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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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shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and glory of his power if it were duely apprehended it would weigh down a mans soul and make it heavy unto death This condemnation includes both damnum poenam poenam damni poenam sensus and both are infinite in themselves and eternal in their continuance What an unpleasant and bitter life would one lead that were born to a kingdom and yet to be banished it and losse it But what an incomparable losse is it to fall from an heavenly kingdome which heart cannot conceive and that for ever In Gods favour is life and in his presence are rivers of pleasures for evermore When your petty penny-losses do so much afflict your spirits what would the due apprehension of so great a losse do would it not be death unto you and worse then death to be separated from this life to be eternally banished from the presence of this glory If there should be no more punishment but this only if the wicked were to endure for ever on earth and the godly whom they despised and mocked were translated to heaven what torment would it be to your souls to think upon that blessednesse which they enjoy above and how foolishly ye have been put by it for a thing of no value what would a rich man's advantages and gaines be to him when he considereth what an infinite loser he is how he hath sold a kingdom for a dung-hill Now if there were any hope that after some years his banishment from heaven might end this might refresh him but there is not one drop of such consolation he is banished and eternally banished from that glorious life in the presence of God which these do enjoy whom he despised If a man were shut up all his lifetime in a pit never to see the light once more would not this be torment enough to him but when withall there is such pain joyned with this losse when all this time he is tormented within with a gnawing worm and without with fire these senses that did so greedily hunt after satisfaction to themselves are now as sensible in the feeling of pain and torment and when this shall not make an end but be eternal O! whose heart can consider it It is the comfort and ease of bodily to●ments here that they will end in death Destruction destroyes it self in destroying the body but here is an immortal soul to seed upon and at length the body shall be immortal that destruction cannot quite destroy it but shall be an everlasting destruction and living death This is the sentence that is once past against us all in the Word of God and not one jot of this Word shall fall to the ground Heaven and earth may fail sooner Ye would think it were an irrepealable decree if all the Nations in the earth and Angels above conveened to adjudge a man to death did pass sentence upon him Nay but this Word that is daily spoken to you which passeth this sentence upon you all is more certain and this sentence of death must be executed unless ye be under that blessed exception made here and elsewhere in the Gospel I beseech you consider what it is to have such a Judge condemning you Would not any of you be afraid if ye were under the sentence of a King if that judgment were above your head Who of you would fit in peace and quietness Who would not flee from the wrath of a King that is like the roaring of a Lion But there is a sentence of the KING of Kings and Nations above your heads Who would not fear thee to whom it doth appertain O King of Nations It is not a great man that can destroy thy body that is against thee it is not he who hath power to kill thee and he hath also a great desire so to do this were indeed much but it is the great and eternal Jehovah who lifts up his hand to heaven and swears he lives for ever he is against thee he who hath all power over body and soul is against thee and so is oblidged to improve his omnipotency against thee He can kill both soul and body and cast them into hell and by vertue of this curse he will not spare thee but pour out all the curses in this book Thou would be at no peace if thou wert declared rebell by the King and Parliament but alace that 's a small thing they can but reach thy body nay neither can they alwayes do that thou may flee from them but whither canst thou flee from him thou cannot go out of his dominions for the earth is his and the sea and all that therein is darkness cannot hide thee from him he may spare long because he can certainly overtake when he pleases men may not because they have no assurance of finding I beseech you then consider this it is of soul-consequence and what hath a man gained if he gain the world and lose his soul if the gainer be lost what is gained And it is of eternal consequence and what is many thousand years to this You can look beyond all these and might comfort your s●lves on hope but you cannot see to the end of this there is still more before than is past nay there is nothing past it is still as beginning O that ye would consider this curse of God that stands registrate upon us all What effects had it in Christ when he did bear it it made his soul heavy to death it was a cup that he could scarcely drink he that supported the frame of this world was almost near succumbing under the weight of this wrath it made him sweat blood in the garden He that could do all things and speak all things was put to this What shall I say When this condemnation was so terrible to him who was that mighty One upon whom all help was laid what shall it be to you No mans sorrow was ever like his nor pain ever like his if all the scattered torments were united in one but because he was God he overcame and came out from under it But what do you think shall be the estate of these who shall endure that same torment and not for three dayes or three years or some thousands of years but beyond imagination to all eternity I beseech you consider this condemnation which ye are adjudged unto and do not ly under it Do ye think ye can endure what Christ endured Do ye think ye can bear wrath according to Gods power and justice and yet the judgment is come upon all men to this condemnation But alace who fears him according to his wrath Who knows the power of his anger Ye sleep secure as if all matters were past and over your head We declare unto you in the Lords Name that this condemnation is yet above you because you have not judged your selves It is preached unto you that ye may flee from it
heaven and earth to be so busied abroad to know other things and then to know and consider nothing of that which of all things most nearly conc●rns us our selves what shall it profite a man if he gain the whole world and lose his soul for that is himself And what shall it pro●●t to know all and not know his soul to be every where but where he ought to be Well a Christian is one called home from vain impertinent diversions one that is occupyed most about his soul and spirit how to have all the disorders h●●●●ds in himself ord●rd all these distempers cured all these defilements washed this is the business he is about in this world to wash his heart from wickedness Jer. 4.14 To cleanse even vain thoughts and shut up from that ordinary repair his own heart he is about the inclosing it to be a garden to the welbeloved to b●ing forth sweet fruits he is about the renewing of it the adorning of it with the new man against that day of our Bridegrooms appearing and bringing him up to celebrate the marriage Though he be in the flesh yet he is most taken up with his Spirit how to have it restored to that primitive beauty and excellency the Image of God in it how to be cloathed with humility and to put on the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit that he accounts his beauty how to rule his own spirit that he accounts only true fortitude and thinks it a greater vassalage and victory to overcome himself then his enemy and esteems it the noblest revenge not to be like to other men that wrong him he is occupyed about the highest gain and advantage viz to save his spirit and soul and accounts all loss to this to bring Jesus Christ into the heart that is the jewel he digs for and esteems all du●g in comparison of it If you be Christians after the Spirit no doubt you are busied this way about your spirits For others they are busied about the flesh to make provision for its lusts and there needs no other mark to know them by Alas poor souls that you have never yet adverted that you have spirits immortal beings within you which must survive this dust this corruptible flesh What will you do when you cannot have flesh to care for when your spirits can have nothing to be carried forth into but must eterternally dwell within the bosome of an evil conscience and be tormented with that worm the bitter remembrance of the neglect of your spirits and utter estrangement from them while you were in the body then you must be confined within your own evil consciences and be imprisoned there for ever because while yet there was time and season you were alwayes abroad and every where but within your own hearts and consciences and is not that a just recompence Then again as Christianity descends from the Father of spirits into the spirit of a man to lodge there for a while it doth at length bring up the spirit of a man and unites it to that eternal Spirit and so as the Original was high and divine the end is high ●oo It issues out of that fountain and returns with the heart of man to imbosome it self in that ag●in And truly this is the great excellency of true Religion above all these things you are busied about that it elevats the spirit of a man to God that it will never rest till it have carried it above to the fountain-spirit Our spirits are sparks and chips to speak so with reverence of that divine beeing but now they are wholly immersed and sunk into the flesh and into the earth by sin till grace come down and renew them and extract them out of that dung-hill and purifie them and then they are as in a state of violence alwise striving to mount upwards till they be embodied or rather inspirited so to speak in that Original spirit till they be wholly united to their own element the Divine Nature You know Christs Prayer Ioh 17. that they may be one as we are one I in them and they in me that they may may be made perfect in one v. 22 23. then spirits have attained their perfection then will they rest from their labours when they are one with him this is the only Center of spirits in which they can rest immoveable You find all the desires and affections of the Saints are as so many breathings upward pantings after union with him and longings to be intimatly present with the Lord therefore a Christian is one after the spirit groaning to be all spirit to have the earthly house of this tabernacle dissolved and to be cloathed upon with that house from heaven He knows with Paul that he is not at home though he be at home in in the body because the body is that which separats from the Lord which partition wall he would willingly have taken down that his spirit might be at home present with the Lord 2 Cor. 6.1 c. Who knoweth saith Solomon the spirit of a man that ascends upward and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth Eccles. 3.21 Truly the natural motion of mans spirit should be to ascend upward to God who gave it When this ●rail and broken Vessel of the body is dissolved into the Elements the higher and purer nature that lodged within it should flee upwards to Heaven even as the spirit of the beasts being but the prime and fi●er part of the body not different in nature from the earth naturally falls down to the earth with the body and is dissolved into the Elements But I think the consideration of that woful disorder that sin hath brought into the world that all things in man are so degenerated and become bruitish both his affections and his conversation that carnal and sensual lusts have the whole dominion over men I say the serious and earnest view of this might make a man suspect and call in question whether or not there be any difference between men and beasts whether or not there be any spirit in the one of an higher nature then in the other Truly it would hal● pe●swade that there is no immortal spirit in man else how could he be such a beast all his time serving diverse lusts Can it be possible might one think that there is any spirit in men that can ascend to heaven when there is no motion thither to be observed among men I beseech you consider this the spirit must either ascend or descend when it goes out of the body as now in affection and endeavour it ascends or descends while it is in the body there is an indispensible connexion between these what way soever the spirit aims at which way soever it turns and direct its flight thither it shall be constrained to go eternally Do you think my Beloved while you are in the body to bow down your selves to the Earth to descend unto the service of
and in his own person he submitted to be tempted to sin though it had been evil for us he had been overcome by it yet this brings him a step lower and nearer us and maketh the union more hopeful But since he can come no lower and can be made no liker us in the case we are in then certainly if the match hold We must become liker him and raised up out of our miserable estate to some suitableness to his holy Nature and therefore the love and wisdom of God to fill up the distance compleatly and effectuat this happy conjunction that the creation seemeth to groan for for vers 22. the whole creation is pained till it be accomplished he hath sent his blessed Spirit to dwell in Vs and to transform our natures and make them partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 as Christ was partaker of humane nature and thus the distance shall be removed when a blessed Spirit is made flesh and a fleshly man made spirit then they are near the day of espousals and this indwelling of the spirit is the last link of the chain that fastens us to Christ and maketh our flesh in some measure like His holy flesh By taking on our flesh Christ became bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh But the union becometh mutual when we receive the spirit we become bone of His bone and flesh of His flesh as it is expressed Eph. 5.30 In allusion to the creation of Eve and her marriage to Adam the ground of the marriage is That near bond of union because she was taken out of man and therefore because of his flesh and bone she was made one flesh with him even ●o the sinner must be partaker of the Spirit of Christ as Christ is partaker of the flesh of sinners and these two concurring these two knots interchanging and woven thorow other we become one fl●sh with him And this is a great mystery indeed to bring two who were so far assunder so near other Yea it is nearer then that too for we are said not only to be one flesh with Christ but one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit because he is animated and quickned by one Spirit that same Spirit of Christ and indeed spirits are more capable of union and more fit to embosome one with another then bodies therefore the nearest union conceivable is the union of spirits by affection this maketh two souls one for it transports their spirit out of the body where it lives and setleth it there where it loveth Now my beloved you see what way this great marriage that heaven and earth are in a longing expectation after shall be brought about Christ he did forsake his Fathers house when he lest that holy habitation his Fathers bosome a place of marvellous delight Prov. 8.30 And descended into the lowest parts of the earth Eph. 4.9 And He came out from the Father into the world John 16.28 This was a great journey to meet with poor sinners But that there may be a full and intire meeting you must leave and forsake your fathers house too and forget your own people Psal. 45.10 You must give an intire renounce to all former lovers if you would be His all former bonds and engagments must be broken that this may be tyed the faster And to hold to the subject in hand you must forsake and forget the flesh and be possessed of his holy Spirit as he came down to our flesh you must rise up to meet him in the Spirit the Spirit of Christ must indeed prevent you and take you out of that natural posture you are born into and bring you a great journey from your selves that you may be joyned unto Him This Spirit of Christ is his messenger and ambassadour sent before-hand to fit you and suit you for the day of Espousals and therefore he must have a dwelling and constant abode in you This indwelling imports A special familiar operation and the perpetuity or continuance of it The Spirit is every where in his being and he worketh every where too but here he hath a special and peculiar work in commission To reveal the love of God in Christ to engage the soul to love him again to prepare all within for the great day of Espousals to purifie and purge the heart from all that is displeasing to Christ to correspond between Christ and his Spouse between Heaven and Earth by making intercession for her when she cannot pray for her self as you find here vers 26. and so sending up the news of the souls panting and breathing after Christ sending up her love groans and sighs to her beloved giving intelligence of all her necessities to Him who is above in the place of an Advocat and Interceeder and then bringing back from Heaven light and life direction from her Head for the Spirit must lead in all truth and consolation for Christ hath appointed the spirit to supply his absence and to comfort the soul in the mean time till he come again you have this mutual and reciprocal knot in 1 Ioh. 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us by the spirit that he hath given It is much nearness to dwell one with another but much greater to dwell one in another and its reciprocal such a wonderful interchange in it we in him and he in us for the Spirit carries the soul to Heaven and brings Christ as it were down to the earth He is the Messenger that carries Letters between both our prayers to Him and His prayers for us and love-tokens to us the anointing that teacheth us all things from our husband 1 Ioh. 2.27 and revealing to us the things of God 1 Cor. 2.12 giving us the fi●st fruits of that happy and glorious communion we must have with Christ in Heaven as you see ver 23. of this chap. and sealing us to the day of redemption Eph 1.13 and 4.30 Supplying us with divine power against our spiritual enemies fetching alongs from Heaven that strength whereby our Lord and Saviour overcame all Eph. 3.16 Gal. 5.17 This is a presence that few have such a familiar and love-abode But certainly all that are Christs must have it in some measure Now whosoever hath it its perpetual the Spirit dwells in them It s not a sojourning for a season not a lodging for a night as some have fits and starts of seeking God and some transient motions of conviction or joy but return again to the puddle these go through them as lightning and do n●t warm them or change them but this is a constant residence where the Spirit takes up house he will dwell he dwelleth with you and shall be in you and abide for ever Joh. 14.16 17. If the Son abide in the house for ever Joh. 8.35 much more the master of the house must abide Now the Spirit where he dwells hath gotten the command of that house all
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
from sin as the death of Christ is made the pledge of our dying to sin so his rising of our living to God Rom. 6.4 5. These are not meer paterns and examples of spiritual things but assured pledges of that divine vertue and power which he being raised again should send abroad throughout the world for as there are Coronation-gifts when Kings are solemnly installed in office so there are Coronation-mercies triumphal gifts when Christ rose and ascended he bestowed then on the world Eph. 4. And certainly these are the greatest the vertue of his death to kill the old man and the power of his resurrection to quicken the new and by faith a believer is united and ingra●ted into him as a plant into a choice stock and by vertue and sap coming from Christs death and resurrection he is transformed into the similitude of both he groweth into the likenesse of his death by dying to sin by crucifying these inward affections and inclinations to it and he groweth up into the similitude of his resurrection by newnesse of life or being alive to God in holy desires and endeavours after holinesse ●nd obedience And thus the first resurrection of the soul floweth from Christs resurrection But add unto this that Christs rising is the pledge and pawn of the second resurrection that is of the body for He is the head and we the members now it is most incongruous that the head should rise and not draw up the members after him certainly he will not cease till He have drawen up all his mem●ers to him if the head be above water it is a sure pledge that the body will win out of the water if the root be alive certainly the branches will shoot out in Spring-time they shall live also There is that connexion betwixt Christ and believers that wonderful communication between them that Christ did nothing was nothing and had nothing done to him but what He did and was and sufferd personating them and all the benefi●e and advantage redounds to them He would not be considered of us as a person by himself but would rather be still taken in with the children as for love he came down and took flesh to be like them and did take their sin and misery off them and so was content to be looked upon by God as in the place of sinners as the chief sinner so he is content and desirous that we should look on him as in the place of sinners as dying as rising for us as having no excellency or privelege incommunicable to us And this was not hid from the Church of old but presented as the grand consolation Thy dead men shall live ●ogether with my dead body they shall rise and therefore may poor souls awake and sing though they must dwell in the dust yet as the dew and influence of Heaven maketh herbs to spring out of the earth so the vertue of this resurrection shall make the earth and sea and air to cast out and render their dead Isa. 26.19 Upon what a sure and strong chain hangs the salvation of poor sinners I wish Christians might salute one another with this Christ is risen and so comfort one another with these words or rather that every one would apply this cordial to his own heart Christ is risen and you know what a golden chain this draweth after it therefore we must rise and live The other cause which is more immediat and will actively accomplish it is the Spirit dwelling in us for there is a suitable method here too as the Lord first raised the Head Christ and will then raise the Members and he that doth the one cannot but do the other so the Spirit first raiseth the soul from that woful fall into sin which killed us and so maketh it a Temple and the body too for both are bought with a price and therefore the Spirit possesseth both but the inmost residence is in the soul and the bodily members are made servants of righteousness which is a great honour and dignity in regard of that base imployment they had once and so it is most suitable that he who hath thus dwelt in both repair his own dwelling-house for here it is ruinous and therefore must be cast down but because it was once a Temple for the Holy Ghost therefore it will be repaired and built again for he that once honoured it with his presence will not suffer corruption alwayes to dwell in it for what Christ by his humiliation and suffering purchased the Spirit hath this Commission to perform it a●d what is it but the restitution of mankind to an happier estate in the second Adam then ever the first was into Now since our Lord who pleased to take on our flesh did not put it off again but admits it to the fellowship of the same glory in heaven in that he died he dies no more death hath no more dominion over him he will never be wearied or ashamed of that humane clothing of flesh and therefore certainly that the children may be like the father the followers their Captain the members not disproportioned to the head the branches not different and heterogeneous to the stock and that our rising in Christ may leave no footstep of our falling no remainder of our misery therefore the Spirit of Christ will also quicken the mortal bodies of believers and make them like Christs glorious body This must be done with divine power and what more powerful then the Spirit for it is the spirits or subtil parts in all creatures that causeth all motions and worketh all effects What then is that Almighty Spirit not able to do You have shadows of this in nature yea convincing evidences for what is the Spring but a resurrection of the earth Is not the world every year renewed and riseth again out of the grave of Winter as you find it elegantly expressed Psal. 107. and doth not the grains of seed die in the ●lods be●ore they rise to the harvest 1 Cor. 15. All the vicissitudes and alterations in nature give us a plain draught of this great change and certainly it is one Spirit that effects all But though there be the same power required to raise up the bodies of the godly and ungodly yet O what infinit distance and difference in the nature and ends o● their resurrections there is the resurrection of life and the resurrection of condemnation Joh. 5.29 O happy they who rise to life that ever they died but O miserable thrice wretched are all others that they may not be dead for ever The immortality of the souls was infinit misery because it is that which eternizes their misery but when this overplus is added the incorruptibility of the body and so the whole man made an inconsumable subject for that fire to seed upon perpetually what heart can conceive it without horrour and yet we hear it often without any such affection It is a strange life that death is the only
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
up and down with every wind its double-minded Now one way then another now in one mind and shortly changed and indeed the soul is like the Sea capable of the least or greatest commotion Iam. 1.6 7 8. I know not any thing that will either fix your hearts from wandring in Prayer or establish your hearts from trouble and disquiet after it nothing that will so exonor and ease your spirits of care as this To lay hold on God as All-sufficient and lay that constraint on your hearts to wait on him and his pleasur● to cast your souls on his promises that are so full and so free and abide there as at your Anchor-hold in all the vicissi●udes and changes of outward or inward things In spiritual things that concerns your salvation that which is absolutely necessary you may take the boldnesses to be absolute in it and as Iob though he should slay me yet will I trust in thee and as Iacob I will not let thee go till thou blesse me But either in outward things that have some usefulness in them but are not alwayes fittest for our chiefest good or in the degrees of spiritual gifts and measures of graces the Lord calls us without anxiety to pour out our hearts in them unto him but withall we would do it with submission to his pleasure because he knows best what is best for us In these we are not bound to be confident to receive the particular we ask but rather our confidence should pitch upon his good-will and favour that he will certainly deny nothing that himself knows is good for us And so in these we should absolutely cast our self without ca●efulnesse upon his loving and fatherly providence and resign our selve● to him to be disposed 〈◊〉 in them as he sees convenient There is sometimes too much limitation of God and peremptoriness used with him in such things in which his wisdom craves a latitude both in publick and privat matters even as mens affections and interests are ingaged but ordinarily it s attended and followed with shame and disappointment in the end and there is on the other hand intollerable remisseness and slacknesse in many in pressing even the weightiest petitions of salvation mortification c. which certainly ariseth from the diffidence and unbelief of the heart and the want of that rooted perswasion both of the incomparable necessity and worth of the things themselves and of his willingnesse and engagement to bestow them The word is doubled here Abba Father the Syriack and Greek word signifying one thing expressing the tender affection and love of God towards them that come to him He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him deligently so he that cometh to God must believe that he hath the bowels and compassion of a Father and will be more easily inclined with our importunat cryes then the fathers of our flesh he may suffer his children to cry long but it is not because he will not hear but because he would hear them longer and delights to hear their cr● oftener If he delay it s his wisdom to appretiat and endear his mercies to us and to teach us to presse our petitions and sue for an answer Besides this is much for our comfort that from whomsoever and whatsoever corner in the world prayers come up to him they cannot want acceptance All Languages all Countreys all Places are sanctified by Jesus Christ that whosoever calls upon the Name of the Lord from the ends of the earth shall be saved And truly it is sweet meditation to think that from the ends of the earth the cryes of souls are heard and that the ends is as near Heaven as the middle and a Wildernesse as near as a Paradise that though we understand not one another yet we have one loving and living Father that understands all our meanings and so the different Languages and Dialects of the members of this body make no confusion in Heaven but meet together in his heart and affection and are one perfume one incense sent up from the whole Catholick Church which here is scattered on the earth O that the Lord would perswade us to cry this way to our Father in all our necessities FINIS
it s a subject of such admiration in it self and so much conce●nment to us Every word hath weight in it and a peculiar emphasis there is a gradation that mystery goes upon till it come to the top every word hath a degree or step in it whereby it rises high and still higher God sent that is very strange but God sent his Son is most strange but go on and it s still the stranger in the likeness of flesh and that sinfull flesh c. In all which degrees you see God is descending and coming lower and lower but the mystery ascends and goes higher and higher the lower God come down the higher the wonder rises up Still the smaller and meaner that God appears in the flesh the greater is the mystery of Godliness God manifested in the flesh If you would arise up to the sensible and profitable understanding of this mystery you must first descend into the depths of your own natural wretchedness and misery in which man was lying when it pleased God to come so low to meet him and help him I say you must first go down that way in the consideration of it and then you shall ascend to the use and knowledge of this mystery of Godliness Gods sending hath some weight of wonder in it at the very first apprehension of it if you did but know who he is and what we are a wonder it had been that he had suffered himself to be sent unto by us that any message any correspondence should passe between heaven and earth after so soul a breach of peace and Covenant by man on earth Strange that heaven was not shut up from all intercourse with that accursed earth If God had sent out an Angel to destroy man as he sent to destroy Ierusalem 2 Chron. 21.15 If he had sent out his armies to kill those his enemies who had renounced the yoke of his obedience it had been justice Matth. 21.41 and 22.7 If he had sent a cruel messenger against man who had now acted so horrid a rebellion it had been no strange thing as he did send an Angel with a fl●mming sword to encompasse the tree of life he might have enlarged that Angels commission to take veangence on man and this is the wonder he did not send after this manner But what heart could this enter into who could imagine such a thing as this God to send and to send for peace to his rebellious footstool man could not have looked for acceptance before the throne if he had prevented and sent first up supplications and humble cryes to heaven and therefore finding himself miserable you see he is at his wits end he is desperate and gives it over and so flees away to hide himself certianly expecting that the first message from heaven should be to arme all the creatures against him to destroy him But O! what a wonderful yet blessed surprisal God himself comes down and not for any such end as vengeance though just but to publish and hold forth a Covenant of reconciliation and peace to convince man of sin and to comfort him with the glad tidings of a Redeemer of one to be sent in the likeness of flesh It s the g●andor and majesty of Kings and great men to let others come to them with their petitions and it s accounted a rare thing if they be acc●ssable and affable But that the Lord of lords and King of kings who sitteth in the Circle of the Heavens and before whom all the inhabitants of the Earth are as poor Grashoppers or crauling worms about whose throne there are ten thousand times ten thousand glorious Spirits ministring unto him as Daniel saw him Chap. 7. v. 9 10. that such an one should not only admit such as we to come to him and offer our suits to his Highness but himself first to come down unto Adam and offer peace to him and then send his own Son And what were we that he should make any motion about us or make any mission to us Rom. 5.10 while we were yet enemies that we were when he sent O how hath his Love triumphed over his Justice But needed he fear our enmity that he should seek peace no wayes one look of his angry countenance would have looked us unto nothing thou lookest upon me and I am not one rebuke of his for iniquity would have made our beauty consume as the moth far more the stroak of his hand had consumed us Psal. 39.11 But that is the wonder indeed while we were yet enemies and weak too neither able to help our selves nor hurt him in the least and so could do nothing to allure him nothing to terrifie him nothing to ingage his love nothing to make him fear yet then he makes this motion and mission to us God sending c. God sending and sending his own Son that is yet a step higher Had he sent an Angel it had been wonderful one of these ministering Spirits about the Throne being far more glorious then man But God so loved the world that he sent his Son might he not have done it by others But he had a higher project and verily there is more mystery in the end and manner of our redemption then difficulty in the thing it self no question he might have enabled the creature by his Almighty power to have destroyed the works of the devil and might have delivered captive man some other way he needed not for any necessity lying upon him gone such a round as the Father to give to the Son and the Son to receive as God to send and the Son to be sent nay he might have spared all pains and without any messenger immediatly pardoned mans sin and adopted him to the place of Sons Thu● he had done the business without his Sons or any others travel and labour in blood and suffering But this profound mystery in the manner of it declares the highness and excellency of the end God proposed and that is the manifestation of his love Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed on us 1 John 3.1 and in this was manifested the love of God toward us that God sent his onl● begotten Son in the world 1 Joh. 4.9 And truly for such a design and purpose all the world could not have contrived such a suitable and excellent mean as this nothing besides this could have declared such love there is no expression of love imaginable to this to give his Son and only begotten Son for us It had been enough out of meer compassion to have saved us however it had been but if he had given all and done all besides this he had not so manifested the infinit fulness of love there is no gift so suitable to the greatness and magnificence of his Majesty as this One that thought it no robbery to be equal with himself Any gift had been infinitly above us because from him but this is not only infinitly above us but equal to
very image of a beast upon his nature to look on that slavery and bondage of his far better part to the worst and bruitish part in him his flesh If a man did wisely consider the constitution of his nature from its first divine original and what a thing the soul is which is truly and more properly himself then his body what excellency is in the soul beyond the body and so what preheminency it advanceth a man unto beyond a beast He could not but account Religion the very ornament and perfection of his nature Reason will say that the spirit should rule and command the body that flesh is but the minister and servant of the spirit that there is nothing the proper and peculiar good of man but that which adorns and rectifies the spirit that all these external things which mens senses are carried after with so much violence do not better a man as man but are common to beasts that in these things mans happiness as man doth not at all consist but in some higher and more transcending good which beasts are not capable of and which may satisfie the immortal spirit and not perish in the using but live with it All these things the very natural frame and constitution of man doth convincingly perswade Now then may a soul think within it self O how far am I departed from my original how far degenerated from that noble and royal dignity that God by the stamp of his image once put upon me How is it that I am become a slave and drudge to that baser and brutish part the flesh I would have you retire into your own hearts and ask such things at them Man being in honour and understanding not is even like the beasts that perish Truly we are become like beasts because we consider not that we are men and so advanced by creation far above beasts The not reflecting on the immortal spiritual nature of our souls hath transformed us in a manner into the nature of beasts perishing beasts Christianity is the very transforming of a beast into a man as sin was the deforming of a man into a beast This is the proper effect of Christianity to restore humanity to elevat it and purifie it from all those defilements and corruptions that were ingrossed and incorporated into it by the state of subjection to the flesh and therefore the Apostle delineats the nature of it unto us and draws the difference wide between the natural man and a Christian The natures of things are dark and hidden in themselves but they come to be known to us by there operations and acting their inclinations and instincts are known this way Grace is truly a very spiritual thing and the nature of it lyes high yet as Christ could not be hid in the house neither can grace be hid in the heart it will be known by its working Christ can better be hid in a house then in the heart because when he is in a heart he is ingadged to restore that heart and soul to its native dignity and preheminency over the flesh and this cannot but cause much disturbance in the man for a season to change governments to cast out usurpers and to restore the lawful and righteous owner to the possession of his right cannot be done secretly and easily it will shake the very foundations of a Kingdom to accomplish it so it is here the restitution of the soul to the possession of its right and dominion over the flesh the casting out of that tyrannous and base usurper the flesh cannot be done except all the man know it feel it and in a manner be pained with it Now the nature of Christianity doth lay it self open to us in these two especially in what it minds and savours and how it causeth to walk life is known especially by affection and motion A feeling thinking ●avouring power is a living power so a moving walking power is a living power and these are here the Christian is shortly described by his nature he is one after the Spirit not after the flesh and by the proper characteristical operations of that nature first minding or savouring the things of the Spirit which comprehends his inward thoughts affections intentions and cogitations all his inward senses are exercised about such objects and then he is one walking after the Spirit his motions are in a course of obedience proceeding from that inward relish or taste that he hath of the things of God It is not without very good reason that the name of a Christian is thus exp●essed one after the Spirit that is his character that expressed his nature unto us whether ye look to the original of Christianity or the prime subject of it or the chief end of it it deserves to be called by this name The original of it is very high as high as that eternal Spirit as high as the God of the spirits of all flesh Things are like their original and some way participat of the nature of their causes that which is born of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3.6 that which is born of God who is a Spirit must be spirit 1 Joh. 5.1 How royal a descent is that how doth it nobilitat a mans nature Truly all other degrees of birth among men are vain imaginary things that hath no worth at all but in the fancies of men they put no real excellency in men But this is only true nobility this alone doth extract a man deface vulgi out of the dregs of the multitude There is no intrinsick difference between bloods or natures but what this make this divine birth this second birth all other differences are but in opinion this is reality it puts the image of that blessed Spirit upon a man Truly such a creature is not begotten in the womb of any natural cause of any humane perswasion or intising words of mans wisdom of any external mercy or judgment no instruction no pe●swasion no allurement nor afrightment can make you Christians in the Spirit till the Spirit blow when he pleaseth and creat you again It must come from above that power that can set your hearts aright and make them to look straight above Christ Jesus came down from Heaven into the earth and took on our flesh that so the Almighty Spirit might come down to transform our spirits and lift them up from the earth to the Heaven We cast the seed into the ground of mens hearts and alace it gets entry but in few souls it is scattered rather on the high-way side and cannot reach into the arrable ground of the heart but it can do nothing without the influence of Heaven except the Spirit beget you again by that immortal seed of the Word Therefore we would cease our wondering that all the means of Gods Word and Works do not beget moe true Christians I do rather wonder that any of Adams wretched posterity should be begotten again and advanced to so high a dignity to
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
but since ye will not condemn your selves this righteous Judge must condemn you Now since it is so that such a condemnatory sentence is past on all men what a priviledge must it be to be delivered from it to have that sentence repealed by some new act of Gods mercy and ●avour David proclaims him a blessed man whose sins are forgiven and covered and indeed he is blessed who escapes that pit of eternal misery though there were no more though there were no title to an inheritance and Kingdom above to be delivered from that wrath to come upon the children of disobedience this is more happiness than the enjoyment of all earthly delights What would a man give in exchange for his soul Skin for skin and all a man hath he will give for his life These riches and advantages and pleasures that men spend their labour for all these they will part with in such a hazard The covetous man he will cast his Coffers over-board ere he lose his life The voluptuous man he will suffer pain and torment in cutting off a member ere he die But if men knew their souls and what an immortality and eternity expects them they would not only give skin for skin and all that they have for their soul but their life also Ye would choose to die a thousand deaths to escape this eternal death But what shall a man give in exchange for his soul Mat. 16.26 though he would give yet what hath he to give There are two things endears any priviledge to us and hightens the rate of it the necessity of it and the preciousness of it and these two are eminent here Is it not necessary to be to live and have a being All men think so when they will give all they have to redeem themselves All other things are accidental to them they are nearest to themselves therefore all must go ere themselves go But I say this is more necessary to be well eternally than to be simply to escape this condemnation than to have a being And this shall be verified in the last day when men shall cry for hills and mountains to fall on them and save them from the wrath of the Lamb Rev. 6.16 Men will choose rather not to be than to fall in that wrath O how acceptable would a mans first nothing be to him in that great day of wrath who shall be able to stand in it When Kings and Princes bond and free great and small shall desire mountains to grind them into powder rather then to hear that sentence of condemnation and yet shall not obtain it O blessed are all they that trust in him when his wrath is kindled but a little Psal. 2.12 Ye toil and vex your selves and spends your time about that body and life but for as precious as they are to you now ye would exchange them one day for immunity and freedom from this wrath and curse How will that man think his lines are fallen in pleasant places How will he despise the glory of earthly Kingdoms though all united in one who considers in his heart ●ow all Kings all Tongues and Nations must stand before the Judgment Seat of God and the books of his Law be opened to judge them by as also the books of their Consciences to verifie his accusation and precipitate their own sentence and then in the open view of all the sons of Adam and the Angels all secrets be brought out their accusation read as large as their lifeti●e and as many curses to be pronounced against every one as there be breaches of the Law of God whereof they are found guilty and then all these will seek into corners and cry for mountains but there is no covering from his presence What do ye think the man will think within himself who will stand before God and be absolved in Judgement by Jesus Christ notwithstanding his provocations above many of them what will a King then think of his Crown and Dominions when he reflects on them what will the poor persecuted Christian then think of all the glory and perfection of this world when he looks back upon it O know poor foolish men what madnesse is in venturing your souls for trifles ye run the hazard of all greatest things for a poor moments satisfaction Ye will repent it too late and become wise to judge your selves fools when there is no place to mend it But this priviledge is no more necessary than it is precious Your souls are now kept captive under that sentence of everlasting imprisonment ye are all prisoners and know not of it What will ye give in ransome for your souls your sins and iniquities have sold you to the righteous Judge of all the earth as malefactors and he hath past a sentence of your perpetual imprisonment under satans custody in hell Now what will you give to redeem your souls from that pi● how few know the worth of their souls and so they offer unto God some of their riches for them Doth not many of you think ye have satisfied for sins if ye pay a civil penalty to the Judge many thinks their own tears and sorrow for sin may be a price to justice at least if it be joyned with ●mendment in time coming And so men conceive their sins are pardoned and their souls redeemed But alas the redemption of the soul is precious yea it ceaseth for ever all your substance will be utterly contemned though ye offered it How few of you would give so much for your souls and yet though ye gave it it will not do it ye must pay the uttermost farthing or nothing Your sorrow and reformations will not compleat the sum no nor begin it though thou wash thee with nitre and take much sope yet is thine iniquity marked with me yet there is still condemnation for thee Though all the world should conveen about this matter to find a ransome for man suppose all the treasures of Monarchs the mines and bowels of the earth the coffers of rich men were searched Nay let the Earth the Sea the Heavens and Sun and Moon be prized at the highest Joyn all the merits of Angels above and men below all their good actions and sufferings yet the sum that amounts of all that addition would not pay the least ●●rthing of this debt The Earth would say it is not in me the Heaven behoved to answer so Angels and men might say we have heard of it but it s hid from all living Where then is this Redemption from the curse where shall a ransome be found Indeed God hath found it It is with him he hath given his Son a ransome for many and his blood is more precious than souls let be gold and silver Is not this then a great priviledge that if all the kingdoms of the world were sold at the dearest yet they could not buy it What a jewel is this what a pearl who ever of you have escaped this
can strike hands and engage to serve the Lord as easily as that people in Ioshua 24.18 19. But we may say Oh that there were such a heart in you but alas such a heart is not in you you cannot serve the Lord for He is holy and jealous and ye are not only weak but wicked I beseech you then believe this one testimony that God hath given of man even the choisest thing in man the very wisdom of a natural man It is not subject to Gods Law and it cannot be better neither can it be subject resolution industry vowes and covenants will not effect this till the most High break and bow the heart And not only is this enmity against the old law of commandments an antipathy at them as crossing our lusts but even against the new and living Law of the spirit of life in Christ. Here is your misery you can neither be subject to the Law as commanding to obey it or threatning for disobedience to it nor to the Gospel as promising to believe and receive it The Law commands but your law countermands within The Law threatens and sentences you with condemnation but you have some self-pleasing delusion and dream in your heads and blesses your selves in your own hearts even though ye walk in the imagination of your hearts contrary to the Law Deut. 29. It is strange that you do not sore-apprehend and fear hell but it s this delusion possesses the heart you shall not die It was the first act of enmity not only the transgression of the command but unbelief of the truth of the curse and that which fi●st encouraged man to sin encourages you all to ly into it and continue in it a fancy of escaping wrath This noise fills the heart Satan whispers it in the ear go on you shall not die Thus it appears that the natural mind cannot be subject to the Law of God no perswasion no instruction can inforce this belief of your damnable condition upon you But then when the enmity is beaten out of this sort and a soul is really convinced of its desperat and lost estate when the heart is brought down to subjection to take with that dreadful sentence yet there is another tower of enmity in the heart that can keep out against the weapons of the Gospel such as Paul mentions Rom. 10.2 Being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God they went about to establish their own and could not submit to the righteousness of God There is a natural pride and stiffness of heart that we cannot endure but to have something in our selves to rest on and take pleasure into and when a soul sees nothing it rather vexes and torments it self as grieving because it hath no ornament or covering of its own nor rejoiceth and delighteth in that righteousness of God revealed in Christ. O the difficulty to bow down so low as to put on anothers righteousness over our nakedness and should it be called submission is it not rather the elevating and ex●lting of a soul yet in respect of our natural posture of spirit it is a matter of great difficulty to make a self condemned sinner submit to thi● To be saved freely without money or price by anothers ransome What empty vain and frivolous expiation and satisfactions will souls invent rather then trust all to this How long will poor souls wander abroad from hill to mountain seeking some inherent qualification to commend them and leave this Garden and Paradise of delights which is opened up in Christ souls look every where for help till all hands fail and then necessity constrains them to come hither but indeed when necessity b●ought in charity and amity keeps in when once he knows what entertainment is in Christ. As for you who as yet have not stooped to the sentence of wrath how will you submit to the righteousness of God but I wonder how you imagine this to be so easie a thing To believe You say You did alwayes believe in Christ and that your hearts are still on him and that you do it night and day Now there needs no other argument to perswade that you do not at all believe in the Gospel who have not apprehended no more difficulty in it no more contrariety to your rebellious natures in it let this one word go home with you and convince you of your unbelief The natural min● is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can it be How then do you come so easily by it certainly it must be fained and counterfit SERMON XXII Rom 8.8 So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God IT is a kind of happiness to men to please them upon whom they depend and upon whose favour their well-being hangs It is the Servants happiness to please his Master the Courtiours to please his Prince and so generally whosoever they be that are joyned in mutual relations and depend one upon another that which makes all pleasant is this To please one another Now certainly all the dependencies of creatures one upon another are but shaddows unto the absolute dependance of creatures upon the Creator for in him we live and move and have our being the dependance of the ray upon the Sun of the stream upon the fountain is one of the greatest in nature but all creatures have a more necessary connexion with this fountain-being both in their being and well being they are nothing but a flux and emanation of his power and pleasure and as the Psalmist expresseth it he hides his face and they are troubled he takes away their breath and they die and return to their dust he sends forth his spirit and they are created and he renews the face of the earth Psal. 104.29 30. You may extend this to the being and well-being happiness and misery of creatures our souls which animat our bodies are but his breath which he breathed into the dust and can retract it when he pleaseth the life of our souls the peace and tranquility and satisfaction is another breathing of his spirit and another look of his countenance and as he pleases to withdraw it or interpose between his face and us so we live or die are blessed or miserable Our being or well-being hath a more indispensible dependance on him then the image in the glasse hath upon the living face If it be so then certainly of all things in the world it concerns us nearest how to please him and be at peace with him If we be in good terms with him in whose hand our breath is and whose are all our wayes Dan. 5.23 Upon whose countenance our misery or felicity hangs then certainly we are happy if we please him it matters not whom we displease for he alone hath absolute uncontrolled and universal power over us as our Saviour speaks over both soul and body We may expect that his good pleasure towards us will not be ●ai●fied but in communicating his fulness and manifesting his
Mal. 1.6 While we call him Father or Lord we proclaim this much that we ought to know our distance from him and his superiority to us and if worship in prayer carry not this character and expresse not this honourable and glorious Lord whom we serve it wantes that congruity and suitableness to him that is the beauty of it Is there any thing more uncomly then for children to behave themselves irreverently and irrespectively towards their Fathers to whom they owe themselves It is a monstruous thing even innature and to natures light O how much more abominable must it be to draw near to the Father of spirits who made us and not we our selves in whose hand our breath is and whose are all our wayes in a word to whom we owe not only this dust but the living spirit that animats it that was breathed from Heaven and finally in whom we live and move and have our being and well-being to worship such an one and yet to behave our selves so unseemly and irreverently in his presence our hearts not stricken with the apprehension of his glory but lying flatt and dead before him having scarcely him in our thoughts whom we speak to and finally our deportments in his sight are such as could not be admitted in the presence of any person a little above our selves to be about to speak to them and yet to turn aside continually to every one that cometh by and entertain communication with every base creature this I say in the presence of a King or Nobleman would be accounted such an absurd incivility as could be committed and yet we behave our selves just so with the Father of spirits O the wandrings of the hearts of men in divine worship while we are in communication with our Father and Lo●d in prayer whose heart is fixed to a constant attendance and presence by the impression of his glorious holinesse whose spirit doth not continually gadd abroad and take a word of every thing that occurrs and so marrs that soul-co●●espondance O that this word Psal. 89.7 were written with great letters on our hearts God is greatly to be feared in the assembly of the Saints and to be had in reverence of all them that are about him that one word God speaketh all Either we must convert Him in an idol which is nothing or if we apprehend Him to be God we must apprehend our infinit distance from Him and his unspeakable inaccessible glory above us He is greatly fea●ed and reverenced in the Assemblies that are above in the upper Courts of Angels those glorious Spi●its who must cover the feet from us because we cannot see their glo●y they must cover their faces from Him because they cannot behold his glory Isa. 6. what a glorious train hath he and yet how reverend are they they wait round about the Throne above and about it as Courtier● upon their King for they are all minist●ing spirits and they rest not day and night to adore and admire that holy one crying holy holy holy the whole earth is full of his glory Now how much more then should he be greatly feared and had in reverence in the assembly of his Saints of poor mortal men whose foundation is in the dust and dwell in clay and besides drink in iniquity like water there is two points of difference and distance from us He is nearer Angels for Angels are pure spirits but we have flesh which is furthest removed from his nature And then Angels are holy and clean yet that is but spotted to his unspotted holinesse but we are defiled with sin which putteth us farthest off from him and which his holinesse hath greatest antipathy at Let us consider this my beloved that we may carry the impression of the glorious holinesse and Majesty of God on our hearts when ever we appear before him that so we may serve and rejoice with trembling and pray with reverence and godly fear if we apprehend indeed our own quality and condition how low how base it is how we cannot endure the very clear aspect of our own consciences we cannot look on our selves stedfastly without shame and confusion of face at the de●ormed spectacle we behold much lesse would we endure to have our souls opened and presented to the view of other men even the basest of men we would be overwhelmed with shame if they could see into our hearts Now then apprehend seriously what He is how glorious in holinesse how infinit in wisdom how the secrets of your souls are plain and open in his sight and I am perswaded you will be composed to a reverend humble and trembling behaviour in his sight But withall I must add this that because he is your Father you may intermingle confidence nay you are commanded so to do and this honours him as much as reverence for confidence in God as our Father is the best acknowledgment of the greatnesse and goodnesse of God it declareth how able he is to save us and how willing and so ratifieth all the promises of God made to us and setteth to a seal to his ●aith●ulness there is nothing he accounts himself more honoured by then a souls full resigning it self to him and relying upon his power and good-will in all necessities casting its care upon Him as a loving Father who careth for us And truly there is much beauty and harmony in the juncture of these two reioycing with trembling confidence with reverence to ask nothing doubting and yet sensible of our infinit distance from him and the disproportion of our requests to his Highnesse A child-like disposition is composed thus as also the temper and carriage of a Courtier hath these ingredients in it The love of his Father and the ●avour of his Prince maketh him take liberty and assume boldnesse and withall he is not unmindful of his own distance from his Father or Master Let us draw near with full assurance of faith Heb. 10.22 There is much in the Scripture both exhorted commanded and commended of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that liberty and boldnesse of pouring out our requests to God as one that certainly will hear us and grant that which is good Vnbelief spoileth all it s a wretched and base-spirited thing that can conceive no honourable thoughts of God but only like it self but faith which is the well-pleasing ingredient of prayer the lower thoughts a man have of himself it maketh him conceive the higher and more honourable of God My wayes are not as your wayes nor my thoughts as your thoughts but as far above as the Heaven above the Earth Isa. 55.8 This is the rule of a believing souls conceiving of God and expecting from him and when a soul is thus placed on God by trusting and believing in him it is fixed My heart is fixed trusting in the Lord Psal. 112.7 O how wavering and inconstant is a soul till it fix at this Anchor upon the ground of his immutable promises It is tossed