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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64687 Twenty sermons preached at Oxford before His Majesty, and elsewhere by the most Reverend James Usher ...; Sermons. Selections Ussher, James, 1581-1656. 1678 (1678) Wing U227; ESTC R13437 263,159 200

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for me to make particular application do you do that your selves We are all children of wrath by nature in our natural condition we are all alike we are all of one kind and every kind generates its own kind 'T is an hereditary condition and till the Son makes us free we are all subject to this woe By nature we are all children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.3 Now that I may not speak of these woes in general I have shew'd how two woes are p●st and a third woe is coming God proceeds punctually with us And are not our proceedings in Judiciary Courts after this manner The Judge when he pronounceth sentence doth particularize the matter Thou shalt return to the place from whence thou camest thou shalt have thy bolts knockt off thou shalt be drawn to the place of execution thou shalt be hanged thou shalt be cut down and quartered and so he goes on And this is that which is the witness of Justice Thus is it here the Spirit of God thinks it not enough to say barely the state of a sinner is a woful estate but the woes are punctually number'd and this shall be my practice Now 1. The first thing that followeth after sin is this After the committing of sin there cometh such a condition into the soul that it is defiled polluted and becometh abominable And this is the first woe 2. The soul being thus defiled and abominable God loaths it for God cannot endure to dwell in a filthy and stinging carrion-soul he startles as it were and seems afraid to come near it he forsakes it and cannot endure it And that 's the second woe First sin defiles it then God departs from it there must be a divorce 3. When God is departed from the soul then the Devil enters in he presently comes in and takes up the room there will be no emptiness or vacuum And this is a fearful woe indeed for as soon as God is departed from a man he is left to the guidance of the Devil his own flesh and the World There will be no emptiness in the heart no sooner God departs but these step in and take Gods place 4. Then in the fourth place after all this is done comes sin and cries for its wages which is death The terrible death which comprehends in it all that beadroll of curses which are written in the Book of God and not onely those but the curses also which are not written Deut. 28. which are so many that they cannot be written Though the Book of God be a compleat Book and the Law of God a perfect Law yet here they come short and are imperfect For the curses not written shall light upon him which are so many as pen and ink cannot set down nay the very pen of God cannot express them so many are the calamities and sorrows that shall light upon the soul of every sinful man Now let us take these woes in pieces one after another 1. The first woe is the polluting and defiling of the soul by sin A thing it may be that we little think of but if God once open our eyes and shew us what a black soul we have within us and that every sin every lustful thought every covetous act every sin sets a new spot and stain upon the soul and tumbles it into a new puddle of filth then we shall see it and not till then for our eyes are carnal and we cannot see this If once we did but see our hateful and abominable spots that every sin tumbles us afresh into the mire did we see what a black Devil we have within us we would hate and abhor our selves as Job did It would be so foul a sight that it would make us out of our wits as it were to behold it A man that is but natural cannot imagine what a black Devil there is within him But though he seeth it not yet he that hath eyes like as flame of fire Rev. 1.14 seeth our stains and spots Our Saviour shews the filthiness of the heart by that which proceeds out of the mouth Mat. 15.18 Those things which proceed out of the mouth come from the heart And v. 19. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts c. Observe Of all evils we account evil thoughts the least This we think strange what thoughts defile a man what so light a matter as a thought Can they make any impression Yes and defile a man too leaving soch a spot behind them which nothing but the hot blood of Christ can wash away So many evil thoughts so many blasphemies so many filthy things come from the heart every one being a new defilement and pollution that a man is made so nasty by it and filthy that he cannot believe that it is so bad with him as indeed it is the Apostle having shewn the Corinthians their former life and exhorted them against it 1 Cor. 6. goes on cap. 7. v. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit Mark then there is a double filthiness a filthiness of the flesh and a filthinest of the spirit The filthiness of the flesh that every one acknowledgeth to be filthy carnality Fornication and Adultery c. These bestial lusts every one knows to be unclean But then there is a filth of the Spirit too and such are evil thoughts They are the filth of the Spirit Corruptio optimi est pessima The corruption which cleaves to the best thing is worst The Soul is the Best thing the most noble thing the filthiness which cleaves to it therefore must needs be the greatest Fleshly filthiness as Adultery is filthy but Contemplative Adultery to dwell thereon is worse however such a man may be pure from the filth of the flesh yet if he delight himself in filthy thoughts his spirit is abominable in the sight of God There is a stain by every one of thy impure thoughts left behind However an actual sin be far greater then the sin of a thought yet if that be but once committed and these are frequently in thee if thou alway lie tumbling in the suds of thy filthy thoughts thy continuing therein makes thy sin more abominable then Davids outward act which he but once committed So that we see there is a filthiness of the spirit as well as the flesh In James 1.21 we have a word sets out the filthiness of it which is Superfluity Lay apart saith he all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness First it 's expressed by the name of filthiness shewing there 's nothing so defiles a man as sin Then 't is called superfluity of naughtiness But what is there any naughtiness to be born with And what exceeds that it is superfluity No that 's not the meaning of the place By superfluity is meant the excrements of sin Excrements are the refuse of meat when the good nourishment is taken away from it And 't is as if he had said Lay
to bring a man to salvation without Christ whereas if he be not under grace under Christ he is accursed If thou wilt be saved by the Law it is not thy endeavour or doing what lieth in thee that will serve the turn every jot and ●ittle that the Law requires must be fulfilled What would be thine estate if thou shouldst be examined according to the strict rigour of the Law Not the least word or thought that is contrary to it but thou must give an account for If thou standest upon thine own bottom or lookest to be saved by thine own deeds not one vain word which thou speakest but thou shalt be questioned for cast and condemned Consider then the great difference of being under Christ and grace and of being under the Law When we are under Christ we are freed from a great deal of inconvenience we are not liable to answer for those evil things which we have committed as in that comfortable place of Ezekiel All his iniquities that he hath done shall not be mentioned unto him When a man is come to forsake his old way his evils are cast out of mind a marvellous comfort to a Christian whereas if a man be not in Christ every idle word he must be accountable for if in Christ the greatest sin he ever committed he shall not hear of All they that stand on Gods right hand hear onely of the good things they have done you have fed cloathed and visited me But they on the left hand hear not a word mentioned concerning the good they have done only their evil deeds are reckoned up Now that I may declare to you the difference between the Law and the Gospel I will difference it in three particulars 1. The Law rejects any kind of obedience besides that which is thorough sound full and perfect without any touch of the flesh It rejects all crackt payment it will take no clipt coyn That obedience which hath any imperfection joyn'd with it will not be accepted But here I must not speak without book See Rom. 7.14 We know that the Law is spiritual but I am carnal And then concludes O wretched man c. The Law is spiritual What 's that We may know the meaning of it by the particle but but I am carnal The Law is spiritual That is it requires that all our works be spiritual without any carnality or touch of the fl●sh If in any point of our obedience there be a smell of the cask it is rejected If the beer be never so good yet if it have an evil smatch it will not relish Let our services have this savour of the flesh and they will not be pleasing to God neither will they have a right savour in his nostrils And thus the Law is spiritual but w● are carnal Now it is otherwise here in the state of the Gospel Alas We are carnal it 's true The Apostle himself complains That th●re is ● law in his members rebelling against the law of his mind and le●ding him ●aptive c. Yet notwithstanding the Gospel accepts our obedience thoug●●he Law will not What 's the reason of this Why it 's plain W●en ●he Law comes it looks for justice it presents a strict rule to us it requires w● sh●uld be compleat But now the Gospel doth not so it requires ●ot justifi●ation of our own but looks that being justified by Gods free grace we ●hould ●h●w forth our thankfulness and express that we are so in heart b● our obedience to our utmost power Here 's all the strictness of the Gospel If there b● a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to what a man hath not 2 Cor. 8.12 God takes well the desires of our mind This i● then our blessed condition under the Gospel it requires not perfect obedience but thankfulness for mercies received and a willing mind Suppose we cannot do what we would that 's no matter God looks to our affections and the willingness of our minds if it be according to the strength that thou hast it is received with acceptance Here then arises the second point of difference and that is 2. The Law considers not what thou now hast but what thou once hadst If thou sayst I have done my best and what would you have a man do more then he can do The Law heeds not that It considers not what thou doest but what thou ough●st to do It requires that thou shouldst perform obedience according to thy first strength and that perfection once God gave thee that all thou doest should have love for it's ground that thou shouldst love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and strength Mat. 22.37 Her● the Law is very imperious like those Task-masters in Egypt that laid burthens on the Israelites too heavy for them to bear They had at first materials and then they delivered in the full tale of bricks But when the straw was taken from them they complain of the heaviness of th●ir burthen But what 's the answer You are idle you are idle you shall deliver the same tale of bricks as before Exod. 5.17 So stands the case here It 's not enough to plead Alas if I had strength I would do it but I have not strength I cannot do it But the Law is peremptory you must do it you are compell'd by force you shall do it The impossibility of our fulfilling it does not exempt us as appears by comparing Rom. 8.3 with Rom. 7.6 although it be impossible as the case stands for the Law to be by us fulfilled yet we are held under it as appears plainly thus If I deliver a man a stock of money whereby he may gain his own living and be advantageous to me and he spend it and when I require mine own with increase he tells me True Sir I received such a sum of money of you for this purpose but I have spent it and am disinabled to pay Will this serve the turn will it satisfie the Creditor or discharge the debt No no the Law will have its own of him If thou payest not thy due thou must be shut up under it It 's otherwise under the Gospel that accepts a man according to what he hath not according to what he hath not And here comes in the third point 3. Under the Gospel although I am fallen yet if I repent the greatest sin that is cannot condemn me By repentance I am safe Let our sins be never so great yet if we return by repentance God accepts us Faith and Repentance remove all The Law knows no such thing Look into the Laws of the Realm If a man be indicted and convinced of Treason Murther or Felony though this man plead True I have committed such an offence but I beseech you Sir pardon it for I am heartily sorry for it I never did the like before nor never will again Though he thus repent shall he escape No the rigour of
of it that it shall not do that which it is apt to do which is as good as if the sin were taken away when there were wild gourds sliced into the pot 2 Kings 4.31 it 's said the Prophet took that venemous herb away i. e. though the thing were there yet it is as if it were not there it shall do no manner of hurt Bring now and pour out and there was no evil thing So in respect of us though there be an evil thing in punishment and what if we had our due would bring condemnation yet when we are sprinkled with the blood of Christ it can do us no evil no hurt it 's said in the Scripture that the stars fell from heaven why the stars are of that bigness that they cannot fall from heaven to the earth but they are said to fall when they give not their light and do not that for which they were put there so though I have committed sin yet when God is pleased for Christs sake to pardon it it is as if it were not there at all This is a great matter but I tell you there is more we are not only freed from the guilt of the punishment but which is higher we are freed from the guilt of the fact I am now no more a murderer no more a lyar when I have received a pardon from the blood of Christ he frees me from that charge the world is changed with me now Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Rom. 8.33 If the Devil lay any thing to thee thou mayst deny it Such a one I was but I am justified but I am sanctified 1 Cor. 6.11 A man hath committed High Treason against the King and the King gives him a pardon for the Treason if I call him a Traytor he can have no remedy against me for he is one the pardon takes not away the guilt But i● his blood be restored unto him by Act of Parliament then if I shall call him Traytor he may have remedy against me because he is restored fully and is not lyable to that disgrace This is our case though our sins be as red as scarlet yet the die shall be changed Isa. 1.18 It shall be so bloody Thou hast the grace of justification and this doth not only clear thee from the punishment but from the fault it self See in Jer. 50.20 The place is worth Gold In those dayes and in that time saith the Lord ●he iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none and the sins of Judah and they shall not be found For I will pardon them whom I reserve What is the matter What a sinful man and no sin What then there is search made for sin in such a man shall it not be found You will say this is meant of the grace of sanctification no I will pardon them that pardoning of sin makes the sin not to be found What a wonderful comfort is this When I shall come at the day of judgment and have the benefit of my justification the last absolution such sins shall not be charged on me my sins and iniquities shall not be remembred I will remember their sins no more saith God it is a wonderful thing and a strange mistake in many men especially the Papists Did they ever write comfortably of the day of judgment Never they make that a terrible day Alas poor souls they knew not that justification is that that makes sins that they shall never be remembred Mark it is said Thou shalt hear of all thy good deeds for thy honour and thy praise but for thy sins there shall search be made and they shall not be found when God forgives sins he doth it fully it shall never be cast in thy teeth again but thou shalt hear of all thy good deeds not of thy bad Then lift up your heads for your redemption draweth near Luk. 21.28 here is the blessed grace of justification that we being justified by faith have not only no condemnation but no guilt whereas all the sins of the wicked man shall be set before his face and he shall stand quaking and trembling by reason thereof not one good thing that he hath done shall be remembred but in the iniquity that he hath committed in that shall he dye Ezek. 18.24 and so I have said somewhat of that point You may remember that I said a word perhaps that some think much of that the question betwixt us and Rome is not Whether we be justified by faith or no But Whether we be justified at all I will make it good There are two graces righteousness imputed which implies forgiveness of sins and righteousness inherent which is the grace of sanctification begun They utterly deny that there is any righteousness but righteousness inherent They say forgiveness of sins is nothing but sanctification A new doctrine never heard of in the Church of God till those last dayes till the spawn of the Jesuites devised it Forgiveness of sin is this that God will never charge me with it again They say that forgiveness of sin is an abolishing of sin in the subject where is true remission as much as to say There is no justification distinct from sanctification whereas the Apostle distinguisheth them when as he saith The Son of God is made unto us wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1.28 He is made unto us of God By the way let me expound it unto you Christ hath three offices A Prophetical Regal and Sacerdotical office He exerciseth his Prophetical office to illuminate our understanding He exerciseth his Kingly office to work on our will and affections there are two branches of it the Kingdome of grace and the Kingdom of glory How am I made partaker of Christs Prophetical office He is made unto me wisdome before I was a fool but now by it I am made wise First he enlightens me and so he is made unto me wisdome well he is my Priest how so He is made an expiation for my sin he is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Saint John A propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the world There is a difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a bar● pardon but this is such a propitiation as the party offended is well pleased with Christ being made a ransome he is made unto us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the oblation offered unto his Father He is righteousness imputed to us And as a King he rules me in the Kingdom of grace and in the Kingdome of glory in the Kingdom of grace he is made unto me sanctification and in the Kingdom of glory he is made unto me redemption it is called by the Apostle the redemption of our bodies these two are thus clearly distinguished The work of Christs Priestly office is to be a propitiation for our sins sanctification proceeds