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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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Ananias to lye unto the Holy Ghost Act 5.3 4. and in so doing thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God Again we are said to be Temples of God and how Why in that the Spirit of God even the Holy Ghost who is God dwelleth in us One proof more 1 Cor. 3.16 where it is said The diversities of gifts the differences of administrations and the diversities of operations are all from the Holy Spirit 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6. who is called God and Lord working all in all v. 11. yea even dividing to every man severally as he will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as a Minister of God according to anothers command but as the Author who is himself God according to his own will As then Christ proves his Divinity in that he communicates life Joh. 5.21 so from hence we prove the Divinity of the Holy Ghost that he distributes his gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even as he will Secondly The Attributes of God As that he is eternal Heb 9.14 1 Cor. 2.10 Mar. 12.28 Is 139.7 that he is omniscient that he is omnipotent and that he is omnipresent And much of force there is in this argument of the Holy Ghost's omnipresence an argument not so easily evaded by the sophistical disputes of the Heretick The Holy Ghost in all the Saints of Christs Church is as the soul in all the members of mans body quickning actuating and ordering them so that as there is but one Body Eph. 4.4 so but one Spirit One and the same Holy Ghost then at one and the same time sanctifieth by his gracious presence and operation the Saints of God in heaven and in earth And how is this possible but to a person infinite and omnipresent Thirdly The Works of God As to him is attributed the Creation of the World the giving of Life the distribution of Grace the governing the Church and the Resurrection of the Dead yea by him was Christ conceiv'd in the womb anointed to his Ministry and rais'd from the grave Heb. 7.7 And upon S. Pauls argument which holds to be without all contradiction The less is blessed of the greater upon this argument must the humanity of Christ as Mediator be less in dignity then the Holy Ghost which could not be if the Holy Ghost were not God for that by vertue of the hypostatical union Christ Col. 1.15 as man is the the first-born of every creature Fourthly The Worship of God Adored he is in that Trisagion of the Churches Anthem Rev. 4.8 Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was Rom. 9.1 and is and is to come Attested he is as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Discerner of the heart and the Searcher of the Conscience Yea invocated he is in the form of Blessing for his spiritual communion and invocated he is in the form of Baptism 2 Cor. 13.14 for his power of regeneration And here review we the form of Baptism We are baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into the name Bez. in loc that is invocato nomine says Beza by invocating the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost But this is too little for so full an Emphasis To be baptiz'd then into the name what is it but by Baptism to be obliged to the faith worship and obedience of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For that Baptism being the seal of the Covenant of grace the Regius Character the Royal stamp of this seal is the name of the sacred Trinity so S. Augustine Wherefore as God in the Trinity of persons owns us to be his people so again do we as his people vow faith worship and obedience unto that sacred Trinity of persons as our God Here if I should ask those who now have rak'd up the long since buried Heresie of Macedonius what is their fear of affirming the Holy Ghost God Is it to assert many Gods how vain is this fear how false were that assertion For in the mysterie of the Trinity the distinction of the Persons does not multiply the Nature of the Godhead neither does the Unity of the Nature nullifie the Persons For the Father is God begetting the Son the Son is the same God begotten of the Father and the Holy Ghost is the same God proceeding from the Father and the Son So that each Person is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manner of subsistence whereby the Godhead is distinguished not a part of the Godhead whereby the essence is divided And as to the procession of the Holy Ghost though true it is after the Orthodox Faith was determined and confirm'd by those Orthodox Fathers who in that Oecumenical Council of Constantinople call'd by the Emperor Theodosius did suppress the then spreading Heresie of Macedonius adding to the Nicene Creed what concerns more fully the Faith of the Holy Ghost that he is the Lord and giver of life who proceedeth from the Father c. Though after this there arose a great controversie betwixt the Greek and Latine Church concerning the Holy Ghost's procession the Grecians affirming it from the Father by the Son the Latines from the Father and the Son After a long time the controversie was composed in the Florentine Synod by the prudence piety and learning of good Bessarion the Crecians being satisfied by the Latines that the Filioque and the Son added to the Nicene Creed was taken from that of Athanasius as more fully exprest to declare the procession of the Holy Ghost But to return to the Administration of Baptism which is very aptly called by the Antients Sacramentum Fidei the Sacrament of Faith as admitting into the houshold of the faithful and being the Sacrament of Faith it is administred in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost as being the sum of our Faith To confess the faith of the Trinity the Antient Church did use their trina immersio a threefold immersion And again to confess the Unity they had but one immersion Greg. l. 1 ep 41. And therefore Gregory writes to Leander the Bishop that it was no matter of reproof whether Baptism was administred with once or with thrice dipping or sprinkling quoniam in tribus immersionibus Personarum trinitas in una potest Divinitatis singularitas designari In three immersions the Trinity of Persons and in one immersion the Unity of Essence may be confest and declared Yea when we say I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost in the name not in the names we profess the power majesty and authority of all the three Persons to be coequal and so in essence and unity co-eternal In those places where the Church useth three immersions or aspersions as at this day in many Countries the Church does there the first dipping or sprinkling is with a nominating the Father the second the Son the third
indulgences for that S. Paul suffered for the Churches sake yet not by way of satisfaction but of edification the better to confirm the Church in the faith of Christ And therefore when he says that he suffered for the Church he subjoins of which I am made a Minister not of which I am made a Mediator Wherefore now thou that complainest of thy afflictions and persecutions and troubles tell me doest thou think to be Christs disciple and not follow him or doest thou think to follow him and not take up thy cross Was the Captain of thy salvation made perfect through sufferings and doest thou think to be partaker of salvation by him and not have fellowship of the sufferings with him Was he himself crown'd with thorns and doest thou expect that he should here crown thee with rose-buds No sure it were proud presumption with the sons of Zebedee to aspire to Christs throne Mar. 10.37 unless we drink of Christs cup. Wherefore let all the children of God look upon their Saviour and elder brother Christ Jesus and so shall his example of patience be a sure ground of comfort in all their afflictions 4. The pattern of Gods Saints Christ Joh 6.33 as he promiseth his Disciples peace in him so he foretels them of tribulations in the world which we find fulfilled when the Apostle tels us that they were become in their sufferings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Theatre unto the woald and to Angels and to men The sufferings of the Apostles became a wonder to the very Angels Sen. l. de provid Optimi milites ad durissima mittuntur The stoutest Soldiers are put upon the hottest service and so the holiest Saints upon the sharpest sufferings And therefore S. Paul he would have no man moved from the stedfastness of his faith Act. 14 22. by the greatnes of his troubles for that we are thereunto appointed of God Ad hoc destinati it is the ordinance and appointment of God that through much tribulation we should enter into the kingdom of God No passage into Paradise but under the Cherubims flaming sword no wearing of the Crown without bearing of the Cross no reigning with Christ in heaven without first suffering with or for Christ on earth 2 Tim. 3.12 And therefore S. Paul is positive and plain All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecutions persecutions either from a reviling tongue or an oppressing hand either from the world without or the flesh within and from Satan in both Wherefore whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth Heb 12.6 and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth We say Unicum habuit Deus filium sine flagitio sinc flagello nullum God he hath only one Son without transgression but no one Son without affliction Wherefore so far ought afflictions to be from damping that they should be arguments of confirming our assurance of Gods love v. 8. for that if we be without chastisement whereof all are partakers then are we bastards and not sons formal Hypocrites but not true Children of God 5. The spiritual benefit of afflictions It is said Schola crucis schola lucis Affliction gives instruction either for the mortifying some sin or the quickening of some grace And therefore God as an indulgent Father Heb. 12.10 he chastens his children for their profit that they may be partakers of his holiness Afflictions to a faithful heart are as the waters to Noah's Ark to raise it higher towards Heaven Hear David Ps 11.4 The Lord is in his holy temple the Lords throne is in heaven his eyes behold his eye-lids try the children of men Why his eye-lids and not his eyes Quia oculos claudendo c. saith the Expositor Because by leaving us a while in our necessities and troubles fidem probat amorem he tries the sincerity of our faith and truth of our love Wherefore though no affliction for the present is joyous but grievous yet let not the children of God have such a sense of the suffering that they be de●ected with sorrow for that afterwards it brings forth the peaceable fruit of righteousness Heb. 12.11 So that the sweet peace of a good Conscience shall outvie the bitter grief of an affl cted Condition the miseries of this life weaning the soul from the love of the world and enflaming the heart with holy desires and longings after Christ and his Kingdom 2 Cor. 4.17 6. The eternal reward of suffering patiently Our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory Observe the Apostles Antithesis For affliction here is glory for light affliction a weight of glory and for momentany eternal And now if we take in the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then have we an excellencie of glory beyond all hyperboles Therefore well might the Apostle say that the sufferings of this life Rom. 8 18. they are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Observe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the Apostle I reckon And indeed none could reckon so well as he for that we find he suffered more of present affl●ctions 2 Cor. 11. 2 Cor. 12. and he saw more of the future glory then any other whatsoever And therefore well might he come in with his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and say After right reckoning I thus gather the sum or after long reasoning I thus determine the question that the sufferings of this life they are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us A thousand years sufferings for Christ with a thousand years service in his Church cannot merit one days being in Gods Courts one days enjoyment of heavenly bliss Yea though every trouble which attends the profession of holiness were a strugling death and every temptation a present hell yet were the reward of glory infinitely transcending the proportion of our sufferings And therefore Mat. 5.11 12. Blessed are ye saith our Lord and Saviour when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evil against you falsly or my sake rejoice and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in heaven In heaven is life and that eternal a Crown Rom 6.23 1 Pet. 5.4 1 Pet. 1.4 and that of glory an inheritance and that of a kingdom Tell me then O man what is more desireable then life what life more excellent then that of glory what glory more glorious then that of a Kingdom what Kingdom more firm then that by inheritance Now know then that life and eternal life glory and a Crown of glory a Kingdom and a Kingdom by inheritance is the reward of those who suffer in the way of righteousness for the name of Christ This that which made that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cloud of witnesses Heb 11. Heb. 1.1 those many Worthies of whom the world
there nothing more hateful to Gods nature and what Gods soul perfectly hates his hand will most severely punish however it may seem to prosper for the present Let David's advice then be as acceptable as it is seasonable Fret not thy self because of evil doers Ps 37.1 neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity v. 2. And the reason is good for they shall be cut down like the grass and wither as the green herb Sometimes the wicked like the green herb they wither in their spring they fall in their rise they perish in the beginnings of their mischievous designs but if they do come to a full growth they grow but to harvest the fit season of their cutting off See another Simile very emphatical The w cked shall perish v. 20. and the enemies of the Lord shall be as the fat of lambs they shall consume into smoke shall they consume away The Metaphor is very expressive and full The thriving worldlings like the fatted lambs God reserves them for the sacrifices of his vengeance and they shall consume even as the smoke so shall they consume away as the smoke when it is at its highest ascent so the wicked when at their highest advancement they then suddenly vanish and come to nothing The wicked of the world though ne'r so high and mighty they shall be written in the earth Jer. 17 13. Luk. 10.20 Ps 17.14 opposite directly to that of the godly though ne'r so low and weak whose names are written in heaven The men of this world they have their portion in this life but as for the Citizens of heaven their inheritance is eternal As the godly then are made blessed in an heavenly happiness so sometimes the wicked in an earthly But as the men of the world are said to have their names written in the earth for their temporal felicitie so also for their certain instability yea their sudden destruction For how suddenly are their names wip'd out by the hand of Providence who are only written in the earth whose foundation of felicity is no more then vanity yea is sin it self Further yet what we prize and would preserve in memory we engrave in marble or in brass but what we lightly esteem Prov. 10 7 quasi per lusum as it were in a sport we write it in the dust or upon the ground Thus the godly shall be had in everlasting remembrance but the memory of the wicked shall rot The former are written in heaven the latter in the earth The godly though temporally miserable yet shall they be eternally happy the wicked though temporally happy yet shall they be eternally miserable Away then with all envious repinings or murmuring impatience at the flourishing prosperity of the wicked What! dost thou wonder that so just a God should suffer so horrid injustice to go unpun●shed Know'st thou not that God oft-times deals with men of a reprobate sense as the Physitian with his Patient in a desperate sickness He gives them over and permits them to have whatsoever they desire A condition this sure not to be envied at in thy worst of enemies And thus Magna yea maxima ira est Hier. ep 33 in Ps 140. quando peccantibus non irascitur Deus God is most severe when being provoked by sin he withholds from punishing and is then most angry when he least discovers his wrath leaving men to their own wills and so to work their own perdition by their own profaneness The liberty of lust is the greatest bondage and uncontroll'd prosperity the sorest plague which made Tertullian say Tert. de pat c. 11. O servum illum beatum cujus emendationi Dominus instat cui dignatur irasci O blessed is that servant with whom the Lord will vouchsafe to be angry that he may amend him 2. The Churches assured preservation notwithstanding her present persecution Which assurance is founded upon Gods promise and her own experience 1. This assurance is founded upon Gods promise and that confirm'd by oath when speaking of the Royal Prophet as a Type of Christ who alone in person and kingdom is eternal of him saith God once and that once for all Ps 89 35 36. yea for ever once have I sworn by my holiness that I will not fail David but his seed shall endure for ever and his throne as the sun before me His seed that is Christ and Christ in his Saints begotten of God through the Spirit they shall endure for ever And however the throne of Christ in his Church like the body of the Sun in the heavens may sometimes be clouded yet is not the power of Christ any more then the light of the Sun extinguished but at length He shall arise and the enemies of the Lord shall be scattered Ps 68.1 like clouds before the sun they shall suddenly vanish and utterly be dispel'd And as we have heard the promise of God unto Christ so hear we the promise of Christ unto his Church That the gates of hell shall not prevail against her The gates For the understanding of this Mat. 16.18 it is easie to observe even in Scripture how of old in the gate was held the Court and the Guard the Judgment and the defence of the City there the Soldier kept his watch his guard for defence and there the Judge had his Tribunal his Court for Judgment So that by the gates of hell is meant in a Figure all the power and policie of hell all which saith Christ of his Church they shall not prevail against it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non superabunt eam so Beza they shall not overcome her yea they shall be overcome by her for so the word as Scultetus observes it is verbum bellicum a warlike word which signifies the combat and contest of enemies till one party be subdued and overthrown The power and policie then of Satan and hell they may valere but they cannot praevalere they may vertere but they cannot subvertere they may shake the Church but being founded upon the rock Christ Jesus they cannot throw her down they cannot do with the Church as with her Temples rase her foundation no Christ will preserve her from levelling We may observe the Fabrick of the Universe was not fram'd but that the Church might be constituted and therefore God did not rest from his works of creation till he came to a Church to worship him the Creator Seeing then the end of forming the world was to constitute a Church easier it is to shatter in pieces the frame of Nature then bring to ruine the Church of God 2. The Churches assurance of preservation founded upon her own experience 2 Cor. 1.10 The Church frames her argument of faith with S. Paul God hath deliver'd me and doth deliver me and I trust also he will deliver me And therefore if we be not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nazianzen speaks Naz. stilit 1. Ps
the Church Triumphant by some excellent glory According to that of the Prophet Dan. 12 3. They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the Firmament and they that turn many to righteousness as the Stars for ever and ever To close then in days of persecution St. Paul tells us That the suffering Saints of Christs Church 1 Cor. 4.9 they are made a Spectacle unto the World and to Angels and to Men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the Apostle We are brought forth into the World as upon a stage to play a prize in the view of Heaven and Earth So that being approved we cannot but be manifest yea performing our parts well the Angels themselves shall give a pla●dite at our exit they shall with triumph conveigh our Souls into the Heavenly Presence Heb. 2.10 where Christ the Captain of our Salvation as Arbiter of the Combate shall bestow a Crown of Glory as the reward of Victory 1 Cor 9 25. In days then of tryal and trouble from the persecutions of Heresie Quest How may we best order our lives as such who are approved for constancy in the Faith Answ In the exercise of these Christian Duties Answ fervent Prayer sincere Obedience devout Meditation strict Watchfulness and holy Zeal 1. Fervent Prayer That God would be pleased in mercy to open the eyes and incline the hearts of the Seducers and of the seduced O Beloved you know not the vertue and efficacy of Prayer for the Conversion of Souls Prayer may do it when Preaching fails when the religious and tender mother Monica applied her self to St. Ambrose with this humble suit That he would by his learned Conference reclaim her son Augustine from his Error seduced into the blasphemous Heresie of the Maniches Though she urged her suit with sighs and that Pathetical Oratory of flowing tears yet the pious and prudent Father waves her request and returns her this answer Thy sons heat of youth and pride of sp rit does render him uncapable of my Conviction to his Conversion but thou continuing thy Prayers earnestly soliciting the Throne of Grace Aug. Confes l. 3. c. 12. Ille legendo reperiet quis ille sit error quanta impietas He shall finde by reading in how great an Error and Impiety he is involved For that Tot lachrymarum filius the son of so many tears shall not perish And that this was seasonable and saving advise the manner and method of St. Augustines Conversion evidently declares Let this then be a part of their Prayer who are approved in the Faith That God would open the eyes and incline the hearts of the Seducers and the seduced or if their Seduction be a Judgment of Reprobation and irreversible by Prayer let this be our supplication That God will defend and deliver his Church from the Policies and Practises 2 Thes 3 2. the Pertinacy and Persecution of such unreasonable men as the Apostle calls them And in our Prayers let not our hearts fail nor our faith faint for notwithstanding the thick mists and threatning storms yet God will be seen in the Mount a present help in our pressing troubles and a saving deliverance in our deepest distresses With Jehoshaphat when we know not what to do then Let our eyes be towards the Lord 2 Chron. 20.6 and if our eyes be towards God in Prayer his eye will be towards us in pity and his compassion shall bring Salvation 2. To our fervent Prayer we must joyn a sincere Obedience I doubt not but that we have many of us poured forth many Prayers breathed forth many sighs But what is the reason they have not returned as Noahs Dove Gen. 8.11 With an Olive branch of peace a gracious answer of mercy Is it not because we have sought our selves more then our God Our ease and rest more then his truth and righteousness Psal 65.2 God is a God that heareth Prayers this is a title in which he glories a glory of which he boasts So that our narrow hearts stop his flowing streams and we become straitned in our selves not in our God His Mercies are free and full our Prayers empty and vain and why are our Prayers empty and vain but because our lives are sinful and vile God is not unwilling to give but we uncapable to receive he not backward to bestow but we unfit to enjoy we seek Consolation but not in the way of Sanctification we desire Peace and rest but pursue it not in the way of Truth and Holiness Renewed hearts and reformed lives O how well how well Beloved do they suit the old Faith and antient Truth That truth in which we profess to be constant and that Faith in which we desire to be approved But oh when our sins out-cry our Prayers and our Conversations confute our Supplications no wonder if an Orthodox Church languish And a few Suppliants at the Throne of Grace have their Prayers returned into their own bosoms not availing for the publick good being strongly overborn by a publick gu●lt Wherefore when we implore God in Prayer imitate we the Church in the Lamentations Lam. 3.41 By lifting up our hearts with our hands unto God in the Heavens Hieron in loc Now Cor cum manibus levat qui orationem operibus roborat he lifts up h●s heart with his hands who strengthens his Prayers with his works his hearty Devotion with his sincere Obedience 3. Devout Meditation This in the sacred Scriptures the Pandects of Divine Law from whence we argue the Panoply and Magazin from whence we arm our Tongues and Pens against all that is Heretical Onely our Meditation here must be accompanied with Humility 1 Cor. 8.1 that Knowledge puff not up with Pride And therefore herein especially do we exercise our Humility in not being over-confident of our own knowledge for alas when the best know most how far are they from knowing half of what is contained in the Mysteries of the Grace and Gospel of Christ For that Hierom in Eph. 3. Singuli sermones syllabae apices puncta in divinis scripturis plena sunt sensibus so St. Hierom every word every syllable every letter every title Chrys Proaem C●m in Ep. ad Rom. Dam Scripturae bonae intelliguntur non bene quod in eis non bene intelligitur etiam temerè audacter asseritur Aug. Tract 18. in Joan. Id. Aug. in the sacred Scriptures is full of mystery and divine meaning Now from hence are all Heresies even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a not knowing the Scriptures so St. Chrysostome and St. Augustine more fully hereby men become Heretical when they have not a right understanding of the sacred Scriptures and what they rightly understand not through ignorance they rashly assert with boldness Wherefore when we meditate upon the sacred Scriptures meeting with some more secret and amazing mysteries let our humility teach us that there Melior est fidelis ignorantia
fast to them and to their doctrine keep firm to that profession of Faith which the Orthodox Clergy have preached in their Sermons and still preach in their sufferings such as never yet renounced or contradicted their subscriptions The sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government contained in the Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Book of Homilies and of Ordination These every Minister did subscribe to even those Ministers did set to their hands in subscription to justifie them who after lift up their hands in Covenant to destroy them But God grant them Repentance and us Perseverance them Repentance of their Revolt and us Perseverance in the Faith that at the last day the Church may say to us what Christ said to his Apostles Lu● ● 28 Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations and then shall Christ in the view of the whole World reward our Patience and crown our Constancy making it manifest fully manifest That we are approved Thus have we done with the several particulars of the Explication and of the Application what remains but your practice Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you Introduction IF we who serve in the Sanctuary do as men intrusted in greatest Affairs and Imployments should do often view our Commission from our Saviour as his Ministers 1 Cor. 4.1 Matth. 10.24 2 Cor. 5.20 from our Lord as his Stewards from our Master as his Servants yea from our King as his Ambassadors This frequent view will animate our Ministry with a zealous vigor encouraged in our Service by the authority and presence of our Lord and Master See the Preface to my Text and we finde our Saviour victoriously risen from the Grave and before he triumphantly ascends into Heaven he orders the affairs of his Church on Earth speaking unto his Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things concerning the Kingdom Acts 1.3 The Kingdom of which he is Soveraign All power being given unto him in Heaven and in Earth which power he hath promised shall never fail his Church For so says Christ unto his Apostles and all their Successors in the close and compline of the Text Behold I am with you unto the end of the World I am with you in the work of your Ministry with you to prosper your labors and protect your persons To prosper your labors making Disciples not to your selves but to me You I have deputed to the Office of Preaching my Word and administring my Sacraments and therefore they who own me their Master shall acknowledge you my Ministers But further I am with you Matth. 10.40 as to prosper your labors so to protect your persons I will plead your right vindicate yo r authority punish your contempt and avenge your injury If any sleight and despise the office of your ministry if any question or doubt the efficacy of mine Ordinances my Word my Sacraments see my power behold my presence maugre all the malice and rage of men and devils of earth and hell the ministry of my Gospel and Grace shall stand let this then be your encouragement and comfort let this be your assurance and establishment I will justifie your Office and make good your Commission for All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth and lo I am with you unto the end of the World And therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye teach all Nations c. The words they are the very basis and foundation of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles Observe in them three parts a Mission Division a Commission and particular Instructions for the exercising that Commission First The Mission delivered in an usual Grecism of the Participle for the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Secondly The Commission not barely no nor properly teach but more fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples Dìscipulas facìte omnes gentes as Beza Disciple ye all Nations Thirdly The particular instructions for the exercising this Commission 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptising and Teaching admitting into the School and Church of Christ by Baptism and then tutoring and training up by Doctrine which Baptism is instituted as to the form of its ministration to be In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost and the Doctrine is prescribed as to the extent of its object to be All things whatsoever Christ hath commanded the end of wh ch Doctrine is obedience even to observe and do Thus Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them in the Name of th● Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you 1. The Mission Go ye The three Offices of Christ as Mediator Explic. his Prophetick Priestly and Regal Office These he now exerciseth in his Church on Earth in the outward Ministry by her Pastors and in the inward Ministra●ion by his Spirit In the outward Ministry of the Church her Pastors do expound the Word of God Preach the Gospel of Truth unfold the Mysteries of Grace which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Prophetical Office Again they offer up the Sacrifices of Prayers and Thanksgivings Baptize and bless in the Name of Christ and celebrate the Sacramental solemnity of the holy Eucharist which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Priestly Office Further yet they bind the unbelieving and loose the Believer they excommunicate the scandalous and absolve the penitent they govern by Discipline and correct by censure which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Regal Office Now no part nor portion of this Ministry may any man take upon him Heb. 5.4 but being called as was Aaron that is called even with an inward and outward call as thus A man hath been brought up in the Schools of the Prophets or else where devoted himself to the study of Divinity whereby he is become in a competent measure fitted for the service of the Church 1 Pet. 5.2 when now he findes St. Peter's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a willingness of spirit and readiness of minde to employ his gifts this is the inward call of God But further to testifie and declare this there must be the outward call of the Church Christ receiving him into the Office of the Ministry by the regular Ordination of his Substitutes who alone in this representing his person can give us our Mission of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye But alas the disorder and confusion of Sacriledge and Schism What was the Prophets complaint is now our Churches groan
thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord c. See David here right according to his own Emblem Ps 42.1 even as the Hart panting after the water-brooks As the Hart so he wounded and pursued wounded with distress and pursued with danger he pants after the water-brooks eagerly longs after the refreshing comforts of Gods Sanctuary Division In the Division of the words observe two general parts Davids Petition with its Divine Reason 1. Davids Petition One thing have I desired of the Lord that I will seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life 2. The divine reason of Davids Petition To behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire c. In the first General observe two Particulars the Object and the Acts. The Object 1. Emphatically asserted to be unum one thing 2. That one thing expresly described to be this That I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life This the Object Secondly the Acts they are two The one speaks the inward affection that of desire the other speaks his eager prosecution of what he desired in seeking after it One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life This is Davids Petition to which he is moved by a twofold reason of Delight and of Devotion 1. Of Delight relating to the types and the antitypes the shadowing figures and glorious mysteries even a beholding the beauty of the Lord. 2. That of Devotion relating to the Oracle and the Altar the Incense and the Sacrifice to which answers our Preaching and Prayer with the Administration of the Sacraments And this David calls a visiting or an enquiring into Gods temple Thus the wounded Hart pants thus Davids troubled soul longs and longing breaths forth his distress concentred in this Petition One thing have I desired of the Lord c. Explic. First General Davids Petition and therein the Object emphatically asserted to be unum one thing In the beginning of the Psalm David keeps an Audit of his Souls accounts reckoning up the large incomes and lasting treasures of Gods bounty grace and mercy the sum whereof is this The Lord is my light and my life my strength and my salvation And now where shall David design his presence but where is his light where shall he desire his person but where is his strength where shall he wish his soul but where is his life and where shall he fix his habitation but where is his salvation even in communion with his God and this especially in the holy Worship of his Sanctuary No wonder then if above all things he desires and seeks after this one thing to dwell in the house of the Lord c. There are quos interpellat ad desiderandum finis ipse desiderandi says Tertullian well Tert. de paen Isa 57.20 There are those whom the end of one desire provoketh to another fluctuating souls whose motion is that of a troubled Sea in continual waves and no wonder if the Needle flit up and down the Compass whilst it is not fixt upon his Pole So no wonder if the mind of man wanders in multiplicity of desires whilst 't is not fixt upon Davids unum his one thing the enjoyment of his God 1 Pet. 2.11 We are here strangers and pilgrims The soul then pursuing sensual delights may haply find some Inne for a nights lodging but no house to make its home no object to make its center Our right habitation can there only be where is our true contentation our repose where is our rest and that is God and this by communion with him in Christ which communion with him in Christ we have in his ordinances and Christs ordinances are in Gods house Gods house then is that one thing above all things which most conduceth to the good of souls yea and welfare of States For no Nation ever prospered in which Gods house was prophaned and when judgment reacheth the Sanctuary who shall secure the City Ezec● 9 ● 6. Ps 75.3 Gen 32.26 The Prayers of the Church are the prosperity of a People whose united force is beyond that of men and Angels it prevails with God Eph. 2.3 it overcomes the Almighty not letting him go without a blessing But from whence is the Churches unity why from Loves union From which union of love it is that the faithful become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-members of the same mystical body fellow heirs of the same eternal Kingdom fellow-citizens of the same heavenly Jerusalem Yea such is the communion of love as not only makes many one but also one many hereby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so S. Chrysostom love not only combines ten thousand into one but also multiplies one into ten thousand For look how many lovers a man hath so manifold he is he hath so many eyes to see for him so many ears to hear for him so many feet to go for him so many hands to work for him so many tongues to speak for him and so many hearts to pray for him Thus the prayers of the Church by a communion of love become each mans in particular which are all theirs in the general And this is the incomparable benefit of the Churches Liturgy generally received that each one hath ten times ten thousand together imploring at the Throne of grace for that blessing he singly sues for Oh the sweet delight of those Closet contemplations when we could take a view of all the Congregations in England at one time of the Lords day in one place of the Lords house in one posture of bended knees and of lift up hands and eyes and hearts breathing one Prayer and closing one Amen! Oh how lovely were this in the sight of Angels how acceptable in the presence of God thus at once in an united force to wrestle with him for a blessing Gen. 32.14 as did Jacob And as such the Prayers such also the Praises of the Church the Militant being Eccho to the Triumphant Holy holy Isa 6.3 so in the Te Deum to Holy Lord God of Hosts that Song of the Cherubims in heaven and of Saints on earth Oh! had we this sacred Unity how soon would vanish our hateful Divisions O that all mens Ambitions and Covetousness were concentred in the Unity of David's desire to enjoy God in his Sanctuary to dwell in his house and devote themselves to his holy worship This the first particular of Davids Petition as to the Object emphatically asserted to be unum one thing 2. We proceed to this one thing as it is expresly described A dwelling in the house of the Lord. Of all the creatures God still hath some whom he calleth his as separate by a particular dedication and sanctification to himself Thus
embraces of thy love and comforts of thy Spirit unto thee that thy thorns may be my crown thy blood my balsom thy curse my blessing thy death my life Coloss 3.3 thy cross my triumph Thus is my life hid with Christ in God and if so then where should be my soul but where is my life And therefore unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul § 4. I lift up my soul unto thee at thy Table who hast been thy self lift up for me on thy Cross thou hast been lift up for me in a propitiatory sacrifice and therefore I here offer my self to thee in a gratulatory oblation Is● 53.10 thou madest thy soul an offering for sin and here I make my soul an offering of thankfulness In this Eucharist then accept my 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mine oblation of praise and thanksgiving in which O Lord it is that I lift up my soul unto thee § 5. Unto thee O Lord thy flesh thy blood not unto the outward elements the bread the wine unto thee and thy fulness as the inward grace not unto thee and their use as the outward sign My soul dwells not on those earthly symbols but by them as by a ladder it ascends and lifts up it self unto thy heavenly riches And thus whilst my body feeds on consecrated food oh let my soul be filled with thy consecrating fulness whilst my body tastes their wholsom sweetness let my soul be satisfied with thy saving goodness And to this end it is that unto thee O Lord I lift up my soul § 6. Unto thee O Lord Oh make good thy name of Lord unto me as Lord rebuke Satan and restrain all earthly and carnal affections that they do not once dare to whisper a temptation to my soul a distraction to my thoughts whilst I am in communion with thee in prayer at thine holy ordinance Do thou as Lord rule me by thy grace govern me by thy Spirit defend me by thy power and crown me with thy salvation Thou Lord the Preserver of heaven and earth thou openest thine hand Psal 145.16 and satisfiest the desire of every living thing Oh open now thine hand thy bosom thy bounty thy love and satisfie the desires of my longing soul which I here lift up unto thee § 7. Thou Lord givest bread to man from the earth thou gavest Manna to Israel from heaven give oh give thy self unto me in this Sacrament as the true bread the heavenly Manna the life-giving food of thy Church Thou Lord art now reigning in heaven oh do thou now also set up thy throne in my heart Thou art exalted in heavenly glory oh manifest thy self in thy gracious presence In thy heavenly glory thou art the joy of holy Angels and blessed Saints in thy gracious presence be thou now the reviving of devout souls and humble Penitents O my love my joy my Jesus my Lord be thou present with me in thy Sacrament present more then by inspiration and make me present with thee and that more then by meditation even lift up my soul unto thee in a spiritual real and eternal communion § 8. Oh how does this blessed Sacrament add wings to devout souls and wrap them up with S. Paul unto the third heaven 2 Cor. 1● 2 in an extasie of contemplation and love And what shall my soul now lie groveling on the earth hiding it self with Saul amongst the stuff 1 Sam. 10.22 clogg'd and deprest with worldly thoughts with earthly and carnal affections No it may not it must not Christ is risen Col. 3.1 and therefore sursum corda my heart my spirit that shall rise too and seek those things which are above even unto thee O Lord my Jesus do I lift up my soul § 9. My soul but how shall I call it mine seeing it is thine thine by purchase thine having bought it with thy blood yea is it not thy Spouse whom thou hast wedded to thy self by thy Spirit through faith And is not this holy Sacrament the Marriage-feast If so sure then my Jesus I was lost in my self till found in thee and therefore my soul is now and not till now truly mine in being wholly thine so that I can say with confidence I lift up my soul unto thee § 10. I lift up Oh the load of my sins the burden of my flesh so heavy that I cannot of my self lift up my head how shall I then lift up my soul Wherefore O my Savior do thou add thy strength to my weakness thy supporting grace to my fainting spirit and then I will run after thee and lift up not onely my hands but my heart not onely my eies but my soul unto thee § 11. My soul For it is not indeed the eye or the tongue or the hand or the knee but the soul which makes the acceptable service in prayer and praises unto God the devotion of the soul that is the very soul of devotion Wherefore that I may present my self a living sacrifice at Christs table Rom. 12.1 my best part shall be my first oblation and therefore in the very preparation and entrance of this sacred solemnity See O see unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul Vers 2 3. O my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed let not mine enemies triumph over me yea let none that wait on thee be ashamed let them be ashamed which transgress without cause § 1. O My God I trust in thee c. My prayer O Lord is founded upon faith my faith upon thy promises so that because thou art my God therefore I trust in thee yea because I trust in thee therefore thou art my God My God otherwise O Christ thou wert not my Jesus but O my Jesus who savest me by thy blood Gal. 3 1. in this thy Sacrament thou art set forth crucified and I behold thy wounds from whence by the hand of faith I pluck forth these comfortable words of life My Lord and my God Joh. 20 28. § 2. My God mine for thou hast partook of my humane nature 2 Pet. 1 4. and thou hast made me to partake of thy divine nature thou hast taken upon thee my flesh and thou hast communicated unto me of thy Spirit yea in this thy Sacrament thou communicates body and blood flesh and spirit thy whole Manhood yea thy very Godhead too thy whole self as Mediator therefore thou art my God and I trust in thee § 3. I trust in thee to make good my right to the Covenant of Grace to make good my claim to the heavenly inheritance yea even to make good my communion with thee in all thy fulness a communion so firm that the Bread and Wine I eat and drink is not more really my food then thou my Jesus in whom I beleeve and trust art my God And for this so great a blessing of thy love for this so great a benefit of thy grace it is
of wickedness and under the most signal judgments of thy displeasure men plead signal testimonies of thine acceptance even in what thy soul hates thy Word condemns and thy wrath pursues § 4. Whilst I see Covenants and Engagements entred with a seeming zeal but broken with open perjurie whilst I see Sacriledge possess yea demolish thy Temples and yet Hypocrisie pretend a propagating thy Gospel whilst I see injustice in the seat of Judgment Profaneness invade Devotion and Violence suppress what is sacred and religious sure these waies of the world are none other then the waies of deceit and lead into the chambers of death But thy waies Prov. 6 27. O Lord are waies of truth and lead in the paths of life wherefore shew me thy waies and teach me thy paths Psal 16.11 § 5. Do thou shew me and do thou teach me While others take upon them to shew me thy waies they teach me to throw off the sacred Order thou hast establishe in thy Church as wicked and antichristian they teach me to desert thy publick Worship as Popery and Superstition yea they teach me Heresie and pretend it is thy Word they teach me Blasphemie and pretend it is saving Doctrine they teach me Schism and pretend it is the Communion of Saints they teach me to prophane thine Ordinances Joh. 4 24. and pretend it is to worship thee in Spirit Wherefore do thou thou Lord shew me do thou teach me as shew me thy waies in thy Word so teach me thy paths by thy Spirit yea lead me in thy truth and teach me make me to learn by practising let the experiences thou givest me of thy sanctifying grace confirm my soul in the sincere profession of thy saving truth § 6. But O my Jesus behold me here another poor Bartimaeus so blind that to shew me thy waies thou must not only point them out but also give me eyes to see Yea I here present my self at thy Table as another impotent Cripple in the Temple Act 3 2● so that to lead ●e in thy truth thou must not onely go before me but give me feet also to run after thee And that thou my Jesus who art the same yesterday today and for ever wilt now by a miraculous power of thy grace and truth Heb. 13 8. even cure my spiritual lameness and ignorant blindness this is the ground of my hopes thy Promises this is my encouragement● thy Sacrament in which Sacrament and Promises thou art exhibited unto my soul as the God of my salvation In thy word thou hast given the promise and in thy Sacrament that promise is sealed that thou wilt save me from the pathes of death and lead me in the way of everlasting life and so faithful art thou who hast promised that safer it is for my soul to be as low as Hell with a promise Heb. 10.23 then to be as high as Heaven without it though as low as hell yet would hope bear me up and though as high as heaven yet would presumption throw me down Jer. 17.5 1 King 13.4 § 7. Thou O God who art my trust art my salvation my trust is not in the arm of flesh that like Jeroboams hand doth suddenly wither my trust is not in humane power or policie that I see by daily experiments Jon. 4 7. proves like Jonas Gourd when the Sun beats hottest when trouble and dis●●ess is the the greatest then doth it vanish and come to nothing what then is my trust Truly Lord my trust is even in thee Psa 146.5 6. who hast made heaven and earth whose Wisdom will find out the way and Power effect the means of my salvation notwithstanding all the present difficulties and seeming impossibilities of deliverance § 8. Yea thou O Lord my joy my Jesus thou art the God of my salvation Oh transcendent love Oh rich mercy Oh incomprehensible goodness the God of my salvation Blessed Saviour had the efficacie of thy merits extended no further to the race of mankind then mine own self yet wouldst thou glory and make me rejoyce in being the God of my salvation And Oh firm salvation which is founded upon the Grace Wisdom Power and Faithfulness of my God! in all which attributes my God my Jesus communicates himself unto me in this his Ordinance sealing me the salvation of my God and giving me a communion with the God of my salvation in this holy Sacrament § 9. O how willingly could my soul dwel upon this Mount and build Tabernacles for this contemplation of my Saviours love how do I behold him through faith communicating himself unto me in all his fulness Which fulness is in his Church and in his chosen as the soul is in the body and in the members whole in the whole and whole in every part So that though he gives salvation unto all yet does he communicate himself unto my soul in that fulness of his merits and grace as if I were saved alone And Oh that my soul could imitate my Savior Oh that my heart might return like love in giving my self my whole self unto my Jesus even in that fervor of affection and ravishment of spirit as if I alone were wholly to possess him joying in him and enjoyed by h m as the one and onely God of my salvation § 10. Seeing then thou art the God of my salvation on thee do I wait all the day so that If I find not present comfort in thy blessed Sacrament yet on thee will I wait the husbandman doth not sow his seed and reap his crop in a day wherefore if thou art pleased to defer thy salvation for the trial of my faith and love yet on thee will I wait in a constant use of those sacred means thou hast ordained and the continued practise of those holy duties thou hast enjoyned and though this be all my daies Oh let not my faith faint seeing I cannot wait too long for the grace I so much desire and which am assured I shall at last obtain Matth ●24 23. seeing he who indures to the end shall be saved § 11. On thee do I wait on thee whose hand of bountie whose bo om of love yea whose bowels of mercy are not onely opened but inlarged to all humble penitents on thee do I wait wait to hear the secret voice of thy Spirit speaking peace unto my conscience wait to feel the reviving v●gor of thy grace quickning mine obedience wait to see the subduing power of thy holy Spirit quelling my rebellious sin wait to feel the chearing vertue of thy heavenly comforts refreshing my fainting soul for all these thy blessings O thou God of my salvation on thee do I wait all the day All the day being never so satisfied with thy goodness as not more eagerly to long after thy heavenly fu●ness wherefore now refresh my faintings quench not my desires but the more freely thou gives let me the more eagerly covet the more
this blessed Sacrament § 7. In the close observe the strange yet strong argument of faith and repentance Pardon mine iniquity for it is great what does the humble penitent pray and plead for pardon from the heinousness of the offence and the multitude of the sins yea and an inforcing plea it is too when uttered from a broken heart and contrite spirit for that then even then is God most affected with mercy when he sees man most afflicted with misery This cry then of the humble penitent unto God pardon my iniquity for it is great is like that of the languishing patient unto the Phisitian help me for I am dangerously sick this we are sure the greater the sense of sin the greater the sincerity of repentance where then there is true penitence it will be a good argument to pray as David here does For thy name sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great Vers 12 13 What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall chuse His soul shall dwell at ease and his seed shall inherit the earth § 1. OH the water-floods of ungodliness which over-flow the world as another deluge in a general apostacy from truth and righteousness yet who is it that fears drowning who is it that in sense of sin and remorse of soul fears humbly and contritely fears the just wrath and vengeance of God Many there are in deed who plead for Reformation and pretend the fear of the Lord but what do they but cast out Devils by Beelzebub cast out prodigality by covetousness superstition by prophaneness Popery by Atheism and the like Yea as the Psalmist speaks whilst the vilest of men are exalted exalted to Moses Chair and Aarons Altar needs must it follow that the wicked walk on every side Psal 12.8 ambulant in circuitu as the vulgar Translation reads it they walk about in a circle pursuing their worldly interest they tread a large circumference of sins of which Hell it self is the Center § 2. See their character from the pen of an Apostle Rom. 3.13 Their throat is an open sepulchre with their tongues they have used deceipt the poison of Asps is under their lips And what is the true orginal as well as the high aggravation of all this wickedness what but that vers 18. There is no fear of God before their eyes So that in wonder at the rarity of a person truely religious we may well say Quis ille vir What man is he that feareth the Lord But it is not onely the rarity but more especially the excellency of the truly religious that David here in devout meditations so much admires § 3. He had said vers 10. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies and now reflecting upon himself he seems to make this the meaning of his here registred meditation Oh how does my conscience accuse me and my sin testifie against me that mine iniquity is great so that though all the waies of God be mercy and truth Vers 10. yet seeing it is to them that keep his covenant and his testimonies I cannot find comfort in his promises whilst I continue in my sins I cannot joy in his mercy whilst I languish in my guilt but as for him who hath God always before his face to over-aw his soul from trangressing his commands Psal 4 4. thereby injoying him in his love and the light of his countenance thereby preserving intire his claim to the promises of grace and life his hope of glory and blessedness Oh the excellencie and greatness Oh the beauty and loveliness Oh the bliss and happiness of such a soul of such a Saint O quis ille vir what a man is he he who thus feareth the Lord § 4. Whilst others fear those who kill the body the truly religious fears him who can kill both body and soul Mat. 10.28 and kill not only as wicked oppressors per modum potentiae by way of power but as a righteous Judge per modum justitiae by way of justice Many there are obstinately wicked who yet fear when they have offended struck with the horror of their guilt but it is the devoutly religious who fear to offend struck with the hatred of the sin It is one thing to fear because we have sinned another thing not to sin because we fear The former is oftentimes from the earth earthly the latter is alwaies from heaven heavenly the former does arise oft-times from the love of our selves the latter only from the love of God Cant 5.5 § 5. Fear is the Spouses myrrh which when it is lest we offend like the myrrh flowing of its own inclination it is much the better but when it is because we have offended like the myrrh of the second flowing which comes not without incision some smart and anguish upon the soul the former is the preservative the latter is the plaister the former prevents the malady the latter helps to the cure Of both we may say by way of excellencie though of the former in the greater excellencie What man is he that thus feareth the Lord Feareth for what why not so much for his judgments as his mercies To fear him for his judgments that is servile to fear him for his mercies that is true filial fear When his Judgments of wrath are upon us Isa 26.9 Psal 90.11 who is it that will not fear It was of old Thereafter as a man feareth so is thy displeasure But now the tables are turn'd and it is the direct contrary Thereafter as is thy displeasure so is mans fear § 6. Gods judgments and mans fear unless it be with those desperately wicked who are even fearless of Gods judgments they keep pace If he severely inflict his wrath then a seemingly devout fear is upon us but if he take off his rod we presently cast off our fear whereas the devout and truly pious soul will say as the Psalmist does Psal 130.4 There is mercy w●th thee O Lord therefore shalt thou be feared Indeed to the Godly all the ways of God are mercy so that we cannot tread the path of holiness but we must set foot in the way of mercy especially when we come to Gods house and approach the Lords table there there the Lord receives us into Covenant confirming to us his grace both the grace of Justification in the remission of sins and the grace of Sanctification by the spirit of holiness yea here he communicates the fulness of his benefits the riches of his blessings the sweetness of his love here he strengthens us in spiritual life and gives us the pledge of eternal glory And who is it that will not fear lest by unworthiness he deprive himself of all this mercy or by unthankfulness sin against all this love § 7. What man is he then that feareth the Lord that feareth to be absent
troubled Certainly his absence cannot but be lamented with greatest greif whose presence the soul prize●h above all earthly joy when the evidence of salvation is obscured the light of Gods countenance darkned the comforts of the Spirit detained then the heavens appear not so clear the promises taste not so sweet the Ordinances prove not so lively yea the clouds which hang over the soul they gather blackness doubts arise fears over-flow terrors increase troubles inlarge and the soul becomes languishingly afflicted even with all variety of disquietments § 10. Oh how does the experience of former happiness sharpen the sence of present misery Every evil after the experience of the opposite good becomes the greater evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Epist 37. when the soul then calls to mind how it hath been inlarged in its devout accesses to the Throne of grace and found no solace like that of communion with God through Christ and withall now sees its communion cut off and the comforts vanished the spring stop'd and the streams ceast O how great must needs be the bitterness of her grief miserum est fuisse felicem we commonly say it is a miserable thing to have been happy it is the souls trouble that she is without Christ but it is the increase of her trouble the sharpning of her affliction that she hath lost him him whose presence was once so sweet that it makes his absence to be most bitter § 11. Many indeed there are well enough as to present sorrow without Christ because they never injoyed him but what soul ever injoyed Christ that can injoy it self and want him without Christ that soul may see her wounds but cannot see her cure she may see her danger but cannot see her refuge and when God shall conceal his love and reveal our guilt hide his face and discover our sin what can be more greivous and afflicting So that well might David joyn his spiritual dereliction and his secret anguish saying I am desolate and afflicted § 12. 3 The high aggravation the troubles of my heart are inlarged the heart of man is the greatest Tyrant the cruellest persecutor to himself he needs none other fury who hath that of an accusing spirit this this alone will be Accuser and Witness Law and Judge Executioner and Punishment the very rack and gibbet of the soul Oh the piercing sting Oh the loud clamors of an accusing conscience this this alone doth make a hell upon earth distracting direful and accusing thoughts are worse then chains then stripes then death needs must that mans troubles be inlarged his anguish increased when his soul left to its own darkness and unbelief with Saul it falls upon its own sword becomes its own executioner Witness those dreadful complaints of a deserted soul and wounded conscience in that 88. Prov. 18.14 Psalm For a wounded spirit saith Solomon Who can bear And a wounded spirit who can declare its troubles its distresses they are as unexpressible as they are insupportable especially when the soul is in desertion § 13. When the humble Penitent apprehending the vastness of eternity both as to heavens joys and hells misery hath labored under the pressing weight of sins guilt and the laws curse And when in this Agony the soul hath thrown it self upon God in Christ and felt a sweet peace in the assurance of pardon and love after all this for him to be in so great darkness as to doubt whether Christ will own him whether God will regard him what can this darkness be but the very valley and shadow of death Psal 13 4. O how does a man in desertion through distrust fight against himself if we go about to bind up his wounds he rends them wider give supplying oyle and healing balm and he will make it a very corrosive to his bleeding soul he will fetch misery out of mercy and hell out of heaven for if to comfort his afflicted soul we tell him of Gods fatherly compassion and mercy his riches of grace and love O how does he thus reason against himself this this the accent of my misery to die in the midst of life to perish in the midst of salvation § 14. Surely God is a Father and were I his child his bowels would not be restrained he is infinitely gracious and were I at all in his heart in his love he that receives millions would not reject me he is so mercifull Rom. 10.20 that he is found of them that seek him not and sure if his displeasure were not irreconcileable I that so carefully seek him should at last find him God is goodness it self and sure my evil must needs be great that goodness cast me off nothing then can heal me but that which has wounded me I have lost the presence of my God I have lost the embraces of my Jesus and nothing but that presence and those embraces can bring comfort to my soul but whilst I am desolate I shall be afflicted and the troubles of mine heart will be enlarged This the Case rightly stated in a mournful complaint I am desolate and aflicted the troubles of my heart are enlarged § 15. 2. The Cure fitly applied and 1. To the spiritual dereliction the manifestation of Divine love Turn thou unto me In desertions of comfort God does not cease to be present but to be manifest He withdraws himself not by departing from the soul but by not manifesting himself to the soul By hiding his face Venit cum manifestatur cum ●ccultatur abscedit S. Aug. ep 3. God departs and by manifesting his favor he returns And therefore saith David Turn thee unto me The freest fountain yields the fullest stream and the best good the greatest comfort And the best good is God who being the Object as well as the Author of our comfort the measure of our joy must needs be according to the degree of our enjoyment In heaven we enjoy him fully and therefore have a fulness of joy but on earth having an imperfect possession Psal 16.11 we have but an imperfect consolation So that it is when God turns his face to us that we can say with David Return unto thy rest O my soul He alone who gives life can give comfort Psal 116.7 He alone who gives grace can give peace The Spirit of sanctification is the Spirit of consolation § 16. Indeed that which can satisfie the soul must be the bounty of a soveraign goodness such as is pardon of sin deliverance from hell conquest over Satan hope of glory and the like Yea who or what can quiet the terrors of Conscience but he who is the Prince of peace and greater then the Conscience When the soul like Hagar languisheth Gen. 21.19 it 's the Spirit of grace and truth that can open the eye enlighten the understanding and discover the ●rue well of life and waters of comfort Darkness of mind is the womb of doubts and the shop
himself delivered from the chains of sin the bondage of Satan the powers of darkness and the flames of hell who in the peace of his conscience can see himself made partaker of the merits of Christs death and the benefits of his intercession can see himself admitted into a covenant of grace with the Lord of life and King of glory received into favor with the God of heaven and earth and so as to be made his child and entituled to the kingdom and the glory of his onely Son Which of us can conceive that has not felt what is the comfort of those thoughts of those meditations in that sweet peace of conscience which the faithful have being reconciled unto God through Christ in the remission of their sins § 20. Let us now joyn together the penitent sinner and the devout Saint in this one exhortation that they approach the Table of the Lord with a secret affliction of soul and that being raised by faith and enlarged by prayer 1 A secret affliction of soul in this consideration that their sins have been the cause of Christs sufferings Luk. 23.21 The Jews cried out of Christ crucifie him crucifie him such was the greatness of their malice that if possible they would have had him twice crucified but yet is not their desire too unhappily fulfilled they crucifying him once with their hands and we even we crucifying him again by our sins Who art thou then that comes to Christ without floods of tears when he comes to thee in streams of blood Who art thou who canst worthily meditate on his wounded body without a wounded soul or view his pierced side without a pierced heart in which our Saviour gives us our true devotion bespeaking us as well as the daughters of Jerusalem Weep not for me but for your selves weep not for me or my sufferings Luk. 23.28 in a fruitless compassion but weep for your selves and your sins in an hearty contrition § 21. Thus affected with contrition 2 Let our hearts be raised by faith that so whatsoever is our affliction and pain we may find an healing vertue in the blood of Christ which is this Sacramental administration is none other then Gileads balm to cure Hermons dew to refresh and Aarons ointment to revive all wounded distressed and drooping souls And as we approach this holy Ordinance with hearts raised by faith So 3 Hearts enlarged in prayer and such prayer as by the paths of its devotion may speak the anguish of our affliction as in the sence of our grosser enormities so of our humane infirmities that so for every sinful distemper in us we may receive an healing vertue from Christ and in our prayers for our selves forget we not the afflictions of the Church the calamities of the Nation and seeing our God pursues us with his judgments send we forth legationem lachrymarum in the language of St. Ambrose send we forth an Ambassage of tears to sue for peace And doubt we not but received into the Court of Heaven they shall have their access to the throne of grace and obtain a gracious audience if not for a publick deliverance yet for our particular salvation having our remission of sins and our peace of conscience confirmed unto our souls by his blessed Sacrament as the seal of grace and the pledge of glory to which glory he preserve us by his mercy who hath purchast it by his merits Jesus Christ the Righteous Amen Vers 19. and part of the 20. Consider mine enemies for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred O keep my soul and deliver me § 1. WHat confidence and comfort can there be in pardon of sin when there is not a conscience and care to prevent sin upon humiliation indeed sin forgiven becomes stingless toothless sin the venome and guilt removed but after humiliation sin reacted becomes the most deeply wounding the most closely gnawing sin more wounding then the Serpent more gnawing then the worm Wherefore holy David here having made it his complaint unto God in prayer vers 18. Look upon my affliction and pain and forgive all my sins knowing the number and force eying the multitude and rage of his spiritual enemies his sinful lusts he joyns to that fervent prayer this further petition Consider mine enemies for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred O keep my soul and deliver me § 2. To give the sence of our present interpretation together with the sum of our intended discourse take it in this paraphrase upon the words Consider mine enemies and thine enemies O God are mine thy greatest enemy is sin and my greatest enemies then must be my lusts Oh consider those mine enemies for they are many a whole host warring against my soul they besiege me closely and assault me fiercely they hate and fight against thy good spirit in me and to hate that is to hate me and the good of my soul yea their hate is cruel it is a tyrannous hatred though I never willingly suffer them to rule over me yet too too often they over-rule me Rom. 6.12 Though I never let them command me as a King yet they often compel me as a Tyrant Now Lord whereas many in the daies of trial and of trouble beseech thee to keep their bodies their estates their bodies from imprisonment their estates from spoil to me sin is worse then bonds then beggery yea then death then hell wherefore I beseech thee to keep my soul the salvation of it is dearest of more price then all the world Matth. 16.26 my good name my health my life my friends my estate all may be lost and I safe But oh my soul is my self to cast away it is to cast away me to keep it is to deliver me O then keep my soul and deliver me § 3. Observe in the words two general parts the Subject and the method of Davids prayer The Subject with its description and the method in its gradation 1 The Subject with its description Davids enemies described from the greatness of their number they are many and the violence of their hate it is cruel for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred 2. The Method in its gradation which gradation hath its three steps Consider mine enemies Keep my soul and Deliver me § 4. 1. The Subject with its description Davids enemies described from the greatness of their number they are many consider mine enemies for they are many No man may resolve his sins into any other original then his own lusts as for Satan though it be he that tempts it 's we that act and therefore when we commit any wickedness and sin against God though it be by Satans instigation our tongues may not smite him but our hearts must smite our selves as Davids did in 2 Sam. 24.10 We may not accuse the tempter but our selves who let in the temptation Non diabolus voluntatem delinquendi imponit
faith and a keeping firm a good conscience is that Integrity and uprightness which shall preserve us preserve us by fixing us upon God in Christ as the Rock of our salvation § 8. A Rock this is so deep that no floods can undermine it so high that no waves can overtop so strong that no storms can shatter it when the Soul is set upon this Rock it views the swelling waves how they some and break themselves but neither hurt nor hazard it and therefore does the Soul raised by faith triumphantly conclude that neither height nor depth neither the height of wicked violence nor the depth of worldly troubles shall separate it from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Rom. 8.29 Whereas then amidst the worlds changes and worldlings violences the upright man seems likeliest to be lost yet shall his Integrity preserve him For that this Maxim of sure truth Piety is the best Policy shall confound all Machiavels Principles in the end Ps 94 14.15 So f●●m is that sacred word of promise The Lord will not cast off his people neither will he forsake his inheritance but Judgment shall return into Righteousness and all the upright in heart shall follow it § 9. 2 The Argument of faith wherewith David backs his Petition For I wait on thee As preservation is a continued creation so is waiting a continued trusting for what Trust believes by faith it waits for by hope and thus is Trust a Compound of both When we trust in God we look to the Word of promise and in that 1 Joh. 2.25 to the authority of him that speaks the word and this is the act of faith Again we look to the object of the promise and in that to the goodness of the object and this is the act of hope Yea further when we trust in God we rely upon his promise as from him who is the first Truth and this is faith And we wait for the promise Heb. 6 12 15. as from him who is the chief Good and this is hope Now that God oftentimes suspends the blessings we desire it is to try the trust we profess and if our trust be upright it will be constant the reliance of faith and the expectance of hope make our trust perfect so that the same grace which casts our souls upon God to trust in him will sustain our souls to wait till we enjoy him Ps 27.13 14. § 10. The truth of faith the sincerity of our trust and the integrity of our hope is never more evident then when help is deferred for if any unruliness of passion if any corruption of self love if any base interest of a temporal end if any such thing have tainted our trust our faith our hope it will then appear and our shame will accompany our sin the deserting a good cause by reason of great calamities will manifest to the world our hearts were not upright 1 Ioh. 2 19. however our professions seemed zealous Hereby shall it appear then that we truly trust God when we firmly rest in him Disquiet of mind discovers weakness of trust and a distracting fear argues a disturbed faith § 11. If with integrity we trust God we shall in piety and prudence commit our way to him Ps 37 5. we shall wait patiently the success of our faith and the effects of his providence Thus when the three Children had committed themselves to God Dan. 3 16. they are not careful to answer Nebuchadnezar they know their duty and let God work his will Indeed it is grace in act more then in habit in function more then in affection in use more then in stock that does quicken strengthen support and save And therefore the waiting Saint hath a waking soul his graces are not dormant slugg'd with security presumption or sloth no but still exercised in the duties of holy devotion and a sincere obedience in an active vigor of life and strength § 12. As in nature so in grace motion is the preservat●ve of purity and the incentive of heat even life it self is the more lively by action God say the Schools is a pure act and every creature hath the greater excellency of being by how much it hath the greater perfection of working Rev. 7.15 Rev. 4.8 the heavenly bodies have their rest in motion and the heavenly Saints their blessedness in operation the more holy the soul is the more heavenly a●d the more heavenly the more active It is then in the exercise of grace and duties of obedience that we wait for the accomplishment of Gods promise his promise of deliverance in time of trouble upon which promise David founds his prayer Psal 50.15 and fixeth his faith when he thus bespeaks God saying Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee § 13. Oh what is the best temper of soul then what the best exercise of grace what the best duties of devotion w●en in publick calamities or private distresses we wait for the salv tion of God 1. What the best temper of soul Answ When compos'd to a holy frame of divine patience this resolution we have from our Saviour when he gives the admonition to his chosen amidst the afflictions of his Church that in their patience they possess their souls Luke 21.19 which words compared with the cont●x● admit this Paraphrase As if our Saviour had said though such shall be the persecution of my Church that men rob you of your goods by oppression rob you of your liberty by imprisonment rob you of your lives by cruelty yet let them not rob you of what is more dear and precious then ten thousand worlds your souls and that by sin through impatience of spirit apostatizing from God But in your patience possess your souls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 possess them so as to preserve them preserve them as your best of treasure even in the profession of faith and a good conscience which is still accompanied with peace and rest in the inward man So that the heart of the upright like the center of the earth amidst all the storms tempests and commot ons of the world Psal 112.7 it remains unmoveable from its stedfastness it is still fixed trusting in the Lord. § 14. 2. What the best exercise of grace Answ The exercise of humility of faith and of hope First humility t●is that dispels all secret murmurings at the publick order of Gods providence prompting the soul to an acknowledgment of his Justice and an advancement of his Mercy an acknowledgment of his Justice thus Daniel Dan. 9.7 8. O Lord righteousness belongeth unto thee but unto us confusion of face as at this day to the men of Judah and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and unto all Israel that are near and that are far off through all the Countries whither thou hast driven them because of their trespass that they have trespassed against thee O Lord to
minds from Gods holy worship Indeed our natures are too weak to b●held always intent upon holy duties and therefore Gods woship hath its necessary intermissions in which intermissions the works of our callings are ordain'd for the keeping our minds innocent in their thoughts and renewed in their vigor for his more holy service Here then O thou afflicted soul who complainest of the secret trouble and vexing importunity of thy Vain thoughts here thou hast thy Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction God give thee his Spirit of Grace and Truth to order thy practice and administer thee Consolation through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen! CHAP. II. The Souls Conflict from the frightful Suggestions of Foul Thoughts GReat is the activity of the Soul discovered by the Thoughts which are more quick in their motion then Lightening darting forth in a moment from Earth to Heaven Ps 139.17 18. Phil. 3.20 and back again from Heaven to Earth Which excellencie of Man in the activity of the Mind was given of God for this end that he might turn away from sin at the first appearance of evil But now oh how hath the guilt of sin laid fetters upon this freedom of the mind and made it servile unto Satan if not to act his suggestions yet to suffer his buffetings 2 Cor. 12.7 So that those very thoughts of sin which the soul abhors those the imagination receives and the mind cannot free it self from horror Ps 19 4. through fear of guilt knowing well that as Devout meditations are acceptable so Foul imaginations must needs be abominable abominable to that God Hab. 1.13 who is of most pure eyes and such as cannot behold iniquity Besides whereas our Thoughts present the Idols which our hearts worship and that the Israelites bowing the knee to Baalim and Ashtaroth were not more truly Idolaters Judg. 2.13 Col. 3.5 then the Covetous the Ambitious the Voluptuous who bow the heart to Riches to Honors to Pleasures and the like Therefore the afflicted soul dreads the guilt of the vilest Idolatry even lest by its blasphemous thoughts it fall down to Satan Mat. 4.9 and worship him Oh! how doth the sad experience of many pious souls witness a dreadful horror in their sudden and frequent thoughts of Infidelity Atheism and Blasphemy calling into question the Truth of Gods Word the Order of his Providence and the very Being of his Deity yea such thoughts as for their foulness are not fit to be uttered And therefore many souls languish in dejection asham'd to declare their grief These the Cogitationes onerosae in the language of S. Bernard the burdensom thoughts which load the soul with an unsupportable weight of mournful distress and press it down with an inconceivable anguish of spiritual dejections In which Dejections and Distress hear and compassionate the Souls Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh! oh the Dunghil of mine unclean Heart which sends forth such filthy vapors Needs must my soul be a very Sink of sin whilst there ariseth from thence such a noisom stench of corrupt Thoughts Sure if ever I had been wash'd with the least drop of my Saviours blood or purified with the least spark of his Spirit and grace so great a filth and so foul a corruption could never cleave unto my soul But oh wo is me I see I am so far from being the Temple of the Lord that I am become the very Den of the Devil the flames of Hell already flash in my face and the amazing terrors of cursed Blasphemies torture my soul and wound my Conscience even unto death yea I could rather chuse to die ten thousand deaths then undergo the fears and frights and bitter pangs of my amazing thoughts and dreadful imaginations Ah what what shall I do with these Egyptian frogs my foul Suggestions which are still croaking In every place and in every action in the Church and in the Closet in my meditations and in my prayers still they crawl in and dead my heart yea their noisom stink makes me loath my self and all my services Oh I faint I die I perish whilst asham'd to speak what I abhor to think I must needs despair of cure not knowing how to lay open my sore The Grounds of Comfort 1. The horrid Blasphemies which affright thy soul though they are thy thoughts yet are they Satans suggestions and not having thy consent of will they bring no guilt upon the conscience Jam. 1.44 15. Non nocet sensus ubi non est consensus is the resolution of S. Bernard agreeable to the truth of Gods Word and the judgment of all both Antient and Modern Divines that where the Will yields no consent there the soul may suffer a temptation but act no sin Yea 2 Cor. 12.7 Quod resistentem fatigat vincentem coronat saith the same Father The importunity and frepuencie of the suggestions which weary the soul resisting shall bring the greater crown of glory in its overcoming True it is He that is born of God keepeth himself 1 Joh. 5 18. and that wicked one toucheth him not But how toucheth him not Is it meant of wicked temptations No sure but of wilful transgressions He toucheth him not tachi qualitativo we say and that aright not so touch as to make like himself in an impress of sin and guilt upon the soul Now then that it is no sin to be tempted is more then evident from this one argument That otherwise our Lord and Saviour himself Heb. 4.15 who was tempted had also finn'd Wherefore this is sin to admit the temptation wish allowance or delight 2. That these foul and frightful suggestions have not thy consent of will appears by this that thou hast a loathing and an abhorring of them which speaks the greatest aversion Desst 7.26 Rom. 22.9 and so is far from a consenting of the will As when the stomach loaths any meat though it be forceably cast into the belly yet can it not be said to be receiv'd with rppetite So when the Will abhorrs any suggestion though forcibly cast into the mind yet can it not be said to be receiv'd with Consent And know we are less able to keep the Mind free from Satans suggesting thoughts we abhor then we are to keep the stomach free from anothers forcing meats we loath Thy thoughts then O distressed soul being injected not inbred thoughts cast in from some suggestion without not rais'd up from some corruption within they are only brats laid at thy door not children of thine own begetting they are Satans buffetings in which the soul is meerly passive a sufferer not a doer 2 Cor. 12.7 And therefore as much need of patience as of penitence of fortitude to resist as of contrition to bewail Obj. 1 Ay but thou sayest Sure it is the corruption of my heart from whence these foul thoughts are rais'd and so though the Devil in his malice be the Father yet my corrupt flesh
and salvation Rom. 8 33. oh how will it at once raise the mind with wonder and fill the soul with comfort and this in beholding how in every link in every mysterie Mercy and truth do meet together Ps 85.10 righteousness and peace do kiss each other O thou afflicted soul how will it strengthen thy faith and thereby confirm thy peace yea enlarge thy joy To behold Christ seal'd by the Father to the office of Mediation Joh. 6.27 1 Tim. 2.5 Luk. 4.18 1 Tim. 3.16 and anointed by the Spirit to the work of Redemption which Redemption he hath perfected by his Passion declared sufficient by his Resurrection and applies as effectual unto his Church in his Intercession So that S. Paul makes it his confident challenge to all in heaven in earth and hell saying Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect Rom. 8.33 34. Magnificentissima conclusio Bez. in loc it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us 2. Humbly applying the Promises of life In this exercise of faith O distressed soul thou shalt experimentally find and feel how aptly the Graces of the Spirit are resembled by fire for that as fire by burning Mat. 3.11 so grace by exercising it further enlarges and spreads it self Thus Charity is increased by loving Patience by bearing Mercy by compassionating and Faith it self by believing The best exercise of Faith then is in application of the Promises and the best application of the Promises is in the supplication of Prayer when in a devout fervor we urge God with the truth of his Word and cast our selves upon him in his free grace for the performance of his Promise which as it is made so is it made good in Christ Jesus unto the faithful 2 Cor. 1 20. 3. The Grounds of Comfort as to a distrust of the sincerity of Repentance 1. A man may be truly sanctified and so through the power of grace in the work of the Spirit a sincere Penitent notwithstanding the reliques of sin to hinder his progress in holiness This we have made good by the example of S. Paul who in an high accent of sorrow and a full confession of guilt complains of a body of sin a law in his members and a being brought into captivity to that law of sin Rom. 7.23 24. which sin though it rules not as a King it hath no willing and ready obedience yet it sometimes bears sway as a Rebel and prevails upon the soul so that with the Apostle the good which he would v 15 19. that he does not and the evil which he would not that he does And this S. Paul speaks of himself not as personating the unregenerate estate which many do imagine but as engaged in the spiritual warfare as S. Augustine hath determined For observe S Aug lib. retr v. 18. v. 22. v. 25. to will saith the Apostle is present with me and what is it not the Spirit of grace that thus sanctifies the will Again I delight in the law of God after the inward man this the voice and the practice too sure of a man regenerate Again With my mind I my self serve the law of God Here the Apostle is certainly either a Saint or an Hypocrite Wherefore then from the example presented it is evident a man may be truly sanctified and so through the power of grace a sincere Penitent notwithstanding the reliques of sin which hinder his progress in holiness 2. The more stirring motions and prevailing power of corruptions is not always from the greater impiety but oftentimes from the fitter opportunity to sin Know then O thou afflicted soul though opportunity doth not beget yet it is worth thy enquiry whether it doth not help to bring forth thy sins of infirmity It may be thou art apt to be more angry and passionate then formerly but is it because thou hast less meekness or more provocation It may be thou findest unclean affections more defiling then formerly but is' t because thou hast less chastity or more temptation It may be thou feel'st more grudgings of impatience and distrust then formerly but is it because thou hast less faith or more affliction Mat. 26.35 compar d with v. 56. 2 King 8.12 13 No man knows what corruptions are in him till he be tempted and that occasion and opportunity by an unhappy midwifery bring them forth Besides the difference of thy condition in the world may have made a difference of estate in thy soul Thou art now it may be at ease and rest and if so know the Birds appear in a calm which hid themselves in the tempest Active imployments yea Deut. 32 15. Jer. 48 11. and an afflicted condition in the world silence and still many corruptions which when we are at ease then they appear and shew themselves not that lust hath then more more life but more advantage not more strength but fitter opportunity 3. Thy sight of sin is from more light of Grace Rom 7 7.8 9. Eph 4. ●8 1 Co● 6 11. Rev. 3.17.18 and thy sense of sin from more life of the Spirit Oh how many lustings and sinful corruptions are there which the soul till exercised in the ways of holiness takes no notice or knowledge of So that thy corruptions increased in their number at which thou art so much dismaied do not necessarily argue that thou hast formerly less iniquity but rather that thou art now able to make a more clear and full discovery of thine iniquity which discovery of sin is a good argument to pro●e the growth of grace For as the dust and atomes in the air are not discern'd till the Suns beams present them to the eye so the lusts and corrupt affections of the heart they are not seen till the Beams of divine light do make their discovery to the soul The Rules of Direction 1. Apprehend aright what is the proper sign of a sincere Repentance even the hatred and detestation of sin accompanied with a striving and contending against sin which contention is to be continued weakening sin in its power till we mortifie it in its motions It is not then the not committing of sin which is in it self the proper sign of a sincere repentance For what were this but to send us to the Wilderness or the Cloyster for the only Penitents yea and not find them there neither seeing the sad experiences of the Godly do sufficiently witness that sins of infirmity and of daily incursion as Tertullian calls them they do too too often surprise the best of Saints Peccata quotidianae incursionis Tert. 1 Joh. 1.8 Ps 18.23 Heb. 12.1 and that in the best of duties Yea there is in most if not in all some particular sin of nature which by special appropriation we may with David call
God my Jesus be gone from me yet will I mourn after him if happily I may find him whom my soul loveth O return return my joy my Jesus For till thou dost return I shall lie down in sorrow without thee my soul refuseth to be comforted The Grounds of Comfort 1. As thy distress is not without a promise thy misery without a Redeemer so nor is thy state and condition without many presidents even a cloud of witnesses whose sad experience will give full testimony to this certain truth Ps 55.5 That God oftentimes not only withholds the comforts of his good Spirit but also afflicts with the terror of our own hearts That oftentimes he hides the grace of the Gospel and discovers the rigor of the Law Ps 88.14 15.16 revealing guilt and concealing mercy yea oftentimes he rebukes the heart with secret checks of conscience and convictions of Spirit so that in the sad apprehension of sin and guilt death and hell the soul languisheth with frights and fears with horror and amazements Yet further he oftentimes renews the charge of former sins in the Court of Conscience making a man to possess the iniquities of his youth Job 13.26 and by his Spirit writing such bitter things against him that the soul is struck with the deep impressions of dread and horror in the apprehension of Gods shutting the gate of mercy and peace Ps 77.7 8 9. his refusing to be intreated or to hearken to any terms of reconciliation so that no holy duties or sacred ordinances for a time either administer comfort or discover love That this is the sad experience of the most eminent Saints the Book of Job and Psalms of David will sufficiently testifie And yet withall this testimony too they give of God and of Christ that he lifteth up those that are cast down Ps 37 24 42.11 147.7 8. 148.3 he healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds yea he gives liberty to the Captive health to the sick life to the dead and the divinest comforts to the most dejected souls so that they rejoice in his salvation and exult in his praises 2. This the condition of our present estate to be freed from the discomforts of afflictions as from the power of sin but in part Our graces are imperfect and therefore needs must our peace Our life 's a pilgrimage 1 Pet. 2.11 2 Cor. 10.4 a warfare and so hardship travel danger distress yea conflicts and wounds they are proper to our condition and therefore we may not think them strange but expect them with resolution bear them with patience and pass them through with constancie The day that hath no night no cloud the joy that hath no mourning no grief the crown that hath no cross no care is reserv'd for heaven not found on earth peculiar it is to the state of blessedness and eternity So that I cannot but question the uprightness of that mans heart who never question'd the goodness of his estate I cannot but doubt that mans assurance who never doubted and fear those comforts which were never discomforted There is certainly a woe to that peace which Satan does not sometimes disquiet True it is God could send forth his Saints as the Sun in its course to attract the eyes of all Beholders and make them in their splendor of graces ou●vie Solomon in his lustre of glory But this God hath not thought so agreeable to his wisdom in his dispensations to his Church and chosen 1 Cor. 1. ●3 14 c. he will rather have the Saints excellencie cloth'd with humane frailty and their inward worth vail'd with outward contempt Yea their life is so hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 that themselves oftentimes feel not the quickenings discover not the actings of their own graces for that a cloud of secret trouble darkens the light of all their comforts Doubtless had Adam continued in his primitive integrity God would have communicated himself to man not only by faith and reason but also by sense and external manifestation But now he conveys spiritual things in a spiritual manner We walk by faith and not by sight As is the manifestation of the Divine presence 2 Cor. 5 7 1 Cor. 13 9. such is our participation of Divine comforts all in part and imperfect 3. Though thy comforts are fled from thee yet the God of thy comforts abides with thee though thou wantest Christ in that blest Communion of joy and peace yet thou hast not lost him in that best communion of grace and life Spiritual joy though a sweet flower of Paradise yet a fading flower though a spiritual yet a temporal blessing a separable adjunct of grace and so not of the necessary being but of the happy well-being of a Christian a partial reward rather then a particular vertue Let this then be a firm ground of solid comfort That though thy light of Joy be extinguisht yet thy seeds of Grace are preserv'd thy heart hath its holy affections though emptied of its divine consolations For tell me who is' t that supports thy soul but the same God who conceals his love Does he not incline thine heart to fear and faithful obedience Ps 23 3 4. Isa 2● 8 even when now he withdraws himself from thy soul in the light and comforts of his countenance And if so what thou dost possess is far more precious then what thou hast lost Communion w th Christ in the sanctifying influence is more excellent then communion with him in the comforting light of his Spirit Besides having the fountain thou wilt not be long without the streams having Christ the fulness of comforts thy soul shall not long remain discomforted God will lighten thy candle uncloud thy sun restore thy comforts Ps 7 120 21. This is Davids confidence Thou Lord which hast shewed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth thou shalt increase my g eatness and comfort ●e on every side Hear Gods profession and promise Isa 57.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity whose name is Holy I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones And how revive them why by healing them with his grace leading them with his councels and restoring comforts to them See then the mercy is thine the promise is thine only thou must know and acknowledge the time of dispensing the season of performing is Gods who orders all things in number weight and measure 4. Those rebukes of the Spirit which so much torture thy conscience and that hiding his face which so much sads thy heart is all from a fatherly tenderness of care and love not from an avenging severity of justice and wrath God deals with the soul as David
with Gods displeasure Thus how often is it that God prepares man to become some excellent structure even when he seems to be turning him into a ruinous heap As men intending to repair seem to demolish the building they take away some beams but it is to put in stronger they stop up some lights but it is to make larger Thus is it with the faithful who are Gods building 1 Cor. 3 9. He removes their props of sense to fix the pillars of faith He darkens the light of their spiritual joys but it is to enlarge their fuller comforts The Rules of Direction 1. Search what root of bitterness it is that hath taken away the taste of all heavenly sweetness what guilt of sin that hath depriv'd thee of the comforts of the Spirit Enter the Court of thy Conscience where God hath set up his tribunal and hear what charge is there laid against thee Is it not some stubbornness of spirit some unrepented disobedience which God chastiseth with those rebukes of conscience and terrors of soul For commonly God deals with his backsliding Saints as a King with his rebellious Subjects when neither the proffers of grace nor the promises of pardon when neither the edicts of command nor the threatenings of wrath when neither gracious counsel nor a bearing patience can prevail then does God arm himself to the battel letting flie the arrows of his indignation into their soul Job 6.4 as Job complains The arrows of the Almighty are within me the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit the terrors of God do set themselvs in array against me This is certain upon all known experience that disobedience and impenitence they are the bitter springs of much spiritual distress And truly God need not go far for a rod to chastise our disobedience if he withdraw his comforting Spirit we shall soon find and feel our own will become an afflicting Spirit our own dreadful thoughts will be our sorest scourges 2. Is it not some spiritual lethargy of remisness and sloth that hath seised thine inward man If so no wonder if the Physitian of thy soul prescribe thee so sharp a medicine administer thee so strong a potion all being little enough to rouse thy drowsie spirits and quicken thy dead heart Holy performances whether in the Closet or in the Church they are not only debts we pay to Gods justice but also oblations we owe to Gods mercy Ps ●1 18 19. and therefore either wholly to omit them or slightly to slubber them over is not only unfaithfulness but also unthankfulness both the majesty and the mercy of God being despised and where his majesty and mercy is despised no wonder if his favor and presence be withheld 3. Is it not the want of reverence and godly fear And therefore by the rebukes of his Spirit God severely tutors thee to what he requires of thee to serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear Heb 12.23 Heb. ● 16 God likes well that we come with boldness to the throne of grace yet a boldness of humble confidence not of a careless irreverence The awe of Majesty is much preserv'd by avoiding too much familiarity and therefore some Monarchs have withdrawn themselves from vulgar eyes to keep up the more sacred esteem and awe of their Soveraignty Thus God he deals with his Saints when much indulg'd they become wanton proud and irreverent God intermixeth Majesty with Mercy and tempers their favours with frowns he withholds his comfortable presence and awes their souls with secret rebukes that they may learn to put in practice what the Church gives in pattern even to walk in the fear of the Lord Act. 9 31. Phil. 2.12 and comfort of the Holy Ghost yea work out their salvation with fear and trembling This is indeed a sure Maxim that he who bears his spiritual afflictions with a distrustful impatience it is more then probable that he stains his devout enlargements with spiritual pride and pride and irreverence go together 4. Is it not thy heart playing false with thy God leaning in its affections too much to the world For that then God usually comes with bitterness to wean the soul when we are upon making the world our Home which should be our Inne when we are upon taking our rest in these earthly things then God brings on an evil day of temptation and trial upon us to discover how vain Earth is when Heaven is clouded how insufficient to sanctifie which cannot comfort When the soul will prove disloyal J●m 4.4 and enter an adulterous league with the World then comes God with his Bill of Divorce that she may know what is the vanity and folly the guilt and curse of her falling off to such wretched beggerly and worthless lovers for that in a day of terrors the soul will know that there is none but Christ none but he that can bring comfort peace and safety Thus then search whether it be not some stubbornness and disobedience some lethargie of sloth some wantonness irreverence or spiritual pride some love of the world Search whether they are not these or some other enormous iniquities which have separated betwixt thee and thy God Isa 59.2 whether they are not these or some such hainous sins which have hid his face from thee and if so no wonder if he who does the works of the Devil find an Hell in his Conscience And to still the clamor and quench the flashes of this Hell observe the second Rule of Direction which follows 2. Confess and bewail thy sin in the deepest of humiliations The reason indeed oftentimes why God puts the soul to the rack it is because it will not confess it is so loth to leave that it is unwilling to acknowledg its sin But as there is no full discovery of sin without examination Prov. 28.13 so nor is there any full pardon of sin without confession Wherefore set thy sins in order before thee and if thy Conscience pleads guilty to none other impiety yet thine ignorance diffidence passion and impatience in thy trial of spiritual afflictions do bring guilt enough for the deepest of humiliations Job 40.4 Thus it was with Job he confesseth unto God saying I am vile what shall I answer I will lay my hand upon my mouth And humbly submitting to the justice of Gods plea Job 42.36 and the reproof of his conviction in the sense of his impatience and pride he abhors himself and repents in dust and ashes And after God gives testimony of his love in accepting a sacrifice from his hands Thus then having set thy sins in order before thee let their guilt affect thine heart with sorrow that sorrow affect thine eyes with tears and then in the anguish of thy soul do thou crouch and crawl to the Throne of Grace solliciting earnestly with strong cries the mercies of thy God through the merits of thy Saviour for the pardon of thy sin the peace
path and leavest the beaten road even that which is right via regia the Kings high-way that way which the King of heaven Christ the Prince of glory Heb 2 10 Luk. 2● 26 9.22 23. both by precept and by pattern by doctrine and example hath chalkt out to us If then we be of the Israel of God having escaped out of the Egypt of an unregenerate state we must expect our Red sea of persecutions our fiery Serpents of temptations and our long Wilderness of afflictions all which we must pass through before we attain the heavenly Canaan the inheritance of promise and of rest And now that we be not discouraged with the difficulties of our passage look we into the Word of life and Gospel of our salvation and there see besides the reward of glory to crown our constancie see the hand that sustains the might that strengthens us to overcome even the power and grace of Christ See the refreshings which keep our souls from fainting and add to our constancie chearfulness even the councels and comforts of the Spirit And these we shall administer to the distressed soul which in its long and continued Conflict makes this sad and languishing complaint The Words of Complaint How long oh how long have I waited for the returns of my God of my Jesus I have often prayed and long expected and yet no comfort comes unto my soul my distress of conscience still continues because my God hides his face and withholds the light of his countenance from me Yea he hath not only laid me in the darkness but also shut me up that I cannot come forth Mine afflictions compass me daily yea all the day they come about me like waters and threaten the swallowing up of my soul And oh what is my help my hope but my God But alas he refuseth to be intreated I am weary of my groaning I have cryed day and night and yet he heareth not so that though the desires of my soul be towards his name and the remembrance of his holiness yet how are my fears and my terrors increased lest I be cut off from his hand cast out of his presence and become one of those that go down into the pit I have been so long in darkness that Satan pleads it in my misgiving thoughts as too plain a sign of being a child of darkness for that sure if the Sun of righteousness were risen upon my soul those clouds this mist that darkness would not continue but as he brings healing in his wings so would he bring comfort in his light refreshings by his Spirit and deliverance by his power The Grounds of Comfort 1. The firm assurance Christ gives of his indulgent care over his Church and chosen Thus he comforted Sion of old When the Prophet in much Pathos of joy Isa 49.13 calls upon the inanimate creatures to make up the Jubile Sing O heaven and be joyful O earth and break forth into singing O mountains for God hath comforted his people and will have mercy upon his afflicted Yet it is Sion's deep complaint in the depth of her calamity v. 14. The Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me But see see the love of God to his afflicted Church exceeds that of the tender mother to her sucking child Naz orat 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no bowels more tender then those of a mother yet more tender far are those of our heavenly Father For so says God in a pathetical expostulation of faithfulness and love v. 15. Can a mother forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb yea she may forget yet will I not forget thee Think not then O thou afflicted soul when God hides his face that he forgets thee or when he withdraws a while he then forsakes thee For how have we seen the careful and tender Mother wave the Child in her loving arms and pleas'd with its embraces threaten its fall that so fear might make it cling unto her bosom with the more sportful eagerness Thus even thus it is with the humble Saint and his gracious Saviour Videtur deserere quia non vult deseri Christ seems to forsake him on purpose that he may not be forsaken of him And this according to the tenor of Gods everlasting covenant That he will put his fear into the hearts of his chosen that they shall not depart from him Yea Jer. 32 4● see the indeleble characters of Christs love and the infallible testimony of his care Says Christ to his Spouse his Church and in her to every faithful soul Behold I have engraven thee in the palms of my hands Engraven how why s● ●9 16. not with the carving tools but the piercing nails and not upon the skin but quite through the flesh not cover'd over with precious gold but colour'd through with more precious blood which neither age nor eternity shall wear out Thus thus have I engraven thee in the palms of my hands Humanitùs dictum saith Jun us it is spoken after the manner of men Jun. in loc but it is indeed an emphatical expression outvying the highest Courtship of the most amorous Lover to his beloved He it may be will have her Picture hang in his bosom that so forsooth she may be near his heart But Christ he hath his Spouse engraven in his hands that so she may be ever in his eye as well as in his heart she is his care as well as his love Wherefore that the Saints and chosen of God are often and long afflicted is not through want of love to pitty or of care to regard or of power to relieve No sure for what Father or Mother is not compassionately affected affectionately moved with the sufferings and sorrows of their dear children What tender Husband or what indeared Friend will not engage himself for the comfort succour supply and safety of whom he truly loves and lovingly tenders And therefore as David frames the Argument Ps 94 9. He that made the ear shall not he hear He that formed the eye shall not he see and he that teacheth man knowledge shall not he know So say I He who implants love and compassion in his creatures shall not he be much more loving and compassionate to his Saints He who imprints those tender affections in fathers husbands friends shall not he be more tenderly compassionate to his Church and chosen Yes sure Wherefore then Exod. 3.7 Jer 31.20 Ps 65.2 Ps 56.8 Mal. 3.16 he hath an eye of Providence to see their distress bowels of pitty to compassionate their trouble ears of mercy to hear their prayers bottles of love to hold their tears a book of remembrance to register their complaints yea Satan and the World shall know he hath Judgments of righteousness to plead their cause Vials of wrath to avenge their blood an arm of power to deliver their persons and a crown of
are fastned unto Pillars so the Word of Truth the Gospel of Christ is committed to the Church to be held forth to the veiw and proposed to the faith of all 1 John 4.6 Wherefore St. John he gives this infallible note of true Doctrine that it holds fast a conformity to and a communion with the Church of Christ Hereby says the Apostle hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error the spirit of error that seeks a separation from and the Spirit of truth that holds a communion with the holy men of God in the several parts of the World and the several ages of the Church both as to the practise of Holiness and Doctrines of Faith To establish us then against those Impostures which withdrawing us from the Church Seduce us into Heresie To establish us I say against those impostures observe we the Apostles seasonable admonition That we be not soon shaken in minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes ● 2 not removed from our judgement and faith in the Scriptures to which we have been directed in which we have been instructed by the Church of Christ not thus removed by Spirit or Word however pretended to be Apostolical and Holy yea however asserted to be Angelical and Divine 2 Cor. 11.14 for that Satan the Prince of Darkness is oftentimes transformed in the Hypocritical pretences of truth and holiness into an Angel of light But O Beloved that which heightens the sin and shall heighten the condemnation of our days Apostates is this That they joyn themselves to those works and workers of darkness which have not so much as the appearance and shew of light For that now wicked men they have fronted themselves with Judah s impudence They declare their sin as Sodom they hide it not Isa 3.9 And though Heresie and Schism with their so inseparable concomitants Sacriledge and Prophaneness though they have put of their mask of truth and holiness yet are not men affrighted with their ugliness but as if the Hellish deformity were some heavenly beauty they are woed and won to an embracing those Doctrines and a pursuing those practises which even startle and amaze the souls and mindes of the truly religious Rev. 12.4 But blessed be God the Dragons Tail is not so long as to sweep away all the Stars of Heaven amidst the thickest of Heresies and Schisms God does and will preserve himself a remnant John 4 24. to worship him in spirit and in truth a remnant approved in the faith and manifest by their works For so says our Apostle There must be also Heresies among you but by the wisdom of Gods providence ordered to this end That they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. General part the Premunition Explic. and therein of the first particular the Apostles fore-arming them with constancy in the Faith that they be approved Mercy and Justice they are the two Pillars of Gods Throne of Majesty whereon he sits as King in the Supremacy of his will to govern by the wisdom and power of his providence all things in Heaven and in Earth So that of all humane actions God he is no bare spectator but an All-powerful and an All-wise disposer what is good he working it by his grace rewards it with his bounty and what is evil he permitting it with patience he revengeth it by his justice but whether good or evil as he sways all by his power so he disposeth all by his wisdom ordering it to these sacred ends his peoples spiritual advantage and his own eternal glory Wherefore that Heresies permitted of God do spring up spread themselvs in the Church Chrysost in Act. Apost Hom 33 Aug E●chirid c. 61 de Cor. Grat. c. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the language of St Chrysostome it comes to pass by Providential dispensation The wisdom of God having determined it more suitable to the glory of his providence ex malis hona elicere quam nulla esse permittere as St. Augustine more suitable to the glory of his providence to bring good out of evil then not to suffer evil at all to be And therefore the Schools in their Tracts of Gods providence tell us aright That if God did not suffer some evil we should want much good Aquin. 1. q. 21. art 2. Non enim esset vita Leonis si non esset occisio animalium If there were no slaughter of Beasts there would be no life of the Lyon and so were there no persecution of Tyrants there would be no patience of Martyrs were there no opposition of Heresie there would be no honor or reward in the approbation of the truth Now as Persecution doth exercise the Patience so does Heresie try the Faith of Gods chosen and to this end doth God order this That Faith having its tentation and tryal Vt fides habendo tentationem haberet etiam probationem Tert. de Praescript Aug Serm. 98. de temp may have its approbation and reward Yea as St. Augustine speaks God suffers the Catholick Faith to be impugned and opposed by Heretical Doctrine Ut fides nostra non otio Torpescat sed multis exercitationibus Elimetur That our Faith may not grow sluggish and rusty with ease but become more quickened and polished by exercise And hereby indeed are exercised all the edifying gifts and sanctifying graces of the Orthodox their edifying gifts of knowledge of prophecy of tongues c. Their sanctifying graces of humility meekness charity c. All which as they are opposed so are they exercised and as they are exercised so are they improved by the subtleties hypocrisies and pertinacies of the Heretical As for the Doctrine of Faith Chrysost in Act. Apost hom 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Trees shaken with the winds more firmly fix their Roots in the Earth so the doctrines of Faith discussed by the oppositions of Heresie more deeply fix their truth in the Church But what is it not a seeming Paradox that the doctrines of Faith should be the more clean for the foul hands of Heresie Why for this know it is as Brass Inscriptions appear the better by foul feet not from the dirt but from the rubbing Thus the doctrines of Faith become the more dilucide and clear not from the Error but from the examinations of Heresie For whilst the subtlety and pertinacy of Hereticks do stir up the wisdom and industry of the Orthodox Theological Verities and Gospel Mysteries Aug. de Civi● Dei l. 16. c. ● Et considerantur diligentius intelliguntur clariùs They are more strictly examined and more clearly understood And therefore does St. Augustine the Hammerer of Hereticks whose Pen was of all the Fathers the most imployed against Heresies and Schisms even he professeth himself to be of the number of those Qui proficiendo scribunt scribendo proficiunt Aug. ep 7. ad Marcel who in improving their
knowledge do write to communicate it and by writing to communicate it do improve their knowledge O how much precious truth should we have wanted in the Treasury of the Churches stock especially concerning the great Mystery of the Blessed Trinity and Personal Unity and of the Catholick Church if the Sabellians Photinians Arians Eunomians Nestorians Eutycheans Donatists Novations and the like if these and others ejusdem farinae of the same Leaven if they had not rose up by their oppositions of Heresie and Schism to stir up the Study Prayer Zeal and Argumentations of the Holy Learned and Orthodox Fathers Yea let us look home a while and upon an easie observation we may finde That this benefit and advantage our Church hath gained by the eager contentions of spightful Tongues and perverse Mindes That her holy Form of Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government hath been more fully discussed and more clearly vindicated against all the false Imputations and strongest Arguments of her Schismatical and Heretical opposers So that if God shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor as that he will do it in his due time you helping forward by your Prayers I nothing doubt and I would not you should distrust If God I say shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor those stale calumnies and unjust cavils of Bishops being Antichristian our Liturgy the Mass our Litany Conjuring our Doctrine Popish our Ceremonies Superstitious our Temples Idolatrous our Ministers Baal 's Priests these and the like clamors of Error and Ignorance of Malice and Madness These I say If God pleaseth to repair and restore our Church they will become then as odious and hateful as they are now acceptable and useful with the vulgar then as much hist down as now cried up then as vain and insufferable as now unjust and unreasonable But if for the sins of the people God shall unchurch the Nation if for our contempt of the light and truth of his Word Rev. 2 5. he shall remove the Candlestick and deprive us of his Ordinances Such is the full conviction of Errors to a confirming all sober mindes in the Faith that I doubt not to say There are many which hear me this day would rather chuse to die and fall with truth then live and flourish with Heresie This the first particular of our first general part the Apostles fore-arming his Corinthians with constancy in the Faith that they be approved 2. With comfort in their Tryal That being approved they shall be made manifest Manifest on Earth and manifest in Heaven 1. Manifest on Earth The furious Zeal and violent Persecution of Heresie is the Furnace Mal. 3.3 4. wherein God oftentimes purifies the faith and faithful separating the dross from the Gold it is that strong wind which shakes down the rotten boughs and corrupt fruit severing it from the strong and sound it is that overflowing floud which overturns the sandy foundation whilst the rocks stand firm or lastly Matth. 7.25 it is that fan which severs the chaff from the Corn men of light fancies Matth. 3.12 and loose affections from those of solid judgments and established hearts How is it with many mens hearts as with musical instruments They are in good tune and temper whilst the pleasant and fair season of peace and prosperity lasts But as upon change of weather the strings do either slack or break so upon change of times do their resolutions either yeeld or faint But oh Beloved an heart established a spirit resolved a minde stedfast Oh how is it the honor and ornament of our Christian Faith By this it is That the Confessors Graces like Lebanons Spices have the sweeter smell in being bruised and in their tryal of Faith they become as more acceptable Sacrifices of Obedience offered unto God so more choice examples of Holiness manifest and set forth in the Church Had it not been then for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of the former ages those antient Fathers Irenaeus Athanasius Hilary Nazianzen Basil Chrysostome Hierome Augustine and others They had not been Stars of so great a magnitude in the Firmament of Christs Church And indeed were it not for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of these latter days our Church would not have so much to glory of her Cranmer Tindal Whitaker Whitgift Bancroft Bilson Andrews Hooker and others Men famous in their Generations yea our Jewel would not have had his lustre nor our Laud his praise our Dypticks and Church Records of Learned Worthies yea of Royal Patriots would not be so large so venerable and so glorious These and all other Strenui propugnatores fidei stout Champions of the Churches faith They are by a blessing of God made manifest and observe made manifest not onely in the Orthodoxes love but also in the Hereticks hate it is with them as with St. Augustine whose industry and piety in quelling and extinguishing the Pelagian Heresie Hieron ep 80. St. Hierome thus congratulates telling him That his name was venerable in the City and honorable in the Church as the Founder again of the ancient Faith and Quod signum majoris gloriae est omnes Haeretici detestantur and which was a signal of greater glory all the Heretical did hate him However then black-mouthed malice doth spit calumny upon the whitest innocence yet that encomium St. Paul gives the ancient Heroes Heb. 11.39 the Patriarchs Prophets and Martyrs of old the same we may justly give our Protestant Worthies of late That by Faith they have obtained a good report a name that shall out-live all Heresie and Schism a name precious and honorable in the memory of the faithful Thus they who in their oppositions of Heresie become constant in the Faith they are made manifest on Earth But further 2. Manifest also in Heaven For this then observe The Church on Earth is Militant and therefore the Church in right order is said to be terrible as an army with banners Cant. 6.4 Though in disorder an army with banners becomes terrible to the Church The then I say on Earth is Militant 1 Cor. 15.32 and St. Pauls fighting with Beasts at Ephesus was not a combate more honorable and glorious then that of contending for the Faith Jude 3. against the rage of Heresies This this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Certamen illud praeclarum as Beza renders it that good 2 Tim. 4.7 that honorable fight of Faith which hath for its reward a Crown of life Rev. 2.10 or if a Crown of life be the reward of Faith to all the blessed yet then the stout Champions of the Faith shall have some special Jewels in their Crown some particular glory in that blessed life and so being manifest on Earth they are manifest also in Heaven being manifest in the Church Militant for their eminent Grace they shall be manifest also in
you the manner so let me minde you of the end of our Mission and Ministry even the good of your Souls and the chiefest good too that of Life and Salvation The office of the Magistrate intends the establishment of Peace the art of the Physitian the health of the Body the profession of the Lawyer the security of the Estate but the calling of the Minister the salvation of the Soul And therefore St. Paul admonisheth Timothy saying 1 Tim 4 16. Take heed unto thy self and unto the doctrine for in so doing thou shalt save thy self and them that hear thee He then that loves his Soul will prize the Ministry and bless God in making him a partaker of the peculiar priviledge of his v●sible Church the publick Ministration of his Word and Sacraments Which gracious priv●ledge of his visible Church Oh! how near are we to the loosing of it Oh help help to prevent it by your Prayers and that which speaks louder then your Prayers the works of an holy Obedience And O how may God justly take away in wrath what men cast off in contempt the office of his Ministry Which sacred Office however slighted by men yet is it honored of God however esteemed of the world as a mean employment for what more contemptible a disdain 1 Tim. 3.2 then thou Priest yet is it stiled by the Apostle an excellent work And see some part of its excellency The Minister in publick Prayer he is the peoples mouth as their Orator unto God and in publick Preaching he is Gods mouth as his Ambassador unto the people and thus what honor on earth greater then this to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nazianzen speaks Naz. Apolog. a Presidentship of Souls and a kinde of Mediatorship betwixt God and Men Behold we the Minister at the Altar and I will not say what Prince on his Throne but what Seraphim in Heaven is employed in a service of more dignity and honor then this to offer unto God the Commemorative Sacrifice of his Sons Body and Blood I might enlarge were it not that I stand before those I know or at least am willing to beleeve not defective in this duty the honorable and reverential esteems of the Gospels Ministry in its several orders and degrees owned by Gods holy Church though despised by men and the wicked world Onely this from the dignity of the Ministration and Office is aggravated the guilt of their usurpation and violence who either thrust themselves into so sacred a function or thrust out others from their lawful Ministry The name of an Ambassador Cicer. in Ver. Non modo inter seciorum jura sed etiam inter hostium tela incolume versetur it is of that reverence and regard that it may not be violated not onely among the rights of confederates but even the weapons of enemies And what are the Ambassadors of earthly Princes sacred and inviolable by the Law of Nations and shall the Ambassadors of the King of Heaven be silenced Numb 16. rejected imprisoned against the Law of God Corah Dathan and Abiram opening their mouths in mutiny against Moses and Aaron the earth opens her mouth in revenge and they sink down quick into the pit Uzziah 2 Chron. 26. King of Judah invading the Priests office he is sequestred from his regal Function being smitten with a Leprosie and so separated from his people And what was God more jealous for the Legal then he is for the Evangelical Ministration did he punish Kings invading the office of the Priest and will he acquit the people usurping the Function of the Minister No sure But know we that under the Law Gods judgments and blessings they were most-what corporal and temporal whereas his judgments and blessings under the Gospel they are most-what spiritual and eternal so that to be given up to a blindness of minde and a reprobate sense which seems to be the judgment of this Nation it is the most dreadful vengeance that can befal a people of which vengeance there can be no surer symptom then this horrid sin even through Schism Heresie Violence Prophaneness and Sacriledge to invade the Function corrupt the Doctrine abuse the Persons debase the honor and spoil the maintenance of that Ministry which Christ hath constituted and constituted here in his Mission and Commission of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Introduction WHilst I behold the Word and Ministry of Christ to to be amongst men as the Ark and Testament among the Philistines scornfully abus'd as in the Temple of Dagon 1 Sam. 5.2 rather then religiously reverenc'd as in the Church of God The sacred Scriptures the Evidences of our salvation not so much read in Devotion as wrested by Faction Malice or Pride being the venemous Spider which converts the wholsom sweetness of saving Truth into the deadly poison of destructive Heresie And as for the Sacramental Seals of Gods holy Covenant whilst I behold them either pluck'd off by the violent or defac'd by the foul hand of Schism and Profaneness so that a question it is Whether the profane neglecting or the unworthy receiving or the disorderly administring the blessed Sacraments bring greater guilt upon the Nation And no wonder then if our dearest blood hath been spilt in so large a profuseness seeing we have spilt Christs precious blood in so open a profaneness Oh! how how have men come to receive the bread and wine of the blessed Eucharist 1 Cor. 11.29 but have not discern'd Christs body and blood through their profane and unworthy participation And now how many oh too too many how do they go to receive Christs body and blood and alas discern not that it is meer bread and wine through an unlawful and Schismatical administration Of these two so horrid evils I cannot suddenly say which is the greater guilt And as for the Sacrament of Baptism whilst I behold Parents cruel to their tender Infants Joh. 3.5 denying them entrance into Christs kingdom and keeping from them the seal of the Covenant of grace out of which Covenant there is no salvation In which see the just judgment of the righteous God that they who in a blind zeal have been so cruel to their mother the Church to eat out her bowels by Schism they are given up to such a blindness of mind that they become cruel to their own children in not admitting them into the Churches bosom her holy communion by baptism And thus those very persons who did load our Church and Ministry with this reproach and scandal that we would bring up our children in the superstition of
is of Apostolical institution is not only the general opinion of the Antients but also of modern Divines even Calvin Beza Piscator Chemnitius and others all which subscribe to S. Hierom who calls Confirmation Apostolicam observationem an Apostolical observation And though Calvin disallows this of S. Hierom in his Institutions yet he consents to it in his Commentaries Calv Com in Heb. 6.2 saying upon Heb. 6.2 Hic unus locus testatur hujus Ceremoniae originem affluxisse ab Apostolis This one place doth abundantly testifie the original of this Ceremony to have flowed from the Apostles Read we here the Apostles Catechism a Summary of the First Principles of the Doctrine of Christ and see how he numbers them by pairs Repentance and Faith Baptism and Laying on of hands the Resurrection of the Dead and eternal Judgment So that we easily discern what Laying on of hands the Apostle means even that which succeeds Baptism that of Confirmation In Baptism regeneramur ad vitam we are regenerated to life by Imposition of hands confirmamur ad pugnam we are fortified to battel even to combat against the Flesh the World and the Devil having given up our names unto Christ Act. 8.17 19.6 and listed our selves under his banner Observe that by this Imposition of hands was given the Holy Ghost does rather magnifie then nullifie this ordinance the miraculous gifts being signs and testimonies of the saving graces of the Spirit Besides all that were baptized were confirm'd but certainly all that were confirm'd did not work miracles This then of Confirmation which was of so high account and common practice with the Apostles I see not why it should be otherwise amongst us Sure I am Tert. de praescr cap. 36. we can say of our Mother the Church of England what Tertullian does of the Asian African and Roman Church Aqua signat Spiritu sancto vestit Eucharistia pascit Martyrio exhortatur she signs us to Christ in Baptism invests us with the Spirit in Confirmation feeds us with the Manna of the Eucharist and animates us to the crown of Martyrdom adversus hanc institutionem neminem recipit against this form of institution she receives none to be her children Before we close I will here declare unto you that great obligation that lies upon us by vertue of that promise and vow we made unto Christ in Baptism and after took upon our selves in our Confirmation and withall I will discover to you that great guilt we bring upon our souls in the breach of that obligation Know then in entring covenant and giving up our selvs by vow unto Christ in our baptism we are become bound unto him in a direct oath of Supremacy and Allegiance Eph. 1.21 22. Mat. 28.28 for ever to acknowledge Christ submit unto him and serve him as our great Adonai our supreme Lord the Head of his Church and King of heaven and earth renouncing yea resisting all Foreign jursdiction of Satan and of hell yea all rebellious usurpations of sin and of the flesh And therefore if reflecting upon our own bosoms we find Satan hath invaded the soul and sin usurp'd the throne of the heart it will be no plea to excuse our rebellion and revolt that renouncing our oaths of Supremacie and Allegiance unto Christ we have submitted to the sway of present Powers even our corrupt lusts and Satans suggestions No our guilt is no less th●n that of Perjury and Apostacy accompanied too with the vilest Sacriledge which seldom go asunder For by entring covenant which we all do in Baptism more fully ratified in Confirmation with Christ as the Lord of life and Prince of peace we consecrate our whole selves unto him in his sacred worship and service And therefore after this to fulfill our own lusts and do the works of Satan what is it but to profane what was consecrate unto the Lord yea to alienate and invade what was dedicated and devoted unto Christ To close observe Baptism doth imprint an indelible character upon the baptized as Soldiers listed in Christs Army Subjects sworne to his Crown from whence it is that those wicked ones are then call'd the Children of the kingdom Mat. 18.22 when cast out into utter darkness And therefore to the Apostate Baptism is not to be renewed because this character cannot be lost Fide perdita Sacramentum fidei non amittit having lost the Faith he loseth not the Sacrament of Faith Manet ad noxam criminis non ad vinculum foederis it remains not as to any benefit of the covenant but the aggravation of his guilt Ad cumulum supplicii non ad meritum praemii it remains not as to hope of mercy and reward but as to the heap of wrath and punishment so S. Augustine Wherefore the Bond of Baptism Aug. de nupt coucup l. 1. c. 10. we have aptly illustrated by the Oath of Allegiance whereby a Nation and People become sworne Subjects to their Prince their bond and tye remains however they by their rebellion and revolt do quit their service and break off their allegiance to their Soveraign their bond and obligation that doth remain and shall to their greater guilt and curse and condemnation Thus have we given you as the Institution so the Administration of Baptism and this Administration both in what is necessary as to the Essence of the Sacrament and in what is more especially requisite as to the Solemnity of the Church In all which particulars we have kept to our Saviours Commission and Instruction which he gave his Apostles saying Go ye disciple all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. 1. Receive ye Beloved this seasonable Admonition Applicat 1 Cor. 11.2 That every faithful Soul here present is as a pure Virgin espoused unto Christ And therefore if false Prophets shall endeavour to seduce this Soul and attempt to ravish this Virgin by adulterate opinions she must cry out to the Ministers of Christs Gospel who will be ready to succour and relieve her But if she be silent and betray her chastity to the lust of the Ravisher expose her faith to the deceitfulness of the seducer she incurs the guilt of spiritual fornication and without sincere repentance she shall die and perish in her sin And as for the present Heresie which so horribly infests the Church that of Anabaptism let me give it you in charge as you will answer it at the last day Heb. 13.17 when I must give up an account of my Ministry let me give it you in charge that if any of you here present shall be sollicitated to desert the Church and separate your selves by Anabaptism that inlet to all Blasphemies and Heresies that then you call in to your aid some faithful Pastor of the Church and I here present my self for your assistance Rom. 14.15 and therefore let not any plausible pleas or fair
of Conscience Oh how is a conscientious man intangled in a snare of perplexities surrounded with a maze of distractions Who cannot in his ordinary affairs of life be quieted in his Conscience in the resolution of things lawful and expedient without Scripture proofs to determine it The rule of Reason That is readily applied by a man of ordinary prudence but the rule of Scripture is not to be applied to every action by the ablest Textuary in the World he stands in need to carry a Concordance in his hand who makes the Scripture the onely rule of all his actions and yet not avoid perplexity of Conscience neither Thirdly A seditious contempt of Humane Laws whether Civil or Ecclesiastical This opinion is that which will break the bonds of all subjection and temporal obedience both of children to Parents of servants to Masters and of subjects to Soveraigns who will by influence of this Error question when they should obey and call into dispute when they should put in practice the lawful commands of their Superiors As for these kinde of men who will not obey Magistrates forsooth but in a Gospel-way upon a Scripture proof for every Law I call the whole World to witness whether ever yet they proved themselves good subjects and sure we are according to that maxim of antient and known experience Qui nescit servire nescit imperare He that knows not how to serve knows not how to govern they will never make good Masters who themselves never were good servants Thus having discovered to you the dangerous falshood and evil consequents of this Vulgar Error That the sacred Scriptures are the onely rule of all our actions give me leave to answer the Objections urged by the Brethren of the Separation the first broachers and the continued abettors of this Error Their main Arguments and Objections are drawn from that of the Apostle Whatsoever ye do 1 Cor. 10.21 do all to the glory of God And again that Whatsoever is not of Faith Rom. 14.23 is sin The first Argument is framed thus We must do all to Gods glory but Object 1 that cannot tend to his glory which is not directed by his Law and therefore in every thing we must be directed by his Law seeing in every thing we are to aim at his glory Answer All this is true and yet the Error remains which is this Answ That the sacred Scripture alone is this Law whereas God in his providence hath ordained several Laws distinct in nature and degree but in subordination the lower to the higher and all to him the supream Lawgiver So that to measure all mens actions by one kinde of Law were to confound that sacred Order of divine Providence in which his Government of the World is so eminently glorious Some actions are within the bounds of nature as we are Creatures for these we have a Law natural some are within the limits of Reason as we are men and for these we have a Law rational Some within the verge of Secular community as we are Subjects for these we have a Law politick some within the sphere of Faith as we are Christians and for these we have a Law divine Lastly some within the orbe of External communion as we are visible Members of the Church and for these we have a Law Ecclesiastical And such is the sweet order of these several Laws in the constitution of Providence that neither opposeth other but all consent in an harmonious subordination unto God and Christ in the Government of the World and of the Church So that we may say of Law Mr. Ho●ker Eccles Polit. she is sacred her seat is the Throne of God her voice the Harmony of the World all things in Heaven and in Earth do her homage the very least as feeling her care and the greatest as not exempted from her power Angels and men and the whole number of the Universe though in different manner yet in uniform consent they reverence and admire her they obey and extol her as the Mother and Nurse as the Queen and Patroness of their Peace and Joy Object 2 The second Argument is framed thus Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 but where there is no Word there can be no Faith and therefore whatsoever action hath not warrant from the written Word of God commanding it it must needs be sinful Answ Answer This Argument however it may seem to set forth the perfection of Gods sacred Law yet does it indeed destroy much of Gods sacred Truth For what St. Paul means by Faith we see plainly from the context is neither fides quae creditur nor fides quá credimus neither the object nor the act neither the doctrine nor the belief of Supernatural Revelation Which Revelation we acknowledge perfect in order to eternal life in the sacred Scriptures But by Faith most evident it is the Apostle means an inward perswasion of minde believing That what we do may lawfully be done whereas to do any thing of which we are not thus perswaded it is sin So that by Faith here the Apostle does not mean the doctrine of Scripture but the dictate of Conscience and most certain it is Let the light and information of Conscience be from Reason as well as from Scripture the dictate of Conscience cannot be resisted without sin against God whose Vicegerent it is in the Soul of Man In things then ordinary quotidianae incursionis of daily incursion yea in matters Civil debitae subjectionis of due subjection Our warrant is sufficient as to Conscience if we know no Law of Scripture to contradict it though we know none in particular to confirm it So that it is the inverted order of right Argumentation to say this or that we may not do because Gods Word does not command it whereas we should rather say this or that we may do because Gods Word does not forbid it For observe What things are indifferent in their own nature as being neither directly expressed in the Word nor necessarily deduced from it nor any way opposit to the Word or inconsistent with it those things we acknowledge left to the prudence of Governors for the preservation of order and unity in the Church which things indifferent in their nature do by the command of lawful Authority become necessary in their use And upon this firm ground upon this sure basis are fixt those Ecclesiastical Laws and Ceremonies of our Church which have been so loudly decryed and so hotly pursued 2. 2. Vulgar Error That every private person who pretends to the Spirit may be a fit Interpreter of sacred Scripture From this evil principle it is that as Hilary complained of of old Annuas atque menstuas fides habemus Every year every moneth produceth some new Doctrine of Faith This is somewhat modest and fair to our Factions and Frenzies in which we have Non modo annuas aut menstruas sed vel diurnas fides
3.15 or addeth thereto No man disannulleth or addeth that is No man ought to disannul or adde under peril of hainous impiety and shameful punishment And let not any think St. John seals up onely the Book of Revelations but that guided by the Spirit of Truth he seals up the whole Books of the New Testament with that dreadful Commination against all Violators of the sacred Scriptures And this whether it be in the Letter or the Sense of Christs holy Word for that of Tertullian is most firmly true Tert. de Praescript c. 17. Tantum veritati obstrepit adulter sensus quantum corruptor stilus To impose an adulterate sense is as much injury to the Word of Truth as to violate the proper phrase And therefore Valentinus and so the Heresies of our times do as much damage to the Scriptures verity in misinterpreting the Sense though they spare the Letter as Marcion did by mangling the sentences and chopping off the words Hear then and tremble O ye seduced Souls who through some carnal prejudice and temporal interest involve your selves in this so horrid sin of Scripture-Sacriledge for that perverting the sense or corrupting the Letter of Christs holy Word of Truth 2 Pet. 3.16 ye do it to your own destruction 2. Observe Beloved these two sure Rules of Instruction and Exhortation 1. Keep close to the Doctrine of the Scriptures 2. Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church Keep close to the doctrine of the Scriptures that will keep you from the seductions of the Romanist Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church that will preserve you from the Errors of the Separatist For so hath God been pleased to make the Militant State of our Mother the Church of England to be betwixt the eager opposition of two enraged Enemies the Church of Rome and the Brethren of the Separation against whom she thus makes good the combate from the Authority of the sacred Scriptures and the Judgment of the Primitive Church Urging the Authority of the Scriptures the Romanist flies at the point of that weapon and would soon be beat out of the field were it not some return he makes by pretending the Church Again Urging the Judgment of the Church the Separatist staggers at that blow and would soon fall to the ground were it not some hold he catcheth by wresting the Scriptures To close then That ye may continue firm and sound in the Faith be careful that in the Epidemical distempers of the times ye change not the dyet of your Souls least what you think to make your food prove your poyson Feed on your Mothers Milk keep to that sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which is contained in the Publick Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Books of Homilies and Ordination all consenting with the Word of God and Truth of Christ Withal see that to the confession of a true Faith Aquin. ye joyn the confession of an holy life Confitetur qui nulla parte diffitetur He confesses truly who confesseth thorowly Confess we with the mouth and with the hand in our words and in our works This is the best Harmony of Confessions And thus Matth. 10.32 Confess we Christ before men and he will confess us before his Father which is in Heaven Own we him in this Tru●h and he will own us in his Glory hear we his Word and do we his Will so shall we receive his Reward and this in an eternal Rest unto our Souls Thus have we done with the Explication and the Application of what concerns the Mission and Commission together with the several Instructions given by our Saviour to his Apostles in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Coloss 1. v. 18 19. And he is the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preheminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell OUR Lord Jesus Christ being ascended into the highest Heavens Introduct and there sate down on the right hand of God Rom 8.34 Heb. 7.25 he ever lives to make intercession for us From which exaltation and intercession the Apostle draws his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ being able to save unto the utmost all that come unto God by him Able to save unto the utmost for that in his intercession is applied unto the Church for her salvation the utmost efficacie of the richest price the fullest power and the highest favour that humanity can receive from God or Divinity communicate to man For it is worth our observing That our blessed Lord to make our salvation sure he saves us by all means possible for salvation to be secur'd He saves us by ransom by rescue and by request by way of price by way of power and by way of favour Christs Resurrection that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of price laid down in his Passion his Ascension that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of power which he exercised in his Resurrection his sitting at Gods right hand that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of favour whereby he is exalted in his Ascension and lastly the Intercession of Christ that is applicatory of all these for the full and final redemption of his chosen In his Intercession he pleads the merit of his Passion as the full paiment he pleads the efficacie of his Resurrection as his clear acquittance he pleads the benefit of his Ascension as giving actual possession Eph. 1.6 Mat. 17.5 Heb. 1.2 and pleads the vertue of his Session at the right hand of the Father as thereby declared to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beloved Son of God and lawful Heir of Heaven Yea our holy Jesus and blessed Mediator being sate down at the right hand of God he is not only by a gracious decree appointed by an holy unction consecrated but also by a glorious investiture from the Father he is established in the spiritual oeconomy Act. 2.36 Rom. 14.9 Mat. 28.18 and actual administration of that soveraign authority whereby he is constituted and declared to be Lord and Christ Judge of quick and dead King of heaven and earth and as S. Paul here gives us the description Head of the body the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead c. Connexion Before we give you the Division of the words we must give you their Dependance to which we are directed by the Copulative and And he is the Head of the body the Church which Copulative does join what we must not separate the Context and the Text. If then we do but look three Verses back we find how the Apostle having set forth the benefits of Redemption he presently subjoins a description of the
Redeemer and this in a Prosopographia a personal character of Christ both from his intrinsecal relation to the Father and from his extrinsecal relation to the creature and that to the creature either as made and form'd or as redeemed and repaired 1. v. 15. According to his intrinsecal relation to the Father so Christ is the image of the invisible God the natural and essential image by eternal generation And if we may draw the Sun with a pencil if illustrate this mystery by a similitude take this as our aptest illustration That as a man beholding himself in a Looking-glass doth produce an image in nothing different from himself in lineaments of body or proportion of parts so God the Father beholding himself in the glass of his Divinity with the eye of his understanding doth beget his Son Heb. 1.3 the express image of his person no ways different from himself in the essence of his Deity or excellency of his Attributes but coessential and coequal But indeed as for the manner of Christs eternal generation in which he is the essential image of the invisible God Naz. orat with Nazianzen I say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is hidden in a cloud and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let it be reverenc'd with silence We may we must make it in humility an article of our Creed not think it in curiosity an object of our knowledge From the Apostles description then of Christ in his intrinsecal relation to the Father pass we to the second part his description of Christ in his extrinsecal relation to the Creator and to the creature 1. As made and form'd in which relation he is call'd the first-born of every creature v 15. At which the Arian readily catcheth to prove Christ Deus factus made God but S Chrysostom and the Antients repell his argument and confute his blasphemy from the propriety and emphasis of the Apostles expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not the first made or the first created but the first begotten or the first-born and therefore primogenitus non primo-creatus ut genitus pro natura Ambr. de fid ● 1. c. 4. primus pro aeternitate credatur Christ is therefore said to be the fi●st begotten not the first created that his being begotten may make us believe the essence of his nature and first begotten the eternity of his essence If with the Modern Expositors especially of the Protestant Church we interpret the Apostle as speaking of Christs humane nature then by first-born is meant Lord and Soveraign according to the law and right of Primogeniture Thus in the Prophecie of David concerning Solomon as a Type of Christ I will make him my first-born Ps 89.27 higher then the Kings of the earth But if with the Antient Writers especially of the Grecian Church we interpret the Apostle as speaking of Christs divine nature then by the first-born of every creature is meant that Christ was begotten before any thing created so primogenitus the first begotten as that he is also unigenitus the only begotten And needs must he be before the creatures v. 16. by whom all things were created even all things that are in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers even the whole heavenly hoast and celestial hierarchy all things were created by him and for him by him in his omnipotent power and for him in his incomprehensible glory He the efficient and the final cause of all the Creatures And he by whom are all things must needs be before all things v. 17. before dignitate tempore in order of dignity and of time And the same Efficient which creates conserves The whole world as at first it had none other hand to frame it so nor now hath it any other pillar to support it then the power of Christs word as he is God And therefore says our Apostle that by him all things consist Even as water whilst contained in the vessel it hath a consistencie in it self which when the vessel is broken it presently flows out and wastes away in its own fluidity Thus the creatures whilst encompassed by Christs conserving power they consist in their being but that power withdrawn they faint and perish in their own mortality Or as the Air when the Sun withdraws his enlightening beams then ceaseth to have any light Thus the creatures should Christ withdraw his sustaining power they would cease to have any being This sustaining power of Gods providence the Schools call manutenentia Dei which is thus illustrated As a man holding a Globe in his hand if he withdraw his hand the Globe presently falls to the ground Thus Christ sustaining the whole Fabrick of the Universe with the supporting power of his providence should he withdraw that power and support needs must the creatures though ne'r so perfect in their kind needs must they fall away and dissolve to their first nothing Even those very perfections of Nature ay and of Grace too which were in Lucifer and Adam what were they when abused and they left to themselves what were they but as Gerson's expression is Gerson apud Ep. Sar. in Col. 1.17 pondera plura ad ruinam more weight to press them down to their greater ruine Now our Apostle having given us the description of Christ in his extrinsecal relation to the creatures as made and form'd he proceeds in the words of my Text to give the further description of him in that his extrinsecal relation to the creatures as redeem'd and repair'd Which relation he brings in with this Copulative and And he is the head of the body the Church who is the beginning the first born from the dead c. Division From the dependance we proceed to the division Observe a single description rais'd from a twofold relation and argued from a threefold reason 1. The single description it is of Christ in the dignity and office of Mediator as the Head of the body the Church 2. The twofold relation from whence this description is raised that of Creator and that of Redeemer That of Creator in which he is the Beginning of all things and that of Redeemer in which he is the first-born from the dead 3. The threefold reason from whence this description of Christ is argued One drawn from the final moving cause that in all things he might have the preeminence A second drawn from the efficient ordmaining cause the good will and pleasure of the Father And the third is drawn from the formal constituting cause the perfection of all fulness dwelling in Christ Thus Christ he is the head of the body the Church who is the begining the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preeminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Explicat 1. The description of Christ in the dignity and office
shall come in Who is the King of Glory The Lord strong and mighty the Lord mighty in Battel Lift up your heads O ye gates even lift them up ye everlasting doors and the King of glory shall come in Who is the King of Glory The Lord of Hosts Jesus the Son of God he is the King of Glory Now the King of Glory Christ Jesus blessed for ever he being entred behold the Father entertaining him with a plenary grant of his Petition in that consecratory Prayer before his Passion John 17.45 Father says he I have glorified thee on Earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was In full answer to this Petition says the Father unto Christ when entred into glory Sit thou on my right hand Psal 110.1 until I make thine enemies thy footstool And our Lord and Saviour being thus exalted All the Angels of God all the Host of Heaven they pay him homage they acknowledge him their King they fall down and worship him Heb. 1.6 worship him as the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the pre-eminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Having done with the first branch of Divine Mysteries How Christ is said to be the Head of the Church we proceed to the second What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head And for the Explication of this we shall speak of the Church in these three particulars its larger acception it s nearer relation and its different adjuncts 1. It s larger acception as the Church of the Elect. 2. It s nearer relation as the Church of the Redeemed 3. It s different adjuncts as visible and invisible 1. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head Explic. in its larger acception as the Church of the Elect. In this extended sense the Church compriseth the heavenly orders of the Angelical Hierarchy who being of the Elect of God 1 Tim. 5.21 Col. 2.10 are also of the Church of Christ who is therefore called The Head of all principality and power The Elect Angels receiving their confirmation as the Elect. Saints their Redemption by Jesus the Mediator True it is as concerning the Angels that Christ he assumed not their nature in his Conception and so neither did he sustain their person in his Passion He took not on him the nature of Angels Heb. 2.16 but the seed of Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He took not hold on Angels a Metaphor signifying an eager following after and laying hold on one running away to bring him back or a catching him that is faln to recover him from the pit This Christ did do for men this this he did not do for Angels but as those which fell sinned without a tempter Ambr. Ser. 8. in Psal 119. so they perish in their sin without a Saviour But as for the Elect Angels St. Ambrose tells us that they needed Christ to preserve them from falling into sin as men did need him to free them from sin into which they were faln and in this St. Bernard joyns issue with St. Ambrose Bern. Tract de dilig D. affirming Qui hominibus subvenit in tali necessitate Angelos servavit a tali necessitate He that succored men in such a necessity saved the Angels from the like necessity Aug. Enchir. c 62. To all this add we that of St. Augustine Quod in Angelis lapsum ex hominibus redditum the number of those Angels which are faln shall be made up by those men whom Christ hath redeemed all which expressions and opinions are several descants and glosses upon the Apostles words in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 telling us Eph. 1.10 Of all things gathered together in one even in Christ the Head of all Excellency and the Center of all Unity Angels and Men were indeed created happy in that natural blessedness of Spiritual contemplation but not in that supernatural bliss of the beatifical Vision Which beatifical Vision being the last end of the rational and intellectual Creature could not be attained by any ordinary work of nature but by some extraordinary act of grace for to be and to be blessed is one and the same in none but God And therefore to be is from nature but to be perfectly blessed is from grace as the last end of being in a perfect communion with God through Christ by love So that it is consonant to the Analogy of Faith to believe and affirm That the estate of the now blessed Angels was at the first mutable and subject to alteration and that presently by the supererogating grace of God thorow Christ they became no longer subject to mutability and change now inseparably adhering to God and so possessing perfect happiness Matth. 18.10 of whom our Saviour hath said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They always behold the face of his Father which is in Heaven This benefit then the Angels have by Christ that they are confirmed in their full and perfect union with God Heb 1.6 Wherefore Let all the Angels of God worship him yea and joyn we too with the Angels in that worship as having communion with them in the same Head even Jesus the Mediator who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the pre-eminence c. 2. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be head in its nearer relation as the Church of the redeemed and redeemed not onely in the infinite sufficiency but also in the actual efficacy of his merit yea and effectual sanctification of his grace For observe Christ he is according to the promise Gen. 3.15 the Seed of the woman not in a common and carnal generation but in a proper and spiritual conception conceived by the Holy Ghost And therefore Christ is not properly the Head of all mankinde but of that part which is regenerated by the same Spirit by which he was conceived So that 1 Cor 1.2 Rom. 8 30. it is effectual calling which constitutes the Church of Christ in actual being as to its internal and essential form Which Church is diversly defined and described by divers men according to the difference of their faiths or fancies To omit then the needless and avoid the curious we may thus define the Church of Christ to be The whole company of Gods Saints called of God in Christ out of the state of sin and death into the state of grace and glory And this in the Language of the sacred Scriptures this is Christs Spouse this the Kings Daughter this the Mount Sion this the Heavenly Jerusalem this the Mother of us all Virgo virtute mater prole so St. Ambrose a Virgin indeed for purity
a Mother for fruitfulness this the Kingdom of Heaven this the Body of Christ this the Church Universal the Church Catholick which is invisible the object of Faith and not of Sense and therefore we say in our Creed I believe the holy Catholick Church Which holy Catholick Church ● Tim ● 15 Cant. 6.8 as by S. Paul it is said to be Columna Veritatis the Pillar of Truth so by Solomon Columna Unitatis the Dove of Unity Indeed the Church can be but one because Christ her Head is but one who is the same yesterday to day Heb. 1● 8 and for ever The same 1. Objectivè in his Word yesterday shadowed in the Law to day shewed in the Gospel the New Testament being claspt up in the Old and the Old laid open in the New The Old Testament and the New like two concentrick circles they differ in their circumference yet agree in one center and that center Christ 2. As Christ is the same objectivè in his Word so is he the same subjectivè in his Attributes his Wisdom Goodness Power yea dignity and authority one and the same Shepherd of his Flock one and the same King of his people one and the same Head of his Church 3. The same effective in the gifts and graces of his Spirit in the power and efficacy of his Word and of his Sacraments Now the light of the Gentiles Luke 2.32 as before the glory of his people Israel as yesterday to Abraham Isaac and Jacob so to day he is to as many as believe on him Jesus a Saviour And if thus but one Head then necessarily but one Body if but one Christ then but one Church But one Church however it receives its divers names of distinction according to its different degrees of communion as being either militant or triumphant The Church militant in tempore peregrinationis in the time of her sojourning here in fear and the Church triumphant in aeternitate mansionis Aug. Enchi● c 56. in the eternity of her dwelling with Christ in glory so S. Augustine Militant is that part of the Church which is on earth still fighting in a continued warfare against the flesh the world and the devil Triumphant is that part of the Church which now rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 who by the power of Christ have vanquish'd the powers of darkness and therefore with victorious palms in their hands clothed with the robes of glory they stand continually before the throne of God Rev. 7.9 15. and serve him in his temple Both these the Militant and Triumphant make up one Church Catholick Aug. ibid. one now in vinculo charitatis in the bond of charity and shall be for ever one in consortio aeternitatis in the fellowship of eternity But further this Catholick Church with which we have communion with Christ as she is Columba Unitatis the Dove of Unity so Columba Puritatis too the Dove of Purity she is the holy Catholick Church Though on Earth indeed she be incompassed with many infirmities Psal 45.13 overshadowed with many afflictions yet is she the Kings daughter all glorious within indued she is with Christs holy Spirit adorned she is with his holy Graces clothed she is with his perfect Righteousness Holy the Church is 1 In Christ her Head who is perfectly holy even holiness it self 2 Holy she is in her Triumphant part Eph. 5.27 which is made compleat in Holiness sine ruga aut macula without either wrincle or spot without either wrincle of imperfection or spot of uncleanness 3 Holy she is in her Militant part also holy by sanctification partially and by imputation of Christs Righteousness perfectly so sanctified she is not as to be free from all abiding of sin Rom. 6.12 that 's for the estate of glory but so as to be free from the reigning of sin that 's for the state of grace Our holiness in this life it is but inchoative and in part in fieri not in facto our perfection of holiness shall not be till our consummation in happiness and when we shall be made compleatly happy then shall we be made also perfectly holy Thus you have seen what is the Church of Christ in its larger acception and in its nearer relation In its larger acception as the Church of the Elect the Elect Angels and Elect Saints in its nearer relation as the Church of the redeemed redeemed in an effectual communication of Christs fulness as he is the Head The Head of the Body the Church c. 3. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head in its different adjuncts as visible and invisible The Church Catholick or Universal not being genericè but integraliter Universale the Universal Church as we say the Universal World as it is aptly distinguished according to its different states into the Church Militant and Triumphant so is it distinguished no less aptly according to its divers adjuncts into the Church visible and invisible Which distinction being observed to be not a distribution of the Genu● into its Species nor of the whole into its parts as if either one Church or one part of the Church were visible and another invisible but a distinction of adjuncts to the same subject This being observed we may the better answer and retort the Arguments of the Romish adversary in the great contest concerning the visibility of the Church To be invisible is an affection of the Catholick Church in respect of its internal and essential form To be visible is an affection of the same Catholick Church according to its form external and accidental The internal and essential form of the Church consists in union with Christ through the Spirit the object of Faith and not of Sense in which regard the Church must needs be invisible But now the external and accidental form of the Church is the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments with a publick profession of the true Faith of Christ and in this the Church must needs be visible yea by how much that profession and Ministry is the more publick and pure by so much is the Church the more conspicuous and glorious The Church then as it is visible may be thus defined to be The whole company of men and women professing the Faith of Christ in the sincere preaching of the Word and right administration of the Sacraments And this is the definition of the Church according to its external and accidental form that definition before given being according to its form Internal and Essential and by this we may understand how men are said to be of the Church and to be in Christ either by outward profession or by inward sanctification that an external this an internal communion by the outward profession of an external communion onely so the Formal Hypocrite by the inward sanctification of an internal as well as the outward profession of an external communion so the Truly Regenerate
Many there are then who bear the name of Christians ay and of Catholicks too who yet are in Christ John 15.2 6 but as withered branches in the Vine yea they are in the Church as Wens in the Body not in a vital and internal communion but in a formal and external profession Thus speaking of the Authors of Heresie and Heads of Faction which separated themselves from the communion of the Church They went out from us says the Apostle but they were not of us 1 John 2.19 for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us They went out from us as to the external and accidental form of the Church as it is the visible company of Professors but they were not of us as to the internal and essential form of the Church as it is the invisible Body of Christ Very fitly then is the visible Church compared in Scripture unto a field in which there grows up together Wheat and Tares Matth. 13.29 30. Matth 3.12 Matth. 13 47. to a floor on which there lies together Corn and Chaff to a draw not in which are contained good Fish and bad for that in the Church as it is visible there are Hypocrites mixt with true Believers the wicked with the godly And therefore the Apostle compares the visible Church to a great house 2 Tim. 2.20 where there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth yea Some to honor and some to dishonor Thus in the visible Church there are not onely strong Believers but also weak Christians not onely those who are more eminent in the gifts and graces of the Spirit but also those who are weaklings and of less spiritual abilities then others Yea further as there are some to honor that is some who through the Election of Grace shall at last inherit eternal glory so some to dishonor Rom. 2.5 that is some who through their impenitence and hardness of heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath and shall be plunged in eternal misery And thus ye have seen in its several particulars What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head 3. How the Church of which Christ is the Head is said to be a Body viz. Especially from the communion of the faithful as Members Eph. 4.4 a communion so near that they are all said to have but one Spirit Acts 4.32 yea one heart and one soul and all this from the efficacy of love Col. 3.14 that bond of perfectness and knot of unity A Sacramental representation of this Mystical Communion 1 Cor 10.17 is given us in the holy Eucharist according to that of the Apostle We being many are one Bread and one Body for we are all partakers of that one Bread That Bread which exhibites to us the flesh of Christ our quickning and enlivening Food Food not which we convert by any carnal digestion into the nature of our body but which converts us by a spiritual operation into the nature of Christs Body making us to be heavenly and spiritual as he is spiritual and heavenly We change not it but it changeth us for so is the powerful operation of spiritual Food to convert into the nature of its self action still following the stronger force and spirituals are more powerful then corporals grace more active then nature By vertue of this communion of the Faithful the Church is said to be Corpus compactum connexum Eph. 4.16 a Body fitly joyned together and compacted no rents of Schism but every member hath its proper place Vers 13. and its peculiar connexion in the whole and this Till we all meet in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Unto a perfect man this does intimate the near and full communion of Christs Church all the Faithful being as one political person in Christ Gal. 3.28 according to that There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus and it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one Body but one Person Now to grow up to a perfect man according to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ is the increase of the Church till consummate in its communion of Members and fulness of perfection which shall be at the last day when the whole number of the Elect is gathered and so Christ in the Church and the Church in Christ have mutually their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their compleat growth like that of the Head in the Body and the Body in the Head and all in one political person and perfect man To close then such is the communion of the Faithful one with another as Members and all in Christ as their Head that he who by Schism separates from the Church though never so seeming a Saint he cuts himself off from Christ and in the prosecution of this separation though he should zealously give up his life unto death his goods unto the spoil his body unto the fire 1 Cor. 13.2 3. yet all this would not be fidei corona Cypr. de Unit Eccles n. 12. but paena perfidia as St. Cyprian speaks not a crown of Faith but a punishment of unfaithfulness the suffering not of a Martyr but of a Malefactor For let the cause be what it will to die in Schism without the Pale of the Church is to perish in sin without the Gate of Heaven Indeed as the Branch withers which is broken off from the Root the River dries up which is cut off from the Fountain so the Soul shall perish which is divided from Christ And that Soul is certainly divided from Christ the Head which separates from the Church which is his Body His Body in a communion of the faithful as Members Here it will be a seasonable service to resolve you these four Questions 1. Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall away 2. What is meant by that common saying That out of the Church there is no Salvation 3. What have we to answer those who say We have no Church 4. Seeing we are to hold communion with the Church how may we know which is a true Church with which we may hold communion First Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall Quest 1 away We see in the World such a general defection from truth and holiness that some may haply propose this Question as well worthy our present resolution Indeed Polutheism a worshipping many gods hath ever been an argument for Atheism a not worshipping any God And in these our days whilst men see so many
Religions they not knowing which to chuse think it best to be of no Religion and whilst they behold the eager opposition of Churches all professing Christ they are ready to question whether indeed Christ hath now any Church But to stop the mouths of Atheists and confirm the Faith of true Christians I shall resolve unto you this Quare Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall away To which I answer Answ Some particular and visible Churches of Christ have and still may fall away but the universal and invisible Church the Body of Christ cannot And this stability of Christs Church is founded upon the immutability of Gods Covenant his promise cannot fail and therefore his Church cannot perish In all her variety of states and conditions Non mutat voluntatem sed vult mutationem so the Schools from the Master of the Sentences and he from St. Augustine When God alters his work he changeth not his will but wills those changes so as to establish his promises Amongst which promises to his Church Matth 16.18 observe that The Gates of Hell shall not prevail against her And again Lo I am with you saith our Saviour what onely for a short time Matth. 28.20 No it is for a long date alway even unto the end of the world Indeed to suppose the Church to fall totally from grace were to separate Christ from being Head and to divide him from the Body Eph. 1.23 and so make him who is the fulness of perfection to be himself imperfect Of particular visible Churches indeed we say That they have and may fall away so did the Church of Israel in the time of Elijah so hath the Church of Ephesus of Antioch of Jerusalem and many other particular Churches they have faln away yet the Universal hath not But still in the height of Heresie there have been some to profess the truth in the deepest Apostacy some to hold fast unto Christ and the purity of his worship Thus in the time of Arianism when as St. Hierom tells us Ingemuit totus orbis se Arianum esse miratus est The whole World groaned and wondered to see it self become Arian yet then there was an Athanasius to be Arianorum Malleus the Hammer and Hammerer of the Arians yea there were stout Professors of the Truth in the several parts of the Earth true Propugnatores fidei the Churches Champions for the Faiths defence Rev. 13.5 Yea see when the whole World wonders after the Beast even the Princes of the Earth dread his power court his friendship adore his greatness yet even then God hath a remnant left A remnant which worship him in Spirit and in Truth But further yet I observe The old Adversaries of the Protestant Faith the Papists they take advantage of our present distractions and whilst our Church labors under an Eclipse they seek to gain Proselytes by this Argument viz. Necessary it is to be of some Church for it is a truth received on all hands That out of the Church there is no Salvation and now as for the Church of England say they where is it or what is it That hath ceased to be but the Church of Rome that continues in her ancient glory So that unless now you will be Roman Catholicks you can be of no Church and if you be of no Church you can expect no Salvation Wherefore to discover the subtlety and overthrow the strength of Quest 2 this Argument I shall resolve this Second Quaere What is meant by this ancient truth and common saying That out of the Church there is no Salvation Answ Answer It is meant of the Church Universal not of this or that or any other particular Church There is no particular Church on Earth but may under a cloud of persecution cease to be any longer visible in respect of the outward Ministry of the Word and Sacraments and yet continue to be of the Church Universal the Body of Christ in the inward sanctification of the Spirit and Grace So that when we say Out of the Church there is no Salvation it is not spoken of the Church of Rome any more then of the Church of France or of the Church of England or of any other particular and National Church on Earth But it is spoken of that Una Sancta Catholica Ecclesia That one holy and Catholick Church the Body of Christ for that out of it indeed there is no Salvation And therefore do the Ancients make Noahs Ark Gen. 6.16 17 18. a Type of the Church for that as all within the Ark so all within this Church are saved and as all without the Ark so all without the Church are destroyed Per portam Ecclesiae intramus in portam Paradisi so St. Augustine through the door of the Church we enter the Gate of Paradise and as the same St. Augustine observes well He that hath not the Church for his Mother cannot have God for his Father and he that hath not God for his Father cannot have Christ for his Saviour and without Christ there is no Salvation For as that which is not of the Body does not receive life Natural from the Head so he that is not of the Church does not receive life Spiritual from Christ We proceed then to the resolution of our Third Quaere Quest 3 What we have to answer those who say we have no Church viz. That a Church does not then cease to be Answ when she ceaseth to be glorious but is visible in her constant sufferings when not visible in her publick Ministry Be it so then that we cannot shew the rich Plate on the Cubbard yet we can shew it cast into the Furnace and do but wait the Artists time and it shall come out more refined and beautiful The Church is the Kings Daughter Psal 45 13. though clothed in Raggs though covered with contempt yet all glorious within Tell me is not the Church then most truly eminent when most eminently suffering for the Truth Innocency is more illustrious upon a Dunghil then injustice on the Throne Fa th and Truth more honorable in a Dungeon then Schism and Superstit on in the Temple wherefore the●e Christ hath his Church where Truth hath her Martyrs And let not then any insulting Romanist say Where is your Church in contempt and scorn whilst we can point him to those who give Testimony to the Faith by their innocency and sufferings To close with the Fourth Quaere Seeing we are to hold Communion Quest 4 with the Church how may we know which is a true Church with which we may hold communion Answ Answer By these inseparable and infallible Notes a sincere Preaching of the Word a right Administration of the Sacraments and a firm Profession of the Faith All which by how much they are the more or the less perfect by so much is the Church the more or the less pure And now blessed be God even for ever
of mens persons some are his elect and chosen Luke 18.7 Ezek. 44 24 Psal 105.15 Mal. 3.8 John 2.16 2 Sam. 7.5 of times and seasons some are his Sabbaths and feasts of servants and attendants some are his Prophets and Ministers of goods and chattels some are his Tithes and Oblations And thus of places and habitations some are his Temples some are his Houses in which Houses and Temples places dedicated to Gods worship and service he vouchsafes to dwell not as thereby confining his presence but therein declaring it For most true it is God hath no bounds of himself but himself his essence is infinite for immensity and omnipresence as well as for majesty and omnipotence He hath heaven for his Throne and earth for his footstool Isai 66.1 and therefore is not contained in Temples made with hands Seeing God then is not inclosed within walls nor confined by place how is he said to be in his Temple as in his house Why it is not to denote him contained but present 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Philo Judaeus gives the short yet full resolution God is present every where as containing all things not contained himself And so though in the immensity of his Omnipresence his being is in all places yet in the manifestation of his gracious presence his dwelling is more especially in his Temple and this in the holy ministrations of his Word and Sacraments And thus hath God his house on earth as well as his house in heaven which two have so good a correspondency in a communion of things Psal 102.19 that they have their analogy in a communication of Names And therefore as we finde in Scripture heaven is called Gods sanctuary so Gods Sanctuary may be called Heaven And thus however men despise the house of Gods worship yet is it the place where his honour dwelleth Psal 26.8 yea as his house above is coeleste solum earth in heaven so his house below it is terrestre coelum heaven on earth But now to attribute holiness to places and call our Churches Gods houses is not this superstitious and Jewish No sure we are otherwayes taught by our Saviour who saith expresly of his Fathers house Mark 11.17 that it shall be called the house of prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to all Nations it shall be called that is palàm erit habebitur it shall so every where be and be accounted as Beza himself gives the glosse And observe We finde not our Saviour using any severities so much as in zeal for Gods house that being prophaned he takes the whip in his hand as well as the Text in his mouth and scourgeth as well as reproveth he whips the oxen and those men more beasts then they the money-changers out of the Temple and justifies his Zeal by a Scriptum est it is written My house shall be called the house of prayer but ye have made it a den of theeves Now that part of the Temple where our Saviour did this was not Atrium populi the Peoples court that wherein the Jewes worshipped but that Atrium gentium the Gentiles court wherein those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 17.4.17 those Grecians and other devout persons spoken of in the Acts Acts 8.27 were admitted and worshipped For we may not think the Jewes who were so zealous for their Temples holiness we may not think they would suffer the Oxen to tread where themselves set foot so charily neither would they suffer shops and stalls and trade and traffick where themselves did not approach b●t cleansed and purified It was that court which was made a thorow-fair Mark 11.16 as appears by the peoples carrying vessels thorow it which none was but that of the Gentiles as being void of legall sanctity and without the first bounds of the Temple yet this being a place of publick prayer our Saviour will have it esteemed as Gods house whereby he establisheth the relative holiness of our Christian Churches The Jewes so zealous that nothing might come within their bounds of the Temple to profane them they were regardless of the Gentiles bounds as not so capable of profanation Our Saviour at once to convince the Jewes error as evill and vindicate the place of the Gentiles worship as holy he sayes of that court where the Gentiles did pray that it is his Fathers house and thereby establisheth the holiness of Christian Oratories to all Nations Wherefore if we be Christians we must approve of the publike places of Gods worship which publike places must be accounted houses of Prayer and if houses of Prayer the houses o● God and what is his is holy And now upon this our Saviours ground have all our Christian Churches been erected and as erected so consecrated Thus when Christianity gained first acceptance with the Imperial authority that famous Church at Jerusalem was consecrated by Eusebius and that at Alexandria by Athanasius And we may observe it was the Churches persecution by Heathens which hindred the building her Temples and sure then to pull down her Temples must be a persecution if not heathenish But why will our Saviour have his Fathers house called the house of prayer why not as well the house of sacrifice and of the Sacraments Quest or the house of prophesying and of preaching I answer Because without prayer all the rest are nothing Answ either as to Gods worship or our benefit And that hereby we see the excellency of prayer above all other duties and of publike prayer above all private devotions Thus I have opened unto you the house of the Lord and we shall proceed further to shew you how David dwells there and discover to you the length of his lease even for term of life so says the Psalmist One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life 1. How David is said to dwell in the house of the Lord. The dwelling David here speaks of is not such as if he would have the pallace of the King to be in the Temple of the Lord or as another Samuel himself continually to attend the Priest no his dwelling is not meant of a proper and continued habitation there but of a frequent and constant repair thither even in the mornings and in the evenings on the Sabbaths and on the Feasts dayes then to attend the publick solemnities of Gods worship and service Psal 84.4 And O blessed are they Lord that thus dwell in thy house they will be still praising thee And it 's worth our observing how Davids desire and resolution answers that of God himself who says of Zion This shall be my rest for ever Psal 132.15 here will I dwell for I have desired it The Lord delights himself in Communion with his Saints and well may his Saints then delight themselves in Communion with their God God dwels with the faithful as in his