on them then they can bear The strong Christian God calleth to more dangerous combats All had not such oppositions as Paul had Some are like Vriah put in the forefront of the battel The devil shall cast some of you into prison Rev. 2.10 It 's but some of them Thus James was beheaded and Peter was imprisoned when the other Apostles were not touched God doth wisely order the affairs of this world even wicked mens tongues and hands are bound up and they are let loose as God pleaseth 4. Even amongst wicked men there is much difference Some are farre more bitter and cruell then others Some have more Conviction Some have better Natures Some are of a more noble disposition for although that Seed of Enmity be in all wicked men yet in some it 's more stifled or diverted then in others when Herodias sought the death of John Baptist Herod for a long time preserved him Thus as all weeds have not the like noxiousnesse so neither is every wicked man like to another Every one is not a Cain an Absalom a Nero or a bloudy Bonner But then Lastly Take heed that if thou hast not so much hatred of the world as other godly men have that it be not for want of godlinesse because thou art not so zealous against sin Thou art more complying with or conniving at the wickednesse of others This is to buy the worlds good word at a dear rate Thou hadst better all the world speak against thee then to have God and thy conscience accuse thee for not doing thy duty Vse of Exhortation to the godly Be not discouraged or weakened in thy duty for the malice of the world Let them rage and rave but do thou continue in thy service to God This fear of men and their malicious outrage hath made many a man wound his conscience and grievously dishonour God Oh but consider Am I afraid of a mans tongue that is mortall and shall I not much more tremble at Gods condemnation Can a man damn thee how many have had sad trouble at their Death They did not their duty for fear of displeasing men SERMON LXXXIII The Application of the fore-going Observation both to the Godly and the Wicked tending to Encourage and Rejoyce the one under all their Sufferings and Deterre and Reclaim the other from all their Oppositions JOHN 17.14 And the World hath hated them because they are not of the World THe Worlds hatred you have heard to be the godly mans Portion The one are Sheep the other Wolves I now proceed to shew What is the Duty of Christs Disciples under the worlds hatred For it 's no mean skill to take the poyson from these enemies and to make wholsom medicines of it as Physicians do about Vipers yea it 's one of the great miracles that Christ hath enabled all believers to perform For we reade when an Heathen suprized a Christian and beat him with much cruelty and with great scorn asking him What great wonder his Master Christ ever did The believer replies even this great miracle That though you use me thus cruelly I can heartily forgive you What then was spoken to the Disciples in an external temporal manner may be verified in a spiritual sense That they shall tread upon Serpents and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them And first Do the ungodly men of the world shoot their arrows against thee Let this make thee examine thy self Whether there be not some sinne thou art guilty of that hereby God would humble thee for The Hebrews call an enemy an observer because his malice puts him upon a diligent observing of all thy wayes and therefore if there be any wickednesse any failing to be sure he will reminde thee of it which made the Heathen say That he who would be good needeth either a faithfull friend or a better enemy It may be then those sins those failings that no friends no Sermons meet with thy enemy may inform thee of So that thou mayest say thy enemy hath been the best friend in the world yea his railing words have done thee more good then many Sermons Not that they intend good no more then the horse-leech but to satisfie their own lusts only thou by heavenly wisdome dost turn their evil into good but if so be that upon examination thou findest thy self free Yet Secondly Consider whether it be not for some other sinnes that such men are made adversaries against thee For you must know God hath a wise ordering of all mens hearts and tongues even in reference to thee and as David when Shimei railed on him said 2 Sam. 16. The Lord hath bid him So whatsoever wicked men do concerning thee thou must say The Lord hath bid him Now though David was not guilty of those sins Shimei reviled him with neither did the Lord bring him in distresse for his quarrel with Saul as Shimei thought yet David had other sins and other transgressions for which he might be afflicted and so looked upon Shimei as a scourge to humble him for them Therefore say Though the things laid to my charge be false yet there are other failings other infirmities that the world knoweth not of which God strikes at by this mans tongue or rather the devil in that man Thirdly Do wicked men hate thee Take our Saviours rule so contrary to flesh and blood Mat. 5.44 Love them that hate you pray for them that persecute you and in other places Be not overcome of evil but overcome evil with good Rom. 12.21 This is that peculiar lesson which the Christian Religion only teacheth Neither Aristotle or Tully thought it a duty but rather a simplicity not to be avenged upon enemies But the Scripture is much in pressing this duty and that as a special sign of grace wherein we shall as children of God represent our heavenly Father who makes the Sunne to shine upon the ungodly as well as the godly All the wicked men of the world they hate God as well as thee and it 's in his power to destroy them all immediately in a moment to send them to hell yet with what patience and loving kindness doth he bear such adversaries he gives them food raiment and manifold preservations so Christ even when we were enemies died for us which the Scripture makes a forcible argument for us to forgive others This is a
God that hath changed my blackmore-skin that hath given me another heart when Paul met with wretched adversaries that blasphemed him and the Gospel he preached No doubt but he reflected upon himself I was such a mad blasphemer once I persecuted the godly once I delighted in cruel vexings of them heretofore And now how great is Gods goodnesse to me that he hath had mercy on me If thou blessest God that he made thee not a Serpent a Toad or that thou wert not a natural fool or a mad man How much rather that he hath not given thee up to such a vile malicious disposition The next thing is to give Cautions and Arguments of admonition to the wicked who thus hate Christ and his Disciples And First Let them know it 's a causless hatred yea it 's an hatred where the greatest love and delight should be And that upon two grounds For 1. They are such who would bring them to everlasting salvation if they were not prejudiced their exemplary life is it not a light shining before you that beholding their godly holy and pure conversation you may be thereby wone to glorifie God The counsels admonitions and spiritual help they would vouchsafe to thee should make thee prize them more then all outward comforts Do ye love such as can make you rich preferre you to places of honour supply your necessities Oh how welcome should such be to you that would give you many an helping lift to Heaven Why then is thy hatred so causless Is it because they desire thy salvation Is it because they pray for thee they mourn in secret for so David professed Rivers of waters ranne down his eyes because men kept not Gods Law Wert thou not a stone and adamant these things would turn thy heart towards him 2. They are such for whose sake thou enjoyest many blessings It 's because of them the ship thou art in is not drowned God keepeth up the world in reference to them therefore the hedges are kept because of the Corn in the ground The innocent deliver the Island for Lot's sake Sodom was spared a long season These stand in the gap when Gods overflowing tempest would carry all before it Secondly Consider that thou dost not hurt them yea thou increasest that which makes them so hatefull to thee For by this means they walk more closely with God they separate themselves from the world It 's a mercy to them they have this hatred otherwise they might comply too much and ensnare their souls and symbolize with mens wickedness Now how absurd is thy hatred by that thou makest them more holy and so advancest that which is so abominable to thee Thou art to them as a fyle to the rusty iron thou art to them as Lazarus dogs tongues were to lick his sores whole thou art Gods scullion to wipe and keep his vessel clean who would not think thou shouldst rather do as that persecutour that would not let him die saying he envied him the honour of a Martyr Thy very hatred should make thee leave hating and opposing because hereby thou makest the godly man more glorious and happy Thirdly Consider hereby thou hurtest thy self and not them As the dog that bites the stone for rage or a man that shoots an arrow at a brazen wall and that recoileth back and kils the Archer thy hatred thy cursings will fall back upon thy head It 's not the godly man only but thy self and thy own soul thou hatest See whether those many curses and miseries thou hast be not the fruit of thy hatred thou art a tormentor and troubler to thy self Though Achan troubled Israel yet he troubled himself and his own house also Fourthly Remember that it 's a devilish thing thou art more wicked then a man useth to be Not to obey or yeeld thy self up to godlinesse is a grievous sin but to oppose is a devilish thing Thou dost the work of the devil if he were incarnate he would speak and do as thou dost 5. Remember the woful and heavy judgements which remarkably follow such men Who ever hardened himself against the Lord and prospered This Christ meant when he said he that stumbled at this stone should fall but upon whom this stone shall fall he should be beaten in pieces Christ will fall on such that oppose him and they shall not have the least mercy Vse Doth the world hate Gods people then admire the goodness and power of God that keeps up a poor Church in the midst of such violence that preserveth a few Lambs among so many Wolves Bears and Lions in such a Wildernesse as they are in We justly admire Gods power in putting bounds to the sea that it overfloweth not the Land much more admirable was that goodness of God in preserving the Israelites when the waters were on every side Oh how much more is God to be praised that keeps his people with any safety any liberty Should wicked men have their will food and raiment and life would be thought too good for thee SERMON LXXXIV Of Conformity to Christ in not being of the world And in his Sufferings JOH 17.14 Because they are not of the world even as I am not of the world THE Last particular considerable in this Verse is the exemplarity of Christ or the Disciples conformity unto Christ They are not of the world as I am not of the world Which words are repeated in the 16. verse and therefore have some weighty and great matter contained in them In the words we are to take notice 1. What it is to be of the world 2. How Christ was not 3. The similitude between Christ and his Disciples herein To be of the world is to partake of the manners life and conversation of the world to have the spirit of the world in a man and this is oppsite to the Spirit of God and to all heavenly things so that both the inward inclination and outward conversation is wholly worldly as our Saviour saith he that is of the earth is earthy That as bodies in whom the element of the Earth is predominant doe naturally fall downward so that soul which is thus principled and habituated in a worldly manner doth minde only earthly things this is to be of the world To be in the world is another thing Our Saviour and the Disciples were in the world but not of it A man may be in the water for some good end but the fish are properly of the water because that is their Element and they have a watery Constitution 2. Christ is said Not to be of the world Now that is a higher degree then the Disciples can be for Christ as God is no waies of the world and then take him as man yet being conceived by the holy Ghost he was not of the world in a natural way 1 Cor. 15.47 The Second Adam is the Lord from Heaven opposed to the first Adam who is said to be of
so farre as their presence was comfortable and necessary to us we may grieve God would not have the old bird killed with her young ones and he that would have mercy shewed to the fowls of the air will much more shew it to his people It is true God in his wisdome many times takes his own children betimes out of the world even too soon for them we would think being in the prime of their service and too soon also for their children and dependents on them but therein God is even mercifull though for the present we do not perceive it For this you know God hath determined in mercy the time of our abode in this world Thou canst not follow me now said Christ to Peter but he should in his time John 13 3● Lastly It 's not alwayes best to have the best good immediately but in it's time It 's true to be with the Lord to be freed from sinne is best in it self absolutely considered but then respectively if this and that be considered quoad hic nunc it 's not best God doth every thing beautifull in his season None could be more loved of the Father then Christ himself he came from the bosome of his Father yet till he had finished his course he is kept from him We say even the best and holiest thoughts or desires may come in unseasonably into our hearts and so not be best at that time As the childs duty is not to learn the best book at first but what he is most capable of Though Heaven and glory be best yet not at this time for thee partake of it So that when it 's best to go out of this world must be left to the wisdom of God But you will ask Is it never lawfull to pray unto God that he would take us out of the world May we not desire to die and to be freed from sin Are we not to pray that Christ would come To this I answer First It 's never lawfull to desire to go out of the world from impatiency or discontent because we have troubles and vexations in this world Thus Elijah sinned when he prayed to God to take away his life for this was through the discontent then upon him So Job when he breaketh forth into those dreadfull imprecations about himself expostulating with God Why life was continued to such who sought for death more then for hid treasures Look then to this that no impatient discontented thoughts make thee weary of this world Secondly Earnest desires to be with God and hearty affections for eternal glory are lawfull and a special duty Thus we are to pray Gods kingdom may come and thus the Saints are said to long for and hasten to the coming of Christ 2 Pet. 3.12 Thus if we speak abstractedly take the thing in it self Our hearts ought to be so heavenly that we are to be as pilgrims here longing for heaven our rest Thirdly It 's never lawfull absolutely and peremptorily to desire of God that he would take us out of this world though our hearts be heavenly but with submission and resignation If Lord I have done my work I have finished my course as we see Christ in this Chapter I have done the work thou gavest me to do therefore glorifie me Austin expresseth this disposition well when he said O Lord if I be yet necessary to my people I do not refuse to live not refuse because in another place he saith Some godly men have need of patience to live as others to die It must be alwayes therefore conditionally If you object Many Martyrs for I mention not those Circumcelliones that would force men to kill them hereby glorying in a contempt of death who willingly offered themselves to the persecutors when none accused them To this some say They were some Hereticks that did so not the true Christians But yet Histories record it of true Christians and then that was an extraordinary spirit in them which as we cannot condemn so neither must we imitate we must live by precepts not examples no not of holy men Vse Do not thou break out into impatient discontents about any exercise or temptation thou art afflicted with say not Why doth not God remove it from me or me from it Consider this in the Text I pray not thou shouldst take them out of the world What did Christ say when Peter drew out his sword Could not I pray for legions of Angels and the Father would send them to help me but the Scripture must be fulfilled So do thou say God could deliver me from all these troubles he hath thousands of ways to put me into rest but I open not my mouth because thou Lord dost it Indeed if they should never be taken out of this world if thy troubles were eternal as the torments of the damned in hell thou mayest justly cry out in the horrour of thy soul But God hath put a period he hath set his time for thy being in this world when thou art ripe thou shalt be cut down and carried into Gods barn When thy service is done then God will call thee to glory SERMON LXXXVI That it is a greater Mercy to be kept from Sinne and all Evil in our Afflictions and Troubles then from the Afflictions themselves JOH 17.15 But that thou shouldst keep them out of the Evil. THis is the positive part of Christs Explication of himself in his Petition for his Disciples viz. to keep them from the evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes this is applied to the thing or matter which is evil as in the Lords Praier Mat. 6.13 Deliver us from evil 2. To Persons Thus often in the Scripture Mat. 12.45 So it shall be to that wicked generation in that day Sometimes it 's applied to the devil as the Original of all wickednesse who also tempts to it So Matth. 13.19 Then comes the wicked one 1 Joh. 2.13 Ye have overcome the evil one Now there are some who limit this to the devil keep them from the devil because it is with the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that is not necessary as appeareth Matth. 5.37 Whatsoever is more then this cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Mat. 5.49 Resist not evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cannot be the devil for we are commanded to resist him but we may take the word generally both for sinne and the devil and sinful persons That the sence may be thus Though I pray not that thou should keep them free from all evil and afflictions yet I pray that they may be preserved from sinne thereby that whatsoever may befall them yet they may not sinne and here we see also that it's Gods gift to keep men in their afflictions that they sin not Otherwise they would undo themselves and through many tribulations they would go not into the Kingdom of Heaven but of hell from misery here to misery hereafter Obs That it 's a greater mercy to
unknown duty amongst Christians Thus as the minde is to be more sanctified so we might shew all other parts of soul and body The will of a man is to be more bowed and made more vehement and powerfull in the things of God To overcome those velleities and incompleat wishings which are so apt to undo us To go beyond Paul as Paul himself desires to overcome himself Rom. 7. What I would not that I doe To have this no longer but what I would that I do And for the Affections who is not sensible what further Sanctification they need Sanctified anger sanctified desires How beautifull and comfortable would they be Who doth not finde them overrunning and going beyond all bounds so that nothing can order them within their limits The Body likewise though that be the bruitish part yet the Apostle prayeth for the sanctification of it which is then done when it 's no more instrumental to sinne the eyes the hands the tongue have an holy watch over them and are imployed for God Thus you see that every part of the whole man admits of further Sanctification A man cannot look over all that he hath and doth as God did on his works and see all exceeding good so as to rest thereupon and worke no more We may see every day more to be done and so never come to a full Rest till we are in Heaven Fifthly We are to be more sanctified Objectively that is Those objects revealed in the Scripture we are to partake more of to receive more sweetness and fulness from Doth not the Apostle pray for the Ephesians of whom he affirmeth the glorious priviledges of the Gospel Yet Chap. 1.17 18 19. That their eyes may be inlightned to know what is the exceeding power of God to them that believe And again Ephes 3.17 18 19. That Christ may dwell in your hearts that ye may be able to comprehend what is the breadth and depth and length of Gods love And lest it should be thought that we are able to do this to the full he addeth And to know the love of God which passeth all knowledge Yea the very glorious things of the Gospel even in this life are such 1 Cor. 2.9 That eyes have not seen neither hath it entred into the heart of a man to understand There is as much in God in Christ in Faith in every Scripture-truth that thou mayest make it new to thee every day Christ may be a new Christ Heaven a new Heaven for every divine Truth is like some stately and magnificent Palace wherein every room affords thee some new wonder and delight and this is the reason why John 4. Christ saith He that drinketh of that water which is Christ shall never thirst more Oh then this is our great sinne and our hindrance also that such dainties are in the Gospel and we do not suck them out There is no heavenly promise or comfort but if thou didst go to draw out of it thou wouldst finde it a deep Well which can never be drawn dry Oh then know if Christ and holy things do not ravish thy soul it 's because thy heart is narrow How can a vessel with a narrow mouth receive all the water of the Sea into it SERMON XC The Contraries to Growth in Grace A Comfortable Advertisement to such as mourn under their Sence of not Growing With Reasons of the Necessity of Growing in Grace JOH 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth THose that are already sanctified may yet be further sanctified and that in several particulars as you have heard There remain some other Instances to be added wherein this encrease of Sanctification may appear And the first which is also very remarkable is That our Sanctification is to grow efficienter by way of inviting exhorting and bringing home others to it For thus we are more sanctified when we are enlarged to sanctifie others instrumentally This some take to be the meaning Joh. 15.8 where Christ tels his Disciples that herein his Father is glorified if they bring forth much fruit And vers 16. I have ordained you that you should go and bring forth much fruit which is in respect of their ministerial emploiment So then if thou askest how may I be more and more sanctified The Answer is ready Be sanctifying others actively and instrumentally Think it the greatest honour in the world if thou art a means to make others holy for though God would use no means or Instruments in the Creation of the world yet he will in the Creation of the New Creature Now Ministers they are by Office appointed to sanctifie others The word or Truth which is the Instrument of Sanctification is published by them Therefore a sanctified Minister doth desire nothing more then to have a sanctified people he desireth that it may be a Vineyard a Garden not a Wildernesse that he is to till and look to he crieth out with Rachel in a spirituall sence Give me Children else I die All his Study and Sermons tend to this that his Hearers may be sanctified and certainly if Christ himself endured all that reproach and shame for Souls he desireth to have the same minde that was in Christ That as Christ is promised to see his Seed after the Travell of his Soul So doth he pray that after all his pains and endeavours he may see an holy Seed So that your Sanctification is that for which we pray and preach yea private Christians in their way are to encrease in their Sanctification by promoting it in others Psalm 51. when David had recovered out of his sinne then would he teach transgressors their waies When one Disciple was converted presently he goeth and calleth his Brother Oh the admirable Zeal that Paul shewed to his Kinsmen after the Flesh that he could wish to be an Anathema for them You that are Parents grow in this active Sanctification Let not God alone by Praier untill your Children be sanctified What a Comfort would it be unto you to be both the Natural and the Spirituall Fathers of your Children Thus ye that are Masters grow also in Sanctification by Sanctifying Servants by having a Sanctified Family Oh it 's to be be feared thou knowest not the Worth and the Excellency of a sanctified Estate or the danger of an unsanctified one that art no more diligent to call others out of it if rightly apprehensive herein Thou wouldst do as the Angel did to Lot while he lingered and tarried in Sodome pull him out by violence as it were that he might not perish Philosophers say There is this difference between those Creatures that are generated of putrid matter and such as come of their kinde that the former though they live and move yet cannot generate the like or propagate individuals because they come of putrid matter and certainly it 's thus here Those that are indeed born of God and have that Divine Seed in them all their Care and Delight is to
state of men afterwards The former of these especially could never be discovered by natural light even Adam though created after Gods image yet needed a revelation of these We have no innate or acquired knowledge about them and though many worthy Divines have indeavoured to prove the Trinity by reason and humane similitudes yet the surest and most evident way is the Scripture so that we may say of them all which Austin speaks of one of them viz. Of Christs being God and man If you can give a reason it would not be mirabile and if an example it would not be singulare It 's true there are many things in Scripture which we know by natural reason as that there is a God but the knowledge by reason is nothing so evident and firm as that by Revelation so that the truth of God being in the chiefest parts of it supernatural It 's no wonder that the wisest Heathens became vain in their imaginations and that their greatest Religion was their highest impiety and within the Church The more men have forsaken Scripture and pleased corrupt reason in the doctrinal part and corrupt fancies in the worshipping part They have been very erroneous and absurd hence the truth of God is called a mystery and said to be revealed because mans reason could no more attain unto it then a dwarf can reach to the heavens Zacheus must get upon this Tree to see Christ Hence no others have been able to endure the glorious lustre of the Scripture because errours are natural the Scripture supernatural All heresies have runne up and down from one age to another like Cain fearing least every Text of Scripture should kill them Do not then judge of Scripture-truths by thy carnal reason The work is above thy natural understanding 6. It 's a godly holy Truth The holy Scriptures they are called and well may they be so called for nothing is a stronger argument to demonstrate the Divine Authority of Scriptures than the holiness thereof Take all the moral books in the world they do as much come short of the holiness of the Scripture as coals do of the glory of the Sunne Plutarch Seneca Epictetus these will teach you to have the clean skin of morality but not the inward life and sound vitals of holiness What transcendent holiness doth the Scripture teach us such as the men of the world know not Holiness in our natures first of all Regeneration neither the name nor the nature of it was known amongst the Heathens they knew not mans natural pollution neither did they see a necessity of such an internal renovation Again Such holy duties the Scriptures teach that not only the doctrinal but the practical part of it is a mystery to flesh and bloud such are faith in Christ love to our enemies self-denial and a readinesse to take up the Crosse Many of these duties are accounted folly and madness by wise men after the flesh It teacheth an heavenly life fellowship and communion with God to do all things from holy principles and to holy ends so that the holinesse that is in the truth of Scriptures should much affect us But oh how few reade and delight in the Scriptures because of the holinesse in them You reade them for dispute or to know the History and to be able to hold up Arguments but who is there that thinketh this the truths of Scripture are holy They are to make heavenly and pure they will forewarn of sin they quicken to grace they inflame to faith and love Oh minde this all Scripture-truth is for holiness As meat is not to be looked upon but eaten and digested 7. They are precious excellent Truths and therefore compared by David to fine gold and by Solomon preferred above all jewels Prov. 3.15 The Apostle also compareth true Doctrine to gold silver and precious stones 1 Cor. 3.12 and they are called precious promises as a precious faith 2 Pet. 1.1 4. These shew in what high degree and dignity the truths of Scripture should be with us Austin said Veritas Christianorum was incomparabiliter pulchrior Helenâ Graecorum If they did strive about her How much more ought we for the truth of God The Prophet complained of old None pleaded for the truth Isa 59 4. neither were valiant for the truth Jer. 9.3 The truths then of the Scripture should be more unto us then any earthly comforts whatsoever You see Christ makes this one main end of his coming into the world to bear witness unto the truth John 18 37. Ann thus the Martyrs they thought Gods truth more worth then their lives and how many millions have willingly endured the worst of deaths to bear witness to the truths of the Scripture So that it 's very strange how such a spirit of delusion should be upon men to make no matter of true Doctrine to think Heresies and Errours are nothing Certainly the godly Martyrs that burnt at the stake had other thoughts of it and the Scripture doth commend it as the great mercy of God unto a people Therefore God promiseth Jer. 33.6 He will reveal abundance of peace and truth and in many places truth is still joyned unto peace as if all the peace and earthly advantages in the world were nothing if we might not have the truths of God also Therefore the Apostle John told that elect Lady He had no greater joy then to see her children walking in the truth and the Spirit of God is promised as the greatest mercy we can have John 16.13 That he will guide us into all truth Natural truth is precious What pains and travel have many used to finde that out They have dispossessed themselves of their goods to finde it out yea they have been so ravished in the contemplation thereof that they have forgotten to eat their bread and have wholly neglected themselves and all pleasure Hence in their Sacrifices to Apollo whom the Heathens made God of truth they cried out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth is sweet Truth is sweet Truth is the natural food to the soul as meat is to the body but then divine supernatural truth which doth so immediately concern our salvation and eternal happiness how precious and dear should that be to us In other things ignorance is not damnable but here to misse of the truth is to fall into destruction It profits not a man to measure the heavens and the motions thereof To understand all the Laws of Nations with their cases thereupon or with Solomon to be able to speak of the nature of all things if a man want the knowledge of Scripture-truths Lastly This truth though precious yet because it 's opposite to a corrupt heart It 's very bitter and makes most men enemies to it It 's a truth requiring holiness hatred of sinne mortification of lusts and because it 's so therefore the vain corrupt hearts of men love errours and lies or deceits by the devil and sinne rather then the
truth of Scripture Thus Christ John 8.40 told the Pharisees They thought to kill him because he told them the truth And Paul Gal. 4.16 Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth The Ministers of this truth are compared to light that is offensive to sore eyes and salt that doth grieve and vex the wounded man Indeed truth if rightly considered is not grievous but to do otherwise then obey truth It 's not the threatning of hell and damnation that should be so grievous but the punishments themselves They cried out of our Saviour saying It was an hard speech of what he had spoken but it 's an harder thing to lie roaring in hell-flames to all eternity Vse Is the word of God thus Truth then be possessed and filled with it Let truth be in your mindes truth in your hearts truth in your lives Take heed of all errours and heresies they oppose the Doctrinal Truths of the Scripture Take heed of all prophaneness and impiety they oppose the practical Truths Oh remember if Gods word be truth then woe be to thee thou art in a lying way in a seduced and damnable way Only know it 's not enough to have a general knowledge of Scripture-Truths but endeavour after a particular practical discerning of them The Scripture cals it knowing the Truth as it is in Jesus Eph. 4.21 and the acknowledging of the truth after godlinesse Tit. 1.1 Tantum scimus quantum operamur We know no more in Gods account then we put in practice Take heed then of being in the number of those Rom. 1.18 who hold the Truth in unrighteousnesse Say as the Apostle in his Ministry 2 Cor. 13.18 So thou in thy whole particular conversation I can do nothing against the Truth but for it This would be a Preservative every way SERMON XCIV How requisite a sound minde and a holy life are to a Minister of the Gospel And of Christs peculiar love to and care of such JOH 17.18 As thou hast sent me into the world even so have I sent them into the world THis Verse begins a New Argument or Reason why the Apostles need Sanctification by the Truth It 's drawn not from the generall Consideration as they are Beleevers but from the particular Relation they were in commissionated with Office to preach the Truth of God Before I enter upon the words the Coherence of this Argument with the Petition doth deserve some Consideration though the particle of Connexion be not expressed yet it is to be supposed howsoever this followeth next in order upon that Petition and therefore there cannot be but Coherence of the matter I shall not trouble you with the Conjectures of Interpreters but pitch on that which is easily acknowledged to be very genuine and plain And first Whereas Sanctification by the Truth is desired for the Apostles because they were to be Officers in the Church and Ministers of the Gospel Whence Observe That Truth and Holinesse are requisite in the Ministers of the Gospel Sanctifie them by thy Truth Why because they are sent to preach the Gospel and they have thy Authority This is the reason why Christ though he called his Apostles immediatly from their worldly calling yet it was two years as Chemnitius in his Harmony computeth ere he sent them out to preach but kept them in his Family and under his Instruction that so they might attain both to true Doctrine and an holy Life This was represented Exod. 28.30 by the Vrim and Thummim which were to be on the Breastplate Light and Perfection sound Doctrine and Integrity of Life Hence the Apostle in the Qualification of Ministers requireth doctrinall abilities that he be apt to teach and can divide the Word of God aright as also many practical Qualifications for holy and unblamable life 1 Tim. 3.2 The Scripture compareth the Ministers of God to Stars and that both for their light and purity differing as Philosophers say from the substance of sublunary things 1. Let us Consider the Grounds why they are to be endowed with Truth and to have a sound minde And first From the Quality of the Office Their Office is to preach the Truth They are appointed to declare the Word of God and that only not humane Inventions not the thoughts of their own heart for if Christ himself avoucheth this that his doctrine was not his own but his that sent him and doth still referre all to the Father that sent him how much more ought the Ministers of God to declare what they reade and what they have received of God by the Scriptures not their own conceits Thus the Prophets of old began their Sermons with Thus saith the Lord and the Apostles begin their Epistles with their call and office Apostles and Servants of God Seeing therefore they have such an Office and Trust that requireth in the very Essentials of it nothing but Truth they ought earnestly to pray for it They are called the Light and the Salt of the Earth Now if the Light be dark all the body is dark If Salt hath lost his Seasoning it 's good for nothing By their Office they are to be the Ministers of Truth as Paul said I can do nothing against the Truth but for it 2 Corinth 13.8 This is a Minister after Gods own Heart that is thus qualified Secondly Truth is necessary if you do respect the subordination of their Office Christ hath not sent them to be Masters and Lords over mens Faith to propound their own Dictates and to anathematize such as do not immediatly obey No They have a Ministeriall not a Magisteriall Office for though in respect of the people they are Guides and Overseers and Shepheards yet in respect of God they are Ministers and Servants They are under Christ the Head and so must not deliver any thing but what they have received They may not make Articles of Faith they cannot appoint the worship of God They cannot institute new Sacraments It 's spiritual Treason in them to do this They are like the skillfull Gemmary that doth not make the Jewell only by his skill doth discover which is true or like Solomon that did not make the true Childe but by his Wisedom did manifest it So the Ministers of the Gospel though never so Learned never so holy yet they of their own authority cannot make any new Truth or new Ordinance Therefore they are compared to Embassadors that are bound up by their Commission To Stewards not Masters in the House The Scripture is called Gods Testament or Will Now the Lawyer may not adde or take away from it though he hath never so much skill and knowledge it would be sinful forgery in him to do so Thus Beloved we Ministers are bound up to Gods Word as that last Will he hath appointed how he will have his Church governed how it must beleeve how it must worship and it must be high Sacriledge to adde or detract from it Therefore if Scripture-Truths
then all those places of Scripture which speaks of our Election so as to praise God to have Confidence in him to triumph over all Afflictions would all be in vain for a man that is dead cannot perform these Duties Vse 1. of Consolation to all Beleevers What holy boldnesse and Confidence may they have for the time to come Did Christ think of thee before ever thou wast born or come into this world and will he not now thou hast a being in this world Did he minde thee before ever thou hadst any Grace and not when thou hast it He that did the greater will he not doe the lesse Vse 2. Of Admonition To search for the Effects and Fruits of Election in your Lives and Conversations For if you are of God and do belong to him you will hear his Word The Word one time or another will be effectuall to you SERMON CVII Of Faith the severall Kindes of it And especially of Justifying Faith It 's Object and Seat c. JOHN 17.20 Who shall believe in me through their word WE are now come to the Description of those who are here prayed for 1. The person in it's qualification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The Object of this Qualification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that in this Description two things are very observable 1. The Action 2. The Object The Action or rather the Quality is in those words Who shall believe 2. The Object in those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the gracious disposition viz. of believing I shall God willing treat more generally of the Nature of it vers 21. where it's again mentioned and so shall passe over the Act and come to the Object that specifieth it And the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is emphatical for it 's observed by the learned that no prophane Authors use that phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it 's peculiar to the Scripture So that as the thing it self viz. recumbency and resting upon Christ for salvation is onely known in the Church of God so is the phrase I shall not at this time examine that ordinary distinction of credere Deum Deo and in Deum it will be more pertinent at vers 21. where the whole Nature of faith in it's latitude is to be examined At this time I am to consider the restriction of it to it 's principal and chief Object and that is Christ For there is a two fold object of Faith the generall and that is the whole truth of God revealed in the Scriptures and the special that is the Lord Christ making an atonement for us and as Faith doth respect this special object so it justifieth a mans faith doth not justifie him as it believeth the threatnings or historical part of the Scripture but as it receiveth Christ and resteth on him It 's true the habit of justifying faith puts it self forth into all those general acts as a man by his rational soul accomplisheth the acts of sense which are common to a beast but that which doth specifically constitute him as a man is rationality so justifying faith doth inable a man to believe every truth revealed in Gods Word but that by which he is justified is when he wholly depends upon Christ and as was said This is emphatically expressed in Scripture by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not that this doth every where signifie the act of saving and justifying faith for John 2.23 many are there said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To believe on the Name of Christ to whom yet Christ would not commit himself but only for the most part is so The Scripture often expresseth it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially by the Evangelist John sometimes with the Dative case Act. 18.8 Act. 27.25 sometimes it hath the Dative case with the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.33 Rom. 10.11 sometimes with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Accusative case Rom. 4.5 Rom. 4.24 sometimes on the Name of Christ sometimes on Christ sometimes on God and all these expressions do come to the same effect only hereby is expressed more then a meer intellectual assent or speculative belief There is also included the fiducial and cordial inclination of the whole heart to rest solely upon Christ renouncing every thing else that may be thought to reconcile God to us Doct. That the fai●h which justifieth and saveth us maketh us wholly to depend and rely upon Christ So that it is with the believer in the matter of Justification as it was with Peter when sinking into the sea he cried out to Christ who took him by the hand and leaning on him was saved Thus the believer he is even sinking and dropping into hell he crieth out I am damning I am damning and then Christ putting his hand forth faith taketh strong hold of it and so is supported or as the Israelite stung with a Serpent it was not the looking upon other objects but only upon the Serpent and it was looking or meer beholding not applying any medicinal things that did cure So it is here It 's not the believing of every truth but only on Christ that justifieth and it is only believing not repenting not loving though they be necessary graces in the persons justified but only believing upon which we are justified Seeing that this is the quintessence of all practical Divinity and the life of faith is that which we are to be exercised in continually and also there are many corrupt doctrinal opinions that oppose it Let us the more diligently consider the whole nature of faith as it justifieth And First You must know that Protestant Writers consonantly to the Scripture make four kindes of Faith 1. Historical which some call Dogmatical whereby we do believe the truths of Scripture revealed therein because of Divine Authority because God saith so for if it be only from custom or education or other humane ends then it 's not so much as a Divine Historical faith and this faith all Christians are supposed to have though it 's to be feared few have any more then a bare humane faith 2. There is a Temporary Faith called so because it doth abide but for a season it being not able to endure the force of persecution and this is a degree higher then the former for that was only in the understanding and so had no efficacy upon the heart or affections at all but this temporary faith is carried out with some affections both to the person revealing and the matter revealed for Mat. 13. They received the Word with joy who believed but for a season 3. There is the Faith of Miracles which was granted in the primitive times of the Church for the confirmation of the Gospel and that sometimes to those who were not justified persons and this had for the object of it a peculiar and special promise for the doing such or such miraculous effects and answerable to this some learned Divines do acknowledge still a special faith whereby the
on Earth she conflicts with desires after Christ hence are those vehement Petitions Come Lord Jesus come quickly The Spirit and Bride say Come Rev. 22.17 20. If then these desires be turned into actuall enjoyments and it 's no longer Come Lord Jesus but he is come then there must needs be all matter of joy and rejoycing he that drinketh of this living water in this life shall never thirst more Joh. 4. viz. with a total thirst So as to be weary of Christ and desire some other Object how much rather will this be true in Heaven Then it 's impossible to be weary to be desirous of something else besides God for there love is joyned to the Object as fully and as nearly as possibly it can be As Philosophers say the matter of the Heavens desireth no other form whereas in sublunary things it constantly doth and all because of the actuality and perfection of that form Thus it must be with the glorified Saints in Heaven They can never be glutted never complain as they did of Manna by the constant use of it but God is as richly as delightsomely enjoyed by every Saint in Heaven to all Eternity as at the very first entrance into Heaven But you will say May not I then desire Heaven as a place of happinesse Is it hypocrisie and insincerity to desire that state of glory Must it be Christ only there The Answer is That is in the principall and first place to be desired but yet secondarily Heaven as it is our happinesse and our glory may be fought after for which many Texts might be brought Vse of Exhortation To moderate all thy desires to this life and the Comforts therein What makes Death so grievous but to part with so dear a Husband so dear a Friend so sweet Children Oh remember Christ is above all and dearer then all So that if Faith were lively in representing Christ to us we should need even patience to live as you see it was with Paul we should finde it to be to our great losse to be enjoying Friends while we might enjoy Christ But on the contrary the wicked mans misery is to be trembled at for there Christ saith Father I will that where the devil and his Angels are to be tormented to all Eternity that those also be with them SERMON CXXXV Of an humbled Christians improving in his Prayers the sweet Appellation of Father JOH 17.24 Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be where I am ETernal glory we heard our Saviour prayed for all those that should believe in him which is expressed thus indefinitely To be with Christ where he is He doth not name the place because this is it which makes heaven to be heaven that we do enjoy Christ there From this we proceed to other things considerable As 1. The Compellation Father This our Saviour useth three times as being a name denoting the most intimate and sweet relation as also causing the greatest confidence why Christ cals God Father hath been discussed already against Socinian glosses he is not a Father to Christ in the same manner as he is to believers neither did Christ use this Title to subdue and overcome any unbelieving and doubting thoughts in him or to quicken up his confidence which otherwise might fail but hereby to demonstrate the near relation between them as also his dependance upon him So that from Christs example herein we may observe That it is a necessary duty in a Christian in his approaches to God to think on those attributes and relations in him which may excite and stir up holy confidence and boldness When we come unto God we are to draw nigh to him as our heavenly Father whose bowels do exceed all parents affections in the world if they were put together Therefore it is our Saviour in that rule of prayer directs to that title and compellation of a Father To open this Consider First That no wicked or unregenerate man is in a state or condition fit to pray or approach unto God upon these termes If God be thy Judge thy enemy and thy adversary then it is not for thee to call him Father As God expostulates in Mal. 1.7 If I be a Father where is mine honour It 's true there is a paternity by way of creation and thus God is the Father of all but we speak onely of that paternity which is by Adoption and the Covenant of Grace Let therefore every wicked and ungodly man conclude that while he abideth so he cannot pray acceptably he may not come to God as a Father It 's blasphemy for such prophane wretches to say to God Thou art my Father The Scripture tels us That such are of their Father the Devil See then if the Devil thy father will bless thee if he will make thee happy Oh that wicked men would but consider what a wofull condition it is to lie in that they cannot pray that they cannot call God Father Thou doest but blaspheme with thy tongue all the while what God the God of wicked and prophane enemies to him No he is a Judge and a consuming fire to all such Secondly It 's of great consequence and advantage for the humbled Christian in his prayer to improve this relation of a Father To such all the sweetness out of this honey-comb To improve this Meditation till it be like fire in his bowels For 1. To the tender heart humbled for sinne it is the greatest temptation that he conflicts with to be perswaded God is his Father Such are the discoveries and experiences of his own sins and infirmities that he concludeth though other may call God Father yet he cannot Is not this the great dispute in the breast of a godly man Whether God be his Father or no Doth he not argue against it from the several corruptions that are in his soul Oh how can this and this be in me if God be my Father As also from the many sad afflictions and exercises he meeteth with more then others If God were my Father would he thus break and bruise me more then many in the world making me the Butt against which all his arrows are delivered So that you see it 's necessary to compose the spirit against this temptation which doth so naturally breed in the heart of a tender Christian Insomuch that to call God Father cordially and upon sincere grounds is a great mercy 2. It 's necessary to be perswaded of and call God Father because Satans great temptation is against this if he overthrow this all is gone if once he can tempt thee to this that God is not thy Father What horrour and what confusion yea what an hell will not presently overwhelm thee You see the devil working with this engine upon Christ himself knowing this was to set the axe to the root of the tree If thou be the Son of God do thus he would have him put that to the trial and
all its idolatry impiety and that it is indeed wholly at the will of the devil And this suggests a 2d Demonstration that the world doth not know God because the devil is the immediate Prince of it He that is called the Prince of darknesse is likewise said to be the god of this world This is fully expressed 2 Cor. 2.4 where the god of this world is said to blinde the mindes of them which believe not lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ should shine into them Therefore you have a notable description of the devils from the Soveraignty and power they have Eph 6.12 where they are called principalities and powers and rulers of the darknesse of this world how wofull then is the condition of the world of ungodly men who are thus made captive to the devils and are ensnared at their will That as they themselves are reserved in chains of darknesse so do they keep all their vassals they are chains of darknesse such as those who are in a dark dungeon and such as they cannot break neither have the wicked any desire to do it and therefore they never say to the devils chains as the ungodly do to Christs dominion Let us break his bonds asunder and cast his yoke away Psal 2. As long then as this strong one keeps the house for the whole world is his house no wonder if he make it like hell it self yea he makes the world by his ruling in it worse then hell in some sence for in hell he is tied up in some degree of torments but in the world he is let loose to infect and damn others though not without his torments 3. The world must needs be without all saving knowledge of God from the defect or absence of those causes which do alone cause saving knowledge So that as the world at first when it was a confused Chaos without form and void could not make a glorious light to appear upon it but that was Gods work whom the Apostle doth therefore describe as him that worketh darknesse out of light 2 Cor. 4 6. alluding to the work of grace which is now upon the world So neither is the world wallowing in its filth and thick darkness able to create the least light of saving knowledge but must for ever perish if God vouchsafe not his grace Now these causes are wanting which necessarily infer ignorance in the world Even as the absence of the Sun makes night 1. There is not the external Revelation and propounding of the doctrine to be believed unless God in much mercy send it Hence you may see that once in Judea only was the true knowledge of God and the whole world besides groped in more then Egyptian darkness and now though God hath commanded this light to shine over the whole world So that it is not limited to any one Nation yet a great part of the world still is heathenish So that they are darkned and become foolish in all their imaginations The denying of the Gospel is a greater misery then if the Sun should be denied to shine to such a people Now it 's God only that makes this light to shine in one place leaving the other in its darkness Even the Pelagians of old did acknowledge this grace of God necessary viz. a revelation and proposition of the object 2. Besides this external light the world wants that internal light of illumination without which the Gospel though never so gloriously preached is but like the Sun shining at noon day to a blinde man for this is made the work of Gods Spirit only Joh. 16.8 to reprove the world of sin and of righteousnesse Till the Spirit of God doth illuminate in both these the world doth not understand the horrible guilt and aggravation of sin the damnable estate and condition it is in thereby Neither doth it know what is that righteousnesse which only can justifie and where it is to be had so that the world even the wisest and most learned thereof are but like so many blinde moles digging constantly in the earth Neither affected with their disease or with the remedy till Gods Spirit doth wonderfully convince them and this is evidently seen in the Christian world For doth not the glorious light of the Gospel compasse men about yet they are like owles the blinder because of this light Insomuch that such blindenesse of minde is not amongst heathens as amongst impenitent and hardened Christians for besides the natural blindeness which they have common with heathens there is a judicial blindenesse that God smiteth them with for unfruitfullnesse and contempt of the Gospel Thus they are twice blinde as some are said to be twice dead Is it not matter of astonishment that a people living many years under constant and powerful preaching should yet he as brute beasts and understand nothing of their misery and the remedy Surely all this is because that judgement is come upon Israel even blindeness of minde and a veil upon their hearts 3. The world knoweth not God because it hath not that ultimate and compleat cause of all saving knowledge which is the spirit of regeneration and the work of a new creature upon their souls for till God give this heart of flesh and remove an heart of stone all the illumination and strongest convictions which men have upon them is not enough to make them know as they ought to know The Apostle Tit. 1.1 speaks of an acknowledgement of truth after godlines now that is only when a mans heart is mollified as well as his minde is enlightned It 's true the Scripture speaks of some 2 Pet. 2.20 who by the knowledge of God did escape the pollutions of the world but that was only in respect of external conversation for they were in their natures Swine still and not sheep It cannot then be that the world should know God and Christ as long as there is that corrupt enmity and spirit of rebellion and contrariety in it to what is holy Christ told Peter that it was not flesh and bloud which had revealed Mat 16.17 that glorious Confession of faith unto him If then the world be thus without the spirit of God enlightening and converting how then can it in any saving way acknowledge God Vse of Instruction Concerning the terrible condition of the perishing world whether within or without the Church yea it is most terrible to those who are the world really but the Church nominally You are shut out from the face of God and Christ You are without hope in the world Oh your greatnesse your pleasures will not avail to keep you from destruction This is Eternall life to know God and Jesus Christ This then is eternal death not to know him 2. That no knowledge of God or Christ which is not practical and saving deserveth the name of Christian knowledge The world though both by nature and supernatural revelation may know much of God yet because lying and living in
full glory to God 307 Heretiques Heretiques that endeavour to spoil Christ of his glory 151 Holy To make a man Holy is more then to make a world 41 God is Holy and so makes others holy 297 The most Holy should be humble in their approaches to the holy God 299 To scoff at Holinesse is to rise up against God ibid. Hour The word Hour hath several significations 19 Christs Hour ibid Vnder a dark Hour be patient 23 The Hour of Gods anger is shorter then the hour of his mercy ib. I Idolatry IDolatry a great and grievous sin 93 Jews Jews deny Christ to be our Mediator 90 Ignorance Ignorance to be lamented 75 Where grosse Ignorance is of Christ there men are in a damnable condition 80 The Causes of Ignorance 81 82 Ignorant All men naturally Ignorant of God in a saving manner 74 Impotency Mans Impotency to any thing that is holy 4 Institution The Institution of Sacraments is grounded upon the power that is given to Christ 27 Inferences Inferences from the knowledge of the true God 93 c. Instrumental causes Instrumental causes are Physical Natural or Moral 470 Joyfull Joy Christ doth really intend that his people shall be Joyfull 400 This is opened in four particulars 400 401 There is a Joy in Christ that his people are to have fulfilled in them 407 There is a three fold Joy ibid To know the nature of this spiritual Joy consider the particulars following 408 The transcendency of this Joy above all other worldly joy 410 The effects of Christian Joy 412 Spiritual Joy may then most abound when soul humiliation and godly mourning is put in practice 415 Judas Why Judas is called the son of perdition 362 Why Judas is said to be already perished 363 What particular eminencies Judas had 372 c. The thing in which Judas did debase himself 375 Take heed of proving a Judas 384 Justification Justification is the gift of God 252 The Reasons of it 253 K Keeps HOw much is implied in this that Christ Keeps them as his charge 339 Known God is only and properly Known by the godly 162 Knowledge Knowledge two-fold Speculative Practical 73 By the Knowledge of God and Jesus Christ we come to eternal life 74 Inbred Knowledge may be increased by the contemplation of the creature ib. True Knowledge only to be had within the Church ib. Without true Knowledge no salvation 75 We must have personal and explicite Knowledge ib. Reasons why Knowledge is so necessary to salvation 76 Motives to move to Knowledge 82 83 Effects of Knowledge 84 85 88 Why Knowledge that is not thus accompanied is ineffectual 88 Our Knowledge of God is very imperfect 91 Who are excluded from the Knowledge of God 96 The Knowledge of the true God is not enough to salvation without the knowledge of Christ 96 The Knowledge of Christ opened in five particulars 97 The Knowledge of God may be had several waies 162 Proved by five Arguments 163 165 L Life THis present Life 63 The Properties of this present Life 63 64 Love Beloved That though God Love his people yet that doth not necessarily inferre that he must keep them from all misery in this world and place them immediately in happinesse with himself 439 Why God doth not presently take his Beloved ones out of the world of sinne and sorrow 440 Wherein the Love of God to Christ and believers is not alike 646 Wherein Gods Love to Christ and believers is alike ibid. The Father doth not Love believers more then Christ 645 Loved It is of great consequence to the world to know how greatly believers are Loved of God 647 This appeareth in several particulars ib. How difficult it is for the world to be so perswaded 648 God the Father Loved Christ as Mediatour and thereby all believers in him from all eternity 669 The particulars wherein ib. Loveth God the Father Loveth believers even as he loveth Christ 642 M Manichees MAnichees confuted 158 Manifestation Manifestation two-fold 161 Christ as God cannot have any thing given him unless by way of Manifestation 665 Mediation Wherein God was glorified by Christs Mediation 113 Christs Mediation for us is of God 194 Gods people are to believe the fulnesse of Christs Mediation ibid. The fulnesse of Christs Mediation in eight particulars 194 c. Four Reasons why 196 Mediatour Christ as Mediatour glorified God in his Humiliation and Exaltation 30 c. It is our duty to know and believe in Christ as the onely Mediatour sent of God 192 The opening of this in three particulars 193 What Christ had or was as Mediator was for us ib. Which appeareth in four particulars 193 c. Christ prayed on Earth as Mediator and makes Intercession in Heaven 226 Christ as Mediatour had his glory given him 663 Mediatory All the children of God are under the Mediatory prayer 226 The aggravations of Christs Mediatory prayer in seven particulars 227 228 229 Christs Mediatory prayer and his death is only for the Elect. 232 Several Considerations to clear the point 233 234 235 Mediatory-Office That Christ in his Mediatory-Office hath respect to the meanest and weakest believer as well as to the choisest c. 524 Meditate It is good for the people of God often to Meditate of this That they are not of this world 455 The Reasons why it is so 454 Meditations Meditations are to be serious upon eternal life 71 The effect thereof 71 72 Merit Whether Christ did Merit this glory for himself 666 Ministers Why the best Ministers sometimes not fruitfull in conversion of ●thers 3 The Ministers of the Gospel are to preach Gods word 207 The opening of it in four particulars 208 It 's a special mercy for Ministers to agree in one 320 What are the Causes that make the Ministers of the Gospel thus differ 323 The Ministers of God must endeavour after the most perfect Vnity even to be One as the Father and Son are One 325 The Ministers duty is to deliver onely Gods truth to the hearers 424 The manner how they are to deliver it 424 The Grounds why it is requisite that Ministers should have truth and godliness 483 Vide Truth Why Ministers must be holy 484 Ministry The Ministry is appointed by Christs power 38 Christs power giveth successe to the Ministry ib. It is necessary 101 The end of the Ministry should be to bring men to the knowledge of God and Christ 166 Four Reasons why this is the end of the Ministry 167 c. If Christ though God yet in respect of his Ministry doth attribute all to God How much more the Ministers of the Gospel who are frail men 341 Two Errours in the extream about the Ministry ibid. A grievous sin to oppose the Ministry of God 486 None may undertake the publick Office of the Ministry without a lawfull Call thereto 491 God hath appointed a perpetual Ministry to the end of the world 557 Consider some Propositions for the opening of it
and we in him by Christ our Mediator Now if we had perfection and freedom from sin we needed not a Mediator So that as Sacraments suppose imperfection in the Communicant thus doth also Christ in the person he is in for if sin were not there How could he be in thee as reconciling thee to God as further sanctifying thee as healing thy corruptions Therefore though in heaven as some say the mystical union of Christ as Head and the Church as his body shall never cease yet the manner of his presence will cease he will not then be in us by faith nor shall we appear in him before God as mediating for us and covering our imperfections for then shall all be done away if then you observe how Christ is in his people to what end you will conclude if I were such as I desire and groan to be then I did not need Christ to be after that manner present in me at all 2. Though God and Christ be in us yet they are in us as free agents communicating efficacy and power according to that measure and degree they please If Christ were in us as a natural agent as the fire burneth or the Sun shineth then he being also omnipotent would produce the greatest effects of grace possible in every beleever because he is free and worketh according to his own councel therefore he distributeth grace as he pleaseth to some more to some lesse to none according to what shall be hereafter Therefore though he might sanctifie thee perfectly yet he will not 3. Christ is not only in us thus freely working in us but he hath also bounded and ordered the way of dispensations of his grace so that he doth not put forth power in us after we are regenerated as if we were so many bruit creatures but he requireth our co-operation and stirring up of our selves Though in the initials of grace we are passive yet not in the progress and though it be Christ that doth daily quicken and preserve us yet we so distemper our selves that some obstructions may be put to his operative presence As 1. Vnbelief Christ worketh in us yet so as by faith insomuch that we are not onely justified by faith but we are in the progress of holiness sanctified by faith Hence Ephes 3.17 Christ is said To dwell in our hearts by faith It 's by faith we receive of the fulness and fatness of Christ insomuch that where faith is not there Christ doth not put forth his power So that as our Saviour said to Mary If thou doest believe thou shalt see the glory of God Joh. 10. so if thou actest faith and dost put that on working then thou wilt both see and feel the glorious presence of Christ Therefore there is no blame in Christ his arm is not shortned This fountain would send forth such living streams it useth to do only thou dammest it up that it cannot run 2. Dulness and slothfulness this doth much withstand Christs operations The Church in the Canticles when she was lazy and pretended excuses not letting in Christ when he desired to come in made her at losse and be without his presence to her dear loss when Christ therefore hath quickned thee by preventing grace he hath many times knocked at the door and there hath been no entrance this hath greatly hindred the course and flourishing of grace 3. When thou givest way to any gross sin this makes Christ with-draw so that little appeareth of him This is like winter to the trees that maketh all the sap withdraw to the root so that outwardly it appeareth a dead tree Therefore cast away that abominable thing and then Christ will come and work as formerly in thee 4. Christ may live and work in thee yet thou not be sensible and apprehensive of it It 's Christ but thou mistakest him for something else as to the Disciples when Christ approached on the waters to them he appeared to be a Spirit at which they trembled not thinking him to be Christ and as Mary Magdalen thought it had been the Gardner when it was her Lord. Thus the godly soul though Christ at that very time doth evidently work in it yet through black distempers doth not indeed judge Christ to be there Lastly Christ sometimes purposely withdraws his operative presence to try us that we might see our own infirmities that we might the more earnestly prize his power and grace Even as in the ship Christ did on purpose sleep that the Disciples being in extremity might the more earnestly awaken him Thus Dormit in te Christus and as Joseph to his brethren discovers not who he is that so he may be the more welcome afterwards And as for the second Question How can Christ be in thee and yet thou have no comfort and assurance You may see the possibility of that in Christ himself who though so dearly beloved of the Father and the Father was in him yet for the present those heavenly consolations were suspended Vse of Instruction to demonstrate the happy condition of such as do believe They have God and Christ within them Though contemptible vessels yet they have a glorious treasure within Though the Cabinet have no excellency yet the Jewel hath Take heed then of grieving such a noble guest within thee when a noble person enters into thy house how doth it trouble thee that any offensive object should come before him Be thou as much carefull left any vain thought any evil action should molest him SERMON CXXIX Of the Vnity of Believers Of the Cause and Nature of it And what makes to the perfect Consummation of it JOHN 17.23 That they may be made perfect in one THose words contain the effect and fruit of that former Unity specified viz. Christ in us and the Father in him for our Saviour here speaks of a three-fold Unity 1. Of the Father with Christ as Mediator 2. Of Christ as Mediator and Head with his Church 3. Of believers amongst themselves and the Vnity of Christ with believers as their Head is the cause of the Members union and communion one with another Now this is the last time our Saviour repeateth this particular of unity for our Saviour doth in this prayer for believers four times repeat it which demonstrateth his exceeding ardent affections for it only every expression seemeth to rise higher then the former The first is That they may be one 2. That they may be one in us 3. That they may be one even as we are one 4. That they may be made perfect in one and this is here mentioned Now what it is to be made perfect in one will appear afterwards onely the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used sometimes of performing and consummating a thing with perfection sometimes it 's used of sanctification and consecration Heb. 2.10 Heb. 5.9 Heb. 7.28 Now although it be true that all believers are consecrated and set apart as holy
from the world to God yet that which is here primarily intended is the perfection and consummation of them in unity which though it will not be compleat till in heaven yet it is inchoate and begun in this life Obs That the Father and Christs being in believers is the cause of that perfect and consummate unity which they ought to have of themselves There could be no union in the body if the Head did not unite it All believers union doth first flow from Christ as their Head and Mediator Insomuch that whatsoever unity they may have which doth not first arise from this spring is humane and carnall To open this let us consider What is implied in their being made perfect in one And First Here is implied sincerity and uprightnesse That their unity be from a pure heart and unfeigned faith This is often the use of the word perfect as opposed to that which is false and counterfeit many are said to walk with a perfect heart because they did not walk with an heart and an heart by dissimulation so that it 's a perfection of essence and parts not of degrees and this indeed is greatly to be urged that as all the other things in the godly be sincere so their unity that they be joyned together from spiritual principles and by spiritual means It was the Heathens Position That amicitia could onely be inter bonos that whatsoever friendship was from bono utili or jacundo and not honesto it did not deserve the name of friendship Now how much more is this true in that unity amongst the godly which hath for it's cause and original Christ himself and for it's patern such an unity that the Father and Sonne have To be perfect then in unity is to have sincere hearts one towards another as the Apostle Rom. 12. Let love be without dissimulation Let there be no water to debase this wine let not this fair fruit be rotten at the core Secondly To be perfect in Vnity doth imply not onely sincerity but integrity of all those substantials and essentials wherein this onenesse doth consist You have heard that the Unity of believers doth empty it self into two great streams one of Faith in respect of Doctrine The other of Charity in respect of life and affections Therefore if any of these be wanting the Unity is dissolved if love be pretended but yet there is no divine truth this is conspiracy not unity and if faith be pretended but not love as yet we have no signe of the true Disciples of Christ Let then the Church of God look it hath these two pillars like Jachin and Boaz to bear it up All Unity without Truth is like a stately building upon sand and Truth without love is like a foundation without superstruction pray that the Spirit of God would lead into all truth for the former and would also work those sanctifying fruits of it love peace meekness c for the latter Thirdly The word perfect in one doth imply an increase and daily progresse in the way of Vnity For though the Church of Christ be his Body yet it 's a growing body it 's not come to it's full stature no not in this life There are further degrees to be attained Ephes 4.13 We are to grow to a perfect man in Christ Jesus and thus we reade of many called perfect as 1 Cor. 2.6 Heb. 5.14 not in an absolute sense but comparatively because they are carried on to further degrees of grace then others We are not then to think that any Church will have such perfect Unity in this life but that it may be more perfected In the best constituted Churches there are several imperfections there is much weakness many carnal affections which are apt to discompose the beautifull frame of the Church Fourthly It doth imply That they are perfected in those means which are appointed by God for this Vnity For seeing the means are wholly for the end the end can never be better enjoyned then formerly if the means be not better improved so that if the Church of God be perfected more in one it must more faithfully improve the means of unity and they are especially two 1. The preaching of the Word of God For as by that at first the Church is called out of the world so by that also it 's kept up in it's purity and unity The Word of God preached is the onely means appointed to remove ignorance and mortifie corruptions which are the rares that hinder the good seed As the envious man soweth these so the Spirit of Christ by the Word worketh the clean contrary Hence Ephes 4. the Ministry is appointed as a means to bring us to this perfect stature farre be it therefore from them to make divisions and rents in the Church of God whose great office and imployment is to proclaim peace The good shepherd will not suffer his sheep so to fight with one another as thereby to be destroyed 2. The Sacrament of the Lords Supper that is a special means to preserve Vnity yea and to perfect it The Apostle 1 Cor. 10. speaketh fully to this For we being many are one bread and one body for we are all partakers of that one bread So Eph. 4. one Baptisme is brought as an ingagement to unity Therefore the more graciously and perfectly these Ordinances are received the more is this unity confirmed and established and therefore those primitive Christians who had one soul and one heart were constant also in their breaking of bread whereby their mutual love was strongly preserved Bellarmine not unfitly speaks of a six-fold Unity in the Church The first is Ratione principii of God who calleth though as he saith this makes the Church not so much una as sub uno one as under one 2. Ratione ultimi finis the salvation to which it 's called and this makes the Church not so much one as ad unum 3. Ratione Mediorum in respect of the means of Faith and Sacraments and thus the Church is rather by one then one 4. In respect of the holy Ghost as a separated Governour 5. In respect of Christ as an internal and conjoyned Head 6. In respect of the connexion of the Members amongst themselves and in these two last respects it 's properly one Lastly This Vnity will be wholly perfected in Heaven Then will all partition walls be destroyed Then shall it no more be said I am of Paul and I am of Apollo but God will be all in all Therefore as this life is a place like Hadadrimmon a valley of tears bewailing corruptions and sinnes amongst us so also the divisions and breaches that are upon us But in Heaven all opinions all different wayes will cease So that although this unity for the main of it be attained in this life yet in the life to come there it will be totally compleated Thus it is here perfect because the endeavours and breathings of the godly should be