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A77708 The good old way: or, Perkins improved, in a plain exposition and sound application of those depths of divinity briefly comprized in his Six principles: / by that late painful and faithful minister of the Gospel, Charles Broxolme in Darby-shire. Broxholme, Charles. 1653 (1653) Wing B5217; Thomason E1483_1; ESTC R208756 186,652 446

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the other What an honourable service this is in comparison of the other and the great difference in the issue and end Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin and so of Satan is death eternal death but the gift of God to wit to his servants is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Vse 3. For Exhortation 1. To exhort Ministers that they would ply their business seeing all the Unregenerate are the slaves of the Divel O what Minister is there but hath most of his people unregenerate 2. To exhort Masters of Families to bring their children of understanding and likewise Servants to the Publike Means that so they may be vindicated from Satan 3. To exhort all the Unregenerate in the use of all good means to labour the new birth O the great Liberty the Regenerate have in this world besides the heavenly Reward in the world to come But the woful bondage of the Unregenerate and the woful payment that attends them in this world and in the world to come besides their living in the continual breach of that Vow which they made in Baptism they then vowing to serve the Lord and not the Divel MEMBER V. And guilty of eternal Damnation Doct. EVery one in the estate of corrupt nature is not only the slave of Satan but likewise subject to eternal Damnation Now in the handling of this Doctrine I observe the method following 1. To acquaint you in some measure what Damnation is 2. To prove the point by Scripture and Reasons 3. To answer some Objections 4. To make Appplication 1. To acquaint you in some measure what Damnation is I say in some measure because it cannot be expressed to the full nor conceived in its largest extent the wrath of God doth so appear in the same Damnation contains in it these Particulars 1. It is a separation from Gods comfortable presence Matth. 7.23 Depart from me ye that work iniquity Thus our Saviour tells us he will say unto all the Reprobates at the day of Judgment Depart from me And the Apostle Paul speaking of the Reprobate at the day of Judgement 2 Thess 1.9 Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord. Now as touching the wofulness of this separation do but ask the godly man or woman the Lord being at any time absent from them in their apprehensions It is to be observed of Eli and his daughter in Law the perplexity they were in and amazement they were put unto when news was brought that the Ark was taken which was was but a sign of Gods presence 1 Sam. 4.17 and so to the end of the Chapter And what a cross was it to Absolom when he might not see Davids face 2 Sam. 14.32 and David but a man The misery of this separation is not to be conceived And one thing that shall aggravate this part of the Reprobates misery they shall see others enjoy what they have lost Luke 13.28 There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth saith our Saviour to the Jewes when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of God and you your selves thrust out This is the first Particular of Damnation to wit a separation from Gods comfortable presence The second Particular Damnation compriseth is Society with the Divel and his Angels This is the Sentence which our Saviour will pronounce upon the Reprobate at the day of Judgment Matth. 25.41 Go ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels In this world the wicked love not to converse with God in his Ordinances to associate themselves with the Saints and people of God and therefore in the world to come they shall have lamentable companions to wit the Divel and his Angels David complains of wicked and contentious neighbours Psal 120.5 c. Wo is me that I sojourn in Mesech that I dwell in the Tents of Kedar my soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace But what cause will the wicked have this way in hell O how will our hair start up if we think we see a Divel nay do but speak of a Divel and men and women bless themselves We read of some of the Heathen being Exiles they could not look back on their own Countrys without grief and tears but what will the wicked do in Hell being banished from God and Heaven and restrained to such company as the Divel and his Angels This is the second Particular of Damnation to wit society and fellowship with the Divel and his Angels The third Particular which Damnation compriseth or contains is intollerable and unconceivable torment both of soul and body O how shall the soul be tormented This our Saviour sets forth by a worm Mark 9.44 speaking of the Damned in hell Where their worm dyeth not A worm lying gnawing at the heart we know is great pain and shall the body be free from punishment in hell Nay the punishment that shall be inflicted upon it our Saviour sets forth by fire Mark 9.44 And the fire is not quenched and fire which is the most scalding and vehement Fire and brimstone as it is Rev. 21.8 Now who can abide to touch the fire so much as with his finger The fourth Particular Damnation compriseth is the universality of the torment It shall extend to every faculty of soul and member of body The Understanding shall discern Gods infinite wrath The Memory shall be fresh to call the sin that is past and the aggravations of it a hell shall be in the Conscience And all these implyed in the Worm fore-mentioned And so likewise in hell every member of the body shall be tormented as may be observed of the Rich man in hell mentioned Luke 16.24 And he cryed and said Father Abraham have mercy on me and send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water to cool my tongue for I am tormented in this flame as though hee should say every member of my body being tormented but especially my tongue The fifth Particular or aggravation of Damnation is Eternity This separation from Gods comfortable presence must be perpetual This Society with the Divel and his Angels must be for ever This intollerable and unconceivable torment of soul and body must be eternal Every faculty of soul and member of body must be tormented and that for evermore It is as if a man were pressing to death and could wish that more weight might be laid upon him but cannot have his desire If those that go to hell were but to continue there as many thousand yeers as there are sands on the sea shoare or Stars in the Firmament there were some hope and comfort but alas when never so many yeers are expired the torments of the Damned are as fresh to begin again as though they had never been Their worm never dieth and their fire never goeth out Mark 9.44 And Matth. 25.46 These saith our Saviour speaking of the Reprobate shall go into everlasting punishment Thus
we see in some measure according to the Scriptures what eternal Damnation is Now we come to prove the Point to wit that every one in the estate of corrupt nature is guilty of is subject to eternal Damnation John 5.24 Verily verily I say unto you saith our Saviour he that heareth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation holding forth thus much that all but the true believer must come into condemnation And so Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus hinting plainly thus much all living and dying out of Christ unregenerate must be damned And likewise 1 Cor. 6.9 Know ye not that the unrighteous those that are in the estate of nature shall not inherit the kingdome of God And if such must not inherit heaven what must they do that go to hell And to the same purpose our Saviour John 3.36 He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him It is as much as if our Saviour should have said All living and dying in the estate of nature the wrath of God shall press them down to the pit of hell they shall be damned And Matth. 13.41 42. The Son of man shall send forth his Angels to wit at the last Judgment and they shall gather out of his kingdome all things that offend and them that do iniquity to wit all the unregenerate and shall cast them into a furnace with fire there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And Rev. 21.8 But the fearful and unbelieving and the abominable and murderers and whoremongers and Socerers and Idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death that is to say whosoever they be that have sin unmortified in them as every one in the estate of nature hath shall be damned that is to say so living and so dying shall be damned Now we come to the Reasons of the Point Reas 1. The unregenerate person is a sinner and that divers wayes Rom. 6.23 Now the wages of sin is death to wit eternal Reason 2. The unregenerate person stands upon his owne bottome is under the curse and so is to satisfie Gods Justice in his own person living and dying in that estate hath no benefit by Christs Satisfaction and Intercession Galatians 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them that is Cursed is every one that keeps not the whole Law either by himself or by another to wit Christ It is true the Regenerate and such as are in Christ fulfil the Law in Christ Christs obedience passive and active being theirs by imputation and so freed from the Curse Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus but the unregenerate are under the Curse the principal part whereof is eternal death and damnation The Curse doth not only contain all the miseries of this life inward and outward besides the separation both of soul and body by corporal death in the end but likewise eternal death and damnation in the world to come The soul when by corporal death it goes out of the body being pressed downe to hell by the wrath of God and at the day of Judgment when both are conjoyned both to be punished according to the particulars aforesaid Reas 3. The consciences of the unregenerate sometimes even in this world tell them no less then the Point comes unto witness Cain Abitophel and Judas When the Lord at any time even in this life is pleased to awaken and wound the consciences of the unregenerate the very flashes of hell fire doth appear in them Now we come to answer two Objections and so to the Uses Obj. 1. But may some men say If the bodies of the unregenerate shal be raised up at the last day and their souls and bodies again conjoined and both to continue for ever why is not their condition future rather called eternal life then eternal death Ans Because that life which is called theirs then is most miserable death and doth not deserve to be called life Ob. 2. But how can it stand with Gods justice to punish temporal offence with eternal punishment Answ 1. Because sin is an offence against an Infinite God and so doth deserve eternal punishment 2. Did the unregenerate person live eternally in this world he would sin eternally 3. The unregenerate damned in hell do not cease to sin I do not say they commit Murder Adultery and such like sins but continue in unbelief impenitency blasphemy c. Now to the Uses Vse 1. To reprove divers persons 1. Such as in their Conference and Discourse do use this imprecation That if this and that be not true which they affirm they wish they might be damned But do those persons consider what damnation is of which they speak so lightly 2. To reprove such as are offended at Gods Ministers for preaching of damnation Do not many of their people remain and continue unregenerate in the state of nature and doth not eternal damnation belong to such Why then should they not preach in this manner unto them for the awaking and rowzing of them up Must not a Minister deal faithfully with his people See what Balaam a false Prophet saith to a King Num. 24.13 If Balak would give me his house full of Silver and Gold I cannot go beyond the commandment of the Lord to do either good or bad of my own mind but what the Lord saith that will I speak If the Lord say in his Word that those that live and dye in the estate of nature must be damned how can the Minister if he would be found faithful either to his Master or people conceal it Joseph did not only tell the Butler the meaning of his dream but likewise the Baker the meaning of his Gen. 40.19 Yet within three dayes shall Pharaoh lift up thy head from off thee shal hang thee on a tree and the birds shal eat thy flesh from off thee And the Butler afterwards relating this to Pharaoh upon occasion Gen. 41.13 And it came to pass saith he as he interpreted to us so it was me he restored to my Office and him that is to say the chief Baker he hanged And is not this that which the Apostle Paul cals upon Timothy for 2 Tim. 2.15 Study to shew thy self approved unto God a work man that needeth not be ashamed rightly dividing the word of truth Do not we rightly divide the word of truth when we preach salvation to the Regenerate and damnation to the Ungenerate 3. To reprove all such as neglect the means whereby they might be brought out of the estate of nature to which eternal damnation belongs No better means to prepare for this business then a
of infinite merit It being more the passion of Christ for a short time then if all men and Angels had suffered for ever Secondly Hath God the Father out of his infinite love given his Son to die for thee then do not thou doubt the supply of all necessaries inward and outward he that hath given the greater will also give the lesser Christ is more worth then ten thousand worlds and Christ is the sweet and pleasant fountain of all other good things It is for him and through him that we have any thing that is good see what the Apostle saith Rom. 8 32. He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things The Lord that hath given thee Christ and him to die for thee will give thee an increase of grace will give thee to persevere in grace nay in the end will give thee eternal life Rom. 5.10 And in regard of outward things it is comfortable to hear what the Lord saith Psal 34.10 The young Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing And Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee For let God be true and every man a liar But this is an argument of arguments which the Apostle useth to perswade true beleevers touching their outward supply I mean Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things Vse 3 To exhort and that divers waies First Is it so that the Sonne of God did humble himself so farre as to take upon him the forme of a Servant nay even to die the accursed death of the Crosse and For our sins and iniquities O then let us be exhorted to grieve and mourn for sin the proper and procuring cause of his sufferings How can we but lament that which procured Christs death Be troubled and vexed for that which caused the Son of God so much trouble and vexation There is nothing doth so demonstrate the horrible nature of sin 〈◊〉 the death of Christ for sin and there is nothing should move us more to grieve for sin then considering that our sins have pierced the Son of God and killed the Lord of life If this consideration will not move us nothing will See Zachar. 12.10 I will pour upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplications and they shall look upon me whom they have peirced and they shall mourn for him as one mourneth for his only Son and shall be in bitternesse for him as one that is in bitternesse for his first born 2. To exhort every one of us to hate and shun sin for the time to come Oh How can we love that how can we favour that which nailed the Son of God to the crosse Will not we labour to die to that for which the Son of God dyed O let us down with this body of sin as the Apostle hath it in 1 Cor. 9.27 I keep under my body and bring it under subjection He beat down his corruption as it were with clubs for so the word he here useth in the Originall signifies as the Apostle Peter exhorts 1 Pet. 4. ver 1 2. Forasmuch as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God And is not this one speciall end why the Son of God gave himself to death for us to wit that we might become a holy people Gal. 1.4 Surely to go on in sin is horrible ingratitude to God and Christ nay the truth of it is we should be so affected to God who gave Christ and to Christ who gave himself to that accursed death of the Crosse for our sins as we should rather our selves admit of death even the most bitter and torturing death then admit of the least sin wittingly and willingly Thirdly Did God the Father so love us as to give us his Son nay the Son so love us as to give himself to death for our sakes why then upon a just occasion and call let us not think much to let our dearest blood goe for Gods sake for Christ sake Shall Christ the Sonne of God willingly dye for us and shall we not willingly lay down our lives for him and for his Truth upon a call that so we may glorifie him Joh. 21.19 And for his people upon a call that so we may manifest that his example swayes us as 1 John 3.16 Herby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brebren Thus far touching Christs Passive obedience and the third Member of the third Principle MEMBER IV. And by his righteousness WHerein we have implyed Christs Active obedience as in the former Member his Passive and this we deliver in the form of a Doctrine thus Doct. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God although he was crucified to death as he was man yet was he a just and righteous man In the prosecution of this Point we are only to make good the latter part of the Doctrine to wit that Christ even as he was man was Just and Righteous To this purpose see 2 Cor. 5.21 He hath made him to be sin for us that is to say a sinner by imputation who knew no sin that is to say who was without sin And Heb. 4.15 We have not an high Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin And hence it is that the Apostle Peter calls him A Lamb without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.19 And that the Apostle Paul saith of him Rom. 10.4 He is the end of the Law that is to say the perfection of the Law whatsoever the Law could exact he not only suffered but likewise was and did Now we are to know that Christ as he was man was righteous two wayes 1. In his Birth and Conception 2. In his life and conversation 1. In his Birth and Conception Luke 1.35 And the Angel answered and said unto her to wit to Mary the mother of Christ The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God So Matth. 1.20 Joseph thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost And although Mary was a sinner yet the Holy Ghost knew well enough how to cleanse and purge from sin that part of her substance of which Christs
humane nature was made and for the guilt of Adams fall it did not belong unto him he not coming from Adam by natural generation but by a miraculous Conception Nay further in his Conception and Birth his humane nature was not only free from sin but withal inriched and filled with Grace and holiness and that in greater measure then all men and Angels as John 1.14 The Evangelist speaking of him and according to his humane nature saith he was full of Grace and in chap. 3. ver 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him that is to say he gave it unto him in an abundant measure and yet the Holiness of Christ as man is not infinite but finite there being this difference betwixt his Righteousness as he is God and his righteousness as he is man His righteousness as he is God being infinite and uncreated his Righteousness as he is man being finite and created Thus we see even as Christ was man he was righteous in his Birth and Conception 2. As he was man he was righteous likewise in his Life and Conversation his whole course of life being conformable to the absolute Righteousness of the Law as 1 Pet. 2.22 Who did no sin speaking of Christ neither was guile found in his mouth And John 8.29 He that hath sent me is with me the Father hath not left me alone for I do always those things which please him The Point being thus maintained we come to answer two Questions 1. To what end was Christs Active obedience the Righteousness of his Humane Nature and the Righteousness of his Life 2. If perfect Righteousness and eternal life be merited by Christs Active obedience how comes it to pass that the Scriptures speak so little of this kind of obedience and so much of his Passive Quest 1. To what end was Christs Active obedience the Righteousness of his humane nature and the Righteousness of his life Ans The principal end next to Gods glory was to merit for the Elect perfect Righteousness and eternal Salvation As we must not conceive of Christs sufferings as the sufferings of a private man but as the sufferings of a publike person he being our Surety and pledge so we must conceive of the Righteousness of his humane nature and life his Active obedience it was not for himselfe but for us as Isai 9.6 Vnto us a child is born and Rom. 8.2 3 4. which place is to be understood of the perfect righteousness of Christs humane nature imputed to all true Believers he so meriting a cover for their corrupt nature and touching the righteousness of his life that he thereby further merited for the true Believer righteousness and eternal life do but see Rom. 5.6 As by one mans disobedience to wit Adams many were made sinners so by the obedience of one to wit Christ shall many be made righteous and so in ver 17. of the same Chapter If. by one mans offence death reigned by one to wit Adam much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness that is to say they who out of Gods abundant favour are justified by the righteousness aforesaid shall reign in life that is shall be saved And Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth and eternal life is a consequent of this perfect righteousness the Apostle here speaketh of We all owe the Lord a double debt 1. The debt of punishment for the breach of his Law 2. The death of obedience to wit the perfect fulfilling of the Law Now Christs Passive obedience doth discharge the former debt his Active obedience the latter by his Passive obedience he hath merited for us remission of sins and freedome from punishment and by his Active obedience he hath merited for us perfect Righteousnesse and eternal life There be other ends of Christs active obedience as the meriting for the Elect sanctifying Grace As Joh. 17.19 For their sake saith Christ I sanctifie my self that they also might be sanctified And then that he might be an example of Holiness as Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart Quest 2. The second Question is If perfect righteousness and eternal life be merited for the Elect by Christs Active obedience how comes it to pass that the Scriptures speaks so little of this kind of obedience and so much of his Passive Ans 1 Because his Passive obedience was most sensible and exposed to the eyes of all 2. Because the Ceremonial Types had especially their accomplishment in it 3. Because this was the chief and principal part of his obedience 4. The Passive implies the Active Now we come to the Uses of the Point Vse 1. To abase and greatly to humble us our natures and lives being ●o stained and defiled as nothing could be a cover unto them but the righteousness of the Son of God the righteousness of all men and Angels being insufficient this way to wit to hide the filthiness of our natures and lives from the eyes of Gods Justice Oh the cause we have to lament the impurity of our natures and lives when nothing could be a Remedy for us but the Son of God must assume our nature and here in the world work righteousness for us This consideration should not a little humble us but likewise work in us a great dislike and loathing of sin and of our selves for sin Vse 2 To inform us touching the goodness of God unto us We in Adams loynes having undone our selves and lost all righteousness that the Lord should provide us a Saviour not only to merit for us remission of sins and freedom from punishment by his Passive obedience but likewise perfect righteousness and eternal salvation by his Active so as let the Justice of God be objected any way to the true Believer he hath sufficient answer in his Pledge and Surety the Lord Jesus and hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one tht believeth If the Law and Justice of God require punishment for sin and disobedience the Believer hath the death and passion of Christ to interpose if the Law and Justice of God require perfect righteousness to be justified in Gods fight and to enter heaven the true Believer may have present recourse to the holy nature and life of Christ as his cover and righteousness so as whatsoever the true Believer should be should do should suffer Christ was did and suffered And may not this greatly comfort the true Believer that the Lord hath provided such a Saviour and further that his righteousness whereby he is justified in Gods sight and must enter heaven is not in his own keeping as his first righteousness in Adam was which was quickly lost but in the keeping of the Lord Jesus and so cannot be lost The Believer may lose this and that outward thing which for the present he enjoyed or
them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God intimating that being in the estate of nature they were the slaves of the Divel under his dominion and so Col. 1.13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness that is to say from the power of Satan as though he and the Collossians had been under Satans dominion so long as they were in the estate of nature And 2 Tim. 2.26 And that they may recover themselves speaking of the unregenerate out of the snare of the Divel who are taken captive by him at his will And do but see one place more Ephes 2.1 2. And you hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience that is to say as the Master of the Shop in his Shop commanding and ruling therein The Truth of this Point may be maintained by divers Arguments Reas 1. Every man and so every woman is either Gods servant or the Divels slave but the unregenerate are not Gods servants It is true they owe God service and obedience but they have no mind no will unto it as our Saviour tells the Jewes Matth. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee How often would I have gathered thy children together even as a hen gathereth her chicken under wings and ye would not And so the Apostle Rom. 6.20 When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness that is when ye were in the estate of nature there was not the least desire or motion in you to holy obedience And do but try those that are in the estate of nature even with the outward Service of God as Prayer reading of the Word hearing of Sermons conversing with the Godly sanctifying of the Sabbath O how irksome and burdensome are these things unto them you seem to kill them when you put these things upon them They cannot they will not hold to these Religious courses constantly they will find some way or other to shift themselves from those as they hold them intollerable burdens And thus we see the unregenerate are not Gods servants and therefore it followes that they are the Divels slaves Reas 2. Every one in the estate of corrupt nature is the servant of sin and so must needs be the slave of the Divel These two are subordinate the one to the other sin being the Divels baud or Broker preferring men and women to his service Now that every unregenerate person is the servant of sin do but see what our Saviour saith Joh. 8.34 Verily verily I say unto you whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin that is to say committeth sin as the unregenerate goes on in the practice of sin impenitently and so the Apostle Rom. 6.17 But God be thanked ye were the servants of sin meaning when they were in the estate of nature but when he writ this Epistle taking notice of a change wrought in them he thanketh God And so ver 20. When ye were the servants of sin which as though the Apostle should say you were when you were in the estate of nature Thus we see the unregenerate are the servants of sin and so consequently the slaves of the Divel Reas 5. The unregenerate although they owe no service to the Divel why yet they willingly and readily subject themselves unto him and obey him John 8.44 Ye are of your father the Divel and the lusts of your father ye will do saith our Saviour to the Jews And hence it is that he calls Satan the Prince of this world John 12.31 and 16.11 And so the Apostle Paul Ephes 6.12 The ruler of the darkness of this world to wit of the unregenerate And 2 Cor. 4.4 The god of this world And it is a wonder to behold and observe how chearfully the unregenerate serve the Divel yea many times when great difficulty nay visible danger is in the way If he command the Drunkard he riseth early in the morning to follow after drunkenness If he command the Adulterer he watcheth his opportunities although never so inconvenient unto the health of his body If he command the Covetous person he will accomplish his worldly project or else it shall cost him his life Who riseth so early as the Drunkard and sits up so late Who walks so many dark nights as the Adulterer Who endures so many Tempests as the Pirat Who adventures on so many dangers as Theeves and Robbers Thus we see the unregenerate are the Divels slaves because of their willing obedience and subjection to him Reas 4. That the unregenerate are the slaves of the Divel is evident by their reward in this life and the life to come In this life besides many outward judgements upon them divers times terrors of conscience and fear of hell fire as the unregenerate are described Heb. 2.15 to be such as through the fear of death that is to say death eternal are all their life time subject to bondage And in the life to come to condemnation Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death to wit eternal And so of Satan He will promise great matters to men and women but he is a Deluder and a Lyar. He told our first Parents obeying him they should become as gods but in their woful experience they found the clean contrary And so he suggested to our Saviour Matth. 4.8 9. that if he would fall down and worship him what he would do for him but had our Saviour trusted him he had been deceived The truth of it is he deceives all that trust him Witness his principal slaves Witches and Wizards unto whom he promiseth much Wealth and Riches but where is the Wealth of such when they dye Thus we see by the woful reward of the unregenerate in this life and the life to come that they are the slaves of the Divel Reas 5. That the unregenerate are the slaves of the Divel is plain because the Lord as the punishment of sin hath given them over unto his dominion and government even as he gave the rebellious Israelites often into the hands of cruel Tyrants We all in Adams loynes making choice of this Master rather chusing to obey Satan then God was it not just with the Lord to give us up unto his Regiment And so the Unregenerate continually delighting more in the service of Satan then in the service of God is it not just with God to leave them in his hands to be slaves to him whose service they so delight in It is true Satan hath no power but what Gods permits But how just is it with God to give up such unto his dominion as are Rebels to his Majesty Now for the further illustration of this point we come to answer some objections 2 To shew the greatnesse and
all his merits unto himself is justified before God and sanctified MEMB. I. A man of a contrite and humble spirit NOW we come to the fourth Principle which requireth of us how a man or a woman may be made partakers of Christ and his Benefits In the first place saith the Catechism they must have contrite and humble spirits A man of a contrite and humble spirit We commend the Point unto you in the form of a Doctrine thus Doct. That a man may be partaker of Christ and his Benefits he must have a contrite and humble spirit See Isai 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters to wit to Christ and he that hath no money that is sees nothing in himselfe to trust unto and so consequently is of a humble and contrite spirit And Jerem. 50.4 In those dayes and in that time saith the Lord the children of Israel shall come they and the children of Judah together going and weeping they shall go and seek the Lord their God observe I pray you going and weeping shall seek the Lord their God as though that were the way and the onely way to find God in Christ to partake of Christ and his benefits And doth not our Saviour tell us this Matth 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous that is such as think themselves righteous but sinners to repentance to wit contrite and humble sinners to call them to a new life to partake of me and my benefits And Mat. 11.28 Come unto me saith he all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest And hence it is that the Lord is described 2 Corinth 7.6 to be the Comforter of such as are cast down And this Doctrine the Apostle James informes us of Jam. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble that is assures such of his favour and therefore ver 10. of the same Chapter Humble your selves saith he in the sight of the Lord and he shall lift you up And do but see that place for all Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted and to set at liberty them that are bruised Now we come to the Reasons Reas 1. Such and only such have an appetite to Christ hunger and thirst after him and his benefits Till we be sick of sin we can find no need of this Physician neither care much for him according to that Mat. 9.12 They that be whole need not a Physician but they that are sick When the fiery Serpent Numb 21.9 had bitten and stung an Israelite then he would run and make use of the Brazen Serpent but never till then Reas 2. Such and only such do prize Christ at his full value are willing to part with any thing to purchase him See what the Apostle Paul saith Philip. 3.8 9. He esteemed all things but dung in comparison of Christ and his Benefits but to make way for this observe the deep sense and feeling he had of his owne unworthinesse 1 Timoth. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom saith he I am chief Reas 3. Such and only such are made fit to receive Christ by faith and to make him their own Mark 1.15 Repent and believe the Gospel the unhumbled and unbroken-hearted sinner is altogether unfit to receive Christ and his benefits Reas 4. Such and only such truly rejoice and take comfort in Christ account him their chief Treasure and happiness Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ that is save in the Passion and Sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ But who was this that did thus rejoice in Christ and his Sufferings Surely it was one that had such a low opinion of himself as that Ephes 3.8 he stiles himself less then the least of all Saints But that you may further see into this weighty Doctrine we intend to answer the Questions following 1. What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 1 What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ This contrition and humiliation contains the particulars following 1. A true and distinct sight of sin and not onely as punishment doth attend it but as it is vile and lothsome in its own nature as Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations 2. Unfained and sound sorrow and as for the consequent so for the cause as for punishment so for sin Acts 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in the is hearts to wit that they were guilty of the death of the Lord of Life 3. A being weary of sin finding it a load and burden upon the conscience Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Our Saviour means here all that have contrite and humble spirits 4. Humble and hearty confession of sin as Luke 15.21 Father saith the Prodigal I have sinned against heaven and in thy sight and am no more worthy to be called thy son Lu. 23.40 41. 5. Earnest suit to the God of heaven for mercy as the Publicane Luke 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner And Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth surely the three dayes he was without sight he sent up many a loud cry to heaven for mercy 6. The sixth particular This Contrition and Humiliation contains a distaste and dislike of sin as Isaiah 30.22 Ye shall defile also the covering of the graven Images of silver and the ornament of thy molten Images of gold thou shalt cast them away as a mensturous cloth to wit in the day of thy repentance thou shalt say unto it get thee hence And Luke 19.8 Zacheus stood and said unto the Lord Behold Lord the half of my goods I give to the poor and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him four fold Thus we see now what Contrition and Humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits But yet we must not think this preparatory work in the particulars aforesaid to be the same that is in the soul after
and theirs 4 By rejoicing to see the livery of Christ put upon their child their child so honoured 5. By educating their children accordingly Ephes 6.4 2 To exhort all Baptized persons First Such as are unregenerate and in the estate of nature manifesting no lesse by their way and course First That they would consider what they are doing even acting the parts of treacherous and foresworne persons proceed just contrary to their Vow and Oath in Baptism Secondly To consider what a deal of ingratitude they manifest to God thus abusing his Livery he that prevented them with this Sign and Seal of the new Covenant before they had any ability to conceive of it that was found of them before they sought him that put a pledge into their bosomes concerning his gracious meaning towards them did they not shew themselves careless of it nay he that by his Sacrament so provoked them to embrace the Covenant 3 To exhort them that they would never rest until such time as they have a feeling of that renewing power signified in Baptism to wit the power of Christs death mortifying sin in them and the vertue of his Resurrection raising them up to newness of life To this purpo●e let them be earnest with the Lord in praye● as well as they can follow hard after the p●werful preaching of the Word that so they may attain to Regeneration whereof Baptism is the Seal It is true if they take this course they shall be called Puritans and Precisians But let them remember their solemn Vow and Oath in Baptism and not regard the malice of Satan and the reproaches of men 2 To exhort such as have true grace are regenerate often to meditate upon their Baptism for the helping of their faith Is any temptation violent any corruption strong any grace weak nay hath Satan and corruption given the foile prevailed in particulars Why then call to mind thy Baptism Gods Covenant with thee signified and sealed in it this is an excellent way to get up thy faith and so to get thee up being fallen and to keep thee up being in the fight and combat For we are to know that the signification force use and fruit of this Ordinance doth not continue only for a moment of time but for the whole course of a mans life Thus much for Baptism Now we come to the Sacrament of the Supper and commend the Doctrine of it unto you in the point following Doctr. As the Sacrament of Baptism is a good outward means to encrease faith why so especially the Sacrament of the Supper But having spoken of Baptism take the Doctrine more briefly The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is an excellent outward means to encrease faith Do but see 1 Cor. 10.16 As though the Apostle should say The participating of the Supper is it not an excellent Signe Pledge and Meanes of our growth in Christ to encrease our faith And 1 Corinth 11.26 Yee do shew the Lords death to wit as to others so to your owne faith for the encrease and confirmation of it Reason 1. The Sacrament unto which this succeeds to wit the Passeover was an excellent meanes this way that is to say for the encrease and confirmation of faith Reason 2. In the Sacrament of the Supper there is such a lively picture and representation of Christ and his benefits Galat. 3.1 Crucified among you As by the preaching of the word so by the administration of the Sacraments especially by the administration of this Sacrament Reas 3. This was one principall end why Christ instituted and ordained this Sacrament to wit that his peoples faith unto the worlds end in the conscionable celebration of it might be encreased and confirmed Now for the opening of this Doctrine we intend to answer divers questions 1. What this Sacrament is 2. The difference betwixt it and Baptism 3. The parts of it 4. What is to be done of us that in the use of this ordinance our faith may be encreased Quest First What the Lords Supper is Answ It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel wherein by bread and wine duely administred and received the true beleever is fed and nourished unto eternall life A little to open this description It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel because in order baptism is to precede and go before it wherein by bread and wine elements first not very hard to be come by Secondly Very apt unto the purpose appointed to wit to signifie and seal spiritual food nay very apt wine being appointed and afforded as well as bread to signifie and seal a compleat feast to the soul full and perfect nourishment by the Lord Jesus the thing signified Duely administred and received that is when the persons administring and receiving are rightly qualified and the same rites and actions punctually observed which the word of God prescribes and enjoynes the true beleever he being the party only that is capable of this feast and unto whom it belongs is fed and nourished unto eternal life The bread and wine not only representing the body and blood of Christ but exhibiting and conveying them to the soul of the beleever for his spirituall nourishment Quest 2. How the Lords Supper differs from baptism Answ First We will shew briefly wherein they agree Secondly wherin they differ They agree in these things First they both represent whole Christ to the soul Secondly they both seal up whole Christ to the soul we mean by whole Christ as Christ for justification so for sanctification 1 Now these Sacraments differ divers waies First in order baptism goes before and the supper follows as being goes before growing Secondly In frequency Baptism is but once to be received the Supper often We are but once born but after we are borne we have need of frequent nourishment Thirdly they differ in the elements and external rites Fourthly in their particular ends Baptism being properly the seal of regeneration but the Supper properly the seal of growth and confirmation The former the seal of Christian being the latter the seal of Christian well being Quest 3. What are the parts of this Sacrament Answ They are either outward or inward The outward as the signe and the word By the signe we mean the elements of bread and wine and the sacramentall action on the Ministers part and on the receivers part The The other outward thing is the word the word added to the element or elements makes a Sacrament Now by the word here we are to understand First the word of institution or command do this Secondly the word of promise this is my body which is given for you this is my blood which is she d for you The inward thing or thing signified is the body aad bloud of Christ given and shed for our sins and our spiritual eating and drinking of them for our nourishment unto eternal life Quest 4 What is to be done of us that in the use of this
advised by the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 c. A man abuseth the world when he looks upon worldly things as things that he shall enjoy alwayes 4. To reprove all such as cannot endure to think of death to be told of death You strike them into a melancholy fit when you put them in mind of their death those persons are far from imitating those Worthies in Scripture whom we read to have made their Sepulchres in their life time as Asa 2 Chron. 16.14 Nay in their Gardens the place of their solace and delight as Joseph of Aramathea John 19.41 Nay those persons come short of some of the Heathen we read of as D●mocritus who was wont to walk among the graves that so he might the better meditate upon death And so it is reported of those Philosophers called Brachmanae that they were so much given to think upon death that they had their graves alwayes before their gates that both going out and coming in they might be put in mind of their latter end And so the antient Aegyptians in the midst of their mirth at their solemn seasts were wont to have the image of Death brought in and laid before them with these words Hoc intuens epulare Beholding this Image eat and drink that being a means they used to make them eat and drink more moderately And surely one special cause why the most are so unprepared for death is because they have no desire to think of it to be put in mind of it And thus now we have done with the use of reprehension Vse 2. For Information to inform us that although death be unavoidable why yet we must be so far from hastning our own death by neglecting the means of life or by laying violent hands upon our selves as we must use all good means for the preserving of our natural life and lengthening our dayes here upon earth and all this implyed in the sixth precept Not that we deny but that in some cases a man or a woman may desire death rather then life As 1. When they are thoroughly convinced and sufficiently resolved that the Lord shall have more glory by their dying then by their living No question this was one reason why Samson desired death he knowing that thereby he should slay more of Gods enemies then he had done in all his life time and hence it was that the holy Martyrs heretofore did so willingly dye nay did so joyfully desire death because they were perswaded that God should have so much glory by their death 2. In consideration that they cannot live here on earth but daily offend their good and gracious God to desire death in this case is not a loathing to live but a loathing to sin and so much is implyed in the Apostle Paul his exclamation Rom. 7.24 3. In consideration that they cannot live in this world but see and hear the Lord much dishonoured by the wicked this was that which did so vex the soul of righteous Lot 2 Pet. 2.8 And no question this was one special cause why Elijah desired death to wit the wickedness of the times he lived in And so Rebecka the wickedness of her Daughter in law Gen. 26.34 35.27.46 4. In consideration that until death they are absent from Christ do not so fully and perfectly enjoy him as they shall do after death 2 Cor. 5.6 7 8 Philip. 1.23 Nay so the whole Church is brought in Rev. 22.20 Now in the cases aforesaid it is lawful for a man or a woman to desire death rather then life not that they may neglect the means of life or hasten their own death this way or that way no nor impatiently wish death this was the fault of the old Israelites as Exod. 16.3 Nay Moses himself this way failed Numb 11.15 And did not Rachel Gen. 30.1 And so Jonah 4.1 2 3 8. And what more common in these times then for men and women when great calamity is upon them or imminent impatiently to wish death Thus much for this Use the Use of Information Vse 3. For Exhortation and it consists of divers parts or branches 1. To exhort every one of us seeing death is unavoidable cannot be avoided much to think and often to meditate and that seriously upon our own death and this being done of us it will be a good means to prevent much evil in our practice and much to put us on in the wayes of goodness To prevent much evil in our practice as 1. Dissoluteness or loosness of life Durst any man give himself liberty to be drunk if he seriously weighed he might be struck with death whiles he is drunk as Elah the King of Israel was 1 Kings 16.9 10. Or durst any man commit uncleanness if he could seriously think of this that God might strike him suddenly while he is in that filthy act as he did Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25.8 2. A frequent and serious meditation of our own death will be a good means to prevent our vigorous and cruel proceedings with others see Job 31.13 14. Matth. 24.48 49. Amos 6.3 3. This will be a good means to prevent our over-love and immoderate use of outward things To this purpose is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 If we do not see death stand at the end of all our earthly profits at the end of all our worldly pleasures we shall too eagarly pursue them and having obtained them shall too much solace our selves in them 4. This will be a good means to prevent the danger of death I mean to take away the sting and terror of it death being like unto the Basilisk if it see thee before thou seest it it will be thy death but if thou see it first thou wilt be the death of it And as the frequent and serious meditation of our own death will be a good means to prevent much evil in our practice so likewise it will be a good means much to further us in the wayes of goodness as 1. Hereby we shall be minded to be more painful and profitable in our places Eccles 9.10 and 2 Pet. 1.13 c. 2. Hereby we shall be made more meek and patient in all our sufferings and afflictions Phil. 4.5 James 5.7 8. This is that which will make quiet in all provocations This'is that which will comfort in all discouragements I shall shortly be sent for I shall shortly be called from hence then I shall be righted then I shall be cleared then I shall have rest 3. Hereby we shall be made more watchful the thing being so certain and the circumstances so uncertain as time place and manner See Mark 13.35 and Luke 21.34 4. And lastly this will be a good means to work in us a care to prepare for death A man that seriously concludes he must dye will not that man go about to set his house in order his heart in order all in order And thus now we have done with the first part or branch of this Use which hath
Philip. 1.21 23. And thus now we have done with the Common-place implyed in the sixth Principle to wit Death NOw we come to the second Head or Common place to wit the general Resurrection and receive it in this Doctrine Doct. It is a most certain truth that there shall be a general Resurrection That all the dead shall rise again with their own bodies at the last day The Scriptures are very clear and evident in this point See Job 19.25 26 27. Isaiah 26.19 John 5.28 29. Acts 24.15 The Grounds and Reasons of the Doctrine And first we will lay you down Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day and then why the bodies of the wicked must be then raised Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day Reas 1. Because the Lord is their God is in Covenant with the godly in Covenant with the whole man not onely soul but body This is our Saviours Argument to the Sadduces who denied the Resurrection Mat. 22.31 32. As touching the Resurrection of the dead have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God saying I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob God is not the God of the dead but of the living Our Saviours meaning is this The God of Heaven speaking to Moses Exod. 3.9 of Abraham Isaac and Jacob who being in Covenant with God but all dead long before the Lord then spake unto Moses yet speaks of them as alive thereby intimating the Resurrection of their bodies that their dead bodies should be raised again at the last day and if their bodies why then the dead bodies of all that are in Covenant with God Reas 2 Christ himself hath undertaken this to wit to raise up the dead bodies of all his at the last day John 6.39 And is not this an easie thing with him he being not only man but God See Mat. 22.29 Phil. 3.20 21. Reas 3. Christ is risen therefore the dead bodies of all the godly shall rise again at the last day This is a true and sure consequence for 1. Christ rose again that he might raise them 2. Christ is their Head and they his Members seeing then Christ their Head is risen they also his Members doubtless shall rise for the glory of the head requires this that he have his members sutable and in like condition with himself 3. The same Spirit is in them which is in Christ raised he joyneth and uniteth them with Christ and worketh the same in them which he doth in Christ But he hath raised Christ therefore he will raise them Reas 4. To this end the bodies of the Elect were made that in them as Temples the Holy Ghost might dwell for ever therefore their bodies shall rise again at the last day and live for ever Reas 5. This great truth denied that the bodies of the godly shall be raised again at the last day overturns all Religion 1 Cor. 15.12 unto the nineteenth Thus you see the Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day Now we come to lay you down the Reasons why the bodies of the wicked must be raised Reas 1. Because the Scripture delivers this in plain and express termes 3 Cor. 5.10 John 5.28 29. Acts 24.15 Reas 2. The threatnings and comminations that lie against the wicked Matth. 10.28 Mark 9.43 and so to verse 49. besides divers other places Reas 3. The Justice of God requires this The wicked do not onely sin in soul but in body therefore their bodies must be raised again at the last day that so they may be punished in both Thus you see that not only the dead bodies of the godly shall be raised again at the last day but also the dead bodies of the wicked Yet observe with a double difference 1. In regard of the efficient 2. In regard of the final cause The bodies of the godly shall rise by the power of Christ their Head the bodies of the wicked by the power of Christ their Judge The bodies of the godly shall rise to eternal glory the bodies of the wicked to eternal condemnation For the further opening of this Doctrine we intend 1. To answer some objections 2. In brief to lay before you the manner or method of the general Resurrection 3. And lastly the Uses First to answer some objections Object 1. From Eccles 3.19.20 Answ 1. Solomon doth not speak here in his own person but in the person of an Epicure or Atheist 2. Suppose Solomon do here deliver his own judgement he speaks nothing here of the estate after death but onely delivers thus much That as beasts dye so men dye the one as wel as the other Object 2. From 1 Cor. 15.50 Answ By flesh and blood here we are not to understand the body simply but as it is cloathed with sin and corruption and so indeed it shall not inherit the Kingdom of God but as it is immortal and glorious it shall Object 3. From 1 Cor. 15.44 So then it may seem our bodies at the last day shall rise Spiritual bodies and not consisting of flesh and blood Answ The Apostle doth explain himself verse 53. There shall not be a change in substance but in quality The bodies of the godly shall then be immortal incorruptible not needing means of corporal nourishment nor subject to infirmities but nimble strong and impassible void of all deformity and uncomliness of perfect stature glorious c. The bodies of the wicked then shall be immortal also and incorruptible but passible to endure the punishment inflicted upon them Object 4. That bodies resolved to dust and ashes should rise again is not this impossible Answ Luke 18.27 Gen. 18.14 Luke 1.37 The Almighty God that made all things of nothing is not he able to restore the body although turned to dust burnt to ashes or devoured by wild beasts The manner of the Resurrection The next thing we promised is to lay forth in brief the manner or method of the gen●ral Resurrection 1. In the first place when the last day of the world is come Christ on a sudden in the same visible form he went to heaven will come in the Clouds with his Angels and the souls of his Saints departed Acts 1.11 Judges 14.15 2. The Trumpet of God shall then sound the voyce of the Arch-angel shall then be heard Christ shall command and call upon the dead to rise and come to judgement 1 Thess 4.16 John 5. 28 29. 3. Immediately presently upon this the souls of all the godly deceased shall en●er into their bodies and then their bodies rise to life eternal and so the souls of all the wicked deceased shall return into their bodies and then their bodies rise to eternal condemnation John 5.28 29. 4. Such as shall then be alive shall have a change on a sudden in stead of death and Resurrection 1 Cor.
as live idlely do not walk diligently in their callings Joh. 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work The Lord never ceaseth from his work of Providence 3. Reproof to all such as are discontented with their outward condition and estates and so calling Gods wise Providence in question contrary to the Apostle Phil. 4.11 I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content And David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didest it 4. To reprove all such as neglect the lawful means Civil or Holy the Lord in his ordinary course working by means or if the means fail they distrust the Lord as though he that tyed us to means were himself tyed to means and could not work by little means against means above means 5. To reprove all such as lay their sins on God because nothing comes to pass but by his Providence but hearken to the Apostle James 1.13 Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of evil neither tempteth he any man There is no sin in God neither doth he put sin into any mans heart It is true indeed the Lord could prevent sin and would if he could not gain himself glory out of it thou canst not do this or that wicked action without Gods Providence but thy sin as it is sin is of thy self and Satan thou sinning willingly and chearfully not endeavouring to serve Gods Providence but thy own vile affections 6. To reprove the evil speech of some as they that say this or that came to pass by meer chance as though any thing came to pass without a cause or without Gods Providence and so such as say this or that we will do not putting in Saint James's condition Jam. 4.15 If the Lord will not remembring that they and their actions are in Gods disposing and not in their own Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the godly It is true they have many enemies but the Lord hath them all in a string as he saith to Sennacherib King of Assyria 2 Kin. 19.27 28. I know thy abode and thy going out and thy coming in and thy rage against me because thy rage against me and thy tumult is come up into my ears therefore I will put my hook into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips and I will turn thee back by the way by which thou camest Nay the Devils themselves the Lord hath them in Chains they cannot go a link beyond his permission as is evident in the History of Job even as he saith unto the Sea Job 38.11 Hitherto shalt thou come but no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed And so in regard of any affliction no affliction can befal the godly but by the Providence of God and no affliction shall befal them but the Providence of God will turn it to their good insomuch as every true Believer may say with David Psal 16.8 The Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved not moved to my hurt and as he saith Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want and verse 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me And wondrous comfortable is that sentence 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him And not a little may the godly man succour his faith by his former experience of Gods Providence Psal 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling that I may walk before God in the light of the living And 1 Sam. 17.37 David said The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the Lion and out of the paw of the Bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine And so Psal 46.1.2 God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble Therefore will we not fear though the Earth be removed and though the Mountains be carryed into the midst of the Sea Vse 3. To exhort every one to serve Gods Providence in the use of all good means Civil and Holy because so the Lord works ordinarily To neglect ordinary means is to tempt God and great presumption as our Saviour replies to Satan when he would have had him cast himself down from the Pinacle of the Temple Matth. 4.7 It is written thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God And yet we must take heed of trusting in the means for that is Idolatry the truth of it is it is Gods blessing that doth mainly effect a thing as Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Except the Lord keep the City the Watchman waketh but in vain And therefore when the means fail us at any time our faith must not It was an evil saying of the Israelites Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness and therefore the Spirit of God saith of them putting forth such a question that they spake against God But it was a good saying of Abraham Gen. 22.8 God will provide and if you peruse verse 14. you shall perceive that this speech of his grew to a Proverb intimating thus much that in due time and place the Lord will supply the wants and necessities of all his people And thus far touching the description of God by his works of Creation and Preservation MEMBER V. One true God Creator and Governor of all things is distinguished into the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost THat there is a distinction of Persons and this distinction in the Divine Essence is evident if so be we look into the holy Scriptures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our image where God the Father consults with his Son and holy Spirit The like phrase we have in Gen. 11.7 Let us go down and there confound their Language And Isa 63.9 10. The Angel of his presence saved them Of whose presence Of God the Fathers and who was this Angel but the Son the second Person in Trinity But they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit to wit the Holy Ghost Haggai 2.5 7. According to the word that I convenanted with you when ye came out of Aegypt Who was it that did covenant with the Israelites to wit God the Father So My Spirit remaineth among you to wit the Holy Ghost And The desire of all Nations shall come to wit the Sonne But this Mysterie is more clearly revealed in the New Testament as when Christ was baptized Matthew 3.16 17. And he saw to wit John the Baptist the Spirit of God descending like a Doue and lighting upon him to wit upon Christ And lo a voyce from Heaven that is to say from God the Father saying This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased But more
and righteousness but a corrupt inclination in every faculty of soul and member of body Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth even from the very time he begins to conceive 4. By Actual transgression And thus we see how many wayes the natural man is a sinner We now come to the Application Vse 1. For Confutation To confute the Papists who affirme that the Virgin M. was without sin free from original sin and from sin all her life long but this were to make her equal to Christ as he was man and this is to cross the Apostles allegation There is none righteous no not one to wit by nature meer man or meer woman since Adams fall and that the V. M. was not exempted in this kind is evident by our Saviours reproving of her John 2.4 When she told him of a want of Wine at the Marriage-feast in Cana Woman what have I to do with thee my hour is not yet come Had she not been in fault he would not so have check'd her And further observe what she her self saith Luke 1.47 My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour If she were free from sin what needed she a Saviour Vse 2. To reprove divers men and women The most will confess they are sinners and great sinners but with so little knowledge as when they became sinners or how or wherein or what sinne is they cannot tell As if a Debtor should acknowledge himself to be indebted to such a man and yet he cannot tell when wherein or how he became indebted to him were not this an ignorant acknowledgement And likewise with so little humility ' the most men and women will confess they are sinners but with so little sense and feeling with so little griefe and shame not considering how great an evil sinne is how odious it makes a man or a woman to God how it layes them open to Gods wrath here and hereafter The Leper we know in the time of the old Testament must be shut up must not converse with men but no Leper so odious to mans eye as sinne makes a man odious to God And no man indebted be it never so much is so in danger of an Arrest by man as the unhumbled sinner is in danger of Gods wrath to Arrest him every hour and to presse him down to the pit of Hell where his worme shall never dye and his fire never goes out Mark 9.44 Vse 3. To awaken the Natural man he being a sinner and a sinner so many wayes as we have heard Ephesians 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the Dead and Christ shall give thee light Would any man unlesse he were dead drunk lay himselfe downe to sleep on the top of the Mast the Ship being under-saile in the midst of the Sea Or will any man but a mad man wittingly and willingly lye sleeping in a house that is on fire over his head O that the Natural man would take notice of his wretched condition that so he might be dejected and cast down crying out of himselfe as the Leper in the Law Leviticus 13.45 Vnclean Vnclean Crying to God with the Publican Luke 18.13 Lord be merciful to me a sinner And with more words then so for we must know we have there but the abridgement of the Publicanes Prayer and crying to the Minister of God with them in the Acts Chapter 2d. Verse 37. Men and Brethren what shall we do Now that men and women would labour for a fight and sense of their Natural misery consider 1. Some Motives 2. Some Means Motive 1. Otherwise they can never confesse their sinnes heartily What is the reason men and women confesse their sinnes so generall and carelesly but because they have not a sight and sense of their natural misery Hosea 14.2 Take with you words and turne to the Lord to wit in the way of confession saith the Prophet to the Israelites But in the first Verse they must before consider how they had fallen by their iniquity how sinful they were Motive 2. Without sight and sense of misery men and women are not capable of true Comfort and Consolation Before true Consolation goes hearty humiliation Luke 5.31 They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick 2 Corinthians Chapter 7. Verse 6. the Apostle Paul stiles the Lord the Comforter of the abject Motive 3. Observe the Promise made to the truly dejected Matthew 5.4 Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Isaiah 37.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity whose Name is Holy I dwell in the High and Holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones We come to the Meanes to bring men and women to a sight and sence of their misery Means 1. To look themselves throughly in the glass of the Law Rom. 3.20 By the Law comes the knowledg of sin 2 By applying to themselves the curses which are without partiality threatned to every transgressor of the Law for every transgression as Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them 3. Consider of how pure eyes the Lord is how he hates iniquity and suffers no transgression to pass unpunished but doth either punish it in the party offending or hath already punished it in the Mediator Vse 4 To justifie the Lord in regard of the judgments he sends upon the world All men and women being corrupted with sin and so many wayes as we have heard no marvel then that the world is so plagued In the seventh of Genesis we read how the Lord destroyed the world by water but see the sixth Chapter from the first verse unto the fourteenth The world was exceedingly corrupted with sin We know what the Psalmist saith Psal 107.17 Fools by reason of their sins and because of their iniquities are afflicted And the Church Lament 5.16 17. Wo unto us that we have sinned for this our heart is faint and for these things our eyes wax dim Nay the very young Infant that is taken away by death the Lord is not unjust in that proceeding even the young Infant being a sinner three wayes at the least by Participation by Imputation and by natural Corruption When judgments are upon us we must not murmur and repine but consider as Solomon doth advise Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider that is consider for what and then we shall justifie him from whom the affliction comes Vse 5. For comfort and consolation to all true Converts It is true they are sinners but the Lord sees no sin in them which he will impute unto them It is true they are sinners but not such as he that was blind speaks of John 9.31 We know that God heareth not sinners for Prov. 15.8 The prayer of the upright
grievousnesse of this slavery and Lastly to the Uses Object 1. But may some men say the debaucht and prophane person the common swearer drunkard gamester those by their very way and course do seem to be the slaves of the divel but your civill honest men and women such as live neighbourly are outwardly well governed but yet are not religious care not much for hearing of Sermons do not labor after holy knowledg have not a good word for those that are forward in profession do you hold those likewise to be the slaves of the Divel An. Yes It is true they are not in that measure the slaves of the divel as the former but being in the estate of nature sin is altogether unmortified in them where sin is altogether unmortified there Satan reigns This is a truth the more liberty any man takes to sin the more he is the slave of the divel But yet this is a truth likewise that Satan hath the meer Civillist sure enough because although sin may sleep in him why yet it is not mortified in him The Scribes and pharisees who were civil men our Saviour Mat. 23.15 stiles them no better then the children of hell he might have as well called them the slaves of the Divell And so Simon Magnus the sin of covetousnesse being unmortified in him the Apostle Peter tels him Acts 8.23 That he was in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity and why in the bond of iniquity because he was bound to the sin of cove●ousnesse as by a chain and so to the Divell this sin being unmortified in him he was the slave of the Divell Object 2. But may some man say divers that in likelihood are in the estate of nature are many times frolick and merry and who so jovial as they Answ It is true and yet sometimes these persons have horrible pangs and gripes of conscience and the reason they are so merry and joviall is because they are not sensible of this bondage neither how deeply they are drowned in this slavery A man on dry ground being alive feels a small waight that is laid on him but being dead in the bottome of the water is not sensible although never so great waight be laid upon him So it is with a meer naturall man spiritually dead Object 3. But the regenerate themselves whil'st they are in this world have sin in them and where sin is Satan is are not they likewise the slaves of the Divel Answ Not although the regenerate have sin remaining in them why yet it doth not raign in them and where sin raigns not Satan raigns not There is a great difference between one being in a house and ruling in a house between one usurping as a tyrant and ruling as a king willingly submitted unto The Apostle Peter speaking of the regenerate 1 Pet. 2.9 But ye are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people They are no longer the slaves of Satan but the servants of God nay the children of God by adoption These Objections being answered we come in some measure to point at the greatnesse and grievousness of this slavery the miserablenesse of it You have heard of the bondage of Christians under the Turks and Infidels of the slavery of the Gibeointes who were censured by Joshuah to be hewers of wood and drawers of water Josh 9.23 But especially of the great slavery of the Israelites under Pharaoh in Egypt but this bondage of the unregenerate under Satan is a great deal worse For first that bondage was of the body only but this is the bondage of the whole man body and soul Secondly In that bondage men were served but in this the Divel who is the basest Lord and who commands the basest things Thirdly In that bondage the greatest harm was temporal but in this eternal even damnation in hell for ever Fourthly In that bondage they had a sense of their thraldome and desired liberty but in this men do not perceive themselves to be bound but think themselves to be free and despise liberty Lastly in all outward bondage there may be probability of help as by running away or by intreaty or by ransome or by the death of those that hold us in bondage but in this bondage men and women lie still as it were bound hand and foot not able not willing to help themselves except the Lord from heaven come and vindicate them out of the paws of the Lion by his Word and Spirit unbind them and set them free Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To inform us touching a great error which is in many They seem to admire at the condition of such as live out of the danger of mans Law have enough to pay every man his own so as they feare not to be cast in prison are able to make their part good in any sute or quarrel may go whither they list as their humor serves from Ale-house to Ale-house from Bawdy-house to Bawdy-house have mony enough in their purses to defray so as they need not go upon the score O they take such to be the only free persons in the world and only to live at their own command and thus they judg looking upon the outward appearance in the mean time not considering that those persons aforesaid being in the estate of nature they are all this while the slaves of the Divel Certain it is there be many that feed daintily are clothed richly live idly take their fill of all worldly pleasures in all licenciousnesse and yet are arrant slaves as any that serves in a Gally It is a good saying of one of the Ancients a good man though he serves yet is he free a wicked man though he reigns yet he is a servant Those that are not the servants of God how many lords have they the world the flesh and the Divel the world their servant their flesh their fellow the Divel their enemy There is no vassallage like unto this besides the woful reward in this life and the life to come And if you would have these slaves of the Divel painted out unto you by some signes First an arguing for sin and a defending of their evil waies Secondly An hating and disliking of those that reprove them for their sins Thirdly A loving of those that sooth them and flatter them in their evil waies Fourthly A maintaining and upholding of sinne in others Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the Regenerate They are not the slaves of the Divel they were indeed but now they are not but the servants of God And this they may know by resisting of Satans suggestions by denying of obedience unto his temptations by mortifying that which is his Broker and Baud to wit sin and corruption by the daily renewing of our repentance and so by their great rejoycing in taking notice of any to come from under his slavery O what an easie service is this in comparison of
thundring and powerful Ministry Vse 2. A call to repentance unto all such as are in the estate of nature as ignorant persons Swearers Cursers Profaners of the Sabbath Whoremasters Drunkards Oppressors Usurers Greedy Earth-worms Contemners of the Gospel Despisers of Gods Ministers who all proclaim themselves to be in the estate of nature O that such would consider the woful case they are in To be under the Curse as the unregenerate person is is no little misery To be subject to all outward calamities in this life nay to have many Spiritual plagues upon them as blindness of mind hardness of heart and many times terrors of conscience even the flashes of hell fire in their consciences and when by temporal death the soul goeth out of the body the wrath of God to press it down to the pit of hell and there to be in unspeakable nay unconceivable torment until the day of Judgment and then when the soul and body shall be again conjoined to appear and stand before 1. Such a Judge as cannot be deceived through ignorance 2. Such a Judge as cannot be forestalled by favour 3. Such a Judg as cannot be overswayed with power 4. Such a Judg as cannot be moved with pity for then the time of pity is past to such 5. Such a Judge as cannot be corrupted with gifts Lastly Such a Judg as cannot be overcome with Arguments and so the Sentence to be passed upon them Mat. 25.41 Go ye Cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels And then to be for ever separated from Gods comfortable presence to be for ever restrained and enforced to the society of the Divel and his Angels both soul and body to be in unspeakable and unconceivable torment and that for ever every faculty of soul and member of body to be in this torment and that for evermore O consider this ye that forget God lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men saith the Apostle So we perswade you to see and to be sensible of your condition that in the use of all good means you would labour to get out of your present estate as it is Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Take heed of fore-slowing the time If death seize upon thee before thy Repentance and Regeneration ah wo be unto thee that ever thou wast born And know thou hast no lease of thy life remember that secure fool Luke 12.20 Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee This day hear Gods voice and do not harden thy heart for to morrow thou art uncertain of it Thus far touching mans misery by nature We proceed to the third Principle PRINC III. Quest What means is there for thee to escape this damnable estate Answ Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Crosse and by his Righteousnesse hath perfectly alone by himselfe accomplished all things that are needful for the salvation of mankind MEMB 1. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God HErein we have the Redeemer of mankind described by three of his Titles 1. Jesus 2. Christ 3. The Son of God this last illustrated by this Epithete eternal The eternal Son of God Of these three Titles in order and first of the Title Jesus This Title is a Title of benefits it signifying an Author of safety our Saviour as we may observe the Angel to interpret speaking to Joseph Matth. 1.21 Thov shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Obj. But may some men say There was others called by this name besides the Redeemer of mankind Ans It is true but take notice of the difference betwixt him and them 1. They had his name imposed on them by the will of men but he had his name given him by an Angel from God 2. They were but typical Saviours he the Saviour indeed 3. They were but temporal and outward Saviours he a Spiritual Saviour 4. They were but Instrumental Saviours he the Author of all good things Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Obj. But the Father and the Holy Ghost are Saviours also Ans It is true but the difference is in their manner of saving The Father saveth by the Son the Son saveth by paying the Ransome and price of salvation the Holy Ghost saveth by a particular applying of this Ransome Two Questions following to be answered and then we come to Application 1. Whom this Jesus saves 2. From what Quest 1. Whom Ans The Angel tells us whom in the place forecited Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people And the Apostle Paul Ephes 5.23 calls him The Saviour of his body to wit of all the Elect. Quest 2. From what Ans The Angel tells us that too in the former place He shall save his people from their sins to wit all their sins the guilt and dominion of them Vse The Application may be to inform us two wayes 1. Touching our miserable lost estate by nature for so much a Saviour implies And the truth of it is we can never rightly and comfortably acknowledg this Saviour until we be sensible this way Many speak of this Saviour as their Saviour but when were they dejected and cast down with a sight and sense of their own misery by nature The Son of man is come saith our Saviour himself Matth. 18.11 to save that which was lost that is to say those that were sensible of their lost estate and condition but divers very ignorant and insensible this way wil yet cal him their Saviour 2. To inform us touching the great mercy of God to mankind Satan and his Angels fell but have no Saviour man falls and the Lord deviseth and affordeth a Saviour Now to this Saviour seeing and feeling our misery let us fly saying and praying with the Disciples Matth. 8.25 Lord save us we perish and with David Psal 35.3 Say unto our souls Thou art our salvation Considering that comfortable Text he himself preach'd upon the truth of which he came into the world to make good Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted to preach deliverance to the Captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised And in ver 21. He began to say unto them This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears Now we come to the second Title Christ which is a Title of Office and signifies Annointed There were three sorts of persons annointed in the time of the Old Testament Prophets Priests and Kings who were all types of this Annointed of this Prophet Priest and King That we may the better understand this Title we intend to answer the Questions
of his flesh As he is one with our nature by Personal Vnion so to be one with him by Mystical Vnion To this purpose let us endeavor to acquaint our selves with his Birth his Life and Death with his Natures his Offices his Benefits what he was what he did what he suffered for Mankind so manifesting that we are acquainted with him united unto him by a holy life and conconversation one special end why he assumed our nature and came into the world as we may see Luke 1.75 and Titus 2.11 and so to the fifteenth verse Thus farre touching the second Member of the third Principle Now we come to the third Member of the third Principle MEMBER III. By his death upon the Cross JEsus Christ the Eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Cross Take it in the form of a Doctrine after this manner Doct. Jesus Christ the Eternal Son of God being made man was Crucified to death The Scripture is abundant in proof this way as Mat. 27.35 44 50. Mark 15.24 25 27 37. Luke 23.33 46. John 19.15 16 17 18 and 30 verses This is that which the Apostle Peter doth charge upon the consciences of the Jewes Acts 2.22 23 and 36 verses Chap. 3.13 14 15 verses And so Chap. 4.10 Chap. 5.30 And so Stephen Acts 7.51 52. That we may the better conceive of this weighty point to wit Christs Passive obedience it shall be necessary to answer the questions following 1. Whether Christ suffered in both his Natures yea or no 2. What he suffered or the Passion it self 3. When his sufferings began and when they ended 4. The Causes of his passion 5. To what end he suffered Quest 1. Whether Christ suffered in both his Natures or no Answ There is no question but he suffered in the Humane nature both soul and body but the Divine nature is impassible cannot suffer and yet in a manner may be said to suffer not onely because the Person that was both God and man did suffer but also because the whole time of Christs humiliation the Majesty and glory of his Divine nature was somewhat laid down and hidden and so we understand the Apostle Phil. 2.7 Who made himself of no reputation speaking of Christ or as it is in the Original Who emptyed himself it being spoken in regard of his Divine nature the Majesty and glory of it being much hidden and obscured all the time he had upon him the form of a servant Quest 2. What Christ suffered or the Passion it self Answ The sufferings of Christ can never be expressed to the full so deeply did he drink off his Fathers wrath for our sins This the Evangelical Prophet denotes before hand Isaiah 52.14 and 53.3 Now his sufferings may be divided into the sufferings of his life and the sufferings of his death or near his death 1. Touching the sufferings of his life which were manifold As 1. He no sooner being conceived as man but suspected to be illegitimate or unlawfully begotten Mat. 1.19 and 20 verses 2. Being born in a Stable and laid in a Manger Luke 2.7 3. The pain of his Circumcision Luke 2.21 4. His flight into Aegypt Mat. 2.13 5. His being tempted of the Divel forty dayes and forty nights together in the Wilderness a place of great terror and in that time the Divel carrying up and down his body at his pleasure sometimes to a Pinacle of the Temple and sometimes to the top of an high Mountain Mat. 4.1 6. His Poverty he having not where to lay his head Luke 9.58 7. His going about from place to place with hunger thirst and weariness to Preach and work Miracles 8. The manifold contumelies and reproaches that were cast upon him by those that did oppose his Doctrine and Miracles as that he was a Deceiver was Mad had a Divel c. Thus we have given you a taste of the first sort of Christs sufferings to wit the sufferings of his life Now 2. We come to lay forth briefly the sufferings of his death or near his death and how grievous and dolorous his sufferings were in and about his death may appear 1. By his testifying and complaining how heavy he was even unto death Mat. 26.38 2. By the great drops or clods of water and blood which fell from his face Luke 22.44 3. By his sundry cryes to his Father that if it were possible the cup of death might pass from him 4. By those unworthy things he suffered at the hands of sinners as being betrayed by one of his own Disciples then taken as a Theef with swords and staves bound and carryed away and brought as a Malefactor before the Magistrate before whom although he was cleared yet must he be scourged stript of his own apparel clothed with scornful Kingly Robes a Crown of thorns put upon his head and a Reed put into his hand instead of a Scepter and so was he led away as a sheep to the slaughter and between two Theeves as the chief of all sinners crucified his joynts stretched and racked his hands and feet digged with nails his side pierced with a Spear and instead of drink he had Vineger tempered with Gall reached unto him the High Priests scoffed the Passengers wagged their heads the Soldiers mocked him nay one of the Theevs upon the Cross could with his last breath blaspheme him so many reproaches and contempts were done unto him as no Chronicle can remember the like ever done to any Malefactor 5. He was as one oppressed and forsaken of God which made him cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me he not onely suffering the first death but the pangs of the second death Thus we see a little what Christ suffered in his life and in his death Quest 3. Is When the sufferings of Christ began and when they ended Answ They began at his Birth or before as we have heard he no sooner being conceived but suspected to be illegitimate and continued until the giving up of the ghost then and not until then were his dolours and torments ended as himself witnesseth John 19.30 When Jesus had received the Vineger he said it is finished and he bowed his head and gave up the ghost which must he understood of his dolours and torments but not of his Humiliation which continued so long as he was captivated of death even unto his Resurrection Quest 4. What were the causes of his Passion Answ The principal causes of his Passion were 1. Gods Decree for the manifestation of his Justice and Mercy Acts 2.23 Him being delivered by the determinate Counsel and fore-knowledge of God speaking unto the Jewes of Christ ye have taken and by wicked hands have crucified and slain 2. The great love of God the Father unto his Elect John 3. ●6 God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And Romans 5.8 God commendeth his love
towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us And so 1 John 4.9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his onely begotten Son into the world that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be a Propitiation for our sins 3. The great love that was in Christ himself unto the Elect Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God saith the Apostle Paul who loved me and gave himself for me And Eph. 5.2 Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and given himself for us And so verse 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it The instrumental Causes were Satan Judas the High Priests the Jewes in general Pilate and the Roman Souldiers But these Instruments neither to be commended nor excused in this business they having their own wicked and malicious ends Quest 5 Now we come to the fifth question To what end Christ suffered Answ The principal and next to Gods glory was to merit for the Elect remission of sins and freedome from punishment Coll. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sins And Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law We must not conceive of Christs sufferings as the sufferings of a private man but as the sufferings of a publick person he being our Pledge and Surety as he is called Heb. 7.22 And whatsoever he suffered he suffered for us as Rom. 4.25 Who was delivered for our offences that is to say to death And 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ dyed for our sinnes And 1 Pet. 2.24 very comfortably Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree And hence it is that he is said to be made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.21 and a Curse for us Galatians 3.13 Here take we notice of the difference between the sufferings of Christ and the sufferings of Martyrs 1. Christs sufferings were an acursed punishment The sufferings of Martyrs are onely Chastisements or Tryals 2. Christs sufferings were Meritorious so are not the sufferings of Martyrs but a duty and debt There be other ends of Christs Passive obedience as the mortifying of sin in the Elect Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is Crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sinne And the giving of them an example of suffering patiently 1 Peter 2.21 Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps Thus we have the five Questions answered Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To inform us and that divers wayes 1. To let us see into the fierceness of Gods Wrath and wonderful Justice against sinne when nothing could expiate it but the death of his Sonne when nothing could satisfie for it but the blood of the Lord Jesus what think we then of those that make nothing of sinne do not account it to be of an horrible and accursed nature 2. See we here the great love of God the Father that rather then we should perish everlastingly his Sonne must undertake for us he must satisfie for us become sinne become a Curse for us dye the accursed death of the Cross for our sakes John 3.16 God so loved the world it cannot be expressed how much that he gave his onely begotten Sonne to dye for us In this God commendeth his love unto us as the Apostle Paul Romans 8. And in this he manifested his love unto us as the Apostle John saith 1 John 4.9 10. Herein is love indeed a miracle of love that God the Father should so love his enemies as to give his onely Sonne to dye for them Very moving is that phrase of the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all as though he had loved us better then his own Son As the Lord saith of Abraham Gen. 22.12 when at his command he was ready to offer up his only son Isaac Now I know that thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thy sonne thy onely sonne from me So may we say of God that we know that he loved us because he hath not withheld his Son his onely Son from us but hath given him to that accursed death for our sakes 3. See we here the great love of Christ himself unto his Church that rather then she should perish he would give himself to death even the accursed death of the Cross as Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for our sinnes which phrase intimates unto us how willingly he laid down his life for our sake Now indeed had not his death been voluntary it could not have been satisfactory But that he laid down his life willingly for us is evident by many circumstances about his death as when Peter counselled him to spare himself see what he got for his labour Matthew 16.23 Get thee behind me Satan saith Christ unto him And when Judas was ready to betray him see what our Saviour saith unto him John 13.27 That thou dost do quickly And when Judas was gone out to get company to apprehend him he went to the place he had wont to be in so as Judas might readily find him nay he met them in the mid-way that came to take him and tells them he was the Party they sought for and when they fell to the ground upon his saying I am he he would not escape from them All these particulars you may observe in the eighteenth Chapter of John Verse first c. He could have been rescued by the Angels Matth. 26.53 but would not and when by his Adversaries he was provoked to have come down from the Cross Matthew 27.42 and could have done so he would not All these circumstances let us see how willingly he laid downe his life for our sakes according to that he saith Joh. 10.18 No man taketh my life from me but I lay it downe of my selfe I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again And doth not this much commend the love of Christ to us he so willingly laying down his life for us No marvel the Apostle Paul Ephes 3.19 cals this love of his a love passing knowledg Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all true beleevers and that on severall cases 1. Doth their present infirmities or their ancient grievous sins stare them in the face Doth at any time the weight and butden of sin with the wrath of God due for the same oppresse them let them weigh and perpend the price of their redemption the great ransome was given for them to wit the precious blood of the Son of God as 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold but with the precious bloud of Christ A ransome invaluable and
the seventh and last Member thereof MEMBER VII Accomplished all things needful for the salvation of Mankind ANd this take likewise in the form of a Doctrine and let the whole Principle be it Doct. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Cross and by his righteousness that is to say by his obedience passive and active hath perfectly alone by himself accomplished all things needful for the salvation of mankind This Principle as you know consists of seven Members six of which we have already handled particularly and so the last onely remains to be spoken of Now for the opening of it take onely two questions 1. Whether mankind hath no benefit by Christs Exaltation because the Catechisme ascribes all to his Humiliation his obedience passive and active 2. How we must in this passage understand mankind Quest 1. The first question is Whether man kind hath no benefit by Christs Exaltation because the Catechisme ascribes all to his humiliation his obedience passive and active An. Although Christs exaltation be no part of his satisfaction he by his obedience passive and active having fully satisfied his Fathers justice in the behalf of mankind why yet mankind hath great benefit by his exaltation and the severall degrees of it as his resurrection ascension and his sitting at his fathers right hand his exaltation being an essentiall part of his mediation Quest 2. How we must in this passage understand mankind Answ Although Christs satisfaction be onely effectuall to the Elect according to these places of Scripture Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his poople from their sins and John 10.15 I lay down my life for the sheep And so Ephes 5.23 He being called the Saviour of the body his body to wit the Elect why yet it cannot be denied but that his satisfaction was sufficient for all mankind for the Whole posterity of Adam according to these places following John 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sinne of the world and John 6.51 I am the living bread which came down from heaven if any man eat of this bread he shall live for ever And the bread that I will give is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world And so 1 John 4.14 We have seen and doe testifie that the Eather sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world and 1 Tim. 2.6 Who gave himselfe a ransome for all Hence it is that Christ is to be offered to all unto whom the Gospel comes As Mark 16.15 And he said unto them to wit Christ unto his Apostles goe ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature that is make a tender of Christ to every creature every reasonable creature not only Jewes but Gentiles and hence it is that the Gospel commands every man and woman to repent and beleeve in Christ as Mark 1.15 Repent ye and beleeve the Gospel that is as though our Saviour should say beleeve that you shall be saved by my merits and hence is also the universall promise of salvation made to every one that shall beleeve in Christ as John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And the truth of it is there is no defect in the remedie but in regard of the merit of Christ every man and woman becomes saveable and yet we must not think that every particular man and woman shall be saved for this is directly contrary to many places of Scripture As do but see Matth. 25.46 our Saviour having laid forth what should be the manner of his proceeding at the last day These saith he shall goe away into everlasting punishment but Matth. 7.13 14. Enter ye in at the strait gate saith Christ for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be which goe in thereat because strait is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life and few there be that find it Nay not every one that liveth in the visible Church shall be saved Matth. 20.16 Many be called to wit outwardly by the word but few chosen that is to say called effectually and so their elections manifested but Matth. 7.22 23. Many will say to me in that day to wit the day of judgment Lord Lord have not we prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out divels and in thy name have done many wonderful works And then I will professe unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity And the truth of it is there is a world of people unto whom Christ never intended to apply his merits effectually as we may observe by that passage in his prayer John 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world to wit the world of the reprobate and Luke 2.34 And Simeon blessed them and said unto Mary his Mother Behold this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel observe the phrase Is set that is to say appointed of God by an unchangeable decree as to be the rising of some so to be the fall of others and so 1 Pet. 2.8 And a stone of stumbling speaking of Christ and a rock of offence though not a cause yet an occasion of their utter ruine and perdition And as we must not think that every particular man and woman shall be saved so likewise we must not think that every particular man and woman may be saved if they will And amongst other reasons this is one justifying faith is not in mans power it being a supernaturall gift and without it no man can have any saving benefit by Christ now that justifying faith is not in mans power see John 6.44 No man can come to me saith our Saviour except the Father which hath sent me draw him No man can come to me that is no man can beleeve in me except it be given him of my Father And further because we say that Christs satisfaction was sufficient for all mankind yet only effectual to the Elect we must not think any part of it to be superfluous because the merit of Christs satisfaction is not to be applyed by parts but the whole merit is to be applyed to each particular person that shall be saved We proceed to the Uses Vse 1 For Trial and Examination whether we be of that number that can assure our selves upon good grounds that Christ is our Saviour seeing his merits are only effectual unto some to wit the Elect. Signes this way First Have we been schooled by the Law Gal. 3.24 Hath the Law brought us to a sight and sense of our natural misery Til then we cannot hunger and thirst after Christ til then we are like to the Laodiceans who thought themselves rich and wanted nothing when indeed they were poor and miserable and wretched and
life is a continual conflict The flesh lusting against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh Calat 5.17 They aime at perfection but have daily need to renew their Repentance Wee now come to the Uses Vse 1. To confute the opinion of divers men and women who will say they are justifyed and believe in Christ and yet they do not at all demonstrate the same by their Sanctification examine their lives and it is not the way of holiness they prosecute but the way of sin and disobedience In their way and course they do not turn to God but from him as the Lord complains of the obstinate Jewes Jerem. 32.33 They have turned unto me the back and not the face though I taught them rising up early and teaching them yet they have not hearkned to receive instruction It is swearing prophaning of the Sabbath uncleanness Drunkenness oppression defrauding they delight in and not the wayes of Gods Testimonies Nay divers are so far from holiness as that they cannot away with those that make a shew that way of all people they cannot brook the forward in Religion but oppose and persecute them all the wayes they can Yea how earnest against the Holy and Zealous even divers that are of civil conversation to give us light that there is a great difference betwixt common grace and sanctifying Well let the prophane person and also the meer Civilist know that he shall dye in his sin that dyeth not unto his sin and that so many as are unsanctified are unjustifyed According to that saying of our Saviour unto Peter John 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part with me Vse 2. For the great comfort and conso lation of all such as truly desire to fear God this being a truth that Justification and Sanctification are inseparable The case being so with the Godly in this world as that their Sanctification is imperfect the flesh ever lusting against the Spirit and sin ever present with them when they would do good Had they no other ground to fasten their Anchor of Hope upon but their Sanctification it could not hold them fast enough against the tempests of Satans temptations but seeing that Sanctification although imperfect is an evidence of another Righteousnesse which is perfect to wit Justification this may bear them up and support them The Apostle Paul finding his Sanctification to be imperfect the flesh to rebel against the spirit hee cryes out Rom. 7.24 Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death But considering of his Justification he comforts himself and ver 25. breaks forth into the praises of God I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord Now then to make sure we are Sanctifyed persons and therefore Justifyed persons that we be not deceived in so weighty a matter it shall not be amiss to lay down some Marks and Signs of Sanctification But because Civility and Formality do not a little resemble Sanctity it may not be unfit in the first place to distinguish them by some notes of Difference and then afterwards to lay down the distinct Signes of Sanctification 1. The Formalist in the ordinary course cares more for the pleasing of man then for the pleasing of God is more for the praise of men then of God The Scribes and Pharisees were notable Formalists and see what our Saviour saith unto them and of them Vnto them Luke 16.15 Yee are they which Justifye your selves before men Of them Mat. 23.5 All their works they do to be seen of men Such also was Saul 2 Sam. 15.13 30. and Jehu see 2 Kin. 10.16 But such as are truly Sanctified are in their ordinary course more for the praise and pleasing of God then of men more for Gods approbation then mans Psal 44.20 21. If we have forgotten the name of our God say the people of God or stretched out our hands unto a strange God shall not God search this out for he knoweth the secrets of the heart And the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 2.17 We are not as many that corrupt the word of God but as of sincerity but as of God in the sight of God speake we in Christ And 1 Thessal 2.4 As we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the Gospel even so wee speak not as pleasing men but God which trieth our hearts 2. The formalist is only for an outward righteousness little regarding inward As we may see again in the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 23.25.27 28. Wee unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye make clean the ●u●side of the cup and of the platter but within they are full of extortion and excess Wo unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye are like unto whited sepulchres which indeed appear beautifull outwardly but are within full of dead mens bones and of all uncleannesse Even so ye also outwardly appear righteous unto men but within ye are full of hypocrisie and iniquity But such as are truely sanctified do as well labour for pure hearts as clean hands grieve for evil thoughts and desires as well as for evil words and actions I do not say so much see Psal 51.10 Create in me a clean heart O God renew a right spirit within me And Psal 142.4 Incline not my heart to any evil thing and the place forecited Rom. 7.24 how the Apostle be wailes his original corruption O wretched man that I am Who shall deliver me from the body of this death 3 The formalist will seem to make conscience of greater sins as Murder Perjurie Adultery and the like but for lesser sins he makes no bones of them as wanton talking rash anger over-reaching a neighbour a shilling or two now and then in a bargain swearing by faith or troth in his usual talk and the like But the Sanctified person makes conscience of every thing he knowes to be sin from the greatest to the least 1 Sam. 24.5 Davids heart smote him because he had cut off the skirt of Sauls garment It was no great matter and yet his conscience smote him for it The truly godly person takes notice of what our Saviour saith Luke 16.10 He that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much that is he that favours himself in the least known injustice wil upon occasion commit the greatest injustice And likewise the person aforesaid regards what the Apostle James saith Chap. 1. ver 27. Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this to visit the fatherlesse and widows in their affliction and keep himself unspotted of the world The true religion much fears the least spot of sin although every day he shew weaknesse and infirmitie and so have cause to renew that suite Mat. 6.12 Forgive us our trespasses why yet he subscribes to Solomon Eccles 10.1 Dead flies cause the ointment of the Apothecary to send forth a stinking savour So doth a little folly him that is in reputation for wisdome and honour And he
Another parable spake he unto them The Kingdome of heaven is like unto leaven which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal till the whole was leavened And so Psal 92.12 13 14. The righteous shall flourish like a Palme tree he shall grow like a Cedar in Lebanon Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of our God They shall still bring forth fruit in old age they shall be fat and flourishing Motive 3. If we do not grow we go back and a declining condition is very uncomfortable what with the dolours inward and the afflictions outward which attend such an estate These be the Motives Now the Means of growth that is to say some inward helps this way for as touching outward means the next Principle intreates Means 1. We must often by our faith apply Christ to Justification The more we apprehend Gods mercy in Christ unto us this way the more our hearts turn towards him in love and obedience 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us And 2 Cor. 5.14 15. The love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again The more clearly we apprehend Christ our Justifyer the more we find in him to be our Sanctifyer See Eph 3.16 17 18 19. Means 2 We must often by our faith have recourse to Gods Promises in this kind The Lord hath made many gracious Promises to further us in the way of Sanctification as Hos 14.4 I will heal their backslidings And Rom 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you And so Mal. 4.2 Vnto you that fear my name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in his wings And ye shall go forth and grow up as calves of the stall Jer. 32.39 40. And Mat. 25.29 Vnto every one that hath shall be given and he shall have abundance Such Promises as these we must call to mind and be earnest with the Lord in Prayer to make them good unto us Branch 2. To exhort all such as are not sanctified to labor for Sanctification Motives Means Motive 1 No Sanctification no Salvation Heb. 12.14 Without holiness no man shall see the Lord And Mat. 5.20 Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees yee shall in no case enter into the kingdome of heaven and the Scribes and Pharisees were men very civil 2 By Sanctification we shall conforme to the holy God have his special image upon us which we had and lost in Adam Ephes 4.24 3 Sanctification is the end of our Election Redemption and Vocation The end of our Election Ephes 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy The end of our Redemption Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he should redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works The end of our Vocation 1 Cor 1.2 Vnto the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus called to be Saints 4 Sanctification is not the least part of glory and eternal felicity 2 Cor. 3.18 But we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory that is from one degree of grace to another even as by the Spirit of the Lord. 5 Where there is not Sanctification there can be no true faith and if no true faith why then no Justification nor Adoption These the Motives to Sanctification Now the Means or inward helps for as touching the outward means the next Principle acquaints Sanctification we know consists of Mortification and Vivification 1 Touching Mortification 1 Weigh and perpend that either sin must die or the sinner must die eternally Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh that is if sin be not mortified in you ye shall die that is to say eternally 2 Weigh and consider the great love of God in giving his Son to dye for sinners John 3.16 and wilt not thou shew love to him again by fighting against sin which he hates 3 Weigh and perpend the great love of Christ who willingly underwent that accursed death of the Cross for thy sins Now wilt thou nourish that which cost him his life Then as touching Vivification the other part of Sanctification weigh and perpend Christs Resurrection 1 The efficient cause of it to wit the Spirit of God And thus think with thy self If the same Spirit which raised up Christ from the dead dwell in me he shall raise up my soul from the death of sin to the life of grace as Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by the Spirit that dwelleth in you and as their mortal bodies at the last day why so their souls in this world 2 Meditate upon the end of Christs Resurrection which was that death might no more have dominion over him but that he might for ever live to God which should be thy study and endeavour even to live to God in a life of holiness and Righteousnesse See Rom. 6.9 10 11. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him for in that he died he died unto sin once but in that he liveth he liveth unto God Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3 Meditate upon the consequents of Christs Resurrection to wit his Ascension into heaven and his sitting at the Fathers right hand So shouldst thou labour to have thy affections above and thy conversation in heaven Colos 3.1 2. If ye then he risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God Set your affections on things above not on things on the earth And so the Apostle professeth of himselfe Philippians 3.20 Our Conversation is in heaven from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ And thus much touching the fourth Principle PRINC V. Quest What are the ordinary or usual means for obtaining of faith Answ Faith cometh only by the preaching of the Word and increaseth daily by it as also by the administration of the Sacraments and Prayer MEMB. 1. Faith cometh only by the preaching of the Word and increaseth daily by it THE fifth Principle acquaints us with the ordinary outward Means whereby faith is obtained and encreased And first the Catechisme makes known unto us the ordinary outward Means whereby faith is obtained Faith cometh only by the preaching of the word And this passage of the first Member we commend to your consideration
because she seems her husband being untowardly weak to prevent his doing of it 2 She doing it in anger And 3 With contempt of Circumcision But that it is unlawful for women to baptize is evident 1 Cor. 14.34 the Apostle not permitting a woman to teach ministerially And if not to teach why then not to baptize baptizing being a Ministerial action as well as preaching Therefore such women as have been guilty this way have great cause to humble themselves 3 To reprove the most parents few of them endeavouring to present their children to baptism as they ought 1 N●t considering and bewailing it that they have been instruments to convey sin and death to their children 2. Not examining themselves whether they be in the Covenant or no and so their children infolded and comprehended Gen. 17.7 Acts 2.39 4 Not earnest with the Lord by Prayer to remember his Covenant with them and theirs and to make it good to them and theirs 4. Not stirring up their faith to apprehend the Promise for themselves and children 5 Not rejoicing to see their children admitted into the visible Church nay to see their ingrafting into Christ confirmed sealed by Baptism Alas the most Parents make a meer complement and matter of form of it and when it is over suffer their children elder and younger to run riot never urging them with the Covenant on their part 4. To reprove such persons as when Baptism is to be administred without any extraordinary occasion depart the Congregation before not staying until the Ordinance be solemnized As though they were unwilling to be put in mind of Gods Covenant with themselves in Baptism the great benefits sealed unto them in the same or rather as though they had no mind to be remembred of their own Covenant made with God in Baptism as desirous to make good the same nay hereby demonstrating themselves to have no voice in admitting others into the visible Church or seeming by their careless departure not to value their priviledge Nay hereby denying to do that office for others which others have done for them to wit to help in prayer for the party or parties to be baptized 5. To reprove divers of Gods people too seldom calling to mind their Baptism the Solemn Covenant in that Ordinance ratified and confirmed betwixt God and themselves And this is one reason why they are so weakly assured of Gods favour and of sins remission why their corruptions are so strong and unmortified why their Graces are so weak and out of exercise why they have no more power and might against all their Spiritual enemies why after a fall they are so long in recovering and raising up again not speedily considering that Baptism although but once administred extends to all sins past present and to come 6. To reprove the most Baptized persons having the badge of Christians but living like Infidels the mark of God in their foreheads but the mark of the Divel in their lives and conversations never seriously consider the solemn Oath they took to God in Baptism there swearing that they would renounce the flesh the world and the Divel how they there consecrated themselves to God but live as though they had then consecrated themselves to the Divel Christians in name but the Divels slaves in deed living in all manner of disobedience and impiety having taken Gods Press-money but living to fight against Him his Ministers his People his Ordinances his Laws But let those forsworn runagates know that a woful Strappado attends them in this life and in the life to come So much for this Use of Reprehension Vse 3. For Tryal and Examination Whether we be inwardly baptized or no whether we find the efficacy and power of Baptism in some measure or no If we do not it is not the outward Baptism that will serve the turne It was the manner of the Jews to stand much upon outward priviledges Jer. 7.4 Mat. 3.9 Rom. 2.25 and so we divers of us stand much upon our outward Baptism but if we be not inwardly baptized we are no better in Gods esteem and account then Turks and Infidels and if we live and die without inward Baptism our outward Baptism shall but aggravate our condemnations Outward Baptism it is true is the Seal of Regeneration but the Word is the seed of it therefore try and examine we what work the Ministry of Gods Word hath had in our hearts whether by this immortal seed we be begotten to God or no 1 Cor. 4.15 Ephes 1.13 1 Pet. 1.23 Observe we what effect the Ministry of the Word hath had in us what new light hath it brought into our minds what new quality into our wills what change hath it wrought in our affections and conversations Especially examine we our affections First What love is there in us to God Do we so love him as we must needs be often chattering unto him calling him Father affectionately Gal. 4.6 2. What love to Gods word and the Messengers of it Job 23.12 1 Pet. 2.2 Acts 16.15 Gal. 4.15 Many that stand much upon their outward Baptism have no affection to the Word and the conscionable Ministers of it they cry out There was never good world since there was so much preaching But where is the power and efficacy of the baptism of such 3 What love to the People of God 1 John 3.14 But many a baptized person of all people cannot endure them Well do we observe the renewing and change aforesaid to be wrought in us then we are baptized with the Holy Ghost Can we demonstrate our true Conversion by the Word then the Seal is properly ours The more lively we feel the new Creature in us the more we find the power and efficacy of baptism Vse 4 For Exhortation 1. Te exhort Parents in presenting their children to baptism to examine themselves whether they themselves ever came into the Covenant by an actual faith or no If they have not let them labour for faith by a constant dependance upon the Ministry of the word To present a child for the Seal of Regeneration and themselves to be in the estate of nature alas what comfort can it afford unto them A man to bring his child for the Seal of that which himself hath not nay which he hath no affection unto Is it not an uncomfortable piece of business But ●f the parents be come into the Covenant by an actual faith why then let them make use of their faith in this business First By calling to remembrance the free and gracious Covenant which God hath made with them and theirs Gen. 17 7 Acts 2.39 that although their child or children by natural generation be lumps of sin and under wrath yet in regard of Gods Covenant and free acceptation they are beloved holy and blessed 2 By being earnest with the Lord to make this Ordinance effectual to their child in his own good time 3 By apprehending and fastning upon the Promise for them
the qualifications of true and acceptable prayer or the conditions and requisites of acceptable prayer First the person or party praying must be in Christ and such an one as doth not live in the practice of any known sin Gen. 44. God had respect first to Abel and then to his offering See Jam. 5.16 Psal 4.3 If the party be not in Christ or evangelically contrite he hath no promise of audience or if the partie live in the practise of any known sin what promise of audience Psal 66.18 Joh. 9.31 God heareth not sinners that is living in the practice of known sin So 1 Joh. 3.22 Secondly If we would put up acceptable prayers we must make sure that our suits and requests be grounded upon the word that we ask nothing but what the word of God warrants us to ask we must not ask as seemeth good unto our selves but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth The sons of Zebedee and their mother were reproved Matth. 20.22 because they asked they knew not what 1 John 5.14 3. If we would have our prayers acceptable to God we must come before him in all humility that is with a lively sense and feeling of our own unworthinesse and wants Psal 51.17 Isa 66.2 Jam. 4.6 God gives grace shews favour to the humble Thus Jacob Gen 32.10 and the Publican Luke 18.13 14. 4 If we would have our prayers acceptable and prevalent we must put them up with fervency and importunity James 5.16 Psal 55.17 This fervency not so much consisting 1. in the loudness of the voyce as in the wrestling of the heart Moses uttered never a word Exodus 14.15 and yet great was the fruit of his Prayer Rom. 8.26 And 2. This fervency arising not onely from a sense of want but likewise from a hope of prevailing 3. This fervency being mingled with sincerity we having good ends in this or that we would obtain of the Lord by Prayer Rom. 12.11 and not that we may consume it on our lusts 4. And lastly This fervency bounding and terminating it self in a willing submission unto Gods wise Decree we refering the time and manner of Gods accomplishing our requests unto his good pleasure Psal 40.1 It was the sin of the Israelites that they limited the holy One of Israel Psalm 78.41 they preseribed to the Lord what they would have for their provision and when they would have it 5. If we would have our Prayers acceptable and prevalent we must make sure to present them in the Name Merit and Mediation of Jesus Christ This is the condition of condition come we never so well qualified to prayer we can have no boldness in it this condition being omitted there being so great a distance betwixt God and us his Majesty and Holiness and our sinfulness and vileness nothing being due to us and our best prayers in our own names but shame and confusion all the former qualifications do but make way for this condition this being the principal requisite of acceptable prayer To this purpose see John 16.23 the latter part of the verse and Rev. 8.3 Upon this Altar we must lay the sacrifice of our prayers it is this Priest that must present them to his Father that they may be acceptable and prevalent 6. If we would have our prayers acceptable and prevalent we must ask in faith I mean confidently believing that according to Gods promise Mat. 7.7 we shall be heard our prayers granted in some kind James 1.5 and 6.7 Mark 11.24 7 Lastly If we would have our prayers acceptable and prevalent we must take heed of omitting thanksgiving Psalm 50.14 15. Phil. 4.6 Thankfulness for former favours is an excellent means to prevail in our present requests Thus much as touching the fifth Principle PRINC VI. Quest What is the estate of all men after death Answ All men shall arise again with their own bodyes to the last judgement which being ended the godly shall possess the Kingdome of heaven but unbelievers and reprobates shall be in hell tormented with the Divel and his Angels for ever IN this sixth Principle we have three notable heads of Divinity or Common places expressed or implyed 1. Death which is implyed from the words shall rise again for there cannot be a Resurrection without death 2. The general Resurrection 3. The last Judgement with the consequents thereof both expressed in this Principle For the first of these heads to wit Death The Doctrine is this Doct. There is no man nor woman living or shall live but must dye Or thus Death is unavoidable Death cannot be avoided There be three kinds of death Corporal Spiritual and Eternal Corporal death is the privation of the soul when the soul is severed or separated from the body Spiritual death is the death of the soul in sin Eternal death is the death of the soul and body in Hell It is the first kind of death to wit Corporal that the Doctrine runs upon As there be certain common Principles which runne through all Arts so this is a general Rule which concerns every man all men must dye As sure as death is our usual Proverb But 1. See we how frequently and infallibly the Scriptures hold forth this truth 2. Consult we with experience 3. Come we to the Reasons 4. To answer some objections And lastly to the Inferences or Uses First see we how frequently and infallibly the Scriptures hold forth this truth Psal 89.48 2 Sam. 14.14 Joshua 23.14 1 Kings 2.1 2. Job 30.23 Psalm 103.15 16. 146.3 4. Eccles 3.1 2. 7.1 2. Isaiah 2.22 40.6 51.12 2. concerning this truth Consult we with experience The ten Fathers of whom we read in the book of Genesis who lived every one of them almost a thousand years yet dyed at the length every one of them Some dye in the womb some in their Infancy some in their youth but they that live the longest at length their turns come It is not worldly wisdome or worldly Prerogative not outward strength or beauty not place or grace that can or ever could exempt in this kind Not worldly Wisdome Psalm 49.12 Foolish Nabal died so did politick Ahithophel Nor worldly Prerogative Princes Kings and Emperors dye and have dyed as well as others Psal 82.5 6. Did not Nimrod Ahasuerus Sennacherib Nebuchadnezzar and Alexander the great dye Behold the great King of all the East is dead so that great Soladine of Babylon and Conqueror of all Asia commanded to be proclaimed he dying in the City of Askalon commanded that his shirt should be carryed up and down the City upon a spear with this Proclamation Behold the great king of all the east is dead And as worldly Wisdome nor worldly Prerogative can exempt in this kind so neither outward Stre●gth nor Beauty Who stronger then Samson and yet he dyed Who more beautiful for a man then Absalom for a woman then Sarah and yet they both dyed Neither is it Place or Grace that can exempt
been to exhort every one of us much to think and often to meditate and that seriously upon our own death which as you may perceive will not be a little advantageous in our Christian course 2. The second part or branch of this Use is to exhort us every one of us seeing death is unavoidable cannot be avoided that we would labour to prepare and fit our selves for death But before we come to hold forth the means we will propound some Motives Motive 1. Now the first Motive we have in the Doctrine it felf death is unavoidable Motive 2. This is the main errand of our life God did not send us into this world to sin and ●o glut our selves with the creature but to bring him some honour and then to dye The Factor is not imployed to take his pleasure abroad but to negotiate for his Master and then to return home Motive 3. Death is but once and that stands in need to be well done which can be but once done Heb. 9.27 once and no more An Hour-glass when it is run out may be turn'd again but in this case it is otherwise Motive 4. When death hath done with thee then God will begin with thee Thou must once dye and after this come to judgement Heb. 9.27 Then no more praying no more fasting no more any Prophet to come unto thee in the Name of the Lord thou shalt not lye a few years in flames of wrath and then get leave to come out that thou mayest amend thy life Oh no! if once there for ever there Motive 5. Lastly consider with thy self it will be as much as thou canst do to do the work of death therefore prepare and get all thy other work done before Then haply thy friends about thee loath to part with thee and thou with them will disquiet thee extremity of pain will be upon thee and perplex thee Satan busie with thee thy conscience active and stirring It is no little no easie work to do the work of death Thus much for the Motives Now to come to the Means whereby to prepare and fit our selves for death Means 1. We must make sure to repent of all our known sins that is call them to mind unfainedly bewail them heartily confess them earhestly crave pardon of them purposing by Gods help to forsake them all Such as dye impenitently dye in their sins and that is a woful and a lamentable dying as our Saviour tels the Jewes John 8.21 24. Means 2. We must make sure of Christ that Christ is ours that we are clothed with his Righteousness 1 Cor. 15.56 57. If thou hast got Christ into thine armes by faith thou may'st boldly look death in the face Rom. 8.36 37. Phil 1.21 Having a good Christ thou may'st be confident of a good death Luke 2.28 c. Means 3. If we would be sitted and prepared for death we must make sure to have renewed natures such being onely fitted for the Bridegrooms coming as have Oyl in their Lamps An outward prosession will not serve the turn unless we have that we make profession of See Revel 20.6 and Revel 22.17 The Spirit and the Bride say Come If a man have got the Spirit the sanctifying graces of Gods Spirit into his soul to beautifie it as the Bride is with her Ornaments why then he may say to Death Come and to Christ Come Lord Jesus come quickly Means 4. That we may be prepared for death we must learn to bear and that willingly and patiently the crosses and troubles wherewith the Lord is pleased daily to exercise us see Matth. 10.37 38. Luke 9.23 And so the Apostle saith of himself 1 Cor. 15.31 that he did dye daily his meaning is that by his patient and willing bearing of those daily crosses he was subject unto he learned every day to dye So think with thy self If I cannot endure a little how shall I endure more If I cannot endure a light cross a small affliction how shall I bear the pangs of death when they come As Agamemnon first overcame the Lacedaemonians by wrastling and then by fighting And Bilney the Martyr first burned his finger in the Candle that after he might the better endure the burning of his whole body at the stake Means 5. We must labour for heavenly-mindedness sit loose to the creature have in us a holy indifferency concerning all things sublunary That which the Apostle saith of the love of money 1 Tim. 6.10 that it is The root of all evil and the cause why many are even pierced thorow with many sorrowes the truth whereof is never more seen then on their death-beds may be likewise said of the love of any other worldly thing the over-love which is the Apostles meaning in the place cited and therefore the counsel is good Psalm 62.10 Matthew 6.19 and 1 Cor. 7.29 c. Means 6. If we would be preprared and fitted for death we must walk sincerely Prov. 10.9 2 Kings 20.3 Means 7. If we would be prepared for death we must walk fruitfully Eccles 9.10 Galatians 6.10 1 Timothy 6.17 c. Luke 16.9 Means 8. Lastly such as have Families and outward estates that they may be the better ●●● pared for death should set them in order Isaih 38.1 And although I mention this the last to do this before sickness in time of health will be great wisdome By doing this they will not dye more quickly but more quiet●y And thus now we have done with the second branch of this Use 3. The third branch of this Use is to exhort so many as are in some good measure prepared for death although the Doctrine contain a most certain truth yet not to be d●smayed nor too much discouraged and this upon the grounds following 1. Because it must be but once done Heb. 9.27 Let me dye saith Seneca a heathen man and what hurt comes by that I can be bound no more I can be sick no more I can dye no more 2. Because death is a conquered enemy Christ overcame this enemy and not onely for himself but for all his Isaiah 25 8. Hos 13.14 1 Cor. 15.57 3. Because this battel being fought we shall be freed from that which hath troubled us all our life long to wit sin Death is the Funeral of our vices and the Resurrection of our graces Death was the daughter of sin and in death shall that be fulfilled The daughter shall destroy the Mother 4. Because then they shall be freed from all their toyl and labours It is a difficult thing to pray the execution of the particular calling not easie but see Revelations 14.13 5. Because then immediately after this battel fought they go to God ever to be with him and to have a Crown of glory put upon their heads by him 1 Thess 4.17 2 Tim. 4 8. 6. And lastly because divers of Gods people heretofore were so far from fearing of death as that they desired it Gen. 49.18 Luke 2.28 c. Rom. 7.24