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A28173 The sinners sanctuary, or, A discovery made of those glorious priviledges offered unto the penitent and faithful under the Gospel unfolding their freedom from death, condemnation, and the law, in fourty sermons upon Romans, Chap. 8 / by that eminent preacher of the Gospel, Mr. Hugh Binning ... Binning, Hugh, 1627-1653. 1670 (1670) Wing B2933; ESTC R6153 246,575 304

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are debters indeed but you owe nothing to the flesh but stripes and mortification SERMON XXXIV Rom. 8.13 For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the Spirit c. THough the Lord out of his absolute Soveraignty might deal with man in such a way as nothing should appear but his supream Will and Almighty Power he might simply command obedience and without any more perswasions either leave men to the frowardnesse of their own natures or else powerfully constrain them to their duty yet he hath chosen that way that is most suitable to his own wisdom and most connatural to mans nature To lay out before him the advantages and disadvantages and to use these as motives and perswasives of his Spirit for since He hath by his first creation implanted in mans soul such a principle as moveth it self upon the presentation of good or evil that this might not be in vain he administers all the dispensation of the Law and Gospel in a way suitable to that by propounding such powerful motives as may incline and perswade the heart of man It is true there is a secret drawing withall necessary the pull of the Fathers arm and power of the Holy Ghost yet that which is visible or sensible to the soul is the framing of all things so as to engage it upon rational terms it is set between two contraries death and life death which it naturally abho●reth and life which it naturally loveth an even ballance is holden up before the light of the conscience in which obedience and sin are weighed and it is found even to the convincing of the spirit of man that there are as many disadvantages in the one as advantages in the other This was the way that God used fi●st with man in Paradise you remember the terms ●un to what day thou eats thou shalt die he hedged him in on the one side by a promis● of life on the other by a threatning of death and these two are very rational restraint● ●uited to ●he ●oul of man and in the inward principles of it which are a kind of instinct to that which is app●ehen●ed good or gainfull Now this vers ●uns even so in the form of words If ye live after the flesh ye shall die you see thi● method is not changed under the Gospel for indeed it is natu●al to the spi●it of man and he hath now much more need of all such pe●swasions because there is a great change of mans inclination to the wo●st side all within is so disordered and perverse that a thousand hedges of perswasive grounds cannot do that which one might have done at fi●st then they were added out of superabundance but now out of necessity then they were set about man to preserve him in his natural ●●ame and in●linations but now they are needfull to change and alter them quite which is a kind of creation therefore sayeth David creat in me a new spirit and therefore the Gospel abounds in va●ie●y of motives and inducement● in greater variety o● far mo●e power●ul inducements then the Law He●e is that gr●a● pe●swasi●n t●k●n f●om the infinit gain or l●sse of ●●e ●●ul of man which is any thing be able to prevail this must do seing it is seconded wi●h some natural inclination in the soul of man to seek its own gain Yet there is a di●●erence between the nature of such like promises and threatning● in the fi●st covenant and in the second In the fi●st covenant though life was freely promised ●et it was immediatly annexed to per●ect obedience as a consequent ●eward o● it it was fi●stly p●omised unto compleat ●ighteousnesse of mens persons But in the second covenant firstly and principally li●e ete●nal grace and glory is promised to Jesus Christ and his ●eed antecedent to any condition or qualification upon their part and then again all the promises that run in way of condition as he that believeth sh●ll not perish c. If ye walk after the Spirit ye shall live these a●e all the consequent fruits of that absolute gracious disposition and resignation of grace and life to them whom Christ hath chosen and so their believing and walking and obeying cometh in principally as parts of the grace promised and as witnesses and evidences and confirmations of that life which is already begun and will not see an end Besides that by vertue of these absolute promises made to the seed of Christ and Christs compleat performance of all conditions in their name the promises of life are made to faith principally which hath this peculiar vertue To cary forth the soul to anothers righteousnesse and sufficiency and to bottom it upon another and in the next place to holy walking though mixed with many infirmities which promise in the first covenant was only annexed to perfect and absolute obedience You heard in the preceeding vers a strong inducement taken from the bond debt and duty we owe to the Spirit to walk after it and the want of all obligation to the flesh Now if honesty and duty will not suffi●e to perswade you as you know in other things it would do with any honest man plain equity is a sufficient bond to him yet consider what the Apostle subjoynes from the dammage and from the advantage which may of it self be the Topickes of perswasion and serves to drive in the nail of debt and duty to the head if ye will not take with this debt ye owe to the Spirit but still conceive there is some greater obligation lying on you to care for your bodies and satisfie them then I say behold the end of it what fruit you must one day reap of the flesh and service of sin If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but then consider the fruit you ●hall reap of the Spirit and holy walking ye shall live It is true the flesh may flatter you more for the present but the end of it will be bitter as death ampl●ctitur ut strangulet the flesh imbraces you that it may strangle you and so if you knew all well you would not think you owed it any thing but enmity and hatred and mortification If your duty will not move you let the love of your selves and your souls perswade you for it is an irrepealable statute The wages of sin is death Every way you choose to fulfill the lusts of your flesh and to make provision for it neglecting the eternal welfare of your souls certainly it shall prove to you the tree of the knowledge of good and evil it shall be as the forbidden fruit which in stead of performing that was promised will bring forth death the eternal separation of the soul from God Adam's sin was an Breviary or Epitome of the multiplied and en●arged sins of mankind you may see in this tragedy all your fortuns so to speak you may behold in it the flattering insinuations and deceitful promises of sin and Satan who is a liar
and by his power obtain this supream autho●y of life and death Now having his authority established in hi● person the next work is to apply this purchase act●ally to con●er this li●e and therefore he hath almighty power to raise up dead sinners to creat us again to good works to redeem us from the ty●anny o● sin and satan whose slaves we are He hath a spirit of li●e which he communicats to his seed he breaths it into these souls that he died for and dispossesseth that powerful corruption that dwells in us Hence it comes to passe that they walk after the Spirit though they be in the flesh because the powerful Spirit of Christ hath entered and taken possession of their spirits Isa. 59.20 21. Let us not be discouraged in our apprehensions of Christ when we look on our ruinous and desperat● estate let us not conclude it is past hope and past his help too We do proclaim in the name of Jesus Christ that there is no sinner howsoever justly under a sentence of death and damnation but they may in him find a relaxation from that sentence and that without the impairing of Gods justice and this is a marvelous ground of comfort that may establish our souls 1 Iohn 1.9 even this that law and justice is upon Christs side and nothing to accuse or plead against a sinner that imploys him for his Advocat But know this also that you are not delivered from death that you may live under sin nay you are redeemed from death that you may be freed from the law of sin but that must be done by his almighty Spirit and cannot be otherwayes done I know not whether of these is matter of greatest comfort that there is in Christ a redemption from the wrath of God and from hell and that there is a redemption too from sin and corruption which dwells within us but sure I am both of them will be most sweet and comfortable to a believer and without both Christ were not a compleat Redeemer nor we compleatly redeemed N●ithe● would a believing soul in which there is any measure of this new law and divine life be satisfied without both these Many are miserably deluded in their apprehensions of the Gospel they take it up thus as if it were nothing but a proclamation of freedom from misery from death and damnation and so the most part catch at nothing else in it and from thence takes liberty to walk after their former lusts and courses this is the woful practical u●e that the generality of hearers make of the free intimation of pardon and forgiveness of sin and delivery from wrath they admit some general notion of that and stops there and examines not what further is in the Gospel and so you will see the slaves of sin professing a kind of hope of freedom from death the servants and vassals of corruption who walk after the course of this world and fulfill the lusts and desires of their mind and flesh yet fancying a freedom and immunity from condemnation men living in sin yet thinking of escaping wrath which dreams could not be entertained in men if they did drink in all the truth and open both their ears to the Gospel if our spirits were not narrow and limited and so excluded the one half of the Gospel that is our redemption from sin There is too much of this even among the children of God a strange narrowness of spirit which admits not whole and intire truth it falls out often that when we think of delivery from death and wrath we forget in the mean time the end and purpose of that which is that we may be freed from sin and serve the living God without fear And if at any time we consider and busie our thoughts about freedom from the law of sin and victory over corruption such is the scantness of room and capacity in our spirits that we loss the remembrance of delivery from death and condemnation in Christ Jesus thus we are tossed between two extreams the quick-sands of presumption and wantonness and the rocks of unbelief and despair or discouragement both of which do kill the Christians life and make all to fade and wither But this were the way and only way to preserve the soul in good case even to keep these two continually in our ●ight that we are redeemed from death and misery in Christ and that not to serve our selves or to continue in our sins but that we may be redeemed from that sin that dwells in us and that both these are purchased by Jesus Christ and done by his power the one in his own person the other by his Spirit within us I would have you correcting your misapprehensions of the Gospel do not so much look on victory and freedom from sin as a duty and task though we be infinitly bound to it but rather as a priviledge and dignity conferred upon us by Christ Look not upon it I say only as your duty as many do and by this means are discouraged from the sight of their own infirmity and weakness as being too weak for such a strong party but look upon it as the one half and greater half of the benefite conferred by Christs death as the greater hall of the redempti●n which the Redeemer by his office is bound to accomplish He will redeem Israel from all his iniquities with him is plenteous red●mp●ion P●al 130.7 8. This is the plenty this is the sufficiency of i● that he redeems not only from misery but from iniquity and that all iniquities I would not desire a believers soul to be in a better posture here-away then this to be looking upon sin in●dwelling a● his bondage and redemption ●rom it as freedom to account ●im●elf in so far free as t●e free Spirit of Christ enters and w●ites that ●●ee Law of love and obedience in his heart and blots out these base characters of the law of sin It were a good temper to be groaning for the redemption of the soul and why doth a believer groan for the redemption of the body but because he shall then be freed wholly from the law o● sin and from the presence of sin I know not a greater argument to a gracious heart to subdue his corruption and strive for freedom from the law of sin then the freedom obtained from the law of death nor is there any clearer a●gument and evidence of a soul delivered from death then to strive for the freedom of the Spirit from the law of sin there jointly help one another freedom from death will raise up a Christians heart to aspire to a freedom and liberty from sin And again freedom from sin will wi●ness and evidence that such a one is delivered from death When freedom from death is an inducement to seek after freedom from sin and freedom from sin a declaration of freedom from death then all is well and indeed thus it will be in some mea●u●e with every soul
Christ the reward also of eternal life might be fulfilled by the Law to us he having removed the impediment of our weakness it might be not only possible but certain to us Y●u would consider then the reason of Christs coming God made at fi●st a Covenant with man promising him life upon perfect obedience to his law and threatning death and damnation upon the transgression thereof You see then what was the way of life to Adam in the state of innocency he was made able to sati●fie the Law with obedience and the Law was abundantly able to satisfie him by giving life unto him Gods image upon mans soul instructed him sufficiently for the one and the Lords promise made to him was as sufficient to accomplish the other so that there was no impossibility th●n upon the Law by reason of the strength which God gave man But it continued not long so sin entering upon man utterly disabled him and because the strength of that Covenant consisted in that mutual and joynt concurrence of Gods promise and mans obedience this being broken the one party falling off that life and salvation becomes impossible to the promise alone to perform It is sin that is the weakness and impotency of man this is the disease hath consumed his strength and concluded man under a two-fold impossibility an impossibility to satisfie the curse and an impossibility to obey the command There are three things in the Covenant of Works A command of obedience and a threatning of wrath and condemnation upon disobedience and a promise of life upon obedience sin hath disabled us every way in relation to the curse and threatning man cannot satisfie it no price no ransome ●ound sufficient for the soul for the redemption of it is precious and ceaseth for ever that curse hath infinit wrath in it which must needs swallow up ●●●it man And then in relation to the command there is such a diminuti●n of all the powers of the soul such a corruption and defilement by reason of the first sin that wherein mans strength lay which was Gods image is cut off and spoiled so that hence●orth it is become impossible to yield any acceptable obedience to the Commandment And hence it is from our impossibility to obey in time to come that there is a holy and faultlesse impossibility upon the promise to give life unto mankind so you see that the law cannot do it because of our weaknesse If either man while he was made upright had continued in obedience or man now fallen from uprightness could satisfie for the fault done and walk without any blemish in time coming then it w●re feasable for the Law to give life to us but the one was not done and the other now cannot be done and so the impossibility of life by works is refounded upon our selves who would not when we could and now neither will nor can obey Thus we may see clearly that all mankind must needs perish for any thing that man can do and according to that first transaction of God with man unlesse some other way and device be found out which indeed was far from the eyes of all living without the reach of their invention or imagination I believe if all the creatures higher or lower that have any reason had conveened to consult o● this business how to repair that Breach made in the Creation by mans sin they might have vexed their brains and racked their inventions unto all eternity and yet never have fallen upon any probable way of making up this breach they might have taken up a lamentation not as the bemoaners of Babylon's ruine we would have healed thee and thou wouldest not but rather thus we would heal thee but we could not and thou wouldest not This design which is here mentioned of repairing the breach by destroying that which made it sin it lay hid in the depth of Gods wisdom till it pleased himself to vent and publish it unto poor forlorn and desperat man who out of despair of recovery had run away to hide himself a poor shift indeed for him to think that he could hide himself from him to whom darkness is as light and to flee from him whose Kingdom is over all and who is present in all the corners of his universal Kingdom in hell in Heaven in the utmost corners of the earth But this silly invention shews how hopeless the case was Though this be the case and condition of man by nature yet strange it is to see every man by nature attempting his own delivery and fancying a probability ye● a certainty of that which is so impossible that is an attaining of life by our selves according to the Law and first Covenant of Works Though our strength be gone yet like Sampson men rise up and think to walk and rouse up themselves as in former times as if their strength were yet in them and many never perceives that it is gone till they be laid hold on by Satan according to the Laws injunction and bound into chains of everlasting darkness but then alace its too late for they cannot save themselves and the season of a Saviour is gone and this no doubt will be the accession of the bitterness and torment that damned souls shall be into that they dreamed of attaining life by a Law that now is nothing but a ministration of death that they lost life by seeking their own righteousness and made the Law more able to condemn them by their apprehending in themselves an ability to satisfie it and by resting in a form of obedience to it There is something natural in it Adam and all his posterity was once to be saved this way so the terms run at fi●st do this and live no wonder that something of that impression be retained but that which was a vertue in Adam while he retained integrity and fulfilled his duty is a might● fault and presumptuous madness in us who have fallen from that blessed estate If man doing his duty expected a reward according to the promise it was commendable but for man now rebellious and stubborn and come short of the glory of God to look for a reward from God against whom he warreth continually and that for rebellion and enmity it is damnable But besides this I think this principle of self-righteousness is much corrupted in man now by what it was in Adam I conceive though Adam looked for life upon obedience according to the promise yet he rested not on and trusted not in his obedience I believe a holy and righteous man would be a humble man too and would rather glory in Gods grace then in his own works the sense of a free and undeserved promise would not suffer him to reflect so much upon his own obedience or put such a price upon it But now it s conjoyned with unmeasureable pride and arises only from self-love There is no ground of mens looking to be saved by their own doings but the in-bred pride
things Hos. 8.12 As thing● that you have not much to do with Do you not let the Officers of Jesus Christ all the sweet invitations of the Gospel passe by as strangers and as if ye were unconcerned in them What taste have they more then the white of an egg How unsavoury a discourse or thought to a carnall heart is it to speak of subduing the lusts of the flesh of dying to the world of the world to come Who findeth their hearts inwardly stirred upon the proposal of Jesus Christ But if any matter of petty gain were proffe●ed O! how would men listen with both their ears How beautiful in the eyes of the covetous mind is any gain and advantage the sound of money is sweeter to him then this blessed sound of peace and salvation How sweet is pleasure to the voluptuous What suitablenesse and conveniency is apprehended in these perishing things but how little moment or weight is conceived and believed to be in things eternal O how substantial do things visible seem to men and how triffling do other things invisible appear But for you whose eyes are opened to you Christ is precious to you the things of the Spirit are beautiful and all your grief is that you cannot affect them according to their worth or love them according to their beauty I say some there are who do see a substance and subsistance only in things not seen Heb. 11.1 And for things that are seen and visible in this world they do account them shadows only in comparison of things invisible The world apprehend no realities but in what they see but a Christian apprehends no solide reality in that he sees but only in that he sees not and therefore as in his judgment he looks upon the one as a shadow the other as a substance so he labours to proportion and conform his affection to a suitable intertainment of them to give a shadow or show of affection to the things of this life but the marrow and substance of his heart to the things invisible of another life Thus the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 c. Rejoycing as if we rejoyced not enjoying as if we possessed not using as if we used not half acts for half objects if we give our whole spirits the strength of our souls and minds to them we are as foolish as he that strikes with all his strength at the air or a feather there is no solidity or reality in these things able to bottom much estimation or affection only mind them and use them as in the by as in passing through towards your Countrey SERMON XVIII Rom. 8.5 6. For they that are after the flesh do mind c. For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minminded is life and peace THere are many differences among men in this world that as to outward appea●ance are great and wide and indeed they are so eagerly pursued and seriously minded by men as if they were great and momentous You see what a strife and contention there ●s among men how to be extracted out of the dregs of the multitude and set a little higher in dignity and degree then they how do men affect to be honourable above the base how do they seek to be rich and hate poverty These differences of poor and rich high and low noble and ignoble learned and unlearned the thoughts of men are wholly taken up with But there is one great difference that is most in Gods eye and is both substantial and eternal and so infinitely surpasseth all these d●ffe●ences that the minds of men most run out upon and it is he●e the great difference between flesh and spirit and them that are after the flesh and them that are after the sp●rit This is of all other most considerable because widest and durablest I say it is the widest of all for all other● put no great difference between men as men they do reach the peculia● excellency of a man that is the true and proper good of his spiritual and immortal part they are such as befalls alike to good and bad and so cannot have either much good or much evil in them I have seen folly set in great dignity and Princes walking on foot Eccle● 10.6 7. Then certainly such titles of honour and dignity such places of eminency erected above the multitude have little or nothing worth the spirit of a man in them seeing a fool a wicked man is as capable of them as a wise man or a man of a princely spirit and ●o of all others they do not elevat a man as a man above others A poor unlearned mean man may have more real excellency in him then a rich learned and great person But thi● draws a substantial and vast difference indeed such as is between flesh and spirit such as is between men and beasts You know what p●eheminency a man hath over a beast there is no such wide distance among the s●ns of men as between the lowest and meanest man and the chiefest beast There is a spirit in man saith Elihu Job 32.8 An immortal eternal substance of a far higher nature and comprehension You know what excellency is in the spirit beyond the flesh such as is in heaven beyond the earth for the one is breathed from Heaven and the other is taken out of the dust of the earth the one is corruptible yea corruption it self the other incorruptible How swi●t and nimble are the motions of the Spirit from the one end of Heaven to the other How can it compasse the earth in a moment Do but look and see what a hudge difference is between a beautiful living body and the same when it s a dead carcass rotten and corrupted It is the spirit dwelling within that makes the odds that makes it active beautiful and comely but in the removal of the spirit it becometh a piece of the most defiled and loathsome dust in the world Now I say such a vast and wide difference there is between a true Christian and a natural man even taking him in with all his common indowments and excellencies the one is a man the other a beast the one is after the flesh the other after the spirit It is the ordinary compellation of the Holy Ghost man being in honour and understanding not is like the beasts that perish Psal. 49.20 and Psal. 94.8 Vnderstand ye bruitish among the people c. and Psal. 92.6 The bruitish man understands not this And Eccles. 3.18 That they themselves may know that they are but beasts Therefore you find the Lord often turning to beasts to insensible creatures thereby to reprove the folly and madness of men Isa. 1.2 and Ier. 8.7 Man hath two parts in him by which he hath affinity to the two m●st distant natures he stands in the midle between Angels and beasts in his spirit he riseth up to an Angelick dignity and in his body he fall● down to a bruitish condition Now which
eye which would make offend and stumble in the way but let the remembrance of the life to come sweeten it all when men undergo the hazard of losing life for a little pleasure when for a poor petty advantage men will endure so much pains and trouble O what should eternal life and such a life as the best li●e here is but death to it how should it mitigat and sweeten the bitterness of mortification how should it fortifie our spirits to much endurance and patience A battel we must have for these lusts that we disingage from the Devil and the World besides will lay wait for us in this way but when for such small and inconsiderable advantages men will endure all the disadvantage of war of a long war O how should the expectation of this peace which incloses and comprehends all felicity all well-being animat and strengthen us to fight in into the City of life and peace eternal SERMON XX. Rom. 8.7 Because the carnal mind is enmity against God and is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be UNbelief is that which condemns the world it involves in more condemnation then many other sins not only because more universal but especially because it shuts up men in their misery and secludes them from the remedy that is brought to light in the Gospel By unbelief I mean not only that careless neglect of Jesus Christ offered for salvation but that which is the root of that The inconsideration and ignorance of our desperat sinfulness and irremediless misery without Christ which not being laid to heart seriously makes such slight and superficial intertainment of a Saviour and Redeemer Man is truly miserable and unhappy whether he know it or not but truly it is an accession to his misery that he knows it not that he neither apprehends what he is now by nature nor what he must shortly be made by Justice Indeed if there were no remedy to be ●ound it were a happy ignorance To be ignorant of misery the knowledge and remembrance of it could do nothing but add unto the bitterness of it if a man might bury it in eternal forgetfulness it were some ease But now when God hath in His mercy so appointed it that the beginning of the belief of sin and misery shall in a manner be the end of miser● and seing whether men know it or not they must shortly be made sensible of it when there is no remedy to be ●ound then certainly it is the hight of mans misery That he knows and considers it not If we would apply our hearts at length to hear what God the Lord speaks for he only can give account of man to himsel● we might have a survey of both in these words and the preceeding of our desperat wickedness and of our intollerable misery for the present by nature we are enemies to God and shortly we must be dealt with as enemies as rebels to the most potent and glorious King be punished with death an endless living death Experience shews how hard a thing it is to perswade you that you are really under the sentence of death you will not suffer your hearts to believe your danger left it interrupt your present pleasures of sin Nay you will flatter your selves with the fancied hope of immunity from this curse and account it a cruel and rigorous Doctrine That so many creatures made by God should be eternally miserable or a sentence of it should be past on all flesh Now that which makes us hardly to believe this is the unbelief and deep inconsideration of your sinfulnesse therefore the Apostle to make way for the former adds Because the carnal mind is enmity against God Do not wonder then that your wayes and courses your affections and inclinations bring forth that ghostly and dreadfull end of death seing all these are enmity to the greatest King who alone hath the power of life and death They have a perfect cont●ariety to His holy Nature and righteous Will not only is the carnal mind an enemy but enmity it self and therefore it is most suitable that the soveraign power of that King o● kings stretched out to the vindication of His Holiness and Righ●eousness by taking vengeance on all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men If rebellion in a State or Monarchy against these petty mortal gods who shall die as men be so hainous as to de●erve death by the consent of all Nations how much more shall enmity and rebellion against the immortal ete●nal King who hath absolute right and dominion over his creatures as over the clay have such a suitable recompence of eternal death Now my beloved if you once believed this the enmity and opposition of your whole natures to God you could not but fearfully apprehend what might be the issue of it you could not blesse your selves as you do and put the evil day far off but certainly you would be affrighted with the terrour and Majesty of that God you have to do with whom when he awakes to judgment you can neither resist nor escape no standing against his wrath and no fleeing from it out of His Dominions and this would dispose and incline your minds in time to hea●ken ●o the treaty of peace which is holden out in the Gospel and to lay down the weapons of your enmity and make peace with Him in His Son the Peace-maker Amity and Unity is the very being and beauty of the world This universe is made up of innumerable different kinds and natures and all these climb and walk together by the bond of peace and concord among themselves and with that One high understanding that directs all and supream will of God that moves all It is that link of union with God that gives and preserves being and beauty in all the creatures as the dependence of the ray upon the Sun or the stream on the fountain makes them what they are which being interrupted they cease to be what they were All things continue as thou hast ordained them for all are thy servants Ps. 119.91 You see then this amity and union of subordination of the creatures to God is not dissolved to this day But wo●ull and wretched man alone hath withdrawn from this subordination and dissolved this sacred tye of happy friendship which at first he was li●ted up unto and priviledged with Amity and friendship you know consists in an union of hearts and wills and a communion of all good things it makes two one as much as two can be by the conspiracy of their affections in one thing and the joynt concurrence of their endeavours to communicat to one another what each hath it takes away propriety and it makes a community between persons Now how happy was that amity how blessed that friendship between God and man Though mans goodness could not extend to God yet his soul united to God by love and delight and all that God had given him returning that to
greatest fear is death not so much because of it self but chiefly because of that eternity of unchangeable misery that naturally it transmitts them unto Now it is only Christian Religion possessing the heart that a●mes a man compleatly against the fear either of death it self or the consequents of it it giveth the most powerful consolation that not only overcometh the bitternesse and taketh out the sting of death but changeth the nature of it so far as to make it the matter of triumph and gloriation There is something here supposed the worst that can befall a Christian it is the death of a part of him and that the worst and ignoblest part only the body is dead because of sin Then that w●ich is opposed by way o● comfort to counterballance it is the life of his better and more noble part And besides we have the founta●ns both of that death and this life mans sin the cause of bodily death Christs righteousnesse the fountain of spiritual life Of death many have had sweet meditations even among these that the light of the Word hath not shined upon and indeed they m●y make us ashamed who prosesse Christianity and so the hope of the resurrection from the dead that they have accounted it only true wisdom and sound Philosophy To meditat often on death and made it the very principal point of living well To be alwayes learning to die and have applyed their whole studies that way neglecting present things that are in the by have given themselves to search out some comfort against death or from death Yea some have so profited in this that they have accounted death the greatest good that can befall man and perswaded others to think so Now what may we think of our selves who scarce apprehend mortality especially considering that we have the true fountain of it revealed to us and the true nature and consequents of it All men must needs know that death is the most universal King in the world that it reigns over all ages sexes conditions nations and times though few be willing to entertain thoughts of it yet sooner or later they must be constrained to give it lodging upon their eye lids and suffer it to storm the very strongest tower the heart and ba●●er it down and break the strings of it having no way either to flee from it or resist it Now the consideration of the general inundation of death over all mankind an● the certain appro●ching of it to every particular mans door hath made many serious thoughts among the wise men of the world But being destitute of this heavenly light that ●hineth to us they could not attain to the original of it but have conceived that it was a common tribute of nature and an universal Law imposed upon all mankind by nature having the same reason that other m●tations and changes among the creatures here below have and ●o have thought it no more strange thing then to see other things dissolved in their elements Now indeed seeing they could apprehend no other bitter ingredient in it it was no wonder that the wisest of them could not fear it but rather wait and expect it as a rest from their labours as the end of all their miseries But the Lord hath revealed unto us in his Word the true cause of it and so the true nature of it The true cause of it is sin sin entred into the world and death past upon all for that all have sinned Rom. 5.12 Man was created for another purpose and upon other conditions and a Law of perpetual life and eternal happinesse was past in his ●avours he abiding in the favour and obeying the will of Him that gave him life and being Now sin inte●posing and separating between man and God loosing that blessed knot of union and communion it was this other law that succeeded as a suitable recompence Thou shall die It is resolved in the Council of Heaven That the union of man shall be dissolved his soul and body separated in just recompence of the breaking the bond of union with God This is it that hath opened the sluce to let in an inundation of misery on mankind this was the just occasion of that righteous but terrible appointment It is appointed that all men once should die and after death cometh to Iudgment Heb. 9.27 That since the body had inticed the soul and suggested unto it such unnatural and rebellious motions of withdrawing from the blessed fountain of life to satisfie its pleasure the body should be under a sentence of deprivement and ●orfeitour of that great benefite and priviledge of life it had by the souls indwelling and condemned to return to its first base original the dust and to be made a feast of worms to lodge in the grave and be a subject of the greatest corruption and rottennesse because it became the instrument yea the incitement of the soul to sin against that God that had from Heaven breathed a spirit into it and exalted it above all the dust or clay in the world Now my beloved do we not get many remembrances of our sin Is not every day presenting our primitive departure from God our fi●st separation from the fountain of life by sin to our view and in such sad and woeful effects pointing out the hainousnesse of sin Do you not see mens bodies every day dissolved the tabernacle of earth taken down and the soul constrained to remove out of it But what influence hath it upon ●s what do the multiplied funeralls work upon us It may b● sorrow for our friends but little or no apprehension of our own mortality and base impression of sin that separats our souls from God Who is made sadly to reflect upon his original or to mind seriously that statute and appointment of Heaven in that day thou shalt die It is strange that all of us fear death and few are afraid of sin that carrieth death in its bosome That we are so unwilling to re●p corruption in our bodies and yet we ●re so earnest and l●borious in sowing to the flesh Be not deceived for you are dayly reaping what you have sowen And O that it were all the harvest but death is only the putting in of the sickle of vengea●ce the first cut of it But O to think on what follows would certainly restrain men and cool them in their fervent pursuits after sin SERMON XXVIII Rom. 8.10 The body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life because of righteousnesse THE sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law saith our Apostle 1 Cor. 15.56 These two concur to make man mortal and these two are the bitter ingredients of death Sin procured it and the Law appointed it And God hath seen to the ex●ct execution of that Law in all ages for what man liveth and shall not taste of death Two only e●caped the common lot Enoch and Elias for they pleased God and God took them
Christ. Here is a blessed message to condemned lost sinners who have that sentence within their breasts vers 1. This was the end of Christs coming and dying that he might deliver us from sin as well as death and the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us and therefore he hath given the holy Spirit and dwels in us by the Spirit to quicken us who are dead in sins and trespasses O! what consolation will this be to souls that look upon the body o● death within them as the greatest misery and do groan with Paul O miserable man that I am c. Rom. 7.24 This is held forth to vers 17. But because there are many grounds of heavinesse and sadnesse in this world therefore the Gospel opposes unto all these both our expectation which we have of that blessed hope to come whereof we are so sure that nothing can frust●at us of it And also the help we get in the mean time of the Spirit to bear our infirmities and to bring all things about for good to us vers 28. And from all this the believer in Jesus Christ hath ground of triumph and boasting before the perfect victory Even as Paul doth in the name of believers from vers 31. to the end Upon these considerations he that cryed out not long ago O miserable man who shall deliver me doth now cry out Who shall condemn me The distressed wrestler becomes a victorious triumpher the beaten Souldiour becomes more than a Conquerour Oh that your hearts could be perswaded to hearken to this joyful sound to embrace Jesus Christ for grace and salvation how quickly would a song of triumph in him swallow up all your present complaints and lamentations All the complaints amongst men may be reduced to one of these three I hear the most part bemoaning the●selves thus Alace for the miseries of this life this evil world Alace for poverty for contempt for sickness Oh miserable man that I am who will take this disease away who will shew me any good thing Psal. 4. any temporal good But if ye knew and considered your latter end ye would cry out more ye would refuse to be comforted though these miseries were removed But I hear some bemoaning themselves more sadly they have heard the Law and the sentence of condemnation is within them the Law hath entred and killed them Oh! what shall I do to be saved Who will deliver me from the wrath to come What is al● present afflictions and miseries in respect of eternity Yet there is one moan and lamentation beyond all these when the soul finds the sentence of absolution in Jesus Christ and gets its eyes opened to see that body of death and sin within that perfect man of sin diffused throughout all the members then it bemoans it self with Paul Oh miserable man who shall deliver me from this body of death Rom. 7.24 I am delivered from the condemnation of the Law but what com●ort is it as long as sin is so powerful in me Nay this makes me often suspect my delivery from wrath and the curse seing sin it self is not taken away Now if ye could be perswaded to hearken to Jesus Christ and embrace this Gospel O! what abundant consolation should ye have what a perfect answer to all your complaints they would be swallowed up in such a triumph as Pauls are here This would discover unto you a perfect remedy of sin and misery that ye should complain no more or at least no more as these without hope You shall never have a remedy of your temporal miseries unlesse ye begin at eternal to prevent them Seek first the kingdom of God and all other things shall be added unto you seek fi●st to flee from the wrath to come and ye shall escape it and beside the evil of time-afflictions shall be removed first remove the greatest complaints of sin and condemnation and how easie is it to answer all the lamentations of this life and make you rejoice in the midst of them You have in this verse three things of great importance to consider The great and precious priviledge the true nature and the special property of a Christian. The priviledge is one of the greatest in the world because it s of eternal consequence and soul concernment the nature is most divine he is one that is in Jesus Christ and implanted in him by faith his distinguishing property is noble sureable to his nature and priviledges he walkes not as the world according to his base flesh but according to the spirit All these three are of one latitude none of them reaches further than another that rich priviledge and sweet property concenters and meets together in one man even in the man who is in Jesus Christ whoever enters into Jesus Christ and abideth in him he meets with these two Justification and Sanctification these are no where else and they are there together If ye knew the nature and properties of a Christian ye would fall in love with these for themselves but if the●e for your own sakes will not allure you consider this incomparable priviledge that he hath beyond all others that ye may ●all in love with the nature of a Christian. Let this love of your selves and your own wel-being pu●sue you in to Jesus Christ that ye may walk even as he walked and I assure you if ye were once in Christ Jesus ye would love the very nature and walking of a Christian no more for the absolution and salvation that accompanies it but ●or its o●n sweetnesse and excellency beyond all other Ye would as the people of Samaria no mo●e believe for the report of your own nece●●●ty and misery but ye would believe in Jesus Christ and walk according to the Spirit for their own testimony they have in your consciences Ye would no more be allured only with the priviledges o● it to embrace Ch●istianity but ye would think Christianity the greatest priviledge a reward ●nto it self Pietas ipsa sibi merces e●t Godlinesse is great gain in it self though it had not such sweet consequents or companions That you may know this priviledge con●●der the estate all men are into by nature Paul expresses it in sho●t Rom. 5. By the offence of ōne judgemnt came upon all unto condemnation and the reason of this is by one man sin came upon all and so death by sin for death passed upon all because all have sinned vers 18.12 Lo then all men are under a sentence of condemnation once This sentence is the curse of the Law Cursed is every one that abideth not in all things commanded to do them If ye knew what this curse were ye would indeed think it a priviledge to be delivered from it Sin is of an infinite deserving because against an infinite God it s an offence of an infinite Majesty and therefore the curse upon the sinner involves eternal punishment O! what weight is in that word 2 Thes. 1.9 Ye
sin and so die for it yet by this means he hath condemned sin by being condemned for sin by this means he hath overcome death and the grave by coming under the power of death and so is now alive for ever to improve his victory for our salvation and by taking on our sin● he hath fully abolished the power and plea of them as the goat that was sent to the wilderness out of all mens sight was not to be seen again Truly this is the way how our sins are buried in the grave ●f oblivion and removed as a cloud and cast into the depths of the Sea and sent away as far as the East is from the West that they may never come in judgment against us to condemn us because Christ by appeasing wrath and satisfying Justice by the sacrifice of himself hath overthrown them in judgment and buried them in the grave with his own body You see then my beloved a solid ground of consolation against all our fears and sorrows an answer to all the accusations of our sins here is one for all one above all You would have particular answers to satisfie your particular doubts you are alwayes seeking some satisfaction to your consciences besides this but believe it all that can be said besides this atonement and propitiation is of no more vertue to purge your consciences or satisfie your perplexed souls then these repeated sacrifices of old were Whatsoever you can pitch upon besides this it is insufficient and therefore you find a necessity of seeking some other grace or qualification to appease your consciences even as they had need to multiply sacrifices but now since this perfect and full propitiation is offered up for our sins should not all these vain expiations of your own works cease Truly there is nothing can pacifie Heaven but this and nothing can appease thy Conscience on earth but this too If you find any accusation against you consider Christ hath by a sacrifice for sin condemned sin in his own flesh the marks of the spear of the nails of the buffettings of his flesh these are the tokens and pledges that he encountered with the wrath due to your sins and so hath cut off all the right that sin hath over you If thou can unseignedly in the Lords sight say that it is thy souls desire to be delivered from sin as well as wrath thou would gladly flee from condemnation th●n come to him who hath condemned sin by suffering the condemnation of sin that he might save these who desire to flee from it to him SERMON XIV Rom. 8.4 That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. GOD having a great design to declare unto the world both his justice and mercy towards men he found out this mean most suitable and proportioned unto it which is here spoken of in the 3. vers to send his own Son to bear the punishment of sin that the righteousness of the Law might be freely and graciously fulfilled in sinners And indeed it was not imaginable by us how he could declare both in the salvation of sinners we could not have found out a way to declare his righteousnesse and holinesse which would not have obscured his mercy and grace nor a way to manifest his grace and mercy which would not have reflected upon his Holiness and Justice according to the letter of the Law that was given out as the rule of life he that doth them shall live in them and cursed is every one that doth them not c. W●at could we expect if this be fulfilled as it would appear Gods truth and holinesse requires then we are gone no place for mercy if this be not fulfilled that mercy may be shewed in pardoning sin then the truth and faithfulnesse of God seems to be impaired This is the strait that all sinners would have been into if God had not found such an enlargement as this how to shew mercy without wronging Justice and how to save sinners without impairing his faithfulnesse Truly we may wonder what was it that could straiten his Majesty so that he must send his own Son so beloved of him and bruise him and hide his face from him yea and torment him and not let the cup pass from him for any intreaties might he not more easily have never added such a commination to the Law Thou shalt die or more easily relaxed and repealed that sentence and past by ●he sinner without any more then exacted so heavy a punishment from one that was innoncent Was it the satisfaction of his Justice that straitned him and put a necessity of this upon him But truly it seems it had been no more contrary to righteousnesse to have past over the sinner without satisfaction then to require and take it off one who was not really guilty The truth is it wa● not simply the indispensible necessity of satisfying Justice that put him upon such an hard and unpleasant work as the bruising of his own Son for no doubt he might have as well dispensed with all satisfaction as with the personal satisfaction of the sinner but here the strait lay and here was the urgency of the case he had a purpose to declare his justice and therefore a satisfaction must be had not simply to satisfie righteousnesse but rather to declare his righteousnesse Rom. 3.25 Now indeed to make these two shine together in one work of the salvation of sinners all the world could not have found out the like of this to dispense with personal satisfaction in the sinner which the rigour of the Law required and so to admit a sweet moderation and relaxation that the riches of his grace and mercy might be manifested and yet withall to exact that same punishment of another willingly coming in the sinners place to the end that all sinners may behold his righteousnesse and justice and so this work of the redemption of sinners hath these Names of God published by himself Exod. 34.6 7. to Moses engraven deeply upon it mercy and goodnesse spelled out at length in it for love was the rise of all and love did run alongs in all yet so as there is room to speak out his holiness and righteousness and justice not so much to afright sinners as to make his mercy the more amiable and wonderfull I know not a more pressing ground of strong consolation nor a firmer bulwark of our confidence and salvation then this conjunction of Mercy and Justice in the business there might have been alwayes a secret hink of jealousie and suspition in our minds when God publisheth mercy and foregiveness to us freely O! how shall the Law be satisfied and the importunity of justice and faithfulness that hath pronounced a sentence of death upon us answered Shall not the righteous Law be a loser this way if I be saved and it not satisfied by obedience or suffering how hard would it be to perswade a soul of free pardon that sees such
the flesh all your time never once seriously to rise up in the consideration of eternity or lift up your heads above temporal and earthly things and yet in the close to ascend unto Heaven No no do not deceive your selves you must go forward this life and eternity makes one straight line either of ascent or descent of happines● or misery and since you have bowed down alwayes while in the body there is no rising up after it forward you must go and that is downward to that element which you transformed your spirits into that is the earth or below the earth to hell your spirits hath most affinity with these and down they must go ●s ● sto●e to the earth But if you would desire to have your spirits ascending up to heaven when they are let out of this prison the body take heed which way they turn bend and strive while here in the body If your struglings be to be upward at God if you have discovered that blessedness is in him and if this be the predominant of your spirit that carries it upward in desires and endeavours and turns it off the base study of satisfying the flesh and the base love of the world if thy soul be mounting alost on these wings of holy desires of a better life then can be found in any thing below certainly the motion of thy spirit will be in ● straight line upward when thou leaves thy dust to the earth An●els waits to carry that spirit to that bosom● of Christ where it longed and liked most to be but devils do attend the souls of most part of men to thrust them down below the earth because they did still bend down to the earth SERMON XVII Rom. 8.5 For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh c. THough sin hath taken up the principal and inmost Cabinet of the heart of man though it hath fixed its Imperial Throne in the spirit of man and makes use of all the powers and faculties in the soul to accomplish its accursed desires and fulfill its bo●ndless lusts yet it is not without good reason expressed in Scripture ordinarily under the name of flesh and a body of death and men dead in sins are said to be yet in the ●lesh The reason is partly because this was the rise of mans first ruine or the chiefest ingredient in his first sin his hearkning to the suggestions of his flesh against the clear light and knowledge of his spirit The Apple was beautiful to look on and sweet to the taste and this eng●ged man thus the voluntary debasement and subjection of the spirit which was breathed in of God unto the service of that dust which God had appointed to serve it hath turned into a necessary slavery so that the flesh being put in the Throne cannot be cast out and this is the righteous judgment of God upon man that he that would not serve so good and so high a Lord should be made a drudge and slave to the very dregs of the Creation Partly again because the flesh hath in it the seeds of the most part of these evil fruits which abound in the world the most part of our corruptions have either their rise or their increase from the flesh the most part of the evils of men are either conceived in the flesh or brought forth by it by the ministry and help of our degenerat spirits And truly this is it that makes our returning to God so hard and difficult a work because we are in the flesh which is like stubble disposed to conceive flame upon any sparkle of a temptation there are so many dispositions and inclinations in the body since our fall that are as powerful to carry us to excess and inordinatness in affection or conversation as the natural instincts of beasts do d●ive them on to their own proper operations You know the flesh is oft●n times the greatest impediment that the spirit hath because of its lumpishness and earthly q●ality how willing would the spirit be how nimble and active in the wayes of obedience if it were not ●etarded dulled and clogged with the heavy lump of our flesh The spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak saith Christ Matth. 26.41 Truly I think the great re●issness negligence weaknes● fainting of Christians in their race of Christianity ariseth ordinarily from this weight that is carried about with them that is must be some extraordinary impulse of a higher spirit to drive us on without wearying And because of this indisposition of the flesh we are not able to bear much of Gods presence in this life it would certainly confound mortality if so much were let out of it as is in Heaven no more then a weak e●e can endure to behold the Sun in its brightness An● then the flesh as it is the greatest retardment in good it is the greatest incitement to evil it is a bosome-enemy that betrays us to Satan it is near us and connatural to us and this is the great advantage Satan hath of a Christian he hath a f●iend within every Christian that betrays him often You know the most part of temptation● from without could have no such force or strength against us if there were not some predisposition in the flesh some seeds of that evill within if they were not presented with some suitableness to our senses and they being once engaged on Satans side they easily draw the whole man with them under a false colour and pretence of friendship therefore they are said to war against the soul 1 Pet. 2.11 And they are said easily to beset us Heb. 12.1 Truly it is no wonder that the enemy storm our City when the out-works yea the very Ports of the City are possessed by traitors no wonder Satan approach near the walls with hi● temptations when our senses our fleshly part is so apt to receive him and ready to entertain all objects without difference that a●e suitable to affect them You see then how much power the flesh hath in man so that it is no wonder that every ●atural man hath this denomination one after the flesh one carnal from the predomining part though the worst part Every man by nature till a higher birth come may be called all flesh all fashioned and composed of the flesh and after the flesh even his spirit and mind fleshly and earthly sunk into the flesh and transformed into a bruitish quality or nature Now the great purpose of the Gospel is to bring alongs a deliverer unto your spirits for the releasing and unsettering of them from the chains of fleshly lusts This is the very work of Christianity to give liberty to the captive souls of men and the opening of the prison to them that are bound Isai. 63.1 The souls o● men are chained with their own fleshly ●usts and if at any time they can break these grosser chains a●●ome ●iner spirits have escaped out of the vilest
in lesser things and shall we be mad self-willed and refractory in the greatest thing that concerns us eternally O! unbelief is that which will condemn the world the unbelief of this one thing that the walking a●●er and minding of the flesh is mortal and deadly Though all men confesse with their tongues this to be a truth yet it is not really believed the deep inconsideration and slight apprehension of this truth makes men boldly to walk and violently to run on to perdition Did you indeed believe that eternal misery is before you at the end of this way and would you be so cruel to your selves as to walk in it for any allurement that is in it Did you really believe That there is a precipice into utter darkness and everlasting death at the end of this alley would the pleasure and sweetness of it be able to in●atuat you and besott you so far as to lead you on into it like an Ox to the slaughter and a fool to the correction of the stocks It is strange indeed thou you neither will believe that death is the end of these things nor yet can you be perswaded that you do not believe it there is a twofold delusion that possesses the hearts of men one is a dream and ●ancy of escaping death though they live in sin another is a dream and fancy that they do believe that death is the wages of sin We might wonder how they consist together if we did not find it by so many experiences Your way proves that you do not believe it that death is the end of it and then your words evidence that you do not believe That you are unbelievers of that O! how desperat is the wickedness and how great is the deceitfulness of the heart The false Prophet that is in every mans bosome deceives him that it may destroy him As Satan is a liar and murderer and murders by lying so the heart of man is a self-murderer and self-destroyer and that is done by lying and d●ceiving There is some lie in every ●in but there is this grosse black fundamental lie at the bottom of all sin A conceit of immunity and freedom from death and hell a strong imagination of escaping danger even though such a way be chosen and walked into as of its own nature inevitably leads to destruction And there is something of this bloody murdering flattery even in the hearts of Christians therefore this Apostle gives us an antidot against it and labours often to purge it out by stirring up that knowledge they have received Know you not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 Be not deceived God is not mocked for what a man soweth that he shall reap he that soweth to the flesh shall reap corruption c. Gal. 6.7 8. O! that you might listen to this word to this watch word given you and stop your course at least for a season to think what shall be the latter end know ye not that such shall not inherit the Kingdom know you not that the way to heaven lyes upward know you not that your way lyes downward towards the flesh and the earth are you so far demented as to think to come to Heaven by walking just downward in the lusts of the flesh Truly this is the strongest and strangest inchantment that can be that you think to sow one thing and reap another thing to sow darkness and reap light to sow corruption and reap incorruption Is that possible in nature to sow nettle-seed and think to ●eap barley or wheat Be not deceived O that you would undeceive your poor deluded souls and know that is as natural for Death and Hell to grow out of sin and walking after the flesh as it is for every seed to yeeld its own fruit and herb Do you then think to disolve the course and order of nature Truly the flesh is mortal in it self it s ordained for corruption you see what it turns to after the life is out that is an embleme of the state of the fleshly soul after death As you did abase your spirits to the service of the flesh here and all your plowing and labouring and sowing was about it the seed which you did cast in the ground was Fleshly lusts earthly things for the satisfaction of your flesh so you shall reap of the flesh Corruption death and destruction that shall make your immortal spirits mortal and corruptible and subject them to death and corruption with the body as far as they are capable it shall deprive them of all that which is their proper life and refreshment and separat them eternally from the fountain of blessedness and banish them out of Heaven unto the fellowship of devils and Oh! that corruption of the incoruptible spi●it is worse then the corruption of the mortall flesh corruptio optimi pessima Now who ever of you is thus far undeceived as to believe your danger and misery and to discern that imbred delusion of your hearts be not discouraged utterly there may be hope of recovery when you see your disease I say if you see that hell is at the end of your way then know that He who sent that voice to call you off that way of death He leaves you not to your own wits to guide you into the right way but He follows with a voice behind you ●aying Here is the way walk in it turn not out of it to the right hand or left and this voice sounds plainly in the Word and it is nothing el●e but the sound of the Gospel that blessed sound that invites and allures you to come in to Jesus Christ the way truth and life the true way to the true life All other wayes all other lifes have no truth in them it s but a cloud a fancy that men apprehend and lay hold on But come to this way and it will truly lead thee to the true life eternal life if you flee unto him out of the apprehension of your danger you have a clear way to come to God and as plain a way to attain life and peace Being in Christ you have assurance of not falling into condemnation He is such a way as will hold you in and not suffer you to go out of it again to the way of Death And therefore he will give you a Tutor a guider and directer in this way to life and peace and that is the Holy Spirit to lead in all truth and to guide your feet in the way of his Commandments so that in this new and living way of Christ you shall have both light of the Word to know where to walk and life of the Spirit to make you walk toward that eternal life and thus grace and truth is come by Christ. Indeed you must suffer the mortification of your flesh you must endure the pain of the death of your lusts the cutting off your right hand and plucking out your right
character of all our evidences and rights for Heaven disowns many as bastards and dead members withered branches and certainly according to this word He will judge you the word that I have spoken shall judge you in the last day O that is a heavy word you have the very rule and method of proceeding laid down before you now which shall be punctually kept at that great day Now why do you not read your ditty and condemnatory sentence here registred If you do not read it now in your consciences he will one day read it before men and Angels and pronounce this I know you not for mine you are none of mine But if you would now take it to your hearts there might be hope that it should go no further and come to no more publick hearing there were hope that it should be repealed before that day because the fi●st entry of the Spirit of Christ is to convince men of sin that they are unbelievers and without God in the world and if this were done then it were more easie to convince you of Christs righteousnesse and perswade you to embrace it and this would lead in another link of the chain the conviction of judgement to perswade you to resign your selves to the Spirits rule and renounce the kingdom of Satan this were another trinity a trinity upon earth three bearing witnesse on the earth that you have the Spirit of God Vers. 10. All the preceeding verses seem to be purposly set down by the Apostle for the comfort o● Christians against the remnants of sin and corruption within them ●or in the preceeding Chapter he person●●● the whole body of Christ militant shewing in his own ex●mple how much sin r●mains in ●he ●●lie●t in this life and this he rather instances in his own person then another that all may know that matter of continual sorrow and lamentation is furnished to the chiefest of Saints and yet in this chapter he propounds the consolation of Christ●●ns more generally that all may know That these priviledges and immunities belong even to the meanest and weakest of Christians that as the best have reason to mourn in themselves so the worst want not reason to rejoice in Jesus Christ. And this would alwayes be minded that the ●mplest grounds of strongest consolation are general to all that come indeed to Jesus Christ and are not restricted unto Saints of such and such a grouth and stature the common principles of the Gospel are more full of this milk of consolation if you would suck it out of them then many particular grounds which you are laying down for your selves God hath so disposed and contrived the work of our s●lvation that in this life he that hath gath●red much in some respect hath nothing over that is to say hath no more reason to boast then another but will be constrained to sit down and mourn over his own evil heart and the emptiness of it and he that hath gathered lesse hath in some sense no want I mean he is not excluded and shut out from the right to these glorious priviledges which may expresse gloriation and rejoycing from the heart that there might be an equality in the body he maketh the stronger Christian to partake with the weaker in his bitter things and the weaker with the stronger in his sweet things that none of them may conceive themselves either dispised or alone regarded that the Eunuoh may not have reason to say I am a dry tree Isa. 56.3 For behold the Lord will give even to such a place in his house and a name better then of sons and daughters The soul that is in sincerity aming at this walk and whose inward de●ires ●●irrs after more of this holy Spirit he will not refuse to such that name and esteem that they dare not take to themselves because of their seen and sel● unworthinesse Now in thi● vers he proceeds further to the fruits and effects of sin dwelling in us to enlarge the consolation against that too Now if Christ be in you the body c. Seeing the word of God hath made such a connexion between ●in and de●th and death is the wages of sin and that which is ●he 〈◊〉 compence of enmity and rebellion ●gainst God the poor t●oubled soul might be ready to conceive That is the body be adjudged to death for sin that ●he rest of the wages shall be payed and sin havi●g so much dominion as to kill the body that it should exerce its full power to destroy all seing we have a visible character of the curse of God engraven on us in the mortality of our bodies it may look with such a visage on a soul troubled for sin as if it were but earnest of the full curse and weight of wrath and that sin were not fully satisfied for nor Justice fully contented by Christs ransome Now he opposes to this misconception the strongest ground of consolation If Christ be in you though your bodies must die for sin because sin dwelleth in them yet that spirit of life that is in you hath begun eternal life in your soul● your spi●its are not only immortal in being but that eternal happy being is begun in you the seeds of it are cast into your souls and shall certainly grow up to perfection of holiness and happiness and this through the righteousnesse of Christ which assureth that state unto you The comfort is it is neither total for it is only the death of your bodie nor is it perpetual for your bodies shall be raised again to life eternal vers 11. And not only is it only part and for a season but it is for a blessed end and purpose it is that sin may be wholly cleansed out that this tabernacle is taken down as the ●eprous houses were to be taken down under the Law and as now we use to cast down Pest-lodges the better to cleanse them of the infection It is not to prejudge him of life but to install him in a better life Thus you see that it is neither total nor perpetual but it is medicinal and profitable to the soul it is but the death of the body for a moment and the life of the soul for ever SERMON XXVII Rom. 8.10 And if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin c. THis is the high excellency of Christian Religion that it contains the most absolute precepts for an holy life and the greatest comforts in death for from the●e two the truth and excellency of Religion is to be measured if it have the highest and perfectest rule of walking and the chiefest comfort withall Now the perfection of Christianity you saw in the rule how spiritual it is how reasonable how divine how free from all corrupt mixture how transcending all the most exqui●ite precepts and laws of men deriving a holy conver●ation from the highest fountain the Spirit of Christ and conforming it to the highest pattern the will of God And
and besides it was for a pledge that at the last day all shall not die but be changed The true cause of death is sin and the true nature of it is penal to be a punishment of sin take away this relation to sin and death wants the sting But in it● fi●st appointment and as it prevails generally over men a●ulea●a est mors it hath a sting that pierceth deeper and woundeth so●er then to the dissolution of the body it goeth in to the innermost pa●●s of the soul and w●undeth that eternally The truth is the death of the body is not either the first death or the last death it is rather placed in the middle between two deaths and it s the fruit of the first and the root of the last There is a death immediatly hath ensued upon sin and it is the separation of the soul from God the fountain of life and blessedness and this is the death often spoken of you who were dead in sins and trespasses c. Eph. 2.1 Being past feeling and alienated from the life of God Eph. 4.18 19. And truly this is worse in it ●elf then the death of the body simply though not so sensible because ●piritu●l the corruption of the best p●●t in man in all reason is worse then the corruption of his worst part but this death which consists especially in the losse of that blessed communion with God which made the soul happy cannot be found till some new life enter or else till the last death come which adds infinit pain to infinit losse Now the death of the body succeeds thi● souls death and that is the separation of the soul from the body most suitable seeing the soul was turned from the fountain spirit to the body that the body should by his command return to dust and be made the most defi●ed piece of dust Now this were not so grievous if it were not a step to the death to come and a degree of it introductive to it But that statute and appointment of Heaven hath thus linked it after death comes Iudgment Because the soul in the body would not be sensible of its separation from God but was wholly taken up with the body neglecting and miskenning that infinit losse of Gods favour and face therefore the Lord commands it to go out of the body that it maythen be sensible of its infinit loss of God when it is separated from the body that it may then have leasure to reflect upon it self and find its own surpassing misery and then indeed infinit pain and infinit losse conjoyned eternal banishment from the presence of that blessed Spirit and eternal torment within it self these two concurring what posture do you think such a soul will be into There are some earnest of this in this life when God reveals his terrour and sets mens sins in order before their face O how intolerable is it and more insupportable then many deaths They that have been accquainted with it have declared it the terrours of God are like poysonable arrows sunk into Jobs spirit and drinking up all the moisture of them Such a spirit as is wounded with one of these darts shot from Heaven who can bear it not the most patient and most magnanimous spirit that can sustain all other infi●mities Prov. 18.14 Now my beloved if it be so now while the soul is in the body drowned in it what will be the case of the soul separated from the body when it shall be all one sense to reflect and consider it self This is the sting of death indeed worse then a thousand deaths to a soul that apprehends it and the lesse it is apprehended the worse it is because it is the more certain and must shortly be found when there is no brazen serpent to heal that sting Now what comfort have you provided against this day what way do you think to take out this sting Truly there is no balm for it no Physitian for it but one and that the Christian is only acquainted with He in whom Christ is he hath this soveraign antidot against the p●yson of Death he hath the very sting of it taken out by Ch●●st death it self killed and of an mortal enemy made the kindest friend And so he may triumph with the Apostle O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Thanks be to God in Iesu● Christ who giveth us the victory 1 Cor. 15.55 The ground of his triumph and that which a Christian hath to oppose to all the sorrows and pains and fears of death mustred against him is threefold one that death is not real a second that is not total even that which is and then that it is not perpetual This last is contained in the next vers the second expressed in this vers and the first may be understood or implyed in it That the nature of death is so far changed that of a punishment it is become a medicine of a punishment for sin it is turned into the last purgative of the soul from sin and thus the sting of it is taken away that relation it did bear to the just wrath of God And now the body of a Christian under appointment to die for sin that is for the death of sin the eternal death of sin Christ having come under the power of death hath gotten power over it and spoiled it of its stinging vertue he hath taken away the poysonable ingredient of the curse that it can no more hurt them that are in Him and so it is not now vested with that piercing and wounding notion of punishment though it be true that sin was the first in-lett of death that it first opened the sl●ue to let it enter and flow in upon mankind yet that appointment of death is renewed and bears a relation to the destruction of sin rather then the punishment of the sinner who is f`orgiven in Christ And O how much solid comfort is here that the great reason of mortality that a Christian it subject unto is that he may be made free of that which made him at first mortal Because sin hath taken su●h possession in this earthly tabernacle and is so strong a poyson that it hath infected all the members and by no purgation here made can be fully cleansed ●ut but there are many secret corners it lurks into and upon occasion vents it self therefore it hath pleased God in His infinit goodnesse to continue the former appointment of death but under a new and living consideration to take down this infected and defiled tabernacle as the houses of leprosie were taken down under the Law that so they might be the better cleansed and this is the last purification of the soul from sin And therefore as one of the Ancients said well That we might not be eternally miserable mercy hath made us mortal Justice hath made the world mortal that they may be eternally miserable but to put an end to this misery
Christ hath continued our mortality Else he would have abolished death it self if he had not meant to abolish sin by death and indeed it would appear this is the reason why the world must be consumed with fire at the last day and new Heavens and earth succeed in its room because as the little house the body so the great house the world was infected with this leprosie so subjected to vanity and corruption because of mans sin therefore that there might be no remnant of mans corruption and no memorial of sin to inte●upt his eternal joy the Lord will purify and change all all the members that were made instruments of unrighteousness all the creatures that were servants to mans lusts a new form and fashion shall be put on all that the body being restored may be a fit dwelling place for the purified soul and the world renewed may be a ●it house for righteous men Thus you see that Death to a Christian is not real death for it is not the death of a Christian but the death of sin his greatest enemy it is not a punishment but the enlargement of the soul. Now the next comfort is that which is is but partial it is but the dissolution of the lowest part in man his body so far from prejudging the immortal life of his spirit that it is rather the accomplishment of that Though the body must die yet eternal life is begun already within t●e soul for the Spirit of Christ hath brought in life the Righteousnesse of Christ hath purchased it and the Spirit hath performed it and applyed it to us not only there is an immortal being in a Christian that must survive the dust for that is common to all men but there is a new life begun in him an immortal well being in joy and happinesse which only deserveth the name of life that cometh never to its full perfection till the bodily and earthly house be taken down If you consider seriously what a new life a C●●ist●●n is ●●●a●lated unto by the operation of the Holy Ghost and the ministration of the word it is then most active and lively when the soul is most retired from the body in meditation the new life of a Christian is most perfect in this life when it carrieth him the furthest distance from his bodily senses and is most abstracted from all sensible engagements as you heard for indeed it restores the spirit of a man to its native rule and dominion over the body so that it is then most perfect when it is most g●thered within it self and disingaged from all external intanglements Now certain it is since the perfection of the soul in this life consists in such a retirement from the body that when it is wholly separated from it then it is in the most absolute state of perfection and its life ●cts most purely and pe●fectly when it hath no body to communicat with and to entangle it either with its lusts or necessities The Spirit is life it hath a life now which is then best when furthest from the body and therefore it cannot but be surpassing better when it is out of the body and all this is purcha●ed by Christs righteousnesse As mans disobedience made an end of his life Christs obedience hath made our life endlesse He suffered death to sting him and by this hath taken the sting from it and now there is a new statute and appointment of Heaven published in the Gospel whosoever believeth in Him shall not perish but have eternal life Now indeed this hath so intirely ch●nged the nature of death that i● hath no● the most lovely and desirable aspect on a Christian that it is no more an object of fear but of desire amicable not terrible unto him since there is no way to save the passenger but to let the vessel break he will be content to have the body splitted that himself that is his soul may escape for truly a mans soul is himself the body is but an earthly tabernacle that must be taken down to let the inhabitant win out to come near his Lord the body is the Prison-house that he groans to have opened that he may enjoy that liberty of the sons of God And now to a Christian death is not properly an object of patience but of desire rather I desire to be dissolved and be with Christ Phil. 1.23 He that hath but advanced little in Christianity will be content to die but because there is too much flesh he will desire to live but a Christian that is riper in knowledge and grace will rather desire to die and only be content to live he will exercise patience and submission about abiding here but groanings and pantings about removing hence because he knoweth that there is no choice between that bondage and this liberty SERMON XXIX Rom. 8.10 The body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life c. IT was the first curse and threatning wherein God thought fit to comprehend all misery Thou shalt die the death in that day thou eatest though the sentence was not presently executed according to the letter yet from that day ●orward man was made mortal and there seemeth to be much mercy and goodness of God interveening to plead a delay of death it self that so the promise of life in the second Adam might come to the first and his posterity and they might be delivered ●rom the second death though not from the first Alwayes we bear about the markes of sin in our bodies to this day and in so far the threatning taketh place that this life that we live in the body is become nothing else but a dying life the life that the ungodly shall live out o● the body is a living death and either of these is worse then simple death or destruction of beeing The serious contemplation of the miseries of this life made wise Solomon to praise the dead more then the living contrary to the custom of men who rejoyce at the birth of a man-child and mourn at their death yea it pressed him further to think them which have not at all been better then both because they have not seen the evil under the Sun this world is such a Chaos such a masse of miseries that if men understood it before they came into it they would be far more loath to enter into it then they are now afraid to go out of it And truly we want not remembrances and representations of our misery every day in that children come weeping into the world as it were bewailing ●heir own misfortune that they were brought forth to be sensible subjects of misery And what is all our life-time but a repetition of sighs and groan● anxiety and satiety loathing and longing dividing our spi●its and our time between them How many deaths must we suffer before death come for the absence or losse of any thing much desired is a sep●ration no lesse g●ievous to the hearts of men
then the pa●ting of soul and body for affection to temporal pe●ishing things unites the soul so unto them that there is no parting without pain no dissolution of that continuity without much vexation and yet the soul must suffer many such tortures in one day because the things are perishing in their own nature and uncertain What is sleep which devours the most part of our time but the very image and picture of death a visible and daily representation of the long cessation of the sensitive life in the grave and yet truly it is the best and most innocent part of our time though we accuse it often there is both lesse sin and lesse misery in it for it is almost the only leniment and refreshment we get in all our miseries Iob●ought ●ought it to asswage his grief and ease his body but it was the extremity of his misery that he could not find it Now my beloved when you find that which is called life subject to so much misery that you are constrained often to desire you had never been born you find it a valley of tears a house of mourning from whence all true delight and solid happiness is banished seing the very Officers and Serjeants of death are continually surrounding us and walk alongs with us though unpleasant company in our greatest contentments and are putting marks upon your doors as in the time of the Plague upon houses infected Lord have mercy upon us and are continually bearing this motto to our view and ●ounding this direction to our ear● cito procul diu to get soon out of Sodom that is appointed for destruction to fly quickly out of our selves to the refuge appointed of God even one that was dead and is alive and hath redeemed us by his blood and to get far off from our selves and take up dwelling in the blessed Son o● God through whose flesh there is accesse to the Father seing all these I say are so why do not we awake our selves upon the sound of the promise of immortality and life brought to our ears in the Gospel Mortality hath already seized upon our bodies but why do ye not catch hold of this opportunity of releasing your souls from the chains and setters of eternal d●ath Truly my beloved all that can be spoken of torments and miseries in this life I suppose we could imagine all the exquisite torments invented by the most cruel tyrants since the beginning to be combined in some one kind of torture and would t●●n st●etch our imagination beyond that as far as that which is compo●ed of all torments surpasseth the simplest death yet we do not conceive nor expresse unto you that death to come Believe it when the soul is out of the body it is a most pure activity all sense all knowledge and seing where it is dulled and dampished in the body it is capable of so much grief or joy pleasure or pain we may conclude That being loosed from these stupifying earthly chains that it is capable of infinit more vexation or contentation in a higher an● purer strain Therefore we may conclude with the Apostle that all men by nature are miserable in life but infinitly more miserable in death only the man who is in Jesus Christ in whose spirit Christ dwells and hath made a temple of his body for offering up reasonable service in it that man only is happy in life but far happier in death happy that he was born but infinitly more happy that he was born mortal born to die for if the body be dead because of sin the spirit is life because of righteousnesse Men commonly make their accompts and calculat their time so as if death were the end of it truly it were happinesse in the generality of men that that computation were true either that it had never beg●n or that it might end here for that which is the greatest dignity and glory of a man his immortal soul it is truly the greatest misery of sinful men because it capacitats them for eternal misery But if we make our accompts right and take the right period truly death is but the beginning of our Time of endlesse and unchangeable endurance either in happinesse or misery and this life in the body which is only in the view of the short-sighted sons of men is but a strait and narrow passage into the infinit ocean of eternity but so inconsiderable it is that according as the spirit in this passage is fashioned and formed so it must continue for ever for where the tree falleth there it lyeth There may be hope that a tree will sprout again but truly there is no hope that ever the damned soul shall see a spring of joy and no fear that ever the blessed spirits shall find a winter of grief such is the evennesse of eternity that there is no shadow of change in it O then how happy are they in whose souls this life is already begun which shal then come to its Meridian when the glory of the flesh falls down like withered hay into the dust the life as well as the light of the righteou● is progressive its shining more and more till that day come the day of Death on●y worthy to be called the present day bec●●se it brings perfection it mounts the soul in the highest point of the Orb and there is no declining from that again The spirit is now alive in some holy aff●ctions and motions breathing upwards wrestling towards that point the soul is now in pa●t united to the fountain of life by loving attendance and obedience and it i● longing to be more cl●●ly united the inward senses are exercis●● about spiritual thing● but the burden of this clayie mansion dot● much dull and damp them and proves a great Remora to the spiri● the body indispo●es and weakens the soul much its life as in an Infant though a reasonable soul be there yet overwhelmed with the incapacity of the organs this body is truly a prison of restraint and confinement to the ●oul and often loathsome and ugly through the filthinesse of sin But when the spirit is delivered from this necessary burden and impediment O how lively is that life it then lives then the life peace joy love and delight of the soul surmounts all that is possible here further then the highest exercise of the soul of the wisest men surpasses the bruitish-like apprehensions of an infant and indeed then the Christian comes to his full stature and is a perfect man when he ceaseth to be a man How will you not be perswaded beloved in the Lord to long after this life to have Christ fo●med in your hearts fo● truly the generality have not so much as Christ fashioned in their outward habit but a●e within da●kn●sse and ea●thinesse and wickednesse and without impiety and pr●fanity will you not long for this life for now you are dead while you live as the Apostle speaks of widows that live in pleasure
comprehensive of all that can be imagined to be the perfective good of man It is no wonder then that the Apostle reckon this Doctrine of the Resurrection amongst the foundations of Christianity Heb. 6.1 2 for truly these t●o the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the mortal body are the two ground-stones or pillars of true Religion which if they be not well settled in the hearts of men all Religion is tottering and ruinous and unable to support it self That the soul cannot taste death or see corruption and that the body shall but taste it and as it were salute it and cannot alwayes abide under the power of it these are the prime foundations upon which all Christian perswasion is built for without these be laid down in the lowest and deepest part of the heart all exhortations to an holy and righteous life are weak and ineffectual all consolations are empty and vain in a word Religion is but an airy speculation that hath no consistence but in the imaginations of men it is an house upon sand that can abide no blast of temptation no wave of misery but must straight way fall to the ground From whence is it I pray you that the perswasions of the Gospel hath so little power upon men that the plain and plentiful publication of a Saviour is of so small vertue to stir up the hearts of men to take hold on him How comes it to passe that the preeepts and prohibitions of the most high God coming forth under his authority lays so little restraint on mens corruptions that so few will be perswaded to stop their course and come off the wayes they are accustomed that men pull away the shoulder and stop the ear and make their hearts as adamant incapable of being affected with either the authority or love of the Gospel that when He pipes unto us so few dance and when he mourns so few laments Is it not because these two foundations are not laid and mens hearts not digged deep by earnest consideration to receive these ground-stones of Christianity the belief of their souls eternal survivance after the dust and of the revivance and resurrection of the body after it hath slept a while in the dust I remember Heathens have had some noble and rare conceptions about vertue and some have laboured to enamour men with the native beauty of it and to perswade them that it was a sufficient reward to it self and truly it would far more become a Christian who knoweth the high and divine pattern of holinesse to be God himself and so must needs behold a far surpassing beauty and excellency in the Image of God than in all earthly things I say it would become him to accustome himself to a dutiful observance of Religion even without all respect to the reward of it he would train his heart to do homage to God out of a loyal affection and respect to His Majesty and from the love of the very intrinsick beauty of obedience without borrowing alwayes from such selfie considerations of our own happinesse or misery Notwithstanding such is the posture of mans spirit now that he cannot at all be engaged to the love of Religion except some Seen advantage concilat it and therefore the Lord makes use of such selfie principles in drawing men to Himself and keeping them still with Him and truly considering mans infirmity this is the spi●it and life of all Religion Immortality and Resurrection that which gives a lustre to all and quickens all that which mak●s all to sink deep and that which makes a Christian stedfast and immovable 2 Cor. 5.8 It is certainly Hope that is the key of the heart that opens and shuts it to any thing These the Apostle Peter 1 Epist. 1. blesseth God heartily for the new birth and in the expressing of it makes hope the very term of that generation and so it must be a substantial thing Blessed be God who hath begotten us again to a lively hope Hope hath a quickning power in it it makes all new where it comes and is full of spirit it is the Helmet and Anchor of a Christian that which bears the dint of temptation and makes him steady in Religion No man will put in his plough in this ground or sow unto the Spirit but in hope for he that soweth must sow in hope else his Plough will not go deep 1 Cor. 9.10 This then is the very spirit and life of Religion the resurrection of the dead without which our faith were in vain and men would continue still in their sins Certainly it is the deep inconsideration of this never-ending endurance of our souls and restitution of our bodies to the same immortality that makes the most part of men so slight and superficial in Religion else it were not possible if that were laid to heart but men would make Religion their business and chief business We have here the two genuine causes of the resurection of the bodies of Christians the resurrection of Christ and the inhabitation of his Spirit The influence that the resurrection of Christ hath on ours is lively and fully holden out by this Apostle 1 Cor. 15. against them who deny the resurrection from the dead If Christ be not raised your faith is in vain ye are yet in your sins and they that are asleep are perished Religion were nothing but a number of empty words of show Preaching were a vanity and imposture Faith were a meer ●ancy if this be not laid down as the ground-stone Christ raised not as a natural person but as a common politick person as the first fruits of them that sleep vers 17 18 19 20. where he alludes to the ceremony of offering the first fruits of their harvest Lev. 23.10 for under the Law they might not eat of the fruits of the land till they were sanctified all was counted prophane till they were someway con●ecrated to the Lord. Now for this end the Lord appointed them to bring one sheaf for all and that was the representative o● all the rest of the heap and this was waved before the Lord and lifted up from the earth now according to the Apostles argument Rom. 11 16. If the first fruits be h●ly so is the lump for it represents all the lump and therefore Iesus Christ the chief of all his brethren was made the first fruits from the dead and lifted up from the grave as the representer of all the lump of his elect and so it must needs follow That they shall not continue in the grave but must in due time partake of that benefite which he was first entred in possession of in their name and for them for if this fi●st fruits be holy so the whole lump must be holy and if the first fruits be risen so must the lump You see then the force of the present reason If the Spirit that raised Christ dwell in you He shall also raise you namely because he
the Holy Ghost hath levelled us all in this point of duty as he hath equally exalted all in the most substantial dignities and priviledges of the Gospel this bond is upon the highest and upon the lowest greatnesse doth not exempt from it and meanness doth not exclude from it though commonly great persons fancy an ●●munity from the stricknesse of a holy conversation because of their greatnesse and often mean an● low persons pretend a freedom from such a high obligation because of their lownesse yet certainly all are debt-bound this way and must one day give accompt You that are poor and unlearned and have not received great things of that nature from God do not think your selves free do not absolve your selves for there is infinit debt besids that you will have no place for that excuse that you had not great parts were not learned and so forth for as the obligation reaches you all so there is as patent a way to the exercise of Religion in the poorest cottage as in the highest Palace you may serve God as acceptably in little as others may do in much there is no condition so low and abject that layeth any restraint on this noble service and imployment this jewel loses not its beauty and vertue when it lyeth in a dung-hill more then when it is set in gold But let us inquire further into this debt we are debters saith he and he instanceth what is not the creditor by which he giveth us to understand Who is the true creditor not the flesh and therefore to make out the just opposition it must be the Spirit we are debters then to the Spirit And what is the debt we owe to Him we may know it that same way we owe not to the flesh so much as to make us live after its guidance and direction and fulfill its lusts then by due consequence we owe so much to the Spirit as that we should live after the Spirit and resign our selves wholly to Him his guidance and direction There is a twofold kind of debt upon the creature one remissible and pardonable another irremissible and unpardonable so to speak the debt of sin and that is the guilt of it which is nothing else then the obligation of the sinner over to eternal condemnation by vertue of the curse of God every sinner cometh under this debt to Divine Iustice the desert of eternal wrath and the actual ordination by a divine sentence to that wrath Now indeed this debt was insoluble to us and utterly unpayable untill God sent His Son to be our Cautioner and he hath payed the debt in his own person by bearing our curse and so made it pardonable to sinners obtained a relaxation from that woful obligation to death and this debt you see is wholly discharged to them that are in Christ by another sentence repealing the former curse vers 1. there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. But there is another debt which I may call a debt of duty and obedience which as it was antecedent to sin even binding innocent Adam so the obligation of the debt of sin hath been so ●●r from taking it away that it is rather increased exceedingly and this debt is unpardonable and indispensible the more of the debt of sin be pa●doned and the more the curse be dispensed with the more the sinner owes of love and obedience to God she loved much because much was forgiven and the more was forgiven of ●in the more she owed of love and the more debt was discharged the more she was indebted to Him and therefore after this general acquitance of all believers vers 1. he presseth this obligation the more strongly therefore brethren we are debters It is like that debt spoken of Rom. 12. Owe no man any thing but to love one another which is not meant that it is unlawful to be debters to men but rather what ye owe or all things else pay it and ye are free your debt ceases and your bond is cancelled but as for the debt of love and benevolence you must so owe that to all men as never to be discharged of it never to be freed from of it when you have done all this hath no limitation of time or action Even so it is here other debts when payed men cease to be debters then they are free but here the more he pay the more he is bound to pay he oweth and he oweth eternally his bond is never cancelled as long as he continues a creature subsisting in God and abides a redeemed on in Christ for these continuing his obligation is eternally recent and fresh as the first day and this doth not at all obscure the infinit g●ace of God or diminish the happinesse of Saints that they are not freed from this debt of love and obedience but rather illustrats the one and increases the other for it cannot be supposed to consist with the wisdom and holinesse of God to loose his creature from that obligation of loving obedience and subjection which is essential to it and it is no lesse repugnant to the happinesse of the creature to be ●●ee from righteousnesse unto sin Now this debt of duty and obedience hath a threefold bond which because they stand in vigor un●ancelled for all eternity therefore the obligation arising from them is eternal too The bond of Creation the bond of Redemption and the bond of Sanctification these are distinguished according to the Persons of the Trinity who appear most eminently in them We owe our beeing to the Father in whom we live and move and have our being for He made us and not we our selves and we are all the works of his hands Now the debt accruing from this is infinit if men conceive themselves so much oblidged to others for ● petty courtesie as to be their Servants if they owe more to their Parents the instruments of their bringing forth into the world O how infinitly more owe we to God of whom we are and have all Doth the Clay owe so much to the Potter who doth not make it but fashion it only and what owe we to Him that made us of nothing and fashioned us while we were yet without form Truly all relations all obligations evanish when this cometh forth because all that a man hath it lesse then Himself then his immortal spirit and that he oweth alone to God and besides whatsoever debt there is to other fellow-creatures in any thing God is the principal creditor in that bond all the creatures are but the Servants of this King which at his sole appointment bring alongs his gifts unto us and therefore we owe no more to them then to the hands of the messenger that is sent Now by this accompt nothing is our own not our selves not our members not our goods but all are His and to be used and bestowed not at the will and arbitrement of creatures but to be absolutly and solely at his
is no other thing then what we owe to our selves and to our own natures so to speak for truly there is a con●ormity and suitablenesse of some things to the very nature of man that is beautiful some things are decent and becomes it other things are undecent and uncomely unsuitable to the very reasonable beeing of man so that they put a stain and blot upon it Now indeed there is nothing can be conceived more agreeable to the very constitution of mans nature then this that the far better and more excellent part should lead and command and the baser and earthly part should obey and follow that the flesh should minister and serve the spirit Doth not even Nature it self teach it and yet no heavier yoke is put upon us then what our own nature hath put upon 〈◊〉 already which indeed is wonderful and certainly this wonderful attempering of his Laws unto the very natural exigence of the spirit of man make the transgression of them so much the more hainous Now all these three forementioned bonds do joyntly bind on this Law upon man in general they oblidge strongly to subjection and obedience to the will of God but particularly they have a constraining influence upon this living after the spirit not after the flesh our very creation speaks this forth when God made man after his own Image when he beautified the spirit of man with that divine similitude and likenesse in that he breathed a spirit from Heaven and took a body out of the dust and then exalted that heavenly piece to some participation of his own nature Doth not all this cry aloud upon u● that the order of creation is now dissolved that the beauty of it is ma●●ed that all is turned up ●ide-down when mens passions and senses are their only gui●s and the principles of light in their conscience are choakt and ●●i●●led Doth not all this teach us plainly that we should not live after the flesh that we owe not so much to this bruitish part as to enthrone it and impower it over us that it were the vilest Anarchy and most intole●able confusion and usurpation to give it the power over u● as most men do that there can be no order or beauty in man till the spirit be unfettered from the chains of fleshly lust● and restored to the native dignity and preheminency and so keep the body in subjection And indeed Paul was so 1 Cor. 9.27 I keep my body in subjection and beat it down because it is an imperious slave an usurping slave and will command if not beaten and kept under Again Christ hath put a bond upon us to this very same he hath strengthned this obligation with a ne● cord in that he gave his precious life a ransome for the souls of men this was the principal thing he payed for the body only being an accessory and appendix to the soul for it is said The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever Ps●l 49.8 and What can a man give in exchange for his soul Mark 8.37 For what material thing can equalize a spirit Many things may be had more preciou● and fine than the body but all of them have no proportion to a spiritual being Now then in that so dear a ransome and so infinit a p●ice must be given for the spirit of man it declares the infinit worth and excellency of it above the body and above all visible things and here indeed the greatest confirmation that can be imagined God hath valued it he hath put the soul of man in the ballance to find something equal in weight of dignity and worth and when all that is in Heaven and Earth is put in the other scale the soul is down-weight by far there is such distance that there is no proportion only the life and blood of his own Son weighs it down and is an overvalue and thus in our redemption we have a visible demonstration as it were of the infinit obligation of this Law not to live after that contemptible part our flesh but to follow after the motions and directions of an enlightned spirit not to spend our thoughts care and time upon the body and making provision for the lusts thereof as most men do and all by nature a●e now inclined to do but to be taken up wi●h the immortal preciou● Jewel that is within how to have it 〈◊〉 and cleansed from all the filth that sin and the flesh hath cast 〈◊〉 and restored to that native beauty the image of God in righteousness and holiness If you in your practice and affecti●n 〈◊〉 the scales otherwise and make the body and things of the body ●uppose the whole world down-weight in your affection and imagination you have p●ainly cont●adicted the just measu●e of the Sanctuary and in effect you declare that Christ died in vain and gave his life out of an errour and mistake of the worth of the soul you say he needed not have given such a price for it seing every day you weigh it down with every triffle o● momentany fleshly satisfaction Lastly the Spirit binds this fast upon us for the soul of man he hath chosen for his habitation and there he delights to dwell in the hea●t o● the contrite and humble and this he intends to beautifie and garnish and to restore it to that primitive excellency it once had The Spirit of man is nea●er his nature and more capable of being con●o●med unto it and therefore his peculiar and special work is about our spirits first to enlighten and convince them then to reform and direct them and lead them and this binds as fo●cibly and constraineth a believer certainly to ●esign himself to the Spirit to study how to order his walk a●ter that di●ection and to be more and more abstracted from the satisfaction of his body else he cannot choose but g●ieve the Spirit his b●st friend which alone is the fountain o● joy and peace to him and being grieved cannot but grieve himself next Now my beloved con●●der if you owe so much to the flesh whether or not it be so steadable and profitable unto you and if you think it can give you a sufficient reward to compense all your pains in satisfying it go on But I believe you can ●eckon no good office that ever it did you and your expectation is lesse what fruit have you of all but shame and vexation of conscience and what can you expect but death the last fruits of it wha● then do you owe unto it are you debters to its pleasure and satis●●cti●n which hath never done you good and will do you eternal hurt consider whether you are so much bound and oblidged to it as to lose your souls for it one of them must be and whether or not you be not more oblidged to God the Father and his Son Iesus Christ to live after the Spirit though for the present it should be painful to beat down your body You
and murderer from the beginning and murdered man at first by lying to him you find the hook covered over with the varnished b●it of an imaginary life and happinesse satisfaction promised to the eye to the taste and to the mind and upon these inticements man bewitched and withdrawn from his God after these vain and empty shadows which when he catched hold upon he himself was caught and laid hold upon by the wrath of God by death and all the miseries before it or alter it Now here is the Mapp of the World for all that is in the world is but a larger volume of that same kind the lust of the eyes the lust of the flesh and the pride of life Albeit they have been known and found to be the notablest and grossest deceivers and every man after he hath spent his dayes in pursuit and labour for them he is constrained to acknowledge at length though too late that all that is in the world is but an imposture a delusion a dream and worse yet eve●y man hearkens after these same flatteries and lies that hath cast down so many wounded and made so many strong ones to fall by them every man trusts the world and his own flesh as if they were of good report and of known integrity and this is mens misery that no man will learn wisdom upon others expences upon the wo●ul and tragical example of so many others but go on as confidently now after the discoverie of these deceivers as if this were the first time they had made such promises and used such fair words to men Have they not been these six thousand years almost deluding the world And have we not as many testimonies of their falshood as there hath been persons in all ages before us After Adam hath tasted of this tree of pleasure and found another fruit growing on it that is death should the posterity be so mad as to be medling still with the forbidden tree and therefore forbidden because destructive to our selves Know then and consider beloved in the Lord that you shall reap no other thing of all your labours and endeavours after the flesh all your toyling and perplexing cares all your excessive pains in the making provision for your lusts and caring for the body only you shall reap no other harvest of all but death and corruption Death you think that is a common lot and you cannot eschew it however nay but the death here meant is of another sort in respect of which you may call death life it is the everlasting destruction of the soul from the presence of God and the glory of his power● it is the falling of that infinit weight of the wrath of the Lamb upon you in respect of which mountains and hills will be thought light and men would rather wish to be covered with them Rev. 6.16 Suppose now you could swim in a River of delights and pleasures which yet is given to none for truly upon a j●st reckoning it will be found that the anxiety and grief and bitte●n●sse that is inte●mingled with all earthly delights ●wallows up the sweetnesse of them yet it will but carry you down ere you be aware into the Se● o● de●th and destruction as the fish that swim and sport for a while in Iordan are carried down into the dead Sea of Sodom where they a●e presently suffocated and extinguished or as a Malefactor is carried through a pleasant Palace to the Gallows so men walk th●ough the delights of their flesh to their own endlesse torment and destruction Seing then my beloved that your sins and lusts which you are inclined and accustomed to will certainly kill you if you inte●tain them then nature it self would teach you the Law of self-defence To kill ere you be killed to kill sin e●e it kill you to mortifie the deeds and lusts of the body which abo●nd among you or they will certainly mortifie you that is make you die Now if self love could teach you this which the love of God cannot perswade you to yet it is well for being once led unto God and moved to change your course upon the fear and apprehension of the infinit danger that will ensue ce●tainly if you we●e but a little a●quainted with the sweetnesse of this life and goodnesse of your God you would find the power of the former a●gumen● à debito from debt and duty upon your spirit let this once lead you in to God and you will not want that which will constrain you to abide and never to depart from Him If you mortifie the deeds of the body you shall live as sin decayes you increase and grow as sins die your soul● live an● it shall be a sure pledge to you of that eternal life and though this be painful and laborious yet consider that it is but the cutting off of a rotten member that would corrupt the whole body and the want of it will never m●im or m●tilat the body for you shall live per●ectly when sin is perfectly expired and out of life and according a● sin is nearer expiring and nearer the grave your souls are nea●●● that endlesse life If this do not move us what can be said n●xt What shall he do more to his Vineyard SERMON XXXV Rom. 8.13 14. But if ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live Vers. 14. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God THE life and being of many things consists in union separat them and they remain not the same or they losse their vertue It is much more thus in Christianity the power and life of it consists in the union of these things that God h●th conjoyned so that if any man pretend to one thing of it and neglect the other he hath really none of them and to hold to the subject in hand there are three things which joyned together in the hearts of Christians have a great deal of force the duty of a Christian and his reward and his dignity his worke and labour seems hard and unpleasant when considered alone but the reward sweetens it when it is joyntly believed his duty seems too high and his labour great yet the consideration of the real dignity he is advanced unto and priviledge he hath received will raise up the spirit to great and high attempts and to sustain great labours Mortification is the work and labour life eternal life is the reward following the Spirit is the Christians duty but to be the son of God that is his dignity Mortification sounds very harsh at first the hearts of men say It is a hard saying who can bear it And indeed I cannot deny but it is so to our corrupt nature and therefore so holden out in Scripture the words chosen to press it express much pain and pains much torment and labour it is not so easie and trivial a business to forsake sin or subdue it as many think