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A86531 The saints dignitie and dutieĀ· Together with the danger of ignorance and hardnesse. / Delivered in severall sermons: by that reverend divine, Thomas Hooker, late preacher in New-England. Hooker, Thomas, 1586-1647. 1651 (1651) Wing H2654; Thomason E635_2; ESTC R202448 184,116 264

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reconciled to him Now when the soul findeth this and the like and withall hath an inward work which though happily he cannot discover the manner and order thereof nor expresse it to others yet he knows more thereof then any man under heaven Ask a child How doe you know such a man is your father Alas he cannot tell you yet he hath a strong affection toward him above all others and feels in himself such a leaning in his affection towards him as another feels not So the mother of the child that was brought before Solomon had no Argument in the world to prove the child to be hers but the yerning of her bowels and relenting of her spirit toward the child proved it sufficiently So there is in a Saint of God an inward tenderness of affection a leaning of his soul towards God which no man knowes but he that hath it If a curious workman after he hath made a clock or a watch shew the frame thereof to a man ignorant of that Art and declare to him the manner of making it happily he will conceive his words and his reasons and perceive that he saith truth but he cannot make such another because he hath not the Art it self of clock-making My brethren so it is here There is a curious frame in the soule of a Christian of grace of faith of repentance of holinesse of love patience and the like a blessed disposition of heart whereby the soul runneth right toward God and every holy dutie and strikes right as I may say in all holy obedience to God this is a frame reared up by the hand of the Spirit of God alone in the heart of a Christian Now the Apostle Paul who had such a work as this wrought in him can tell the nature of hope and of faith and of repentance but I that read what he hath written of these things being a naturall man though happily I understand the sence and apprehend the meaning of the words yet the true knowledge of the nature of repentance or faith or hope I cannot possibly attain to so long as I remain a meer naturall man Even as an ignorant man cannot conceive the Art of Watch-making in that manner as the Artist himself understands it so cannot I discern the nature of this spiritual frame in the heart further then God is pleased to teach me this skill by the work of his Spirit within my self When I finde my own heart wrought upon then I can best discover it to another then doe I know that which before I never understood though happily I could discourse something concerning such things and understand the outside as it were yet that was all I never knew the bottom as I doe now You see then the difference between the knowledge of Hypocrites that live in the bosome of the Church and the knowledge of Gods Elect or saving knowledge Now for the Use of all in a word or two If this be so that men may live in the Church of God and enjoy the means of grace and yet be a people of no understanding have no saving knowledge then my brethren here is a word of reproof to check all those conceits and pull down all those silly imaginations of poor ignorant carnall creatures that live here among us in the bosome of the Church who because the Lord hath been pleased to put them into a place where the truth is plainly taught and preached presently perswade their own souls that they have wise dome and knowledge enough to bring them to life and salvation If happily you come to any of these men and tell them that they ought to be inlarged in those duties God requireth of his children that they should be able to catechise their families to pray with them to instruct them that they should be skilfull in the art of humbling their souls before God in private conversing and spirituall communion with him Alas they will answer you that for the present they are too weak and unable for such things as these Well but prove them again afterwards when they have continued a longer time under the means and demand of them how they have bettered themselves what strength of grace they have attained unto By no means you must meddle with them What they have not lived so long in a good Parish under a panfull Minister and gone so often to Church but surely they have sufficient to bring them to heaven and although they cannot doe so and so though they cannot give you a reason of the hope that is in them yet they make no question but to speed as well as the best Men think it enough to be good Church-men to have and injoy the helpes God vouchsafeth and bestoweth upon his people to be often hearers of the Word read and preached and so rest themselves contented and there set up their staffe though in the mean time they remain as blind and ignorant and as carnall as ever My brethren be not deceived the Lord will not be mocked It is not sufficient to salvation for a man to be an often hearer to have his heart now and then inlarged to give assent to the truths delivered to conceive the grounds of them or to be able happily to discourse of some points of religion Oh look further he that hath saving knowledge indeed goes farre beyond all this You that are tradesmen or you that have children will any man say my child is a good Schollar for he hath gone so long to schoole or my Apprentise hath good skill in his trade because he hath served me so many yeares It is true he ought to be so but it doth not follow that because he hath had such and such helps and lived so long under them that therefore he is so So it is here there is no reason for any man to ground his assurance of salvation on his injoyment of the meanes or to imagine that God hath wrought mercifully for him in the matter of knowledge which accompanieth life and happiness because of his long living under a good ministry no it is not enough to have the preaching of the word among us and to have the meanes and helps of saving knowledge you may have all these and yet remain ignorant and blind and be a people of no understanding Secondly this is a word of instruction to us We are hence given to understand the sinfulnesse of our nature and the blindnesse of our mindes seeing a man may have all the means under heaven and yet all prove unprofitable to him may injoy all the helpes that God hath set up in his Church for the good of peoples soules and yet receive no good by them What a strange heart is ours Yet so it is even amongst many of us in this place and I wish it were not so with most that live in the Church at this day I fear me that if a man should goe from heart to heart and observe every ones particular
because through the merit of Christ and the mercie of God it is transitorie to all beleevers 4. Lastly it is called a bodie because as our bodies are made up of many Integrals and consist of several members by which they act and exercise severall functions so also originall corruption is one thing consisting of many particular sins as so many integrall parts or severall members whereby it putteth forth it self in severall operations For these and such like reasons Originall corruption is called a bodie Thus you see what is here meant by bodie And now it is more easie to understand what is meant by the Spirit The Spirit is life because of righteousnesse For if by the body be meant originall corruption then by the Spirit must be meant originall righteousnesse that which is elsewhere in the Scripture called the divine nature or the seed of God or grace or holiness or the like Originall holiness or righteousness is that which I take it is here meant by the Spirit It is so called John 3.6 That which is born of the spirit is spirit and so in many other places Now this same habit of holiness is called the Spirit 1. To shew the excellency of it That as a Spirit is an excellent thing far above all bodily substances so is holiness the excellentest of Gods creatures for grace is also a creature as other things 2. To shew the durableness of it though sin shall die in the Saints and be utterly destroyed yet grace shall never be destroyed stroyed nor cease in the Saints of God 3. It is called the Spirit in regard of the Objects of it for the Objects of this grace are spirituall things 4. In regard of the Author of it It is the holy Spirit of God that begets and works it in people therefore as the child beareth the name of the Father so doth this of the Spirit Thus you see what is meant by sin namely the transgression of Gods Law either in omission or commission What by righteousness The observation of Gods Law in the duties of the first and second Table What by the bodie Originall corruption What by the spirit the habit of holiness or originall righteousnesse Now then the whole amounteth to this That if so bee the Lord Christ be in people then there is a death of sin in them and a life of righteousnesse Thus much is meant by the words let them be taken any way which way soever Expositors can carry them this must be the sence of them and therefore we need not spend further time in the Exposition but will fall directly upon the Doctrine which is this In whomsoever Christ is there is a death of sin and a life of righteousnesse The Point is very evident and expresse in the Text being the main matter scope and drift thereof as well as in other places of Scripture For the proving of it not to trouble you with many other Scriptures you may consider these things First The ends and the offices of Christ which the Apostle Paul expresseth Tit. 2.14 Christ gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquitie and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works The main end of Christ is the redemption of a people from all iniquitie which implieth not onely the removal of the guilt of sin but the destroying of the bodie of sin Therefore 1 Joh. 3.8 it is said That for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devill Not onely the guilt of sin but the power and dominion of sin is the work of the Devill now therefore for this purpose saith the Text the Son of God was manifested that he might free us from the guilt yea and from the dominion and life and power of sin There is one end Another end of Christs giving himself was To purifie us therefore he must put sin to death in us for to purifie is nothing else but to purge out corruption as the fire doth work the drosse out that is in the gold Again To purifie us that we might be a peculiar people zealous of good works Where there is a zealousnesse of good works there must be a life of righteousnesse So that by that place you plainly see that the end of Christ is the putting of sin to death and bringing in the life of righteousnesse Moreover Christ was to be the second Adam and he is so called 1 Cor. 15.45 And to speak the truth the first Adam was a Type of Christ as it is Rom. 5.14 Who is the Figure or Type of him that was to come For not onely the Ceremonies amongst the Jewes were Types of Christ but even Adam in his fall in his undoing the world in his overthrowing of mankind was a Type and Figure of Christ also Onely other Types did figure out Christ by way of similitude but Adam by way of dissimilitude and contrarietie For look what Adam did the contrary to that Christ is to doe Now Adam did cause to all in whom he was as the Parent is in the child a death of righteousnesse and a life of sin Therefore the contrary the Lord Jesus Christ must work in all those in whom he is a death of sin and a life of righteousnesse Secondly this Point is also plain from the consideration of those respects in which Christ is said to be in people Those are as you heard before First in regard of his Spirit Secondly in regard of his Vertue influence and sap that is in them Now where ever these are there must be a death of sin and a life of righteousnesse For the former even as fire doth purge away drosse and rust so the holy Ghost works out corruption and puts sin to death where ever he cometh and as light expelleth darkness even so doth he expell unrighteousnesse and sin because he is the holy Spirit Again for the vertue and life of Christ you know it was the life of righteousnesse therefore whereever this is there must be a life of righteousnesse in that man Last of all the truth of this will appear from the consideration of that communion with Christ and conformitie to him that all those must have which are in Christ and Christ in them Wherein they must have a communion with and a conformitie to Christ Saint Paul sheweth Rom. 6. from the third verse to the twelfth In the third Verse he layeth down that Union by Faith which all justified persons have with the Lord Jesus and from this he inferreth a communion with him and a conformitie unto him But in what In his death and in his resurrection If we have been planted together saith he v. 5. in the likenesse of his death mark not in the same death but in the likeness thereof wee shall bee also in the likeness of his resurrection Where the Apostle declareth that like as there was in Christ a bodily death and a bodily resurrection so there is in
there no sin can command the whole soul but howsoever it may command part of the man yet there is no part that will be wholly commanded by it This Saint Paul expresly sheweth Rom. 7. from the 15. verse to the end of the Chapter It is true saith he with my flesh that is with my unregenerate part for by flesh there he doth not mean his bodie but the naturall part both of soul and bodie I serve the law of sin but with my minde that is with the regenerate part of soul and bodie I serve the Law of God Whereever there is a death of sin there will be a part in every part of a man that will not be subjected or commanded by any sin This I take to be the meaning of that 1 joh 3. 9. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him and hee cannot sin because he is born of God That is so far as he is born of God that same part in him which is the seed of God the off-spring of God it cannot sin sin cannot command that though it command all the rest Thereupon it is called the divine nature and the spirit because as the Spirit and the divine nature will not be masterd by corruption so the regenerated part of a man will not be commanded by any sin whatsoever Secondly which is indeed a fruit of the former and a further expression of it where there is this death of sin there sin is never committed with full consent delight and purpose of heart They that have sin alive in them drink down iniquitie like water and draw sin unto them as it were with cart-ropes And that I conceive the Psalmist meaneth by departing wickedly from God Psal 18. 21. They that have sin dead in them imperfectly may depart from God but they doe not wickedly depart from him not with full consent content delight and purpose of heart And the Apostle saith Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh doe minde the things of the flesh A man that hath sin dead in him may commit sin but hee doth not minde sin We may conceive what this minding is by this similitude When a woman that is with child strongly longs after something she doth minde that thing How her mind is continually upon it her ele her heart her fancis her thoughts her whole self as it were is taken up with it Thus is it with those that have sin alive in them their particular corruptions are minded by them they doe with full gale post after the satisfying their lusts They are said to make provision for the slesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 13. 14. But now they that have sin dead in them doe never commit sin with the full bent of their spirit with the full consent and delight of their will but there is ever an antipathy to the sin a with-drawing from the corruption something that doth lust against it as well as something that doth lust after it Thirdly he that hath sin dead in him is freed from many particular sins that he did formerly commit Rom. 7. 5. When we were in the flesh that is when sin was alive in us the mations of sins which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death While sin is alive it is perfectly fruitfull but when it is dead the fruitfulness thereof is much lessened Such saith the Apostle were some of you 1 Cor. 6. 11. implying that now they were not such though formerly they had been There is in the regenerate a ceasing of many though not of all the actions of sin The power of sin in them is weakned therefore the fruitfulness of sin must needs be diminished There is a great alteration wrought in their wills and affections in their thoughts words and actions in their generall and particular calling in their duties towards God and man They do not bring forth so many fruits of sin as they were wont at least they doe now for the ordinary course of their lives refrain from bearing the fruit of such sins as are grosse or scandalous Fourthly the godly in whom sin is dead doe not onely cease bearing the fruits of grosse and scandalous sins but oftentimes though not perpetually are able to deny and forbear the committing of any particular sin even those that are most naturall to them most strong in them that are wont to catch them on a sudden and to prevail over them even those the godly have power oftentimes to resist and overcome A man that is in the flesh that hath sin alive in him is described Ephes 2. 3. to be such a one as doth fulfill the desires of the flesh and therein appeareth the life of sin when the desires of the flesh are alwaies fulfilled But now on the other side the imperfect death of sin appeareth in this that not onely some of the desires of the flesh are never fulfilled but even all the desires of the flesh are alwayes more or lesse crossed and not fulfilled And this I take to be the meaning of that Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that you cannot doe the things that you would I suppose that latter clause You cannot doe the things that you would is not onely meant of the Spirit that by the flesh the Spirit is disabled to doe the things that it would but it is also meant of the flesh that by reason of the Spirit the flesh cannot doe the things it would that look as sometimes the remnants of the flesh doe hinder the Spirit that it cannot doe as it would so also the beginnings of the Spirit do hinder the flesh that in nothing it is able to do the things it would This is a fourth Effect whereby the weakning of corruption doth appear That sin is not able to work in us that which it would no not in any particular whatsoever but in those sins that are most naturall many times there is a denying of them and a forbearing to commit them and to fulfill the desires of them Now to these you must in the last place add that which is a propertie accompanying all of them and is the last particular whereby the death of sin appeareth and that is That this same weakning and lessening of corruption discovered in these Effects that I have opened unto you is both universall and also durable and permanent First it is universall there is not onely a weakning and lessening of corruption in some parts but in all And herein it differeth from all counterfeit death of sin in which there may be a weakning of some sins yet not of all but though some happily be weaker then they were others are as strong as ever But where-ever this death of sin is indeed there sin is universally weakned and this also will appear in all the particulars and parts