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A39669 The method of grace, in bringing home the eternal redemption contrived by the Father, and accomplished by the Son through the effectual application of the spirit unto God's elect, being the second part of Gospel redemption : wherein the great mysterie of our union and communion with Christ is opened and applied, unbelievers invited, false pretenders convicted, every mans claim to Christ examined, and the misery of Christless persons discovered and bewailed / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1681 (1681) Wing F1169; ESTC R20432 474,959 654

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be in Christ he is a new creature O Reader what ever slight thoughts of this matter and with what a careless and unconcerned eye soever thou readest these lines yet know thou must either be a new creature or a miserable and damned creature for ever If civility without the new creature could save thee why are not the moral Heathens saved also if strictness of life without the new creature could save thee why did it not save the Scribes and Pharisees also if an high profession of Religion without the new creature can save thee why did it not save Judas Hymeneus and Philetus also Nothing is more evident than this that no repentance obedience self-denyal prayers tears reformations or ordinances without the new creation avail any thing to the salvation of thy soul the very blood of Christ himself without the new creature never did and never will save any man Oh how necessary a work is the new creation circumcision avails nothing and uncircumcision nothing but a new creature Fifthly The new Creature is a marvellous and wonderful creature there are many wonders in the first creation the works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein Psal. 111. 2. but there are no wonders in nature like those in grace is it not the greatest wonder that ever was seen in the world except the incarnation of the Son of God to see the nature and temper of man so altered and changed as it is by grace to see Lascivious Corinthians and Idolatrous Ephesians become mortified and Heavenly Christians to see a fierce and cruel persecutor become a glorious confessor and sufferer for Christ Gal. 1. 23. to see the carnal-mind of man which was lately fully set in a strong bent to the world to be wholly taken off from its lusts and set upon things that are spiritual and heavenly certainly it was not a greater miracle to see dead Lazarus come out of his Sepulchre than it is to see the dead and carnal mind coming out of its Lusts to embrace Jesus Christ. It was not a greater wonder to see the dead dry bones in the vally to move and come together than it is to see a dead soul moving after God and moving to Christ in the way of faith Sixthly The new creature is an immortal creature a creature that shall never see death Joh. 4. 14. it is in the soul of man a well of water springing up into eternal life I will not adventure to say it is immortal in its own nature for it is but a creature as my Text calls it and we know that essential interminability is the incommunicable property of God the new creature hath both a beginning and succession and therefore might also have an end as to any thing in it self or its own nature experience also shews us that it is capable both of increasing and decreasing and may be brought nigh unto death Rev. 3. 2. the works of the spirit in believers may be ready to dye but though its perpetuity flow not out of its own nature it flows out of Gods Covenant and promises which make it an immortal Creature when all other excellencies in man go away as at death they will Job 4. 21. this excellency only remains our gifts may leave us our friends leave us our estates leave us but our graces will never leave us they ascend with the soul in which they inhere into glory when the stroke of death separates it from the body Seventhly The new Creature is an heavenly creature 't is not born of flesh nor of blood or of the will of man but of God Joh. 1. 13. its descent and original is heavenly it is spirit born of spirit Joh. 3. 6. its center is heaven and thither are all its tendencies Psal. 63. 8. its proper food on which it lives are heavenly things Psal. 4. 6 7. it cannot feed as other creatures do upon earthly things the object of all its delights and loves is in heaven Psal. 73. 26. Whom have I in heaven but thee the hopes and expectations of the new creature are all from heaven it looks for little in this world but waits for the coming of the Lord the life of the new creature upon earth is a life of patient waiting for Christ his desires and longings are after Heaven Phil. 1. 23. The flesh indeed lingers and would delay but the new creature hastens and would fain be gone 2 Cor. 5. 2. it is not at home while it is here it came from Heaven and cannot be quiet nor suffer the soul in which it dwells to be so until it comes thither again Eighthly The new creature is an active and laborious creature no sooner it is born but it is acting in the soul Acts 9. 6. behold he prayeth activity is its very nature Gal. 5. 25. If we live in the spirit let us walk in the spirit Nor is it to be admired that it should be always active and stirring in the soul seeing activity in obedience was the very end for which it was created for we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works Eph. 2. 10. and he that is acted in the duties of Religion by this principle of the new creature or nature will so far as that principle acts him delight to do the will of God rejoice in the way of his Commandments and find the sweetest pleasure in the paths of duty Ninthly The new creature is a thriving creature growing from strength to strength 1 Pet. 2. 2. and changing the soul in which it is subjected from glory unto glory 2 Cor. 3. 18. The vigorous tendencies and constant strivings of this new creature is to attain its just perfection and maturity Phil. 3. 11. it can endure no stints and limits to its desires short of perfection every degree of strength it attains doth but whet and sharpen his desires after higher degrees upon this account it greatly delights in the Ordinances of God Duties of Religion and Society of the Saints as they are helps and improvements to it in order to its great design Tenthly The new creature is a creature of wonderful preservations there are many wonders of divine providences in Gratia nec totaliter intermittitur nec finaliter amittitur actus omittitur habitus non amittitur actio pervertitur fides no●… s●…bvertitur concutitur non excutitur defl●…it fructus lat●… succus effectus justificationis suspenditur at ●…tus justificati non dissolvitur Suffrag Brit. the preservation of our natural lives but none like those whereby the life of the new creature is preserved in our souls there are critical times of temptation and desertion in which it is ready to dye Rev. 3. 2. the degrees of its strength and liveliness are sometimes sadly abated and 〈◊〉 sweet and comfortable workings intermitted Rev. 2. 4. the evidences by which its being in us was wont to be discovered may be and often are darkned 2 Pet. 1. 9.
incorporate with sin than oyle with water contraries cannot consist in the same subject longer than they are fighting with each other if there be no conflict with sin in thy soul or if that conflict be only betwixt the conscience and affections light in the one strugling with lust in the other thou wantest that fruit which should evidence thee to be a new creature Thirdly The mind and affections of the new Creature are set upon heavenly and spiritual things Col. 3. 1 2. Ephes. 4. 23. Rom. 8. 5. if therefore thy heart and affections be habitually earthly and wholly intent upon things below driving eagerly after the world as the great business and end of thy life deceive not thy self this is not the fruit of the New Creature nor consistent with it Fourthly The new Creature is a praying Creature living by its daily Communion with God which is its livelyhood and subsistence Zech. 12. 10. Acts 9. 11. If therefore thou be a prayerless soul or if in all thy prayers thou art a stranger to Communion with God if there be no brokenness of heart for sin in thy confessions no melting affections for Christ and holiness in thy supplications surely Satan doth but baffle and delude thy over-credulous soul in perswading thee that thou art a new Creature Fifthly The new Creature is restless after falls into sin until it have recovered peace and pardon it cannot endure it self in a state of defilement and pollution Psal. 51. 8 9 10 11 12. It is with the conscience of a new Creature under sin as it is with the eye when any thing offends it it cannot leave twinkling and watering till it have wept it out and in the very same restless state it is under the hiding of Gods face and divine withdrawments Cant. 5. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. If therefore thou canst sin and sin again without such a burthensome sense of sin or restlesness or solicitude how to recover purity and peace with the light of Gods countenance shining as in dayes past upon thy soul delude not thy self thou hast not the signs of a new Creature in thee 4th Use for Exhortation If the new Creation be a sound evidence of our interest in Christ then hence let me perswade all that are in Christ to Use 4. evidence themselves to be so by walking as it becomes new Creatures The new Creature is born from above all its tendencies are Heaven-ward accordingly ●…et your affections on things that are above and let your conversation be in Heaven if you live earthly and sensual lives as others do you must cross your new Creature therein and can those acts be pleasant unto you which are done with so much regret wherein you must put a force upon your own spirits and offer a kind of violence to your own hearts Earthly delights and sorrows are suitable enough to the unregenerate and sensual men of the world but exceedingly contrary unto that spirit by which you are renovated If ever you will act becoming the principles and nature of new Creatures then seek earthly things with submission enjoy them with fear and caution resign them with cheerfulness and readiness and thus let your moderation be known unto all men Phil. 4. 5. Let your hearts daily meditate and your tongues discourse about heavenly things be exceeding tender of sin strict and punctual in every duty and hereby convince the world that you are men and women of another spirit 5th Use for Consolation Let every new creature be chearful and thankful if God have renewed your natures and thus altered the frame and Use 5. temper of your hearts he hath bestowed the richest mercy upon you that Heaven or Earth affords this is a work of greatest rarity a new creature may be called one among a thousand 't is also an everlasting work never to be destroyed as all other natural works of God how excellent soever must be 't is a work carried on by almighty power through unspeakable difficulties and mighty oppositions Eph. 1. 12. the exceeding greatness of Gods power goes forth to produce it and indeed no less is required to enlighten the blind mind break the rocky heart and bow the stubborn will of man and the same almighty power which at first created it is necessary to be continued every moment to preserve and continue it 1 Pet. 1. 5. the new creature is a mercy which draws a train of innumerable and invaluable mercies after it Eph. 2. 13 14. 1 Cor. 3. 22. when God hath given us a new nature then he dignifies us with a new name Rev. 2. 17. brings us into a new Covenant Jer. 31. 33. begets us again to a new hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. intitles us to a new inheritance Joh. 1. 12 13. 't is the new creature which through Christ makes our persons and duties acceptable with God Gal. 6. 15. In a word it is the wonderful work of God of which we may say this is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes there are unsearchable wonders in its generation in its operation and in its preservation Let all therefore whom the Lord hath thus renewed fall down at the feet of God in an humble admiration of the unsearchable riches of free grace and never open their mouths to complain under any adverse or bitter providences of God The Twenty seventh SERMON Sermon 27. GAL. 5. 24. Text. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh Of the nature principle and necessity of Mortification with the affections and lusts TWo great Tryals of our interest in Christ are finished we now proceed to a third namely the mortification of sin they that are Christs have crucified the flesh The scope of the Apostle in this context is to heal the unchristian breaches among the Galatians prevailing by the instigation of Satan to the breach of brotherly love to cure this he urges four weighty arguments First From the great Commandment to love one another upon which the whole Law i. e. all the duties of the second Table do depend vers 14. Secondly He powerfully disswades them from the consideration of the sad events of their bitter contests calumnies and detractions viz. mutual ruine and destruction vers 15. Thirdly He disswades them from the consideration of the contrariety of these practices unto the Spirit of God by whom they all profess themselves to be governed from vers 17 to the 23. Fourthly He powerfully disswades them from these animosities from the inconsistency of these or any other lusts of the flesh with an interest in Christ they that be Christs have crucified the flesh c. q. d. you all profess your selves to be members of Christ to be followers of him but how incongruous are these practices to such a profession Is this the fruit of the Dove-like-spirit of Christ Are these the fruits of your faith and professed mortification Shall the sheep of Christ ●…narl and fight like rabid and
how are some vain minds puffed up with these things but ye have not so learned Christ. 3. That you steddily persevere in those good wayes of God in which you have walked and beware of heart or life apostasie You expect happiness whilst God is in Heaven and God expects holiness from you whilst you are on earth It was an excellent truth which Tossanus y Obtestor etiam vos liberos generos charissimos ne illius veritatis evangelicae unquam vos pudeat potest enim laborare sed non vinci veritas non semel expertus sum Dominum Deum mirabiliter adesse iis qui coram ipso ambulant in sua vocatione sedulò integrè versantur licet ad tempus odiis aut simultatibus aut calumniis agitentur Melch. Adams in vita Tossani recommended to his posterity in his last Will and Testament from his own experience I beseech you saith he my dear Children and Kindred that you never be ashamed of the truths of the Gospel either by reason of scandals in the Church or persecutions upon it truth may labour for a time but cannot be conquered and I have often found God to be wonderfully present with them that walk before him in truth though for a time they may be opprest with troubles and calumnies 4. Lastly That you keep a strict and constant watch over your own hearts lest they be ensnared by the tempting charming and dangerous snares attending a full and easie condition in the world There are temptations suited to all conditions those that are poor and low in estate and reputation are tempted to cozen cheat lie and flatter and all to get up to the mount of Riches and honours but those that were born upon that mount though they be more free from those temptations yet lie exposed to others no less dangerous and therefore we find not many mighty not many noble are called 1 Cor. 1. 26. Many great and stately Ships which spread much sail and draw much water perish in the storms when small Barks creep along the shore under the wind and get safe into their Port. Never aim-at an higher station in this world than that you are in z Lugebat moribundus Hermannus plus temporis operaeque se palatio quàm Templo impendisse luxum vitiae Aulae quae corrigere debuisset adjuvasse atque ita multo peccati dolore trepidâ spe divinae clementiae plurimo astantium horrore anceps sui anima aeternitatem ingressa est Hist. Bohem. lib. 11. some have wisht in their dying hour they had been lower but no wise man ever wisht himself at the top of honour at the brink of eternity I will conclude all with this hearty wish for you that as God hath set you in a capacity of much service for him in your generation so your hearts may be enlarged for God accordingly that you may be very instrumental for his glory on earth and may go safe but late to Heaven That the blessings of Heaven may be multiplied upon you both and your hopeful springing branches and that you may live to see your Childrens Children and peace upon Israel In a word that God will follow these truths in your hands with the blessing of his spirit and that the manifold infirmities of him that ministers them may be no prejudice or bar to their success with you or any into whose hands they shall come which is the hearty desire of Your most faithful friend and Servant in Christ Jo. Flavel THE EPISTLE Christian Reader EVery Creature by the instinct of nature or by the light of reason strives to avoid danger and get out of harms way The Cattel in the fields presaging a storm at hand fly to the hedges and thickets for shelter The Fowls of Heaven by the same natural instinct perceiving the approach of Winter take their timely flight to a warmer Climate This * Plin. l. 18. c. 35. Virg. Georg. l. 1. Naturalists have observed of them and their observation is confirmed by Scripture testimony of the Cattle it is said Job 37. 6 7 8. He saith to the Snow be thou on the earth likewise the small rain and the great rain of his strength then the beasts go into dens and remain in their places And of the Fowls of the air it is said Jer. 8. 7. The Stork in the Heavens knoweth her appointed times and the Turtle and the Crane and the Swallow observe the time of their coming But man being a prudent and prospecting creature hath the advantage of all other Creatures in his foreseeing faculty For God hath taught him more than the beasts of the earth and made him wiser than the fowls of Heaven Job 35. 11. And a wise mans heart discerneth both time and judgement Eccles. 8. 5. For as there are natural signs of the change of weather Mat. 16. 3. so there are moral signs of the changes of time and providences yet such is the supineness and inexcusable regardlesness of most men that they will not fear till they feel nor think any danger very considerable till it become inevitable We of this Nation have long enjoyed the light of the glorious Gospel among us it hath shone in much clearness upon this sinful Island for more than a whole Century of happy years but the longest day hath an end and we have cause to fear our bright Sun is going down upon us for the shadows in England are grown greater than the substance which is one sign of approaching night Jer. 6. 4. The beasts of prey creep out of their dens and coverts which is another sign of night at hand Psal. 104. 20. and the workmen come home apace from their labours and go to rest which is as sad a sign as any of the rest Job 7. 1 2. Isa. 57. 1 2. Happy were it if in such a juncture as this every man would make it his work and business to secure himself in Christ from the storm of Gods indignation which is ready to fall upon these sinful Nations It is said of the Egyptians when the storm of hail was coming upon the land Exod. 9. 20. He that feared the word of the Lord made his servants and cattle flee into the houses 'T is but an odd sight to see the prudence of an Egyptian out-vying the wisdom and circumspection of a Christian. God who provides natural shelter and refuge for all creatures hath not left his people unprovided and destitute of defence and security in the most tempestuous times of national judgements It is said Mic. 5. 5. This man meaning the man Christ Jesus shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come into our land and when he shall tread in our Palaces and Isai. 26. 20. Come my people enter thou into thy Chambers and shut thy doors about thee hide thy self as it were for a little moment until the indignation be overpast My Friends let me speak as freely as I am sure I speak
it appear that there is such a Union betwixt Christ and believers it is no Ens rationis 1. empty notion or cunningly devised fable but a most certain demonstrable truth which appears First From the Communion which is betwixt Christ and believers in this the Apostle is express 1 Joh. 1. 3. truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his son Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It signifies such fellowship or Copartnership as persons have by a joynt interest in one and the same enjoyment which is in common betwixt them So Heb. 3. 14. we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ipse venit in sortem nostrae mortalitatis ut in fortem nos adduceret suae immortalitatis clarum autem est hic agi de consortibus unctionis quales sunt omnes fideles qui unctionis participes fiunt Rivet partakers of Christ and Psal. 45. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here the Saints are called the companions consorts or fellows of Christ and that not only in respect of his assumption of our mortality and investing us with his immortality but it hath a special reference and respect to the Unction of the Holy Ghost or graces of the Spirit of which believers are partakers with him and through him Now this Communion of the Saints with Christ is entirely and necessarily dependant upon their Union with him even as much as the branches participation of the sap and juice depends upon its Union and coalition with the stock take away Union and there can be no communion or communications which is clear from 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. All is yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods where you see how all our participation of Christs benefits is built upon our Union with Christs person Secondly The reality of the believers Union with Christ is evident from the Imputation of Christs righteousness to him for his Justification That a believer is justified before God by a righteousness without himself is undeniable from Rom. 3. 24. being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus and that Christs righteousness becomes ours by Imputation is as clear from Rom. 4. 23 24. but it can never be imputed to us except we be united to him and become one with him which is also plainly asserted in 1 Con. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousness sanctification and redemption he communicates his merits unto none but those that are in him hence all those vain cavils of the Papists disputing against our Justification by the righteousness of Christ and asserting it to be by inherent righteousness are solidly answered When they demand how can we be justified by the righteousness of another can I be rich with another mans money or preferr'd by anothers honours Our answer is Yes if that other be my surety or husband indeed Peter cannot be justified by the righteousness of Paul but both may be justified by the righteousness of Christ imputed to them they being members joyntly knit to one common head principal and surety are one in obligation and construction of Law head and members are one body branch and stock are one tree and it 's no strange thing to see a graff live by the sap of another stock when once it is ingraffed into it Thirdly The Sympathy that is betwixt Christ and believers proves a Union betwixt them Christ and the Saints smile and sigh together St. Paul in Colos. 1. 2 4. tells us that he did fill up that which is behind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the remainders of the sufferings of Christ in his Flesh not as if Christs sufferings were imperfect for by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. but in these two Scriptures Christ is consider'd in a twofold capacity he suffered once in Corpore proprio in his own person as mediator these sufferings are compleat and full and in that sense he suffers no more he suffers also in Corpore m●…tico in his Church and members thus he still suffers in the sufferings of every Saint for his sake and though these sufferings in his Mystical body are not equal to the other either pondere mensura in their weight and value nor yet designed ex officio for the same use and purpose to satisfie by their proper merit offended Justice nevertheless they are truly reckoned the sufferings of Christ because the head suffers when the members do and without this supposition that place Acts 9. 5. is never to be understood when Christ the head in Heaven crys out Saul Saul why persecutest thou me when the toe was trod upon on earth how doth Christ sensibly feel our sufferings or we his if there be not a Mystical Union betwixt him and us Fourthly and Lastly The way and manner in which the Saints shall be raised at the last day proves this Mystical Union betwixt Christ and them for they are not to be raised as others by the naked power of God without them but by the vertue of Christs resurrection as their head sending forth vital quickening influences into their dead bodies which are united to him as well as their souls For so we find it Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you even as it is in our awakening out of natural sleep first the animal spirits in the head begin to rouze and play there and then the senses and members are loosed throughout the whole body Now it 's impossible the Saints should be raised in the last resurrection by the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them if that Spirit did not knit and unite them to him as members to their head So then by all this it is proved that there is a real Union of the Saints with Christ. Next I shall endeavour to open the quality and nature of this Union and shew you what it is according to the weak 2. apprehensions we have of so sublime a Mystery and this I shall do in a General account of it and Particular First More generally it is an intimate conjunction of believers to Christ by the imparting of his Spirit to them whereby 1. they are enabled to believe and live in him All divine Spiritual life is originally in the Father and cometh not to us but by and through the son Joh. 5. 26. to him hath the Father given to have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickening enlivening power in himself but the Son communicates this life which is in him to none but by and through the Spirit Rom. 8. 2. the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death The Spirit must therefore first take hold of us before we can live in Christ and
of glory Col. 1. 27. So then destroy this Union and with it you destroy all our fruits priviledges and eternal hopes at one stroke Fifthly The Mystical Union is a most Efficacious Union for through this Union the divine power flows into our 5. souls both to quicken us with the life of Christ and to conserve and secure that life in us after it is so infused Without the Unition of the soul to Christ which is to be conceived efficiently as the Spirits act there can be no Union formally considered and without these no communications of life from Christ to us Eph. 4. 16. And when there is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or effectual working of the spirit of life in every part which he there speaks of as who should say the first bublings up of the new life a spiritual vitality diffused through the soul which ere while was dead in sin yet still this Union with Christ is as necessary to the maintaining as before it was to the producing of it For why is it that this life is not again extinguished and wholly suffocated in us by so many deadly wounds as are given it by temptations and corruptions surely no reason can be assigned more satisfying than that which Christ himself gives us in John 14. 19. because I live ye shall live also q. d. whilst there is vital sap in me the root you that are branches in me cannot wither and dye Sixthly The Mystical Union is an indissoluble Union there is an everlasting tye betwixt Christ and the believer and herein also it is beyond all other Unions in the world death dissolves the dear Union betwixt the husband and wife friend and friend yea betwixt soul and body but not betwixt Christ and the soul the bands of this Union rot not in the grave what shall separate us from the love of Christ saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 35 38 39. he bids defiance to all enemies and triumphs in the firmness of this Union over all hazards that seem to threaten it It is with Christ and us in respect of the Mystical Union as it was with Christ himself in respect of the hypostatical Union that was not dissolved by his death when the Natural Union betwixt his soul and body was nor can this mystical Union of our souls and bodies with Christ be dissolved when the Unions betwixt us and our dearest relations yea betwixt the soul and body are dissolved by death God calls himself the God of Abraham long after his body was turned into dust Seventhly It is an honourable Union * Apex cap●…t vertex ●…obilitatis est Christus sine quo nibil est i●… toto ho●… sublunari orbe terraru●… nobile cujus solium est coelum cujus scabellu●… est terra terra ●…nquam in qua h●…rum omnis cognatio nobilitas sita-est collocata divinis illius pedibus substernitur Laurent Hum●…redus de no●…ilitate lib. 2. p. 176. yea the highest honour 7. that can be done unto men the greatest honour that was ever done to our common nature was by its assumption into Unity with the second person hypostatically and the highest honour that was ever done to our single persons was their Union with Christ mystically To be a servant of Christ is a dignity transcendent to the highest advancement among men but to be a member of Christ how matchless and singular is the glory thereof and yet such honour have all the Saints Eph. 5. 30. we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eighthly It is a most Comfortable Union yea the ground 8. of all solid comfort both in life and death whatever troubles wants or distresses befal such in this is abundant relief and support Christ is mine and I am his what may not a soul make out of that If I am Christs then let him take care for me and indeed in so doing he doth but care for his own he is my head and to him it belongs to consult the safety and welfare of his own members Eph. 1. 22 23. he is not only an head to his own by way of Influence but to all things else by way of dominion for their good how comfortably may we repose our selves under that cheering consideration upon him at all times and in all difficult cases Ninthly It is a fruitful Union the immediate end of it is 9. fruit Rom. 7. 4. we are married to Christ that we should bring forth fruit to God all the fruit we bear before our ingrafture into Christ is worse than none till the person be in Christ the work cannot be Evangelically good and acceptable to God we are made accepted in the beloved Eph. 1. 6. Christ is a fruitful root and makes all the branches that live in him so too Joh. 15. 8. Tenthly and Lastly It is an enriching Union for by our 10. Union with his person we are immediately interessed in all his riches 1 Cor. 1. 30. how rich and great a person do the little arms of Faith clasp and embrace All is yours 1 Cor. 3. 22. all that Christ hath becomes ours either by communication to us or improvement for us his Father Joh. 20. 17. his promises 2 Cor. 1. 20. his providences Rom. 8. 28. his glory Joh. 17. 24. it's all ours by vertue of our Union with him Thus you see briefly what the Mystical Union is Next we shall improve it Inference 1. If there be such a Union betwixt Christ and believers oh then what transcendent dignity hath God put upon believers Infer 1. Si vis vir virtutis appellari indue te Christum qui est Dei virtus sapientia in omnibus adjung●… te domino ita ut 〈◊〉 c●…●…o spiritus fias tunc vir virtutis essicieris Orig. Hom. in Numb 31. Well might Constantine perfer the honour of being a member of the Church before that of being head of the Empire for it is not only above all earthly dignities and honours but in some respect above that honour which God hath put upon the Angels of glory Great is the dignity of the Angelical nature they are the highest and most honourable species of creatures they also have the honour continually to behold the face of God in Heaven and yet in this one respect the Saints are preferr'd to them they have a Mystical Union with Christ as their head of influence by whom they are quickned with spiritual life which the Angels have not It is true there is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or gathering together of all in heaven and earth under Christ as a common head Eph. 1. 10. he is the head of Angels as well as Saints but in different respects to Angels he is an head of dominion and government but to Saints he is both an head of dominion and vital influence too they are his chief and most honourable subjects but not his Mystical members they are as the Barons and
Nobels in his Kingdome but the Saints as the dear Spouse and wife of his bosome this dignifies the believer above the greatest Angel And as the Nobles of the Kingdome think it a preferment and honour to serve the Queen so the glorious Angels think it no degradation or dishonour to them to serve the Saints for to this honourable office they are appointed Heb. 1. 14. to be ministring or serviceable spirits for the good of them that shall be heirs of salvation the chiefest servant disdains not to honour and serve the heir Some imperious Grandees would frown should some of these persons but presume to approach their presence but God sets them before his face with delight and Angels delight to serve them Infer 2. If there be such a strict and inseparable Union betwixt Christ Infer 2. and believers then the graces of believers can never totally fail immortality is the priviledge of grace because sanctified persons are inseparably united to Christ the fountain of life your life is bid with Christ in God Coloss. 3. 3. Whilst the sap of life is in the root the branches live by it thus it is betwixt Christ and believers Joh. 14. 19. because I live ye shall live also see how Christ binds up their life in one bundle with his own plainly intimating it is as impossible for them to dye as it is for himself he cannot live without them True it is the spiritual life of believers is encountred by many strong and fierce oppositions it is also brought to a low ebb in some but we are always to remember there are some things which pertain to the essence of that life in which the very being of it lyes and some things that pertain only to its well-being all those things which belong to the well-being of the new creature as manifestations joys spiritual comforts c. may for a time fail yea and grace it self may suffer great losses and remissions in its degrees notwithstanding our Union with Christ but still the essence of it is immortal which is no small relief to gracious souls when the means of grace fail as is threatned Amos 8. 11. whem temporary formal professors drop away from Christ like withered leaves from the trees in a windy day 2 Tim. 2. 18. and when the natural Union of their souls and bodies are suffering a dissolution from each other by death when that Silver cord is loosed this Golden chain holds firm 1 Cor. 3. 23. Infer 3. Is the Union so intimate betwixt Christ and believers how great Infer 3. and powerful a motive then is this to make us open-handed and liberal in relieving the necessities and wants of every gracious person for in relieving them we relieve Christ himself Christ personal is not the object of our pity and charity Qui respectu fratris in Ecclesia non movetur vel Christi contemplatione moveatur qui non cogitat in labore egestate conservum vel dominum cogitet in ipso illo quem despicit constitutum Cyprian de opere eleemosynis he is at the fountain head of all the riches in glory Eph. 4. v. 10. but Christ mystical is exposed to necessities and wants he feels hunger and thirst cold and pains in his body the Church and he is refreshed relieved and comforted in their refreshments and comforts Christ the Lord of heaven and earth in this consideration is sometimes in need of a penny he tells us his wants and poverty and how he is relieved Mat. 25. 35 40. A Text believed and understood by very few I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in Then shall the righteous answer Lord when saw we thee an hungred c. And the King shall answer and say unto them Verily I say unto you in as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it to me It was the saying of a great Divine that he thought scarce any man on earth did fully understand and believe this truth and he conceives so much hinted in the very Text where the righteous themselves reply Lord when saw we thee sick c. intimating in the question that they did not throughly understand the nearness yea oneness of those persons with Christ for whom they did these things And indeed it is incredible that a Christian can be hard hearted and close handed to that necessitous Christian in refreshing and relieving of whom he verily believes that he ministers refreshment to Christ himself O think again and again upon this Scripture consider what forcible and mighty Arguments are here laid together to engage relief to the wants of Christians Here you see their near relation to Christ they are Mystically one person what you did to them you did to me Here you see also how kindly Christ takes it at our hands acknowledging all those kindnesses that were bestowed upon him even to a bit of bread he is you see content to take it as a courtesy who might demand it by authority and bereave you of all immediately upon refusal Yea here you see this one single branch or act of obedience our charity to the Saints is singled out from among all the duties of obedience and made the test and evidence of our sincerity in that great day and men blessed or cursed according to the love they have manifested this way to the Saints O then henceforth let none that understand the relation the Saints have to Christ as the members to the head or the relation they have to each other thereby as fellow members of the same body from henceforth suffer Christ to hunger if they have bread to relieve him or Christ to be thirsty if they have to refresh him this Union betwixt Christ and the Saints affords an Argument beyond all other arguments in the world to prevail with us methinks a little Rhetorick might perswade a Christian to part with any thing he hath to Christ who parted with the glory of heaven yea and his heart blood to boot for his sake Inference 4. Do Christ and believers make but one Mystical person how unnatural Infer 4. and absurd then are all those acts of unkindness whereby believers wound and grieve Jesus Christ this is as if the hand should wound its own head from which it receives life sense motion and strength When Satan smites Christ by a wicked man he then wounds him with the hand of an enemy but when his temptations prevail upon the Saints to sin he wounds him as it were with his own hand as the Eagle and Tree in the Fable complain'd the one that he was wounded by an Arrow winged with his own Feathers the other that it was rived asunder by a wedge hewen out of its own limbs Now the evil and disingenuity of such sins is to be measured not only by the near relation Christ sustains
to believers as their head but more particularly from the several benefits they receive from him as such for in wounding Christ by their sins First They wound their head of influence through whom they live and without whom they had still remain'd in the state of sin and death Eph. 4. 16. Shall Christ send life to us and we return that which is as death to him O how absurd how disingenuous is this Secondly They wound their head of government Christ is a guiding as well as a quickening head Col. 1. 18. the is your wisdome he guides you by his counsels to glory but must he be thus requited for all his faithful conduct what do you when you sin against him but rebel against his government refusing to sollow his counsels and obeying in the mean time a deceiver rather than him Thirdly They wound their consulting head who cares provides and projects for the welfare and safety of the body Christians you know your affairs below have not been steered and managed by your own wisdome but that orders have been given from heaven for your security and supply from day to day I know O Lord saith the Prophet that the way of man is not in himself neither is it in him that walks to direct his own steps Jer. 10. 23. It 's true Christ is out of your sight and you see him not but he sees you and orders every thing that concerns you And is this a due requital of all that care he hath taken for you Do ye thus requite the Lord for all his benefits what recompence evil for good O let shame cover you Fourthly and Lastly They wound their head of honour Christ your head is the fountain of honour to you this is your glory that you relate to him as your head you are on this account as before was noted exalted above Angels Now then consider how vile a thing it is to reflect the least dishonour upon him from whom you derive all your glory O consider and bewail it Infer 5. Is there so strict and intimate a relation and Union betwixt Christ and the Saints then surely they can never want what is good for Infer 5. Qui misit filium immisit spiritum promisit vultum quid tandem denegabit their souls or bodies Every one naturally cares and provides for his own especially for his own body yet we can more easily violate the law of nature and be cruel to our own flesh than Christ can be so to his Mystical body I know it 's hard to rest upon and rejoyce in a promise when necessities pinch and we see not from whence relief should arise but oh what sweet satisfaction and comfort might a necessitous believer find in these considerations would he but keep them upon his heart in such a day of straits First Whatever my distresses are for quality number or degree they are all known even to the least circumstance by Christ my head he looks down from heaven upon all my afflictions and understands them more fully than I that feel them Psal. 38. 9. Lord all my desire is before thee and my groaning is not hid from thee Secondly He not only knows them but feels them as well as knows them we have not an high priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4. 15. in all your afflictions he is afflicted tender Sympathy cannot but flow from such intimate Union therefore in Matth. 25. 35. he saith I was an hungred and I was a thirst and I was naked For indeed his Sympathy and tender compassion gave him as quick a resentment and as tender a sense of their wants as if they had been his own yea Thirdly He not only knows and feels my wants but hath enough in his hand and much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enough to supply them all for all things are delivered to him by the Father Luk 10. 22. all the storehouses in heaven and earth are his Phil. 4. 19. Fourthly He bestows all earthly good things even to superfluity and redundance upon his enemies they have more than heart can wish Psal. 73. 7. he is bountiful to strangers he loads his very enemies with these things and can it be supposed he will in the mean while starve his own and neglect those whom he loves as his own flesh it cannot be Moreover Fifthly hitherto he hath not suffered me to perish in any former straits when and where was it that he forsook me this is not the first plunge of trouble I have been in have I not found him a God at a pinch how oft have I seen him in the Mount of difficulties Sixthly and Lastly I have his promise and engagement that he will never leave me nor forsake me Heb. 13. 5. and Joh. 14. 18. a promise never crackt since the hour it was first made If then the Lord Jesus knows and feels all my wants hath enough and more than enough to supply them if he gives even to redundance unto his enemies hath not hitherto forsaken me and hath promised he never will why then is my soul thus disquieted in me surely there is no cause it should be so Infer 6. If the Saints are so nearly united to Christ as the members to Infer 6. the head O then how great a sin and full of danger is it for any to wrong and persecute the Saints For in so doing they must needs persecute Christ himself Saul Saul saith Christ why persecutest thou me Acts Agesilaus dic●…re solitus est se v●…hementer admirari eos non haberi in sacrilegorum numero qui laederent eos qui Deo supplicarent vel Deum venerantur quo i●…nuit eos non tantum Sacrilegos esse qui deos ipsos aut templorum ornatum spoliarent sed eos maxime qui deorum ministros praecones contumeliis afficiunt Aemyl Prob. 9. 4. The righteous God holds himself obliged to vindicate oppressed innocency though it be in the person of a wicked man how much more when it is in a member of Christ He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of mine eye Zech. 2. 8. And is it to be imagined that Christ will sit still and suffer his enemies to thrust out the very Apples of his eyes no no He hath ordained his arrrows against the persecutors Psal. 7. 13. O it were better thy hand should wither and thine arm fall from thy shoulder than ever it should be lifted up against Christ in the poorest of his members Believe it Sirs not only your violent actions but your hard speeches are all set down upon your doomes-days book and you shall be brought to an account for them in the great day Jud. 15. Beware what arrows you shoot and be sure of your mark before you shoot them Infer 7. If there be such a Union betwixt Christ and the Saints as hath been described upon what comfortable terms then may believers Infer 7. part with their bodies at Death Christ your
from them is and for ever will be marvellous in their eyes Oh what mercy would the damned account it if after a thousand years torments in hell God would at last be reconciled to them and put an end to their misery But believers are discharged without bearing any part of the curse not one farthing of that debt is levied upon them If you say how can this be when God stands upon full Object satisfaction to his Justice before any soul be discharged and restored to savour freely reconciled and yet fully satisfied how can this be Very well for this mercy comes freely to your hands how Solut. costly soever it proved to Christ and that free remission and full satisfaction are not contradictory and inconsistent things is plain enough from that Scripture Rom. 3. 24. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus freely and yet in the way of redemption For though Christ your surety have made satisfaction in your name and stead yet it was his life his blood and not yours that went for it and this surety was of Gods own appointment and providing without your contrivement or thoughts O blessed reconciliation happy is the people that hear the joyful sound of it Fifthly and Lastly That God should be finally reconciled to sinners so that never any new breach shall happen betwixt him and them any more so as to dissolve the League of friendship is a most ravishing and transporting message Two things give Confirmation and full security to reconciled ones viz. The terms of the Covenant and the intercession of the Mediator The Covenant of grace gives great security to believers against new breaches betwixt God and them It 's said Jer. 32. 40. And I will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me The fear of God is a choice preservative against second revolts and therefore taken into the Covenant It is no hindrance but a special guard to assurance There is no doubt of Gods faithfulness that part of the promise is easily believed that he will not turn away from us to do us good all the doubt is of the inconstancy of our hearts with God and against that danger this promise makes provision Moreover the Intercession of Christ in heaven secures the Saints in their reconciled state 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation he continually appears in heaven before the Father as a Lamb that had been slain Rev. 5. 6. And as the bow in the clouds Rev. 4. 3. So that as long as Christ thus appears in the presence of God for us it is not possible our state of Justification and reconciliation can be again dissolved And this is that blessed Embassy Gospel Ministers are imployed about he hath committed to them the word of this reconciliation In the last place we are to enquire what and whence is this efficacy of preaching to reconcile and bring home sinners to 3. Christ. That its efficacy is great in convincing humbling and changing the hearts of men is past all debate and question The weapons of our warfare saith the Apostle are not carnal but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and bringing into Captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. No heart so hard no conscience so stupid but this sword can pierce and wound in an instant it can cast down all those vain reasonings and fond imaginations which the Carnal heart hath been building all its life long and open a fair passage for Convictions of sin and the fears and terrors of wrath to come into that heart that was never afraid of these things before So Acts 2. 37. When they heard this they were pricked to the heart and said unto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do What shall we do is the doleful cry of men at their wits end the voice of one in deepest distress and such outcries have been no rarities under the preaching of the word its power hath been felt by persons of all orders and conditions the great and honourable of the earth as well as the poor and despicable The learned and the ignorant the civil and profane the young and the old all have felt the heart-piercing efficacy of the Gospel If you ask whence hath the word preached this mighty power The answer must be Neither from it self nor him that preaches it but from the spirit of God whose instrument it is by whose blessing and concurrence with it it produceth its blessed effects upon the hearts of men First This Efficacy and wonderful power is not from the 1. word it self take it in an abstract notion separated from the spirit it can do nothing it is called the foolishness of preaching 1 Cor. 1. 21. foolishness not only because the world so accounts it but because in it self it is a weak and unsuitable and therefore a very improbable way to reconcile the world to God that the stony heart of one man should be broken by the words of another man that one poor sinful Creature should be used to breath spiritual life into another this could never be if this sword were not managed by an omnipotent hand And besides we know what works Naturally works necessarily if this Efficacy were inherent in the word so that we should suppose it to work as other Natural agents do then it must need convert all to whom it is at any time preached except its effect were miraculously hindered as the fire when it could not burn the three Children but alas thousands hear it that never feel the saving power of it Isai. 53. 1. and 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. Secondly It derives not this Efficacy from the Instrument 2. by which it is ministred let their gifts and abilities be what they will it 's impossible that ever such effects should be produced from the strength of their Natural or gracious abilities 2 Cor. 4. 7. We have this treasure saith the Apostle in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us This treasure of Gospel light is carried 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in earthen vessels as Gideon and his men had their Lamps 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in earthen pitchers or in Oyster-shells for so the word also signifies the Oyster-shell is a base and worthless thing in it self however there lyes the rich and precious Pearl of so great value and why is this precious treasure lodged in such weak worthless vessels surely it is upon no other design but to convince us of the truth I am here to prove That the Excellency
assenting act of faith in the very foundation and hence I doubt I do not believe There may be and often is a true and sincere assent found in the soul that is assaulted with violent atheistical suggestions Sol. from Satan and thereupon questions the truth of it and this is a very clear evidence of the reality of our assent that whatever doubts or contrary suggestions there be yet we dare not in our practice contradict or slight those truths or duties which we are tempted to disbelieve Ex. gr we are assaulted with atheistical thoughts and tempted to slight and cast off all fears of sin and practice of religious duties yet when it comes to the point of practice we dare not commit a known sin the awe of God is upon us we dare not omit a known duty the tye of conscience is found strong enough to hold us close to it in this case 't is plain we do really assent when we think we do not A man thinks he doth not love his child yet carefully provides for him in health and is full of grief and fears about him in sickness why now so long as I see all fath rly duties performed and affections to his childs welfare manifested let him say what he will as to the want of love to him whilest I see this he must excuse me if I do not believe him when he saith he hath no love for him Just so is it in this case A man saith I do not assent to the being necessity or excellency of Jesus Christ yet in the mean time his soul is fill'd with cares and fears about securing his interest in him he is found panting and thirsting for him with vehement desires there 's nothing in all the world would give him such joy as to be well assured of an interest in him while it is thus with any man let him say or think what he will of his assent it 's manifest by this he doth truly and heartily assent and there can be no better proof of it than these real effects produc'd by it Secondly But if these and other objections were never so fully answer'd for the clearing of the assumption yet it often falls out that believers are afraid to draw the conclusion and that fear arises partly from First The weighty importance of the matter Secondly The sense of the deceitfulness of their own hearts First The conclusion is of infinite importance to them it is the everlasting happiness of their souls than which nothing is or can be of greater weight upon their spirits things in which we are most deeply concerned are not lightly and hastily received by us it seems so great and so good that we are still apt if there be any room for it to suspect the truth and certainty thereof as never being sure enough Thus when the women that were the first messengers and witnesses of Christs resurrection Luke 24. 10 11. came and told the disciples those wonderful and comfortable tydings it 's said that their words seemed to them as idle tales and they believed them not they thought it was too good to be true too great to be hastily received so is it in this case Secondly The sense they have of the deceitfulness of their own hearts and the dayly workings of hypocrisie there makes them afraid to conclude in so great a point as this is They know that very many dayly cozen and cheat themselves in this matter they know also that their own hearts are full of falseness and deceit they find them so in their daily observations of them and what if they should prove so in this why then they are lost for ever they also know there is not the like danger in their fears and jealousies that would be in their vain confidences and presumptions by the one they are only deprived of their present comfort but by the other they would be ruined for ever and therefore choose rather to dwell with their own fears though they be uncomfortable companions than run the danger of so great a mistake which would be infinitely more fatal And this being the common case of most Christians it follows that there must be many more believers in the world than do think or dare conclude themselves to be such Infer 4. If the right receiving of Jesus Christ be true saving and justifying faith then those that have the least and lowest degree and measure Infer 4. of saving faith have cause for ever to admire the bounty and riches of the grace of God to them therein If you have received never so little of his bounty by the hand of providence in the good things of this life yet if he have given you any measure of true saving faith he hath dealt bountifully indeed with you this mercy alone is enough to ballance all other wants and inconveniencies of this life Poor in the world rich in faith James 2. 5. O let your hearts take in the full sense of this bounty of God to you say with the Apostle Eph. 1. 3. blessed be the God and father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus and you will in this one mercy find matter enough of praise and thanksgiving wonder and admiration to your dying day yea to all eternity for do but consider First The smallest measure of saving faith which is found in any of the poople of God receives Jesus Christ and in receiving him what mercy is there which the believing soul doth not receive in him and with him Rom. 8. 32. O believer though the arms of thy faith be small and weak yet they embrace a great Christ and receive the richest gift that ever God bestowed upon the world no sooner art thou become a believer but Christ is in thee the hope of glory and thou hast authority to become a son or daughter of God thou hast the broad seal of heaven to confirm thy title and claim to the priviledges of Adoption for to as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God To as many be they strong or be they weak provided they really receive Christ by faith there is authority or power given so that it 's no act of presumption in them to say God is our Father heaven is our inheritance Oh precious faith the treasures of ten thousand worlds cannot purchase such priviledges as these all the Crowns and Scepters of the earth sold at their full value are no price for such mercies Secondly The least degree of saving faith brings the soul into a state of perfect and full Justification For if it receives Jesus Christ it must therefore needs in him and with him receive a free full and final pardon of sin the least measure of faith receives remission for the greatest sins By him all that believe are justified from all things Acts 13. 39. it unites thy soul with Christ and then as
yearning bowels after him whether he be yours or not you cannot tell but that you are resolved to be his that you can tell whether he will save you is a doubt but that you resolve to lye at his feet and wait only on him and never look to another for salvation is no doubt Well well poor pensive soul if it be so arise lift up thy dejected head take thine own Christ into thy arms These are undoubted signs of a real closure with Christ thou makest thy self poor and yet hast great riches such things as these are not found in them that despise and reject Christ by unbelief 3. Use of Exhortation This point is likewise very improveable by way of Exhortation 3. Use. and that both to Unbelievers and Believers First To unbelievers who from hence must be prest as ever they expect to see the face of God in peace to receive Jesus Christ as he is now offered to them in the Gospel this is the very scope of the Gospel I shall therefore press it by three great Considerations viz. First What is in Christ whom you are to receive Secondly What is in the offer of Christ by the Gospel Thirdly What is in the rejecting of that offer First Motive First Consider well what is in Christ whom I perswade you this day to receive did you know what is in Christ you Motive 1. would never neglect or reject him as you do For First God is in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. the Deity hath chosen to dwell in his flesh he is God manifest in flesh 1 Tim. 3. 16. a Godhead dwelling in flesh is the worlds wonder so that in receiving Christ you receive God himself Secondly The Authority of God is in Christ Ex●… 23. 21. My name is in him him hath God the father sealed Joh. 6. 27. he hath the Commission the great seal of heaven to redeem and save you all power in heaven and earth is given to him Matth. 28. 18. he comes in his Fathers name to you as well as in his own name Thirdly The wisdome of God is in Christ 1 Cor. 1. 24. Christ the wisdom of God yea in him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. Never did the wisdome of God display it self before the eyes of Angels and men as it hath done in Christ. The Angels desire to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 12. yet they are not so much concerned in the project and design of this wisdome in redemption as you are Fourthly The fulness of the Spirit is in Christ yea it fills him so as it never did nor will fill any creature Joh. 3. 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure to him all others have their limits stints and measures some more some less but the Spirit is in Christ without measure O h●…w lovely and desirable are those men that have a large measure of the Spirit in them but he is anointed with the Spirit of holiness above all his fellows Psal. 45. 2 7. Whatever grace is found in all the Saints which makes them desirable and lovely wisdome in one faith in another patience in a third they all Centre in Christ as the rivers do in the Sea quae faciunt divisa beatum in hoc mixta 〈◊〉 Fifthly The righteousness of God is in Christ by which only a poor guilty sinner can be justified before God 2 Cor. 5. 21. we are made the righteousness of God in him he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord our righteousness Jer. 23. 6. i. e. the i. e. Autorem justitiae nostrae Calv. in Loc. author of our righteousness or the Lord who justifies us by that name he shall be known and call'd by his people than which none can be sweeter Sixthly The love of God is in Christ yea the very yearning bowels of divine love are in him what is Christ but the love of God wrapt up in flesh and blood 1 Joh. 4. 9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us and herein is love that God sent his Son this is the highest 〈◊〉 that ever divine love made and higher than this it 〈◊〉 mount O love unparalell'd and admirable Seventhly The mercies and compassions of Christ are all in Christ Jude v. 21. Mercy is the thing that poor sinners want it 's that they cry for at the last gasp it 's the only thing that can do them good O what would they give to find mercy in that great day Why if you receive Christ you shall with him receive mercy but out of him there is no mercy to be expected from the hands of God for God will never exercise mercy to the prejudice of his Justice and it is in Christ that justice and mercy meet and embrace each other Eighthly To Conclude The salvations of God are in Christ. Acts 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other Christ is the d●…r of salvation and Faith is the key that opens that door to men if you therefore believe not i. e. if you so receive not Jesus Christ as God hath offer'd him you exclude your selves from all hopes of salvation The Devils have as much ground to expect salvation as you you see what is in Christ to induce you to receive him Motive 2. Next I beseech you confider what there is in the offer Motive 2. of Christ to sinners to induce you to receive him Consider well to whom and how Christ is offered in the Gospel First To whom he is offered not to the fallen Angels but to you they lye in chains of darkness Jude 6. as he took not their nature so he designs not their recovery and therefore will have no treaty at all with them but he is offered to you creatures of an inferiour rank and order by nature nor is he offered to the damned the treaty of peace is ended with them Christ will nevermake them another tender of salvation nor is he offered to millions of millions as good as you ●…ow living in the word the sound of Christ and Salvation is not come to their ears but he is offered to you by the special favour and bounty of heaven and will you not receive him O then how will the devils the damned and the heathens upbraid your folly and say had we had one such tender of mercy of which you have had thousands we would never have been now in this place of torments Secondly Consider how Christ is offered to you and you shall find that he is offered First Freely as the gift of God to your souls you are not to purchase him but only to receive him Isa. 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money let him come c. Secondly Christ is offered importunately by repeated intreaties 2 Cor. 5. 20. As though God did beseech you we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O what amazing condescension is here in the God of
the second we partake with him the former is the remote the later the next cause thereof In the explication of this point I shall speak to these four things 1. What are those things in which Christ and believers have fellowship 2. By what means they come to have such a fellowship with Christ. 3. How great a dignity this is to have fellowship with Jesus Christ. 4. And then apply the whole in divers practical inferences First What are those things in which Christ and believers 1. have fellowship to which I must speak both negatively and positively First The Saints have no fellowship with Jesus Christ in Negatively those things that belong to him as God such as his consubstantiality coequality and coeternity with the father 't is the blasphemy of the wicked Familists to talk of being Godded into God and Christed into Christ neither men or Angels partake in these things they are the proper and incommunicable Justitia Christi fit nostra non quoad universalem valoremsed particularem necessitatem imputatur nobis non ut causis salvationis sed ut subjectis salvandis Bradshaw de justificatione glory of the Lord Jesus Secondlly The Saints have no communion or fellowship in the honour and glory of his mediatory works viz. his satisfaction to God or redemption of the elect 't is true we have the benefit and fruit of his mediation and satisfaction his righteousness also is imputed to us for our personal justification but we share not in the least with Christ in the glory of this work nor have we an inherent righteousness in us as Christ hath nor can we justifie and save others as Christ doth we have nothing to do with his peculiar honour and praise in these things though we have the benefit of being saved we may not pretend to the honour of being Saviours as Christ is to our selves or others Christs righteousness is not made ours as to its universal value but as to our particular necessity nor is it imputed to us as to so many causes of salvation to others but as to so many subjects to be saved by it our selves Secondly But then there are many glorious and excellent Posi ively things which are in common betwixt Christ and believers though in them all he hath the preeminence he shines in the fulness of them as the Sun and we with a borrowed and lesser light but of the same kind and nature as the Stars Some of these I shall particularly and briefly unfold in the following particulars First Believers have communion with Christ in his names and titles they are call'd Christians from Christ Eph. 3. 15. from him the whole family in heaven and earth is named this is that worthy name the Apostle speaks of James 2. 7. He is the son of God and they also by their union with him have power or authority to become the sons of God Joh. 1. 12. He is the heir of all things and they are joynt heirs with him Rom. 8. 17. He is both King and Priest and he hath made them Kings and Priests Rev. 1. 6. but they do not only partake in the names and titles but this communion consists in things as well as titles and therefore Secondly They have communion with him in his righteousness i. e. the righteousness of Christ is made theirs 2 Cor. 5. 21. and he is the Lord our righteousness Jer. 23. 6. 'T is true the righteousness of Christ is not inherent in us as it is in him but it is ours by imputation Rom. 4. 5. 11. and our union with him is the ground of the imputation of his righteousness to us 2 Cor. 5. 21. we are made the righteousness of God in him Phil. 3. 9. for Christ and believers are considered as one person in construction of Law as a man and his wife a debtor and surety are one and so his payment or satisfaction is in our name or upon our account Now this is a most inestimable priviledge the very ground of all our other blessings and mercies O what a benefit is this to a poor sinner that owes to God infinitely more than he is ever able to pay him by doing or suffering to have such a rich treasure of merit as lyes in the obedience of Christ to discharge in one entire payment all his debts to the least farthing Surely shall one say In the Lord have I righteousness Isa. 45. 24. even as a poor woman that owes more than she is worth in one moment is discharged of all her obligations by her marriage to a wealthy man Thirdly Believers have communion with Christ in his holiness or Sanctification for of God he is made unto them not only righteousness but Sanctification also and as in the former priviledge they have a stock of merit in the blood of Christ to justifie them so here they have the Spirit of Christ to sanctisie them 1 Cor. 1. 30. and therefore we are said of his fulness to receive grace for grace Joh. 1. 16. i. e. say some grace upon grace manifold graces or abundance of grace or grace for grace that is grace answerable to grace as in the seal and wax there is line for line and cut for cut exactly answerable to each other or grace for grace that is say others the free grace of God in Christ for the sanctification or filling of our souls with grace be it in which sense it will it shews the communion believers have with Jesus Christ in grace and holiness Now holiness is the most precious thing in the world it 's the image of God and chief excellency of man it is our evidence for glory yea and the first-fruits of glory in Christ dwells the fulness of grace and from him our head it is derived and communicated to us thus he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one Heb. 2. 11. You would think it no small priviledge to have Baggs of Gold to go to and enrich your selves with and yet that were but a very trifle in comparison to have Christs righteousness and holiness to go to for your Justification and Sanctification More particularly Fourthly Believers have communion with Christ in his death they dye with him Gal. 2. 20. I am crucified with Christ i. e. the death of Christ hath a real killing and mortifying influence upon the lusts and corruptions of my heart and nature true it is he died for sin one way and we dye to sin another way he dyed to expiate it we dye to it when we mortifie it the death of Christ is the death of sin in believers and this is a very glorious priviledge for the death of sin is the life of your souls if sin do not dye in you by mortification you must dye for sin by eternal damnation if Christ had not dyed the Spirit of God by which you now mortifie the deeds of the body could not have been given unto you then you must
that as the heathen said of moral vertue I may much more say of Christ That were he to be seen with mortal eyes he would compel love and admiration from all men for he is altogether lovely Cant. 5. 16. Infer 7. What delight and singular advantage must needs be in the communion of the Saints who have communion with Jesus Christ in all Infer 7. his graces and benefits That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye also may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. 3. O 't is sweet to have fellowship with those that have fellowship with God in Jesus Christ. Christ hath communicated to the Saints varieties of graces in different measures and degrees and as they all receive from Christ the fountain so it 's sweet and most delightful to be improving themselves by spiritual communion one with another yea for that end one is furnisht with one grace more eminently than another that the weak may be assisted by the strong as a Modern Divine well observes Athanasius was prudent and active Basil of an heavenly Mr. Tors●…ell sweet temper Chrysostome laborious without affectation Ambrose resolv'd and grave Luther couragious and Calvin acute and judicious thus every one hath his proper gift from Christ the fountain of gifts and graces 1 Cor. 7. 7. One hath quickness of parts another solidity of judgement but not ready and presential one is zealous but ungrounded another well principled but timorous one is wary and prudent another open and plain one is trembling and melting another chearful and joyous one must impart his light another his heat the Eye the knowing man cannot say to the Hand the active man I have no need of thee And O how sweet would it be if gifts graces and experiences were frequently and humbly imparted but idle notions earthly-mindedness self-interests and want of more communion with Christ have almost destroyed the comfort of Christian fellowship every where in the world Infer 8. In a word those only have ground to claim interest in Infer 8. Christ who do really participate of his graces and in whom are found the effects and fruits of their Union and communion with him If you have interest in Christ you have communion in his graces and benefits and if you have such communion it will appear in your maintaining daily actual communion with God in duties whereby will be produced First The increase of your Sanctification by fresh participations from the Fountain as Cloth which is often dipt into the Fat receives the deeper dye and livelier tincture so will your souls by assiduous communion with God It will also be discerned Secondly In your deeper humiliation and spiritual sense of your own vileness the more any man partakes of God and is acquainted with him and assimilated to him the more base and vile in his own sight he still grows Job 42. 5 6. Isa. 6. 5. Thirdly It will appear in your more vehement longings after the full enjoyment of God in heaven 1 Pet. 1. 8. and Rom. 8. 23. you that have the first-fruits will groan within your selves after the full harvest and satisfying fruition you will not be so taken with things below as to be content with the best lot on earth for your everlasting portion O if hese communicated drops be so sweet what is there in Christ the fountain And thus I have opened the method of grace in bringing home Christ and his benefits to Gods elect by Union in order to communion with him Thanks be to God for Jesus Christ. The Ninth SERMON Serm. 9. MATTH 11. 28. Text. Containing the first general use of Exhortation inviting all men to apply Jesus Christ. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest THe Impetration of our Redemption by Jesus Christ being finished in the first part and the way and means by which Christ is applied to sinners in the foregoing part of this Treatise I am now orderly come to the general Use of the whole which in the first place shall be by way of Exhortation to invite and perswade all men to come unto Christ who in all the former Sermons hath been represented in his garments of salvation red in his apparel prepared and offered to sinners as their all-sufficient and only remedy and in the following Sermons will be represented in his perfumed garments coming out of his Ivory Palaces Psal. 45. 8. to allure and draw all men unto him For a general head to this Use which will be large I have chosen this Scripture Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest These words are the voice of our Lord Jesus Christ himself in which there is a vital ravishing sound 't is your mercy to have such a joyful sound in your ears this day and in them I will consider their dependance parts and scope As to their dependance it is manifest they have an immediate relation to the foregoing verse wherein Christ opens his Commission and declares the fulness of his authority and saving power and the impossibility of coming to God any other way all things are delivered to me of my Eather and no man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him v. 27. This 28 verse is brought in proleptically to obviate the discouragements of any poor convinced and humbled soul who might thus object Lord I am fully satisfied of the fulness of thy saving power but greatly doubt whether ever I shall have the benefit thereof For I see so much sin and guilt in my self so great vileness andutter unworthiness that I am over-weighed and even sink under the burden of it my soul is discouraged because of sin This objection is prevented in the words of my Text Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden Q. d. let not the sense of your sin and misery drive you from your only remedy be your sins never so many and the sense and burthen of them never so heavy yet for all that come unto me you are the persons whom I invite and call I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance In the words three things are especially remarkable 1. The souls spiritual distress and burthen weary and heavy laden 2. It s invitation to Christ under that barthen come unto me 3. It s incouragement to that great duty I will give you rest First The souls spiritual distress and burthen exprest in 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui laboratis scil ad defatigationem usque hac enim Emphasi differt Tò 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod in genere significat laborare Piscator in Loc. i. e. Qui sentitis ●…nus peccatorum sub illo tant●…
Gal. 6. 1. You that are spiritually minded restore or set him in joint again in the spirit of meekness considering thy self Israel was commanded to be kind to strangers for saith God you know the heart of a stranger and surely if any case in the world require help pity and all compassionate tenderness this doth and yet how do some slight spiritual troubles upon others Parents slight them in their own children Masters in their servants the more bruitish and wicked they O had you but felt your selves what they feel you would never handle them as you do But let this comfort such poor creatures Christ hath felt them and will pity and help them yea he therefore would feel them himself that he might have compassion upon you If men will not God will pity you if men be so cruel to persecute him whom God hath smitten God will be so kind to pour balm into the wounds that sin hath made if they pull away the shoulder from you and will not be concerned about your troubles except it be to aggravate them God will not serve you so but certainly you that have past through the same difficulties you cannot be without compassion to them that are now grapling with them Inference 4. How unexpressibly dreadful is the state of the damned who must bear the burden of all their sins upon themselves without relief or Inference 4. hope of deliverance Mark 9. 44. where their worm dyeth not and the fire is not quenched O if sin upon the soul that 's coming to Christ for deliverance be so burdensome what is it upon the soul that is shut out from Christ and all hopes of deliverance for ever For do but ponder these differences betwixt these two burdens First No soul is so capacious now to take in the fulness of the evil and misery of sin as they are who are gone down to the place of torments Even as the joyes of Gods face above are much unknown to them that have the foretastes and first-fruits of them here by faith so the misery of the damned is much unknown even to them that have in their consciences now the bitterest taste and sense of sin in this world as we have the visions of heaven so we have the visions of hell also but darkly through a glass Secondly No burden of sin presseth so continually upon the soul here as it doth there afflicted souls on earth have intermissions and breathing times but in hell there are no Lucid intervals the wrath of God there is still flowing it is in fluxu continu●… Isa. 30. 33. a stream of brimstone Thirdly No burden of sin lyes upon any of Gods elect so long as the damned do and must bear it our troubles about sin are but short though they should run parallel with the line of life but the troubles of the damned are parallel with the endless line of eternity Fourthly Under these troubles the soul hath hope but there all hope is cut off all the Gospel is full of hope it breathes nothing but hope to sinners that are moving Christ-ward under their troubles but in hell the pangs of desperation rend their consciences for ever So that upon all accounts the state of the damned is inexpressibly dreadful Inference 5. If the burden os sin be so heavy how sweet then must the Inference 5. pardon of sin be to a sin-burdened soul Is it a refreshment to a prisoner to have his chains knockt off a comfort to a debtor to have his debts paid and obligations cancelled What joy must it then be to a sin-burthened soul to hear the voice of pardon and peace in his trembling conscience Is the light of the morning pleasant to a man after a weary tiresome night the Spring of the year pleasant after a hard and tedious Winter they are so indeed but nothing so sweet as the favour peace and pardon of God to a soul that hath been long restless and anxious under the terrors and fears of conscience for though after pardon and peace a man remembers sin still yet it is as one that remembers the dangerous pits and deep waters from which he hath been wonderfully delivered and had a narrow escape O the unconceivable sweetness of a pardon Who can read it and not wet it with tears of joy Are we glad when the grinding pain of the Stone or racking fits of the Colick are over and shall we not be transported when the accusations and condemnations of conscience are over Tongue cannot express what these things are this joy is something that no words can convey to the understanding of another that never felt the anguish of sin Inference 6. Lastly In how sad a case are those that never felt any burden in Inference 6. sin that never were kept waking and restless one night for sin There is a burthened conscience and there is a benummed conscience The first is more painful but the last more dangerous O 't is a fearful blow of God upon a mans soul to strike it senseless and stupid so that though mountains of guilt lye upon it it feels no pain or pressure and this is so much the more sad because it incapacitates the soul for Christ and is a presage and fore-runner of hell It would grieve the heart of a man to see a delirious person in the rage and height of a fevor to laugh at those that are weeping for him call them fools and telling them he is as well as any of them much so is the case of many thousand souls the God of mercy pity them Second Use for Counsel The only further Use I shall make of this Point here shall Use 2. be to direct and counsel souls that are weary and heavy laden with the burden of sin in order to their obtaining true rest and peace And first First Counsel Satisfie not your selves in fruitless complaints to men Many 1. Counsel do so but it 's never the near I grant it 's lawful in spiritual distresses to complain to men yea and it is a great mercy if we have any near us in times of trouble that are judicious tender and faithful into whose bosomes we may pour out our troubles but to rest in this short of Christ is no better than a snare of the Devil to destroy us Is there not a God to go to in trouble The best of men in the neglect of Christ are but Physicians of no value Be wise and wary in your choice of Christian friends to whom you open your complaints some are not clear themselves in the doctrine of Christ and faith others are of a dark and troubled spirit as you are and will but entangle you more As for me saith Job is my complaint to man and if it were so why should not my spirit be troubled Job 21. 4. One hour betwixt Christ and thy soul in secret will do more to thy true relief than all other counsellors and comforters in
Sermon 10. MAT. 9. 12. But when Jesus heard that he said unto them Text. Wherein the general Exhortation is enforced by one Motive drawn from the first Title of Christ. They that be whole need not a Physician but they that be sick HAving opened in the former discourses the nature and method of the Application of Christ to sinners it remains now that I press it upon every soul as ever it expects peace and pardon from God to apply and put on Jesus Christ i. e. to get union with him by faith whilst he is yet held forth in the free and gracious tenders of the Gospel to which purpose I shall now labour in this general Use of Exhortation in which my last Subject engaged me wherein divers Arguments will be further urged both from The 1. Titles and of Jesus Christ. 2. Priviledges The Titles of Christ are so many Motives or arguments fitted to perswade men to come unto him Amongst which Christ as the Physician of Souls comes under our first Consideration in the Text before us The occasion of these words of Christ was the call of Matthew the Publican who having first opened his Heart next opened his House to Christ and entertains him there this strange and unexpected change wrought upon Matthew quickly rings in all the Neighbourhood and many Publicans and Sinners resorted thither at which the stomachs of the proud Pharisees began to swell from this occasion they took offence at Christ and in this verse Christ takes off the offence by such an answer as was fitted both for their conviction and his own vindication But when Jesus heard that he said unto them The whole have no need of a Physician but they that be sick He gives it saith one as a reason why he conversed so much with Publicans and Sinners and so little among the Pharisees because there was more work for him men set up where they think Trade will be quickest Christ came to be a Physician to sick souls Pharisees were so well in their own conceit that Christ saw he should have little to do among them and so he applied himself to those who were more sensible of their sickness In the words we have an account of the temper and state both Of 1. The secure and unconvinced Sinner 2. The humbled and convinced And 3. Of the Carriage of Christ and his different respect to either   1. First The secure sinner is here described both with respect to his own apprehensions of himself as one that is whole and also by his low value and esteem for Christ he sees no need of him the whole have no need of the Physician 2. Secondly The Convinced and Humbled Sinner is here also described and that both by his state and condition he is sick and by his valuation of Jesus Christ he greatly needs him they that be sick need the Physician 3. Thirdly We have here Christs carriage and different respect to both the former he rejects and passeth by as those with whom he hath no concernment the later he converses with in order to their cure The words thus opened are fruitful in observations I shall neither note nor insist upon any beside this one which fuits the scope of my Discourse viz. DOCT. That the Lord Jesus Christ is the only Physician for sick souls The world is a great Hospital full of sick and dying souls Doct. all wounded by one and the same mortal weapon sin Some are senseless of their misery feel not their pains value not a Physician others are full of sense as well as danger mourn under the apprehension of their condition and sadly bewail it The merciful God hath in his abundant compassion to the perishing world sent a Physician from Heaven and given him his Orders under the Great Seal of Heaven for his Office Isai. 61. 1 2. which he opened and read in the audience of the people Luke 4. 18. The spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach good tydings unto the meek he hath sent me to bind up the broken hearted c. He is the tree of life whose leaves are for the healing of the Nations he is Jehova Rophe the Lord that healeth us and that as he is Jehovah Tzidkenu the Lord our righteousness The Brazen Serpent that healed the Israelites in the Wilderness was an excellent Type of our Great Physician Christ and is expresly applied to him John 3. 14. he rejects none that come and heals all whom he undertakes but more particularly I will First Point at those Diseases which Christ heals in sick souls and by what means he heals them Secondly the excellency of this Physician above all others there is none like Christ he is the only Physician for wounded souls First We will enquire into the Diseases which Christ the Physician cures and they are reducible to two heads 〈◊〉 viz. 1. Sin and 2. Sorrow First The disease of sin in which three things are found exceeding burthensome to sick souls 1. The Guilt of sin all cured by this Physician and how 2. The Dominion 3. The Inherence First The guilt of sin this is a mortal wound a stab in 1. the very heart of a poor sinner 'T is a fond and groundless distinction that Papists make of sins Mortal and Venial all sin in its own nature is mortal Rom. 6. 23. The wages of sin is death yet though it be so in its own nature Christ can and doth cure it by the Soveraign Balfom of his own precious blood Eph. 1. 7. In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace This is the deepest and deadliest wound the soul of man feels in this world what is guilt but the obligation of the soul to everlasting punishment and misery It puts the soul under the sentence of God to eternal wrath the condemning sentence of the great and terrible God than which nothing is found more dreadful and insupportable put all pains all poverty all afflictions all miseries in one Scale and Gods condemnation in the other and you weigh but so many Feathers against a talent of Lead This Disease our great Physician Christ cures by Remission which is the dissolving of the obligation to punishment the loosing of the soul that was bound over to the Wrath and Condemnation of God Coll. 2. 13 14. Heb. 6. 12. Micah 7. 17 18 19. this remission being made the soul is immediately cleared from all its obligations to punishment Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation all Bonds are cancelled the guilt of all sins is healed or removed original and actual great and small This cure is performed upon souls by the blood of Christ nothing is found in Heaven or earth besides his blood that is able to heal this disease Heb. 9. 22. Without shedding of blood there is no remission nor is it any blood that will do it but that only which dropt from
with God is daily interrupted but it shall not be so in Heaven where the cure is perfect you shall not know love or delight in God as you do this day for you are not as yet come to the rest and to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you and so much as to the diseases of sin and Christs method of curing them Secondly As sin is the disease of the Saints so also is Sorrow The best of Saints must pass through the vally of 2●… Bacha to Heaven How many tears fall from the Eyes of the Saints upon the account of outward as well as inward troubles even after their reconciliation with God Through much tribulation we must enter into the Kingdom of God Acts 14. 22. It would be too great a digression in this place to note but the more general heads under which almost infinite particulars of troubles and afflictions are found It shall suffice only to shew that whatever distress or trouble any poor soul is in upon any account whatsoever if that soul belong to Jesus Christ he will take care of it for present and deliver it at last by a compleat cure First Christ cures troubles by sanctifying them to the souls of his that are under affliction and makes their very troubles medicinal and healing to them Trouble is a Scorpion and hath a deadly sting but Christ is a wise Physician and extracts a Soveraign Oyl out of this Scorpion that heals the wound it makes By affliction our wise Physician purges our corruptions and so prevents or cures greater troubles by lesser inward sorrows by outward ones Isai. 27. 9. By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and this is all the fruit to take away his sin Secondly Christ cures outward troubles by inward consolations which are made to rise in the inner man as high as the waters of affliction do upon the outward man 2 Cor. 1. 5. One drop of spiritual comfort is sufficient to sweeten a whole Ocean of outward trouble It was an high expression of an Nihil Corpus sent it in nerv●… cum Anima sit in Coelo afflicted Father whom God comforted just upon the death of his dear and only Son with some clearer manifestations of his love than was usual O said he might I but have such consolations as these I could be willing were it possible to lay an only Son into the grave every day I have to live in this world Thus all the troubles of the world are cured by Christ John 16. 33. In the world ye shall have trouble but in me ye shall have peace Thirdly Christ cures all outward sorrows and troubles in his people by death which is their removal from the place of sorrows to peace and rest for evermore Now God wipes all tears from their eyes and the days of their mourning are at an end they then put off the Garments and Spirit of mourning and enter into peace Isai. 57. 2. they come to that place and state where tears and sighs are things unknown to the Inhabitants one step beyond the state of this mortality brings us quite out of the sight and hearing of all troubles and lamentations These are the diseases of souls sin and sorrow and thus they are cured by Christ the Physician Secondly Next I shall shew you that Jesus Christ is the only Physician of souls none like him for a sick sinner and this will be evident in divers respects First None so wise and judicious as Jesus Christ to understand 2. and comprehend the nature depth and danger of soul diseases O how ignorant and unacquainted are men with the state and case of afflicted souls but Christ hath the tongue of the Learned that he should know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary Isai. 50. 4. He only understands the weight of sin and depth of inward troubles for sin Secondly None so able to cure and heal the wounds of afflicted souls as Christ is he only hath those medicines that can cure a sick soul. The blood of Christ and nothing else in Heaven or Earth is able to cure the mortal wounds which guilt inflicts upon a trembling Conscience let men try all other receipts and costly experience shall convince them of their insufficiency Conscience may be benummed by stupefactive medicines prepared by the Devil for that end but pacified it can never be but by the blood of Christ Heb. 16. 22. Thirdly None so tender hearted and sympathizing with sick souls as Jesus Christ he is full of bowels and tender compassions to afflicted souls he is one that can have compassion because he hath had experience Heb. 5. 2. If I must come into the Chirurgeons hand with broken bones give me such a one to choose whose own bones have been broken who hath felt the anguish in himself Christ knows what it is by experience having felt the anguish of inward troubles the weight of Gods wrath and the terrors of a forsaking God more than any or all the sons of men this makes him tender over distressed souls Isai. 42. 3. A bruised reed he will not break and smoaking flax he shall not quench Fourthly None cures in so wonderful a method as Christ doth he heals us by his stripes Isai. 53. 5. The Physician dyes that the Patient may live his wounds must bleed that ours may be cured he feels the smart and pain that we might have the ease and comfort No Physician but Christ will cure others at this rate Fifthly None so ready to relieve a sick soul as Christ he is within the call of a distressed soul at all times Art thou sick for sin weary of sin and made truly willing to part with sin Lift up but thy sincere cry to the Lord Jesus for help and he will quickly be with thee when the Prodigal the embleme of a convinced humbled sinner said in himself I will return to my Father the Father ran to meet him Luke 15. 20. he can be with thee in a moment Sixthly none so willing to receive and undertake all distressed and afflicted souls as Jesus Christ is he refuses none that come to him Joh. 6. 37. He that cometh unto me I will in no wayes cast out whatever their sins have been or their sorrows are however they have wounded their own souls with the deepest gashes of guilt how desperate and helpless soever their case appears in their own or others Eyes he never puts them off or discourages them if they be but willing to come Isai. 1. 18 19. Seventhly None so happy and successful as Christ he never fails of performing a perfect cure upon those he undertakes never was it known that any soul miscarried in his hands John 3. 15 16. other Physicians by mistakes by ignorance or carelesness fill Church-yards and cast away the lives of men but Christ suffers none to perish that commit themselves to him Eighthly none so free and generous as
Christ he doth all gratis he sells not his medicines though they be of infinite value but freely gives them Isai. 55. 1. He that hath no money let him come if any be sent away 't is the rich Luk. 1. 53. not the poor and needy those that will not accept their remedy as a free gift but will needs purchase it at a price Ninthly and Lastly None rejoyces in the recovery of souls more than Christ doth O it is unspeakably delightful to him to see the efficacy of his blood upon our souls Isai. 53. 11. He shall see the travail of his soul i. e. the success of his death and sufferings and shall be satisfied when he foresaw the success of the Gospel upon the world it 's said Luk. 10. 21. In that hour Jesus rejoyced in spirit and thus you see there is no Physician like Christ for sick souls The Uses of this Point are For Information and Direction First From hence we are informed of many great and necessary truths deducible from this as Inference 1. How inexpressible is the grace of God in providing such a Physician Inference 1. as Christ for the sick and dying souls of Sinners O blessed be God that there is Balm in Gilead and a Physician there that your case is not as desperate forlorn and remediless as that of the Devils and damned is There is but one case excepted from cure and that such as is not incident to any sensible afflicted soul Mat. 12. 31. and this only excepted all manner of sins and diseases are capable of a cure Though there be such a disease as is incurable yet take this for thy comfort never any soul was sick i. e. sensibly burthened with it and willing to come to Jesus Christ for healing for under that sin the will is so wounded that they have no desire to Christ. O inestimable mercy that the sickest sinner is capable of a perfect cure There be thousands and ten thousands now in Heaven and earth who said once never was any case like theirs so dangerous so hopeless The greatest of sinners have been perfectly recovered by Christ 1 Tim. 1. 15. 1 Cor. 6. 11. O mercy never to be duly estimated Inference 2. What a powerful restraint from sin is the very method ordained Inference 2. by God for the cure of it Isai. 53. 5. by his stripes we are healed The Physician must dye that the Patient might live no other thing but the blood the precious blood of Christ is found in Heaven or earth able to heal us Heb. 9. 22. 26. This blood of Christ must be freshly applied to every new wound sin makes upon our souls 1 John 2. 1 2. every new sin wounds him afresh opens the wounds of Christ anew O think of this again and again you that so easily yield to the solicitations of Satan is it so cheap and easie to sin as you seem to make it Doth the cure of souls cost nothing True it is free to us but was it so to Christ No no it was not he knows the price of it though you do not hath Christ healed you by his stripes and can you put him under fresh sufferings for you so easily Have you forgot also your own sick days and nights for sin that you are careless in resisting and preventing it Sure 't is not easie for Saints to wound Christ and their own souls at one stroke if you renew your sins you must also renew your sorrows and repentance Psal. 51. Title 2 Sam. 12. 13. you must feel the throes and pains of a troubled Spirit again things with which the Saints are not unacquainted of which they may say as the Church Remembring my affliction the Wormwood and the Gall my soul hath them still in remembrance Lam. 3. 19. Yea and if you will yet be remiss in your watch and so easily incur new guilt though a pardon in the blood of Christ may heal your souls yet some Rod or other in the hand of a displeased Father shall afflict your bodies or smite you in your outward Comforts Psal. 89. 32. Inference 3. If Christ be the only Physician of sick souls what sin and folly is it for men to take Christs work out of his hands and attempt Inference 3. to be their own Physicians Thus do those that superstitiously endeavour to heal their souls by afflicting their bodies not Christs blood but their own must be the Plaister and as blind Papists ●…o many carnal and ignorant Protestants strive by confession restitution reformation and a stricter course of life to heal those wounds that sin hath made upon their souls without any respect to the blood of Christ but this course shall not profit them at all It may for a time divert but can never heal them the wounds so skinned over will open and bleed again God grant it be not when our souls shall be out of the reach of the true and only remedy Inference 4. How sad is the case of those souls to whom Christ hath not Inference 4. yet been a Physician They are mortally wounded by sin and are like to dye of their sickness no saving healing applications having hitherto been made unto their souls and this is the case of the greatest part of mankind yea of them that live under the discoveries of Christ in the Gospel which appears by these sad symptoms First In that their eyes have not yet been opened to see their sin and misery in which illumination the cure of souls begins Act. 26. 18. to this day he hath not given them Eyes to see Deut. 29. 4. but that terrible stroke of God which blinds and hardens them is too visibly upon them mentioned in Isai. 6. 9 10. no hope of healing till the sinners Eyes be opened to see his sin and misery Secondly In that nothing will divorce and separate them from their lusts a sure sign they are not under Christs cure nor were ever made sick of sin O if ever Christ be a Physician to thy soul he will make thee loath what now thou lovest and say to thy most pleasant and profitable lusts get ye hence Isai. 30. 22. till then there is no ground to think that Christ is a Physician to you Thirdly In that they have no sensible and pressing need of Christ nor make any earnest enquiry after him as most certainly you would do if you were in the way of healing and recovery These and many other sad symptoms do too plainly discover the disease of sin to be in its full strength upon your souls and if it so continue how dreadful will the issue be See Isai. 6. 9 10. Inference 5. What cause have they to be glad that are under the hand and Inference 5 care of Christ in order to a cure and who do find or may upon due examination find their souls are in a very hopeful way of recovery Can we rejoyce when the strength of a natural disease is broken and
which they receive them Hence it is that some men taste more spiritual sweetness in their daily bread than others do in the Lords Supper one and the same mercy by this means becomes a feast to soul and body at once Fourthly All mercies have their duration and perpetuity from Christ all Christless persons hold their mercies upon the greatest contingencies and terms of uncertainty if they be continued during this life that 's all there is not a drop of mercy after death but the mercies of the Saints are continued to eternity the end of their mercies on earth is the beginning of their better mercies in Heaven There is a twofold end of mercies one perfective another destructive the death of the Saints perfects and compleats their mercies the death of the wicked destroys and cuts off their mercies for these reasons Christ is called the mercy Secondly In the next place let us enquire what manner of mercy Christ is and we shall find many lovely and transcendent 2. properties to commend him to our souls First He is a free and undeserved mercy called upon that account the gift of God John 4. 10. And to shew how free this gift was God gave him to us when we were enemies Rom. 5. 8. needs must that mercy be free which is given not only to the undeserving but to the ill deserving the benevolence of God was the sole impulsive cause of this gift John 3. 16. Secondly Christ is a full mercy replenished with all that answers to the wishes or wants of sinners in him alone is found whatever the justice of an angry God requires for satisfaction or the necessities of souls require for their supply Christ is full of mercy both extensively and intensively in him are all kinds and sorts of mercies and in him are the highest and most perfect degrees of mercy for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Col. 1. 19. Thirdly Christ is the seasonable mercy given by the Father to us in due time Rom. 5. 6. in the fulness of time Gal. 4. 4. a seasonable mercy in his exhibition to the world in general and a seasonable mercy in his application to the soul in particular the wisdom of God pitched upon the best time for his incarnation and it hits the very nick of time for his application When a poor soul is distressed lost at its wits end ready to perish then comes Christ all Gods works are done in season but none more seasonable than this great work of Salvation by Christ. Fourthly Christ is the necessary mercy there is an absolute necessity of Jesus Christ hence in Scripture he is called the bread of life Joh. 6. 48. he is bread to the hungry he is the water of life Joh. 7. 37. as cold water to the thirsty soul he is a ransome for captives Mat. 20. 28. a garment to the naked Rom. 13. ult only bread is not so necessary to the hungry nor water to the thirsty nor a ransom to the Captive nor a garment to the naked as Christ is to the soul of a sinner the breath of our nostrills the life of our souls is in Jesus Christ. Fifthly Christ is a fountain mercy and all other mercies flow from him a believer may say of Christ all my fresh springs are in thee from his merit and from his Spirit flow our Redemption Justification Sanctification Peace Joy in the Holy Ghost and blessedness in the world to come In that day shall there be a fountain opened Zech. 13. 1. Sixthly Christ is a satisfying mercy he that is full of Christ can feel the want of nothing I desire to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. Christ bounds and terminates the vast desires of the soul he is the very Sabbath of the soul how hungry empty straitned and pinched in upon every side is the soul of man in the abundance and fulness of all outward things till it come to Christ The weary motions of a restless soul like those of a River cannot be at rest till they pour themselves into Christ the Ocean of blessedness Seventhly Christ is a peculiar mercy intended for and applied to a remnant among men some would extend redemption as large as the world but the Gospel limits it to those only that believe and these Believers are upon that account called a peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. The offers of Christ indeed are large and general but the application of Christ is but to few Isai. 53. 1. the greater cause have they to whom Christ comes to lye with their mouths in the dust astonished and overwhelmed with the sense of so peculiar and distinguishiug mercy Eighthly Jesus Christ is a suitable mercy fitted in all respects to our needs and wants 1 Cor. 1. 20. wherein the admirable wisdom of God is illustriously displaied ye are complete in him saith the Apostle Col. 2. 20. Are we enemies He is reconciliation are we sold to sin and Satan He is redemption are we condemned by Law He is the Lord our righteousness hath sin polluted us He is a fountain opened for sin and for uncleaness are we lost by departing from God He is the way to the Father Rest is not so suitable to the weary nor bread to the hungry as Christ is to the sensible sinner Ninthly Christ is an astonishing and wonderful mercy his name is called Wonderful Isai. 9. 6. and as his name is so is he a wonderful Christ his person is a wonder 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of godliness God manifested in the flesh his abasement wonderful Phil. 2. 6. his love is a wonderful love his redemption full of wonders Angels desire to look into it he is and will be admired by Angels and Saints to all eternity Tenthly Jesus Christ is an incomparable and matchless mercy as the Apple-tree among the Trees of the Wood so is my Beloved among the Sons saith the enamoured Spouse Cant. 2. 3. Draw the comparison how you will betwixt Christ and all other enjoyments you will find none in Heaven or earth to match him he is more than all externals as the light of the Sun is more than that of a Candle nay the worst of Christ is better than the best of the world his reproaches are better than the worlds pleasures Heb. 11. 25. he is more than all Spirituals as the Fountain is more than the Streams he is more than justification as the cause is more than the effect more than sanctification as the person himself is more than his image or picture he is more than all peace all comfort all joys as the Tree is more than the Fruit. Nay draw the comparison betwixt Christ and things eternal and you will find him better than they for what is Heaven without Christ Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven but thee If Christ should say to the Saints Take Heaven among you but as for me I will withdraw my self from you
may make an Idol of it and dote beyond the bounds of moderation upon it but there is no danger of excess in the love of Christ the soul is then in the healthiest frame and temper when it is most sick of love to Christ Cant. 5. 8. Fifthly The loveliness of every creature is of a cloying and glutting nature our estimation of it abates and links by our nearer approach to it or longer enjoyment of it creatures like Pictures are fairest at a due distance but it is not so with Christ the nearer the soul approacheth him and the longer it lives in the enjoyment of him still the more sweet and desireable he is Sixthly Lastly All other loveliness is unsatisfying and straitning to the soul of man there is not room enough in any one or in all the creatures for the soul of man to dilate and expatiate it self but it still feels it self pinch't in Aestuat infelix angusto ●…mite mundi and narrowed within those strait limits and this comes to pass from the inadequateness and unsuitableness of the creature to the nobler and more excellent soul of man which like a Ship in a narrow River hath not room to turn and besides is ever and anon striking ground and foundring in those shallows but Jesus Christ is every way adequate to the vast desires of the soul in him it hath Sea-room enough there it may spread all its fails no fear of touching the bottom And thus you see what is the importance of this phrase altogether lovely Secondly Next I promised to shew you in what respects Jesus Christ is altogether lovely And 2. First He is altogether lovely in his person a deity dwelling in flesh Joh. 1. 14. The wonderful union and perfection of the divine and humane nature in Christ renders him an object of admiration and adoration to Angels and men 1 Tim. 3. 16. God never presented to the world such a vision of glory before and then considering how the humane nature of our Lord Jesus Christ is replenished with all the graces of the Spirit so as never any of all the Saints was filled O how lovely doth this render him Joh. 3. 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him this makes him fairer than the children of men grace being poured into his lips Psal. 45. 2. If a small measure of grace in the Saints makes them such sweet and desireable companions what must the riches and fulness of the Spirit of grace filling Jesus Christ without measure make him in the eyes of believers O what a glory and a luster must it stamp upon him Secondly He is altogether lovely in his Offices for let us but consider the suitableness fulness and comfortableness of them First The suitableness of the Offices of Christ to the miseries and wants of men and we cannot but adore the infinite wisdom of God in his investiture with them we are by nature blind and ignorant at best but groping in the dim light of nature after God Acts 17. 27. Jesus Christ is a light to lighten the Gentiles Isai. 49. 6. When this great Prophet came into the world then did the day-spring from on high visit us Luk. 1. 78. The state of nature is a state of alienation and enmity to God Christ comes into the world an attoning sacrifice making peace by the blood of his Cross Col. 1. 20. All the world by nature are in bondage and captivity to Satan a lamentable thraldom Christs comes with a kingly power to rescue sinners as a prey from the mouth of the terrible one Secondly Let the fulness of his Offices be also considered by reason whereof he is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God by him Heb. 7. 25. The three Offices comprising in them all that our souls do need become an universal relief to all our wants and therefore Thirdly Unspeakably comfortable must the Offices of Christ be to the souls of sinners if light be pleasant to our eyes how pleasant is that light of life springing from the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4. 2. If a pardon be sweet to a condemned malefactor how sweet must the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus be to the trembling Conscience of a lawcondemned-sinner If a rescue from a cruel Tyrant be sweet to a poor Captive how sweet must it be to the ears of inslaved sinners to hear the voice of liberty and deliverance proclaimed by Jesus Christ Out of the several Offices of Christ as out of so many fountains all the promises of the new Covenant flow as so many soul refreshing streams of peace and joy all the promises of illumination counsel and direction flow out of the Prophetical Office all the promises of reconciliation peace pardon and acceptation flow out of the Priestly Office with the sweet streams of Joy and Spiritual comfort depending thereupon all the promises of converting increasing defending directing and supplying grace flow out of the Kingly Office of Christ indeed all promises may be reduced to the three Offices so that Jesus Christ must needs be altogether lovely in his Offices Thirdly Jesus Christ is altogether lovely in his relations First He is a lovely Redeemer Isai. 61. 1. he came to open the Prison-dores to them that are bound Needs must this Redeemer be a lovely one if we consider the depth of misery from which he redeemed us even from the wrath to come 1 Thess. 1. 10. How lovely was Titus in the eyes of the poor enthralled Greeks whom he delivered from their bondage This endeared him to them unto that degree that when their liberty was proclaimed they even trode one another to death to see the Herauld that proclaimed it and all the night following with instruments of musick danced about his Tent crying with united voyces A Saviour a Saviour Or whether we consider the numbers redeemed and the means of their redemption Rev. 5. 9. And they sang a new Song saying Thou art worthy to take the Book and to open the Seals thereof for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation He redeemed us not with Silver and Gold but with his own precious Blood by way of price 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. with his out-stretched and glorious arm by way of power Col. 1. 13. he redeemed us freely Eph. 1. 7. fully Rom. 8. 1. seasonably Gal. 4. 4. and out of special and peculiar love Joh. 17. 9. In a word he hath redeemed us for ever never more to come into bondage 1 Pet. 1. 5. Joh. 10. 28. Oh how lovely is Jesus Christ in the relation of a Redeemer to Gods elect Secondly He is a lovely Bridegroom to all that he espouses to himself how doth the Church glory in him in the words following my Text This is my Beloved and this is my Friend O ye Daughters of Jerusalem q. d. Heaven and earth cannot show such another which needs no fuller
proof than the following particulars First That he espouseth to himself in mercy and in loving kindness such deformed defiled and altogether unworthy souls as we are who have no beauty no excellency to make us desirable in his eyes all the springs of his love to us are in his own breast Deut. 7. 7. He chooseth us not because we were but that he might make us lovely Ephes. 5. 27. He passed by us when we lay in our blood and said unto us live and that was the time of love Ezec. 16. 5. Secondly He expects nothing with us and yet bestows himself and all he hath upon us our poverty cannot enrich him but he made himself poor to enrich us 2 Cor. 8 9. 1 Cor. 3. 22. Thirdly No Husband loves the Wife of his bosome at the rate Christ loved his people Eph. 5. 25. He loved the Church and gave himself for it Fourthly None bears with weaknesses and provocations as Christ doth the Church is stiled the Lambs Wife Rev. 21. 9. Fifthly No Husband is so immortal and everlasting a Husband as Christ is Death separates all other relations but the souls union with Christ is not dissolved in the Grave yea the day of a Believers death is his marriage-day the day of his fullest enjoyment of Christ no Husband can say to his Wife what Christ saith to the Believer I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. Sixthly No Bridegroom advanceth his Bride to such honours by Marriage as Christ doth he relates them to God as their Father and from that day the mighty and glorious Angels think it no dishonour to be their servants Heb. 1. 14. They are brought in admiring the beauty and glory of the Spouse of Christ Rev. 21. 9. Seventhly and Lastly No marriage was ever consummated with that triumphal solemnity as the marriage of Christ and Believers shall be in Heaven Psal. 45. 14 15. She shall be brought to the King in rayment of needle work the virgins her companions that follow her shall be brought unto thee with gladness and rejoycing shall they be brought they shall enter into the Kings Palace Among the Jews the marriage house was called Bethillula the house of praise there was joy upon all hands but not like the joy that will be in Heaven when Believers the Spouse of Christ shall be brought thither God the Father will rejoyce to behold the blessed accomplishment and consummation of that glorious design and project of his love Jesus Christ the Bridegroom will rejoyce to see the travail of his soul the blessed birth and issue of all his bitter pangs and agonies Isai. 53. 11. The holy Spirit will rejoyce to see the complement and perfection of that sanctifying design which was committed to his hand 2 Cor. 5. 5. To see those souls whom he once found as rough stones now to shine as the bright polished stones of the Spiritual Temple Angels will rejoyce great was the joy when the foundation of this design was laid in the incarnation of Christ Luk. 2. 13. Great therefore must their joy be when the top-stone is set up with shouting crying Grace grace The Saints themselves shall rejoyce unspeakably when they shall enter into the Kings Palace and be for ever with the Lord 1 Thess. 4. 17. Indeed there will be joy on all hands except among the Devils and damned who shall gnash their teeth with envy at the everlasting advancement and glory of Believers Thus Christ is altogether lovely in the relation of a Bridegroom Thirdly Christ is altogether lovely in the relation of an Advocate 1 Joh. 2. 1. If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation 't is he that pleads the cause of Believers in Heaven appears for them in the presence of God to prevent all new breaches and continue the state of friendship and peace betwixt God and us In this relation Christ is altogether lovely For First He makes our cause his own and acts for us in Heaven as for himself Heb. 4. 15. He is touched with the tender sense of our troubles and dangers and is not only one with us by way of representation but also one with us in respect of sympathy and affection Secondly Christ our Advocate follows our suit and business in Heaven as his great and main design and business therefore in Heb. 7. 25. he is said to live for ever to make intercession for us as if our concernments were so minded by him there as to give up himself wholly to that work as if all the glory and honour which is paid him in Heaven would not satisfie him or divert him one moment from our business Thirdly He pleads the cause of Believers by his blood it satisfies him not as other Advocates to be at the expence of words and oratory which is a cheaper way of pleading but he pleads for us by the voice of his own blood Heb. 12. 24. where we are said to be come to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel every wound he received for us on earth is a mouth opened to plead with God on our behalf in Heaven quot vulnera tot ora and hence it is that in Rev. 5. 6. he is represented standing before God as a Lamb that had been slain as it were exhibiting and opening in Heaven those deadly wounds received on earth from the justice of God upon our account other Advocates spend their breath Christ his blood Fourthly He pleads the cause of Believers freely other Advocates plead for reward and exhaust the Purses while they plead the causes of their Clients Fifthly In a word he obtaineth for us all the mercies for which he pleads no cause miscarries in his hand which he undertakes Rom. 8. 33 34. O what a lovely Advocate is Christ for Believers Fourthly Christ is altogether lovely in the relation of a Friend for in this relation he is pleased to own his people Luk. 12. 4 5. There are certain things in which one friend manifests his affection and friendship to another but none like Christ. For First No Friend is so open-hearted to his friend as Christ is to his people he reveals the very counsels and secrets of his heart to them Joh. 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have called you friends for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you Secondly No Friend in the world is so expensive and bountiful to his friend as Jesus Christ is to Believers Joh. 15. 13. He parts with his very blood for them greater love saith he hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends he hath exhausted the precious treasures of this invaluable blood to pay our debts O what a lovely friend is Jesus Christ to Believers Thirdly No Friend sympathises so tenderly with his Friend in
Sermon 13. HAGGAI 2. 7. Text. Alluring the hearts of men to come to Christ by a fourth motive contained in another Title of Christ. And the desire of all Nations shall come THe former Chapter is mainly spent in reproving the negligence of the Jews who being discouraged from time to time had delayed the rebuilding the Temple and in the mean time imployed their care and cost in building and adorning their own houses but at last being perswaded to set about the work they meet with this discouragement that such was the poverty of the present time that the second structure would no way answer the magnificence and splendor of the first In Solomons days the Nation was wealthy now drained so that there would be no proportion betwixt the second and the first To this grand discouragement the Prophet applies this relief that whatsoever should be wanting in external pomp and glory should be more than recompensed by the presence of Jesus Christ in this second Temple For Christ the desire of all Nations saith he shall come into it Which by the way may give us this useful note That the presence of Jesus Christ gives a more real and excellent glory to the places of his worship than any external beauty or outward ornaments whatsoever can bestow upon them Our eyes like the Disciples are apt to be dazled with the goodly stones of the Temple and in the mean time to neglect and overlook that which gives it its greatest honour and beauty But to return In these words we have both the description of Christ and an index pointing at the time of his incarnation he is called the desire of all Nations and the time of his coming in the flesh 't is plainly intimated to be while the second Temple should be standing where by the way we find just cause to admire and bemoan the blindness that is hapned to the Jews who owning the truth of this Prophecie and not able to deny the destruction of the second Temple many hundred years past will not yet be brought to acknowledge the incarnation of the true Messiah notwithstanding But to the point the character or description of Christ stiled the desire of all nations who was to come into the world in the time of the second Temple Mal. 3. 12. and that after grievous concussions and shakings of the world which were to make way for his coming for so our Prophet here speaks I will shake all nations and the desire of all nations shall come to which the Apostle alludes in Heb. 12. 26. applying this prophecie to Jesus Christ here called the desire of all Nations putting the act for the object desire for the thing desired as in Ezec. 24. 16. the desire of thine eyes that is the desirable Wife of thy bosome So here the desire of all nations that is Christ the object of the desires of Gods elect in all nations of the world A Saviour infinitely desireable in himself and actually desired by all the people of God dispersed among all kindreds tongues and nations in the world From whence this note is DOCT. That the desires of Gods Elect in all Kingdoms and among Doct. all people of the earth are and shall be drawn out after and fixed upon the Lord Jesus Christ. The merciful God beholding the universal ruines of the world by sin hath provided an universal remedy for his own Elect in every part of the earth Christ is not impropriated to any one Kingdom or Nation in the world but intended to be Gods salvation to the ends of the earth and accordingly speaks the Apostle Col. 2. 11. There is neither Greek nor Jew Barbarian Scythian Bond nor Free but Christ is all and in all In the explication of this point two things must be enquired into 1. Why Christ is called the desire of all Nations 2. Upon what account the people of God in all Nations desire him First Why he is called the desire of all Nations and 1. what that Phrase may import and there are diverse things that are supposed or included in it First That God the Father hath appointed him as a common remedy for the sins and miseries of his people in all parts and quarters of the world So in the Covenant of Redemption betwixt the Father and the Son the Lord expresseth himself Isai. 49. 6. and he said It is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the Tribes of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou maist be my salvation to the end of the earth Suitable whereunto is that Prophecie Isai. 52. 15. He shall sprinkle many Nations If God had not appointed him for he could not be desired by all Nations And indeed herein the grace of God doth admirably shine forth in the freeness of it that even the most barbarous Nations are not excluded from the benefit of redemption by Christ. This is that the Apostle admires that Christ should be preached to the Gentiles 1 Tim. 3. 16. A people that seemed to be lost in the darkness of Idolatry yet even for them Christ was given by the Father Ask of me saith he and I will give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession Secondly Christ the desire of all Nations plainly notes the sufficiency that is in him to supply the wants of the whole world as the Sun in the Heavens suffices all Nations for light and influence so doth the Sun of Righteousness suffice for the Redemption Justification Sanctification and salvation of the people of God all the world over Isa. 45. 22. Look unto me and be ye saved all ye ends of the earth Thirdly It implies the reality that is in godliness it shews you that Religion is no fancy as the Atheistical world would perswade us and this evidently appears in the uniform effects of it upon the hearts of all men in all nations of the world that are truely religious all their desires like so many Needles touched by one and the same Loadstone move towards Jesus Christ and all meet together in one and the same blessed object Christ. Were it possible for the people of God to come out of all Nations Kindreds and Languages in the world into one place and there confer and compare the desires and workings of their hearts though they never saw each others face nor heard of each others name yet as face answers to face in a glass so would their desires after Christ answer to each other all hearts work after him in the same manner what one saith all say these are my troubles and burthens these my wants and miseries the same things my desires and fears one and the same Spirit harmonically works in all Believers through the world which could never be if Religion were but a fancie as some call it or a combination or confederacy as others
call it fancies are as various as faces and confederacies presuppose mutual acquaintance and conference Fourthly Christ the desire of all Nations implies the vast extent his Kingdom hath and shall have in the world out of every Nation under Heaven some shall be brought to Christ and to Heaven by him And though the number of Gods elect compared with the multitudes of the ungodly in all Nations is but a remnant a little flock and in that comparative sense there are few that shall be saved yet considered absolutely and in themselves they are a vast number which no man can number Mat. 8. 11. Many shall come from the East and from the West and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven In order whereunto the Gospel like the Sun in the Heavens circuits the world it arose in the East and takes its course towards the western world rising by degrees upon the remote Idolatrous Nations of the earth out of all which a number is to be saved even Ethiopia shall stretch out her hands to God Pfal 68. 31. And this consideration should move us to pray carnestly for the poor Heathens who yet sit in darkness and the shadow of death there is yet hope for them Fifthly It holds forth this that when God opens the eyes of men to see their sin and danger by it nothing but Christ can give them satisfaction 't is not the amenity fertility riches and pleasures the Inhabitants of any Kingdom of the world do enjoy that can quench and satisfie the desires of their souls when once God touches their hearts with the sense of sin and misery Christ and none but Christ is desirable and necessary in the eyes of such persons Many Kingdoms of the world abound with riches and pleasures the providence of God hath carved liberal portions of the good things of this life to many of them and scarce left any thing to their desires that the world can afford Yet all this can give no satisfaction without Jesus Christ the desire of Nations the one thing necessary when once they come to see the necessity and excellency of him then take the world who will so they may have Christ the desire of their souls Thus we see upon what grounds and reasons Christ is stiled the desire of all Nations But there lies one great Objection against this truth Object which must be satisfied viz. if Christ be the desire of all Nations how comes it to pass that Jesus Christ finds no entertainment in so many Nations of the world among whom Christianity is hissed at and Christians not tolerated to live among them who see no beauty in him that they should dedesire him First We must remember the Nations of the World have their times and seasons of conversion Those that Sol. once embraced Christ have now lost him and Idols are now set up in the places where he once was sweetly worshipped The Sun of the Gospel is gone down upon them and now shines in another Hemisphere and so the Nations of the World are to have their distinct days and seasons of illumination The Gospel like the Sea gaineth in one place what it loseth in another and in the times and seasons appointed by the Father they come successively to be enlightned in the knowledge of Christ and then shall that promise be fulfilled Isai. 49. 7. Thus saith the Lord the Redeemer of Israel and his Holy One to him whom the nation abhorreth to a servant of Rulers Kings shall see and arise Princes also shall worship because of the Lord that is faithful Secondly Let it also be remembered that although Christ be rejected by the Rulers and Body of many Nations yet he is the desire of all the Elect of God dispersed and scattered among those Nations Secondly In the next place we are to enquire upon what 2. account Christ becomes the desire of all Nations i. e. of all those in all the Nations of the world that belong to the election of grace And the true ground and reason thereof is because Christ only hath that in himself which relieves their wants and answers to all their needs As First They are all by nature under condemnation Rom. 5. 16 18. under the curse of the Law against which nothing is found in Heaven or earth able to relieve their Consciences but the blood of sprinkling the pure and perfect righteousness of the Lord Jesus and hence it is that Christ becomes so desirable in the eyes of poor sinners all the world over If any thing in nature could be found to pacifie and purge the Consciences of men from guilt and fear Christ would never be desirable in their eyes but finding no other remedy but the blood of Jesus to him therefore shall all the ends of the earth look for righteousness and for peace Secondly All Nations of the world are polluted with the filth of sin both in nature and practice which they shall see and bitterly bewail when the light of the Gospel shall shine amongst them and the same light by which this shall be discovered will also discover the only remedy of this evil to I le in the spirit of Christ the only fountain opened to all Nations for sanctification and cleansing and this will make the Lord Jesus incomparably desirous in their eyes Oh how welcome will he be that cometh unto them not by blood only but by water also John 1. 5 6. Thirdly When the light of the Gospel shall shine upon the Nations they shall then see that by reason of the guilt and filth of sin they are all barr'd out of Heaven Those dores are chained up against them and that none but Christ can open an entrance for them into that Kingdom of God that no man cometh to the Father but by him John 14. 6. neither is there any name under Heaven given among men whereby they must be saved but the name of Christ Act. 4. 12. Hence the hearts of sinners shall pant after him as the Hart panteth for the water brooks And thus we see upon what grounds Christ becomes the desire of all Nations The improvement of all followeth in five several uses of the point viz. 1. For Information 2. For Examination 3. For Consolation 4. For Exhortation 5. For Direction Use for Information First Is Christ the desire of all Nations How vile a sin is Use 1. it then in any Nation upon whom the light of the Gospel hath shined to reject Jesus Christ and say as those in Job 21. 14. Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thy ways To thrust away his worship government and servants from amongst them and in effect to say as it is Luke 19. 14. we will not have this man to reign over us thus did the Jews Act. 13. 46. they put away Christ from among them and thereby judged themselves unworthy of eternal life This is at once a fearful sin and a dreadful
sign how soon did vengeance overtake them like the overthrow of Sodom O let it be for a warning unto all Nations to the end of the world He would have gathered the Children of Israel under his wings as a Hen doth her brood even when the Roman Eagle was hovering over them but they would not therefore their Houses were left unto them desolate their City and Temple made an heap Secondly If Jesus Christ be the desire of all Nations how incomparably happy then must that Nation be that enjoys Christ in the power and purity of his Gospel-ordinances If Christ under a vail made Canaan a glorious land as it 's called Dan. 11. 41. what a glorious place must that Nation be that beholds him with open face in the bright Sunshine of the Gospel O England know thy happiness and the day of thy visitation what others desire thou enjoyest provoke not the Lord Jesus to depart from thee by corrupting his worship hankering after Idolatry abusing his Messengers oppressing his people lest his soul depart from thee 2d Use for Examination If Christ be the desire of all Nations examine whether he Use 2. be the desire of your souls in particular else you shall have no benefit by him Are your desires after Christ true spiritual desires Reflect I beseech you upon the frames and tempers of your hearts Can you say of your desires after Christ as Peter did of his love to Christ Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I desire thee try your desires as to their sincerity by the following characters First Are they vehement and ardent hath Christ the supreme place in your desires do you esteem all things to be but dross and dung in comparison of the excellencies of Jesus Christ your Lord Phil. 3. 8. Is he to you as the refuge City to the manslayer Heb. 6. 18 19. as a spring of water in a dry place as the shadow of a great Rock in a weary land Isai. 32. 2. Such vehement desires are true desires Secondly Are your desires after Christ universal i. e. is every thing in Christ desirable in your eyes the Hypocrite like the Harlot is for a divided Christ they would be called by his name but live upon their own stock Isai. 4. 1. if his holiness and government his cross and sufferings be desirable for his sake such universal desires are right desires Thirdly Are your desires after Christ industrious desires using all the means of accomplishing what you desire You say you desire Christ but what will you do to obtain your desires If you seek him carefully and incessantly in all the ways of duty if you will strive in prayer labour to believe cut off right hands and pluck out right eyes i. e. be content to part with the most profitable and pleasant ways of sin that you may enjoy Christ the desire of your souls then are your desires right desires Fourthly Are your desires after Christ permanent desires or only a suddain mood and fit which goes off again without effect If your desires after Christ abide upon your hearts if your longings be after him at all times though not in the same height and degree then are your desires right desires Christ always dwells in the desires of his people they can feel him in their desires when they cannot discern him in their loves or delights Fifthly Will your desires after Christ admit no satisfaction nor find rest any where but in the injoyment of Christ then are your desires right desires the soul that desires Christ can never be at rest till it come home to Christ 2 Cor. 5. 2 6. Phil. 1. 23. The Devil can satisfie others with riches and pleasures of this world as Children are quieted with Rattles If nothing but Christ can rest and terminate your desires surely such restless desires are right desires Sixthly Do your desires after Christ spring from a deep sense of your need and want of Christ hath conviction opened your eyes to see your misery to feel your burthens and to make you sensible that your remedy lies only in the Lord Jesus then are your desires right desires bread and water are made necessary and desirable by hunger and thirst By these things try the truth of your desires after Christ. 3d Use for Consolation Do you indeed upon serious trial find such desires after Use 3. Christ as were described above Oh bless the Lord for that day wherein Christ the desire of Nations became the desire of your souls and for your comfort know that you are happy and blessed souls at present First Blessed in this that your eyes have been opened to see both the want and the worth of Christ. Had not Christ applied his precious eye-salve to the eyes of your mind you could never have desired him you would have said with them in Isai. 53. 2 3. He hath no form nor comliness and when we shall see him there is no beauty that we should desire him or as they to the Spouse Cant. 5. 9. What is thy Beloved more than another Beloved Oh blessed souls inlightned of the Lord to see those things that are hid from them that perish Secondly You are blessed in this that your desires after Christ are a sure evidence that the desire of Christ is towards you had he not first desired you you could never have desired him We may say of desires as it is said of love we desire him because he first desired us your desires after Christ are inflamed from the desires of Christ after you Thirdly Blessed in this that your desires shall surely be satisfied Mat. 5. 6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be filled Prov. 10. 24. The desires of the righteous shall be granted God never raised such desires as these in the souls of his people to be a torment to them for ever Fourthly Blessed in this that God hath guided your desires to make the best choice that ever was made in the world whilst the desires of others are hunting after riches pleasure and honours in the world toiling themselves like Children in pursuit of a painted Butterfly which when they have caught doth but daub their fingers God mean while hath directed your desires to Christ the most excellent object in Heaven or earth Any good will satisfie some men Oh happy soul if none but Christ can satisfie thee Psal. 4. 6. Fifthly Blessed in this that there is a work of grace certainly wrought upon thy soul and these very desires after Christ are a part thereof Sixthly Blessed in this that these desires after Christ keep thy soul active and working after him continually in the ways of duty Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired that will I seek after Desire will be a continual spring to diligence and industry in the ways of duty the desire of the end quickens to the use of means Prov. 18. 1. Others may fall asleep and cast off duty
others You know what the Law of God awards for striking a woman with Child so that her fruit go from her Exod. 21. 22 23. Oh shed not soul blood by stifling the hopeful desires of any after Christ. Blessed be God for Jesus Christ the desire of all Nations The Fourteenth SERMON Sermon 14. 1 COR. 2. 8. Text. Containing the fifth Motive to apply Christ drawn from another excellent Title of Christ. Which none of the Princes of this world have known for had they known him they would not have Crucified the Lord of Glory IN this Chapter the Apostle discourses to the Corinthians the excellency of his Ministry both to obviate the contempt which some might cast upon it for want of humane Ornaments and to give the greater authority unto it among all and whereas the spiritual simplicity of his Ministry laid it under the contempt of some he removes that several ways by showing them First That it was not suitable to the design and end of his ministry his aim being to know nothing among them save Jesus Christ and him crucified vers 1 2. Secondly Neither was it for the advantage of their souls it might indeed tickle their fancies but could be no solid foundation to their faith and comfort vers 4 5. Thirdly Though his discourses seemed jejune and dry to carnal hearers yet it had a depth and an excellency in it which spiritual and judicious Christians saw and acknowledged vers 6 7. Fourthly Therefore this excellent wisdom which he preached far transcended all the natural wisdom of this world yea the most raised and improved understandings of those that were most renowned and admired in that age for wisdom vers 8. Which none of the Princes of this world knew In which words we have 1. A Negative Proposition 2. The proof of the Proposition First A Negative Proposition none of the Princes of this 1. world knew that Spiritual Wisdom which he taught By Princes of this world or rather principes seculi the Princes of that age he means as Camero well notes the learned Rabbies Scribes and Pharisees renowned for wisdom and learning among them and honoured upon that account as so many Princes but he adds a diminutive term which darkens all their glory They are but the Princes of this world utterly unacquainted with the wisdom of the other world To which he adds Secondly A clear and full proof for had they known it 2. they would not have crucified the Lord of glory In which words we find one of Christs glorious and royal Titles the Lord of glory upon which Title my present Discourse must fall The words being fitly rendred and nothing of ambiguity in them they give us this observation DOCT. That Christ Crucified is the Lord of Glory Doct. Great and excellent is the glory of Jesus Christ the Scriptures every where proclaim his glory Yea we may observe a notable Climax or gradation in those Scriptures that speak of his glory The Prophet Isaiah speaking of him calls him glorious Isai. 4. 2. In that day shall the branch of the Lord be beautiful and glorious John speaking of his glory rises a step higher and ascribeth to him a glory as of the only begotton Son of the Father John 1. 14. i. e. a glory meet for and becoming the Son of God proper to him and incommunicable to any other The Apostle James rises yet higher and doth not only call him glorious or glorious as the only begotten of the Father but the glory Jam. 2. 1. glory in the abstract my brethren saith he have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the glory with respect of persons for the word Lord which is in our translation is a supplement Christ is glory it self yea the glory emphatically so stiled the glory of Heaven the glory of Sion the glory of our souls for ever The Author to the Hebrews goes yet higher and calls him not simply the glory but the brightness of his Fathers glory Heb. 1. 3. as who should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say the radiancy sparkling or beaming forth of his Fathers glory the very splendor or refulgency of divine glory Oh what a glorious Lord is our Lord Jesus Christ the bright sparkling Diamond of Heaven who shines in glory there above the glory of Angels and Saints as the glory of the Sun excels the lesser twinkling Stars When he appeared to Paul in Acts 26. 13. I saw said he a light from Heaven above the brightness of the Sun shining round about me needs must the glory of Christ be unspeakable who reflects glory upon all that be with him John 17. 24. and stamps glory upon all that belongs to him His works on earth were glorious works Luk. 13. 17. The purchased liberty of his people a glorious liberty Rom. 8. 21. The Church his mystical body a glorious Church Eph. 5. 27. The Gospel which reveals him is a glorious Gospel 1 Tim. 1. 11. But more particularly let us consider the glory of Christ as it is distinguished into his either 1. Essential Glory 2. Mediatorial First The Essential Glory of Christ which he hath as God 1. from everlasting which is unspeakable and unconceivable glory for saith the Apostle Phil. 2. 6. He being in the form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God i. e. he had a Peerage or equality with his Father in glory Joh. 10. 30. I and my Father are one and again Joh. 16. 15. All things that the Father hath are mine the same name the same nature the same essential properties the same will and the same glory Secondly The Mediatorial glory of Christ is exceeding 2. great this is proper to him as head of the Church which he hath purchased with his own blood Of this glory the Apostle speaks Phil. 2. 9 10. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exalted above all exaltation Now the mediatorial glory of our Lord Jesus Christ consisteth either 1. In the fulness of Grace inherent in him 2. Or in the Dignity and Authority put upon him First In the fulness of grace inherent in him the humanity of Christ is filled with grace as the Sun with light Joh. 1. 14. Full of grace and truth never any creature was so filled by the Spirit of Grace as the man Christ Jesus is filled for God gives not the spirit to him by measure Joh. 3. 34. By reason of this fulness of grace inherent in him he is sairer than the Children of men Psal. 45. 2. Excelling all the Saints in spiritual lustre and gracious excellencies Secondly In the Dignity and Authority put upon him he is crowned King in Sion all power in Heaven and earth is given unto him Mat. 28. 18. he is Lawgiver to the Church James 4. 12. All acts of worship are to be performed in his name Prayer Preaching Censures Sacraments
all to be administred in his name Church Officers are Commissioned by him Eph. 4. 11. The Judgement of the world in the great day will be administred by him Mat. 25. 31. Then shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory To conclude Jesus Christ shall have glory and honour ascribed to him for evermore by Angels and Saints upon the account of his Mediatorial work This some Divines call his passive glory the glory which he is to receive from his redeemed ones Rev. 5. 8 9 10. And when he had taken the Book the four Beasts and the four and twenty Elders fell down before the Lamb having every one of them Harps and golden Vials full of Odours which are the prayers of the Saints and they sung a new Song saying Thou art worthy to take the Book and to open the Seals thereof for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every Kindred and Tongue and People and Nation c. And thus you see that our Lord Jesus Christ is upon all accounts the Lord of Glory The Uses follow Inference 1. How wonderful was the love of Christ the Lord of glory to be so abased and humbled as he was for us vile and sinful Inference 1. dust 'T is astonishing to conceive that ever Jesus Christ should strip himself out of his Robes of Glory to cloath himself with the thread-bare tatters of our flesh Oh what a stoop did he make in his incarnation for us If the most magnificent Monarch upon earth had been degraded into a Toad if the Sun in the Heavens had been turned into a wandring Atom if the most glorious Angel in Heaven had been transformed into a silly Fly it had been nothing to the abasement of the Lord of Glory This act is every where celebrated in Scripture as the great mystery the astonishing wonder of the whole world 2 Tim. 3. 16. Phil. 2. 8. Rom. 8. 3. The Lord of glory looked not like himself when he came in the habit of a man Isai. 53. 3. We hid as it were our faces from him nay rather like a worm than a man Psal. 22. 6. A reproach of men and despised of the people The Birds of the air and Beasts of the earth were here provided of better accommodations than the Lord of glory Mat. 8. 20. Oh stupendious abasement Oh love unspeakable Though he was rich yet for our sakes he became poor that we through his poverty might be rich 2 Cor. 8. 9. He put off the Crown of Glory to put on the Crown of Thorns quanto pro me vilior tanto mihi charior said Bernard the lower he humbled himself for me the dearer he shall be to me Inference 2. How transcendently glorious is the advancement of Believers by their union with the Lord of Glory This also is an admirable Inference 2. and astonishing mystery 't is the highest dignity of which our nature is capable to be hypostatically united and the greatest glory of which our persons are capable to be mystically united to this Lord of Glory to be bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh O what is this Christian dost thou know and believe all this and thy heart not burn within thee in love to Christ O then what a heart hast thou What art thou by nature but sinful dust a loathsom sinner viler than the vilest Toad cast out to the loathing of thy person in the day of thy nativity O that ever the Lord of Glory should unite himself to such a lump of vileness take such a wretch into his very bosom Be astonished O Heavens and earth at this this is the great mystery which the Angels stoopt down to look into Such an honour as this could never have entred into the heart of man it would have seemed a rude blasphemy in us once to have thought or spoken of such a thing had not Christ made the first motion thereof Yet how long didst thou make this Lord of Glory wait upon thy undetermined will before he gained thy consent Might he not justly have spurned thee into Hell upon thy first refusal and never have made thee such another offer Wilt thou not say Lord what am I and what is my Fathers house that so great a King should stoop so far beneath himself to such a worm as I am That strength should unite it self to weakness infinite glory to such baseness O grace grace for ever to be admired Inference 3. Is Jesus Christ the Lord of Glory then let no man count Inference 3. himself dishonoured by suffering the vilest indignities for his sake the Lord of Glory puts glory upon the very sufferings you undergo in this world for him Moses esteemed the reproaches of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11. 26. He cast a Kingdom at his heels to be crowned with reproaches for the name of Christ. The Diadem of Egypt was not half so glorious as self-denial for Christ. This Lord of Glory freely degraded himself for thee wilt thou stand huckling with him upon terms 'T is certainly your honour to be dishonoured for Christ Act. 5. 41. To you it is given in behalf of Christ not only to believe but also to suffer for his sake Phil. 1. 29. The gift of suffering is there matched with the gift of faith 't is given as an honorarium a badge of Honour to suffer for the Lord of Glory as all have not the honour to wear the Crown of Glory in Heaven so few have the honour to wear the chain of Christ upon earth Thuanus Cur me non quoque torque donas insi nis hujus ordinis mili em creas Thuanus reports of Lodovicus Marsacus a Knight of France that being led to suffer with other Martyrs who were bound and he unbound because a person of Honour he cryed out Why don't you honour me with a Chain too and create me a Knight of that Noble Order My brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations Jam. 1. 2. i. e. tryals by sufferings David thought it an honour to be vile for God and that 's a true observation that disgrace it self is glorious when endured for the Lord of Glory Inference 4. Is Christ the Lord of Glory How glorious then shall the Saints one day be when they shall be made like this glorious Inference 4. Lord and partake of his glory in Heaven John 17. 22. the glory which thou gavest me I have given them yea the vile bodies of Believers shall be made like to the glorious body of Christ Phil. 3. 21. What glory then will be communicated to their souls True his essential glory is incommunicable but there is a glory which Christ will communicate to his people When he comes to judge the world he will come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe 2 Thes. 1. 10. Where he seemeth to account his social glory which shall
he only 2. is matter of Consolation to Believers which will demonstratively appear by this Argument He that brings to their souls all that is comfortable and removes from their souls all that is uncomfortable must Argu. needs be the only consolation of Believers But Jesus Christ brings to their souls all that is comfortable and removes from their souls all that is uncomfortable Therefore Christ only is the Consolation of Believers First Jesus Christ brings whatsoever is comfortable to the souls of Believers Is pardon comfortable to a person condemned Nothing can be matter of greater comfort in this world Why this Christ brings to all Believers Jer. 23. 6. And this is the name whereby he shall be called The Lord our righteousness this cannot but give strong consolation righteousness is the foundation of peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. The work of righteousness shall be peace and the effect of righteousness quietness and assurance for ever Isai. 32. 17. Come to a dejected soul labouring under the burthen of guilt and say Cheer up I bring you good tidings there is such an Estate befallen you or such a troublesom business comfortably ended for you alas this will not reach the heart If you can bring me saith he good news from Heaven that my sins are forgiven and God reconciled how soon should I be comforted And therefore as one well observes this was the usual receipt with which Christ cured the souls of men and women when he was here on earth Son or Daughter be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee and indeed it is as easie to separate light and warmth from the beams of the Sun as cheeriness and comfort from the voice of pardon Are the hopes and expectation of Heaven and glory comfortable Yes sure nothing is comfortable if this be not Rom. 5. 2. We rejoyce in hope of the glory of God Now Christ brings to the souls of men all the solid grounds and foundations upon which they build their expectations of glory Col. 1. 27. Which is Christ in you the hope of glory Name any thing else that is solid matter of comfort to the souls of men and the grounds thereof will be found in Christ and in none but Christ as might easily be demonstrated by the enumeration of multitudes of particular instances which I cannot now insist upon Secondly Jesus Christ removes fom Believers whatever is uncomfortable therein relieving them against all the matters of their affliction and sorrow As namely First Is sin a burthen and matter of trouble to Believers Christ and none but Christ removes that burthen Rom. 7. 24 25. O wretched man that I am saith sin burthened Paul who shall deliver me from the body of this death I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. The satisfaction of his blood Eph. 5. 2. The sanctification of his Spirit John 1. 5 6. His perfect deliverance of his people from the very being of sin at last Eph. 5. 26 27. This relieves at present and removes at last the matter and ground of all their troubles and sorrows for sin Secondly Do the temptations of Satan burthen Believers O yes by reason of temptations they go in trouble and heaviness of spirit Temptation is an enemy under the walls temptation greatly endangers and therefore cannot but greatly afflict the souls of Believers but Christ brings the only matter of relief against temptations The intercession of Christ is a singular relief at present Luke 22. 32. But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not and the promises of Christ are a full relief for the future The God of peace shall shortly tread Satan under your feet Rom. 16. 20. Thirdly Is spiritual desertion and the hiding of Gods face matter of affliction and casting down to Believers Yes yes it quails their hearts nothing can comfort them Thou hidest thy face and I was troubled Psal. 30. 7. Outward afflictions do but break the skin this touches the quick they like rain fall only upon the Tiles this soaks into the House but Christ brings to Believers substantial matter of Consolation against the troubles of desertion he himself was deserted of God for a time that they might not be deserted for ever in him also the relieving promises are made to Believers that notwithstanding God may desert them for a time yet the union betwixt him and them shall never be dissolved Heb. 13. 5. Jer. 32. 40. Though he forsake them for a moment in respect of evidenced favour yet he will return again and comfort them Isai. 54. 7. Though Satan tug hard yet he shall never be able to pluck them out of his Fathers hand John 10. 20. Oh what relief is this What consolation is Christ to a deserted Believer Fourthly Are outward afflictions matter of dejection and trouble Alas who finds them not to be so How do our hearts fail and our spirits sink under the many smarting rods of God upon us but our relief and consolation under them all is in Christ Jesus for the rod that afflicts us is in the hand of Christ that loveth us Rev. 3. 19. Whom I love I rebuke and chasten his design in affliction is our profit Heb. 12. 10. That design of his for our good shall certainly be accomplished Rom. 8. 28. and after that no more afflictions for ever Rev. 21. 3 4. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes So that upon the whole two things are most evident First Nothing can comfort the soul without Christ he is the soul that animates all Comforts they would be but dead things without him Temporal enjoyments riches honours health relations yield not a drop of true Comfort without Christ. Spiritual enjoyments Minister ordinances promises are fountains sealed and springs shut up till Christ open them a man may go comfortless in the midst of them all Secondly No troubles sorrows or afflictions can deject or sink the soul that Christ comforteth 2 Cor. 6. 10. As sorrowful yet always rejoycing A Believer may walk with a heart brim full of comfort amidst all the troubles of this world Christ makes the darkness of trouble to be light round about his people So that the conclusion stands firm and never to be shaken that Christ and Christ only is the Consolation of Believers which was the thing to be proved In the Third place I am to shew you that Believers and 3. none but Believers can have consolation in Christ which will convincingly appear from the consideration of those things which we laid down before as the requisites to all true Spiritual Coonsolation For First No unbeliever hath the materials out of which Spiritual Comfort is made which as I there told you must be some solid spiritual and eternal good as Christ and the Covenant are What do unregenerate men rejoyce in but trifles and meer vanities in a thing of nought Amos 6. 13. See how their mirth is described in Job 21. 12. They
every Creature is suitable to its nature You see divers Creatures feeding upon several parts of the same herb the Bee upon the flower the Bird upon the seed the Sheep upon the stalk and the Swine upon the root according to their nature so is their food sensual men feed upon sensual things spiritual men upon spiritual things as your food is so are you If carnal comforts can content thy heart sure thy heart must then be a very carnal heart yea and let Christians themselves take heed that they fetch not their Consolations out of themselves instead of Christ. Your graces and duties are excellent means and instruments but not the ground-work and foundation of your Comfort they are useful buckets to draw but not the well it self in which the springs of consolation rise If you put your duties in the room of Christ Christ will put your comforts out of the reach of your duties Inference 3. If Christ be the Consolation of Believers what a comfortable Inference 3. life should all Believers live in this world Certainly if the fault be not your own you might live the happiest and comfortablest lives of all men in the world If you would not be a discomfort to Christ he would be a comfort to you every day and in every condition to the end of your lives your condition abounds with all the helps and advantages of consolation you have the command of Christ to warrant your comforts Phil. 4. 4. You have the Spirit of Christ for a spring of comfort you have the Scriptures of Christ for the rules of comfort you have the duties of Religion for the means of comfort why is it then that you go comfortless If your afflictions be many in the world yet your encouragements be more in Christ your troubles in the world may be turned into joy but your comforts in Christ can never be turned into trouble Why should troubles obstruct your comfort when the blessing of Christ upon your troubles makes them subservient to promote your happiness Rom. 8. 28. Shake off despondency then and live up to the principles of Religion your dejected life is uncomfortable to your selves and of very ill use to others Inference 4. If Christ be the Consolation of Believers then let all that desire Inference 4. comfort in this world or in that to come imbrace Jesus Christ and get real union with him The same hour you shall be in Christ you shall also be at the fountain head of all Consolations Thy soul shall be then a pardoned soul and a pardoned soul hath all reason in the world to be a joyful soul in that day thy Conscience shall be sprinkled with the blood of Christ and a sprinkled Conscience hath all the reason in the world to be a comforting Conscience in that day you become the Children of your Father in Heaven and he that hath a Father in Heaven hath all reason to be the joyfullest man upon earth in that day you are delivered from the sting and hurt of death and he that is delivered from the sting of death hath the best reason to take in the comfort of life O come to Christ come to Christ till you come to Christ no true comfort can come to you The Sixteenth SERMON Sermon 16. EPHES. 1. 7. Text. Enforcing the general exhortation by a seventh motive drawn from the first benefit purchased by Christ. In whom we have redemption through his blood the remission of sins according to the riches of his grace SIx great Motives have been presented already from the Titles of Christ to draw the hearts of sinners to him more are now to be offered from the benefits redounding to Believers by Christ. Essaying by all means to win the hearts of men to Christ. To this end I shall in the first place open that glorious priviledge of Gospel remission freely and fully conferred upon all that come to Christ by faith in whom we have redemption by faith c. In which words we have first a singular benefit or choice mercy bestowed viz. Redemption interpreted by way of apposition the remission of sins this is a priviledge of the first rank a mercy by it self none sweeter none more desirable among all the benefits that come by Christ. And therefore Secondly You have the price of this mercy an account what it cost even the blood of Christ in whom we have redemption through his blood Precious things are of great price the blood of Christ is the meritorious cause of remission Thirdly You have here also the impulsive cause moving God to grant pardons at this rate to sinners and that is said to be the riches of his grace Where by the way you see that the freeness of the grace of God and the fulness of the satisfaction of Christ meet together without the least jar in the remission of sin contrary to the vain cavil of the Socinian adversaries In whom we have redemption even the remission of sins according to the riches of his grace Fourthly You have the qualified subjects of this blessed priviledge viz. Believers in whose name he here speaks we have remission i. e. we the Saints and faithful in Christ Jesus vers 1. we whom he hath chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world and predestinated unto the adoption of Children vers 4 5. we that are made accepted in the beloved vers 6. 't is we and we only who have redemption through his blood Hence observe DOCT. That all Believers and none but Believers receive the remission Doct. of their sins through the riches of grace by the blood of Jesus Christ. In the explication of this point three things must be spoken to 1. That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state 2. That their pardon is the purchase of the blood of Christ. 3. That the riches of Grace are manifested in remission First That all that are in Christ are in a pardoned state where I will first shew you what pardon or the remission of sin is Secondly That this is the priviledge of none but Believers First Now remission of sin is the gracious act of God in and through Christ discharging a believing sinner from all the guilt and punishment of his sin both temporal and eternal 'T is the act of God he is the author of remission none can forgive sins but God only Mark 2. 7. against him only i. e. principally and essentially the offence is committed Psal. 51. 4. To his Judgement guilt binds over the soul and who can remit the debt but the Creditor Mat. 6. 12. 'T is an act of God discharging the sinner it is Gods loosing of one that stood bound the cancelling of his bond or obligation called therefore remission or releasing in the Text the blotting out of our iniquities or the removing our sins from us as it 's called in other Scriptures see Psal. 103. 11. Mica 7. 18 19. It is a gracious act of God the
God The heart of God is so propense and ready to grant the desires of Believers that it is but ask and have Mat. 7. 7. the dore of grace is opened at the knock of prayer that is a favourite indeed to whom the King gives a blank to insert what request he will If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you John 15. 7. Oh blessed liberty of the sons of God! David did but say Lord turn the Counsel of Ahitophel into foolishness and it was done as soon as asked 2 Sam. 15. 31. Joshua did but say Thou Sun stand still in Gibeon and a miraculous stop was presently put to its swift motion in the Heavens nay which is wonderful to consider a prayer in the womb yet unborn I mean conceived in the heart and not yet uttered by the lips of Believers is often anticipated by the propenseness of free grace Isai. 65. 24. And it shall come to pass that before they call I will answer and whilst they are yet speaking I will hear The prayers of others are rejected as an abomination Prov. 15. 8. God casts them back into their-faces Mal. 2. 3. But free grace signs the petitions of the Saints more readily than they are presented we have not that freedom to ask that God hath to give 't is true the answer of a Believers prayers may be a long time suspended from his sense and knowledge but every prayer according to the will of God is presently granted in Heaven though for wise and holy ends they may be held in a doubtful suspense about them upon earth Fourthly The free discoveries of the secrets of Gods heart to Believers speaks them to be his special favourites men open not the counsels and secrets of their own hearts to enemies or strangers but to their most inward and intimate friends The secret of the Lord is-with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant Psal. 25. 14. When God was about to destroy Sodom he will do nothing in that work of judgement till he had acquainted Abraham his friend with his purpose therein Gen. 18. 17. And the Lord said Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do for I know him c. So when a King was to be elected for Israel and the person whom God had chosen was yet unknown to the people God as it were whispered that secret unto Samuel the day before 1 Sam. 9. 15. Now the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before Saul came according to the manner of Princes with some special favourite Fifthly The Lords receiving every small thing that comes from them with grace and favour when mean while he rejects the greatest things offered by others doth certainly bespeak Believers the special favourites of God There was but one good word in a whole sentence from Sarah and that very word is noted and commended by God 1 Pet. 3. 6. She called him Lord. There were but some small beginnings or buddings of grace in young Abijah and the Lord took special notice of it 1 Kings 14. 12. Because in him there is found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel in the house of Jeroboam Let this be an encouragement to young ones in whom there are found any breathing desires after Christ God will not reject them if any sincerity be found in them a secret groan uttered to God in sincerity shall not be despised Rom. 8. 26. The very bent of a Believers will when he hath no more to offer unto God is an acceptable present 2 Cor. 8. 11. The very intent and purpose that lies secretly in the heart of a Believer not yet executed is accepted with him 1 Kings 8. 18. Where as it was in thine heart to build an house to my name thou didst well that it was in thine heart Thus small things offered to God by Believers find acceptance with him whilst the greatest presents even solemn assemblies Sabbaths and prayers from others are rejected They are a trouble unto me saith God I am weary to bear them Isai. 1. 14 15. Incense from Sheba the sweet Cane from a far Country are not acceptable nor sacrifices sweet unto God from other hands Jer. 6. 20. From all which it appears beyond doubt that the persons and duties of Believers are accepted into the special favour of God by Jesus Christ which was the second thing to be spoken to and brings us to the third general viz. Thirdly How Christ the Beloved procures this benefit for 3. Believers And this he doth four ways First By the satisfaction of his blood Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son No friendship without reconciliation no reconciliation but by the blood of Christ therefore the new and living way by which Believers come unto God with acceptance is said to be consecrated for us through the veil of Christs flesh and hence believers have boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10. 19 20. Secondly The favour of God is procured for Believers by their mystical union with Christ whereby they are made members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5. 30. So that look as Adams posterity stood upon the same terms that he their natural head did so Believers Christs mystical members stand in the favour of God by the favour which Christ their spiritual head hath John 17. 33. I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me Thirdly Believers are brought into favour with God by Christs becoming their Altar upon which their persons and duties are all offered up to God the Altar sanctifies the gift Heb. 13. 10. And this was typified by that legal rite mentioned Luke 1. 9 10. Christ is that golden Altar from whence all the prayers of the Saints ascend to the throne of God perfumed with the odours and incense of his merits Rev. 8. 34. And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a golden Censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne and the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand And thus you see how the persons and duties of Believers are brought into favour and acceptance with God by Jesus Christ. The Uses follow Inference 1. If all Believers be in favour with God how great a mercy is Inference 1. it to have the prayers of such ingaged on our behalf Would we have our business speed in Heaven let us get into favour with God our selves and engage the prayers of his people the favourites of Heaven for us vis unita
fortior one Believer can do much many can do more when Daniel designed to get the knowledge of that secret hinted in the obscure dream of the King which none but the God of Heaven could make known it 's said Dan. 2. 17. Then Daniel went to his House and made the thing known to Hanania Mishael and Azaria his Companions that they would desire mercies of the God of Heaven concerning this secret The benefit of such assistance in prayer by the help of other favourites with God is plainly intimated by Jesus Christ unto us Mat. 18. 19. If two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven God sometimes stands upon a number of voices for the carrying of some publick mercy because he delighteth in the harmony of many praying souls and also loves to oblige and gratifie many in the answer and return of the same prayer I know this usage is grown too formal and complemental among Professors but certainly it is a great advantage to be inward with them who are so with God St. Bernard prescribing rules for effectual prayer closes them up with this wish cum talis fueris memento mei when thy heart is in this frame then remember me Inference 2. If Believers be such favourites in Heaven in what a desperate Inference 2. condition is that Cause and those Persons against whom the generality of Believers are daily engaged in prayers and cries to Heaven Certainly Rome shall feel the dint and force of the many millions of prayers that are gone up to Heaven from the Saints for many generations the cries of the blood of the Martyrs of Jesus joyned with the cries of thousands of Believers will bring down vengeance at last upon the Man of sin 'T is said Rev. 8. 4 5 6. That the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand and immediately it is added vers 5. And the Angel took the Censer and filled it with fire of the Altar and cast it into the earth and there were voices and thunderings and lightnings and earth-quakes and the seven Angels which had the seven Trumpets prepared themselves to sound The prayer of a single Saint is sometimes followed with wonderful effects Psal. 18. 6 7. In my distress I called upon the Lord and cryed unto my God he heard my voice out of his Temple and my cry came before him even into his ears then the earth shook and trembled the foundations also of the hills moved and were shaken because he was wroth what then can a thundring legion of such praying souls do It was said of Luther iste vir potuit cum Deo quicquid voluit that man could have of God what he would his enemies felt the weight of his prayers and the Church of God reaped the benefits thereof The Queen of Scots professed she was more afraid of the Prayers of Mr. Knox than of an army of ten thousand men these were mighty wrestlers with God howsoever contemned and vilified among their enemies There Jacobus Lanigius the Sorbone Doctor who wrote the lives of Luther Knox and Calvin speaks as if the Devil had hired his pen to abuse those precious servants of Christ. will a time come when God will hear the prayers of his people who are continually crying in his ears How long Lord how long Inference 3. Let no Believer be dejected at the contempts and slightings of Inference 3. men so long as they stand in the grace and favour of God it is the lot of the best men to have the worst usage in this world those of whom the world was not worthy are not thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e the sweepings of the house the filth wiped off any thing Erasmus the dirt that sticks to the Shoos Valla the dung of the Belly as the Syriack translates The condemned man that was tumbled from a steep Rock into the Sea as a sacrifice to Neptune was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Budeus Sit pro nobis 〈◊〉 worthy to live in the world Heb. 11. 38. Paul and his Companions were men of choice and excellent spirits yet saith he 1 Cor 4. 13. Being defamed we intreat we are made as the filth of the world and are the off-scouring of all things unto this day they are words signifying the basest contemptiblest and most abhorred things among men How is Heaven and Earth divided in their Judgements and estimations of the Saints those whom men call filth and dirt God calls a peculiar Treasure a Crown of Glory a Royal Diadem But trouble not thy self Believer for the unjust censures of the blind world they speak evil of the things they know not he that is spiritual judgeth all things yet he himself is judged of no man 1 Cor. 2. 14. You can discern the earthliness and baseness of their spirits they want a faculty to discern the excellency and choiceness of your spirits He that carries a dark Lanthorn in the night can discern him that comes against him and yet is not discerned by him a Courtier regards not a slight in the Country so long as he hath the ear and favour of his Prince Inference 4. Never let Believers fear the want of any good thing necessary Inference 4. for them in this world the favour of God is the fountain of all blessings provisions protections even of all that you need He hath promised that he will withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly Psal. 84. 11. He that is bountiful to his enemies will not withhold what is good from his friends The favour of God will not only supply your needs but protect your persons Psal. 5. 12. Thou wilt bless the righteous with favour wilt thou compass him as with a shield Inference 5. Hence also it follows that the sins of Believers are very piercing Inference 5. things to the heart of God The unkindness of those whom he hath received into his very bosom upon whom he hath set his special favour and delight who are more obliged to him than all the people of the earth beside O this wounds the very heart of God What a melting expostulation was that which the Lord used with David 2 Sam. 12. 7 8. I anointed thee King over all Israel and I delivered thee out of the hand of Saul and I gave thee thy masters house and thy masters wives into thy bosom and gave thee the house of Israel and Juda and if that had been too little I would moreover have given unto thee such and such things wherefore hast thou despised the Commandment of the Lord But Reader if thou be a reconciled person a favourite with God and hast grieved him by any eminent transgression how should it melt thy heart to hear the Lord thus expostulating with thee I delivered thee out of
the hand of Satan I gave thee into the bosom of Christ I have pardoned unto thee millions of sins I have bestowed upon thee the riches of mercy my favour hath made thee great and as if all this were too little I have prepared Heaven for thee for which of all these favours dost thou thus requite me Inference 6. How precious should Jesus Christ be to Believers by whose Inference 6. blood they are ingratiated with God and by whose intercession they are and shall for ever be continued in his favour When the Apostle mentions the Believers translation from the sad state of nature to the blessed priviledged state of grace see what a Title he bestows upon Jesus Christ the purchaser of that priviledge calling him the dear Son Col. 1. 13. not only dear to God but exceeding dear to Believers also Christ is the favourite in Heaven to him you owe all your preferment there take away Christ and you have no ground to stand one minute in the favour of God O then let Jesus Christ the fountain of your honour be also the object of your love and praise Inference 7. Estimate by this the state and condition of a deserted Saint Inference 7. upon whom the favour of God is eclipsed If the favour of God be better than life the hiding of it from a gracious soul must be more bitter than death deserted Saints have reason to take the first place among all the mourners in the world the darkness before conversion had indeed more of danger but this hath more of trouble Darkness after light is dismal darkness Since therefore the case is so sad let your preventing care be the more grieve not the good Spirit of God you prepare but for your own grief in so doing Inference 8. Lastly Let this perswade all men to accept Jesus Christ as Inference 8. ever they expect to be accepted with the Lord themselves It is a fearful case for a mans person and duties to be rejected of God to cry and not be heard and much more terrible to be denied audience in the great and terrible day Yet as sure as the Scriptures are the sealed and faithful sayings Si voluntatem Dei nosse quisquam desiderat fit amicus Deo August of God this is no more than what every Christless person must expect in that day Mat. 7. 22. Luke 13. 26. Trace the history of all times even as high as Abel and you shall find that none but Believers did ever find acceptance with God all experience confirms this great truth that they that are in the flesh cannot please God Reader if this be thy condition let me beg thee to ponder the misery of it in a few sad thoughts Consider how sad it is to be rejected of God and forsaken by all creatures at once what a day of streights thy dying day is like to be when Heaven and Earth shall cast thee out together Be assured whatever thy vain hopes for the present quiet thee withal this must be thy case the dore of mercy will be shut against thee no man cometh to the Father but by Christ. Sad was the case of Saul when he told Samuel the Philistins make war against me and God is departed from me 1 Sam. 28. 15. The Saints will have boldness in the day of Judgment 1 John 4. 17. but thou wilt be a confounded man there is yet blessed be the God of mercy a capacity and opportunity of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 19. Isai. 27. 5. But this can be of no long continuance O therefore by all the regard and love you have for the everlasting welfare of your own souls come to Christ embrace Christ in the offers of the Gospel that you may be made accepted in the beloved The Eighteenth SERMON Sermon 18. JOHN 8. 36. Text. The liberty of Believers opened and stated If the Son therefore shall make you free ye shall be free indeed FRom the 30th verse of this Chapter unto my Text you have an account of the different effects which the words of Christ had upon the hearts of his hearers some believed verse 30. these he encourageth to continue in his word verse 31. giving them this encouragement vers 32. Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Hereat the unbelieving Jews take offence and commence a quarrel with him vers 33. We be Abrahams seed and were never in bondage to any man We are of no slavish extraction the blood of Abraham runs in our veins this scornful boast of the proud Jews Christ confutes vers 34. where he distinguisheth of a twofold bondage one to men another to sin one civil another spiritual whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin then tells them vers 36. The servant abideth not in the house for ever but the Son abideth for ever Wherein he intimateth two great truths viz. that the servants and slaves of sin may for a time enjoy the external priviledges of the house or Church of God but it would not be long before the master of the house will turn them out of dore but if they were once the adopted Children of God then they should abide in the house for ever And this priviledge is only to be had by their believing in and union with the natural Son of God Jesus Christ which brings us fairly to the Text If the Son therefore shall make you free ye shall be free indeed In which words we have two parts viz. 1. A Supposition 2. A Concession First A Supposition if the Son therefore shall make you free 1. q. d. The womb of nature cast you forth into the world in a state of bondage in that state you have lived all your days servants to sin slaves to your lusts yet freedom is to be obtained and this freedom is the prerogative belonging to the Son of God to bestow if the Son shall make you free Secondly Christs Concession upon this supposition then 2. shall ye be free indeed i. e. you shall have a real freedom an excellent and everlasting fredom no conceit only as that which you now boast of is if ever therefore you will be free men indeed believe in me Hence note DOCT. That interest in Christ sets the soul at liberty from all that Doct. bondage whereunto it was subjected in its natural state Believers are the Children of the New Covenant the denizons of Jerusalem which are above which is free and the mother of them all Gal. 4. 26. the glorious liberty viz. that which is spiritual and eternal is the liberty of the Children of God Rom. 8. 21. Christ and none but Christ delivers his people out of the hands of their enemies Luk. 1. 74. In the Doctrinal part of this point I must shew you First What Believers are not freed from by Jesus Christ in this world Secondly What that bondage is from which every Believer is freed by Christ. Thirdly What kind of
name is as an Oyntment poured forth Cant. 5. 16. his mouth is most sweet O how powerfully and how sweetly doth the voyce of God slide into the heart of a poor melting sinner how jejune dry and tastless are all the discourses of men compared with the teachings of the Father Thirdly God teacheth plainly and clearly he not only opens truths to the understanding but he openeth the understanding also to perceive them 2 Cor. 3. 16. In that day the vaile is taken away from the heart a light shineth into the soul a clear beam from heaven is darted into the mind Luk. 24. 45. Divine teachings are fully satisfying the soul doubts no more staggers and hesitates no more but acquiesces in that which God teaches 't is so satisfied that it can venture all upon the truth of what it hath learnt from God as that Martyr said I cannot dispute but I can dye for Christ. See Prov. 8. 8 9. Fourthly The teachings of God are infallible teachings the wisest and holiest of men may mistake and lead others into the same mistakes with themselves but it is not so in the teachings of God if we can be sure that God teacheth us we may be as sure of the truth of what he teacheth ●…r his spirit guideth us into all truth Joh. 16 〈◊〉 and into nothing but truth Fifthly The teachings of God are abiding teachings they make everlasting impressions upon the soul Psal. 119. 98. they are ever with it the words of men vanish from us but the words of God stick by us what God teacheth he writeth upon the heart Jer. 31. 33. and that will abide littera scripta manet 'T is usual with souls whose understandings have been opened by the Lord many years afterward to say I shall never forget such a scripture that once convinced me such a promise that once encouraged me Sixthly The teachings of God are saving teachings they make the soul wise unto Salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. There is a great deal of other knowledge that goes to hell with men the pavement of hell as one speaks is pitched with the sculs of many great Scholars but eternal life is in the teachings of God Joh. 17. 3. This is eternal life to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent This is deservedly stiled the light of life Joh. 8. 12. in this light we shall see light Psal. 36. 9. Seventhly The teachings of God make their own way into the dullest and weakest capacities Isa. 32. 4. The heart also of the rash shall understand knowledge and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to speak plainly upon this account Christ said Mat. 11. 25. 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 't is admirable to see what clear illumination some poor illiterate Christians have in the mysteries of Christ and Salvation which others of great abilities deep and searching heads can never discover with all their learning and study Eighthly To conclude the teachings of God are transforming teachings 2 Cor. 3. 18. they change the soul into the same image God casts them whom he teacheth into the very mould of those truths which they learn from him Rom. 6. 17. These are the teachings of God and thus he instructeth those that come to Christ. Secondly Next let us see what influences divine teachings have upon souls in bringing them to Christ and we shall find 2●… a threefold influence in them 1. They have an influence upon the external means by which they come to Christ. 2. They have influence upon the mind to remove what hindered it from Christ. 3. They have influence upon the will to allure and draw it to Christ. First They have influence upon the means by which we come to Christ the best ordinances are but a dead letter except the spirit the teaching and quickening spirit of God work in fellowship with them 2 Cor. 3. 6. The best Ministers like the Disciples cast forth the Net but take nothing win not one soul to God till God teach as well as they Paul is nothing and Apollo nothing but God that giveth the increase 1 Cor. 3. 7. Let the most learned eloquent and powerful Orator be in the Pulpit yet no mans heart is perswaded till it hears the voice of God cathedram in coelis habet qui corda docet Secondly They have influence upon the mind to remove what hindered it from Christ except the minds of men be first untaught those errors by which they are prejudiced against Christ they will never be perswaded to come unto him and nothing but the Fathers teachings can unteach those errors and cure those evils of the mind the natural mind of man slights the truths of God untill God teach them and then they tremble with an awful reverence of them Sin is but a trifle till God shews us the face of it in the glass of the Law and then it appears exceeding sinful Rom. 7. 13. We think God to be such a one as our selves Psal. 50. 21. until he discover himself unto us in his infinite greatness awful holiness and severe Justice and then we cry who can stand before this great and dreadful God! We thought it was time enough hereafter to mind the concernments of another world untill the Lord open our eyes to see in what danger we stand upon the very brink of eternity and then nothing scares us more than the fears that our time will be finished before the great work of Salvation be finished We thought our selves in a converted State before till God make us to see the necessity of another manner of conversation upon pain of eternal damnation We readily caught hold upon the promises before when we had no right to them but the teachings of God make the presumptuous sinner let go his hold that he may take a better and surer hold of them in Christ. We once thought that the death of Christ in it self had been enough to secure our Salvation but under the teachings of God we discern plainly the necessity of a change of heart and state or else the blood of Christ can never profit us Thus the teachings of God remove the errors of the mind by which men are withheld from Christ. Thirdly The teachings of God powerfully attract and allure the will of a sinner to Christ Hos. 2. 14. But of these drawings of the father I have largely spoken before and therefore shall say no more of it in this place but hasten to the last thing propounded viz. Thirdly why it is impossible for any man to come to Christ without the Fathers teachings and the impossibilities hereof will appear three ways 1. From the power of sin 2. From the indisposition of man 3. From the nature of faith By all which the Last point designed to be spoken to from this Scripture will be fully cleared and the whole
another these things are according as the teachings of God do accompany our teachings we often see a weaker and plainer discourse blessed with success whilst that which is more artificial neat and laboured comes to nothing St. Austin hath a pretty similitude to illustrate this Suppose saith he two Conduits the one very plain the other curiously carved and adorned with images of Lyons Eagles c. the water doth not refresh and nourish as it cometh from such a curious Conduit but as it is water Where we find most of man we frequently find least of God I speak not this to encourage carelesness and laziness but to provoke the dispensers of the Gospel to more earnestness and servent prayer for the assistance and blessing of the Spirit upon their labours and to make men less fond of their own gifts and abilities blear-eyed Leah may bear Children when beautiful Rachel proves barren Inference 4. Learn hence the transcendent excellency of saving spiritual Inference 4. knowledge above that which is meerly literal and natural One drop of knowledge taught by God is more excellent than the whole Ocean of humane knowledge and acquired gifts Phil. 3. 8. Joh. 17. 3. 1 Cor. 2. 2. Let no man therefore be dejected at the want of those gifts with which unsanctified men are adorned If God have taught thee the evil of sin the worth of Christ the necessity of Regeneration the mystery of faith the way of communion with God in duties trouble not thy self because of thine ignorance in natural or moral things thou hast that Reader which will bring thee to Heaven and he is a truly wise man that knows the way of salvation though he be ignorant and unskilful in other things thou knowest that which all the learned Doctors and Libraries in the world could never teach thee but God hath revealed them to thee others have more science thou hast more savour and sweetness bless God and be not discouraged 2d Use for Examination If there be no coming to Christ without the teachings of Use 2. the Father then it greatly concerns us to examine our own hearts whether ever we have been under the saving teachings of God during the many years we have sate under the preaching of the Gospel Let not the question be mistaken I do not ask what Books you have read what Ministers you have heard what stock of natural or speculative knowledge you have acquired but the question is whether ever God spake to your hearts and hath effectually taught you such lessons as were mentioned in our last discourse O there is a vast difference betwixt that notional speculative and traditional knowledge which man learneth from man and that spiritual operative and transforming knowledge which a man learneth from God If you ask how the teachings of God may be discerned from all other meer humane teachings I answer it may be discerned and distinguished by these six signs Sign 1. The teachings of God are very humbling to the soul that is taught Humane knowledge puffeth up 1 Cor. 8. 1. but the teachings of God do greatly abase the soul Job 42. 5. I have heard of thee by the bearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee wherefore I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes the same light which discovers to us the holiness justice greatness and goodness of God discovereth also the vileness baseness emptiness and total unworthiness of man yea of the best and holiest of men Isa. 6. 5. Sign 2. The teachings of God are deeply affecting and impressive teachings they fully reach the heart of man Hos. 2. 14. I will allure her and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably unto her or as it is in the Hebrew I will speak to her heart When God showeth unto man the evil of sin he so convinceth the soul that no creature comforts have any pleasure or sweetness in them and when he sheweth unto man his righteousness pardon and peace in Christ he so comforteth and refresheth the heart that no outward afflictions have any weight or bitterness in them one drop of consolation from Heaven sweetens a Sea of trouble upon Earth Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. Sign 3. The teachings of God are sanctifying and renewing teachings they reform and change the heart Eph. 4. 21 22 23. If so be that you have heard him and been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus that ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful Lusts and be renewed in the spirit of your mind c. See here what holiness and purity is the effect of divine teaching holiness both external and internal negative and positive holiness of every kind follows the Fathers teachings all the discoveries God makes to us of himself in Christ have an assimulating quality and change the soul into their own likeness 2 Cor. 3. 18. Sign 4. All Gods teachings are practical running into obedience Idle notions and useless speculations are not learnt from God As Gods creating words so his teaching words are with effect as when he said let there be light and there was light so when he saith to the soul be comforted be humbled it is effectually comforted Isa. 66. 13. it is humbled Job 40. 4 5. As God hath in nature made no creature in vain so he speaks no word in vain every thing which men hear or learn from the Father is for use practice and benefit to the soul. Sign 5. All the teachings of God are agreeable with the written word the Spirit of God and the word of God do never jarr Joh. 14. 26. He shall take of mine and shew it unto you When God speaketh unto the heart of man whether in a way of conviction consolation or instruction in duty he always either maketh use of the express words of God in Scripture or speaks to the heart in language every way consentaneous and agreeable to Scripture So that the written word becomes the Standard to weigh and try all divine teachings Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light or morning in them whatever is discrepant and jarring with the Scripture must not pass for an inspiration of God but a deluding sophism and insinuation of Satan Sign 6. The teachings of God are very satisfying teachings to the soul of man the understanding faculty like a Dial is enlightned with the beams of divine truth shining upon it this no mans teachings can do men can only teach objectively by propounding truth to the understanding but they cannot enlighten the faculty it self as God doth 1 John 5. 20. he giveth man understanding as well as instructions to be understood he opens the eyes of the understanding as well as propoundeth the object Eph. 1. 18. And thus we may discern and distinguish the teachings of God
life be prolonged for a season it lives in believers still but not upon the provision they willingly make to fulfil the Lust of it Rom. 13. ult The design of every true believer is co incident with the design of the spirit to destroy and mortifie corruption they long for the extirpation of it and are daily in the use of all sanctified means and instruments to subdue and destroy it the workings of their corruptions are the afflictions of their souls Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death and there is no one thing that sweetens the thoughts of death to believers except the sight and full enjoyment of God more than their expected deliverance from sin doth Evidence 5. Where ever the spirit of God dwelleth in the way of sanctification in all such he is the spirit of prayer and supplication Rom. 8. 26. Likewise the spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered where ever he is poured out as the spirit of grace he is also poured out as the spirit of supplication Zech. 12. 10. his praying and his sanctifying influences are undivided There is a threefold assistance that the spirit gives unto sanctified persons in prayer he helps them before they pray by setting an edge upon their defires and affections he helps them in prayer by supplying matters of request to them teaching them what they should ask of God he assisteth them in the manner of prayer supplying to them suitable affections and helping them to be sincere in all their desires to God 't is he that humbles the pride of their hearts dissolves and breaks the hardness of their hearts out of dcadness makes them lively out of weakness makes them strong he assisteth the spirits of believers after prayer helping them to faith and patience to believe and wait for the returns and answers of their prayers O Reader reflect upon thy duties consider what spirituality sincerity humility broken-heartedness and melting affections after God are to be found in thy duties is it so with thee or dost thou shuffle over thy duties as an interruption to thy business and pleasures are they an ungrateful task imposed upon thee by God and thy own conscience are there no hungerings and thirstings after God in thy soul or if there be any pleasure arising to thee out of prayer is it not from the ostentation of thy gifts if it be so reflect sadly upon the carnal state of thy heart these things do not speak the spirit of grace and supplication to be given thee Evidence 6. Where ever the spirit of Grace inhabits there is an heavenly spiritual frame of mind accompanying and evidencing the indwelling of the spirit Rom. 8. 5 6. For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit for to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace by the mind understand the musings reasonings yea and the cares fears delights and pleasures of the soul which follow the workings and meditations of the mind as these are so are we if these be ordinarily and habitually taken up and exercised about earthly things then is the frame and state of the man carnal and earthly the workings of every creature follow the being and nature of it if God Christ Heaven and the world to come engage the thoughts and affections of the soul the temper of such a soul is spiritual and the spirit of God dwelleth there this is the life of the regenerate Phil. 3. 20. our conversation is in Heaven and such a frame of heart is life and peace a serene placid and most comfortable life no pleasure upon earth no gratifications of the senses do relish and savour as spiritual things do Consider therefore which way thy heart ordinarily works especially in thy Solitudes and hours of retirement these things will be a great evidence for or against thy soul. David could say how precious are thy thoughts unto me O God! how great is the summ of them if I should count them they are more in number than the sand when I awake I am still with thee Psal. 139. 17 18. Yet it must be acknowledged for the relief of weaker Christians that there is great odds and variety found in this matter among the people of God for the strength steadiness and constancy of a spiritual mind results from the depth and improvement of sanctification the more grace still the more evenness spirituality and constancy there is in the motions of the heart after God The minds of weak Christians are more easily entangled in earthly vanities and more frequently diverted by inward corruptions yet still there is a spiritual pondus inclination and bent of their hearts towards God and the vanity and corruption which hinders their communion with him is their greatest grief and burthen under which they groan in this world Evidence 7. Those to whom the spirit of grace is given they are led by the spirit Rom. 8. 14. As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the Sons of God sanctified souls give themselves up to the government and conduct of the spirit they obey his voice beg his direction follow his motions deny the solicitations of the flesh and blood in obedience to him Gal. 1. 16. and they that do so they are the sons of God 't is the office of the spirit to guide us into all truth and 't is our great duty to follow his guidance Hence it is that in all enterprizes and undertakements the people of God so earnestly beg direction and counsel from him Lead me O Lord in thy righteousness saith David make thy way straight before my face Psal. 8. 5. they dare not in doubtful cases lean to their own understandings yea in points of duty and in points of sin they dare not neglect the one or commit the other against the convictions and perswasions of their own consciences though troubles and sufferings be unavoidable in that path of duty when they have ballanced duties with sufferings in their most serious thoughts the conclusion and result will still be it is better to obey God than man the dictates of the spirit rather than the counsels of flesh and blood But before I leave this point I reckon my self a debtor unto weak Christians and shall endeavour to give satisfaction to some special doubts and fears with which their minds are ordinarily entangled in this matter for it is a very plain case that many souls have the presence and sanctification of the spirit without the evidence and comfort thereof Divers things are found in believers which are as so many fountains of fears and doubts to them And First I greatly doubt the spirit of God is not in me Obj. 1. saith
interest in Christ as my Text considers it and what an heaven upon earth must then be found in mortification These indeavours of mine to subdue and mortifie my corruptions plainly speak the Spirit of God in me and my being in Christ and O what is this What heart hath largeness and strength enough to receive and contain the joy and comfort which flowes from a cleared interest in Jesus Christ Certainly Christians the tranquillity and comfort of your whole life depends upon it and what is life without the comfort of life Rom. 8. 13. If ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live i. e. you shall live a serene placid comfortable life for it is corruption unmortified which clouds the face of God and breaks the peace of his people and consequently imbitters the life of a Christian. 2. Motive As the comfort of your own lives which is much so your Motive 2. instrumental fitness for the service of God which is much more depends upon the Mortification of your sins 2 Tim. 2. 21. If a man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a vessel unto honour sanctified and meet for the masters use and prepared unto every good work Where is the mercy of life but in the usefulness and serviceableness of it unto God It is not worth while to live sixty or seventy years in the world to eat and drink to buy and sell to laugh and cry and then go down to the place of silence So far as any man lives to God an useful serviceable life to his praise and honour so far only and no farther doth he answer the end of his being But it is the purged mortified soul which is the vessel of honour prepared and meet for the masters use Let a proud or an earthly heart be imployed in any service for God and you shall find that such an heart will both spoil the work by managing it for a self end as Jehu did and then devour the praise of it by a proud boast Come see my zeal When the Lord would employ the prophet Isaiah in his work and service his iniquity was first purged and after that he was imployed Isa. 6. 6 7 8. Sin is the souls sickness a consumption upon the inner man and we know that languishing consumptive persons are very unfit to be imployed in difficult and strenuous labours Mortification so far as it prevails cures the disease recovers our strength and inables us for service to God in our generations 3. Motive Your stability and safety in the hour of temptation depends Motive 3. upon the success of your mortifying endeavours Is it then a valuable mercy in your eyes to be kept upright and stedfast in the critical season of temptation when Satan shall be wrestling with you for the Crown and Prize of eternal life Then give diligence to mortifie your corruptions Temptation is a siege Satan is the enemy without the walls labouring to force an entrance natural corruptions are the Traytours within that hold correspondency with the enemy without and open the gate of the soul to receive him It was the covetousness of Judas his heart which overthrew him in the hour of Temptation They are our fleshly lusts which go over unto Satan in the day of Battel and fight against our souls 1 Pet. 2. 11. the corruptions or infectious atomes which fly up and down the world in times of Temptation as that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports 2 Pet. 2. 20. are through lusts 2 Pet. 1. 4. 'T is the lust within which gives a luster to the vanities of the world without and thereby makes them strong temptations to us 1 John 2. 16. Mortifie therefore your corruptions as ever you expect to maintain your station in the day of trial cut off those advantages of your enemy lest by them he cut off your souls and all your hopes from God 4. Motive As Temptations will be irresistible so afflictions will be unsupportable to you without Mortification My friends you Motive 4. live in a mutable world providence daily rings the changes in all the Kingdoms Cities and Towns all the world over You that have husbands or wives to day may be left desolate to morrow you that have estates and children now may be bereaved of both before you are aware Sickness will tread upon the heel of health and death will assuredly follow life as the night doth the day Consider with your selves are you able to bear the loss of your sweet enjoyments with patience Can you think upon the parting hour without some tremblings O get a heart mortified to all these things and you will bless a taking as well as a giving God 'T is the living world not the crucified world that raises such tumults in our souls in the day of affliction How cheerful was holy Paul under all his sufferings and what think you gave him that peace and cheerfulness but his mortification to the world Phil. 4. 12. I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and suffer need Job was the mirrour of patience in the greatest shock of calamity and what made him so but the mo●…tifiedness of his heart in the fullest enjoyment of earthly things Job 31. 25. 5. Motive The reputation and honour of Religion is deeply concerned in the Mortification of the Professors of it for unmortified Motive 5. professors will first or last be the scandals and reproaches of it The profession of religion may give credit to you but to be sure you will never bring credit to it All the scandals and reproaches that fall upon the name of Christ in this world flow from the fountain of unmortified corruption Judas and Demas Hymeneus and Philetus Ananias and Saphira ruined themselves and became rocks of offence to others by this means If ever you will keep Religion sweet labour to keep your hearts mortified and pure 6. Motive To conclude what an hard●…tug will you have in your dying Motive 6. hour except you get a heart mortified to this world and all that is in it your parting hour is like to be a dreadful hour without the help of mortification Your corruptions like glew fasten your affections to the world and how hard will it be for such a man to be separated by death O what a bitter and doleful parting have carnal hearts from carnal things whereas the mortified soul can receive the messengers of death without trouble and as cheerfully put off the body at death as a man doth his clothes at night death need not pull and hale such a man goes half way to meet it Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better Christian wouldst thou have thy death bed soft and easie wouldst thou have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the
of God is the direct way to the assurance of the love of God 2 Pet. 15. 10. This path leads you into heaven upon earth Fifthly Diligence in obedience is a great security against backsliding Small remissions in duty and little neglects increase by degrees unto great Apostasies you may see how that disease is bred by the method prescribed for its cure Rev. 2. 5. Do thy first works Sixthly In a word laborious diligence in the day of life will be your singular comfort when the night of death over takes you 2 Pet. 1. 11. 2 Kings 20. 3. Pattern 5. Delight in God and in his service was eminently conspicuous in the life of Christ and is a rare pattern for believers imitation John 4. 32 34. But he said unto them I have meat to eat that ye know not of my meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work The delights of Christ were all in heaven The Son of man was in heaven in respect of delight in God while he conversed here among men And if you be Christs heavenly things will be the delight of your souls also Now spiritual delight is nothing else but the complacency and well-pleasedness of a renewed heart in conversing with God and the things of God resulting from the agreeableness of them to the spiritual temper of his mind Four things are considerable about spiritual delights First The nature of it which consisteth in the complacency rest and satisfaction of the mind in God and spiritual things The heart of a Christian is centred it is where it would be it is gratified in the highest in the actings forth of faith and love upon God as the tast is gratified with a suitable delicious relish Psal. 63. 5 6. Psal. 119. 14 24. Psal. 17. 18. Secondly The object of spiritual delight which is God himself and the things which relate to him He is the blessed Ocean into which all the streams of spiritual delight do pour themselves Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in heaven but thee and on earth there is none that I desire incomparison of thee Thirdly The subject of spiritual delight which is a renewed heart and that only so far as it is renewed Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the Law of God after the inward man Fourthly The principle and spring of this delight which is the agreeable ess of spiritual things to the temper and frame of a renewed mind A sensitive pleasure arises from the suitableness of the faculty and object So it is here no delicious sweetness can be so pleasant to the taste or beautiful colours to the eye or melodious sounds to the ear as spiritual things to the renewed souls because spiritual senses are delicate and the objects more excellent But my business here is not so much to open its nature as press you to the practice thereof in conformity to your great pattern whose life was a life of delight in God and whose work was performed with the greatest delight for God I delight to do thy will O my God O Christians strive to imitate your pattern in this and to encourage you I will briefly hint a few things First Scarce any thing can be more evidential of sincerity than a heart delighting in God and the will of God Hypocrites go as far as others in the material part of duties but here they are defective they have no delight in God and things spiritual but do whatsoever they do in Religion from the compulsions of conscience or accommodations of self ends Secondly An heart delighting in God will be a choice help and means to perseverance The reason why many so easily part with Religion is because their souls never tasted the sweetness of it they never delighted in it but the Christian who delights in the Law of God will be meditating day and night and shall be like a tree planted by a river of water whose leaf fadeth not Psal. 1. 2 3. Thirdly This will represent Religion very beautifully and takingly to such as are yet strangers to it you will then be able to invite them to Christ by your example the language whereof will be like that Psal. 34. 8. O taste and see that God is good Fourthly This will make all your services to God very pleasing and acceptable through Christ you will now begin to do the will of God on earth as it is done in heaven your duties are so far Angelical as they are performed in the strength of delight in God But may not a sincere Christian act in duty without delight Obj. yea may he not feel some kind of weariness in duties Yes doubtless he may but then we must distinguish betwixt the Temper and Distemper of a renewed heart the best hearts Sol. are not always in their right frame Pattern 6. The inoffensiveness of the life of Christ upon earth is an excellent pattern to all his people he injured none offended none but was holy and harmless as the Apostle speaks Heb. 7. 26. He denied his own liberty to avoid occasion of offence as in the case of the Tribute Mony Mat. 19. 27. The children are free notwithstanding lest we should offend them go c. So circumspect was Christ and inoffensive among all men that though his enemies sought occasion against him yet could they find none Luke 6. 7. Look unto Jesus O ye professors of Religion imitate him in this gracious excellency of his life according to his command Phil. 2. 15. That ye may be harmless and blameless the Sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation You are indeed allowed the exercise of your prudence but not a jot farther than will consist with your innocence Be ye wise as Serpents and harmless as Doves 'T is the rule of Christ that you offend none 1 Cor. 10. 32. 2 Cor. 6. 3. And to engage you to the imitation of Christ in this I will briefly press it with a few encouragements which methinks should prevail with any heart that 's truly gracious First For the honour of Jesus Christ be you inoffensive his name is called upon you his honour is concerned in your deportment if your carriage in the world give just matter of offence Christs worthy name will be blasphemed thereby James 2. 7. Your inoffensive carriage is the only means to stop the mouths of detractours 1 Pet. 2. 15. Secondly For the sake of souls the precious immortal souls of others be wary that you give no offence wo to the world saith Christ because of offences Mat. 13. 7. Nothing was more commonly objected against Christ and religion by the heathen in Cyprians time than the loose and scandalous lives of professors Behold say they these are the men who Ecce qui jactant se redemptosà tyranni de Satanae qui praedicant se mortuos esse mundo nibi lominus vincuntur cu●…iditatibus s●…is Cyprian boast themselves to be redeemed from the
his Tribunal to be solemnly sentenced They are as my Text speaks condemned already but then that dreadful sentence will be solemnly pronounced by Jesus Christ whom they have despised and rejected then shall that scripture be fulfilled Luke 19. 27. These mine enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring them hither and slay them before me Inference 2. Hence be informed how great a mercy the least measure Inference 2. of saving faith is for the least measure of true faith unites the soul to Jesus Christ and then there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. 1. Not one sentence of God against them So Acts 13. 39. By him all that believe are justified from all things The weakest believer is as free from condemnation as the strongest the righteousness of Christ comes upon all believers without any difference Rom. 3. 22. Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Christ Jesus unto all and upon all them that believe for there is no difference 'T is not in imputed as it is in inherent righteousness one man hath more holiness than another The faith that receives the righteousness of Christ may be very different in degrees of strength but the received righteousness is equal upon all believers A piece of gold is as much worth in the hand of a child as it is in the hand of a man O the exceeding preciousness of saving faith Inference 3. How dreadful a sin is the sin of unbelief which brings Inference 3. men under the condemnation of the great God! no sin startles less or damns surer 'T is a sin that doth not affright the conscience as some other sins do but it kills the soul more certainly than any of those sins could do for indeed other sins could not damn us were it not for unbelief which fixes the guilt of them all upon our persons This is the condemnation Unbelief is the sin of sins and when the spirit comes to convince men of sin he begins with this as the capital sin John 16. 9. But more particularly First Estimate the evil of unbelief from its Object It is the slighting and refusing of the most excellent and wonderful person in heaven or earth The fiducial vision of Christ is the joy of Saints on earth the facial vision of Christ is the happiness of Saints in heaven 'T is a despising of him who is altogether lovely in himself who hath loved us and given himself for us 'T is the rejecting of the only Mediator betwixt God and man after the rejecting of whom there remains no sacrifice for sin Secondly Let the evil of unbelief be valued by the offer of Christ to our souls in the Gospel 't is one part of the great mystery of godliness that Christ should be preached to the Gentiles 1 Tim. 3. 16. That the word of this salvation should be sent to us Acts 13. 26. A mercy denied to the fallen angels and the greatest part of mankind which aggravates the evil of this sin beyond all imagination So that in refusing or neglecting Jesus Christ is found vile ingratitude highest contempt of the grace and wisdom of God and in the event the loss of the only season and opportunity of salvation which is never more to be recovered to all eternity Inference 4. If this be the case of all unbelievers it is not to be admired Inference 4. that souls under the first convictions of their miserable condition are plunged into such deep distresses of Spirit It 's said of them Acts 2. 37. That they were pricked at the heart and cried out Men and brethren what shall we do And so the Jayler He came in trembling and astonished and said Sirs what must I do to be saved Certainly if souls apprehend themselves under the condemnation and sentence of the great God all their tears and tremblings their weary days and restless nights are not without just cause and reason Those that never saw their own miserable condition by the light of a clear and full conviction may wonder to see others so deeply distressed in Spirit They may misjudge the case and call it melancholy or madness but spiritual troubles do not exceed the cause and ground of them let them be as deep and great as they will and indeed it is one of the great mysteries of grace and providence a thing much unknown to men how such poor souls are supported from day to day under such fears and sorrows as are able in a few hours to break the stoutest Spirit in the world Luther was a man of great natural courage and yet when God let in spiritual troubles upon his soul it is noted of him ut nec vox nec calor nec sanguis superesset He had neither voyce nor heat nor blood appearing in him Inference 5. How groundless and irrational is the mirth and jollity of all carnal and unregenerate men they feast in their prison Inference 5. and dance in their fetters O the madness that is in the hearts of men If men did but see their mittimus made for hell or believe they are condemned already it were impossible for them to live at that rate of vanity they do and is their condition less dangerous because it is not understood Surely no but much more dangerous for that O poor sinners you have found out an effectual way to prevent your present troubles it were well if you could find out a way to prevent your eternal misery but 't is easier for a man to stifle conviction than prevent damnation Your mirth hath a twofold mischief in it it prevents repentance and encreaseth your future torment O what an hell will your hell be who drop into it out of all the sensitive and sinful pleasures of this world If ever a man may say of mirth that it is mad and of laughter what doth it he may say so in this case Inference 6. Lastly what cause have they to rejoyce admire and praise the Lord to Eternity who have a well grounded Inference 6. confidence that they are freed from Gods condemnation O give thanks to the Father who hath delivered you from the power of darkness and translated you into the Kingdom of his dear Son Col. 1. 13. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for if you be freed from condemnation you are out of Satans power he hath no more any dominion over you The power of Satan over men comes in by vertue of their condemnation as the power of the Jayler or Executioner over the bodies of condemned prisoners doth Heb. 2. 14. If you be freed from condemnation the sting of death shall never touch you For the sting of death smites the souls of men with a deadly stroak only by vertue of Gods condemnatory sentence 1 Cor. 15. 55 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law If you be freed from condemnation now you shall stand with comfort and boldness
dreadful stab to that noble power Gods vicegerent in the soul. And thus you see the first thing made good that light puts deep guilt and aggravation into sin Secondly In the next place let us examine why sin so aggravated by the light makes men liable to the greater condemnation 2. for that it doth so is beyond all debate or question else the Apostle Peter would not have said of those sinners against light as he doth 2 Pet. 2. 21. That it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness nor would Christ have told the Inhabitants of Chorazin or Bethsaida that it should be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of Judgement than for them There is a twofold reason of this 1. Ex parte Dei on Gods part 2. Ex parte Peccatoris on the Sinners part First Ex parte Dei on Gods part who is the righteous Judge of the whole earth and will therefore render unto every man according as his works shall be for shall not the Judge of the whole earth do right he will judge the world in righteousness and righteousness requires that difference be made in the punishment of Sinners according to the different degrees of their sins Now that there are different degrees of sin is abundantly clear from what we have lately discoursed under the former head where we have shewed that the light under which men sin puts extraordinary aggravations upon their sins answerable whereunto will the degrees of punishment be awarded by the righteous Judge of Heaven and earth The Gentiles who had no other light but that dim light of nature will be condemned for disobeying the law of God written upon their hearts but yet greater wrath is reserved for them who sin both against the light of nature and the light of the Gospel also and therefore it is said Rom. 2. 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Jew first and also of the Gentile Impenitent Jews and Gentiles will all be condemned at the Bar of God but with this difference to the Jew first i. e. principally and especially because the light and mercy which he abused and violated were far greater than those bestowed upon the Gentiles because unto them were committed the Oracles of God and God had not dealt with any Nation as with that Nation Indeed in the rewards of obedience the same reason doth not hold he that came into the Vineyard at the last hour of the day may be equal in reward with him that bare the heat and burthen of the whole day because the reward is of grace and bounty not of debt and merit but it is not so here justice observes an exact proportion in distributing punishments according to the degrees deserts and measures of sin and therefore it is said concerning Babylon Rev. 18. 7. How much she had glorified her self and lived deliciously so much torment and sorrow give her Secondly Ex parte Peccatoris upon the account of sinners it must needs be that the heaviest wrath and most intolerable torments should be the portion of them who have sinned under and against the clearest light and means of grace for we find in the Scripture account that a principal and special part of the torment of the damned will arise from their own Consciences Mark 9. 44. Where their worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched and nothing is more manifest than this that if Conscience be the tormentor of the damned then sinners against light must needs have the greatest torments For First The more knowledge any man had in this world the more was his Conscience violated and abused here by sinning against it and O what work will these violations and abuses make for a tormenting Conscience in Hell With what rage and fury will it then avenge it self upon the most stout daring and impudent sinner the more guilt now the more rage and fury then Secondly The more knowledge or means of knowledge any man hath enjoyed in this world so much the more matter is prepared and laid up for Conscience to upbraid us with in the place of torments and the upbraidings of Conscience are a special part of the torments of the damned O what a peal will Conscience ring in the ears of such sinners Did not I warn thee of the issue of such sins undone wretch How often did I strive with thee if it had been possible to take thee off from thy course of sinning and to escape this wrath Did not I osten cry out in thy bosom stop thy course sinner Hearken to my counsel turn and live but thou wouldst not hearken to my voice I forewarned thee of this danger but thou slightedst all my warnings thy lusts were too strong for my light and now thou seest whither thy way tended but alas too late Thirdly The more knowledge or means of knowledge any man hath abused and neglected in this world so many fair opportunities and great advantages he hath lost for Heaven and the more opportunities and advantages he hath had for Heaven the more intolerable will Hell be to that man as the mercy was great which was offered by them so the torment will be unspeakable that will arise from the loss of them Sinners you have now a wide and open door many blessed opportunities of salvation under the Gospel it hath put you in a fair way for everlasting happiness many of you are not far from the kingdom of God there will be time enough in Hell to reflect upon this loss What think you will it not be sad to think there O how fair was I once for Heaven to have been with God and among yonder Saints My Conscience was once convinced and my affections melted under the Gospel I was almost perswaded to be a Christian indeed the bargain was almost made betwixt Christ and my soul there were but a few points in difference betwixt us but wretch that I was at those points the bargain stuck and there the treaty ended to my eternal ruine I could not deny my lusts I could not live under the strict yoak of Christs government but now I must live under the insupportable wrath of the righteous and terrible God for ever and this torment will be peculiar to such as perish under the Gospel The Heathen who enjoyed no such means can therefore have no such reflections nay the very Devils themselves who never had such a plank after their shipwrack I mean a Mediator in their nature or such terms of reconciliation offered them will not reflect upon their lost opportunities of recovering as such sinners must and will this therefore is the condemnation that light is come into the world but men loved darkness rather than light Inference 1. Hence it follows that neither knowledge nor the best means of knowledge are in themselves sufficient to secure men from wrath Inference 1. to come Light in it self is a choice
Bradwardine the profound Doctor who was learned usque ad stuporem even to a wonder professed that when he first read Pauls Epistles he despised them because he found not in them Metaphysicum ingenium those Metaphysical Notions which he expected Upon this account it was that Christ brake forth into that Pathetical gratulation of his fathers love to the elect Mat. 11. 25. At that time Jesus answered and 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 Secondly It is not opposed to all light and knowledge in Spiritual truths A man may have a true understanding of the Scriptures give an Orthodox exposition of them and enlighten the minds of others by them and yet the Gospel may be hidden from himself Mat. 7. 22. Many will say unto me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy Name So Rom. 2. 19. Aid art confident that thou thy self art a guide of the blind a light to them that sit in darkness c. A man may shew others the way to Christ and Salvation whilst both are hid from himself Thirdly It is not opposed to all kind of influences upon the affections for it is possible the Gospel may touch the affections themselves and cause some sweet Motions and Raptures in them and yet be an hidden Gospel to the soul Heb. 6. 5 9. Secondly But if these three things may consist with spiritual blindness unto what then is it opposed To which I answer that Spiritual blindness stands only opposed unto that saving Manifestation of Jesus Christ in the Gospel by the Spirit whereby the soul is regenerated and effectually changed by a real conversion unto God Where-ever the Gospel thus comes in the demonstration of the Spirit and of power producing such an effect as this in the soul it is no longer an hidden Gospel to that soul though such persons do not see clearly all that glory which is revealed by the Gospel though they know but in part and see darkly as through a glass yet the eyes of their understandings are opened and the things which belong to their peace are not hidden from them Secondly But though this be the happiness of some men 2. yet it is demonstrable that the eyes of many are blinded by the God of this world and the Gospel is an hidden Gospel from them for First Many that live under the Gospel are so entirely swallowed up in the affairs of this world that they allow themselves no time to ponder the great concernments of their souls in the world to come and judge you whatever the gifts and knowledge of these men are whether the God of this world hath not blinded their eyes If it were not so it were impossible that ever they should thus wast the most precious opportunities of salvation upon which their everlasting well-being depends and spend time at the door of eternity about trifles which so little concern them Yet this is the case of the greatest number that go under the Christian name The earth hath opened her mouth and swallowed up their time thoughts studies and strength as it did the bodies of Corah and his accomplices The first the freest and upon the matter the whole of their time is devoted to the service of the world for even at that very time when they present their bodies before the Lord in the duties of his worship their hearts are wandering after vanities and going after their covetousness Ezek. 33. 31. Judge whether the God of this world hath blinded these men or no who can see so much beauty in the world but none in Christ and put such an absolute necessity upon the vanities of this world but none upon their own salvation If this be not spiritual blindness what is Secondly The great stilness and quietness of mens consciences under the most rouzing and awakening truths of the Gospel plainly proves that the God of this world hath blinded their eyes For did men see and apprehend the dangerous condition they are in as the word represents it nothing in the world could quiet them but Christ. As soon as mens eyes come to be opened the next enquiry they make is What shall we do to be saved It is not possible that a man should hang over hell see Christ and the hopes of salvation going and the day of patience ending and yet be quiet O it cannot be that conscience should let them be quiet in such a case if it were not blinded and stupified but whilst the God of this world that strong man armed keepeth the house all his goods are in peace Luke 11. 21. If once your eyes were opened by conviction a man may then say Be quiet if you can sit still and let the hopes and seasons of salvation pass quietly away if you can Suppose one should come into the Congregation and whisper but such a word as this in your ear your child is fallen into the fire and is dying since you came from home would it be in the power of all the friends you have to quiet you and make you sit still after such an information much less when a man apprehends his own soul in immediate danger of the everlasting burnings Thirdly The strong confidences and presumptuous hopes men have of salvation whilst they remain in the state of nature and unregeneracy plainly shews their minds to be blinded by the policy of Satan This presumption is one of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 false reasonings by which Satan deludes the understanding as the Apostle calls them Jam. 1. 22. 'T is the cunning Sophistry of the Devil farthered by self-love Prov. 21. 2. Every way of a man is right in his own eyes and partly by self-ignorance Rev. 3. 17. Thou saidst I am rich and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art poor You have no fears no doubts no case to propound that concerns your future state and why so but because you have no sight your consciences are quieted because your eyes are blinded Fourthly The trifling of men with the duties of Religion plainly discovers the blinding power of Satan upon their minds and understandings else they would never play and dally with the serious and solemn ordinances of God at that rate they do if their eyes were once opened they would be in earnest in prayer and apply themselves with the closest attention of mind in hearing the Gospel There are two sorts of thoughts about any subject of meditation Some think at a distance and others think close to the subject Never do the thoughts of men come so close to Christ to heaven and to hell as they do immediately upon their illumination When Johns Ministry enlightned the peoples minds it is said Mat. 11. 12. From the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Surely these men were more