Selected quad for the lemma: blood_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
blood_n body_n life_n wine_n 6,722 5 7.7919 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A65285 A body of practical divinity consisting of above one hundred seventy six sermons on the lesser catechism composed by the reverend assembly of divines at Westminster : with a supplement of some sermons on several texts of Scripture / by Thomas Watson ... Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1692 (1692) Wing W1109; ESTC R32148 1,021,388 604

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

his Soul 1. We must not injure another in his Name A good Name is a precious Balsom it is a great Cruelty to murder a Man in his Name We injure others in their Name When we calumniate and slander them 'T was David's Complaint Psal. 35.11 They laid to my Charge things which I knew not The Primitive Christians were traduced for Incest and killing their Children as Tertul. Dicimur infanticidii incestus rei This is to behead others in their good Name this is an irreparable Injury No Physician can heal the Wounds of the Tongue 2. We must not injure another in his Body The Life is the most precious thing and God hath set this Commandment as a Fence about it to preserve it Thou shalt not kill God made a Statute which was never to this Day repealed Gen. 9.6 Who so sheddeth Man's Blood by Man shall his Blood be shed In the Old Law had a Man killed another unawares he might take Sanctuary but if he had killed him willingly tho he did fly to the Sanctuary the Holiness of the Place was not to defend him Exod. 21.14 If a Man come presumptuously upon his Neighbour to slay him with Guile thou shalt take him from my Altar that he may die Now in this Commandment Thou shalt do no Murder all those Sins are forbidden which lead to it and are the occasions of it As 1. Vnadvised Anger Anger boyls up the Blood in the Veins and oft produceth Murder Gen. 49.6 In their Anger they slew a Man 2. Envy Satan envy'd our first Parents the Robe of Innocence and the Glory of Paradise therefore never left till he had procured their Death Ioseph's Brethren envied him because his Father loved him and gave him a Coat of divers Colours therefore take Counsel to slay him Gen. 37.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Envy and Murder are near a-kin therefore the Apostle puts them together Gal. 5.21 Envyings Murders Envy is a Sin breaks both the Tables at once It begins in Discontent against God and ends in Injury against Man as we see in Cain Gen. 4.6 8. Envious Cain first discontented with God there he broke the First Table and then he fell out with his Brother and slew him there he broke the Second Table Anger is sometimes soon over like Fire kindled in Straw which is quickly out but Envy is a radicated thing and will not quench its Thirst without Blood Prov. 27.4 Who is able to stand before Envy 3. Hatred The Pharisees hated Christ because he excelled them in Gifts and had more Honour among the People than they therefore they never left till they had nailed him to the Cross and taken away his Life Hatred is a Vermin lives upon Blood Ezek. 35.5 Because thou hast had a perpetual Hatred and hast shed the Blood of the Children of Israel Haman hated Mordecai because he did not bow to him and he presently sought Revenge He got a Bloody Warrant sealed for the Destruction of the whole Race and Seed of the Jews Esther 3.9 Hatred is ever cruel All these Sins are forbidden in this Commandment which lead the Van and are oft the occasions of this Sin of Murder Quest. How many ways is Murder committed Resp. We may be said to Murder another Twelve ways 1. With the Hand As Ioab kill 〈◊〉 Abner and Amasa 2 Sam. 20.10 He smote him in the Fifth Rib and shed out his Bowels 2. Murder is committed with the Mind Malice is Mental Murder 1 Iohn 3.15 Whoso hateth his Brother is a Murderer To malign another and wish Evil against him in the Heart is a murdering him 3. Murder is committed with the Tongue By speaking to the Prejudice of another and causing him to be put to Death Thus the Jews kill'd the Lord of Life when they inveighed against him and accused him falsly to Pilate Iohn 18.30 4. Murder is committed with the Pen. So David killed Vriah in writing to Ioab to set Vriah in the Fore-front of the Battle 2 Sam. 11.15 Tho the Ammonites Sword cut off Vriah yet David's Pen was the Cause of his Death Therefore the Lord tells David by the Prophet Nathan 2 Sam. 12.9 Thou hast killed Vriah 5. Murder is committed by Plotting anothers Death Thus Iezabel tho she did not lay Hands her self upon Naboth yet because she contrived his Death and caused Two false Witnesses to swear against him and bring him within the Compass of Treason she was a Murderer 1 Kings 21.10 6. Murder is committed by instilling Poyson into Potions Thus the Wife of Commodus the Emperor killed her Husband by poysoning the Wine which he drank So many kill the Children they go with by taking such Medicines or strong Purges as prove the Death of the Child 7. By Witchcraft and Sorcery a thing forbidden under the Law Deut. 18.10 There shall not be found among you an Enchanter or a Witch or a Consulter with Familiar Spirits 8. By having an Intention to kill another as Herod would under a Pretence of Worshipping Christ have killed him Mat. 2..8 13. So Saul when he made David go as Captain against the Philistins designing thereby that the Philistins should have killed him 1 Sam. 18.17 Saul said Let not my Hand be upon him but let the Hand of the Philistins be upon him Here was intentional Murder and it was in God's Account as bad as actual 9. By consenting to anothers Death So Saul to the Death of Stephen Acts 22.20 I also was standing by and consenting to his Death He that gives Consent is accessary to the Murder 10. By not hindring the Death of another when in our Power Pilate knew Christ was innocent I find no Fault in him but he did not hinder his Death therefore he was guilty It was not washing his Hands in Water could wash away the Guilt of Christ's Blood 11. By Vnmercifulness 1. By taking away that which is necessary for the Sustentation of Life As to take away those Tools or Utensils whereby a Man gets his Living Deut. 24.6 No man shall take away the nether or the upper Milstone to pledge for he takes a mans Life 2. By not helping him when he is ready to perish You may be the Death of another as well by not relieving him as by offering him Violence Si non paveris occidisti Ambrose If thou dost not feed him that is starving thou killest him And then how many are guilty of the Breach of this Commandment 12. By not Executing the Law upon Capital Offenders A Felon having committed Six Murders the Judge may be said to be guilty of Five of them because he did not execute the Felon for his first Offence The next thing I shall speak to is to show the Aggravations of this Sin of Murder As 1. To shed the Blood of another Causless as to kill another in an Humour or Frolick A Bee will not sting unless provok'd But many when they are not provoked will take away the
Christ doth not cast these Pearl before Swine Whether Iudas were present at the Supper is controverted I rather incline to think he was not For Christ said to the Disciples This is my Blood which is shed for you Luke 22.20 Christ knew his Blood was never shed effectually and intentionally for Iudas In eating the Passover Christ gave Iudas a Sop which was a Bit of Unleavened Bread dipt in a Sauce made with bitter Herbs Iudas having received the Sop went immediately out John 13. But suppose Iudas were there tho he receiv'd the Element yet not the Blessing 7. Take Eat This Expression of Eating denotes Four things 1. The near mystical Vnion between Christ and his Saints As the Meat which is eaten incorporates with the Body and becomes one with it so by eating Christ's Flesh and drinking his Blood Spiritually we partake of Christ's Merits and Graces and are mystically one with him Iohn 17.23 I in them 2. Take eat Eating shows the infinite Delight the believing Soul hath in Christ. Eating is grateful and pleasing to the Pallat So feeding on Christ by a lively Faith is delicious Nullus animae suavior cibus Lactantius No such sweet feeding as on Christ crucifyed This is a Feast of Fat things and Wine on Lees w●ll refined 3. Take eat Eating denotes Nourishment Meat as it is delicious to the Pallat so it is nourishing to the Body So eating Christ's Flesh and drinking his Blood is nutritive to the Soul The new Creature is nourished at the Table of the Lord to everlasting Life Iohn 6.54 Whoso eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood hath eternal Life 4. Take eat shows the Wisdom of God who restores us by the same means by which we fell We fell by Taking and Eating the Forbidden Fruit and we are recovered again by Taking and Eating of Christ's Flesh. We died by eating the Tree of Knowledge and we live by eating the Tree of Life 8. This is my Body These Words Hoc est Corpus meum have been much controverted between us and the Papists This is my Body that is by a Metonymy It is a Sign and Figure of my Body The Papists hold Transubstantiation that the Bread is after Consecration turn'd into the very Substance of Christ's Body We say we receive Christ's Body Spiritually they say they receive Christ's Body Carnally which is contrary to Scripture The Scripture affirms that the Heavens must receive Christ's Body until the times of the restitution of all things Acts 3.21 Christ's Body cannot be at the same time in Heaven and in the Host. Aquinas saith It is not possible by any Miracle that a Body should be locally in two places at once Besides it is absurd to imagine that the Bread in the Sacrament should be turned into Christ's Flesh and that his Body which was hung before should be made again of Bread So that This is my Body is as if Christ had said This is a Sign and Representation of my Body 9. And he took the Cup. The Cup is put by a Metonymy of the Subject for the Adjunct for the Wine in the Cup it signifies the Blood of Christ shed for our Sins The taking of the Cup denotes the Redundancy of Merit in Christ and the Fulness of our Redemption by him He not only took the Bread but the Cup. 10. And when he had given Thanks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ gave Thanks that God had given these Elements of Bread and Wine to be Signs and Seals of Man's Redemption by Christ. Christ's giving of Thanks shows his Philanthropy or Love to Mankind who did so rejoyce and bless God that Lost Man was now in a way of Recovery and that he should be rais'd higher in Christ than ever he was in Innocency 11. He gave the Cup to them Why then dare any with-hold the Cup This is to pollute and curtail the Ordinance and alter it from its Primitive Institution Christ and his Apostles administred the Sacrament in both Kinds the Bread and the Cup 1 Cor. 11.24 25. And the Cup was receiv'd in the ancient Church for the space of 1400 Years as is confess'd by Two Popish Councils Christ saith expresly Drink ye all of this He doth not say Eat ye all of this But Drink ye all as foreseeing the Sacrilegious Impiety of the Church of Rome in keeping back the Cup from the People The Popish Council of Constance speaks plainly but impudently That altho' Christ instituted and administred the Sacrament in both Kinds the Bread and the Wine yet the Authority of the Holy Canons and the Custom of the Mother Church think good to deny the Cup to the Laity Thus as the Popish Priests make Christ but half a Saviour so they administer to the People but half a Sacrament The Sacrament is Christ's Last Will and Testament in the Text This is my Blood of the New Testament Now to alter or take away any thing from a Man's Will and Testament is a great Impiety What is it then to alter and mangle Christ's Last Will and Testament Sure 't is an high Affront to Christ. Quest. 3. What are the Ends of the Lord's Supper Resp. 1. It is an Ordinance appointed to confirm our Faith Iohn 4.48 Except ye see Signs ye will not believe Christ sets the Elements before us that by these Signs our Faith may be strengthened As Faith cometh by hearing so it is confirmed by seeing Christ crucify'd The Sacrament is not only a Sign to represent Christ but a Seal to confirm our Interest in him Object But it is the Spirit confirms Faith therefore not the Sacrament Answ. This is no good Logick The Spirit confirms Faith therefore not the Sacrament is as if one should say God feeds our Bodies therefore Bread doth not feed us whereas God feeds us by Bread So the Spirit confirms our Faith by the Use of the Sacrament 2. The End of the Sacrament is to keep up the Memory of Christ's Death 1 Cor. 11.25 This do ye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in remembrance of me If a Friend give us a Ring at his Death we wear it to keep up the Memory of our Friend Much more then ought we to keep up the Memorial of Christ's Death in the Sacrament Christ's Death lays a Foundation for all the magnificent Blessings which we receive from Christ. The Covenant of Grace was agreed on in Heaven but sealed upon the Cross. Christ hath sealed all the Articles of Peace in his Blood Remission of Sin flows from Christ's Death Matth. 26.28 This is my Blood of the New Testament shed for many for the Remission of Sins Consecration or making us Holy is the Fruit of Christ's Death Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the Blood of Christ purge your Conscience Christ's Intercession is made available to us by Vertue of his Death Christ could not have been admitted an Advocate if he had not been first a Sacrifice Our entring into Heaven is the Fruit of Christ's Blood Heb. 10.19
6.4 he sees in secret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in impios habet Rivet As a Merchant enters down Debts in his Book so God hath his Diary or Day-Book and he enters down every sin into the Book He makes a Critical Discant upon Mens Actions Ieroboam's Wife disguised her self that the Prophet should not know her but he discern'd her 1 Kings 14.6 Why feignest thou thy self to be another The Hppocrite thinks to prevaricate and juggle with God but God will unmask him Eccles. 12.14 God shall bring every work into Iudgment with every secret thing Jer. 29.23 They have committed Villany in Israel even I know and am a witness saith the Lord. I but the Hypocrite hopes he shall colour over his sin and make it look very specious Absolom masks over his Treason with the pretence of a Religious Vow Iudas dissembles his Envy at Christ and Covetousness with a pretence of Charity to the Poor John 12.5 Iehu makes Religion a stirrop to his Ambitious Design 1 Kings 10.16 but God sees through these Figleaves You may see a Jade under his gilt Trappings Ier. 16.17 Their Iniquities is not hid from my eyes And he that hath an Eye to see will find an Hand to punish Use 2. of Exhortation Is God so infinite in his Knowledge then we should always set our selves as under his Omniscient Eye Sic vivendum est tanquam in conspectu Seneca Let us set David's Prospect before our Eye Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me Seneca counselled Lucilius that whatever he was doing he should imagine some of the Roman Worthies beheld him and then he would do nothing dishonourable The consideration of God's Omnisciency would 1. Be preventive of much sin The Eye of Man will restrain from sin and will not God's Eyes much more Esther 7.8 Will he force the Queen before me when I stand and look on Will we sin when our Judge looks on Would Men speak so vainly if they considered God over-heard them Latimer took heed to every word in his Examination when he heard the Pen go behind the Hangings So what care would Persons have of their words if they remembred God heard and the Pen is going in Heaven Would Men go after strange Flesh if they believed God were a Spectator of their wickedness and would make them do Pennance in Hell for it would they defraud in their Dealings and use false Weights if they thought God saw them and for making their Weights lighter would make their damnation heavier 2. The setting our selves as under the Eye of God's Omnisciency would cause Reverence in the Worship of God God sees the frame and carriage of our Hearts when we come before him How would this call in our stragling thoughts how would this animate and spirit Duty it would make us put fire to the Incense Acts 26.7 The Tribes instantly served God day and night 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnibus venibus with the utmost zeal and intensness of Spirit To think God is in this place he beholds us would add Wings to Prayer and Oil to the flame of our Devotion 2. Is God's Knowledge infinite study sincerity be what you seem 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord looketh upon the heart Men judge of the Heart by the Actions God judgeth of the Actions by the Heart If the Heart be sincere God will see the Faith and wink at the failing Asa had his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Blemishes but his Heart was right with God 2 Chron. 15.17 God saw his Sincerity and pardoned his Infirmity Sincerity in a Christian is like Chastity in a Wise which doth excuse many Failings Sincerity makes our Duties acceptable like Musk among Linen that perfumes it As Iehu said to Iehonadab 2 Kings 10.15 Is thy heart right with me and he said it is if it be saith he give me thy hand and he took him up into the Chariot So if God sees our heart is right that we love him and design his glory now saith he give me your Prayers and Tears now you shall come up with me into the triumphant Chariot of Glory Sincerity makes our Services to be golden and God will not cast away this Gold though it may want some weight Is God Omniscient and his Eye chiefly upon the Heart wear this Girdle of Truth about you and never leave it off Use 3. of Comfort Is God a God of infinite Knowledge then there is Comfort 1. To the Saints in particular 2. To the Church in general in three Respects 1. In case of Private Devotion Christian thou settest hours apart for God thy Thoughts run upon him as thy Treasure God takes notice of every good Thought Mal. 3.17 He had a Book of Remembrance written for them that thought upon his Name Thou enterest into thy Closet and prayest to thy Father in secret he hears every sigh and groan Psal. 38.9 My groaning is not hid from thee Thou waterest the Seed of thy Prayer with Tears God bottles every Tear Psal. 56.8 Put thou my Tears into thy bottle When the Secrets of all Hearts shall be opened God will make an honourable mention of the Zeal and Devotion of his People and he himself will be the Herauld of their Praises 1 Cor. 4.5 Then shall every man have praise of God 2. The Infiniteness of God's Knowledge is a Comfort in case the Saints have not so clear a Knowledge of themselves They find so much Corruption that they judge they have no Grace Gen. 25.22 If it be so why am I thus If I have Grace why is my Heart in so dead and earthly a frame O remember God is of infinite Knowledge he can spy Grace where thou canst not he can see Grace hid under Corruption as the Stars may be hid under a Cloud God can see that Holiness in thee which thou canst not discern in thy self He can spy the flower of Grace in thee though overtop'd with weeds 1 Kings 14.13 Because there is in him some good thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God sees some good thing in his People when they can see no Good in themselves and though they judge themselves he will give them an Absolution 3. It is Comfort in respect of Personal Injuries It is the Saints lot to suffer The Head being crowned with Thorns the Feet must not tread upon Roses if Saints find a real Purgatory 't is in this Life but this is the Comfort God sees what wrong is done to them The Apple of his Eye is touched and is not he sensible St. Paul was scourged by cruel Hands 1 Cor. 11.35 Thrice was I beaten with Rods as if you should see a Scullion whip the King's Son God beholds it Exod. 3.7 I know their sorrows The Wicked make wounds in the backs of the Saints and then pour in Vinegar God writes down their Cruelty Believers art part of Christs Mystical Body and for every drop of a Saint's Blood spilt God puts a drop of Wrath in his Vial. 2. Comfort
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hyperbolically Evil Rom. 1.13 it is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Abomination Deut. 7.25 God hath no mixture of Evil in him Sin hath no mixture of Good it is the Spirits and Quintissence of Evil it turns Good into Evil it hath deflowr'd the Virgin-Soul made it red with Guilt and black with Filth it is called the accursed thing Jos. 7.11 No wonder ergo that God doth so hate Sin being so unlike to him nay so contrary it strikes at his Holiness Sin doth all it can to spight God Sin would not only Unthrone God but Ungod him if Sin could help it God should be God no longer Use 2. Is God the Holy One and is his Holiness his Glory Then how impious are they 1. That are Haters of Holiness as the Vulture hates Perfumes so they hate this sweet Perfume of Holiness in the Saints their Hearts rise against Holiness as a Man's Stomach at a Dish he hath an Antipathy against There is not a greater sign of a Person devoted to Hell then to hate one for that thing wherein he is most like God his Holiness 2. That are Despisers of Holiness they despise the Glory of the Godhead Glorious in holiness the despising of Holiness is seen in the deriding of it Is it not sad Men should deride that which should save them Sure that Patient will dye that derides the Physick The deriding the Grace of the Spirit comes near to the despighting the Spirit of Grace Scoffing Ishmael was cast out of Abraham's House Gen. 21.9 Such as scoff at Holiness shall be cast out of Heaven Use 2. of Exhortation Is God so infinitely holy then let us endeavour to imitate God in Holiness 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy There 's a twofold Holiness An Holiness of Equality and an Holiness of Similitude An Holiness of Equality no Man or Angel can reach to Who can be equally Holy with God Who can parallel him in Sanctity But 2. there is an Holiness of Similitude and that we must aspire after to have some Analogy and Resemblance of God's Holiness in us be as like him in Holiness as we can though a Taper doth not give so much Light as the Sun yet it doth resemble it We must Imitate God in Holiness Quest. Must we be like God in Holiness wherein doth our Holiness consist Resp. In two things 1st In our Suitableness to God's Nature 2dly Our Subjection to his Will 1. Our Holiness stands in our Suitableness to the Nature of God Hence the Saints are said to partake of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 which is not a partaking of his Essence but his Image Herein is the Saints Holiness when they are the lively Pictures of God they bear the Image of God's Meekness Mercifulness Heavenliness they are of the same Judgment with God of the same Disposition they love what he loves and hate what he hates 2. Our Holiness consists in our Subjection to the Will of God As God's Nature is the Pattern of Holiness so his Will is the Rule of Holiness This is our Holiness 1. When we do his Will Acts 13.22 2. When we bear his Will Mich. 7.9 What he inflicts wisely we suffer willingly This is our Holiness when we are suitable to God's Nature and submissive to his Will this should be our great Care to be like God in Holiness Our Holiness should be so qualified as God's God's is a real Holiness such should ours be Ephes. 4.24 Righteousness and true holiness it should not be only the Paint of Holiness but the Life of Holiness it should not only be like the Aegyptian Temples beautiful without but like Solomon's Temple Gold within Psal. 45.13 The King's Daughter is glorious within That I may press you to resemble God in Holiness 1. How Illustrious every holy Person is he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is a fair Glass in which some of the Beams of God's Holiness shines forth We read Aaron put on Garments for Glory and Beauty Exod. 28.2 When we wear the embroidered Garment of Holiness it is for Glory and Beauty A good Christian is ruddy being sprinkled with Christ's Bloud and white being adorn'd with Holiness As the Diamond to a Ring so is Holiness to the Soul So beautiful a thing is Holiness that as Chrysostom saith ' They that oppose it cannot but admire it 2. It is the great Design God carries on in the World to make a People like himself in Holiness What are all the Showers of the Ordinances for but to rain down Righteousness upon us and make us Holy What are the Promises for but to encourage Holiness What is the sending of the Spirit into the World for but to anoint us with the Holy Unction 1 Ioh. 2.20 What are all Afflictions for but to make us Partakers of God's Holiness Heb. 12.10 What are Mercies for but Loadstones to draw us to Holiness What is the end of Christ's dying but that his Bloud might wash away our Unholiness Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for us to purifie unto himself a peculiar People So that if we are not holy we cross God's great Design in the World 3. 'T is our Holiness draws God's Heart to us Holiness is God's Image God cannot choose but love his Image where he sees it A King loves to see his Effigies upon a piece of Coin Psal. 45.7 Thou lovest righteousness And where doth Righteousness grow but in an holy Heart Isa. 6● 4 Thou shalt be called Hepbsiba for the Lord delighteth in thee It was her Holiness drew God's Love to her Verse 12. They shall call them the holy people God values not any by their high Birth but their Holiness 4. Holiness is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the only thing that differenceth us from the Reprobate Part of the World God's People have his Seal upon them 2 Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God standeth sure having this seal The Lord knows them that are his And let all that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity The People of God are sealed with a double Seal 1. Election The Lord knows who are his 2. Sanctification Let every one depart from iniquity As a Nobleman is distinguished from another by his Silver Star as a virtuous Woman is distinguish'd from an Harlot by her Chastity so Holiness distinguisheth between the two Seeds All that are of God as they have Christ for their Captain Heb. 2.10 so Holiness is the white Colour they wear 5. Holiness is our Honour Holiness and Honour put together 1 Thes. 4.4 Dignity goes along with Sanctity Rev. 1.6 He hath washed us from our sins ●n his bloud and hath made us kings unto God When we are washed and made holy then we are Kings and Priests to God The Saints are call'd Vessels of Honour they are called Jewels for the sparkling of their Holiness because fill'd with Wine of the Spirit this makes them Earthly Angels 6. Holiness gives us Boldness with God
A Christian after his weary Marches and Battels shall put off his Bloody Armour and rest himself upon the Bosom of Jesus that Bed of Perfume When Death hath given the Saints the Wings of a Dove then they shall fly away to Paradise and be at rest 7. The Seventh thing in Glory is Eternity 2 Cor. 4.17 An Eternal weight of Glory First Glory is a Weight The Hebrew Word for Glory quod significat Pondus is a Weight God must make us able to bear it Secondly An Eternal Weight 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glory is such a Manna as doth not breed Worms If the Saints glory in Heaven were but for a time and they were in fear of losing it it would eclipse and imbitter the Joys of Heaven but Eternity is written upon their Joys The Garland made of Flowers of Paradise fades not 1 Pet. 5.4 I have read of a River which they call the Day-River in which time it runs with a full Torrent but at Night it is dried up such are all Earthly Comforts they run with a full Stream all the Day-time of Life but at the Night of Death they are dried up but the Saints glorified shall drink of the Rivers of Pleasure for evermore Psal. 16.11 Eternity is the Heaven of Heavens in fine Gaudium erit sine fine Bern. The Joys of Heaven as overflowing so ever-flowing Quest. 2. When do Believers enter upon Possession of Glory Resp. They pass immediately after Death into Glory Some hold with the Platonists and Lucianists that the Soul dies But many of the Sober Heathens believed the Souls immortality The Romans when their Great Men died caus'd an Eagle to be let loose and fly about in the Air signifying hereby that the Soul was immortal and did not dye with the Body Christ tells us the Soul is not capable of Killing Luke 12.4 Therefore not of Dying And as the Soul doth not Dye so neither doth it Sleep in the Body for a time If the Soul be at Death absent from the Body 2 Cor. 5.8 then it cannot Sleep in the Body There is an immediate passage from Death to Glory It is but winking and we shall see God Luke 23.43 This Day shalt thou be with me in Paradise by Paradise is meant Heaven the Third Heaven into which Paul was wrap'd which all hold to be the Heaven of the blessed was called Paradise 2 Cor 12.4 Now saith Christ to the Thief on the Cross 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Day shalt thou be with me in Paradise his Body could not be there for it was laid in the Grave But it was spoke of his Soul that it should be immediately after Death in Heaven Let none be so vain as to talk of Purgatory A Soul purg'd by Christs Blood needs no fire of Purgatory but goes immediately from a Death-bed into a glorified State Use 1. See what little cause Believers have to fear Death when it brings such glorious Benefits To me to Dye is Gain Why should the Saints fear their Preferment Is it not a blessed thing to see God to love God and to lye for ever in the Bosom of Divine Love Is it not a blessed thing to meet our Godly Relations in Heaven Why should the Saints be afraid of their Blessings Is a Virgin afraid to be matched into the Crown Now is but the Contract at Death is the Marriage-Supper of the Lamb Rev. 19.9 What hurt doth Death but take us from among Fiery Serpents and place us among Angels What hurt doth it do but to cloath us with a Robe of Immortality Hath he any wrong done that hath his Sack-Cloath pull'd off and hath Cloath of Gold put upon him Fear not Dying who cannot live but by Dying Use 2. You who are Real Saints whose Hearts are purified by Faith spend much time in musing upon these glorious Benefits which you shall have by Christ at Death Thus might you by a Contemplative Life begin the Life of Angels here and be in Heaven before your time Eudoxus was so affected with the Glory of the Sun that he thought he was born only to behold it What should we contemplate but Caelestial Glory when we shall see God Face to Face David was got above the ordinary sort of Men he was in the Altitudes ●sal 139.18 I am ever with thee A true Saint every Day takes a turn in Heaven his Thoughts and Desires are like Cherubims flying up to Paradise Can Men of the World so delight in looking upon their Bags of Gold and Fields of Corn and shall not the Heirs of Heaven take more delight in Contemplating their Glory in Reversion Could we send forth Faith as a Spy and every Day view the Glory of the Ierusalem above how would it rejoyce us as it doth the Heir to think of the Inheritance which is to come into his Hand shortly Use 3. Consolation This is that which may comfort the Saints in Two Cases 1. Under their Wants they abound only in Wants The Meal is almost spent in the Barrel but be patient till Death and you shall have a Supply of all your Wants You shall have a Kingdom and be as Rich as Heaven can make you He who hath the promise of an Estate after the expiring of a few Years though at present he hath nothing to help himself yet comforts himself with this that shortly he shall have an Estate come into his Hands 1 Iohn 2.3 It doth not yet appear what we shall be we shall be enamel'd with Glory and be as rich as the Angels under their Sufferings 2. A true Saint is as Luther Haeres Crucis but this may make us go chearfully through our Sufferings there are great things laid up in store there is Glory coming which Eye hath not seen we shall drink of the Fruit of the Vine in the Kingdom of Heaven though now we drink in a Wormwood Cup yet here is Sugar to sweeten it we shall taste of those Joys of Paradise which exceed our Faith and may be better felt than they can be expressed Of the RESVRRECTION John 5.28 Marvel not at this for the Hour is coming in which all that are in the Graves shall hear his Voice and shall come forth they that have done Good unto the Resurrection of Life and they that have done Evil unto the Resurrection of Damnation Quest. WHat Benefits shall Believers receive from Christ at the Resurrection Resp. 1. Their Bodies shall be raised up to Glory 2. They shall be openly acquitted at the Day of Judgment 3. They shall be made perfectly blessed in the full enjoyment of God for ever 1. The Bodies of Believers shall be raised up to Glory The Doctrin of the Resurrection is a Fundamental Article of our Faith the Apostle puts it among the Principles of the Doctrin of Christ Heb. 6.2 The Body shall rise again we are not so sure to rise out of our Beds as we are to rise out of our Graves The saved Body shall arise again Some
Life of another This makes the Sin of Blood more bloody The less Provocation to a Sin the greater the Sin 2. To shed the Blood of another contrary to Promise Thus after the Princes of Israel had sworn to the Gibeonites that they should live Iosh. 9.15 Saul slew them 2 Sam. 21.1 Here were two Sins twisted together Breach of Oath and Murder 3. To take away the Life of any Publick Person inhanceth the Murder and makes it greater As 1. To Kill a Judge upon the Bench because he represents the King's Person 2. To murder a Person whose Office is Sacred and comes on the King of Heaven's Ambassage The murdering of him may be the murdering of many Herod added this Sin above all that he shut up Iohn Baptist in Prison Luke 3.20 Then much more to behead Iohn in Prison 3. To stain ones Hands with Royal Blood David's Heart smote him because he did but cut off the Lap of King Saul's Garment 1 Sam. 24.5 How would David's Heart have smote him if he had cut off Sauls Head 4. To shed the Blood of a near Relation aggravates the Murder and dies it of a deeper Crimson For a Son to kill his Father is horrid Parricides are Monsters in Nature Qui occidit patrem plurima committit peccata in uno Cicero He who takes away his Fathers Life committeth many Sins in one He is not only guilty of Murder but of Disobedience Ingratitude Ostracism and Diabolical Cruelty Exod. 21.15 He who striketh his Father or Mother shall be surely put to Death Then how many Deaths is he worthy of that destroyes his Father or Mother Such a Monster was Nero who caused his Mother Agrippina to be slain 5. To shed the Blood of any Righteous Person aggravates the Sin First Hereby Justice is perverted Such a Person being innocent is unworthy of Death Secondly A Saint being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Publick Blessing he lies in the Breach to turn away Wrath So that to destroy him is to go to pull down the Pillars of a Nation Thirdly He is precious to God Isa. 15.43 44. He is a Member of Christ's Body therefore what Injury is offered to him is done to God himself Acts 9.4 Caution I. Tho this Commandment forbids Private Persons Thou shalt not kill to shed the Blood of another unless in their own Defence yet such as are in Office must punish Publick Offenders yea with Death else they sin To kill an Offender is not Murder but Justice A Private Person sins if he draws the Sword a Publick Person sins if he put up the Sword A Magistrate ought not to let the Sword of Justice rust in the Scabbard As the Magistrate should not let the Sword be too sharp by Severity so neither should the Edge of it be blunted by too much Lenity Caution II. Neither doth this Commandment Thou shalt not kill prohibit a Iust War When Mens Sins grow ripe and long Plenty hath bred Surfeit Then God saith Sword go through the Land Ezek. 14.17 God did abet the War between the Tribes of Israel and Benjamin When the Iniquity of the Amorites was full then God sent Israel to commence a War against them Iudg. 11.21 Vse I. Lamentation That this Land is so defiled with Blood Numb 35.33 How common is this Sin in this Hectoring Age England's Sins are written in Letters of Blood Some make no more of killing Men than Sheep Ier. 2.34 In thy Skirts is found the Blood of the poor Innocents Iunius reads it in Alis and so in Hebrew In Thy Wings is found the Blood of Innocents It alludes to the Birds of Prey which stain their Wings with the Blood of other Birds May not the Lord justly take up a Controversie with the Inhabitants of the Land because Blood toucheth Blood Hos. 4.2 There is a Concatenation a Plurality of Murders And that which may encrease our Lamentation is that not only Man's Blood is shed among us but Chrst's Blood Such as are profane flagitious Sinners are said to Crucify the Son of God afresh Heb. 6.6 1. They Swear by his Blood and so do as it were make his Wounds bleed afresh 2. Crucifie Christ in his Members Why persecutest thou me The Foot being trodden on the Head cried out 3. If it lay in their Power were Christ alive on Earth they would nail him again to the Cross. Thus Men Crucifie Christ afresh And if Man's Blood doth so cry how loud will Christ's Blood cry against Sinners Vse II. Beware of having your Hands imbrued in the Blood of others Obj. But such a one hath wronged me by Defamation or other ways and if I spill his Blood I do but revenge my own Quarrel Resp. If he hath done you wrong the Law is open but take heed of shedding Blood What because he hath wronged you will you therefore wrong God Is it not a Wrong to God to take his Work out of his Hand He hath said Vengeance is mine and I will repay Rom. 12.19 But you will take upon you to revenge your self You will be both Plantiff and Judge and Executioner your self This is an high Wrong done to God and he will not hold you guiltless Now to deterr all from having their Hands defiled with Blood consider what a Sin Murder is 1. A God-affronting Sin It is a Breach of Commandment trampling upon God's Royal Edict It is a Wrong offered to God's Image Gen. 9.6 In the Image of God made he Man It is a tearing God's Picture and breaking in Pieces the King of Heavens Broad-Seal Man is the Temple of God 1 Cor. 6.19 Know ye not that your Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost So that the Man-slayer destroys God's Temple And will God endure to be thus confronted by proud Dust 2. It is a crying Sin Clamitat in Coelum vox Sanguinis There are three Sins in Scripture said to cry 1. Oppression Psal. 12.5 2. Sodomy Gen. 18.21 3. Blood-shed This comes so loud that it drowns all the other Cries Gen. 4.10 The Voice of thy Brothers Blood cries unto me from the Ground Abel's Blood had as many Tongues as Drops to cry aloud for Vengeance This Sin of Blood lay heavy on David's Conscience Tho he had sinned by Adultery yet that he cried out of most was this Crimson Sin of Blood Psal. 51.14 Deliver me from Blood-guiltiness O God Tho the Lord visits for every Sin yet he will in a special manner make Inquisition for Blood Psal. 9.12 If a Beast did kill a Man the Beast was to be ston'd and his Flesh must not be eaten Exod. 21.8 If God would have a Beast stoned that killed a Man who had not the Use of Reason to restrain him then much more will he be incensed against those who go both against Reason and Conscience in spoiling the Life of a Man 3. Murder is a Diabolical Sin It makes a Man Primogenitum Diaboli The Devil 's First-born He was a Murderer from the beginning Iohn
these about to massacre and damn their own Souls 3. They murder their Souls who avoid all means of saving their Souls They will go to Plays to drunken Meetings but will not set their Foot within God's House or come near the Sound of the Gospel Trumpet As if one that is Diseased should shun the Bath for fear of being healed These do wilfully damn their Souls and are as great Murderers of themselves as he who having means of Cure offered him chooseth Death rather than Physick 4. They do voluntarily murder their Souls who suck in false Prejudices against Religion as if Religion were too strict and severe they that espouse Holiness must live a melancholly Life like Hermits and Anchorites and drown all their Joy in Tears This is a Slander which the Devil hath cast upon Religion For there 's no true Joy but in believing Rom. 15.13 No Hony so sweet as that which drops from a Promise Some Men have foolishly taken up a Prejudice against Religion they are resolved rather never to go to Heaven than go thither through the Strait Gate I may say of Prejudice as Paul to Elimas Acts 13.10 O Prejudice thou Child of the Devil thou Enemy of all Righteousness how many Souls hast thou damned 5. They are wilfully set to murder their own Souls who will neither be good to themselves nor suffer others to be so Matth. 23.13 Ye neither go into the Kingdom of Heaven your selves neither suffer ye them that are entring to go in Such are those that persecute others for their Religion Drunken Meetings shall escape Punishment But if Men meet to serve God then let all Severity be used These are resolved to Shipwrack others tho they themselves are cast away in the Storm Oh! Take heed of this of murdering your own Souls No Creature but Man doth willingly kill its self So I have done with the First the Sin Forbidden in this Commandment Thou shalt not kill EXOD. XX. 13 Thou shalt not Kill II. The Second Duty implyed is That we should do all the Good we can to our selves and others 1. In reference to Others We should endeavour to preserve the Lives and Souls of others 2. In reference to our selves To preserve our own Life and Soul 1. In reference to Others 1. To preserve the Life of others Comfort them in their Sorrows relieve them in their Wants Be as the good Samaritan pour Wine and Oyl into their Wounds Iob 29.16 I was a Father to the poor 13. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me This is a great means of preserving the Life of another by relieving him when he is ready to perish Pompey when there was a great Dearth in Rome provided Corn for their Relief and when the Mariners were backward to sail thither in a Tempest saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not necessary that we should live but it is necessary that Rome be relieved Grace makes the Heart tender it causeth Sympathy and Charity As it melts the Heart in Contrition towards God so in Compassion towards others Psal. 112.9 He hath dispersed he hath given to the poor This the Commandment implies That we should be so far from ruining others that we should do all we can to preserve the Lives of others When we see the Picture of Death drawn in their Faces administer to their Necessities Be Temporal Saviours to them draw them out of the Waters of Affliction with a Silver Cord of Charity That I may perswade you to this let me lay before you Arguments First Works of Charity evidence Grace 1. Faith Iam. 2.18 I mill shew thee my Faith by my Works Works are Faith's Letters of Credence to show We judge of the Health of the Body by the Pulse where the Blood stirs and operates Christian judge of the Health of thy Faith by the Pulse of Charity The Word of God is the Rule of Faith and good Works are the Witnesses of Faith 2. Love Love loves Mercy It is a Noble bountiful Grace Mary loved Christ and how liberal was her Love She bestows on Christ her Tears Kisses costly Oyntments Love is like a full Vessel will have Vent it vents it self in Acts of Liberality Secondly To communicate to the Necessities of others is not Arbitrary it 's not left to our Choice whether we will or no but it is a Duty incumbent 1 Tim. 6.17 Charge them that are Rich in this World that they do good that they be rich in good Works This is not only a Counsel but a Charge If God should lay a Charge upon the Inanimate Creatures they would obey If he should charge the Rocks they would send forth Water If he should charge the Clouds they would melt into Showers If he should charge the Stones they would become Bread And shall we be harder than the Stones not to obey God when he chargeth us to be rich in Good Works Thirdly God supplies our Wants and shall not we supply the Wants of others We could not live without Mercy God makes every Creature helpful to us The Sun doth enrich us with it's Golden Beams The Earth yields us its Encrease Veins of Gold Crops of Corn store of Flowers God opens the Treasury of his Mercy he feeds us every Day out of the Alms-basket of his Providence Thou openest thy hand and satisfiest the desire of every living thing Psal. 145.16 Now doth God supply our Wants and shall not we minister to the Wants of others Shall we be only as a Spunge to suck in Mercy and not as a Breast to milk it out to others Fourthly Herein we resemble God to be doing Good to others 'T is our Excellency to be like God Godliness is God-likeness And wherein are we more like him than in Acts of Bounty and Munificence Psal. 119.68 Thou art good and dost good Thou art good there is God's Essential Goodness and dost good there is his Communicative Goodness The more helpful we are to others the more like we are to God We cannot be like God in Omnisciency or in working Miracles but we may be like him in doing Works of Mercy Fifthly God remembers all our Deeds of Charity and takes them kindly at our Hands Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your labour of Love which ye have shewed towards his Name in that ye have ministred to the Saints The Chief Butler may forget Ioseph's Kindness but the Lord will not forget any kindness we show to his People Mat. 25.35 I was an hungred and ye gave me Meat Thirsty and ye gave me Drink Christ takes the kindness done to his Saints as done to himself God that hath a Bottle for your Tears hath a Book to write down your Alms. Mal. 3.16 A Book of Remembrance was written before him Tamerlane had a Register to write down all the Names and good Service of his Soldiers So God hath a Book of Remembrance to write down all your Charitable Works and at the
Residence Eph. 3.17 A King's Palace must be kept clean especially his Presence-Chamber If the Body of the Temple the Soul is the Holy of Holies this must be consecrated We must not only keep our Bodies from Carnal Pollution but our Souls from Envy and Malice Quest. How shall we know our Souls are pure Resp. 1. If our Souls are pure then we fly from the appearance of evil 1 Thess. 5.22 We will not do that which looks like sin When Ioseph's Mistress did court and tempt him he left his Garment in her hand and fled Gen. 39.12 'T was suspicious to be near her Polycarp would not be seen in Company with Marcion the Heretick because it would not be of good Report 2. If our Souls are pure this Light of Purity will shine forth Aaron had Holiness to the Lord written upon his Golden Plate Where there is Sanctity in the Soul there Holiness to the Lord is engraven upon our Life we are adorn'd with Patience Humility good Works and shine as Lights in the World Phil. 2.15 carry Christ's Picture in our Conversations 1 Iohn 2.6 O let us labour for this Soul-Purity without it there 's no seeing of God Heb. 12.14 What Communion hath Light with Darkness And that we may keep our Souls pure 1. Have Recourse to the Blood of Christ This is the Fountain set open for Sin and Vncleanness Zech. 13.1 A Soul steep'd in the Brinish Tears of Repentance and bathed in the Blood of Christ is made pure 2. Pray much for Pureness of Soul Psal. 51.10 Create in me a clean Heart O God Some pray for Children others for Riches but pray for Soul-purity Say Lord tho my Body is kept pure yet Lord my Soul is defiled I pollute all I touch O purge me with Hyssop Let Christ's Blood sprinkle me let the Holy Ghost come upon me and anoynt me O make me Evangelically pure that I may be translated to Heaven and placed among the Cherubims where I shall be as holy as thou wouldst have me to be and as happy as I can desire to be EXOD. XX. 15 Thou shalt not Steal As the Holiness of God sets him against Vncleanness Thou shalt not commit Adultery so the Justice of God sets him against Rapine and Robbery Thou shalt not steal The thing forbidden in the Commandment is medling with another Man's Propriety Thou shalt not steal The Civil Lawyers define Furtum Stealth or Theft to be the laying Hands unjustly on that which is anothers The invading anothers Right Quest. 1. Whence doth Theft arise Resp. 1. The Internal Causes are 1. Vnbelief A Man hath an high Distrust of God's Providence Can God prepare a Table in the Wilderness Psalm 78.19 So saith the Unbeliever Can God spread a Table for me No he cannot Therefore he is resolved he will spread a Table for himself but it shall be of other Mens Cost and both first and second Course shall be served in with stollen Goods 2. Covetousness The Greek Word for Covetousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an immoderate Deisre of Getting This is the Root of Theft A Man covets more than his own and this Itch of Covetousness makes him scratch what he can from another Achan's covetous Humour made him steal the Wedge of Gold which Wedge did cleave asunder his Soul from God Iosh. 7.21 2. The External Cause of Theft is Satan's Sollicitation Iudas was a Thief Iohn 12.6 How came he to be a Thief Satan entred into him John 13.27 The Devil is the great Master-Thief he robbed us of our Coat of Innocency and he perswades Men to take up his Trade He tells Men how bravely they shall live by Thieving and how they may catch an Estate And as Eve listned to the Serpents Voice so do they and as Birds of Prey live upon Spoil and Rapine Quest. 2. How many sorts of Theft are there Res. I. There is a stealing from God and so they are Thieves who rob any part of God's Day from him Remember to keep holy the Sabbath-day Not a pa●t of the Day only but the Whole Day must be dedicated to God And lest any should forget this the Lord hath prefixed a Memento Remember Therefore to cut God short and after Morning Sacrifice to spend the other part of the Sabbath in Vanity and Pleasure this is Spiritual Thievery 't is to rob God of his Due and the very Heathens will rise up in Judgment against such Christians For the Heathens as Macrobius notes did observe a whole Day to their False Gods II. There is a stealing from Others 1. A stealing away their Souls and so Hereticks are Thieves By robbing Men of the Truth they rob them of their Souls 2. A stealing away their Money and Goods from them And under this Head of stealing away others Money there may be several arraigned for Thieves 1. The High-way Thief who takes a Purse contrary to the Letter of this Commandment Lev. 19.13 Thou shalt not rob thy Neighbour Mark 10.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Do not steal This is not the Violence which takes the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 11.12 2. The House-Thief who purloyns and filcheth out of his Masters Cash or steals his Wares and Drugs The Apostle saith Some have entertained Angels into their Houses unawares Heb. 13.2 But many Masters have entertained Thieves into their Houses unawares The House-Thief is an Hypocrite as well as a Thief he hath demure Looks and pretends he is helping his Master when he only helps to rob him 3. The Thief that shrowds himseif under Law as the unjust Attorney or Lawyer who prevaricates and deals falsly with his Client This is to steal from the Client By Deceit and Prevarication the Lawyer robs the Client of his Land and may be the means to ruine his Family He is no better than a Thief in God's Account 4. The Church-Thief or Plura●st who holds several Benifices but seldom or never preacheth to the People He gets the Golden Fleece but lets his Flock starve Ezek. 34.2 Wo be to the Shepherds of Israel Ver. 8. They feed themselves and feed not my Flock These Ministers will be indited for Thieves at God's Bar. 5. The Shop-Thief he steals in selling 1. Who useth False Weights and Measures and so steals from others what is their due Amos 5.8 Who make the Ephah small The Ephah was a Measure the Jews used in Selling they made the Ephah small gave scant measure which was plain stealing Hos. 12.7 The Ballances of Deceit are in his Hand Men by making their Weights lighter make their Accounts heavier 2. He steals in selling who puts excessive Prices on his Commodities He takes thrice as much for a Commodity as it cost him or as it is worth To over-reach others in selling is to steal Mens Money from them Lev. 19.13 Thou shalt not defraud thy Neighbour neither rob him To defraud him is to rob him This over-reaching others in selling which is a cunning way of stealing is both against Law
Apostacy 'T is a renouncing of our Baptism 'T is damnable Perjury to go away from God after a Solemn Vow 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me He turned Renegado and afterward became a Priest in an Idol Temple saith Dorotheus Iulian the Apostate Gregory Nazianzen observes bathed himself in the Blood of Beasts offered in Sacrifice to the Heathen Gods and so as much as in him lay washed off his former Baptism The Case of such as fall away after Baptism is dreadful Heb. 10.38 If any Man draw back The Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to draw back alludes to a Souldier that steals away from his Colours So if any Man steal away from Christ and run over to the Devils side my Soul shall have no pleasure in him That is I will be severely avenged on him I will make my Arrows drunk with his Blood If all the Plagues in the Bible can make that Man miserable he shall be so II. The Second Sacrament wherein Jesus Christ communicates to us the Benefits of his Redemption is the Lord's Supper Mark XIV 24 And as they did Eat Iesus took Bread c. Secondly Having spoken of the Sacrament of Baptism I come now to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper The Lord's Supper is the most Spiritual and sweet Ordinance that ever was instituted Here we have to do more immediately with the Person of Christ. In Prayer we draw nigh to God in the Sacrament we become one with him In Prayer we look up to Christ in the Sacrament by Faith we touch him In the Word Preached we hear Christ's Voice in the Sacrament we feed on him Quest. 1. What Names and Titles in Scripture are given to the Sacrament Resp. 1. It is called 1. Mensa Domini The Lord's Table 1 Cor. 10.21 The Papists call it an Altar not a Table The Reason is because they turn the Sacrament into a Sacrifice and pretend to offer up Christ corporally in the Ma●s It being the Lord's Table shews with what Reverence and solemn Devotion we should approach to these Holy Mysteries The Lord takes notice of the Frame of our Hearts when we come to his Table Matth. 22.11 The King came in to see the Guests We dress our selves when we come to the Table of some Great Monarch We should think with our selves we are going to the Table of the Lord therefore should dress our selves by Holy Meditation and Heart-Consideration Many think it is enough to come to the Sacrament but mind not whether they come in Due Order Perhaps they had scarce a serious Thought before whither they were going All their Dressing was by the Glass not by the Bible Chrysostom calls it The dreadful Table of the Lord So it is to such as come unworthily 2. The The Sacrament is called Coena Domini the Lord's Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 to import it is a Spiritual Feast It is indeed a Royal Feast God is in this Cheer Christ in both Natures God and Man is the matter of this Supper 3. The Sacrament is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Communion 1 Cor. 10.16 The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ The Sacrament being called a Communion shews 1. That this Ordinance is only for Believers because none else can have Communion with Christ in these Holy Mysteries Communio fundatur in ●nione Faith only gives us Union with Christ and by Vertue of this we have Communion with him in his Body and Blood None but the Spouse communicates with her Husband A Stranger may drink of his Cup but she only hath his Heart and communicates with him in a Conjugal manner So Strangers may have the Sign drink of the Cup but only Believers drink Christ's Blood and have Communion with him in his Priviledges 2. The Sacrament being a Communion shews That it is Symbolum Amoris a Bond of that Unity and Charity which should be among Christians 1 Cor. 10.17 We being many are one Body As many Grains make One Bread so many Christistians are one Body A Sacrament is a Love-Feast The Primitive Christians as Iustin Martyr notes had their Holy Salutations at the Blessed Supper in token of that Dearness of Affection which they did bear each to other It is a Communion therefore there must be Love and Union The Israelites did eat the Passover with Bitter Herbs so must we eat the Sacrament with bitter Herbs of Repentance but not with bitter Hearts of Wrath and Malice The Hearts of the Communicants should be knit together with the Bond of Love Thou braggest of thy Faith saith Austin but show me thy Faith by thy Love to the Saints For as in the Sun Light and Heat are inseparable so Faith and Love are twisted together inseparably Where there are Divisions the Lord's Supper is not properly a Communion but a Disunion Quest. 2. What is the Lord's Supper Resp. It is a visible Sermon wherein Christ crucify'd is set before us or it is a Sacrament of the New Testament wherein by receiving the Holy Elements of Bread and Wine our Communion with Christ is signify'd and seal'd up to us Or thus It is a Sacrament Divinely Instituted wherein by giving and receiving Bread and Wine Christ's Death is shewed forth and the worthy Receivers are by Faith made Partakers of his Body and Blood and all the Benefits flowing from thence For the further explaining of the Nature of the Lord's Supper I shall look back to to the Institution 1. Iesus took Bread Here is the Master of the Feast or the Institutor of the Sacrament The Lord Iesus he took Bread He only is fit to Institute a Sacrament who is able to give Vertue and Blessing to it 2. He took Bread Christ's Taking of the Bread was one Part of his Consecration of the Elements and setting them apart for an Holy Use. And as Christ did consecrate the Elements so we must labour to have our Hearts consecrated before we receive these Holy Mysteries in the Lord's Supper How unseemly a Sight is it to see any come to these Holy Elements having Hearts leavened with Pride Covetousness Envy These do with Iudas receive the Devil in the Sop and are no better than Crucifyers of the Lord of Glory 3. And Blessed it This is another Part of the Consecration of the Element Christ blessed it He blesseth and it shall be blessed Viz. He look'd up to Heaven for a Benediction upon this Ordinance newly founded 4. And Brake it The Bread broken and the Wine poured out was to signifie to us the Agony and Ignominy of Christ's Sufferings the Rending of Christs Body on the Cross and that Effusion of Blood which was distilled from his blessed Sides 5. And gave it to them Christ's giving the Bread denotes Christ's giving of himself and all his Benefits to us freely Tho Christ was sold yet given Iudas did sell Christ but Christ gave himself to us 6. He gave it to Them viz. The Disciples This is Childrens Bread
Christ could not have prepared Mansions for us if he had not first purchased them by his Death So that we have a great deal of cause to commemorate Christ's Death in the Sacrament Quest. In what Manner are we to remember the Lord's Death in the Sacrament Answ. It is not only an Historical Remembrance of Christ's Death and Passion Thus Iudas remembers Christ's Death and how he betray'd him And Pilate remembers Christ ' Death and how he crucify'd him But our remembring Christ's Death in the Sacrament must be 1. A Mournful Remembrance We must not be able to look on Christ crucified with dry Eyes Zech. 12.10 They shall look on him whom they have pierced and mourn over him O Christian when thou lookest on Christ in the Sacrament remember how oft thou hast crucifyed him The Jews did it but once thou often Every Oath is a Nail with which thou piercest his Hands Every unjust sinful Action is a Spear with which thou woundest his Heart O remember Christ with Sorrow to think thou shouldst make his Wounds bleed afresh Mark XIV 22 23 24. Iesus took Bread c. 2. It must be a Ioyful Remembrance Iohn 8.56 Abraham saw my Day and rejoyced When a Christian sees a Sacrament Day approach he should rejoyce This Ordinance of the Supper is an Earnest of Heaven 't is the Glass in which we see him whom our Souls love It is the Chariot by which we are carried up to Christ. When Iacob saw the Waggons and Chariots which were to carry him to his Son Ioseph his Spirit revived Gen. 45.27 God hath appointed the Sac●●ment on purpose to chear and revive a sad Heart When we look on our Sins ●e have cause to mourn but when we see Christ's Blood shed for our Sins this may make us rejoyce In the Sacrament our Wants are supplyed our Strength is renewed Here we meet with Christ and doth not this call for Joy A Woman that hath been long debarred from the Society of her Husband how glad is she of his Presence At the Sacrament the believing Spouse meets with Christ He saith to her All I have is thine My Love is thine to pity thee my Mercy is thine to save thee How can we think in the Sacrament on Christ's Blood shed and not rejoyce Sanguis Christi clavis Paradisi Christ's Blood is the Key which opens Heaven else we had been all shut out 3. End of the Sacrament is to work in us an endeared Love to Christ. When Christ bleeds over us well may we say Behold how he loved us Who can see Christ die and not be Sick of Love That is an Heart of stone whom Christ's Love will not melt 4. End of the Sacrament the mortifying of Corruption To see Christ crucified for us is a means to crucify sin in us Christ's Death like the Water of Jealousie makes the Thigh of Sin to rot Numb 5.27 How can a Wife endure to see that Spear which killed her Husband How can we endure those sins which made Christ vail his Glory and lose his Blood When the People of Rome saw Caesar's bloody Robe they were incensed against them that slew him Sin hath rent the White Robe of Christ's Flesh and died it of a crimson Colour The Thoughts of this will make us seek to be avenged on our sins 5. End the Augmentation and Encrease of all the Graces Hope Zeal Patience The Word Preached begets Grace the Lord's Supper nourisheth it The Body by feeding encreaseth Strength so doth the Soul by feeding on Christ Sacramentally Cum defecerit virtus mea calicem salutarem accipiam Bern. When my spiritual strength begins to fail I know a Remedy saith Bernard I will go the Table of the Lord there I will drink and recover my decayed strength There is difference between Dead Stones and Living Plants The Wicked who are Stones receive no spiritual Encrease but the Godly who are Plants of Righteousness being watered with Christ's Blood grow more fruitful in Grace Quest. 4. Why are we to receive this Holy Supper Answ. Because it is a Duty incumbent Take Eat And observe it is a Command of Love If Christ had commanded us some great matter would not we have done it 2 Kings 5.13 If the Prophet had bid thee do some great thing wouldst thou not have done it If Christ had enjoyned us to have given him a Thousand of Rams or to have parted with the Fruit of our Bodies would we not have done it Much more when he only saith Take and Eat Let my broken Body feed you let my Blood poured out save you Take and Eat This is a Command of Love and shall we not readily obey 2. We are to celebrate the Lord's Supper because it is a provoking to Christ to stay away Prov. 9.2 Wisdom hath furnished her Table So Christ hath furnished his Table set Bread and Wine representing his Body and Blood before his Guests and they wilfully turn their Backs upon the Ordinance Christ looks upon it as a slighting of his Love and that makes the Fury rise up in his Face Luke 14.24 For I say unto you that none of those that were bidden shall taste of my Supper I will shut them out of my Kingdom I will provide them a black Banquet where weeping shall be the first Course and gnashing of Teeth the Second Quest. 5. Whether the Lord's Supper be oft to be Administred Resp. Yes 1 Cor. 11.26 As oft as ye eat of this Bread The Ordinance is not to be celebrated once in a Year or once in our Lives but often A Christians own Necessities may make him come often hither His Corruptions are strong therefore he had need come often hither for an Antidote to expell the Poyson of Sin and his Graces are weak Grace is like a Lamp if it be not often fed with Oyl it is apt to go out How therefore do they sin against God who come but very seldom to this Ordinance Can they thrive who for a long time forbear their Food And others there are who do wholly forbear This is a great Contempt offered to Christ's Ordinance Men do as it were tacitly say Let Christ keep his Feast to himself What a cross-grain'd piece is Man he will Eat when he should not and he will not eat when he should When God said Eat not of this forbidden Fruit then he will be sure to eat When God saith Eat of this Bread and Drink of this Cup then he refuseth to eat Quest. 6. Are all to come promiscuously to this Holy Ordinance Resp. No that were to make the Lord's Table an Ordinary Christ forbids to cast Pearls before Swine The Sacramental Bread is Children's Bread and it is not to be cast to the Profane As at the giving of the Law God set Bounds about the Mount that none might touch it So God's Table should be guarded that the Profane should not come near In the Primitive Times after Sermon done and they were going to
Celebrate the Lord's Supper an Officer stood up and cried 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holy things for Holy Men And then several of the Congregation were to depart I would have my Hand cut off saith Chrysostom rather than I would give Christ's Body and Blood to the Profane The wicked do not eat Christ's Flesh but tear it they do not drink his Blood but spill it These Holy Mysteries in the Sacraments are tremenda mysteria Mysteries that the Soul is to tremble at Sinners defile the Holy things of God they poyson the Sacramental Cup. We read that the wicked are to be set at Christ's Feet Psal. 110. not at his Table Quest. 7. How may we receive the Supper of the Lord worthily that so it may become effectual to us Resp. That we may receive it worthily and it may become Efficacious 1. We must solemnly prepare our selves before we come We must not rush upon the Ordinance rudely and irreverently but come in due order There was a great deal of Preparation to the Passover 2 Chron. 30.18 19. And the Sacrament comes in the room of it Quest. Wherein doth this Solemn Preparing for the Ordinance consist Resp. 1. In Examining our selves 2. In Dressing our Souls before we come which is by washing in the Water of Repentance 3. By exciting the Habit of Grace into Exercise 4. In begging a Blessing upon the Ordinance 1. Solemn Preparing for the Sacrament consists in Self-examining 1 Cor. 11.28 But let a Man examin himself and so let him eat It is not only a Counsel but a Charge Let him examin himself As if a King should say Let it be enacted Jesus Christ having by his Institution consecrated these Elements in the Supper to an high Mystery they represent his Body and Blood Therefore there must be Preparation and if Preparation then there must be first Examining our selves without which there can be no Preparation Let us be serious in this examining our selves our Salvation depends upon it We are curious in examining other things We will not take Gold but examine it by the Touch-stone We will not take Land but we will examine the Title And shall not we be as exact and curious in examining the state of our Souls Quest. 1. What is required to this Self-examining Resp. There must be a Solemn Retiring of the Soul We must set our selves apart and retire for some time from all Secular Employment that we may be more serious in this Work There is no casting up of Accounts in a Crowd nor can we examin our selves when we are in a Crowd of Worldly Businesses We read a Man that was in a Iourney might not come to the Passover Numb 9.13 because his Mind was full of Secular Cares and his Thoughts were taken up about his Journey When we are upon Self-examining-work we had not need be in an Hurry or have any distracting Thoughts but retire and lock up our selves in our Closet that we may be more intent in the Work Quest. 2. What is Self-examination Resp. It is a setting up a Court in Conscience and keeping a Register there that by a strict Scrutiny a Man may see how Matters stand between God and his Soul Self-examination is a Spiritual Inquisition an Heart-Anatomy whereby a Man takes his Heart as a Watch all in pieces and sees what is defective there It is a Dialogue with ones self Psal. 77.7 I commune with my own Heart David call'd himself to Account and put Interrogatories to his own Heart Self-examining is a critical Descant or Search as the Woman in the Parable did light a Candle and search for her lost Groat Luke 15.8 So Conscience is the Candle of t●● Lord. Search with this Candle what thou canst find wrought by the Spirit in thee Quest. 3. What is the Rule by which we must Examine our selves Resp. The Rule or Measure we must Examine our selves by is the Holy Scripture We must not make Fancy or the good Opinion which others have of us the Rule by which we judge of our selves But as the Goldsmith brings his Gold to the Touch-stone so must we bring our Hearts to a Scripture Touch-stone To the Law to the Testimony Isa. 8.20 What saith the Word Are we divorced from Sin Are we renewed by the Spirit Let the Word decide whether we are fit Communicants or no. We judge of Colours by the Sun so must we judge of the state of our Souls by the Sun-light of Scripture Quest. 4. What are the cogent Reasons why we must Examine our selves before we approach to the Lord's Table Resp. 1. It is a Duty imposed Let him examine himself The Passover was not to be eaten Raw Exod. 12.19 To come to such an Ordinance slightly without Examination is to come in an undue manner and is like Eating the Passover Raw. 2. We must examine our selves before we come because it is not only a Duty imposed but opposed There is nothing the Heart naturally is more averse from than Self-exemination We may know that Duty is good which the Heart opposeth But why doth the Heart so oppose it Because it doth cross the Tide of Corrupt Nature 't is contrary to Flesh and Blood The Heart is guilty and doth a guilty Person love to be examined The Heart opposeth it therefore the rather set upon it That Duty is good which the Heart opposeth 3. Because Self-examining is so needful a Work as appears 1. Without Self-examination a Man can never tell how it is with him whether he hath Grace or no and this must needs be very uncomfortable He knows not if he should die presently what will become of him or to what Coast he shall sail whether to Hell or Heaven As Socrates said I am about to die and the gods know whether I shall be happy or miserable How needful therefore is Self-examination that a Man by Search may come to know the true state of his Soul and may guess how it will go with him to Eternity 2. Self-examination is needful in respect of the Excellency of the Sacrament Let him eat de illo Pane Of that Bread 1 Cor. 11.28 That excellent Bread that consecrated Bread that Bread which is not only the Bread of the Lord but the Bread the Lord. Let him drink de illo Poculo Of that Cup that precious Cup which is perfum'd and spic'd with Christ's Love that Cup which holds the Blood of God Sacramentally Cleopatra put a Jewel in a Cup which contained the price of a Kingdom This Sacred Cup we are to drink of enriched with the Blood of God is above the Price of a Kingdom It is more worth than Heaven Therefore coming to such a Royal Feast having whole Christ his Divine and Humane Nature to feed on how should we examine our selves before-hand that we may be fit Guests for such a Magnificent Banquet 3. Self-examining is needful because God will examine us That was a sad Question Matth. 22.12 Friend how camest thou in hither
not having a Wedding Garment Men are loth to ask themselves the Question O my Soul art thou a fit Guest for the Lord's Table Are there not some Sins thou hast to bewail Are there not some Evidences for Heaven that thou hast to get Now when Persons will not ask themselves the Question then God will bring such a Question as this to them How came ye in hither to my Table not prepared How came ye in hither with an unbelieving or profane Heart It will be such a Question as will cause an Heart-trembling God will examine a Man as the chief Captain did Paul with Scourging Acts 22.24 'T is true the best Saint if God should weigh him in the Ballance would be sound defective But when a Christian hath made an impartial Search and hath laboured to deal uprightly between God and his own Soul Christ's Merits will cast in some Grains of Allowance into the Scales 4. Self-examining is needful because of that Secret Corruption in the Heart which will not be found out without searching There are in the Heart Plangendae Tenebrae Aug. Hidden Pollutions It is with a Christian as with Ioseph's Brethren when the Steward accused them of having the Cup they were ready to swear they had not the Cup in their Sack but upon Search it was found there Little doth a Christian think what Pride Atheism Uncleanness is in his Heart till he searcheth Therefore if there be such hidden Wickedness like a Spring that runs under Ground we had need examine our selves that finding out our secret Sin we may be humbled and repent Hidden Sins if not searched out defile the Soul If Corn lie long in the Chaff the Chaff defiles the Corn hidden Sins layn long in defile our Duties Needful therefore it is before we come to the Holy Supper to search out these hidden Sins as Israel searched for Leaven before they came to the Passover 5. Self-examining is needful because without it we may easily have a Cheat put upon us Ier. 17.9 The Heart is deceitful above all things Many a Man's Heart will tell him he is fit for the Lord's Table As when Christ asked the Sons of Zebedee Matth. 20.22 Are ye able to drink the Cup I shall drink of Can ye drink such a Bloody Cup of Suffering They say unto him We are able So the Heart will suggest to a Man He is fit to drink of the Sacramental Cup he hath on the Wedding Garment Grande profundum est homo Aug. The Heart is a Grand Impostor It is like a cheating Tradesman which will put one off with bad Wares The Heart will put a Man off with ●●eming Grace in stead of saving A Tear or two shed is Repentance a few lazie Desires is Faith Blue and red Flowers that grow among the Corn look like good Flowers but they are beautiful Weeds The foolish Virgins Lamps looked as if they had had Oyl in them but they had none Therefore to prevent a Cheat that we may not take False Grace in stead of True we had need make a thorough Disquisition and Search of our Hearts before we come to the Lord's Table 6. Self-examining is needful because of those False Fears the Godly are apt to nourish in their Hearts which make them go sad to the Sacrament As they who have no Grace for want of Examining presume so they who have Grace for want of Examining are ready to despair Many of God's Children look upon themselves through the black Spectacles of Fear They fear Christ is not formed in them they fear they have no Right to the Promise and these Fears in the Heart cause Tears in the Eye Whereas would they but search and examine they might find they had Grace Are not their Hearts humbled for Sin And what is this but the bruised Reed Do they not weep after the Lord And what are these Tears but Seeds of Faith Do they not Thirst after Christ in an Ordinance What is this but the New Creature crying for the Breast Here are you see Seeds of Grace and would Christians examine their Hearts they might see there is something of God in them and so their false Fears would be prevented and they might approach with Comfort to these Holy Mysteries in the Eucharist Mark XIV 22 Iesus took Bread c. 7. Self-examining is needful in respect of the Danger in coming unworthily without Examination 1 Cor. 11.27 He shall be guilty of the Body and Blood of the Lord. Par facit quasi Christum trucidaret Grotius i. e. God reckons with him as with a Crucifyer of the Lord Iesus He doth not Drink Christ's Blood but sheds it and so brings that Curse upon him as the Jews His Blood be upon us and our Children The Vertue of Christ's Blood nothing more comfortable the Guilt of it nothing more Formidable 4. We must examine our selves before the Sacrament in respect of the Difficulty of Self-examining Work Difficulty raiseth a Noble Spirit Self-examining is difficult 1. Because it is an Inward Work it lies most with the Heart External Acts of Devotion are easie To lift up the Eye to bow the Knee to read over a few Prayers this is as easie as for the Papists to tell over a few Beads But to examine a Man's self to take the Heart as a Watch all in pieces to make a Scripture-Trial of our Fitness for the Lord's Supper this is not easie Reflexive Acts are hardest The Eye cannot see its self but by a Glass We must have the Glass of the Word and Conscience to see our own Hearts 'T is easie to spy the Faults of others but it is hard to find out our own 2. Self-examination is difficult in regard of Self-Love As Ignorance blinds so Self-love flatters What Solomon saith of Love Prov. 10.12 Love covereth all Sins is most true of Self-love A Man looking upon himself in the Glass of Self-love that flattering Glass his Vertues appear greater than they are and his Sins lesser Self-love makes a Man rather excuse himself than examine himself Self-love makes one think the best of himself and he who hath a good Opinion of himself doth not suspect himself and not suspecting himself he is not forward to Examine himself The Work therefore of self-Examination being so difficult it requires the more Impartiality and Industry Difficulty should be a Spur to Diligence 5. We must examine our selves before we come because of the Beneficialness of Self-examination The Benefit is great which way soever things turn If upon Examination we find that we have not Grace in Truth then the Mistake is discovered and the Danger prevented If we find that we have Grace we may take the Comfort of it He who upon Search finds that he hath the Minimum quod sic The least Degree of Grace he is like one that hath found his Box of Evidences he is an happy Man he is a fit Guest at the Lord's Table he is Heir to all the Promises he is
as sure to go to Heaven as if he were in Heaven already These are the Reasons why we must examin our selves before we approach to the Lord's Table Quest. 5. What must we Examine Answ. 1. Our Sins 2. Our Graces First Our Sins Search if any dead Fly might spoil this sweet Oyntment When we come to the Sacrament we should do as the Jews did before the Passover they searched for Leaven and having found it did burn it 1. Let us search for the Leaven of Pride This sowres our Holy things We are born with a Spiritual Tympany Will an humble Christ be received into a Proud Heart Pride keeps Christ out Intus existens prohibet alienum Pride swells the Heart and Christ cannot come into the Heart if it be full already To a proud Man Christ's Blood hath no Vertue 't is like Dioscordium put into a dead Man's Mouth which loseth its Vertue Let us search for this Leaven of Pride and cast it away 2. Let us search for the Levaen of Avarice The Lord's Supper is a Spiritual Mystery it represents Christ's Body and Blood what should an earthly Heart do here The Earth puts out the Fire Earthliness quencheth the Fire of holy Love The Earth is Elementum Gravissimum it cannot ascend A Soul belimed with Earth cannot ascend to Heavenly Cogitations Col. 3.5 Covetousness which is Idolatry Will Christ come into that Heart where there is an Idol Search for this Leaven before you come to this Ordinance How can an earthly Heart converse with that God which is a Spirit Can a Clod of Earth kiss the Sun 3. Search for the Leaven of Hypocrisie Luke 12.1 Beware of the Leaven of the Pharisees which is Hypocrisie Aquinas describes it Simulatio Virtutis Hypocrisie is a counterfeiting of Vertue The Hypocrite is a living Pageant he only makes a show of Religion He gives God his Knee but no Heart and God gives him Bread and Wine in the Sacrament but no Christ. Oh let us search for this Leaven of Hypocrisie and burn it Secondly We must examine our Graces I shall instance only in one Our Knowledge 1. Whether we have Knowledge 2. Whether it be rightly Qualified 1. We are to examine whether we have Knowledge else we cannot give God a reasonable Service Rom. 12.1 Knowledge is a necessary Requisite in a Communicant Without Knowledge there can be no Fitness for the Sacrament A Person cannot be fit to come to the Lord's Table who hath no Goodness but without Knowledge the Mina is not good Prov. 19.2 Some say they have good Hearts tho they want Knowledge As if one should say His Eye is good but it wants Sight Under the Law when the Plague of Leprosie was in a Man's Head the Priest was to pronounce him unclean The ignorant Person hath the Plague in his Head he is unclean Ignorance is the Womb of Lust 1 Pet. 1.14 Therefore it is requisite before we come to Examine our selves what Knowledge we have in the main Fundamentals of Religion Let it not be said of us that to this Day the Vail is upon our Heart 2 Cor. 3.15 But sure in this Intelligent Age we cannot but have some Insight into the Mysteries of the Gospel I rather fear we are like Rachel who was fair and well-sighted but barren Therefore 2. Let us examine whether our Knowledge be rightly Qualified 1. Is it Influential Doth our Knowledge warm our Heart Claritas in intellectu parit ardorem in affectu Saving Knowledge doth not only direct but quicken 'T is Lumen Vitae the Light of Life Iohn 8.12 2. Is our Knowledge Practical We hear much do we live the Truths we know That is the right Knowledge which doth not only adorn the Mind but reform the Life Secondly This solemn preparing for the Sacrament as it consists in examining our selves so in dressing our Souls before we come And this Soul-dress is in two things 1. Washing in the Laver of Repenting Tears To come to this Ordinance with the Guilt of any sin unrepented of makes way for the further hardening of our Heart and giving Satan fuller possession of us Zech. 12.10 They shall look upon me whom they have pierced and shall mourn for him The Cloud of Sorrow must drop into Tears We must grieve as for the Pollution so for the Vnkindness in every sin To sin against Christ's Love who died for us When Peter thought of Christ's Love who call'd him out of his Unregeneracy made him an Apostle and carried him up to the Mount of Transfiguration where he saw the Glory of Heaven in a Vision and then to think of his Denying Christ it broke his Heart he wept bitterly Matth. 26.75 To think before we come to a Sacrament of our sins against the Bowel-Mercies of God the Father the bleeding Wounds of God the Son the blessed Inspirations of God the Holy Ghost it is enough to broach our Eyes with Tears and put us into an Holy Agony of Grief and Compunction And we must be so distressed for sin as to be divorced from sin The Serpent before he drinks casts up his Poyson In this we must be wise as Serpents before we drink of the Sacramental Cup we must cast up the Poyson of sin by Repentance Ille verè plangit commissa qui non committit plangenda He doth truly bewail the sins he hath committed who doth not commit the sins he hath bewailed And this is the Dressing our Souls before we come washing in the Waters of true Rpentance 2. The Soul-dress is the exciting and stirring up the Habit of Grace into a lively Exercise 2 Tim. 1.6 I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the Gift of God which is in thee i. e. The Gifts and Graces of the Spirit The Greek Word to stir up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to blow up Grace into a Flame Grace is oft like Fire in the Embers which needs blowing up It is possible that even a good Man may not come so well disposed to this Ordinance because he hath not before taken pains with his Heart to come in Due Order He hath not stirred up Grace into its vigorous Exercise and so tho he doth not eat and drink Damnation yet he doth not receive Consolation in the Sacrament Thus you see what this Dressing of our Souls is before we come Thirdly This Solemn preparing for the Sacrament is in begging a Blessing upon the Ordinance The Sacrament is not like Physick which hath an inherent operative Vertue No but the Efficacy of the Sacrament depends upon the Co-operation of the Spirit and a Word of Blessing In the Institution Christ blessed the Elements Iesus took Bread and blessed it In the Text the Sacrament will no further do us good then as it is blessed to us We ought then before we come to pray for a Blessing on the Ordinance that the Sacrament may be not only a Sign to represent but a Seal to confirm and an Instrument to convey
Christ and all his Benefits to us We are to pray that this great Ordinance may be Poyson to our Sins and Food to our Graces That as it was with Ionathan when he had tasted the Honey-Comb his Eyes mere enlightned 1 Sam. 14.27 So that by our receiving this Holy Eucharist our Eyes may be so enlightned as to discern the Lord's Body Thus should we implore a Blessing upon the Ordinance before we come The Sacrament is like a Tree hung full of Fruit but none of this Fruit will fall unless shaken by the Hand of Prayer 2. That the Sacrament may be effectual to us as there must be a Due Preparing for it so a right partaking of it Which right Participation of the Sacrament is in Three Things 1. When we draw nigh to God's Table in an humble Sense of our Vnworthiness We do not deserve one Crumb of the Bread of Life we are poor Indigent Creatures who have lost our Glory and are like a Vessel that is Shipwrack'd We smite on our Breast as the Publican God be merciful to us Sinners This is a right Partaking of the Ordinance 'T is part of our Worthiness to see our Unworthiness 2. We rightly partake of the Sacrament when at the Lord's Table we are fill'd with Anhelations of Soul and inflamed Desires after Christ and nothing can quench our Thirst but his Blood Matth. 5.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed are they that thirst They are blessed not only when they are filled but while they are thirsting 3. A right participation of the Supper is when we receive in Faith Without Faith we get no good What is said of the Word Preached It profiteth not not being mixed with Faith Heb. 4.2 is as true of the Sacrament Christ turned Stones into Bread Unbelief turns the Bread into Stones that it doth not nourish Then we partake aright when we come in Faith Faith hath a two-fold Act an adhering and an applying By the first Act we go over to Christ by the second Act we bring Christ over to us Gal. 2.20 This is the great Grace we must set awork Acts 10.43 Philo calls it Fides Occulata Faith is the Eagle Eye that discerns the Lord's Body Faith causeth a virtual Contact it toucheth Christ. Christ said to Mary Touch me not c. Iohn 20.17 She was not to touch him with the Hands of her Body But he saith to us Touch me Touch me with the Hand of your Faith Faith makes Christ present to the Soul The Believer hath a real Presence in the Sacrament The Body of the Sun is in the Firmament but the Light of the Sun is in the Eye Christ's Essence is in Heaven but he is in a Believers Heart by his Light and Influence Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your Heart by Faith Faith is the Pallat which tastes Christ 1 Pet. 2.3 Faith makes a Concoction it causeth the Bread of Life to nourish Faith causeth a Coalition it makes us one with Christ Eph. 1.23 Other Graces make us like Christ Faith makes us Members of Christ. Fourthly Then we partake aright of the Sacrament when we receive in Love 1. Love to Christ. Who can see Christ pierced with a Crown of Thorns sweating in his Agony bleeding on the Cross but his Heart must needs be endeared in Love to him How can we but love him who hath given his Life a ransom for us Love is the Spiced Wine and Juyce of the Pomgranate which we must give Christ Cant. 8.2 Our Love to this Superiour and Blessed Jesus must exceed our Love to other things as the Oyl runs above the Water Tho' we cannot with Mary bring our costly Oyntment to anoynt Christ's Body yet we do more than this when we bring him our Love which is sweeter to him than all Oyntments and Perfumes 2. Love to the Saints This is a Love-Feast Tho' we must eat this Supper with the Bitter Herbs of Repentance yet not with the bitter Herbs of Malice Were it not sad if all the Meat one eats should turn to bad Humours He who comes in Malice to the Lord's Table all he eats is to his hurt He eats and drinks Damnation to himself 1 Cor. 11.29 Come in Love It is with Love as it is with Fire You keep Fire all the Day upon the Hearth but upon special occasions you draw the Fire out larger So tho we must have Love to all yet to the Saints who are our Fellow-Members here we must draw out the Fire of our Love larger and we must show the Largeness of our Affections to them by prizing their Persons by chusing their Company by doing all Offices of Love to them counselling them in their Doubts comforting them in their Fears supplying them in their Wants Thus one Christian may be an Eben-ezer to another and as an Angel of God to him The Sacrament cannot be effectual to him who doth not receive in Love If a Man drinks Poyson and then takes a Cordial the Cordial will do him little good He who hath the Poyson of Malice in his Soul the Cordial of Christ's Blood will do him no good Come therefore in Love and Charity And thus we see how we may receive the Supper of the Lord that it may be Effectual to our Salvation Vse I. From the whole Doctrine of the Sacrament learn How precious should a Sacrament be to us It is a Sealed Deed to make over the Blessings of the New Covenant to us Justification Sanctification Glory A small piece of Wax put to a Parchment is made the Instrument to confirm a rich Conveyance or Lordship to another So these Elements in the Sacrament of Bread and Wine tho in themselves of no great value yet being consecrated to be Seals to Confirm the Covenant of Grace to us so they are of more value than all the Riches of the Indies Vse II. The Sacrament being such an Holy Mystery let us come to this Holy Mystery with Holy Hearts There 's no receiving a crucify'd Christ but into a consecrated Heart Christ in his Conception lay in a pure Virgins Womb and at his Death his Body was wrapped in clean Linnen and put in a new Virgin-Tomb never yet defiled with Rottenness If Christ would not lie in an unclean Grave sure he will not be received into an unclean Heart Isa. 52.11 Be ye clean that bear the Vessels of the Lord. If they who did carry the Vessels of the Lord were to be holy then they who are to be the Vessels of the Lord and are to hold Christ's Body and Blood ought to be holy Vse III. Consolation Christ's Body and Blood in the Sacrament is a most Sovereign Elixir or Comfort to a distressed Soul Christ having poured out his Blood now God's Justice is fully satisfied There is in the Death of Christ enough to answer all Doubts What if Sin is the Poyson here is the Flesh of Christ an Antidote against it What if Sin be red as Scarlet is not Christ's
a Debtor cannot pay his Creditor how can he merit at his hands 3. That the Scripture is not a perfect Rule of Faith and Man errs therefore they eek it out with their Traditions which they hold to be of equal Authority 4. They teach that an implicite Faith is saving though one may have an implicite Faith yet be ignorant of all the Articles of Religion 5. They say that the inward act of the Mind is not required in Gods Worship Diversion of Mind in Duty though one prayes and never thinks of God is no Sin saith Angelus and Sylvester and other Papists 6. The Papists make Habitual Love to God unnecessary It is not needful saith Bellarmine to perform any acts of Religion out of love to God Stapleton and Cajetan affirm that the Precept of loving God with all our heart is not binding by which they cut asunder the Sinews and Soul of all Religion Thus instead of honouring Gods name the Papists dishonour it Let us pray heartily that this Romish Religion may never get footing again in this Nation God grant that this poysonful weed of Popery may never be watered here But that it being a Plant which our Heavenly Father hath not planted it may be rooted up 5. Gods Name is dishonoured by Carnal Protestants How is Gods name this day dishonoured in England His name is like the Sun in an eclipse Christians instead of hallowing Gods name reproach and dishonour it 1. By their Tongues 2. By their Lives 1. By their Tongues 1. They speak irreverently of Gods name Gods name is sacred Deut. 28.58 That thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name The Lord thy God The names of Kings are not mentioned without giving them their Titles of Honour High and Mighty but Men speak irreverently of God as if he were like one of them Psal. 50.21 this is a taking Gods name in vain 2. They swear by his name Many seldom name Gods name but in Oaths How is God dishonoured when Men rend and tear his name by Oaths and Imprecations Ier. 23.10 Because of swearing the land mourns If God will reckon with Men for idle Words shall not idle Oaths be put in the Account-Book O but saith one I cannot help it it is a custom of swearing I have got and I hope God will forgive me Answ. Is this a good Plea a custom of swearing This is no excuse but an aggravation of Sin As if one that had been accused for killing a Man should plead with the Judge to spare him because it was his custom to murder This were an aggravation of the offence Will not the Judge say thou shalt the rather dye So it is here 2. As Men dishonour God by their Tongues so by their Lives What is it to say Hallowed be thy Name when in their Lives they profane his name they dishonour God by their Atheism Sabbath-breaking Uncleanness Perjury Intemperance Injustice Men hang out a Flag of Defiance against Heaven As the Thracians when it thunders shoot their Arrowes against Heaven so Men shoot their Sins as bearded Arrowes against Heaven Sinners are hardened in Sin they despise Counsel they laugh at Reproof they have cast off the vail of Modesty Satan hath taken such full possession of them that when they sin they glory in their shame Phil. 3.19 they brag how many new Oaths they have invented how oft they have been drunk how many they have defiled they declare their sin as Sodom Such horrid impieties are committed that a modest Heathen would blush at Men in this Age sin at that rate as if either they did not believe there were an Hell or as if they feared Hell would be full ere they could get thither Was Gods name ever so openly dishonoured All our Preaching will not make them leave their Sins What a black vail is drawn over the face of Religion at this day Vivimus in temporum faecibus Sen. We live in the dregs of time wherein the common shore of wickedness runs Physitians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when there is no part of the Body free from Distemper England hath a Kakexy it is all over disease The whole head is sick the whole heart is faint Isa. 1.6 As black Vapours rising out of the earth cloud and darken the Sun so the Sins of People in our Age like Hellish Vapours cast a cloud upon Gods glorious name O that our Eyes were like Limbecks dropping the water of holy tears to consider how Gods name instead of being hallowed is polluted and profaned And may not we justly fear some heavy Judgments Can God put up our affronts any longer Can he endure to have his name reproached Will a King suffer his Crown-Jewels to be trampled in the dust Do not we see the symptoms of Gods Anger do we not see his Judgments hovering over us Sure God is whetting his Sword he hath bent his Bow and is preparing his Arrowes to shoot Qualis per arva Leo fulvam minaci fronte concutiens jubam Sen. Trag. The Body Politick is in a Paroxism or burning Fit and may not the Lord cause a sad Phlebotomy Seeing we will not leave our Sins he may make us lose our Blood May not we fear that the Ark should remove the Vision cease the Stars in Gods Church be removed and we should follow the Gospel to the grave When Gods name which should be hallowed is profaned among a People it is just with God to write that dismal Epitaph upon a Nations Tomb The Glory is departed And that I may speak to the Consciences of all and deal impartially it were well if only the profane party were guilty but may not many Professors be called to the Bar and indited of this that they have dishonoured Gods name 2 Chron. 28.10 Are there not with you even with you sins against the Lord your God Are there not the spots of Gods Children Deut. 3● 5 If you are Diamonds have you no flawes Have not you your vanities If your Discourse be not profane is it not vain Have not you your self-seekings rash censures indecent dresses If the wicked of the Land swear do not you sometimes slander If they are drunk with wine are not you sometimes drunk with passion If their sin be blaspheming is not your sin murmuring Are there not with you even with you sins against the Lord The sins of Gods Children go nearer to his heart than the sins of others Deut. 32.19 When the Lord saw it he abhorred them because of the provoking of his sons and daughters The sins of the wicked anger God the sins of his own people grieve him he will be sure to punish them Amos 3.2 You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities O that our head were waters that we could make this place a Bochim a place of weepers that Gods Children might mix blushing with tears that they have so little hallowed and so
of Gods Will Thy Will be done 3. By doing the Will of God we evidence Sincerity as Christ said in another sense Iohn 10.25 The works which I do bear witness of me So it is not all our golden words if we could speak like Angels but our works our doing of Gods Will which bears witness of our Sincerity We judge not of the health of a Mans Body by his high Colour but by the Pulse of the Arm where the Blood chiefly stirs so a Christians soundness is not to be judged by his Profession what is this high Colour but the estimate of a Christian is to be taken by his Obediential acting his doing the Will of God this is the best Certificate and Letters Testimonial to shew for Heaven 4. Doing Gods Will much propagates the Gospel this is the Diamond that sparkles in Religion Others cannot see what Faith is in the Heart but when they see we do Gods Will on Earth this makes them have a venerable opinion of Religion and become Proselites to it Iulian in one of his Epistles writing to Arsatius saith That the Christian Religion did much flourish by the Sanctity and Obedience of them that professed it 5. By doing Gods Will we show our Love to Christ Iohn 14.21 He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me What greater Love to Christ than to do his Will though it cross our own Every one would be thought to love Christ but how shall that be known but by this do you do his Will on Earth Neque principem veneramur si odio ejus Leges habemus Isid. 'T is a vain thing for a Man to say he loves Christs Person when he slights his Commands Not to do Gods Will on Earth is a great evil 't is 1. Sinful 2. Foolish 3. Dangerous 1. It is Sinful 1. We go against our Prayers we pray Fiat voluntas tua thy will be done and yet we do not obey his will we confute our own Prayer 2. VVe go against our Vow in Baptism we have vowed to fight under the Lords Banner to obey his Scepter and this Vow we have oft renewed in the Lords Supper if we do not Gods will on Earth we are forsworn and God will indite us of Perjury 2. Not to do Gods will on Earth is Foolish 1. Because there is no standing it out against God If we do not obey him we cannot resist him 1 Cor. 10. ●2 Are we stronger than he Iob. 40.9 Hast thou an arm like God Canst thou measure Armes with him To oppose God is as if a Child should fight with an Arch-Angel as if an heap of Bryars should put themselves into a battalia against the Flame 2. Not to do Gods will is foolish because if we do not Gods will we do the Devils will Is it not folly to gratifie an enemy To do his will that seeks our ruine Quest. But are any so wicked as to do the Devils will Answ. Yes Iohn 8.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do VVhen a Man tells a lye doth he not do the Devils will Acts 5.3 Ananias Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye to the Holy Ghost 3. Not to do Gods Will is dangerous it brings a Spiritual Praemunire If Gods Will be not done by us he will have his will upon us if we obey not Gods will in commanding we shall obey his will in punishing 2 Thess. 1.7 The Lord Iesus shall be revealed with his mighty Angels in flames of fire taking vengeance on them that obey not his gospel Either we must do Gods will or suffer it 6. VVhatever God wills us to do is for our benefit Behold here self-interest As if a King commands his Subject to dig in a Mine of Gold and then gives him all the Gold he hath digged God bids us do his will and this is for our good Deut. 10.13 And now O Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God and keep the commandments of the Lord which I command thee this day for thy good It is Gods will that we should repent and this is for our good Repentance ushers in remission Acts 3.9 Repent that your sins may be blotted out It is Gods will that we should believe and why is it but that we should be crowned with Salvation Mark 16.16 He that believes shall be saved VVhat God wills is not so much our Duty as our Priviledge he bids us obey his voice and it is greatly for our good Ier. 7.23 Obey my voice and I will be your God I will not only give you my Angels to be your guard but my self to be your portion my Spirit shall be yours to sanctifie you my Love shall be yours to comfort you my Mercy shall be yours to save you I will be your God 7. To do Gods will is our Honour A Person thinks it an Honour to have a King speak to him to do such a thing the Angels count it their highest Honour in Heaven to do Gods will Servire Deo regnare est To serve God is to reign Non onerant nos sed ornant Salvian How chearfully did the Rowers row the Barge that carried Caesar to be imployed in his Barge was an Honour to be imployed in doing Gods will is insigne Honoris the highest ensign of Honour that a Mortal Creature is capable of Christs Precepts do not burden us but adorn us 8. To do Gods Will on Earth makes us like Christ and akin to Christ. 1. It makes us like Christ Is it not our Prayer that we may be like Christ. Jesus Christ did his Fathers will Iohn 6.38 I came down from Heaven not to do my own will but the will of him that sent me God the Father and Christ as they have but one Essence so but one VVill Christs will was melted into his Fathers Iohn 4.34 My meat is to do the will of him that sent me By our doing Gods will on Earth we resemble Christ nay we are akin to Christ and are of the Blood-Royal of Heaven Alexander called himself Couzen to the Gods what Honour is it to be akin to Christ. Matth. 12.50 Whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in Heaven the same is my Brother and Sister and Mother Did King Solomon arise off his Throne to meet his Mother and set her on a Throne by him 1 Kings 3.19 such Honour will Christ bestow on such as are doers of Gods will he will salute them as his Kindred and set them on a Glorious Throne in the Amphitheatre of Heaven 9. Doing Gods will on Earth brings Peace in Life and Death 1. In Life Psal. 19.11 In keeping thy precepts there is great reward not only after keeping them but in keeping them when we walk closely with God in Obedience there is a secret Joy let into the Soul and how swiftly and chearfully do the wheels of the Soul move
rich fall into a snare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophilact Pride Idleness VVantonness are the three worms that usually breed of Plenty Prosperity oft deafens the ear against God Ier. 22.21 I spake to thee in thy Prosperity but thou saidst I will not hear Soft pleasures harden the heart In the Body the more fat the less blood in the Veins and the less Spirits the more outward plenty often the less Piety Prosperity hath its Honey and also its Sting Prosperity like the full of the Moon makes many Lunatick The Pastures of Prosperity are rank and surfeiting Anxious care is the malus Genius the evil Spirit that haunts the rich Man and will not let him be quiet when his Chests are full of Money his heart is full of care either how to manage or how to encrease or how to secure what he hath gotten Sunshine in pleasant but sometimes it scorcheth Should not this make us content with that allowance God gives if we have daily bread though not dainties think of the Danger of Prosperity the spreading of a full Table may be the spreading of a snare Many have been sunk to Hell with golden Weights The ferry Man takes in all Passengers that he may encrease his Fare and sometimes to the sinking of the boat 1 Tim. 6.9 They that will be rich fall into many hurtful Lusts which drown them in Perdition The Worlds golden Sands are Quicksands this may make us take our daily bread though it be but coarse contentedly what if we have less food we have less snare if less dignity less danger as we want the rich Provisions of the World so we want the Temptations 7. If God keeps us to a spare diet if he give us less Temporals he hath made it up in Spirituals he hath given us the Pearl of Price and the holy anointing 1. The Pearl of Price the Lord Jesus he is the quintessence of all good things to give us Christ is more then if God had given us all the world God can make more worlds but he hath no more Christs to bestow he is such a golden mine that the Angels cannot dig to the bottom Eph. 3.8 From Christ we have Justification Adoption Coronation The Sea of Gods Mercy in giving us Christ saith Luther should swallow up all our wants 2. The holy Unction God hath anointed us with the graces of his Spirit Grace is a seed of God a blossom of Eternity the graces are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damascen the impressions of the divine Nature Stars to enlighten us Spices to perfume us Diamonds to enrich us and if God hath adorned the hidden Man of the heart with these sacred Jewels it may well make us content tho' we have but short Commons and that coarse too God hath given his People better things then Corn and Wine he hath given them that which he cannot give in anger and which cannot stand with Reprobation and they may say as David Psal. 16.6 The lines are fallen to them in pleasant places and they have a goodly heritage I have read of Didimus and Anthony Didimus was a blind Man but very holy Anthony ask'd him if he was not troubled for the want of his eyes he told him he was why said Anthony are you troubled you want that which Flyes and Birds have when you have that which Angels have So I say to Christians if God hath not given you the Purse he hath given you his Spirit if you want that which rich Men have God hath given you that which Angels have and are you not content 8. If you have but daily bread enough to suffice nature be content consider it is not having abundance makes the life always comfortable it is not a great Cage will make the Bird sing a competency may breed contentment when having more may make one less content A staff may help the Traveller but a bundle of staffs will be a burden to him A great Estate may be like a long trayling garment more burdensome then useful Many that have great incomes and revenues have not so much comfort in their Lives as some that go to their hard labour 9. If you have less daily bread you will have less account to give The Riches and Honours of the World like Alchimy make a great show and with their glistering dazle Mens eyes but they do not consider the great account they must give to God Luke 16.2 Give an account of thy Stewardship What good hast thou done with thy Estate hast thou as a good Steward traded thy golden Talents for Gods glory hast thou honoured the Lord with thy Substance the greater Revenues the greater Reckonings this may quiet and content us if we have but little daily bread our account will be less 10. You that have but a small competency in these outward things your provisions are short yet you may be content to consider how much you look for hereafter God keeps the best Wine till last What though now you have but a small pittance and are fed from hand to mouth you look for an eternal Reward white Robes sparkling Crowns Rivers of Pleasure A Son is content though his Father gives him but now and then a little Money as long as he expects his Father should settle all his land upon him at last If God give you but a little at present yet you look for that glory which eye hath not seen may not you be content The World is but a Diversorium a great Inn if God give you but sufficient to pay for your Charges in your Inn you may be content you shall have enough when you come to your own Country Quest. How may we be content though God cut us short in these Externals though we have but little daily bread and coarse Resp. 1. Think with our selves some have been much lower then we who have been better then we Iacob an holy Patriarch goes over Iordan with his Staff and lived in a mean condition a long time he had the Clouds for his Canopy and Stone for his Pillow Moses that might have been rich some Historians say Pharaoh's Daughter adopted him for her Son because King Pharaoh had no Heir and so Moses was like to have come to the Crown yet leaving the Honours of the Court in what a low mean condition did he live in when he went to Iethro his Father-in-Law Musculus famous for Learning and Piety was put to great Straits he was put to dig in a Town ditch and had scarce daily bread yet content Nay Christ who was Heir of all yet for our sakes became poor 2 Cor. 8.9 Let all these Examples make us content 2. Let us labour to have the Interest cleared between God and our Souls he who can say My God hath enough to rock his heart quiet in the lowest condition what can he want who hath El-Shaddai the all-sufficient God for his portion though the nether-Springs fail yet he hath the upper-Springs though the bill of
the Serpent And Dan. 6.4 The Presidents and Princes ●ought to find occasion against Daniel but they could find no occasion or fault Behold here the innocency of the Dove Look on St. Paul Acts 23.6 When Paul perceived that the one part were Sadduces and the other Pharisees he cried out I am a Pharisee By which Speech Paul got all the Pharisees on his side Here was the Wisdom of the Serpent And ver 1. I have lived in all good Conscience before God until this day Here was the innocency of the Dove How amiable is this the Vnion of the Dove and the Serpent The Scripture joins these two together Meekness of Wisdom Jam. 3.13 Wisdom there is the Serpent Meekness there is the Dove This beautifies a Christian when he hath the Serpen●'s Eye in the Dove's Head We must have Innocency with our Wisdom else our Wisdom is but Craftiness and we must have Wisdom with our Innocency else our Innocency is but Weakness We must have the Innocency of the Dove that we may not circumvent others and we must have the Wisdom of the Serpent that others may not circumvent us We must have the Innocency of the Dove that we may not betray the Truth and the Wisdom of the Serpent that we may not betray our selves In short Religion without Policy is too weak to be safe Policy without Religion is too subtil to be good When Wisdom and Innocency like Castor and Pollux appear together they presage the Soul's Happiness Doct. 3. That Christians must be both wise and innocent I begin with the first Wise Be ye wise as Serpents 1. I shall speak concerning Wisdom in general Solomon saith Wisdom is the principal thing Prov. 4.7 'T is better than Riches Prov. 31.14 Happy is the Man that findeth Wisdom for the Merchandise of it is better than the Merchandise of Silver If the Mountains were Pearl if every sand of the Sea were a Diamond it were not comparable to Wisdom Without Wisdom a person is like a Ship without a Pilot in danger to split upon Rocks Iob sets forth the Encomium and Praise of Wisdom Iob. 28.13 18. The Price of Wisdom is above Rubies The Ruby is a precious Stone transparent of a red fiery colour It is reported of one of the Kings of India that he wore a Ruby of that bigness and splendor that he might be seen by it in the dark But Wisdom cast● a more sparkling colour than the Ruby it makes us shine as Angels No Chain of Pearl you wear doth so adorn you as Wisdom Wisdom consists chiefly in three things 1. Knowl●dge to discern 2. Skill to judge 3. Activity to prosecute 1. Knowledge to discern wherein Happiness lies 2. Skill to judge what will be the fittest Means to conduce to it 3. Activity to prosecute those things which will certainly accomplish that End So much for Wisdom in general More particularly Wisdom is variously distinguished 'T is either Natural or Moral or Theological 1. A Natural Wisdom Which is seen in finding out the Arcana Naturae the Secrets of Nature Aristotle was by some of the Ancients called an Eagle fallen from the Clouds because he was of such raised Intellectuals and had so profound an insight into the Causes of Things This Natural Wisdom is adorning but it is not sufficient to Salvation St. Hierom brings in Aristotle with his Syllogisms and Tully with his Rhetorick crying out in Hell 2. A Moral Wisdom Which consists in two Things Malum respuendo Bonum elegendo Moral Wisdom lies in the rejection of those things which are prejudicial and the election of those things which are beneficial This is called PRVDENCE Knowledge without Prudence may do hurt Many a man's Wit hath undone him for want of Wisdom 3. A Theological or Sacred Wisdom which is our knowing of God who is the supream and sovereign Good Greece was counted the Eye of the World for Wisdom and Athens the Eye of Greece but neither of them knew God Acts 17.23 I found an Altar with this Inscription 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the unknown God To know God in whom is both Verum Bonum Truth and Goodness is the Master-piece of Wisdom 1 Chron. 28.9 And thou Solomon my Son know thou the God of thy Father And this knowledge of God is through Christ. Christ is the Glass in which the Face of God is seen Col. 1.15 And then we know God aright when we know him not only with a knowledge of Speculation but Appropriation Psal. 48.14 This God is OVR God This knowledge of God is the most sublime Wisdom therefore 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisdom from above Jam. 3.17 But to come nearer to the Text and speak of the Wisdom of the Serpent Be ye wise as Serpents Quest. But must we in every thing be like the Serpent Answ. No. Our Saviour meant not that in every thing we should imitate the Serpent I shall shew you 1. Wherein we should not be like the Serpent 2. Wherein we should be like the Serpent I. Wherein we should not be like the Serpent 1. The Serpent eats Dust. Isa. 65.25 Dust shall be the Serpent's Meat It was a Curse upo● the Serpent Thus we should not be like the Serpent to feed immoderately on earthly Things It is absurd for him that hath an heaven-born Soul capable of Communion with God and Angels to eat greedily the Serpent's Meat A Christian hath better Food to feed on the heavenly Manna the precious Promises the Body and Blood of Christ. 'T is counted a Miracle to find a Diamond in a Gold-Mine and it is as great a Miracle to find Christ the Pearl of Price in an earthly heart The Lapwing wears a little Coronet on its head yet feeds on dung To have a Crown of Profession on the head yet feed inordinately on these dunghil-Comforts is unworthy of a Christian. What a poor contemptible thing is the World It cannot fill the Heart If Satan should take a Christian up to the top of the Pinacle and shew him all the Kingdoms and Glory of the World what could he shew him but a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Shew a pleasant Delusion There is a lawful Vse God allows of these outward things but the Sin is in the Excess The Bee may suck a little Honey from the Leaf but put it in a Barrel of Honey and it is drown'd The wicked are thus characterized Ephes. 3.19 They mind earthly things They are like Saul hid among the Stuff We should be as Eagles flying aloft towards Heaven not as Serpents creeping on the Earth and licking the Dust. 2. The Serpent is deceitful The Serpent useth many Shifts and glides so cunningly that we cannot trace him This was one of those four things which wise Agur could not find out the way of a Serpent upon a Rock Prov. 30.19 'T is a deceitful Creature We should not in this sence be like the Serpent for deceitfulness Naturally we too much resemble