Selected quad for the lemma: world_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
world_n holy_a son_n trinity_n 2,763 5 9.8407 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A75460 The comfort of the soul laid down by way of meditation upon some heads of Christian religion, very profitable for every true Christian. Composed and written by Iohn Anthony of London Doctor of Physick. Anthony, John, 1585-1655. 1654 (1654) Wing A3479; Thomason E739_1; ESTC R207006 271,347 376

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Adam and how rebelliously we have sinned against God in the whole course of our lives If this be our condition which is most true as we are in the Sta●● of nature what comfort can we then take in all worldly pomp and dignities what contentment is there in all earthly pleasures and delight they are all nothing else but vanity and vexation of spirit We may injoy more of this world than our hearts can desire and yet our soules may starve for want of spiritual food and comfort d Gen. 4. 12 Cain was heir apparent to the whole world and yet he was driven out from the presence of God and became a vagabond upon earth So we may injoy whatsoever the world can afford us and yet God will not look upon us with a gracious aspect and then our condition will be no better than that of Cain We may injoy health wealth peace liberty and all manner of prosperity and yet our souls may be sick they may languish with sadnesse of heart they may be much perplexed and shut up as it were in a dungeon because they are so restrained by the corruptions of our nature that they have no freedome to mount upwards towards heaven It is nothing so uncomfortable to live in perpetuall darknesse and never to see the light of the Sun as it is to have our understandings spiritually darkened and to live without the light of the e Mal. 4. 2 Sun of righteousnesse to have no appearance from him to open the eyes of our understandings to be a guide to our reason to season our hearts with grace and to shew us the way that will bring us to heavenly happinesse This is our condition by nature we are out of the favour of God our life is void of all true comfort and consolation we walk in darknesse f Isa 53. 6 we go astray like silly sheep and follow our own inventions and we have no ability in our selves to return again into the right way Wherefore let our hearts be throughly affected with this our sad condition let our Meditations hereupon draw us to a godly sorrow for our sins which may bring us to true repentance and newnesse of life let this be our chief care and the desire of our soules to regain the grace and favour of God and to be reconciled unto him Let our souls bewail our sins with hearty contrition and true compunction let our teares manifest the grief of our hearts and the truth of our repentance for our transgressions and let us cast our selves down at Gods footstool and humbly acknowledge our offences to him suing earnestly to God by prayer for the pardon and forgivenesse of them through Faith in Christ Also we ought to be humble petitioners to God for a supply of such graces as we want to strengthen ●s against the corruptions of our nature and against all the enemies of our salvation This should be our constant practise every night before we sleep to make our peace with God for the sins of the day past wherein we have failed of our duty and wherein we have dishonoured God that our souls may rest in peace as well as our bodies do rest in quiet So likewise every morning we should acknowledge our thankfulnesse to God for the comforts of the night past and to crave his blessing upon our labours the day following If we continually practise this duty it will keep us from grosse sins and great offences and it will make us take all occasions to renew our Repentance with God for our sins Every fit of pain or of sicknesse that we feel and every crosse or affliction that we suffer calls loud for repentance because it is a fruit of our sins also every blessing and every good thing that God is pleased to bestow upon us cryeth loud for our thankfulnesse because it is bestowed of his own free bounty and goodnesse and not for any merit or desert of ours Though we are miserable vile and wretched in our selves yet God is gracious and mercifull and doth dayly give us occasions to glorifie him and he doth use all means to bring us home again unto himself for he doth not delight in the death of a sinner but rather that he should repent and turn unto him neither doth he deal with us according to our sins nor reward us according to our deservings but hath paid a great prize for our redemption out of this miserable condition Concerning the Redemption of Man VVHen God saw man in this sad condition a lamentable spectacle of wofull misery then he took pity upon him a Ezek. 16. 8 and this time of his wretched estate was the time of Gods love to him for soon after his fall God made a gracious promise of Redemption to him b Gen. 3. 15 that the seed of the woman should break the serpents head This promise God did afterwards renew to the Patriarks which was concerning Christ the Lord that should come in his appointed time whom God did plainly reveal to some of the Prophets c Gal. 4 4 5 VVhen the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that are under the Law that we might receive the adoption of sons d 1 John 4 9 10 In this was manifested the love of God toward us because that God sent his onely begotten Son into the world that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his son to be the Propitiation for our sins e John ● 18 The onely begotten son of God who is in the bosome of his Father came down from heaven and assumed our nature and took upon himself the guilt of our sins to Redeem us from the curse of the Law from the dominion of sin and Satan and from the power of death f 1 Cor. 7. 23 Christ hath also paid an infinite price for our Redemption even his own most precious blood and the full vialls of Gods wrath were poured out upon him because he did undertake to satisfie the justice of God for our sins for thus saith the Prophet g Isa 53. 6. The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all h Acts 12. 7 8 Now let us gird up our loines with Peter and binde on our sandals i Eph. 6. 15 and let our feet be shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace to be fitted and prepared for our deliverance out of prison for the chains of our sins are taken off and the prison doores are opened to set us at liberty and to redeem our souls from destruction This Work of our Redemption is so great a mystery that the blessed Angels do adore it with much admiration but they cannot comprehend it it was decreed in heaven before the world was and all the three Persons in the holy Trinity had their severall operations in the effecting of it k 1. John 4 14. The Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world And
THE COMFORT OF THE SOUL Laid down by way of Meditation upon some heads of Christian Religion very profitable for every true Christian Composed and writen by Iohn Anthony of London Doctor of Physick Psal 19. ver 14. Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be alwayes acceptable in thy sight O Lord my strength and my Redeemer LONDON Printed for G. Dawson and are to be sold by John Mountague at the Sign of the White-Dragon in Duck-Lane 1654. I have perused these Divine Meditations Intituled the Comfort of the Soul and do find them to be so Orthodox and solide pious and profitable that I do approve them well worthy to be Printed and Published JOHN DOVVNAME To the Right Honourable Dame Elizabeth Dygby Baronesse of Geshal in the Kingdom of Ireland Grace Mercy and Peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ HAving nothing of mine own that is worthy your Acceptance to express my Cordiall respects and thankfulnesse for those many favours which I have received from you I have taken some spirituall Receipts out of Gods sacred Dispensatory which I am bold to present or Dedicate to your Honour because they are speciall Cordialls for the spirits and precious Antidotes against the evill of sad times Wherein also you will finde some Balm of Gilead for the cure of all spirituall diseases if it be applyed close to the part that is ill affected with the hand of Faith If these things do relish well with your spirituall Palate then I am confident you will take sometime to ruminate hereupon for I know it hath been your constant course to Meditate something dayly of Divine and heavenly things which did strongly induce me to present these unripe fruits of my labours to you which I gathered in mine old age for mine own use according to my first Intention Though I have thus laboured out of my Calling as I am a Physician yet I am not out of my profession as I am a Christian Now seing this Work is come to Publick view I do humbly desire your favourable construction of the frailties that are in it and that you will be pleased to vindicate it from carping spirits for I did not write it to please their curiosity but to refresh and comfort those that do any way stand in need of spirituall consolation If any thing herein can give you any reasonable satisfaction let God have the honour and glory of his own Work and I shall greatly rejoice therein and shall still remain your much obliged Servant JOHN ANTHONY To the READER COurteous Reader if thou dost live under the Crosse and art sensible of these sad times or if Gods visitation be upon thee which makes thee to sigh and groan under the burden and pressure of thy sorrowes so that thy soul desireth comfort and thy spirits want spirituall refreshing and heavenly consolation then I have written this Treatise for thee which I present to thy view wherein thou shalt finde the true way how to demean thy self under Gods visitation how to bear thy crosse with a contented patience how to make the burden of thy sorrowes more easie or how to be delivered out of them if God seeth it to be most for his glory and best for thy good also how to refresh thy spirits and comfort thy soul in what kinde soever it is afflicted Here also thou shalt finde that many of Gods dear servants have suffered as great afflictions as thou canst and yet God did send them comfort and deliverance but specially what Christ thy Saviour hath suffered for thee and what benefit and comfort thou maist have by it if thou canst draw it to thy self and make a particular application of it to thine own sorrowful condition without which it will yeeld thee but small consolation in thy miseries If thou dost meet with any thing here that will fit thy present condition either for edification or for comfort thou must ruminate well upon it to suck out the spirituall jui●e to imprint it in thy minde and to bring it close home to thy heart that it may comfort thy soul and cure thy wounded Spirit David found great comfort when he did Meditate on the Word of God My soul saith he shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse and my mouth shall praise thee with joyfull Psal 63. 5 6 lips when I remember thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night watches And it must needs be so for this is a duty which God requireth and he takes speciall notice of those that do practice it to pour down his blessings upon them as he did upon Isaack who went out dayly into the field to Meditate Gen. 24. 63 64. upon the wonderfull Works of God and then at that very time God sent him a vertuous Wife If the Spirit of God goeth along with thee in thy holy Meditations they cannot but be comfortable to thy soul thou wilt then conceive aright of the secret and hidden things of God and thou wilt see the infinite wisdom ond power of God in all the Creatures his goodnesse and bounty to thee in them and a glympse of the Majesty and glory of the great Creator God Almighty His holy Spirit will also open thy heart to let in whatsoever spirituall good thou reapest by thy pious Meditations For if thou lookest upon the creature and doest not Meditate something of God in it thou dost look upon it in vain and if thou readest or hearest his Word Preached and dost not settle it upon thy affections by ruminating upon it thou canst not edifie thy heart nor comfort thy soul thereby So likewise if thou doest read any thing in this Treatise that is comfortable to poor dejected Spirits it will not comfort thee if it be not well digested in thy heart and applyed to thine own soul If thou art not acquainted with this holy Duty I have given thee some directions how to perform it and if thou doest first practise it upon thy self to meditate upon thine own condition what thou art by nature and what by grace and considerest seriously in thy thoughts what way thou walkest what steps thou treadest and to what end thy wayes do tend thou wilt not onely come to the knowledge of thy self but thou wilt also learn how to Meditate profitably and comfortably upon God thy Creator upon Jesus Christ thy Redeemer and upon the Holy Ghost thy Sanctifier and Comforter I conclude with this saying of an ancient Father Nothing is found more sweet in this life nothing is conceived more comfortable nothing doth so separate the affections from the love of this world nothing doth so fortifie the minde against temptations nothing doth so stir up man and further him to every good work and duty as the grace and benefit of Divine Meditation and heavenly contemplation Thine in the Lord Christ JOHN ANTHONY A Table of these severall Heads contained in this Book MEditation is a Duty
we have conflicts with pleasure and plenty sometimes with afflictions and penury with sin and temptations with pain and sicknesse and with the terrours of death all which for a time may hinder the freedome of our spirits that we cannot compose our thoughts nor settle our hearts for holy Meditations but we shall recover our selves again by the power of Christ whose Grace is sufficient to hold us up against all opposition whatsoever and to set our hearts in such a frame as is fitting for the performance of this holy Duty Wherefore d Eph. 6. 11 12. seeing we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknesse of this world and against spirituall wickednesse in high places we must put on the whole armour of God that we may be able to stand against the wiles of the devill e 2 Cor. 10. 3 4. Though we walk in the flesh we do not war after the flesh for the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the Knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ The same power that pulleth down the strong holds of sin in us and the sinfull imaginations of our mindes will also raise up the affections of our hearts to devout and pious Meditations of the heavenly and spirituall things The more free we keep our hearts from worldly cares and our mindes from sinfull thoughts the fitter we shall be for this holy Duty the better we shall perform it and we shall reap the more comfort by it But unregenerate men are not acquainted with this spirituall armour they have no power against their spirituall enemies they have no weapons fit for this warfare for untill they are brought out of their naturall condition into the State of grace have interest in Christ by faith they are so clogged with their worldly affairs so wedded to earthly vanities and so intangled with the corruptions of their nature that there is no room in their hearts for any holy contemplations and they have no grace that can give them strength to fight against the allurements of the world the intisements of the flesh and the cunning stratagems of the devill How dreadfull it is to Meditate on God NOw prepare thy heart and all the faculties of thy soul by those former Directions and by prayer to meditate on a Neh. 1. 5. Psal 47. 2. Dan. 9. 4. the great and terrible God who in himself is infinite in Majesty and eternall in glory and the great Creator of heaven and of earth whose Essence and Being is incomprehensible for thou canst not but stand confounded at the consideration of his greatnesse which the blessed Angels are not able to comprehend Wherefore empty thy heart of all sinfull cogitations and lay aside all thy worldly cares that thou maist freely set thy minde upon God to contemplate with all fear due reverence something of his excellencies and greatnesse so far as God hath revealed himself and according to the measure of that heavenly knowledge which he hath given thee let thy Meditations of these things be guided with good understanding and let them be bounded with Christian sobriety lest thou be swallowed up in the depth of this infinite and incomprehensible Ocean Let thy faith regulate thee in thy Meditations for what thou canst not comprehend thou art bound to believe because thou dost deal with the hidden things of God b Joh. 5. 6. who is Truth it self Thus meditate with dreadfull reverence on the high and mighty God for as he is infinite in his Essence so he is also infinite in all his Divine Attributes Wherefore content thy self with what he hath revealed in his Word and by his Works and do not curiously search into those things which are not yet to be known but are sealed up in his own secret counsell untill he shall be pleased hereafter to reveal them c 1 Sam. 6. 19. The Lord smote the men of Bethshemesh with a very great slaughter because they looked into the Ark of the Lord which was not lawfull to any save onely to Aaron and his sons Beware then that he smite not thee if thou presumest to look further into his secret counsells than Christ hath revealed If we duly consider the transcendent majesty and glory of God it will cast great dreadfullnesse into our Meditations for it will dazel the eye of our understanding far more than the brightnesse of the Sun beames can dazel the eyes of our bodies which may strongly move us to a dreadfull fear and reverence of him d Job 37. 22 for as Elihu said to Job with God is terrible majesty Also Job speaketh thus of God to his three friends e Job 13. 11. Shall not his his excellency make you afraid and his dreadfall upon you f Gen. 28. 17. How dreadfull saith Jacob is this place and it was because God was there Thus saith the Lord of hosts by his Prophet g Mal. 1. 14. I am a great King and my Name is dreadfull among the Heathen h Heb. 12. 21. When God gave the Law at Mount Sinai the sight was so terrible that Moses himself said I exceedingly fear and quake i Exod. 34. Moses did earnestly desire to see the face of God to whom he gave this answer that no man could see him and live but yet to satisfie his request and to shew him in part what a terrible and glorious God he was he told Moses that he should see some piece of his glory but he added that it was needfull he should hide himself in the hole of a rock and be covered with Gods own hand for his defence while God in some measure of his Majesty did passe by in his glory And when he was past God took away his hand and suffered him to see his hinder parts onely which was notwithstanding most terrible to behold k Dan. 7. Daniel also did see in a vision the Majesty of this great and terrible God which is recorded in the sacred Scriptures to teach us thereby what a Prince of Majesty is and how dreadfull in his judgements when he is offended Now consider what maketh it so dreadful to Meditate on God it is not onely the consideration of his incomprehensible and Divine Essence or the transcendent glory of his sacred Majesty or his infinite Power whereby all creatures all principalities and powers are under his subjection but also the consideration of the frailty and weaknesse of our nature and the vilenesse of our condition by reason of our many sins wherewith we have offended him and justly incurred his high displeasure and have deserved his wrath and fury to be poured out upon us whereby we stand in continuall fear of his judgements and of the severity of his justice For
to the people of God in their march through that hot Countrey We are by nature under the spiritual bondage of sin and Satan which is far worse than the Egyptian bondage was to the Israelites and we have no means to be brought out of it but by an almighty power and if God doth deliver us yet we are so ignorant of the way to the heavenly Canaan that we cannot set one step toward it except the holy Ghost doth put a spiritual Light into our understanding to teach and instruct us in the right way to heavenly happinesse And because we shal meet with many spiritual enemies so long as we march thorough the wildernesse of this world the holy Ghost will so protect and defend us that they shall neither hurt our souls by their power nor keep us out of Canaan by their subtilty or malice He will guide and direct us into all holy duties he will give us holy desires and true endeavours to do the will of God and to walk humbly before him in this present world Also the holy Ghost doth protect us from the heat of Gods wrath by working faith in us to lay hold upon the merit of Christs death for the pardon of our sins and by conferring grace for the sanctification of our lives So likewise he doth refresh and comfort our fainting spirits with the sweet dewes of heavenly consolations and he doth mollifie and soften our obdurate and stony hearts with those influences of grace that descend from him that we may p Joel 2. 28 Gal. 5. 22 23. be fruitfull in all good works This holy Spirit doth also quench the fire of sin which otherwise would inflame the whole man with sinful lusts And lastly the holy Ghost doth purge and cleanse the soul from the filth of sin as water washeth away the filth of the body This doth God promise by his Prophet q Zech. 36 25. I will pour clean water upon you and you shall be clean from all your filthinesse and from all your idols will I cleanse you Wherefore we ought seriously to ruminate upon these operations of the holy Ghost for we cannot find the right way to the heavenly Canaan by all that nature or humane learning can afford us we cannot over power our spiritual enemies by our own strength we have no holy desires and no ability in our selves to any thing that is good nothing that is in our power can keep us from the wrath of God and we have nothing that can refresh and and comfort our afflicted spirits But here we shal find that the holy Ghost wil be our guide to this heavenly Country he wil be our Protector against all adversary power and he wil be a true comforter to us in all our sorrowes and upon all occasions in all conditions of life He will bring us unto Christ and wil firmly unite us unto him by faith r 1 Cor. 10. 1 2. for as the ancient Fathers were all under the cloud and all passed thorough the sea and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea so we are baptized unto Christ by the holy Ghost that our sins may be washed away in his blood and that we may be sanctified by this spirit of grace to live in true holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes If we can thus Meditate on the holy Ghost it wil be exceeding profitable and comfortable to our souls Thirdly the holy Ghost is resembled to the pillar of fire that conducted the Israelites by night out of Egypt toward the Land of Canaan Now we must consider that such as are the properties of fire such are some of the operations of the holy Ghost in our hearts Fire is the most pure Element and purifies all other elements it doth naturally mount upward it is bright and shining and giveth light to all dark places It doth also warm and comfort every part of our bodies and it is the most active of all the other elements it purifies the gold and burnes away the drosse Thus it is with the holy Ghost for he is essentially pure in himself and purifies every soul from dead works into which he comes he wil not suffer any unclean lust or evill concupiscence to have dominion where he dwelleth and he wil raise up the cogitations of the minde and the affections of the heart to mount upwards in heavenly contemplations Also whereas by nature Å¿ 1 Cor. 2. 10 11. we cannot receive the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto us neither can we know them because they are spiritually discerned God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit for the holy Ghost wil put a spiritual light into our hearts to discern the deep things of God he wil also inflame our affections with an holy zeal to the glory of God and will make our love fervent to the truth So likewise the holy Ghost wil melt our hard and stony hearts and make them tender and gracious flexible and yielding to every holy duty And whereas our hearts are naturally bound up in unbelief and heavy and sluggish to any thing that is good t Psal 119. 32. the holy Ghost wil so inlarge them that with all cheerfulnesse of spirit and willingnesse of minde we shall run the way of Gods Commandements Wherefore now if we have found any of these operations of the holy Ghost in our hearts we shal be in some measure purified and refined from our sins and pollutions we shall have some of the drosse of our corrupted nature consumed and the heavenly graces of the Spirit of God wil shine forth in the integrity of our lives and conversations Also we shall have some spiritual light to guide our darkned understandings in the knowledge of God and of his wayes some fervency in our Prayers some love to the truth and some holy zeal to the true worship and service of God we shal delight in his Law we shal study to do good works and it will be the desire of our hearts and the comfort of our souls to Meditate day and night in the Commandements of God If these Operations of the holy Ghost which are resembled to these two pillars cannot easily work upon us if these cannot raise up our affections to heavenly contemplations and to be forward and ready to every good duty in the service of God then surely we are exceeding dull and stupid and we have great need to pray earnestly that the holy Ghost will be pleased to come with his unresistible power and break our hard stony hearts and molifie this extreme obduracy that is in them with his suppling grace that so we may more easily take the impression of his sanctifying grace in us Consider further that these two pillars which did lead the Israelites out of Egypt were a visible sign of the presence of God with them to conduct them in the way to Canaan to protect and defend them from all their
Prophet b Isa 59. 2. But your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have made him hide his face from you that he will not hear For God will not regard us untill the pardon of our sins be sealed to us by faith in the bloud of Christ and we can have no comfort in God nor hope of his grace and favour untill we have some assurance of the remission of our sins by true repentance and turning unto God For thus saith the Prophet c Isa 56. 3 4 5 7 Th●ugh we have been strangers to the people of God and as fruitlesse as a dry tree yet if we now k●●p his Sabbaths and choose the things that please him and take hold of his Covenant he will give us a place in his house and an everlasting name that shall not be cut off he will bring us to his holy mountain and make us joyfull in his house of Prayer and all our offerings shall be accepted Though Christ by his death and resurrection hath perfectly wrought our redemption from all our spirituall enemies yet we have not the full vertue and power of it in this life for we are often foiled with the temptations and suggestions of the devill our sins do prevail against us our sinfull lusts and unruly passions do often over-power us d Rom. 7. 19 20 23. and the corruptions of our unregenerate part do war against the Law of our minde and bringeth us captive to the Law of sin so that the good which we would we do not but the evill which we would not that we do it is then no more we that do it but sin that dwelleth in us Wherefore we can feel the power of our redemption but in part so long as we live in the flesh but it will be fully perfected when our corruptible shall put on incorruption and our mortall shall put on immortality and that cannot be untill the generall resurrection at the last day when all the enemies of our salvation shall be subdued For death will seize upon our bodies and will keep them in the prison of the grave untill Christ shall come with power and break open the prison doores by the power of his resurrection and raise them up to immortality and to eternall glory and then our Redemption will be made perfect to us and this e John 6. 54 Christ hath promised and he doth plainly manifest it to us for when he had shewed his disciples some signes and tokens of his second comming which were forerunners of the generall resurrection he said f Luke 21 ● 28. That when they see those things begin to come to passe then they should look up and lift up their heads for their Redemption draweth nigh whereof we are as fully perswaded by faith in this life as if we did already injoy it Wherefore let nothing weaken our faith in our Redemption for we may confidently rest upon it though we have it but in part in this life for Christ will perfect it to us at the last day when he will raise up our bodies out of the dust by his Almighty Power which is the last part of our Redemption Here is matter of great comfort if our hearts do piously ruminate upon the transcendent love of God to us in our Redemption g John 3. 16 For God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Redemption is freely offered to all yet none can have the assurance of it but such as believe in Christ and belong unto him through the election of Grace these and none but these shall have the benefit of it for they are within the New Covenant h Heb. 9. 15 which Christ hath procured for them by his death these onely shall receive the promise of an eternall inheritance and shall be advanced to an higher degree of felicity and blessednesse than they had in Adam before his fall Adam had but a dimme light of his Redemption yet it was sufficient to ground his faith upon it and the promise of grace was very mystically delivered to him but the Patriarks and Prophets had a clearer evidence of it God hath given us a full demonstration of our Redemption because Christ is come in the flesh and hath finished the whole work of our Salvation by treading down all principalities and powers under his feet and by subduing to us all the enemies of our salvation and because death is our last enemy which will undoubtedly seize upon our bodies we do assuredly believe that by the power of Christs Resurrection who is our head our bodies shall be raised up out of the dust at the last day for Christ hath redeemed our bodies from death as well as our souls from the devill that both in soul and in body we may live and reign with Christ for evermore Wherefore if God hath been so rich in goodnesse to us and if his grace and love hath been so free as to redeem our souls from hell and our bodies from the grave even when we were his enemies and when he saw nothing in us but misery then let us with the Prophet David say thus with our selves i Psal 116 12 13 14 What shall we r●nder unto the Lord for all his benefits towards us how shal we pay our vowes which we have made to him in our Baptism or at any other time we will take the cup of salvation and call upon the Name of the Lord we will be his servants and will offer to him the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving Thus let our thoughts and the Meditations of our hearts be alwayes upon the love of God to us and not upon the vanities of this world let them be set upon the joyes and happinesse of heaven and not upon earthly transitory pleasures and delights let us study how to live a sanctified life unto God and a blamelesse life to our neighbours and not how to fulfill our own sinfull desires and the evill concupiscence of our flesh otherwise we have received the grace of God in vain and we can have no good assurance of our Redemption by Christ for God bestoweth his grace upon us and hath given us the light of his Spirit that we should walk as in the light and not in darknesse that our conversation should be holy and pure and not corrupted and defiled with uncleannesse but that we should perform holy obedience unto God and serve him with pure affections Now let our hearts and souls devoutly Meditate upon the great Work of our Redemption for it was far greater than the Creation of the whole world God did but say the Word let such a thing be made and it was made he did not disrobe himself of any part of his glory in the creation of any creature but rather his glory wisdom and power was magnified in the making of the least of them
incline the will or else we cannot receive it All heavenly gifts and spiritual graces come from God which the Father is sometimes said to give according to this of James ſ Jam. 1. 17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above and cometh down from the Father of lights Sometimes also the Sonne is said to give them for thus saith the Apostle t Eph. 4. 8. when he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men that is he gave not onely places of dignity and of authority to some in his Church but also he gave them all spiritual indowments of grace meet for their several places and functions But these heavenly graces are properly wrought in our hearts by the holy Ghost how and when he pleaseth We must therefore crave his help we must wait his time and attend upon the means until he shall be pleased to work grace in us and we must resolve without delaies or excuses u Heb. 3. 7. to accept of grace even that very day when God doth offer it and not to grieve his good Spirit by refusing the sweet tender of grace or by losing any opportunity wherein God may be glorified by this heavenly work of grace in us Wherefore Ps 8. 4 5. be not thou like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear which will not hearken to the voice of charmers charming never so wisely but when any means of grace is offered or when thou feelest a good motion in thy heart be ready to imbrace it for that is Gods call and then Christ knocketh at the door of thy heart x Rev. 3. 20. as he did at the door of the Laodiceans if thou dost presently open unto him he will come in to thee and will sup with thee and thou shalt sup with him but if thou deferrest it until the morrow thou knowest not whether he will knock again or not O what a bountiful and gratious guest dost thou lose if thou wilt not open thy heart when the Spirit of Christ knocks there either by the preaching of his Word by holy inspirations by his blessings by afflictions or by any other means whatsoever If thou belongest unto him thou wilt know his knock thou wilt know his voice thou wilt make hast and prepare the best rooms in thine affections to give him entertainment and thou wilt clear away all the filth of thy sins by faith and true repentance that he may come into a clean heart that nothing may displease or discontent him for he comes not to lodge with thee a night or two as a stranger or to sojourn with thee a moneth or a year and then to leave thee y Eph. 3. 17. but he will dwell in thy heart by faith z Joh. 14. 23 and will abide with thee for ever by his holy Spirit When he is come he will furnish his rooms with his own furniture he will perfume them with his own merits so that whatsoever issue from thence shall be a sweet savour well pleasing and acceptable to God he will also beautifie and adorn all the faculties of thy soul with spiritual and heavenly graces he wil heal and cure al thy spiritual diseases he will be a Prophet to thee to teach and instruct thee in the wayes of godliness he will be thy High-priest to make intercession for thee and to present thy prayers and oblations unto God his Father also he will be thy King to rule in thy heart with his scepter of righteousness and to subdue all the enemies of thy salvation Christ will feast thee at his own table with bread of life water of life and with heavenly Manna which are precious dainties and spiritual food for thy soul to feed upon and thy heart will rejoice and be glad in him Thou shalt also injoy a Gal. 5. 22 23. the fruits of his Spirit which are love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodnes faith meekness temperance and all that belong unto thee shall partake of the riches of his goodness and of his blessings b Ps 24. 7. Let thy gates therefore stand open that the King of glory may enter in and be thou as ready to receive him with all joy and gladness of heart c Luc. 19. 6. 9. as Zachaeus was to receive Christ when he was in the flesh who brought salvation to his House Be not thou like the spouse in the Canticles d Cant. 5. 2● who would not rise out of her bed of security to open the door of her heart to her beloved but suffered him to stand knocking and calling until his locks were wet with the drops of the night Now if thou hast any care of thy souls health study and meditate how to observe the times and means of grace and how to improve them to the glory of God and to thine own spiritual gain Canst thou observe the times and seasons of the year for the fruits of the earth and hast thou no care to take the opportunities that God gives thee for grace learn of the marriner who will hoyse up sail when the wind serves for him and when God offers thee grace do thou raise up thy heart and affections to receive it If thou refusest his gracious goodness to thee herein it is no wonder if thou art barren of true vertue and piety if thy soul be without spiritual comfort in thy sorrows and afflictions and it is no marvel if thou art fruitless in all good works If thou wilt make the true gain of thy time thou must diligently attend to the holy ordinances of God thou must thankfully receive his mercies and blessings thou must bear the Cross of Christ with patience and with meekness submitting thy self with all humbleness of spirit to the will and pleasure of God Also thou must repent of holy duties omitted as well as of sins committed and howsoever God shall deal with thee at that very time make an holy use of it for the glory of God and for the comfort of thy soul If the devil hath deluded thee with false pretences or hath lulled thee asleep in his bed of security so that thou hast slighted the means of grace and hast vainly spent thy precious time without any spiritual or heavenly gains thou must labour with all Christian diligence to recover it again which thou maist do by the gracious help and assistance of the holy Ghost herein for thou hast no ability in thy self to get out of these dangerous snares of the devil or to redeem the time that thou hast lost To conclude if thou dost desire to make the true gain of the time of grace thou must strive to remove out of thy heart whatsoever doth displease or dishonour God and whatsoever may hinder the operations of the holy Ghost and the current of grace to thy heart For if thy mind is carried after the love of the world after vain pleasures or sinful delights and if thou dost
our lives will be much the harder Time is not gained but lost which we spend without some fruits of grace and godliness which indeed is the true gain of time and therefore we should seek unto God while he may be found c Isa 55. 6. we should call upon him while he is neer otherwise though we seek him he will not be found and though we call upon him he will not answer nor be intreated Thus saith the Apostle d 2 Cor. 6. 2 now is the time acceptable now is the day of salvation But we have just cause to bewail our condition for the corruption of our nature doth so weaken us and the power of our spiritual enemies doth so prevail against us that we cannot break through such strong opposition as they make to hinder this holy work of grace in us I he devil doth cunningly disswade us from it the world doth strongly allure us to follow still the vanities of it and our own flesh doth dayly intice us to carnal pleasures and delights so that we can finde no time to make our peace with God or to improve the means of grace to his glory and to our own comfort Though we do sometimes strive against our sins yet we cannot overcome them or if one sinne be subdued another is ready to rise up against us also though we cannot actually commit a sin yet we may commit it in our sinful desires to it in a sinful remembrance of it in consenting to it or in suffering it to be done when by our place and authority we might hinder it We have also just cause to bemoan our selves for though we do labour for grace and do use all means for it to the best of our power and yet we cannot attain unto it Though it be thus with us yet we must still continue our best endeavours to oppose all the enemies of our salvation and we must still use the means of grace and wait upon God until he shall please to work grace in us by his Spirit also we must pray unto him with a faithful heart that by the omnipotent power of his grace e and by the rod of his strength which is the Word and Sprit he would make us able to overcome our corruptions by seasoning our hearts with grace to subdue the power of our sins by repentance to improve our time to the glory of God and also to break through the snares of the devil the world and the flesh Then God will so bless us in our pious indeavours that we shall prevail against all opposition and adversary power not by our own strength but by the might and power of Jesus Christ our gracious Redeemer f 2 Cor. 12. 9. whose grace and favour is sufficient for us and whose strength is made perfect in our weaknesse under whose banner we fight these spiritual battels for the honour of his great name Of Christ our Redeemer IF it be so that Christ is our Redeemer and hath wrought our redemption with his own blood and hath purchased for us a new Covenant and an everlasting inheritance in heaven as formerly in part hath been shewed also if we have all our strength and power from him against our spiritual enemies without whom we cannot stand against them nor break through the bands of death to injoy that heavenly inheritance which he hath prepared for us we must then know who Christ is what is the nature of his Person what is his power and strength and how he was qualified for this great work that we may have a sure ground to confide in him and to rest upon him as our Redeemer and onely Saviour Also we must know how he hath satisfied the justice of God for our sinnes how he hath conquered death hell and the devil and what price he hath paid for our ransom for without this heavenly knowledge and faith to apply it to our selves vve can dravv no comfort to our souls from Christ neither can vve have any good assurance that vve are freed from the curse of the Lavv that the justice of God is satisfied for our sins that sin hath no condemning power over us that the sting of death is taken away and that we are reconciled again unto the favour of God God hath revealed these deep mysteries to us in his holy Word that the meditations of our hearts may be enlarged upon them for our instruction and edification and for the comfort of our souls as God shall give light to our understandings by his blessed Spirit But as the Prophet saith a Is 53. 8. Who can declare his generation which was from eternity for Christ our Redeemer is the onely begotten Son of God b Joh. 1. 18. who is in the bosom of the Father and was promised and expected since the beginning of the world And when the fulnesse of time was come that God had appointed for his incarnation c John 1. 14 the Word was made flesh for d Heb. 2. 16 he took on him the seed of Abraham and personally united to his Divine nature a true humane body e Luc. 1. 31 32. of the seed of the Virgin Mary f Mat. 26. 38 which was indued with a reasonable soul and the holy Ghost did so sanctifie her wombe that he was born without sin either original or actual And though the humane nature of Christ was taken into his Deity whereby this union was never to be dissolved yet either nature had their whole properties and operations remaining still unconfounded and therefore he was true God and true man g Heb. 2. 17 like unto us in all things h Heb. 4. 15. sin onely excepted and those two natures made but one person in Christ i Mat. 28. 18 to whom God the Father hath given all power in heaven and in earth so that he commandeth and over-ruleth al created power whatsoever God did also give him three honourable offices that he might be every way fit to be our eternal Mediatour between God and us for God ordained him to be a Prophet to teach and instruct us to be a Priest to make intercession for us and to offer such a sacrifice to God for our sins as he would accept and to be a King to rule and govern his Church and also to rule in our hearts by his Spirit Christ being thus qualified hath fulfilled for us and in our nature whatsoever the Law did require of us and his righteousness is imputed to us by faith for our justification that no guilt of sinne might cleave to us in the sight of God When Christ did execute that part of his priestly office which was the offering up of his body a sacrifice for us no heart can conceive and no tongue can express the bitter torments which he suffered both in his soul and in his body to satisfie the justice of God for our sinnes and to purchase our freedome and redemptition out of the captivity
Jewes and therefore he will not refuse us Lastly consider that Pilate did highly honour our Lord and Saviour Christ when he wrote this Title to be set over his head upon the Crosse r Jon 2● 10. Jesus of Nazareth the King of the Jewes which was a title of great honour and not of shame and disgrace unto him Their manner was to set up a superscription to shew the crimes why a malefactor was put to death but Pilate could find no crime and no fault in Christ and therefore he wrote this superscription to clear his innocencie and to brand the Jewes with perpetual ignominie and shame to all generations for their malice and cruelty against him For though Pilate did not believe that Christ was a King and though he was perswaded by the chief Priests and by the people to condemn him and to put him to death yet God would not suffer him to be perswaded by them to alter the Title but to have it written in Hebrew Greek and Latine that all Nations and Languages might know the honour of his Person and the horrible wickedness of the bloudy Jewes in killing their King whom God had appointed and sent to be their Saviour and Redeemer also to make their name odious to all people as a just judgement of God upon them because they refused the sweet tender of his grace and mercy and killed his dear and onely Son Christ was brought to the lowest degree of his humiliation and now God doth begin to glorifie him and to publish his honour and his great Name by the highest authority to all nations and people and to the perpetual infamy and reproach of all his enemies to all posterity This honour was his due and God would not suffer him to loose it and thus God will do for us also If we are made the scorn of men if we suffer persecution fire sword or famine in a good cause and if we die upon this crosse yet God will manifest the integrity of our hearts and will give us that honour which is due to us as his servants and his children for if we drink of Christs bitter cup of sorrows we shall also drink of his pleasant cup of joy and consolation Wherefore if thou wilt have the meditations of thy heart upon the passion of thy dear and gracious Redeemer to be comfortable and profitable to thy soul thou must not look upon him onely in that despicable condition as he is now upon the crosse to the outward eye but with the eye of faith thou must look upon him as he is the eternal Son of God God and man and as he is dignified with all his excellencies and titles of honour for he was a Prophet and such a Prophet as did endow all the former Prophets with the spirit of prophesie whose Prophesies did chiefly concern him Also he was a Priest after the highest order whose Priesthood was eternal according to this of the Psalmist ſ Psal 110. 4. The Lord sware and will not repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck So likewise he was a spiritual King to rule his Church and in the hearts of all his elect and he did subdue all his enemies under him and he will also subdue all the enemies of his spiritual Kingdom in us If thou canst thus see the excellencies of Christ through his mean and contemptible condition and if thou canst believe that he is thy Redeemer and all-sufficient to be thy Saviour it will inflame the affections of thy heart with intire love to him because he hath humbled himself so low for thy sake it will make thee bend thine ear to his instructions for he will teach thee heavenly wisdom and how to walk in the paths of godlinesse he will also present thy prayers and all thy holy services to God his Father and then they shall be accepted and this will also work a reverential fear in thee to yeild all obedience to his commands If thou doest thus look upon Christ though he be upon the crosse it will give thee abundant comfort in thy sufferings exceeding much joy in the benefits which thou shalt have by his passion and it will stirre thee up to a thankful acknowledgement of his goodness and mercie to thee Now look upon thine own unworthiness and thou wilt admire the mo●● that Christ should so much humble himself to exalt thee that he should suffer so much smart pain and torment to free thee from everlasting torments and burnings in hell and that he should loose the comfort of his Deitie and the sense of his Fathers love to reconcile thee unto God and to make an attonement for thy sins Who were the Agents in the Passion of CHRIST VVE come now to consider what Agents there were in this doleful tragedie of our Saviour Christ how every one acted for his own ends how God did make the designes of the devil and of all his wicked instruments to work for his own glorie and how he did afterwards bring their wickedness upon their own heads The whole Passion of Christ and every circumstance of it was decreed from eternitie and the three Persons in the sacred Trinity were the first and principal Agents in this great work of Christs Passion for they decreed that Jesus Christ the second Person in the holy Trinitie should be sacrificed and made a propitiation for the sins of the world which was done at Gods appointed time For God the Father sent him into the world for this end and purpose and God the Son gave himself to be a ransome for us and assumed our nature that he might fulfil all righteousness and suffer the whole penalty of the Law for us also God the holie Ghost did give him all fulness of grace and power to bear the bitterness of his passion and thereby to conquer sin death hell and the devil and to give us power also over all the enemies of our salvation Though God was the principal Agent in the crucifying of Christ yet herein he had no evil intent or purpose and therefore he was without sin for he had a gracious and merciful end in it that his justice might be satisfied for the sin of man and that the redemption and salvation of all his elect might be wrought by the precious bloud and all sufficient sacrifice of his dear Son But the devil was the chief actor in the wickedness and crueltie of this sad tragedie whose end and design was to hinder our salvation by destroying our Saviour and this he did seek to bring to passe by wicked means and of malice to mankind and therefore as soon as he had his permission from God he raised up his wicked instruments for his hellish design First a John 13. 27. he entred into Judas and took possession there b Mat. 26. 25 16. who out of covetousness sold his Lord and Master to the chief Priests and Elders for thirtie pieces of silver
our souls when they are thirsty and dry heaven will then smile upon us though the world frownes the inward man will feel comfort and consolation though the outward man be miserably tortured and tormented with the vexations and miseries that are incident to this life Wherefore every pain and grief that we feel and every crosse and affliction that we suffer should make us have a greater desire to some of this water p 2 Sam. 23. 15. than David had to drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem which was by the gate Also if we will draw comfort to our selves from this heavenly Fountain we must then comfort the comfortlesse q Mat. 25. 35. we must feed the hungry visit the sick cloath the naked and relieve the oppressed then Christ will comfort us in our distresses and he will provide for us in our necessities r Psal 34. 10 The young lyons may lack and suffer hunger but we shall not want any good thing Christ was Å¿ Zech 13. 1 this Fountain which God promised should be opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleannesse and it was opened when this blessed Virgin saw the blood and water gush out of his side which was pierced with the Spear to take away the guilt of sin that doth wound our souls and to wash away the filth of sin that doth pollute and defile our consciences No darts of Satan can be so fiery against a poor sinner but this blood can quench them no wound can be so deadly or so deep in the soul but this blood can search it and cure it if it be rightly applyed by Faith whereof we may have an holy assurance by our repentance and newnesse of life Wherefore here is much comfort for a poor languishing soul that is doubtful of the pardon of his sins if his Faith can perswade him that Christ Jesus was crucified for him and that this Fountain was opened for his cure for without this holy perswasion nothing can truly comfort us in our spirituall afflictions Faith will give us this holy assurance if by the vertue and power thereof we can say with holy Paul t Gal. 6. 14 By the crosse of our Lord Jesus Christ the world is crucified to me and I unto the world Hereby we have power to mortifie our evill concupiscence and all our sinful lusts that they may have no dominion over us to lead us captive unto destruction Lastly we may learn by the Example of our blessed Saviour that it is a pious duty which God requireth for children to provide for their needy or aged parents according to their ability both in their life and at their death and this is part of that thankfulnesse which they ow to their parents and which God hath commanded them to perform for next under God we ow our selves and whatsoever we have unto them we had our being our breeding and our education from them can any expression of thankfulnesse then be too much for them If God hath blessed us with plenty and with increase it was for our parents sakes to relieve and succour them in their age and in their necessity or else it was because they were faithfull to God in his worship and service and therefore God hath poured down his blessings upon us their children as it hath been his usuall custome so to do Wherefore if God hath dealt bountifully with us and but sparingly with our parents we are both bound by the Law of God and by the law of nature to supply their wants according to our power As God hath communicated some part of his own honour to our Parents by giving them the Title of Father to preserve the preheminence which he hath given them over their children so he hath bound the children by a strict command to honour their Parents and to expresse it by their reverence obedience and thankfulnesse to them for what they have received from them which they cannot perform as they ought if they do withdraw any thing from their due honour and dignity or their helping hand from them in their necessity Children are not bound thus to honour their Parents onely in their minority or so long as they are under their tuition and government for the Commandement of God doth not limit it to these times but it gives the Father the Mother this honor so long as they have any child living and there is a promise of a great blessing annexed to this Commandement Children may come to be greater in worldly honours and preferments then their Parents and yet they have no priviledge against this Command of God Thus saith Paul u Eph. 6. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right and then he citeth Gods Commandement which bindes them to this obedience u Luk. 2. 51. Christ himself was subject to his Parents untill his heavenly Fathers businesse called him away and now at his death he takes order for his Mothers maintainance Wherefore if children do thus expresse their thankfulnesse to their Parents and do thus honour and obey them according to the Example of Christ then God will provide for them and their children and will perform his promise of long life and of blessings both temporall and eternall on the contrary God will curse the children that dishonour their Parents and are in this kind unthankfull to them both in this life and in the life to come The darkning of the Sun NOw behold how God did shew a miraculous sign of his high indsgnation against the cruelty of the bloody Jews and barbarous Gentiles to his onely Son and how much he did hate and abhor their abominable sin a Mar. 27. 45 For the Sun was then totally darkned at mid-day and so continued for the space of three houres which was a far greater darknesse than could be by any eclipse as if it had disdained to look upon and mourned to see such an horrible fact as was then committed in crucifying the Lord of glory Hereby also was signified how the glory b Mal. 4. 2. of the Sun of righteousnesse was then darkned c Isa 53. 2. There was no beauty in him and no comelinesse that we should desire him Christ was then in the extremity of his passion for the flood-gates of Gods wrath were set open upon him and the bright beams of his heavenly Fathers countenance were clouded from him which he could not regain untill he had fully satisfied his justice for the guilt of our sins which he had taken upon himself and which did most obscure his transcendent beauty which was naturally in him All this Christ hath suffered for us that God might look favourably upon us and that the guilt of our sins might be done away by faith in his blood also that the spots and pollutions of them might be washt away in the Laver of Regeneration and newnesse of life This miraculous
which was determined by all the three Persons in the holy Trinity before the world was he laid aside his Glory and humbled himself for that great Work which was decreed in the secret Counsel of God and to be wrought at his appointed time The first degree of Christs Humiliation was that he gave away the manifestation of glory of his Deity which he had with the Father in heaven which was his due from his first incarnation the bright beams whereof were clouded with his humanity for he took upon himself our flesh and was cloathed with our weak and frail nature and was subject to such humane passions and infirmities as might be without sin This was a great degree of Humiliation for the eternall King of glory to leave his glorious mansions in heaven and to come down and be with us men here upon earth and to take up his habitation in an earthly tabernacle which was subject to hunger thirst and heat and cold to pain torment and death it self The second Degree of his Humiliation was that he took upon himself the guilt of our sins and did undertake to fulfill the whole righteousnesse of the Law for us and to satisfie the justice of God for all the sins of his Elect not that his humane nature was polluted or stained with any sin For the holy Ghost did so sanctifie the Virgins wombe that he was conceived and born without Originall sin and he lived without any actuall transgression but our sins were imputed to him and therefore as the Apostle saith a Gal. 3. 13 He was made a curse for us Also b Tit. 2. 14. Christ gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works He gave his body and all the parts of it to the persecutors tormentors he gave his blood to be spilt and his life for the redemption of man he gave his soul to suffer anguish and sorrow c ●sa 53. 10. and to be a● of fering for sin also in some sort he gave his Deity by suffering most horrible blasphemies that were cast upon him d Acts 20. 28. and God purchased to himself a Church with his own blood This was a very low abasement of Christ when he left all his glory in heaven and came down to live here upon earth not in the nature of Angels but he cloathed himself with our flesh which was all stained and defiled with the guilt of our sins e Isa 53. 6. for God laid on him the iniquity of us all The third degreee of Christs Humiliation was that he was content with a mean condition of life here upon earth his birth and education was very mean he was exposed to wants and necessities to perils and dangers even from his infancy and after he began his Ministry he had no abiding place f Mat. 8. 20. he had not where to lay his head and he did the office of a servant to his own Disciple g John 13. 5 when he washed their feet for as the Apostle saith h Ph●l 2. 7. He made himself of n● reputation and took upon him the form of a servant Christ continually travelled from place to place to teach the people to heal the sick to cleanse the lepers and to cast out Devils he was often wearied often hungry and often thirsty Thus was his whole life full of sorrowes and full of afflictions and thus low did the eternall Son of God humble and abase himself to advance us and to perfect the work of our redemption Lastly in his passion he was made a scorn to the most abject of all the people and a derision both to Jew and Gentile he suffered both in his soul and in his body as much anguish pain and torment as the power of the divell and the malice of wicked men was able to inflict upon him And as if all this was not sufficient to humble him enough God himself did fiercely assault him for he kept all comfort from him when he was in his greatest extremity and his wrath went along with all his other sufferings When Christ had suffered to the full so much as the justice of God required in satisfaction for all our sins and that the work of our Redemption was perfectly finished then he commended his soul unto God and dyed upon the Crosse according to this of the Apostle i Phil. 2 8. He humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the crosse this kinde of death was most painfull shamefull and accursed Here is a short view of the humiliation of Christ for our weak understandings cannot reach to the depth of that which Christ suffered for us much lesse can we reach to the honour and dignity of his Person in his Divine nature which doth make his sufferings and his Humiliation far the greater If we do seriously meditate upon it with pious affections it will teach us to adore his sacred Majesty with reverence and godly fear to love him with a perfect love to serve and obey him with a pure and upright heart and to suffer any thing for his sake with a cheerfull minde Also if we have gained any grace by the death and passion of Christ it will teach us meeknesse of spirit and humility of minde though we have places of preheminence and authority above other men If God shall bring us down from an high degree to a mean condition of life we shall bear it contentedly because God is the sole disposer of all things and he can raise us to an higher degree if he pleaseth If what we have be too little for us and that we can improve more to the best advantage of Gods glory he will then in his good time bestow more upon us If our life be full of troubles and sorrowes the Humiliation of Christ will teach us k 1 Pet. 5. 6 7 to humble our selves under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt us in due time We may safely cast our care upon him for he careth for us l Psal 18. 35 His right hand will hold us up m Psal 17. 5 He will hold up our goings in his paths that our footsteps slip not n Cant. 2. 6. Christ also will put his left hand under our heads and with his right hand he will imbrace us Wherefore if we have this gracious humility of spirit it will produce these and many more blessed fruits to give us comfort in a troublesome and painfull life And when death comes it will be favourable to a meek and humble spirit and well-come to a good conscience if we be thus qualified it will bring us to our graves in peace and then we shall have a joyfull and a blessed resurrection Christ did willingly humble himself to the death for us why should we be unwilling to resign up our life unto him do we know no other happinesse or
in our affections Why are our prayers our praises and our thanksgivings so few and so seldome sent up to him Why are they so cold and so dull that they cannot mount up to him And why are our spirituall oblations so full of unbelief Do we think that Christ will intercede for us if we sin wittingly and willingly against God Will he procure our pardon if there be any accursed thing hidden in our hearts Will Christ present our Prayers to God if they proceed out of feigned lips And will he present our duties and services to God if they are performed with unbelieving and deceitfull hearts If we thus conceive of the intercession of Christ we delude our selves and indanger our souls to utter perdition If we did truly believe that Christ hath taken possession of that heavenly inheritance which is prepared for us our souls would be ravished with an holy desire to injoy it we would contemn the vanities of this world in comparison of that and our affections would not be carried after sinfull pleasures afflictions and crosses would not cast down and deject our spirits but we would live chearfully in the midst of all troubles and sorrowes because by faith in Christ we are made heirs of the kingdom of Heaven If that place be so perfectly pure that no unclean thing can enter there we should study to live piously and vertuously to the glory of God while we live in the flesh that we may have a sure hope to injoy it hereafter If a Kings Son that is heir apparent but to an earthly Crown should live like a base peasant and delight in the company of such as are of mean and low degree we wil be ready to say that he is unworthy of such an Inheritance Let us make this our own case and consider to what honour and dignity we are born by our adoption in Christ that we may not live in subjection to every base and sinfull lust as unworthy of that Inheritance which Christ hath prepared for us in the Kingdom of heaven Though our condition ●e mean in this world and our calling such as that we must converse with ungodly people as to the outward man yet the conversation of the inward man may be spirituall and holy c Joh. 17. 15 for Christ hath prayed his Father to keep us from the evill that is in the world that we may imitate here upon earth the blessed Angels and Saints in heaven by glorifying God and by our readinesse to fulfill his will and pleasure Thus saith the Apostle d Col. 3. 1 2 If we be risen with Christ we should seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God and there should our affections be set and not on things on the earth Thus we may have our conversation in heaven thus we may live a spirituall life upon earth and thus we may injoy the sweet communion of the blessed Trinity even in this life for God the Father will be gracious and loving to us in Christ as a Father is to his children God the Son will be righteousnesse sanctification and Redemption to us according to the nature of a Saviour to his elect people and God the holy Ghost will abide with us for ever in all difficulties and dangers according to the nature of a true Comforter A brief summe of the Exaltation of CHRIST IF we look now upon our beloved Saviour we may contemplate his great Exaltation with much joy and gladnesse of heart a Eph. 4. 8. for he is ascended up on high and hath led captivity captive b Rev. 19. 11 12 13 14 15 16. John doth describe him sitting upon a white horse because he doth judge in righteousnesse his eyes were as a flame of fire and on his head were many crownes he was cloathed with a vestare dipt in blood and his name is called the Word of God and the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses and out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword that with it he should smite the nations and he shall rule them with a rod of iron and he treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God and he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written King of kings and Lord of lords c 1 Tim. 6. 15 16. He is the blessed and onely Potentate who onely hath immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto whom no man hath seen or can see d Phil. 2. 9 10. God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every name that at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth e Rom. 9. 5. for he is over all God blessed for ever f Psal 2. 6 8 God hath now made Christ a King and set him upon his holy hill of Sion he hath given him the heathen for his inheriritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession Also the Apostle saith g Col. 2. 9 10. In Christ dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily and we are compleat in him which is the head of all principality and power We may yet consider further how God hath exalted Christ h Eph. 5. 23. For he hath made him the head of his Church i Eph. 1. 22. and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be head over all things to the Church Also k Psal 118. 12. Christ is become the head stone of the corner in this spirituall building and he doth so firmly binde every stone of this building to himself that they shall never depart from him Thus God is pleased to reveal in some measure how highly he hath exalted our dear Saviour after his great sufferings in his bitter passion but as we are not able to conceive what he suffered so our weak capacity cannot reach to that transcendent glory and Majesty which he now hath in the same nature as he was our Redeemer God and Man If God hath so highly exalted our glorified Redeeemer then we must study and Meditate with an holy zeal and pious devotion how to exalt him in our hearts how to prize him in our affections according to his excellencies and dignities how to have a reverent esteem of his worth how to honour and reverence him for his greatnesse and l Hos 3. 5. how to fear and love him for his goodnesse Also we must have a diligent care to obey his rule and government as he reigns and rules in our hearts by his Spirit that we may withstand and resist the temptations of the devill that the alluring vanities of the world may not insnare us and that no evill concupiscence may overpower us to make us dishonour our God or disobey the will of our dear Saviour If Christ be truly advanced in our mindes and thoughts according to the glory
will still reign in us though we cannot actually commit sin So likewise if we do spiritually feed upon the body and blood of Christ at the Lords Table we do then seal this Covenant of grace to our souls and we shall finde the comfort of all those promises that are contained in it This spiritual food was the fruit that the Spouse did feed upon h Cant. 2. 3. which was so sweet to her taste and we shall also finde the same sweetnesse in that blessed fruit But if we come to that holy Supper with mindes full of worldly cares or sinfull lusts and with hearts full of hypocrisie and unbelief we do eat and drink damnation to our selves We need not now envy at the prosperity of ungodly men their wealth is their snare to bring them into the paths of perdition their gain is their losse their pleasure will be their pain and their sweetnesse will be bitterness to them in the end so that what gain soever they make of this world if they do not also gain Christ with it they will finde no Advantage nor true comfort by it It is a shame for rich men and a dishonour for such as are in eminent places of authority if they are not truly vertuous and religious This heavenly gain is peculiar onely to the Children of God which they have onely by Christ and they seek it no where but of him Our Advantage and Gain by CHRIST in Death AS Christ is our spirituall gain in this life so he is no lesse our advantage and Gain in our death for he hath so conquered death that it shall neither sting us nor hurt us though we must at Gods appointed time yield and submit unto it Death of it self is a terrible enemy and destructive to our whole nature and it is the greatest part of the curse for the breach of the Law but Christ hath made it our friend and hath taken the curse from it so that if we live an holy and pious life in Christ we shall also dye a comfortable and a Christian death in him a Rom. 5. 12 By the fall of Adam sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned b Heb. 9. 2● Therefore it is appointed unto all men once to dye and after this is the judgement Thus saith the Psalmist c Psal 89. 48 What man is be that liveth and shall not see death Shall he deliver his soul from the hand of the grave Paul saith d 2 Cor. 4. 7 that our bodies are but earthen vessels which are soon broken or e 2 Cor. 5. 1. earthly houses which are soon dissolved The wise man hath no priviledge from death more than the fool one event happeneth to them both f Eccl. 2. 14 16 How dyeth the wise man As the fool saith the Preacher g Eccl. 3. 20 All go unto one place both high and low rich and poor all are of the dust and all turn to dust again For we must be conformed to Christ in his death if we desire to be conformed to him in his resurrection This is the way that every man must go before he can h Rom. 3. 23. come to eternall life for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God i Rom 6. 23 and the wages of sin is death If it be so that none can escape the stroke of death but that it will seize upon all flesh with an unresistible power we ought then to be alwayes well prepared that death may not come suddenly upon us to take us away in our sins before we have made our peace with God by faith in Christ and before we have got a modest and sober assurance of the pardon of our sins by true repentance that we may willingly part with this world and comfortably resign up our souls to God in full hope that we shall injoy a better life hereafters for evermore and this preparation for Death is onely by Christ Consider now that Christ will fit and prepare us for Death and will also fit a Death for us which shall make most for the glory of God and be most advantagious to us and he will so sanctifie it to us that our gain thereby shall be far greater than our loss If we dye in the Lord or for the Lord death may part our souls from our bodies but it cannot part our souls from Christ the soul may be parted for a time from a crazy diseased and corruptible body which is but an earthly Tabernacle but we shall receive the same bodies again in full strength in perfect beauty and incorruptible free from aches or diseases from decay or corruption Death may take our souls out of a world of miseries and calamities of sorrowes troubles and vexations but it will presently convey them into an haven of rest and into an heaven of happinesse where there is no labour nor toil no troubles nor sorrow but perfect peace and fulnesse of joy for ever and our bodies shall be raised up to injoy the same blessednesse with our souls k 2 Cor. 5. 1. Death may dissolve the earthly house of our tabernacle but we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternall in the heavens What if we lose our lands and possessions wherunto we are but tenants at will l ● Pet. 1. 3 4 We have a lively hope by Christ to injoy an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us Death may take us from our earthly friends but it will bring us into the society of the glorious Angels and blessed Saints in heaven and to be wedded to Christ our Beloved for ever to whom in this life we are but espoused Consider in the next place for our further comfort that we have this Advantage by Christ above other men when we are to dye m 1 Cor. 15. 55 56. that death hath nothing to hurt us sin hath no power to condemn us and therefore death cannot binde us over unto judgement Thus saith the Lord by his Prophet n Isa 42 ●5 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake and will not remember thy sins How can death then be any way hurtful to us As Christ hath taken away the guilt of our sins so he will also fasten all our good works and pious duties to our souls which will go with us to the grave o Rev. 14. 13 and will follow us to the day of judgement to be had in remembrance then before God This is a blessed Advantage that we have by Christ in death above other men that have no interest in Christ For their evil works cleave so close to their souls that they will follow them unto judgement to increase their torments in their condemnation Thus saith Paul p 1 Tim. 5. 24. Some mens sins are open before hand
going before to judgement and some mens follow after Zophar also saith thus of the wicked q Job 20. 11 His bones are full of the sin of his youth which shall lye down with him in the dust Consider also that Christ through his own death hath destroyed the Divell r Heb. 2. 14 that had the power of death so that now the Divel is most weak against the servants of God at the time of their death whereas to the wicked he is a strong enemy and will not be beaten from their beds-feet until he hath gotten their souls which are given him for a prey ſ Luk. 10. 22 But God hath appointed his holy Angels to attend upon his children when they depart out of this life and to receive their souls from the hand of death to carry them up into Abraham's bosome This is a great comfort and benefit to them when they are to leave this world and it is such a Gain as no naturall and unregenerate man can expect Wherefore t 2 Pet. 1. 10 we ought to use all care and diligence to make our calling and election sure and to make sure our union with Christ by faith that so we may live a sanctified life to the Lord and then let Death come how or when it will we shall undoubtedly dye in the Lord for death may come in an hour or in a moment when we look not for it it may break in upon us like a theefe in the night and take away our souls at unawares but this need not trouble us for if our life hath been holy and upright towards God our death cannot be but sanctified to us in Christ who wil keep our souls out of the power of the divel For if we have no other power to preserve them from destruction but what nature or common grace can afford us we are not able to encounter with death to make any advantage by it for the strength of nature will decay in us and common grace can give us no antidote against the sting of death it is onely faith in Christ which is the true Antidote against the terrours of death and against the power of the Divell nature can give us no balm to heal the wounds and putrid sores that sin hath made in our souls which must be cured before we go hence or else death will deliver them up in such a loathsome condition as that God will not accept them u Jer. 46. 11 But if we go up to Mount Gilead we shall finde balme there which will cure us of all our spiritual diseases For in vain we shall use many medicines if we neglect this balm which is the blood of Christ Jer. ● 22. There is balm in Gilead there is a Physician even Jesus Christ our blessed Redeemer that can recover the health of our souls and can rescue them out of the jawes of death and from the power of the Divel Now let the Meditations of thy heart be continually how to injoy Christ in thy life that thy soul may injoy him at thy death and how to make the true gain of thy time here that when death shall bereave thee of all time Christ may be then thy gain for ever If thou wilt have any hope of a comfortable death thou must labour to live an holy life unto God for a vicious and sinfull life can give thee no assurance of a blessed death and if Christ be not thy Redeemer in thy life he will not be thy Saviour at thy death to save thy soul from destruction and to bring it to eternall blisse Also if thou desirest to injoy heavenly felicity with the Saints of God thou must so live in the true fear of God that thou mayest dye in his favour and then death will open the door and give thy soul free passage to injoy it All the good that Christ hath procured for us by his death cannot be fully injoyed in this life but is reserved for us in heaven which we must come to possesse by death and therefore Christ will so prepare us for it with his sanctifying grace and will also prepare death for us that it shall not hinder us of these great benefits but be a speciall means to bring us to the full possession of them If we do well consider and faithfully believe that we shall have this gain by Christ in our death how will it strengthen us against the fears and terrours of death How will it confirm us in a stedfast hope of a joyful resurrection How will it stir up our hearts and affections to live as becometh the children of God that death may deliver up our souls unto him and how willingly shall we part with this world if we have an holy assurance to injoy a far better Inheritance in the world to come But Christ is no gain to unregenerate men in their death for as they would not know him in their life so he will not know them when they dye but will leave them to the power of death to binde them over unto judgement Death will bereave them of all their wealth and possessions it will strip them of all their rich jewels and precious ornaments it will lay their honours in the dust it will take away all their beauty strength and comelinesse which was their pride and it will leave them nothing but their winding-sheet neither will it give them any recompence for all their losses but shame and confusion pain and torment which never shall have end x Luk. 16. Thus it was with the rich man in the Gospel for death took him away from all that he had and left him not so much as a little water to cool his tongue when he was in the tormenting flames and thus it is with all rich men if they are not rich in faith and in grace But some are not willing to dye through humane frailty and weaknesse though they be in the state of grace y Mat. 26. 41. for the spirit may be ready though the flesh be weak Others have no assurance of a better life and therefore they would willingly keep this which they now injoy Some again have their hearts and affections so glewed to earthly things that the very thoughts of death is bitter to them Others also are loath to dye because they cannot provide for wife and children and they have none to take care of them Though God requires this Christian care of them yet we must not distrust the goodnesse of God whose eye of providence is upon all his creatures then much more upon those that belong unto him But when we have done our best endeavor in an honest calling to provide for them yet must leave them scant of means for their subsistance then God will have a special care of such Widows fatherles children therefore he hath given many strict commands concerning them and he hath made many promises of protection help and comfort to
t Acts 3. 8. If the creeple whom Peter and John cured leaped and praised God then we have much more cause to praise and glorifie God with joyfull hearts because Christ hath cured us of our spirituall lamenesse and of all other spiritual infirmities Also u Mat. 27. 54. if the Centurion when he saw the earth-quake and what was done at Christs death glorified God saying Truly this was the Son of God then ought we to glorifie God for our regeneration and for our Spirituall life and to say Truly this was the work of the Son of God We may dayly see the wonderfull works of God which he doth for his own glory to give us dayly occasions to honour and glorifie him and therefore this should be our continual practise to magnifie the Name of God according to this of Paul u Cor. 10. 31. Whether ye ear or drink or whatsoever ye do do all to the glory of God It is the continual work of the Saints and Angels in heaven to sing Hosanna to the highest and it should be our constant care here upon earth to glorifie God and to magnifie him for all his benefits mercies and goodnesse to us Thus we may come to have an holy assurance that we have a spiritual life in Christ if we do truly believe that he hath redeemed us by the merit of his blood from all our iniquities and from all the issues of sin also that he hath sanctified us and made us an holy people to himself not to serve the world the flesh or the divel but to serve the living God with a clean heart and pure affections So likewise if we finde a new principle of grace planted in our hearts whereby we are able in some measure to walk in the paths of godlinesse and so to steer all our actions that they may tend to the honour and glory of God the Peace of our consciences and the eternal comfort of our souls How to injoy true Happinesse ALL men desire to be happy but few seek it where it is to be found some seek it in morall vertues and natural endowments some in morall vertues and natural endowments some in worldly pleasures and profits others think to finde it in riches and honours but all come far short of the glory of true happinesse though they do obtain their desire in all earthly things for all that this world doth afford cannot make a man truly happy so much as in this life much lesse can it procure his happinesse in the life to come for there will still be something wanting or else something to imbitter their contentment in these things here below If we have honour or authority to day we may be in ignominy and disgrace to morrow if we have riches and plenty to day we may be exposed to want and penury to morrow sicknesse or pain will blast all our earthly contentments but when death comes it will bereave us of them all It is in vain therefore to seek our happinesse in these vain things or to put our confidence in them for our felicity doth not consist in uncertain riches or in transitory honours and pleasures which in themselves are nothing else but vanity and vexation of spirit But true happinesse is from above and it consisteth in the sweet fruition of God this happinesse we had in the state of innocency but we lost it by the fall of our first Parents and we have no means to recover it but onely by Christ Jesus our blessed Redeemer Wherefore a Rom. 8. 32. God took pity on our miserable condition and of his infinite mercy and love hath not spared his own Son but delivered him up for us all to work our redemption by his death and passion and to bring us again into the favour of God And as John saith b Joh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life so that we cannot have this true blessednesse but onely by Christ which is every where set forth in this Treatise Thus doth the boundlesse mercy and unlimited goodnesse of God appear in offering his dear Son to all that will come and imbrace him but some cannot come because they live not where the Gospel of Christ is preached which doth reveal him and must instruct them in the right way how to finde him some will not come but make excuses c Lu. 14. 1● 19. like those in the Gospel that were bidden to the great Supper for they are hindered by their worldly occasions others are wholly taken up with carnall delights and pleasures which keeps them from coming to Christ though they may injoy this true happinesse by him Consider now that riches honours and lawful pleasures are not in themselves simply evill for they are Gods good creatures and his blessings neither do they keep us from coming unto Christ but we may injoy Christ together with them if we do not immoderately covet them and use no unjust means to get them or put our trust and confidence in them to derogate from the honour of God If we injoy Christ with them he will sanctifie them to us for our comfort and will make them the first fruits of our happinesse whereby we may glorifie God and do much good to our neighbour otherwise they are but the shadow of happinesse and not the true substance of it which in the end will be bitternesse when we must give a strict account unto God how we have used them Many a poor man that injoyeth Christ is more happy in his poverty than they that abound in wealth and honour if they are without Christ for they injoy a contented minde peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost and they have an holy assurance that their joy and happinesse shall be made perfect in the life to come Wherefore he that hath Christ hath the Fountain of all true happiness and some streams thereof will flow to him even in this life But this is true which Christ saith d Joh. 6. 44 No man can come unto me except the Father which hath sent me draw him and we can have no part in Christ nor happinesse by him except we do truly believe in him This is the way that God himself hath taught us Whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have everlasting life Also this is the same way which Christ taught his Disciples e Joh. 14. 1 Yee believe in God believe also in me Our faith must be as firm as strong and as well grounded upon Christ as he is our Redeemer God and Man as it is upon God alone or else we cannot injoy him and all that happinesse which floweth from him Though we dare not approach neer unto God in regard of his divine justice yet through the mediation of Christ our gracious Redeemer we may have free accesse unto our God and we shall find him sitting
should highly prize our Faith because it is the principall grace that the holy Ghost worketh in our hearts and it maketh all other graces profitable and effectuall to us according to their severall natures Our repentance is not sound and true if it be not a fruit of Faith for we cannot truly humble our selves before God and freely confesse our sins unto him with a contrite heart if we do not look upon him as our mercifull Father by Faith in Christ that we may have good hope of the pardon of our sins neither can we shew any fruits of repentance by mortifying the corruptions of our nature but by the vertue and power of Christs death which we must draw to our selves by Faith and also by our regeneration to newnesse of life but by the power of his resurrection which we must also have by faith Our repentance can give us no holy assurance of the remission of our sins if we do not believe that Christ hath fully satisfied the justice of God for them all by the merit of his death g Lu. 21. 19 We cannot possesse our souls in patience when we suffer afflictions and tribulations and when we are under the crosse if we do not belive that Christ hath sanctified our sufferings to make them work for our good and that h Act. 14. 22 through much tribulation we must enter into the Kingdom of heaven We cannot love God with true filiall love nor obey him with filiall reverence and fear if we are not perswaded of our adoption in Christ by Faith i Mat. 10. 42 Our works of charity will not be accepted unlesse they are done in Faith as to the Disciples of Christ and then we shall not lose our reward Thus doth Faith put life and vigour into all other graces to make them effectuall and powerfull for our sanctification and for the spirituall comfort of our souls which is a special consideration to make us account of our faith as a principall Grace without which we can have no hope of salvation Thirdly k Mat. 13. 46 Faith is that Pearl of great price which the Merchant man in the Gospel found and sold all that he had to buy it for no humane learning no abilities of nature no wealth or riches can purchase we must renounce our trust in all these before we can buy this rich pearl for it is above the strength of nature to attain unto it and no power of men or Angels can procure it but we must have it of the holy Ghost he keeps it in his own power and we may have it of him without money and without price if in the true humiliation of our spirits we beg it of him But if we seek to buy this pearl of the world we shall pay dear for it and yet not have the right Pearl the lustre of these pearls can reach no further than to the object of the eye but the lustre of this true Orientall Pearl will shine in all dark places of woe and misery and it will pierce the very heavens to the eye of God himself Notwithstanding we do so highly value the pearls that nature or this world doth afford us that we will take any pains or be at any cost to gain some of them though they are of no worth to rest upon when we are in any spirituall misery whatsoever but as for this precious Pearl we are loath to part with any thing for it that by nature is near or dear to us or wherein we take pleasure and delight Thus we delude our selves with vain hopes and we rest upon that which cannot help because we know not the worth of true Faith to make it the instrument of our trust and confidence in God through Christ Let this consideration also advance the estimation of Faith in our hearts and affections because by it we gain Christ with all his excellencies and in Christ we gain the injoyment of the grace and favour of God and the assurance of eternall salvation Wherefore if this be the transcendent worth of true Faith we should then with all care and diligence seek out where it is to be had and labour by all means to obtain it If God seeth this holy desire in us he will then give us to understand by his Spirit that this rich pearl is no where to be found but in his own Cabinet also he will prepare our hearts and our will for it he will anoint our eyes with spirituall eye-salve to finde it and he will direct us to the means how we may obtain it First therefore we must know l Eph 2. 8. 8. that Faith is onely the gift of God which he bestoweth upon whom be pleaseth m Eph. 1. 19 and he works it in us by his mighty power Secondly God will give us hearts to seek it of him by fervent Prayer which is a powerfull means to obtain any thing of God Thirdly his Spirit will go along with the Preaching of his Word that if we hear it with sincere affections it may work Faith in us n Rom. 10. 17. for faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God Lastly when we have found this precious Pearl in his Word God will make us willing to buy it though we give for it our souls and all the faculties thereof our hearts our affections and all the parts of our bodies all which must be given up to the Lord or else we cannot injoy true faith and yet this is not all for we must empty our selves of all conceit of our own worth and quite renounce all confidence in worldly things all sinfull pleasures and every sin that presseth us down or that cleaveth close to us or else we cannot obtain this precious Pearl of God Fourthly we may conceive that Faith is of great estimation because it is so rarely found upon earth Thus saith our Saviour Christ concerning Faith o Lu. 18. 8. When the Son of man cometh shall he finde faith on the earth It is such a rare Jewell as is scarcely to be found few do injoy it and none can rightly esteem of it but onely such as have it p Rev. 2. 17. Christ promiseth to give a white stone to him that overcometh and in this stone a new name is written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it We cannot obtain this white stone of purity righteousnesse and true holinesse but by Faith whereby we are cloathed with the righteousnesse of Christ which is this white stone also we shall know this new name that is written in it for by Faith we shall put on Christ and shall be made new creatures to live as becometh new Christians in newnesse of life and in uprightnesse of conversation It is true which Paul saith q 2 Thes 3. 2. that all men have not faith for there is so much wickednesse fraud deceit and unbelief among men that true faith can hardly be found is it is
whereas both his soul and his body ought to be kept clean and undefiled that the holy Ghost may delight to dwell therein and that his heart and affections may be alwayes fit for heavenly contemplations So likewise if his chiefest study and care be to adorn his Profession of godlinesse onely with a specious form and fair outside of purity and holinesse and doth not faithfully strive to shew the power of it in his life and conversation he deludeth his own soul and doth feed it with the meer shadow of consolation and not with the substance of sound comfort which is onely found in the power of godlinesse If these or the like be the meditations of our hearts and if our affections keep at so far a distance from God and from all true goodnesse that we have scarcely any thoughts tending that way it is then no marvell if we misse the comfort which our souls desire when we are in any anguish of Spirit or under the buffetings of Satan and it is no wonder if we are sad and cast down and go mourning all the day long when the times are dangerous and full of troubles and we can hear nothing but complaining in our streets for hereby we have no support for our Faith no Anchor for our hope and no sure rock to rest upon that our souls may be truly comforted in the day of visitation Well may our spirits droup when we are peached with pain or sicknesse with wants troubles or afflictions if we ●rust onely to earthly means and comforts for we can finde nothing in them but vanity and vexation of spirit which will sooner increase our sorrowes than comfort and support us under them Wherefore if we will refresh our soul with true comfott when they are pressed with any sadnesse or sorrow we must fetch our comfort from above our delight must be to Meditate on heavenly things our hearts and affections must be taken off from these things here below and raised up to contemplate those things which concern the Kingdom of Heaven Christ and him crucified must be the subject of our Meditations if we will have any spirituall consolation and the holy Ghost is the onely means to convey this comfort to our hearts from Christ for he doth work all sanctifying graces in us which are as so many pipes wherein this heavenly liquor doth swiftly run down from Christ to us and Faith doth fasten these golden pipes unto Christ who is the Fountain of all true consolation Our repentance can give us no assurance of the Pardon of our sins unlesse Faith doth fasten it unto Christ our hope can give us no comfort in the Promises of God if Faith doth not fasten it unto Christ our patience can give us no comfort in our afflictions and tribulations except Faith doth fasten it unto Christ who hath sanctified all our afflictions by his own sufferings Thus Faith doth make these and all other saving graces effectuall and comfortable to us because it doth bring them home unto Christ Wherefore if thou hast any care of thy soul to comfort it when it is sad and heavy to feed it when it is hungry to refresh it when it is thirsty ruminate well upon these things and if thou hast any holy desire to be weaned from the love of this world and to be familiarly acquainted with God and with his Son Jesus Christ and to injoy the Communion of the holy Ghost to direct thee in the way to eternall happinesse thou must then daily exercise and practise this holy and Religious duty of zealous and devout Meditation in heavenly and spirituall things FINIS
and he will not suffer us to be tempted above the strength of our Faith but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that we may be able to bear it i Psal 37. 244 Though we fall we shall not be utterly cast down For our Lord Christ holdeth us with his hand and he will raise us up again by true repentance as he did Peter If the floud-gates of sorrows are set open upon us if the fear of troubles or the fear of death doth surprize us Christ will stop those sloud-gates and will comfort us at the hour of death or else he will give us an eye of Faith not to look upon them with a sad and heavie heart but to look up above them to that coelestial happiness which he hath prepared for us which no eye hath seen no tongue can express and no heart can conceive and to wait patientlie for it until Christ our ever blessed Redeemer shall reveal it to us which will be but in part in this life by Faith but fullie and perfectlie in the life to come according to everie mans capacitie Also if the Devil doth aggravate our sins and sers them before us in a multiplying Glass to the breaking of our hearts with godlie sorrow and to the anguish of our Souls which will make us shed many bitter tears for them as Peter did then Christ will look graciouslie upon us and will give us a double measure of true consolation by the assurance of the pardon and forgiveness of them We may further learn Instructions by Peters fall that if we give way to any sin the Devil will easily draw us unto higher degrees of sinning as he did Peter For at the first he did but simply deny Christ then he denied him with an oath k Mat. 26. 74. And at last he began to curse and to swear that he knew not the man and therefore we must be very careful to nip sin in the bud lest it lay us open to the Devils tyranny or stop the current of grace to our hearts whereby we shall not be able to recover our selves but rather we shall fall away more and more from God Sin is a spiritual gangrene to the soul which will eate into all the faculties of it if it be not in time cut off and killed by faith in the death of Christ and by true Repentance There is so much of the unregenerate part in the best of Gods servants as that they sin daily and the Devil is ready to take advantage upon every sin but he cannot easily fasten his sting upon their sins because they are not glued so fast to their hearts but that they may easily remove them wheras his sting will soon take hold of any sin that is rooted in us either by custome or by delight to wound our souls even to the death If we sleight the least sin it will bring us on to greater and if we be careless of small sins they will bring us to a custom of sinning which will quickly beget an habit of sin in us which is a fit ground for the Devil to work upon to keep us from returning unto God and to plunge us deep into the gulf of sin unless Christ in his abundant mercy doth touch our hearts with his Spirit to let us see from whence we are fallen and doth also give us grace to repent and return to the Lord and then we shall keep a more diligent watch over our selves for the time to come If we look upon our selves in Peter we shall see that we also are subject to the like delusions of the Devil we are as ready to deny Christ and to fall away from God as he was and the fear of trouble persecution or danger for Christ will prevail as much with us as it did with him to make us renounce our Profession and the Truth of the Gospel and to bring us to the brink of perdition but Christ will not suffer us to fall into that bottomless pit but will look upon us in mercy as he did upon Peter The Devil did delude Peter with vain hope that by this means he should escape the trouble and danger that might come upon him if it were known that he was a Disciple of Christ for thus he brought him into the ready way to lose the grace and favour of his Lord and Master Jesus Christ and into the way that leadeth to eternal destruction Thus also doth the Devil delude us if we trust him for he will promise all worldly wealth and earthly pleasures and will give to some a large portion of them in part of payment but in the end he will pay them with wormwood and gall which will be more bitter to them than Peters tears were unto him When we think our selves most strong then we are soonest overcome and when we presume most upon our own strength then we give the Devil the greatest advantage against us In prosperity we think our selves so strong that we cannot be shaken we are then secure and able to stand unmoveable against any opposition l 1 Cor. 10 22. but let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall For alas we know not the wiles of Satan we cannot conceive how many wayes he hath to deceive us What way shall we then take to escape these wiles and deceits whereof the world is full by his means There is a deceitful tongue against which David thus prayeth m Psal 120. 1. Deliver my soul O Lord from lying lips and from a deceitful tongue There is also a bag of deceitful weights which is alwayes seconded with a false tongue as the Lord speaketh by his Prophet n Mic. 6. 11 12. Shall I account them pure with the wicked ballances and with the bag of deceitful weights For the rich men thereof are full of violence and the inhabitants thereof have spoken lies and their tongu● is deceitful in their mouth The wise man telleth us o Prov. 14. 36. of a deceitful Witness p Prov. 23. 6. and that the dainties at a rich mans table are deceitful meat because they will easily intice us to gluttony Also q Prov. 27. 6. that the kisses of an enemy are d●cei●ful for they proceed from a false heart Who can discover the deceitfulness of his own heart or the delusions of his own fancy Every sinful lust and evil concupiscence doth delude us the world is full of deceit to beguile us wicked men have their wiles to vex the godly and such as are simple in heart r Num 25. 18. as the Midianites vexed the Children of Israel with their wiles wh●rewith they beguil●d them in the matter of Peor and in the matter of C●zby If we will be well fenced from these delusions which come from the Devil ſ Eph. 6 11. we must put on the whole Armour of God ●nd then we shall be able to stand against them all This holy Armour will
also defend us from all the delusions of worldly vanities and of our own sinful lusts howsoever the world the flesh or the Devil shall tempt us for it will preserve and keep us from the evil of their temptation Consider now that God who can bring good out of evil and can make all things work together for the good of his servants made Peters fall to be a means of exceeding great good unto him for thereby he did see the weakness of his Faith to keep him from presumption also unsusp●cted dangers to keep him from security he did see the malice and subtilty of the Devil to make him more careful and watchful over himself and he was the better able by his own experience to comfort and strengthen his brethren in their slips and falls but above all it made him love Christ his dear Lord with more int●re affections and to stick closer unto him for the time to come and to be more couragious in his cause Thus God turned the evil which the Devil intended for Peters hurt and made it conduce to h●s great good and thus also will he turn away the evil of our sins and of our temptations and the evil of our sorrows and sufferings and will make them advance his own glory and to be profitable to us if we can bath our sins in our penitentiall teares as Peter did Now we come to consider more fully how the divell went to work to make Peter fall so fearfully surely the instruments which he used were but the high Priests servants the words which they spake to Peter were of no great consequence they were neither threatning nor terrifying which in themselves could not so much afright him neither was it onely the sudden fear of danger or those wicked suggestions of the divel though they did work much upon him to make him doubt of the Deity of Christ now he saw him so contemptibly used of the Priests and Elders that made Peter fall so dangerously for he was in more danger of his life but a little before and yet he was not daunted but the divell knew that Peter was of an hot fiery spirit and violent in his passions which would easily make him say he knew not what and therefore he did chiefly work upon them which would transport him beyond the bounds of his reason and understanding and also beyond the bounds of grace and godlinesse All that went before were but as engines of warre which he fitted and prepated for this great battery By his suggestions he did undermine Peters faith and confidence in Christ to make way that fear might take the greater hold upon him that so he might by degrees bring him to such an hight of passion as should over-power his reason understanding faith and all spiritual grace that was in him and thus he brought him to deny to forswear and to abjure his dear Saviour even with execrations whom he knew to be now about the great work of mans salvation When Jesus was transfigured upon Mount Tabor t Mar. 9. 6. Peter spake he wist not what for sudden fear carried him beside himself Also when Jesus shewed his Disciples what he should suffer at Jerusalem u Mat. 16. 21 22 23. Peter began to rebuke him for it for he was carried beyond the bounds of modesty and sobriety with a preposterous zeal and a secret pride which the divell did stir up in him Thus was the violence of Peters passions the immediate cause of his downfall because they did exceed moderation and were not regulated according the holy will of God Thus also did the devill go to work with us to bring us to perditiou first he will set upon us with his subtile wiles and delusions then he will labour to undermine our faith and trust in God by his evill suggestions and wicked stratagems that we should not wait upon God for his help and succour in our distresses that we should not depend upon his Providence for relief and comfort in our wants and necessiti●s and that we should not rest upon him and upon his mercy in Christ for our salvation If all this will not serve his turn to bring us to confusion then he will assault us with feares and doubtings to disquiet the peace of our consciences he will frighten us with troubles and dangers for the profession of the Truth he will make us doubt of the Wisdome of God to direct us in all our affairs that we may trust to our own Wisdome with our God he will make us doubt of his power to deliver us when we are in any straits as he did Peter to make us trust to secondary meanes without God or else to use unlawfull meanes for our safety and he will make us doubt of the mercy and love of God when we feel the smart of his rod or the anguish of our spirits for our sins to make us think that God hath forsaken us that he hath cast us out of his favour and that there is no hope of comfort for us that so he may bring us into despair How was holy Job terrified with these doubts and feares in his afflictions Job 7. 13 25. when his bed did not comfort him his couch did not ease his complaint and when his soul chose strangling and death rather than his life thus it was also x Psal 77. with Asaph and others If all other meanes fail then the divell will work upon our passions and personall infirmities and he will kindle such a fire there as will devour our reason and understanding as will mislead our zeal and the affections of our hearts and will carry us beside our selves and beyond the limits of Piety and goodnesse If he meeteth with such men as will give way to their passions he will easily inflame them with fury and rage beyond all moderation or else he● will drive them down into discontent and despair which is very hardly recovered But by the wisedome of the Spirit of God we shall discover and escape his wiles and delusions by the power of grace we shall withstand his wicked suggestions by vertue of a good conscience we shall stand upright in the fear of troubles and dangers y Rom. 1. 1. 20. and the strength of our faith in Christ will carry us on cheerfully through all afflictions crosses and sorrowes and it will confirm our trust and confidence in God so that we shall find this of David to be true z Psal 22. 4 5. They that trust in the Lord shall be delivered out of all their troubles and shall not be confounded a 2 Kin. 1● 5. Hezekiah was delivered from Senacheribs great Army because he trusted in the Lord. If Peter had trusted in his Lord and Master Christ Jesus whom he knew to be the Son of God he had never fallen so dangerously as he did Faith will also bring us to the true fear of God which will enable us to over-power and