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A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

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may hold firm You may be free chose it rather not to stand to the courtesie of any thing about you nor of any Man whether enemy or friend for the tenure of your happiness lay it higher and surer and if you be wise provide such a peace as will remain untouch'd in the hottest flame such a light as will shine in the deepest dungeon and such a life as is safe even in death it self that life that is hid with Christ in God But if in other sufferings even the worst and saddest the Believer is still a happy Man then more especially in those that are the best kind suffering for righteousness not only do they not detract from his happiness but 2dly They concur and give accession to it he is happy even by so suffering As will appear from the following considerations 1. 'T is the happiness of a Christian until he attain perfection to be advancing towards it to be daily resining from sin and growing richer and stronger in the graces that make up a Christian a new creature to attain a higher degree of patience and meekness and humility to have the heart more weaned from the Earth and fixed on Heaven now as other afflictions of the Saints do help them in those their sufferings for righteousness the unrighteous and injurious dealing of the World with them have a particular fitness for this purpose those trials that come immediately from God's own hand seem to bind to a patient and humble compliance with more authority and I may say necessity There is no plea no place for so much as a word unless it be directly and expresly against the Lord's own dealing but unjust suffering at the hands of Men requires that respect unto God without whose hand they cannot move that for his sake and for reverence and love to him a Christian can go through those with that mild evenness of Spirit that overcomes even in suffering And there is nothing outward more fit to perswade a Man to give up with the World and its Friendship than to feel much of its enmity and malice and that directly acting it self against Religion making that the very quarrel which is of all things dearest to a Christian and in highest esteem with him If the World should caress them and smile on them they might be ready to forget their home or at least to abate in the frequent thoughts and fervent desires of it and turn into some familiarity with the World and favourable thoughts of it and thus let out somwhat of their hearts after it and thus grace would grow faint by the diversion and calling forth of the Spirits as in Summer in the hottest and fairest weather 't is with the body 'T is a confirm'd observation by the experience of all Ages that when the Church flourish'd most in outward peace and wealth it abated most of its spiritual lustre which is its genuine and true beauty and when it seem'd most miserable by persecutions and sufferings 't was most happy in sincerity and zeal and vigour of grace when the Moon shines brightest towards the Earth 't is dark Heavenwards and on the contrary when it appears not is nearest the Sun and clear towards Heaven 2dly Happy in acting and evidencing by those sufferings for God their love to him Love delights in difficulties and grows in them the more a Christian suffers for Christ the more he loves Christ accounts him the dearer and the more he loves him still the more can he suffer for him 3dly Happy as in testifying love to him and glorifying him so in conformity with him which is loves ambition affects likeness and harmony at any rate a Believer would readily take it as an affront that the World should be kind to him that was so harsh and cruel to his beloved Lord and Master Canst thou expect or wouldst thou wish smooth language from that World that revil'd thy Jesus that called him Beelzebub couldst thou own and accept friendship at its hands that buffetted him and shed his blood or art thou rather most willing to share with him and of S. Paul's mind God forbid that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of Christ whereby the World is crucified to me and I unto the World 4. The rich supplies of spiritual comfort and joy that in those times of suffering are usual that as sufferings for Christ do abound consolations in him abound much more as the Apostle testifies God speaking most peace to the Soul when the World speaks most War and enmity against it and this compenses abundantly when the Christian lays the greatest sufferings Men can inflict in the one ballance and the least glances of God's countenance in the other it says 't is worth all the enduring of these to enjoy this says with David let them curse but bless thou let them frown but smile thou And thus he usually doth refreshes such as are prisoners for him with visits that they would buy again with the hardest restraint and debaring of nearest friends The World cannot but misjudge the state of suffering Christians it sees their Crosses but not their anointings Was not St. Stephen think you in a happy posture even in his enemies hands was he afraid of the Showre of Stones coming about his ears that saw the Heavens opened and Jesus standing on the Father's right hand so little troubled with the stoning him that as the Text hath it in the midst of them he fell a sleep 5. If those sufferings be so small weigh'd down even with present comforts and so the Christian happy in them in that regard how much more doth the weight of Glory surpass that follows these sufferings they are not worthy to come in comparison they are as nothing to that glory that shall be revealed in the Apostle's Arithmetick 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when I have cast up the sum of the sufferings of this present time this instant this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they amount to just nothing in respect of that glory Now these sufferings happy because the way to this happiness and pledges of it and if any thing do they raise the very degree of it however 't is an exceeding excellent weight of glory the Hebrew word that signifies glory signifies weight yet the glories that are here are all too light except in weight of cares and sorrows that attend them but that hath the weight of compleat blessedness speak not of all the sufferings nor of all the prosperities of this poor life nor of any thing in it as worthy of a thought when that glory is named yea let not this life be called life when we mention that other life that our Lord by his death hath purchas'd for us Be not afraid of their terrour No time nor place in the World so favourable to Religion that it is not still needful to arm a Christian mind against the outward oppositions and discouragements he shall meet with all
that was posed lovest thou me Lord I appeal to thine own eye who seest my heart Lord thou knowest that I love thee at least I desire to love thee and to desire thee and that is love Willingly would I do thee more sutable service and honour thy name more and do desire more Grace for this that thou maist have more Glory and intreat the light of thy Countenance for this end that by seeing it my heart may be more weaned from the World and knit unto thy self thus it answers touching its inward frame and the work of holiness by the Spirit of holiness dwelling in it But to answer Justice touching the point of guilt it flies to the blood fetches all its answer thence turns over the matter upon it and answers for it for it doth speak and speaks better things than the blood of Abel speaks full payment of all that can be exacted from the sinner and that 's a sufficient answer The Conscience is then in this point once made speechless driven to a nonplus in it self hath from it self no answer to make then turns about to Christ and finds what to say Lord there is indeed in me nothing but guiltiness I have deserved death but I have fled into the City of refuge thou hast appointed there I resolve to abide to live and die there if Justice pursue me it shall send me there I take sanctuary in Jesus my arrest laid upon me will light upon him and he hath wherewithal to answer it He can straightway declare he hath pay'd all and can make it good hath the acquittance to shew yea his own liberty is a real sign of it he was in Prison and is let free which tells all is satisfied Therefore the answer here rises out of the resurrection of Iesus Christ. And in this very thing lies our peace and way and all our happiness Oh! its worth your time and pains to try your interest in this it is the only thing worthy your highest diligence But the most are out of their wits running like a number of distracted Persons and still in a deal of business but to what end they know not You are unwilling to be deceived in those things that at their best and surest do but deceive you when all is done But content to be deceived in that your great concernment You are your own deceivers in it gladly gull'd with shadows of faith and repentance false touches of sorrow and and false of Joy and are not careful to have your Souls really unbottom'd from themselves and built upon Christ to have him your treasure your righteousness your all and to have him your answer unto God your Father But if you will yet be advised let go all to lay hold on him lay your Souls on him and leave him not he is a tried Foundation Stone and he that trusts on him shall not be confounded Verse 22. 22. Who is gone into Heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject to him THIS is added on purpose to shew us further what he is how high and glorious a Saviour we have Here four points or steps of the Exaltment of Christ. 1. Resurrection from the Dead 2. Ascension into Heaven 3. Sitting at the right Hand of God 4. In that Posture his Royal Authority over the Angels The particulars clear in themselves Of the sitting at the right Hand of God you are not ignorant that it is a borrowed Expression drawn from Earth to Heaven to bring down some Notion of Heaven to us to signifie to us in our Language suitably to our Customs the Supream Dignity of Jesus Christ God and Man the Mediator of the New Covenant his matchless nearness unto his Father and the Sovereignty given him over Heaven and Earth And that of the subjection of Angels is but a more particular specifying of that his Dignity and Power as enthron'd at the Father's right Hand they being the most elevated and glorious Creatures so his Authority over all the World implyed in that subjection of the highest and noblest part of it His Victory and Triumph over the Angels of Darkness is an evidence of his Invincible Power and Greatness and matter of Comfort to his Saints but this here is his Supremacy over the glorious Elect Angels That there is amongst them Priority we find that there is a comely order in their differences cannot be doubted but to marshal their Degrees and Stations above is a point not only of vain fruitless Curiosity but of presumptuous intrusion whether these are names of their different particular Dignities or only different names of their general Excellency and Power as I think it cannot be certainly well determin'd so it imports us not to determine only this we know and are particularly taught from this place that whatsoever is their common Dignity both in names and differences they are all subject to our glorious Head Christ. What Confirmation they have in their Estate by him though piously asserted by Divines is not so infallibly clear from the alledged Scriptures which may bear another sense But this is certain that he is their King and they acknowledge him so and do incessantly admire and adore him they rejoyce in his glory and in the glory and happiness of Mankind through him they yield him most cheerful obedience and serve him readily in the good of his Church and each particular Believer as he deputes and imploys them Which is the thing here intended having in it these two 1 His Dignity above them 2. His Authority over them 1. Dignity that even that Nature which he stoopt below them to take on he hath carried up and raised it above them the very Earth the flesh of Man exalted in his Person above all those heavenly Spirits who are of so excellent and pure a Being in their Nature and from the beginning of the World cloathed with so transcendent Glory that a parcel of Clay is made so bright and set so high to outshine these bright flaming Spirits these Stars of the Morning that flesh being united to the Fountain of Light the blessed Deity in the Person of the Son In coming to fetch and put on this Garment he made himself lower than the Angels but carrying it with him at his return to his eternal Throne and sitting down with it there it is high above them as the Apostle teaches excellently and amply Heb. 1. 2. To which of them said he sit on my right Hand This they look upon with perpetual Wonder but not with envy nor repining no amongst all their eyes no such eye to be found yea they rejoyce in the infinite Wisdom of God in this Design and his infinite Love to poor lost Mankind its wonderful indeed to to see him filling the room of their fallen Brethren with new guests from Earth yea such as are born Heirs of Hell not only thus sinful Man raised to a participance of Glory with them
a spiritual trial or tentation my grace sufficient for thee And where the Lord doth thus 't is certainly better for the time than the other would be Observe here his cars are to the Righteous but his eyes are on them too they have not so his ear as blindly to give them what they ask whether it be fit or no but his eye is on them to see and consider their estate and to know better than themselves what is best and accordingly to answer This is no prejudice but a great Priviledge and Happiness of his Children that they have a Father that knows what is fit for them and with-holds no good from them And this commutation and exchange of our requests a Christian observing may usually find out the particular answer of their Prayers and if sometimes they do not than not to subtilize and amuse themselves so much in that but rather to keep on to the exercise knowing as the Apostle speaks in another case this for a certain that their labour shall not be in vain in the Lord and as the Prophet hath it he hath not said unto the House of Jacob seek ye me in vain 3. Only this we should always remember not to set bounds and limits to the Lord in point of time to set him a day that thou wilt attend so long and no longer how patiently will some men bestow long attendance on others where they expect some very poor good or courtesie at their hands but we are very brisk and hasty with him who never delays us but for our good to ripen those Mercies for us that we as foolish Children would pluck while they are green and have neither that sweetness and goodness in them which they shall have in his time All his works are done in their season were there nothing to check our impatiences but his Greatness and the greatness of those things we ask for and our own unworthiness these might curb them and perswade us how reasonable it is that we wait He is a King well worth waiting on and there is in the very waiting on him an honour and happiness far above us and the things we seek are great forgiveness of Sins evidence of Sonship and Heirship Heirship of a Kingdom and we condemned Rebels born Heirs of the bottomless Pit and shall such as we be in such haste with such a Lord in so great requests but the attendance that this reason enforces is sweetned by the consideration of his Wisdom and Love that he hath foreseen and chosen the very hour for each mercy fit for us and will not slip it a moment Never any yet repented their waiting but found it fully compens'd with the opportune answer in such a time as then they are forc'd to confess was the only best I waited patiently says the Psalmist in waiting I waited but it was all well bestowed he inclin'd to me and heard my cry brought me up c. and then after falls into admiration of the Lord's method his wonderful workings and thoughts to us-ward while I was waiting and saw nothing thy thoughts were towards and for me and thou didst then work when thy goodness was most remarkable and wonderful When thou art in great affliction outward or inward thou thinkest it may be he regards thee not yea but he doth Thou art his Gold he knows the time of refining thee and then taking thee out of the Furnace he is verst and skillful in that work Thou sayest I have cried long for power against sin and for some evidence of pardon and find no answer to either yet leave him not he never yet cast away any that sought him and staid by him and resolv'd whatsoever came on 't to lie at his footstool and to wait were it all their life time for a good word or a good look from him And they chuse well that make that their great desire and expectation for one of his good words or looks will make them up and make them happy for ever and 't is he is Truth they are sure not to miss of it blessed are all they that wait for him And thou that sav'st thou canst not find pardon of sin and power against it yet consider whence are those desires of both that thou once didst not care for why doth thou hate that sin which thou didst love and art troubled and burden'd with the guilt of it under which thou wentest so easily and didst not feel before are not these something of his own work yes sure and know he will not leave it unfinished nor forsake the work of his hands his eye may be on thee tho thou seest him not and his ear open to thy cry tho for the present he speaks not to thee as thou desirest 'T is not said that his Children always see and hear him sensibly but yet when they do not he is beholding them and hearing them graciously and will shew himself to them and answer them seasonably Psal. 22. 2. I cry in the day time and thou hearest not c. Yet will not he entertain hard thoughts of God nor conclude against him thou art holy v. 3. where by Holiness is meant his faithfulness I conceive to his own as follows that he inhabites the praises of Israel to wit for the Favours he hath shewed his people as v. 4. Our Fathers trusted in thee Let the Lord's open ear perswade us to make much use of it be much in this sweet and fruitful exercise of Prayer together and apart in the sense of these three Considerations mentioned above The Duty the Dignity and the Utility of Prayer 'T is due to the Lord to be worship'd and acknowledg'd thus as the Fountain of Good How will men crouch and bow one to another upon small requests and he only neglected by the most from whom all have all Life and Breath and all Things as the Apostle speaks in his Sermon Acts 17. 25. 2. And then the Dignity of this to be admitted into so near converse with the highest Majesty were there nothing to follow no answer at all Prayer pays it self in the Excellency of its Nature and the sweetness that the Soul finds in it poor wretched Man to be admitted into Heaven while he is on Earth and there to come and speak his mind freely to the Lord of Heaven and Earth as his Friend as his Father to empty all his Complaints into his Bosom to refresh his Soul in his God wearied with the Follies and Miseries of the World Where any thing of his love this is a priviledge of highest sweetness for they that love find much delight to discourse together and count all hours short and think the day runs too fast that is so spent and they that are much in this exercise the Lord doth impart his secrets much to them 3. And the most profitable exercise no lost time as prophane hearts judge it but only gain'd all blessings attend this work the richest traffick
fruitful 2. By this Spirit it s said here he preacht not only did he so in the Days of his abode on Earth but in all times both before and after never left his Church altogether destitute of saving light which he dispenced himself and conveyed by the hands of his Servants therefore it s said he preacht that this be no excuse for times after he is ascended into Heaven no nor for times before he descended to the Earth in humane flesh though he preached not then nor does now in his flesh yet by his Spirit he then preacht and still doth so according to what was chief in him he was still present with his Church and preaching in it and is so to the end of the World This his infinite Spirit being every where yet 't is said here by it he went and preached signifying the remarkable clearness of his Administration that way as when he appears eminently in any work of his own or taking notice of our works God is said to come down so to those Cities Gen. 11. Let us go down So Exod. 3. 8. Thus here so clearly did he admonish them by Noah coming as it were himself on purpose to declare his Mind to them And this word I conceive is the rather used to shew what equality there is in this He came indeed visibly and dwelt amongst Men when he became flesh yet before that he visited by his Spirit he went by that and preached And so in after times himself being ascended and not having come visibly in his flesh to all but to the Jews only yet in the preaching of the Apostles to the Gentiles as the great Apostle says of him in this expression Eph. 2. 17. He came and preached to you which were asar off and this he continues to do in the ministry of his word and therefore says he he that despiseth you despiseth me c. Were this considered it could not but procure far more respect to the word and more acceptance of it Would you think that in his word Christ speaks by his eternal Spirit yea he comes and preaches addresses himself particularly to you in it could you slight him thus and turn him off with daily refusals or delays at least Think it is too long you have so unworthily used so great a Lord that brings unto you so great Salvation that came once in so wonderful a way to work that Salvation for us in his flesh and is still coming to offer it unto us by his Spirit does himself preach to us tells us what he undertook on our behalf and how he hath performed all and now nothing rests but that we receive him and believe on him and all is ours But alas from the most the return is that we have here disobedience Sometimes disobedient Two things in the hearers by which they are charactared their present condition in the time the Apostle was speaking of them and this by-past disposition when the Spirit of Christ was preaching to them this latter went first in time and was the cause of the other Therefore of it first If you look to their visible subordinate Preacher a holy Man and an able and diligent Preacher of righteousness both in his Doctrine and in the tract of his life which is the powerfullest preaching it seems strange that he prevailed so little But much more if we look higher this hight as the Apostle points to us to look to that Almighty Spirit of Christ that preacht to them and yet they were disobedient The word is they were not perswaded and it signifies both unbelief and disobedience and that very fitly unbelief being in it self the grand disobedience the mind not yielding to Divine Truth and so the spring of all disobedience in affection and action And this root of bitterness this unbelief is deep ●a●●ened in our natural hearts and without a change in them a taking them to pieces they cannot be good it is as a Tree firm rooted cannot be pluckt up without loosening the ground round about it and this accursed root brings forth fruit unto death because the Word is not believed the threats of the Law and promises of the Gospel therefore Men cleave unto their sins and speak peace unto themselves while they are under the Curse It may se●m very strange that the Gospel is so fruitless amongst us yea that neither word nor rod both preaching aloud to us the Doctrine of Humiliation and Repentance yet perswades any Man to return or so much to turn inward and question himself to say what have I done But thus it will be till the Spirit be poured from on high to open and soften hearts It is to be desired as much wanting in the Ministery of the Word but were it there that would not serve unless it were by a concurrent work within the Heart meeting the Word and making the impressions of it there for here we find the Spirit went and preacht and yet the Spirits of the Hearers still unbelieving and disobedient it s a combined work of this Spirit in the Preacher and Hearers that makes it successful otherwise it is but shouting in a dead man's ear there must be something within as one said in a like case To the Spirits in Prison That 's now their Posture and because he speaks of them as in that Posture he calls them Spirits for it s their Spirits that are in that Prison As likewise calls them Spirits that the Spirit of Christ preacht to because it is indeed that that the preaching of the Word aims at it hath to do with the Spirits of Men is not content to be at their ear with a sound but works on their Minds and Spirits some way either to believe and receive or to be hardened and sealed up to Judgement by it which is for Rebels If disobedience follow on the preaching of that word the prison follows on that disobed●ence and that Word which they would not be bound by to obedience binds them over to that Prison whence they shall never escape nor be released for ever Take notice of it and know that you are warned you will not receive Salvation offering pressing it self upon you You are every day in that way of disobedience hastening to this perpetual Imprisonment Consider you now sit and hear this Word so did these that are here spoken of they had their time on Earth and much patience used towards them and though not to be swept away by a flood of Waters yet daily carried on by the flood of ●imes 90 Psal. and mortality And how soon you shall be on the other side set into Eternity you know not I beseech you be yet wise hearken to the offers yet made you for in his name I yet once again make a tender of Jesus Christ and Salvation in him to all that will let go their sins to lay hold on him Oh! do not destroy your selves you are in Prison he proclaims you Liberty Christ is still following
hapned unto you 13. But rejoyce in as much as you are partakers of Christ's sufferings that when his Glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy THis fighting li●e when we consider it aright sure we need not be desired not to love it but have need to be strengthned with patience to go through and to fight on with courage and assurance of victory still combating in a higher strength than our own against sin within and troubles without This is the great Scope of this Epistle and the Apostle often interchanges his advices and comforts in reference to these two Against sin he instructs us in the beginning of this Chapter and here again against suffering and both in a like way and us to be armed armed with the same mind that was in Christ against trouble here after the same manner in the mortifying of sin we suffer with him as there he teaches verse 1. of this Chapter in the encountring of a●●liction we suffer with him as here we have it and so the same mind in the same sufferings will bring us to the same issue Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you c. But rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings that when his glory shall be revealed ye likewise may be glad with exceeding joy The words to the end of the chapter contain grounds of encouragement and consolation for the Children of God in sufferings especially in suffering for God These two verses have these two things 1. The clo●s conjuncture of sufferings with the estate of a Christian. 2. The due composure of a Christian towards suffering 1. It s no new and therefore no strange thing that sufferings hot sufferings fiery ones be the Companions of Religion besides the common miseries of humane life there is an accession of troubles and hatreds for that holiness of life to which the Children of God are called It was the Lot of the Church from her wicked Neighbours and in the Church the lot of the most holy and peculiar Servants of God from the prophane multitude Woe 's me my Mother says Ieremy thou hast born me a Man of contentions And of all the Prophets says not our Saviour handling this same argument in his Sermon So persecuted they the prophets that were before you and after tells them what they might look for Behold says he I send you forth as sheep in the midst of Wolves And generally no following of Christ but with his badge and burden somthing to be left our selves left whosoever will be my disciple let him deny himself and what to take take up his Cross and follow me And doth not the Apostle give his Schollars this universal lesson as an infallible truth all that will live Godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution and look in the close of that roll of Believers conquering in suffering what a cluster of sufferings and torture you have Heb. 11. ver 36 37. c. Thus in the Primitive times the tryal and fiery tryal even literally so continued long these wicked Emperours hating the very innocency of Christians and the people though they knew their blameless carriage yet when any evil came would pick this quarrel and still cry Christianos ad Leones Now this if we look to inferiour causes is not strange the malignant ungodly World hating holiness the light yea the very shadow of it and the more the Children of God walk like their Father and their home the more unlike must they of necessity become to the World about them and therefore become the very mark of all their enmities and malice And thus indeed the Godly though the Sons of peace are the improper causes the occasion of much noise and disturbance in the World as their Lord the Prince of peace avows it openly of himself in that sense I came not to send peace but a sword to set a Man at variance with his Father and the Daughter against the Mother c. If a Son in a Family begin to enquire after God and withdraw from their prophane or dead way Oh! what a clamour rises presently Oh! my Son or Daughter or Wife is become a plain fool c. And then all done that may be to quel and vex them and make their life grievous to them The exact holy walking of a Christian condemns really the World about him shews the disorder and foulness of their prophane ways and the Life of Religion set beside dead formality discovers it to be but a carcase and lifeless appearance and for this neither grosly wicked civil nor formal persons can well digest it There is in the life of a Christian a convincing light that shews the deformity of the works of darkness and a piercing heat that scorches the ungodly which stirs and troubles their consciences and this they cannot endure and hence rises in them a contrary fire of wicked hatred and hence the trials the fiery trials of the godly If they could get those precise persons removed out of their way think they then they might have more room and live at more liberty as 't is Revel 11. 10. a carousing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What a dance there about the dead bodies of the two witnesses the people and nations rejoyced and made merry and send gifts one to another because these two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth And from the same hearth I mean the same wickedness of heart in the World are the fires of persecution kindled against the Saints in the World and the bonefires of joy when they are rid of them And as this is an infernal fire of enmity against God t is blown by that Spirit whose Element it is Satan stirs up and blows the coal and raises the hatred of the ungodly against Christians But while he and they in whom he powerfully works are thus working for their vile ends in the persecutions of the Saints he that soveraignly orders all is working in the same his wise and gracious ends and attains them and makes the malice of his enemies serve his ends and undo their own It is true that by the heat of persecution many are fear'd from embracing it such as love themselves and their pre●ent ease and others that seem'd to have embrac't it are driven to let it go and fall from it but yet all well computed Religion is still upon the gaining hand those that reject it or revolt from it are such as have no true Knowledge of it nor share in it nor in that happiness in which it ends but they that are indeed united to Jesus Christ do cleave the closer to him and seek to have their hearts more fastened because of these trials that they are or likely may be put to And in their victorious patience appears the invincible power of Religion where it hath once gained the heart that it cannot be beaten nor burnt out it self is a fire more mighty
Glory cannot endure the ballance is found too light a great Monarch and so many Principalities and Provinces put in one after another ●till no weight yea possibly as a late politick Writer wittily observes of a certain Monarch the more Kingdoms you cast in the scale is still the lighter Men are naturally desirous of Glory and gape after it but they are naturally ignorant of the true nature and place of it they seek it where it is not and as Solomon says of riches set their hearts on that which is not hath no subsistence nor reality But the Glory above is true real Glory and bears weight and so bears aright the name of Glory which in the Hebrew signifies weight and the Apostles Expression seems to allude to that sense speaking of this same Glory to come calls it a far more excellent weight of glory it weighs down all labour and sufferings in the way so far as they are not once worth the speaking of in respect of it it is the hyperbole other Glory is overspoke but this Glory over glorious to be duly spoke exceeds and rises above all that can be spoke of it Eternal Oh! that adds much the glory here such as it is yet were it lasting Men would presume upon some more reason so to affect and think if it stayed with them when they have caught it and they stay'd with it to enjoy it but how soon do they part they pass away and the glory passes away both as smoak● as a vapour our life and all the pomp and magnificence of those that have the greatest outward glory and make the fairest shew it is but a shew a pageant goes thro● the Street and is seen no more But this hath length of days with it Eternal Glory Oh! a thought of that swallows up all the grandeur of the World and the noise of reckoning years and ages had one Man continued from the Creation to the end of the World and in the top of Earthly Dignity and glory admired by all yet at the end everlasting oblivion being the close how nothing were it to Eternal Glory but alas we cannot be brought to believe and deeply take the impression of Eternity and that is our undoing By Iesus Christ. Your portion out of him eternal shame and misery but by him even all Glory and this hath likewise an evidence of the greatness of this glory it can be no small estate that the blood of the Son of God was let out to purchase His. That which he gives and gives as his choice of all to his chosen his Children and if there is any thing here that hath delight or worth in it which he gives in common even to his enemies if such a World and variety of good things for them that hate him Oh! how excellent must those things be he hath reserved for his friends for those he loves and causes to love him As 't is his gift it is indeed himself the beholding and enjoying of himself Now this we cannot conceive Oh! that blessed Day when the Soul shall be full of God shall be satisfy'd and ravisht with full vision should we not admire that such a condition is provided for Man wretched sinful Man Lord what is Man c. and for me as wretched as any that are left and fallen short of this Glory a base worm taken out of the mire and washt in the Blood of Christ and within a while set to shine in Glory without sin Oh! the wonder of this how would it stir to praise when we think of such an one there who will bring us up in the way to this Crown how will this hope sweeten the short sufferings of this Life and Death it self which is otherwise the bitterest in it self most of all sweetned by this as being nearest it and setting us unto it what though thou art poor and diseased and despised here Oh! consider what is there how worthy the affection worthy the earnest eye look of an heir of this Glory what can he either desire or fear whose heart is thus deeply fixed Who would refuse this other clause to suffer a while a little while any thing outward inward he thinks fit how soon shall all this be overpast and then overpayed in the very entry the beginning of this Glory that shall never end Verse 11. To him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever Amen THEY know little of their own wants and emptiness that are not much in Prayer and they know little of the greatness and goodness of God that are not much in praises The humble Christian hath a heart in some measure fram'd to both he hath within him the best School Master that teaches him how to pray and how to praise and makes him delight in the exercise of them both The Apostle having added Prayer to his Doctrine adds here you see praise to his Prayer To him be Glory and Dominion for ever The living praises of God spring from much holy affection and that affection springs from a Divine Light in the Understanding so says the Psalmist sing ye praises with understanding or you that have understanding Psal. 47. It is a spiritual Knowledge of God that sets the Soul in tune for his praises and therefore the most can bear no part in this Song they mistune it quite through their ignorance of God and unacquain ance with him Praise is unseemly in the mouth of fools they spoil and mistune it Obs. 1. The thing ascribed 2. The term or endurance of it The former in two words Glory and Power Glory the shining forth of his Dignity the Knowledge and acknowledgment of it by his Creatures that his excellency may be confest and praised his name exalted that service and homage may be done to him which all adds nothing to him for how can that be but as it is the duty 't is the happiness of his creature to render it such as he hath sitted for that all the creatures indeed declare and spea● him glorious the Heaven's sound it forth and the Earth and ●ea resounds and ●cchoes it back but his reasonable Creature hath he peculiarly framed both to take notice of Glory in all the rest and to return it from and for all the rest in a more express and lively way And in this lower World 't is Man alone that is made capable of observing the Glory of God and offering him praises he expresses it well that calls Man the World's High-Priest all the creatures bring their oblations of praise to him to offer up for them and for himself for whose use and comfort they are made the Light and Motion of the Heaven's and all the variety of creatures below them speak this to Man He that made us and you and made us for you is great and wise and worthy to be praised and you are better able to say this than we therefore praise him on our behalf and your own Oh! he is great and mighty
IMPRIMATUR Novemb. 25. 1693. Guil. Lancaster R. P. D. Henrico Epis. Lond. à Sacris Domesticis A Practical COMMENTARY UPON THE First Epistle General of St. Peter VOL. II. Containing the Third Fourth and Fifth CHAPTERS By the Most Reverend ROBERT LEIGHTON D. D. Some-time Archbishop of Glasgow Published after his death at the request of his Friends LONDON Printed by B. G. for Sam. Keble at the Great Turks-head in Fleet-street over-against Felter-lane MDCXCIV TO THE Christian Reader THE following Discourses of our most Reverend Author contain his judicious and pious Thoughts upon the Third Chapter to the end of the First Epistle of St. Peter which together with the Commentary on the First and Second Chapters published the last year make a compleat and useful Explication of that whole Epistle They might have been all of one Impression and so have come into thy hands at the same time and in one Volume had not some prudent considerations oblig'd us to change the Printer However we have taken care so to print this Second Part that it may conveniently be bound up with the first and there is little loss by the delay but that of time which perhaps is not so much neither but that it may with more profit to thee be happily redeemed I know that some do not relish the phrase and contexture of such Discourses but I am on the other hand assured by others very able and competent judges of such performances that they are highly valuable in their whole scope and tendency for they think that they not only contain the purity of Doctrine according to Scripture but also the life and spirit of Christian Morals and that they happily cement together and bear in upon the heart right notions of God and Religion with solid Piety In a word that as they are written by a Primitive Spirit and in a plain Stile so they may through Gods grace sow the Seeds of Primitive Devotion which is too much worn out in this Age the seat whereof is more in the Heart than in the Head If they serve in any measure those great ends our labour is highly rewarded Let such then as shall reap this benefit by these well designed Papers be pleased to know that it is not so much to me as to the Pious Zeal and Care of our Great and now Blessed Authors surviving Relations that they owe this Happy Enjoyment whose Virtue and Piety afford matter enough for a large Preface if their Modesty did not so awfully restrain my too forward inclinations that I must content my self to say that they now live like him whom they tenderly loved whilst he was amongst them and that as he did so they make it their business to do good without letting the World know of it It has been at their charge and pressing desire that all those papers that are already printed have been copied out prepared for the press and published They neither proposed to themselves nor expect any other advantage but thy Edification and therein the glory of God rich returns indeed and which nothing can rob them of but meerly thy inproficiency and if that happen which God forbid the loss shall be more thine than theirs I was not willing that such good ends should be obstructed by my declining any part of the trouble that fell to my share on the contrary I considered it a Duty I owed first to God and then to the memory of the excellent Author whose divine converse and wonderful example gave me early and powerful Resolutions to dedicate my self to God and the Service of his Church In my performance I have done my best tho short of what I wished to serve thee there remains in our Hands some brief but lively Discourses upon the Epistle to the Ephesians upon the Decalogue the Creed and the Lord's Prayer which possibly may be made publick in a convenient time When this is done I think we have ended all we intend to publish at present Let us therefore set about the reformation of our Lives in the use of these means depending upon God for the success and that he by his free Grace and good Spirit may enable thee and me by this and all other helps which this Age affords to make greater and greater Advances towards Heaven and so to finish our Course with Ioy is and shall be the hearty Prayer of Thy Servant in the Lord I. FALL York March 13 th 1694. Books written by the most Reverend Father in God Robert Leighton D. D. sometimes Archbishop of Glasgow Printed for and are to be Sold by Sam. Keble at the Great Turk's-Head in Fleet-street EIghteen Sermons Printed in 1691 8 o. A Practical Commentary upon the First and Second Chapters of St. Peter by the most Reverend Robert Leighton D. D. sometime Archbishop of Glasgow 1693. 4 o. R mi. D. D. Roberti Leightoni Praelectiones Theologicae in Auditorio publico Academiae Edinburgenae dum Professoris primarii munere ibi fungeretur habitae Vna cum Paraenesibus in Comitiis Academicis ad gradus Magistralis in artibus Candidatos Quibus adjiciuntur Meditationes Ethico Criticae in Psalmos IV. XXXII CXXX 1693. 4 o. A Practical Commentary upon the First Epistle General of St. Peter Vol. II. containing the Third Fourth and Fifth Chapters by the most Reverend Robert Leighton D D. sometime Archbishop of Glasgow 1694. 4 o. ERRATA PAg 16. on the margin for nulla read multa p. 22. l. 22. far very read very far p. 51. l 5. mind read mud p. 61. l. 10. be read the. p. 81. l. 2. re read respect p. 211. l. 1. not be read not to be p. 219. l. 25. caties read Calamities p. 243. l. 16. point it thus we were all sealed to God in Baptism p. 245. l. 1. yea read ye p. 254. l. 20. dele where he reigns p. 261. l. 31. bear read bore p. 277. l. 10. he read the ib. penult it hatest read hatest it p. 281. l. 29. point it thus not to equal that which it were so reasonable c. p. 262 l. 32. their read the. p. 357. l. 21. before you read before you p. 416. l. 14. of the way teaching read the way of teaching p. 441. l. 30 some read foam p. 448. l. 15. turn read turned 1 Ep. St. Peter Chap. III. Ver. 1. Likewise ye Wives be in subjection to your own Husbands that if any one obey not the word they also without the word may be won by the Conversation of the Wives THE Tabernacle of the Sun Psal. 19 is set high in the Heavens but 't is that it may have influence below upon the Earth And the Word of God that is spoke of there immediately after as being many wayes like it holds resemblance in this particular 't is a sublime heavenly Light and yet descends in its use to the Lives of Men in the variety of their Stations to warm and to enlighten to regulate their affections and actions in whatsoever course of
in Heaven it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven But alas where is ours The greatest part of Hearts say nothing and others with such wavering and such a jarring harsh noise being out of tune earthly too low set that they spoil all and disappoint the Answers Were the Censer fill'd with those united Prayers Heaven-wards it would be fill'd with Fire Earth-wards against the Enemies of the Church And in your private Society seek unanimously your own and each anothers Spiritual Good not only agreeing in your affairs and civil converse but having one heart and mind as Christians to eat and drink together if no more is such Society as Beasts may have to do these in the excess to guzzle and drink intemperately together is a Society wo●se than that of Beasts and below them to discourse together of civil business is to converse as men but the peculiar converse of Christians in that notion as born again to Immortality an unfading Inheritance above is to further one another towards that to put one another in mind of Heaven and things that are Heavenly And 't is strange that men that profess to be Christians when they meet either fill one anothers ears with Lies and prophane Speeches or with Vanities and Trifles or at the best with the Affairs of Earth and not a word of those things that should most possess the Heart and where the minds should be most set but are ready to reproach and taunt any such thing in others What are you asham'd of Christ and R●ligion Why do you profess it then Is there such a thing think ye as Communion of Saints if not why say you believe it 'T is a Truth think of it as you will the Publick Ministry will profit little any where where a People or some part of them are not thus one and do not live together as of one mind and use diligently all due means of edifying one another in their holy Faith How much of the primitive Christians praise and profit is involv'd in the word they were together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with one accord with one mind and so they grew the Lord added to the Church Consider 1. How the Wicked are one in their ungodly Designs and Practices the Scales of Leviathan as Luther expresses are linkt together shall not the Lord's Followers be one in him They unite to undermine the Peace of the Church shall not the Godly joyn their Prayers to countermine them 2. There is in the Heart of all the Saints one Spirit how can they be but one since they have the same purpose and journey tend to the same home and why shall they not walk together in that way When they shall arrive there they shall be fully one and of one mind not a jar nor difference all their Harps perfectly in tune to that one new Song Having Compassion This testifies that 't is not a bare speculative agreement of opinions that is the badge of Christian Unity for this may accidentally be where there is no further Union but that they are themselves one have one life in that they feel how it is one with another there is a living sympathy amongst them as making up one Body animated with one Spirit for that 's the reason why the Members of the Body have that mutual feeling even the remotest and distantest and the most excellent with the meanest this the Apostle urges at large Rom. 12. 4. and 1 Cor. 12. And this lively Sense is in every living Member of the Body of Christ towards the whole and towards each other particular part This makes a Christian rejoyce in the welfare and good of another as if it were his own and feel their griefs and distresses as if himself were really sharer in them for the word comprehends all feeling together feeling of j●y as well as of grief Heb. 13. 3. 1 Cor. 12. 26. And always where there is most of Grace and of the Spirit of Jesus Christ there is most of this Sympathy The Apostle St. Paul as he was eminent in all Grace had a large Portion of this 2 Cor. 11. 29. And if this ought to be in reference to their outward condition much more in spiritual things rejoycing at the increases and flourishing of Grace in others That base envy that dwells in the hearts of rotten Hypocrites that would have all ingross'd to themsel●es argues that they move not further than the compass of self that the pure love of God and the sincere love of their Brethren flowing from it is not in them but when the heart can unfeigne●ly rejoyce in the Lords bounty to others and the lustre of Grace in others far out-shining their own truly 't is an evidence that what Grace such a one hath is upright and good and that the law of Love is engraven in their hearts And where that is there will be likewise on the otherside a compassionate tender sense of the infirmities and frailties of their Brethren Whereas some accou●t it a sign of much advancement and spiritual proficiency to be able to sit upon the qualifications and actions of oth●rs and to lavish out severe censures round about them to sentence one weak and of poor abilities and another proud and lofty and a third covetous c. And thus to go on in a Censor-like-magisterial strain it were truly an evidence of more Grace not to get upon the Bench to judge them but sit down rather and mourn for them when they are manifestly and rea●ly faulty and for their ordinary infirmi●ies to consider and bear them These are the characters we find in the Scriptures of stronger Christians Rom. 15. 1. Gal. 6. 1. This holy and humble sympathy argues indeed a strong Christian and nothing truly as one says shews a spiritual Man so much as the dealing with another Mans sin far will he be from the ordinary way of insulting and trampling upon the weak or using rigour and bitterness even against some gross falls of a Christian but will rather vent his compassion in tears than his passion in fiery raylings will bewail the frailty of Man and or dangerous condition in this Life amidst so many snares and tentations and such strong and subtle enemies 2dly As this sympathy works to particular Christians in their several conditions so by the same reason it acts and acts more eminently towards the Church and the publick Affairs that concern its good And this is it that we find hath breath'd forth from the hearts of the Saints in former times in so many pathetical complaints and Prayers for Sion Thus David in his saddest times when he might seem most dispensable to forget other things and be wholly taken up with lamenting his own fall Psal. 51. yet even there he leaves not out the Church ver 17. in thy good pleasure do good to Zion And his heart broken all to pieces yet the very pieces cry no less for the building of
unto God looking upon misery as a sufficient incentive of pity and mercy without the ingredient of any other consideration 'T is a pure vulgar piece of goodness to be helpful and bountiful to Friends or to such as are within appearance of requital 't is a trading kind of Commerce that but pity and bounty that needs no inducements but the meeting of a fit Object to work on where it can expect nothing save only the priviledge of doing good which in it self is so sweet is God-like indeed who is rich in bounty without any necessity yea or possibility of return from us for we have neither any thing to confer upon him nor hath he need of receiving any thing who is the spring of Goodness and of Being And that we may the better understand him in this he is pleas'd to express this merciful nature in our notion and language by bowels of mercy and pity and the stirring and sounding of them and Ps. 103. The pity of a Father and Is. 49. of a Mother nothing tender and significant enough to express his compassions Hence our Redemptions Is 63. 9. hence all our hopes of Happiness The gracious Lord saw his poor Creatures undone by sin and no power in Heaven nor in Earth able to rescue but his own alone therefore his pity was moved and his hand answers his heart his own arm brought Salvation he sent the Deliverer out of Sion to turn away iniquity from Iacob And in all exigences of his Children he is overcome with their Complaints cannot hold out against their moanings he may as Ioseph seem strange for a while but cannot act that strangeness long his heart moves and sounds to theirs gives the Eccho to their Griess and Groans as they say of two strings that are perfect Unisons touch the one the other also sounds Ier. 31. 19. Oh the unspeakable priviledge to have him for our Father who is the Father of Mercies and Compassions and those not barren fruitless pityings for he is withal the God of all consolations do not think that he can shut out a bleeding Soul that comes to him and refuse to take and to bind up and heal a broken heart that offers it self to him puts it self into his hand and intreats his help doth he require pity of us and doth he give it to us and is it not infinitely more in himself all that is in Angels and Men is but an insensible drop to that Ocean Let us then consider both that we are oblig'd to pity especially to our Christian Brethren and to use all means for their help within our reach to have bowels stirr'd with the reports of such bloodsheds and cruelties as come to our ears and to bestir our selves according to our Places and Power for them but sure all are to move this one way for their help to run to the Throne of Grace if your bowels sound for your Brethren let them sound that way for them to represent their estate to him that hath highest both pity and power for he expects to be rememoranced by us he put that office upon his People to be his Recorders for Zion and they are Traytors to it that neglect the discharge of that place Courteous The former relates to the Afflictions of others this to our whole carriage with them in any condition and yet there is a particular regard of it in communicating good supplying their wants or com●orting them that are distress'd that it be not done or rather I may say undone in doing with such supercilious roughness venting either in looks or words or any way that sowrs it and destroys the very being of a Benefit and turns it rather into an injury and generally the whole Conversation of Men is made unpleasant by cynical harshness and disdain This the Apostle recommends is contrary to that Evil not only in the Superfice and outward Behaviour No Religion doth not prescribe nor is satisfied with such courtesie as goes no deeper than words and gestures which sometimes is most contrary to that singl●ness Religion owns these are the upper Garments of Malice siluting him aloud in the Morning whom they are undermining all the day and sometimes tho' more innocent yet it may be troublesome meerly by the vain affectation and excess of it and even this becomes not a wise Man much less a Christian an over study or acting of that is a token of emptiness and is below a solid mind though they know such things and could outdo the studiers of it yet they as it indeeds deserves do despise it Nor is it that graver and wiser way of external plausible Deportment that answers fully this Word 't is the outer half indeed but the thing is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a radical sweetness in the Temper of the Mind that spreads it self into a Man's Words and Actions and this n●t meerly natural a gentle kind disposition which is indeed a natural advantage that some have but this is spiritual from a new Nature descended from Heaven and so in its Original and Nature far excels the other supplies it where it is not in Nature and doth not only increase it where it is but elevates it above it self renews it and sets a 〈◊〉 excellent stamp upon it Religion is in this mistaken sometimes in that men think it imprints an unkindly roughness and austerity upon the mind and carriage indeed it bars and banishes all vanity and lightness and all compliance and easie partaking with sin Religion strains and quite breaks that point of false and injurious courtesie to suffer thy Brother's Soul to run hazard of perishing and to share of his guiltiness by not admonishing him after that seasonable and prudent and gentle manner for that indeed would be studied that becomes thee as a Christian and that particular re●●●ctive manner that becomes thy Station These things rightly qualifying it it doth no wrong to good manners and the courtesie here enjoyn'd but is truly a part of it by due admonishments and reproofs to seek to recla●● a Sinner 't were worst unkindness not to do 't thou shalt not hate thy Brother c. But that which is true lovingness of heart and carriage Religion doth not only no way prejudice but you see requires it in the Rule and where it is wrought in the Heart works and causes it there fetches out that crookedness and harshness that is otherwise invincible in some humours Isa. 11. Makes the Wolf dwell with the Lamb. This Christians should study and belie the prejudices of the World that they take up against the Power of Godlinefs to be inwardly so Minded and of such outward Behaviour as becomes that Spirit of Grace that dwells in them to endeavour to gain those that are without by their kind obliging Conversation In some copies 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 humble and indeed as this is excellent in it self and a chief character of a Christian it agrees well with all these
into nor is there any inward moth to corrupt them an inheritance that tho' the whole World be turned upside down is in no hazard of a touch of damage a Kingdom that not only cannot sall but cannot be shaken Oh! be wise and consider your latter end and whatsoever you do look after this blessed inheritance seek to have the right to it in Jesus Christ and the Evidences and Seals of it from his Spirit and if it be so with you your Hearts will be upon it and your lives will be like it Verse 10. 10. For he that will love life and see good days let him refrain his Tongue from Evil and his Lips that they speak no guile THe rich bounty of God diffuses it self throughout the World upon all yet there is a select number that hath peculiar blessings of his right hand that the rest of the World share not in and even to common blessings they are differenced by a peculiar title to them and sweetness in them their blessings are so indeed and entirely so outside and inside and more within than they appear without the Lord himself is their portion and they are his This is their blessedness which in a low estate they can challenge and outvie all the painted prosperity of the World Some kind of blessings do abundantly run over upon others but the Cup of blessings it belongs unto the Godly by a new right from Heaven graciously conferr'd upon them others sent away with gifts as they apply that but the inheritance is Isaac's they are called to be the Sons of God and are like him as his Children in goodness and blessing the Inheritance of blessing is theirs alone called says the Apostle to inherit a blessing and all the promises in the great Charter of both Testaments run in that appropriating stile entail'd to them as only Heirs Thus this fitly is translated from the one Testament to the other by the Apostle for his present purpose He that will love c. Consider 1. The qualification requir'd 2. The blessing annex'd and ascertain'd to it the Scope being to recommend a Rule so exact and for that purpose to propound a Good so important and desirable as a sufficient attractive to study and conform to that Rule The Rule is all of it one streight line running through the whole Tract of a Godly Man's Life yet you see clearly that it is not cut asunder indeed but only mark'd into four whereof the two latter parcels are somewhat longer more generally reaching a man's ways the two former particularly regulating the Tongue In the ten Words of the Law that God delivered in so singular a manner both by Word and Writ from his own mouth and hand there be two that if not wholly yet most especially and most expressly concerd the Tongue as a very considerable though a small part of man and of these four words here two are bestow'd on 't The Apostle St. Iames is large in this teaching the great Concernment of this point 't is a little member says he but boasteth great things needs a strong Bridle and than the bridling of it makes much for the ruling the whole Course of a Man's Life as he there applies the resemblance yea he gives the skill of this as the very Character of perfection And if we consider it it must be of very great consequence how we use that Tongue being the main outlet of the thoughts of the heart and the means of Society amongst men in all Affairs Civil and Spiritual by which men give birth to the conceptions of their own minds and seek to beget the like in the minds of others The bit that is here made for mens mouths hath these two halfs that make it up 1. To refrain from open evil speaking 2. From double and guileful speaking From Evil. This is a large Field the Evil of the Tongue but I give it too narrow a name we have good warrant to give it a much larger a whole Universe a World of Iniquity a vast bulk of Evils and great variety of them as of Countries on the Earth or Creatures in the World and multitudes of such are venemous and full of deadly poyson and not few Monsters new productions of wickedness semper aliquid novi as they say of Africa There be in the daily discourses of the greatest part many things that belong to this World of Evil and yet pass unsuspected that we do not think them to be within its compass not using due diligence and exactness in our discoveries of the several parts of it although 't is all within our selves yea within a small part of our selves our Tongues It were too quick a fancy to think to travel over this World of Iniquity the whole circuit of it in an hour yea or so much as to aim exactly at all the parts that can be taken of it in the smallest Map but some of the chief we would particularly take notice of in the several four parts of it for it will without constraint hold resemblance in that division with the other yet habitable World I. Prophane Speech that which is grossly and manifestly wicked and in that part 1. Impious Speeches that directly reflect upon the glory and name of God Blasphemies and Oaths and Cursings of which so great so lamentable abundance amongst us the whole Land overspread and defiled with it the common noise that meets a man in Streets and Houses and almost all places where he comes and to these joyn those that are not scant amongst us neither scoffs and mocking at Religion the power and strictness of it not only by the grosser sort but by pretenders to some kind of goodness for they that have attained to a self-pleasing pitch of Civility or formal Religion have usually that point of presumption with it that they make their own size the model and rule to examine all by what is below it they condemn indeed as prophane but what is beyond it they account needless and affected preciseness and therefore are as ready as others to let fly invectives or bitter taunts against it which are the keen and poysoned shafts of the Tongue and a persecution that shall be called to a strick account 2. Impure or filthy speaking which either pollutes or offends those that hear them and are the noisom breath of a rotten polluted heart II. Consider next as another grand part of the Tongue uncharitable Speeches tending to the defaming and disgrace of others and these are likewise of two sorts 1. Open rayling and reproaches 2. Secret slander and detraction The former is unjust and cruel but it is somewhat the less dangerous because open 't is a fight in plain field but truly no piece of a Christian's warfare to encounter it in the same kind the Sons of Peace are not for those Tongue-Combats they are often no doubt set upon so but they have another abler way of overcoming it than by the use of the same
that for Cry in the Psalm do mean and in that sense the Lord's open ear and hearkning hath in it his readiness to answer as one that doth hear and to answer graciously and really as hearing favourably Some directions 1. For Prayer that it may be accepted and answered 2. For observing the answers of it 1. For Prayer the qualification of the Heart that offers it 2. The way of offering it The Heart 1. In some measure a holy Heart according to that here the Righteous no regarding iniquity entertaining of friendship with any sin but a permanent ove and desire of Holiness Thus indeed a man prays within himself as in a sanctified Place whither the Lord's ear inclines as of old to the Temple need not run superstitiously to a Church c. intra te ora sed vide prius an sis templum Dei The sanctified Man's Body is the Temple of the holy Ghost as the Apostle speaks and his Soul the Priest in it that offers sacrifice both holy to the Lord consecrated to him a believing Heart no praying without this Faith the very life of Prayer whence springs Hope and Comfort with it to uphold the Soul and keep it steady under storms with the promises and as Aaron and Hur to Moses keeping it from fainting strengthening the hands when they would begin to fail that word Psal. 10. 17. for the preparing of the heart which God gives as an assurance and pledge of his inclining his ear to hear signifies the establishing of the Heart that indeed is a main point of its preparedness and due disposition for Prayer Now this is done by Faith without which the Soul as the Apostle St. Iames speaks is a rolling unquiet thing as a Wave of the Sea of it self unstable as the Waters and then driven with the Wind and tossed too and fro with every tentation see and feel thine own unworthiness as much as thou canst for thou art never bid believe in thy self no but countermanded that as Faith's great Enemy but what hath thy unworthiness to say against free promises of Grace which are the basis of thy Faith so then believe that that you may pray this is David's advice Ps. 62. Trust in him at all times ye people and then pour out your hearts before him confide in him as a most faithful and powerful Friend and than you will open your hearts to him 2. For the way of offering up prayer 't is a great art a main part of the secret of Religion to be skill'd in it and of great concern for the comfort and success of it much here to be considered but for the present briefly 1. Offer not to speak to him without the heart in some measure season'd and prepossess'd with the sense of his Greatness and Holiness and there is much in this considering wisely to whom we speak the King the Lord of Glory and setting the Soul before him in his presence and then reflecting on our selves and seeing what we are how wretched and base and filthy and unworthy of such access to such a Great Majesty the want of this preparing of the heart to speak in the Lord's ear by the consideration of God and our selves is that which fills the exercise of prayer with much guiltiness makes the heart careless and slight and irreverent and so displeases the Lord and disappoints our selves of that comfort in prayer and answers of it that otherwise we would have more experience of We rush in before him with any thing provided we can tumble out a few words and do not weigh these things and compose our hearts with serious thoughts and conceptions of God The Soul that studies and endeavours this most hath much to do to attain to any right apprehensions of him for how little know we of him yet should we at least set our selves before him as the purest and greatest Spirit a Being infinitely more Excellent than our Minds or any Creature can conceive this would fill the Soul with awe and reverence and balast it make it go more even through the exercise to consider the Lord as that Prophet saw him sitting on his Throne and all the Host of Heaven standing by him on his right Hand and on his left and thy self a defiled Sinner coming before him as a vile Frog creeping out of some Pool how would this fill thee with holy Fear Oh! His greatness and our baseness and Oh! the distance This is Solomon's advice be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in Heaven and thou upon Earth therefore let thy words be few This would keep us from our ordinary bablings that heart nonsense tho' the words be sense yet through the inattention of the heart are but as impertinent confus'd Dreams in the Lord's ears as there follow v. 3. 2. When thou addressest thy self to prayer desire and depend upon the assistance and inspiration of the holy Spirit of God without which thou art not able truly to pray 't is a supernatural work and therefore the principle of it must be supernatural He that hath nothing of the Spirit of God cannot pray at all he may howle as a Beast in his necessity or distress or may speak words of Prayer as some Birds learn the Language of Men but pray he cannot and they that have that Spirit ought to seek the movings and actual workings of it in them in Prayer the particular help of their infirmities teaching both what to ask a thing that of our selves we know not and then enabling them to ask breathing forth their desires in such sighs and groans as the breath not simply of their own but of God's Spirit 3dly As those two before it so in the exercise of it you should learn to keep a watchful eye over your own hearts throughout for every step of the way that they start not out by the keeping up of a continued remembrance of that presence of God which in the entry of the work is to be set before the eye of the Soul and our endeavour ought to be to six it upon that view that it turn not aside nor downwards but from beginning to end keep sight of him who sees and marks whether we do so or no. They that are most inspective and watchful in this will still be faulty in it but certainly the less watchful the more faulty and this we ought to do to be aspiring daily to more stability of mind in prayer and driving out somewhat of that roving and wandring that is so universal an Evil and certainly so grievous to those that have it most but that observe and discover it most and endeavour most against it A strange thing that the mind even the renewed mind should be so ready not only at other times but in the exercise of Prayer wherein we peculiarly come so near to God yet even then to slip out and leave him and follow some
further This is indeed a a great vanity and a great misery to lose that labour and gain nothing by it which duly used would be of all others most advantageous and gainful and yet all meetings are full of this Now when you come this is not simply to hear a discourse and relish or dislike it in hearing But a matter of life and death of eternal death and eternal life and the spiritual life begot and nourisht by the word is the beginning of that eternal life Follows To them that are dead By which I conceive he intends such as had heard and believed the Gospel when it came to them and now were dead And this I think he doth to strengthen these brethren to whom he writes to commend the Gospel to this intent and not to think the condition and end of it hard As our Saviour mollifies the matter of outward sufferings thus so persecuted they the Prophets that were before you And the Apostle afterwards in this Chapter uses the same reason in that same subject so here that they might not judge the point of mortification he presses so grievous as naturally Men will do he tells them it is the constant end of the Gospel and they that have been saved by it went that same way he points out to them They that are dead before you died this way that I press on you before they died and the Gospel was preached to them for that very end Men pass away and others succeed but the Gospel is still the same hath the same tenour and substance and the same ends As Solomon speaks of the Heaven's and Earth that remain the same while one Generation passes and another cometh the Gospel surpasses both in its stability as our Saviour testifies they shall pass away but not one Iot of this Word And indeed they wear and wax old as the Apostle teaches us but the Gospel is from one Age to another of most unalterable integrity hath still the same vigour and powerful influence as at the first They that formerly received the Gospel it was upon these terms therefore think them not hard and they are now dead all the difficulty of that work of dying to sin is now over with them if they had not died to their sins by the Gospel they had died in them after a while and so died eternally it is therefore a wise prevention to have sin judged and put to death in us before we die if we die in them and with them we and our sin perish together if we will not part but if it die first before us then we live for ever And what think you of thy carnal will and all the delights of sin What is the longest term of its life uncertain it is but most certainly very short thou and these pleasures must be severed and parted within a little time however thou must dye and then they dye and you never meet again Now were it not the wisest course to part a little sooner with them and let them dye before thee that thou mayest inherit eternal life and eternal delights in it pleasures for evermore It s the only bargain and let us delay it no longer This is our season of enjoying the sweetness of the Gospel others heard it before us in our rooms that now we fill and now they are removed and remove we must shortly and leave this same room to others to speak and hear in It is high time we were considering what we do here to what end we speak and hear and to lay hold on that Salvation that is held forth unto us and that we lay hold on it let go our hold of sin and those perishing things that we hold so firm and cleave so fast to do they that are dead who heard and obeyed the Gospel now repent their repentance and mortifying the flesh or do they not think ten thousand times more pains were it for many Ages all to little for a moment of that which now they enjoy and shall enjoy to eternity And they that are dead who heard the Gospel and slighted it if such a thing might be what would they give for one of these opportunities that now we daily have and daily lose and have no fruit nor esteem of them You have lately seen many of you and you that shifted the sight have heard of numbers cut off in a little time whole families swept away by the late stroke of God's hand many of which did think no other but that they might have still been with you here in this place and exercise at this time and many years after this and yet who hath laid to heart the lengthning out of their day and considered it more as an opportunity of that higher and happier life than as a little protracting of this wretched life which is hastening to an end Oh! therefore be intreated to day while it is day not to harden your hearts though the Pestilence doth not now affright you so yet that standing mortality and the decay of these earthen lodges tells us that shortly we shall cease to preach and hear this Gospel Did we consider it would excite us to more earnest search after our evidences of that eternal life that is set before us in the Gospel and we would seek it in the characters of that spiritual life which is the beginning of it within us and is wro●ght by the Gospel in all the heirs of Salvation Think therefore wisely of these things 1. What 's the proper end of the Gospel 2. Of the approaching end of thy days and let thy certainty of this drive thee to seek more certainty of the other that thou maist partake of it and then this again will make the thoughts of the other sweet to thee that visage of death that is so terrible to unchanged sinners shall be amiable to thine eye having found a Li●e in the Gospel as happy and lasting as this is miserable and vanishing and seeing the perfection of that life on the other side of death will long for the passage Be more serious in this matter of daily hearing the Gospel why it is sent to thee and what it brings and think it is too long I have flighted its Message and many that have done so are cut off and shall hear it no more I have it once more inviting me and it may be this may be the last to me and in these thoughts ere you come bow your knee to the Father of Spirits that this one thing may be granted you that your Souls may find at length the lively and mighty power of his Spirit upon yours in the hearing of this Gospel that you may be judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit Thus is the particular nature of that end exprest and without the noise of various senses intends I conceive no other but the dying to the World and sin and living unto God which is the Apostle's
powerfully assimilated to him by converse with him as we readily contract their Habitudes with whom we resort much especially of such as we singularly love and respect thus the Soul is moulded further to the likeness of God is stampt with fuller Characters of him by being much with him becomes liker God more holy and spiritual and brings back a bright shining from the Mount as Moses 4thly And not only thus by a natural influence doth prayer work this advantage but even by a federal efficacy suiting and upon suit obtaining supplies of Grace as the chief good and besides all other needful mercies it is a real means of receiving whatsoever you shall ask that will I do says our Saviour God having establisht this intercourse and engag'd his Truth and Goodness in it that if they call on him they shall be heard and answered If they prepare the Heart to call he will incline his ear to hear and our Saviour hath assur'd us that we may build upon his Goodness and the affection of a Father in him that he will give good things to them that ask says one Evangelist and the holy Spirit to them that ask it says another as being the good indeed the highest of Gifts and the sum of all good Things and that which his Children are most earnest supplicants for Prayer for Grace doth as it were set the Mouth of the Soul to the Spring draws from Jesus Christ and is replenisht out of his fullness thirsting after it and drawing from it that way And for this reason is it that our Saviour and from him and according to his example the Apostles recommend Prayer so much Watch and pray says our Saviour and St. Paul pray continually And our Apostle here particularly specifies this as the grand means of attaining that conformity with Christ which he presses this is the high-way to it be sober and watch unto prayer He that is much in prayer shall grow rich in grace he shall thrive and increase most that is busiest in this which is our very traffick with Heaven and fetches the most precious commodities thence he that sets oftenest out these Ships of desire makes the most Voyages to that Land of Spices and Pearls shall be sure to improve his stock most and have most of Heaven upon Earth But the true art of this trading is very rare every trade hath something wherein the skill of them lies but this is deep and supernatural is not reacht by humane industry industry is to be used in it but we must know it comes from above the faculty of it that Spirit of Prayer without which Learning and Wit and religious Breeding can do nothing Therefore this to be our prayer often our great suit for the Spirit of Prayer that we may speak the Language of the Sons of God by the Spirit of God which alone teaches the Heart to pronounce aright those things that the Tongue of many Hypocrites can articulate well to mans ear and only the Children in that right strain that takes him call God their Father and cry unto him as their Father and therefore many a poor unlettered Christian so far outstrips your School-Rabbies in this faculty because it is not effectually taught in these lower Academies they must be in God's own School Children of his House that speak this Language Men may give Spiritual Rules and Directions in this and such as may be useful drawn from the word that furnishes us with all needful Precepts but you are still to bring these into the seat of this faculty of prayer the Heart and stamp them upon it and so to teach it to pray without which there is no prayer this is the prerogative Royal of him that framed the Heart of Man within him But for advancing in this growing more skillful in it it is with continual dependence on the Spirit to be much used praying much thou shalt be blest with much faculty for it so then askest thou what shall I do that I may learn to pray there be things here to be considered that are exprest as serving this end but for present this and chiefly this by praying thou shalt learn to pray thou shalt both obtain more of the Spirit and find more the chearful working of it in Prayer when thou puttest it often to that work for which it is received and wherein it is delighted and as both advantaging all Graces and the Grace of Prayer it self this frequency and abounding in Prayer is here very clearly intended in that the Apostle makes it as the main of our work that we have to do and would keep our hearts in a constant aptness for it be sober and watch to what end unto prayer Be sober and watch They that have no better must make the best they can of carnal delights it is no wonder they take as large a share of them as they can bear and sometimes more But the Christian is called to a more excellent estate and higher pleasures so that he may behold men glutting themselves with these base things and be as little moved to share with them as men are taken with the pleasure a Swine hath in weltring in the Mire It becomes the Heirs of Heaven to be far above the love of the Earth and in the necessary use of any thing in it still to keep both within the due measure of their use and their heart wholly disingag'd from the affection of them This is the Sobriety here exhorted It s true that in the commonest sense of the word it is very commendable and it is sit to be so considered by a Christian that he flie gross intemperance as a thing most contrary to his condition and holy calling and wholly inconsistent with the spiritual temper of a renewed mind and those exercises to which it is called and its progress in its way homewards It is a most unseemly sight to behold one simply by outward profession a Christian overtaken with surfeitting and drunkenness much more to be given to the vile custom of it all sensual delights the filthy lust of uncleanness go under the common name of Insobriety Intemperance and they all degrade and destroy the noble Soul are unworthy of Man much more of a Christian and the contempt of them preserves the Soul and elevates it But the Sobriety here recommended though it takes in that too yet reaches further than temperance in meat and drink It is the spiritual temperance of a Christian mind in all earthly things as our Saviour joyns these together Luk. 21. 34. surfeiting and drunkenness and cares of this life and under the cares are all the excessive desires and delights of this life which canno● be followed and attended without distempered carefullness Many that are sober men and of temperate diet yet are spiritually intemperate drunk with pride or covetousness or passion drunk with self-love and love of their pleasures and ease with love of the world and the things of it which
cannot consist with the love of God as St. Iohn tells us drunk with the inordinate unlawful love even of their lawful calling and the lawful gain they pursue by it their hearts going after it and so reeling to and fro never fixed on God and heavenly Things but either hurried up and down with uncessant business or if sometimes at ease it is as the ease of a drunken man not compos'd to better and wiser thoughts but falling into a dead sleep contrary to the watching here joyned with sobriety Watch. There is a Christian Rule to be observed in the very moderating of bodily sleep and that particularly for the interest of Prayer but Watching as Sobriety here is chiefly the spiritual circumspectness and vigilancy of the mind in a wary walking posture that it be not surprized by the assaults or slights of Satan by the World nor its nearest and most deceiving enemy the corruption that dwells within that being so near doth most readily watch unperceived advantages and easily circumvents us Heb. 12. 1. The Soul of a Christian being surrounded with enemies of so great both power and wrath and so watch●ul to undoe it should it not be watchful for its own safety and live in a military vigilancy continually keeping constant watch and sentinel and suffering nothing to pass that may carry the least suspicion of danger to be distrustful and jealous of all the motions of his own Heart and the smilings of the World and in relation to these it will be a wise course to take that word as a good caveat be watchful and remember to mistrust Under the Garment of some harmless pleasure or some lawful liberties may be conveyed into thy Soul some thief or traytor that will either betray thee to the enemy or at least pilser and steal of the preciousest things thou hast Do we not by experience find how easily our foolish hearts are seduc'd and deceived and so apt to deceive themselves and by things that seem to have no evil in them yet are drawn from the height of affection to our highest good and from our Communion with God and study to please him which should not be intermitted for then it will abate but ought still be growing 2. Now the Relation of these is clear they are inseparably link't together each of them assistant and helpful to the other in their nature as they are here in the words Sobriety the friend of watchfulness and prayer of both Intemperance doth of necessity draw on sleep excessive eating or drinking sending up too many and so gross vapours surcharge the brain and when the body is thus deaded how unfit is it for any active imployment Thus the mind by a surcharge of delights or desires or cares of earth is made so heavy and dull that it cannot awake hath not spiritual activeness and clearness that spiritual exercises particularly Prayer do require Yea as bodily insobriety full feeding and drinking not only for the time indisposes to action but by custome of it brings the body to so gross and heavy a temper that the very natural spirits cannot stir to and fro in it with freedom but are clog'd and stick as the Wheels of a Coach in a deep miry way Thus is it with the Soul glutted with earthly things the affections bemir'd with them make it resist and unactive in spiritual things and the motions of the spirit heavy and obscured in it grows carnally secure and sleepy prayer comes heavily off But when the affections are soberly acted and even in lawful things that they have not liberty with the reins laid on their Necks to follow the World and carnal projects and delight when the unavoidable affairs of this life are done with a spiritual mind a heart kept free and disingaged Then is the Soul more nimble for spiritual things for Divine Meditation and Prayer it can watch and continue in these things and spend it self in that excellent way with more alacrity Again as the Sobriety and the watchful temper attending it enables for Prayer so Prayer preserves these it winds up the Soul from the Earth raises it above these things that intemperance feeds on acquaints it with the transcending sweetness of Divine Comforts the love and the loveliness of Jesus Christ and these most powerfully wean the Soul from these low creeping pleasures that the World gapes after and swallows with such greediness He that is admitted to nearest intimacy with the King and is called daily to his presence not only in the view and company of others but likewse in secret will he be so mad as to sit down and drink with the kitchin boys or the common guards so far below what he may enjoy surely no. Prayer being our near Communion with the great God certainly it sublimates the Soul and makes it look down upon the base ways of the World with disdain and despise the truly besotting pleasures of it Yea the Lord doth sometime fill these Souls that converse much with him with such beautiful delights such inebriating sweetness as I may call it that 't is in a happy manner drunk with those and the more of this the more is the Soul above base intemper●nce in the delights of the World as common drunkenness makes a Man less than a Man this makes him more that throws him below himself makes him a beast this raises him above makes him an Angel Would you as sure you ought have much faculty for Prayer and be frequent in 〈◊〉 and find much the pure sweetness of it then 〈…〉 selves more the muddy pleasures and sweetness of the World if you would pray much and with much advantage then be sober and watch unto prayer 〈…〉 your hearts to long so after ease and wealth 〈◊〉 esteem in the World these will make your hearts if they mix with them become like them and take 〈◊〉 quality will make them gross and earthly and unable to mount up will clog the wings of pray●r and you shall find the loss when your Soul is heavy and drowsie and falls off from delighting in God and your Communion with him Will such things as those you follow be able to countervail your damage can they speak you peace and uphold you in a day of darkness and distress or may it not be such now as will make them all a burden and vexation to you But on the otherside the more you abate and let go of these and come empty and hungry to God in prayer the more room shall you have for his consolations and therefore the more plentifully will he pour in of them and enrich your Soul with them the more the less you take in of the other 2. Would you have your selves raised to and continued and advanced in a spiritual heavenly temper free from the surfeits of earth and awake and active for heaven be uncessant in prayer But thou wilt say I find nothing but heavy indisposedness in it nothing but roving and vanity of
heart and so though I have used it sometime it s still unprofitable and uncomfortable to me although it be so yet hold on give it not over or need I say this to thee though it were referr'd to thy self wouldest thou forsake it and leave off then what wouldest thou do next for if no comfort in it far less any for thee in any other way If tentation should so far prevail with thee as to try intermission either thou wouldest be forced to return to it presently or certainly wouldest fall into a more grievous condition and after horrours and lashings must at length come back to it again or perish for ever Therefore however it go continue praying strive to believe that love thou canst not see for where sight is abridg'd there it is proper for faith to work if thou canst do no more lie before thy Lord and look to him Lord here I am thou maist quicken and revive me if thou wilt and I trust thou wilt but if I must do it I will lie at thy feet my life is in thy hand and thou art goodness and mercy while I have breath I will cry or if I cannot cry yet I will wait on and look to thee One thing forget not that the ready way to rise out of this sad yet safe estate is to be much in viewing the Mediator and interposing him betwixt the fathers view and thy Soul Some that do orthodoxly believe this to be right yet as often befals us in other things of this kind they do not so consider and use it in their necessity as becomes and therefore fall short of comfort he hath declared it no Man comes to the Father but by me How vile soever put thy self under his robe and into his hand and he will lead thee in to the Father and present thee acceptable and blameless The Father shall receive thee and declare himself well pleased with thee in his well beloved Son who hath covered thee with his righteousness and brought thee so Cloathed and set thee before him 3. The third thing is the reason binding on these The end of all things is at hand This is needful often to be remembred for even believers too readily forget it and it s very sutable to the Apostles foregoing discourse of Judgement and to his present exhortation to sobriety and watchfulness unto prayer even the general end of all at hand though since the Apostle writ this many Ages are past For 1. The Apostles usually speak of the whole time after the coming of Jesus Christ in the flesh as the last time for that two double Chiliads of years past before it the one before the other under the Law and in this third it is conceived shall be the end of all things And the Apostles seem by divers expressions to have apprehended it in their days not far off So St. Paul 1. Thess. 4. 17. We which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the Clouds As not impossible that it might come in their time which put him upon some explication of that correction of their mistakes in his next Epistle to them wherein notwithstanding he seems not to assert any great tract of time to interveen but in that time great things were first to come 2. However this might always have been said in respect of succeeding Eternity the whole duration of the World is not considerable and to the eternal Lord that made it and hath appointed its period a thousand years are as one day We think a thousand years a great matter in respect of our short life and more through our short sightedness that look not through to eternal life but what is the utmost length of time were it millions of years to a thought of eternity We find much room in this earth but to the vast heavens it is but as a point Thus that which is but small to us a field or little inclosure a Fly had it skill would divide it into vinces in proportion to it self 3. To each man the end of all things is even after our measure at hand for when he dies the World ends for him Now this consideration fits the Subject and presses it strongly seeing all things shall be quickly at an end even the frame of Heaven and Earth why should we knowing this and having higher hopes lay so much out of our desires and endeavours upon these things that are posting to ruine it s no hard notion to be sober and watchful to prayer to be trading that way and seeking higher things very moderate in these seeing they are of so short a date and as in themselves and their utmost term so more to each of us particularly who are so soon cut off and flee away why should our hearts cleave to those things from which we shall so quickly part and if we will not freely part and let go we shall be pulled away and pull'd with the more pain the closer we cleave and faster we are glued to them This the Apostle St. Paul casts in seasonably though many think it not seasonable at such times when he is discoursing of a great point of our life marriage to work Christian minds to a holy freedom both ways whether they use it or no not to view it nor any thing here with the World's Spectacles that make it look so big and so fixed but to see in the stream of time as passing by and no so great matter the fashion of this World passeth away as a pageant or shew in a Street going through and quickly out of sight what became of all the marriage Solemnities of Kings and Princes of former Ages that they were so taken up with in their time when we read of them described in History they are as a night dream or a day fancy that passes through the wind and vanishes Oh! foolish man that hunts such poor things and will not be called off till death benight him and his great work not done yea not begun no nor seriously thought of your Buildings your Trading your Lands your Matches and Friendships and Projects when they take with you and your hearts are after them say but for how long all these their end is at hand therefore be sober and watch unto prayer learn to divide better more hours for it and fewer for them your whole heart for it and none of it for them seeing they will fail you so quickly prevent them come free lean not on them till they break and you fall into the pit 'T is reported of one that hearing that 5th of Genesis read so long lives and yet the burden still they died Enoch lived 905 and he died Seth 912 and he died Methuselah 969 and he died took so deep the thought of death and eternity that it changed his whole frame and set him from a voluptuous to a most strict and pious course of life how small a word will do much when God sets it into
but true willingness of heart so this willingness should not arise from any other but pure affection to the work not for filthy gain but purely from the inward bent of the mind As it should not be a compulsive or violent motion by necessity from without so it should not be an artificial motion by weights hung on within avarice love of gain the former were a wheel driven or drawn going by force the latter little better as a Clock made go by art by paces hung to it But a natural motion as that of the heavens in their course a willing obedience to the Spirit of God within moving a Man in every part of this holy work that 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his mind carried to it as the thing he delights in loves to be exercised in it There may be in a faithful Pastor very great reluctances in ingaging and adhereing to the work upon a sense of the excellency of it and his unfitness and the deep apprehension of those high interests the glory of God and the Salvation of Souls and yet he enter into it and continues in it with this readiness of mind too that is with most single and earnest desires of doing all he can for God and the flock of God only grieved that there is in him so little suitableness of heart so little holiness and acquaintance with God for enabling him to it but might he find that he were satisfied and in attendance upon that goes on and waits and is doing according to his little skill and strength and cannot leave it is constrained indeed but all the constraint is that of love to Iesus and for his sake to the Souls he hath bought and all the gain sought is to gain Souls to Christ which is far different from the constraint and that gain here discharged yea is indeed that very willingness and readiness of mind which is opposed to that other constraint this without this within that other gain is base filthy gain this noble and divine Inf. 1. Far be it from us that necessity and constraint be the thing that moves us in so holy a work The Lord whom we serve sees into the heart and if he find not that primely moving accounts all our diligence nothing And let not base earth be within the cause of our willingness but a mind toucht with Heaven It is true the tentations of earth with us in matter o● ●gain are not great but yet the heart may cleave to them as much as if they were much greater and if it do cleave to them they shall ruin us as well a poor stipend and glebe if the affection be upon them as a great Denary or Bis●oprick if a Man fall into it he may drown in a small brook being under water as well as in the great Ocean Oh! the little time that remains let us joyn our desires and endeavours in this work bend our strength to him that we may have joy in that day of reckoning And indeed there is nothing moves us aright nor shall we ever find comfort in this service unless it be from a cheerful inward readiness of mind and that from the love of Christ thus said he to his Apostle lovest thou me then feed my Sheep and feed my Lambs love to Christ begets love to his peoples Souls that are so precious to him and a care of feeding them he devolves the working of love towards him upon his flock for their good puts them in his room to receive the benefit of our services which cannot reach him in himself he can receive no other profit from it It is love much love gives much unwearied care and much skill in this charge How sweet is it to him that loves to bestow himself to spend and be spent upon his service whom he loves Iacob in the same kind of service endured all and found it light by reason of love the cold of the nights and the heat of the days seven years for his Rachel and they seemed to him but a few days because he loved her Love is the great endowment of a Shepherd of Christs flock He says not to Peter art thou wise or learned or eloquent but lovest thou me then feed my Sheep The third evil is ambition and that is either in the the affecting of undue authority or the overstraining and tyrannical abuse of due authority or to seek these dignities that suit not with this charge which is not Dominium but Ministerium Therefore discharg'd Luke 22. There is a ministerial authority to be used in discipline and more sharpness with some than others but still lowlin●ss and moderation predominant and not domine●ring with rigour rather being examples to them in all holiness and especially in humility and meekness wherein our Lord Jesus particularly propounds his own example But being ensamples Such a pattern as they may stamp and print their Spirits and carriage by and be followers of you as you are of Christ and without this there is little or no fruitful teaching Well says one either teach not or teach by living so the Apostle exhorteth Timothy to be an example in word but withal in conversation that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the best printed copy But this pares off will some think all encouragements of learning No advantage no respect nor authority Oh! no it removes poor worthless encouragements out of the way to make place for one great one that is sufficient which all the other together are not that is Verse 4. And when the chief Shepherd shall appear ye shall receive a Crown of Glory that fadeth not away THou shalt loose nothing by all that restraint from base gain and vain glory and Worldly power No matter let them go for a Crown that weighs them all down that shall abide for ever Oh! how far excellent A Crown of Glory pure unmixt glory without any ingrediency of pride or sinful vanity or any danger of it And a Crown that fadeth not of such a flower as withers not not a temporary garland of fading flowers such as all here are Wo to the Crown of pride Isa. 28. 1. Though it is made of flowers growing in a fat valley yet their glorious beauty is a fading flower but this fresh and in perfect lustre to all eternity May they not well trample on base gain and vain applause that have this Crown to look to They that will be content with those let them be doing but they have their reward and it s done and gone when faithful followers are to receive theirs Joys of royal pomp marriages and feasts how soon do they vanish as a dream that of Ahazverash that lasted about half a year but then ended and how many since that gone and forgot But this day begins a triumph and a feast that shall never either be ended or be wearied of still fresh new delights all things here the choicest pleasures cloy but satisfie not Those
and unbeseeming his creature the best of them much more such worms as we are that things must rather be to our mind than his and we must either have all our will or else for our part he shall have none of his praises 3. That which on these two will follow a fixed heart if it be refined from creature-love and self-love spiritualness and love of God will fix it and then shall it be fit to praise but an unstable uncomposed heart can never be no more than an instrument can be harmonious and fit to play on that hath loose pins that are still slipping and letting down the strings pins that never fasten and thus are the most cannot fix to Divine Thoughts to consider God to behold and admire his excellency and goodness and his free love Oh! that happy word of David worthy to be twice repeated when shall we say it O God my heart is fixed well might he add I will sing and give praise Oh! that we would pray much that he would fix them and then he having fixed them we would praise him much 2. If any due disposition be once attained for praises then must the heart so disposed be set to study the matter of praises And that 1. The infinite excellency of God in himself which though we know little of yet this we know and should consider it that it is far beyond what all the creatures and all his works are able to testify of him that he transcends all we can speak or hear or know of him 2. Look on him in his works behold not the vast Heavens above nor the firm Earth beneath us nor all the variety of his works in both without holy wonder stir'd in us and that stirring us to sing praises Oh! his greatness and might and Wisdom shining in these Lord how manifold are thy Works in Wisdom hast thou made them all But above all that work that marvel of his works the sending of his Son forth of his bosom and that is the mystery the Apostles do so magnifie in their writings and that so much in this Epistle and that the chief incentive to this close in praise ascribing glory to him This praise looks particularly back to the stile in the prayer the God of all grace who hath called us to his eternal glory by Jesus Christ so many other mercies but chiefly for that choice of mercies to his glory who hath called us to his glory then look through the work of saving his Chosen so redeemed by the blood of his Son his maintaining his own work in them against all the enemies and oppositions about it the advancing it in the midst of them and even by them and bringing them safe to glory that perfecting and establishment as in the foregoing words it is that that so affects the Apostle in the very entry of this Epistle that there he must break forth into praise Chap. 1. ver 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead He begins there in praise and here ends in it and so incloses all within that Divine Circle And as we would consider these things in general so his particular dealing with us his good providence in spirituals and temporals would we search Oh! what a surcharge of innumerable ●ercies would each of us find and were we better acquainted with the Holy Scriptures had more our delight in them they would acquaint us better with all these things and give us light to see them and warm our hearts and excite them to his praises who is the God of all our mercies 3. The heart somewhat disposed to praise and then studying the matter of it would be applyed actually to render praise 1. To aim at God in all which is continued praise to eye his glory in every thing and chiefly to desire that that his name may be exalted this is the excellent way indeed whereas most are either wholly for their self ends or often squinting out to them That Soul is most noble that singly and fixedly aims at exalting God and seeks this stamp on all it speaks and does and desires all to the greater glory of my God 2. To abound in the express and solemn return of praise this way To him be glory not a customary dead saying of it over as is usual with us but the heart offering it up What is so pure and high as this exercise the praises of the ever glorious Deity What is Heaven but these and were it not best as we can to begin it here and long to be there where it shall never end To him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever Amen Verses 12 13 14. 12. By Sylvanus a faithful Brother unto you as I suppose I have written briefly exhorting and testifying that this is the true Grace of God wherein ye stand 13. The Church that is at Babylon elected together with you saluteth you and so doth Marcus my Son 14. Greet ye one another with a kiss of Charity Peace be with you all that are in Christ Iesus Amen THIS a kind of postscript and hath its testimony of the bearer and the Apostolick form of saluting Withal he expresses the measure of his writing that it was brief and the end of it that it was to testify c. And this indeed the end of our preaching and we ought each to seek it by the word and by mutual exhortations and sometimes a few words may have much to this purpose to have our hearty establishment in the faith and not only to believe but remember that we have the best of it that there is truth in our hopes and they shall not deceive us they are no fancy as the World thinks yea when all things else shall vanish their truth shall most appear in their full accomplishment The entertainment and increase of Christian love of esteem of one another and affection one to another is no matter of empty compliment but is the very stamp and badge of Jesus Christ upon his followers therefore most carefully to be preserved entire and unhappy they that by any means do willingly break it Oh! let us beware of it and follow peace even when it seems to fly from us This Peace that is the portion of those in Christ is indeed within them and with God but through him 't is likewise one with another and in that notion to be desired and wisht joyntly with the other They that are in Christ are the only Children and heirs of true peace others may dream of it and have a false peace for a time and wicked men may wish it to themselves and one another but 't is a most vain hope and nought but to wish it to them that are in Christ hath good ground all solid peace founded in him and flows from him Now the peace of God which