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A34038 The righteous branch growing out of the root of Jesse and healing the nations held forth in several sermons upon Isai. chap. 11, from vers. 1 to 10 : together with some few sermons relating to all who live under the shadow of the branch / by William Colvill. Colvill, William, d. 1675. 1673 (1673) Wing C5432; ESTC R26038 212,566 434

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be brought to light and they shall know there is no name under heaven whereby they can be saved but the Name of Jesus Act. 4.12 Quest It may be asked at what time was this prophesie fulfilled For answer Consider the Gospel or Doctrine of the glad tidings of salvation in Christ was a mystery hid from the Gentiles and other heavenly Truths and Ordinances were communicat only to the Jews Ps 147.19 20. Rom. 3.2 There was not a Church among the Gentiles before the time our blessed Lord gave commission to preach unto them Mat. 28.19 It is true there were some proselytes at diverse times before the birth of our Lord in time of the Patriarchs was Melchizedeck though some think he was Shem and Job in Moses his time was Jethro in Joshua his time Rachab in the time of the Judges Ruth in the time of David Ittai the Gittit in Solomons time Hiram and in Jeremiahs time Ebedmelech these were but the first fruits of the Gentiles and drops in comparison of that great flood of Converts foretold Is 2.2 It shall come to pass in the last dayes that the mountain of the Lords house shall be established in the top of the mountains and shall be exalted above the hills and all nations shall flow unto it After the birth of our blessed Lord and his sending forth the Apostles to teach all Nations the knowledge of the Gospel did abound in many parts of the world as the sea abounds with waters it was foretold by our blessed Lord that this prophesie should be fulfilled in a great part even before the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans Mat. 24.14 and it was fulfilled Rom. 10.18 Their sound went unto all the earth and their words unto the ends of the world Col. 1.23 which was preached to every creature which is under heaven for the Gospel was preached by the Apostles even to the greater part of the habitable world so far as it was known at that time according to that ample Commission given by our Lord to his Disciples Mat. 28 19 20. Therefore faith Augustine de Civit. Dei lib. 22.8 Whosoever he be that requires miracles at this time he himself is a great wonder and prodigy who believeth not when all the world believeth the Gospel But before the end of the world these Nations which sometimes were Christian and are now overspread with Turcism and Mahometism as at this day Assyria and Egypt and many Nations living at this day in Paganism shall be converted to the Christian Faith and the Gospel shall be preached unto many Nations which were not known in the dayes of the Apostles as it is at this day both in the Eastern and Western India Observ The preaching hearing and knowledge of the Gospel is the ordinary mean of conversion and of a Gospel-like conversation 2 Cor. 4.6 God hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ 2 Thess 2.14 God hath called you by our Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ This is evident from instances of divers persons converted to the Faith of Jesus Christ and to the way of Sanctification by the preaching of the Gospel Act. 2.37.47 Act. 16.14.33.31 It is also evident from the denominations the Gospel getteth as 1. The word of grace Act. 20.33 Not only because it is sent to a Nation or People out of Gods free-grace Matth. 13.11 It is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of Heaven but to them it is not given But also by it as the ordinar instrument the holy Spirit worketh the sanctifying and saving grace of believing and turning to the Lord in all come to years of discerning and appointed for Salvation Act. 11.21 The hand of the Lord was with them and a great number believed and turned unto the Lord. 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds c. Gal. 2.8 He that wrought effectually in Peter to the Apostleship of the circumcision the same was mighty in me towards the Gentils Therefore now in these dayes after that this sacred instrument and testimony is sealed and reposited by God in his Church the pillar and ground of the truth 1 Tim. 3 15 as the only authentical Record and invariable Rule of the Christian Faith if any man shall pretend to the inward revelation of the Spirit without or contrair to the written Word it is Enthusiasm and a delusion of his own private spirit neither let any man think it is enough to have the outward revelation of the written Word without the inward operation of the holy Spirit enlightning the understanding by Faith to perceive and assent unto the truth revealed in the Word and enclining the will by love to receive and retain it in the heart for the Lord openeth both the understanding and the heart Luk. 24.45 Act. 16.14 The Gospel is called the word of life Act. 5.20 Because the Gospel is the seed of the new life 1 Pet. 1.23 Faith and belief to the threatnings of the Law is as the Plough to rent the fallow-ground of our heart but Faith conceiving and embracing Christ in the promises of the Gospel is the seed of our regeration Jam. 1.18 Of his own will beg at he us by the word of truth It is called the word of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.19 Because in the Gospel remission and reconciliation in the blood of Christ is offered unto all who repent and believe in him Act. 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And it is called The word of Salvation Act. 13.26 Because it is the ordinar mean of Salvation Rom 1.16 2 Thess 2 13. God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth That the Gospel is the ordinar mean of Conversion to the Faith of Christ is evident from Reason and clear consequences from Scriptural truths 1. Hope of life and immortality is a strong motive to turn men from the broad way that leadeth unto death and to everlasting destruction Now the Gospel sheweth unto us life and immortality in Christ Jesus Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin 2 Tim. 1.10 The grace of God is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ who hath abolished death and hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel 2. By the knowledge we have of Christ and by believing in him as he is offered in the Gospel we are turned from an estate of condemned rebels unto an estate of persons justified and reconciled in the blood of Jesus Christ Isa 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many for he shall
for fruition the center of all his desires and hopes the motion of his heart toward God is the greater and he vehemently desires to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is best of all This knowledge in some abstruse and supernatural mysteries is but confuse and general we know from divine revelation something of the matter but little or nothing of the manner It is our duty to acquiesce on divine testimony and refer the knowledge of the manner unto that day wherein we shall see God face to face It is with us here in this dark valley of Baca as it was with that blind man of Bethsaida Mark 9. who at the first touch of his eyes by Christ did see objects more generally and confusedly but afterward at the second touch more particularly and distinctly So here in this life by his first touch and illumination of our mind with the light of faith we see something of these great mysteries in a confused and general notion but at his second touch in heaven by the beatifick vision we shall know distinctly and more particularly at the least we shall know so much in these high mysteries as will satisfie the desire of the soul and will rejoyce the heart without all anxious or painful desire to know more Therefore Christian Reader I made choice to speak in the publick Congregation for some time on this portion of Scripture wherein the Lord Jesus Christ the Righteous BRANCH is held forth to us that coming to him we may be healed both of sin in our justification through him who is JEHOVAH our Righteousness and that we may be sanctified and daily purified from all uncleanness of the flesh and spirit by him who also is made of God sanctification unto us who bare our sins in his own body on the tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteousness This knowledge is most to be sought after for as the fashion of this world passeth away so certainly the knowledge of things worldly will be out of fashion after death but the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ begun in the Elect here by faith unto the Gospel will be perfect and everlasting in that day of eternity when the Lamb will be our light for ever If thou ingenuous Reader shall reap as I pray God thou mayest any spiritual benefit by this small Treatise published at the desire of some pious and sober minded hearers give all praise to the Righteous BRANCH who as he is in himself most precious so he maketh himself savoury and precious to believers And that it may be seen he is so to thee let thy conversation smell of the BRANCH What escapes thou perceivest as in the multitude of words there want not failings impute them meerly to the weakness of the trembling hand here that holds forth the BRANCH but no wayes to the BRANCH it self Though possibly thou cannot construct some expressions in this Treatise with thine own sentiment and opinion yet certainly the intention of the Author to magnifie the riches and power of Gospel-grace in the conversion of chief sinners and his earnest endeavours to stir up Converts unto a suitable conversation in Christian duties and unto Christian communion in love and peace among themselves cannot be disrellished by any person of the Gospel-spirit Farewell ERRATA Pag. Lin. Read 16 23 facility 67 20 Acts 16. ibid 27 have heard 75 30 loffes 76 6 nor on 116 29 thou hast 125 1 Acts 10.1 132 20 Mat. 25.30 175 16 diversity 202 29 42 220 20 because of 241 24 ingenuous 259 20 jealous God 261 30 lenitives 263 23 special 279 19 of conscience THE RIGHTEOUS BRANCH Growing out of the Root of Jesse and healing the Nations ISAI Chap. 11. from vers 1. to 10. And there shall come forth a Rod out of the Stemme of Jesse and a Branch shall grow out of his Roots IT is usual and worthy of the holy Prophets in speaking of temporal mercies and deliveries of the people of God from their enemies to insert something by way of Prophesie like a bright colour to give lustre to temporal benefits by speaking something anent our spiritual and eternal redemption by the promised Messias Thus the same Prophet having prophesied of the temporal deliverance of the Jews from the combination of the Kings of Assyria and Israel subjoyns an Evangelical Prophesie concerning the coming of the Messias Isa 7.14 The Prophet Jeremiah having spoken Chap. 23. of the return of the Jews from the captivity of Babylon subjoyns vers 6 a Prophesie of the kingdom and benefits of the Messias as also the like is done Jer. 33.15 In like manner the Prophet here having foretold their deliverance from Sennacherib King of Assyria subjoyns a gracious and comfortable Prophesie of the Messias his birth government and the deliverance and redemption both of Jews and Gentiles from their spiritual enemies by their happy conversion to the faith of the promised Messias In this Chapter from the beginning to vers 10. we have these particulars 1. The low beginning and original of the Messias set forth in borrowed expressions 2. His singular endowments and qualifications for executing the office of Mediator and for governing his Church vers 2. 3. The manner of his government vers 3 4 5. 4. The effects of his government vers 6 7 8 9. 5. The cause of these effects in the end of vers 9. For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea Vers 1. By rod or twigg we understand the Lord Jesus Christ as a small twigg sprouting up from Jesse the father of David He is so called in respect of his outward low and humble condition in the world as it is also said Isai 53.2 He shall grow up as a root out of a dry ground he hath no form nor comliness c. Which is not to be understood in relation to the outward form or feature of his body which without all question was most comely having its constitution and complexion framed in a singular manner by the Holy Ghost but it is spoken in respect of his outward condition and estate in the world because he was born in a poor Cortage without all outward Pomp and State Luk. 2.7 This prophesie of Christs descending from the loyns of David and Jesse was accordingly fulfilled Act. 13.23 By Branch is meant our blessed Lord who is so called Jer. 23.5 Zechar. 3.8 and 6.12 In which places the 70. Interpreters render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oriens and in this Text they render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Flos because he was in dignity the first-born and flower of all the creatures To these places of holy Scripture wherein our blessed Lord is called the Branch many learned Interpreters do think that place Matth. 2.23 he shall be called a Nazaren doth relate he was called a Nazaren that is the Branch from the City Nazareth where he had his education it being a
same time he was attended by an heavenly host of Angels and was worshipped both by the wise men that came from the east and by the shepherds after he was tempted as a man in the wilderness yet the Angels ministered unto him as the Son of God after his sleeping as a man in the ship he rebuked the Sea and the Winds as the Son of God yea in his lowest condition upon the Cross he by the power of his God-head did shake the earth and raise the dead Vse 2. Meditate oft-times for thy comfort upon his lowing and humbling himself in his birth life and death look upon it as the greatest token of his love Jacobs service in so low a condition was a great token of his love to Rachel but the Prince of Glory even Jacobs Lord was in the form of a servant near-by thirty four years to espouse us who were by nature enemies to God Look upon his low condition and humiliation as a special mean to engage thy heart and affection to himself who took upon him thy nature to make thee partaker of the Divine Nature by a conformity to God in holiness in this life and in glory and happiness for ever in the other life Look upon his humiliation as thy pattern in thy behaviour to thy inferiours he condescended to us in our low estate therefore be not high-minded neither in a supercilious arrogancy stand upon your punctilio's but let the like mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus who humbled himself to do us good So should we after his example condescend to do good one to another Phil. 2.3 4 5. VERSE II. And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him the spirit of wisdom and understanding the spirit of counsel and might the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord. FOr the better clearing these words we would answer three questions 1. Seing God gave him the Spirit not in measure Joh. 3.34 How is it that the graces of the Spirit bestowed upon him are here stinted and limited to the number of six 2. Seing he had these graces from all eternity being equal in understanding wisdom counsel might and knowledge with the Father how is the Spirit said to rest upon him in his Incarnation as if he had not been endowed with those graces before that time 3. What is meant by these several graces and gifts mentioned here I answer to the first The graces reckoned up here are such as were bestowed upon him as Man and Mediator in our nature at his Incarnation and were requisit for him in the Government of his Church and people although all other graces were habitually and eminently in him as humility meekness patience c. yet such graces are mentioned here as in a special manner qualified him for the actual discharge of the Mediatory-office as for that spoken of our blessed Lord Joh. 3.34 He received not the spirit by measure it is not to be understood simply as if the Humane Nature of Christ by way of transfusion had received an infinit measure of grace for a finit creature cannot receive such a measure seing every thing is received according to the measure and capacity of the receiver but it is spoken by way of comparison with all the intelligent creatures Angels or Men who received not such a measure of the graces of the Spirit as Christ did in his Humane Nature wherein he was anointed above his fellows Psal 45.7 Eph. 4.7 To the second Question I answer Our blessed Lord in respect of his Divine Nature was of infinit understanding wisdom counsel might and knowledge but these graces in a finit measure were communicat to the Humane Nature in the personal union thereof with the Divine Nature in his Incarnation but in a measure far above the capacity of Angels or Men because the nearer the creature is united to God the perfection of it is the greater therefore it is even so among believers in the Church here on earth some of them are more perfect then others because united to God by more of faith and love then others and in Heaven the Saints glorified are more perfect then the Saints militant on earth because they are united and near to God in the facial vision of God by full knowledge and perfect love Now of all creatures the Humane Nature of Christ was and is most perfect because united and nearest to the Divine Nature in a personal union To the third I answer We understand by the Spirit of understanding his large capacity in perceiving and up-taking what was incumbent for himself to do and suffer as our Mediator and also what the elect should do for attaining eternal life through him By the Spirit of wisdom we understand the gift of active prudence whereby he was enabled for doing and performing the duty which he understood was incumbent to him as our Mediator Psal 40.8 9 10. I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart I have declared thy faithfulness and thy salvation I have not concealed thy loving kindness and thy truth from the great congregation By the Spirit of counsel we understand his ability to reveal the eternal counsel and purpose of the Father concerning the way of mans salvation Joh. 6.40 And this it the will of him that sent me that every one which seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life By the Spirit of might we understand that power and dominion over all creatures given to him as Mediator and Head of his Church Mat. 28.18 All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth An exceeding power of invincible grace toward the Elect in their effectual calling and conversion Eph. 1.19 and also a power and mighty force to subdue his obstinat and incorrigible enemies 1 Cor. 15.25 For he must reign till he hath put all enemies under his feet By the Spirit of knowledge we understand not only his certain and infallible knowledge of all things to be done and suffered by him for the salvation of lost man but also his knowledge and dexterity for instructing his Church in the truth and way of salvation As in the Breast-plate of the High Priest was Vrim and Thummim rendered by the 70. Interpreters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Manifestation and Truth So our Lord knew the truth and had a transcendent gift of a convincing gravity and authority as also a perswasive clearness upon the spirits and hearts of his hearers Psal 45.2 Grace is poured into thy lips Mat. 7.28 29. And it came to pass when Jesus had ended these sayings the people were astonished at his doctrine For he taught them as one having authority and not as the Scribes Luk. 24.32 And they said one to another Did not our heart burn within us while he talked with us by the way and while he opened to us the Scriptures This knowledge infused into the Humane Nature of Christ was not an absolute Omniscience which is incommunicable to any
creature yea not to the Son of man Mark 13.32 This knowledge in the Humane Nature of Christ was intrinsecal communicat from the personal union for it is said He knew in himself to wit from the God-head dwelling in him personally Luk. 8.46 Joh. 6.61 but the knowledge of the Prophets and Apostles was extrinsecal by inspiration and extraordinary revelation By the spirit of the fear of the Lord we understand that heavenly grace of unspotted holiness and purity in his Humane Nature for such an High Priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled c. Heb. 7.26 therefore is he called by way of singularity and excellency 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Holy Thing Luk. 1.35 The words being thus explained two things may be observed 1. The variety of the graces and gifts powred forth upon our Lord Jesus Christ for the good of his Church 2. The permanency and continuance of these graces and gifts in vigor and exercise it is said The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him Observ 1. Variety of graces and gifts were poured forth upon Jesus Christ our Head for the good of all the members of his mystical body the Church this is evident from this place as also from Joh. 1.14 16. He was full of grace and truth and of his fulness have we all received and grace for grace As the ointment poured forth upon the head of Aaron the High Priest did flow down to the skirts of his garment Psal 133.1 in like manner the vertue of the graces of the Spirit poured forth on Jesus Christ our great High Priest doth descend to the meanest member of his mystical body for sanctifying them throughout and for gladning their hearts with that oyl of gladness spoken of Psal 45.7 8. It is said Eph. 4.10 He asscended up far above all Heavens that he might fill all things It is true believers were filled in some measure with grace through him before his ascending into Heaven yet a greater measure of the Spirit was poured forth upon them after his ascension Acts 2.33 as the Sun after its rising fills the earth with light but the higher it ascends in its course the earth is filled with more of light so there is a greater measure of spiritual knowledge and grace in believers after the ascension of Christ then was before his birth or during the time of his abode upon the earth in the time of his humiliation Vse 1. Seing the Lord Jesus Christ received all these graces and gifts of the Spirit as Mediator for the good of his Church we should in all our wants and spiritual indigencies have our recourse by prayer to him that out of his fulness we might receive grace for grace It is a sure ground of our confidence and comfort that he received all these graces and gifts for our benefit therefore we should go to him as Children of the Family to the Stewart sealed and appointed by the Father who to their certain knowledge hath got provision both of grace and glory for all of the houshold of Faith and we may be assured he is faithful in all the House of God to give unto the children their Fathers allowance Joh. 6.27 Labour not for the meat which perisheth but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life which the son of man shall give unto you for him hath God the Father sealed Art thou dull in understanding and hath little or no sharpness of wit to understand and discern spiritual and supernatural truths no more then a blind man has sight to discern colours Go to the Lord Jesus Christ in whom was and is the spirit of understanding be thou humble under the sense of thy spiritual blindness and by prayer seek that eye-salve which is called the Vnction from the holy One 1 Joh. 2.20 and is called the Spirit of revelation Eph. 1.17 Seek it with a sincere purpose of heart to improve thy understanding of the truth revealed unto practice and doing what thou shalt understand to be Gods will and thy duty Go with confidence to the Lord Jesus Christ who is both able and willing to open thy understanding and to give a heavenly faculty to perceive and understand divine truths He not only taught the Disciples going to Emmaus by word of mouth but also opened their understandings Luke 24.44 And if thou have an honest purpose of heart to do revealed duties thy Lord will mak thee to understand and discern the truths that are necessary for the saving of thy soul Joh. 7.17 If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self Wouldst thou have spiritual wisdom and prudence for ordering thy conversation and doing of revealed duties Go to him upon whom was poured the spirit of wisdom by prayer seek it of him who gives liberally Jam. 1.4 Make conscience of frequent hearing and reading the Word of God which is the book of heavenly wisdom making men wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 16. In difficulties and perplexities wherein thou knows no more what to do then Jehoshaphat did in a great strait 2 Chron. 20.12 go to him for counsel Prov. 8.14 Counsel is mine And here it is said The spirit of counsel was upon him He is called by way of excellency The Counseller Isai 9.6 He hath promised to give counsel to our hearts in times of greatest difficulties Luk. 21.15 and accordingly he did so to his faithful servants as to Stephen Act. 6.10 and to Paul Act. 23.6 In an hour of temptation from the power of thine own corruption from Satan and from the world go to the Lord Jesus Christ for obtaining might and power to resist and in end to overcome thy spiritual enemies thus did Paul in an hour of darkness and temptation 2 Cor. 12.9 remember the spirit of might was poured on him he is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him Go to him for strength and protection in times of great trials and persecutions keep fast the word of his patience that is his direction for carrying thy self in such a time humbly patiently and peaceably Rev 3.10 Go to him in a time of fainting that from him thou may get quickening and might to run the ways of his Commandments Because the spirit of might was poured forth upon the Captain of our Salvation to help forward poor willing souls now and then fainting in the way of their Christian race it is not enough in your regeneration at first to be quickened unto a new life but in respect of your faintings in the race and course of Sanctification ye have need of daily quickening and up-stirring to the duties of the new life Therefore it is that David a man according to Gods heart being already in the state of grace and partaker of the new life prayeth frequently for quickening unto duty Psal 119.25 37 88 107 159. and Psal 143.3 Wouldst thou have the knowledge and
to my self Rashness in Judgement doth bring guiltiness upon the Judge and dammage upon the innocent Party David his rash Judgement against Mephibosheth did no small prejudice both to himself and to the poor innocent lame man In your privat Judgement be not rash Mat. 7.1 as in judging wicked men to be in a good cause or course from their outward prosperity Mal. 3 15. or in judging a cause to be evil because men are cross'd in it This was the error of Asaph till he recollected himself Psa 73.17 Jonah in fleeing from the Lord was in an evil course and yet found a Ship ready at the first and also fair weather at his Embarqueing but God met with him in end and crossed his course The Disciples of our Lord were in a right course commanded by himself Joh. 6. and yet were crossed with a mighty contrary wind but in end had an happy and safe landing Of this purpose see more Serm. Joh. 7.24 Neither should men be rash in judging one another about matters indifferent in the practice whereof they differ one from another Rom. 14.2 This Magisterial censuring one of another is a great impediment to peace and unity Augustine his advice is good Epist 106. to Casul We must always beware saith he to overcloud the fair face of Christian Charity by the tempest of contention And to the same purpose speaketh judicious Calvin Institut Lib. 4. Cap. 10. Sect. 32. We must alwayes take heed saith he that one Church do not despise or contemn another for the difference of outward Discipline VERSE IV. But with righteousness shall he judge the poor and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth and he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked HIs justice in the Government of his subjects is set down here positively where we understand by judging the poor his delivering of them out of the hand of their oppressors by taking them and their cause into his own cognizance and protection and in end doing justice to them and upon their oppressors Ps 140.12 I know that the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor By the meek we understand both the great and small who being wronged bear the wrongs with a meek spirit not avenging themselves by reviling or by rendering evil for evil as was the disposition of David though a great man Ps 38.13 14. But I as a deaf man heard not and I was as a dumb man that openeth not his mouth thus I was as a man that heareth not and in whose mouth are no reproofs By reproving for the meek of the earth we understand our blessed Lord his appearing for them in his gracious providence and in the course of vindicative justice when under their afflictions and persecutions they are quiet and peaceable then doth the Lord unto whom they commit their cause in righteousness oft-times arise and in their stead reproves their oppressors and injurers not only by his Word as he did David by Nathan for the wrong done to Vriah but also many times by his rod and sad judgements Ps 105.14 He suffered no man to do them wrong yea he reproved Kings for their sakes Or sometimes he reproves them by awaking and tormenting their guilty consciences Job 20.19 20. Because he hath oppressed c. he shall not surely feel quietness in his belly he shall not save of that he desired And ver 26. a fire not blown shall consume him Observ 1. The Lord God is the judge and defender of the poor even of such as are in a destitute and desolat condition as of the widow the fatherless and the strangers Ps 12.5 For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise saith the Lord. As a Judge he will arise in judgement to decide in their favours thus he arose in judgement for oppressed Naboth and by a visible judgement upon Achab the oppressor declared to all the world the innocency of Naboth who had been unjustly condemned as a blasphemer the Lord recommends such oppressed persons as his special Clients unto his Deputies and Vice-gerents upon earth Ps 82 3. Is 1.17 He commends in all Judges the care they have of the poor and destitute Ps 72.12 speaking of Solomon He shall deliver the needy when he cryeth the poor also and him that hath no helper Upon this account good Josiah is much commended by the Lord Jer. 22.16 He judged the cause of the poor and needy then it was well with him was not this to know me saith the Lord Prov. 29.7 The righteous considereth the cause of the poor but the wicked regardeth not to know it And he threaten sad judgements against such Judges who respect persons and turn away the right from the poor Job 13.10 Amos 2.6 Micah 3 10. Vse 1. For imitation unto all men in place of publick judgement they should in judging follow the example of our blessed Lord who in judging and governing did plead and assert the cause of the poor and destitute 2 Chron. 19.6 7. Take heed what ye do for ye judge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgement wherefore now let the fear of the Lord be upon you take heed and do it for there is no iniquity with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts The poor are frequently recommended in holy Scripture by God himself unto the Judges on earth and we know subordinat Judges take special notice of these who are recommended to them by the supreme Judge and Ruler of the Land and their cause is expeded with all possible and convenient diligence Vse 2. For admonition to men of power on earth not to oppress the poor for the Lord is their Judge and will own their cause Exo. 22.22 Job 34. from ver 24. to 29. what the oppressor at a time gets by oppression the supreme Judge of the earth in his justice and providence doth oft-times revocke from him or his posterity Job 20.15 He hath swallowed down riches and he shall vomit them up again God shall cast them out of his belly Sometimes the Lord smites him with terrour in his conscience which is as a fire not blown or visible to the world but secretly he torments him Job 15.21 Job 20.26 This oppression of the poor brings great houses to desolation Hab 2.9 10 11. Wo to him that coveteth an evil covetousness to his house that he may set his nest on high The Lord God oft-times in his justice raiseth up one oppressor against another as one Pyrat for robbing of another Is 33.1 Wo to thee that spoilest and thou wast not spoiled and dealest treacherously and they dealt not treacherously with thee when thou shalt cease to spoil thou shalt be spoiled and when thou shalt make an end to deal treacherously they shall deal treacherously with thee Vse 3.
pot of earth Ministers are the Lords Heraulds and the affront done to the Heraulds doth reflect upon the Prince who sent them David was highly provocked by the affront done to his Ambassadours 2 Sam. 10. And he punished it severely 2 Sam. 12.31 In like manner our blessed Lord taketh the contempt done to his Ministers as done unto himself Luk. 10.16 Vse 2. For exhortation to receive this sacred Word as the Word of God It is the rod of his mouth the whole Scripture is given by inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 It is the Lanthorn which sheweth us the way to Heaven Psal 119.100 2 Pet. 1.19 It is the rule of our faith Joh. 20.31 and of our obedience and conversation Gal. 6.16 It worketh effectually only in these who with a single heart receive it as the Word of God 1 Thes 2.13 Observ 2. The Word of God is powerful He shall smite c. This is evident 1. From these things unto which it is compared as Jer. 23.29 to fire which so smiteth and pierceth the hard rock with heat that the same is rent in pieces and to an hammer which breaks the hard stone It is compared unto a sword Heb. 4.12 which opens up and discovers the heart like the Anatomists razor and sheweth the inward vileness of our hearts 2. It is evident from the high Elogies given to the Word it is called the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 12 8. and the reproof of wisdom doth come home to the heart and smite it soundly The wise reproof given by Nathan to David in a parable did smartly smite the heart of David The Word is called the power of God Rom. 1.16 not that any natural power is inherent in the letters or syllables of the words as may be seen Acts 19.15 but because God doth ordinarily with the power of the Holy Ghost accompany his own sacred Ordinance spoken in simplicity of words and in sincerity of affection unto the hearts of his Elect that so they are powerfully induced to believe the Word and tu●n unto the Lord Acts 11.21 3. It is evident from examples as in Josiah humbled at the heart by the reading of this word 2 Chron. 24 27. The convert-Jews were pricked at the heart by this word Acts 2.37 We have a memorable example of the power of the Word recorded by Cyrill Bishop of Alexandria an eye-witness of the same At the first Council of Nice saith he there came out of curiosity thither an Heathen Philosoph who was a subtile and acute Logician but a great adversary to the Christian Religion some of the learned Fathers there reasoned with him by way of School-disputes but he by one or other distinction did elude the force of their Arguments whereupon one of the most simple in that famous Council being a very pious though not a learned man came against him like David against Goliah and in great simplicity of words with much zeal saith to him O Philosopher in the Name of Jesus Christ hearken to these things that are truths there is one God who made Heaven and Earth who made man of the earth and breathed life into him who created all things visible and invisible by the power of his Word and upholds all things by the same this Word and Wisdom which we call the Son of God having pity on man in his lost condition was born of a Virgin and by his suffering of death hath delivered us from eternal death by his resurrection he applyes to us eternal life and we look for him to come and to judge us according to the things done in the body O Philosopher believest thou it to be so Then he without all contradiction as astonished with the power of the Word could only answer this that it was a truth indeed which he had spoken Thereafter the aged Father desired him to follow after himself and to receive Christian an Baptism the seal of his faith into that saving truth whereupon he immediatly followed and turning himself toward his Schollars that came along with him and to the other hearers said So long as men did deal with me by bare words only I did oppose words to words and by artifice of words I did elude what they spoke but when power came forth from the mouth of the speaker my naked words could not resist divine power neither could man withstand God and therefore saith he to his Schollars believe ye in Christ and together with me follow this aged man in and by whom God hath spoken to me at this time Ruffinus Hist Lib. 1. Cap. 13. relating this History saith It was from God for verifying that place of holy Scripture 1 Cor. 4.20 The kingdom of God is not in word but in power for when the Spirit of God is with the Word we see it can so smite the heart that it brings all our imaginations captive to it 2 Cor. 10.4 Quest How doth the Word of God smite the heart Ans 1. By light shewing and convincing the understanding of the errours and dangers of our sinful wayes for by the Law is the knowledge of sin Rom 7.7 And in the Word as in a mirrour the vileness of sin which is compared to things most vile as to the dross of mettal to the scum of a pot to putrified sores to leprosie to dung to swine wallowing in the mire and to a dog licking up his own vomit but the vileness of sin is most seen in the mirrour of the Gospel because nothing could cleanse us from the filth of sin but the precious bloud of the Son of God And the danger of sin is seen in consequents thereof to wit all misery in this life not only the first but also the second death and damnation eternal unless it be preveened by true repentance and faith in Jesus Christ Luke 13.5 Joh. 3.18 2. The heart is smitten after conviction by grief and sorrow Acts 2.37 The convert-Jews being convinced of the wickedness and hainousness of their sin by Peters Sermon were pricked in their hearts cried out from fear Men and brethren what shall we do And the af●●g●ted Jaylour being afrighted from apprehension of the dange● of his sins cried out Acts 16.30 Sirs What must I do to be saved In like manner Felix the Governour being convinced of his sins and afrighted with the apprehension of Judgement to come did tremble Acts 24.25 3. After the conscience is awakened with fear then the will is pained and confounded with shame and displeasure Jer. 31.18 19. Rom. 6.21 What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of those things is death Vse 1. For admonition unto men of an hard and stupid heart to resort often unto the hearing and reading of the Word of God for who can tell but God one time or another will smite the earthy and obdured heart and open it as he did the heart of Lydia Acts 14. Object 1. But many have heard the Word and yet their hearts
his own good time can easily recompense all our temporal losses even in this world if it seem good in his eyes Is 61.7 For your shame you shall have double and for confusion they shall rejoice in their portion therefore in their land they shall possess the double But certainly in that day of restoring all things all losses shall be recompenced though not in specie yet in value exceeding them very far therefore reckon with thy self that all the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 Object 4. The faithful Lord hath promised to deliver out of temptation 1 Cor. 10.13 yet I am daily infested with sinful thoughts and sometime brought into bondage with my own consent Ans Yet it is the better that such thoughts are a grief to thy spirit as Hagar was to Sarah be of good courage the Lord in his own good time will cast out the bond-woman and her child even thy in-dwelling corruption and all the off-spring of it reverence the wisdom of God in suffering thy soul to be molested with these incursions and bickerings of that impure spirit he permits it that the grace of humility and prayer m●y be the more exercised by thee all the Canaanites were not driven out of the land of Canaan by the wise providence of God permitting and ordering it for good that the wilde beasts should not multiply in the land So the Lord in his wisdom permits the in-dwelling and stirrings of corruption within thy soul to preveen the encrease of pride and to keep thee humble and watchful and to stir thee up unto daily prayer for encrease of strength in the inner man Therefore give it not over but resist daily trusting to that promise Rom. 16.20 The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly Thou art engaged into a good cause to fight against thy lusts although through the wiles of Satan at a time thou mayest be brought into bondage yet despair not of victory in end mourn as Peter did after his denyal in the high Priests Hall and if thou mournest bitterly for thy bondage it is not altogether voluntary when thou mourns for it there is some resistance to it from grace in thy will and he that gives grace to resist shall give victory in end Rom. 7.24 25. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. The father of the possessed child brought his son who had been infested and molested from his childhood and when the child was a-coming to Christ the unclean spirit did vex him and rent him but he went forward to our blessed Lord who charged that soul spirit to come out of him and enter no more into him Mark 9.17 c. So it may be thou art never more infested than when thou hast a resolution to go to Christ and walk after his Commandments yet rise up by repentance and resolution of new obedience who knows but thy mighty Lord will rebuke that unclean motion and say as he did to that unclean spirit I charge thee to come out of him and enter no more into him Object 5. But in the mean time my soul faints within me under great afflictions and desertions because there is neither appearance of comfort nor out-gate Answ As faithfulness cleaveth to his loins as a girdle so let faith in thine heart cleave to him and his promises for as the lungs like bellows do cool and refresh the heart that it faint not through much heat and labour so faith breathing the faithful and gracious promises of God into the fainting soul doth revive the same Psal 27.14 Psal 42.5 Psal 119.81 When the Mariners in the Ship with Paul Acts 27. saw no light outward for directing their course they did cast out their Anchors and waited for the day so when thou who fears the Lord walkest in darkness and hath no light trust in the Name of thy faithful Lord and stay thy self upon thy God Isai 50.10 Remember for thy encouragement thy blessed Lord is faithful and compassionat Mat. 15.32 he had pity on the multitude who had continued with him three days without any bodily refreshment and would not send them away fasting lest they should faint in the way much more thy Lord full of compassion will not suffer a poor humble soul that hath been waiting on him by sincere obedience and for him by a lively hope purifying the heart and thirsting more and more for righteousness to depart out of this life without some refreshment in the inner man but as he did to that old expectant Simeon Luk. 2. he will give him Christ his Saviour into the arms of his faith that he may depart in peace in the hope of salvation VERSE VI. The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb and the leopard shall lie down with the kid and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together and a little child shall lead them FRom this vers to the 10. is set down the great and admirable effects of Christs powerful government by his Spirit and Word to wit a strange change and metamorphosis of persons who before the light of the glorious Gospel did shine in their hearts were of a sensual and brutish disposition and of a wild and savage conversation who were rebellious against God and had an antipathy one against another who were like Wolves in oppression like Leopards and young Lions in fierceness like the Asp and Cockatrice in bitterness of spirit and venomousness in conversation but these after their conversion by the light of the Gospel shall live in obedience and peace with God and in concord with others who before them were in a state of grace The wolf shall dwell with the Lamb and the leopard shall lie down with the kid and the calf and the young lion c. that is they shall be so daunted by the power of grace with the Gospel that they shall live in a sweet communion and fellowship with these who were in Christ before them and also with these who sometimes were also bitter and malicious enemies to the godly even such as had been like Asps and Cockatrices shall be converted and made partakers of the meek and lowly Spirit of Christ The cause of all this change will be the light of the glorious Gospel as it is said in the end of vers 9. For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea As at the Sun-rising the wild beasts do return to their dens and caves so the light of the Gospel in such as are effectually called according to the eternal purpose of God will make their wild and beastly affections to hide themselves for shame and they shall have no pleasure in the unfruitful works of darkness and they shall cast away all their idol-lusts Isai 31.6 7. Hos 14.8 Observ
1. Man before his conversion to God is compared to creatures void of reason and carried away by their sensual appetites unto objects pleasing to sense so that they are liker to brute beasts then to men of sound reason therefore in holy Scriptures they are compa●ed sometimes to the beasts in the field sometimes to the fowls in the air sometimes to the fishes in the sea and sometimes to creeping things To beasts of the field are compared such obstinat sinners who oppose the Gospel and will not forsake their sins that Christ may reign in them such are as head-strong beasts 1 Cor. 15.32 Acts 19.29 in which respect men are called brutish Psal 92.6 7. Psal 94.8 Isai 19.11 Open and fierce persecuters are compared to the fierce lion 2 Tim. 4.17 Hereticks who subtilly seduce people from Christ and from his truth as also being cruel hypocrites are compared to wolves Acts 20.29 Mat. 7.15 The furious and outragious man to a boar robbed of her whelps that doth run against any he meets with though possibly innocent Prov. 17.12 such were the furious Donatists and Circumcellions who massacred these of the orthodox Church that withstood their schism The oppressour who by violence beareth down all who stand in his way is compared to the ranging bear Prov. 28.15 The vindictive man who dissembles his malice and watcheth for an opportunity of revenge is compared to lions and leopards who lurk privily and setteth upon the Passenger unawares Psal 10.9 Secret and subtile detractors of the children of God are compared to foxes which peel the bark from the Vines so they by blasting their reputation endeavour to make their labours fruitless and unprofitable to others through calumny and prejudice Cant. 2.15 The insolent and riotous man who roaving in his wild courses doth puff at all that reprove him is compared to the wilde ass snuffing up the wind and will not be turned back Jer. 2.24 The man that inconsideratly and yet willingly casts himself into temptations is compared to a horse rushing into the battel Jer. 8.6 The man who is not over-awed by the fear of God nor led by the counsel of God in his Word but must be restrained by outward force or judgements is compared to the horse and mule Psal 32.9 The man that is inconstant in the way of his Religion is compared to a dromedary Jer. 2.23 The prophane men who have no esteem of the precious Ordinances of God are compared to swine and dogs Mat. 7.6 Seducers who infect others with the poyson of their pernicious errours are likened to mad dogs Phil. 3.2 Men who after profession of repentance return to their old sins are compared unto swine and dogs 2 Pet. 2.20 Men who revile Rulers unto barking dogs 2 Sam. 16.9 Covetous men unto greedy dogs Isa 56.11 The beautiful woman who wants discretion and doth expose her self unto temptations is compared to the swine The silly person drawn away to uncleanness by her allurements is likened unto the ox led to the slaughter Prov. 7.22 The base-spirited man who submits to adversaries upon any termes though never so unhonest is compared unto an ass Gen. 49.14 So is also the base servile spirit that doth not duty out of love but only out of servil fear Prov. 26.3 And the drunkard is worse than the beast in the field because the beast thirsteth for drink only to satisfie necessity and his natural appetite but the drunkard thirsteth for drunkenness to satisfie his sensual and sinful appetite They are compared to the fowls in the Air the man that walks disorderly and waits not upon the employments of his lawful calling is compared to a bird wandering from its nest Prov. 27.8 The unnatural parent careless of breeding or providing for his children is compared unto the Ostriche Job 39.14 Lament 4.3 The deceitful man who by fraud and unrighteousness maketh his purchase and thereafter in the just providence of God is spoiled thereof is compared unto a Partridge gathering and hatching eggs but beaten or chased away from them by the hunter or some ravenous fowl Jer. 17.11 The ambitious proud man that sets his nest on high and thinketh no hand is able to remove him is compared to an eagle Jer. 49.16 The man who preyes upon the simplicity and weakness of others is compared unto ravenous birds Is 46.11 The pusillanimous man afraid of every thing is compared unto the silly dove Hos 7.11 They are compared unto fishes in the Sea the great men on earth who to satisfie their lusts of covetousness and ambition do trouble the peace of the Sea of this world are compared unto whales Ezek. 32.2 The dissembling cruel man unto the crocodile that seems to weep and yet devours tne passenger that comes under his reach Is 27.1 Such a man was Ishmael the son of Nethaniah Jer. 41.6 They are compared to creeping things the false turbulent Prophet by his loud and frequent cryings stirring up the powers of the earth to war one against another is compared unto frogs and as the loud cryings of frogs is ordinarily the sign of an ensuing tempest So is the seditious upstirrings of seditious false Prophets a sign of ensuing troubles unless God in mercy preveen it Rev. 16.14 15. Seditious whisperers detractors and calumniators are compared unto vipers Mat. 3.7 and here they are compared unto asps which are serpents full of wyndings like unto the plyes of a buckler as the Greek word imports and they do hurt men at unawares Gen. 49.17 Ps 140.3 And great men of bitter and fierce spirits are compared here to the cockatrice the chief of serpents called in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in Latine Regulus and because the wicked counsels of leading-men do much harm therefore they are compared to the eggs of the cockatrice Is 59.5 Vse 1. For admonition to all men living yet in the state of nature and walking after their own sensual lusts Look into the glass of Gods Word take a view of your deformity through corrup● nature and be humble in the sigh and sense of it because your sinful lusts prevailing in you makes you rather like unto beasts than unto rational men At this the very Heathens of old did glanse in their Mythologies and poetical Metamorphosis as in Actaeon turned into a pufillanimous hart by his fond lusts and Lycaon into a wolf by his cruel and tearing oppression this is the spiritual use we should make of the History of some of the beasts recorded in holy Scripture to this end that beholding in that mirrour of these creatures our deformity in our conformity unto them we may be humbled ashamed and study in time coming to conform our selves unto the will of God revealed in the holy Word Let us not be like unto these of whom the Apostle speaketh Jam. 1.24 who behold their natural face in a glass but straight-way forget what manner of men they were far less should we be like unto the Apes who beholding their deformed and
that thereby he may not have sin but by his presumptuous thoughts he hinders himself to obtain the pardon of sin Such a condition of the Church as may be free from all spot or wrinkle is to be expected in Heaven when we shall be presented faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy Jude Epist 24. Yea we may not separat from Church-communion though gross and scandalous sinners live in it so long as they are acknowledged by the Church-rulers to be members thereof 1. Because the holy and zealous Prophets in the Old Testament did not command the people to make separation in such a case when Hophni and Phinehas the sons of Eli were a scandal to the people 1 Sam. 2.17 When many of the children of Israel both high and low were guilty of gross and scandalous sins the Prophet Isaiah did according to his duty sharply reprove them Isai 1.21 22 23. yet did he not require the godly to abstain from all Church-communion with these gross offenders 2. Albeit in our blessed Lord his time the Pharisees who had the preheminence for the most part in their Synagogues were men void of honesty judgement and mercy covetous proud and cruel yet the Lord himself kept communion with that Church Luke 4.16 As his custom was he went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day and stood up for to read He commanded others also to keep Church-communion with them Mat. 23.2 He did sharply reprove the Angels or Ministers of the Churches of Pergamos and Thyatira because they did tolerat in their Church-meetings persons abominable in errours both of judgement and of practice yet did he not command privat Professors in these Churches to separat from them and to erect Congregations apart by themselves 3. The Apostles Peter and John who were pillars of the Christian Church did keep Church-communion with the Jewish Church wherein were the Pharisees Acts 3.1 There were in the Church of Corinth some who did scandalously transgress by riot and drunkenness 1 Cor. 11.21 yet the Apostles did not require the pious and sober Christians among them to separat themselves from that Church Cyprian Lib. 3. Epist 3. Albeit there seem to be tares in the Church yet neither our faith nor charity should be hindered thereby that because we see tares to be in the Church we our selves therefore should depart from the Church it is our duty in such a case he means of privat Professors only to endeavour that we our selves may be good grain In a great house saith the Apostle 2 Tim. 2.20 there are not only vessels of gold and of silver but also of wood and of earth but the vessels of earth shall be broken by the Lord alone to whom the rod of iron is given And Epist 12. Neither think ye saith he to the Novatians that by so doing ye assert and maintain the Gospel of Christ whileas ye have separated your selves from the flock of Christ and from peace and concord with it when it is more agreeable to the duty of generous and good Souldiers to keep their ground within their own Trenches and being placed there to do such things which are for the benefit of the publick Augustine contra Donat. Parmen adviseth these who live in a Church pestered with profaneness and gross corruptions in manners for to do these four things 1. Let us amend saith he what we can 2. What things we cannot amend let us tolerat and mourn with love to the persons of these gross offenders 3. Let us endeavour to preserve unity 4. If thou canst not take away the wicked from thee yet take evil and wickedness out of thy self Calvin Institut Lib. 4. Cap. 1. Sect. 13. There were ever some who out of a false perswasion of their own perfect sanctity as if they had already become aerial Demons or Spirits they despised the society of all men in whom they perceived any humane weakness or frailty such men saith he were the Donatists and at this day some of the Anabaptists But as for flagitious and scandalous persons he thinks they should be processed and debarred from Church-communion in the holy Sacrament untill they satisfie the Church and thereafter be received again into communion If Church-rulers neglect to censure such scandalous persons privat Christians do not sin in receiving the holy Sacrament with them but the Church-rulers sin in not censuring them and thereby making the hearts of the godly sad Beza Epist 2. saith We should labour to come our selves especially to that holy Table with a pure conscience and if coming so we do communicat in the Church with some murderers and adulterers yea with Turks and Jews the fault will not be imputed to us but to the Church-rulers who admitted such August Tom. 9. Lib. de Medicin Cap. 3. saith We cannot debar any man from the communion except he hath of his own accord confessed or hath been processed and convict in some Judicature Ecclesiastical or Secular Yet if that hainous sin be known to one privat person only it appears he is bound both for good to the Church of Christ and for good to the soul of that guilty person sinning hainously in secret to follow our blessed Lord his direction Matth. 18.15 16 17. If thy brother shall trespass against thee go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone if he shall hear thee thou hath gained thy brother but if he will not hear thee c. and in end tell it to the Church Vse For exhortation seing the true members of the mystical body of Jesus Christ and sincere Converts to the Christian Faith will be as is prophesied here of a peaceable and harmless disposition and conversation let us live in a communion of love in peace and concord not like wolves and savage beasts biting and devouring one another How pleasant and how good a thing is it for brethren to dwell together in unity Psal 133.1 2. It is both pleasant and profitable like the oyntment poured forth upon the head of Aaron it maketh a Church fragrant and to be well reported amongst those who behold them or hear of them it is profitable like the dew of Hermon it maketh the Church to grow and enlarge her borders how pleasant is it to see the houses of one and the same city conform every way one to another as they say it is in the city of Gonoa but how unpleasant is it to see the houses of one and the same city divided far one from another as if every man in his own pride would make his own house a Citidale let us remember the spiritual Jerusalem should be as a City compact together Psal 122.3 How unpleasant also is it to see the stones of one and the same building even budging and dividing asunder one from another Is not the Christian Church said to be a building in Christ fittly framed together for an habitation of God through the Spirit Epes 2.22 and being so framed
together it groweth up in sanctification and becometh an holy Temple to the Lord wherein he delights to dwell but division and discord in the Church is both unpleasant and unprofitable Contention and division amongst the rowers in the ship and vain presumption in the passengers to take the oars into their own hands greatly hinders the progress of the Ship in her way What is the cause the Gospel was spred so far in the Apostl's time in one age only their sound went through all the world Rom. 10.18 and the Christian Church was wonderfully enlarged The reason is they were then of one mind and heart and the spiritual Guides had nothing so much before their eyes as the glory of God that he might be known in his rich mercy and grace and in the conversion of sinners that they may be saved they sought not themselves nor their own glory and pomp in the world but the glory of Christ their Lord and Master they were of one heart and rowed one to anothers hand they did not strive one against another in a bitter emulation but did strive together one with another in a godly emulation for furthering the Gospel It is true even in the Apostles times there was division in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 1.12 but Paul and Cephas were no ways the the Authors or Abettors of these divisions they did not foment them by their own contentions or by bitter emulation and popular ambition Paul sharply reproved it 1 Cor. 1.13 and condemned it as a course not of spiritual but rather of meer natural and carnal men 1 Cor. 3.4 5. And Peter requires them 1 Pet. 2.1 2. to lay aside all prejudice and to drink-in the sincere milk of the Word like new born babes who look more to the breast than to the face of the Nurse Division and discord in a Church hath many times proven as St. Jerom observed in the Donatists the occasion of errour and pernicious heresie which eats like a canker when the stones are divided one from another in the building then the rain getteth place and though not perceived at first yet in end undermyneth the wall consumeth the timber and in end bringeth ruine a small lake in the ship at first through the joyntours of the boords if not timously and carefully stopped doth drown the ship and also the passengers Division in Churches one from another doth entertain heresie and the Authors thereof What was the cause that great Heretick Marcion whom Tertullian calleth murem ponticum the rat that did rent and consume the Church of Pontus was received and kindly entertained in the Church of Rome after he had been excommunicate by his own father The cause thereof was that division between the Roman and African Church for Rome would have appeales to be made unto them from beyond the Sea this was the cause the Hereticks fleeing from the Eastern Church got shelter in the Western that by so doing they might maintain their pretended priviledge to revise and recognosce all causes Ecelesiastical What was the cause those who fled from the Western Church were countenanced and welcomed in the Eastern Was it not their division from the Western Church and their bitter emulation that thereby they might maintain their emulation of supremacy which ambition both in the Western and Eastern Churches proceeded from the pride of some chief Church Rulers both in the one and other Church In the Eastern Church It is true some godly and learned men have given and sometimes do give connivance to errour and heresie not out of any evil intention but out of their excess of moderation and charitable inclination being deceived by the insinuations of subtile Hereticks and Shismaticks but such connivance proved oft-times very unprofitable yea exceeding harmful unto the Christian Church because those dissembling Hereticks who seemed at first to be officious followers and flatterers of those good men afterward when these godly men that did tolerate them were gathered to their Fathers these deceivers began openly to vent and violently to press upon others their opinions as doctrins and matters of Faith which formerly they had desired to be in charity tolerated as privat opinions therefore we would beware of the beginnings of division Schism and all bitter emulation for if ye bite and devour one another take heed that ye be not consumed one of another Gal. 5.15 Let us remember and consider for our up-stirring to live in peace and concord one with another 1. Our God is called the God of peace our Redeemer the Prince of peace the Holy Ghost the Spirit of peace and of spiritual Communion and the more peaceable we are we become the liker to our heavenly Father to our elder Brother and to the Holy Ghost the Comforter 2. We are all members of one mystical body How unnatural a thing is it for one member of the same body to bear another Ephraim against Manasses and Manasses against Ephraim it is called an eating of their own arm Is 9.20 Such contention and division is like two sandy-stones grateing one upon the other till they be crumbled into nothing this fury and madness is a great grief of heart to the godly and sober-minded and a matter of rejoicing to the common adversaries of the truth thereby they think to spoil us of the truth and they cry out as Moab did against Israel 2 King 3.23 They have smitten one another now therefore Moab to the spoil 3. Consider often and seriously peaceable mindedness is an individual companion of true Religion Jam. 3.17 The wisdom that is from above is first pure then peaceable gentle and easie to be intreated Let us labour for christian moderation in our Opinions and Disputes and decline extremities Basil the great said truly that divers men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through an immoderat desire of opposing and counterpoising the opinoins and assertions of others are oft-times drawn away from the golden midst and afterward cannot retire although possibly they would for fear to offend their party whose opinion they have once espoused Let us beware of that too simple credulity to tatlers and whisperers who make it their business to separate chief friends but as Solomon saith Prov. 25.23 The north wind driveth away rain so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue And above all let us pray to God for much of the Spirit of Christ for he was of a meek and lowly Spirit that he would build the walls of Jerusalem and that peace may be within her walls and prosperity within her palaces Ps 51.18 Ps 122.6 7. VERSE IX For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea IN these words is set down the instrumental cause and ordinar mean of this great conversion and change in their disposition and conversation to wit the abounding and large knowledge they shall have by the preaching of the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ whereby life and immortality shall
bear their iniquities Isa 53.11 3. By the manifestation of Jesus Christ and by believing in him as he is offered in the Gospel in all his Mediatory-offices such a deep impression of his rich and free love is put upon our spirits that we are turned to a conformity unto him in our wills and affections unto the will of God 2 Pet. 1.4 By the precious promises ye are made partakers of the divine nature This impression is like the Spirit moving the wheels of our inner man and making them to follow the Spirit in their motions conform to his Word Ezech. 1.20 our hearts become like the paper stamped with the printing iron and receiving an impression thereby conform to the impression of the Spirit by his word and the doctrine of the Gospel is therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 16.17 the impression of doctrine Quest If the great mystery of Redemption and Salvation in Christ may be known by the light of Nature and of humane Reason Answ 1. There are means given of God whereby all people on earth may know God in his existence and something of his power wisdom and justice as the book of Creation Psal 19.11 Rom. 1.20 The Book of ordinary Povidence bearing witness there is a God Acts 14.17 Acts 17.27 The Works of his extraordinary Providence carried by report or otherwayes unto the Heathens Josh 2.10 The report of the silence of the Oracle at Delphos made unto Octavius Augustus did so affect him with admiration that he caused erect an Altar with this Inscription 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the God first-born by the Minut-book of mans own conscience which is a vade-mecum something of the justice of God both preceptive and vindicative is known and was known to the Heathens from the light of Nature Rom. 2.14 15. When the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these not having the Law are a Law unto themselves which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another The Heathens knew something of the revenging justice of God from the great terrours upon the spirits of those that do evil as upon these wicked men Caligula and Nero but shall these Books there was not one sylable of the way of salvation by Jesus Christ that knowledge of the Law of Nature from the light of Nature maketh them inexcusable before God because they glorified not God and did not all the good and moral duties they might have done if they had improven that light of Nature so that they are without excuse Rom. 1.20 2. The Heathens before and under the Law and even many at this very day from the light of Nature and by tradition as the learned Grotius thinks in his Book of the satisfaction of Christ from Noah and from Japhet and Ham the Progenitors of the Gentiles as also from their posterity downwards to the Heathens and Pagans at this very day they had and now have the custom of sacrificeing although the Heathens by these sacrifices did and do acknowledge from the light of Nature the Majesty Sanctity and Justice of God which is to be satisfied and appeased by the children of men guilty of many iniquities yet they did not know Jesus Christ who offered up himself a sacrifice by his death to satisfie Divine Justice and to preserve us from eternal wrath this is only known by Divine Revelation in the holy Scriptures wherein we are required by faith to behold him who taketh away the sin of the world Joh. 1.29 3. The Heathens by the light of Nature knew that in great calamities it was their duty to pray unto God for help and relief the Mariners in the Ship with Jonah being afraid in the great storm did cry every man unto his God Jonah 1.5 but they knew not Jesus Christ the alone Mediator between God and man and therefore did not pray in his Name in whom alone both our persons and our supplications are accepted the knowledge of this we have in the holy Scriptures from our blessed Lord John 16.23 Verily verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you 4. The knowlege of the work of Redemption and Salvation in Jesus Christ is only known from Divine Revelation in the holy Scriptures Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other for there is none other Name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved This great mystery is only known by revelation in the holy Scriptures Mat. 11.25 our Lord said I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes Mat. 16.17 Blessed art thou Simon Bar-jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in Heaven The Incarnation of the Son of God and the Salvation of lost man by him is called a mystery hid from the Gentiles for many ages Eph. 3.9 This sublime mystery the natural man cannot know by the strength of humane reason 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Some who magnifie the strength of humane reason think that by the natural man in this place is to be understood the carnal man addicted to his sinful desires which hinder him by the strength of his own reason to take up these divine mysteries but it is clear from the series of the sacred Text that natural man signifieth one indued only with the light of reason and it is some way opposed by way of distinction to the spiritual man inlightened and renewed by the illumination of the Holy Spirit as also spiritual man is taken Gal. 6.1 Brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of meekness Chrysost on this place by natural man understandeth a man indued only with the light of reason That man saith he who liveth for the flesh neither is yet illuminat in his mind by the Spirit but only has that inbred humane wisdom which the Creator of all things has put into the souls of men Grotius upon that place speaketh thus The natural man and the carnal man is not the same thing the natural man is he who is guided only by the light of humane reason but the carnal man is he who is ruled by the affections of his body It is true some of the ancient Fathers in the Christian Church who before their conversion had been eminent Philosophers themselves and had a great kindness for some of the best of them as Socrates and Plato they do speak very charitably concerning their salvation although they lived in Gentilism yet they thought not that they were saved without some
yet hid from many Nations and many outwardly called are not drawn and called effectually Matth. 22.14 Matth. 23.37 2. It is taken by way of restriction to the subject-matter spoken of in the same place as 1 Cor. 9.22 I am made all things to all men to wit in the use of my Christian liberty in matters indifferent 3. It is taken for very many though not simply for all individuals of men Joh. 11.48 If we let him thus alone all men will believe on him that is very many will believe on him 4. It is taken for all kinds as Act. 10.12 Peter saw in a vision a great sheet wherein were all manner of four-footed beasts on the earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 5.9 Thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation So it is taken here for all kinds of men rich and poor male and famale Jews and Gentiles as it is taken Joh. 11.51 52. He prophesied that Jesus should die for that Nation and not for that Nation only but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Joh. 10.16 And other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring and they shall hear my voice and there shall be one fold and one shepherd Gal. 3.28 There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Jesus Col. 3.11 Where there is neither Greek nor Jew circumcision nor uncircumcision Barbarian Scythian bond nor free but Christ is all and in all Augustine understands this place of these who are predestinat to salvation or of all kinds of men To the third I answer there is an outward drawing and calling by the preaching of the Word Matth. 23.37 Our Lord saith O Jerusalem how often would I have gathered thy children together c. and ye would not There is an inward drawing by the cord of Faith and Love wrought and fastned in the heart by the Holy Ghost Act. 11.21 The hand of the Lord was with these Preachers and a great number believed and turned unto the Lord. The outward drawing by the word without this inward drawing by the Spirit is not effectual for mans conversion Act. 13.45 The unbelieving and envious Jews were not drawn by the Word preached by Paul but they contradicted and blasphemed his Doctrine Heb. 4.2 But the word preached did not profit them not being mixed with faith in them that heard it Although the word preached be a mean sufficient in its own kind that is a sufficient outward mean yet is it not simply sufficient for conversion As Plowing and Sowing are sufficient outward means for fruitfulness but are not effectual without the first and latter rain This effectual drawing is a drawing upward of the soul by faith unto an union and communion with Jesus Christ in his merits Joh. 6.65 No man said our Lord can come unto me except it were given unto him of my Father The grace of faith is given to us from above it is like a cord cast down from the Rock of our Salvation to save man from drowning and destruction in his sins it is a drawing of the heart upward unto Christ by faith in this life and a bringing of the soul to the enjoyment of glory in the life to come Joh. 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me The sense of Christs love in dying for us is like the heat descending from the Sun and drawing up the purified vapours It is like the Load-stone drawing up the hard and heavy Iron The sense of Christs love in dying for us softens our hard hearts and turneth them toward himself 2. As it is a drawing of the heart up to himself by faith and love so it is an obediential drawing by love and obedience to the wayes of his holy Commandments It is not a drawing only toward an outward profession of the truth from the custom of others or hope of worldly applause or benefit as Simon Magus was baptized that he might retain the respect and following of many Samaritans his old followers who had now been baptized neither is it a drawing to the profession of the truth only for fear of worldly loss as many of the Persians became Jews in their outward dissembled profession for fear of the Jews But this inward drawing and believing is from love to God in the will Psal 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power that is when thou together with thy Word exerts the power of thy invincible g●ace thou wilt make thy people willing and obedient to follow thee in the wayes of thy Commandments 3. It is an equal and uniform drawing both of the inner and outer man all the powers of the soul like so many wheels anointed and moved by the Spirit of God are drawn after the Spirit according to the outward drawing of the Word as it is said of that extraordinary drawing by the Spirit Ezek. 1.20 Whithersoever the Spirit was to go they went The understanding is enlightned by heavenly knowledge and light within by the Spirit of God according to the outward light of the Word 2 Cor. 4.6 For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ The will is strongly inclined to embrace Christ and is sick of love to enjoy him Cant. 3.8 The affections like the inferiour wheels are moved and carried toward Christ by an inlightned understanding and by a vehement inclination of the will Cant. 5.4 My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door and my bowels were moved for him Although the drawing and motion toward Christ beginneth from within yet it stayeth not there but draweth also the outward man unto Christ the members of the body become weapons of righteousness Rom 6.13 As the motion of the Clock is first within and thereafter perceived in the regular motion of the Hand of the Horologe and in the sound of the Bell so the inward drawing and motion of the soul is perceived in our outward regular actions and gracious communications 4. It is a most sweet and delightful drawing the God of all grace by his preveening grace maketh us first willing and then by his subsequent and assisting grace draweth us most sweetly with delectation in our hearts after him It is as when one is drawn forward to a place from the sent of precious odours Cant. 1.3 4. It is as the speedy mounting of an Eagle upon wing from the smell and fight of the dead carcase so the sight and sent through faith of Christ crucified doth most sweetly and willingly draw an hungry soul unto Christ to be fed
and refreshed out of the fulness of the merit of his death Mat. 24.28 For wheresoever the carcase is there will the Eagles be gathered together Augustine in his Tractat. on this place ●aith It is a drawing as the shepherd going before draweth the sheep after him by holding forth a green branch in his hand so our blessed Lord worketh in the hearts of the elect that gracious disposition of his own sheep to hear and follow his voice and thereafter by the sweetness of the object propounded to them to wit Christ the Branch of Righteousness and by the inward operation and strong impulse of the Spirit he maketh them follow the outward call of the Word Joh. 10.4 When he putteth forth his own sheep he goeth before them and the sheep follow him for they know his voice 5. It is an invincible and irresistable drawing it is not only by moral swasion of motives taken from benefit or prejudice to their souls but it is by a powerful perswading and efficacious inclining of the heart Gen. 9.27 God shall perswade Japheth and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem. Hos 2.14 Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably unto her or to her heart Although there is in all men a corrupt principle of resistance to the will of God yet when God is pleased to exert that exceeding greatness of his power toward them that believe Eph. 1.19 Actual resistance is overcome by the insuperable grace of God Jer. 17.14 Heal me O Lord and I shall be healed save me and I shall be saved Jer. 31.18 Turn thou me and I shall be turned for thou art the Lord my God Augustine calleth the operation of grace in our conversion to the wayes of God victrix delectatio an overcoming delight like a sweet and strong smell overcoming and bearing down corrupt vapours and exhalations this grace of God in conversion is rejected by no hard heart because willingness to resist is taken away as Augustine speaketh well to this purpose Therefore humble penitents should look up by faith to Christ on the Cross as he is held forth to them in the Gospel The persons stung in the wilderness looked to the brazen serpent and were healed so whatever thy sins hath been and whatsoever be the sting of thy guilty conscience confess thy sins with purpose and active endeavours for amending thy wayes draw near by faith to Jesus Christ and thou shalt be healed Joh. 3.14 15. As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternal life Although thy faith be weak yet if convinced of thy sins and mourning for them thou look to Christ alone for salvation thou shalt be saved Isai 45.22 Look unto me and be ye saved all the ends of the earth for I am God and there is none else which place speaketh expresly of Christ if we compare vers 23. with Phil. 2.11 All that looked to the brazen serpent in the wilderness were not alike quick-sighted yet all who looked were healed So all stung with sorrow in their hearts for their sins if they fix their eye and heart upon Christ crucified they shall be saved though faith be weak in the measure for our salvation doth not depend upon the strength of our faith but upon the strength and power of Christ in whom we believe And if thou be truly drawn by faith to Christ then Christ and his Cross will be great in thine eyes and estimation far above all things here below As a man lifted up to an high mountain esteems things below in the valley to be but small so a soul elevated by saith to Christ and to things that are above esteems little of all things on earth in comparison of Christ and his unsearchable and durable riches Phil. 3.8 I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but dung that I may win Christ And the true believer glorieth most in the Cross of Christ who endured the Cross and despised the shame to save us poor souls from extreme and everlasting pain and shame Gal. 6.14 As we believe the merit of the Cross of Christ so let us labour to feel more and more of the power of his Cross crucifying sin in us and drawing our hearts from the vanities of this present world and quickening us to serve and honour him who spared not his life but gave it to the death of the Cross for us To him with the Father and the Holy Spirit be all praise c. Amen Soul-healing vertue in Christ to the broken in heart SERMON III. PSAL. 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds THe holy Prophet stirreth up his own heart and the hearts of others from the consideration of the glorious attributes and works of the Lord to praise his great Name and amongst these works for the manifestation of his compassion and mercy toward poor mourning sinners because he healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds This our blessed Lord applyeth to himself as a work of mercy common to him with the Father Luk. 4.18 He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted As in healing the diseases and wounds of the body there be these three considerable 1. The Physician 2. The Patient 3. The Cure it self So it is in healing the diseases of the soul and wounds of the spirit of man We have all these three in these words 1. The Physician is the Lord himself Jehovah He. 2. The Patient The broken in heart and wounded in spirit 3. The Cure He healeth The Lord God is the soveraign Physician who according to his good pleasure healeth all distempers He healeth a distempered civil State by restoring civil Peace Psal 46.9 Psal 147.14 A distempered Church by restoring Unity Peace and Love Isa 30.26 Jer. 30.17 Jer. 32.39 He healeth breaches in families by restoring domestick Peace and Amity He healeth distempers through bodily diseases Ezod 15.25 2 Kings 20.5 He healeth Souls distempered through the guilt and sting of an evil conscience Psal 103.3 Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Jer. 3.22 Return ye backsliding Children and I will heal your backslidings In all our distempers it is our wisdom and duty to go to God and to his Son Jesus Christ the Soveraign Physician for healing sick Souls Psal 61.2 From the end of the earth will I cry unto thee when my heart is overwhelmed lead me to the rock that is higher then I. Psa 60.2 Thou hast made the earth to tremble thou hast broken it heal all the breaches thereof for it shaketh especially when the soul is in an high fever and distemper of grief and fear through bypast sins Psal 41.4 I said Lord be merciful unto me heal my soul
for I have sinned against thee We should use the outward means ordained by God for healing our souls such as are the hearing of the Gospel receiving the holy Sacrament of the holy Supper and daily Prayer these are through Gods blessing strengthning and healing Ordinances but we must not rest on the outward performances or on the abilities of the Minister thereof as if there were any Intrinsecal vertue in them for healing a sick and fainting Soul The Word was preached by Christ himself and yet no healing followed Matth. 23.37 Luke 19.42 The Sacrament of Baptism was ministred by Philip the Evangelist to Simon Magus and yet there was no healing of that gall of iniquity in his heart when a people look too much to the instruments who preach the Word or minister the Sacraments it provokes our jealousie God many times to withhold assistance from the Ministers and a blessing from the outward means to the people for all these outward Ordinances are but empty cisterns till they be filled by an influence of power and life from himself Joh. 6.63 It is the spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing The outward Ordinance without the Lords special presence and blessing is like the staff of Elisha in the hand of Gehazi they do not quicken a dead soul nor awake the sleepy and secure soul 2 Kings 4.31 Therefore inusing the outward means for healing our souls we should go by Prayer to the great Physician himself that by his Spirit he would go along with the outward Ordinances If thou go to him thou needest not despare of healing for in his own due time he will heal all that come to him Jer. 17.14 Heal me O Lord and I shall be healed There is no soul-disease incureable to him though in it there were a complication of infirmities and distempers Isai 1.16 18. Wash ye make you clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes cease to do evil Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow c. Though thy sins were inveterat through custom from thy child-hood like the Lunatick child Mark 9.21 Though incurable through all the counsel of friends like the disease of that sick woman Luke 8.43 Therefore come your selves to him and let parents bring their stubborn children in their prayers to Him the great Physician who can heal perverse spirits and make crooked things straight even when parents and friends has despared of their recovery from their soul-distempers and evil wayes In all distempers and wounds of spirit from outward grievous afflictions come to this Soveraign Physician though creatures neither can nor will heal thee yet he will come near to the afflicted who under affliction bodily are most afflicted in their spirit for their sins Psal 27.10 Jer. 30.17 Hos 2.14 I will allure her and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably unto her When the godly are in a desolat and wildernesse-like condition and few or none to comfort then the Lord in an acceptable time comes in to the soul with comfort all the moral Instruments of our comfort and healing are but as an Apprentice who can do nothing without their masters secret information and direction therefore the broken-hearted would come to Jesus Christ who had a calling from the Father Luke 4.18 to bind up and heal the broken in heart he healed Inveterat bodily diseases as one of twelve years one of eighteen and one of thirty eight years for the comfort of all poor humbled sinners who formerly have accustomed themselves to do evil He is a skilful Physician to apply several Medicines for healing several diseases He has Corrosives to awake these who are in a spiritual Lethargy even the spirit of burning and judgement Isai 4.4 He has sharp afflictions as a scourge to tame and daunt proud and vain men who are in a spiritual Phrency and distempered with an heady conceit of their own righteousness Job 36.8 9. If they be bound in fetters and be holden in cords of affliction then he sheweth them their work and their transgressions that they have exceeded He has Lenatives and Restauratives to poor fainting Souls even the sweet promises of the Gospel Isa 57.11 Matth. 5.3 4. Matth. 11.28 Though this great Physician the Lord Jesus Christ in the Humane Nature be locally in Heaven yet he can heal broken hearts on earth by the vertue and presence of his Spirit through the power of hi● Intercession at the Fathers right hand 1 Joh. 2.1 2. If any man sin we have an Aduocat with the Father Jesus Christ the Righ●eous and he is the Propitiation for our sins He healed the Centurions sick servant at a distance Matth. 8. And the Son of that Noble man Joh. 4.51 at a distance also As the Sun in the Firmament though at a distance from the Earth doth quicken and revive the Creatures by the influence of light and heat so the Sun of Righteousness the Lord Jesus Christ doth by the influences of his Spirit and Vertue quicken and revive a soul fainting under the burden of sin 2. The Patient under Gods Cure is the broken in heart or wounded in spirit The broken heart is called also in Scripture a contrite spirit Ps 51.13 Is 57.15 When the heart that was sometime whole and hard like a stone is broken into pieces like a grain bruised between the upper and nether milstone so the heart of a truly humbled sinner is crushed between the sense of divine justice displeased with its sins and the sense of divine love manifested in the Gospel it is called a bruised spirit Isa 42.3 When the heart is bruised and bowed down so with the burden of many and manifold sins that from the deep sense of greif and shame for them they have not the confidence to look up to God Psal 40.12 Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up c. It is called a wounded spirit Prov. 18.14 because the Lord of hosts provoked by our sins doth justly wound the guilty conscience with pain that the wounded spirit can get no rest Psal 38.3 There is no soundness in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there any rest in my bones because of my sin It is called a soft and tender heart sensible of the danger and vileness of sin Josiah his heart was tender and humbled at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34.27 A rent heart Joel 2.12 When the love of sin is emptied out of the heart by repentance as water out of a rent vessel and it is called an heart of flesh plyable and yeelding to walk in the commandments of God Ezek. 36.26 27. The necessity of a broken heart is evident from the text because it is the broken heart only that God healeth 1. God taketh speci-notice of the broken in heart Psal 56.8 Ezek. 9.4 2. He preserveth the broken in heart in the midst of common calamities Psal 34.18 Ezek. 9.4
of believers in this life and the condition of their glorified bodies in the life to come here the body is an earthly house mouldering down dayly but in heaven it will be fixt eternal and incorruptible This opposition is clearly set forth 1 Cor. 15.41 42 43. 1. Now the body of the Saints is subject to alteration and corruption It is sow● saith the Apostle in corruption but raised in incorruption The body now is in a continual flux and decay some pickles of our dust are running dayly our life is like a lamp within this pitcher of clay having need dayly to be recruited by fresh oyl but in heaven our bodies will be of a fixed condition without any need of reparation then the vital and animat spirits of the body will be pure and free from all superfluous humors and from all conflict of one bodily quality against another which like contrary tydes do make a great commotion within the body but in heaven there will be a perfect harmony amongst all the elementary qualities in the body and therefore no possiblity of alteration or declining to old age 2. There is an opposition in respect of the feature and beauty of the body The body is sown in dishonour but raised in honour Our body in this life is called a vile body Phil. 3.20 Saccus stercorum and the greatest on earth must carry about with them these monitories of humility A little time before death the face becomes pale and earth-like as wine near-run doth smell of the dreg after the soul is gone like an heavenly spark of fire out of a mud-house then the body becomes nasty and loathsome through stench Abraham desired to bury his some-time beautiful Sarah out of his sight But in the day of resurrection the bodies of the godly will be raised in honour like unto the glorious body of Christ As the tabernacle in the wilderness was made according to the pattern shown unto Moses in the Mount so the tabernacle of our body will be raised according to the pattern of Christs b●●y shown in mount Tabor when he was transfigured Mat. 17. They will be raised in great comeliness both for splendor and proportion these bodies that had any defect or deformity in this life through want of any member shall have all made up in that day of restoring all things he that bringeth forth the lillie from under the ground in beautiful colours exceeding the glory of king Solomon and he that restored Malchus his ear will adorn the body with beauty and with integrity of members all doubts how such a thing can be are resolved by the Apostle Phil. 3.21 He will do it according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself 3. There is an opposition in respect of the healthful disposition and constitution of the body It is sown in weakness but will be raised in power The best constitution of the body now in comparison of that it had in the estate of innocency is at the best but weakness although all bodies now be not alike weak yet a sharp fit of an ague or of the stone will lay the strongest man on his back even the strongest bodies through much labour do become weak and feeble as a strong bow through much shooting becomes flug and remiss Sampson notwithstanding his great strength became weary and thirsty after his fight with the Philistines and on death-bed the strongest man is not able to carry a drink to his own head or to turn himself in his bed but in the day of resurrection the body will be raised in power and strength and so continue without all weariness for weakness in the body and weariness after labour is a consequent of mans fall and of original corruption if man had not fallen his labour in the garden would have been only a pleasant recreation without toil and sweat but in heaven there will be no remaines of corruption in the soul and therefore no weariness in the body 4. There is a great opposition between our body now and the glorified body in the resurrection in respect of exercise and operations It is sown a natural body but will be raised a spiritual body not of a spiritual Aerial or Etherial substance for the same individual body will be raised and it was not in this life Aerial or Etherial there will be a raising up of that same body which is fallen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that was a terrestrial body it is said demonstratively 1 Cor. 15.54 This corruptible and this mortal But the body will be raised up with spiritual qualities now it is a natural body and has need of natural means for preserving and continuing the spece and kind by Generation as also of meat drink and sleep for preserving the Individual by nutrition but after the resurrection the body will be abstract and retired from the use of these natural means and operations the glorified Saints will be like unto Angels neither giving in marriage nor taking in marriage Mat. 22.30 The number of the Elect and of the Church Triumphant will be compleat at the resurrection there will be no more enlargeing of the Church by posterity the whole desire and delight of the Sa●nts glorified will be so ●ully taken up with the vision and fruition of the all-sufficient and unchangeable God that the beatifick vision will drown and swallow up any remembrance of natural desire or delight on the creature if Peter Matth. 17. was so deeply affected with a sight of that created glory he saw on mount Tabor that he forgot all his former contentments and enjoyments worldly below the mount when he said It is good for us to be here How much more will the Saints in heaven be ravished with the sight and knowledge of that increated glory of God himself in their souls when he shall be marvellous in his Saints 2 Thes 1.10 and when they shall also behold the glory of Jesus Christ the Sun of Righteousness in his humane glorified body The glorified body will not have any use or need of meat drink or sleep because the body then will be of a fixed and durable constitution and consistence without all possibility of alteration or decay Rev. 7.16 In heaven the body will be spiritual in respect of lucidity and agility in motion like unto the celestial Spirits and Angels who in a very short time make their motions through a vast space and interval as the Angel Gabriel did Dan. 9.23 In like manner our bodies then will be carryed quickly in an imperceptible moment of time wheresoever our souls shall desire to be 1 Thes 4.17 We shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air As for these members of the body which in this life serve for necessar and natural use they will serve in heaven for ornament and integrity of the body as the breasts of the woman come to old age who sometimes