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A10650 An explication of the hundreth and tenth Psalme wherein the severall heads of Christian religion therein contained; touching the exaltation of Christ, the scepter of his kingdome, the character of his subjects, his priesthood, victories, sufferings, and resurrection, are largely explained and applied. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne; by Edward Reynoldes sometimes fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford, late preacher to the foresaid honorable society, and rector of the church of Braunston in Northhampton-shire. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1632 (1632) STC 20927; ESTC S115794 405,543 546

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Wee have a Holy Catholick Church gathered together by the Scepter of his Kingdome and holding in the parts thereof a blessed and beautifull Communion of Saints The Lord shall send forth the Rod of thy strength out of Sion Rule thou in the midst of thine enemies Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power in the beauties of holinesse from the wombe of the morning thou hast the dew of thy youth Wee have the last Iudgment for all his enemies must bee put under his feete which is the Apostles argument to prove the end of all things 1 Cor. 15.25 and there is the day of his wrath wherein he shall accomplish that judgment over the heathen and that victorie over the Kings of the earth who take counsell and bandie themselves against him which he doth here in his word beginne We have the Remission of sinnes comprised in his Priesthood for hee was to offer Sacrifice for the remission of sinnes and to put away sinne by the Sacrifice of himselfe Eph. 1.7 He. 9.26 Wee have the Resurrection of the Bodie because he must subdue all his enemies under his feete and the last enemie to bee subdued is death as the Apostle argues out of this Psalme 1 Cor. 15.25 26. And lastly wee haue life everlasting in the everlasting merit and vertue of his Priesthood Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek and in his sitting at the right hand of God whither he is gone as our forerunner and to prepare a place for us Heb. 6.20 Ioh. 14.2 and therefore the Apostle from his sitting there and living ever inferreth the perfection and certaintie of our salvation Rom. 6.8.11 Rom. 8.17 Eph. 2.6 Col. 3.1 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 15.49 Phil. 3.20 21. 1 Thess. 4.14 Heb. 7 25. 1 Ioh. 3.2 The Summe then of the whole Psalme without any curious or artificiall Analysis wherein every man according to his owne conceite and method will varie from other is this The Ordination of Christ unto his Kingdome together with the dignitie and vertue thereof v. 1. The Scepter or Instrument of that Kingly power v. 2. The strength and successe of both in recovering maugre all the malice of enemies a Kingdome of willing subjects and those in multitudes unto himselfe v. 2 3. The Consecration of him unto that everlasting Priesthood by the vertue merit whereof he purchased this Kingdome to himselfe v. 4. The Conquest over all his strongest and most numerous adversaries v. 5 6. The proofe of all and the way of effecting it in his sufferings and exaltation Hee shall gather a Church and hee shall confound his enemies because for that end he hath finished broken through all the sufferings which hee was to drinke of and hath lifted up his head againe Vers. 1. The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole Here the Holy Ghost beginnes with the Kingdome of Christ which hee describeth and magnifieth ● By his unction and obsignation thereunto The Word or Decree of his Father The Lord said 2 By the Greatnesse of his person in himselfe and yet neernesse in bloud and nature unto us My Lord. 3 By the Glorie power and heavenlinesse of this his Kingdome for in the administration thereof he sitteth at the right hand of his Father Sit thou at my right hand 4 By the Continuance and Victories thereof Vntill I make thy foes thy footstoole The Lord said Some read it certainly or assuredly said by reason of the affinity which the originall word hath with Amen from which it differs onely in the transposition of the same radicall letters Which would afford this observation by the way That all which Gods saies of or to his Sonne is very faithfull true For which cause the Gospell is by speciall Emphasis called The Word of Truth Eph. 1.13 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A faithfull saying worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1.15 Or most worthy to be beleeved and embraced For so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being applied unto the Gospell signifie Ioh. 1.12 Ioh. 3.33 Act. 17.11 Being opposite unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13.46 But the principall thing here to bee noted is The Decree appointment Sanctification and sealing of Christ unto his Regall Office For the Word of God in the Scripture signifies his Blessing Power P●easure Ordination Man liveth not by bread alone but by every word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God Matth. 4.4 That is by that command which the creatures have received from God to nourish by that Benediction and Sanctification which maketh every Creature of God good unto us 1 Tim. 4.5 Gods saying is ever doing something his words are operative and carry an unction and authoritie along with them Whence we may note That Christs Kingdome belongs to him not by usurpation intrusion or violence but legally by order decree investiture from his Father All Kings raigne by Gods providence but not alwayes by his approbation They have set up Kings but not by mee they have made Princes and I knew it not Amos 8.4 But Christ is a King both by the providence and by the Good will and immediate Consecration of his Father He loveth him hath given all things into his hand Ioh. 3.35 He judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment to his Sonne Ioh. 5.22 That is hath entrusted him with the oeconomie and actuall administration of that power in the Church which originally belonged unto himselfe He hath made him to be Lord and Christ Act. 2.36 Hee hath ordained him to bee Iudge of quicke and dead Act. 10.42 Hee hath appointed him over his owne house Heb. 3.2.6 He hath crowned him put all things in subjection under his feete Heb. 2.7 8. Hee hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 Therefore hee calleth him My King set up by him upon his owne holy hill and that in the vertue of a solemne decree Psal. 2.6 7. But wee must here distinguish betweene Regnum naturale Christs naturall Kingdom which belongeth unto him as God coessentiall and coeternall with his Father and Regnum oeconomicum his Dispensatory Kingdom as he is Christ the Mediator which was his not by Nature but by Donation and unction from his Father that hee might be the Head of his Church a Prince of Peace a King of Righteousnesse unto his people In which respect he had conferr'd upon him all such meete qualifications as might fit him for the dispensation of this Kingdome 1 God prepared him a Bodie or a Humane nature Heb. 10.5 and by the grace of personall and Hypostatica●l union caused the Godhead to dwell Bodily in him Col. 2.9 2 He anointed him with a fulnesse of his Spirit not such a fulnesse as Iohn Baptist and Stephen had Luk. 1.15 Act. 7.55 which was still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulnesse of a measure or vessel a
that proceed out of our mouth Eph. 4.29 a respect unto the glory of God in whatsoever workes wee goe about 1 Cor. 10.31 The whole soule body and Spirit should bee Sanctified throughout and that even till the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ 1 Thess. 5.23 Christ hath service much more than enough to take up all the might strength studies abilities times callings of all his servants Businesses towards God and himselfe worship feare Communion love prayer obedience service subjection businesses towards and for our selves watchfulnesse repentance faith sincerity sobriety growth in grace businesse towards other men as instruments and fellow members exhortation reproofe direction instruction mourning rejoycing restoring releeving helping Praying Serving in all wayes of love So much evill to bee avoided so many slips and errors to bee lamented so many earthly members to bee crucified so much knowledge and Mysteries to bee learned so many vaine Principles to bee unlearned so much good to bee done to my selfe so much service to bee done to my brother so much glory to bee brought to my Master every Christian hath his hands full of worke And therefore Christ expostulateth it as an absurd thing to call him Lord Lord to professe and ingeminate a verball subjection and yet not to doe the things which hee requires Luk. 6.46 The third thing observed touching the Kingdome of Christ is the Glorie and Power thereof intimated by his sitting at the Lords right hand Gods right hand in the Scripture is a Metonymicall expression of the strength power majesty and glorie that belongs unto him This is mine infirmitie saith the Psalmist but l will remember the yeares of the right hand of the most high Psal. 77.10 Where wee finde Gods power under the metonymie of a right hand opposed to the infirmitie of his servant My infirmitie and weake faith made me apt to sinke under the sense of Gods displeasure but when I called to minde the experiences of Gods former power in alike distresses I recollected my Spirits and was refreshed againe So the right hand of the Lord is said to spanne or extend the heavens Esai 48.13 And the Psalmist expresseth the strength and salvation of the Lord by his right hand Psal. 118.14 15 16. and his fury is the Cup of his right hand Hab. 2.16 And he strengthneth and helpeth and upholdeth his people by the right hand of his Righteousnesse that is by his Power and faithfull promises which in their weaknes strengthens them in their feare and flagging helps them in their sinking and falling upholds them Esai 41.10 So the Psalmist saith of wicked men that their right hand is a right hand of falsehood Psa. 144.11 that is either confidence in their owne power will deceive themselves or they will deceive others to whom they promise succour and assistance Therfore Gods right hand is cald the right hand of Majesty Heb. 1.3 and the right hand of power Luk. 22.69 To sit then at Gods right hand noteth that great Honor and Judiciarie Office and plenitude of power which God the Father hath given to his Sonne after his manifestation in the flesh in his nativity and justification by the Spirit in his resurrection he was then amongst other dignities received up into glory 1 Tim. 3.16 This wee finde amongst those expressions of honor which Salomon shewed unto his Mother that shee sate at his right hand 1 King 2.19 And herein the Apostle puts a great difference betweene Christ and the Leviticall Priests that they stood daily Ministring but Christ after his Offering Sate downe on the right hand of God Heb. 10.11 12. noting two things First That Christ was the Lord and they but Servants for standing is the posture of a Servant or Minister Deut. 10.8.17.12 Ezek. 44.24 and not sitting Luk. 17.7 Secondly that their worke was daily to bee repeated wheras Christs was consummate in one offering once for all after which hee rested or sate downe againe This fitting then of Christ at the right hand of Majestie and glorie notes unto us first The great Exaltation of the Lord Christ whom God hath highly honoured and advanced and given a name above every name First his Divine nature though it cannot possibly receive any intrinsecall improvement or glory all fulnesse of glory essentially belonging thereunto yet so farre forth as it was humbled for the oeconomie and administration of his office so farre it was readvanced againe Now he emptied and humbled himselfe not by putting off any of his divine glory but by suffering it to be overshaddowed with the similitude of sinfull flesh and to be humbled under the forme of a Servant as the light of a candle is hidden in a darke and close Lanterne So that Declaratorily or by way of Manifestation he is in that respect magnified at Gods right hand or as the Apostle speakes declared to be that Sonne of God by Power in rising from the dead and returning to his glory againe Rom. 1.4 Againe how ever in Abstracto wee cannot say that the Deitie or Divine nature was exalted in any other sense than by evident manifestation of it selfe in that man who was before despised and accused as a blasphemer for that he made himselfe equall with God yet in Concreto and by reason of the Communication of properties from one nature to another in the unitie of one person it is true that as God saved the World by his bloud and as it was the Prince of life that was crucified and the Lord that lay in the grave so God likewise was in the forme of a servant humbled and at the right hand of Majestie exalted againe Secondly the humane nature of Christ is most highly exalted by sitting at Gods right hand for in the right of his Hypostaticall union hee hath an ample and immediate claime to all that glory which might in the humane nature bee conferr'd upon him So that though during the time of his conversation amongst men the exigence and oeconomie of the Office which he had for us undertaken made him a man of sorrowes and intercepted the beames of the Godhead and Divine glorie from the other nature yet having finished that dispensation there was in the vertue of that most intimate association of the natures in one person a communicating of all glory from the deitie which the other nature was capeable of For as by the Spirit of Holinesse he was filled with treasures of wisdome and knowledge and grace and thereby fitted for the Office of a Mediator and made the first fruits the first borne the heire of all things the head and Captaine of the Church furnished with a residue and redundancie of the Spirit to sanctifie his brethren and to make them joynt heirs and first borne with himselfe so by the Spirit of glory is he filled with unmatchable perfections beyond the capacitie or comprehension of all the Angels of Heaven being not onely full of glory but having in him all the fulnesse of glory
for executing condemnation upon the contumacious adversaries of the Gospell of Christ amongst the Gentiles as in the great victory of Gog and Magog Ezek. 39. Some by Gentiles understand all Enemies both spirituall and earthly Hee shall fill the places with dead Bodies That notes both the swiftnesse of the victory and the greatnesse of the victory That it shall bee so generall and so speedy that the enemie shall have either none left or they that are left shall not bee able nor have leasure to bury their dead Bodies Ezek. 39.11 He shall wound the head over divers Countries That is either the principall of his enemies every where or Satan who is the God of the World that ruleth as Head over the Children of disobedience in all places Or Antichrist the Head of nations the chiefe of Gods enemies Revel 13.7 8.14.8.17.15.18 The Lord at thy right hand According to the two-fold Apostrophe before mentioned here are two observations which I will but touch First that God the Father is worthy to have all the power Majesty and judgement which hee hath given to his Sonne our Mediator for our protection salvation and defence most thankfully and triumphantly acknowledged to him We finde our Savior himselfe praising God in this behalfe that hee had delivered all things into his hand even power to make Babes beleeve on him Matth. 11.25.27 And this S. Paul is frequent in namely in praising and glorifying God for Christ. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee c. I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 7.25 1 Tim. 1.16 17. All the promises of God are in him yea and in him Amen to the Glory of God by us 2 Cor. 1.19 20. Hee gave himselfe for our sinnes that hee might deliver us from this present evill world according to the will of God and our Father to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Gal. 1.4 5. Every tongue must confesse that Iesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father Phil. 2.11 And reason there is that it should thus bee acknowledged to the Father because hee hath all his Kingdome and power in the Church from the Father All power is given unto mee Hee hath given him a name above every name and this the Sonne hath revealed to us that so hee might manifest the name that is get glory to his Father thereby Ioh. 17.6 7. For in Christ it was God that reconciled the world to himselfe Secondly hee hath it all given unto him in our nature in our behalfe and as our head so that wee in the gifts of God to him were onely respected and therefore wee have reason to praise God for them It was not indeed given to him strictly for it was not to him Beneficium but Onus an office but not a benefit but to him for us or to us in and by him In all the victories deliverances refreshments experiences of Gods power and goodnesse wee must ever remember to praise God in and through his Sonne to acknowledge the power of his right hand which is not now against his Church but against the enemies of his Church For therefore the deliverance of his Church is ascribed to Gods Right hand because hee hath there one to plead to intreat to move his right hand in our behalfe Therefore in all our distresses in all conflicts and temptations wee must by faith looke up unto Gods right hand put him in remembrance of that faithfulnesse righteousnesse atonement and intercession which is there made in our behalfe There wee shall have matter enough to fill our mouths and hearts with praises and triumph and rejoicing in him It is Christ who is at the right hand of God who shall separate us from the Love of Christ Rom. 8.34 35. Here are two arguments of the Churches safety and triumph The Love of Christ and the Honor of Christ. Hee loveth all his to the end But what good can love doe without power Therefore hee that loveth us is exalted by God and hath all power given him for this purpose that his love may doe us good In the conflicts of my corruptions which are an adversary too wise too subtile too numberlesse for mee to vanquish I may yet when I am driven to Pauls extremity rest in his thanksgiving and looking up to Iesus who will be the finisher of every good worke which hee beginnes and seeing him at Gods right hand may triumph in the power and office which God hath given to his Sonne there which is to subdue our iniquities and to sanctifie us by his Truth and by that residue of Spirit which he keepeth for the Church Ioh. 17.17 19. for that Prayer is a Modell as it were and counterpane of Christs Intercession for saith he I come to thee and speake these things in the world that they may have my joy fulfilled in them ver 13. that is that they having a specimen and forme of that Intercession which with thee I shall make for them left upon publike record for them to looke on and there finding that their sanctification is the businesse of my sitting at thy right hand may in the midst of the discomforts and conflicts of their corruption have a full joy and triumph in the honour which thou hast given me I am beset with the temptations of mine enemies and persecutions for the Name of Christ In this case I may give God praise for the power which hee hath given to his Sonne I may from mine enemies appeale unto Gods right hand I may like Stephen when the stones and buffets are about my soule looke up by faith see there my Captain standing up in my defence Act. 7.55 I may acknowledge unto God the power given unto his Sonne that though nothing of all this fall upon me without his provision and permission yet sure I am that he hath power and mercy in his right hand that though mine enemies were as strong as a combination and armie of kings yet the Lord at his right hand hath from him in my behalfe received power enough to strike through kings when the day of his wrath is come Note secondly Christ is at the right hand of his people present with them and prepared to defend them from all their enemies present by his Spirit to strengthen comfort and uphold them enabling them to glory and rejoyce in all their sufferings as knowing that they are but for a moment and that which is needfull to purge their faith and to make them beare their shame 1 Pet. 1.6 7. Iam. 1.2 3. Esai 27.8 9. and to glorifie the consequent power of Christ which shall bee revealed to their joy 1 Pet. 4.13 when hee will recompence double to us in mercy and to our enemies in severity Esai 54.7 8.61.7 present by his mighty power and by his Angels to rescue deliver and protect them to bee as a wall of fire as a shield a buckler a rocke a Captaine to his people
of brasse iron or tinne may bee drawne out of a pit so the Lord by the concurrence of severall unsubordinate things which have no manner of dependance or naturall coincidencie amongst themselves hath oftentimes wrought the deliverance of his Church that it might appeare to bee the worke of his owne hand Sometimes by ordering and arming naturall causes to defend his Church and to amaze the enemie Thus the starres in their courses are said to fight against Sisera Iudg. 5.20 A mighty winde from heaven beating on their faces discomfited them as Iosephus reports So the Christian armies under Theodosius against Eugenius the Tyrant were defended by winds from heaven which snatcht a way their weapons out of their hands To make good that Promise No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper So the Lord slew the enemies of Ioshua with haile Ios. 11.11 And thus the Moabites were overthrowne by occasion of the Sunne shining upon the water 2 King 3.22 23. Sometimes by implanting phantasies and frightfull apprehensions into the mindes of the enemie as into the Midianites Iudg. 7.13 14. The Assyrians 2 King 7.6 thus the Lord caused a voyce to be heard in the Temple before the destruction of Ierusalem warning the faithfull to goe out of the Citie Sometimes by stirring up and prospering weake and contemptible meanes to shew his Glorie thereby The Medes and Persians were an effeminate and luxurious people Cyrus a meane prince for hee was not at this time the emperour of the Medes or Persians but onely sonne in law to Darius or Cyaxares and yet these are made instruments to overthrow that most valiant people the Babylonians Esai 45.1.13.3.17 As Ieremie was drawen out of the dungeon by old rotten rags which were throwne aside as good for nothing So the Lord can deliver his Church by such instruments as the enemies thereof before would have looked upon with scome as upon cast and despicable creatures for God as he useth to infatuate those whom he will destroy so he doth guide with a spirit of wonderfull wisdome those whom hee raised to defend his kingdome The Babylonians were feasting and counted their Citie impregnable being fortified with wals and the great river and God gave wisedome beyond the very conjectures of men to attempt a businesse which might seeme un●easable in nature to drie up Euphrates and divide it into severall small branches and so he made a way to bring his armie into the Citie while they were feasting the gates thereof being in great confidence and security left open Esay 44.27 28.45.1 Ier. 51.36 Sometimes by turning the hearts of others to compassionate the Church to hate the enemies and not to helpe them but to rejoyce when he is sinking Esay 14.6.10.16 Nahum 3.7 Sometimes by the immediate stroke of God upon their bodies or consciences Thus God gave the Church rest by smiting Herod Act. 12.23 24. Thus Maximinus being smitten with an horrible and stinking disease in his bowels confessed that it was Christ which overcame him and Iulian being smitten with an unknowne blow from heaven as is supposed confessed that Christ was too hard for him and another Iulian uncle to the Apostate for pissing on the Lords Table had his bowels rotted and his excrements issued out non per secessum sed per vulnera as the same Historian reports Sometimes by tiring them quite out and making them for very vexation and succeslesnesse give over their vaine attempts or else disheartning them that they may not begin them So Dioclesian retired to a private life because he could not root out the Christians And Iulian was afraid to persecute the Christians as his predecessours had done lest they should thereby increase he forbore it out of envie and not out of mercy as Nazian observes Sometimes by turning their owne devices upon their heads ruining them with their owne counsels and it may be dispatching them with their own hands Thus the Lord set every mans sword against his fellow in the huge host of the Midianites Iudg. 7.22 So Pilate and Nero the one the murtherer of Christ the other the dedicatour of all the consequent great persecutions both died by their owne hands as being most wicked and most cruell and therefore fittest to revenge the cause of Christ and his people upon themselves Thus God did not onely curse the counsell but revenge the treason of Achitophel by an act of the most desperate folly and inhumanity which could be committed Sometimes by hardning them unto a most desperate prosecution of their owne ruine as in the case of Pharaoh suffering them to lift at the stone so long till it loosen and fall upon them Zech. 12.3 Matth. 21.44 Sometimes by ingratiating the Church with them to their owne destruction as he did Israel with the Aegyptians Exod. 12.35 36. By these and a world the like meanes doth the Lord overthrow the enemies of his kingdome Now all this is In the day of his wrath or in his owne due time where we may note by the way that Christ hath wrath in him aswell as mercie Though hee be by wicked and secure men misconceived as if he were only compassionate yet laesa patientia fit furor he will more sorely judge them hereafter whom hee doth not perswade nor allure here So mercifull he is that he is called a Lambe for meeknesse and yet so terrible that he is called a Lion for fury It is true fury is not in him namely to those that apprehend his strength and make their peace with him Esay 27.4.6 But yet to those that will not kisse that is not love worship nor obey him hee can with a little wrath shew himselfe very terrible Psal. 2.12 He commeth first with peace Luke 10.5 but it is Pax concessa not pax emendicata a peace mercifully offered not a peace growing out of any necessity or exigencies on his part and so wrought by way of composition for his owne advantages The peace of a Conquerour Zech. 9.10 A peace which putteth conditions to those to whom it is granted that they shall be tributaries and servants unto him Deut. 20.10 11 12. Therefore the Apostle saith that he came to preach or to proclaime peace Ephes. 2.17 but if we reject it he then followes the directions of Ioshua These mine enemies which would not have me to raigne over them bring them hither and slay them before me Luke 19.27 But the maine thing here to be noted is that Christ hath a Day a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a prefixed and constituted time wherein hee will be avenged on the greatest of his enemies When he forbeares and suffers them to prevaile yet still he holdeth the line in his owne hand the hooke of his decree is in their nostrils and he can take them short when hee will It is never want of power wisdome or love to his Church that their quarrell is not presently revenged but all these are fitted to his
those men who stand at defiance with the power of Christ speaking in his servants The Apostle saith there is no escape left for those who neglect so great salvation Heb. 2.3 And yet this is the constant folly and cry of naturall men We will not have this man to raigne over us Let us breake their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us But First Every man must be subject to some King either Christ or sinne for they two divide the world and their Kingdomes will not consist And the subjects of sinne are all slaves and servants no liberty amongst them Ioh. 8.34 Whereas Christ makes all his subjects Kings like himselfe Revel 1.6 and his is a Kingdome of Righteousnesse peace and joy Rom. 14.17 Secondly If men by being the subjects of sinne could keepe quite out from the judgment and Scepter of Christ it were something but all men must one way or other be subdued unto him either as sonnes or as captives either under his grace or under his wrath As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to mee Rom. 14.10 11. Hee must bee either a savor of life or of death either for the rising or the fall of many in Israel either for a sanctuary or for a stumbling block All must either bee saved by him or judged by him There is no refuge nor shelter of escape in any Angle of the World for his Kingdome reacheth to the uttermost corners of the earth and will finde out and fetch in all his enemies Thirdly the matter were not great if a man could hold out in the opposition But can thine heart endure or thine hands bee strong saith the Lord in the day that I shall deale with thee Ezek. 22.14 What will yee doe in the desolation which shall come from farre when you are spoiled what will yee doe where will you leave your glory what will become of the King whom you served before It may bee thy mony is thine idol and thou art held in thraldome under thine owne possessions But what will remaine of a mans silver and gold to carry him through the wrath to come but onely the rust thereof to joyne in judgment against him It may bee thou servest the times and fashions of the world rejoyceth in thy youth in the wayes of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes But thou must not rise out of thy grave in thy best cloaths nor appeare before Christ like Agag gorgeously apparelled Thou must not rise to play but to be judged It may bee thou servest thine owne lust and anothers beautie but what pleasure willt there be in the fire of lust when it shall bee turned into the fire of Hell or what beauty wilt thou finde on the left hand of Christ where the characters of every mans hellish conscience shall bee written in his face Thou servest thine owne vainglorie and affectations but what good will it bee to bee admired by thy fellow prisoners and condemned by thy Judge In one word thou servest any of thine owne evill desires foolish man here they command thee and there they will condemne thee they are here thy Gods and they will bee there thy devils The Second particular in the description of Christs Kingdome is the greatnesse and neernesse of his person unto David My Lord. David calleth him my Lord upon a double reason by a Spirit of Prophesie as foreseeing his incarnation and nativitie out of the tribe of Iuda and stock of Iesse and so hee was Davids Sonne and by a Spirit of Faith as beleeving him to be his redeemer and salvation and so hee was Davids Lord. A virgin shall conceive and beare a Sonne there we see his incarnation and descent from David and shall call his name Immanuel God with us there wee see his Dominion over David As man so he was his Sonne and as Mediator so he was his Lord. As Man so he was subject unto Mary his Mother and as Mediator so hee was the Lord and Savior of his Mother Luk. 2.51 Luk. 1.46 47. As Man hee was made for a little while lower than the Angels that hee might suffer death but as Mediator God and Man in one person so he was made much better than the Angels all the Angels of God were his subjects to worship him and his Ministers to waite upon him Heb. 2.7.9 Heb. 1.4.6.7 So then the pronoune Mine leads us to the Consideration of Christs Consanguinity with David as he was his Sonne and of his Dignity above David as hee was his Lord. From hence wee learne That though Christ was Man yet hee was more than a bare man For jure naturae no Sonne is Lord to his Father Domination doth never ascend There must be something above nature in him to make him his Fathers Soveraigne as our Savior himselfe argueth from these words Matth. 22.42 45. Christ then is a Lord to his people he had Dominion and was the salvation of his owne fore-fathers A Lord. First By right of the Creation For hee is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 which the Apostle makes the argument of his Soveraignitie To us there is but one Lord Iesus Christ by whom are all things and wee by him 1 Cor. 8.6 Secondly By a right of Sonship and Primogeniture as the chiefe the first borne the Heire of all things Hee is not in the House as Moses was a Servant but a Sonne over his owne House Heb. 3.5 6. That is hee was not a Servant but Lord in the Church as the Apostle else where gives us the same distinction We preach Christ Iesus the Lord and our selves Servants 2 Cor. 4.5 For in the Scripture phrase the first borne notes Principality Excellencie and Dominion I will make him saith God my first borne higher than the Kings of the earth Psal. 89.27 So in Iob The first borne of death is the same with the King of terrors Iob 18.13 14. and so the Apostle saith That the Heire is the Lord of all Gal. 4.1 and therefore from his primogeniture and designation to the inheritance of all things he inferreth his preeminence and honor even above the Angels Col. 1.18 Heb. 1.2.4 Thirdly By the right of his Vnction Office and mediatorship unto which he was designed by his Father He was to have in all things the preeminence For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1. 18 19. Where by fulnesse either wee must understand fulnesse of the God head bodily as the Apostle speakes Col. 2.9 Or fulnesse of the Spirit of Grace which S. Iohn speakes of Iob. 1.16 Ioh. 3.34 And in both respects he is a Lord over all in one by the Dignity of his Hypostaticall union in the other by the grace of his heavenly unction and in both as Mediator and head in the Church Therefore the Apostle saith That God hath made him Lord and Christ Act. 2.36 and by the accomplishment of his office
due to the Ministers of the Gospell by a Law of Iustice. It is a wrong and foolish Apologie to pretend the punishment for the continuance of the fault The poverty of many men is doubtlesse a just recompence for their neglect of the honor of the Gospell For God hath ever severely punished the contempt and dishonor done to his messengers 2 Chron. 16.10.12 2 Chron. 24 21-25 2 Chron. 26.19 20. 2 Chron. 36.16 17. Wheras on the other side doe thou deale faithfully with God fulfill to thy power his appointment and decree that they which preach the Gospell may live by the Gospell and then hearken unto God Honor the Lord with thy substance and the first fruits of all thine increase so shall thy barnes bee filled with plenty and thy presses burst out with new wine Prov. 3.9 10. Consider now from this day and upward from the day that the foundation of the Lords Temple was laid consider it Is the seed yet in the barne From this day I will blesse you Hag. 2.18 19. Yee are cursed with a curse for ye have robbed me even this whole nation Bring yee all the Tithes into the store-house that there may be meat in mine house and prove mee herewith saith the Lord of Hoasts if you will not doe it out of duty yet doe it out of experiment If I will not open you the windowes of heaven and powre you out a blessing that there shall not be roome enough to receive it Mal. 3 9-12 There was never any man lost by paying God his Dues there was never any man thrived by grudging or pittancing the Almighty I will conclude this point with the Apostle It is his Doctrine faithfull Ministers are worthy of double honor And it is his Exhortation Render to all their Dues Tribute to whom Tribute Custome to whom Custome feare to whom feare Honor to whom Honor Rom. 13.3 Note lastly The Priesthood of Christ is an everlasting Priesthood Hee also was without Father and without Mother without beginning of dayes or end of life As man without a Father as God without a Mother The same yesterday and to day and for ever His name was Everlasting Father His Gospell an Everlasting Gospell He was a lamb slaine from the beginning of the world The vertue of his bloud goes backward as high as Adam He was foreordain'd before the foundation of the world 2 Tim. 1.9 The redemption of those that transgressed under the first Testament the remission of sinnes that were past were procured by this Sacrifice Heb. 9.15 Rom. 3.25 It goeth downward to the end of the world he must raigne till all be put under his feete and he must raise up all by the power and vertue of his victory over death Ioh. 5 26-29 And lastly it goeth onward to all immortality for though the Acts and administration of his Priest-hood shall cease when hee shall have delivered the Kingdome to his Father and have brought the whole Church into Gods presence yet the vertue and fruits of those Acts shall bee absolutely eternall for so long as the Saints shall bee in heaven so long they shall enjoy the benefit of that Sacrifice which did purchase not a lease or expiring terme but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an endlesse life an everlasting glory an inheritance incorruptible that fadeth not away reserved in the heaven for them VERSE 5. The Lord at thy Right hand shall strike through Kings in the day of his wrath VERSE 6. Hee shall judge amongst the Heathen he shall fill the places with dead Bodies Hee shall wound the heads over many Countries IN the former part of the Psalme we have had the description of Christs offices of King and Priest together with the effect thereof in gathering a willing people unto himselfe Now here the Prophet sheweth another effect of the powerfull administration of these offices containing his victories over all his enemies allegorically expressed in a Hypotiposis or lively allusion unto the manner of humane victories wherein first I shall in a few words labour to cleere the sense and then the observations which are naturall will the more evidently arise The Lord at thy right hand To lay aside their exposition who understand these words of God the Father the words are an Apostrophe of the Prophet to those at whose right hand the Lord Iesus is Some make it an Apostrophe to God the Father a triumphall and thankfull prediction of that power and Iudgement which he hath given to this his Benjamin the Sonne at his right hand Because that thereby the phrase retaineth the same signification and sense which it had in the first verse As if David had said O God the Father of all power and majesty worthy art thou of all praise thanksgiving and honor who hast given such power to thy Sonne in the behalfe of thy Church as to smite through Kings and judge heathen and pull downe the chiefe of his enemies and to subdue all things to himselfe and these read it thus O Lord hee that is at thy right hand shall strike through Kings c. Others make it to be an Apostrophe to the Church and so to bee a phrase not expressing Christs exaltation as verse 1. But his care and protection over his Church his readinesse to assist and defend his owne people against all the injuries and assaults of adverse power Salomon saith A wise mans heart is at his right hand but a fooles heart is at his left Eccl. 10.2 That is his heart is ready and prepared to execute any wife counsels or godly resolutions as the Prophet David saith My heart is prepared ô God my heart is prepared I will sing and give thankes But a fooles heart when hee should doe any thing is like his left hand to seeke of skill unactive and unprepared when hee walketh by the way his heart faileth him vers 3. And this readinesse and present helpe of God to defend and guide his Church is expressed frequently by his being at the right hand thereof Because the Lord is at my right hand I shall not bee moved Psal. 16.8 Hee shall stand at the right hand of the poore to save him Psal. 109.31 I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand saying unto thee feare not I will helpe thee Esai 31.13 As if David had said Bee not dismayed nor cast downe ô yee subjects of this King as if being exalted to Gods right hand hee had given over the care and protection of his people for as hee is at the right hand of his Father in glory and majesty so is he at your right hand too standing to execute judgement on your enemies and to reveale the power of his arme towards you in your protection Now the reasons of this phrase and expression as I conceive are these two First to note that Christs power providence and protection doe not exclude but onely strengthen assist and prosper the ordinary and just endeavors of the Church
the Lord is said to be at the Right Hand of his Church 485 Christs enemies kings 487 All praise and honour to bee given unto God for the Power and Office of Christ. 489 Christ is present and prepared to defend his people from their enemies 491 Christ in his appointed time will utterly overthrow his greatest enemies 493 Satans enmitie is in Tempting 494 Satans enmitie is in Accusing 495 How the Spirit of judgement overcommeth corruptions 495 How Christ overcommeth his potent adversaries in the world 498 There is a constituted time wherein Christ will be avenged of his enemies 502 1. VVhen sinne is growne to its fulnesse 503 which is knowne by its Vniversality 504 which is knowne by its Impudence 504 which is knowne by its Obstinacie 504 2. VVhen the Church is throughly humbled and purged 506 3. VVhen all humane hopes and expectations are gone 506 Christs victories are by way of pleading and disceptation 509 A torrent of curses betweene man and Salvation 515 The Necessity of Christs Sufferings 522 The Greatnesse and Nature of Christs Sufferings 521 522 The Power and vertue of Christs Resurrection 524 AN EXPOSITION OF THE HVNDRETH AND TENTH PSALME PSALME 110. vers 1. The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole CHRIST IESVS the Lord is the Summe and Center of all divine revealed truth neither is any thing to be preached unto men as an object of their faith or necessary element of their salvation which doth not some way or other either meete in him or refer unto him All Truths especially divine are of a noble and pretious nature and therefore whatsoever mysteries of his Counsell God hath been pleased in his Word to reveale the Church is bound in her ministerie to declare unto men And Saint Paul professeth his faithfulnesse therein I have not shunned to declare unto you all the Counsell of God But yet all this Counsell which elsewhere he ca●s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the testimonie of God he gathers together into this one conclusion I determined not to know any thing amongst you that is in my p●eaching unto you to make discovery of any other knowledge as matter of consequence or faith but onely of Iesus Christ and him crucified And therefore Preaching of the Word is called preaching of Christ and Ministers of the Word Ministers of Christ and learning of the Word Learning of Christ because our Faith our Workes and our Worship which are the three essentiall elements of a Christian the whole dutie of man and the whole will of God have all their foundation growth end and vertue only in and from Christ crucified There is no fruit weight nor value in a Christian title but only in and from the death of Christ. The Word in generall is divided into the Old and New Testament both which are the same in substance though different in the manner of their dispensations as Moses veild differ'd from himselfe unveild Now that Christ is the substance of the whole New Testament containing the Historie Doctrine and Prophesies of him in the administration of the latter ages of the Church is very manifest to all The old Scriptures are againe divided into the Law and Prophets for the historicall parts of them doe containe either typicall prefigurations of the Evangelicall Church or inductions and exemplary demonstrations of the generall truth of Gods justice and promises which are set forth by way of Doctrine and Precept in the Law and Prophets Now Christ is the summe of both these they waited upon him in his transfiguration to note that in him they had their accomplishment First for the Law hee is the substance of it hee brought Grace to fulfill the exactions and Truth to make good the prefigurations of the whole Law The ceremoniall Law he fulfilled and abolished the morall Law hee fulfilled and established that his obedience thereunto might be the ground of our righteousnesse and his Spirit and grace therewith might bee the ground of our Obedience And therefore it is called the Law of Christ. 2 For the Prophets he is the Summe of them too for to him they give all witnesse He is the Author of their Prophesies they spake by his Spirit and he is the object of their Prophesies they spake of the grace and salvation which was to come by him So that the whole Scriptures are nothing else but a Testimonie of Christ and faith in him of that absolute and universall necessitie which is laid upon all the world to beleeve in his name It is not onely necessitas praecepti because wee are thereunto commanded but necessitas medii too because he is the onely Ladder betweene earth and heaven the alone mediator betweene God and man in him there is a finall and unabolishable covenant established and there is no name but his under heaven by which a man can be saved In consideration of all which for that I haue formerly discovered the Insufficiency of any either inward or outward principle of mans happinesse save only the Life of Christ I have chosen to speake vpon this Psalme and out of it to discover those wayes whereby the Life of Christ is dispenced administred towards his Church For this Psalme is one of the cleerest and most compendious prophesies of the Person and Offices of Christ in the whole Old Testament and so full of fundamentall truth that I shall not shunne to call it Symbolum Davidicum the Prophet Davids Creed And indeed there are very few if any of the Articles of that Creed which we all generally professe which are not either plainely expressed or by most evident implication couched in this little modell First the Doctrine of the Trinitie is in the first words The Lord said unto my Lord. There is Iehovah the Father and My Lord the Sonne and the sanctification or consecration of him which was by the Holy Ghost by whose fulnesse he was anointed unto the Offices of King and Priest for so our Saviour himselfe expounds this word Said by the sealing sanctification of him to his office Ioh. 10.34 35 36. Then wee have the Incarnation of Christ in the word My Lord together with his dignitie and honor above David as our Savior himselfe expounds it Matth. 22.42.45 Mine that is my Sonne by descent and genealogie after the flesh and yet my Lord too in regard of a higher sonship We have also the S●fferings of Christ in that he was consecrated a Priest v. 4. to offer up himselfe once for all and so to drinke of the brooke in the way Wee have his Eluctation and conquest over all his enemies and sufferings his resurrection he shall lift up his head his Ascension and Intercession sit thou on my right hand And in that is comprised his Descent into Hell by S. Pauls way of arguing That he ascended what is it but that hee descended first into the lower parts of the earth Eph. 4.9
enriched to be stedfast unmoveable abundant in the worke of the Lord to doe his will as the Angels in heaven doe it yet in many things they faile and have daily experience of their owne defects But here is all the comfort though I am not able to doe any of my duties as I should yet Christ hath finished all his to the full and therefore though I am compassed with infirmities so that I cannot doe the things which I would yet I have a compassionate advocate with the Father who both giveth and craveth pardon for every one that prepareth his heart to seeke the Lord though he be not perfectly cleansed 1 Ioh. 2.2 2 Chron. 30.18 19. Secondly Against the pertinacie and close adherence of our corruptions which cleave as fast unto us as the very powers and faculties of our soule as heat unto fire or light unto the Sunne Yet sure we are that he who forbad the fire to burne and put blacknesse upon the face of the Sunne at midday is able likewise to remove our corruptions as farre from us as he hath removed them from his owne sight And the ground of our expectation hereof is this Christ when he was upon the earth in the forme of a servant accomplished all the Offices of suffering and obedience for us Therefore being now exalted farre above all heavens at the right hand of Majestie and glory he will much more fulfill those Offices of Power which he hath there to doe Which are by the supplies of his Spirit to purge us from sinne by the sufficiencie of his grace to strengthen us by his word to sanctifie and cleanse us and to present us to himselfe a glorious Church without spot or wrinckle He that brought from the dead the Lord Iesus and suffered not death to hold the head is able by that power and for that reason to make us perfect in every good worke to doe his will and not to suffer corruption for ever to hold the members It is the frequent argument of the Scripture Heb. 13.20 21. Col. 2.12 Eph. 1.19 20. Rom. 6.5 6. Rom. 8.11 Thirdly against all those firie darts of Satan wherby he tempteth us to despaire and to forsake our mercie If he could have held Christ under when he was in the grave then indeed our faith would have been vaine we should be yet in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17. But he who himselfe suffered being tempted and overcame both the sufferings and the temptation is able to succor those that are tempted and to shew them mercie and grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 2.17 18. Heb. 4. 15 16. Lastly against death it selfe For the Accomplishment of Christs Office of redemption in his resurrection from the dead was both the Merit the Seale and the first fruits of ours 1 Cor. 15.20 22. Thirdly The sitting of Christ on the right hand of his Father noteth unto us the actuall Administration of his Kingdome Therefore that which is here said sit at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole the Apostle thus expoundeth He must raigne till he hath put all enemies vnder his feete 1 Cor. 15.25 And he therefore died and rose and revived that he might be Lord both of dead and living namely by being exalted unto Gods right hand Rom. 14.9 Now this Administration of Christs Kingdome implies severall particulars First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The publication of established Lawes For that which is in this Psalme called the sending forth of the rod of Christs strength out of Sion is thus by the Prophets expounded Out of Sion shall goe forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem Esai 2.3 Mich. 4.2 Secondly The conquering and subduing of subjects to himselfe by converting the hearts of men and bringing their thoughts into the obedience of his Kingdome Ministerially by the word of reconciliation and effectually by the power of his Spirit writing his Lawes in their hearts and transforming them into the image of his word from glorie to glorie Thirdly Ruling and leading those whom he hath thus converted in his way continuing unto their hearts his heavenly voice never utterly depriving them of the exciting assisting cooperating grace of his holy Spirit but by his divine power giving unto them all things which pertaine unto life and godlinesse after he had once called them by his glorious power Esai 2.2 Ioh. 10.3 4. 1 Cor. 1.4 8. Esai 30.21 1 Pet. 2.9 2 Pet. 1.3 Fourthly Protecting upholding succouring them against all temptations and discouragements By his compassion pittying them by his power and promises helping them by his care and wisedome proportioning their strength to their trials By his peace recompencing their conflicts by patience and experience establishing their hearts in the hope of deliverance Heb. 2.17 Ioh. 16.33 1 Cor. 10.13 2 Cor. 1.5 Phil. 4.7 19. Rom. 15.4 Fifthy Confounding all his enemies First Their projects holding up his Kingdome in the midst of their malice and making his truth like a tree settle the faster and like a torch shine the brighter for the shaking Secondly Their Persons Whom he doth here gall and torment by the Scepter of his word constraining them by the evidence thereof to subscribe to the Iustice of his wrath and whom he reserveth for the day of his appearing till they shall be put all under his feete In which respect he is said to stand at the right hand of God as a man of warre ready armed for the defence of his Church Act. 7.56 Fourthly the sitting of Christ on the right hand of God noteth unto us his giving of gifts and sending downe of the Holy Ghost upon men It hath been an universall custome both in the Church and elsewhere in dayes of great joy and solemnitie to give gifts and send presents unto men Thus after the wall of Ierusalem was built and the worship of God restored and the Law read and expounded by Ezra to the people after their captivitie it is said that the people did eate and drinke and send portions Nehem. 8. 10 12. The like forme was by the people of the Iewes observed in their feast of Purim Ester 9.22 And the same custome hath bin observed amongst heathen Princes upon solemne and great occasions to distribute donations and congiaries amongst the people Thus Christ in the day of his Majestie and Inauguration in that great and solemne triumph when he ascended up on high and led captivity captive he did withall give gifts unto men Eph. 4.10 Christ was notably typified in the Ark of the Testament In it were the Tables of the Law to shew that the whole Law was in Christ fulfilled and that he was the end of the Law for Righteousnesse to those that beleeve in him There was the golden pot which had Manna to signifie that heavenly and abiding nourishment which from him the Church receiveth There was the Rod of Aaron which budded Signifying either the miraculous incarnation of Christ in a Virgin or
owne vices But now first the power of Christ in his Church is universall there is in him all power and no weaknesse no power without him or against him and therefore no wonder if from a fulnesse of power in him and an emptinesse in his enemies the argument of continuance in his kingdome doth infallibly follow for what man if hee were furnished with all sufficiencie would suffer himselfe to be mutilated and dismembred as Christ should if any thing should prevaile against the Church which is his fulnesse Againe this power of Christ is supported with wisdome it can never miscarry for any inward defect for the wisdome is proportionable to the power this All power and that All the treasures of wisdome Power able by weaknesse to confound the things which are mighty and wisdome able by foolishnesse to bring to nought the understanding of the prudent and both these are upheld by righteousnesse which is indeed the very soule and sinewes of a kingdome upon which the thrones of Princes are established and which the Apostle makes the ground of the perpetuitie of Christs kingdome Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy kingdome Hebr. 1.8 Thirdly the quality of Christs kingdome is to be a Growing kingdome though the originals thereof be but like a graine of mustard-seed or like Eliahs cloud to a humane view despicable and almost below the probabilities of subsistence the object rather of derision than of terrour to the world yet at last it groweth into a widenesse which maketh it as catholike as the world And therefore that which the Prophet David speakes of the Sunne the Apostle applies to the Gospell Rom. 10.18 to note that the Circle of the Gospell is like that of the Sunne universall to the whole world It is such a kingdome as groweth into other kingdomes and eats them out The little stone in Nebuchadnezzars vision which was the Kingdome of Christ for so Ierusalem is called a stone Zech. 12.3 brake in peeces the great Monarchies of the earth and grew up into a great mountaine which filled the world Dan. 2.34 35. for the kingdomes of the earth must become the kingdomes of the Lord and of his Christ Revel 11.15 Therefore the Prophets expresse Christ and his kingdome by the name of a Branch which groweth up for a standard and ensigne of the people Esay 11.1.10 Zech. 3.8 A branch which growes but never withers It hath no principles of death in it selfe and though it be for a while subject to the assaults of adversaries and forren violence yet that serves onely to trie it and to settle it but not to weaken or overturne it The gates of hell all the powers policies and lawes of darknesse shall never prevaile against the Church of Christ he hath bruized and judged and trodden downe Satan under our feet He hath overcome the world he hath subdued iniquitie hee hath turned persecutions into seminaries and resurrections of the Church he hath turned afflictions into matters of glory and of rejoycing so that in all the violence which the Church can suffer it doth more than conquer because it conquers not by repelling but by suffering And this shewes the sacrilege and sawcinesse of the Church of Rome which in this point doth with a double impiety therefore pervert the Scriptures that it may derogate from the honour of Christ and his kingdome And those things which are spoken of the infallibility authority and fulnesse of power which Christ hath in his body of the stability constancie and universalitie of his Church upon earth doth arrogate onely to the Pope and his See at Rome As the Donatists in S. Augustines time from that place of the Spouse in the Canticles Tell me O thou whom my soule loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocke to rest in Meridie excluded all the world from being a Church save onely a corner of Africa which was at that time the nest of those hornets So because Christ sayes his Church is built upon a rocke and the gates of hell shall not prevaile against it therefore the Romanists from hence conclude all these priviledges to belong to them and exclude all the famous Churches of the world besides from having any communion with Christ the Head That scornefull expostulation which Harding makes with that renowned and incomparable Bishop under whose hand hee was no more able to subsist than a whelpe under the paw of a Lion shall wee now change the song of Micheas the Prophet Out of Sion shall come the Law and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem and sing a new song out of Wittenberg is come the Gospell and the Word of the Lord from Zurich and Geneva may most truely and pertinently be retorted upon himselfe and his faction who boldly curse and exclude all those Christian Churches from the body of Christ and the hope of salvation who will not receive lawes from Rome nor esteeme the Cathedrall determinations of that Bishop though haply in himselfe an impure diabolicall and intolerable beast as by their owne confessions many of them have beene to be notwithstanding the infallible Edicts of the Spirit of God and as undoubtedly the Word of Christ as if S. Peter or Saint Paul had spoken it an arrogancie than which there is scarce any more expresse and characteristicall note to discerne Antichrist by It is true that Christs regal power doth alwaies shew forth it selfe in upholding his Catholike Church and in revealing unto it out of his sacred Word such necessary truths as are absolutely requisite unto its being and salvation but to binde this power of Christ to one man and to one See as if like the Pope he were infallible only in S. Peters chaire is the meere figment of pride and ambition without any ground at all raised out of a heape and aggregation of monstrous presumptions of humane and some most disputable others most false conceits of which though there be not the least vestigia in sacred Scriptures yet must they be all first wrested in for indubitate principles and laid for sure foundations before the first stone of Papall authoritie can bee raised As first that the externall and visible regiment of the whole Church is Monarchicall and that there must be a predominant mistresse Church set over all the rest to which in all points they must have recourse and to whose decisions they must conforme without any hesitancie or suspition at all whereas the Apostle tels us that the unity of the Church is gathered by many Pastors and Teachers Eph. 4.11 12 13. for as if severall needles bee touched by so many severall Loadstones all which have the selfe-same specificall vertue in them they doe all as exactly bend to one and the same point of heaven as if they had beene thereunto qualified by but one so in as much as Apostles Prophets Evangelists Pastors Teachers come all instructed with one and
beleeve his kingdome of glory and salvation but they shall be made subject to the sword of his wrath and that without any hope of escape or power of opposition for God himselfe shall do it immediatly by his owne mighty power Hee will interpose his owne hand and magnifie the glory of his owne strength in the just confusion of wicked men So the Apostle saith that The Lord will shew his wrath and make his power knowne in the vessels fitted for destruction Rom. 9.22 Two meanes the Apostle sheweth shall be used in the destruction of the wicked to effect it The presence or countenance and the glorious power of the Lord 2 Thes. 1.9 The very terrour of his face and the dreadfull Majesty of his presence shall slay the wicked The kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and the chiefe captaines and the mighty men those who all their life time were themselves terrible and had beene acquainted with terrours shall then begge of the mountaines and rockes to fall upon them and to hide them from the Face of him that sitteth upon the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe Revel 6.15 16. Esai 2.10 whence that usuall expression of Gods resolution to destroy a people I will set my face against them O then how sore shall the condemnation of wicked men bee when therein the Lord purposeth to declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the glorious strength of his owne almighty arme Here when the Lord punisheth a people he onely sheweth how much strength and edge he can put into the Creatures to execute his displeasure But the extreme terrour of the last day shall be this that men shall fall immediatly into the hands of God himselfe who hath said Vengeance belongeth unto me and I will recompence Heb. 10.30 31. And therefore the Apostle useth this expostulation against Idolaters Doe we provoke the Lord to jelousie Are we stronger than he 1 Cor. 10.22 Dare we meete the Lord in his fury doe we provoke him to powre out All his wrath Psal. 78.38 He will at last stir up all his wrath against the vessels that are fitted for it And for that cause he will punish them himselfe For there is no Creature able to bring all Gods wrath unto another there is no vessell able to hold all Gods displeasure The Apostle telleth us that wee have to doe with God in his Word Heb. 4.13 but herein he useth the ministery of weake men so that his Majesty is cover'd and wicked men have a veile upon their hearts that they cannot see God in his Word When thy hand is lifted up namely in the threatnings and predictions of wrath out of the word they will not see for it is a worke of faith to receive the word as Gods word and therein before-hand to see his power and to heare his rod Mic. 6.9 Other men belye the Lord and say it is not he But though they will not acknowledge that they have to doe with God in his word though they will not see when his hand is lifted up in the preparations of his wrath yet they shall see and know that they have to doe with him in his judgements when his hand falleth downe againe in the execution of his wrath So the Lord expostulateth with them Ezek. 22.14 Can thine heart endure or thine hands bee strong in the dayes that I shall deale with thee The Prophet Esay resolves that question The sinners in Sion are affraid fearefulnesse hath surprised the hypocrites namely a fearefull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation as the Apostle speakes Heb. 10.27 Who amongst us shall dwell with the devouring fire who amongst us shall dwell with everlasting burnings Esai 33.14 that is in the words of another Prophet Who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fiercenesse of his anger His fury is powred out like fire and the rockes are throwne downe by him Nahum 1.6 Confirmations of this point we may take from these considerations First the quarrell with sinners is Gods owne the controversie his owne the injuries and indignities have beene done to himselfe and his owne sonne the challenges have beene sent unto himselfe and his owne Spirit And therefore no marvell if hee take the matter into his owne hands and the quarrell so immediatly reflecting upon him if he be provoked to revenge it by his owne immediate power Secondly revenge is his royalty and peculiar prerogative Deut. 32.35.41 from whence the Apostle inferres That it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10.30 31. And there are these arguments of fearefulnesse in it First it shall be in Iudgement without mercy Iam. 2.13 there shall be no mixture of any sweetnesse in the cup of Gods displeasure but all poison and bitternesse there shall not bee affoorded a drop of water to a lake of fire a minute of eafe to an eternity of torment Secondly it shall be in fury without compassion In humane judgements where the law of the state will not suffer a Judge to acquit or shew mercy yet the law of nature will force him to cōpassionate grieve for the malefactor whom he must condemne There is no Judge so senselesse of anothers miserie nor so destitute of humane affections as to pronounce a sentence of condemnation with laughter But the Lord will condemne his enemies in vengeance without any pittie I will laugh saith the Lord at your calamity I will mocke when your feare commeth Prov. 1.26 Thirdly it shall bee in revenge and recompence in reward and proportion that is in a full and everlasting detestation of wicked men the weight whereof shall peradventure lye heavier upon them than all the other torments which they are to suffer when they shall looke on themselves as scorned and abhorred exiles from the favour and presence of him that made them For as the wicked did here hate God and set their hearts and their courses against him in suo aeterno in all that time which God permitted them to sinne in so God will hate wicked men and set his face and fury against them in suo aeterno too as long as he shall be Judge of the world Thirdly this may be seene in the inchoations of hell in wicked men upon the earth When the doore of the conscience is opened and that sin which lay there asleepe before riseth up like an enraged Lion to fly upon the soule when the Lord suffers some flashes of his glittering sword to breake in like lightening upon the Spirit and to amaze a sinner with the pledges and first fruits of hell when he melteth the stout hearts of men and grindeth them unto powder what is all this but the secret touch of Gods owne finger upon the conscience For there is no creature in the world whose ministerie the heart doth discerne in the estuations and invisible workings of a guilty and unquiet spirit Fourthly the torments of wicked angels
whence can they come there is no Creature strong enough to lay upon them a sufficient recompence of paine for their sinne against the Majestie of God And for the disputes of Schoole-men touching corporall fire in hell and the manner of elevating and applying corporall agents to worke upon spirituall substances they are but the intemperate nicities of men ignorant of the Scriptures and of the terrour of the Lord who is himselfe a consuming fire The divels acknowledge Christ their Tormentor and that when hee did nothing but rebuke them there was no fire nor any other creature by him applied but onely the Majesty of his owne word power and person which wrung from them that hideous cry Art thou come to torment us before the time Matth. 8.29 Lastly consider the heavinesse of Christs owne soule his agonie and sense of the curse due unto our sinne when he was in the garden the trouble astonishment and extreme anguish of his soule which wrought out of his sacred body that woefull and wonderfull sweat Whence came it all wee reade never of any divels let loose to torment him they were ever tormented at his presence We reade of no other Angels that had commission to afflict him we reade of an Angell which was sent to strengthen him Luk. 22.43 There is no reason to thinke that the feare of a bodily death which was the onely thing that men could inflict upon him was that which squeezed out those drops of bloud and extorted those bitter and strong cries from him There were not in his innocent soule in his most pure and sacred body any seeds or principles of such tormenting distempers his compassion towards the misery of sinners his knowledge of the guilt and cursednesse of sinne was as great at other times as now What then could it else be but the weight of his Fathers justice the conflict with his Fathers wrath against the sinnes of men which wrought such extremity of heavinesse in his soule And hee was our suretie he stood in our stead that which was done to the greene tree should much more have beene done to the dry If God layd upon him the strokes which were due unto our sinne how much more heavie shall his hand be upon those whom he throughly hateth But shall not the Angels then be executioners of the sentence of Gods wrath upon wicked men I answere The Angels shal have their service in the comming of the Lord. First as Attendants to shew forth the majestie and glory of Christ to the world 2 Thes. 1.7 Matth. 24.31 Secondly as executioners of his will which is to gather together the Elect and the reprobate to binde up the wicked as sheaves or faggots for the fire Matth. 13.30.24.31 But yet still the Lord interposeth his owne power As a Schoolemaster setteth one scholar to bring forth another unto punishment but then hee layeth on the stripes himselfe But why is it said that the Father shal put Christs enemies under his feet doth not Christ himselfe do it as well as the Father yes doubtlesse God hath given the Sonne authority to execute Iudgement also and put into his hands a rod of iron to dash his enemies to peeces like a potters vessell for whatsoever things the father doth these also doth the sonne likewise Ioh. 5.19.27 Psal. 2.9 But we are to note that the subjecting of Christs enemies under his feete is a worke of divine power And therefore though it be attributed to Christ as an Officer yet it belongeth to the Father as the Fountaine of all divine operations So God is said to have set forth his Sonne as a propitiation Rom. 3.25 and yet the Sonne came downe and manifested himselfe Phil. 2.7 8. Heb. 9.26 The Father is said to have raised him from the dead Act. 2.32 Rom. 6.4 and yet the Sonne raised himselfe by his owne power Iohn 10.18 the Father is said to have set Christ at his owne right hand in heavenly places Ephes. 1.20 and Christ is said to have sate downe himselfe on the right hand of the Majestie on high Heb. 1.3.10.12 The Father is said to give the holy Ghost Ioh. 14.16 and yet the Sonne promiseth to send him himselfe Ioh. 16.7 so here though the Sonne have received power sufficient to subdue all his enemies under his feete for he is able to subdue all things unto himselfe Phil. 3.21 yet the Father to shew his hatred against the enemies of Christ and his consent to the victories of his Son will likewise subdue all things unto him 1 Cor. 15.27 28. O then that men would be by the terrour of the Lord perswaded to fly from the wrath to come to consider the weight of Gods heavie hand and when they see such a storme comming to hide themselves in the holes of that Rocke of mercy It is nothing but Atheisme and infidelity which bewitcheth men with desperate senselesnesse against the vengeance of God And therefore as the Lord hath seconded his Word of Promise with an oath that they might have strong consolation who flye for refuge to lay hold on the hope which is set before them Heb. 6.17 18. So hath hee confirmed the Word of his threatnings with an oath too If I lift up my hand to heaven and say I live for ever I will render vengeance to mine enemies I will reward them that hate me Deut. 32.40 41. and againe The Lord hath sworne by the excellency of Iacob surely I will never forget any of their workes Amos 8.7 and againe I have sworne by my selfe that unto me every knee shall bow Esai 45.23 and this he doth that secure and obdurate sinners might have the stronger reasons to flye from the wrath which is set before them O nos miseros qui nec juranti Deo credimus How wonderfull is the stupidity of men that will neither beleeve the words nor tremble at the oath of God Hee warneth us to fly from the wrath to come and we make haste to meete it the rather wee fill up our measure and commit sinne with both hands greedily with uncleane and intemperate courses we bring immature deaths upon our selves that so we may hasten to hell the sooner and make triall whether God be a liar or no. For this indeed is the very direct issue of every profane exorbitancy which men rush into Every man hath much Atheisme in his heart by nature but such desperate stupidity doth wonderfully improve it and bring men by degrees to the hellish presumption of those in the Prophets The Lord will not doe good neither will he doe evill It is not the Lord neither shall evill come upon us the Prophets shall become winde and the word is not in them The dayes are prolonged and the vision shall faile this man prophesieth of things afarre off of doomes day of things which shall be long after our time Vnto these men I say in the words of the Apostle though they sleep and see nothing and mocke at
enemies of Christ. They are before him as nothing lesse than nothing the drop of a bucket the dust of a ballance a very little thing What thing is heavier than a mountaine what thing easier than a touch what lighter than chaffe or softer than wax and yet they who in the eyes of men are as strong and immoveable as mountaines if God but touch them they shall bee turned into chaffe and flow at his presence If a man had a deadly pestilence and of infallible infection how easily might that man be avenged on his enemy with but breathing in his face Now the breath of the Lord is like a streame of brimstone to devoure the wicked As easily as fire consumeth flax or stubble as easily as poyson invadeth the spirits of the body as easily as a rod of iron breaketh in peeces a potters vessell as easily as a burdensome stone bruizeth that which it fals upon so and much more irresistibly doth the wrath of the Lord consume his enemies Not to insist long on so certaine and obvious a truth Farre easier wee know it is to destroy than to build up there is no such art required in demolishing as there is in erecting of an edifice those things which are long and difficultly growing up are suddenly extinguished Since therfore God had power and wisedome to make the creature no wonder if hee can most easily destroy him Againe Gods power is as it were set on by his jealousie and fury against sinners Anger wee know is the whetstone of strength in an equality of other termes it will make a man prevaile Nothing is able to stand before a fire which is once enrag'd Now Gods displeasure is kindled and breaketh forth into a flame against the sinnes of men Deut. 29.20 like a devouring Lion or a bereaved Beare like the implacable rage of a jealous man so doth the fire of the Lords revenge breake forth upon the enemies of his Sonne Adde hereunto our disposition and preparednesse for the wrath of God Strength it selfe may bee tired out in vaine upon a subject which is uncapable of any injury therefrom But if the paw of a Beare meet with so thinne a substance as the kall of a mans heart how easily is it torne to pieces Every action is then most speedily finished when the subject on which it workes is thereunto prepared Farre easier is it to make a print in wax than in Adamant to kindle a fire in dry stubble than in greene wood Now wicked men have fitted themselves for wrath and are the procurers and artificers of their owne destruction They are vessels and God is never without treasures of wrath so that the confusion of a wicked man is but like the drawing of water out of a fountaine or the filling of a bag out of a heape of treasure Lastly adde hereunto our destitutenesse of all helpe succor Even fire amongst pitch might bee quenched if a man could powre downe water in abundance upon it But the wicked shall have no strength either in or about them to prevent or remove the wrath to come Here indeed they have some helpes such as they are to stand out against God in his word Weatlh and greatnesse to bee the provisions of their lusts the countenance of the wicked world to encourage them in their wayes Satan and the wisedome of the flesh to furnish them with arguments and to cast a varnish upon uncleanesse but when the lion comes the shepheard can doe the sheepe no good when the fire comes the rotten post shall perish with the varnish which cover'd it Hee that was here strong enough to provoke God shall at last bee bound hand and foote and so have no faculty left either to resist him or to runne from him There is a foolish disposition in the hearts of men to thinke that they shall ever continue in that estate which they are once in The proud and wicked man hath said in his heart I shall never bee moved I shall never bee in adversity God hath forgotten hee hideth his face hee will never see it And the Prophet David was overtaken with this grosse error I said in my prosperity I shall never bee moved This was the vaine conceite of the foole in the gospell thou hast much laid up for many years take thine ease eate drinke and bee merry This ever hath been the language of secure and wicked men No evill shall come upon us I shall have peace though I walke in the imagination of mine heart To morrow shall bee as this day and much more abundant And so also in afflictions Hath the Lord forgotten to bee gratious and shut up his loving kindnesse in displeasure from day even to night wilt thou make an end of mee I said my hope is left and I am cut off for my part I shall never overcome such an affliction I shall never breake through such a pressure And both these come from want of faith touching the power of God to subdue all enemies under Christs feete If men would but consider how easily God can breake downe all their cobwebs and sweepe away their refuge of lies how easily hee can spoile them of all the provisions of their lusts and leave them like a lambe in a large place they would bee more fearfull of him and lesse dote upon things which will not profit they would take heed how they abuse their youth strength time abilities as if they had a spring of them all within themselves and consider that their good is not in their owne hand that the seithe can get as well through the greene grasse as the dry stubble that consuming fire can as well melt the hardest metall as the softest wax What is the reason why men in sore extremities make strong resolutions and vow much repentance and amendment of life and yet as soone as they are off from the rack returne againe to their vomit and wallow in their wonted lusts but because their sense made them feele that then which if they had faith they might still perceive and so still continue in the same good resolutions namely that Gods hand was neere unto them But what is not God a God afarre off as well as neere at hand doth not hee say of wicked men that in the fulnesse of their sufficiency they shall bee in straites cannot hee blast the corne in the blade in the harvest in the barne in the very mouth of the wicked Did hee not cut off Belshazzar in his cups and Herod in his robas and Babylon and Tyrus in their pride and Haman in his favor and Iezabel in her paint Have but faith enough to say I am a man and therefore no humane events should bee strange unto mee and even that one consideration may keepe a man from outrage of sinning It may bee I have abundance of earthly things yet am I still but a gilded potsheard It may bee I have
ye shall be glad also with exceeding joy And this joy shall be so much the greater because it shall grow out of the everlasting subjection of the enemie under Christs feet and those whom here they persecuted and despised shal there with Christ be their judges Secondly as it noteth the Rest so likewise the Triumph of Christ when he shall set his feet on the necke of his enemies The Apostle saith that he triumphed over them in his Crosse Coloss. 2.15 And there are two words which have an allusion unto the formes of triumph Expoliation and Publication or representation of the pompe unto the world of the faithfull He spoiled principalities and powers that is He tooke from them all their armour wherein they trusted and divided the spoiles Luke 11.22 The armour of Satan was principally the hand-writing of the Law which was against us or contrary unto us so long as wee were under the full force and rigour of that so long we were under the possession and tyranny of Satan but when Christ nailed that unto the Crosse and tooke it out of the way then all the other panoply of Satan was easily taken from him he was then spoiled of all his weapons and provisions of lust for the world and therewithall the things which are in the world were unto us crucified in the Crosse of Christ so that now by faith in him wee are able to overcome the world to value it aright to esteeme the promises thereof thinne and empty and the threatnings thereof vaine and false the treasures thereof baser than the very reproches of Christ and the afflictions thereof not worthy to bee compared with the glory which shall bee revealed in us as being in their measure but light and but momentary in their duration The power and wisdome of Satan was likewise in the Crosse of Christ most notably befooled and disappointed for when hee thought that hee had now swallowed up Christ hee found a hooke under that bait he found that which neither himselfe nor any of his instruments could have suspected that Christ crucified was indeed the wisdome of God and the power of God and that through death hee chose to destroy him who had the power of death 1 Cor. 1.24 Heb. 2.14 Againe he made a shew or publike representation of this his victory and of these his spoiles openly unto the world As the Crosse was his triumphall chariot so was it likewise ferculum pompae the pageant as it were and table of his spoiles for though to a carnall eye there was nothing but ignominy and dishonour in it yet to those that are called there is an eye of faith given to see in the Crosse of Christ Hell disappointed Satan confounded his kingdome demolished the earthly members of the old man crucified affections and lusts abated and captivity alreadie led captive And indeed what triumph of any the most glorious Conquerour was ever honoured with the opening of graves the resurrection of the dead the conversion of enemies the acclamation of mute and inanimate creatures the darknesse of the Sunne the trembling of the earth the compassion of the rockes the amazement of the world the admiration of the Angels of heaven but onely this triumph of Christ upon the Crosse And if he did so triumph there how much more at the right hand of the Majestie on high where he is crowned with glory and honour and at that great day which is therefore called the Day of the Lord Iesus because hee will therein consummate his triumph over all his enemies when hee shall come with the attendance of Angels in a chariot of fire with all the unbeleevers of the world bound before his Throne and with the clamour applause and admiration of all the Saints And this is a plentifull ground of comfort to the faithfull in all their conflicts with Satan sinne temptations or corruptions they fight under his protection and with his Spirit who hath himselfe already triumphed who accounteth our temptations his and his victories ours who turned the sorest perplexities which the world shal ever see into a doctrine of comfort unto his Disciples Luke 21 25-28 When ever then we are assaulted with any heavie temptation to discomforts feares fainting wearinesse despaire sinfull conformities or the like let us not tosse over our owne store nor depend upon any strength or principles of our owne but looke onely by faith unto the victories of Christ and to this great promise which is here made unto him as Head and Captaine of the Church by whom wee shall be able to doe all things and though wee were surrounded with enemies to escape as he did thorow the midst of them all Wee know the Cats unum magnum in the fable was more worth than the Foxes thousand shifts notwithstanding all the which he was caught at the last Our enemies come against us in armies with infinite methods and stratagems to circumvent us this onely is our comfort that we have unum magnum one refuge which is above all the wisdome of the enemie to climbe up unto the Crosse of Christ and to commit the keeping of our soules unto him out of whose hands no man can take them When David went forth against Goliah he did not grapple with him by his owne strength but with his Sling and his stone at a distance overthrew him It is not good to let Satan come too close unto the soule to let in his temptations or to enter into any private and intimate combate with him this was for our Captain onely to doe who we know entred into the field with him as being certaine of his owne strength but our onely way to prevaile against him is to take faith as a sling and Christ as a stone he will undoubtedly finde out a place to enter in and to sinke the proudest enemie we are beset with enemies yea we are enemies unto our selves the burden of the flesh the assaults of the world the firy darts of Satan treason within and warres without swarmes of Midianites troopes of Amalekites the Sea before us the Aegyptian behinde us sinne before Satan and the world behinde either I must runne on and bee drowned in sinne or I must stand still and be hewed in peeces with the persecutions of wicked men or I must revolt and turne backe to Aegypt and so be devoured in her plagues In these extremities the Apostle hath given us our unum magnum Looke unto Iesus he that is the Author will be the finisher of our faith It is yet but a little while he will come and will not tarry he is within the view of our faith hee is within the crie of our prayers hee sitteth at the right hand of power nay hee there standeth and is risen up already in the quarrell of his Saints Act. 7.56 The nearer the Aegyptian is to Israel the nearer he is to ruine and the nearer Israel is to deliverance Though Moses have
Now then this Spirituall Gospell of Christ is the Scepter of his Kingdome and therefore as it is insigne regium an ensigne of roialty it importeth Glory and Majestie It is a Gospell full of glory Wee may observe that the very Typicall prefigurations of that mercy which is the sole businesse of the Gospell of Christ are in the Scriptures honored with the name of Glory The garments of the Priests being types of the Evangelicall Righteousnesse of the Saints were made for glory and beauty The Tabernacle which was ordaind for an evidence and seale of Gods Evangelicall presence with that people is called by the Prophet David a Tabernacle of honor the place which God did use to fill with his owne glory The Ark of God which was nothing else but Evangelium sub velo the Gospell under vailes and shaddowes is called by an excellency The Glory of Israel which is the attribute of Christ All Kings shall see thy glory The Temple at Ierusalem was the place of Gods Rest This is my Rest for ever here will I dwell Arise O Lord God into thy Resting place thou and the Arke of thy strength It was so called to note first the stability of Gods Evangelicall covenant in Christ it was not to bee changed nor to bee repented of but to bee sure and fixed in Christ for ever His Kingdome a Kingdome which was not to bee shaken his Priesthood a Priesthood which was not to passe away his teaching a teaching which was to continue to the worlds end And secondly to note the delight of God in Christ and in the mercy which through him was unto the world revealed Therein the Lord ●esteth and reposeth himselfe as in the crowne and accomplishment of all his workes And this Temple is called a glorious Rest a glorious high throne a house of glory of beauty and of holinesse It is said at the first Dedication thereof that the Glory of the Lord filled it It was not the gold or silver wherewith before that Dedication it was beutified wherein the glory thereof did consist but in the evidence of Gods presence which at that time was but a cloud whereas the true glory thereof himselfe was a Sunne as the Prophet cals him And with this did the Lord fill the second Temple which for this cause is said to have been more glorious than the former though in the magnificence of the structure farre inferior Now then as the Apostle in a case of just alike proportion useth a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a terme of excesse when hee speaketh of the substance in comparison of the type If the bloud of bulls and goates did Sanctify to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ So may wee in this case If the Types of Evangelicall things were thus glorious how much more glorious must the Gospell it selfe needs bee And therefore as I before observed in other things so in this is it true likewise that Christ and his Gospell have the same attribute of glory frequently given unto them Christ is called the Glory of the Lord and of his people Israel And the Gospell a glorious mysterie a Royall Law a ministration of glory Nay glory it selfe for so I understand that place of the Apostle that yee would walke worthy of God who hath called you unto his Kingdome and glory that is unto the knowledge of his Gospell for of that in all the antecedent parts and in the verse immediatly following doth the Apostle speake A glory which draweth the study and amazement of the most glorious creatures of God unto it To consider this point more particularly The glory and majesty of the Gospell of Christ appeareth principally in foure things in the Author of it in the Promulgation and publishing of it in the Matter which it containes and in the Ends purposes or uses for which it serves First in the Author of it Many things of small worth have yet growne famous by the authours of them and like the unprofitable children of renowned progenitors hold their estimation and nobility from the parents which begate them And yet from men who are uncleane there will ever descend some uncleannesse upon the workes which they doe But the Gospell is therefore indeed a glorious Gospell because it is the Gospell of the blessed God There is glory in all the workes of God because they are his for it is impossible that so great a workeman should ever put his hand to an ignoble work And therefore the Prophet David useth his glory and his handy worke promiscuously for the same thing The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy worke to note that there is an evidence of glory in any thing which hee puts his hand unto And yet the Prophet there sheweth that there is more glory in the law of his mouth than in the workes of his hands The Lord is better known by Sion and his name greater in Israel than in al the world besides the more God doth communicate himselfe unto any of his works the more glorious it is Now there is nothing wherein God hath so much put himselfe wherin he may be so fully knowne communicated with depended upon and praised as in his Gospell This is a glasse in which the blessed Angels doe see and admire that unsearchable riches of his mercy to the Church which they had not by their owne observation found out from the immediate view of his glorious presence In the Creatures we have him a God of power and wisedome working all things in number weight and measure by the secret vigour of his providence upholding that being which he gave them and ordering them to those glorious ends for which he gave it In the law we have him a God of vengeance and of recompence in the publication thereof threatning and in the execution thereof inflicting wrath upon those that transgresse it But in the Gospell we have him a God of bounty and endlesse compassion humbling himselfe that he might be mercifull to his enemies that he might himselfe beare the punishments of those injuries which had beene done unto himselfe that he might not offer onely but beseech his owne prisoners to bee pardoned and reconciled againe In the Creature he is a God above us in the Law he is a God against us onely in the Gospel hee is Immanuel a God with us a God like us a God for us There is nothing doth declare God so much to bee God as his mercy in the Gospell Hee is invisible in himselfe we cannot see him but in his Sonne Hee is unapproachable in himselfe wee cannot come unto him but by the Sonne Therefore when hee maketh himselfe knowne in his glory to Moses hee sendeth him not to the Creation nor to mount Sinai but putteth him into a rocke being a resemblance of Christ and then maketh
of the Booke of God and he that obeyeth not doth despise for the Lord calleth disobedience rebellion stubbornenesse and a rejecting of his word 1 Sam. 15.22 23. He that persisteth in any knowne sinne or in the constant omission of any evident dutie fighteth against Christ himselfe throweth away his owne mercy stoppeth his eares at the entreaties of the Lord and committeth a sinne directly against Heaven And if he so persist God will make him know that there is flaming fire prepared for those that obey not the Gospell of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thes. 1.8 Therefore whensoever we come unto the Word read or preached wee should come with an expectation to heare Christ himselfe speaking from heaven unto us and bring such affections of submission and obedience as becommeth his presence Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith unto the Churches I will heare what God the Lord will speake for he will speake peace unto his people Christs sheepe discerne his voyce in the dispensation of the Gospell and will not know the voice of strangers And this was the honour of the Thessalonians and the men of Berea that in the preaching of the Word they did set themselves as in Gods presence expecting in it his authoritie and receiving it in his name Dareth any man to rush with a naked weapon into the presence of his prince and with scorne to throw backe his owne personall commands into his face againe And shall wee dare to come armed with high thoughts and proud reasonings and stubborne resolutions against the majesty of the Lord himselfe who speaketh from heaven unto us Receive with meeknesse saith the Apostle the ingrafted Word which is able to save your soules The word doth not mingle nor incorporate and by consequence doth not change nor save the soule but when it is received with meeknesse that is when a man commeth with a resolution to lay downe his weapons to fall downe on his face and give glory to God he that is swift to wrath that is to set up stout and fretfull affections against the purity and power of the Word to snuffe against it and to fall backward like pettish children which will not be led will be very slow to heare or to obey it for the wrath of man doth not worke the righteousnesse of God A proud hearer will be an unprofitable liver Ever therefore come unto the word with this conclusion It may be this day will God strike me in my master veine I am an usuall profaner of his glorious name a name which I should feare for the greatnesse and love for the goodnesse and adore for the holinesse of it hee will peradventure lay close to my conscience that guilt which himselfe hath declared to be in this great sinne that whatsoever is more than yea and nay is sinne unto me and whatsoever is sin is Hell to my soule I am a vaine person a companion of loose and riotous men It may bee the Lord will urge upon my conscience the charge of his owne word not to companie with fornicators to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse not to follow a multitude to doe evill and that though hand joyne in hand yet sinne shall not goe unpunished I am unprofitable loose and rotten in my discourse and hee will ply mee with his owne authority that for every idle word I must render an account I am full of oppression and unjust gain and the Lord will now urge the instructions of Nehemiah the restitution of Zacheus upon me In these or any other the like cases if a man can come with Saint Pauls temper of hart not to consult with flesh and bloud but Lord what wilt thou have me to doe or with the answer of Samuel Speake Lord for thy servant heareth or with the resolution of Cornelius I am here present before God to heare all things that shall bee commanded of God I am come with a purpose of heart to cleave unto thy holy will in all things Here I am in my sinnes strike where thou wilt cut off which of mine earthly members thou wilt I will not arme it I will not extenuate it I will not dispute with thee I will not rebell against thee I will second thee in it I will praise thee for it This is to give God the glorie of his owne Gospell It is not to part from a little monie towards the maintenance of the word or to vouchsafe a little countenance to the dispencers of it and yet alas how few are there who repay unto the ministers of the Gospell that double honor which God and not they hath given unto them but to part from our lusts and to suffer our old man to be crucified which giveth honour to the Word If a man had thousands of rammes and tenne thousand rivers of oyle and would bee content to part from them all for Gods worship If a man had children enough and in a famine of the word would buy every sermon which hee heareth with the sacrifice of a Sonne yet all this would not give glorie enough to the ordinance of God Men naturally love their lusts the issue of their evill hearts better than their lands or the children of their body if Herods son stand in the way of his ambitious security it were better to be his Hog than his childe The losse of cattell and fruits and water and light and the first-borne of all the land was not enough to make Pharaoh let goe his sinne hee will once more rush into the midst of a wonderfull deliverance of Israel and venture his owne and his peoples lives for but the bondage of his enemies and the satisfaction of his lust To doe justly then to love mercy and to walke humbly before God to acknowledge his name in the voyce of the minister and to put away the treasures of wickednesse out of our hands this onely is to give God the glory which is due unto his Word Mic. 6.6 10. Secondly the Gospell is glorious in the promulgation publishing of it unto the world And this may appeare whether we consider the initiall Promulgation in Christs owne personall preaching Or the plenary Revelation thereof in the sending of the holy Ghost to those selected vessels who were to carry abroad this treasure unto all the world For the former wee may note that there was a resemblance of state and glory observ'd in the preaching of Christ. A Forerunner sent to prepare his way and to beare his sword before him as a Herald to proclaime his approach and then at last is revealed the Glory of the Lord. And thus we may observe how we sent his Harbingers before his face into every Citie and place whither he himselfe would come that so men might prepare themselves and lift up their everlasting gates against this Prince of Glory should enter in When one poore ordinary man
duty of that honour which hee is called unto namely to hold on the Crowne on the head of his Soveraigne to make it the maine end of his greatnesse to study and by all meanes endeavour the establishment of his Princes Throne so every Christian as soone as he hath the honour to be called unto the kingdome and presence of Christ hath immediately no meaner a depositum committed to his care than the very Throne and Crowne of his Saviour than the publike honour peace victorie and stability of his masters kingdome The Gospell is committed to the custody of the Bishops and Pastors of the Church to preach it They are as it were the Heralds and Fore-runners of Christ to prepare his way into the soules of men To the custody of the Princes and Judges of the earth to defend it to be a guard about the person and truth of Christ to command the obedience and to encourage the teaching of it The Gospell is the Law of Christs Throne and the princes of the world are the lions about his Throne set there to watch and guard it against the malice of enemies And therefore it is recorded for the honour of David that he set in order the courses of the Priests and appointed them their formes and vicissitudes of Service Of Salomon that he built adorned and dedicated a Temple for Gods solemne worship Of Iosiah that hee made the people to serve the Lord their God Of Ezekiah that he restored the service and repaired the Temple of God that he spake comfortably to the Levites who taught the good knowledge of the Lord that hee proclaimed a solemne passeover that hee ordered the courses of the Priests and Levites that hee gave commandement concerning the portion of their due maintenance that they might be encouraged in the Law of the Lord a patterne worthy the admiration and imitation of all Christian princes in spight of the sacrilegious doctrine of those men who would rob them of that power and office which God hath given them for the establishment of his Gospell and it was imitated by the first Christian Prince that ever the world had Lastly the Gospell is committed to the keeping of every Christian to practise it to adorne it to pray for it to be valiant and couragious in his place and station for the truth of it And for a man to neglect these duties is to betray and dishonour the Kingdome of Christ and to degenerate from that high and publike condition in which God had placed him Againe it putteth a spirit of Fortitude and boldnesse into the hearts of men Boldnesse to withstand the corruptions of the times to walke contrary to the courses of the world to out-face the sinnes and the scornes of men to be valiant for a despised truth or power of religion not to be ashamed of a persecuted profession to spread out contra torrentem brachia to stand alone against the power and credit of a prevailing faction as Paul against the contradiction of the Iewes and Peter and Iohn against a Synode of Pharises and those invincible champions of Christ Athanasius against the power of Constantius the frequent synodicall conventions of countenanced heretiks and the generall deluge of Arrianisme in the world Ambrose against the wrath and terrour of the emperour of the world to whom having imbrued his hands in much innocent bloud that holy Father durst not deliver the bloud of Christ. Chrysostome against the pride and persecution of the Empresse Eudoxa Luther against the mistresse of fornications the princesse of the earth and as himselfe professed if it had beene possible against a whole citty full of divels The Christians of all ages against the fire fury and arts of torment executed by the bloudy persecutors of the Church Nay further the Gospell giveth boldnesse against that universall fire which shall melt the Elements and shrivell up the heavens like a role of parchment Herein saith the Apostle is our love made perfect that we may have boldnesse in the day of judgement because as he is so we are in this world that is we have his image in us and his love shed abroad in our hearts and therefore wee are able to assure our hearts before him and to have confidence towards him Now he who hath boldnesse to stand before God to dwell with consuming fire and with everlasting burnings who can get the Lord on his right hand and put on the Lord Jesus though he bee not out of the reach or beyond the blow yet is hee above the injurie of the malice of men they may kill but they can never overcome him I am he that comforteth you who art thou saith the Lord that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and forgettest the Lord thy Maker c What an invincible courage was that of Eliah which retorted the slander of Ahab upon his owne face I have not troubled Israel but thou and thy fathers house And that of Micaiah against the base request of a flattering Courtier who thought God to bee such an one as himselfe that would magnifie and cry up the ends of a wicked king As the Lord liveth what the Lord saith unto me that will I speake And that of Amos against the unworthy instructions of Amaziah the priest of Bethel Thou saiest prophesie not against Israel and drop not thy words against the house of Isaac therefore thus saith the Lord Thy wife shall be an harlot in the citie and thy sonnes and thy daughters shall fall by the sword and thy land shall be divided by line and thou shalt dye in a polluted land and Israel shall surely goe into captivitie forth of his land And that of Ieremiah who boldly gave the lye to Irijah the captaine of the ward It is false I fall not away to the Caldeans The time would faile if I should speake of the unbended constancy or as the Gentiles stiled it obstinacie of Ignatius Polycarp Iustin Cyprian Pionius Sabina Maximus as those infinite armies of holy martyrs who posed the inventions tyred out the cruelties withstood the flatteries and with one word Christiani sumus overcame all the tyrannies quenched the fire and stopped the mouthes of their proudest persecutors Againe the Gospell putteth a kinde of lustre and terrour on the faces of those in whom it raigneth and maketh them as the Law did Moses to shine as lights in the world and to bee more excellent than their neighbours worketh in others towards them a dread and awfulnesse Though Ieremie were a prisoner cast-into the dungeon and in such extremity as he was there likely to perish yet such a majestie and honor did God even then put upon him and that in the thoughts of the king himselfe that he could not be in quiet till hee consulted with him about the will of the Lord and by his many conferences with him made it plainely appeare that hee stood in
interpretatively in the constitution and preparation of heart the violation of all because they are all grounded upon the same divine authority and directed unto the same saving ends and therefore wee ought not to picke and choose either in the preaching or practising thereof Thirdly we are to answere for the bloud of the people if wee prevaricate if wee let their sinnes alone they will have a double edge to kill them and us both like the mutuall embracements of two in a river which is the meanes to drowne them both Speake unto them all that I command thee be not dismaied at their faces saith the Lord to his Prophet lest I confound thee before them If thou warne not the wicked from his wicked way that hee may live he shall dye in his wickednesse thy bashfulnesse shall doe him no good but his bloud will I require at thy hands Is it at all congruous that men should have boldnesse enough to declare their sinnes to speake them to proclaime them to weare them to glorie in them and that those officers who are sent for no other businesse but in the name and authority of Almighty God to fight against the corruptions of the world should in the meane time hang downe the head and be tongue-tied that men should have more boldnesse to destroy themselves and to doe Satans works than we to save them or to serve God Fourthly we are to speake in the person of Christ and in the vertue of his Spirit We must speake as the Oracles of God and with his words as if he himselfe did by us speake unto the people We must give manifestation of Christ speaking by us that men may be convinc'd that God is in us of a truth and that we are full of power by his spirit that his spirit setteth to his seale to authorize our commission and to countenance our ministery and therefore we must use judgement and might that is spirituall discretion and inflexible constancy against the sinnes of men for these two are contrary to the two grand props of Satans kingdome which are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his craftinesse and his weapons of power for where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty his spirit will not be straightned neither will the Lord keepe silence hee that speaketh by the spirit of Christ must speake though not in equality which is impossible yet in some similitude and proportion as he spake that is as those that have Authority and power committed to them for the edification of the Church Lastly a partiall unsearching and unreproving Minister is one of Gods curses and scourges against a place the forerunner of a finall and fearefull visitation The dayes of visitation and recompence come saith the Lord. The Prophet is a foole the spirituall man is mad for the multitude of thine iniquity and the great hatred If a man walking in the spirit and falshood that is professing the worke of a spirituall man and yet betraying his office or in a false and lying spirit prophesying of wine and strong drinke that is cherishing and encouraging sensuall livers in their pernitious courses he shall even be the prophet of this people And therefore when the Lord will punish with an extreme revenge the rebellion of a people against his Gospell who judge themselves unworthy of so great a salvation hee either removeth their Candlesticke and taketh it away from them or else sealeth up the mouth of his Prophets that they may bee dumbe and reprove them no longer and that they may not bee purged any more from their filthinesse or else infatuates their Prophets and suffereth Satan to seduce them and to be a lying Spirit in their mouthes that he may destroy them as wee see in the ruine of Ahab and in the captivity of Iudah Againe as the Ministers of the Gospell must use liberty so must they likewise use sinceritie in the dispensation thereof because it is a glorious Gospell This likewise is the Apostles inference for having spent a whole chapter in this one argument of the glory of the Gospell he presently concludeth Therefore seeing we have this ministery that is the dispensation of such a Gospell committed unto us wee faint not but have renounced the hidden things of dishonestie that is as I conceive the arts of dawbing and palliating and covering over uncleane courses with plausible reasonings and fleshly apologies which is the use of false prophets not walking in craftinesse that is not using humane sleights or cogging to carry men about with every wind of false doctrine as sinners are very willing to be deceived and love to have it as false prophets say it is nor handling the Word of God deceitfully that is falsifying and adulterating it with corrupt glosses and so tempering it to the palat of sinners that the working searching vertue thereof whereby of it selfe it is apt to purge out and wrestle with the lusts of men may be deaded and so it may well consist with the power of lusts still as Physitians use so to qualifie and allay poison by other correctives and crosse ingredients that it shall serve as an instrument to strengthen us not extinguish life or as immodest Poets may so tamper with the chast expressions of Virgil or Homer as by them both to notifie and in corrupt minds to kindle uncleane lustings but by manifestation of the truth that is by such spirituall and perspicuous demonstrations as under which there cannot subesse falsum there can no falsitie nor deceit lurke commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God that is working not the fancies or humours or fleshly conceits of men which alwayes take the part of sinne but their very consciences which alwayes is on Gods side to beare witnesse unto the truth which wee speake to receive it not as the wit or learning of a man but as the Word and wisdome of God to acknowledge the conviction the judicature the penetration thereof and so to fal down upon their faces and to glorifie God and report that he is in us of a truth and all this in the sight of God that is so handling the Word as that wee may please and approve our selves to his eye whose servants we are and whose worke wee doe This is that which the Apostle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vncorruptnesse gravitie sinceritie soundnesse of doctrine such as the very adversaries themselves shall not be able to picke quarrels withall or to speake against we must not then make account to adorne the Gospell with our owne inventions or with superstructions of humane wit and fancie though these things may to fleshly reason seeme full of beautie yet indeed they are but like the mingling of glasse-beads with a chaine of diamonds or of lime with pure and generous wine they are indeed but
nothing at all but in the fellowship of the body and as they are thereunto applied by the same common soule which animates them all so Christian men should doe nothing but as parts of Christ and as actuated by the same gracious Spirit which is in him This is the meaning of our being Christians and of that consent which in our Baptisme we yeeld unto the Covenant of Christ that we will not follow nor be led by Satan the world or the flesh that is by that wisdome which is earthly sensuall or devillish but that we will be ordered by that Spirit of regeneration the seale of whose Baptisme wee receive in our sacramentall washing O then what is become of the Christianity of many men who forget that they have beene purged who live as if they had never beene baptized into Christ who lived as if they had never learned Christ What a prodigie and contradiction is it that that tongue which even now professed it selfe to be Christian and said Amen to a most cleane and holy prayer should like those beasts which Seneca speaketh of which by but turning aside their head to some other spectacle doe immediately forget the meat which they seemed most greedily to eat before breake forth presently into blasphemies oathes lies revilings clamours obscenities which are the very fumes and evidences of hell in the heart That those hands which even now were reached forth to receive the sacred pledges and most dreadfull mysteries of salvation which were even now imployed in distributing almes to the members of Christ or in helping to heave and lift up a prayer unto heaven which seemed like the hands of Ezekiels living creature to have wings of devotion over them should suddenly have their wings melted off and fall downe to covetous and cruell practices againe that those feet which in the morning carried men into the Lords Sanctuary and into the presence of Christ should the same day turne the backes of the same men upon the Temple of the Lord and carry them to stews and stages the nurseries of uncleannesse that those eyes which even now seemed to have beene nail'd unto heaven and to have contended with the tongue and the hand which should more earnestly have presented the prayers of the soule to God should almost in the space of their owne twinkling be filled with sparkles of uncleannesse gazing and glutting themselves upon vaine or adulterous objects What is this but for men to renounce their Baptisme to teare off their seale and dash out their subscription from the covenant of grace to deny the Lord that bought them to repent of their bargaine which they had made for salvation and really to dishonour that Gospell which they hypocritically professe This then is the first honour which wee can doe unto the Gospell of Christ when we set it up in our hearts as a most adequate rule of all wisedome and the alone principle of every action Secondly wee continue to honour the Gospell of Christ by walking in Obedience thereunto as our perfect Rule First in the Obedience of faith receiving it and leaning upon it laying hold on the covenant which is therein revealed as on the onely hope which is set before us for this is a great acknowledgement of the glorie and praise of God when we trust in him for salvation Therefore the Apostle having shewed the Glorie of Christ above Moses maketh this principall use of it that therefore we should heare his voyce and take heed of an evill and unbeleeving heart in departing from him Wee saith he are to the praise of Gods Glory who trust in Christ. Secondly in Obedience of life and Holinesse When for the honour of the Gospell we can denie our selves and dishonour our lusts and part from all that wee had before as from dung and drosse and expresse the image of Christ in our conversations This is indeed the true learning of Christ when we shew forth his life in ours when we walke as he also walked when as he was so we are in this world when the same minde judgement affections are in us which were in Christ. Thus the faithfull are said to honour God when they sanctifie his Sabbath and to glorie him when they bring forth much fruit Thirdly we honour the Gospell of Christ by constancie and continuance in our faith and obedience thereunto for standing fast or persisting immoveably in our course without sorrow or repentance is an argument of the excellencie of the Gospell Walke saith the Apostle as becommeth the Gospell that I may heare of your affaires that you stand fast in one spirit Lusts ever bring inconstancie with them and make the soule like weary and distempered bodies never well in any posture or condition wicked men flye like Bees from one flower to another from one vanity to another can never finde enough in any to satiate the endlesse intemperancie of unnaturall desires onely the Gospell being spiritually apprehended hath treasures enough for the soule to rest in and to seeke no farther And therefore falling away from the truth power or puritie of the Gospell is said to expose Christ to shame and to crucifie him againe For as in Baptisme when wee renounce sinne and betake our selves to Christ we doe as it were expose sinne unto publike infamie and naile it on the Crosse of Christ So when we revolt from Christ unto sinne againe and in our hearts turne backe unto Egypt and thrust him from us we doe then put him to shame againe as if hee were either in his power deficient or unfaithfull in those promises which before we pretended to relie upon If Israel as they consulted should likewise actually have rebelled against Moses and returned in body as well as in heart unto Egypt againe what a scorne would it have wrought in that proud nation that their vassals should voluntarily resume their thraldome after so many boasts and appearances of deliverance If a man should relinquish the service of some noble person and apply himselfe unto some sordid matter for subsistence would not the mouths of men be quickly open or their mindes jealous to suspect that however such a man carry an high name and there bee great expectations from attending on him yet in truth he is but a dry matter whom his own servants doe so publikely dishonour So when any men turne Apostates from the power and Profession of the Gospell of Christ presently wicked men are apt to blaspheme and to conceive desperate prejudices against our high and holy calling If any man make a boast of the Law and yet breake it hee dishonoreth God the more for saith the Apostle The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you as it is written so then constancie in Christs service giveth him the glory of an honourable master and his Law of a royall law putteth to silence the ignorance of those foolish men who lie in waite to take advantages that
effectually that is it doth not consummate nor accomplish any perfect worke but onely in those that beleeve in the rest it proves but an abortion and withers in the blade Secondly with love and readinesse of minde without despising or rejecting it No man can bee saved who doth not receive the truth in love who doth not receive it as the primitive Saints did with gladnesse and readinesse of minde as Eli though from the hand of Samuel a Child as David though from the hand of Abigail a woman as the Galatians though from the hand of Paul an infirme and persecuted Apostle For herein is our homage to Christ the more apparent when we suffer a little childe to lead us Thirdly with meeknesse and submission of heart reverencing and yeelding unto it in all things Wresting shifting evading perverting the word is as great an indignity unto Christ as altering interlining or rasing a patent which the King hath drawen with his owne royall hand is an offence against him Patience and effectuall obedience even in affliction is an argument that a man esteemes the word to bee indeed Gods owne word and so receives it Hee onely who putteth off the old man the corrupt deceitfull lusts of his former conversation and is renewed in the Spirit of his minde is the man that hath heard and been taught by Christ that hath received the Truth in him Againe in as much as the Gospell is the Rod of Christs owne strength or the instrument of his arme who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed and the instrument is no further operative or effectuall than according to the measure of that impressed vertue which it receiveth from the superior cause therefore wee should learne alwayes to repaire unto Christ for the successe of his word For he onely is the teacher of mens hearts and the author of their faith To him onely it belongeth to call men out of their graves and to quicken whom hee will Wee have nothing but the ministerie he keepeth the power in his own hands that men might learne to waite upon him and to have to doe with him who onely can send a blessing with his word and teach his people to profit thereby Another ground of the power of the word is that it is sent from God The Lord shall send forth the Rod of thy strength From which particular likewise wee may note some usefull observations as First that Gods appointment and ordination is that which gives being life majesty and successe to his owne word authority boldnesse and protection to his servants When hee sendeth his word hee will make it prosper When Moses disputed against his going down into Egypt to deliver his brethren sometimes alleaging his owne unfitnesse and infirmity sometimes the unbeliefe of the people this was still the warrant with which God encouraged him I will bee with thee I have sent thee doe not I make mans mouth I will bee with thy mouth and teach thee what thou shalt say I was no Prophet neither was I a Prophets Sonne saith Amos but I was an heardsman a gatherer of sycamore fruit And the Lord tooke me as I followed the flock and said unto mee Goe prophecie unto my people Israel And this made him peremptory in his office to prophecie against the idolatry of the Kings Court and against the flattery of the Priest of Bethel And this made the Apostles bold though otherwise unlearned and ignorant men to stand against the learned councill of Priests and Doctors of the Law Wee ought to obey God rather than men Vpon which Grave was the advice of Gamaliel If this counsell or worke bee of men it will come to nought But if it bee of God yee cannot overthrow it lest haply yee bee found even to fight against God For to withstand the power or progresse of the Gospell is to set a mans face against God himselfe Secondly in as much as the Gospell is sent forth by God that is revealed and published out of Sion wee may observe That Evangelicall learning came not into the world by humane discovery or observation but it is utterly above the compasse of all reason or naturall disquisition neither men nor Angels ever knew it but by divine revelation And therfore the Apostle every where calleth it a Mystery a great and a hidden Mystery which was kept secret since the world began There is a Naturall Theologie without the world gathered out of the workes of God out of the resolution of causes and effects into their first originals and out of the Law of nature written in the heart But there is no naturall Christianity Nature is so farre from finding it out by her owne inquiries that shee cannot yeeld unto it when it is revealed without a Spirit of faith to assist it The Iewes stumbled at it as dishonorable to their Law and the Gentiles derided it as absurd in their Philosophy It was a Hidden and secret wisedome the execution and publication whereof was committed onely to Christ. In God it was an Eternall Gospell for Christ was a lambe slaine from before the foundations of the world namely in the predeterminate counsell decree of his father but revealed it was not till the dispensation of the fulnesse of time wherein he gathered together in one all things in Christ. The purpose and ordination of it was eternall but the preaching and manifestation of it reserved untill the time of Christs solemne inauguration into his Kingdome and of the obstinacy of the Iewes upon whose defection the Gentiles were called in Which might teach us to adore the unsearchablenesse of Gods judgements unto former ages of the world whom hee suffered to walke in their owne wayes and to live in times of utter ignorance destitute of any knowledge of the Gospell or of any naturall parts or abilities to finde it out For if these things bee true First that without the knowledge of Christ there is no salvation This is eternall life to know thee and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifye many Secondly that Christ cannot bee knowen by naturall but Evangelicall and revealed light The naturall man cannot know the things of the Spirit of God because they are spiritually discerend The light shined in darknesse and the darknesse was so thick and fixed that it did not let in the light nor apprehend it Thirdly that this light was at the first sent onely unto the Iewes as to the first borne-people excepting onely some particular extraordinary dispensations and priviledges to some few first fruits and preludes of the Gentiles He sheweth his word unto Iacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel Hee hath not dealt so with any nation Hee hath not afforded the meanes of salvation ordinarily unto any other people the world by wisedome knew him not Fourthly that this severall
his race shall the succession increase and armies of the Church of God bee continually supplied The words thus unfolded doe containe in them a lively Character of the subjects in Christs spirituall Kingdome Described first by their Relation to him and his propriety to them Thy People Secondly by their present condition intimated in the word Willing or Voluntaries and if wee take Thy People and Armies for Synonymous termes The one notifying the order and quality of the other expressed in the Text and that is to bee military men Thirdly by their through and universall resignation subjection and devotednesse unto him For when he conquereth by his word his conquest is wrought upon the wills and affections of men Victorque volentes Per populos dat jura Thy people shall bee willing The ground of which willingnesse is further added for so chiefly I understand those words The Day of thy Power So that the willingnesse of Christs subjects is effected by the power of his grace and Spirit in the revelation of the Gospell Fourthly By their honorable attire and military robes in which they appeare before him and attend upon him In Beauties of Holinesse or in the various and manifold graces of Christ as in a garment of diverse colours Fiftly and lastly by their age multitudes and manner of their birth They are the Dew of the morning as many as the small drops of dew and they are borne to him out of the wombe of the morning as dew is generated not on the earth but in the aire by a Heavenly calling and by the shining of the morning-starre and day-spring upon their consciences Yee are all the Children of light saith the Apostle and the Children of the day wee are not of the night nor of darknesse 1 Thess. 5.5 I said before that I approve not the mincing and crumbling of Holy Scriptures Yet in these parts of them which are written for models and summaries of Christian Doctrine I suppose there may bee weight in every word as in a rich Iewell there is worth in every sparkle Here then first wee may take notice of Christs Propriety to his people Thy people All the Elect and Beleevers doe belong unto Christ. They are His People They are his Owne sheepe There is a mutuall and reciprocall propriety between him and them I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine His desire is towards mee His I say not as hee is God onely by a right of inseparable dominion as wee are his creatures For all things were created by him and for him And hee is over all God blessed for ever Nor his onely as hee is the first-borne and the heire of all things In which respect hee is Lord of the Angels and God hath set him over all the workes of his hands But as he is the mediator and head in his Church In which respect the faithfull are his by a more peculiar propriety Wee are thine thou never barest rule over them they were not called by thy name The Devils are his Vassals The wicked of the world his prisoners The faithfull onely are his subjects and followers His Iewels his Friends his Brethren his Sonnes his Members his Spouse His by all the relations of intimatenesse that can bee named Now this Propriety Christ hath unto us upon severall grounds First by Constitution and Donation from his Father God hath made him Lord and Christ. Hee hath put all things under his feete and hath given him to bee Head over all things to the Church Aske of mee and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession Behold I and the Children whom thou hast given mee Thine they were and thou gavest them to mee For as in regard of Gods Iustice we were bought by Christ in our redemption so in regard of his love wee were given unto Christ in our election that hee might redeeme us Secondly by a right of purchase treaty and covenant betweene Christ and his Father For wee having sold away our selves and being now in the enemies possession could not bee restored unto our primitive estate without some intervening price to redeeme us Therefore saith the Apostle hee was made under the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hee might Buy out those that were under the Law And againe yee are Bought with a price Hee was our surety and stood in our stead and was set forth to declare the righteousnesse of God God dealt in grace with us but in justice with him Thirdly by a right of conquest and deliverance Hee hath plucked us out of our enemies hands hee hath dispossessed and spoiled those that ruled over us before he hath delivered us from the power of Satan and translated us into his owne Kingdome wee are his free men hee onely hath made us free from the Law of sinne and death and hath rescued us as spoiles out of the hands of our enemies and therefore wee are become his servants and owe obedience unto him as our Patron and deliverer As the Gibeonites when they were delivered from the sword of the children of Israel were thereupon made hewers of wood and drawers of water for the congregation So wee being rescued out of the hands of those tyrannous Lords which ruled over us doe now owe service and subjection unto him that hath so mercifully delivered us Being made free from sinne saith the Apostle ye become the Servants of Righteousnesse And wee are delivered from the Law that being dead wherin we were held that wee should serve in newnesse of Spirit And againe Hee died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose againe Fourthly by covenant and stipulation I entred into covenant with thee and thou becamest mine Therefore in our Baptisme we are said to bee Baptized into Christ and to put on Christ and to bee Baptized into his name that is wholy to consecrate and devote our selves to him as the servants of his family Therefore they which were Baptized in the ancient Church were wont to put on white rayment as it were the Liverie and Badge of Christ a Testimony of that purity and service which therein they vowed unto him And therefore it is that wee still retaine the ancient forme of vow promise or profession in Baptisme which was to renounce the Devill and all his works the world with the pompe luxury and pleasures thereof And this is done in a most solemne and deliberate manner by way of answere to the question and demand of Christ. For which purpose S. Peter calleth Baptisme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Answere or the interrogative triall of a good conscience towards God Hee that conformeth himselfe to the fashions and setteth his heart upon the favors preferment empty applause and admiration of the world that liveth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
and shame of sinne and the first fruits of that eternall vengeance which is thereunto due not onely set forth Christ before them as a rock of redemption reaching out a hand to save and offering great and pretious promises of an exceeding eternall abundant weight of glory but besides all this doth inwardly touch the heart by the finger of his Spirit framing it to a spirituall and divine conformity unto Christ. How can the soule of such a man in these present extremities of horror which yet are but the pledges of infinite more which must ensue and in the evidence of so wonderfull and sweete promises the seales of the eternall favor and fellowship of God choose but with much importunity of affection to lay hold on so great a hope which is set before it and with all readinesse and ambition of so high a service yeild up it selfe into the hands of so gracious a Lord to bee by him ordered and over-ruled unto any obedience Secondly this willingnesse of Christs People is wrought by a spirituall illumination of minde And therefore the Conversion of sinners is called a Conviction because it is ever wrought in us Secundum modum judicii as wee are reasonable and intelligent creatures I take it under favor and submission to better judgements for a firme truth that if the minde of a man were once throughly and in a spirituall manner as it becommeth such objects as are altogether spirituall possessed of the adequate goodnesse and truth which is in grace and glory the heart could not utterly reject them for humane liberty is not a brutish but a reasonable thing it consisteth not in contumacie or headstrongnesse but in such a manner of working as is apt to bee regulated varied or suspended by the dictates of right reason The onely cause why men are not willing to submit unto Christ is because they are not throughly and in a manner suteable to the spirituall excellency of the things illightned in their minde The Apostle often maketh mention of fulfilling and making full proofe of our ministery and of preaching the Gospell fully namely with the evidence of the Spirit and of power and with such a manifestation of the truth as doth commend it selfe unto the conscience of a man The Word of God saith the Apostle is not yea and nay that is a thing which may bee admitted or denied at pleasure but such a word as hath no inevidence in it selfe nor leaveth any uncertainty or hesitancie in a minde sitted to receive it And as wee may thus distinguish of preaching that there is an imperfect and a full preaching so may wee distinguish of understanding the things preached in some it is full and in others but superficiall for there is a Twofold illumination of the minde the one Theoreticall and meerly Notionall consisting in knowledge the other Practicall Experimentall and spirituall consisting in the irradiation of the soule by the light of Gods countenance in such an apprehension of the truth as maketh the heart to burne therby when we know things as wee ought to know them that is when the manner and life of our knowledge is answerable to the nature and excellencie of the things knowne when the eye is spiritually opened to beleeve and seriously conclude that the things spoken are of most pretious and everlasting consequence to the soule as things that concerne our peace with God This is the Learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge the setting to the seale of our owne hearts that God is true the evidence of spirituall things not to the braine but to the conscience In one word this is that which the Apostle calleth a spirituall Demonstration And surely in this case the heart is never over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truths unto a practicall judgement Therefore the Apostle saith that Eve being Deceived was in the transgression and there is frequent mention made of the deceitfulnesse of sinne to note that sinne got into the world by error ●nd seduction For certainly the will is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Rationall Appetite and therefore as I conceive doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented thereunto as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of a humane soule for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to bee free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally secundum modum sibi competentem in a manner suteable to its owne condition If it bee objected that the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good and therefore is not likely to bee made willing by the illumination of the minde To this I answere that it is true the will must not onely bee mov●d but also renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ. But withall that God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner of which I have spoken without a speciall worke of grace thereupon opening the eye and removing all naturall ignorance prejudice hesitancie inadvertency misperswasion or any other distemper of the minde which might hinder the evidence of spirituall truth By which meanes hee also frameth and fashioneth the will to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed Thirdly this willingnesse of Christs people is wrought by the Communion and adspiration of the spirit of Grace which is a free spirit a spirit of love and a spirit of liberty a spirit which is in every faculty of man as the soule and principle of its Christianity or heavenly being and working And therefore it makes every faculty secundum modum sibi proprium to worke unto spirituall ends and objects As the soule in the eye causeth that to see and in the eare to heare and in the tongue to speake so the spirit of Grace in the minde causeth it rightly to understand and in the will causeth it freely to desire heavenly things and in every facultie causeth it to move towards Christ in such a way and maner of working as is suteable to its nature Fourthly this willingnesse of Christs people ariseth from the apprehension of Gods deare love bowels of mercy and riches of most unsearchable grace revealed in the face of Iesus Christ to every broken and penitent spirit Love is naturally when it is once apprehended an Attractive of love And therefore it is that the Apostle saith Faith worketh by love that is By faith first the heart is perswaded and affected with Gods Love unto us in Christ. I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himselfe for me Gal. 2.20 Eph. 3.17 18. Being thus perswaded of his love to us the heart is framed
purpose of God who had so ordained Act. 4.28 God would not suffer a bone of Christs to be broken and yet he did not disable the souldiers from doing it for they had still as much strength and libertie to have broken his as the others who were crucified with him but that which in regard of the truth and prediction of holy Scriptures was most certainly to be fulfilled in regard of the second causes by whom it was fulfilled was most free and voluntary Wee finde what a chaine of meere casualties and contingencies if we looke onely upon second causes did concurre in the offence of V●s●ti in the promotion of Esther in the treason of the two Chamberlaines in the wakefulnesse of the King in the opening of the Chronicles in the acceptance of Esthers request and in the favour of the King unto her and all this ordered by the immutable and efficacious providence of God which moderates and guides causes and effects of all sorts to his owne fore-appointed ends for the deliverance of his people from that intended slaughter determined against them the execution whereof would evidently have voided that great promise of their returning out of captivitie after seventie yeares with relation unto which promise their deliverance at this time was in regard of Gods truth and purpose necessary though in regard of second causes brought about by a cumulation of contingencies In like maner when the hearts of men do voluntarily dedicate and submit themselves to the kingdome of Christ if we look upon it with relation unto the Spirit of grace which is the principium quo the formall vertue whereby it is wrought so it is an effect of power and as it were an act of conquest and yet looke upon it with relation unto the heart it selfe which is Principium quod the materiall efficient cause thereof and so it is a most free sweet connaturall action exactly temper'd to the exigencie of the second cause and proceeding there-from with most exact delight answerably to the measure of the grace of illumination or spirituall evidence in the minde whereby our naturall blindnesse prejudices and misperswasions may be remov'd and to the measure of the grace of excitation assistance and co-operation in the heart whereby the naturall frowardnesse and reluctancy thereof may be subdued In one word there are but three things requisite to make up a free and voluntary action First it must be cum judicio rationis with a preceding judgment Secondly it must be cum indifferentia there must be an internall indeterminatenesse and equall disposition of it selfe unto severall extremes Thirdly it must be cum dominio actus the will must have the power of her owne worke And all these three doe sweetly consist with the point of the Text That the heart is made willing to obey Christ by an act of power For first this power we speake of is onely the power of the Word and Spirit both which doe alwayes worke in the ordinary course of Gods proceeding by them with men secundum judicium by a way of judgement and conviction by a way of teaching and demonstration which is suteable to a rationall facultie Secondly which way soever the will is by the Spirit of grace directed and perswaded to move it still retaines an habituall or internall habitude unto the extremes so that if it should have moved towards them that motion would have beene as naturall and suteable to its condition as this which it followeth for the determination of the act is no extinguishment of the libertie thereunto Thirdly when the Spirit by the power of the word of grace doth work the will in us yet still the will hath the dominion of its owne act that is it is not servilely or compulsorily thereunto overswayed but worket● ex motu proprio by a selfe-motion unto which it is quickned and actuated by the sweetnesse of divine grace as the seed of that action according to that excellent knowne speech of Saint Augustine Certum est nos velle cum volumus sed Deus facit ut velimus Thus we see how the subjection of Christs people unto his kingdome is a voluntary act in regard of mans will and an act of power in regard of Gods Spirit inwardly ●llightning the minde with the spirituall evidence not only of the truth but the excellencie and superlative goodnesse of the Gospell of Christ and inwardly touching the heart and framing it to a lovely conformitie and obedience therunto The ground of this point why there is an act of power required to conquer the wils of sinners unto Christ is that notable enmitie stoutnesse reluctancie rebellion wearinesse aversenesse in one word fleshlinesse which possesseth the wils of men by nature such forwardnesse unto evill so much frowardnesse against good such a spring and byas from private ends and worldly objects such feares without such fightings within such allurements on the right hand such frownes and affrightments on the left such depths of Satan such hellish and unsearchable plots of principalities and powers to keepe fast and faithfull to themselves this chiefe mistris of the soule of man such slie and soaking such furious and firy temptations to flatter or to fright it away from Christ such strong prejudices such deepe reasonings such high im●ginations such scornefull and meane conceits of the purity and power of the wayes of Christ such deceitfulnesse of heart such misperswasions and presumptious of our present peace or at least of the easinesse of our future reformation such strong surmises of carnall hopes which will be prevented or worldly dangers incurred or private ends disappointed such lusts to be denied such members to be hewed off such friends to be forsaken such passions to be subdued such certaine persecutions from the world such endlesse solicitations of Satan such irreconcilable contentions with the flesh in the midst of all these pull-backes how can we thinke the will should escape and breake thorow if God did not send his Spirit as once the Angell unto Lot Gen. 19.16 to lay hands upon it while it lingers and hankers after its wonted course to use a mercifull conquest over it and as the Scriptures expresse it to lead it to draw it to take it by the arme to carry it in his bosome to beare it as an Eagle her young ones on her wings nay by the terrours of the Lord and the power of his Word and wrath to pull and snatch it as a brand out of the fire Certainly there is so much extreme perversenesse so much hellishnesse and devillish antipathy to God and his service in the heart by nature that if it were left to its owne stubbornenesse to kicke and rebell and fall backe and harden it selfe and were not set upon by the grace of Christ no man living would turne unto him or make use of his bloud by the same reason that any one man perisheth every man would too because in all there is as fundamentall and originall enmity
and draw it away ever so should the word and worship of God worke upon us in all our distempers and in all our deviations Christ was hungry and faint with fasting it was about the sixth houre and hee had sent his Disciples to buy meate and yet having an occasion to doe his Father service hee forgat his food and refused to eate Ioh. 4.6.8.34 The Love of Children hee that is begotten loveth him that did beget him 1 Ioh. 5.1 with a Love of Thankfulnesse We love him because He loved us 1 Ioh. 4.19 I love the Lord because he hath heard my voyce and my supplication Psal. 116.1 With a love of obedience faith worketh by love Gal. 5 6. Love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 If a man love me hee will keepe my words Ioh. 14.23 with a love of reverence and awfull feare A Sonne honoureth his Father Mal. 1.6 If you call on the Father c. Passe the time of your sojourning here in feare 1 Pet. 1.17 The faith of Children For whom should the Childe relie on for maintenance and supportance but the Father Take no thought saying what shall wee eate or what shall wee drinke or wherewith shall wee bee cloathed For your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of all these things Matth. 6.31 32. The hope assurance and expectation of Children For as Children depend on their parents for present supply so for portions and provisions for the future fathers lay up for their Children and so doth God for his There is an inheritance reserved for us 1 Pet. 1.4 Lastly the Prayers and requests of Children Because ye are Sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Note 2. The Birth of a Christian is a divine and heavenly work● God is both Father Mother of the Dew by his power and wisedome a Father by his providence and indulgence a mother Progenitor genitrixque therefore hee is cald in Clem. Alex. Metripater to note that those causalities which are in the second agents divided are eminently and perfectly in him united as all things are to bee resolved into a first unity Hath the Raine a Father or who hath begotten the Drops of Dew saith Iob. Out of whose wombe came the Ice and the hoary frost of heaven who hath gendred it None but God is the parent of the Dew it doth not stay for nor expect any humane concurrence or causality Mich. 5.7 Esai 55.10 such is the call and conversion of a man to Christ A heavenly calling Heb. 3.1 the operation of God in us Col. 2.12 A birth not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh no● of the will of man but of God Ioh. 1 1● 1 Ioh. 3.9 Paul may pla●t and Apollo may water but it is God that must blesse both nay it is God who by them as his instruments doth both of his owne will begat he us Iam. 1.18 The Mi●isters are a Savor of Christ 2 Cor. 2.15 It is not the garment but the perfume in it which diffuseth a sweet sent It is not the Labor of the Minister but Christ whom hee preacheth that worketh upon the soule I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the Grace of God which was with mee 1 Cor. 15.10 It is not good therefore to have the faith of God in respect of persons the seed of this spirituall generation cannot otherwise bee given us than in earthen vessels by men of like passions and infirmities with others Therefore when pure and good seed is here and there sowed to attribute any thing to persons is to derogate from God where gifts are fewer parts meaner probabilities lesse God may and often doth give an increase above hope as to Daniels Pulse that the excellency of the power may bee of him and not of man Though it bee a lame or a leprous hand which soweth the seed yet the successe is no way altered good seed depends not in its growth on the hand that sowes it but on the earth that covers and on the heavens that cherish it So the word borroweth not its efficacy from any humane vertue but from the heart which ponders and the Spirit which sanctifies it When then thou comest unto the word come with affections suteable unto it All earth will not beare all seed some wheate and some but pulse there is first required a fitnesse before there will bee a fruitfulnesse Christ had many things to teach which his Disciples at the time could not carry away because the Comforter was not then sent who was to lead them into all truth they who by use have their senses exercised are fit for strong meate The truth of the Gospell is an heavenly truth and therefore it requires a heavenly disposition of heart to prosper it It is wisedome to those that are perfect though to others foolishnesse and offence The onely reason why the word of truth doth not thrive is because the heart is not fitted nor prepared unto it The seed of it selfe is equall unto all grounds but it prospers onely in the honest and good heart the raine in it selfe alike unto all but of no vertue to the rocks as to other ground by reason of their inward hardnesse and incapacity The Pharises had covetous hearts and they mocked Christ the Philosophers had proud hearts and they scorned Paul The Iewes had carnall hearts and they were offended at the Gospell the people in the wildernesse had unbeleeving hearts and the word preached did not profit them But now a heavenly heart comes with the affections of a Scholer to bee taught by God with the affections of a servant to bee commanded by God with the affections of a Sonne to bee educated by God with the affections of a sinner to bee cur'd by God It considers that it is the Lord from heaven who speakes in the Ministery of the word to him who is but dust and ashes and therefore hee puts his hand on his mouth dares not reply against God nor wrestle with the evidence of his holy Spirit but falleth upon his face and giveth glory unto God beleeves when God promiseth trembles when God threatneth obeyes when God commandeth learnes when God teacheth bringeth alwayes meeknesse and humility of Spirit ready to open unto the word that it may incorporate Lastly from hence we must learne to looke unto God in all his ordinances to expect his arme and Spirit to bee there in revealed to call on and depend on him for the blessing of it If a man could when hee enters into Gods house but powre out his heart in these two things A Promise and a Prayer Lord I am now entring into thy presence to heare thee speake from heaven unto mee to receive thy raine and spirituall Dew which never returneth in vaine but ripeneth a harvest either of corne or weeds of grace or judgement My heart is prepared ô Lord my heart is prepared to learne
of him that is above all and so are a security unto us against all adverse power or feare for what or whom need that man feare that is one with the most high God If God be for us who can be against us Rom. 8.31 When God blesseth his blessing is ever with effect and successe it cannot be reversed it cannot be disappointed Hath he said and shall he not doe it or hath he spoken and shall he not make it good Behold saith Balaam I have received commandement to blesse and hee hath blessed and cannot reverse it Numb 23.19 20. Note fifthly from Melchisedeks meeting Abraham returning from the slaughter of the Kings we may observe the great forwardnesse that is in Christ to meet and to blesse his people when they have beene in his service Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousnesse Esay 64.5 I said I will confesse my sinnes and thou forgavest the iniquitie of my sinne Psal. 32.5 No sooner did David resolve in his heart to returne to God but presently the Lord prevented him with his mercy and anticipated his servants confession with pardon and forgivenesse Thou preventest him with the blessings of goodnesse Psal. 21.3 As the father of the Prodigall when he was yet a great way off far from that perfection which might in strictnesse be required yet because hee had set his face homeward and was now resolved to sue for pardon and re-admittance when he saw him he had compassion and ranne the fathers mercy was swi●ter than the sonnes repentance and fell on his necke and kissed him Luke 15.20 We doe not finde the Lord so hastie in his punishments He is slow to anger and doth not stirre up all his wrath together He is patient and long-suffering not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance hee comes and hee comes againe and the third yeere he forbeares before he cuts downe a barren tree But when hee comes with a blessing hee doth not delay but prevents his people with goodnesse and mercy O how forward ought we to be to serve him who is so ready to meet us in his way and to blesse us Note sixthly from the refection and preparations which Melchisedek made for Abraham and for his men we may observe That Christ as King and Priest is a comforter and refresher of his people in all their spirituall wearinesse and after all their services This was the end of his unction to heale and to comfort his people The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because hee hath annointed me to preach the Gospell to the poore he hath sent mee to heale the broken hearted to preach deliverance to the captives and a recovering of sight to the blinde to set at libertie them that are bruized and to preach the acceptable yeare of the Lord Luke 4.18 19. To provide a feast of fatted things of wines on the lees of fat things full of marrow of wines on the lees well refined Esay 25.6 To mi●ke out unto his people consolations and abundance of glory Esay 66.11 To speake words in season to those that are weary and to make broken and dry bones to rejoyce and to flourish like an herb Esay 50.4 Psal. 51.8 Esay 66.14 And this is a strong argument to hold up the patience faith and hope of men in his service and in all spirituall assaults we have a Melchisedek which after our combate is ended and our victory obtained will give us refreshments at the last and will meet us with his mercies If we faint not but wait a while we shall see the salvation of the Lord that in the end he is very pitifull and of tender mercy Exod. 14.13 Iam. 5.11 He is neere at hand his comming draweth nigh He is neere that justifieth mee who will contend with m●e Let us stand together Who is mine adversary let him come neere to me The readinesse of the Lord to helpe is a ground of challenge and defiance to al enemies Phil. 4.5 Iam. 5.8 Esai 50.8 9. Iob went forth mourning and had a great warre to fight but the Lord blessed his latter end more than his beginning and after his battle was ended met him like Melchizedek with redoubled mercies David Hezekiah Heman the Ezrahite and many of the Saints after their example have had sore and dismall conflicts but at length their comforts have beene proportionable to their wrestlings they never wanted a Melchizedek after their combats to refresh them Rejoyce not against mee O mine enemie when I fall I shall rise when I sit in darkenesse the Lord shall bee a light unto me I will beare the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him untill he plead my cause and execute judgement for me he will bring me forth to the light and I shall behold his righteousnesse Mic. 7.8 9. He hath strength courage refection spirit to put into those that fight his battles though they bee but as Abraham a family of three hundred men against foure kings yet hee can cut Rahab and wound the dragon and make a way in the sea for the ransomed to passe over and cause his redeemed to returne with singing and with joy and gladnesse upon their heads I even I am he that comforteth you who art thou that shouldest bee affraid of a man that shall dye and of the sonne of man that shall bee as grasse Esai 51.12 Note seventhly from Melchisedeks receiving of tithes from Abraham which the Apostle taketh speciall notice of foure or five times together in one Chapt. Heb. 7.2 4 6 8 9. we may observe That Christ is a receiver of homage and tribute from his people There was never any type of Christ as a Priest but he received tithes and that not in the right of any thing in himselfe but meerely in the vertue of his typicall office so that originally they did manifestly pertaine to that principall Priest whom these represented whose personall priesthood is standing unalterable and eternall and therefore the rights thereunto belonging are such too If it objected why then did not Christ in his life receive tithes I answer first because though hee were the substance yet the standing typicall priesthood was not abolished till after his ministery on earth was finished for his priesthood was not consummate till his sitting at the right hand of God secondly because he tooke upon him a voluntary poverty for especiall reasons belonging to the state of his humiliation and to the dispensation of mans Redemption 2 Corinth 8.9 You will say now Christs priesthood is consummate and hee himselfe is in heaven whither no tithes can bee sent therefore none are due because he hath no typicall priests in earth to represent him I answer though hee bee in heaven in his body yet he is on earth in his ministery and in the dispensation of the vertue of his sacrifice and the Ministers of the Gospell are in his stead 2 Cor. 5.20 and ought to bee received
so that that Tribe was but almost a quarter as numerous as the rest Now looke in the next place to the Proportion of their maintenance One would thinke that the fortieth part of the people could require but the fortieth part of the maintenance in proportion But first they had the Tenth of all the increase of seed and fruit and great and small cattell Levit. 27.30 Secondly they had fortie eight cities with suburbs for gardens and for cattell Numb 35.2 Which cities were next to the best and in many tribes the best of all in Iuda Hebron in Benjamin Gibeon both Roiall Cities so that those Cities with about a mile suburb to every one of them can come to little lesse than the wealth of one tribe alone in that little countrie which from Dan to Beersheba was but about a hundred and sixtie miles long Thirdly they had all the first fruits of cleane and uncleane beasts Numb 18.13 Of the fruits of the earth and the fleece of the sheepe Deut. 18.4 Nehem. 10.35 of men to bee redeemed Num. 18.15 Fourthly the meate Offerings the sinne offerings the trespasse offerings the heave offerings and the wave offerings were all theirs Numb 18.9 10 11. Fifthly they had all vowes and voluntary oblations and consecrations and every hallowed thing Numb 18.8 9. Sixthly excepting the Holocaust they had either the shoulder or the breast or the skinne or something of every Sacrifice which was offered Numb 18.18 Lev. 7. Deut. 18.3 Seventhly the males were to appeare three times a yeare before the Lord and they were not to come empty handed Exod. 23.15.17 Lastly unto them did belong many recompences of injurie which was the restitution of the principall and a fifth part Num. 5.7 8. Now put the Tithes the Cities and these other constant revenews together and the Priests and Levites who were but about a quarter as many as one tribe had yet about three times the revenews of one tribe But to leave this Argument Let us consider what the Apostle saith let him that is taught in the word communicate to him that teacheth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all his goods as Beza well expounds it Gal. 6.6 The elders that labour in the word and Doctrine are worthy of double honor for the Scripture saith Thou shalt not muzzle the oxe that treadeth out the corne and the Labourer is worthy of his reward 1 Tim. 5.17 18. Who goeth a warfare at any time of his owne charges Who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof Or who feedeth a flock and eateth not of the milke of the flock Say I these things as a man that is am I partiall doe I speake meerly out of affection and humane favor to mine owne cause or calling or saith not the Law the same also For it is written in the Law of Moses Thou shalt not muzle the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the corne Doth God take care for Oxen or saith hee it altogether for our sakes That is doth God provide Lawes for rewarding and encouraging the labor of brute beasts and doth hee leave the maintenance and honor of his owne immediate officers to the arbitrary and pinching allowances of covetous and cruel men For our sakes no doubt this is written That hee that ploweth should plow in hope and that hee that thresheth in hope should bee partaker of his hope That is that the encouragement of the Ministers in their service might depend upon such a hope as is grounded on Gods Law and provision and that they might not bee left to the wills and allowances of those men against whose sinnes they were sent And this the Apostle proveth by an argument drawne from a most unanswerable equitie If wee have sowen unto you spirituall things is it a great thing if wee shall reape your carnall things If you doe rightly judge of those heavenly treasures which wee bring in abundance unto you impossible it is that you should judge our paines and service towards your immortall and pretious soules sufficiently rewarded with a narrow and hungry proportion of earthly and perishable things Doe yee not know that they which minister about holy things live of the things of the Temple And they which waite at the Altar are partakers with the Altar to note that they receive their maintenance from the hand of God himselfe whose onely the things of the Altar are and not from men Even so hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the Gospell should live by the Gospell 1 Cor. 9 7-13 And what is it To live First They must love as men they must have for necessity and for delight Secondly they must live as beleevers Hee that provideth not for his owne is worse than an infidell 1 Tim. 5.8 They must therefore have by the Gospell sufficient to lay up for those whom the Law of common humanity much more of faith commands them to provide for Thirdly they must live as Ministers They must have wherewith to maintaine the Duties of their cal●ing a good example of piety and charity and hospitality that they may confirme by practice what in Doctrine they teach 1 Tim. 3.2 And the instruments of their calling which in a profession of so vast and unlimited a compasse of learning for there is no part of learning in the whole circle thereof which is not helpfull and may not contribute to the understanding of Holy Scriptures to some part or other of a Divines imployment cannot but bee very chargeable And alas how many men preach the Gospell and yet can scarce finde the first and meanest of all these supplies This is the great ingratitude of the world and withall the malice and policie of Satan by the poverty and contempt of the Ministers to bring the Gospell it selfe into contempt and to deterre able men from adventuring on so unrewarded a calling as Calvin justly complaines All that can with colour or countenance bee pretended by those who are guilty of this neglect is Poverty and disability to maintaine the Gospell And it were well if there were not places to be found wherein Dogs and Horses hawks and hounds grow fat with Gods portion and the mercenary Preacher when he growes leane with want is accused of too much studie But suppose that povertie be truly alleaged Doe wee thinke poverty a just pretext for the neglect of a morall duty may a man spend the Lords day on his shop-board because he is poore and wants means And if I may not rob God of his time upon pretence of povertie neither then is the same any argument to rob him of his portion Be not deceived God is not mocked namely with pretence of poverty and necessity as Calvin expounds that place Gal. 6.7 S. Paul bears witnesse unto some men that they did good beyond their power that they were richly liberall though they were deeply poor 2 Cor. 8.2 3. And yet those were but contributions out of mercy whereas double honor is
for themselves The Lord is not at our left hand to succor us in our idlenesse and negligence but at our working hand to give successe to our honest endeavors The sword of the Lord doth not fight without the sword of Gedeon Iudg. 7.18 In the miracles of Christ when hee fed and feasted men hee never created wine or bread of nothing but blessed and so changed or multiplied that which was by humane industry prepared before Our Savior had fish and bread of his owne and yet hee would have his Disciples put in their net and catch and bring of their owne to note unto us that Gods power and providence must not exclude but encourage mans industry Ioh. 21.9 10. Hee protecteth us in viis nostris non in praecipitiis in our wayes not in our precipices or presumptions Psal. 91.11 So long then as the Church is valiant and constant in withstanding the enemies of her peace prosperity God is undoubtedly with her to blesse that courage and to strengthen that right hand so long as Moses held up his hand God fought for Israel There was Ioshuas sword and Moses his hand or prayer and upon those Gods blessing Exod. 17.12 13. And they were all to concurre If the sword should cease the Prayer would doe no good for God will not bee tempted If the Prayer faint the sword is in vaine for God will not bee neglected As in a curious Clock stopp any wheele and you hinder the whole motion If God promise to bee present Ioshua must promise to bee couragious Iosh. 1.5.6.9 Secondly to note unto us the care and militarie wisedome of Christ our Captaine to meete with and to prevent our enemies and to intercept their blowes against us for wee may observe in the Scripture that Satan plieth the right hand of the Church laboureth to weaken and assault us where there is most danger towards him Let Satan stand at his right hand Psal. 109.6 That is either give him over to the rage of Satan that hee may bee hurried to execute his will or set Satan to hinder him in his mischievous intents Thus Satan stood at the right hand of Ioshua the high Priest to resist him Zech. 3.1 Noting the assiduous and indefatigable endeavors of Satan to resist disappoint and overthrow the workes of the worthies in Gods Church I would have come unto you even I Paul once and againe but Satan hindered us 1 Thess. 2.18 And to divert the strength of men upon his service And therefore to rebuke him and to shew to the Church that our strength is from him and due unto him hee also stands there to outvie the temptations and impulsions of Satan These are the two expositions which are given of these words The Lord at thy right hand Now though of all places of Scripture there is indeed but one literall sense yet when two are given which both tend unto the same generall scope and are suteable not onely to the analogie of faith but to the meaning mainely aimed at by the Holy Ghost in the place and when there is no apparant evidence in the face of the Text for preferring one before the other I thinke it is not unfit to embrace both and so something I shall touch upon both senses Shall strike through or wound or make gore bloudie Kings in the day of his wrath The word is Hath stricken through Kings It is a Prophesie of things future spoken as of things to bee done To strike thorow notes a complete victory and full confusion of the enemie an in curable wound that they may stagger and fall and rise up no more and that affliction may not arise a second time Nahum 1.9 1 Sam. 26.8 The onely difficulty is what is meant by Kings for which wee must note that the Kingdome of Christ is spirituall and his warre spirituall and therefore his enemies for the most part spirituall Therefore I take it wee are hereby to understand the most potent enemies of Christ whether spirituall wee wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesse in high places Ephes. 6.12 2 Cor. 10.4 Or Carnall as heathen and wicked men Psal. 2.8 9. The fat and the strong enemies of the Church Ezek. 34.16 Our spirituall enemies in Scripture are called Kings Satan the Prince of this world the God of this world the Prince of the power of the aire The King of the locusts c. Sinne and originall concupiscence is a King Let not sinne raigne in your mortall bodies And the Earthly enemies of Christ are called Kings The ten Hornes that is ten Kings make warre with the Lambe The Kings of the earth stood up and the rulers were gathered together against the Lord and his Christ and Death which is the last enemie is a King The King of Terrors that raigneth over men A●d over all these Kings doe the victories of Christ reach Some by Kings understand the Romane emperors who are called Kings 1 Pet. 2.13.17 And their overthrow for persecuting the Church But since all sorts of Christs enemies are called Kings in Scripture and all of them doe push at his Kingdome in the Church I see no ground why wee may not by Kings understand them all with their subjects armies and associates As in great victories the Lords and principall men are said to be overcome when the servants and souldiers are routed and slaine In the Day of his wrath That is when time hath ripened the insolency and malice of the enemie when his fury is fully stirred up and provoked when the just and full time of his glory is come That it may appeare that they are overcome not by time or chance or humane power or secular concurrence but onely by the power of his wrath hee will doe it Christ is never destitute of power but in wisedome hee hath ordered the times of his Church when to have his Church suffer and beare witnesse to him and when to triumph in his deliverances So the meaning of this clause is this when the day of recompence is come when the sinnes and provocations of his enemie is ripe when the utmost period of his patience is expired 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the fixed and unmoveable day which hee hath set bee the probabilities never so poore preparations never so small the expectations never so low the meanes in humane view never so impossible yet then by his wrath hee will utterly and incurably wound his enemies both spirituall and temporall that they shall not rise a second time He shall judge amongst the Heathen The word judgement noteth both Government and Punishment The Lord shall judge his people and repent himselfe for his servants when hee seeth that their power is gone Deut. 32.36 There to judge noteth government The Lord standeth up to plead and to judge his people Esai 3.13 That nation whom they serve will I judge Gen. 15.14 There to judge noteth punishment Here it is taken
greater glory The Lord seemeth to neglect to breake up the hedge to sleepe while his Church is sinking as Christ to his Disciples seemed carelesse Mark 4.38 39. so frequently in Scripture the Saints expostulate with God in an humble and mourning debate Why sleepest thou O Lord Arise cast us not off for ever Psal. 44.23 Ier. 14.8 9. But God hath his quare against us too for this infirmitie and haste of ours Why sayest thou O Iacob and speakest O Israel my way is hid from the Lord and my judgement is passed over from my God That is he hath not taken notice of my calamitie Hast thou not knowne hast thou not heard that the everlasting God the Lord the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary There is no searching of his understanding Esay 40.27 28. He is wonderfull in counsell and excellent in working and therefore he doth not slumber nor sleepe but only in wisdome ordereth times and seasons that there may in the end be the greater glory unto him and in the things done the more beautie Every thing saith Salomon is beautifull in its time if you gather it before it loseth both its beauty and vertue It would bee a madnesse for a man to mow downe his corne when it is in the greene blade Hee waiteth saith the Apostle for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience Iam. 5.7 Now the Prophet assureth us that Light that is comfort refreshment peace deliverance is sowne for the righteous Psal. 97.11 It was sowen for the people of God when they were in captivity though to themselves they seemed as dead men in their graves yet indeed they were dead but as seed in the furrowes which revived againe Psal. 126.5 6. and therefore the Lord likewise like Saint Iames his husbandman is said to wait that he may be gracious to his people Esay 30.18 Though a man suffer never so much injury and be most violently kept out of his owne right yet he must wait till time and mature proceedings have brought on his matters to a triall therefore the Lord calleth it The yeare of recompences for the controversies of Sion Esay 34.8 It is not for private men to order the periods or stints or revolutions of times wherein businesses are to be tried but publike authoritie constitutes that and every man must wait for the appointed time so the Church must not set God the times when it would bee heard or eased but must trust his wisedome and power Ier. 49.19 for there is a set time wherein he will have mercy upon Sion Psal. 102.13 Now this Time is ruled and bounded by these considerations First when the sinne of the enemie is growen ripe and his heart proud and insolent against God and his people when he trampleth upon the poore when he sacrificeth to his owne net when he adoreth his owne counsels when he deifieth his owne condition and thinketh that none can pull him downe then is it a time for God to shew himselfe and to stir up his glory It is time saith David for thee O Lord to worke for they have made void thy Law Psal. 119.126 So outragious they are that their fury runneth over from thy servants to thine ordinances to blot out the very records of heaven the name and feare of God out of the earth And this reason and period of time wee finde frequently in the Scriptures given In the fourth generation they shall come hither againe for the iniquitie of the Amorites is not yet full Gen. 15.16 It is not growen to that ripenesse and compasse as I in my wise secret and patient providence will permit O thou that dwellest upon many waters abundant in treasures saith the Lord to Babylon thine end is come and the measure of thy covetousnesse Ier. 51.13 when men have filled up the measure of their sinne then is their end come bee their wealth or safety or their naturall or acquired munition never so great Put you in the sickle saith the Prophet for the harvest is ripe come get you downe for the presse is full the fats over-flow for the wickednesse is great Ioel 3.13 When wickednesse is so great that it filleth all the vessels then is the Lord ready to put in his sickle and to cut it downe It is further demanded when sinne is full To this I answer that there are three things principally which set forth the fulnesse of sinne Vniversality Impudence and Obstinacy First when a whole Land is filled with it that there are none to intercede or to stand in the gap when from Streets to Palaces from Houses to Courts from Schooles to Churches from every corner sinne breaketh forth so that bloud toucheth bloud The Land is full of adulterers saith the Prophet because of swearers the Land mourneth for both Priest and Prophet are profane yea in my house have I found their wickednesse saith the Lord Ier. 23.10 11. when in every place and at every view there are new and more abominations Ezek. 8.17 Ier. 5 1-6 Secondly when sinne is impudent whorish and outragious when there is no feare modesty or restraint but it breaketh all bonds and like a raging sea overrunneth the bankes They declare their sinne as Sodome saith the Prophet and hide it not woe unto their soules Esay 3.9 it is so full that it breakes out into their countenance hypocrisie it selfe is too narrow to cover it This is that which the Apostle calleth An excesse of riot and the Prophet a rushing like an horse into the battell Now when God thus gives a man over sinne will not be long a filling up when lusts breake forth and throng together when from concupiscence sinne goes on to conception and delight to formation and contrivance to birth and execution to education and custome to maintenances and defence to glory and boasting to insensibilitie hardnesse and a reprobate sense then there is such a fulnesse in sinne as is neere unto cursing the very next step is hell Lastly when sinne holds out in stubbornenesse and is incorrigible when the remedy is refused the pardon rejected the peace not accepted Then is sinne come to its fulnesse The sinne of the Amorites was never quite full but when they rejected that peace mercy and subjection to Gods people which was offered them first But when men sinne against those meanes of grace which are sent unto them and leave no remedie to themselves no marvell if the Lord give them over and let in the enemie upon them 2 Chron. 36.16 Therefore we must take heed of finishing sinne for it is not sin but the consummation and finishing of sinne which condemnes a man Now when thus the sinne of the enemie is growne so ripe that it breaketh forth into pride and insultation against Gods people then is the Lords time to shew himselfe I will restore health unto thee saith the Lord to his Church and I will heale thee of thy wounds because