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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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reasons and such intentives as draw on a lust woe be to them that put away all feare of judgement and so draw on lusts with the cords of vanity Vse 4. To teach us all to wean our selves from these lusts Young men I write unto you love not the World nor the things of the Werld and old men have nothing to doe with them refrain from them apply such corrosives such threatnings such promises Christs death and cut off all occasions of sin root it out challenge your hearts arraign them before God bring them as enemies to your souls and labour to cut them off utterly If any man love ●he world the love of the Father is not in him Doct. It is not the having but the love of the world that keeps our hearts from the love of the Father It is not the having of the World for Davids mountaine was strong Joseph had his will in Aegypt Abraham was rich but though they had the World yet they had not the love of the World Jam. 4.3 4. whosoever is a friend to the World is an enemy to God it is not the Lordship of the World but the friendship of the World that is enmity against God for the time shall come that they that take the Lambs part shall be Princes of the World and Saint James calls the love of the World Adultery as a woman that makes her selfe a friend to another man and bestows that love upon him which her Husband only should injoy is an enemy to her Husband so a man that is a friend to the World or to the lusts of it is an enemy to God alienated from him and he would have them know that there is no worldly covetous man but he knows that his love of the World is enmity against God it is the World that hinders you from the Word and Prayer and good duties Reas 1 From the amplitude of that love which we owe to God which cannot therefore be divided to others Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul and minde and strength Mat. 22.37 then we must love the World no further than it may help us in his service and we may imploy it to his advantage if we love it more we sin against the great Commandement if we must love the Lord with all our heart and mind and strength then what sorry weake affection is due to the World even an heartless faint love all our love and vigour of our spirits is to be set on God now if a man love the World he cannot thus love God for if he love the World his first and chiefest care is for wealth and riches and then it may be he will a little look towards God first let me bury my Father first let me stock my Farm and try my Oxen and then if I have any time I will come to the Feast 2 A covetous or a lustfull or a proud man when he hath the World and the lusts thereof he is fully satisfied with his portion without God Psal 17.8 so Luk. 12.19 Soul take thine ease thou hast goods laid up for many years he wraps up the comforts of his soul in these outward things if he have wealth or pleasure he is content without God the more he hath of the World the lesse he cares for God as the Moon when it is at the full it is most opposite to the Sun so is it with a worldly man 3 The love of the World will make a man part with God rather than with the World he will rather part with Grace and Heaven too than leave the World he will rather part with eternal life than his wealth as the young man in the Gospel Mat. 19. from 16. to 22. he had rather part with Christ and an expresse promise of heaven than part with his possessions so we see how the love of the World keeps us from the love of God Notable is that speech of Christ Mat. 6.24 No man can serve two Masters c. God and this World are as two Masters such is the amplitude of Gods service that he that serves God as he ought hath no time to serve the World No man that hath a servant but he looks that his whole time should be spent in his service so if we spend any time in the service of the World we cannot be servants to God Indeed if services be subordinate we may serve many so we may seek and take pains for the World but be sure it be in subordination to Gods service look that it may make you more free to Gods service Vse 1. To discourage any man from the love of the World there is no greater discouragement than to say If we love the World the love of the Father is not in us As if a Father come to a childe and say if you love such a young man or woman you cannot love me and I shall take you for my utter enemy and you shall never make it up againe would not any ingenuous childe rather than he would be an enemy to his Father part with any so when God saith If you love the World you cannot love me I shall look at you as my enemies were not this enough to make any christian out of love with the World therefore chuse whether you will love God or the World if you love the one you cannot love the other therefore it is not a matter of frugality or providence to love the World for I say If any man loves the World he makes the World his God therefore covetousnesse is called Idolatry Col. 3.5 a mans belly may be his God the love of the World is directly against God the love of God requires all your hearts souls and strength therefore no part to be set on the World Vse 2. It may exhort Christians to mortifie their love to the World you must either crucifie your love to the World or to God If you love the world you cannot love God if you love God you cannot love the world you cannot serve God and Mammon Motives 1 If a man can but withdraw his mind from the World he may be Master of the field in any temptation that befals him what is the World all that is in the world is either profit or pleasure or credit and we regard the World no further so that if thou beest weaned from thy profit or pleasure in meat or drink or Pastime if thou beest weaned from credit thou shalt bereave Satan of the weapons he fights against thee with for how doth he keep men back from Religion but that it will not stand with his credit and applause in the World what hinders them from holy duties but love to their profits and pleasures therefore could but a man wean himself from them he might easily overcome the wicked one how did Josephs Mr. work on him was it not from pleasure and if Joseph be content to leave the lusts of the flesh he
a dead heartednesse to the world For a man to rise early and sit up late follow his work hard take much pains is not a thing to be discommended Prov. 10.14 Prov. 31.27 It 's commended in the good Housewife even the greatest Princesse may not eat the bread of idlenesse then we see diligence in worldly businesse may well stand with grace but yet the same person must be dead to the world his heart must be set on things above these are not his life that is laid up in Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. His heart is crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 Though his employment be in the world yet his conversation is in heaven Phil. 1.20 Prov. 6.5 6. It 's made a part of wisdome to be as busie Ants gathering and laying up but all the while his hands are there his heart is in heaven he doth things in obedience to God by the rule of his Word and for his freedome in Gods service another may do the same work with the same care and successe and yet the heart far unlike 3 The love of our enemies is a particular virtue of Gods Saints Matth. 5.45 to 47. Now this very grace hath in it contrary works in our heart it 's like fire and water both naturally our hearts are very cold and hard and frozen like ice towards our enemies but Christ comes and thawes these frostlings and warms us with compassion towards them that his heart oftentimes mourns for them to see them take such unjust courses against them who have not wronged them and on the other side whereas a naturall man if he see his enemy he boyls in wrath and passion against him love comes like a cool water and cools the heat of passion in our heart For application Wouldst thou know whether thou hast life or no Why hast thou found thy heart affected with joy for Gods goodnesse to thee and yet withall grieved and sorrowfull for thy unkinde dealing with him These are certain evidences of the life of grace in thee You may find many affected and comforted with the Word as Herod was but if this joy were of God it would not vanish away like smoak but would administer so much the more sorrow and mourning for sin though a Christians joy may suddenly vanish yet it alwayes leaves behinde an inward grieving for sin to keep possession for it 2 How do you finde your hearts affected to Gods worship Do you finde your hearts generally unwilling to pray or hear This is an ill signe But if you finde your hearts willing and the more willing the more carefull withall In this case there is life But if a man have fear without joy or joy without fear the heart is not in a good temper 3. How dost thou finde thy heart in tribulation Dost thou finde no consolation supporting thee This is an ill signe But if thou findest with David in the multitude of thy troubled thoughts Gods comforts sustain thy soul Psal 94.18 in this case thou hast life 4. Observe your carriages Doe you bear patiently with bad men and yet not so patiently as to bear with evill Patience and zeal must goe together 5. Are you of a meek gentle and flexible temper It s well But how are you in Gods cause Are you there inflexible and immovable so that you will not abate an hoose in Gods cause Why both these are a life of grace 6. Thou sayst thou art modest and thinkest meanly of thy selfe I but how is this grace coupled for God sends them two and two together as he did his Disciples to ballance one another Hast thou withall a lofty spirit in the wayes of God an heart lift up to heavenly things Why such a spirit hath life The most modest should be most magnanimous 7. Look at worldly businesse Canst thou be diligent in thy calling Why this God requires But how stands thy heart Art thou busie in the world and yet thy heart dead to the world This is a signe of true spirituall life 8. If we finde our hearts so abounding in love that like fire it thawes our cold frozen affections and again like water can cool our hot passionate spirits why this love is a fruit of faith and a signe of life it s a signe our sins are forgiven us if we have hearts forgiving others Now we come to the effects of Sanctification as they are exprest in the life of a Christian and they are answerable to the effects of naturall life The effects of naturall life are principally five 1. Motion When a creature is able to move it selfe in its place to those duties of this or that life it s said to live If a thing move not but by others it s not alive or if it move out of its place it s not alive as a stone thrown up moves downward and fire moves upward but this is not properly life but rather a desire of rest and for things that move they move according to the life they have as a tree a vegetative life a beast a sensitive life a man a rationall life but if a man have a spirituall motion in his proper place it s a signe of spirituall life sometimes a man reacheth out of his place reaching to higher matters and more ambitious thoughts then his calling leads to those move not from an inward principle of grace but from levity of heart so the Pharisees they moved to holy duties but it was for credit others for profit for loaves John 6.26 It s one thing to move to spirituall duties out of an inward inclination and affection to them another thing to move out of levity or desire of eminency it is one thing to move to them out of love another thing to move to them out of respect or credit or profit Why this is but as the moving of a stone out of its naturall gravity Absolom had a marvellous affection to reign and oh that he were King every one should have justice 2 Sam. 15.13 But he was now out of his place and therefore the thing he did was but to attempt the cutting off his Fathers life but that is life properly that moves in its place Again a man may move in his place and yet by an outward principle as a clock moves by the weight that hangs on it so a man may move to some duties of Religion by the weight of the Law or authority hanging on him Again Jehu may move in his calling very busily and yet have no spirituall life so it must be inquired whether the duty a man doth be spirituall or no. And a duty is spirituall 1. When we are sensible of our insufficiency and therefore depend upon Christ that thorough him we may doe all things 2. When we have respect to the Word of God as our rule 3. When we doe all for the glory of God Gal. 2.20 The life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God So far a man lives as he denies
16. 3 From the transitoriness of the World and the contrary permanency of the love of God v. 17. Q. 1. What is the World A. The World is taken Four ways and all incident to this place 1 For the frame and fabrick of Heaven and Earth and all the Creatures Act. 17.24 So love not the world that is not the Creature 2 The wicked of the world Joh. 15.19 and though he doth not here intend them yet we are to seperate our selves from them 3 The World is taken for the Fashions and Customs of the world Be not transformed after the world Rom. 12.2 4 The world is taken for those endowments and benefits the World affords as Riches Honours Profits and Pleasures c. Jam. 4.4 These three are chiefly aimed at Love not the Creature love not the Fashions and Customs of the world love not the Profits and Pleasures of the world Obj. May not we love the Creature are not all the Creatures very good Gen. 1. ult are we not exhorted to do good to all must we not then love all Gal. 6.10 what then is the love of the world which is here forbidden A. Love is such an affection of the heart whereby a man affects communion with the Creature and communion of good to it as the love of Money is when we love it for it self This love is double 1 Amor concupiscentiae when a man covets the thing for the thing it self for the gain of it 2 Amor amicitiae which is when I not only desire communion with it but communication of good to it The first is chiefly here forbidden when I affect the World or the things of the World for themselves for its own sake and not for Gods that it may be a furtherance to Gods service when we love the world rather than God when we desire it though we be without God and rejoyce in it for it self this is the love of the world here forbidden Q. What is meant by the things of the World A. 1. Not the Creatures for that is included in the world Act. 17.24 and it appears by verse 16. that by the things of the world he means the lusts of the world not only lusting after women but such an affection whereby we are carried after any Creature inordinately that is lust Rom. 7. Gal. 5.17 and again the Creatures are of the Father but he speaks of such things as are not of the Father Love not the World he writes to old men and young men such as are most subject to it Doct. The World is not to be beloved of young or old I write unto you Fathers love not you the World I write unto you young men love not you the World St. James is sharp in this p in t Jam. 4.3 4. where he reproves them as Adulterers that love the World those that are friends to the world are enemies to God Obj Are not all the Creatures of God good and ought we not to be merciful to our Beasts Ans Hee doth not forbid mercy or love to Beasts or Creatures but hee would not have your love terminated in them bounded in them he would not have you rejoyce or delight in the Creature before you have part in the Creator for if you affect these things for themselves the love of God is not in you Reas 1 From the enmity that is in the Creature it self against the Creator ever since the fall there lyes this vanity on the Creature that it emptyes our souls of Grace and love to the Creator and from all Gods ordinances 1 In hearing the word if it be possible the world will keep you back let God propound a Feast of fat things One makes an excuse he hath hyred a Farm and he must go see it another hath bought yoaks of Oxen and he must go try them a third hath married a Wife and he cannot come Luk. 14.19 20 2 If a man break through this and come to the ordinances hee shall find that the world is a great enemy to him there Ezek. 33 21 22. his heart is drawn after profits and pleasures it may be it will make you despise what you hear as the Pharisees did they scoffed at Christ as a poor man himselfe who had not felt the sweetnesse of the world and this is the enmity of the world 3 If you should hear the Word and attend to it and delight something in it yet the World will so damp you or choak you that all the seed will be smothered Mat. 13.22 while we busie our selves here and there in the World the Word is gone and Grace is gone this is the enmity of the World Vse 1 It may serve to teach all young and old to take up this exhortation love not the World no man is addicted to the World but he is in more slavery and bondage than any gally-slave whose hands may be bound and his feet shackled but his heart is free and he desires freedome from that slavery but a worldly man is imployed and busied in the World and his body is a slave to it and not only so but his very mind and heart is a captive to the World hee cannot be free to any good and spiritual imployment neither can he so much as desire freedome from this slavery what a miserable thing is it to see a man imployed altogether for his body and estate and have no heart at all to that which is good O! they may not be suffered to come to sermons they have other things to attend to for men to be thus inthralled it is a misery and if they come to the Word yet the World fills their heads that either they cannot attend to it or if they do after they are gone the World steals all away therefore I say again love not the World if riches increase set not your hearts upon them nor count them your chiefest good but be sure first to seek the Kingdom of God and if God bestow any worldly blessings upon you take it as a pledge of his love and be thankfull to him and acknowledge your own unworthinesse Gen. 32.10 as Jacob there did and make them a means to help you forward in Gods service as it is with Seamen the deeper and wider the Sea is the more free they are and lesse carefull so if you have abundance of wealth to swim and wallow in you must use more liberty in good courses and take no care for winds and storms you have Sea-room enough set not your hearts on them but go on in a more speedy course of Christianity Vse 2 A sign of trial whether thou love the world or no Dost thou love the world for it self Dost thou think it well with thee if thou hast the world and not well if thou hast not the world doth all thy content rest in the world like the rich man in the Gospel then thou lovest the world but if thou regard the world no further than it may help thee
Peter James and John Mat. 26.41 when Christ called on them to watch and pray he comes and finds them sleeping what saith he the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak even then when he had most need and themselves also of watchfullnesse they fell into drowsinesse and so fell into Temptation that they all left Christ and Peter especially Simon sleepest thou whom Sathan desires to winnow For thee now to Sleep is a Lust of the Flesh Let us therefore so look at Sleep and Ease as that we must give account of It s a common fault of Gentlemen that live of their own Means they may Live at Ease and rest they think what is a Gentleman but his Ease and Pleasure God forbid that we should be like that Fool in the Gospel Soul take thine Ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years you must not think that God hath given great means and estate to live at ease the glorious Angells are ministring Spirits doing their duties with all agility and chearfullnesse Adam who was Lord of the world yet was set to till the ground from the highest creature to the lowest all have employments appointed them by God Dangers of Idlenesse 1 It will bring you to poverty that you shall be suddenly Beggars and that without remedy 2 It distempers your Bodies and Stomachs 3 It will make your Souls naked and ragged that is plain the field of the sluggard is over-grown with Thorns and Thistles all your impatience vanity idlenesse all your dullnesse unprofitablenesse in your life it springs from your sluggishnesse of heart you have not stirred up your spirits 4 It will make you a Brother to a great waster you waste your outward patrimony and your patrimony of Grace when Peter was once fallen into drowsinesse how wofully was he bankrout how poor and naked Simon sleepest thou and we see Temptation came on him suddenly and strongly 5 Such as do their businesse with a slack unbent hand cursed be that man if you see a sluggish hand God leaves him to himself he curses both himselfe and his businesse therefore be diligent and fruitful and strengthen your selves you shall finde the blessing of God going along with you prospering your estates and Souls Thus we see what are the Lusts of the flesh they are such as the body affects and is satisfied with as intemperancy incontinency love of pastime and love of idlenesse and sleep these are the lusts of the flesh Now for the Reasons why we should wean our selves from these Lusts which may be as so many motives to disswade us from them Rea. 1 All these Lusts are so many Enemies to our Souls 1 Pet. 3.11 they are the diseases of our Spirits now if we satisfie any disease in our body wee feed the disease and make it worse So wee cannot satisfie any of these Lusts but the more we feed them the stronger they grow They are like the Dropsie the more you drink the more you may so satisfying encreases the disease the more you obey a Tyrant and submit your selves to him the more authority he claims over you and the more will be Lord it over you so if you once give up your selves to obey these lusts and let them reign they will Lord it over you and keep you in greater subjection Rom. 6.12 so that when a man pleads for his Lust but this once that I may fullfill my Lust and I hope I shall never do it again but I will bid farewell to it if I now take leave to go into evil Company for one merry meeting I shall hereafter deal with them no more why take this course against a Lust do but once give way to any Lust and instead of satisfying it you will adde fuell to it this will be a way to ingage you to a further commission of that lust many have a conceit may I but now tipple with a customer and get a good bargain I will give it over why give but once way to a lust and it will make such a gap that all the lusts in the Forrest may break in make but one little crevise in the bank of the Sea thinking to abate the rage of the Sea why it will make it wider and overflow all so if you give but a little way to a lust to a little Gluttony or Intemperancy you will never give over modo modo non habent modum the more fuel you give the stronger the fire of lust burns Reas 2 The heavy distempers that bodily lusts put upon the soul of man they do aggravate the diseases that Christians most complain of it is the common complaint of Christians oh the deadnesse and dullnesse and hardnesse and coldnesse of my heart and spirit oh that I could but get a soft heart why the lust of the flesh so overcharges our hearts and makes them so heavy that we have no desire to good Luk. 21.34 take heed that your hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you shall find that whereas our spirits have been enlarged and comforted in Gods ordinances and in his service it is strange how little affection or comfort we find in these if our hearts be overcharged with Intemperancie or Wantonnesse or Voluptuousnesse or Idlenesse it is like lead at a Birds heels what we feed on we grow into the nature of it let a man feed on earthly things he grows earthly and unsavoury so if a Christian gives way to any sensuality he shall find his spirit grow so sensual and worldly that it is made very unfit for spiritual things Reas 3 From the end of these lusts if we affect any pleasure of the World for it self it is a lust of the flesh to cleave to the Creatures now we shall find that none of these lusts commend us to God neither meat nor drink nor pastime nor sleep if we affect any thing for it self it never commends us to God or makes us draw near to him though we had all these pleasures in the largest measure as Paul saith of them 1 Cor. 8.8 now if these draw us not to God but many a poor soul that wants these hath far more fellowship with God than such as enjoy abundance thereof why then a Christian should thus reason am not I a whit the nearer God for these why then should my heart affect them 4 Nay as they do not commend us to God so 1 Cor. 6.13 Meat for the belly and the belly for meat they are all corruptible both the chear we affect and our bellies both corruptible therefore let us set our minds on eternal incorruptible things Vse May dehort both old and young from affecting the lusts of the World you see from the Father they are not but from the World and the means to help us against these lusts are 1 Abstain from fleshly lusts as Peter speaks Rom. 13.14 make no provision for the flesh take heed of all occasions I have made a Covenant with mine eyes saith Job not
for Gods service 1 JOH 2.17 And the world passeth away and the lusts thereof but he that doth the Will of God abideth for ever TO disswade them from the love of the World and the Lusts of it the Apostle useth three Arguments 1 Vers 15. 2 Vers 16. 3 From the contrary disposition of them that love the World and them that keep the Word as if he should say That which is eternal ought not to addict it self to transitory things but you that have your sins forgiven c. are so Ergo. So then this third Argument is taken from the frailty and ficklenesse of all these outward things and the constancy and perpetuity of heavenly things therefore be weaned from the one and affect the other By the World is meant all the Creatures all the fashions and courses of the World the condition thereof Honour Credit Profit Pleasure all these passe away Doct. The World and all the Lusts thereof are of a transitory and fading condition So saith the text very inconstant now here presently gone the things of the World are transitory and transitory they are in three respects 1 The world passeth away 1 Cor 7.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. the shape and fashion of the world passeth away the word is taken from the presentation of the world as upon a Stage a man seldom acts the same part a week together you shall never see the world or the Creatures in the same state long now in one state then in another come now and you shall see a man married come again and you shall finde him a Widower sometimes joyful sometimes doleful crying Have pity on me O my friends sometimes again in abundance of sorrow over-night and joyful in the morning 2 In respect of the fleeting and fading condition of the estate we do enjoy whilst we do enjoy it fleeting and passing away by little and little even while you rejoyce in it Isa 40.6 7. where hee compares them to flowers which whilst they flourish decay what are all the comforts of the world but a Nose-gay which for the present thou smellest sweetnesse and comfort in yet even as a Posie whilst thou smellest at it fades and dyes so are all the comforts of this World even fading and decaying whilst thou enjoyest them Again All the sorrows and vexations of the world passe away sorrow abides not ever nor cares yea in the midst thereof wee may finde some joy Psal 94.18 19. yet many times we adde sorrow to sorrow wee think wee shall go on in the bitternesses of our souls all the day but he was deceived Isa 38.15 3 In regard of the passing away and fading of all worldly things Eccles 1.4 one generation passes after another and so do all other comforts yea the World it self shall be consumed 2 Pet. 3.10 the individuals consumed the Elements changed Psal 102.6 7. Q. 2. How do the lusts of the World passe away A. The lusts of the flesh the lust of the eye and pride of life which are the sum of all the ways of the sons of men all his time is spent either in pleasure or profit or credit and now all these passe away 1 Because they are oft disappointed of those objects which they aime at a man pursues pleasure but he findes sorrow another Profit but it fades away another in ambition seeks Honour and Glory but Psal 112.8 9. The desire of the wicked shall perish it shall be as the house of the Spider 2 These passe away because when a man doth enjoy them they fade and wither away in it a man strongly desires a thing but as soon as hee hath it he is weary of it 2 Sam. 3. as David that desired the water of Bethlehem or as Children soon weary when they have that thing they desire so Gal. 4.15 16. see how their affections to him were dead Psal 26.2 139.23 24. when David lookt at the wayes of his own lusts he desired God to winnow him and see if there were any way of wickednesse in him implying though sometimes he had lusts in his heart yet now he found none 2 Sam. 13.15 Ammon had a strong lust to his Sister Tamar but when he had fulfill'd it he hated her more than he loved her so when we have fulfilled a lust we are not satisfied with it but say to it arise be gone as a Bee when it hath suckt something from one Flower goes to another and then to a third so we are soon weary of lusts there is an emptinesse in the Creature no way able to satisfie the desires of mans heart but they are soon weary and therefore desire variety 3 From the perpetuall destruction of these lusts and our selves with them when we dye all our lusts dye with us all our pride and wantonnesse yea in Hell there are none remaining but such as come from disappointment of hope as discontent and murmuring and obstinacy and Blasphemy and dispair but all other lusts gluttony incontinency ambition dye with us therefore well saith the Apostle the World passeth away and the lusts thereof they are all but for a season Vse 1. Is it so that they all passe away all the Creatures and all the lusts of the World are transitory then it may be a strong ground of exhortation to old men and young love not the World nor the things of the World this is the counsell of an aged Apostle when he was near a hundred years old he spake it out of experience of heavenly things and vanity of the World doe but consider the things themselves in their own estate love not the World nor the things of the World for they all passe away on this ground Solomon exhorts us not to set our hearts on the World Prov. 23.4 5 on riches which is the way to honour cease from thine own wisdome you think it wisdome to provide a large Estate but it is folly Wilt thou set thine eye on that which is not riches certainly make themselves wings and fly away like an Eagle suppose one of you should invite your friend to dinner and lead him to your Garden or Orchard where he finds a company of w●ld fowle and you tell him be of good chear yonder is good store of wild fowle we shall have but when you goe to take them they fly away how will his expectation b● frustrate so it may be thou hast thy fields well stockt thy houses well fil'd and thou sayest now soul eat drink thou restest refreshed in them and settest thy heart on them but God saith O fool this night thy soul shall be taken away and then whose shall all these things be or else sheep rot and Cattle dye casualties by Sea heavy losses take away a mans Estate suddainly never did wild fowle more deceive them that set their eyes upon them than riches doe the owners thereof Vse 2. May teach all that desire perpetuity and constancy in any condition trust not in riches honour
World his spirit is made carnall and stupid and worldly and can arise no higher therefore when Solomon gave himselfe to seek pleasure Eccl. 2.3 to try what was in them though he did not neglect Wisdome as Eccles 1.8 yet he found by experience deal as wisely as he could in the end they did so stupifie him that he was led away by them to Idolatry 1 King 11.4 then is a man become stupid when he is serious about trifles and trifling about serious things by pursuit of these his judgment was quick in earthly matters but in matters of Religion he began to grow very weak and ignorant how much more then they that wholly give themselves to the lusts and pleasures of the World Reas 3. Ever since the fall of our First Parents there lyes a Curse of God upon all the Creatures Gen. 3.17 18. now in cursing the ground he Cursed all the Creatures with it so that now there is a disproportion and unsuitablenesse betwixt the Creatures and man for whom they were made so that the whole Creature is subject to vanity Rom. 8.19 20. Eccles 1.2 Vanity of vanities all is vanity Now if they be all accursed you shall finde that there is a venemous corruption in them all which with-holds us from that chiefe good for which we were made so that let any man put upon you any Profit or Honour or Credit continually you would think your selfe engaged to him and set your selves to be serviceable to him and should not we deale as kindly with God should not we be more obedient to God for his following us with his blessings one would think we should but what is the reason of it the more we have of Profits and Honours and Credit the more full we are of our selves and the more loose from God so that the more he blesseth us the more we neglect him the more he comforts us the more we grieve him how comes this but from a secret curse that lies upon all the Creatures otherwise it could not be that we should grow so carelesse and stupid as the Moon when it wants light it draws nearer to the Sun but when it is at the full and hath most Light it is furthest from the Sun so when God fils us we sit furthest from God our spirits become empty of grace and regardlesse of God therefore this should move us from affecting the World and the lusts of the World Vse 1. A ground of strong exhortation to both old men and young Love not the World nor the lusts of it for there is no proportion betwixt the World and a Child of God what proportion betwixt transitory and everlasting things fading and permanent these are bodily and carnal your hearts are spirituall and heavenly therefore it is for you to look out for other things that will ab de nay why doe you spend your strength for that which will not profit all will not help your souls why should a man swear and toyle for that which when he hath he may loose his own soul he may get credit in the World and yet may be base in Gods eyes it is that which will not satisfie the soul the immortall soul will not be contented with transitory fading things these are but as dreams they dream of abundance but their souls are all this while empty and starving and if these be so transitory why doe we feed on meats that are so unsuitable to our souls if we have once made the World our Element if we be lifted up out of the World to heavenly and Spirituall things we are like a Fish out of the water we faint and gasp and are weary and must return to our mud again we have no comfort at all is not this a woful disproportion Nay further seeing all the things of this World are vanity and folly even lawfull pleasures I said of mirth it is madnesse and folly Eccl. 2.2 why therefore let us be exhorted to wean our affection from them walke among them as snares take heed you be not trapt by them all the Blessings of this life are but Curses if you use them for themselves and then they weaken your spirits and corrupt your hearts therefore love not the World nor the things of the World for these all fade away there is a disproportion betwixt the cursed things of this World and spirituall Blessings indeed they are not Curses if you receive them as coming from God and use them to him otherwise if you set your hearts on them and use them for themselves they will prove a curse to you Vse 2. Let us be exhorted to lift up our hearts to more heavenly and spirituall things let us lift up our souls to those pleasures and profits that endure for ever Joh. 6.26 labour for those pleasures that may truly satisfie your souls desire God to lift up your hearts from worldly to spititual things and then we shall find the Word of God sweeter than Honey and the Honey-comb therefore feed not on Husks and Chaff but feed on Spiritual things which may nourish you to eternal life and for earthly things use them as helps to Spiritual things to make you more vacant for religious exercises more fruitfull in good works so you shall find them helpfull to you and you shall draw near to God by them when we look not so much at honour or pleasure or profit as Gods hand giving them 1 JOHN 2.18 19 20. Little Children it is the last time and as ye have heard that Antichrist shall come even now are there many Antichrists whereby we know that it is the last time c. SAint John writing to all sorts of Christians Old Young and Children he speaks particularly to them all to Young-men and Old he wrote Vers 14 15. Love not the world but for Babes he writes not to them about the love of the World for they are not easily subject to it but no age so flexible as young Children so that if they be once set in a right way and live under faithful Instructers there is no great danger of them therefore he writes to them here to make them beware of false Teachers and cleave to sound Doctrin First now he describes and sets out these false Teachers 1 By their coming in the last time vers 18. 2 By their Apostacy they went out from us 3 By shewing the cause of it they were never of us vers 19. Secondly he gives them signes whereby they may know them and discern them and that is from their Unction they have received vers 20 21. Thirdly He gives a mark of Antichrist he is a Lyer who denieth Jesus is the Christ is a lyer c. vers 22. Fourthly He layes down some means to help them 1 By looking to their Doctrin Keep close to sound Doctrin 2 Cleave to your holy Unction have a speciall care to live righteously Vers 18. In this verse he plays the Trumpeter and warns the Church Little Children
Vse 2. To reprove those that are close-handed and close-hearted Though a man should doe something for company sake and out of vain glory yet if he give not out of love and compassion how dwells the love of God in such a man 3 Comfort to poor men that are in need God so far takes their parts as that he thinks there is no love to God in him that loves not and helps not his Brother not that people should be idle and sturdy worke a slack and beg with a sturdy hand 1 JOHN 3.18 19. My little children let us not love in word neither in tongue but in deed and truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him THe Apostle exhorting to brotherly love useth divers arguments The third argument is taken from the security of such mens consciences that love in truth But a man say I may be decieved To this St. John answers If our own hearts condemne us not God will lesse condemne us Doct. That the love of christians one to another ought not to be verball or in world onely but in deed and in truth Not in tongue but in the truth of inward affection and deed and performance Psal 16 2 3. He confines not his love to them but that all is an universality of the Subject no part in him but expresseth love to them He loves them in his words thoughts carriages in his whole man Psal 122. two last verses 2 Sam. 1.26 His heart was dearly affected to David passing the love of women in affection action 1 Sam. 18.3 He loved him as his owne soul Reas 1 From the unprofitablenesse of lip love it will neither doe thee good nor thy Brother It is an empty love Let us not love with an empty love Jam. 2.15 16. This will doe our brother no good to pitty his nakednesse will doe him no good nor us either because as is our love to our Brother such is Gods love to us No man can assure himselfe of his hearty receiving Gods reall love unlesse he loves his brethren really and heartily 2. From the unsuitablenesse of this verball love to Gods love towards Christians Luke 1.78 Isa 55.3 It is an hearty love reall John 13.10 He loves his enemies Rom. 3.8 8.32 Vse 1. To reprove all such love as falls short of reality Some fall short of Lip-love cannot afford their Brother a good word or a good work when they know a word in season might be of such use for the maintaining of the innocency or honour of a man not a blossome of love grows upon the tongue 2. Such as give good words but their hands are withered and that ariseth from withered affections Prov. 23.7.8 He saith Eat and drinke but his heart is not with thee 2 Pet. 1.27 He shews every man wants ability to love his Brother if his heart be clogged with any base lust of envy coveteousnesse wantonnesse c. If there be any Kitchin lust it will not endure this heavenly fire Doct The sincerity of our love to our Brethren is the security of our consciences and estates before God Vse 1. To reprove the Popish doctrine That it is impossible to have a certainty of salvation The Apostle saith here We assure our hearts before God 2. Of exhortation unto brotherly love in sincerity and to grow up in it A man may give all that he hath and yet not know love Get your hearts purified from all lusts The Word of God will purifie you Psal 119.9 You shall finde a fresh spring of love bubling up and streaming forth and though your Brethren cannot recompence it to you yet you shall have peace 3. See here a means to seal confidence and beliefe of hearts Cleanse your hearts from sin that hinders brotherly love 4. Of comfort to those that love the Brethren heartily you may be assured of your good estates 1 JOHN 3.20 21. For if our heart condemn us God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God THese two Verses declare the good or evill estate of a man according to the good or evill report of our consciences Doct. According to the verdict or testimony of our consciences God will save us or condemn us at the last day If our hearts condemn us God knows more by us to condemn us By heart here is meant conscience For S. John here speaks an Hebraism The Old Testament hath not conscience onely the New Prov. 15.15 2 Sam. 24.10 If our conscience record we are innocent God in Heaven will record it Titus 3.10.11 Reas 1. From the office of coscience which hath a fivefold work 1 Conscience useth to be an observer and spyer of what a man is and what a man doth Prov. 14.10 Another knows not what a man is but himselfe doth Conscience is a good companion of the good the worst of the bad Prov. 15.15 A good conscience is a feast There is good company where a good conscience is No man knows so well as his conscience doth 2 Conscience is a regester of what we have done long ago 1 Kings 2.44 Whereto thy heart is privy He means his conscience Gen. 42.20 21. 3 Conscience is a witnesse and will either accuse or excuse Rom. 2.15 Excuse in well-doing accuse in ill-doing Heb. 13.18 Rom. 14.12 2 Cor. 1.12 4 Conscience is a Judge either to clear or condemn 1 Cor. 4.3 Gen. 20.5 5. It is an Executioner of what God gives judgement and sentence It goes before Gods judgement and witnesseth Mat. 27.4 5. But after Gods sentence and his word Conscience doth execute it Rom. 8.15 then Conscience poures upon us horrors and terrours which is a forerunner of hell onely differing in measure and durance Thus Conscience doth to good men upon some occasions So David when he had numbred the people 2 Sam. 24.10 I have done very foolishly he speaks with some bitternesse of heart Acts 2.37 This is called pricking of heart Prov. 18.14 A wounded spirit who can bear Why doth God put such a faculty into men 1. That God might manifest his being There is no stronger evidence of Gods being For to whom doth it witnesse Is it not to God Before whom doth it condemn or to whom is it an executioner if there were no God 2. His own providence And we must not think that God mindes not things below if he did not why is Conscience afraid and comforted if God did not look into Conscience 3 For Gods justice that he might magnifie it God proceeds in his Judicial course without any witnesse but Conscience If God have none to bear witnesse how shall he magnifie his justice in condemning secret sins 4. Gods mercy If God be angry with a man it is an advantage to a man that he knows it Acts 9.6 Heb. 9.14 As Conscience doth determine here so will God in another world Conscience is Gods Vicegerent set up
not meet to know whether Christ abide in them or no such have no care to make their calling and election sure But St. John saith 't is possible and a thing worthy the seeking after and also very expedient 3. This should exhort all Christians to try and examine themselves whether they are in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 Know ye not He speaks of such as have lived long under a faithful Ministery It is an evill signe Either know that Christ is in you or be not satisfied 4. To exhort us to give up our hearts to God that his fear and love may rule our hearts that so those outward things take not up your affections Rom. 8.9 14. 5. Comfort to Gods servants that give up their hearts and lives to God which have laid their salvation not on a sandy but sound ground which have built it upon divine testimony even the Spirit of God which is a divine Spirit 1 JOHN Chap. IV. Vers 1. Beloved believe not every spirit but try the spirits whether they are of God because many false Prophets are gone out into the world THis Chapter consists of two parts 1. A preservative against false Teachers to verse 6. 2. A renewed exhortation to Brotherly love The argument fals by the way on the tryal of spirits for he had said Thereby shall you know that Christ abideth in you by the spirit that he hath given you Now lest the people of God should be deceived by the spirits of their Ministers he bids them therefore to try their spirits and that by the Spirit which Christ hath given them For he which is spiritual discerneth all things 1 Cor. 2.15 These words are an Exhortation to the people of God how to order themselves towards the spirits of their Ministers which exhortation is laid down 1. Negatively Believe not 2. Affirmatively But try the spirits The negative duty and affirmative are both confirmed by an argument taken from the multitude of false Teachers There are many false Prophets gone out into the world which shews he speaks chiefly of the tryal of their Ministers or else you may be deceived in your judgement as if a friend should bid his friend take heed what piece of gold he takes because there are many slips and counterfeits gone abroad In that St. John bids his hearers not to believe every spirit hence observe Doct. That every Minister is carryed away with one spirit or other or else why doth St. John exhort them to try the spirits He speaks of ordinary Prophets such are subject to the judgement of the people 1 Cor. 14.23 as for Paul he was an extraordinary Prophet 1 Cor. 4.3 What is meant by Prophesie Such as a man may attain to by use hence Ministers are called Prophets they were wont to foretel sundry things to come look what they speak on earth is confirmed in heaven though they cannot foretell things besides the Scripture yet they may things out of the Scripture so that you may see that God is in them of a truth Every good Prophet so far as he prophesieth according to God is carryed by the holy Ghost but when he doth not speak according to God he is carryed with an evill spirit Numb 11.25.26 1 Sam. 18.10 an evil spirit came upon Saul so that every Prophet prophesieth either by the Spirit of God or by a wicked spirit an evill man may sometimes prophesie well and then it is by the spirit of God it is a spirit that comes upon them as Baalam Numb Ch. 23. 24 a good man is ordinarily led by the Spirit of God but sometimes he is transported by an evill spirit and then he speaks not by the Spirit of God he perverts the Word and he misseth the text and application of it Peter he will tell our Saviour this thing shall not be unto thee Mat 16 22. what saith Christ to him vers 23. Get thee behinde me Satan There is not the worst debauched Minister but when he comes to preach one spirit or other comes upon him therefore well doth St. John say Believe not every spirit but try the spirits What is the spirit of the Prophets 1 Thess 5.23 There are three things in a man body soul and spirit the soul of a man is the breath of God by which he is made a living creature by the spirit of a man here is meant the inclination of the mind which is called a spirit in divers places as a spirit of fornication a spirit of slumber a spirit of jealousie every good or evill inclination is called a spirit Be renewed in the spirit of your minds Ephes 4.23 that is the disposition of your mindes What is the reason some are more just some are more painfull then others the good or evill spirit comes upon them Why is thy inclination called a spirit 1. It alwayes comes from some spirit 2. It hath some vehemency in it to bow the will one way or other either to better or worse as the spirit leads him it is possible a man may preach well in the morning and badly in the afternoone Try the spirits what variety of spirits are there Try all things saith the Apostle and keep that which is good 1 Thes 5.21 There be three sorts of spirits of the World of the Devil and of God every Minister is led by some of these of every one of these spirits there is a great variety 1. Sometimes the spirit of God comes upon a man as it did on the seventy Elders Numb 11.25 26. The Spirit of God is like the spirit of new Wine which ripens the wits so when the spirit of God comes upon a man he doth better understand the Word of God and the hearts of the people The spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2. There are two sorts of deep things of God some lye hidden in the word of God some in man 2. There is a spirit of the world which doth not shine for the uniting of the hearts of Gods people but this is a spirit of pride when a man would be counted a learned man or when a man seeks his own profit or honor the Spirit of God seeks to know the things that are given him of God 1 Cor. 2.12 3. There is the spirit of the Devil which guides a man into errour in his doctrine as Peter said to our Saviour This shall not be unto thee this spirit searcheth not the deep things of God but of the Devil this spirit seeks to make the hearts of those sad whom he would not have made sad 2 Cor. 11.2.13 to 15. to pervert the Scripture and drive out the care of Gods service and the power of godlinesse Vse 1. This should instruct Ministers when they come into the presence of God and enter into the Ministry to labour to prevail with God that they may be acquainted with the deep things of God that they may lead the people of God by the
short of no gift yet 1 Cor. 1.10 he complains that there is schism among them therefore there may be knowledge of God and yet want of love to our brethren Answ 1. The knowledge that is there spoken of is a knowledge that enlightens the understanding that puffes up and swims in the brain it sinks not into their hearts and affections 2. There is a knowledge that reacheth to the heart and life of a man a man is said not to know when he doth not acknowledge Psal 1.6 The Lord knows the way of the righteous the Lord approves affects and delights in their way when a man doth not regard he is said not to know Mat. 7.23 Known unto God are all his works Acts 15.18 3. There is a knowledge that doth expresse its selfe in action Know you the God of thy Fathers 1 Chron. 18.9 1 Sam. 2.12 the Sons of Eli they knew not God though Priests yet knew not the way of Religion because they were wicked children without yoak they are not acquainted with the wayes of the Lord. Reas 1. From the nature of God both in his attributes and works both expresse in abundance that those that know God cannot but love their brethren for no attribute doth so much expresse the nature of God as this of love 2 If we know God and be acquainted with God there will be some likenesse between God and us if we see God loving godly Ministers and hearers so will we Gal. 6.10 3. From the impression which the love of God makes in our hearts Rom. 5.5 our hearts are like to a stone-wall in a cold day the wall is cold always but warmed on a Sun-shine day 4. From our love to God What causeth you to love God if for this because he pardons your sins and saves your soules this a man may doe by a spirit of false love he that loves God truly will love him for his goodnesse not onely to us but to others Vse 1. This may be a ground of tryall of our love and fellowship with God if you find in your hearts an unfeigned love to godly Ministers if you make Gods serv●nts the men of your delight you need no better evidence from Heaven that you are beloved of God Obj. I am acquainted with many godly Ministers and good men Answ Consider whether thou lovest them for thy own sake because they may be helpfull to thee this is from self-love but dost thou love a Minister or a Christian for his goodnesse sake for his likenesse to God for his graces and vertues this is a signe thou lovest him not for thy sake but Gods 2. This exhorts every such soule as desires fellowship with God to be acquainted with God to love their brethren you come to the Ordinances of God and you finde not Christ you come into Christian Communion and find little comfort know this that according to your love to your brethren such is Gods love to you if there be any strangenesse in you to any brethren this will make God strange to you all the affections we find in prayer in reading preaching or any Ordinance of God they will prove but delusions if we love not our brethren 1 JOHN 4.9 In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the world that we might live through him THe second Argument to move us to brotherly love is taken from the example of God the Fathers love to us ward A third argument is taken from the benefit which such receive which walke in love among themselves The benefit is twofold 1 They have fellowship with God they see the face of God and find God dwelling within them to verse 16. The second benefit is they grow up to perfection without love there is no growth of grace These words then contain an argument to move us to love our Brethren and it 's taken from Gods love Wherein we have 1 The manifestation of Gods love 2 The Object towards us 3 The evidence thereof because he sent his Son 4 The place whereto he sent his Son and that is into the world as also with the end that we might live through him In this was manifested the love of God towards us Doct. That God doth not only bestow love upon his people but it is his good pleasure to manifest it Rom. 5.8 Psal 98.2 3. Isa 52.10 There is the mighty power of God by which he overcomes all our sins by which he redeemeth us Luk. 3.6 All flesh shall see the salvation of our God yea more then all flesh for it is manifested 1 To the Angels Luke 2.13 14. 2 To mens consciences Rom. 5.8 Gal. 2.20 God commonly gives us no gifts but he is willing his Spirit should shew unto us his love 3 This love of God is manifested to the rest of mankind Rev. 3.9 Reas From Gods glory Luke 2.14 the high praises of God were in their mouthes Jerusalem shall be comforted because God will make bare his arm in the redemption of his people Isa 52.9 10. 2 If God did not reveal our salvation to us it would be no comfort to us but when it is manifested it is a ground of joy 3 It 's a means to draw on many men into the unfeigned love of God which otherwise might be left in darknesse Zech. 8.23 When the love of God is manifested to the children of men it doth raise them up to seek God Cant. 5.16 therefore the daughters of Jerusalem are provoked to seek Christ Jesus with the rest of his people when they discern what a gracious God he is to them that cleave to him in a conjugall affection Psal 106.45 this encourageth them that are coming on in the wayes of grace and discourageth them that doe not and convinceth them that are of the Synagogue of Satan who know that he is the Lord. Vse 1. This should teach the servants of God not only to bear an hidden love but also a manifest love to Christ now indeed are the time wherein men need not be ashamed to manifest their love but if times grow hard then men will come to Christ by night as Nicodemus did but God requires if he manifest his love to your conscience that you should make it known to the world and not to be like Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Joh. 9.38 39. If we be ashamed of him in the world he will be ashamed of us before his Father Mark 8 38. when Christ hung on the Crosse Joseph came in boldly to Pilate and asked the body of Jesus Mark 15.43 which shewes you that where there is truth of grace though it be close at the first coming on yet when there is danger indeed every man will put forth himselfe to bear witnesse to the truth Doct. That God bare love to us before he sent his Son to reconcile us to himself The sending of Christ into the world was out of free love for his love moved him
The Sun is the life of many Vermine take away the Sun and they dye as flyes but when the Sun shines in its season they live let God take away the Sun-shine of his favour from us we can neither pray nor preach we live a life of grace of holinesse Prov. 16.14 15. Rom. 8.2 Ephes 2.4 5. there is life enougst in Christ to procure us life 2 There is a life of glory of which it is said John 10.27 28. That Christ gives to his sheep eternall life 1 Cor. 15.4 5. John 5.24 28 29. so many whose souls receive life by the Word of the Gospel their bodies shall rise to eternall life How did Christ procure us this life He procured this by his death Rom. 5.9 10. while we were yet enemies we were yet reconciled by the death of Christ We received life of grace and holinesse by his means I will pour out my Spirit of grace upon all flesh Reas 1. It was unpossible our corrupt nature should fulfill any law of God Rom. 8.4 Gal. 3.21 2 The glory of Christ requires that as the Father quickneth so he also John 5.21 Vse 1. This shewes us what our condition is without Christ if God send Christ that we might live through him then in Gods fight without Christ we are dead as dead flyes dead wormes in a cold frost we are utterly dead without true peace we are like thorns that give a blaze but we lye down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Christ is our life without him we can doe nothing we are not able to put forth any spirituall action 2 Let us try our estates Whether can we say that God sent his Son into the world and hereby manifested his love to us Doe you live in Gods sight without him we are but dry bones untill we can say we live in Christ we cannot say we have any sense of Gods favour 3 It teacheth such as have any evidence of life in Christ Joh. 10.10 to come into Gods presence as dry bones intreat God that he would so speake the word as that those dry bones may live 4 To teach all such as have received this manifest token of Gods love to acknowledge the Lord Christ to be their life Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain now Paul is crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and now for him to live is Christ now every day he lives he doth the more expresse Christ 1 JOHN 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Doct. THe love of God to us was not procured by our love to him but his own good pleasure he therefore loved us because it pleased him So that in these words we have the freenesse of Christs love he loved us freely because he loved us when we loved not him we did not begin in love to him but he to us and this is set out by the effect and end of it the pardon of our sins What is that love God bare to us before we loved him Answ There is a threefold principle of love which God magnifies and manifests to his people before they love him 1 That love whereby he chose us to life and to redeem us by Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 and the choyce to life was not according to workes but free grace 2 Gods love in redeeming us by Christ was before any love of ours to God Joh. 3.16 3 His love prevented us by effectually calling us drawing implies unwillingnesse therefore it prevented all good affections in us he must draw us out of presumption then out of despair Reas From the difference between the care of Gods love and of our love self love is so ●iveted in our hearts that we cannot love any unlesse it be for some cause concerning us a natural man loves none any further then tends to profit or pleasure but a Christian is inlarged to all Gods children he loves them all and the ground of this is because we know such to be incorporated into the same body with us and so as we see them in some kind our own and so we should never have loved God unlesse we had found his love to us Object A christian comes off freely to many ●ffices of love to them that love not him Answ True but it is because he knows God can abundantly recompence it they sometimes may lay down their lives for their brethren and for the Truth but they know that Christ hath done it for them before 2 From the eternity of Gods love now Jer. 31.3 an everlasting love can have no cause the cause is alwayes before the effect no temporall thing can be the cause of an eternall love 3 From the end of Gods love that he might bring us to walke in love Ephes 1.4 Tit. 2.14 The love of God to his people of old is a fir president to all his children Deut. 7.8 9. compared with Deut. 9.4 5 6. Vse 1. Refutes a popish and Arminian conceit that God chooseth none to life but out of foreseen faith and good works else he had chosen none to life but this is a mercenary love let a servant labour never so hard yet he knows he shall be well paid at the years end and therefore it is servile love this is that love which they would put upon God 2 It exhorts all to begin betimes to love God begin never so soon God hath prevented us Rom. 11.35 it was an early love of Josiah at twelve years of age when he sought after God but Gods love was up before him you cannot be in your love before him though you begin as soon as you are warm in the womb John Baptist was very early when he leaped for joy in the womb yet Gods love was before him an Angel had appeared to his Father and had promised a blessing before John was begotten 3 To teach old people if God have prevented them with love long before how should this stir them up to love God and to be humbled for the want of love to God that hath loved them so long Shall we be to seek in our love to God and cleave to worldlinesse in our old times and let God stay till our children be provided for What an unworthy dealing is this with God This should exhort all Gods servants that have had experience of Gods love to acknowledge the freedome of Gods love Job by Gods testimony was a man that feared God and eschewed evill What saith the Devill Doth Job serve God for naught No but though God had stript him of all as he did yet he had shewed such marvellous love to his soul as that he had just cause to love God for ever if God should not have bestowed on him one dram of wealth 4 This should teach Gods children to be as observant in love to Gods children as God is to them to love them freely to doe kindnesse to them freely Psal 16.2 3.
John 15.5 2 Resurrection to glory Rom. 8.11 hence he is called a quickning Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 Vse 1. If Christ be a word of life then men out of Christ have no life in them they have neither the life of justification nor mortification nor vivification nor resurrection to glory but are stark dead men to grace and glory 2. If Christ be a word of life then we who professe our selves to be Christians to be Members of Christ are to live no life but this now for the better conceiving of this know that we live a threefold life 1. Naturall 2. Spirituall 3. Carnall whereby we live the life 1 Of Reason 2 Grace 3 Sin The two former we may live and are so to doe because we receive both these lives from Christ the word of life the last we are not to live for the Members can live no life but the life of their head the branches live no life but the life of the root Hence Paul lived not but Christ in him Gal. 2.20 Now that we may doe this we must esteem and carry our selves as dead men to all things else that we may wholly live and move and have our being to him and from hence arise three duties First We are not to live to our old sins at all but to be as dead men to them Rom. 6.11 and therefore to have no Member to stir at their command Rom. 6.13 old lusts when they now call upon us we are to lend the deaf Ear to them when we were dead to Righteousnesse we did not one living action but sinfull so now being dead to sin let us doe no li●ing action but righteous Secondly We are no longer to live unto friends to riches honours or pleasures but to the Lord we once were wedded to such things but now being dead we are free from them Rom. 7.1 2. if these call for any motion or action of a living man at our hands not agreeable to the Will of Christ we are dead hence Wives are to obey their Husbands in the Lord Col. 3.18 and Children their Parents Ephes 6.1 and Servants their Masters Ephes 6. so Psal 45.10 11. 3. We are to be as dead men to our own reason and will and all the affections of our hearts and to yeeld to them onely in the Lord Luke 9.23 He that would live to God when he is dead must die to himselfe while he is alive Vse 3. If Christ be a Word of Life a living and a quickning word then when we finde our hearts dead and dull and indisposed to good duties run we and seek unto him for life and quickning Psal 119.37 40. If we be afflicted in Conscience and esteem our selves as dead men in regard of the apprehension of Gods Wrath and the want of the life of Justification then let us seek to him Psal 119.107 28. If we fear that though we finde some life of grace yet we shall be unfruitfull and dead unto God except we be strengthened and quickned more then ordinary here againe let us seek unto this Word of Life Luke 17.5 Mark 9.24 In the midst of our entertainment of many of our acquaintance as Hezekiah did 2 Kings 20.13 who might have taken an excellent opportunity of sanctifying Gods name considering the occasion of their coming 2 Chron. 32.31 he might have wrought on them to have embraced the true worship of such a God Deut. 32.31 And so indeed did Moses upon Jethro Exod. 18.8 9 10 11 12. and in the liberall use of Gods Creatures an easie matter it is to forget God and to be dead and unfruitfull unto him here then seek to this Word of Life but alwayes seek we in humility and consciousnesse of our own weaknesse and then God will delight to quicken us 1 JOHN 1.2 For the life appeared and we have seen it and bear witnesse and shew unto you that eternall life which was with the Father and was manifested unto us THis Verse containeth nothing in a manner in it but what you have mentioned either in the verse before or else in the next after it In it consider 1. The dependance of it with the former the words come in by way of answer to an objection Obj. If Christ was from the beginning eternal God how then could he be seen and heard John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time Answ Yes for that eternall Word of Life was in fulnesse of time made manifest in the flesh c. 2. The order of the words in themselves and in plain placing they stand thus For that Life that Eternall Life which was with the Father and which we have seen and thereof we bear witnesse and which we shew or declare unto you appeared appeared I say unto us 3. The meaning of the words which is best opened by handling distinctly five Propositions which are expresse in the Text Three concerning Christ Two concerning the Apostles First Three concerning Christ 1. Christ is Life Life eternall 2. This Eternall Life Christ was with the Father 3. This Eternall Life which was with the Father appeared to the Apostles Secondly Two concerning the Apostles 1. The Apostles and Disciples saw this eternall life 2. Th●●postles and Disciples bare witnesse unto and declared this eternall life to the Church of God Proposit 1. Christ is life eternall Life Therefore called the word of Life v. 1. hence also John 14.6 though life there is not taken so largely as here There the meaning is I am the true and right way to eternall life as appeareth by that which goeth before from verse 2. to 6. and the reason following verse 6. Here it is taken for him who liveth in himselfe and is the Fountain and Author of all life to us whether of Nature or Grace or Glory Eternall life 1 John 5.20 and he is so called because 1. Himselfe liveth for ever Rev. 1.17 18. Prov. 8.23 2. To us he is the Author of eternall life Heb. 5.9 John 18.28 Vse 1. From hence the God head of Christ is argued and that 1. From his Simplicity comparing this place with John 5.26 see the like 1 Joh. 1.5 7. He is therefore free from all composition not onely of matter and form universall and particular but even of subject and adjunct Ergo He is God for these speeches are are no Hyperbolies 2. F●om his Eternity for no Creature is eternal but all had their beginning in time Vse 2. Hence we see a reason 1. Of that speech in Prov. 8. ult All that hate me love death such are all they that will not be governed by him Luke 19.14 2. Of that speech Eph. 2.1 5. men out of Christ are dead 3. Why ungodly and wicked men die eternally they are out of Christ John 15.6 where is to be translated not Men but Angels Mat. 13.49 50. the Angels whomsoever they finde out of Christ they cast into Eternall death not so much because they have deserved it for so have the godly but
Saints of God The communion of the Saints is a Spiritual conjunction of the Saints with Jesus Christ and one another wherein Christ partaketh of our infirmities and we in common partake of benefits and communicate them one to another 1 I call it a Spiritual Conjunction to distinguish it from 1 A Natural as the three Persons of the Trinity are joyned in one nature and essence 2 Personal as the two Natures of Christ are in one Person 3 Moral as Man and Wife are in Law one flesh by Gods Ordinance For this is a Conjunction of mens Persons not by an outward bond such as Gods Ordinance is to Marriage but by an inward bond one Spirit resting in Christ above measure and in the Saints according to their measure 1 Cor. 6.17 1 Joh. 4.13 Rom. 8.9 Hence it is that the same minde is in us which was in Christ Phil. 2.5 and all the members are alike affected and disposed towards God Christ their own sins good duties one to another 2 I say of the Saints with Christ and one another where by Saints I do not mean only Saints Canonized by the Pope nor only the Saints departed but the Saints also on earth whose conjunction with Christ and one with another is mentioned 2 Cor. 1.2 Col. 1.2 Joh. 15 5. Ephes 5.30 1 Cor. 12.13 Joh. 17.20 21. 3 I adde wherein Christ partaketh of our infirmities And infirmities wherein he partaketh with us are of three sorts 1 Of Nature Flesh and Blood Heb. 2.14 Phil. 2.7 2 Of Corruption all our sins imputed 2 Cor. 5.21 1 Pet. 2.24 3 Of Condition all our afflictions and miseries Acts 9 4. Col. 1.24 4 I adde we in this communion partake of Christs benefits which are Six 1 Adoption Gal. 4.4 5 6. hence we are said to have fellowship with God in the text the greatnesse of this benefit See 1 Sam. 18.23 2 Righteousnesse of Christ imputed 2 Cor. 5.21 Papists do deride this thinking it all one to say A man may be wise or learned by another mans wisdom and learning but Christ was not another man to us 3 Holinesse 1 Cor. 1. penult which stands in Mortification Rom. 6.6 and in Vivification or fruitfulnesse Joh. 15.5 Worms that are dead all Winter live again lying in the Sun at the Spring 4 Protection of Angels Psal 91.11 12. Heb. 1. ult 5 Dominion over the Creatures Heb. 2.7 8. 1 Cor. 3.22 23. they hold in capite 6 Right to a glorious Inheritance Gal. 4.7 Col. 1.12 The means of further conveying and confirming these benefits unto us besides the Doctrin of the Prophets and Apostles are the Sacraments hence 1 Cor. 12.13 1 Cor. 10.16 17. 5 I say we communicate them one to another and that 1 In heart mutually praying for one another Ephes 6.18 Hence a Christian man as a rich Merchant hath Factors dealing for him with God in every Country 2 In voice by 1 Mutual instruction 2 Tim. 2.25 26. Act. 18.25 26. 2 Mutual reproof Gal. 6.1 2. Levit. 19.17 3 Mutual consolation 1 Thes 5.14 3 For Action by 1 Good example of Christian life Matth. 5.16 good example edifieth much Phil. 2.15 see Peter Martyrs testimony of Bucers Family in Epist ad Ecclesiam 2 Liberal bestowing of outward things upon them Gal. 6.10 In regard that this Communion is 1 A Spiritual conjunction of the Saints with Christ and one with another it is compared to the Conjunctions Ephes 5.23.30 Joh. 15.5 2 This his partaking of our infirmities and ours of his benefits it is compared to a Marriage Hos 2.19 20. 3 A communicating of our goods one to another it is a Brother-hood Coloss 1.3 2 How doth the Apostles Doctrine procure and preserve this union and communion By these means Means 1 1 By making known to us that by nature we were strangers and enemies to God Col. 1.21 Acts 26.18 Ephes 2.2 2 Tim. 2.26 This fellowship which all natural men have with Satan to omit the fellowship which Conjurers have with him by League Psal 85.5 and that which Witches have with him by carnal copulation standing in three things 1 In resemblance both sin with one continued Act 1 Joh. 3.8 sinneth Joh. 8.44 Acts 13.10 and so all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have a fellowship one with another 2 In subjection of the Natural man to the government and guidance of Satan Ephes 2.2 2 Tim. 2. ult all Gods children are led by his Spirit Rom. 8.14 so are Natural men by that wicked Spirit he first worketh upon the mind deluding and blinding them 2 Cor. 4.4 John 13.2 and then he carrieth the heart and affections whither it pleaseth him John 13.27 Ephes 2.2 3. In under-going the same punishment Mat. 25.41 Means 2 2 By working upon our hearts a remorse of Conscience with the sense of this Acts 2.37 this word is used in a contrary sense Rom. 11.8 where it signifies not compunction but the deep slumber wherein Natural men feel no compunction Rom. 7.9 10. this is called a wounding or the spirit thus afflicted is called wounded Prov. 18.14 broken-hearted weary Psalm 51.17 Matth. 11.28 This remorse is not alike to all to some it is more terrible and maketh a deeper impression Job 6.2 3 4 cap. 13.24 to others it is not so grievous as in Lydia Acts 16.14 15. her readinesse to entertain them sheweth that the Wound was made and healed in the Sermon-time I conceive Lydia's Conversion to be like the Thiefs upon the Crosse he first had fear of God Luke 23.40 yet assured of Salvation soon after vers 43. In the Jews Acts 2.37 to 42. at the next Exhortation In John Glover not for many years five in all yet it is found in all Rom. 8.15 all do receive the Spirit of bondage to fear though they receive it not to fear again Luke 4.18 The Reasons of this are three 1 To make us like unto Christ he was so Mat. 26.37 Luke 22.44 Mat. 27.46 and we must be like him Rom. 8 29. 2 To make us value Christ and his benefits at an higher rate Mat. 9.12 need not Prov. 27.7 the want of this is the reason why Christ is so little esteemed of the most 3 To tame our wanton hearts and make us more pliable and tractable to the yoke of Christ and any course of obedience he shall shew us Acts 9.6 16.30 2.37 Our Saviour can soon perswade heavie laden and weary souls to think that his yoke and burthen is light when they have felt the burthen of sin which how heavie it is see Psal 38.4 but an hard matter it is to perswade others to think so Means 3 3 By revealing Christ unto us and working in our harts a sound and earnest nest desire to seek and enjoy him Mat. 5.6 and because Christ is not ours but by faith John 3.16 and Faith is not ours but by the Holy Ghost therefore we rest not till by pouring out our earnest desires to God we have obtained him Luke 11.13 Means 4
4 The same Doctrin worketh faith whereby we are united unto Christ Rom. 10.17 Gal. 3.7 The Consectaries or the Uses are three Vse 1. Hence then it is easie to discern what estate Natural men be in out of fellowship with God and his Saints If by nature we had fellowship with them what needeth the Apostles Doctrin to bring us unto it they who defie the Devil and cannot abide to hear that they have had any fellowship with him have as yet none with God Vse 2 Then fellowship with God and his Saints is a thing that may be attained The conceit of the contrary Satan useth as an effectual means to keep men from seeking it See Fol. praeced Vse 3 Then all have great cause with diligence to attend on the Apostles Doctrin it is Gods power to salvation Rom. 1.16 1 JOHN 1.4 And these things write we unto you that your joy may be full FOr the meaning of these word we must shew you 1 What is here meant by Joy 2 How this joy is said to be full 1 Some by Joy understand that glorious Estate full of delight and pleasure which the Saints in Heaven enjoy and we our selves hope for after this life according to that Psalm 16. ult but here I suppose though that be not excluded but followeth upon the other to be meant that joy in the Holy Ghost which such as have fellowship with Christ enjoy in this life The Reasons why I think so are two 1 Because though in Heaven be fullnesse of joy yet in Scripture phrase Heaven to my remembrance is no where called full of joy nay in St. Johns course of speech there is another on this side Heaven which is called full joy 2 Joh. 11. Joh. 16.24 15.11 2 What St. John meaneth by this end of his writing fullnesse of joy we may easily conjecture by the means he useth to procure it to us now if you mark it the whole course of his writing is in a manner nothing else but a laying down of certain marks whereby we may examin our selves and discern whether we have fellowship with God or no whether we be in the Estate of Grace or no See one verse 6 7. another 8 9. another Chap. 2. verse 3. now these marks do not so directly tend to procure us fullnesse of joy in Heaven as to settle our hearts in the assurance of this point that we are in the Estate of Grace and so may reap and receive true and sound Peace of conscience and full joy in the Holy Ghost So that by full joy I here understand joy in the Holy Ghost For the better and more profitable handling whereof there is to be shewn 1 What this Joy is 2 How it is said to be full 3 Some Corolaries from thence For the first What this Joy is Joy in the Holy Ghost is a spiritual affection arising from peace of conscience whereby we rejoyce in our union with Christ with joy unspeakable and glorious Or joy in the Holy Ghost is a spiritual affection whereby the heart is unspeakably and gloriously enlarged and ravished upon the solid apprehension of union and communion with Christ 1 It is a spiritual joy not only because the objects of it are spiritual good things union with Christ and the benefits which we reap from it Adoption Righteousnesse Holinesse protection of Angels dominion over the Creatures right to a glorious inheritance but also and that more principally because it is wrought in us by the holy Spirit hence it is called Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 hence he is called the Comforter John 15. penult when God and Christ are said to dwell in the hearts of faithfull men nothing else is meant but the Holy Ghost dwelling in them and working this joy John 14.23 Rev. 3.20 John 14.18 compared with John 16.7 22. 2 Arising from Peace of Conscience Rom. 14.17 Rom. 5.1 2 3. now peace of conscience is a work of the Holy Ghost which ariseth from feeling of our righteousnesse or our justification before God for to be justified before God is not enough to pacifie the the conscience unlesse it be felt See Davids example Psalm 51.8 12. Hence ariseth that distinction of four sorts of consciences 1 Quiet but not good Luke 11.21 2 Good but not quiet Psal 51.17 3 Neither good nor quiet Gen. 4.13 14. 4 Both quiet and good Luke 1.47 Hence is that also Prov. 15.15 it is a cause of continual joy in the Holy Ghost as a continual feast is of continual mirth 3 Whereby we rejoyce in our union with Christ 1 Pet. 1.8 in whom we do believe and rejoyce yea rejoyce in him whose by faith you are Gal. 6.4 this is shewn also in that it ariseth from peace and peace from righteousnesse but by union with Christ 4 With joy unspeakable and glorious these words may seem to expresse some accidental things to this joy but because the nature of it cannot be well declared in it self these words shadow out the nature of it 1 Pet. 1.8 This Joy is 1 Unspeakable because it is better felt than expressed Prov. 14.10 like to bodily health 2 Glorious both because it is a glimps of the Glory and the Joys of Heaven hence the Spirit that works it is called The earnest of our inheritance Ephes 1.14 and because it triumphs gloriously against all causes of grief and sorrow Rom. 5.3 Acts 20.23 24. 2 How is this joy said to be full 1 In opposition to that joy which ariseth from the things of this life this is more full than that Psal 4.6 7. those are empty joys to this witnesse 1 The variety of them if there were full joy to be had by them what need we to seek for variety Wherefore doth the Bee suck so many Flowers if she could finde Hony enough in one 2 The mixture in them of sorrow Prov. 12.13 3 The shortnesse of them that which must be full joy to an eternal Soul must be eternal whereas these are not Job 2.5 2 In opposition to that joy which Christians have in Christ Jesus too but yet is often eclipsed and in the wain as I may so say through manifold doubtings of our estate 1 Pet. 1.6 Vse 1. If by the Apostles Doctrin full joy may be had then there is no need of Traditions if joy may be full by the Word written what then can they adde Vse 2. Then they embrace an empty shadow of joy that seek joy in earthly things which are like empty Pits Jer. 2.13 though the stars should shine always to us yet if we should have no greater light we should have a continual night Vse 3. Then the hearts embracings of the Apostles Writings and finding the fruits of them bringeth not melancholy and dumpishnesse as the World thinks but fulnesse of joy Vse 4. Then let us search the Apostles Writings and enquire for full joy out of them but of that in the next 1 JOH 1.4 This last Use our Saviour teacheth
us so we should cleanse our selves from all sin because it is a remnant of filthinesse Vse 6. It may shew us the wonderfull preciousnesse of the bloud of Christ and the no lesse wonderfull favour and love of God towards us were not Christs bloud of wonderfull efficacy it could not cleanse such base filthy sinfull lusts so Gods favour were it not wonderfull he would not take upon him such an homely office Women if they were not Mothers would not take such homely offices up as to cleanse their Children from their filth why if God were not of the like affection to us he would not cleanse us from our filthinesse we count it an homely office to sweep sincks and scum pots c this is Gods office if he did not sweep the Sinck and scum off the scum of our hearts it would never be done and therefore it shews the tender affection of God towards us in that he is willing to take such an office upon him to cleanse us from our filthinesse he poures clean water upon us all other means will doe no good without him it is with us as it is with young Infants that would lie in their defilements if their Mothers did not make them clean and so would we even wallow in the defilements of sin if God did not cleanse us therefore admire Gods love and mercy towards us Vse 7. It is a good help to mortification if we consider what a loathsome thing sin is and what pure eyes God is of it would be an antidote against sin shall we commit such filthinesse in Gods sight to make our selves so base and loathsome before him Doct. All sin is unrighteousnesse and cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse that is from all sin Sin and unrighteousnesse the one explains the other Rom. 6.13 yeild not your Members weapons of Unrighteousnesse that is weapons of sin sometimes Unrightnesse is properly confined to the sins of the second Table as unholinesse to the first but sometimes righteousnesse comprehends the whole course of a Christian and Unrighteousness comprehends all sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Because every sin doth either God wrong or others or our selves Righteousnesse gives every one his due if we sin in temperance we debase and defile our selves if we sin in theft or slander we wrong others in their goods or good names if we worship not God as God if we keep not his Sabbaths or prophane his name we wrong God Vse 1. Shews the Error of those who think if they pay every man his own they are righteous men why doe you no wrong are you not sinners yes they will say why then you are not righteous for every sin doth wrong to God our selves or others Others say if they wrong any it is themselves why it is unrighteousnesse to wrong your selves 2. As you love innocency live righteously doe God no wrong others no wrong your selves no wrong otherwise you are unrighteous 3. For Comfort to any that have their souls cleansed by the bloud of Christ from all filthinesse we are holy set at liberty from all filthinesse and all unrighteousnesse Doct. Sin pardoned is ever cleansed sin pardoned is sin cleansed what sin God pardons the same sin he cleanseth Heb. 9.14 The same bloud that pardons cleanseth us from sin Reas From the power of the death of Christ which serves not onely to procure pardon of sin but likewise healing of sin for his bloud is offered up as a ransome for sin well then it is pardoned but it is not onely so but it is a means to kill and mortifie sin Rom. 6.6 there is a destructive power to kill sin as well as meritorious power to pardon sin now his death is said to mortifie sin in us 1. Exemplariter For if Christ be dead we also shall die with him to sin Rom. 6.9 11. 2. It hath a natural Efficacy as it is an object for us to look at as fearful and formidable when sin presents it selfe we look at it as crucifying Christ and shall we look on it without mourning Zech. 12.10 shall we wrong him so much as to crucifie him again 3. His bloud cleanseth sin in obtaining at Gods hand a Spirit of Sanctification which makes the death of the Head reach to the lowest Members of the body as when the head dies all the Members die so the death of Christ having obtained the Spirit of God from him if he our head die then we shall die to sin as the resurrection of Christ procures vivification so the death of Christ mortification Gal. 4.4 5. Obj If sin be always mortified where it is pardoned how comes it to passe that godly men fall so often into the same sin Doth not David confesse that there was a way of lying in him Psal 119.29 Remove from me the way of lying which implies it was not one act but a way a course that he walked in sometimes so Isaac Gen. 26. told the same Lye both to the Philistims and Abimelech so it was with Jonah he was froward before he went to Niniveh and froward afterward how is it then that sin may be cleansed and yet renewed and if renewed how cleansed Ans It is with Sin in this respect as with Sampsons Hair it may be cut but it will grow again Sin may be mortified in some kinde and yet renewed again because Sin in this Life is mortified but in part Pride Wantonnesse Coveteousnesse in part are mortified but in part alive and if we neglect the practise of mortification that sin we had got some mastery of we shall fall into again if Sin break out again it is because we neglect those means we should mortifie Sin by he doth not say the bloud of Christ hath cleansed us but cleanseth Doth cleanse implying that cleansing is a continued Act the bloud of Christ is a notable Medicine to heal Sin and purge from filthinesse but if a man neglect to apply this Plaister to his Soul it may not be so effectuall as it would Vse 1. For tryall whether our Sins be pardoned or no would you know whether your Sin be pardoned why then it is also cleansed if your Sin be not cleansed in some measure it is not pardoned at all therefore look at your Sins if they be healed then they are certainly pardoned for it is the same bloud of Christ that both heals and pardons Sin Hos 14.4 God doth not onely love freely and pardon graciously but he heals them also therefore consider doe you finde your Sins healed that is that they have not that power they had before doe they seem loathsome to you whereas before you delighted in them now in heart you hate them and in practise avoyd them then those Sins are pardoned and if he pardons one Sin he pardons all his pardons are universall but if a man live in Sin still and love it as well and is no more ashamed than formerly he had been but goes on in the same
Objection to encourage men to sin thus it ariseth If Confession of sins be a means to have them pardoned and if the bloud of Christ cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse then it is but going to God and confessing our sins after we have sinned and we shall be pardoned 2. Whereas he saith If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and there is no truth in us it might be Objected To what end then should we strive against sin seeing doe we what we can we shall still sin Against both these Objections he shews them in the Text that he writes not these things to embolden them in sin but to discourage them from sin These things I write unto you that ye sin not The Parts of these words are Three 1. A loving compellation My little Children 2. A declariton of the end of his writing viz. their innocency that they sin not 3. A consolation to them who notwithstanding fall into sin for this he tells them Christ was both an Advocate and an Attonement 1. For the Compellation My little children he speaks not of Natural but Spiritual Children such as are justified and sanctified justified as appears v. 12. sanctified as appears v. 13. when he calls them My little Children it implies therein such as his Ministry helped to beget to God Doct. Such as are the Instruments under God of our Conversion Justification and Sanctification they are to us as Spiritual Fathers and we to them as little Children It is a speech often used by the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.15 where he prefers himselfe before all other Teachers they had he begat them so he calls Timothy 1 Tim. 2.2 Tit. 1.4 so he calls Onesimus in Philemon Phil. 2.22 Reas From the resemblance betwixt them and Natural Parents as they beget Children of that seed they infuse so Ministers beget Children of the Immortal Seed of the Word 1 Pet. 1.23 24 25. as in Natural Seed so in Spiritual there is a more Material and a more Spiritual part the Material part is the Letter of the Word the more Spiritual part is the Spirit conveyed in it now because Ministers together with the Word convey the Spirit therefore they begetting Children of such a Word they are called Fathers and those so begotten Children Obj. Mat. 23.9 Call no man Father c. Ans He doth not forbid to call such Ministers Spiritual Fathers but he forbids the affectation of such Titles many affect to be called Fathers of the Church that never begat any to God as the Pharises did Non appellatio sed affectatio prohibetur 2. Non appellatio sed denominatio prohibetur If any one will be the Father of such a Sect or Faction to draw Disciples after them 1 Cor. 1.12 as if any affected to be called Calvinists or Lutherans because they affected their Doctrin the domination of Factions and Sects is forbid but we should look at all as Members of one Christ and Ministers are but all Servants of the same Christ 1 Cor. 3.5 to 9. if men will be divided and some will be of Paul and some of Apollo c. this is forbidden 3. Non appellatio sed fiducia interdicitur not the call of such but the confidence on them as when we trust more to their sayings because they are ancient then to the Scripture or to others of equall Grace and Gifts 2. Ministers are not to affect such Titles to be called Rabbi or Master c. this is forbidden so then we see Christ did not simply forbid such Titles Vse 1. Of direction to Ministers or such as intend the Ministery what is it about which they are most to bend their endeavours to be fruitfull to beget Children to God it is meet for a Minister to look at the good respect of the people and living and maintenance but he is chiefly to desire and bend his endeavours to beget Children to God to beget such to God whom he may respect as Children with like care and diligence for a man to look at preferment or credit or wealth these are but husks of his imployment the true end of his Calling is to beget Children How may that be done 1. He is to look that he grow strong himselfe for weak men in nature are not prolifici therefore Ministers must labour to grow strong in grace a man without grace seldome begets any to God therefore they must first mortifie sin and then increase in grace Prov. 11.13 2. There may be strength in Ministers yet there may be a disproportion betwixt them and their people therefore Ministers and people must strive to keep a proportion and correspondence he must see how he may accommodate himself to the temper of his people they must with Paul become all to all that they may beget some in any thing that is lawfull he must acommodate but he must by no means comply to the evill humours of his people Jer. 15.19 for then he brings contempt upon his Life and Doctrine 3. Look that your Seed be Spirituall that is the pure Word dispensed in the Spirit and Power mingle no Traditions or Tricks of your wit with it if you doe your Seed is corrupt and wants vigour a velvet scabbard dulls the edge of the Sword so the Word deckt over with Human eloquence is like a Sword in a velvet scabbard it hinders the power of it what hath the Chaffe to doe with the Wheat Jer. 23.28 29. you must not mingle the Word with the dreams and fancies of men but dispence the Word in the power and evidence of the Spirit and labour to have the Word sealed in your hearts that you may speak out of the heart and inward affection that Word which comes from the heart sooner goes to the heart Vse 2. It may teach Hearers how to hear the Word of God aright if Ministers are so to dispense the Seed of the Word that they may beget Children to God then Hearers must learn how to apply themselves towards their Ministers not to content themselves in having gotten good Ministers and their respect to them though these be very good till you be Children to him whom he hath begot if you were not so before or if you were yet Children to be nursed by him suck nourishment from him grow in grace under him labour to receive stronger meat from him that you may become Fathers to others Heb. 5.12 it yeelds much comfort to the spirit of a man when he can say the seed of such and such a Sermon converted him it often fills a man with many doubts because he hath not discerned the power of the Word Vse 3. It may teach both Ministers and people so to carry themselves one towards another as Fathers and Children as many times a Marriner carries a King over Sea but though he be a Prince yet in that case he must be ruled by the Marriner so a Minister may teach Princes and great men and they in this case must be as Children to
4.19 which if it were not a word of Conversion yet at least of new Conversion Mat. 9.9 and it is a general rule Luke 9.23 where by following of Christ in the last place is meant imitating Christ thus it is new in respect of Christs Commandment 2 In respect of Christs efficacy and power working in our hearts vers 9. it is wrought and stampt in us by a new work of Christ in the spirits of his followers that they do indeed set their hearts to follow Christ 2 It is new in respect of us Believers 1 In regard of the outward hearing of the ear it is new never so plainly spoken before Follow me in all the Old Testament there is not such an expresse letter as follow Christ imitate Christ walk as Christ hath walked 2 In regard of that new work wrought in the hearts of Christians Ephes 4.24 that is but on such a frame of holinesse and righteousnesse wherein you may lively resemble the new Adam the new man Christ Vse 1 As we ought not to affect new-fanglednesse so we ought not to loathe and reject newnesse before St. John carefully avoided new fanglednesse now he commends newnesse The ground of this difference is 1 Look whatever comes from God the Ancient of days is always new and never waxeth old and as it is new so it is always old yea old enough if it come from God Eccles 1.9 2 If it come from God the newer it is the better it is because our old Natures and Corruptions and Courses should alwayes be abhorred of us but grace and that new man and new wayes of holinesse should be acceptable to us 3 If it be new and come from God it is a greater manifestation of God we may see a greater light in it than ever before Vse 2 Never look to fullfill this Commandment of imitating Christ untill you become new men for it is a new Commandment and a new Commandment requires new obedience and new obedience requires new spirits and a new man do not therefore think to follow Christ with old spirits thus much of the quality now follows the reason For the darknesse is past c. Doct. The state of the Children of God in this Life is as darknesse passing and true light now shining It is an excellent description of a godly mans Estate from his first Conversion forward the word in the Original signifies passing or a driving away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not so well translated past For the opening of the point consider there is a threefold darknesse and a threefold light 1 Darknesse of 1 Ignorance Mat. 4.16 2 Uncleannesse 2 Cor. 6.16 3 Affliction or discomfort Psal 112.4 2 Light of 1 Knowledge Mat. 4.16 2 Holinesse 2 Cor. 6.16 Ephes 5 8. 3 Comfort Psal 92.11 It may be spoken of all here but chiefly of the two former darknesse of ignorance and uncleannesse is passing away in a Christian and light of Knowledge and Holinesse is shining forth daily more and more in his heart Rom. 13.12 the day is at hand i. e. not yet come yet near at hand and the night far spent i. e. almost gone and spent yet not so spent as wholly gone the shadows of the night still remain but the day begins to dawn 2 Pet. 1.19 the dawning of the day is when the shaddows of darknesse are not yet clearly vanished and he doth not say the Sun but the day star which riseth ●efore the Sun a good while he there describes the State of the Church till the day of resurrection the light of the Gospel doth not yet clearly and fully shine but is only dawning Christ is in his Children as a day Star gives them comfortable light but the Sun is not yet in his strength Prov. 4.18 it is not yet perfect day with us no not with the best Christians under Heaven but it grows by degrees till it be perfect day with them which is at the day of their dissolution like to the earthen Pitchers of Gideons men Judg. 7.16.20 when they brake their Pitchers the Lamps gloriously shone forth and dazled their eyes thus it is with a Christian when these earthen Pitchers and carkasses are broken his light will shine forth gloriously in the mean time we have light we have lamps but they are in Pitchers shining very dimly Q. If we had been perfected the first day and the light had shined gloriously forth at the first had it not been better A. Yes if God had been pleased so to have done but God would not have it so and therefore it were not better God rather sees it fit that we should carry our light in earthen Vessels wherein there is partly darknesse and partly light 2 Cor. 4.7 and that for these reasons Reas 1 That God might shew his power in our weaknesse 2 Cor. 12 9 10. we should never have known Christs vetrue the power of Grace or the depth of our corruptions if wee had been perfected the first day of our conversion as God made the world by degrees and described it so because he would have us discern his power so God doth display the power of his grace by perfecting us by degrees and not all at once Reas 2 That God might teach us to war with spirituall enemies as God left Canaanites among those Isralites that had not known and were untaught in the wars of Canaan to prove them and to know if they would hearken to Gods Commandements Judg. 3.3 so God leaves his Children some imbred enemies still in their soules to humble us and to prove us and try if wee will cleave to him besides Jesus Christ loves and takes delight in ruling especially at home in the midst of his enemies Psal 110.2 in the midst of our corruptions in the midst of unbelief Faith rules in the midst of pride Humility rules in the midst of anger Meeknesse rules c. Grace gets ground in the midst of corruptions which is to the glory of Jesus Christ Reas 3 To prevent the multiplication of the Beasts of the Field amongst us as God left Canaanites among the Israelites to that end Exod. 23.29.30 if there were not weaknesses in us it were impossible for Gods people to live in the World 1 The World would not bear with us you know it would not bear with Christ who walked as meekly as might bee Joh. 14.30 i. e. Satan found no weaknesse in him no corruption in Christ for him to work upon if christians had a full and cleare light of grace breaking forth at once all would cry away with them they are not worthy to live Vse 1. See here a ground of the great difference between christians and christians differing in Faith differing in manners some are comfortably perswaded of their own Estates but others full of fears and doubts how comes this about truly it is with christians as it is with mornings of the day some mornings are a great deale more bright than others and some
be strong indeed to let the Word abide in you thus Joseph though he was much tempted to uncleannesse yet he did not consent but lookt at it as a breach of Gods Word how can I do this wickednesse and sinne against God none so able to resist temptations as those that have the Word of God abiding in them therefore if you would overcome pride wantonnesse c. let the Word of God dwell in you receive it in your Judgements in your wills memories affections do not think it weaknesse for men to have the Word abiding in them they are strong hee that fears God fears not any Commandment or threatning in respect of Gods hee that is affected with Gods promises regards not all the flatteries of the World Doct. Such young men as have the word of God abiding in them they overcome the wicked one this is one reason of their victory the abiding of the Word in them There are three special temptations of Satan either against Repentance or Faith or Sanctification now the Word of God is mighty through God to repell all these 1 Against the temptation of repenting so soon there is a Word that binds him Eccl. 12.1 a Word that threatens the contrary Eccl. 11.9 there are promises Prov. 8.17 there are comfortable examples as Josiah Timothy and these resist this temptation 2 If a man do give up his heart to God and will set on a good course yet he will make him live in pensivenesse and fears and doubts now against this the Word is powerful there are Commands to believe 1 Joh. 3.23 1 Joh. 5.1 Mat. 11.28 there are Threatnings if a man believes not Joh. 3. ult and there are notable Promises to him that believes Joh. 3. ult many Examples Paul believed on God and he was pardoned so Mary Magdalen and others 3 If a mans heart be satified in the pardon of sin then Satan will tempt him with some base Lusts that may defile and wound his Conscience now against this the Word hath First Commands 1 Thes 4.3 1 Pet. 1. Be ye holy as I am holy Mat. 5. ult Secondly Promises Rom. 2.6 to 8. and Threatnings to discourage him and Examples to encourage him as Paul Act. 24.16 I exercise my self to keep a good Conscience Q But how comes the Word to be thus powerful to overcome all the enemies of Salvation A. 1 Because it is the sword of the Spirit to cut asunder all lusts and temptations Ephes 6.17 No man hath more need of a sword to defend himself or offend his enemy than young men have of the Word to defend themselves and resist Satan and it is not so much the Letter of the Word as the Spirit of the Word that doth this the Word cuts off all temptations there is no place for invasion Vse 1 To teach us as we desire to walk in the World as Masters of the Field so as not to be beaten out and kept off either from Repentance or Faith or Sanctification let this be our care to have the Word of God ingrafted in us this is all our strength against temptations Q. But how shall I get the Word of God to abide in me A. 1. Be sure you keep your hearts broken and clean and if it be broken and clean the Word will abide there and will have the rule and dominion for the Word of God dwells in a trembling heart Isa 66.2 if we receive it with fear and reverence this very reverence will over-rule us Psal 119.161 what is the reason why Princes could not prevaile against him because his heart stood in awe of Gods Word so that is an antidote against all temptations and persecutions What if Princes rise against you that Prince of Darknesse Satan and his Angels if the Word dwell in you it will help you to resist them what if evil company come against you if the Word dwell in you it will help you How shall I do this great wickednesse c. the Word of God dwells in broken vessels and withall keep the Vessel clean keep your hearts pure come to the Word resolved not to keep any Lust that is the reason why Herod came not on because he clave to his Lusts to his Herodias wherefore lay aside all filthinesse and superfluity and receive with meeknesse the ingrafted Word of God Jam. 2.1 if you come to the Word with a broken and clean heart it will abide you 2 Look at the Word as wonderful as very effectual to do great things and that will make thee keep the Word in thee thus saith David Psalm 119.129 the sence of the great efficacy of the Word to humble you and cleanse you c. will make you keep the Word 3 Another means is to look up to God to send his Spirit that may bring to minde those things which you have need of and fasten them to your hearts though you forget the Word for the present yet when you are tempred to any Lust the Spirit will bring it to your remembrance Isa 30.21 You shall hear a voyce behind you saying This is the way walk in it 4 Ponder the Word of God in your hearts which was Maries practice Luke 2.19 and this made her an eminent Christian 5 Confer of the Word it is a great help to make it abide in you teaching it to others searching the Scripture Act. 17.11 12. 6 If you would have the Word abide in you give up your souls to a conscionable obedience of whatsoever you hear if you resolve to keep it it will mightily keep you against the World against Satan against your Lusts he that would keep his heart in a good frame let his heart stick close to the Word and the Word to it let them be riveted together that you may love the Word and rejoyce in it this is the very way to have the Word abide in you as therefore you desire to be Conquerors Let the Word dwell richly in you Col. 3.16 Isa 11.9 that so you may grow up to abundance of knowledge look at it as a wonderfull Word and submit your souls to it ponder on it conferre about it and this will help you against all Temptations 1 JOH 2.15 Love not the world nor the things of the world c. THe Apostle having exhorted to many Duties as keeping the Commandments and walking as Christ walked here hee removes an impediment which might hinder all and that is Love of the world and he writes here to young men and old men chiefly to little Babes he writes verse 18. In this verse we have a prohibition of Love in respect of a double Object 1 The world 2 The things of the world This prohibition is grounded on a three-fold reason 1 From the removal of the love of the Father from such 2 Love not the things of the world because whosoever is in the world is either the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes or the pride of life and is not of the Father vers
over-masters that temptation what made David fall but the lust of the flesh what made Peter deny his Master was it not fear of death what made D●mas forsake Paul was it not love of the World so that there is no temptation but it is headed with the World if it be not pointed with the World it can doe little so that if the Prince of the World come and find nothing of the world in us or love to profit or pleasure or credit he can doe nothing as Christ when he saw he had no love to these things he had nothing to doe with him Vse 3 Of consolation to every soul who though he be busie in the World yet loves not the World it is not the having of the World nor the having of the lusts of the World that makes you enemies to God but the love of them so that you may have the World and the lusts thereof and yet have God too so that you love them not but desire to mortifie them and crucifie them let God see that your heart and strength and the vigour of your spirits be towards God not for your own lusts but for Gods service and then though a man have the World and many lusts in him against his will these doe not seperate him from the love of the Father 1 JOHN 2.16 For all that is in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the World IN the former ver the Apostle diswaded both old and young from the love of the World and the things of the World that is the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life And he diswades them from this from a threefold reason 1 Love not the World for it evacuates the love of God in us verse 13. latter end 2 The lusts of the World are not of God but of the World verse 16. 3 The third reason why we should not love the World and the lusts thereof is from their nature and original they are not permanent but passe away Doct. All the sinfull dispositions and courses of the World are of these three sorts either the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye or the pride of life This Text is a sufficient warrant though there be no other such division in Scripture for every Word of God is perfect therefore all the sinfull dispositions and wayes of the World are either the lusts of the flesh of the eye or pride of life Lusts of the flesh are such as are stirred up by the flesh which being obtained our bodies find comfort such pleasure as we find in meat and drink or women in intemperancy or incontinency Lusts of the eye are such as satisfie the sences and that is called covetousnesse and they are called lusts of the eye because the eye is only satisfied with them Pride of life is the affecting of a mans own carnall excellency when he looks only at himself and hath an high conceit of himself Reas 1 From the observation of what the heart is set upon when it is drawn aside to any concupiscence either credit leads a man or profit and pleasure leads him Jam. 1.14 every man is drawn aside of his own concupiscence if to credit that is pride of life if to Profits that is lust of the eye if to Pleasure that is lust of the flesh Reas 2 From the answer of such objections as might be made against this Obj. 1 You may say there are many sins which fall not under this division as when a man grows contentious it may be neither for profit nor pleasure nor pride Ans No contention but springs from pride Prov. 13.10 a carnal affecting of his own excellency makes him contend Object 2 Atheisme or superstition no profit or pleasure or credit in it so prophanesse what profit or pleasure or credit in swearing Ans All the sins against the first table fall either under Atheisme or Superstition or Prophanesse and all these proceed from disobedience which is want of feare and reverence of God which is nothing else but pride doe you see any Creature neglect Religion surely it is from pride of heart Psal 10.3 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seeke after God so superstition comes from pride though it seems to be done in humility and devotion Col. 2. ult Micah 6.6 7 8. doe not come before him with your own inventions and think to please him for it is nothing but pride so for prophanenesse as swearing or Sabbath-breaking it comes from pride so when Pharaoh said who is God I know him not it proceeded from pride Exod. 9.17 so whensoever men breake off the bonds of Gods service and will not be held in this springs from pride of heart that they will not be subject to the Lord. Obj. Indulgence to Children as in David and Eli when they cannot find in their hearts to give them a bad speech doth this spring from pride or profit or pleasure is it not rather meeknesse and mildnesse Ans Such indulgence alwayes proceeds from pride thou hast honoured thy children above me 1 Sam. 2.29 when a man should ra●her see God dishonoured than his Children or his Children honoured than God this is a great measure of pride Object 4. What say you to timerousnesse when out of very fear a man neglects Religion as Peter denyed his Master for fear it was neither for pleasure or profit or pride or whence comes Cains or Judas his despaire comes this from pride Ans This springs from pride of heart when a man grows so timerous for was it not for his self confidence that God left Peter to such basenesse of spirit and when he preferred his own pleasure and safety was not this a lust of the eye so Pilate what made him afraid of Caesar was it not love of his own safety did he not honour himselfe before God and was not that pride and from whence came Cains despair was it not from his pride against his Brother he envied his Brother and what was that but pride and for Judas his despair it is from pride of heart in that God is not in a mans heart if he find not comfort in himselfe he will not seek it in God but seek it rather in an halter this is pride this is pride that he cannot brook such horrours of conscience as God inflicts had he had an humble soul he would have contented himself and looked up to Christ for pardon as well as many that crucified him all basenesse of spirit and timerousnesse proceeds from pride that makes a man afraid to offend such great men it is because they would not loose their credit and honour and is not this pride aut servit humiliter aut superbe dominatur ejusdem spiritus est basely to serve or proudly to domineer Let us survey the whole Law of God and all sins will fall
weaned from but civill customes spring from the light of Christ shining in us in morall oeconomicall and politicall vertues 2. When there is a lust in Gods children against them though many receive them their hearts are secretly set against them this is a signe they are carnall and we must turn from them Reas 1. These cannot satisfie our soules they are transitory and our souls eternal what should an high soaring Eagle meddle with such flies an eternal soule must be set upon an eternall object 2. These are corporall and feed the body onely in the midst of these the soul is blind carnall foolish these are disproportionable to the nature of it and therefore cannot strengthen it 3. They are not of the Father and therefore lead us not to the Father a man cannot work above the sphear of his calling so give up your hearts to these and you will never reach higher Vse 1. Shews we may conform to the civill customes of the World the Holy Ghost doth not forbid those 1 Cor. 9.20 21 22. Paul became all things to all men so that in pretence of mortification we must not fill our spirits with morosity and rusticall rudenesse good manners and civill respects stand well with Christianity 2. This shews that we may have a lawfull use of honours and pleasures and riches we are to use them as from God and to God 3. It teacheth us what is in the World and of the World that we are to be weaned from viz. from corrupt Customes they are of the World and are transitory and corporeall and lead us not to the Father Thus much for the Generall now because these lusts before mentioned are the springs of all the lusts in the World therefore we will speak of them in particular Doct. Old-men and Young-men are to be weaned from the lusts of the flesh For he writes to Old-men and Young-men Love not the World nor the things of the World for all that is in the World the lust of the flesh c. Quest 1. What are the lusts of the flesh The lust of the flesh is an affection to satisfie the flesh as Col. 2. ult whatsoever therefore the flesh the body of man not taking it for the whole corrupt nature for that includes all these sins but these lusts are bodily lusts such as the body desires to be satisfied with Now the body stirs up first to intemperancy whereof two parts Gluttony and Drunkennesse 2. The body tends to Incontinency Whoredome and Adultery 3. The body desires ease and pleasure Gluttony and Drunkennesse in meat and drink Wantonnesse Whoredome love to Idlenesse and pastime all these are included here and to Children he doth not speak for they are not usually given to eat much or drink more than needs but when they have enough they cease and for inconstancy they are not tempted to it and for ease it cannot be Idlenesse in them though they spend much time in pastime and play Zech. 8.5 for their bodies are too weak to labour and their minds to study are too shallow but when they come to riper years let them be imployed but even the first seven years are spent in pastime and God looks not much at it but you young men and old men love not intemperancy incontinency or idlenesse 1 The body distempered with meat is Gluttony with drink is Drunkennesse Now a man may sin in Gluttony and Drunkenness or Intemperancy either when his appetite is carried to an unfit object as 1. When a man hath a longing desire to those things which are hurtfull unto him as if by the Physician Wine be forbidden or salt meats to some bodies yet there is a lust in mens natures to affect these it was a lust of intemperancy in the old Law to desire after any unclean meats forbidden Lev. 8. and God reproves it Isa 65.4 they lusted after Swines flesh and abominable things so that though a man exceed not in the measure yet in the object this is intemperance such a lust was that in our first Parents Gen. 3.6 here was lusting after a meat forbidden because she saw it was faire 2. This lust shews it selfe not so much in the nature of the meats or drinks as in the the measure of it for a man may exceed measure in eating and drinking 1 Beyond health when it is not for strength Eccl. 10.16 17. it is a lust forbid to eat in the morning excessively and glut themselves this is beyond the strength of the body the same may be said of drinks in excessive manner Luke 21.34 when the Lungs and Liver are distempered and inflamed and health hurt Prov. 23.26 this is an excesse 2 When we covet meats and drinks beyond the measure of our estate when we lust above our means Prov. 23.20 21. when by costly meat and drink he weakens his estate Prov. 21.17 if a man be given to costly fare he shall surely come to poverty 3 A man may exceed when he exceeds the measure of due order when they compell men to eat and drink more than willingly they would 4 When we exceed the bounds of reason when we so eat and drink that we forget our businesse and reason is quite disturbed as Lot was so drunk that he defiled his Daughters Gen. 19.33 35. and Noah was so far drunk that he could not cover his nakednesse in Lot his reason was wholly taken away in Noah partly and now whether reason be disturbed in part or in whole it is a lust of the flesh 5 He may exceed the bounds of his Calling when he eats or drinks so much as makes him unfit for his Calling this is a lust of the flesh that hinders either our generall or particular Calling Luke 21.34 and for particular Calling we read Exod. 32. They ate and dranke and rose up to play so that the meat and drink that should strengthen a man utterly disables him to follow his Calling 3. If we be carried to meat and drink with no other end but to eat and drink and satisfie our appetite this is a lust of the flesh a satisfying of the flesh and looking no further than to serve the body this is oft the failing of many that abhor Gluttony and Drunkennesse yet ask them why they eat and drink it is onely to satisfie their appetite this is onely to fulfill the lusts of the flesh Col. 2. ult 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether ye eat or drinke doe all to the glory of God therefore not onely to please Nature but to make you fit for Gods service either in your generall or particular callings Let this be the last end of all your meat and drink to glorifie God to make you more chearfull and strong about the businesse God calls you to not that it is a sin to satisfie the appetite for God hath not made the appetite frustrate and it is of God to be hungry and thirsty and we may chear our bodies but we must not terminate all this in eating
and drinking for then it is a lust of the flesh Gen. 27.3 4. Go and take thy Bow and take some Venison and make me savoury meat such as my soul loveth What did he onely look to please his appetite no but that I may eat and blesse thee that being refreshed by thy provision I may be strengthned to blesse thee a lively Pattern for all Christians so to eat savoury meat as that we may be fitted for prophecy if God call fit to pray if God call fit to hear fit for any duty God shall call us to and not to make us more dull and heavy Thus we see intemperance is a lust of the flesh and wherein it consists Next to that follows incontinency which is an affection to women which is inordinate Mat. 5.28 and that is a lust to be avoided of all And this lust expresses it selfe in three kinds 1 When it is carried to a wrong object 2 When it exceeds measure 3 When it aimes not at a right end For the first Sometimes the heart is carried to beastly unnaturall lusts against nature and order as with beasts Lev. 18. secondly If it be carried to kindred as when Ammon defiled his Sister Tamer and this lust lies in carrying it selfe to a wrong object thirdly When it is carried in women to men or men to women before consent of Parents though it may be a fit match yet it must be with consent of Parents though the Angell prospered Abrahams Servant in his way yet he durst not ask Rebeccahs good-will before he asked the good-will of her Parents 2 It is a lustfull affection in conjugall affection when it exceeds measure as when for it he omits his duty to God or denies his profession sometimes a man hath a good affection to Religion but the love of his wife carries him away Luke 14.26 a man may be so transported to his wife that he dare not be forward in Religion lest he displease his wife and so the wife least she displease her husband and this is an inordinate love when it exceeds measure 3 It is a lust of the flesh when they are so transported with affection that they look at no higher end than marriage it selfe to have conjugall affection 1 Cor. 7.29 the meaning is let such as have wives look at them not for their own ends but to be better fitted for Gods service and bring them nearer to God and then we so have wives as if we had them not every man is to look at his wife as a Talent sent from God and therefore he must look to restore it better by twofold at least that I may say Lord here is the wife thou gavest me and I am the more wise and humble and gracious and so Children and Servants when we affect them onely to doe our businesse and look at no higher end but our selves this is a lust of the flesh when in any thing we enjoy we look no higher but to please our selves therein 4 There is a lust of the flesh which is a lust of pastime or pleasure inordinately and this God threatens with poverty Prov. 21.17 There is a threefold lust in pastime 1 When we are set on unlawful Objects unlawful Games 2 In excessive Manner 3 To a wrong end 1 Our pastimes are unlawfull in respect of the Object if we make a pastime of every thing of such things as should be matters of devotion and sorrow and humiliation we may not jest in Scripture phrase neither may we make shews and pageants of Scripture stories as of Christ or other holy men this is unlawfull to make pastime of holy things when Moses drew near to God and God called to him I am the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob Exod. 3.5 God bid him put of his shooes for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground when men come into the presence of God you should put off your shooes that is your unclean affections if we come near to God we must not come with common ordinary affections we must not come with our old shooes so cards and dice we may not make a pastime of them if they be lots it is an ordinance of God and therefore not to be made a pastime of Obj. There are some religious lots some civill some indifferent if we should deal with divine lots we should use more devotion but the other a man may take more liberty in Ans I say all lots are religious whether they be about holy things as choosing Apostles or civill as casting lots about division of lands or any other thing to determine a controversy or the like as they cast lots on Christs Garments for it is not the object that makes a thing lawfull or unlawfull as whether we swear in Religious or Civill matters or Lusory because whatsoever we swear about we call God to be a witnesse so in all kinde of lottery whatsever it be about we appeal to God who is disposer of all things Prov. 16.33 for man being but causa per accidens of the event of the lot there must be some cause per se and that is God so that whatsoever it be about though matters of pastime or lusory it is a religious ordinance because it appeals to divine providence and therefore to be avoided 2 It is a wrong object when we set our pastime on other mens sins which should be matter of griefe and sorrow 2 Pet. 2.3 it was prophanenesse in Cham to make a mock at his Fathers nakednesse so it is prophanesse to make others drunk and then make a pastime of it and so for stage-playes to put on womens apparrell to make pastime so to make pastime by them who live without a calling 3 When men play with the Judgements of God Psal 119.120 if you see Gods Judgements on another make not a pastime of other mens infirmities in this regard it hath been thought unmeet for great men to keep fools and mad-men to make them pastime 1 Sam. 21.14 15. he thought it unmeet for the gravity of a King to make pastime of his folly not but that a man may smile at the simplicity of an Ideot but yet he should see Gods hand in it and be thankfull to God that he is not such a one so it is unlawfull to make a mear recreation of hawking and hunting seeing the enmity between the Creatures came for our sins and therefore it should be a matter of compassion 2 Pastime is unlawfull when it exceeds measure 1 Of time Ephes 5.16 when men spend whole nights and dayes in pastime 2 When men make an occupation of recreation as stage-players and musicians men should have a calling besides so then it is prophanesse for a man altogether to follow his pastime and recreation according to the Proverb What hath a Gentlemen but his pleasure six dayes should be imployed in the works of our callings 3 When we abuse it in excesse of our affections that our hearts are overwhelmed therewith
to look upon a Maid Job 31.1 so for drink Prov. 23.31 Prov. 4.15 it is a notable means of mortification to withhold the blood and spirits from flowing into that member thereby in a good measure they stupifie it Secondly Use some course to stupifie that part Thirdly Cut it off would you mortifie lust Beware of all occasions if such meats or drinks wilt make you Gluttons or Drunkards meddle not with them and so you shall hinder influence to these lusts apply the death of Christ the threatnings of God and so when it begins to stupifie cut it off better it is to want all the sinful pleasures of this life than having of them to be cast into Hell 2 Refrain from bringing forth fruit of these lusts the more fruitful a Tree grows the more sap and strength it draws and strikes deeper into thee earth so let sin once grow fruitful bring forth acts it will get deeper hold and grow so rooted that it will reign in you if you avoyd all occasions and yeeld not to satisfie the least of them it will soon be gone if a strange Dogg comes in if you feed him he stands waiting for one piece after another but if you beat him he is gone where he may finde better entertainment so if lusts find that they can have no entertainment they cannot get one morsell no yeilding to them but repulsing they will be gone from you where they may finde better welcome 3 When thou findest any lust of the flesh arising in thee turn the strength of it to a Spiritual end A man hath an affection to meat or drink what saith Christ I have meat and drink that ye know not of though he were very faint and hungry yet when he saw a company come he attended not to his meat and drink but there was Spiritual food and that comforted and refreshed him so art thou troubled with lust after Women and God calls thee not to Marriage why turn the strength of thy affection to another that is white and ruddy the fairest of ten thousand The more you set your heart to consider how amiable and beautiful and excellent he is you shall finde he will so satisfie your heart that you will finde little content in any other thing besides As the Sun if it shine hot on a fire it puts it out so the love of Christ if it once shine in your hearts and fill your souls with light and joy unspeakable and glorious you shall finde all base Kitching lusts were they never so vehement the Sun of Righteousnesse will soon eat them out so for love of idlenesse and rest let but a Soul consider what comforts he ever found in the favour of God when his left hand was under him and when God held him up in his everlasting Arms do but consider how sweet was one hour of that inward peace you found then above all outward comforts you shall easily see that though your body should never finde rest more yet this inward peace will so satisfie you that you will be ready to say with Paul I have enough I have learned in all these to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-sufficient that I need not more Phil. 4.11 12. 4 Walk faithfully and constantly in your general and particular Callings the reason why a Christian grows carnal and sensual is because either in Gods Ordinances or his particular Calling hee was not spiritually minded walk in the Spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.16 be spiritual and heavenly in Prayer in hearing the Word in your Calling and you shall finde your lusts decay otherwise he that rusheth into occasions of sin needlesly he tempts the Devil to tempt him so that whereas the Devil might otherwise be much weakened and not so able to overcome if we invite occasions and rush into such places where Satan reigns we thrust Weapons into Satans hand and a man never ordinarily leads himself into temptation but he falls let Peter go into the High Priests Hall he shamefully denies his Master before he come out therefore take heed of running into occasions of sin 2 Refrain from the fruits of sin and grow Spiritually minded look after Spiritual objects when we are carried to Sensual objects when we are carried to delight in pleasures and pastimes why let us remember Blessed is the man that hath not walked c. Psal 1.1 2 3. but his delight is in the Law of the Lord he recreates himself his Soul in that such a man shall be as a tree planted by the rivers of water ever sucking sap and grace from the Ordinances that so he grows up but contrary such a one as runs into occasions and fullfills his ●●sts he shall be as a barren Heath and parched Wildernesse his leaf and fruit blasted We come now to the second sort of lusts Doct. Young and old are to be weaned from any lusts of the eye By the lust of the Eye is meant Covetousnesse or inordinate desire of profit 1 Because the Eye makes us covet it as Achan Josh 7.21 2 Because the eye in some measure is glutted with the sight of it Obj. Why doth he not speak of lusts of the Ear for 2 Tim. 2.4 there is an itching Ear thus the Athenians Acts 17 21 and so some have a strong affection to Musick and never well without it this is a lust of the Ear and why is not this reckoned as well as the lust of the eye Aquinas makes this Objection and answers it thus That these lusts stand not so much on the bodily eye as the imagination but the man may as well desire curiosities by the Ear as the Eye make us covet what it sees Answ The answer therefore is the Eye is the seat of sundry Faculties 1 It may be referred to the Understanding and Imagination for that is in the Soul Psal 33.18 2 The hope of a man is translated to his Eye 2 Chron. 20.12 sometimes pity Thine eye shall not spare Deut. 13. sometimes disdain expresseth it self in the eye sometimes pride Prov. 30. in a lofty look and the eye is put oft for the desire of the heart when the eye looks long after it Matth. 5.28 there is a desire that reacheth to something Psal 54. Psal 92.1 Mine eye also shall see my desire upon mine enemies not onely hopes but desires are ever in the eye It is true therefore that the desire of Melody is a lust of the flesh desire of news to satisfie curiosity affection of vain preaching tends to satisfie the pride of life for the lust of all outward senses as far as they satisfie the Senses and Body they belong to the lusts of the flesh but a longing earnest desire after profit is Covetousnesse which is a lust of the eye Q. 1. Wherein stands the lust of the eye A. Either when it is set on wrong objects or in excessive measure or to a wrong end and these the Scripture aims at if the
eye be set on wrong objects this the Scripture calls an hastie eye that have it he will per fas nefasque Prov. 28.22 23. a man of an evil eye hasts to be rich never staying on Gods Providence such was Achans lust and Ahabs after Naboths Vine-yard he made hast to obtain it so a man makes haste when he pursues some gain not lawfully but by Symony or Sacriledge or Bribery or Deceit Isa 33.16 so that a man looks at his gain and not at God Quaerenda pecunia primum est Virtus post nummos so that a man hastes so much after wealth that he cannot stay Sermons or Prayers he must follow his gain and he will have it by hook or by crook this lust is against Piety because our love to God should make us affect nothing but what we may lawfully enjoy and in subordination to his will and to imploy it to his service 2 This lust of the Eye is expressed in excessive measure and this is called a greedy eye a man perhaps will not get it but by honesty but when he hath laid hold on goods he is never satisfied Eccl. 4.8 so Eccl. 5.9 10 11. like a Dropsie the more a man drinks the more he desires so the more a man hath the more he desires Prov. 27.20 there a greedy eye or covetous heart is compared to Hell and the Grave you may as soon satisfie Hell as a covetous heart you may sooner fill his Land or Houses or Barns than fill his eye that is never satisfied This greedy eye offends against that inward contentment that a man owes to his Soul when he is so covetous that his heart is never satisfied Q. When should a man think himself satisfied and how far may he desire those things A. In our Callings we must be diligent and we may desire Wealth of God partly for our necessity and expediency and partly to leave to our Posterity thus far a man may desire Wealth but we are never to desire more than we have good use of and glorifie God by a man must be content as well to want as abound but when a man is insatiably craving when hee hath much hee would have more and when he hath most he is not satisfied that is a greedy eye 3 There is a lust of the Eye that fails in the end as it is insatiable so it is an unprofitable desire and when a man craves Wealth for Wealths sake and never takes care to use it well and this I call a needy eye when God calls him to bestow some on Church or Common-wealth or Family or Friends what saith he what know I whether I may have need my self and so for fear of future need he will not provide seasonably for Family or Church or Common-wealth he will part with nothing willingly unlesse hee see it be for his profit Deut. 15.19 this needy eye is therefore reproved and this was in Nabal 1 Sam. 25.11 he was afraid his Servants should want and therefore would not supply Davids necessity This needy eye trespasseth against Liberality and Charity The ground of this evil eye is an evil judgment it springs from a blinde eye whereby it is possest that wealth is good in it self and he places his happinesse in his riches and his safety and life stands in it contrary to the assertion of our Saviour Luke 12.15 A mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which hee possesseth and therefore hee desires wealth above all things Vse 1 It discovers the true nature of Covetousnesse you will say I hope frugality is not Covetousnesse and providing for Children and Family true but dost thou see thy heart carried after wealth though by unlawful means by Symony or Deceit or Sabbath-breaking then thy heart is covetous because thou hastest to be rich thou art so hasty that thou canst neither stay for Sermons or Prayer or grace certainly then Covetousnesse transports thee the first born of Hell 2 When thou art diligent if gain come not in thou art not content or if much come in yet thou art not satisfied 3 When thou hast wealth thou takest no care how to use it thou grudgest to give any thing to Church or Common-wealth or poor Friends thou saist what if thy self and thy Children should want why truly this needy eye is Covetousnesse but when thou takest lawful pains and it hinders thee in no good duty if God crosse thee thou art content if God blesse thee thou art forward to be helpful to do any good then thou art not covetous Vse 2 Of exhortation to Young men and Old-men Love not the World nor the things of the World you see how such trespasse against Piety and Liberality and Charity it is the root of all evil 1 Tim. 6.10 not so much the breeding root as the feeding root of all evil and it is called the root of all evil in three respects 1 It separates from God the fountain of all good Col. 3.5 and therefore it is called Idolatry because hee blesseth himself in his riches Psal 49.18 Prov. 18.11 Mat. 6.24 wealth makes him serve Mammon rather than God Deut. 13.18 2 It choaks the best seed of the Word sometimes keeps him from coming to the Word Luke 14.14 or distracts him there or choaks the Word afterwards 3 Covetousnesse exposeth a man to every temptation of Satan lays him open to Satan to be a slave unto him makes him to Apostatize Swear Lye Deceive if he propounds wealth to himself as the chiefest good 2 If you belong to God you shall seldom finde your hearts straitned and Gods face turned away but it is for your Covetousnesse Isa 57.17 18. he sees you neglect him and his Ordinances for wealths sake Remedies against Covetousnesse 1 A contented desire Heb. 13.5 if you can say once I have enough I am full I am content to part with any thing Q. But how shall the content 2 Godlinesse is both great gain and contentment and till God gives grace the Soul is never satisfied when the Soul is endued with grace it is content in regard of these outward things There are two things in godlinesse that breed content and satisfaction 1 It makes God our portion and then dry bread and cold water with Gods favour and mercy is a sufficient portion to us and our Children Psal 16.5 6. this made Paul content Phil. 4. 2 It doth not only fill our hearts with God but it turnes the desire of the Soul to Gods Ordinances godlinesse will make a man look at the Word as more precious than gold 119.27 and as an hidden treasure that he will part with all for Psal 36.6 7. Psal 63.13 Now we come to the third sort of Lusts the Pride of life Doct. Pride of Life Young and Old are to be weaned from Pride of Life is an inordiate affection of our hearts unto Carnal excellency i. e. to be great in our selves and for our selves a proud man contends with God about
and wish you had never kept them company but on the contrary had you but once got into a near communion with the Saints you should never depart from them it was the saying of a late faithful Servant of God Dr. Preston Though I leave my life yet I shall not leave my company Vse 5 Of consolation to any soul that ever had true fellowship with Christ and his church having once loved you he will love you to the end 1 Cor. 10.13 1 Thes 5.23 24. Psal 37.23 24 25. though we doe fall yet the Lord puts under his hand Rom. 8.25 Rom. 5.10 1 Pet. 1.5 we are kept by the power of God to Salvation he embraceth us with his everlasting arms so that if we have once got fellowship with God and his Church fear not you shall not fall and if you doe start aside and feed on ill Dyet you shall finde the smart of it he will humble you that he may save you at the last day Doct. It is a note of seducers or Antichristian Teachers to depart from the fellowship of the Church They went out from us because they were not of us and so such were never cordial or hearty to the church therefore when you see any fall off know it argues an Antichristian spirit 2 Thes 2 3. 1 Tim. 4.1 Many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall depart from the Church so that all Antichristian spirits have a corrupt spirit of seperation For Explication Q 1. What is this seperation A. 1. A seperation Local such was that practise of the Tribe of Gad. and Manasses Josh 22.9 10. it was not seperation in fellowship as they professe vers 26 27 but that is not a seperation that makes an Antichrist 2 A departing in fellowship which yet falls short of an Antichristian spirit though it deserve blame and reproof Gal. 2.12 not but that his judgement and affection was with them yet he with-drew from their society in Ordinances for this Paul blamed him but yet it was not an Antichristian spirit though he were a man of great zeale and courage yet none so subject to be carried away with fear as he was let christians therefore most suspect themselves there wherein they least suspect themselves and think themselves strongest but this was an infirmity in him 3 There is a departing from the Faith of the church or sitting loose from them in Spirit judgement and affection their Doctrin contrary and hearts contrary as Paul saith In the latter dayes certain shall depart from the Faith Heb. 10.25 to 29. so that such fall off not only in place or fellowship in ordinance but in judgment heart and affection that is a mark of an Antichristian spirit Jude 4.5 3 Epist Joh. 8 9 10. It is said of the new converts that were added to the church that they continued in the Apostles Doctrin and fellowship Acts 2.42 therefore when they break from the fellowship of the church they depart from the Apostles doctrin Q. What be the grounds A. 1. From the fellowship the true Members of the church have with Christ 1 Joh. 1.4 therefore when you see a spirit of with-drawing from the fellowship of the church they depart from the Apostles Doctrine and if from them then from Christ for surely our fellowship is with God and with the Son therefore to prevent that denying of Christ he gives them charge that they doe not forsake assembling themselves c. Heb. 10.25 to 29. A finger cut off from the hand is not only cut off from the hand but from the head too so if men fall off from the Members they will also fall off from Christ the Head Vse 1. Seems to inform our judgements what to think in case of seperation for this place is much abused The Papists they build on this place that they that seperate from their church are Antichrists That company say they that breake off from the fellowship of the church is Antichristian as it is plain here now what were Calvin and Luther but such as brake off from the fellowship of the church therefore they were of Antichrists spirit and fore-runners of him We must therefore know it is not every seperation from that which is called a church that is a note of an Antichristian spirit but it must be known whether that were the true church now this church St. John speaks of was the true Church for it was from such whose sins were forgiven now if it be not a true Church that they breake from it is no sign of Antichrist 2 Chro. 11.16 such as set their hearts to seek the Lord seperated themselves from those that followed Jereboam and came to Jerusalem so the Apostles were faine to seperate from the Church of the Jewes which persecuted Christ and them and so constituted a Church by themselves a Christian Church so then it is not a seperation from a false Church but a true that is a sign of an Antichristian spirit Obj. But what pretence or just ground had such Divines to fall from the Romish Church or we in England for we only upon the falling out of Hen. 8. with the Pope fell from him A. True that matter of Divorce did move him to fail off from the Pope and indeed that cause was enough to fall off from the Pope who would binde a Prince to an unlawful Marriage But the whole body of Christendom had a Three-fold ground of seperation which may be just when a Church is heretical that is hold an errour contrary to the foundation obstinately yet that is not a sufficient ground as the Church of Corinth denied the Resurrection from the Dead yet he calls them Saints so though the Pharisees had charged that none should profess Christ which was an obstinate denying of Christ and taught false Doctrine yet Christ charges them to obey them because they sit in Moses Chair and therefore fundamental erroneousnesse is not alwayes a just cause 1 Therefore that is a just cause of seperation when a Church is infected with Blasphemy and Contradiction and Blaspheme the wayes of God Acts 19.19 Acts 13.45 46. 2 Idolatry is a just ground of seperation 2 Cor. 6.16 17 18. 3 Persecution is a just ground of seperation Mat. 10.23 Acts 8.1 Now all these have met in the Church of Rome they have blasphemed and condemned as Heretical Justification by Faith and other fundamentall truths 2 They worship Images as of the Virgin Mary yea with Divine honour as the Bread in the Sacrament what greater Idolatry 3 The World knows and the blood of thousands of Martyrs can testifie their horrible Persecutions that as long as we were subordinate to them we could not profess the true Religion without loss of Goods and life therefore we have just cause to seperate our selves from them Vse 2. It may teach us what to judge of the Seperatists or Brownists are they of Antichrist Surely their practise is blame-worthy 1 Because they seperate where Christ keeps fellowship Rev.
by Deceivers why calls he them so A. A Deceiver is such a one who upon pretence of that which is good and true puts us off with that which is counterfeit and naught So these false Teachers deceit is in their Doctrin and in their persons In their Persons 2 Cor. 11.13 In their Doctrin they make us beleeve it is the Doctrin of Christ in but in truth it is empty windy doctrin Ephes 4.14 Vse 1 May serve to stir us up so much the more to hate and detest them and to a more serious watchfulness against them a man hates a Deceiver worse than a Robber a man had rather lose his Purse by violence than be cunningly cheated of it the reason is because a man that takes your Purse only wrongs you of your Mony but the other deprives you of your Money and also befools you and makes a mock at it so these Deceivers do not only deprive us of the truth but through cunning delusions they over-reach us and laugh us to scorn 2 Pet. 2.14 Let us therefore try all things and hold fast that which is good 1 Thes 5.21 If we heard that there were counterfeit Money abroad and cunning Fellows that would undermine us we would look narrowly to our selves why there are cunning Deceivers abroad which will not only deceive you of your Purses and Goods but of your Faith and the Gospel and Salvation therefore how circumspect and careful ought we to be it is a wonderful sluggishness of spirit when we know there are so many false Teachers now in the Land and yet it is a wonder to see how raw we are in the Scriptures how unapt to answer any thing out of the Scripture if we were put to it therefore do not only receive the truth from the credit of Ministers or our own spirits but warranted from the Word that we may be ready to render a Reason of the hope that is in us Doct. 3. Sometimes in reproving and confuting of false Teachers it is seasonable to conceal their names Saint John doth not say These things I write unto you concerning Corinthus or Ebion but he passeth by their names and saith These things I write unto you concerning Deceivers 2 Cor. 11.13 2 Cor. 15.12 Gal. 1.7 Phil. 3.2 Jude 4. he doth not there describe them he names none yet sometimes we read he names them 1 Tim. 1.19 2 Tim. 2.18 2 Tim. 4.14 15. It is seasonable to conceal their names 1 When there may be any hope of their conversion we should not too much exasperate them because the contention is not so much against their persons as against their Doctrin and practice 2 When it were good that both they and their Doctrin should utterly perish and be forgot Gal. 5.12 It is seasonable to expresse their names 1 When they are excommunicate Hymeneus and Philetus 2 That others may beware of them 2 Tim. 4.14 15. Vse To teach us to forbear personall invectives in our writings a wound in a mans good name is a wound in the apple of his eye a man that hath his eye hurt he sees you not so if you strike a man on his good name it is hard if ever he hear any thing after from you He writes to them about them that seduce them yet they did not seduce them but only did endeavour it Doct. 4. The desire and indeavour to deceive is deceit Such as have a desire and purpose to deceive are indeed deceivers though they actually seduce not 2 Joh. 7. Rom. 16.17 18. 2 Cor. 11.13 as he that looks after a woman to lust after her commits Adultry Matth. 5.28 because in his heart he desires it so because a man hath a long look in his heart to deceive he is a Deceiver you read of some that trod under foot the bloud of Christ Heb. 10.29 now that is impossible for Christ is in Heaven yet if a man do what in him lies it is as if he did it Reas From Gods acceptance of the will for the deed whether in good or evil 2 Cor. 8.12 therefore it was provided in the Law if any man did bear false witnesse against his neighbour it should be death because he would have taken away his Neighbours life so if there be a will in a man to deceive it is as if he did deceive And as the poor Woman Luke 21.4 is said to cast more into the Treasury than they all because she had a will to do it and put forth her self to her utmost ability so if a man put forth himselfe in what he can to deceive though he never reach it yet he is a Deceiver for though it be impossible the Elect should be seduced Matth. 24.24 yet it is his desire and endeavour to do it for God hath communicated to men more will and desire many times then power to accomplish it therefore if there be will to it the hinderance is not on mans part but on Gods Vse 1. Must teach men to make as much conscience of their wills and desires as of their acts men are apt to excuse themselves in respect of the will if the act be not done but didst thou desire it and go about it if thou hadst a mind to it then it is done because God sees that which was in thine heart as done there was the desire of thy soul and the endeavour of thy hand but that it came not to passe is from Gods hand Vse 2. This may be a singular comfort to Gods servants that cannot do what good they would they have a minde to profit by the Word to read and pray as they ought but they cannot I say if there be a willing minde that the desire of thy soul is towards God if thy c●re and endeavour be to do it it is certainly done though thou canst not reach it Gen. 22.12 Abraham did spare his Son why true but that was because God held his hand but because he went three dayes journey and came to the place God had appointed and built an Alter and bound him and would have slaine him though upon Gods calling from Heaven to him he spared him ye God accounts it as if he did it so had a man many corruptions in his heartt that were as his Isaac darling lusts if thou use all means to mortifie and crucifie them though thou canst not get the Victory over them as thou desirest yet God accounts it as if they were Mortified if God will have it rest there and say it is enough it is an acceptable sacrifice to God when David had a minde to build a Temple to God and prepared abundantly for it though God forbad him yet saith he it was well it was in thine heart and I will therefore build thee an house 2 Sam. 7. he accepted the will for the need so if thou set thy heart to build Gods House to be doing good to the Church and reforme the Town where you live if in authority though you fall short
of them they will sway him So men think that learned men and wise God must needs accept and they cannot go wrong John 7.48 3. It is the conceit of men that God blesseth the good with prosperity and the wicked have want and adversity So did Job's friends 4. They measure Gods righteousnesse to reach no farther then the second Table 5. It any be so enlightned that they know God requires service to himselfe they content themselues with performance of duties without engaging of their hearts and lives Psal 51.6 6. Some that are of the best discerning they finde some desires after the Word some affections in prayer and fasting Rom. 10.3.4 They performe duties not onely to men but God and they doe God service zealously where is the defect They being ignorant of the righteousnesse of Christ go about to establish their own righteousnesse they know God requires righteousnesse with zeal and yet they know not the righteousnesse of Christ they think that the doing of good duties and that zelously will serve them at the day of judgement they never knew what need they had of Christ to cover their imperfections and to help them to perform good duties hence those did persecute Paul who knew the righteousnesse of Christ better then they Acts 21. c. Obj. But doth it not fall out oftentimes that evill men know good men Herod knew John Answ Sometimes a hypocrite may discern a righteous man but then they are more then meer worldly men 1 Cor. 12.1 2 3. There must be some works of the Holy Ghost 2. There is a defect in all such mens knowledge they cannot discern them of weak grace and many corruptions but eminent men they may Herod reverenced John and despised Christ Vse 1. Of refutation of two Popish opinions 1. They say that the Church of God is a visible Church alwayes to the world If we say that the Church is not visible to the world we say no more then St. Iohn speaks 2. They say none can know himself to be born of God St. John makes it the property of a worldling not to know the children of God much more not to know himself to be a child of God Gal. 6.10 If a man could not know one from another how should he make this difference Gods owne servants many times have but little discerning as an old man naturally hath a very bad discerning can hardly see his friends unlesse he be nigh them and look upon them Many times a man is able to give a fuller testimony of another then of himself Vse 1. It reproves all the uncertain walks of Gods servants or such as professe themselves so to be You shall have them many times to walk so unevenly between God and their own souls between themselves and men either you are worldly or your brethren else they would know you to be the children of God or of the world 1 Thes 1.4 Vse 3. It is a ground of tryall of a mans estate If thou knowest not that they which fear God are born of him thou art yet of the world and dost not know Christ if thou love them not nor affect them nor lend an helping hand unto them Vse 4. To teach us that Gods children are hidden and unknown to the world A man that is wealthy and carries things meanly we say such a man is an hidden man he is worth thousands Gods people are worth millions but they are hidden men the world knows them not If a pearl fall into the dirt you cannot discern it but wash away the dirt and you shall see it sparkle Vse 5. It should teach Gods children to moderate the affections of carnall excellency and acceptance in the world It is a leven of hypocrisie and pride that infects many times the hearts of Gods people they would be somewhat The world knows you not Be willing to go as unknown men in the world John 5.44 A Prince that comes among his subjects disguised he cares not though they justle him and take place of him and speak hardly of him a Prince would smile within himself he knows how they would respect him if they knew him Shal the hand or foot take it ill that it is not known when as the head was not known Vse 6. It should work in Gods children an inclination to forgive wrongs and injuries if they knew you better they would use you better Luke 23.34 Acts 3.17 Obj. They speak most unjustly and undeservedly Answ Pity their malice and envy them not Vse 7. It may teach the world not to flatter themselves in doing ill to Gods servants you think it is out of wisdome it is indeed out of ignorance and because they know not Christ and his righteousnesse 1 JOHN 3.2 Beloved now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is IN the former verse the Apostle exhorts Christians to a serious consideration of the love of God which he hath shewed them in calling them his children Against which dignity he answers an objection The Objection is taken from the misprising of the world The world knows no such excellency in them To this he answers that this ignorance of theirs ariseth from the ignorance of Christ In this verse he answers a second Objection from the doubts that themselves have of their estates by reason of those sundry temptations and afflictions they meet withal in the world To this he answers Even now they are the Sons of God 2 Though now their estate be hid yet it shall appear 3. He confirmes this that they shall appear when Christ appears And that he confirmes from their own knowledge For they shall see him as he is 1. Consider we their estates Sons of God 2. The hiddennesse of their present and future estates 3. What they shall be like viz. Christ which is set out by the testimony of their own knowledge and he insinuates all by a sweet compellation Beloved Doct. That the Sons ef God ought to be the men of our love and delight 3 Epist Joh. 1.2 5. 1 Pet. 2.11 Phil. 4.1 Where we see his deep affection towards them he looks at them as born of God and therefore he stiles them Beloved and Dearly beloved In those things we love there is first an affection of desire to be united to them Secondly a communication of good unto them For the first Pfal 119.63 79 If he be to choose company he will make choyce of such as fear God And this is called amor concupiscentiae Secondly there is a love with desires to communicate good to the thing beloved And this is Amor amicitiae Psal 60.1 2 Pet. 1.7 Do good to all but specially to the houshold of faith Such as are born of God So that whether we desire union or communion of good company to any we should chiefly desire it to the company
of beleevers This was Davids grief that he could not enjoy the company of good men Psal 120. Reas 1. For Gods singular love to them verse 1. What manner of love And if God love them so dearly we ought also to love them 1. From their love above all others back again to God when others sit loose in their affections Christians should love them that love God who hath loved them so dearly Psal 139.21 22. 3. From the truth that is in every Christian beleever 2 John 1.2 If a man loves Gold he loves to have true Gold so if we love any let us love them in whom is truth of other men not one of a thousand that hath truth in them you shall finde them no further loving then may be to their own ends in latter times men shall be lovers of themselves for in former times God did inlarge the worlds affections many brethren would have hazarded their lives for their friends but now no further love then they shall finde aliquid jucundum or utile But Christians love one another for the loves sake that is in them Many complain much that true friendshiip is gone it 's an hard thing to find a faithfull friend Prov. 20.6 This faithfullnesse in friendship is a proper badge of the Son of God John 13.35 15.19 Vse 1. This should teach Ministers with what affection they should speak to their people when they call them Beloved This ought not to be a word of complement but their hearts should go with it How can such call them Dearly beloved when they come at them but once a year how doe they love union with them or communication of good to them 2. This may be a direction to us all as we would approve the truth of our hearts before God to love all that are born of God as St. John he calls them Beloved Look at all beleevers as the Sons of God and look at them as beloved if they walk in the truth 3. This may be a reproof of all such as estrange themselves from Christians yea many there be that are glad of any advantage to trouble them that are born of God they are far from St. John's spirit There are some that will not maligne and oppose them but yet if they be such as are poor from whom they can get neither pleasure nor profit they estrange themselves from them But St. John calls any Beloved in whom he findes the truth of grace There is no Christian but hath something for which he ought to be beloved there is something in them worthy our imitation You shall finde more comfort in your love to poor weak Christians then if you fasten your love upon more eminent persons and greater in place Doct. 2. That the ignorance that the world hath of Gods children and our obscurity and weaknesse in the world doth not hinder our present good estate in the world Now we are the Sons of God now that we are afflicted in the world Isa 54.11 which shews you that though the children of God be afflicted and weather-beaten yet God hath promised such blessings to them as may make them blessed in the world vers 13.14 Isa 43.3 4. Though we be led through the water and fire of affliction yet in the midst of all our troubles when we are passing through the Lord promiseth that he will be with us and that he will be our comfort in the midst of persecution and temptation Thus you see how dear and precious Gods children are in his sight David when he saw the prosperity of the wicked that all went well with them then he began to think that he had cleansed his herat in vain but soon afrer when he went into the Sanctuary of the Lord then he saw that the Lord set them but in slippery places Therefore howsoever it seem in our eyes that it goes well with the wicked yet let us not despair God will guide his children by his counsell and afterward receive them to glory You may hear Job complaining of his poor and miserable estate Job 19.18 19 20. he had now no more comfort left him then he had skin on his teeth and therefore he cryes to his friends to pitty him vers 21 22. And what do you think was the rejoycing of his soul in the midst of the anguish of his spirit and affliction of body being all consumed away with misery he tells you vers 25. to v. 27. Yet I am sure my redeemer liveth So that what though his present estate be miserable and his future happy estate be obscure to the world yet he knows when Christ shall appear he shall be like him Col. 3.3 4. as the Apostle speaks Our life is hid with Christ in God Reas 1. Taken from our likenesse to the Son of God Christ Jesus who was in such a poor condition as that though the birds of the air had nests yet the Son of man had not where to lay his head yet all this while he was the Son of God in whom alone he was well pleased Mat. 3.17 And as it was with Christ our head so may we look it should be with us his members Rom. 8.29 If God did see it meet that his Son should be thus afflicted in the world and drinke of such a bitter portion of Gods wrath let us not think we shall go to heaven and partake of those heavenly mansions which Christ hath prepared for us but we also shall drink of the same cup that he drank of Let us account our selves happy that God will so esteem of us to make us his Sons Reas 2. From the freedome of Gods love to men And first that he doth not esteem of them according to their outward lustre 1 Sam. 16.7 God seeth not as man seeth Ps 22.6 This is meant of Christ So Isa 53.3 Secondly That he doth not esteem of them according to their inward estate Ezek. 16.16 Deut. 7.8 8. So that though there be much pride and stubbornnes of heart found in Gods children and oftentimes in a great measure against God yet all these inward corruptions do not hinder our future glorious estate Vse 1. This should teach the children of God to be content with their estates They are indeed apt to think that if the world do not esteem of them but are ready to put many injuries upon them and to persecute them with hatred that they are not Gods children or else they murmur and grieve within themselves And if the world do sometimes esteem of them yet if their health liberty and maintenance be taken away then they think surely they have cleansed their hearts in vain and washed their hands in innocency Psal 73.13 As for the men of the world they are in prosperity they suck water out of a full cup their eyes start out with fatnesse and they have more then they can wish But David can tell them when he went into the Sanctuary that he saw that God had set them
the whole man the understanding will and affections 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Thess 5.23 Well then may it be called a lively fruitfull hope Reas Hope comes to all the ordinances of God with expectation that it shall finde benefit from the Word prayer and good company Hope waits on God for good in every ordinance and then it never goes away empty it strive before it comes to prepare the heart and to cleanse it from all filthinesse Vse 1. This may discover unto us the wonderfull loathsomnesse of sin If sin were not an excrement why should we purge it out We purge out nothing but filthy loathsome things and therefore when hope is said to purge it implyes that sin is loathsome 2. Hence discern the soundnesse of our hope Do you finde your hearts daily striving to ●leanse your selves if not thy hope will make thee ashamed If thy hope do not set thee on work every day to cleanse thy heart truly thy hope is nothing but a vain delusion and nothing will more sting thee at the last day when thou shalt hope for heaven thou shalt be cast out of Gods presence 3. Let it teach all Christians as they would not be ashamed of their hopes to make their calling and election sure Let their hopes make them purge and cleanse themselves And let not Christians think it is enough to purge themselves but they must purge their families A Christian must suffer none in his family to be uncircumcised God would have killed Moses because he had one uncircumcised Magistrates must cleanse their Towns and places where they live Good Josiah when he was to celebrate the Passover he set himselfe with all his heart to purge Jerusalem and Judah Doct. 3. The purity of Christ is the pattern of every Christians purity Or thus Every hopefull Christian makes Christs purity the pattern of his 1 Cor. 11.1 Heb. 12.12 Be ye followers of me as I am of Christ Set before you a pattern of a cloud of witnesses 1 John 2.6 He that abides in Christ ought to walk as he hath walked Why should every Christian make Christ the pattern of his purity 1. From the end of Gods predestination He hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Son Rom. 8.29 And God in all things requires that we should grow up to the fellowship of the stature of Jesus Christ 2. From the perfection of the pattern All other patterns of godly men will fail us in some things but Christ is a perfect pattern he will fail us in nothing Vse 1. This should teach us to reject the society of such men as inwardly loath the name of Puritans alas if they cannot endure the name of purity in poor weak Christians how would they hate the purity of Christ If they cannot endure the brightnesse of a candle how will they endure the brightness of the Sun and yet they say they love Christ But if they have not purity how can they love Christ and if they love not Christ they are accursed for ever 2. This reproves those who though they do not hate purity yet they think themselves very well if they exceed the worst sort of men they are no whore-mongers nor theeves nor deceivers Alas if there be no more then morall honesty they shall come far short of Heaven 3. This reproves the Romish Church that think ordinary Christians are not bound to so strict a pattern as their regular Christians Did ever any of them reach higher then Christ and is not every Christian exhorted to set Christ as a pattern 4. This reproves another sort of Christians who if they have got but such a measure of grace as they are assured to be in a state of grace they never look further but now they look out for themselves in the world as if they might rest in what is behinde and never presse forward to what is before them contrary to Paul Know O Christian it is not enough to get truth of grace nor some purity but you must grow pure as Christ is pure Vse 2. This may exhort us all as we would maintain our hope to be made like Christ hereafter so to strive to this exactnesse of purity to purifie our selves as he is pure If you would be hopefull Christians you must be growing Christians growing up to the measure of the purity of Christ decay in growing and you decay in hope No Christian so full of joy and hope as he that is every day getting something and growing up to perfection 1 John 2.6 Phil. 3.12 13 14. Motives to stir us up to grow in grace 1. So soon as you slack this care your hope faith and grace waxeth weak If we see our bodies do not voyd excrements for many dayes we think our bodies are not in a good state but some diseases lye on us How can we have an healthfull soul when we purge not our corruption many a day 2. From the great uncomelinesse that is in us if we do not strive to be pure Is it not an uncomely thing to see the head to be of gold and the members partly brasse partly clay and dirt 3. It 's very grievous to the Spirit of God that we should be no better for all it hath dwelt so long in us When Christ had been long with his Disciples and they were not bettered by him he up braids them O foolish and slow of heart to believe how long shall I be with you It was a griefe to Christ that he should be long with his Disciples and they not to grow up to strength of grace Obj. But doth not virtue consist in a golden mean Ans Virtue consists not in a mean between two degrees but in a mean between two extreams You may exceed the bounds of righteousnesse and so be unrighteous but you cannot exceed the degrees of righteousnesse Christ saith Be perfect as your heavenly father is perfect Can you then be too pure and holy No you cannot though you were as full of g●ace and holinesse as Christ himselfe 4. As ever you desire to be worthy partakers of the Sacrament then labour to purifie your selves The reason why many a christian comes to the Sacrament and finds no comfort is because they grieved the Spirit of God before they came by neglecting to cast out those obstructions which hinder the influence of the head to the members 1 Cor. 11.30 31. Means to help us to purifie our selves 1. Be perswaded that you are not in a safe estate till you are grown up to some good measure of purity You would think him in a poor case that should live 200 years and yet for want of evacuation should live in sicknesse and weaknesse And so a christian is in an uncomfortable estate unlesse he purge himselfe 2. Be very watchfull over thy wayes 3. Use the ordinances of God constantly Say not after conversion It is no matter whether we be alwayes conversant in Gods ordinances but at some times when the
not of God Of whom then John 8.41 of the Devill To be of the Devill is to be of him as a Father to be begotten of him So Elimas when he would have kept the Deputy from the faith Reas 1. From the imitation of the Devill which those exercise and put forth in such works When a man is freely carried into evill he imitates Satan and so is his childe Gen. 4.20 So they were called Fathers who were first in any act of all them that imitate them 2. By spiritual propagation begotten of his seed those are called the seed of Satan There is a seed of Satan which stirrs them up to this imitation Gen. 3.15 The seed of Satan expresseth it self in obstinacy and efficacy in sin When a man is willing to take pains in sin John 8.44 Ye are of yur father the devill How will that appear his work ye will doe So the Devill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 takes pains and is industrious in sin Elimas sought to pervert the Deputy who attended to the Word Vse 1. Of triall Here we may see of what parentage we are of We may see whether we be so ill as to be born of Satan Let us examine our selves What is our businesse in this world if it be to follow the lust of our owne hearts to regard our profits and pleasure and we delight in sin and what crosseth us we maligne and are at enmity with it The Scripture doth not call a man the child of the Devill when he is but meerly naturall deprived of grace and prone to sin men are then called the children of the devill when as they are in the bosome of the Church and see the way they should walk in and that their estate is not good and yet are resolved to do evill to take pains in it and if any crosse them they will be at enmity with them there will be private grudges between many but when it is for righteousnesse sake then they are of the seed of Satan Now such men as are the children of the devill may possibly become better 2 Tim. 2. two last verses They may be delivered out of the snares of Satan But this God never doth but with such conflicts as it may be seen there hath been strife between Micael and his Angels and the Devill and his angels Take a man meerly naturall and it is an easie matter to bring him home Jude vers 22 23. shews that when we are meerly naturall tendernesse of compassion prevails much There is lesse opposition against grace then when the Devill is come into the heart and joyns with sin The Devill cast a thought into Judas heart to betray Christ John 13.2 he did not presenly consent to it but ●after he had eaten the sop Satan entred into him verse 27. The Deill had possession of him before setting his heart in a course of covetousnesse but now he had a farther possession of him now he resolves to betray Christ and now he spies a time to bring it about The Devill findes us flesh and blood at the first then he tempts us to sin if we begin to run to him then he enters and sets us in that way When a new temptations comes and we consider whether we shall do it or no when we break off we are the better and get strength against sin But if we yeeld and commit sin willingly then we are the children of the Devill Take we heed of pleasing our selves in any sinfull estate If we have committed sin willingly and the Devil come with full sail into our souls if we now lye down in peace we shall be the children of Satan This is to give our souls and hearts to the Devill 1 Sam. 15.15 16. Sin of rebellion is not of ignorance but through depravation of will when out of resolution a man will sin against God he will make bold with God this is a sin of witchcraft As in a sin of witchcraft a man or woman give their souls to the devill so when a man commits sin willingly he gives his foul to the Devill You would think it a strange thing to be called a Witch therefore rest not in this condition How shall we get out of it 1. Henceforth resolve that through the strength of Gods grace you wil never commit any sin again Listen more diligently to the Word of GOd give up your heart to God and his word 2 Cor. 8.5 Lay open all your rebellion confessing your sins and rebellions to God tell him of those passages of your lives wherein you have rebelled against him 1 John 2.9 Vse 2. To magnifie the freenesse of Gods grace that hath delivered you out of darknesse into light from Satan to God when you have sinned against knowledge and conscience Doct. The devill keeps a constant and continuall course of sinning from the beginning to this day The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an accuser yet that is not his onely word for he is sometimes called Satan an adversary this is one of his ordinary works to accuse the brethren Sometimes he doth accuse God to us as he did God to Adam He accuseth God to the conscience of a poor sinner that God hath cast him off for ever 2. Sometimes he doth accuse us to God as he did Job 1.9 10. Doth Job fear God for nought 3. He accuseth them to those that are in stead of God as to the Magistrates and he accuseth them to other men he puts slanderous speeches in the mouthes of others without any ground or cause How is he said to sin from the beginning It implyeth that he transgresseth the law and that by a constant act he sins daily and provokes others to sin that hath been his constant course from the beginning from the beginning is not meant from his first creation for it is evident that he stood till the sixt day else God would not have said Omnia valde bona There are five things wherein Satan hath sinned from the beginning wherein he transcends all sinners besides 1. He was the eldest sinner the first in sin 2. He is the most industrious painfull sinner he comes from compassing the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. He is the Father of sin John 8.44 If a man can utter any vain word any sinfull practice it 's from the devill because generally he doth so watch over the wayes of men and he is casting in blasphemous thoughts against God and envious thoughts against our Brother 4. Every sin he hath committed hath been a sin against the Holy Ghost For to that sin is required illumination and malice of heart 5. He transcends others in the perpetuity and constancy of sinning He is called an unclean spirit 2 Cor. 1.1 when he lyes he speaks of his owne accord John 8.44 If at any time he speak true it is by the over-ruling hand of God 1 Sam. 28.19 Reas As is the tree so is the fruit Mat. 7.18 Vse It shews us that Satan
not onely receive the Word but conceives of it and is framed to the will of God and being born of God he is alwayes his childe When a man is transformed into the image of God his judgement and heart stampt with the image of God he delights in God and his wayes and children his judgement and heart are carryed that way they are all for God repentance is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his minde is then changed Prov. 23.26 My Son give me thy heart his heart is given to God The seed of Gods Word was not in Herod John 2.24 Psal 119.11 1 John 2.27 The seed of God remains in the children of God both Word and Spirit Reas 1. From the mighty power the Word hath had in his soule when he was first begotten and born of God It was such as did so affect and terrifie as no earthly comfort was able to satisfie his heart he hath been so overwhelmed with fears and doubts as that he will be afraid to sin as long as he lives 2. From the strong possession that the Word and Spirit have in the heart as they doe abide in the whole man so especially in the conscience and will I doe not allow what I doe but what I hate that doe I which shews that the Word hath taken such fast hold of his judgement and will that both are for God Jer. 32.40 Psal 119.161 3. From the great change this seed makes in the heart of a childe of God It makes him from a wilde olive to be a sweet olive A good tree Mat. 18 cannot bring forth evill fruit Every thing brings forth fruit according to the seed Obj. There is a seed of corruption cannot a man bring forth according to that Answ There is an old man but he is crucified if we sin we doe not trade in sin our judgements and hearts are against it When some lawlesse lusts have carryed us captive and we complain of them to God and desire that they were cast out God looks at them not as ours Rom. 6.14 Psal 110.28 Vse 1. To refute all such doctrines as teach the apostasie of Saints They say such as are born of God may come to sin totally and finally This errour fights against a double doctrine of the Apostle He saith Whosoever is born of God the seed remaineth in him If a man can shake out the Spirit how doth it remain 2. The Text saith there is no possibility of sinning they say he may sin Obj. They say Whilest he is a childe of God he cannot sin but he may cease to be a childe of God Answ 1. He cannot sin whereby he should be made no childe of God 2. There is a doctrine of the Papists and their Divines that teach liberty of will cannot be nisi ad opposita that a man may will a thing or not I ask whether a childe of God forbears a sin willingly or not We say willingly If a childe of God walk in innocency from sin he can doe no otherwise Whereas their doctrine is a mans will is not free unlesse a man may doe a thing or not to doe it What doe they think of Saints and Angells in Heaven or God himselfe whether have they free-will or no I hope none of them can sin yet doe they good most freely Wherein stands liberty Not onely that a man doth a thing without constraint but that he follows the counsell of his own will he follows his own judgement and reason 2. For tryall of our own hearts whether we be born of God or no. If we be our ordinary course is good we dare not sin know not how to go about it that seed which is in us sets our hearts and judgements aright Gen. 39.9 Other men may think it strange that we cannot doe as they doe This is a good evidence that thou art born of God 3. See what to judge of those that have made a profession and yet fall away They were never born of God for then they could not have sinned 4. This may be a ground of much comfort to every childe of God He will preserve us spotlesse and blamelesse Here is a double comfort 1. He looks not at thy course as sin if thou be humbled for it and he will take a course to mortifie it 2. You can never lose the favour of God because if you be once begotten you can never be unbegotten You are begotten of an immortall seed and therefore cannot die Obj. This may seem to be a doctrine of presumption for then a man may live as he list Answ Suppose a Physitian could give us the apple of the tree of life that so we should never die but yet bids us take heed to a diet for although we could not die yet we should have such pangs stone gout strangury as that we would wish death rather then life So God will make the best of his servants know what it is to wax wanton against him and make them curse all the occasions that lead them to sin 5. This should teach us that have received any seed of God to take heed that we sin not and therefore inform the judgement aright out of the Word of God 2 Tim. 1.3 that so you may come to sound judgement and wisdome One errour of judgement will shake you much in your way 1 John 5.18 1 JOHN 3.10 In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devill whosoever doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loveth not his Brother HErein is a manifest difference between the children of God and the children of the Devill The signes of difference are twofold 1. Generall doe not righteousnesse 2. Particular doe not love the Brethren Doct. The children of God and the children of the Devill are not so alike one to another but that there may be found a manifest difference betwixt them even in this world Gal. 5.10 Mat. 7.20 Were there not a manifest difference it were not so necessary for God to charge his Ministers Jer. 15.19 to walk with a divided affection towards them Ezek. 13.22 If a difference had not been so manifest God had not so justly blamed them If you say this is peculiar to Ministers Levits they must judge who are clean who are not and not private Christians Answ That God makes it a badge of them that shall inherit Heaven and have fellowship with God there Psal 15.4 Jude v. 20 21 22 23. which shews we should put a signe of difference not onely between good and bad but even between bads Some sin ignorantly others more absolutely How doth this manifest difference apear A double signe of it 1 Cor. 12.10 It is a spirituall gift of discerning He speaks of discerning what gifts and what measures a man hath and wherein the strength of a mans gifts lies 1 Cor. 2 15. Although he cannot discern every mans speciall gifts what he is most fit for yet plain and manifest things he discerns and
Brethren is a known and undoubted evidence that we are passed from death to life What is it to love our Brethren Love is an affection whereby we desire communion one with another and communication of good one to another A man in nature prizeth his Brethren and will do more for them then any other So it is in grace Acts 4. ult 2.42 44. Phil 1.2 We must affect to be of one heart Eph. 3.3 4. There must be brotherly equality if we be Brethren You are of the same Father Gal. 6.26 one Mother one Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 one Inheritance 1 Pet. 1.4 We will desire to communicate brotherly offices to the inward man Rom. 2.11 12. and to the outward man if need be Acts 2 44. Reas 1. From the naturall pronenesse which is in our nature to strangenesse envy c. We doe not naturally seek any mans good but our own or so far forth as reacheth our own ends 2 From the affection of every mans heart to liberty Now a man delights onely in such company as are like himselfe because otherwise he is restrained If Gods people be the men of your delight and counsell you were never so well as wirh them Psal 115.115 16.3 This is a sign we are passed from death to life 3. From a mans backwardnesse of communication of brotherly offices Gal. 6.10 4 From the great distance that is between us and the love of our Brethren and how many steps there are before we come to it Matth. 5 3. to 9. Vse 1 Of tryall of our own estates whether we are in a state of death or life It is one of the plainest notes in Scripture and most evident Gal. 6.10 If our love run in an equall channell to all men if we know not Gods people we know not Christ 1 John 3.1 2. If you know them how doe you affect them Do you think it were good if the Town were cleansed of them Gen. 49.4 5 Psal 101 we are not as yet born of God Obj. Doe not many love Gods children and honour them and yet are not the children of God Gen. 27.29 Acts 5.13 That they did not joyn with them was a signe that they were not born of God Gen. 39.1 2 3. 2 To convince the doctrine of doubting Papists who say a man cannot know himselfe to be in a state of grace Eccl. 9.1 2. No man can know it by outward things They say here by knowledge is meant conjecturall knowledg not certain knowledge Answ This is a contradiction A man lyes if he saith he knowes a thing and is not certain of it There is no peace of conscience in this Religion 3 To exhort such as know not yet that they are passed from life to death to labour to love the Brethren Prov. 13.20 4 Of consolation to every soul that hath nothing in this world but this they love the Brethren This is such a thing as upon which thou mayest build a certain knowledge that thou art passed from death to life and therefore thou mayst take comfort He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death The Apostle in the former words did imply the world was in death for want of love And left any should think that he did but imply it and not directly expresse it he sets it down expresly Here is a description of a man that loves not his Brother 1 He is in death 2 Abides in death By death is meant the same that was meant in the former part of the verse Abiding implyes not only a being in that estate but continuance and residence in it Doct. The want of love to any of our Brethren is a sign of abidance in the state of damnation or in an unregenerate and carnall estate And he saith not he that hates but he that loves not and he saith not brethren but brother any or every brother Mat. 18.6 Offend not one of these little ones Christs little ones are such as have but little grace and great corruption Reas From the want of love that is found in such a one towards God and that is an argument of being in a state of death If a man love God in obedience to his commandements he should love his brother by the same commandement That commandement which requires me to love one Brother requires me to love all Jam. 2.10 11. Breake one commandement break all for who gave one gave all whoso neglects offices of love to one performes none to any nor to God It is a note of sincerity that a man hates all sin as well as one Psal 119.101 104 For it is an argument of love when there is no Brother or Sister but we enlarge our affections towards them Gal. 3.28 So much want of love so much hypocrisie 2. From the bitter or deadly root of want of love to this or that Brother It springs from two occasions 1. Either from his infirmities in himselfe Or 2. From spirituall injuries to our selves True a man will say such Christians I would away with but they have such unsavoury corruptions The first root of this is the condemnation of the generation of Gods people If a man may condemn this or that man for this or that corruption he may come to condemn the best of Gods servants because the best of Gods servants may be in the same failings for which thou hatest such a Brother Prov. 30.12 The greatest of Gods servants have shamefully faln David Peter Lot Noah The second root is from the enmity against Gods free justification of sinners Take away this and you take away all Christian religion If you love not a Brother because of some infirmities you doe overthrow the free justification of Gods grace of a sinner For God that hath justified the greatest hath justified as well the least as freely and as fully and wilt thou justifie some and condemn others God condemns none Rom. 8.1.33 34. If Christians doe beleeve the free justification of sinners then let us imitate our Father which is in heaven justifie whom he justifies The third bitter and deadly root If there be the least sparke of grace in his heart all his corruptions are his enemies and he but a shrimp in grace and hath many enemies What good nature is this when a man would love a man if he had no enemies but when he hath enemies and such as are ready ever and anon to beat him down he cannot love him The fourth want of a member like spirit for the more naked unseemly or deformed any member is the body is the more carefull of it if it may be it shall be healed if not it shall be covered 1 Cor. 12.23 24. If we want this it flowes from want of a member like spirit 2 Somtimes neglect of our Brother springs from some personall injury done to our selves We cannot love them This springs from this root want of forgivenesse of our own sins for we pray for forgivenesse upon this ground Mat. 6.12 15. Our Saviour
Word of God Zech. 7.13 Prov. 28.9 Reas 1. From a rule of equity which God useth in dispensing himselfe Mat. 7.2 As we dispense our selves to him so doth God himselfe to us This it a generall rule of Gods walking towards men With what measure we mete God will measure to us again If we let no Word of God fall to the ground but our conscience stand in awe of it and our hearts cleave to it God will let none of our prayers fall to the ground 2. From the unity of the Spirit that doth help us to keep the commandements God makes account we keep the commandements when there is none but our judgements approve Ezek. 36.26 27. Rom. 8.15 The Spirit helps us to pray and it asks things according to the will of God and he knows the meaning of the Spirit As who should say He that prayes not in the Spirit is a Barbarian unto God 3. From the love and respect God bears to them that keep his commandements It is the way to become Gods Favourite John 14.21 23. Vse 1. It shews us the cause of the fruitlesnesse of our prayers at any time God hears not us because we hear not him If our prayer fall to the ground then surely Gods Word hath faln to the ground A good prayer and a bad life can never meet James 2.20 If we live in awlesse respect to Gods commandements he hears not our prayers 2. Encouragement to the obedience of Gods commandements What comfort would a man have more then to have his wish If God give thee an heart to keep all his commandements thou mayst assure thy heart that all thy petitions are granted 3. A ground of comfort to every such soule as makes conscience of his wayes If thou walkest with a care to fulfill Gods will he will fulfill thine Such as give themselves to walk as Christ hath walked may have this comfort John 11.32 Psal 119.5 6. Such petitions as are long delayed and seem to be most strongly denyed are fulfilled Dan. 10.3 10 11 12. Daniels prayers were heard the first day but not then answered A petition is granted in Heaven and a course taken for the accomplishment of it but yet there must be a time to bring it about Deut. 5.25 26. Though God delay our prayers yet even then he grants them Prov. 21.10 Jer. 17.10 God regards the hearts of his people and their movings Moses desired onely to see the good Land God bid him go up to the hill and so strengthened his sight to see it he should not go over because the people should see Gods displeasure against him We have an end alwayes in our prayers and we prescribe means to God he many times denies the means in displeasure but gives the end 2 Cor. 12.7 8. So it was in Paul God would not remove the messenger of Satan but he did that by it which he would have done the free passage of the spirit in his heart Heb. 5.7 A Christian prays for the light of his countenance God hears not Why dost thou desire it to strengthen thy faith He will doe it by the word of promise We pray that God would mortifie some corruption Why doe we desire it that grace may have free passage in our hearts God will by such lusts mortifie a greater that is pride of heart and God works such a loathing in thy heart and bitternesse in regard of sin that we might mortifie them The second benefit is the acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God amplified by an argument taken from the practice of such men whose hearts doe not condemn them before God they keep his commandements and doe that which is pleasing in his sight set forth in a Syllogisme Whoso keeps Gods commandements those whatsoever they ask they receive of God But those whose hearts condemn them not keep Gods commandements Doct. That such as keep Gods commandements they keep a good conscience and Gods favour together They have peace at home and in heaven First They have peace at home in their own conscience Heb. 13.18 We have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly that is to keep Gods commandements Secondly As they keep a good conscience on earth so they keep favour in heaven 1 Kings 15.5 Thus it s said of David that he did that which was good in the sight of the Lord he had a care to keep Gods commandements Thus did Asa 2 Chron. 14.2 Hezekiah Ib. 29.2 So did Josiah 2 Kings 23.25 and 2 Chron. 34.2 What is it to keep Gods commandements Ans It is not barely to keep them in our minds and memory but First to keep them as one would keep his high-way A traveller so soon as he is out of his way and sees it he blames himselfe for it and hastens to get into it again Secondly as a man would keep his jewells Prov. 6.20 21. Thirdly to keep it as the apple of our eye Prov. 7.1 2 3. If the least more fall into our eye we never leave till we get it out so we must make scruple of the least sins Fourthly we must keep the commandements as we would keep our life Now Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life So we should lose our lives and all we have for Gods commandements Reas From the suitablenesse of the will or commandements of God and the conscience of a Christian You please a man when you doe that which is according to his will and so look what is good in Gods sight that is according to Gods commandements The commandements of God are a lively image of his will God is a God of pure eyes Hab. 1.13 he hateth wickednesse Psal 5.4 Any thing that is evill is displeasing in Gods sight When Vriah was slain and David took his Wife into his house it is said that thing displeased the Lord 2 Sam. 12.27 But the will of God is our sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 A man is said to be made after Gods own Image when he is righteous and holy The Apostle exhorts us to put on the next man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph. 4.24 Holinesse is the sum of the commandements of the first Table Righteousnesse of the second Vse 1. Hence we may have a tryall of our conscience whether it be good or no for upon the goodnesse of our conscience depends the peace of this world and another Heb. 13.18 Examine your selves Doe you keep Gods commandements as a man would keep his way the apple of his eye his life and soul or his Jewells Else you doe not keep a good conscience There are four sorts of consciences First A conscience that is quiet yet not good As when the strong man keeps the house all that he p●ssesseth is in peace Luke 11.21 Secondly There is a conscience which is good but yet not quiet Such was Davids Psal 31.22 when he said in his hast he was utterly cast
rich 3 He denyed his own honour He being in the form of God yet made himself of no reputation to save us from reproach 4 As if all this had been too little he denyed his own life and laid it downe for us John 3.16 Reas What is the reason of this difference that our love to our neighbour must be so great above the love to our selves 1 Because there was no cause of denying our selves in innocency but now man is fallen he cannot raise up another but he must stoop If two men go together if they go both upright they may go hand in hand but if one be faln and not able to rise the other if he will raise him must stoop down and toyl to get him up God hath raised up some sooner then others therefore we must take up our faln Brethren 2 God requires love in a more exact manner and measure because he hath now given an higher and more exact pattern We have the pattern of Christ that forgave us ten thousand talents therefore we ought to forgive our Brethren an hundred pence Mat. 18. Vse 1. This should stir up all Christians to walk now in an higher frame of love then formerly they were wont in times past We walked then in a lower way to love our Brother as our selves But we must now say I will do so for my Brother as I may not prejudice my self my estate credit or life But now we that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weaker Rom. 15.1 2. Now we must have the same minde in us which was in Christ Jesus Heb. 2.4 to 16. 2 Cor. 11.7 8. Paul abased himself that they might be exalted and denyed himself of many comforts that he might help them As Christ laid down his life for us so must we for our Brethren in sundry cases 1 John 3.16 For more particular direction 1 A man ought to deny his own expediences for his Brothers necessity Neh. 5.18 2 He ought to deny himself in outward things to supply his Brethren in spiritual things Thus Paul 3 If a man be of a private condition and his Brother of publique use to the Church he ought to deny himself to maintain and succour him as they said to David Thou art worth ten thousand of us Rom. 16.4 5. Aquila and Priscilla 2 This should teach you that are of higher estate to help your poor neighbours that are fallen into straights not through prodigality or ryot but through Gods hand or charge of children You must not say I must look to my self and to my children that they be maintained This was the old rule now we must deny our selves and our own experiences and be continually doing good in obedience to this commandement It was a royal speech of David 2 Sam. 24. Shall I offer a sacrifice of that that cost me nothing Heb. 13 15 16. When God blesseth thee with many a pound wilt thou offer a sacrifice to God that cost a penny or a thing that cost thee nothing It 's for you to blesse God that hath enriched you with such abundance and say with David What shall I render to the Lord for all these goods Your goods reach not to God but to the Saints that are on the earth and if you begin to straighten your hands and hearts you will finde God straightning himselfe to you What a blessed thing were it to be laying aside something for good uses Our Saviour that lived in so mean a condition yet had care to provide for the poor John 13.28 Doct. There is not a more effectual means to the obtaining our petitions then by growing up in practice of these two commandements in believing on the Name of Christ and love to our Brethren Mark 11.22 to 26. There you have both joyned together Jam. 1.8 Let a man pray in faith and waver not When a Christian is tossed with doubtings and distractions he shall rather drown his prayers then bring them to the bosome of Christ Jesus Job's friends were godly men but because they dealt not in love with Job God professeth he would not hear them Want of love to our Brethren it damps our prayers before God So that though our persons be accepted yet our prayers shall not Why is faith so necessary 1. Faith makes our persons acceptable to God God heares the young ravens and lyons when they call upon him he rather hears their misery then their prayer but faith makes the person acceptable Thus By faith Abel c. Heb. 11. 2. Faith purifies the heart Acts 15.9 If I regard wickednesse in my heart God will not hear my prayers Psal 66.18 3 Faith furnisheth the heart with graces that make our prayers amiable There are four graces requisite in prayer and all are wrought by faith 1 Reverence to God A man without faith considers not before whose presence he stands he considers not that God is near to hear his petitions but faith is the evidence of things not seen it makes us come before God with reverence and godly fear Heb. 11.27 2 Faith breeds in us humility whereby we come before God with a sense of our unworthinesse and of the least of Gods mercies and an unablenesse to ask any thing according to his will 3 Faith works fervency and earnestnesse of spirit that we will give God no rest 2 Sam. 15.16 Effectual fervent prayer is called a prayer of faith For 1 Faith puts life into every duty Gal. 3. 2 Faith layes hold of the promises of God in Christ and we urge and presse God upon his word 3 Faith makes us very sensible of our wants and therefore we cry very hard for help 4 Faith works in us an holy canfidence that what we ask God will undoubtedly grant and it 's meant of faith in the Name of the Lord Jesus There are three things in the Name of the Lord Jesus which Faith layes hold on 1 Faith lays hold on the offices of his mediation There had been no hope of acceptance unlesse there had been a Mediator to reconcile God and us 1 John 2.1 2. Heb. 4.14 15 16. Though we should finde many weaknesses in our selves yet with confidence may we draw neer to God seeing we have such an High Priest which is touched with our infirmities he is that great Master of requests that is in such favour with God that he never presents up a prayer to God but he returns such an answer that we need not go away with sad hearts John 16. ●3 24. 2 Faith lookes at Christ as him in whom all the promises are yea and amen 2 Cor. 5.20 3 Faith layes hold on all the attributes of God set on work by Christ for our good So that if we look for wisdome grace or power they are all set on work for the good of his Church The name of the Lord is a strong tower that is the attributes of God the righteous flye to it .. How By faith Q. How is the love of
know he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us In the second place we come to speak of the means whereby we may discern that God dwels in us and that is by the Spirit which he bath given us Doct. That the Spirit of God bestowed on us is an evident signe of Jesus Christ dwelling in u. He doth not say we believe though this be a great word for faith is the evidence of things not seen but he saith we know it now scire is rem per causam cognoscere What is that Spirit that being bestowed on us is an evidence of Christs dwelling in us Did not the Spirit of the Lord come upon Saul and he prophesied 1 Sam. 10. Yet it is not said that Christ abode in him for ch 16. verse 14. it is said that the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evill Spirit from the Lord troubled him Answ There be sundry degrees of Gods Spirit which may be given to a man and yet be no evidence of Gods dwelling in him or he in God 1. There is a Spirit of illumination whereby a man may prophesie as Saul did But a man may have this Spirit of God and yet fall away so as to sin against the holy Ghost Heb. 6.4 5 6. 2. A Spirit of administration of Church or Common-wealth 1 Sam. 11.6 3. A Spirit of power to do many wonders Matth. 7.22 23. And yet Christ acknowledgeth that he never knew them they did never abide in Christ nor he in them 4. There is a Spirit of renewall of many affections which may befall any man 1. A Spirit of Zeal as in Jehu Come and see my zeal for the Lord 2 Kings 10.15 16. and yet he took no heed to walk in the Law of the Lord verse 31 32. 2. Of Joy in Herod Mark 6.20 3. Humility in Ahab 1 King 21.29 4. Fear in Felix Act. 24.25 What is then the Spirit whereby we know that we keep Gods commandements and have fellowship with him Answ It is the Spirit of life which is in Jesus which frees us from the law of sin and death Rom. 8.2 This is the Spirit of adoption vers 15. of grace and supplication Zac. 12.10 What doth this differ from the former for they were the Spirit of God Answ It exceeds in this Because the former Spirits of God did rest only upon the outwards of a man as his Tongue Memory Affection but this bids defiance unto all the enemies of his salvation the Heart and Will which are the Castle wherein Christ abides are given up to Christ Pro. 23.26 God requires the heart if we give the heart to God we give all Prov. 4.23 Life springs not from good affections nor good actions but from the heart Q. What doth this Spirit more in my heart then did the other How shall I know that the holy Ghost hath gotten possession of my heart Answ If the Spirit of God hath taken possession of your hearts it lifts up your hearts for to prize the Lord Jesus above all other things in the world it makes thee willing to do and suffer Gods will with patience it will cause you to resigne your selves and your desires to the Lord Jesus now all your affections and whole heart is for the Lord. If Paul now sin he doth that which he would not Rom. 7.16 17. Having given us this Spirit we dwell in Christ and he in us 1 John 4.13 Because by this Spirit we keep his commandements If we keep his commandements it shall go well with us and with our children after us for ever Deut. 5.29 Reas From the free covenant of grace by which he hath promised everlasting fellowship to those that keep his commandements Jer. 32 40. Isa 55.2 3. Obj. This may make us believe but not to know as we believe Vnity in Trinity and Trinity in Vnity but we cannot know it But you say here We do not only believe but know Answ There is a difference between faith and knowledge For a man may believe a thing is true because he doth not doubt of the authority of it but yet we do not know all truths that are spoken though we believe them for stnowledge is of a certain conclusion we know this to be so partly by faith partly by sense and reason for though faith believe things before we know them it being the evidence of things not seen and so a man may believe that God is gracious before we know it yet when faith hath laid hold on the promises it sets reason on work This Spirit of God works in us an evidence of our abode in Christ for 1. this Spirit of God works peace of conscience Phil. 4.7 which passeth all understanding though it doth not always abide yet it keeps garrison always it bears witnesse to a man that Christ is in him and he in Christ 2. It works a change in all Christians it changeth them from the power of Satan to the power of God Gal. 5.19 20 21. And though the peace of conscience and consolation of the Spirit abide not always yet the Spirit of regeneration and sanctification doth always abide and doth change the whole man 2 Cor. 5.17 Before a carnal and fleshly Spirit but now the Spirit of glory and grace rests upon us which makes us relish Christian communion and Christian society This Spirit doth alwayes abide and so we know that Christ abides Rom. 8.9 Obj. I may think there is a through change but yet it may be it 's only of the outward man Answ Consider how it changeth thy heart Is thy heart with God and wholly for God Dost thou long for peace with God Wouldst thou not forgoe it if thou hadst it for all the world Is the Word of God more precious to thee then thine appointed food No profit pleasure or preferment shall hinder thee from following of Christ When a man hath horrour of conscience he would give his life for peace but then a man doth not affect God so much as his own peace Thus Cain Gen. 4. When Saul had a spirit full of trouble then David must play a fit of musick When wicked mens hearts are at rest then they never regard God but then they close with the world and sensuall lusts But when the Sun of righteousnesse doth arise in a mans heart he will scatter abroad all those distempers of spirit that hang about him and frame his heart to an holy care of keeping Gods commandements Vse 1. To reprove a Popish opinion that no man can know whether Christ abide in him or no. But why doth St. John then say Hereby we know and he speaks to old men young men and babes to try themselves These men condemn the whole generation of the just Such a woman as cannot tell her child who is his Father is a strumpet and so is the Church of Rome 2. It reproves others that think it impossible Some think it not worth the knowing others think it
conscience nor shew how to lay hold of eternall life and to make their calling and election sure and if they speak of heavenly matters at any time they see such speak but with a cold affection and therefore they goe home and not affect them but when a godly Minister preaches in an heavenly manner he being moved by a godly principle his conversation is in Heaven Phil. 3.20 he talks of Heaven Mat. 12.35 A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Vse If Ministers would know their own spirits let them consider what doctrine they deliver what end they aime at and what are their hearers and so by this means they will easily discern their own spirits 1 JOHN 4.7 8. Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God c. IN the words and the verse following the Apostle exhorts his hearers and himselfe to mutuall love one of another the occasion is from what he had delivered verse 6. In the words First An exhortation to mutuall love between Ministers and people Secondly A reason to presse this on them 1 From the Originall of their love that is from God 2 From the Estate of such who love they are born of God and know God 3 From the evill estate of such as doe not love they know not God this is proved by an argument from Gods Nature for God is love Doct. That it is the part of godly Ministers to exhort themselves and their godly hearers to mutual love both the people to love their Ministers and the Ministers their people When our Saviour was about to leave the charge of the souls of his people to Peter he asked him three severall times whether he loved him John 21.15 16 17. that so out of his aboundant love to Christ he might feed his sheep 1 Thes 5.13 esteeming him they would love him for his work sake Heb. 10.24 the Apostle exhorts them to provoke one another to love Heb. 13.1 whatsoever happens he would have brotherly love to continue so St. Peter exhorts 1 Pet. 1.22 Reas 1. From the Covenant that stands between Ministers and people they are partakers of one baptisme members of one and the same body 1 Cor. 10.17 1 Cor. 12.27 therefore they should inlarge themselves one to another Eph. 4.16 they should love one another because God hath incorporated them into one body 2. Because they doe not receive mutuall edification except all be done in love for all edification is wrought by love Knowledge puffeth up but love edifieth therefore let all things be done in love mutuall love is both profitable and comfortable 3. Want of love is the sowring of a Ministers spirit 2 Cor. 12.20 it saddens him when he sees the people envying one another when the body is full of swellings and inflammations the medicines and plaisters laid on doe not heal a man must first allay the inflamations so when a Minister sees swelling amongst his people what he preacheth is spilt upon the ground 4. If people walk not in mutuall love the Minister shall lose his portion 1 Thes 5.13 from them he shall lose his estimation among them for they will not profi● by any Ordinance of God but wax cold Vse 1. This exhorts Ministers to make it their main and principall work to alla● swellings and to knit together all the Members of a Congregation in one spirit and mutuall love as God knits them together in one body as we desire to grow up together in the graces of Gods Spirit let us love one another where there is no love there is no edifying all graces fall short of edifying where love is wanting 1 Cor. 13.1 2. 2 To exhort the people of God to receive this exhortation of love not to suffer any dissention to be found among them Heb. 13.17 you cannot be inflamed with hatred but your Minister shall lose his portion of love Doct. That the springing of our love from God should move Ministers and people to mutual love Love is the chiefe lesson Christ gave to his Disciples when he went out of the world John 13.35 36. 2 Tim. 1.13 a man may assoon lose his inheritance in the Lord Jesus as lose his love to his brethren if God set love in my soule and man unset it I shall destroy the work of God in my soule Vse 1. Take heed of wrath if love be of God whence then is hatred that is from the enemy of God Eph. 4.26 27. if we keep leaven long it will sowre so this anger will degenerate into hatred Obj. You will say You will not hate your brother but yet you will have nothing to doe with him Answ When a man affects not Communion with his brother nor communication of good to him such a man doth hate his brother 2. If we would have any comfort in our hearts we must have a care that nothing that befalls betwixt us and our brethren should take away our love from them if we suffer a fire of wrath to kindle in us we doe as much as in us lies to destroy our own souls Cant. 7.7 8. Much water cannot quench love therefore love is an heavenly fire hatred a fire from hell Majus lumen extinguet minus Doct. That the love to our brethren is a pledge of our birth-right John 13.34 Reas 1. It is the nature of God and by this means thou partakest of the D●vine Nature Rom. 5.5 2. Love is a fruit of faith by which we receive Christ Gal. 5.6 Vse 1. This condemns such of deep prodigality as suffer love to decay so much you lose of your love to your brethren so much you lose of your love to God and so much you lose of the evidence of your inheritance 2. Preserve your love to your brethren and you preserve your inheritance your brotherly love is a pledge of your inheritance 3. Of comfort to such souls as abound in their love to their brethren so much love so much grace so much hope of an everlasting inheritance if your love decays your faith and hope of salvation decays Obj. But a little thing frets my soul and I am not so soon healed being fretted some flesh is hard to heal so is it with some mens spirits What shall I doe to uphold my brotherly love Answ 1. Keep your love to God and so you shall preserve your love to your brethren forgive your brethren and God will forgive you Mat. 18. ult 2. Keep your hearts clean love will not long rest in an unclean heart 1 Pet. 1.22 because love is an heavenly fire 1 JOHN 4.8 He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love Doct. THat according to our love or want of love to our brethren such is our knowledge or want of knowledge of God What is it to know God The Apostle bears witnesse of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.5 that they abound in knowledge so that they fall
because his is a Spirit of truth Doct. The Spirit of God bearing witnesse ●● the Scripture and in the hearts ●f Gods people is a Spirit of ●ruth John 14.16 17. John 16. ● When the Spirit of Truth is 〈◊〉 he shall guide you into all truth Quest Why is it called a Spirit of Truth Answ Not only because be in one of the Persons in the blessed Trinity and therefore his witnesse must needs be truth a man that works by a rule may go● aw●y but the rule it selfe is not awry the holy Ghost being a God of Truth cannot 〈◊〉 speak truth himselfe being the line cannot goe wrong But he is called a Spirit of truth rather 1. Because he speaks nothing but what he hears of the Father and of the Son John 16.13 ●●e Spirit 〈◊〉 ●●thing from the Father and the Son speaks nothing but 〈◊〉 we receives from them what they apprehend and judge the same 〈◊〉 testifies John 8.26 and he speaks it without change and alteration 2. Because he speaks a testimony not of a shadowing or typical representation 〈◊〉 and manifest truth Moses s●ake by types which observed the 〈◊〉 but what the holy Ghost speaks is evident truth without v●●d or covering ● Cor. ● 17 18. 3. From the effect of the Spirit the Spirit not only speaks but works truth in the hearts of those to whom he speaks by speaking truth he works truth in the heart so that they that receive the testimony are of the truth John 3.19 2 John 1.2 Now they that receive the testimony of the Spirit that Jesus Christ is come by water and bloud they are cleansed from the world from dissimulation and hypocrisie and so are made of the truth Object How comes it to passe then that sometimes many speaking by the Spirit yet speak falsly and yet are confident they speak truth Answ True a man having received some work of the Spirit may speak falsehood as Zedekiah 1 Kings 22.24 and yet was confident he spake by the Spirit but yet though a man speaking by a spirit of delusion may think he hath spoken the truth yet it hinders not but when the Spirit of God indeed bears witnesse it may be discerned to be truth Vse 1. If this Spirit bearing witnesse to Christs coming be a Spirit of truth then such as have received the Spirit of truth need not be afraid that they are led by a spirit of delusion that doe believe that Jesus Christ came by water and bloud Jer. 20.10 11. the way of the righteous man cannot deceive him Quest How shall I know that this spirit doth not deceive when it witnesseth pardon and healing and the like Answ 1. The Spirit bears witnesse of it selfe as well as of other things the Sun shews it selfe as well as makes other things visible 2. The Spirit beareth witnesse of it selfe from the work it frames in the hearts of Gods servants the testimony of the Spirit doth so set on its witnesse doth so pacifie and purifie the conscience that he plainly sees that this is the very Spirit of God which is manifest by the fruits 3. The testimony of the Spirit breathing in the Word and in the hearts of Gods children doe so agree in every thing that its evident to be the same Spirit though it be true the Spirit is more strong and evident in the Scripture the witnesse may be weak in our hearts yet always in the main aim and ends they agree together 4. By how much the more suitable it is to the Scripture by so much the more it conforms us to the Image of Christ the Spirit of Christs make you meek and lowly as he was draws us from earthly objects to a more divine frame that Spirit which fashions to Christ is of God Vse 2. Of just reproof to Gods servants that have found the bloud of Christ pacifying and purifying their hearts if in this case their souls doubt and are solicitous they refuse the testimony of the Spirit Satan say they may transform himselfe into an Angell of light I but Satan cannot pacifie the conscience much lesse purifie it himselfe being an unclean spirit loves to draw on others to impurity if therefore the spirit within you draw you on to walk in truth and to frame your heart according to the Image of Christ if you finde any measure of peace and purity its evident the Spirit is a Spirit of truth Vse 3. Of comfort to all such as have put their trust in Christ upon the testimony of Gods Spirit witnessing to them that Christ came to save and heal them Why this is strong consolation to them that which makes out spirits doubtfull is the deceitfulnesse of our own hearts Jer. 17.10 But yet this should comfort us that though our hearts be deceitfull yet this Spirit of God breathing in us is a Spirit of truth and if you would know whether you have a spirit of truth in you or no Why by this you shall know it that Spirit which speaks peace and purity to a mans soul that Spirit is of God Satan may doe much but he is not able to transform himselfe into such a spirit no other spirit can work this but the Spirit of God a spirit speaking peace without purity may be a delusion and a spirit speaking purity without any measure of peace may be a delusion for all the paths of Wisdome are peace but both peace and purity together doe evidently manifest it to be the Spirit of God Vse 4. For them that have found any measure of peace and purity they ought to teach them to be very carefull to discern whether this spirit be of God or no if thou hast found much peace and withall thou walkest in simplicity and godly sincerity this Spirit is of God 2 Cor. 1.12 But if our peace make us carelesse of our wayes and more licentious we shall never approve such a spirit to be of God where Gods Spirit breaths the more peace the more care of purity and therefore let us always put them together Herods spirit of joy was a spirit of delusion because it was not a spirit of purity Mark 6.20 Herod and David both fell into the same lusts how shall we know whether of them had the Spirit of God David for a while seemed to do worst but Herod he so favoured his lust that he destroyed John that reproved him David he heard the Prophet and humbled himself and renewed his repentance before God and therefore doubtlesse his Spirit was of God because he was studious of purity such a soul as favours his lust and takes part with it hath not Gods Spirit in him that sicknesse is mortall that refuseth utterly all means of health if therefore either our peace or purity be wanting we shall not have this testimony of Gods Spirit that spirit that speaks both is a Spirit of truth 1 JOHN 5.7 For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and
God be true and every man a lyar Rom. 3.15 Jer. 9.2 3 4 5. 2. Hence learn that all that believe this divine testimony of the Son ought to be compounded into unity it was the last solemn Prayer that Christ put up for the Church that they all might be one with him as he was one with the Father John 17.8 9 20 21. where he useth this as a motive to God to bring on all believers to unity because he was one with the Father and the Father with him and therefore he prayes that they be one that hereby the world might believe that God had sent him as if dissensions among brethren would bear witnesse to the world that God did not send his Son to be our Saviour so that by these dissensions as much as in them lies they make the promises of God of none effect 2. They annihilate all the testimony that the three Persons give to Christ this unity is that mark whereby all the world shall know them to be Christs Disciples and it is the main duty Paul calls for Ephes 4.3 6. from this ground because there is but one God and one Christ and one faith Acts 4.31 32. And indeed all the dissensions of the world have sprung from this ground that they doe not all worship one God or believe not that God is but one For what makes a man to fall out with his brother but either his profit or pleasure or credit is conceived to be hindered and is not this because I make my profit or my credit my God and so I had rather lose God and fellowship with his Saints then lose any gain and pleasure and so I am a lover of pleasure more then of God Now the Apostle made account if we professe but one God the unity of God should be more powerfull to make us one then any thing in the world should be to make us two so much dissension so much atheism If we suffer the world to be more mighty to make difference then God to make unity we make God our Idoll 1 JOHN 5.8 And there are three thus bear witnesse in earth the Spirit and the water and the bloud and these three agree in one IN these words is described the testimony given on earth to the Divinity and Sonship of Christ Wherein 1. Their number Three 2. Their names the Spirit the Water and the Bloud 3. Their consent and these three agree in one Doct. The Spirit the Water and the Bloud are three principal witnesses on earth that bear witnesse to the Sonship of Christ The three principall witnesses for he doth compare them to the three witnesses in Heaven Quest What these three witnesses be Answ The Spirit partly breathing in the Scripture partly in the conscience of men First The Spirit breathing in the Scriptures for they in a speciall manner bear witnesse to Christ and they are called Testaments and indeed they are so farre witnesses as no witnesse is to be received unlesse it be consonant to the testimony of the Scripture Gal. 1.7 8. and it is not Paul or Peter that testifies this but the Sp●rit breathing in them otherwise Christ receives not the testimony of men neither doth the conscience of a Christian receive the testimony of any living man except he finde the Spirit breathing in him for let God be true and every man a lyar This Spirit breathing in the Scripture is a Spirit of power and perfection the Spirit of power in the Scripture is discerned partly 1. In convincing men John 16.9 2. In comforting those that are dejected Rom. 3.16 3. In strengthing us against temptation 1 John 2.14 Secondly There is in the Scripture a Spirit of perfection so that if we have but the testimony of the Scripture what need we any further witnesse 2 Tim. 3.16 17. Thirdly There is a Spirit that bears witnesse in our hearts that Jesus is the Son of God and that Spirit is the same that breathed in the Scripture so that when we are hearing or reading yet the Spirit sets it home to your hearts and souls so that we goe home either convinced or comforted or strengthned to every good work and duty God requires now this Spirit fully perswades us that Jesus is the Son of God for this Spirit goes beyond the power of all created things for no created power is able to convince an hard heart or comfort a dejected Spirit or strengthen us in our Christian course therefore if we find a Spirit in us inabling us to doe all this the soul rests satisfied without any need of further witnesse that Jesus is the Son of God Fourthly Water bears witnesse to this by water some understand the water of baptism and indeed that gives strong testimony to Christ especially to them that are prepared to receive it as in the Apostles times when they were first brought on to believe and then to be baptized God then strongly testified this truth so that after baptism they were filled with much joy and oft-times with divers gifts and tongues Acts 8.36 The water of baptism sent away the Eunuch rejoycing see Acts 19.6 7. and though children be not capable of this mercy now in their Infancy except by an extraordinary power yet notwithstanding a Christian afterwards findes such vertue and strength from his baptism that he sees there is no water like it but that there is a divine testimony in it But because water is but a representation of this Spirit therefore by water here may be understood the water of sanctification the Spirit of God sanctifying and regenerating us for besides the Spirit of God that at some extraordinary times fills with unspeakable joy of the holy Ghost there is also an ordinary work of Gods Spirit partly cooling refreshing us as water doth partly making us fruitful in our Christian course for those great inlargements of Gods Spirit doe not always abide with us in that measure but this water is a spring in us continually afording us something which evidently witnesseth this truth Tit. 3.5 John 4.14 1. In this water of Gods Spirit we finde a power to cleanse us from our lusts as running waters doe channells and sinks Ezek. 36.25 when I see something in me conforming me to Christ that water bears witnesse that Jesus is the Son of God 2. There is a power in water to cool and refresh us when God sheds abroad his Spirit in us there is something that cools us from the heat of Gods wrath Isa 44.3 3. This water is of a mighty power to make us fruitfull Psal 1.3 A Christian watered by the Spirit of God draws such moysture and life from every Ordinance of God that he brings forth fruit in due season according to his calling Ezek. 30.26 27. Quest How doth this water bear witnesse that Jesus is the Son of God Answ Because all the vertue that this water hath to cleanse comfort or fructifie us springs onely from faith in the testimony that Jesus
it which speaks in the heart of every believer John 6.44 No man can come to me except the Father which sent me draw him as none come to Christ except the Father draw him so he draws none but by the same power whereby he sent Christ and that was by his Soveraign authority if God should draw us onely by the cords of men we should break through all as the Israelites did Hos 11.4 But when God shakes our hearts by an Almighty power and lets us see the danger of our estate and after enlightens us to see the wayes of salvation then he draws a man on to Christ take a naturall man all the world cannot perswade him of his dangerous estate but he is perswaded of his good nature and good heart towards God Secondly If he be convinced of it all the world cannot perswade him that any promise belongs to him and therefore here God must put forth an Almighty power of a Spirit of adoption whereby he is brought on to believe the promises before he had onely an humane credulity now he believes it from a testimony within himselfe John 6.45 2 The Son of God bears witnesse in our hearts of this truth by speaking freedome and liberty to our souls from the guilt of sin John 8.36 If the Son shall make you free then shall you be free indeed that whereas before we were bound to our sins and lusts and wayes Christ comes and sets us free from all so that now we serve not our selves or men but the Lord Christ by this a Christian knows that surely Christ is the Son of God that hath made me a son of God my selfe 3 The Spirit bears witnesse to our hearts of this truth by convincing our hearts of it John 16.9 Secondly By working a Spirit of faith and a spirit of joy in believing John 14.16 17. Hence he is called the Comforter Thirdly By giving us a spirit to make us overcome the temptations of the world and the lusts of our own hearts 2 Tim. 1.7 1 John 4.4 and this testimony is divine 1 Because it is the revelation and will of God himselfe 2 Because it is above all humane power thus to draw us and convince us and strengthen and comfort us against all temptations For the three witnesses on earth they likewise bear witnesse to this truth in our hearts 1 The Spirit that is the Spirit breathing in the Word hath such a mighty power to enlighten and quicken and strengthen a soul that whatsoever the Spirit speaks in the Scripture the same it witnesseth in our souls 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 2 Water bears witnesse in our hearts to this truth that is the water of Sanctification doth so cleanse and cool and refresh the conscience of a man and make him so fruitful in his Christian course that it 's plainly a divine testimony it passeth all the power of the creature thus to pacifie and quiet the conscience it is only the Spirit of God that is able thus to pacifie a guilty soul thus to cleanse an impure heart and to make these dry barren stocks as we are fruitful this is a divine work of Gods Spirit 3 The bloud of Christ witnesseth this truth to our hearts by being sprinkled on our consciences and so speaking peace to us this is a divine work 2 The same bloud purifies every Ordinance and creature there would be no vertue in any Ordinance nothing would doe us good but for the bloud of Christ sanctifying it to our use now this testimony is of greater force then the testimony of all the sons of men together There be three things needful in a testimony 1 That it be certain 2 Evident 3 Powerfull and Effectuall 1 This divine testimony is more certain then all the testimonies of the world because God is greater in knowledge and so knows more then men can 2 Because he is greater in truth men may erre but God cannot lye Tit. 1.2 3. Rom. 4.2 2 This testimony is more evident to make a thing evident is required 1 Objectum perspicuum 2 Organum bene affectum 3 Medium apte dispositum Now God doth make this truth evident by the concurrence of all these 1 He lets us plainly see the danger of sin and the vertue and worth of Christs bloud God reveals his Son to our hearts John 3.12 Gal. 1.46 so what the Gospel speaks of his Son the same is plainly revealed and so he makes the object perspicuous 2 He opens the eyes of men to discern it to long after it to tast of his vertue and power Acts 26.18 1 Pet. 2.3 1 Cor. 2.14 15. A natural man sees nothing of this work 3 He clears the Medium that is the Word and Sacraments Prayer Christian Communion so that whereas before we lookt at them but as beggerly rudiments of little power or worth after God hath once enlightned us we see the power and vertue of God therein so plainly as if we had been touched by the Sun beams 3 This divine testimony is far more powerfull then any humane testimony Heb. 4.12 13. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. The Ordinances of God are mighty and effectual through God so to change and renew our hearts that no humane power is able to reach them Vse 1. To refute two doctrines of the Romish Church 1 That the last ground-work of faith is resolved on the testimony of the Church Ask them if they believe Jesus to be the Son of God they say yes ask them why Because the Scripture say so ask rhem But why doe you believe the Scripture From the testimony of the Church say they so that their best faith is but humane credulity But ask a true Protestant why he believes Jesus to be the Son of God he tels you because the Scripture say so ask him why he believes the Scripture he saith not because the Church believes so but he believes it from a testimony within himselfe What say they you trust a private spirit of your own nay his private spirit is common with him to all believers ever since the world was and that spirit is no other then the Spirit of God that breatheth in all his children Besides he hath other witnesses in his heart the Spirit the water and the bloud and this is a divine testimony greater then the witnesse of all the world so that here is a double errour of theirs 1 In grounding their faith upon the Churches testimony 2 In blaspheming the Spirit of God for a private spirit Fundamental errours That Doctrine that lifts the Church from Christ and builds it on the testimony of the Fathers and the Schools that doctrine overthrows the foundation for other foundation can no man lay then what is laid already even Jesus Christ 2 It refutes another uncomfortable doctrine of the Romish Church that teach that a man cannot by divine faith have assurance of his estate in grace and salvation for say they all divine faith is generall thus he that repents
have committed this sin and they know God is not able to break his word Mark 9.22 There comes a poor man to Christ for help for his son and said If thou canst doe any thing have compassion on us What saith Christ If thou canst believe all things are possible to him that believeth viz that I am able why saith he Lord I believe help my unbeliefe he believed God was able to help him and yet was not certain of it neither and yet this faith procured this blessing from God Quest How can this be called believing on Christ when the heart is not grounded on Christ nor rests on him Answ As to believe on Christ is to rest on him as a stone on the foundation so there is a believing on Christ when the heart yet rests not one Christ but rowls it selfe on Christ and that may be done while the heart is yet in motion Resting is a setlednesse of condition but rowling is an unsetled tumbling about sometimes rowls one way sometimes another yet such a Christian believes on Christ because he is rowling towards him that so he may lie on him Psal 37.5 Commit thy ways to the Lord in the original rowl thy ways upon God lean thy soul that way that is done by rowling thy selfe towards him that thou mightst rest on him Prov. 3.6 Trust on the Lord with all thy heart lean not on thy own wisdome a man may be said to lean that way whereon he is not yet setled Quest When is a man said to lean on Christ Answ 1. When a man is perswaded that God is able to help him yet doubts of his willingnesse and yet comes to him leans towards him craves his help as Mark 5.25 there comes a woman to Christ with a bloudy issue she came neither doubting of his ability nor will If I may but touch the hemme of his garment I shall be made whole this was a resting on Christ But the poor Leper was not come so far as to assure himselfe that Christ would doe it but he believes his power and useth the means to make him willing Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean 2 A man may be said to lean on Christ when he believes not his willingnesse nor yet confidently his power and yet desires God to help his unbelief this is a rowling upon Christ If thou ca●●● doe any thing help us in Scripture phrase this kind of rowling upon Christ is called a coming to Christ it 's one thing to be coming to Christ and another thing to rest on him but yet he is a believer if he doe but come to Christ Math. 11.28 this coming to Christ is believing on him for to such he promiseth that he will refresh them and he refresheth none but believers Joh. 6.35 37 67. By coming to Christ we believe on him and he that cometh to him he will in no wise cast out if a man be but coming onwards humbled for his sins and perswaded that God is able to help him if not yet if he be grieved for his unbelief and prayes to God to help his unbelief this is coming to Christ that is making towards him and this is faith Suppose a man tell you in such a field of yours is a rich treasure if you believe the man will you not goe about to dig it up but if you doubt of the truth then you let it alone so God tels you all the treasures of life and grace are laid up in Christ this record God gives of his Son now if we believe this record we will use all good means to attain this eternal life otherwise if we doe not use the means to get this treasure we make God a lyar as if his record were not true Vse 1. It reproves the dangerous sin of such as neither relye on Christ nor rowl towards him St. John tels us we make God a lyar a fearfull thing for mortal men to make the God of truth a God of lyes now if we make God a lyar we make him no God at all if we live in unbelief we live in Atheism all such as find not their hearts resting on God or rowling towards him they make God a lyar and there is no truth in them for if we did but believe that eternal life were to be found in Christ we would not rest till we were assured of it if we know of any Inheritance left us we will ●ow from one end of the land to the other to obtain it so if we believed that the treasure of salvation were laid up in Christ we should never rest rowling towards him till we had got possession thereof Vse 2. May stir us up never to rest till we have brought our hearts to relye upon Christ to lean on him to rowl towards him if we doe not this we are Atheists therefore as we desire to make God a God of truth let ●s never rest till we have found our hearts relying on him Psal 132. ● to 6. It was a notable resolution of David in the midst of all his ●●bles that he would not give himselfe rest till he had prepared as habitation for God so let us never cease rowling towards Christ till at length we find our selves resting on him Quest What would you have us to doe to ●●ing our hearts to relye and 〈◊〉 on God Answ 1. Rowl your selves to such places where you may have means of grace Faith comes by bearing Rom 10.17 2 Rowl off your hearts from all your sins come out of your sinful corruptions rowl your selves out of your bod● of security 2 Cor 6. two last verses 3 Rowl your selves so far from all worldly comforts as that you set not your hearts on them Psal 62.10 nor on great friends Psal 146.3 4 Cast your meditation on the mighty power of God which is able to heal such untoward hearts as yours 5 Use all the means you may and endeavour with all the strength you may that God may heal you 6 If you doubt of his will and are not confident of his ability pray that God would give you a believing heart Lord help my unbelief Vse 3. For them that have rowled themselves on Christ rest not in rowling there is no rest to be had in rowling therefore from rowling 〈…〉 come to establishment in Christ and th●re rest sit down in quietnesse and confidence now if thou wouldst have a stone lye on the foundation thou most cut off all the roughnesse and unsquarenesse or else it cannot lye 〈◊〉 there is none but either he hath some doubts that make him under or else pride that is a great swelling therefore we must lay down all our high thoughts and 〈◊〉 levell with Christ for he is meek and lo●ly besides all hatred and 〈◊〉 is an uneven swelling in our hearts and how 〈◊〉 can they lye smooth in the building bowles and swelling bodies will not touch but in 〈◊〉 point smoo●● things lye flat what swelling of heart we
the fruits of his mediation 2. In our hearts and wills we have Christ when we look at him as our chiefest good that there is nothing in heaven or earth that we desire in comparison of him this is an act of the will and affections Psal 73.25 Psal 42.1 2. this is called hungering and thirsting after Christ No hunger is satisfied without eating of that we hunger after so when a soul hungers and thirsts after Christ give him pleasures and profits yet they satisfie not except you give him Christ and this is an high point of worship Gal. 6.14 when our hearts are set on him that our chiefest care is to get him our greatest griefe to lose him our chiefest delight in him why if we be thus affected to Christ we have him Object The Church earnestly desired and sought after Christ yet found him not Cant. 3. 1 to 4. Answ 1. She could neither have sought after him nor desired him except she had had him 2. When she sought him and said She found him not she means I found him not in that measure of peace and comfort and fellowship I desired but yet she had him for she said She sought him whom her soul loved Secondly Such a soul as it thus highly prizeth and desireth and hungers after Christ so it debased it selfe the more we esteem him the more we debase our s●lves the more we love him the lesse we love our selves when Christ once revealed himselfe to J●b Job 40.3 What laid he Behold Lord I am vile see Job 42.4 5. No soul that highly prizeth and aff●cteth Christ but the more he d●saffects and loaths himselfe as unmeet to come into the presence of Christ Isa 6.4 5. Then said I woe is me for I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips for mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of Hosts the more he sees Christ the more he abhors himselfe as an unclean and abominable thing that if he could he would goe out of himselfe this selfe-denyall is the first principle in Christianity Luke 9.23 3. We worship Christ in our lives by our obedience in doing his will and by patience in suffering for him Our obedience is a true worship of Christ 1. When a man hath such respect to all Gods Commandements in his heart that there is not one of them but he hath respect unto and submits his heart to it this is a principall part of Gods worship Psal 119.6 2. When he hath respect to them all in his conversation 2 Cor. 10.4 5. The Gospel of Christ brings every thought into subjection now this is a marvellous worship of Christ when a man hath not a thought in him but it is subjected to Christ 4. We worship Christ in our lives by our patience in suffering if the Lord call us to suffer for him when we can sit down quietly and rest well contented to endure his good pleasure with patience this is a principall part of Gods worship 1 Sam. 3.18 It was a good testimony of Elies sincerity when he heard of a wofull judgement denounced against him It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth good in his eyes we have the Lord for our Lord when we give him leave to rule us as he pleaseth and patiently submit our selves unto him in every thing Job 1.21 an argument we have God for our God otherwise how should we complain and murmur at the instruments Psal 39.9 Lam. 3.29 The Church complaining of her misery tells us the frame of her Spirit in such a time it is good to bear the yoak in our youth she sits alone and keeps silence Psal 62.1 2. Micah 7.7 8. This is a solemn worship of Christ if God call a man to suffer for his Name divers evills he is so far from being ashamed of it that it is his glory and rejoycing if any man suffer as a Christian let him rejoyce in that behalfe when a man is thus framed to obedience in doing and patience in suffering the will of God such a soul is a true worshipper of Christ and by worshipping him we have him if contrary we look at Christ as no such excellent thing but are ashamed of him if we can look at our selves as great men in the world and scorn to seek and mourn after Christ when we will not be under Christs yoak but scorn to stoop to him in every thing and by no means we will endure any hardship for him why then we doe not worship Christ and if we doe not worship him we have him not and not having him we have no life 5. We are said to have Christ by purchase this is exprest partly in that parable Mat. 13.46 One way to have this Pearl is to buy it see Isa 55.1 2. Come and buy yea without money why without money Cant. 8.7 If a man should give all the treasure of his house for Christ they would be greatly dispised Acts 8.19 when Simon Magus offered money for the gift of the holy Ghost Peter tells him Thy money perish with thee yet many times without parting with money we cannot have him the holding fast of money oft-times looseth Christ upon this ground the young man went without him Mat. 19. 21 to 25. Upon the poynt of money Christ parted with the Pharisees Luke 16.14 In three cases money must be parted with else you shall not purchase Christ First When the Lord upon some speciall command requires it as he did the young man expressely now for him to stick for money for want of parting with it he lost Christ upon the same point Ananias and Saphira lost Christ because they kept back some of the price Acts 5.1 2 3 4. a fearfull judgement felt on them to shew how dangerous it is to stand upon tearms with Christ in this case money must be parted withall Secondly When in times of persecution a man cannot have Christ with peace and purity unlesse he be willing to part with all for him as sometimes the m●rket goes higher sometimes lower but at what rate soever it goes a Christian is resolved to take Christ at the highest rate sometimes unlesse a man be content to be spoyled of all his goods he cannot have liberty of conscie ce in this case set money and goods and lands and all goe and suffer joyfully the spoyling of your goods Heb. 10.34 Thirdly When sometimes by laying out money we may win Christ as in case we want a good Ministry among us and cannot have it unlesse we be willi●g to lay out money for obtaining the Gospel and this he calls sowing to the spirit Gal. 6.8 As a man by laying out money provides things needfull for him so when a man layes out for spirituall uses he shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting In these three case money must be parted with and yet if you think money can purchase Christ you are not worthy of him 1. Christ must be purchased by parting with all those strong
Psal 119.5 24. Try therefore if such a covenant have past betwixt you and God have we for our parts given up our selves to God be sure God hath prevented us in all this if there have no such covenant past between you and God then God is not your God you have not Christ Object Who is there to be found that so looks to his own wayes and his housholds that he walks so strictly with God as you require Answ True they that doe make a covenant with God often break even as often as there is a thought or word or action that was not from Gods word or mouth or counsel but this is our hope 1. We have Christ for our surety of this covenant Heb. 7.22 and he will make up all breaches when therefore we break covenant with God let us renew our humlliations and be ashamed of our breach of covenant and charge our souls for it and acknowledge that as we have broken covenant with God so might God justly breake covenant with us and if we thus return and humble our selves then God will renew his covenant with us again 2. We have Christ by way of acceptance this is exprest Joh. 1.12 To as many as received him he gave them power to become the sons of God to receive him as divers expresse this place is to receive him as a Father as a King as an Husband but it may rather be conceived that to receive Christ is to receive him into an house or Temple and this may be gathered from the precedent words vers 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is meant his own place or own home for so it is used Joh. 19.27 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he took her into his home so as many as received him as many as received him into their hearts as into a Temple when we thus receive him we have him Quest How doe we receive Christ as into a Temple Answ Three wayes 1. When we prepare a way for him to come into his holy Temple Mal. 3.1 Now what is this preparation Isa 40.3 4. 1. Mountains must be puld down that is the lofty spirits of man must be puld down and that is when we subject our selves at his feet willing to be disposed and framed which way he pleaseth and to do what he would have us do if we would have Christ come into our hearts he must not find high craggy rocky wayes but all must be laid level and even 2. Every valley shall be filled that is every base eatthly heart shall be lifted up to the high wayes of the Lord to mind life and heavenly things raised up above earthlinesse and low things of the world Psal 24.7 to 10. Lift up your heads O ye Gates and be ye lifted up ye everlasting doores that the King of glory may come in Christ will not descend into pits but if your hearts be set on heavenly things on Gods favour and his heavenly Kingdome then you are fit for Christ 2. A mans heart may be too low through despair many a poor soul after his high thoughts are puld down he sinks down so low into despair that he thinks no promise or mercy belongs to him Why this heart is too low for Christ therefore it behoves a christian to beleeve there is an hope in Israel concerning this Christ hath had mercy on as bad as me and therefore we will lay our mouths in the dust till he shall have mercy on us and if he offer grace we are willing to receive it 3. Crooked things must be made straight there are in our hearts many turnings in and out these must be made straight it 's when we look with a single eye and are willing to be guided by a straight rule and aim singly at Gods ends such an heart is fit for Christ when it 's cleansed from all hypocrisie 2. There is another crookednesse of our hearts when we shift off and cover sin Psal 125.5 but to prevent it Christ will have us deale plainly discover our sins openly before God and then is Christ ready to come suddainly into his Temple 4. Rough places must be made smooth many a mans heart is rough and harsh and bitter why God will have this frame of heart laid down all bitternesse and wrath put away and the heart made loving and meek the Lamb Christ will not rest in Lyons dens therefore rhe Apostle bids us lay aside all wrath and malice when our rough hearts are made smooth end amiable why then undoubtedly Christ will come into his Temple 2. When Christ is come into our hearts if we would look to keep him there we must look to it that there be no common and unclean thing found there 2 Cor. 6.16 17 18. This Temple is an holy place therefore put away not only unclean but common things all your affairs must be dedicated to the Lord all your wealth and store all your houshold and children must be consecrate to the Lord Christ loves to lye clean he dislikes even bodily slovenlinesse much more spirituall defilements 3. To receive Christ into his Temple is to look well to the charge of Gods holy offerings God would have every man in particular to take the charge of his holy things on himselfe and not put it off to others let every one keep his charge every one offer up his dayly sacrifice and his service for the Sabbath all Gods offerings must be looked to and if we doe thus God will rest in his holy Temple for ever Exod. 15.2 consider therefore whether you have thus received Christ have you found your proud hearts humbled your base earthly hearts lifted up to Gods wayes all crooked by-paths of hypocrisie and shifting put away doe you find your rough spirits made smooth and amiable Why if it be so then Christ is come and when he is come doe you strive to keep your hearts clean and undefiled and dedicate your selves and yours to God you keep the charge of Gods holy offerings and set up his Ordinances amongst you why then we have received Christ è contra if we find it not thus we have no Christ and so no life Hitherto we have heard what it is to have Christ the second thing to be inquired after is What it is to have the Son He that hath the Son hath life it is not enough to have Christ but if we would have life we must have Christ as the Son Quest What then is it to have the Son Answ There are three things implyed in having the Son 1. That such a have Christ in truth doe not rest so much in having any of the benefits of Christ but they doe chiefly affect to have the Son himselfe many professors sought after Christ for the loaves sake John 16.26 27. But Christ bids them not to labour for the meat that perisheth but to labour for Christ himself the bread of life hereby Peter discovered hypocrisie of Simon Magus in that he desired the gift of
of a promise which is fed by a promise Many times a word of grace and wise admonition sinks so deep into the heart as that it makes many a one amend his wicked wayes and take better courses and reform his life but this is no evident signe of spirituall life So an hypocrite may be so far convinced as to turn the stream of his life and yet without all power of godlinesse and the ground is we cannot receive life from the words or works of the Law it 's altogether impossible Gal. 3.21 All true spirituall life is from some word of promise that hath been dispen●ed to us in the Word The word of the Law may reclaim us from giving outward offence but yet without all respect or obedience to God But when we are quickened by a word of promise then the love of God constraineth us Obj. Is it not ordinary for the word of the Law to cast down and humble us before we can lay hold on a promise Answ True Yet this is not that which makes a man a new man this may reach to the reformation of many outward sins but yet it gives not spirituall life till we begin to think of and long after Christ and meditate and talk of him till at length the sight of Christ doth so work on us that we do not only long after him but we so receive him and imbrace him that we are inlightned by him A third cause of life is the Spirit of God John 3.6 There is a shedding abroad of the Spirit into the heart of every regenerate man that he hath not the same spirit he had before Now a mans spirit is the bent and inclination of the soul Eph. 4.23 Be ye renewed in the spirits of your minds The soul and the body is the same But there is another spirit they see other things they never saw before judge otherwise then they did before now they have new thoughts and judgements and affections so that their heart is far off from earthly things and let on spirituall things All things are become new A new heart new conference new imployment new company the whole man hath another frame of spirit in him He that finds it thus hath life For application Consider therefore how you finde your hearts speaking concerning your estates Do you finde indeed that sometimes you have had good motions cast in but before God was pleased to call you to his grace nothing did you good Doe you finde your life wrought by a spirit of promise Do you finde that you are renewed to a new inclination and frame of spirit then you have life Your life springs from true causes if not you have not life A second sort of signes of life is from the effects of spirituall life And 1 Justification or pardon of sins is a principall part of our spirituall life Psal 32.2 3. And this is called justification to life Rom. 5.18 Even as a condemned mans pardon is the life of the man so is the pardon of our sins the life of our souls Now the first effect flowing from the pardon of our sin is 1 Some inward peace of conscience some inward satisfaction that he never found before My sin is not pardoned at least not manifested so to be till I finde some measure of inward peace Rom. 5.1 What was it that burthened thy conscience but guilt of sin If therefore God say to my soul Son thy sins be forgiven thee upon this follows the tranquility of the mind and sometimes in that unspeakable manner that passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Though this be not so ordinary yet they alwayes finde a secret peace and ease as if you had cast off milstones from the heart Isa 32.17 The effect of righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever if sin be pardoned peace and everlasting assurance follows A 2. effect of this life of Justification is that look as you see in a morall life no man hath received life but he strives to maintain it so that all that he hath will he give for his life So if thou hast received the life of the pardon of thy sins thou shalt finde a serious and constant care of preserving that life and peace so that you will let all go rather then the peace of your conscience Thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal 63.4 And therefore if I finde a tender care in me to maintain my peace it 's a signe I have received life seeing I am so carefull to maintain it A man that hath been in a great debt and lately paid it he is carefull to run on the score no more so when God hath blotted out the score of our sins a Christian is very sollioitous to sin no more but that he may live an holy and spotlesse life all his dayes Notable is the example of Joseph Gen. 39. How shall I commit this great wickednesse and sin against God How shall I break my peace of conscience and run on a new score Sometimes indeed Gods children have received pardon of sins and yet afterwards turned Gods grace into wantonnesse but withall observe if they have been overtaken with some grievous lusts the losse of their peace and favour of God hath been more bitter to them then death it self and if the Lord give us hearts follicitous to maintain our peace it is a sign that he hath given us peace those sins are pardoned which we abhor it 's the nature of life to preserve it self and to expell what may be an enemy to life And this is a signe our peace is not counterfeit but sound if we be carefull to preserve it A 3. effect of our life of Justification is that which our Saviour gives Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her because she loves much He that loves much hath much forgiven him The love of God in some measure proportionable to the sin pardoned is a good evidence of the pardon of our sins Gods pardons are lively pardons they leave not a man as he was but whom he pardons them he heals This woman was a notorious Harlot her loving much shewed that her many sins were forgiven her according to the multitude and measure of sins pardoned such is the measure of our love to God and his Saints And indeed there is none hath so little forgiven him but he thinks it a great deal as indeed well he may and thinks himselfe bound to love God abundantly For application Consider therefore what peace thou hast Perhaps thou wilt say I have had peace all my life long but such peace is ill rooted it springs not from a word of God And 2 It 's fruitlesse Thou sayst thou hast peace but what care hast thou to maintain it and to expell thy sins which hinder thy peace And again if thou hast such peace where is thy love If that be wanting pardon of sin is wanting If thou wouldst have good ground of the pardon of thy sins try thy self
flexiblenesse a dead carkase is always stiffe So consider whether you be stiffe or no why if there be life of grace in you That wisdome that is from above is gentle and easie to be entreated James 3.17 There are four things in this plyablenesse First He is easily pleased with any indifferent indevours 1 Pet. 3.8 A gracious man is easily pleased if a man be froward and hard to please it s a signe such a soul is stiffe and dead Secondly If he be offended he is easie to be entreated James 3.17 It s a sign● of a reprobate sence to be implacable Rom. 3.1 Thirdly If he have offended another he is willing to yeeld to that man whom he hath offended so much stiffnesse so much deadnesse Fourthly There is this gentlenesse in every living Christian he is willing to deny himselfe upon unequall terms when he might stand upon his right yet he yeelds his right rather then any offence should grow so Abraham did to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. If we finde it thus we are loving Christians but if men be hardly pleased like Nabal churlish hardly recall'd will not yeeld but stand upon their right to the utmost then they are in a deep swound or dead 3. Whilest the body is alive its savoury a dead carkase is very unsavoury mark your spirits every living Christian is a sweet savour to God his words are savoury Col. 4.5 6. Ephes 4.29 His works savour well in the nostrills of God and man Ephes 5.10 But if your speeches and carriages be unsavoury uncomely and profane are ye not then carnall 1 Cor. 3.3 But a good Christian so carryes himselfe that the bowells of the Saints are refreshed by him Unsavoury speeches and carriages argue the deadnesse of such a soul Vse 2. May shew us the dangerous and uncomfortable condition of every such soul that hath not Christ He that hath not the Son hath not life If we be without Christ we are dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2.1 5. We may say of men by nature as was said of Senacheribs host Behold ye are all dead carkases 2 Kings 19.35 We by nature have not this act of life Five acts of life we heard of before by Nature we are wanting in them all 1. By Nature we have no spirituall motion all our works are but dead works Hebrewes 9.14 And so dead are we by Nature that we doe no good nay we can doe no good and which is worst of all we will doe no good Rom. 3.12 There is none that doth good no not one All the imaginations of our hearts by nature are wholly evill and that continually Gen. 6.5 And as all his thoughts are evill so are all his words Mat. 12.33 And so are all his works Mat. 7.18 We are as rotten trees we cannot bring forth one good fruit There is not so much in a naturall man as one good thought or word or action that proceeds from faith or is regulated by Gods Word or aymes at Gods glory nay if God should raise us up and inable us to doe good yet we would not Jer. 13. ult Oh Jerusalem wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be The man that had a bodily disease on him when Christ askt him Wilt thou be made whole He said Yea Lord. But if God ask us the question Wilt thou be made clean we refuse it We finde shifts to put off Christ never could we finde that day wherein we could say This day I would be a Christian but we are either almost perswaded to be Christians or else it must not be this day as bad debtors they would not have the creditors set them a day lest they should break it so wee would be spared from setting God a day for surely we would break it indeed when we are pressed with some fore sicknesse indangering death what say we O! If God would but once restore me to health againe all the world should see I would become a new man and yet when he was in health he said I will seek God and turne to him in sicknesse and thus we put God off from Winter to Summer from Spring to Harvest when we are sick we promise amendment if God will send us health but why not now Doe you know whether ever you shall have health or no And will you hazard your soules And therefore God expects that in afflictions we should seek him 2. They feed not on Christ which was a signe of life but as God said of his superstitious people Isa 44.20 the same may be said of every naturall man He feedeth upon ashes a deceitfull heart hath turned him aside that he cannot deliver his soule nor say Is there not a lye in my right hand Every naturall man hath an idoll that he sets up in his heart and whoever he be that feeds not on the living God feeds upon ashes It is taken from children that for some evill humour delight to be ●●●bling upon ashes and coals So every naturall man he feeds upon ashes that is upon dry and unsavoury meat that will not profit the soule for the soul is spirituall and fed upon spirituall food profits and pleasures and honours are no more fit meat for the soul then ashes for the body Solomon complaines of the vanity of mankinde Eccl. 3.21 Who knoweth the spirit of a man that goeth upward or the spirit of a beast that goeth downward Who knows Who considers or takes it to heart that his soule goes to a better place then the beast Who provides better for his soul then the beasts Doe not they all feed on worldly comfort who should feed on immortall food We by nature all of us feed on ashes so that we cannot deliver our soules and say Is there not a lye in my hand Is not this a false course a lying vanity Will not profits and honours deceive me A seduced heart hath deceived him 3. A third act of spirituall life is growth Now a carnall man is far from growing in grace apt is he to grow in sin to proceed on in evill to increase in ungodlinesse 2 Tim. 3.17 Jerem. 9.3 From coveteousnesse to ambition from ambition to voluptuousnesse this is his best growth 4. A fourth act of life was expulsion of noysome lusts Now by nature we are loath to part with our lusts Jer. 4.14 O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse how long shall vain thoughts lodge in thee We by nature will never cleanse out our lusts but if we doe cast out any thing it s the motions of Gods Spirit we think them superfluous and burdensome and hinderers of our credit and pleasures so that all good motions and good counsells that have been put in us we cast them out Ahab is struck with fear and humiliation but he casts out all by calling a Councell for War Let Cain have a good motion he puts it off by building a City and so takes off his thoughts from once seeking to God to heal
that he will either grant what you ask or what he knows will be better for you and as welcome to you for God looks not so much at the petition as at the end you aim at in opportuning such a blessing and that he will grant even when he seems to deny us our petitions Heb. 5 9. Christ was heard in that he prayed for Why how was he heard did he not drink of the cup he prayed against Yes yet he was heard 1. Christs will was that his Fathers will might be fulfilled not his in this he was heard 2. It 's said he was heard in that he feared though he did drink of the cup yet he was saved from those fears and terrors that overwhelmed him 3. The main end of Christ was that his Church might be redeemed which God granted so God granted the end of his petition though not the thing it self So Moses prayed earnestly that he might goe over and see the good Land God told him he should not goe over yet God let him see that good Land as well as if he had gone over If we submit our wills to Gods will and pray in humility and faith make account God seriously ponders the aime of your hearts in begging such a mercy and though he seems to crosse such your petitions and to delay them yet he knows how to grant the end of your petitions by other means then you conceive even then when God is displeased with our weake and unworthy prayers as he was with Moses Deut. 3.22 to 28 Yet then he knows how to grant what we aimed at And this magnifies the name of Christ that though in our own name we should never find acceptance yet in Christs name he will grant our petitions 2. We pray according to the will of God when we pray according to his will revealed in our hearts in the spirit of him that prayes Jude v. 20. Eph. 6.18 Now we pray according to Gods will revealed in the Spirit 1. When the Spirit raiseth our hearts to reach forth sensibly with longings and breathings after the blessings we want Thus Hannah poured forth her soul unto God 1 Sam. 1.15 She exprest not so much in words as in the reaching and breathing of her spirit after the blessing she prayed for So Isa 26.9 With my soul within me have I desired thee as if there were another Spirit in his spirit When we pray in a further measure of strength then our own hearts could reach to such a prayer is of the Spirit 1. When we pray with fervency and earnestnesse Jam. 5.16 This is that which is called wrestling and striving with God Rom. 15.30 When our hearts are so set on Gods favour as they will not let goe till we have prevailed Gen. 32.10 24 25 26. expounded Hos 12.4 3. We pray in the Spirit when we persevere in praying and are importunate with God Luk. 18.1 to 10. This is expressed by the importunity of the Widow that prevailed with the unjust Judge Shall a sinfull Judge a mortall man be prevailed with by the importunity of a poor Widow and will not God much more avenge his elect that cry to him day and night You may think God regards not your prayers but the poor Widow did not more trouble this Judge then God is troubled with your prayers so that he cannot rest untill he have fulfilled your desires To the same purpose Luk. 11.5 to 11. Though God seem to be asleep yet if you continue knocking God will open unto you therefore when you have a good petition in hand never give over but pray continually and watch thereunto Eph. 6.18 till he answer To what end doth he call it knocking but to imply that our prayers make as much noyse in heaven as men doe by knocking at our doores Matth. 7.7 So the woman of Syrophaenicia she knocked and continued knocking and would not have a denyall so that Christ answers her O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee as thou wilt As if he were overwrestled by her importunity to grant her petitions Reas 1. Because when we pray according to Gods will he fulfills his own will when he grants our petitions It 's Gods will that we should pray so now Gods will must be fulfilled 2. Because when we pray according to the will of God in the Name of Christ our prayer is Christs prayer as if you send a childe or servant to a friend for any thing in your name the request is yours and he that denyes your childe or servant in this case denyes you so no more can God deny a prayer put up in Christs name then he can deny Christ himself Joh. 16.23 24. Reas 3. From the intercession of the Spirit in such a prayer no prayer put up in the manner aforesaid but is the prayer of the holy Ghost and God knows the meaning of his Spirit Rom. 8.26 God knows our prayers would be weake and cold except there were another Spirit besides our own if therefore he discern his own Spirit in our prayers he cannot deny his Spirit nay further as the Spirit makes intercession for us so Christ himselfe prayes for us Rom. 8.34 He takes up all our prayers for us as the great Master of requests and he doth so perfume them and take out all weaknesse out of them that he presents them as a sweet odour to God Rev. 8.3 Even as if a younger Brother should goe and gather a Posie for his Father he out of ignorance gathers many weeds withall but his elder Brother takes it and pulls out all the weeds and perfumes the flowers with sweet water and then presents it to his Father in his Brothers name so Christ sees many sinfull weaknesses in our prayers but he takes away all unsavourinesse and perfumes them and so presents them to God and he accepts them Vse 1. As ever we desire that our selves or ours should speed well let both our selves and ours learn to pray well you have enough if you can but pray wel you can but speake and have desire and it shall be granted open thy mouth wide and God will fill it as long as you have an heart opened to pray you shall want no blessings therefore above all blessings beg of God a spirit of prayer Now that you may pray well 1. Take heed that you be not of a wavering double minde Jam. 1.6 7 8. partly for God partly for our selves pray with a single heart Act. 11.21 that is 1. Give up your hearts wholly to God 2. Be carefull to keep all Gods commandements for as we hearken to Gods commandements so will he hearken to our prayers if we observe his words he will observe ours 2. Have respect to pray according to Gods will in Faith and Humility Vse 2. For them that doe pray according to Gods will be assured that God will grant your petitions according to your wills God hath spoken it and therefore he will not deny it Notable