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A29488 A bundle of soul-convincing, directing, and comforting truths clearly deduced from diverse select texts of Holy Scripture, and practically improven, both for conviction and consolation : being a brief summary of several sermons preached at large / by ... M. Roger Breirly ... Brereley, Roger, 1586-1637. 1677 (1677) Wing B4659; ESTC R1288 256,743 378

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of the Father 3. So that all Knowledge all Passions with a hard heart are nothing and nothing more hardens than that 4. And all things prosper according to the disposition of the Heart learning c. are the works of man but saith and a broken heart the gift of God only This Word may and doth worke many Passions a light belief in many and yet never partaker of Christ therein as Ezek. 33. They heard and shewed love And Herod did many things for the Knowledge thereof is glorious and the evidence of the Truth convinceth man to make him inexcusable But these are but First Stirring of natural passions Second Or informing Reason more clearly Many such Passions we see stirr'd up and all nothing So that fits passions lights and easements come and go but misery in man and mercy in God remains ever And the life of faith is not any strength or quality in man but a tender heart open ear to hear believe Gods Word live thereby SERMON VII Isai 57.10 Thou hast wearied thy self in the greatnesse of thy way Yet saidest not There is no hope Thou hast found the life of thy hand therefore thou was not grieved IN this Chapter the Prophet first bewails the losse of the Righteous of Israel which was not laid to heart but they presumed still of their own strength without God Then he calls the Rebellious to a reckoning to convince them of their Idolatry and carnal confidence and to see the vanity of their way and their misery and captivity ensuing And all by a Metaphor of Adulterers that have forsaken their Husbands that would have been a safeguard unto them and joyning themselves unto others which would be their downfal As first that they had joyned themselves to another than to him and had made a covenant with them and sed themselves with beastly pleasures in satisfying of their Lusts sometimes covertly behind the door Sometimes lifted up in their conceits as upon a high Mountain Then their carnal confidence in the arm of flesh in going to the King of Assyria and then when he failed to the King of Babylon and so concludes they have sought all wayes of wearinesse and yet returned not to God Wherein he shewes 1. The frowardnesse of Mans Heart and his many devices to nourish his fleshly hope and put evil from his thoughts 2. The ground of all t●is vain confidence is because he find the life of his hands for the present therefore not grieved Thou hast wearied or toiled thy self viz. Sought out all devices and wayes to nourish hope even unto wearinesse and yet saw not thy miserie So that All mans toil in the Flesh wherein he wearies himself is only to feed his hope of safetie without God to keep evil from his heart and eyes yet all in vain for evil shall over take him in the end Yea though man daily see the wearinesse and vanitie of his own wayes that they prevaile not to the satisfying of his own lust desire yet he still seeds his hope thinks he shall put the evil from his heart As Israel though they saw they prospered not in their designs by their fleshlie power yet still sought to the arm of Flesh trusted it Pharaoh though God wearied him with his judgements yet he was still hardened against him The Pharisees though they saw they prevailed not against Christ yet ceased not to fight against his Kingd●m The Wordling though he toile in wearinesse yet still at a want yet he cannot cast off care but hopes to gain satisfaction And Balack Balaam Is● 62. They will n●t s●t but they shall see For man hath m●re confide●ce in the World in the Flesh than in God more ground and reason to believe it than God For thought the World have sailed him a thousand times yet still he believes it will help him But if God seem to defer his help a while he runs to his old friend Mammon again as Israel did to Egypt against Aissria contra For man is loath to see any evil towards himself or the down-fall of his Fleshlie Kingdom though it doth fail in his sense and feeling yet he holds it up in his conceits and hopes And so would still have somewhat to look at that he might believe For nothing can destroy the hope of man but God by the power of his Truth and sensible Wrath in mans heart man can shufle and shift off any thing else 1. For if guilt be revealed yet there is hope For he will mend his course falter Moses and so hope for mercie 2. If affliction and crosse come yet he will be more warry and diligent and so prevent or recover it 3. If Death come yet he puts it off as long as he can and saith While there is yet Life there is hope of mends 4. For there is such a sure covenant betwixt the World and mans Fleshlie Heart that if one faill he runs to another and if one conceit hold not he gets another 1. Hic labor hoc opus Thus doth the Wordlie heart of man wear out his dayes in wearinesse and still feeds his vain hopes How hath the youthful mind wearied himself in one vanitie after another that now they are wearinesse to him and if the old man were kept to those youthfull dallyance it would be a burden And yet though there was hope in riches and how hath the rich Worldling fed his hopes with pulling down and building and yet he is too short Nay there is nothing but is wearinesse in all our wayes and yet we follow them as though in the end whe should gain rest So lothe is man to leave the pursuit of his fleshlie hopes so little heart to bear the want thereof That he will trye the utmost of his strength before he yeeld 2. Nay See the wearie passages man hath in Religion and yet will not denie himself he hath gained knowledge wrought righteousnesse changed his course and all to beget a Faith and yet his heart is fearful and distrustful and thinks by a new device or degree to gain it Nay how often hath God confounded thy self-opinions and conceits that thou saw it would not serve the turn and yet hast set a fresh upon a new one 3. Nay how often hath God frustrate the fleshlie conceits of believers and yet they have not learned to trust him 4. Thus the Flesh still deceives for the witt of man shews him many great wayes of thriving all proves wearie great wayes of believing and yet proves vain opinion Man will have hold of something that his hope may be preserved Thus is he still bewitched will not understand the fear of the Lord. 5. But know when thou hast wearied thy self and worn out thy dayes all thy hopes shall die with the● and thou shalt see the Truth of that thou wilt not now believe 1. When the World shall passe away from thee or thou from
it 2. Thy friends forsake thee or thou forsake them 3. Thy Knowledge vanish and thy conceits fail thee 4. Death arrost thee and lay all thy counsels in the dust and no hope of returning or staying any longer no hope to escape the punishment of thy guilty soul then there will be no hope indeed 5. This we see what the life of man is nothing but a wearying of himself and ●eeding his hopes which end in confusion and the greater the way is and more likelie the project the more deceived 1 The way of the Pharis●es is a great way of holinesse great conceits arise hence but all abominable 2. The way of fleshlie knowledge and high contemplation is a great and seeming way of happiness yet an enemie to the crosse of Christ 3. The way of self-holinesse and good qualities and joyful feelings feed hope that he hopes it will be something so is not brought down to say there is no hope 6. And here we see what an evil rests in the heart of man like a predominant disease overcomes all medicines There is nothing that God doth to him or that he enjoyes but this evil destroyes it both that evil disposition overcomes it and the evil of miserie falls upon him which all his witt and weary toiling cannot avoide 1. If he meddle with the Word there is an evil Infidelitie and Lust that eats it out and yet he saith There is no hope 2. If he pray there is an evil of selfnesse and pride that conceives hope from what he doth 3. If he seek to know and comprehend yet there is an evil stubbornnesse that he will not yield 4. If he get the World there is an evil of guilt and want that destroyes his hope and confidence Nay there is no evil befals man but there is a greater with man which he sees not but covers all he can untill God take him from himself and make him a new man in Christ And yet saidest thou not There is no hope Yet thou blessedst thy self in new aid and not brought to seek help at me So that Till all mans hope in the flesh be destroyed the help 〈◊〉 God in mercy never relieves him As with the Prodigal and those in the Ship Lord save us we perish The hope that David had in his high mountain turned away the face of God and in numbering the People 72. He was past hope in himself that he hoped to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the Living The Pharisees was strong in this 1. For till then man never prayes nor seeks to God in earnest but to the World and to the Arm of Flesh. 2. For this sights against faith more than all and nothing so opposite 3. For this is the proper effect of the truth to destroy the fleshly hopes in mans heart and to root it out that he may seek to another 4. For till then man never denies himself till he be sensible of his real misery and sees and finds no help in the World or himself to avoide it 1. All the poor ease the World hath is to nourish his hope for all the good he hath is nothing but feeding him self with hopes of more good and so long as he can keep this conceit alive in his heart he will not trouble God 1. See the ground of his hopes First One hath the World or thinks to get it and therefore he hopes he shall not want But David hoped because God was his Shepherd 2. Another hath Religion and the World and therefore he hopes he shall do well 3. Another he hath much light and many feelings of joy and he thinks that all will be well but none hopes in God 2. See the endlesse goodnesse of God that in crossing blesseth them and in destroying hope stablisheth them in him self when the restlesse heart is past hope saying I have gotten the World and looked to my wayes but the Rebellion of my heart is that I have no hope Then saith God If thou hast no hope in the World nor in thy Self then hope in Me. SERMON VIII Psal 81.10 11. I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would have none of me THis Psalm is a Psalm of Praise ordained to be sung in the Feast of Tabernacles when from the fifteenth day till the two and twenty they feasted in boothes as Levit. 23. To put them in mind how they dwelt as strangers in Egypt and were thence delivered and after forty years in the Wildernesse where they dwelt in Tents daily to be removed at Gods appointment and they to live by Faith in the Covenant Shewing the life of man that though he dwelt in Tents as Abraham and have no habitation nor succour nor power to defend him yet God helped them in all these straits wherein 1. He exhorts them to praise God with Psalms and Instruments 2. Reckons up the great benefits of God in their deliverance both in Egypt and the Wildernesse where he gave them a Law and everlasting Testament 3. Adding the promise that he will be their God still if they will trust and fear him of which 4. He shews a reason why they should have none other Gods viz. because he is their only God that brought them out of the Land of Egypt and confirms the promise that he will be the same still 5. Then he upbraids them and shewes how notwithstanding all these mercies and truth they forsake and would not hear him 6. And so the righteousnesse of his Judgement in forsaking them with an aggravation of his judgement by remembring what they had lost and might have found I am the Lord thy God Why shouldest thou have any other God I am only He all thy devices have failed but I was alwayes thy refuge none could help when I helped So that When man hath run through all Inventions Lusts yet none but God in Jesus Christ shall be his rest and stay and the heart simply believing acknowledging this is only happy How often doth he urge this in the Prophets I am God alone and beside me there is no other Who can measure the Heavens or gather the Earth into his fist who can tell things to come I only have laid the foundation of the Earth The Prodigal would needs have others yea be a God to himself but was fain to flie hither David Psal 73 confesseth I have none in heaven but thee Thus cryed the People when Elias offered Sacrifice The Lord he is God the Lord he is God Pauls righteousnesse was but drosse none but Christ and him crucified 1. All other things are but deceivable snares of Satan and all our toyl and hopes are but our own sorrows for to this we must and he must either be our best rest and friend or woe to us These may flatter a while but
Three VVitnesses he needed not for they out of their hardnesse confesse He proceeds to judgement wherein he 1. He layes down the safe estate of Sion the Church in that he hath there laid the Foundation and Corner-stone Jesus Christ and the safety of all that build thereon He that believes c. 2. And then the judgement of the enemies as 1 That they shall have right judgement by him 2. That he will disannul all their hopes of safetie c. 1. Note their present condition and what had brought them to it viz. Their fulnesse and peace and conceit of their priviledges above others So that had made them now scorners of Christ his Word by the Prophets So that Long peace and plentie ease fulnesse in the World covered with a conceit of Redemption by Christ doth usually harden man against God and cover man from himself that Christ and his promise his wayes and Religion are despised and little set by Which for the most part brings a heavy day in the end Thus the old World mocked at Noah and Psal the● 10. Tush there is no knowledge in the most high let him do his Word that we may see it Thus the Pharise● being full despised the righteousnesse of God mad● a mock of Christ See what end it brings Prov. 1. Because they despised my counsels c. Therefore shall th● eate the fruit of their own wayes As in Constantine time when the Church enjoyed rest from their enemies and that they had peace through the Christia● World Men became wanton in knowledge and fe● from the truth of Christ into foul errors to the ve●● denying of Christs Godhead and the Holy Ghost S● in times of peace and fulnesse Religion is made but matter of discourse not of practise 1. For two things make all things esteemed Necessity Delight But when the heart is fatted up with th● World he feels no want of Christ And for delight h● hath none for he never felt the sweetnesse of his Lor● and Reconciliation 2. For the fulnesse of the World embraced eats o●● the life of Religion As the thorny ground choked th● seed Davids high Mountain And Christ saith How hardly doth these enter into Heaven So that though the World laugh and seems pleasant for the present yet in the end it is a miserable comforter For though Israel was now full and despised the honny Comb of Christs death yet afterwards were carried captive they were forced to sit by the waters of Babel weeping and drink their own tears as those Psal 37. Who had what they desired yet were they set in slippery places and suddenly went down to hell 1. This is too plain in experience peace and plenty have been our portion many a day We feed of the fattest baist our selves before the fire we feel no smart as do others nor are we pinched with famine nor hear we the fearful noise of the drum nor are we affrighted with the terrors of an army We dwell safe under our Vines and are not driven from our habitation as other our neighbours who are glad to forsake house and harbour lands and riches to save their own lives We play with our Wives and Children and sport our selves with them for company when others hearts are broken with cries and lamentation of Wife and Infants and knowes not how to save them from that approaching destruction that is coming And yet what effect hath this wrought even like those in Zephaniah 1.12 which say Tush God will neither do good nor evil and tush we shal feel no evil 2. But look for it for where this goes before the other will follow after If Sodom mock at Lot through fulnesse of bread yet God will meet with them And if the Pharisees stumble at this stone and will not have this man to reign over them yet the falling on them shall crush them to pieces and destroy those his enemies But Israel would never believe warning till it fell upon them 3. To be crossed then in the World to suffer want reproach persecution is a safer way than prosperity For by the one man is driven to G●d for want drove the Prodigal to his Father and hereby the flesh is weakned and crucified but by ful●esse made strong and no Judgement nor bondage so great as this Security Hardnesse and Slavery to our own Passions But woe and alace to the poor World who have not the World and yet despise Christ most of any For they are left to their own dissolute Wills and Lusts and want education in Gods Fear as much as meat And therefore it were to be wished that the course begun might be continued 4. But it is a fearful thing to make a mock of Christ and set lightly by his Word and to be so far in love with the World that we esteem not his Word it argues we find little good therein and little comfort by the Promise For what we find any good in we highly esteem of and what would pull us from our pleasant pleasures we cannot endure Therefore was the word of the Prophets so unwelcome to Israel so to us For first 1. The doctrine of Faith we count foolishness and uncertain 2. The doctrine of the Cross impossible 3. The doctrine of Obedience bondage needlesse 4. The doctrine of Death most unwelcome Yea what account do we make of the World what care contending about it and yet how lightly we passe over Christ and his Word But take heed for this grows from setting light to scorning and then to persecuting of it 5. Pray we then with David that we fall not into presumptuous sin For this is that Word that must save thee and that Christ that must redeem thee and tha● Promise that must comfort thee And thou little knows what thou scornes even that which at Death must be thy best friend but how ca● we look for him to be a friend at Death whom we have despised and scorned all our life Because ye have said Here was their carnal confidence Presumption and Fools-Paradise wherein they blessed themselves under the shelter of Vanity a●● Falshood they would not hear of Sin Guilt Death and the Cross but thought they had a device in wit the world to put off all these So that All men naturally labor by all wit and inventions to put off the evil day far from them and security and presumption to give rest to their restlesse hearts rather than to feel the evil in themselves that they may find rest through mercy in another S● the rich fool much goods for many dayes so David blessed himself in his high mountain and Israel by the Ark. Thus the Pharisees covered all under pretence of Holinesse but all in vain Nay all cry Peace peace 1. For man is lothe to see any evil approaching to himself 2. And mans mind must have something to bear it up if not Christ he runns to vain shifts 3.
Man is fa●len into an evil estate of heart which all creatures are not able to help and he put to his shifts to keep it off as long as he can For the fear of Hell and Death is a little bell These three evils pursue men fi●st 1. Guilt and Fear of Hell l●ke a worm gnaws daily and but for these man would live merrily in the world Thus he makes a covenant with either by forgetting or by flattering the Law and stablishing a Righteousnesse of his own or presuming of mercy a far off 2. The evil of Death presseth upon us and threatens to make an end of all Joy Pleasure Riches leaves no Hope to man thus we put off many dayes think we shal yet live long when men of our age are gone forgotten but it hasteth upon us daily 3. The evil of Adversity pincheth daily now this Crosse that Losse this Sicknesse that Want and Trouble this we hope to prevent and recover bow down in fear and basenesse and husband all so well hereafter that we shal enjoy better dayes when it is impossible to order all things according to mans mind So that all these are but vain shifts and falshood But the only way is with Christ to take the evil day ●nd crosse upon us 1. For guilt to see it and bear the indignation of the Lord and with the Prodigal cry out dayly We have sinned c. And wait on Him that hath overcome Hell and Darknesse and now saith O Death where is thy sting Hell where is thy victory 2. And for Death no Covenant to be made with it but seeing the vanity of the World to meet it joyfully and say Thou canst do me no hurt but take the World and the Life which I esteem not and open a door to that life which I shal enjoy 3. And for the Crosse no way to escape it But Patience and subjection to the Fathers will who knows what is best to tame our proud hearts and to crosse us in that wherein we dote And herein appears his love that he will suffer us to enjoy nothing that will hurt us but even this shall turn to our good Thus we all strive to put evil far off to shufle over the fearful dayes We now think lightly of them and play with wasters but when we come to graple with death we shal find it no play game Look for it for an evil day is coming and happy he that is prepared for that d●y Take heed lest at any time our hearts be oppressed with cares of this life or luke warmenesse Thus saith the Lord Behold I lay in Sion Here He first layes the fou●dation of rest in the Church that though it fare ill with his enemies yet is his Church built upon the foundation of free mercy in Christ and his truth revealed by him shall stand against all storms So that God hath laid in his Church conveyed to his People a foundation of rest in Jesus Christ which shall preserve them against all crosse of Death and Hell and n● storm shall be able to overthrow it Psal 125. They th● trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Sion Mat 7. They that build upon the Rock shall abide the Tempest David calls him a Rock of Stone and Peter the Corner-stone For this is prophesied of him Isa 9. His Name shall 〈◊〉 called Wonderful Counsellor The mighty God the Prin● of Peace c. Other Foundation can no man lay 1. Thence it is said Heb. 11. That faith is the grou● of things hoped for because Christ whom faith ot●●ests on is unchangeable to his 2. And the promise in him is Yea Amen Though in us oftentimes it is Nay 3. This is that whereby Adam was restored and first laid in him whereby Abraham was preserved and Paul delivered in greatest extremity This foundation is Jesus Christ the Son of God Lord of the Covenant the ingraved form of his Image given of the Father for the Restauration of man to whom he hath given all power in Heaven and in Earth and hath hid in him the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge and the heart of man built on this foundation by saith thereon cannot fail But the Church of Rome hath translated this foundation from Christ to the Church from head to members from that Mat. 18. Super hanc Petram and so they have the determination of all truth it to be received and believed because of their testimony And so that Christ is to be believed because of the Church and not contra And thus they pervert one Article of the Creed to bring all mens heads under their girdle and that they may sit in the Consciences of men and do what they list without controle They say We are not only to believe the Church to be but to give credit to it To understand the difference note Austins distinction of Faith in regard of the object 1. Credere in aliquid to believe and put confidence in one 2. Credere alicui to believe or give credit to one 3. Credere aliquem to believe that one is or after this manner To believe in one hath reference to God only because the object thereof must be both verum bonum To believe or give credit to one hath relation to his object as to objectū formale a principle for whose sake To believe one to be hath relation as ad objectum materiale The first we agree in And as for the second we say The testimony of to Church is of all humane the greatest and can never err in the whole nor fundamentally They say Crede Ecclesiae as to the formal cause for whose sake we are to believe all Truth and some of them that was inserted tanquam meum cum omnia alia credendi And so they make it a foundation of faith upon whose credit they wholly depend And this is the difference and this we deny 1. Because the Grammatical Constructions will not bear it Credere being taken to give credit is put with a Dative Case and an Accusative Case as in the Creed 2. Because there is no such certainty in their Church for man to depend on but that which must be the foundation of Faith must be a thing certainly known and determined what it is not the word but the thing For saith is not verbal but real But according to their own assertions the Church is a thing to them not certainly known or determined what it is Their Doctors divide the Church into the Church Essential The Convocation of all that believe in Christ Representative The Bi hops in a General Council Or Council of Cardinals Vertual the Pope only And of these we agree not which is the Church on which we must depend Some will have the Essential as Tride Catech Gloss upon Gratians Decrees which are Popes own law 2 Chap. 24 4.1 Some others seeing this could not be because it could not be known conclude it to
of natural wit to know the good will pleasure of God or the Mistery of Christ so as man shall find life theteby or certainty therein but as the Father makes himself known in Christ by his Word power of his Spirit unto the faith of man believing his truth 1. Cor. 2. The natural man understandeth not the things of God Christ saith I am the light that enlightens all that comes after me Joh. 1 He is the light of the world Joh. 1.4 There is anoynting that teacheth all things 1. Joh. 5. None can say that Jesus is the Christ but by the Holy Ghost Though we think that That Jesus we read of was the Christ and Saviour yet the flesh thinks but of him after the flesh but his mightie Power his wonderful Truth unspeakable Love to Man the bitternesse of his Sufferings the Joy in the Fathers will the Victory over Hell and Death the joy at the Fathers right hand none knowes it but he that believes it out of blinnnesse and misery 1. For the Father hath hid the treasures of wisdom in him hidden them from the world found not by curious searching but by humble crying believing found not in man but in Christ there to be enjoyed for he is made our Wisdom Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption 2. Adam had thought to have known God in the Creatures and himself and the evil also without God but knew no good till God revealed Christ in the promise So until we be brought by the truth of Christ to know no good in any thing but in God nor no evil in any thing but in our selves we know nothing at all but we seek to see a good in every thing and in our selves especially and would see no evil and so are lifted up and know nothing as we ought 3. And this Christ prayes that his Elect may know that thou art in me and I in thee and that thou hast sent me And I speak not of any self but they are the words of my Father that sent me for of my self I can do nothing 4. And note that this great Mystery was revealed after Christs death for then he sent the Comforter to lead into all truth and not till then Before this the Disciples had a thousand imaginations of Christ but now they knew that he was the Son of the Father Head of the Church So we have a world of fancies to●c●ing God and Christ but never know him until the Crosse reveal him for till then we only t●ink him to be such and such and another thought crosseth that But this makes the weaknesse and vanity to appear his power preserves for every mans work shall be revealed by Fire How wonderful are the blind conceits that man hath of God and Christ as 1. When we will needs comprehend God vvithout Christ in his Essence Properties Attributes Eternity Omnipotencie c. What a foolishnesse is this to think to compasse in our thoughts Omnipotence c. 2. Others that frame a knowledge of Christ in comprehending the Story of his Life and Death Works c Thus vve know him by Relation as we do other Countries where we never were but never vvalk on foot with him in his death and miserie None knowes him whose miserable heart is not delivered from Death by him who believes his truth above all then this truth makes him free 3. We see then that all Knowledge comes by Faitht as suppose a man a Stranger promise to ransome me a captive I believe he will but I know not that he will but only vvait in faith nor hovv he vvil do it nor vvhy he vvill but when he makes good his word then I know his love vvhich he revealed to me and I not able to conceive in my self So with Christ he promiseth that he vvill redeem me but I know not that he vvill onlie I believe and wait in miserie yet by that Faith I am preserved through the Word though I feel nothing but death and b●ndage Wouldst thou know the Love of God that passeth Knovvledge vvait on Christ by Faith believing his Word and he will reveal the Love of the Father For though vve know not the mind of G●d yet vve have the mind of Christ So that thou must knovv nothing but in him abide in him ●nd his Word abide in thee and he will reveal all things unto thee So that our curious and busie Wit so hun ing to knovv and straining out the Wit to understand leads to many fancies But knovv that his wayes are insearchable but vvait and attend and he vvill reveal Christ and the Father if th●u fit under the burden of thine ovvn ignorance and content for the time to knovv nothing but thy ovvn vilenesse Here we see that Christ is both God and Man A M●n in vvhom the fulnesse of the God head dvvells to vvhom all is given that knovvs the mind of the Father and reveals i● to us This is the only God on Earth that mans mind ma● be fixed here not gade abroad neither ascend into Heaven nor descend down into Hell c. Where then is the free vvill and power of Man vvithout Christ living in him and leading into all Truth dravving the vvill of Man to vvait on God in subjection All else is but trusting to the Wit of Nature vvhich is alvvayes blind It follovveth in the 28. verse SERMON III. Matth 11.28 Come unto me all that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you Take my yoke upon you learn of me for I am meek lowly in heart HEre is his Invitation upon the former relation of his fulnesse viz. You see where all help is 〈◊〉 then you want help in any strait that lyes on you as a burden Come to me viz. to my Word Promise for there he dwells I will ease you So that There is no certain way or means to a burdened heart to free his guilt ease his burden or rid in him ou● of the Snare of Satan but the simple fleeing of the mind from all to Christ in his Word of Truth and there to stick and abide in life and death He was of old ordained to break the Serpents head and prophesied of to bind up the broken hearted He was the refuge of Job in all his afflictions I know that my Redeemer liveth He was sealed and appointed thereto by the purpose of the Father This himself witnesseth by word and work By word I am come to save the World I am the Resurrection and the Life he that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live By works How many poor lame blind did he help which he was after to do spiritually to heal the blind c. The afflicted he comforted as the Publicane Mary c. And this Paul found in himself and taught unto others That there is none other Name under Heaven c. 1. For nothing can free the spirit of man but he
the power of darknesse and death and subdue thine enemies under thy feet and then shall death the last enemie be destroyed that God may be all in all 4. Only in this time take heed of hardning in securitie ●nd blind presumption SERMON XIII Heb. 2 24. Forasmuch as the Children were partakers of Flesh and Blood he also took part with them that he might through death destroy him that had the power of death that is the devil IN the former Chapter he had declared the great and divine power of Christ who was far above all Angels and Power In this he shews that now Christ ●●eing made the Prophet and High Priest of mans Salvation it became him to be a man like us both to teach and suffer for us which he proves by divers testimonies of the Prophets as I will declare thy name unto my Brethren and Isa 8.18 Behold I and the Children which God hath given me So that he was made even ou● brother In these verses he concludes and explait● what he hath said before as if he should say Forasmuch as those Children which thou hast given me were but Fle●● and Blood and not able to free themselves but through the same Flesh and Blood were under the Power of th● Devil and by him kept in bondage under the feard death He took flesh and blood on him also becam● a weak man that thus he might by death free his Children from that bondage these words declare two thing 1. What man is in himself viz. Weak under the powe● of the devil thereby kept in bondage fear of deat● 2. What Christ hath done for weak man viz. Tak● part with us by his death destroyed Satan freed 〈◊〉 Forasmuch as the Children viz. of Adam or rather o● the Elect Were partakers of flesh and blood Weaknesse want miserie and death for through the flesh we a● subject to all those so that this is our portion the l●● of Spirit is gone our Spirit dead fo● want of th● life of God so also for life and salvation able to do nothing but depend on another So that All men even the Elect of God and faithful have nothing properly their own but flesh and blood viz Weaknesse Want and Miserie till they are supplied b● Christ and his fulnesse Gen. 6. His thoughts and imag●nations are evil Psal 8. What is man He is a thing 〈◊〉 nought lesse than nothing and lighter than vanitie low● than the Angels and yet he found no stedfastene●● in them Paul though full of the gifts of God 〈◊〉 the least of all Saints in me dwells no good thing not ab● to think one good thought Do our holy high thoughte● men judge so of themselves Egypt but a Reed an● the strength of Pharaoh but a broken staffe and what 〈◊〉 our Riches but as grasse our Wisdom foolishnesse 〈◊〉 Powers not able to make white or black our Righteousn● as a filthy Rag our Sacrifice as the cutting off a Dog● neck nay all but grasse and as the flower of the field 1. This is plain in experience Doth not the weak heart of man flie any whither for succour though it finds none bowes to the World creaves help of the arm of flesh flie any whither for to hide himself would do any thing for to free himself from the fear of his own heart danted with everie noise dead with any losse can do no good not suffer any evil and yet this silly creature sits in his own conceit as a God a Lucifer Queen that shall see no evil 2. Whence then are all those high thoughts of judging others and justifying our selves seeking honour each of other but because we see not our own weaknesse and bondage Nay if our eye were returned inward we should have no boasting if we saw but the spring of Lust and Pride and how unable we are to resist the least temptation or stand in the least affliction how good soever God be to us yet in our selves but flesh and blood his gifts shews his goodnesse and they are in him not in man enjoyed from him not from our own fountain All high thoughts then are from the devil for all is but flesh and blood Thy high Turrets and great Babels and fair inheritance must come to nought when thy Soul shall be taken and it may be thou shalt see it This great portion gathered and daily increased wherein thou boastest thy self must all be scattered and ●hou not know what shall become of it thy deep wisdom shall fail thee it is but fleshly not able to see into the way of life to prevent or deliver thee from death Thy counsels must perish thy righteousnesse is but a ●ag shall vanish nothing continue Nay what ever thou doest thou mars it if Christ be not there If thou pray or ●alk all is nothing but fleshly only to stablish a fleshly kingdom peace to thy self Nay bring out thy best qualitie it is but fleshly such as the Heathens have as well as thou if Christ be not there else we needed no Christ but our Spirits being lost he came to breath a new life therein to by his power Object But God giveth gifts to men Answ True but if he be not with those gifts man marrs them Where then is the power of good motions or free-will c. To know believe love repent c. Not in us but in Christ And yet this makes not man secure Doth the beggers poverty make him cease begging or the lame man to lye still and not cry for help Nay the feeling of this keeps repentance and prayer a foot in the Church and so had we need of mercie everie day and to pray night and day That when this grasse withers c. Yet that the Word of God may abide in our hearts for ever Magnifie Gods mercie that unto us so poor and weak that can do nothing vouchsafes his help and grace 3. So that all Religion is not any thing we can do to God we are not fitted no What can we add to him but to receive still from him both Faith and Righteousnesse and all for having none he is made all these to us that so we may daily cry Lord increase our Faith help our unbelief 4. But Religion never throve since flesh and blood even mans fleshly wisdom and conceited power and righteousnesse of man got pearckt up in Christs room in the heart of man nor will it thrive in any till this be laid in the dust again and that we begin at the verie earth to abhore our selves in dust and ashes He took part with them That is was made man partaker of all wants and infirmities of man and ye● himself conquered being tempted and helps all that are tempted So that Jesus Christ that living Saviour of man is partaker and fellow-seeler of all mans weaknesse infirmities that he suffers and lovingly helps and frees man where all help fails Isa 50.11 Isa 63. In all