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A51840 A fourth volume containing one hundred and fifty sermons on several texts of Scripture in two parts : part the first containing LXXIV sermons : part the second containing LXXVI sermons : with an alphabetical table to the whole / by ... Thomas Manton ... Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1693 (1693) Wing M524; ESTC R13953 1,954,391 1,278

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with him by baptism unto death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life for if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the like●ness of his Resurrection 2. In Baptism you were entred by others therefore in grown years you must enter your selves by your own Consent Disciples of Christ. There is a Personal Act required of all that come to Age that they may stand to the Covenant and own what their Parents promised for them As the Parents of the Blind-man said Iohn 9.21 He is of Age ask him he shall speak for himself You did by your Parents according to God's Institution Covenant to renounce the Pomps and Vanities of the World and accept of Christ but now you are of Age you must speak for your selves then every one must come with his own Hand and enter themselves into God's Muster-Roll Isa. 44.3 4 5. I will pour water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will pour my Spirit upon thy Seed and my blessing upon thine Off-spring c. One shall say I am the Lords and another shall call himself by the Name of Iacob and another shall subscribe with his hand unto the Lord and surname himself by the Name of Israel As they grow up they shall engage themselves unto the Lord. Therefore Christianity is called a Confession and Jesus Christ is called the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Heb. 3.1 and every Christian is a Confessor Rom. 10.9 If thou shalt confess with thy mouth one that must openly own Christ and personally profess his subjection to the Gospel of Christ 2 Cor. 9.13 They glorifie God for your professed subjection unto the Gospel of Christ. Our Renunciation of Christ's Enemies and Profession of our Faith and Resignation to God should be made with our own mouths when we are able 3. This Personal Consent must not only be Outwardly professed but the Heart must be Renewed and the bent of it set towards God For we have not only to do with men but with God therefore Rom. 6.13 Yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead All this is spoken to shew the Vanity of those that say That there is no Conversion in the Church no Regeneration but by Baptism these are pernicious Errors that strike at the Root of Holiness As there is a Conversion from Paganism to Profession or Confession of the Name of Christ so there is a Conversion from Confession to Reality We are all bound to enter our selves as Christ's Disciples 2 Doct. They that enter themselves Disciples to Christ and give up themselves to him must follow him that is to say imitate his Example REASONS 1. In the General Because this is agreeable to the General Sence of Religion that is in the Hearts of all men Ea demum vera est Religio imitari quem colis This is true Religion to imitate what we worship otherwise men are not true to the Religion they do profess The Heathens were so bad because they were taught Iovem colere potius quàm Catonem to Worship Iupiter rather than Cat● So Christians are to be much better because it is Christ whom they worship therefore they are to be pure as he is pure 1 Ioh. 3.3 He that hath this hope in him purifyeth himself as he is pure A Man is not true to his Religion if he doth not prize that and follow after that which he conceits to be most excellent in his God To despise Holiness in Men and pretend to love it in God is gross Hypocrisie Reason will tell us that the first Cause should be the highest Rule that the Divine Essence and Being as it is the beginning of all Beings so it should be the Rule of all Perfections II. There are many Special Reasons why Christ should be propounded to us as our Pattern and Example whom we should follow and imitate 1. Because he is a Pattern of Holiness set up in our Nature It would discourage us to consider of the deep Ocean of the Deity rather we are taught to coast it in our Passage to Heaven by the Banks of Christ's Example He came down from God not only to restore us to God's Favour but to set us an Example 1 Pet. 2.21 Leaving us an Example that we should follow his steps The Life of Christ is a living Rule Religion exemplified a visible Commentary on God's Law The Angels obeyed God and we are referred to their Example in the Lord's Prayer Thy Will be done on Earth as it is done in Heaven but this could not be so encouraging as when it is done by one in our Nature 2. Because there are many advantages by this Pattern in our Nature As 1. Our Pattern is more compleat than if God had been our Pattern There are some Graces wherein we cannot be said to resemble God and therefore we must look for a Pattern elsewhere as Humility Faith Fear Hope Reverence Obedience none of these things are in God for he hath no Superior and these things imply Inferiority and Subjection There are some parts of Holiness which stand in a Conformity to God others which stand in a subjection to God such as Man oweth to God as his Superior which hath no resemblance to any thing in God's Nature for God is not subject to any But Knowledge Wisdom Justice Mercy Love Purity we have them in a lower degree some shadow of them Now in all these Christ is our Pattern Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart in all things that have respect to Suffering and Subjection in Patience and Self-denyal Our Rule was perfect at first but not our Pattern 2. It is an engaging Pattern We are engaged by the Rule of our Obedience but much more by Christ's Example The Practice of Christ maketh every Duty lovely to us for the Disciple is not above his Lord. Masters many times to shame their Servants will take the work in hand which they grudge at Iohn 13.14 If I then your Lord and Master have washed your Feet ye ought also to wash one anothers feet Shall we forbear to follow such a Leader 3. It is an encouraging Pattern Partly as there is an efficacy in this Pattern as with the Gospel or Law of Christ there goeth along the Ministration of the Spirit so also with the Consideration of his Example It is not a bare Moral Inducement but it is accompanied with a real Influence of the Spirit Christ doth not only bless to us his Doctrine but his Example he hath purchased Grace that we may do as he hath done before us he hath divided his Spirit and shed it abroad among his Disciples Every Duty is sanctified by his subjection to it all his Paths drop fatness and the way to Heaven is made more easie because he hath walked in it
other Sins or to feed a Lust and therefore we had need to deny it as it is Lust. 2 dly You should deny them as worldly Lusts so you must abstain from them not serve them as they are stirred up by worldly Objects they keep us from better Employment and therefore Grace teacheth us to deny them as they tend only to such a vile purpose Many Arguments there are 1. Whatever is for this World must be left on this side the Grave Pomp Pleasure and Estate must be left behind us Job 1.21 Naked came I out of my Mother's Womb and naked must I return thither There is no carnal Pomp and Pleasure in the next World Here we bustle for Greatness but Death ends the Quarrel Like foolish Birds we seek to build strong Nests when to morrow we must be gone Open the Grave and look upon the Reliques of Man's Mortality thou canst not discern between the Rich and the Poor the King and the Peasant all are alike obnoxious to Stench and Rottenness Those Desires that carry you out to the World must be mortified A Mill-wheel runs round all the Day and at Night it is in the same place So whatever we gain and purchase in the World it must be left at Night when we go to Bed when Death finds us and in the same place at Death we are as naked as we came into the World 1 Tim. 6.7 For we brought nothing into the World and it is certain we can carry nothing out A Man's Wealth doth not follow him but his Sins do his Iniquity will find him out Consider at Birth a Man is contented with a Cradle and at Death with a Grave yet here we join House to House and Field to Field Isa. 5.8 as if the whole World could not contain us 2. As they are only for this World so our abode here is but short and uncertain and therefore if it be worldly Lust it should be less prized for it lasts but for a time Within a very little while those that are most potent powerful and shining in the Splendor of the World shall be turned to Dust and Ashes God hath made Life short for many wise and merciful Reasons that the time of our Labour might not last too long He hath made us to enjoy himself and because he loveth the Saints he would have them the sooner with himself and would not be long without their Company and that we might love eternal Life therefore this Life is short and that he might gratify the Saints for he that hath a Journey to go would pass it over as soon as he can God makes their Journey as short as is convenient for his Glory and to shame wicked Men because they delight in that which is but of a short continuance but their Torment is Eternal The Pleasure of Sin is but for a Season but the Torments of Sin are for ever and ever therefore this should put a check to your Desires it is only for a World that passeth away nay the Lusts of this World pass away 1 Iohn 2.17 The World passeth away and the Lusts thereof The time will come when we shall have no lusts to these things it begins at Sickness but at the Day of Judgment we shall have no relish of these things and when the whole World is burnt up it will be our torment that we have prostituted our Affections to such low and unbeseeming things we shall see the Vanity when it is too late Men will have little love to the World then 3. If they be but worldly Lusts they should not be cherished were they never so durable Why Because this is not our Happiness and our Rest. Carnal Men have more of the World Christ committed his Purse to the worst of his Disciples Of the other he saith They are not of the World even as I am not of the World John 17.16 In this World God is most liberal to the worst therefore here we should not set up our Rest. Look as it is said of Abraham Gen. 25.6 that he gave Gifts to Ishmael and to the Sons of Keturah but he gave the Inheritance to Isaac Wicked Men have their Portion but not the Inheritance God will not be in their Debt therefore they have Gifts Therefore saith a Christian Why should I cherish these worldly Lusts this is not my Portion but the Portion of others From Men of the World which have their Portion in this Life Psal. 17.14 The World is Satan's Circuit he compasseth the Earth It is the Saints Slaughter-house they shed the Blood of Saints and Prophets Rev. 16.6 It is the place where God is dishonoured They are favoured and loved most by the World whom Christ hath rejected and past by 4. Worldly Lusts do hinder us from our Work We were made for another World and this Life is lent us for a while to look after Heaven We cannot drive on those two Cares at once for the World and Heaven too as a Man cannot look with one Eye to Heaven and with another to the Earth therefore why should we indulge worldly Lusts Who would lose a Crown to be owner of a Dunghil And will you forfeit Heaven and the Joys of God's Presence for worldly Conveniences Lust hinders your care of Heaven It is true a temperate and religious use of the World furthereth it but worldly Lust doth take off your Heart from God and Heaven and unfits it for it so that your Heavenly Desires are hindered 5. In a sense worldly Lusts do hinder us of the Comfort of this World Want encreaseth with Enjoyment as the Fire encreaseth by laying on more Fuel The more we enjoy the more we desire so we do not enjoy what we do possess The more we have the more we want so that a covetous Man neither enjoys this World nor the World to come 6. If it be worldly Lust then take heed of it for thou art as thy Love is If thou lovest this World thou art a worldly Man if thou lovest God thou art a godly Man if thou lovest Heaven thou art a heavenly Man A Man is not as his Opinion is but as his Affections are A bad Man may be of a good Opinion but a bad Man can never have good Affections The Soul as Wax receives the Impression from the Object Thou art a Person of the World if thou lovest the World Take a Looking-glass and put it towards Heaven there you shall see the Figure of Heaven the Clouds and things above put it downward towards the Earth you shall see the Figure of the Earth Trees Meadows Fruits So doth the Soul receive a Figure from the things to which it is set if the Heart be set towards Heaven that puts thee into a heavenly Frame if thou appliest it to earthly Objects thou art a Man of the Earth 7. The more we mortify these worldly Lusts the more we prevent Affliction We might prevent the bitterness of the Cross if we would
submit to any condition for his glory Some that profess his name will suffer nothing for him If they may injoy him or his ways in peace and quietness well and good but if trouble arise for the Gospel's sake immediately they fall off The most yea the best have a secret lothness and unwillingness to condescend to a condition of trouble and distress for the Gospel Now to these I will but propound these three considerations 1. If Christ had been unwilling to die for us and suffer for us if the same mind had been in Christ what had been our estate and condition to all Eternity without his sufferings we should have suffered eternal misery If you would not have Christ of another Mind let the same Mind be in you 2. We cannot lose for him as much as he hath done for us 2 Cor. 8.9 Ye know the Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ that though he was rich yet for our sakes he became poor that we through his poverty might be rich 3. We are gainers by him if we part with all the World for his sake Mark 10.29 30. There is no Man that hath left House or Brethren or Sisters or Father or Mother or Wife or Children or Lands for my sake and the Gospel but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time Houses and Brethren and Sisters and Mothers and Children and Lands with Persecutions and in the World to come Eternal Life Oh then do not stand upon terms The same Mind or Spirit answerable to Christ was that of David 2 Sam. 6.22 I will be yet more vile than thus Christ became vile for us made himself of no reputation and shall we be flouted out of our Religion If he had disdained to indure grief and sorrows and stood upon befitting terms what had become of us 2. Humility We are far inferiour to Christ and shall we stand so much upon our reputation Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in Heart Learn of me not to make Worlds or work Miracles but to be contented with the lowest place the meanest service to be any thing and do any thing to bring glory to God and that not out of necessity but choice Mat. 20.28 Even as the Son of Man came not to be Ministred unto but to Minister It is brought to check aspiring or affecting domination in the Church They that love the preheminence would be great and high seem to dislike Christs proceeding especially those that rend and tear all to advance themselves or to grow greater in the World See that magnificent preface to the History of Christ's washing his Disciples Feet Iohn 13.3 Iesus knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands and that he was come from God and went to God Poor Worms that are but three degrees distant from dust and nothing how do we stand upon our terms Christ when his own thoughts were most filled with his own glory doth the meanest office Surely considering Christ's humility we should no more over-value our selves nor desire high esteem with others nor affect preheminence nor undervalue and despise others 3. More exact obedience Christs condescention was a special act of Grace and Love but it was also a signal act of obedience It is so called in the 8th verse He humbled himself and became obedient to death even the death of the Cross. It was done in pursuance of the Fathers command and elsewhere Heb. 5.8 9. Though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered And being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him By the multiplicity of his sufferings he learned obedience and the impression is according to the Stamp and Seal Christ came to be the Leader of an obeying People 4. Self-denial as well as obedience Preferring a publick Interest the glory of God and the good of Souls before his own glory as God and the Interests of that natural Life that he assumed Rom. 15.3 Christ pleased not himself and Iohn 12.27 28. Now is my Soul troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour Father glorifie thy name That was enough if God was glorified Every Christian should be thus affected Phil. 1.20 That Christ may be magnified in my body whether it be by life or by death 5 The last lesson is contempt of the World and all the glory thereof Christ teacheth us this lesson by making himself of no reputation two ways 1. The example of his own choice The Lord of Heaven and Earth despised and neglected the glory and riches of this World He passed through the World to sanctifie it as a place of service but chose not pomp of living nor the happiness of it lest we should chuse it as our rest and portion They are not of the World as I am not of the World Iohn 17.16 Those that are dearest unto God must look by crosses and trials to be fitted for another World If a Man say never so much for contempt of the World yet live in the love of it his saying is nothing But Christ would be a pattern of his own doctrine Contempt of the World is a lesson of great consequence Salvation lieth upon it 1 Iohn 2.15 16 17. Love not the World neither the things that are in the World if any Man love the World the love of the Father is not in him For all that is in the World the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eye and the Pride of Life is not of the Father but is of the World And the World passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the Will of God abideth for ever Whether we are high or low full or kept bare it concerneth us all to learn it Though we flow in wealth we should be as having nothing and sit loose from the Creature If we are poor we must count grace a preferment Jam. 1.9 10. Let the brother of low degree rejoyce in that he is exalted But the rich in that he is made low because as the flower of the grass he shall pass away There is required of all an hearty preparation for when they are not called to a patient enduring of afflictions for Christs Name Phil. 4.12 I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need This is of an hard digestion to a Natural Man Now Christs example is a great help to us to check our worldly desires let us not affect greater eminency in the World than Christ had And to check the vanity of fulness or our carnal complacency that it may not be a snare to us 1 Tim. 5.6 The Woman that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth Christ was a Man of sorrows do you Profess Christ and yet are
and so degenerate lest a Desire be turned into a Lust and its vehemency withdraw the Heart from God As we know natural Heat from Unnatural it is so temperately dispersed that the Constitution of Nature is not disturbed or oppressed by it but unnatural Heats oppress Nature So Desires as long as they do not disturb the Soul they are not hurtful but when they exceed their Bounds they are to be under the Coercion of Reason 1 Cor. 6.12 All things are lawful for me but I will not be brought under the Power of any He that will do all that he may will do more than he should It is good to keep at a distance from the Power of Sin not always to walk on the Brink lest we become Slaves to Lust. Secondly Take one Distinction more of these Lusts. It is intimated by the Apostle 1 Iohn 2.16 All that is in the World the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eyes and the Pride of Life This is the Sum and Contents of the corrupt World Let us see the meaning and then make some Observations on the Place All that is in the World You will say How can the Apostle speak thus There are Sun Moon and Stars and glorious Creatures in the World why doth the Apostle instance only in the Sink and Kennel of the World I answer The World is taken for the corrupt World all that is of Price all that is of Account with carnal Men all that takes up their Care and Thoughts is Lust and Vanity either the Lusts of the Flesh the Lusts of the Eyes or the Pride of Life He doth not speak of the natural World which is full of glorious Creatures but of the corrupt World which is opposite to the Kingdom of Christ that 's full of Lusts and Sins But let us see a little particularly what are the Contents of this World 1. The Lust of the Flesh. 2. The Lust of the Eyes 3. The Pride of Life 1. The Lust of the Flesh. Flesh is sometimes taken in a large sense for corrupt Nature for the whole Dunghil of Corruption that we brought with us into the World And the Lusts of the Flesh for the workings of this Corruption the reaking of this Dunghil whether in the Understanding by Thoughts or carnal Counsel or in the Will by carnal Desires so it is taken at large But here it is taken more strictly for the Corruptions of the sensual Appetite or for the immoderate Desire of soft and delicate Living and for Sensuality or the intemperate use of Pleasures Meats and Drinks and such things as gratify the Flesh. 2. The Lusts of the Eye some expound by Curiosity others by Wantonness Indeed the Eye is the usual Broker of Temptations the Eye lets out the Lust and lets in the Temptation all kind of Lusts make use of it But I suppose Covetousness is here intended or an inordinate desire of Profit When we look upon the Bravery of the World or upon Money or any thing that pleaseth this kind of Corruption the Eye seduceth the Heart as soon as we look upon a thing This is charged upon the Eye Eccl. 1.8 All things are full of labour Man cannot utter it the Eye is not satisfied with seeing Prov. 27.20 Hell and Destruction are never full so the Eyes of Man are never satisfied All strong Desires look out by the Eye especially insatiable Avarice 3. The next part of the corrupt World is Pride of Life so called because it cannot be kept in but is manifested in our Lives or rather because 't is a Sin of a diffusive Nature that spreads it self throughout the whole Life of Man Whereas other Sins are confined and limited he ascribeth an universal and unlimited influence to Pride The Lusts of the Flesh they are but for the Flesh to content the Body the Lusts of the Eye there he noteth the Instrument the Eye purveyeth for the Heart but Pride of Life there he ascribes an universal and unlimited Influence and calls it Pride of Life because it taints every Action it serves it self of every Enjoyment it mingles with other Lusts the whole Life is but Sphear enough for Pride to discover it self Other Vices destroy only their Contraries Covetousness destroys Liberality Drunkenness Sobriety but Pride destroyeth all it runs through all Enjoyments Wit Strength Beauty Riches Apparel Learning Grace There is nothing so low but it yields Fuel to Pride the Hair which is but an Excrement is often hung out as a Bush and Ensign of Vanity And there is nothing so high and sacred but Pride can abuse it like Misseltoe it groweth upon any Tree but most upon the Best Well then all worldly Lusts are reduced to these three Heads for he says All that is in the World Usually we understand by Worldliness nothing but Covetousness or an inordinate Desire of worldly Profit but the corrupt World is of a larger extent Pride is a worldly Lust and so is Sensuality or a love of Pleasure For look as the Ocean is but one yet several parts of it have divers Names so Worldliness is but one Sin yet having divers kinds it hath several Names Those that mind Honours are guilty of Worldly Lusts Pride of Life Those that mind Riches are guilty of Worldly Lusts the Lusts of the Eye Those that are voluptuous and mind Pleasure are still guilty of Worldly Lusts the Lusts of the Flesh. This is as one saith the World's Trinity the Roots of all other Sins against which we should bend the main Endeavours of our Souls You do nothing in Mortification till the Axe be laid to the Root of these Sins Sensuality Covetousness Pride 1. The Lusts of the Flesh viz. Sensuality or an inordinate desire of Pleasures It is the Happiness of Beasts to enjoy Pleasure with more Liberty than Man can and without Remorse of Conscience and therefore a Heathen could say He is not worthy the Name of a Man qui unum diem velit esse in voluptate that would spend one day in Pleasure Other Sins deprive us of the Image of God but the Lusts of the Flesh deprive us of our own Image they unman us of all Desires These bring most Shame because it is the lowest basest Act of Self-Love and the matter of them is gross and burthensom and they do emasculate and quench the Bravery of the Spirit and embase it and keep the Soul at the greatest distance from God and spiritual Employments How can they look after God and Heaven whose Hearts are sunk in their Bellies The Lusts of the Flesh quench the Vigor of Nature how much more do they hinder the powerful Operations of the Spirit Iude 19. Sensual not having the Spirit The Spirit is divine and active and raises the Soul to higher things but sensual Persons have no Radiancy of Graces nor Vigor of Gifts Nay in some sense this is at the bottom and is the Root of every Sin it is the Devil's Bait and the Sauce of
it is the great Work of Grace to cure this Disposition to take us from the World first our Hearts then our Bodies It is made an Effect of the new Birth 1 Iohn 5.4 Whatsoever is born of God overcometh the World And 2 Pet. 1.4 By which we are made Partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the Corruption that is in the World through Lust. Heavenliness follows Grace there is something Divine a higher Birth than that we receive from Adam else we should live as other Men do There is the Spirit of the World and the Spirit of God now natural Men are endowed with the Spirit of the World they use their Souls only as a Purveyor for the Body to turn and wind in the World to feed high to shine in worldly Pomp to affect Honours and great Places these things we learn without a Master we bring these Dispositions into the World with us Therefore to deny worldly Lusts is to row against the Stream to roul the Stone upward to go quite contrary to the Course and Current of Nature When the Apostle speaks of the new Nature he calls it a putting off concerning the former Conversation the Old Man which is corrupt according to the deceitful Lusts Ephes. 4.22 2. Custom which is another Nature Carnal Affections are not only born with us but bred up with us we are acquainted with them from our Infancy and so they plead Prescription Religion comes afterward and therefore very hard it must needs be to renounce our Lusts because they have the start of Grace The first Years of humane Life are merely governed by the Senses which judg of what is sweet and not of what is good whence it cometh to pass that when a Man is come to that Age wherein he beginneth to have the Use of Reason he can hardly change his Custom and alter his Course of Life and therefore continueth to live as he hath begun still the Senses act in the first place Earthly Contentments are present to our Sense the other only to our Faith these are before our Eyes and we still see the Need and Use of them We know how hard it is to break a Custom especially if it yield any Pleasure or Profit Ier. 13.23 How can ye do Good that are accustomed to do Evil 3. Example increaseth Sin though it doth not cause it At first Sin is natural it is not caused by Imitation but yet Imitation doth much encrease Sin Isa. 6.5 I dwell in the midst of a People of unclean Lips that 's a Snare certainly So we are born worldly and the greatest part of those Men with whom we do converse they are all for present Satisfaction There are many that say Who will shew to us any good Psal. 4.6 The Multitude are for worldly Wealth and Profit A mortified Man is rare one that renounces Interest and Contentments is a Wonder in the World 1 Pet. 4.4 They think it strange that you run not with them to the same Excess of Riot Therefore this is a great Snare to the Soul we are in Danger to miscarry by Example as well as by Lust for Men will say Why should not we do as others do there are but a few that are otherwise given and the World thinks them to be mopish precise and singular The greatest part seek worldly Good We easily contract Contagion and Taint one from another and learn to be carnal and worldly There are few heavenly and mortified Christians and Men think these do thus and thus and hope to be saved we that have the same Nature learn the same Manners surely there is some what in the World or else these wise Men would not follow it so earnestly 4. Satan he joins Issue with our Lusts and makes them more violent he finds the Fire in us and then blows up the Flames Therefore carnal Men are said to walk after the Prince of the Power of the Air in fulfilling the Will of the Flesh and the Mind Ephes. 2.3 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the Course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the Children of Disobedience Among whom also we all had our Conversation in times past in the Lusts of the Flesh fulfilling the Desires of the Flesh and of the Mind Satan hath a Hand in it he presents Objects poisons the Fancy and stirs up those corrupt and carnal Motions therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 7.5 Lest Satan tempt you for your Incontinency He marks our Temper and to what we are flexible and pliable what is our Sin and then he joins Issue with it when Satan seeth our carnal Affections run that way he makes an Advantage of it As when the matter of a Tempest is prepared the Devil joins and makes it more terrible and violent so he doth deal here with our Corruptions when he seeth our Hearts strongly carried out either to the Delights Pleasures or Honours of the World he blows up the Fire he finds in us into a Flame Well then to deal with Nature Custom Example Satan this is hard All these plead for worldly Lusts. IV. Upon what Grounds and Encouragements are we to deny worldly Lusts How doth Grace teach us to deny them partly by way of Diversion partly by way of Opposition and partly by way of Argument Discourse and Perswasion 1. By Diversion acquainting us with a better Portion in Christ. The Mind of Man must have some Oblectation and Delight Love is a strong Affection and cannot remain idle in the Soul it must run out one way or another Look as Water in a Pipe must have a Vent therefore it runs out at the next Leak So we take up with the World because it is next at hand and we know no better things Well then Grace for Cure goes to work by Diversion Why should we look after these things when better are shewed to us in Christ Grace acquainteth us with Pardon of Sin with the Sweetness of God's Love in Christ with the Comfort of Forgiveness with the spiritual Delight that is in Communion with God with the Hopes of Glory And look as the Woman of Samaria John 4.28 when she was acquainted with Christ left her Pitcher so when Grace acquainteth us with Christ and draws out the Stream of our Affections that way the Course of them is diverted and turned from the World why should you look after these things when you have a better Portion Rom. 13.14 There the Apostle describes this Diversion or turning the Stream another way Put ye on the Lord Iesus Christ and make no Provision for the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof If Christ be put on and take up the Heart if he be delighted in as the Treasure of the Soul Lusts will not engross so much of our Care and Esteem Get Christ as near the Heart as you can for those that are acquainted with him and his Sweetness with Pardon Peace
and Grace they will lose their Savour and Relish of these things It is an ill Sign when we have not lost our Savour and Taste of carnal things it is a Sign we are not much acquainted with Christ. It is no wonder for a Man that knows no better Fare to love coarse Diet and so it is no wonder that one that never tasted of the Sweetness of hidden Manna should long for the Garlick and Flesh-Pots of Egypt 2. Grace goes to work by way of Opposition it planteth opposite Principles in the Heart and maketh Use of an opposite Power It planteth opposite Principles We have a new Divine Nature and so escape the Corruptions of the World through Lust 2 Pet. 1.4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious Promises that by these ye might be Partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the Corruptions that are in the World through Lust. Lusts follow the Nature as the Nature is so are the Desires The Old Man is full of deceitful and carnal Lusts and the New Man is full of spiritual and heavenly Desires then it makes Use of an opposite Power of the Help and Supply of the Spirit of God Gal. 5.16 Walk in the Spirit and you shall not fulfil the Lust of the Flesh. There are two Principles Flesh and Spirit that are always warring one upon another and that weaken one another The Spirit as a never-failing Spring of holy Thoughts Desires and Endeavours doth dry up the contrary Issue and Spring of Corruption So Rom. 8.13 If ye through the Spirit mortify the Deeds of the Body ye shall live The mortifying of the Body of Sin must be done through the Spirit a natural Man may see better but without the Spirit 's Help he can do nothing All the Reason in the World will not tame Lust We may declaim against it but nothing in Heaven or Earth will change our Dispositions or work out our Corruptions but only the Spirit of God We have by the Spirit not only Direction but a continued Influence and Supply of Power 3. Grace goes to work by way of Argument and Perswasion Grace out-reasons and out-pleads Lust and so it cannot obtain a Grant from the Soul but is denied The chief Argument which Grace urgeth is the Unsuitableness of Lust to our Condition that so it may shame the Soul Those things that become us while we are Children as Toys and Rattles will not become us when we are Men so certainly those things that suited well enough with us while we were mere Men become us not when we are Christians 1 Pet. 4.1 2 3. He that hath suffered in the Flesh hath ceased from Sin that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the Flesh to the Lusts of Men but to the Will of God For the time past of our Life may suffice us to have wrought the VVill of the Gentiles when we walked in Lasciviousness Lusts Excess of VVine Revellings Banquettings and abominable Idolatries Rom. 13.11 And that knowing the time that now it is high time to awake out of Sleep It is high time to leave worldly Lusts. For a Man after Grace to be addicted to Lusts it is a Relapse into a spiritual Disease and in all Diseases Relapses you know are dangerous as a Man that falls into a distempered Heat is recovered out of a Feaver 1 Pet. 1.14 As obedient Children not fashioning your selves according to the former Lusts in your Ignorance These were your former Lusts when you were under spiritual Distempers and were only fit for you then But how are they unseemly and unsuitable to our Condition 1. They are unsuitable to our Privileges and to our Interest in the Death of Christ Rom. 6.2 How shall we that are dead to Sin live any longer therein He argues not ab impossibili but ab incongruo it is an unfit thing for such to live in Sin We disparage the Death of Christ when we are not the better but the worse for it Hath he redeemed us from Sin that we might yet serve it Did he humble himself for our sakes that we should be proud Did he put such Contempt on the World that we should loosen the Reins to worldly Lusts Was he at all this Pains to make us worse You hereby put a Contumely and Reproach upon Christ's Death and disparage his Purchase 2. It is contrary to the Example of his Life We do not worship the God of this World nor Mammon but Christ Christ by his own choice hath put a Disgrace on the World he chose a mean Estate not out of Necessity but Design He came not in worldly Pomp Matth. 8.20 The Foxes have Holes and the Birds of the Air have Nests but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his Head John 18.36 My Kingdom is not of this VVorld Who is more able to judg what is best We or Christ Iohn 17.14 They are not of the VVorld even as I am not of the VVorld Who is fitter to chuse or wiser to chuse Christ or We Who is in an Error Christ or We If there was so much in the World as we fancy Christ was in an Error to despise it 3. It is contrary to our Hopes we look for better things It is a most lamentable thing to see a Christian that professeth the Assurance of a better Life to lie digging like a Mole in the Earth 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly Beloved I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims abstain from fleshly Lusts that war against the Soul Worldly Men are fastned to things present but the Children of God do bend and tend to things to come Worldly Men do not look for better things and therefore they are more to be excused We have Cause to blush every time we think of our Condition What are you Whence came you Whither are you going You are Passengers to Heaven why do you stick and linger by the way Something we may take for our Refreshment as Men that pass through a Field of Corn rub the Ears as they go As the Angel roused Elijah 2 Kings 19.7 Arise and eat for the Iourney is too great for thee You that affect to tarry in a foreign Country have you a Father in Heaven Would a Traveller hang his Room in an Inn Will he buy such things as he cannot carry with him Such things as we can carry with us to Heaven should take up our Time and Thoughts Piety out-lives the Grave but Honour and Wealth must be left behind us 4. It is contrary to our Vows We renounced them in Baptism In Baptism there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Answer to God's Questions Believest thou with all thy Heart Renouncest thou with all thy Heart 1 Pet. 3.20 Baptism saves not the putting away of the Filth of the Flesh but the Answer of a good Conscience towards God You break your baptismal Vows if you do not deny worldly Lusts. Christ doth not only call us off from Sin but from the
World for he is to be accepted not only as our Lord and Lawgiver but as our chiefest Good as an All-sufficient Saviour You are under a Vow and alienate things once consecrated when you withdraw your Affections after you have once given them up to Christ What have Lusts to do in an Heart that is once dedicated to God Vse 1. Information It informeth us 1. How little Interest in Christ they have who are still under the Power of worldly Lusts. The Apostle giveth us this Note Gal. 5.24 They that are Christ's have crucified the Flesh with the Affections and Lusts. He doth not say that they are Christ's that believe that he was crucified or that he died for Sinners but they are Christ's that feel that he was crucified that by the Virtue of his Cross do crucify their own Lusts and sinful Affections What a Christian and yet worldly a Christian and yet sensual a Christian and yet proud You that are given to Pleasures do you believe in Christ that was a Man of Sorrows You that are carried out after the Pomp and Vanity of the World do you believe in Christ whose Kingdom was not of this World You that are proud and lofty do you profess an Interest in the humble Christ It is in vain for those to talk of his dying for Sinners and boast of the Excellency of his Cross that never felt the Virtue of it Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the World is crucified unto me and I unto the World Your Affections to the World are still strong how can you glory in his Cross What Experience have you of the Goodness of it Have you gotten any thing by the Cross Are you planted into the Efficacy of it Rom. 6.5 For if we have been planted together in the Likeness of his Death we shall be also in the Likeness of his Resurrection Do you feel any weakning of Lusts and decay of Sin at least doth it put you upon Endeavours in this kind The Roots of Sin are in all but do you seek to mortify them Do you deny them in the way prescribed do you seek to prevent them with Diligence to suppress them with Watchfulness to resist them with Strenght and Resolution When there is not a constant Course of Mortification set up but Lust is let alone to reign without Controul you have no Interest in Christ. Mark it is said they crucify the Flesh there is a Work on your part Man is not wholly passive 2. It informeth us that true Mortification is proper to Grace Grace teacheth us to deny worldly Lusts mere Reason cannot Reason may sometimes convince us of Lusts but it cannot reform them in many things it is blind but in all weak The sublimest Philosophy that ever was could never teach a Man to go out of himself to deny his Lusts to despise the World Many of the Heathens were to Appearance temperate just sober and liberal but still the Lusts remained and therefore some in Despair have pulled out their Eyes because they could not prevail over a naughty Heart Sapientia eorum abscondit vitia non abscindit they hid their Sins but did not cut them off As an Oven stopped up is the hotter within so the Excess and Execution of Lusts being prevented they grew more outragious The Heart of Man will not be kept in order by any thing but by the Power of Grace We may argue fast vow pray promise and watch against Sin these are good means but not to be rested in for they are too weak to master Sin God hath reserved this Honour for his Grace in Jesus Christ Rom. 7.24 25. O wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this Death I thank God through Iesus Christ our Lord. We can have Deliverance no where else Are not Counsels of Reason able to help me No they cannot Is not a moral Course of Mortification able to help me as Fasting Watching Prayer No these may restrain it somewhat and lessen the Violence of it Satan may be outed for a time but yet he returneth with more Violence as the Jailor hangeth more Irons on him that is caught again after an Escape It is only the Grace of God that mortifies Sin Vse 2. Of Reproof of those that do not deny worldly Lusts but feed and serve them they act for their Sins rather than against them Nature is bad of it self and we need not make it worse these tempt Temptations and cater and purvey for Sin Therefore the Apostle useth that Phrase Rom. 13.14 Make not Provision for the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof Men make it their Business to satisfy their boundless Desires forecast to fulfil their sinful Desires and Affections We must provide for the Body but not to fulfil every wanton Lust and loose Desire This may be done by outward Provocations when Men feed their Distempers and make Nature more lustful and more wrathful Iames 5.5 Ye have lived in Pleasure on Earth and been wanton ye have nourished your Hearts as in a Day of Slaughter The Heart is the Seat of Desires they reared up their Concupiscence by Excess and dainty Morsels and all those Courses by which Lust seemeth to be satisfied but is indeed inflamed As salt Water wets the Palate but inflames the Stomach so they nourished Lust by voluntary casting themselves on Occasions of Sin He who truly desireth to shun Sin will shun the Occasions of it Who would bring Fire to a Barrel of Gunpowder Gen. 39.10 And it came to pass as she spake to Joseph day by day that he hearkened not unto her to lie by her or to be with her As he would not yield to the Sin so not to the Occasion Or else it may be done by Meditation and Thoughts By Thoughts the Heart and the Temptation are brought together as a Match is first propounded before it is closed with Thoughts are Sin 's Spokesmen and fasten the Temptation on the Heart as worldly Thoughts admiring outward Excellencies Psal. 144.15 Happy is the People that is in such a case Wrathful Thoughts debase Men every Circumstance aggravates the Injury and Offence and so inflames their Spirits Or else by a free and uncontroled Use of the Senses Matth. 5.28 Whosoever looketh upon a Woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his Heart Death getteth in by the Windows Eve saw the Fruit Gen. 3.6 And when the Woman saw that the Tree was good for Food and that it was pleasant to the Eyes and a Tree to be desired to make one wise she took of the Fruit thereof and did eat David saw Bathsheba 2 Sam. 11.3 From the Roof he saw a Woman washing her self and the Woman was very beautiful to look upon and this inflamed his Heart Solomon bids us Prov. 23.31 Look not thou upon the Wine when it is red when it giveth his Colour in the Cup
Sleep and Pastime II. In Meats and Drinks and the necessary Supports of Humane Life III. In Pomp and Apparel IV. In the Cares of this World I st Branch Sobriety in Recreation The first Branch of Sobriety in Recreation in Sleep and Pastime and other the Delights of Humane Life For Sleep I need say but little it is a soft Enemy that steals away half our Time and should be reckoned among our Burdens and not our Pleasures as a thing to be born with Patience rather than to be taken with Delight It is our Unhappiness that so much of our Lives should be spent and not one Act of Love and Kindness should be shewed to God The Angels that are wholly spiritual are exempted from this Necessity Night and Day they are always praising God doing his Will and hearkning to the Voice of his Word Yea we may see many other Creatures are restless in their Motions and obey the Law of their Creation without weariness The Sun in a constant unwearied Course moves from East to West and from West to East and never ceaseth When thou liest upon thy Bed in the Morning thou mayest think of it how many thousand Miles the Sun hath travelled since thou wenest to rest the last Night that he might come again this Morning to give thee Light to go about thy Labour and Exercise and yet thou liest snorting upon thy Bed and turning hither and thither as Solomon saith like a Door upon the Hinges David contended with the Sun who should be up first as the Sun to represent God to the World so he to acknowledg God in his Prayers and Supplications Psal. 119.147 I prevented the dawning of the Morning and cried But of this I will speak no more Common Prudence and the Light of Nature will give us sufficient Direction But now for Sports and other the Delights of Humane Life accept of God's Indulgence with Thankfulness and use it with Moderation Adam in Innocency was placed in a Garden of Delight and since the Fall God hath provided not only for Necessity but Pleasure Certainly in Christ we have a great Liberty but we should not use it as an Occasion to the Flesh. To the Pure all things are pure Titus 1.15 Only let us take heed that we are pure in the use of these outward Comforts and Refreshments Now we need not fear the Uncleanness of Meats and Sports but let us fear the Uncleanness of Lusts. There is a double exercise of Sobriety in our Sports and Recreations and the Delights of the Humane Life to direct us in the Choice of them and in the Use of them 1. In the Choice of them that they be lawful not the Pleasures of Sin Heb. 11.25 There is a strange Perverseness in Man's Nature those Pleasures relish best that are seasoned with Sin as if we could not do Nature Right without Wrong to God and putting an Affront upon his Laws He that breaks the Hedg a Serpent shall bite him Eccles. 10.8 Now to prevent danger in this kind and that we may not break through the Hedg and the Restraints which God hath set us and so find Remorse upon our Death-Beds Conscience must be informed Generally we may observe that we offend God more in our Recreations than in any other Affairs of Life and are more guilty of unlawful Recreations than of unlawful ways of Gain and Traffick and therefore it is good to be wary and keep at a distance from Sin And because Recreations are not among things absolutely necessary but only convenient if they be questionable or of ill Fame it is better to forbear Phil. 4.8 Whatsoever things are of good report c. think of these things that we may be sure not to be guilty of any contempt of God and that we may not give offence to others As for Instance a Lusory Lot in Cards or Dice is very questionable therefore better to be forborn than used especially where they give offence And again because every thing is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.4 therefore we should seek to understand our Liberty by the Word and venture upon nothing in this kind but what we can commend to God in Prayer and upon which we can ask a Blessing Thus Sobriety directs you in the choice of Recreations 2. In the Use. Usually we offend in such things as are for the Matter lawful there the Soul is more secure as in the Gospel the Excuse is put in the handsomest terms Luke 14.20 I have married a Wife and therefore I cannot come For the understanding of it note Christ's Parables do put the Dispositions of Mens Hearts into Words Now the Sensualist or the Man that is addicted to Pleasures is there represented and mark he doth not urge dalliance with Harlots but I have married a Wife and therefore I cannot come implying that excess in lawful Pleasures keepeth many from Christ and from the things of Grace and therefore here is the Work of Sobriety to set bounds and limits to the use and exercise of our Liberty that it may not degenerate into Licentiousness Well but what Rules shall we observe In short then we offend in Sports when they waste our Estate rob us of our Time cheat us of opportunity of Privacy and Retirement with God and when they unfit the Heart for the Duties of Religion 1. When they waste their Estates You may not do with your Estates as you please you are Stewards and are to be accountable to God at the last Day for every Penny Why should a Prodigal have a greater Liberty and Dominion over his Estate than a covetous Man I will tell you for what reason I speak it Prodigals that waste their Substance with riotous Living as he described in Luke 15.13 when they are taxed for this they say It is my own and I may do with my own as I please We are not content to take such an Answer from a rich and covetous Man when you press him to Charity if he should say It is my own and I shall give what I please as Nabal said 1 Sam. 25.11 Shall I take my Bread and my Water and my Flesh that I have killed for my Shearers and give it unto Men whom I know not The truth is it is a mistake on both sides it is not theirs but God's he is the great Owner Therefore when Recreations are costly and waste your Estates you cannot give an account of it to God at the great Day you rob your Families at least the Poor Lust starves Charity and makes it a Beggar It is sad when a Lust can command thee to do more than the Love of God can when you can lavish away thus much upon your Pleasures and account nothing too dear for them and every Penny be begrudged that is for a Use truly good You are guilty of Sacrilege to God you rob him of his Tribute and you rob the Poor of their Support who are God's Receivers 2.
third Branch of Sobriety is in Apparel That this is a part of Sobriety appears by that Scripture 1 Tim. 2.9 That Women adorn themselves in modest Apparel with Shamefac'dness and Sobriety We must be moderate as to Apparel as well as to other Delights and Comforts of Life In managing this part of the Discourse I shall first give you some Rules and then some Helps 1. For the Rules The Work of Sobriety is to moderate the Affection and then the Use. 1. To moderate the Affection to vain and immodest Apparel there the Disease begins Col. 3.5 Mortify therefore your Members which are upon the Earth Fornication Uncleanness inordinate Affection There may be even in those that are poor a Desire and an Envy at the Bravery of others which is grievous to the Spirit of God when we want it our selves Pride in Apparel is not only the Sin in the wearing but in the Desire of it when we can no sooner see a vain Fashion but we are taken with it as Ahaz was taken with the Altar at Damascus and we must have another of the like Fashion It is the Duty of Christians to consider one another to provoke to Love and to good Works Heb. 10.24 who should be most sober most modest in their Apparel but we often provoke one another to Excess and Pomp and strive who shall excel therefore this Desire when we are taken with vain Fashions is sinful And if our Hand will not reach to it then we envy and speak against others not out of Zeal but Emulation because we cannot attain to the like our selves as Diogenes trod on Plato's rich Garment with a greater Pride Calco Platonis fastum Envy shews we value these things Now to moderate this secret Envy take a Consideration or two 1 st If we have Food and Raiment to cover our Nakedness why should we trouble our selves about more 1 Tim. 6.8 And having Food and Raiment let us be therewith content When God first made Adam and Eve Apparel he made them Coats of Skins plain and homely Ware and they were greater Persons than we are And it is said of the Children of God those of whom the World was not worthy Heb. 11.37 They wandred about in Sheepskins and Goatskins Our Condition is much better therefore let us not envy others when they shine and excel in Pomp of the World it is enough God hath given us any thing for Warmth and Use. 2 dly Consider how holy Men have behaved themselves upon a like Occasion It is recorded in the Life of Bernard if he saw a poor Man in coarse Habit he would say It may be this poor Man may be glorious within and have a better Soul than thou hast but if he saw a Man with a fine Garment he would say It may be he excels thee as much within as without So Pambus when he saw one very curious in dressing her self he wept saying Have I been as careful to please Christ to deck my Soul with Grace in the Sight of God as she is to please a wanton Lover Thus should we make a spiritual Use of such a Spectacle and strive to be as fine in God's Sight as they are in Bravery without 2. The Work of Sobriety is not only to moderate the Affection but to moderate the Use of Apparel and outward Ornament that we may not be pompous and excessive That there is such a Sin as Excess in Apparel appears by the frequent Disswasives of the Word The Scripture takes notice of it chiefly in Women but Men have their Share The Holy Ghost by the Prophet Isaiah is pleased to give us an Account of the Fashions of those Days and to make an Inventory of their Wardrobe chap. 3.18 to 24. In that Day the Lord will take away the Bravery of their tinkling Ornaments about their Feet and their Cauls and their round Tires like the Moon The Chains and the Bracelets and the Mufflers the Bonnets and the Ornaments of the Legs and the Head-bands and the Tablets and the Ear-rings the Rings and Nose-Iewels the changeable Suits of Apparel and the Mantles and the Wimples and the crisping Pins the Glasses and the fine Linen and the Hoods and the Vails and therefore threatneth an heavy Judgment ver 24 25. And it shall come to pass that instead of sweet Smell there shall be Stink and instead of a Girdle a Rent and instead of well-set Hair Baldness and instead of a Stomacher a girding with Sackcloth and Burning instead of Beauty Thy Men shall fall by the Sword and thy Mighty in the War Mark the Judgment a Scab which meeteth with their Aim which was to set off their Beauty and the Violence Incivilities and Rudeness of the Souldiers to meet with the matter of their Sin who shall strip them of their Garments that they should not have Rags to cover their Nakedness So 1 Pet. 3.3 the Spirit of God takes notice of the outward Adorning of plaiting the Hair and of wearing of Gold and of putting on of Apparel By which he reproves not a decent dressing but a laying of it forth in Curls and Locks and wanton Plates So Luke 16.19 there it is taken notice of as a Luxury in the rich Man that he was clothed in Purple and fine Linen and fared sumptuously every Day Curious Clothing is made to be one of his Crimes as well as Gluttony and Neglect of the Poor Usually they go together And the Experience of all Ages sheweth that there is such a Sin and in these times more abundantly when all Distinctions of Ranks and Place and Superiours and Inferiours are taken away But how shall we do to find out the Sin Cases being so different and the Custom of Ages and Nations so various I answer in the general Such a Modesty as is without Exception doth best become the Saints and Christians indeed who are chiefly to regard the inward Ornament to adorn themselves in the Sight of God rather than in the Sight of Men 1 Pet. 3.4 Whose adorning let it be the hidden Man of the Heart in that which is not corruptible even the Ornament of a meek and quiet Spirit which is in the Sight of God of great Price And again they are to stand at a Distance from a Snare and to avoid all Appearance of Evil 1 Thess. 5.22 Abstain from all Appearance of Evil. And again they are to give no Offence neither to Iew nor Gentile nor to the Church of God 1 Cor. 10.32 Neither to their Fellow-Members within nor to Observers without Therefore if we had to do with a gracious Heart the Case would be soon decided they do not love to walk upon the Brink nor to come near a Sin An inoffensive modest Habit is free from all Exceptions and if Men and Women were wise they would soon see that it would neither lessen their Esteem with God or Men but increase it rather But more particularly Persons guilty are clamorous and say why do we
abridg them of their Liberty and take upon us to condemn their Garb I confess it is a Sin to condemn what God hath not condemned There are two sorts of Superstition Positive when we count that holy that God never made holy And Negative when we condemn that for sinful which God never made sinful Therefore what Rules can be given to trace and find out the Sin The Abuse will be best discovered by considering the Use. What are the Ends of Apparel They are diverse either for Necessity to defend the Body against the Injuries of the Weather therefore they that discover their Nakedness sin against that or else for Honesty or Modesty to cover that Deformity of the Body which was the Fruit of Sin or else for Profit such Apparel as sutes with our Callings and Course of Life or for Frugality according to the Proportion of our Estate that we may not waste the good Gifts of God that should be kept either for Family-Uses or for other good Uses or for Distinction of Persons of Age Sex and Rank Deut. 22.5 The Woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a Man neither shall a Man put on a Woman's Garment for all that do so are Abomination to the Lord thy God By these Ends the Abuse may be conceived 1. It is a foul Abuse of Apparel and Ornament when Men and Women disguise Nature and seek to mend that which God hath made by patching painting and other Varnishes of Art Iezebel is infamous in Scripture for Painting and dare any sober Woman that pretends to be a Christian put her self into her Garb and Fashion They reprove God that seek to mend Nature Cyprian saith It is a Dislike of God's Work So Tertullian before him They dislike God's Workmanship in their own Faces and consult with the Devil how to mend it That which is natural is from God and that which is artificial is from the Devil How shall God own them at the last Day when they are ashamed of his Workmanship Will thy Maker own thy disguised Face He will say this is not the Face that I made We should appear before Men with no other Face than we would appear before God with at the Day of Judgment Would I have God see me thus disguised patched and painted Doth not Conscience startle at the thought of it when God shall come to take knowledg of all the Works he hath made wouldst thou appear then with these Spots and artificial Varnish 2. Addictedness to Fashions certainly that argues such a Levity that doth not sute with the Gravity of Religion That there is a Sin in Fashions is plain by Isa. 3. where the Holy Ghost is pleased to give us an Inventory of the Wardrobe of the Women among the Jews for what Reason but to shew they were vainly addicted to Fashions So Zeph. 1.8 I will punish the Princes and the King's Children and all such as are clothed with strange Apparel God takes notice of Pride in Apparel though it be in Courtiers Nobles Princes and Kings Children their new and strange exotick Garbs therefore much more is it evil in private Persons and those that are of an inferiour Rank But you will say if we must not follow the Fashion of what Date should our Habits be Should we go back as far as Adam to clothe our selves with Skins and Leaves and run back to the Rudeness of former Ages I answer There may be as much Vanity and Affection in being too much out of the Fashions of the times and places in which we live as in being too much in it therefore our Liberty in this kind is to be determined by the general and received Custom of the gravest and godly wise It stands not with Christian Gravity to be first in a Fashion and affect that which is new nor to take it up when it is only the Fashion among those that are light and vain they are not to be imitated for that 's conforming our selves to the Fashions of the World which the Apostle disproves Rom. 12.2 Be not conformed to this World The Apostle speaks in the Business of long Hair and when he had spoken what an unseemly thing it was for a Man Ruffian-like to go with long Hair 1 Cor. 11.14 Doth not Nature it self teach you that if a Man have long Hair it is a Shame to him He adds ver 16. But if any Man seem to be contentious we have no such Custom neither the Churches of God Which seems to carry this Sense that if Women will come with their Nakedness into the Congregation and if Men will wear long Hair and if any Man or Woman will contend and say the thing is indifferent and they have a Liberty in this kind this is the short Answer We have no such Custom neither the Churches of God Therefore the general and received Custom of the Churches of God ought to be a Law in all such Cases Mark the vain World is not to give you a Precedent but the Use of the Churches and the Practice of godly Christians and their Sobriety 3. When our Apparel exceeds the Proportion of our Callings and Abilities There is more due to Persons of a higher Rank than to those of inferiour place Matth. 11.8 They that wear soft Clothing are in Kings Houses It is more commendable in them that stand before Princes than in others and therefore our Rank and Place and Estate must be considered It is a wrong to the Family and the Poor when our Garments exceed our Abilities Nay but take them both together though they do not exceed our Abilities yet if they exceed our State Place and Calling it is a Sin As for Instance For Ministers who should be mortified to the Glory and Pomp of the World it is not fit for them to shine in Bravery as others do So for Ministers Wives the Scripture is pleased to take notice of Women in that Relation above all other Women 1 Tim. 3.11 Their Wives must be grave sober And for Servants it is odious to see them strive to be in a Garb exceeding their Station and to do as others of better Rank and higher Place As Habits were given for Necessity so for Distinction of Ranks and Orders of Men and as odd a Sight it is to see an Inferiour exalting in Pomp as to put the Attire of the Head upon the Feet and Shooes on the Head 4. When it sutes not with Modesty and Chastity Garments were given to cover Nakedness and the Deformity that was introduced by Sin Therefore the Apostle saith Let the Women adorn themselves in modest Apparel with Shamefac'dness and Sobriety not with broidered Hair or Gold or Pearls or costly Array 1 Tim. 2.9 And therefore the leaving the Breasts naked in whole or in part is a Transgression of this Rule they uncover their Nakedness which they should vail and hide especially in God's Presence As the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 11.10 The Woman ought to have Power on
her Head because of the Angels In the Assembly there you meet with Angels and Devils Angels to observe your Garb and Carriage and Devils to tempt you therefore be covered because of the Angels Yet usually Women come hither with a shameless Impudence into the Presence of God Men and Angels This is a Practice that neither sutes with Modesty nor Conveniency nothing can be alledged for it but Reasons of Pride and Wantonness it feeds your own Pride and provokes Lust in others You would think they were wicked Women that should offer others Poison to drink they do that which is worse lay a Snare for the Soul uncover that which should be covered lest you provoke others of your Rank to imitate your Vanity if they should not by the Fear of God be guarded from unclean Thoughts and filthy Desires Now Christians should be far from allowing Sin in themselves or provoking it in others 5. When dressing of the Body takes up too much of our Hearts and Time so as to cause us to neglect the inward adorning and by it we are tempted to Pride Certainly there is a Sin in Fashions themselves but the greatest Sin in the Pride of the Heart The Garment falls under a Rule but Apparel is not the Offence but Pride Isa. 3.16 The Daughters of Zion are haughty and walk with stretched-out Necks and wanton Eyes walking and mincing as they go and making a tinkling with their Feet Better never wear Jewels or costly Raiment more than to be tempted by it to Pride Therefore the spiritual Ornament you should still preserve is being humble in Spirit 1 Pet. 3.4 Let your Adorning be the hidden Man of the Heart even the Ornament of a meek and quiet Spirit When you forget that it is a sad Exchange Outward Adornment belongs to the Pomp of the World but the inward Adornment is our spiritual Glory and Excellency The outward adorning is to please Men but the inward adorning pleaseth God Now we should rather please God than Men better never please Men than offend God 2. To offer some Helps 1. Consider Curiosity in Clothes argues Deformity of Mind a godly serious humble Christian is above these things Therefore how can we chuse but think that a Man or Woman hath Vanity in his Heart that is so clothed with it upon his Back Look as Plaisters argue a Wound or Sore so do these exotick and vain Attires argue a Wound and Blot in the Soul that there is Pride Vanity and Levity there Clemens Alexandrinus observes that the Lacedemonians permitted only Harlots and infamous Women and common Prostitutes to go in gorgeous Attire Clothes then are the Flag and Ensign which Pride hangs out and the Nest of Wantonness 2. To be proud of Clothes is to be proud of our own Shame Before Sin came in Man did not need a Garment Look as the Sun is adorned with Light it needs no Trimming and Ornament so Man in Innocency was adorned with Grace and needed no other Robe but when he sinned he needed Garments So then he that is proud of his Clothes is but proud of the Rags with which his Wounds are bound up Clothes are a Memorial that we were once disobedient to God Shall a Thief be proud of his Shackles or a Malefactor of his Brand or Mark in his Forehead This is a time of Mourning not of Triumph therefore God at first clothed Adam with Skins an Habit that becomes Mourning We shall not need these things in Heaven Clothes are only there in Use where Sin is 3. Consider that Habit makes not the Man A Horse is not chosen by his Trappings but by his Strength and Swiftness the Trappings are things external that conduce nothing to his Goodness so Man is not to be valued by his Habit it is but the Excrement of Silk-worms not by the Ornaments of the Body but the Endowments of the Mind Imperatoria Majestas saith Seneca virtute constat non corporis cultu And therefore if you would excel others indeed you should excel them in Grace and Vertue Alas many are but Dung finely dressed the hidden Man of the Heart that 's the Man Grace is the best Dressing and that which is never out of fashion by this Men are valued The more wise and excellent Men are indeed the less curious in their Apparel Cato that had been Consul at Rome never wore Apparel that exceeded an hundred Pence Let great ones be known by their Modesty of Apparel 4. Consider when you are most gorgeous the Beasts excel you Craesus King of Lydia being gorgeously arrayed asked Solon if ever he had seen a more beautiful Spectacle he answered Yes Sir I have seen Peacocks and Pheasants and other Birds And Matth. 6.29 Christ takes notice of this that Solomon in all his Glory was not arrayed like one of the Lillies The Draughts and Colours of Nature are more beautiful than Art Therefore neither delight in Bravery or Envy when thou seest the Bravery of others thou hast a fairer Flower in thy Garden 5. Think often of Jesus Christ hanging naked upon the Cross who was stripped of his Garments to satisfy for thy Excess O! shall we again put him to open Shame as if he died in vain Say Shall Pride live when Christ died to subdue it and mortify it and to expiate for it IV th Branch Sobriety in worldly Cares The next Branch is Sobriety or Moderation in worldly Cares These also besot the Mind and deprive it of the Sense of spiritual things By a strange Fascination and Inchantment our Care becometh our Pleasure and Men grow quite drunk with the World so that they are always scraping and raking here as if their whole time were given for nothing but getting Wealth First What this carking and worldly Care is that must be moderated The Scripture doth not only allow but require an honest Diligence It is a Command as well as a Threatning In the Sweat of thy Face thou shalt eat thy Bread Gen. 3.19 The Grievousness and Burdensomness of Labour falls under the Threatning but the Labour it self is a Command as moral as any of the Ten. The Apostle saith Phil. 4.6 Be careful for nothing but he doth not say Do nothing The Scriptures would not have us to be idle and careless they commend the diligent Hand To let Children and Family shift for themselves were not only unchristian but unmanly we see the very brute Beasts provide for their young Ones Diligence is one of the means by which God provideth for us But yet though the Scriptures do allow a diligent Care yet they forbid a carking Distrust There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Care of Diligence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Care of Diffidence the first is a Duty laid upon us the second is a Sin Faith is painful but not distrustful It is represented by the Emblem of a pair of Compasses while one Foot is fast in the Center the other wanders about in the Circumference
begrudg the pains of his Service 1 Cor. 15.58 Be ye stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the Work of the Lord for asmuch as ye know that your Labour will not be in vain in the Lord. The Children of God are wont to think they can never do enough for God that hath found out such a Reward for them in Christ. A thousand Years Service will not deserve one hour's Enjoyment of this blessed Hope much less eternal Happiness When we come to see what shall be bestowed upon us we shall be ashamed that we have done no more Work for God having so much Wages and such excellent Encouragement Mat. 25.37 the Saints are brought in there saying Lord when saw we thee an hungred and fed thee or thirsty and gave thee Drink being ashamed Ah Lord this is nothing What have we done At the Day of Judgment there will be the highest Exaltation of the Saints and yet the lowest Self-abasement they will wonder even to admiration of Angels There will be Christ's owning them and they disclaiming their own Services and all their Works and Christ rewarding them And therefore grudg not if you have the strictest Precepts of any Religion remember you have the noblest and highest Reward 6. It informs us what cause we have to contemn all earthly things tho they be never so great and glorious because of this blessed Hope There are two Considerations that will make us contemn the World and they are suted to the two essential Parts of Man and we should ever think of them We carry about us a mortal Body and an immortal Soul the Body lasts but for a while and the Soul survives and out-lives the Body's Happiness Now we toil our selves in gathering Sticks to our Nest when to morrow we must be gone Alas here we dwell in Houses of Clay whose Foundation is in the Dust which are crushed before the Moth Job 4.19 Our Estate in this World is represented by a Tabernacle which is a moveable Habitation but our Estate in Heaven is represented by a Temple Here it is but a Tabernacle and that of Clay that will be crumbled into Dust nay we are said to be crush'd before the Moth and a Moth is but a little enlivened Dust and so is Man The World is but a House of Potters Vessels that will be soon broken And shall we for the Conveniences of a Temporal Life prejudice and run the hazard and loss of our Eternal Hopes Shall we injure the Soul to gratify the Body that is the way to destroy both for ever Our great care should be for that Place where we live longest in the other World we have the longest Life and the most glorious Possession therefore our great Care should be for that 7. It informs us what little cause we have to envy carnal Men the Hope of your Profession is a blessed Hope This was David's Preservative he was daily in danger of his Life and his Enemies were fat and shining in the Pomp of the World and how doth he comfort himself Psal. 17.15 When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy Likeness as if he had said Alas their Felicity is but a sorry thing they are filled and I shall be filled too David sums up their Happiness under two Heads Whatever here we have it is either for personal Use or for our Posterity A worldly State is only valuable upon these two Grounds what we may use for the present and what we may transmit to our Children Now what a sorry Happiness is this to what I expect 1. For personal Use ver 14. Their Bellies are filled with thy hid Treasure that is with the rarest Dishes and best Meats which God's Store-house doth afford By hidden Treasures is meant Food and other worldly Comforts therefore called hidden Treasures because it doth not lie within every one's grasp and reach they are not vulgar and common Delights The meaner sort their Hand will not attain to it Lo here is all that which God allows them for their Portion the filling of the Belly and alas this is but the Happiness of Beasts who eat with less remorse yet all their Happiness is to fill their Belly with better Food than the poorer sort which indeed is a Misery rather than a Happiness for what doth this but nourish sensual Lusts and strengthen and hearten our Enemy And gorgeous Apparel is but a Supply from Creatures beneath us it is but Stercus in volutum Dung neatly wrapp'd up here 's the Sum of all a Carnal Man's Happiness that which God allows him for his Portion But a Christian hath better Fare if he goes into the Sanctuary there 's enough but if he goes into Heaven there 's a great deal more David defeats the Temptation by this Psal. 73.16 17. When I sought to know this it was too hard for me until I went into the Sanctuary of God to enjoy God in his Ordinances and the present Glimpses of God's Face Present Communion with God is far to be preferred above all the Dainties in the World But that is not all we shall be satisfied for ever We may go into Heaven as well as into the Sanctuary and behold God's Righteousness When I awake that is out of the Dust I shall be satisfied with thy Likeness A Child of God hath his Content and Happiness to the full when he comes to die A carnal Man his Back hath been richly clothed and Belly filled but when he comes to die he hath a sad Doom Son remember thou in thy Life-time receivedst thy good things and likewise Lazarus his evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented Luke 16.25 was said to Dives who fared deliciously every day and was clothed in Purple and fine Linen Well you have your Portion and must look for no more you give God a discharge for ought else But for God's Children then their Happiness begins they are going down to sleep in the Grave and when they awake they shall be filled they have not only God's Favour here but Eternal Felicity hereafter They that are called to a Feast will not fill themselves at home with courser Fare The rich Glutton who had his Belly full of hid Treasure here was shut out but Lazarus is carried into Abraham's Bosom and feasted there for this was their Table-gesture to lie in one another's Bosoms Christians reserve your Appetite a little you will be satisfied it is but staying a little longer for a better Meal We expect to be like Angels let others be like Beasts whose Happiness lieth in feeding 2. Then for the other part the transmission of Honour and ample Revenues to Posterity It is true Man is much carried out this way he would fain advance his House and live gloriously in his Posterity Posterity is a shadow of Eternity Children are but the Father multiplied when the Father's Thread is spun out then the Knot is knit his Name and Memory is continued in the World by his Children
that they should do more good in their places This is the most precious Gift yet given in order to some other thing it is made for God that we should glorify him and be capable of injoying him to all Eternity 2. This is the End of the Distribution Wherefore hath God given these Talents in any eminent degree or in such variety to Men but that they should trade with them and be more fitted for his Service 1 Cor. 12.7 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every Man to profit withal There is indeed a three-fold End of all our Trading The glorifying of God the saving of our own Souls and the good of others For in a moral Consideration there are but three Beings God Neighbour Self The Glory of God must be regarded in the first place and with it is connected the Advancement of the Kingdom of Christ. For all the Gifts that we have are for the Master's Use And therefore if we do not principally mind the Glory of God and the Advancement of Christ's Kingdom we pervert the Gifts we have received Yet this is rare in a self-loving World Phil. 2.21 All seek their own not the things which are Iesus Christ's The saving of our Souls must be regarded next to the Glory of God For next to God Man is to love himself and in himself first his better part The Graces of Sanctification though profitable for others yet are chiefly intended for the good of him that hath them And the Graces of Edification though profitable for the Owner yet are principally intended for the good of Others A Man that hath sanctifying Grace doth good to others with it that is utilitas emergens not finis proprius It is not the direct End for which these Graces are given but other subservient Gifts are for the good of the Body Lastly The Good of others their Edification and Benefit For God hath scattered his Gifts that every part may supply somewhat for the good of the whole as every Member of the Body hath its several use by which the whole Body receiveth benefit Rom. 12.4 5. For as we have many Members in one Body and all Members have not the same Office so we being many are one Body in Christ and every one Members one of another Well then let us look to the End of the Distribution A Man hath not Wealth for himself nor Parts for himself nor Gifts for himself to promote his own Ends but to bring in Souls to God not for Pomp but Use. All have their proper and distinct Offices some to Serve others to Rule some to Counsel others to Execute Every one have their proper but distinct Use for God maketh nothing in vain nor was the World appointed to be a Hive for Drones and idle Ones Wherefore hath God given some great Wealth and Power but as the great Veins supply the lesser with Blood that they might be more publickly useful Wherefore hath he given Ordinances but that we may get Grace by them and save our own Souls They are represented sometimes as Duties they being not a matter Arbitrary but a part of the Homage we owe to God sometimes as Privileges that we may not look upon them as a burdensome Task sometimes as means of our Growth and ●mprovement that we may not wrest in the Work wrought sometimes as Talents for which we must give an Account to quicken our earnest Diligence Wherefore hath God given Gifts but that we may shew forth his Praise and edify others Yea wherefore hath he given Grace it self but that we might be both obliged and fitted to glorify him in the World Ephes. 1.12 That we should be to the Praise of his Glory who first trusted in Christ. They are set up as Lights in the World to shine to others 3. There is a Charge expresly given with the distribution of the Talents Luke 19.13 And he called his ten Servants and delivered them ten Pounds and said to them Occupy till I come They were to imploy their Industry to improve it to the greatest Advantage of bringing in an Increase to God This Charge is given by our proper and rightful Lord and it is committed to Servants not to Strangers and Freemen who are at their own dispose but to Servants who are at the Command of their Lord who hath made us and bought us And this Trust is accepted by Covenant of all that profess themselves to be his Servants not implicite as there may be between the Devil and his Agents but explicite and formal That we will be wholly his and for him And we are accountable for the Possession if we do not mind the Use. For a Man that hath an Estate made over to him in Trust and for certain Uses expressed in the Conveyance hath indeed no Estate therein at all but with respect to those Uses Certain it is that we have the Comfort more in the Use than the Possession The solid Comfort of Wealth Power and Honour is never seen till we imploy it for God It is not tasted so much when you are gorgeously attired and your Tables are plentifully furnished and when you glut your selves with all manner of fleshly Delights as in feeding the Hungry clothing the Naked relieving the Oppressed So for Ordinances the worth of them is known by Use and Improvement not when we resort to them for Custom and Fashion's sake but when we taste that the Lord is gracious 1 Pet. 2.3 So the Graces of the Spirit are most sweet when they do not lie idle then we feel the comfort them Iohn 15.11 These things have I spoken to you that my Ioy might remain in you and that your Ioy might be full Vse Let us improve our Trust and rouse up our selves and say What Honour hath God by my Wealth Power Honour Greatness What Protection to his Cause What Relief to his People To this end consider 1. What is your Business in the World Our Lord Jesus said Iohn 18.37 To this end I was born and for this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the Truth Every one is sent into the World for some End for God would not make a Creature in vain For what End did you come into the World but to glorify God in your Place and Calling What part in the World would God have me to act Most Men are ready to go out of the World before they ask for what purpose they came hither 2. Every one is trading for some Body either for God or for the Devil and the Flesh either regarding his Master's Glory or his own Carnal Satisfaction Rom. 8.5 They that are after the Flesh do mind the things of the Flesh but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit 3. Consider how much you are intrusted with Look within you without you round about you and see how much you have to account for For natural Advantages Time Wealth Honour Estate Nehem. 1.11
follow Christ to any purpose Take up the Cross It is an allusion to the Punishments that were in use when Christ lived in the World the Malefactors bore their own Cross to the place of Execution and then they were nailed to it alive So let him reckon upon that he must bear his Cross. And follow me There is a twofold following of Christ Special and General 1. Special as those Disciples that were his menial Servants of his own Family train'd up for the Ministry these did follow Christ up and down because they were chosen Witnesses and were to be conscious and privy unto all his Actions that they might better give an account of them to World Acts 1.21 22. Wherefore of those which have companied with us all the time that the Lord Iesus went in and out among us beginning from the Baptism of Iohn unto that same day that he was taken up from us must one be ordained to be a Witness with us of his Resurrection And so follow me is Come take lot and share with me abide with me be my Disciple 2. The Phrase bears a more General Sence Ioh. 12.26 If any Man serve me let him follow me and so to follow Christ is either to take his Direction or imitate his Example 1. When we take his Direction We are said to follow Christ when we take him for our Lord and Master and live according to his Holy Doctrine As they that have such a one for their Master in any Sect of Philosophy are said to follow him so they that take Christ for their Teacher as the great Prophet of the Church herein they follow him Mar. 17. ● Hear ye him 2. We are said to follow Christ when we imitate his Example as 1 Cor. 11.1 Be ye followers of me as I also am of Christ From the words thus Explained three Points of Doctrine may be gathered 1. In Order to Eternal Life it is required that a Man should not only sell all and give to the Poor but that he should follow Christ or enter himself as one of his Disciples 2. Whosoever entereth himself as one of his Disciples and gives up his Name to Christ must follow him or imitate his Example 3. All those that would follow Christ must prepare their shoulders for the Cross. 1 Doct. In order to Eternal Life it is required not only that a Man should sell all and give to the Poor but that he should follow Christ or enter himself as one of his Disciples Here I shall enquire What it is and why it is necessary 1. What it is to enter our selves as one of Christ's Disciples I shall lay no other Duty upon you than what you are engaged unto by your Baptism therefore I shall only explain what your Baptism binds you to which is a Bond upon you to enter your selves as Christ's Disciples It is a renouncing all other Lords and Masters a choosing Christ and believing in him alone for Salvation and a resigning up our selves to do his Will 1. A renouncing all other Lords and Masters which are opposite to Christ viz. The Devil the World and the Flesh. The Devil Col. 1.13 Who hath delivered us from the power of Darkness and hath translated us into the Kingdom of his dear Son Before there is any entrance into the Kingdom of Christ there is a translating from the Power of Darkness that I take to be the Power of the Devil The World Gal. 6.14 The world is crucified to me and I unto the world Then for the Flesh Rom. 8.12 We are debtors not to the flesh to live after the flesh In our Natural State we are under the power of all these three as it is set forth Eph. 2.2 3. Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the A●r the Spirit that now worketh in the Children of disobedience Among whom we all had our conversation in time past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the Flesh and of the Mind There are all the three Enemies of our Salvation that must be renounced mentioned There is the Custom and corrupt course of the world Alas the Generality of the World live a Sensual Flesh-pleasing Life that was their Rule and the Prince of the power of the Air that was their Guide and the Flesh or the bent of corrupt Nature that was their Principle While we are in our Corrupt State the Devil hath Power to Rule us and the Example and common Customs of the World doth encourage us and corrupt Nature within doth strongly urge us to Sin against God And therefore when we do indeed enter our selves the Disciples of Christ these Enemies of his and ours must be renounced that we may have another Rule another Lord and another Principle Another Rule which is the Law of God another Lord which is Jesus Christ another Principle which is the Spirit of Christ dwelling and working in us There must be first an Emptying of Heart before it can be filled with Grace There must be a dispossessing of those strong and cursed Inmates that have such hand and power over us that Christ alone may Rule and Govern us 2. There must be a Believing in Christ or a resting upon him alone for Salvation When the Eunuch offered himself to be Baptized Philip tells him If thou believest with all thy heart thou mayest Acts 8.37 And he answered and said I believe that Iesus Christ is the Son of God Faith in the Son of God is the great Qualification necessary to Christ's Disciples that as they forsake the Devil the Pomps and Vanities of the World and the Inclinations of the Flesh so they may cleave to him alone as Lord and Saviour to give Repentance and Remission of Sins to his People Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of Sins 3. It is required that we resign up our selves to do his Will and walk according to his Directions if we would be Christs Disciples for otherwise we do but give him an empty Title and we may as much mock him as the Roman Soldiers did that put a Robe upon him and cry'd Hail King of the Iews When we cry him up as Lord and Saviour and do not resign up our selves to his Use and Service we mock him as they did Take three Scriptures to prove this Luk. 6.46 Why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say Cui●r●s nomini subject a negatur is nomine illuditur Tertull. It is a mockage to give Christ a Title and deny him the Duty which belongs to it The greatest part of the Christian World live in a bare outward profession of Christ's Name without any Care and Conscience to walk answerably they seem to have renounced the Devil the World and the Flesh but their Hearts are in a secret League with them still
before us Partly as it assureth us of his sympathizing with us in our hard Service he knoweth the weaknesses of Humane Nature and its reluctancies to the Law of God Christ learned Obedience by the things that he suffered Heb. 5.8 and having experienced the hardships of suffering his Heart is intendred towards those that are in the like Case Heb. 2.18 For in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted Partly because of the Perfection of his Obedience to cover our Infirmities God hath had full Obedience from Christ and therefore where a poor Soul doth its utmost it can rely on God for acceptance which is a great encouragement in our work Rom. 5.19 By the Obedience of one shall many be made righteous VSE To perswade us to follow Christ. 1. Our general Profession of being Christians doth oblige us to be like him Head and Members should be all of a piece If we take the Name of Christ upon us we had need express him to the Life 1 Pet. 2.9 Ye are a chosen generation a Royal Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar People that ye should shew forth the Praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light If a Man should put your Name to the Picture of a Swine you would account it a disgrace Oh what an affront is it to Christ to put his Name to the Picture and Image of the Devil we do but express him in scorn and contempt When we are wrathful unclean covetous unchaste sensual proud unholy and say we are Christians what a dishonour scorn and contempt do we put upon Christ What did the Heathens say heretofore Estimari a cultoribus potest ipse qui colitur You may know what one he is whom they worship by them that worship him We profess to bear the Image of Christ yet are vain turbulent carnal unthankful unholy Oh what is this but to carry the Name of Christ in disgrace up and down the World 2. We shall never be like him in Glory unless we be like him in Grace also Rom. 8.29 For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son Here the Foundation is laid If you would appear before God with confidence and not be ashamed at the great day be like to him then you shall have boldness 1 Ioh. 4.17 Herein is our love made perfect that we may have boldness in the Day of Iudgment because as he is so are we in the World Otherwise how can we look him in the face Therefore let us follow him Assequi nunquam possumus sequi tamen nunquam desinamus though we cannot follow him as Asahel did Abner close at the heels yet let us follow him however thô it be but as Peter followed Christ afar off to the High Priest's Hall But wherein should we follow Christ I Answer 1. In his Self-denyal This is the first Lesson in Christianity and one of the hardest Christ came from Heaven to teach us this Lesson and his Birth Life and Death was a continual Lecture of Self-denyal His Birth it was a great step from God's Bosom to the Virgin 's Lap. None can deny themselves as Christ who when he was rich viz. in all the Fulness and Glory of the Godhead yet for our sakes became poor that we through his poverty might be rich 2 Cor. 8.9 None was so rich as Christ and therefore none can deny themselves as Christ did We may talk of Flocks and Herds and Lands and Lordships and the Ornaments of the present Life but he had the possession of a perfect and unbounded Happiness and Glory and yet he was born of a Woman he had a poor Mother in a poor place and was wrapt up in cheap swadling Cloaths He that was God's Fellow the Heir of all things the Lord of Angels was thrust among the Beasts of the Stable Certainly Christ came into the World with such a slender Provision that we might not stand upon Greatness and Bravery His whole Life after he was born was exercised with Labours and Sorrows Rom. 15.3 Even as Christ pleased not himself that is he did not Study the Interest of that Life which he assumed Certainly if any had cause to love Life Christ had his Soul dwelt with God in a Personal Union in such a near Fellowship as we are not capable of and yet he pleased not himself but gave up himself for our sins It is ridiculous to profess him to be our Master and not to follow his Example We have no Reason to stand upon our Points as we do to be delicate and tender of our Interests when Jesus Christ pleased not himself We murmur if we have but a little bad Entertainment in the World for his sake and yet we cannot be worse used than Christ was Mat. 10.24 25. The Disciple is not above his Master nor the Servant above his Lord It is enough for the Disciple that he be as his Master and the Servant as his Lord. We have no Cause to complain if we be reduced to course Apparel when we remember the Swadling cloaths of Christ or to complain of a hard Bed and Prison when Christ was laid in a Manger Christ would teach us hereby that an innocent Poverty is better than all the Pomp of the World and for his Sufferings from the Cratch to the Cross still he was a Pattern of Self-denyal therefore they that indulge themselves in all the delights of the Flesh seem not to believe in Christ who was a Man of Sorrows We are in a base condition but two or three degrees distant from Dust or Nothing yet how are we for pleasing and satisfying our selves even to the dishonour of God and wrong of Conscience 2. In his Humility Christ did not this out of Necessity but Choice Matth. 20.28 The Son of Man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a Ransom 〈◊〉 many He came not in the Pomp and Equipage of Princes but in the Form of a Servant How should this check aspiring after and affecting Domination especially in the Church They that love Preheminence and would be great and hig● 〈◊〉 to affect another Jesus They that rend and tear all to pieces ei●her 〈…〉 their Greatness or grow greater have not the same Mind that was in Jesus You should be humble and lowly and condescending to the meanest Offices It is worth your Observation that in the Gospel we are so often told that after the Lord Jesus had performed some eminent Miracle he withdrew himself and retired from the Multitude that so he might not be mixed with their Praises Thus when he received that Glorious Testimony from Heaven declaring him to be the Son of God Matth. 3.17 And lo a voice from Heaven saying This is my belov●● Son in whom I am well pleased he retired into the Wilderness So when he had raised his Fame by curing
than in the time that their Corn and their Wine encreased And Cant. 1.4 We will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy Loves more than VVine The choicest Contentments of the Flesh are nothing so satisfying as the Joy of his Salvation This Joy is called unspeakable and glorious as being better felt than uttered 1 Pet. 1.8 The strength of it is seen when other Comforts fail How precious are thy Thoughts unto me O God! Psal. 139.17 How great is the summ of them Sixthly The sixth Property of Faith is Victory over the World 1 Ioh. 5.4 5. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the VVorld and this is the Victory that overcometh the VVorld even our Faith who is he that overcometh the VVorld but he that believeth that Iesus is the Son of God I shall dispatch this briefly and shall shew you 1. What is the World that is to be overcome All worldly things whatsoever so far as they lessen our Esteem of Christ and Heavenly things or as they hinder us in our Duty to God In short the Delights and Terrors of this World for we must be Armed on both sides with the Armour of Righteousness both on the right hand and the left 2 Cor. 6.7 The Fears of this World are apt to stagger us so do Snares pervert and inveigle us Moses had Temptations of all kinds right-hand Temptations from Riches Honours Pleasures Heb. 11.24 25 26. By Faith Moses when he was come to years refused to be called the Son of Pharaoh's Daughter choosing rather to suffer Affliction with the People of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt Left-hand Temptations Ver. 27. By Faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him who is invisible The Armour of the right hand is called Temperance of the left hand Patience 2 Pet. 1.6 To Knowledge Temperance and to Temperance Patience In the Parable of the Sower sowing his seed we read that which fell on the Stony ground withered in Persecution Luk. 8.13 They on the rock are they which when they hear receive the Word with joy and these have no root which for a while believe and in time of temptation fall away That which was sown in the Thorny-ground was choaked with the Cares Riches and Pleasures of the World Verse 14. And they which fell among Thorns are they which when they have heard go forth and are choaked with Cares and Riches and Pleasures of this life and bring no fruit to perfection If the Terrors of Sense assault our Constancy we must set Loss against Loss Pain against Pain Fear against Fear Matth. 10.28 Fear not him that can kill the Body and do no more but fear him that can cast both Body and Soul into Hell If they threaten a Prison remember God threatens Hell If they threaten Fire God threatens everlasting Fire If they threaten loss of Estate loss of Heaven is much worse If the Delights of Sense are likely to Corrupt us to pervert or divert our Minds from better things we must look to it and remember what better things are reserved for us Persecution is opposite to Prosession without but this obstructs the very Vigour Life and Power of Godliness within Ioh. 2.15 If any Man love the World the Love of the Father is not in him And then for Pleasures 2 Tim. 3.4 Lovers of Pleasures more than lovers of God Heb. 12.16 Or prophane Person as Esau who for one Morsel of Meat sold his Birth-right Honours are baneful to our Faith Ioh. 5.44 How can ye believe which receive Honour one of another and seek not the Honour that cometh from God only They eat out the Heart of it These are our daily Temptations 2. The Necessity of Overcoming the World 1. 'T is by the World that our spiritual Enemies have advantage against us The Devil seeketh to tempt or fright the fleshly Nature in us either by the Terrors or Allurements of Sense therefore Conquer the World and the Tempter is disarm'd he blindeth us as the god of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 In whom the god of this World hath blinded the minds of them which believe not least the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the Image of God should shine unto them He Vexeth as the Prince of this World and having a strong Party in the World he findeth it no great matter to entice a sensual Worldly Mind to almost any thing that is evil The Baits and Provisions of the Flesh are in the World 1 Ioh. 2.16 For all that is in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the World The World fits us with a Bait agreeable to every Appetite or a Dyet that suiteth with every Distemper of our Souls A proud Mind must be Honour'd and Humoured and will go nothing lower than high Place and Pomp of living a Sensual Mind must have its Pleasures and the Covetuous the Increase of Wealth and Religion is either cast off or neglected and made an Underling 2. The World is the great Lett and Impediment to our Obedience In the first Epistle of Iohn ch 5. in the Context to the Words that I am now explaining Verse the 2 d and 3 d. it is said By this we know that we love the Children of God when we love God and keep his Commandements for this is the love of God that we keep his Commandements and his Commandements are not grievous Then it followeth Verse 4. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the VVorld c. So Titus 2.11 12. For the Grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared to all Men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present VVorld The one must be done that the other may be done We shall soon be tempted to make a Breach upon Righteousness Sobriety or Godliness if we do not labour to overcome the World So Psal. 119.36 Incline my Heart unto thy Testimonies and not to Covetousness 3. This Victory over the World distinguisheth the Spiritual from the Animal Life The World of Mankind is distinguished into two sorts some that live the Animal Life and some that live the Spiritual Life They that live the Animal Life are such as only behave themselves meerly as living Creatures or as a wiser sort of Beasts and the Comfort of their Life is only kept up by the good things of this World Land Heritages Honours Pleasures Riches and so Reason is subjected to Sense all their Contrivance is for the Flesh But the Spiritual and Divine Life is supported by the Comforts of the Spirit and the Foresight of Eternal Joyes in the World to come and so Reason is raised and sublimated by Faith These two Lives are distinguished Ioh. 3.6 That which is born of
the Flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit 1 Cor. 2.14 15. But the natural Man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are Foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned But he that is spiritual judgeth all things yet he himself is judged of no Man And Iude v. 19. These be they who separate themselves sensual having not the Spirit Now the more we live this spiritual Life the more thorough Christians we are Another kind of spirit cometh upon a Man he liveth as a Man of another World he can bear up when the Outward and Animal Life is exposed to the greatest difficulties 2 Cor. 4.16 He fetcheth his Solace and Comfort from those great and glorious things which are kept for him in Heaven 'T is a mighty thing to have this spirit of Faith 4. We cannot hold out with Christ whilst any Temporal and Sensitive thing lyeth too near the Heart 1 Tim. 6.10 For the love of Money is the root of all evil which while some coveted after they have erred from the Faith and pierced themselves through with many sorrows And 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken us having loved this present VVorld The Devil hath them in a string and are easily taken again though we seem to make some escape from him 3. Faith is the Grace that is employed in overcoming the World 'T is not only said to be a means of overcoming but the Victory it self for 't is the Nature of Faith there are Terms in it as in other Graces 't is a Recess from the World and an Access to God a drawing off the Heart from things Visible and Temporal to those which are Invisible and Eternal How doth Faith overcome the World 1. As 't is an Assent to God's Word and chiefly to the Promises of the Gospel Now this strong and firm Assent doth preposses the mind with the Glory of the World to come Heb. 11.26 Moses had an eye to the Recompense of Reward And 2 Cor. 4.18 VVe look not to the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen And Heb. 11.1 Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen By this sight and View of Heavenly things our Esteem of the World is abated so by consequence the Force of the Temptation Alas whatever this World offereth must be left on this side the Grave Pomp Pleasure Estate ● Tim. 6.7 For we brought nothing into this VVorld and 't is certain we can carry nothing out Here we lust for greatness but Death soon endeth the quarrel In the Grave no difference is to be discerned between Rich and Poor both are alike Obnoxious to Rottenness and Corruption but Faith perswadeth us of better things Heb. 11.13 These all dyed in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the Earth 2. As 't is a Consent It causeth us to Surrender our selves to Christ's Discipline or that Religion which wholly draweth us off from this World to the World to come Its purpose and drift is that we may deny our selves bear the Cross and follow him this we Promise in Baptism 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism saveth us not the putting away the filthiness of the Flesh but the Answer of a good Conscience towards God by the resurrection of Iesus Christ. The Spirit of our Religion is not the Spirit of the World 1 Cor. 2.12 Now we have received not the Spirit of the World but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God 3. As it is a Dependance and Trust in Christ's Power and Sufficiency to maintain you and defend you safe 'till you are brought home to God He dyed for this end Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for our sins that he might deliver us from this present evil World according to the Will of God and our Father He intercedeth for us to the Father for this end Ioh. 17.15 I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the World but that thou shouldst keep them from the evil He overcame the World in his own Person for this end not only to encourage us but to enable us by his example Ioh. 16.33 These things I have spoken unto you that in me ye might have peace in the World ye shall have tribulation but be of good cheer I have overcome the World He sendeth his Spirit into our Hearts to preserve us against the Assaults of the Devil the World and the Flesh 1 Ioh. 4.4 Ye are of God little Children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you than he that is in the VVorld And because every state of Life is thick set with Temptations he reneweth his Influence upon us Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ which strengthens me He had before spoken of carrying an equal mind in all Conditions Christ enabled him as well as taught him this Contentment Well then reckon the growth of your Faith by the exercise of your Mortification and weanedness from the World rather than by strong Confidence of your good Estate or high flown Joys and Comforts The Comforts of the Spirit will not be tasted by an unmortified Worldly Heart Most men's Confidence cometh from their Security and mindlesness of these things The Comforts are more suspicious when the Mortification is a sure Note Seventhly The seventh Property of Faith is quieting the Heart against Fears and Doubts and Waiting on God I joyn these two things together because the Scripture doth Lam. 3.26 It is good that a Man should both hope and quietly wait for the Salvation of God But we must handle them asunder 1. Waiting Sense is all for present satisfaction but Faith can tarry God's leisure 'till these good things which we do expect do come in hand Isa. 28.16 He that believeth shall not make haste Men that cannot tarry for relief will yield up a Town upon the basest Terms The Children of God were always forced to eat their Words when they spoke in haste Psal. 31.22 For I said in my haste I am cut off from before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest the Voice of my Supplication when I cryed unto thee And Psal. 116.11 I said in my haste all Men are Lyars But where Faith and Hope is there is Patience Rom. 8.25 If we hope for what we see not then do we with Patience wait for it James 5.7 8. Be patient therefore Brethren unto the coming of the Lord Behold the Husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the Earth and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter Rain Be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh Unbelief leapeth overboard on the first danger Impatience and Precipitation is the Cause of all Mischief What
of their Sacrifices and drank the Wine of their Drink-offerings yea often the Blood of their Sons and Daughters whom they sacrificed to him yet all of a sudden his strong Holds were demolished the Idols broken whom they and their Fathers had worshipped and prayed unto in their Distresses and Adversities and blessed in their Prosperities the Temples broken down the Altars polluted and set at nought and the World turned from these Vanities to the living God But a little while after the Fires were kindled and the Professors of the True Religion were butchered and slaughtered but then they overcame him by the Blood of the Lamb and by the Word of their Testimony and not loving their Lives unto the Death Rev. 12.11 So that when the Church seemed weakest and her Enemies strongest then she had more for her than against her When Satan's Instruments were killing Christians then they were pulling down Satan's Throne and advancing Christ's So that it is better to be a simple Souldier on Christ's side than Commander of a whole Army against him When the Persecutors had done Satan raised up Hereticks in the Church as Worms that bred in the Body and devoured it Yet Christ confounded them and a little Time brake each Sect in pieces and those that were the great Scourge and Vexation of one Age were scarce known to the next but by their Names and some obscure Reports The Light of the Gospel did soon scatter these Mists as soon as they did arise Last of all came the great Apostacy of Antichristianism whereby the Simplicity of the Christian Doctrine was turned into School-Niceties the Worship of the Gospel into a Theatrical Pomp and the Pageantry of ridiculous Ceremonies and the Discipline of the Church into a Temporal Domination And all this supported by the Blood of the Saints and worldly Grandeur and the combined Interests of many Popish Nations And here are the Ebbs and Flows between the two Shores of Christ and Antichrist amongst us You know by what a bloody Design Hagar the Bond-woman that was cast ou● sought to weaken and vaunt it over Sarah but the Lord broke the Snare and our Foot is escaped 5. If the promised Seed had not bruised the Serpent's Head the World had been in a worse Case than it is There is some Conviction and Restraint where Conversion taketh not place Consider how Satan reigneth where Christ hath not pursued him with his Gospel or where Christ hath withdrawn his Gospel for the Ingratitude of Men. Surely there is a difference between the Places where People live in the Dregs of Christianity and there where the Devil is worshipped and Idolatry set up 6. Though there be not a total Destruction of the Kingdom of Satan yet it is in an absolute Subjection to the Throne of the Mediator The Kingdom of Sin and Satan are so far destroyed as not to hinder the Demonstration of Mercy to the Elect and as to be subservient to the Demonstration of his Justice to others who neglect or contemn the Remedy offered which is God's great Design that the Elect may obtain though the rest be hardned 7. That in time Christ will destroy all opposite Reigns and Kingdoms He doth some sooner others later but there will be an universal and absolute Subjection to Christ at the Day of Judgment Infernal Spirits shall then bow the Knee to him Phil. 2.10 with Rom. 14.10 11. and that with Isa. 45.23 Then Saints shall judg Angels 1 Cor. 6.2 and the whole Mystery of Iniquity will then be finished and come to nothing Vse 1. Thankfulness and Praise to our Mediator The Eternal God hath selected a People from the rest of the World to praise him for the Mystery of his Love Here in the Assemblies of his People for God inhabiteth the Praises of Israel Psal. 22.3 And hereafter that he may have the Thanks of his glorified Saints for ever Consider to this end how Satan's Design is crossed and counterworked in the Mystery of our Redemption 1. Satan's Design was to dishonour God by a false Representation as if envious of Man's Happiness Gen. 3.5 God doth know that in the Day that ye eat thereof then your Eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as Gods knowing Good and Evil. And so to weaken the esteem of God's Goodness Now in the Work of our Redemption God is wonderfully magnified and represented as amiable to Man not envying our Knowledg and Delight but promoting it by all Means even with great Care and Cost 1 John 4.8 God is Love 2. To depress the Nature of Man that in Innocency stood so near God Now that the Humane Nature so depressed and abased by the malicious Suggestions of the Devil should be so elevated and advanced and be set up far above the Angelical Nature and admitted to dwell with God in a personal Union O let us now chearfully remember and celebrate this Victory of Christ Our Praise now is a Pledg of our everlasting Triumph This Table is spread for us in the sight of our Enemies and we come to have intimate Communion and Fellowship with him at his Table Vse 2. To exhort us to make use of Christ's Help for our Recovery out of the Defection and Apostacy of Mankind O let Satan be crushed in you and the old carnal Nature destroyed He that so willingly entred into the Conflict on the Cross though his Heel were bruised will as willingly imploy the Power of the Spirit to help you the one was in order to the other Christ doth not only enter upon the Work by Conquest but hath much to do with every individual Person before he can settle his Kingdom in their Hearts There is a Combate between Christ and Satan for the rescue of every Sinner and we are not easily brought to change Masters Now yield to him suffer him to save you You look to the outward Interest of Christ in the World and you do well but it is easier to bring Men to own a true Religion than to bring them under the Power of it Christ's greatest Victory is the overcoming Mens Corruptions and carnal Inclinations to purify their polluted Souls and to set up Christ's Government in the Heart where once Satan ruled The Kingdom of Christ within us is the most excellent Kingdom Luke 11.20 If I with the Finger of God cast out Devils no doubt the Kingdom of God is come upon you If once we become Christ's we will more really care for his Interest in the World Vse 3. To shew us the Nature of Christ's Victory and wherein it consisteth Not in an Exemption from Troubles nor in a total Exemption from Sin for the present 1. Not in an Exemption from Troubles No you must expect Conflicts Tho Satan's deadly Power be taken away our Heel may be crushed Christ hath delivered us from the present evil World Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from this present evil World Not that the World should
without some Remark and Observation Isaac goeth to meet with God and he meeteth with God and Rebekah too Godliness hath the promises of this Life and that which is to come there is nothing lost by Duty and Acts of Piety and Worship Seneca said The Iews were an unhappy People because they lost the Seventh part of their Lives meaning the time spent in the Sabbath This is the Sense of Nature to think all lost that is bestowed on God Flesh and Blood snuffeth and cryeth What a weariness is it And what need all this waste Oh let me tell you by serving God you drive on two cares at once Worldly Interests many times are cast into the way of Religion and besides the main design these things are added to us Wonderful are the Providences of God in and about Duties of Worship some have gone aside to pray and escaped such as lay in wait to destroy them and Luther tells a story of one that balked a Duty and fell into a danger passed by a Sermon and was presently surprized by Thieves Others there are that thought of nothing but meeting God in his Worship and God hath made their Duties an occasion of advancing their outward Comforts Certainly it is good to obey all impulses of the Spirit there may be somewhat of Providence as well as Grace in it Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the even-tide and he lift up his eyes and saw and behold the camels were coming In the Words you have several Circumstances The Person Isaac his Work he went out to meditate the Place in the Field the Time at even-tide 1. For the Person Isaac I need not say much because I would not digress He was Abraham's Son and God said of Abraham Gen. 18.19 I know him that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord to do justice and judgment that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which he hath spoken of him Good Education leaveth a Savour and Tincture upon the Spirit at least an Awe and a Care of Duties and Exercises of Religion and therefore it is no wonder to hear of Abrahams Son that had been trained up in the way of the Lord to go out to meditate it is a Seal of the Blessing of Education Again Isaac was now in his Youth certainly he could not be very old Sarah was Ninety years old when the Promise was first made to her of a Son Gen. 17.17 Then Abraham fell upon his face and laughed and said in his heart Shall a child be born unto him that is an hundred years old And shall Sarah that is ninety years old bear Now Sarah was but One Hundred Twenty Seven old years when she dyed Gen. 23.1 And this Match was immediately after her Death for just as he received Rebekah he left off his Mourning for Sarah Gen. 24.67 And Isaac brought her into his Mother Sarahs tent and took Rebekah and she became his wife and he loved her And Isaac was comforted after his mothers death Probably Isaac now was a little above Thirty Isaac a Young Man that was now entring into the World goeth out to meditate Usually we make Religious Exercises the Work of Gray Hairs and after we have spent the heat and flower of our Spirits in the vanities of the World we hope to make amends for all by a Severe and Devout Retirement Young and Green Heads look upon Meditation as a dull melancholly work fit only for the phlegme and decay of Old Age vigorous and eager Spirits are more for Action than Thoughts and their Work lyeth so much with others that they have no time to descend into themselves But the Elder World was more Innocent the Exercises of Isaacs Youth were pious he went out into the Fields to meditate 2. To open his Work to you to meditate or as it is in the Margin to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word used in the Original is indifferent to both Senses it properly signifies muttering or an imperfect and suppressed sound the Septuagint sometimes renders it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sing but here they render it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to exercise himself and most properly a Sportive Exercise as if his going abroad had been only to sport and recreate himself after the toyl of the day But that is not so probable the Holy Ghost would not put such a Mark upon such a Circumstance Therefore I suppose the Septuagints word must be taken more largely to comprise also a Religious Exercise But how is it To Pray or Meditate I would not recede from our own Translation without weighty Cause most other Translations look that way Symachus renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to speak Aquila 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to discourse as with others that is with God and his own Soul and so it suiteth with the force of the Original Word which properly signifies to mutter or such a speaking as is between Thoughts and Words So that the meaning is he went aside privately to discourse of God and the Promises and of Heavenly Things 3. The Place in the field Partly for Privacy deep Thoughts require a Retirement Many of Davids Psalms were penned in the Wilderness He that would have the Company of God and his own Thoughts had need go aside from other Company and be alone that he may not be alone that the Mind being sequestred from all Distractions may solace it self the more freely in these Heavenly Thoughts Exod. 3.1 Moses led the flock to the back-side of the desert and came to the mountain of God even to Horeb. He goeth aside from the other Shepherds that he might converse with the Great Shepherd and Bishop of our Souls and there he seeth the Vision of the burning Bush. When God would communicate his Loves to the Church he inviteth her into the Wilderness Hosea 2.14 Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably unto her The most familiar and intimate Converses between God and the Church are in private So the Spouse inviteth the Bridegroom Cant. 7.11 Come my beloved let us go forth into the field let us lodge in the villages In these Solitary and Heavenly Retirements to which no Eyes are conscious and privy we have most Experience of God and of our selves Duties done in Company are more easie by ends and Mans Eye and Observance may have an influence upon our Worship and therefore Meditation is difficult and tedious because it is a work of Retirement that hath approbation from none but our Father that seeth in Secret Partly because the Field is an help to Meditation fancy and invention being elevated and raised by the sweetness variety and pleasure of it there being on every side so many Objects and lively Memorials of God However in this sense the Circumstance is not binding some do better in a Closet than in a
SERMON V. GENESIS xxiv 63 And Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the even-tide 4. Case WHEN must we Meditate 1. In the General something should be done every day seldom Converse begetteth a strangeness to God and an unfitness for the Duty It is a Description of Gods Servant Psalm 1.2 His delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night At least we should take all convenient occasions It is an usual way of Natural Men to make Conscience of Duties after a long neglect they performe Duties to pacifie a Natural Conscience and use them as a Man would use a sleepy Potiori or Strong Waters they are good at a pinch not for constant Drink Alass we lose by such wide gaps and distances between performance and performance it is as if we had never done it before 2. For the particular time of the day when you should meditate that is Arbitrary I told you before you may do it either in the silence of the Night when God hath drawn a Curtain of Darkness between you and the things of the World or in the freshness of the Morning or in the Evening when the Wildness and Vanity of the Mind is spent in Worldly Business 3. There are some special solemne times when the Duty is most in season As 1. After a working Sermon after the Word hath fallen upon you with a full stroak it is good to follow the blow and when God hath cast Seed into the Heart let not the Fowls peck it away Matth. 13.19 When any one heareth the word of the kingdom and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked one and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart Ruminate on the Word chew the Cud many a Sermon is lost because it is not whet upon the Thoughts Iames 1.23 24. He is like a man that beholdeth his Natural face in a glass For he beholdeth himself and goeth his way and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was Matth. 22.22 When they heard these things they marvelled and left him and went their way You should rowl the word in your thoughts and deeply consider of it 2. Before some solemn Duties as before the Lords Supper and before special times of deep Humiliation or before the Sabbath Meditation is as it were the breathing of the Soul that it may the better hold out in Religious Exercises it is a good preparative to raise the Spirits into a frame of Piety and Religion When the Harp is fitted and tuned it doth the better make Musick so when the Heart is fixed and setled by a preparative Meditation it is the fitter to make Melody to God in Worship 3. When God doth specially revive and enable the Spirit It is good to take advantage of the Spirits gales so fresh a Wind should make us hoise up our Sails Do not lose the Spirits Seasons the Spirits Impulses are good significations from God that now is an acceptable time 5. Case What time is to be spent in the Duty I Answer That is left to Spiritual Discretion Suck the Teat as long as Milk cometh Duties must not be spun out to an unnecessary length You must neither yield to laziness nor occasion Spiritual wearyness the Devil hath advantage upon you both wayes when you rack and torture your Spirits after they have been spent it makes the Work of God a Bondage And therefore come not off ti●l you find profit and do not press too hard upon the Soul nor oppress it with an indiscreet Zeal It is Satans Policy to make you out of Love with Meditation by spinning it out to a tediousness and an unnecessary length 6. Case Whether should the time be set and constant I Answer It is good to bind the Heart to somewhat and yet leave it to such a liberty as becomes the Gospel Bind it to somewhat every day that the Heart may not be loose and arbitrary we see that necessity quickneth and urgeth and when the Soul is engaged it goes to work the more throughly Therefore the Lord asks Ier. 20.21 Who is this that engaged his heart to approach unto me It is good to lay a tye upon the Heart and yet I advise not to a set stinted Hour lest we create a snare to our selves Though a Man should resist Distractions and Distempers yet some business is unavoidable and some Distempers are invincible I have observed this that even Religious Persons are more sensible of their own Vowes then of Gods Commands when Men have bound up themselves in Chains of their own making their Consciences fall upon them and dogg them with restless Accusations when they cannot accomplish so much Duty as they have set and prescribed to themselves And besides when Hours are customary and set the Heart groweth formal and superstitious 7. Case Are all bound to meditate Are the Ignorant Are Men of an unquiet Nature Are Servants Are Ministers 1. Are the Ignorant and Men of barren Minds that have not a good stock of Knowledge I answer Yes they are bound to this as well as other Duties though they cannot do it well it is their Duty to strive that the Word of God may dwell richly in them It is a mark of a Godly Man every Man is bound to be skilful in the Scriptures Ier. 31.34 They shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord. God hath no Child so little but he knows his Father therefore all are bound in some measure to be able to discourse of God and of the things of God 2. But some are of an unquiet Nature fit for Publick Duties but not for Private Exercises are they bound as well as those of softer Spirits and fitter for Meditation I answer This is not Temper but Distemper the unquiet Spirit must not totaliter cessare wholly discontinue this work They are to mind wherein they may serve God most but not totally desist from a work so necessary and of such great importance 3. Are Servants bound to it whose time is not their own I Answer They should do what they can God is more merciful to them but those that are in bondage to others may find some leisure for God 4. Are Ministers obliged Their whole work is a Study their Imployment is a continual Meditation I Answer There is a difference between Meditation and Study In Study we mind the good of others in Meditation the good of our own Souls Things work with us according to our end and the aims that we propose to our selves Things work with us according to our end and the aims that we propose to our selves Publick Teaching is no such Tryal of our Hearts there is a Natural Pride in us to urge us to teach others and that makes so many intrude into the Ministry there is some kind of Authority in it that we exercise over others but we are to mind the good of our own Souls and to regard
comparison with Babes and Novices Therefore it is good with Mary to sit at the feet of Iesus and not presently with the Spouse to beg the kisses of his mouth but to go on by degrees 2. Though we must contrive a Method and Course yet there must be a liberty left for Things for all Seasons and Occasions As in the World though a Man hath disposed his business yet he reserveth a liberty for incidental and unthought of occasions so in these Spiritual Matters and in the course of Religious Exercises you must not bind up your selves from these occasions I shall name Four 1. Working and Forcible Sermons It is not good to lose the heat that we have gotten at the Word but to go home and chew the Cud. In the word there is Ingestion in Meditation you turn it into nourishment There must be a time for Concoction and when the Seed is scattered it must be covered 2. For present Impulses keep your selves free that you may not lose the advantage of such impulses Many times Christ cometh leaping upon the mountains and skipping upon the hills Cant. 2.8 He impelleth our Hearts on a sudden and unlookt for by causing Holy Thoughts to shoot into our Minds by representing our Unworthyness Coldness and Deadness of Life or else he inflameth us by representing the Beauty and Loveliness of Grace Then it is good those thoughts should take the next turn and our Method must give way to Gods Dispensation As general Nature altereth its course in some great particular Exigencies fire descendeth and Water ascendeth so in this case the general work must be interrupted It is a kind of resisting God not to entertain these Motions I do not mean when they come upon you in the necessary work of your Callings but only that they may have the next turn 3. For remarkable Providences when God casteth us upon such Objects as stir up special Veneration and Reverence as some Marvellous Events or Creatures that discover his Wisdom and Glory or sudden Death of one near us It is of Excellent Use while such Experiences are warm to go home and consider of them As Waldo a Rich Merchant of Lyons was conversing with a Friend and he fell down dead and presently he went home and thought of the uncertainty of Life and the necessity of providing for a Future State and God blessed these Thoughts for his Conversion Or else the end falls of a Person Eminent for Religion when we see some Glorious Star fall like Lightning from Heaven these are Accidents that must not be passed over without some Mark and Consideration and then God doth as it were call you off from your usual thoughts 4. The present Exigence of the Spirit Choose that which is seasonable and what suits with your own Case a Sermon works more forcibly when it is seasonable Thus David Psalm 94.19 In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul He means his sad Thoughts it was an advantage to him then to solace himself with those Comforts God had provided The Scripture useth this Similitude of Rain upon New Mowen Grass Rain when it comes seasonably refresheth the Grass and causes it to spring up which otherwise would be burnt up with the Drought and Heat of the Season so the Soul would be parched with a Temptation if it be not watered with seasonable Thoughts But I have spoken to this point before But you will say What is the Method that we should use Answ. Though I cannot exactly prescribe it yet give me leave to advise 1. For those that are wholly to begin this Duty it is best first to meditate about Meditation the Nature Use and Excellency of it and how they may carry it on with success It is a good preparative to the whole Work I do direct you to this course because this is that which the Soul standeth in need of this will lay a Charge and Necessity upon the Soul As to Pray is a good preparative to Prayer so to Meditate on Meditation is a good preparative to Meditation To quicken you consider the Motives alledged and when you have done all say Oh Soul Do but go and try Oh Lord help me and keep this up in the Thoughts of thy Servant 2. For the general Method it is good to keep the Method of the Spirit The Method of Meditation should follow that of Gods Dispensation Iohn 16.8 When the spirit is come he shall reprove the world of sin and of righteousness and of judgment First begin with Sin which is more easie and familiar to the Understanding it is good to lay the Foundation of all in the mortifying and purgative way and then go to Righteousness and after the Extermination of Sin we shall be fitter to entertain the Love of God and then go to Judgment Take another Method First consider the great End of Man that you may come to your selves then the Evil of Sin that you may bemoan and avoid it then the Miseries of the World or the Vanity of the Creature that you may contemn it then the Horrors of Death the Severity of Judgment the Torment of Hell that you may prevent it then the Excellencies of Christ the Priviledges of the Godly the Rare Contrivance of the Gospel then of Providence of Heaven of God and his Attributes his Power his Wisdom his Eternity c. with suitable Scriptures for each of these 2. For the manner how you must work upon these Objects 1. There must be pregnant Thoughts and Apprehensions Deep Consideration begins the Work you must set your Hearts to consider the Subject for when the Heart is once set these Thoughts through the Blessing of God will come in freely It is often spoken in Scripture of setting our Hearts to seek the Lord when the Heart is set for Prayer God comes in with a great enlargement so when the Heart is set to consider you will have serious and solemn thoughts If vain thoughts trouble you and interpose yet still set the Heart and go on as a Man in a Journey though dogs come out and bark upon him he rideth on to run after every Cur would be a great hindrance and diversion so if you stand quarrelling with every vain thought you lose your purpose and so the Devil will gain that by a Reflexed Act which you seek to reject in a Direct Act as Cryers in a Court in calling for Silence many times make the greatest noise Mr. Greenham was wont to lift up his Heart in a short Ejaculation and so go on 2. There are Serious Inforcements and Rational Inculcations Things barely propounded do not work it is by Lively Reasons they are whetted upon the Soul Look as it is in going to Sea those that only mind passage do not stay upon the Ocean and therefore do not fetch up the Treasures of the great Deep but those that go to fish cast out the Net again and again so must you you must cast
why will you match your Souls that are of an Heavenly Original to these base outward things 4. All these things which we think increase our Happyness do but add to our Trouble both to our Outward Inward and Eternal Trouble 1. Many times to our Outward Trouble The greater Gates do but open to the greater Cares and the more any are endowed with any Excellency in the World they have proportionable Sorrow and Incumbrances Moral Wisdom is the best of all Outward Enjoyments yet that encreaseth our Portion of Sorrow Eccles. 1.18 For in much wisdom is much grief and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow Many have observed that never was a Man eminent for any outward endowment but the Joy of it was abated with an answerable proportion of Sorrow and Trouble and their encumbrances have been every way suitable to their Comforts Those that have been most famous for outward Qualities have come to some dismal End as Sampson for Strength Saul for Stature Absalom for Beauty Achitophel for Council and Parts Asahel for Swiftness Alexander for Warlike ●rowess Nabal for Riches and God hath made it good by many Experiences in our times the Wheel of Providence hath rolled upon them and they have come to some sad End So for Witt and Parts Wit has been many a Mans Ruine Isa. 47.10 Thy wisdom and thy knowledge hath perverted thee Many are undone by their own Wisdom and Knowledge and the greatness of their parts and came to sad Accidents 2. For inward Troubles As Children catch at painted Butter-flies and when they have taken them their gawdy Wings melt away in their fingers and there remaineth nothing but an ugly Worm so we catch at those things which perish in the using but the Worm of Conscience remaineth Many times outward Blessings are salted with a Curse we never have outward things as a Blessing till we have an higher Interest in them Psalm 127.2 So he giveth his beloved sleep Those that have an Interest in God can rest quietly in the bosom of Providence and outward Comforts are given as a Blessing when they are additionals and appendices to the Covenant of Grace Matth. 6.33 Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you God doth not say seek the World and Heaven shall be added to you but seek Heaven and the World shall be added For by seeking of Heavenly things first you drive on two Trades at once for Earth and Heaven But when Men cumber themselves with the World there is a snare upon the Conscience and they cannot enjoy the comfort of their Condition It will add to your inward Trouble when God is neglected and the World sought 3. For Eternal Trouble These things are Temporal and we hazard the loss of Eternal things for them We never leave God but with disadvantage to our selves Ionah 2.8 They that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy whenever you go off from God for a Fleeting Shadow you loose an Eternal Joy The Comfort of the World is but for a time but our Punishment is for ever Ea quae ad usum diuturna esse non possunt ad supplicium diuturna sunt why should we look after those things that we cannot use for ever and so wound and destroy our Souls for ever An immoderate seeking after Temporal things will be our Eternal Ruine Oh that Men would be wise not to run so great a hazard for so small a pleasure Riches are uncertain but the Love of them brings a sure Damnation Phil. 2.19 Whose end is destruction who mind earthly things Oh say then shall I overturn the quietness of my Life Shall I wound my Conscience Shall I contract guilt and terrour for the time to come for that which will perish in the using and is uncertain in the Enjoyment Let us leave things that perish to Men that perish Shall I adventure my Soul upon so vain a pursuit Shall I lose Eternal Glory for a little Vain Glory Shall I make my Children or Kindred Rich and be poor to all Eternity Shall I bereave my Soul of all my hopes and of those Eternal Joyes which God hath provided for them that love him for a possession that is so uncertain and so ensnaring 2. You should deal with your Hearts by apt Similitudes The word will afford you with several who would dwell in a Ditch that may have a goodly House in a City Who would leave Treasures and feed of Husks Who would refuse a pleasant Bride for a Company of nasty Harlots Or who would sit on the Stairs when he is called up to sit on the Throne I may enjoy God in Christ and shall I think it my happyness to enjoy the World 3. By Comparisons Compare the World with Heaven here you have the fuller Wealth and but a foretast of Heaven but the Grapes of Heaven are better than the Vintage of the World and these present Enjoyments are sweeter and more sure than all Honours and Riches in the World These things are gotten with care kept with Fear and lost with grief Reason thus with your selves what are these Pleasures to the Joyes of the Spirit These gratifie the Body the Beast and are so disproportionable to reason it self that when we have sucked out the quintessence of all Earthly Delights they cannot yield a perfect contentment Therefore Solomon saith Prov. 14.13 Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful and the end of that mirth is heavyness We see that laughter by too much extension and dilatation of the Spirits causeth an aking in the sides in the outward Expressions of Jollity God would shew how painful it is you will find carnal delights alwaies go away and leave some sad Impressions God's worst is better than the Worlds best the groans of the Spirit are better than the Joyes of the World The groads of the World never go away but they leave a Contentment and drop some sweetness but the Joyes of the World never go away but Clouds of Sorrow are left behind God's Children rejoyce in the midst of their Mourning and a Glory hath risen upon their Spirits even when they seem to be disconsolate in the Eyes of the World 4. By Colloquies with God Either by way of Complaint that thou hast sinned and been ungrateful to God Psalm 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a beast before thee Lord This hath been my brutishness to chose outward Pleasure before Communion with God and to prefer the Contentments of the World before the delights of thy presence Go and humble your selves and say Lord I have traded with vanity and vexed my self in unprofitable pursuits I have lived so long in the World and have scarce minded the end wherefore I was sent into the VVorld as if I was put into the VVorld only as Leviathan in the Sea to take my fill of Pleasure and bathe my Soul in Carnal Delights Or else by way of Thanksgiving if the
live as if they were above changes God is neglected or but coldly owned as if now we had no more need of him Lam. 1.9 She remembred not her last end therefore she came down wonderfully That is She was not mindful of the Changes and Mutations to which all things are obnoxious Men usually loose their Sense of Duty with their Fears The Heart groweth flat and dead in Prayer not carried out with such Zeal and Earnestness as when we were in distress Or it takes us off from what we proposed in our Affliction and all our Vowes and Promises are forgotten 2. In Insolency This is manifested 1. By Contention When we are delivered then we revive the old quarrels as Timber warpeth in the Sun-shine When God giveth us success then follow Divisions The greatest strife is in dividing the Spoil Only by pride cometh contention saith Solomon Prov. 13.10 Plenty and ease begetteth Pride Dioclesians Persecution was brought on by the Factious Carriage of the Christians themselves contending for the Honours of the Church In King Edwards dayes when there was a little breathing then was there a Contention for Ceremonies 2. By Insultation over Enemies True they are under but it is unmanly to speak to the grief of those whom God hath wounded If our Mercies cannot be advanced but by the fall of our Brethren let us not insult but pity them David grieved when Saul fell and fasted for his Enemies Those whom the hand of the Lord hath touched have a kind of Reverence due to 'em as places blasted with Thunder and Lightning were accounted Sacred Iudges 21.6 And the children of Israel repented them for Benjamin their brother 3. By Oppression and Violence Because it is in the power of their hands Micah 2.1 Power doth mightily draw forth Corruption Tenderness of Conscience should be a restraint where publick force is not This I can do but I dare not But when Men imply their Power for hurt not for good and think to be born out in a sinful course by their Strength and Power it is Pride and Carnal Confidence VSE Oh Christians Beware of being lifted up in any kind 1. Take heed of secet thoughts of Merit Deut. 9.4 Speak not thou in thine heart after that the Lord thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying for my righteousness the Lord hath brought me in to possess this Land Though there be not such formal thoughts or down-right expressions yet this is the implyed thought There are explicite thoughts and implicite thoughts the one is actually and sensibly conceived in the Mind the other lurk and lie hid there and our Actions being interpreted are necessarily resolved into such thoughts As when you are scornful and pittyless vaunting your selves above others and do not actually admire the Riches of the Lords Goodness surely there is some latent thought of Merit in the Heart You may take notice of Gods Justice but still you must admire Free Grace 2. Take heed of ascribing to your Wisdom Power and Conduct Man would fain be Faber fortunae suae the Author of his own happyness justling God out of his thoughts Habbak 1.16 They sacrifice to their net and burn incense to their dragg because by them their portion is fat and their meat plenteous Insulting and glorying in their Wisdom and Strength Though a Man doth not fall down as a gross Idolater and performe Rites of Devotion yet his thoughts run this way and so God is laid aside God giveth his People warning of this Deut. 8.14 Let not thine heart be lifted up and thou forget the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt and ver 17. And thou say in thine heart my power and the might of my hand hath gotten this wealth Why should the Lord give so many warnings if we were not exceeding prone to this We should throw our Crowns at Gods Feet It is enough for us to be poor Instruments in Gods hand I hope you came here before the Lord with such a design this Day to strip your selves and give all the Glory to God 3. Take heed of the Pride of Self-dependance Hereby the Heart is taken off from God and then the Devil hath us upon the hip He that swimmeth in a full stream is apt to be carryed away with the stream It is a hard matter to see the nothingness of the Creature when we enjoy the fulness of the Creature Mans thoughts are alwaies swallowed up with his present Condition In Misery we think we shall never come out of it In Prosperity that it will never be otherwise Paul could say As having nothing yet possessing all things 2 Cor. 6.10 Few can say as possessing all things and having nothing so as to sit loose from our worldly dependances I have learned to abound it is an harder Lesson than I have learned to be abased Phil. 4.12 As there is more of choice in it and less of necessity We are beaten to the other We use to say such a one would do well to be a Lord or a Lady It is an harder matter than you are aware of Many have done well in a low Condition that could not manage an higher Ephraim is a cake not turned Hosea 7.8 Not baked of both sides so as to walk with an Holy Equality and evenness of Spirit in all Conditions You think it is hard to bear Miseries it is as hard to master Comforts to carry a full Cup without spilling and to keep from surfeiting at a rich and luscious Banquet Few know how to abound To prick these windy Bladders in solemn remembrances of Mercy such things as these are necessary 1. A special Recognition and Recalling of Sins is not unseasonable Let the warm Sun melt you Ezek. 36.30 31. I will multiply the fruit of the tree and the increase of the field that ye shall receive no more reproach of famine among the heathen Then shall ye remember your wayes and doings that have not been good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for all your iniquities When Mercies humble us and set us a mourning it is a kindly work Moses bowed himself when the Lord proclaimed the Name of his Mercy Oh bow your selves poor worthless Creatures that God should look upon us 2. Meditate upon the Changes of Providence Things are at a great uncertainty in the World Hezekiah is delivered and then falls sick he is delivered again and then groweth proud and then came Wrath upon him and upon all Iudah and Ierusalem Psalm 39.5 Verily every man at his best estate is altogether vanity not only in his worst but at his best Estate When he is in his Zenith then he is at the vertical point Verily this is a Truth should be stamped deeply upon all our hearts Belisarius a famous General to day and within a little while forced to beg for a half-penny Things and Persons are as the Spokes of a Wheel sometimes in the Dirt and sometimes out
for God First Let us open this looking First It implieth Faith or a believing the reality of these Invisible things That there are eternal and glorious things to be enjoy'd after this life Certainly an Object though never so glorious cannot be seen without eyes Now Faith is the eye of the Soul without which we can have no prospect of the World to come Therefore Faith is defined to be Heb. 11.1 The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Without Faith Reason is short sighted and there is a deep mist upon Eternity 2 Pet. 1.9 Reason is acute enough in discerning what is noxious and comfortable to the present life Good for Back and Belly but it seeth little of any thing beyond this present World so as to quicken us to make any preparation for Death and Eternity The Mind hath no eyes to look beyond the mists and clouds of this lower World but such as the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation is pleased to give us and cannot believe the reality of the unseen glory 'till in his light we see light Ephes. 1.17 18. Alass The wisest part of Mankind are taken up with Toys and Childish Trifles in comparison of these Invisible things The sweetness of Honour VVealth and Pleasure is known easily by feeling and therefore known easily and known by all but few can see the reality and worth of these unseen things Though Heaven and Glory be talked of in their hearing yet they know it not 'T is quite another thing when it is represented to us in the light of the Spirit None discern the worth of these things but those that have the Eagle-eye of Faith that can pierce above the Clouds to the Seat of the Blessed Faith is like a Prospective-glass by which we see things at a distance Others onely mind things at hand things that may be seen and felt Compare Lumen Fidei the light of Faith with the light of Sense That one degree of light the light of Sense can onely discern things near us present with us and before our eyes Those things which lie out of the view of Sense make no Impression upon them They see nothing but these corporeal things which even Dogs and Horses see as well as they As for Instance That it is good to eat well and drink well and sleep well To be at liberty and enjoy our pleasure or mind our business here in the World and thrive and prosper and do well according to hearts desire But the light of Faith will discover that there is no such danger as perishing for ever no such worth in any thing as there is in Salvation by Christ no such business of Importance as seeking after Eternal Life That all the gay things of Sense are but as so many May games to this happiness All the terrible things in the VVorld but as a Flea-biting All the business of the VVorld but as a little Childish sport at Push-pin in comparison of working out our Salvation with fear and trembling Much of Christianity lieth in opening the eye of Faith and shutting that of Sense Faith can look through all the clouds and changes of this VVorld To those eternal perpetual solid good things which God hath prepared for them that love him and so can the better contemn all those perishing vanities which the VVorld doteth upon This is that which is called in the Text looking and not looking c. The next degree of light is Lumen Rationis Reason can onely guess at future contingencies or at best see things in their causes and that it is probable if nothing letteth that such and such things will fall out but Faith can look through all distance both of time and place and the mist of contrary appearances to things promised with such certainty and sure perswasion as if the things we are perswaded of were at hand Heb. 11.13 These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth John 8.56 Your Father Abraham rejoiced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Still it can believe in hope against hope and see Sun-shine at the back of the Storm and Heaven and Happiness in the midst of deep Afflictions Compare the Lumen Fidei with the Lumen Prophetiae Rev. 20.12 They agree in the common object such things as are revealed by God They agree in the same common nature That they see things future and to come with such clearness and certainty as if they were in being They differ because Faith goeth upon the common Revelation which God hath made to all the Saints in Scripture The other some special Revelation made to certain chosen persons The light of Faith affects the Heart with great joy and comfort The other is usually accompanied with rapture and extasie Yea let us compare it with Lumen Gloriae The Beatifical Vision that worketh a change in Body and Soul 1 Iohn 3.2 This in Soul 2 Cor. 3.18 There we see him Face to Face 1 Cor. 13.12 Here as in a Glass Though we are not so higly affected with the light of Faith yet as truly That nullifieth all sin and misery This exasperateth the Heart against sin and fortifieth it against misery Though the light of Faith giveth not as full an enjoyment of God yet as sure and proportionably affecteth the Heart as if we saw Christ in the midst of his Holiness and Paul with his Crown of Righteousness It puts the Believers Head above the Clouds in the midst of the glory of the World to come Once more this Lumen Fidei is somewhat like that sight which God hath of things Scientia Visionis simplicis Intelligentiae God seeth all things that may be in his own All-sufficiency all things in his own Decree Faith acts proportionably It sheweth all things that may be in the All-sufficiency of God and though it be not sure of the event yet our God is able Dan. 3.17 18. It seeth all things that shall be in the Promises of the Gospel wherein his Decree is manifested it realizeth them as if they were already They have a pledge of the Blessing when they have the Promise Now if we had such a Faith could thus look to things unseen it would produce notable effects A Man would be another manner of Christian Secondly It implieth an earnest Hope as well as a lively Faith Hope implieth Two things First A frequent Meditation Secondly A desirous Expectation 1 Frequent Meditation For Faith is acted by serious Thoughts Carnal Men are described to be those who mind earthly things Phil. 3.19 And again Who mind the things of the flesh Rom. 8.5 As a Man is in the constitution of his Heart so are his musings and meditations For thoughts being the genuine birth and immediate off-spring of the Soul do discover the temper of it But those that
another World they would sooner discern their mistake How miserably will you bewail your selves when you have lost Eternity for poor Temporal things What comfort will it be to you that you have been Merry lived in Pomp and Ease It is better to believe than try To prevent the misery than experiment it Now for means to help you Vse I. Frequent Recollection For thereby you come to your selves Luke 15.17 And when he came to himself he said How many Hired Servants of my Fathers have Bread enough and to spare and I perish with Hunger Many are so busie about their vanities that they cannot find that they are Men or think what business they have to do in the World nor where they must dwell for ever Self-communing would be an hopeful means to undeceive them Isa. 46.8 Remember this and shew your selves Men bring it again to mind O ye transgressors And elsewhere the Prophet sheweth what reasonings we should use with our selves Isa. 55.2 Surely this would be one means to wean you from Carnal Vanities and to deaden the Gust and Tast of them to your Souls most men debase their reason to the service of their Appetites and Lusts their pleasure and business is the pleasing and gratifying of the Flesh Rom. 13.14 All their care is to Eat well and Drink well to be well Fed and well Clad and to make a fair shew in the Flesh and live in Worldly Pomp All their business is to gather in provision for the satisfying of their present Lusts they spend their days and cares for nothing else which is that living after the Flesh Rom. 8.13 That sowing to the Flesh Gal. 5.8 which the Scripture condemneth And what is the reason of all this Because they are inconsiderate Never consider whence am I whither am I a going What shall become of me to all Eternity Psal. 119.59 I thought on my ways and turned my Feet unto thy Testimonies They are like Children hunting after Butter-flies and when they have them their gawdy Wings melt away in their Hands and there remaineth nothing but an ugly Worm The Worm of Conscience the Worm of Disappointment Oh recollect thy self is this to make Eternal things our scope 2. Let us often compare together the condition of the present and of the future Life All things that are liable to the view of Sense soon pass away whether Comforts or Crosses The Good and Evil of the present World are soon over accordingly should be our carriage towards them 1 Cor. 7.29 30 31. Now consider how unreasonable it is the Soul should be drawn away by Transitory things from those which are Eternal The things we doat upon are not worthy to be compared with the greatness and duration of those things to which we are invited by the Promises of the Gospel It may be you have Health and Strength and Wealth now but how long will you have it We are not sure of the enjoyment of these things the next day How soon may they be withered The prosperity of the wicked is cut down as Grass withered as the Green Herb Psal. 37.2 But things unseen will be yours to all Eternity God is an everlasting Portion Psal. 73.26 My Flesh and my Heart faileth But God is the strength of my Heart and my Portion for ever Christ's Redemption is an everlasting redemption Heb. 9.12 He entred in once into the Holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us God and Christ will be yours to day and will be yours to all Eternity Those things which are seen if they do not perish may be taken from you Mat. 6.19.20 We are not sure to get it but you are sure to leave it Iob 1.21 But these other things cannot be taken from you Luke 10.42 One thing is needful and Mary hath chosen that good part which shall not be taken from her The Devil cannot and God will not take it from you 3. Improve your experience of the vanity of this World Psal. 119.96 I have seen an end of all perfection but thy Commandments are exceeding broad Vain light Hearts pass over these things and get no profit by them They find the Creature vanity and vexation of Spirit yet run out as greedily after it as they did before Psal. 49.13 This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They are sensible of the folly of their Ancestors but are not mended by it they have Eyes to see but not an Heart to see Deut. 29.2 3 4. Ye have seen all that the Lord did before your Eyes in the Land of Egypt unto Pharaoh and to all his Servants and to all his Land The great Temptations which thine Eyes have seen the Signs and those great Miracles yet the Lord hath not given you an Heart to perceive and Eyes to see and Ears to Hear unto this day 4. Be sure when you are tempted to revive this meditation upon your Hearts That things seen are Temporal and things unseen are Eternal As 1. When any Temptation cometh to draw your Hearts to give contentment to the Flesh for a season As for Instance when you are tempted to please your Eye your Taste your Sensual Desire or to wrong your Souls for Wealth and Honour remember these are not Eternal Pleasures Riches Honours And shall I dare run the hazard of wronging God or my Soul for a little present satisfaction Leave my fatness and sweetness to rule over the Trees What! hazard Eternal things for Temporal trifles 2. When tempted by the bitterness of the Cross to relent in Gods Cause Say as Basil's Forty Martyrs that were kept naked in the open Air in a cold Night to be burn'd next day Sharp is the cold but sweet is Paradice Troublesome is the Way but pleasant is the end of the Journey Let us endure a little cold and the Patriarchs Bosom will soon warm us Stephen saw Heaven opened and that fortified him against the Showers of Stones from the People Act. 7.51 'T is for such a season 5. Beg the light of the Spirit 'T is necessary for us both with respect to things seen and unseen 1. Seen That we may apprehend the vanity of the Creature Psal. 90.92 So teach us to number our days that we may apply our Hearts unto Wisdom Psal. 49.4 I will incline mine Ear to a Parable I will open my dark saying upon the Harp David is describing the vanity of Worldly prosperity And also to see things unseen Eph. 1.17 18. That the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of Glory may give unto you the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation in the Knowledge of him The Eyes of your Vnderstanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the Hope of his ●alling and what the Riches of the Glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Our Wisdom Natural is Carnal and Sensual Iam. 3.15 Either for Riches Pleasures or Honours Prov 23.4 Labour not to be Rich cease from thine own Wisdom Reason catereth for the Body
respect to our selves to raise our Faith in the Crucified Saviour For God hath set him forth to be a propitiation for our sins through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 We believe that by this means the Favour of God may be recovered his Image restored Eternal Life obtained and all the Mercy offered in the new Covenant bestowed upon us according to the Gracious terms thereof II. With respect to others We annunciate it as we make publick profession of this Faith that we are not ashamed of Christ Crucified but rather glory in it and in the Blessed Effects of his death Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should Glory save in the cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the world is crucified to me and I unto the world We glory in this that we are his peculiar People distinguished from the perishing world as Goshen from Aegypt or those in the Ark from those who perished in the waters or as Gideon's Fleece wet with the Dew from all the rest of the ground or as Rahab's House from the rest of Iericho We own Christ and Christ will own us You will say What great matter is there in this profession where all are Christians among whom Christ's name is had in Honour and Esteem I Answer 1. Never was it so well with the World but that somewhat of Christ was called in question and so the profession of his intire Truth may be dangerous and costly Sometimes this Truth and sometimes that is contradicted and opposed And so it cometh to pass that Self-denial is a standing Rule never out of season And therefore we still fortifie our Selves by this Duty to own the present Truth how much soever it be spoken against Thus Paul Gloried in Christ in opposition to the carnal policy of the false Apostles who gloried in the flesh the riches pomp and favour of the World which ran of their side But we remember the Cross of Christ to deaden our Affections to the glory and applause of the world II. This profession must be not in Word only but Deed also We profess our selves to be a peculiar People redeemed from all iniquity by Christ to live to God and serve God Now if our conversation be not answerable we do not remember the Blood of the Covenant with Honour but spill it on the ground and trample it under our feet Heb. 10.29 and destroy our profession by our conversation As we destroy our profession of God Tit. 1.16 They profess that they know God but in works they deny him So of Christ 1 Tim. 5 8. If any provide not for his own and especially for those of his own house he hath denied the faith and is worse than an Infidel A merciless Man hath denied the Faith And Ier. 9.25 26. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom neither let the mighty man glory in his might let not the rich man glory in his riches But let him that glorieth glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me that I am the Lord which exercise loving kindness judgment and righteousness in the earth for in these things I delight saith the Lord So that our Lives must be an Hymn to Christ or a constant glorying in him Great things are expected of the peculiar people 1 Pet. 2.9 Ye are a chosen generation a royal Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light Well then this annunciating the death of Christ before many witnesses is useful to us in times of trouble that we may be faithful to his Interest and in times of Peace that we may be the more bound to all Holy Conversation and Godliness III. We profess also our selves to be parrtakers of the benefits of Christ's death by a lively Faith For the Apostle tells us 1 Cor. 10.21 Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of Devils Ye cannot be partakers of the Lords Table and of the Table of Devils In the Lord's Supper we profess to be partakers of the Body and Blood of Christ that is the benefits of his death And he had said before of the Iews ver 18. They which eat of the sacrifices are partakers of the Altar they Eat and Drink with God at the Altar So eating and drinking at the Lord's Table is a sign of communion with Christ and that we rejoyce in this that we are admitted into the participation of the benefits and efficacy of his death If we be unqualified and unprepared to Receive them we mock God and dishonor Christ. 3. We annunciate it to God This we do two ways 1. In a way of Prayer Pleading before him the value of this Sacrifice with Humility and Affiance expecting the benefits thereof Christ's Blood is pleaded by him in Heaven by his constant intercession and by us upon Earth in Prayer when we shew the Father that Sacrifice once made by him In which we trust and for which we expect Mercy and Grace to help us As the Apostle beggeth Grace through the Blood of the everlasting Covenant Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Iesus Christ that great shepheard of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting Covenant Make ye perfect in every work to do his Will working in you that which is well pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom be Glory for ever and ever Amen And we sue out our Pardon and beg the Gift of the Spirit in the name of our Mediator and Advocate 2. In Thanksgiving and Praise to God for Jesus Christ and his benefits Eph. 1.3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ. Looking upon all Blessings as streaming to us in his Blood and the fruits of his Mediatorial Administration 2. With respect to the Properties and manner how it is to be annunciated 1. It must be serious In Spiritual things the Heart is not soon wrought upon or else the Sacred Impressions are easily defaced Glances have no Fruit and Efficacy to warm the Heart As Birds that often straggle from their Nests suffer their Eggs to grow chill and cold but when they sit long the Brood is hatched So by a constant Incubation we profit most and these things sink deeper into our Hearts It is true the things represented are great things and so force their way into our Minds whether we will or no but yet they are Spiritual and depend on Faith therefore some Entertainment and serious Consideration is necessary Heb. 3.1 Wherefore holy Brethren partakers of the heavenly Calling consider the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Christ Iesus The Heart of Man catcheth like Tinder at every Spark when Sin is represented but it is otherwise in Holy and Heavenly Things They that do not use to command their Thoughts make less Earnings
Psal. 17.14 15. From men which are thy hand O Lord from men of the world which have their portion in this life and whose Belly is fill'd with the hid treasure they are full of Children and leave the rest of their substance to their Babes But as for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Men are dazled with the splendour of Worldly Happiness and think it a fine thing to be well fed and well clad and well attended but this is all for them and theirs and shall we Envy them for this That they have more for Back and Belly than we have a little pomp of living especially when such great things be provided for us in Christ. Alass what is a more plentiful Table to the Everlasting fruition of God The Pomp of the World to the Honour Christ will put on us at the day of Judgment when he shall be admired in his Saints The favour of Princes to seeing God face to face Vain Glory to Everlasting Glory Their momentary Pleasures which pass away suddenly as a Dream to that Everlasting pleasure at God's Right hand A little Decking and Adorning of the Body to be satisfied with his likeness and to walk with God in White 2. Present Enjoyments Here I take in the notion of the Text his secret is with the righteous There is some difference what should be meant by the secret of the Lord. Sometimes it noteth 1 Spiritual Illumination or the knowledge of God's Will Psal. 25 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him he will teach them his Covenant They know more of God's mind than others do and they know it not only Literally but Spiritually That is by the lively light of the Spirit not Disciplinarily Now this is a great favour that God doth so love them that he doth admit them to his Arcana Iohn 15.15 I have called you Friends for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known to you 'T is a greater Evidence of God's Friendship to understand his Counsel in the Word and to be acquainted with the Mysteries of Godliness than all the Success Power and greatness of the World Christ gave his Spirit to the rest of the Apostles but his Purse to the Son of Perdition Some have Knowledge and Eminent Gifts others Wealth and Honour yea though they which increase Knowledge increase Sorrow yet the knowledge of a despised hated truth though it expose us to sufferings is better than to flourish in opposition against the ways of God through our ignorance obstinacy and blind prejudice And will you that are directed in the way of Salvation advanced to know God and the tenour of his Will far more than the Blind Carnal Careless World Envy them that are only acquainted with Christianity as a Report or Tradition calculated and formed to to a Worldly Interest 2. The secret of the Lord may intend not only direction in our Duty but Satisfaction about God's Dispensations for our Consolation in all Afflictions God helpeth them to interpret his Providence better than others called the secrets of Wisdom Iob. 11.6 And should the Saints whose Graces make them so sharp and Engaged that know more of God's mind than others in these very dealings which are so troublesome and offensive to them should they envy the Oppres●or and be so discontented to suffer a little that have more skill than others to look into God's ways and consider the course of his proceedings 3. Secret may imply the visible Blessings of God's Providence so 't is said Iob. 29.34 The secret of the Lord was upon my Tabernacle The singular Love God bore to him did preserve him and did guide him and his Family and made all his Affairs prosper Psal. 31.20 God shall hide them in the secret of his presence When they seem to be left open as a prey to the oppressions and injuries of their potent Adversaries yet there is a secret guard upon them and they are kept the World knoweth not how Now should such that are hedged round about with the guard of a secret Blessing leave their refuge for the defence of a little Interest in the World which God hateth and can soon blow upon Psal. 91.1 He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty 4. Secret may note the intimate familiarity that is between God and them and that inward Consolation which they have with God in a course of Holiness which is hidden from the World 1 Iohn 1.7 But if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another John 14.21 He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and manifest my self to him Many secret Refreshings visits of Love expressions of Grace are bestowed upon them Now have such any cause to envy others They that walk with God meet him at every turn are so often comforted and quickned by the manifestations of God and the influences of his Grace Psal. 17.15 As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness The Psalmist preferreth his present condition before the greatest happiness of carnal men because he had opportunities of beholding the Face of God or enjoying the Comforts of his Presence This is as if a Child fed with Manchet should envy a Slave for being fed with the Bread of Sorrows 3 The Nature and mischievous effects of this envy For 't is not so tame an evil as the world doth imagine 1. It disposeth to fretting or murmuring against God's Holy Providence Psal. 37.1 Fret not thy self because of evil doers neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity Prov. 24.19 Fret not thy self because of evil men neither be thou envious at the wicked It notes a certain taxing of God's Providence as if he did not rightly Govern the World 1. It tempteth to Apostacy from God's ways to the ways of the wicked That 's in the Text clearly Envy not the oppressor and chuse none of his ways implying that this emulation of their Happiness will draw you to cry up a Confederacy with them and to enter into their Lot and Net Prov. 24.1 Be not thou envious against evil men neither desire to be with them When we admire their Happiness it secretly inticeth our Hearts to take share and lott with them A Man is perverted by this Envy it weakneth our fear of God our value of Spiritual Blessings expectation of things to come and diligence in God's Service 3. It implieth and includeth many ill Principles which tend directly to the weakning of Faith Hope and Piety 1. It implyeth or includeth this Principle or Opinion That the felicity of a Man consisteth in these external good things which the wicked enjoy which is an error destructive to Godliness For change a Man's
chief good and last end and all goeth to wrack and disorder for the whole Life is seasoned by it They call the Proud Happy and therefore envy them 2. It includeth this Principle That 't is in vain to depend upon God in a course of Duty and Holiness that we may shift better and carve better for our selves Mal. 3.14 Ye have said 't is in vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinances Psal. 73.11 12 13. And they say how doth God know and is there knowledge in the most high Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches verily I have cleansed my heart in vain Lastly It includeth an Opinion of our own Worth and Merit as if we deserved more at God's hands as if all Happiness were but our due Debt which destroyeth all Humility Luke 17.10 When ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you say we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our duty to do 1. Use to reprove us and humble us for this envying the wicked It appeareth partly by our troubling and vexing our selves so much at the sight of their Prosperity we are so dejected at it as if God had done nothing for our Souls as all our Happiness were gone and lay in outward things We should chide our selves for this Psal. 42.5 Why art thou cast down O my Soul why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance Partly by our questioning Providence and murmuring against Providence as if all things were not under the Government of God Exod. 17.7 They tempted the Lord saying Is the Lord among us or not Judges 6.13 If the Lord be with us why then is all this befall'n us or as if we had deserved more than he giveth us Isai. 58.3 Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our Soul and thou takest no knowledge partly by our proneness to chuse their ways and weariness of the good course wherein we are engaged Alas How have we lost our way and been hurried to and fro in this time of Tryal like light chaffe As Cyprian observeth de lapsis Ad primum statim verbum minantis inimici fidem suam perdit nec prostratus est persecutionis metu sed voluntario lapsu seipsum prostravit c. We give out at the first Assault yea before assaulted at the very Blast and Rumor of a Temptation 2. Envy them not Let it enforce the admonition of the Text Now for Remedies Let me 1. Recommend those three radical Graces Faith Fear and Love 1 Faith that we may see afar off and look beyond the present condition 2 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off Faith sheweth us there are other good things after this life with which these present unstable good things are not to be compared nor so much as called good things The use of Faith is to be Heb. 11.1 The evidence of things not seen the substance of things hoped for Some are of so weak a sight that without their Spectacles can scarce see any thing except those that are so bulkey and great that they are not only seen but felt but if they use their Spectacles they can see afar off In a Perspective-Glass Men can discern Ships at Sea at a great distance All carnal Men see nothing but these corporeal things which Dogs and Horses see They know 't is good to eat well and drink well and sleep well increase by Trade or follow after vain pleasures but Faith giveth an Eagles Eye that can see beyond all the Clouds of the lower World an Invisible God and Heaven at a distance Yea Faith is necessary to see the vanity of present things Psal. 37.35 36. I have seen the wicked in great power and spreading himself like a green bay tree Yet he passed away and loe he was not yea I sought him but he could not be found that we may not look too much to Sense and Appearance that we may not judge rashly of matters as they shew for the present But remember all Flesh is Grass and the Glory of Man as the Flower of Grass 2 The fear of God is necessary Prov. 23.27 Let not thine heart envy sinners but be thou in the fear of God all the day long Fear is always necessary that we may be sensible of his Providence to suppress all Murmurings and to moderate our desires of earthly things to keep us as with a Bridle from putting forth our hands to iniquity 3 ly Love is also necessary Love to God and his ways Psal. 119.165 Great peace have they that love thy Law and nothing shall offend them they do not easily stumble So to Men 1 Cor. 13.5 Charity envieth not We are apt to be grieved at the good of others and their preference before our selves We should rejoyce in others good as our own 1 Cor. 12.26 The members should have the same care one for another and whether one Member suffer all the members suffer with it or one member be honoured all the members rejoyce with it 2. A due estimation and value of our Priviledges tho' Spiritual and future They are not worthy of the Favour of God that do not prefer it above all worldly things whatsoever even one drachm of his Love Heb. 11.26 Esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the Treasures in Aegypt For he had respect unto the recompence of reward In the darkest times of trouble you are in a better state than they A Christian sees nothing under the Sun truly great and worthy his Envy nothing worthy to be compared with what he injoyeth in Christ. 3 ly A sound Judgment about Providence and a right Interpretation of God's dealing with us If the Just should be always prosperous and the Wicked always miserable Religion would be a matter of Sense So on the contrary if the Just should have always evil and the wicked always good 't would tempt to despair therefore Providences are mixed The present state is a state of Faith we are justified by Faith we live by Faith we walk by Faith now the state of Faith requireth this that the manner of God's Government of worldly Affairs should neither be too perspicuous nor too obscure but be carried on in a middle way as the Morning is a middle thing between the darkness of the Night and the Light of high Noon For if it were too clear Sense would do all there would be no need of Faith If it were too obscure Faith would be too much discouraged therefore the Righteous are not always happy and the wicked always miserable 'T would not be a dispensation suitable to God's end which is to try our Respects to him Yea the Fear and Hope of Temporal Reward would be the greatest Motives to keep the Law of God and Men compelled to
of Christ. These things are worthy in themselves but when Men count them unworthy we should not be ashamed Not ashamed of sufferings 2 Tim. 1.8 Be not ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor me his Prisoner but be thou a partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel through the power of God Mallem ruere cum Christo quam stare cum 〈◊〉 I had rather perish with Christ than stand fast with Caesar. And M●rsac cur non me quoque torque donas c. Why dost thou not grace me with a Chain 〈◊〉 Nor ashamed of those that suffer for the Name of Christ 2 Tim. 1.16 He was not ashamed of my chain Heb. 11.26 Esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt As any one cometh nearer to Christ so should he be dearer to us This is true Gratitude not to be ashamed of Christ and his Service nor Servants otherwise Christ will be ashamed of us Mark 8.38 Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the Holy Angels Oh to have Christ be ashamed of us to hide his Face in that day How terrible will it be In the changes of the World Men if they did know it would stick to that Party that is sure to be uppermost Christ is sure to be uppermost if you shrink from him when his Cause or Honour lyeth in the Dust it will be matter of Eternal Shame in the world to come 3. Doctrine The kindred is only reckoned to the sanctified All Men are in some sense of the same stock with Christ yet it is said He that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one The rest of the world are left out as not capable of the comfort of this Relation 1. Who are the Sanctified 2. Why this appropriation 1. Who are the Sanctified To Sanctifie signifieth Two things to separate and to set apart for an Holy use And to cleanse and Purifie And when this is applied to Persons they are sanctified that are dedicated and set apart for God's use and service and are purified and cleansed from the pollution of Sin And so in all that are Sanctified there is a difference between them and others For they are set apart for God while others live to themselves Psal. 4.3 The Lord hath set apart him that is godly for himself Yea there is a change and so a difference between them and themselves 1 Cor. 6.11 And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God This closely followed would find out the Parties here intended But yet we must know that in both these Senses some are Sanctified in appearance only others really and indeed 1. In Appearance only And so all the members of the visible Church that are in outward Covenant with God and bound to be Holy are called Saints and said to be Sanctified Exod. 31.13 I am the Lord that doth sanctifie you And thus Apostates are said to trample the Blood of the Covenant under foot wherewith they were Sanctified Heb. 10.29 That is externally in their separation from the World and dedication to God's Service by outward Calling and Covenant In foro externo before Men these are Sanctified yea in his external Dispensation God speaketh to such an one and of him and dealeth with him as one of his own People 2. Really and indeed So Sanctification is threefold 1. Meritorious 2. Applicatory 3. Practical 1. Meritorious Sanctification is Christ's meriting and purchasing for his Church the inward inhabitation of the Spirit and that Grace whereby they may be Sanctified So it is said Heb. 10.10 By which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once for all All those for whom Christ did offer himself are Sanctified in due time by virtue of Christ's offering So it is said Heb. 13.12 Iesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own Blood did suffer without the gate This Sanctification cannot be repeated or increased but was done once for all and that by one above even Jesus Christ. There needeth no addition to his Merit 2. Applicatory Sanctification is the inward renovation of the Heart of those whom Christ hath Sanctified by the Spirit of Regeneration whereby a Man is translated from Death to Life from the state of Nature to the state of Grace This is spoken of Tit. 3.5 Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost This is the daily Sanctifiation which with respect to the merit of Christ is wrought by the Sprit and the ministry of the Word and Sacraments 3. Practical Sanctification is that by which they for whom Christ Sanctified himself and who are renewed by the Holy Ghost and Planted into Christ by Faith do more and more Sanctifie and cleanse themselves from sin in Thought Word and Deed 1 Pet. 1.15 As he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation 1 Joh. 3.3 Every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure Weakning the relicks of sin and getting more readiness and preparation of Heart for all the acts of the Holy Life In the former we are passive we contribute nothing to the First little to the Second but in this we are operative Besides these two Notions to consecrate and purifie help us to understand the nature of true Sanctification 1. As to Sanctifie signifieth to Consecrate or Dedicate to God so it signifieth both the fixed inclination or the disposition of the Soul towards God as our highest Lord and chief good and accordingly a resignation of our Souls to God to live in the love of his Blessed Majesty and a Thankful Obedience to him More distinctly 1 It implyeth a Bent a tendency or fixed inclination towards God which is habitual Sanctification 2. A Resignation or giving up our selves to God by which actual Holiness is begun A constant using our selves for him by which it is continued and the continual exercise of a fervent love by which it is increased in us more and more till all be perfected in Glory And perfect Love is maintained by a perfect vision of him 2. As it signifieth to Purifie and Cleanse so it signifies the purifying of the Soul from the love of the World Omnis impuritrâ est ex mixtum vitioru A Man is impure because when he was made for God he doth prefer the base trifles of this world before his Maker and everlasting Glory And so he is not Sanctified that doth despise and disobey his Maker He despiseth him because he preferreth the most contemptible Vanity before him and doth chuse the transitory pleasure of sinning
before the endless fruition of God Now he is Sanctified when his worldly Love is cured and he is brought back again to the Love and Obedience of God Those that are Healed of the over-love of the World are Sanctified as the inclinations of the flesh to worldly things are broken 2. Why this Appropriation 1. Because the Relation is only reckoned to those that have benefit by it Now none but the Sanctified have benefit by Christ's Incarnation As Christ told Peter Iohn 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part with me Without this Soul washing Men can prove no Interest in Christ. This is the great evidence If no Interest in him no Communion with him no share in the Inheritance purchased by him and so it doth them no good to hear of a God in their nature Alas if the secure world did mind this they would more seriously study Holiness and not so easily presume on the Grace of God in Christ. 2. Because there the Relation holdeth of both sides Christ is born of a Woman and they are born of God Iohn 1.13 And he is a Kinsman doubly ratione incarnationis suae regenerationis nostrae as Macarius He taketh Humane Nature and we partake of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 They that have not this new Birth the Kindred is not reckoned to them It is between Sanctifier and Sanctified There is a conformity between Head and Members of the Mystical Body an unity of Nature Spiritually as well as outwardly The Sanctified are of one as well as the Sanctifier they are of the Spirit 3. The Captain of Salvation and the Heirs brought to Glory are an Holy Society whereof he is the Head and they the Members He Sanctifieth and they are Sanctified A living Head and rotten Members will not suit As a Prince instituteth a noble Society suppose of the Garter whereof he is Head all the Members that call one another Brethren are in their degree of answerable Nobility with himself So Christ hath instituted a Society where all shall be Brethren but he the Head He gave himself for it Eph. 5.27 Christ is the head of the Church and Saviour of the Body 4. These suit with Christ's ends of coming into the World and assuming Humane Nature Two ends there were of his Humiliation and mean condition in the World 1. One by way of Merit to procure the Sanctifying Spirit to restore us to a state of Holiness and to purifie to himself a peculiar People zealous of good Works Tit. 2.14 Eph. 2.25 26. The Spirit begets us to the Image of God and it is by Christ that we are possessed of the Spirit and renewed according to his Image in Righteousness and true Holiness 2. His mean condition whereby he became our Brother and did partake of flesh and blood because his Brethren did partake of the same is a testimony against the Pride Carnality and Worldliness of Men which is the true Impurity of their Souls He was in the form of a Servant and made himself of no Reputation Phil. 2.7 8 9. to draw off deluded Men from over-loving the Pleasures and Riches and Honours of the World and so to cure them of that perverse Love wherein impurity and unholiness doth consist and to teach us a setled contempt of all these Vanities in comparison of God and Heaven and that inclination and affectedness we should have to him 5. These are qualified for the Inheritance suited to the everlasting Glory and Happiness which belongeth to the Brethren Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God God is an holy God and Heaven is the place where his Holiness dwelleth If God will be now sanctified in all that draw nigh unto him surely they must be sanctified that dwell with him hereafter unless we be washed by the Blood of Christ and sanctified by his Spirit of Grace how can we dwell in his ●ight We must be consecrated before we can minister in his Heavenly Temple God will not divest himself of his Holiness to gratifie impure and unholy Creatures and admit them to dwell in his Presence upon other Terms 1 Use. To press you to labour after holy Hearts and holy Lives The more you increase in Holiness the more you increase in the favour of God Prov. 11.20 Such as are upright in the way are his delight A Man is made truly amiable by Holiness the more God loveth him and it is the greatest Testimony of God's love to us to give a new Heart and a right Spirit within us Rom. 5.5 The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy-Ghost which is given to us 2 Use. It shews who they are that may take comfort in that Christ calls them Brethren even the Sanctified such as have the Spirit of Christ dwelling and working in them and do purifie themselves yet more and more They that have not this double Union and Communion with Christ are not Brethren though they be Men as Christ was For though Christ assumed their Nature yet they do not assume Christ's Nature Though he was the Son of Man yet they are not the Sons of God Therefore try 1. Are you Sanctified Is there a Principle of Grace set up in your Hearts Another Spirit than the Spirit of the World Is there a new Spirit as God has promised Ezek. 36.26 27. 2. Does that Work go on It is compleat in Parts at first but are you growing in degrees as an Infant doth Is there more Love more Zeal Faith Fear Reverence Watchfulness Are you more fixed more cleaning your selves 2 Cor. 7.1 More humb●ing your selves for out-breakings of Sin ●s there more fitness and suitableness to God's Will more pressing towards the Mark as it was with Paul Phil. 3.14 4 Point That this Sanctification which is required of us proceedeth originally from Christ. He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that Sanctifyeth and therefore said to be made unto us Sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 That is a Fountain of Holiness Now Christ sanctifyeth us 1. Partly by his Merit Flee to the Blood of Christ as the meritorious and procuring Cause When God's Image was lost there was no way to recover it but by paying a Price to provoked Justice and no less price would serve the turn than the Blood of Christ. Therefore it is said Eph. 5.26 He gave himself for the Church that he might cleanse and sanctify it meritoriously And this he hath done sufficiently on the Cross Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified That is done enough for the perfect reconciling of all that are sanctified 2. By his Spirit 1 Cor. 6.11 But ye are sanctified ye are cleansed in the name of our Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God Whatever the Spirit of God doth he doth as Christ's Spirit as being purchased by him as dwelling first in him who is the Head and then in the Members and for his Glory and as we
diverted either by the comfortable or troublesome things we meet with here in the World Not by the comfortable things 1 Pet. 1.13 Wherefore gird up the L●yns of your Mind be sober and hope to the end for the Grace that is to be brought unto you at the Revelation of Iesus Christ. Nor by the troublesome things of the World Rom. 8.39 Nor height nor depth nor any other Cr●ature shall be able to separate us from the Love of God which is in Christ I●sus our Lord Well then the Supreme Good or Fruition of the ever-blessed GOD is believed sought after waited for we know it by Faith we seek it by Love we wait for the enjoyment of it by Hope Faith affordeth us Light to discover it and direct us to it Love possesseth the Soul with a Desire to enjoy it and Hope giveth us a Confidence of obtaining it through Jesus Christ our Lord. III. Their Use in the Spiritual Conflict 1. They impel us to do our Duty with all diligence whatever Temptations we have to the contrary 1 Thess. 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work of Faith and labour of Love and patience of Hope Whence you see Work is ascribed to Faith Labour to Love and Patience to Hope Work to Faith because that Grace is working and ready to break out into Obedience 2 Thess. 1.11 And the Work of Faith with Power Labour to Love because Love puts Men upon Industry and Diligence they that love God will be hard at work for him Heb. 6.10 For God is not unrighteous to forget your Work and Labour of Love Patience to Hope because that Grace produceth Endurance and Constancy 2 Thess. 3.5 The Lord direct your Hearts into the Love of God and into the patient waiting for Christ. And the good Ground brought forth Fruit with Patience Luk. 8.19 In short you see these Graces are of an Operative and Vigorous Nature Faith is but a dead Opinion unless it break out into practice Love but a cold Approbation of the Ways of God unless we overcome our Slothfulness Hope but a few slight Thoughts of Heaven unless we persevere and hold out till the time of Retribution cometh 2. These Graces restrain and subdue those corrupt Inclinations which are yet in the Heart and would be a great impediment to us if they be not more and more overcome such as Ungodliness and Worldly Lusts Atheism or a denial of Gods Being and unbelief or distrust of his Promises Worldly Lusts Tit. 2.12 Teaching us to deny Vngodliness and Worldly Lusts. That is to say Worldly Fears and Worldly Desires or in one word the Sensual Inclination called the Spirit of the World These can never be overcome without Faith by which the Mind is soundly perswaded of the Truth of Salvation by Christ nor without Love by which the Will is firmly resolved and bent upon it nor without Hope by which the Executive Powers are fortified and strengthened in their Operations In short when the Doctrine of Christ concerning things to be believed and done is first propounded to us it findeth us wedded to the World and intangled in the Vanities thereof but as this Doctrine is received and believed the bent and inclination of our Souls is altered a new byass is put upon us and our love to God and heavenly things is more and more increased the Heart is set to seek after God and that with the greatest earnestness and diligence Without this the Carnal and Worldly Inclination prevaileth over us As in the want of Faith Heb. 3.12 Take heed Brethren lest th●re b● in any of you an evil Heart of unbelief in departing from the living God Want of Love 1 Iohn 2.15 16. Love not the World neither the things that are in the World If any Man love the World the love of the Father is not in him For all that is in the World the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eyes and the Pride of Life is not of the Father but is of the World Want of Hope Heb. 10.35 Cast not away therefore your Confidence which hath great recompense of reward Many are beaten out of their Christianity at last because they cannot tarry for Christ's Recompences 3. To fortifie us against all evil without Besides Corruptions within there are Temptations without manifold Afflictions which Satan maketh use of to draw us to sin Now these three Graces arm us against them 2 Tim. 1.7 where he speaketh of enduring the Afflictions of the Gospel by the power of God God hath not given us a Sp●r●● of Fear but of Power of Love and of a sound Mind Faith Hope and Love are intended thereby by a Spirit of Power meaning Hope which breedeth ●ortitude notwithstanding Dangers and Threats of Men Love retaineth its own Name and by the sound Mind is meant Faith All these help us to encounter the Difficulties and Hardships of our Pilgrimage and breed in us a Tranquility of Mind and Contentedness in every State 4. Without Faith Hope and Love we cannot pray to God nor entertain any sweet Communion with him while we dwell in Flesh. Iude 20.21 But ye beloved building up your selves on your most holy faith praying in the Holy-Ghost keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ unto eternal life That Clause Praying in the Holy-Ghost is to be referred in common to them all praying to be built up in our most holy Faith praying to be kept in the love of God praying that we may look for the Mercy of our Lord Jesus to Eternal Life Prayer is not an Exercise only of our natural Faculties but also of the three fundamental Graces of the Spirit There are three Agents in Prayer the Humane Spirit the new Nature and the Spirit of God The Humane Spirit for by the Understanding and Memory we work upon the Will and Affections The new Nature as Prayer is the work of Faith Hope and Love And the Holy-Ghost is there mentioned as also Rom. 8.26 27. Likewise the spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings that cannot be uttered And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the spirit because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God The middle is to our purpose now Prayer is a Work of Faith as the great Mysteries of our most holy Faith are therein reduced to Practice Eph. 2.18 For through him we both have an access by one spirit unto the father Love is acted in Prayer as we delight our selves in conversing with God all our Desires and Groans in Prayer are acts of Love expressing our Longings after more of God Hope is acted in Prayer as we express our Trust in God and the Merits and Intercession of Christ and plead his gracious Promises Prayer it self is but Hope put into Language Psal. 62.8 Trust in him at all
another and do not firmly adhere to God being weaned from the Vanities of the World they are carried hither and thither by their perverse Affections sometimes to one thing sometimes to another 3. With respect to that one Object who alone was sufficient for us They that have left God and would find Happiness in the Creatures need many Creatures before they can patch up any sorry tolerable Happiness to themselves One broken Cistern can yield but little Refreshing Ier. 2.13 So many Disappointments make them look more about God made Man for himself capable to enjoy him now he is an infinite Eternal Good We desire an infinite Eternal Good still such as may quiet and satisfy us therefore Man being made capable of enjoying God who is infinite and finding himself not satisfied with a few or many things always seeketh after new things Here is his Error that he seeketh after that which is infinite among those things which are finite and so wandreth up and down groping for an Eternal Good Acts 17.26 27. And hath made of one Blood all Nations of Men for to dwell on the Face of the Earth and determined the Times before appointed and the Bounds of their Habitations That they should seek the Lord if hap●y they might feel after him and find him though he be not far from every one of us As we depart from God we are gone from Unity and are left distracted and confounded in the Multitude of the Creatures Quaerunt in varietate Creaturarum quod amiserunt in unitate Creatoris They seek in the variety of the Creatures what they have lost in the one God Vse 1. Is to represent the Misery of fallen Man that we may take up a Lamentation for him and bewail our Departure from Life and Blessedness and forsaking it for Sin and Misery They have cast off God and set at nought his Counsel and given themselves over to many fruitless and hurtful Inventions For alas Man being left to the Counsel of his own desperately wicked and deceitful Heart what doth he look after What may be expected from him but that all his Thoughts and Projects should be for the satisfaction of his Lusts to serve his Pride Avarice Revenge Pomp Pleasure and Vanity God is not in all his Thoughts he cares not whether he be pleased or displeased honoured or dishonoured Here consider the Disorder and Danger of this State 1 st The Disorder introduced hereby 1. The Creature is preferred before God For all their Projects are how to live at ease in the World not how to please and enjoy God and so they forsake their own Mercies for observing lying Vanities Jonah 2.8 They seek an Happiness apart from God who is their own Mercy that is they might have had from him all that which the Mercy of an Al-sufficient God can afford And for what do they forsake him for lying Vanities in regard of their Emptiness they are Vanities and in regard of their disappointing our Expectations lying Vanities They do deceive us with a vain Shew and in the issue miserable Disappointments And mark these must be observed followed after with a great Sollicitude and Care whereas the other is freely offered to us it is our own in the Offer and it is our own Fault if it be not our own in the Choice So Ier. 2.13 My People have committed two Evils they have forsaken me the Fountain of living Waters and have hewed them out Cisterns broken Cisterns that will hold no Water God is the Well-spring of all manner of Good a Fountain that runneth constantly and never faileth and such would he have been to us if we had continued loyal and dutiful to him Besides the leaving of the everliving alsufficient and ever-flowing Fountain of all Good they have betaken themselves to poor paltry Vanities that will yield them no real and solid Refreshment 2. The Body is preferred before the Soul For all our Inventions run upon the Body and the pleasing the Flesh Rom. 13.14 And make not Provision for the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof But the precious and immortal Soul is little thought of and cared for They sit down well appaid with carnal Contentments Luke 12.19 Soul take thine Ease eat drink and be merry thou hast much Goods laid up for many Years They do not rise to any Thoughts of an higher Life never think of that immortal Soul they carry about with them but only use it to cater for the Body that the Body may be well fed and clothed and adorned Our business is to seek Rest for our Souls if we would invent and consider we should look after that Ier. 6.16 Ask for the old Paths where is the good Way and walk therein and ye shall find Rest for your Souls We are never in our Wits again till this be the Project and Design we travel with But alas this is not thought of the neglected Soul may easily complain of hard Usage What are our Thoughts but what shall we eat and what shall we drink and how shall we make a fair Shew in the Flesh If we look after the Soul it is to adorn it with secular Learning and Wisdom which is but to serve the Flesh in a more cleanly manner and to gratify our worldly Ends our Pride or our Interests We look after Flowers rather than Fruit those Adornments of the Soul which are for Pomp rather than Life and for present Use rather than Eternal Benefit 3. They prefer Earth before Heaven and Time before Eternity All their business is rather to make sure of the Prosperity of the Body than the Salvation of the Soul And though it is plain and they do or may know and see that this will not cure their Diseases nor ease their Pain nor save them from the Grave nor Hell yet because Riches will help them to live in Pleasure and Reputation with the World and in Plenty of all things and to have their Will as long as they live that 's enough for them for they care not for the Pleasures and Happiness which is to be enjoyed in the other World Though Death and the Grave may put an end to all they have here much sooner than they imagined yet their Minds and Hearts are set upon these things as their Happiness and will not be diverted from them they have their Portion in this World Psal. 17.14 From Men which are thy Hand O Lord from Men of the World which have their Portion in this Life and whose Belly thou fillest with thy hid Treasure they are full of Children and leave the rest of their Substance to their Babes 2 dly The Danger As it is a base thing to act so disproportionably to the Light of Reason so within a little while it will be a bitter thing Ier. 2.19 Thine own Wickedness shall correct thee and thy Backslidings shall reprove thee know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy
its present Estate Therefore every Man if there be not a Life after Death is bound to seek the Preservation and Continuance of this Life above all things in the World besides and to do that no Device would be dishonest or Practice amiss But all they that have ever heard of the Name of Vertue abhor this Principle as base and odious That a Man should make what shift he can though never so base and wicked to maintain and save his Life no Means used to this end are to be accounted foul for nothing is so ill as Death nothing so good as Life But if this would destroy all Honesty and Vertue then certainly we have Hopes and Fears of another Life If you will say No Vertue is a sufficient Recompence to it self at what rate soever it be purchased and maintained yet what is there to countervail all the Losses and Grievances it exposeth us unto such as the loss of Life and Limbs Vertue is a sufficient Reward to it self Spe non Re in Hope not in the Thing it self but so far as 't is the only way to everlasting Communion with God who is our exceeding great Reward or so far as the assured Hope of a better Life after Death is inseparably connexed to the constant Practice of Godliness in this Life And to do Good merely for Goodness sake without any Eye or Respect to the Reward is a Strain of Devotion contrary to that Doctrine which is taught us by Christ and his Apostles 3. With respect to Man's Comfort and Solace in his Troubles which ariseth from reflecting on our future Reward when all things go across to us here Comfort one another with these Words saith the Apostle 1 Thess. 4.18 Now what Words were those The Belief of a blessed Resurrection of those that died in or for the Lord that is by occasion of the Faith of Christ he thought that Consideration sufficient to yield Matter of Comfort or Support to them These are Consolations proper to Christians because they are sure as depending upon Christ's Word and they are congruous and sutable because their Hearts are set upon these things not upon a vain World but a blessed and glorious Estate that Christ hath offered and himself is entred into and when we get thither our Affections will be satisfied Desires granted and Hopes fulfilled So that still the Apostle's Reasoning is strong If in this Life only we have Hope in Christ we are of all Men most miserable For our Consolations which are fetched from the other World are our proper Consolations 4. With respect to the Credit and Esteem of God's Servants in the World It is neither for the Glory of God nor the Safety of his People that the most eminent Vertue and Goodness should lie under perpetual Infamy God's Servants do not only suffer hard things but their Names are cast forth as evil Now this is not for the Honour of God because it reflects upon him when the Children of Wisdom are represented as Sons of Folly in checking their Lusts venturing their Interests and renouncing their All for their Fidelity to Christ as if they did foolishly in running into such Inconveniences when they might spare themselves and sleep in a whole Skin Now it is a great Dishonour to God that his wisest and most faithful Servants should be accounted Fools and an humorous odd sort of Men that needlesly trouble themselves and others This hardneth the World in Sin and would quench and destroy all Zeal for God if there were not a time coming when the Wisdom of the World shall be seen to be the greatest Folly and that there are no such Fools as those that imploy their greatest Abilities in attaining present Pleasure Profit and Preferment but those are the wisest Adventurers who have sold all to promote the Glory of God and gain Christ who look not upon things as they appear now to the sensual and deluded World but as they will be found at the last Day when all things shall be seen in their own proper Colours Neither is it for the Safety of the Saints who though they seek nothing but the Publick Good are traduced as the Troublers of Israel and their Way condemned as factious Singularity Therefore it is a great Satisfaction that we have hopes that things shall be reviewed and that which is good be restored to its publick Honour and the Godly who prize a good Name above all earthly Interests shall have their Faith found to Praise and Honour and Glory 1 Pet. 1.7 That the Trial of your Faith being much more precious than of Gold that perisheth though it be tried with Fire might be found unto Praise and Honour and Glory at the Appearing of Iesus Christ. Vse 1. It sheweth us how much it concerneth us to be assured of the future Estate It is the Life of our Religion it bindeth our Duty upon us by the strictest Tie and doth also establish our true and proper Comfort If we may have hope of better things from Christ in another World not only in our Calamities but by our Calamities we should not have such dark and doubtful Thoughts about Eternal Blessedness but live more in the clear Foresight of it by Faith and the Foretaste of it by Hope especially should this support us in two Cases in sharp Afflictions and in Death 1. In sharp Afflictions We are apt to take scandal and offence at the Sufferings that befal us for Righteousness sake but consider not only the Promises of Christ but that our very Persecution is an Argument of our final Deliverance The opposition of ungodly and unrighteous Adversaries is to them an evident Token of Perdition but to you of Salvation and that of God Phil. 1.28 That they are wretched and obdurate People and run on to their own Destruction but that you are sincere and penitent Believers who are not drawn away from your Fidelity to Christ by any Terrors whatsoever It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only an Argument to confirm the Hopes of the Gospel but a Mark and Token of your Sincerity it confirmeth your Right Well then though our Afflictions be smart and grievous let us comfort our selves with these Hopes You are not to look to present things but future not to what is applauded in the World but what Opinion Christ will have of them at the last not to what you feel now but what you shall enjoy hereafter Though all things appear with Pomp and Glory on the World's side and Terror to the Saints yet this Scene is soon withdrawn and present Time is quickly past like a Dream or piece of Phantastry and then there is an utter Inversion of things Shame is on the Wickeds side and Honour put upon the Saints and the Shame and Glory are both eternal and when they enter into everlasting Torments we enter into our Master's Joy and the Children of God that are derided and vilified in the World are then approved and justified
times ye people pour out your hearts before him On the other side when we omit Prayer or perform it coldly or cursorily surely there is a defect in their Faith Love or Hope A defect of Faith they do not believe God's Being and Providence and the Promises of God's holy Covenant Psal. 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God And Vers. 4. They call not upon the Lord. The Practical Atheist is one that doth not pray at all times nor much nor often call upon God Mal. 3.14 Ye have said it is in vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinance and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of Hosts Or if they do not soundly believe his Covenant Rom. 10.14 How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed How can they address themselves to God in Christ if they are not rooted in the Faith of the Gospel Or sometimes a defect in their Love to God because they have no delight in him Iob 27.10 Will he delight himself in the Almighty Will he always call upon God Isa. 43.22 But thou hast not called upon me O Iacob But thou hast been weary of me O Israel They are glutted with worldly Happiness and so God is neglected Ier. 2.31 32. Have I been a wilderness unto Israel A land of darkness Wherefore say my people we are Lords we will come no more unto thee Can a maid forget her ornaments or a bride her attire Yet my people have forgotten me days without number Or a defect in their Hope they despair either of Assistance or Acceptance with God David when he had lost his Peace by some wounding Sin he had not the heart to go to God Psal. 32.3 I kept silence 1 John 3.21 If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Sin represents God as an angry Judge God is terrible to a guilty Conscience we inherit this as coming from Adam Gen. 3.8 Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden 5. We are not prepared for Death and Judgment without Faith Hope and Love but either of these Days will be terrible to us 1. Death Take either Grace Faith Hope or Love Faith first we live by Faith and afterwards we dye by Faith Heb. 11.13 These all dyed in faith not having received the promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them The intervening Promises are most questioned in the present Life because of the urgency of present Necessities but the great Promise is questioned hereafter When we are to lanch out into Eternity it is a hard matter to look with a steady confidence into the other World when the Soul must flit out of the Body to see Heaven open to receive it needs a strong Faith Iohn 11.25 26. I am the resurrection and the life he that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never dye believest thou this So for Love that is necessary that we may be willing to go home to our Father who hath admitted us into his Family pardoned our Sins and relieved our Souls And it is a great encouragement in the hour of Death when we are to leave the World and come immediately into his Presence who hath done such great things for us and is now about to do more But in what a woful case are they who must appear before a God whom they never knew nor heartily loved and with whom they never had communion and acquaintance they never had experience of his Kindness nor interest in his Love and now are forced into his Presence against their will Certainly it is Faith and Love must smooth and sweeten our Passage into the other World and make it comfortable to us Love overcometh our natural loathness to quit the Body 2 Cor. 5.8 We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord. To enjoy Christ's Presence we can part with what is nearest and dearest to us So for Hope in what a lamentable case are Men when they come to dye if they are without Hope Iob 27.8 What is the hope of the hypocrite though he hath gained when God taketh away his soul They are full of Presumption and blind Confidence now while they swim in the full stream of Worldly Comforts and Advantages but when this Dotage is over they have no solid Comfort but either dye senseless and stupid or are filled with Horror and Despair and their hopes fail them when they have most need of them 2. So for the Judgment For the Context speaketh of the day of the Lord which cometh unexpectedly on the Sensual and Careless and is matter of Terror to them but it is welcom to the Godly who are upon their guard and have long-looked and prepared for it Now what is the due preparation for Judgment but furnishing our selves with Faith Love and Hope For these Graces do both put us on that Spiritual Care which is necessary for waiting for it and also fill us with Confidence and Comfort Faith 2 Thess. 1.10 When he shall come to be glorified in his saints and to be admired in all them that believe because our testimony among you was believed in that day Love is necessary 1 Iohn 1.17 18. Herein is our love made perfect that we may have boldness in the day of judgment because as he is so are we in this world There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not made perfect in love Hope Heb. 9.28 And unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation 1. Use Is to perswade us to get these Graces all of them partly because without them the new Creature is not perfect You will want Sight Life or strength either an Eye or an Heart or a Power to act And partly because they have a mutual Influence one upon another Faith and Hope upon Love for Faith looketh backward to the Wonders of God's Love shewed in our Redemption by Christ Hope looketh forward to the state of Glory and Blessedless prepared for us And both excite our Love to God and thankful Obedience to him Again Faith and Love breed Hope for they that believe and love Christ's appearing will wait for it and not think of it with Perplexity and Fear but with Comfort and Delight There is a great deal of Grace then to be brought to us Well then labour to get all these Graces To this end 1. Remove the Impediment that is a careless vanity of Mind which groweth upon us through an Indulgence to the Delights of the Flesh so that either we have none or seldom and cursory Thoughts of God or Christ or the World to come Let us be sober as in the Text
so 1 Pet. 1.13 Be sober and hope to the end Draw off your Affections from Carnal Vanities or Delights of the Senses that you may more earnestly mind God and Heaven 2. Wait on all opportunities of profiting and use the known Means of Grace more conscionably These Graces indeed are not acquired but infused they are God's Gifts As for Faith Eph. 2.8 For by grace ye are saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God So for Love 1 Iohn 4.7 Beloved let us love one another for love is of God Not only recommended to us by his Example but wrought in us by his Spirit So for Hope Rom. 15.13 Now the God of hope fill ye with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy-Ghost But God loveth to bless us by his own means which are the Word and Prayer 2 Use. Exercise these Graces Remember they are your Armour and Furniture for the Conflict when your Resolutions of Obedience to God are most assaulted or you are apt to be discouraged 1. When any Want Cross Sorrow or Tribulation overtaketh you upon Earth fetch your Comforts from God Christ and Heaven be sure that Faith Hope and Love be at work so the Children of God are wont to do in their deep Afflictions How calamitous soever our condition be Faith can see that there is comfort enough to be had in God Christ and the Covenant 1 Pet. 1.8 In whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory So for Hope Rom. 12.12 Rejoycing in hope patient in tribulation Though we are pressed with Wants and Miseries yet there is a better State to come And in the worst condition Love can rejoyce in God Hab. 3.18 Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation 2. In some grievous Temptation whereby we are apt to wax weary in our Minds stir up these Graces Do I believe the Promises heartily love God and hope for his Salvation And shall his Service or my Fidelity to him be tedious to me When some present Delight inviteth us to Sin or some present Bitterness to draw us off from God in time of Temptation these Graces are seasonably acted to counterbalance Things carnal with spiritual Things present with future Heb. 11.35 They were tortured not accepting deliverance that they might obtain a better resurrection A Sermon on Prov. xiv 14 The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways and a good man shall be satisfied from himself IN the Proverbs we must not look for Method and Coherence for these Sentences are not as Golden Links in a Chain hanging one to another but as Pearls in a String every Sentence is precious but independant of each other In this Proverb I shall take notice 1. Of the Drift of the Holy-ghost 2. The Art and Contrivance so as may best suit that Scope First The drift of the Holy-Ghost is the same with that of many other Scriptures and divers Passages in the Proverbs also which may serve for a Doctrine Doctr. That whether good or bad every one shall reap the Fruit of his own ways Isa. 3.10 11. Say ye to the righteous that it shall be well with them for they shall eat the fruit of their own doings Wo unto the wicked it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hands shall be given him To keep up the Hearts of that small company of godly Persons that yet remained among them God giveth them assurance of his goodness they shall fare well whatsoever befalleth others All things that happen shall be good or work for good to better their Hearts or hasten their Glory for they shall enjoy the Fruit of all their Labours But it is sure to go ill with the Wicked for he shall be rewarded according to what he hath wrought Lest you should think this a particular Promise to that time only Salomon maketh it the common Cordial of the Saints against the prosperity of the Wicked Eccles. 8.12 13. Though a sinner do evil an hundred times and his days be prolonged yet surely I know that it shall be well with them that fear God that fear before him But it shall not be well with the wicked neither shall he prolong his days which are as a shadow because he feareth not before God Wicked Men though they escape long they shall not escape always though Punishment be delayed it is at length executed and generally they do not live long Lest you think this is spoken Pro more faederis according to the tenor of the Mosaical Covenant where long Life is promised instead of Eternity and short Life threatned as a Curse Let us see what the Gospel saith where we have greater Encouragements to quicken us to hold fast our Integrity and go on steadily in our Obedience and patient waiting on God Rom. 6.21 22 23. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed For the end of those things is death But now being made free from sin and become servants to God you have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life For the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Where the different Recompences are asserted and the manner how they accrue to us Death to Sin as Wages and Life to Obedience as the meer Gift of God not merited by us but bountifully bestowed by him This is the drift of the Holy-Ghost to shew that different Courses have contrary Ends and Issues Secondly The Art and Contrivance of this short saying whereby this Truth may the better be insinuated into our Minds and here 1. I shall take notice that here are two different Persons spoken of The backslider in heart and The good man 2. That both desire to be filled or satisfied 3. That the one taketh his own Ways and the other God's Direction 4. That in the Event they are both filled but in a different sense 5. That rightly understood every one hath this from himself The Backslider is filled with his own Ways and the godly Person hath his own Choice and eats of the Fruit of his Doings I. Let us state the Character of these different Persons for that is the Clue to guide us to the understanding of all the rest for according to this the different Course and End must be determined Well then The backslider in heart and The good man are opposed First The backslider in heart is he that turneth his Heart from God and his Ways and daily groweth worse and worse The Word may be rendred doubly either Aversus Corde or Reversus Corde and so it is meant either of the ordinary wicked Person or of the Apostate the one turneth away from God after Counsel the other after Tryal 1. It is meant principally and chiefly of the ordinary wicked Person who turneth
out an Happiness for himself and be sufficient to himself for his own Blessedness without any Dependance upon God Now when Man was thus fal● off from God God was disobliged from providing for him and so Man is left to his own Shifts But alas how ill doth he provide for himself This being the very thing intended in the Text I shall a little more amply dilate upon it in several Propositions 1. When Man fell from God he fell from him tanquam à principio fine from Dependance upon him as the first Cause and respect to him as his chief Good and last End His Dependance was loosened because he distrusted God's Provision for him and would be a God to himself his own Principle Rule and End live from himself to himself according to his own Will So that Self-love came in the Place of Love to God he that before sought nothing but God began now to seek himself and thought he should find in himself what he lost in God 2. Man being once off from God never of himself cometh on again but rangeth infinitely being guided by his own Will and Wit Ionah 2.8 They that observe lying Vanities forsake their own Mercies Man being fastened to such Objects as he liketh keepeth a-loof from God whom he liketh not and will not come at him as long as he can make a shift without him Ier. 2.31 We are Lords we will come no more unto thee And though he wandreth hither and thither he finds no Rest for his Soul for he seeketh Happiness where it is not to be found in the Riches Honours and Pleasures of the present Life 3. Though he meet with often Disappointments yet he is unwilling to return even after God hath shewed a Remedy and brought Life and Immortality to Light in the Gospel in which Way he may have Peace and Happiness and so Rest for his Soul God hath shewed us the way to Rest Ier. 6.16 Ask for the old Paths where is the good Way and walk therein and ye shall find Rest for your Souls Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy-laden and I will give you Rest. But yet Man is for his shifts still till God changeth his Heart and giveth him Counsel in his Reins and disappoints him in his worldly Inventions and Pursuits by blasting the Creature or occasioning some Wound in his Conscience God speaketh often in his Word but it is disregarded till he speak by real Arguments and speak to the Quick so as to force an hearing till he take away their Comforts or take away their Use of them by some languishing Sickness or Anguish in their own Conscience or both by smiting them with a Rod dipp'd in Guilt When thou with Rebukes dost correct Man for Iniquity thou makest his Beauty to consume away like a Moth Psal. 39.11 So that then they see the Fruitlesness of all their Inventions their vain Pleasures costly Buildings great Honour and Riches how little these can stead them against the Wrath of an angry God So loth is Man to submit to God's Remedy he laboureth all that he can to patch up his sorry Happiness and is very unwilling to confess his Misery he turneth and windeth every way and seeketh Help from the Creature before he will be brought to implore Aid from Grace he will use all Means within his grasp and reach till his Despair teach him to return from whence he fell and that it is better to seek God's Favour than continue his vain Pursuits Hosea 2.7 I will return to my first Husband for then it was better with me than now Secondly Why many Inventions 1. In opposition to that one streight Line which leadeth to true Happiness Christ telleth us One thing is necessary Luke 10.42 namely to serve and please God and enjoy him for ever To enjoy God and please him is that one thing which is enough But Error is manifold though there be but one Path to Heaven yet there are many ways of sinning and going to Hell Every Man hath his several Course and Way of sinning Isa. 53.6 All we like Sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own Way According to the several Constitutions and Business and Affairs of Men. Velle suum cuique est nec voto vivitur uno As the Channel is cut so corrupt Nature in every Man findeth an Issue and Passage No Sin cometh amiss to a carnal Heart yet some are more kindly and sutable one is worldly another sensual another proud and ambitious It is our Wisdom to observe our own Haunt and the tender Parts of our Souls Psal. 18.23 I was upright before him and I kept my self from mine Iniquity All Sin is but carnal Self-love disguised or many with respect to the successive entertainment of divers Sins Titus 3.3 Serving divers Lusts and Pleasures Sins take the Throne by turns by Age and Experience Men grow weary of former Vanities but others are adopted into their room and so their Lusts are but exchanged not abrogated Now we are fallen from our primitive Happiness we multiply Means and Laws yea at the same time the Pleasures of the Flesh draw the Sinner several ways James 4.1 Whence come Wars and Fightings among you Come they not hence even of your Lusts which war in your Members Desire of Riches contradicts Idleness and the toilsom Cares and Labours of this World that Ease which the Flesh affecteth disgraceful Lusts are contradicted by Ambition and Pride 2. Many Inventions in opposition to that Simplicity and Singleness of Heart which Original Rectitude did include The Heart of Man was originally of one constant uniform Frame but now instead of Simplicity there is a Multiplicity The Heart now is never right till it be one with God Therefore David prays Psal. 86.11 Vnite my Heart to fear thy Name He begs a Heart intirely fixed upon God which as our great End uniteth all our Affections in this one Scope that we might please him and enjoy him as our chief Good and last End That fixeth Man's Mind which otherwise will be tossed up and down in perpetual Uncertainties and distracted by a Multiplicity of Ends and Objects that it cannot continue in any composed and setled Frame No one part of our Lives will agree with another A divided Heart breedeth an uncertain Life Iames 1.8 A double-minded Man is unstable in all his Ways The whole not firmly knit together by the Power of the last End running through all So that our Lives are a meer Lottery the Fancies and Appetites we are governed by being jumbled together by Chance The Heart by natural Corruption is loosed from God and distracted with variety of vain Objects which offer themselves to our Senses The Interest of the World and Flesh is taken into competition with God and whilst the Heart rangeth abroad it is such a variable and double Heart as will never be true to God And while Men are tossed from one Dependance to