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A57982 The tryal & triumph of faith: or, An exposition of the history of Christs dispossessing of the daughter of the woman of Canaan Delivered in sermons; in which are opened, the victory of faith; the condition of those that are tempted; the excellency of Jesus Christ and free-grace; and some speciall grounds and principles of libertinisme and antinomian errors, discovered by Samuel Rutherfurd, professor of divinity in the University of St. Andrews. Published by authority. Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661. 1652 (1652) Wing R2397A; ESTC R203460 278,378 498

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has heard the voice of my weeping Tears have a tongue and Grammar and language that our Father knoweth Babes have no prayers for the breast but weeping the mother can read hunger on weeping Object 3. But I am often so as I cannot weep weeping is peculiar to a man as laughing is and spirituall weeping is peculiar to the renewed man Ans. Vehemencie of affection doth often move weeping so as it is but spilt weeping that we can attain hence Ezechiah can but chatter as a crane and a swallow and moan as a dove Is. 38.14 Sorrow keepeth not alway the Road-way weeping is but the scabberd of sorrow and there 's often more sorrow where there is little or no weeping there 's most of fire where there is least smoak Object 4. But I have neither weeping one way or other ordinary nor marred Ans. Looking up to heaven lifting up of the eyes goeth for Prayer also in Gods Books Psal. 5.3 My Prayer will I direct to thee and I will look up Isa. 48.14 Mine eyes fail with looking upward Psal. 69.3 Because 1. Prayer is a pouring out of the soul to God and Faith will come out at the eye in lieu of another door often affections break out at the window when the door is closed as smoak venteth at the window when the Chimney refuseth passage Steven lookt up to Heaven Act. 7.55 He sent a Post a greedy pittifull and hungry look up to Christ out at the window at the neerest passage to tel a poor friend was coming up to him 2. I would wish no more if I were in Hell but to send a long-look up to Heaven there be many love looks of the Saints lying up before the Throne in the bosome of Christ the twinkling of thy eyes in Prayer are not lost to Christ elie Stevens look Davids look should not be registred so many hundred years in Christs written Testament Object 5. Alas I have no eyes to look up the Publican Luk. 18. looked down to the earth and what senses Spirituall have I to send after Christ. Ans. There 's life going in and out at thy nostrils Breathing is praying and taken off our hand as crying in Prayer Lam. 3.56 Thou hast heard my voice hide not thy ear at my breathing at my cry Object 6. I have but a heard heart to offer to God in Prayer and what can I say then wanting all praying disposition Ans. 1. Therefore pray that you may pray 2. The very aspect and naked presence of a deed spirit when there is a little vocall praying its acceptable to God or if an overwhelmed heart refuseth to come its best to go and tell Christ and request him to come and fetch the heart himself 3. Little of day light cometh before the Sun the best half of it is under ground Ro. 8.23 We our selves groan within our selves All is here transacted in our own heart the soul cryeth O when will my Father come and fetch his children When shall the Spousely in her Husbands bosome 4. If Christs eye but look on a hard heart it will melt it 5. I shew heer the Minimum quod sic the smallest of Prayer in which the life and essence of Prayer may breath and live Now Prayer being a powring out of the soul to God much of the affections of love desire longing joy Faith sorrow fear boldnesse comes along with prayer out to God and the heart is put in Christs bosome and it s neither up nor down to the essenc of sincere praying whether the soul come out in words in groans or in long-looks or in sighing or in powring out tears to God Job 16.20 or in breathing Object 7. What shall be done with half praying and words without sense Ans. This is the woman of Canaans case Piscator observeth an Elepsis of the word or Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or because or for Have mercy on me my daughter is vexed she should have said because my daughter is vexed But the minde is hasty that she lets slip words so are broken Prayers set down in Scripture as Prayers Psal. 116.1 I love because the Lord hath heard my voice There 's nothing in the Hebrew but one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I love but he sheweth not whom he loveth it s a broken word because as Ambrose saith He loved the most desireable thing I have love he would say but its centure and bed is only God Psal. 6.3 My soul is sore vexed but thou O Lord how long That is a broken speech also Psal. 109.4 For my love they were my enemies in the Hebrew its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vani Tephilla at ego oratio But I prayer or I was all Prayer as if I in soul and body had been made of Prayer The reasons of broken Prayers are often 1. The hastinesse of the affections not the hastinesse alwayes of unbelief Esa. 28.16 But often of Faith 2 Pet. 3.10 Love and longing for Christ have Eagles wings and love flyeth when words do but creep as a Snail 2. It cometh from a delique in the affections they are broken as a too high bended Bow that there 's a swooning and delique of words every part of a supplication to a Prince is not a supplication a poor man out of fear may speak Non-sense and broken words that cannot be understood by the Prince but non-sense in Prayer when sorrow blacknesse and a dark overwhelmed spirit dictateth words are well known in and have a good sence to God therefore to speak morally Prayer being Gods fire as every part of fire is fire so here every broken Parcell of Prayer is Prayer so the Forlorne son forgot the half of his Prayers he resolved to say Luk. 15.19 Make me as one of thy hired servants but v. 21. He prayeth no such thing and yet his Father fell on his neck and kissed him a Plant is a tree in the potency an infant man seeds of saving grace are saving grace prayer is often in the bowels and womb of a sigh though it come not out yet God heareth it as a Prayer Rom. 8.27 And he that scarcheth the hearts knoweth what is the minde of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God Psal. 10.17 Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble Desires have no sound with men so as they come to the ear but with God they have a sound as Prayers have Then when others cannot know what a groan meaneth God knoweth what is under the lap of a sigh because his Spirit made the sigh he first made the Prayer as an intercessor and then as God heareth it he is within praying and without hearing Object 8. But are all my cryings in Prayer works of the Spirit Ans. The flesh may come in and joine in Prayer and some things may be said in haste not in Faith as in that Prayer Ps 77.9 Hath God forgotten to be gracious
swooning and death Gracious love produceth love sicknesse Cant. 2.5 Swooning Cant. 5.6 the Martyrs have died to injoy him and refused to accept of life because of the love of a Union with him Heb. 11.37 How many deserted souls come to this I die if I injoy not Christ. Posit 7. It s good that the affections be ballanced and loaden with Heavenly and spirituall lights Lower vaults and under houses send up smoak to the fair pictures that are in the higher houses lusts dominion over light maketh a misty and unbelieving mind so when the light is carnall and nothing but worldly policy it s like the highest house which if ruinous and rainy sendeth down rain and continuall droppings on the lower house Minde and affections vitiate and corrupt one another Grace in either contributes much to the spirituality of the actions one of another so the mockers of eternity and judgment are ignorant because they will be ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 And Elies sons will be abhominably lustfull in their affections because they know not the Lord and are ignorant of God 1 Sam. 2.12 Mathew heareth and seeth Jesus and he followeth him Matth. 9.9 The more that Mary Magdalen followeth and loveth the more she knoweth and seeth the excellency of Christ Joh. 20. ver 1.11.12.13.14 compared with ver 17 18. Posit 8. When the desires are naturall then Heavenly objects are desired and sorrowed for in a naturall way Balaam desires to die the death of the righteous but Esau weepeth for the blessing in a carnall way when the desires are spirituall earthly objects are desired in a spirituall way Even bread as it savoureth of Christ Math. 6.9 compared with ver 11.12 And so the woman seeketh deliverance to her Daughter spiritually and with a great Faith Posit 9. The believer saith if the creature will go along with me to my Fathers house welcome if not What then There I must lodge though Gold refuse to go with me See how God in a manner resigneth his own freedom in giving and transferreth this honour on the womans desire God keeps pace with a sanctified will in satisfying when the will keeps pace with God in acting longing and desiring 1. He putteth Heaven upon the choice of a sanctified heart Deu. 30.19 Choose life that both thou and thy seed may live Rev. 22.17 Whosoever will let him take of the waters of life freely Isa. 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters 2. Heaven is put upon the quality of the wil and what it desires Joh. 4.10 If thou knewst that gift of God and who it is that sayes to thee give me drink thou wouldst have asked of him and he should have given thee water of Life Rev. 21.6 I will give unto him that thirsteth of the Fountain of the water of life freely There 's an edge upon the word Fountain for the Fountain and first spring of the water of life is above the streams this is promised to him that hath a heavenly and spirituall thirst for Christ. 3. God putteth himself and the measure or compasse of heaven upon the measure and compass of the bensil and pitch of heavenly desires Pro. 2.3 If thou cryest after knowledge liftest up thy voice for understanding 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures 5. Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord find the knowledge of God There be four words here to expresse the bensill of the will and desire we are to cry for wisdome the Chalde reads the other part of the ver if thou call understanding thy mother that the cry spoken in the former part may be such a high cry as children use when they weep cry after their Mother The other word is To give the voice to wisdom The other two words do note sweating digging in the bowels of the earth casting up much earth to find a treasure of silver or gold Ps. 81.10 Open thy mouth wide and I will fil it Vatablus Seek what thou wilt and I wil grant it It s a doubt if any man by inlarged desires can put Gods giving goodnes to the utmost extent 4. God maketh his fulnesse in giving far beyond our narrownesse in seeking Eph. 3.20 He is able to do this is as much as he is willing to do Rom. 11.23 Jud. v. 24. exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think according to the power that worketh in us This is considerable that when Christ shall put the Crown of incomparable glory on the head of the glorified soul there shall be thousand millions of moe Diamonds Rubies and Jewels of glory on that Diadem then ever your thoughts or imaginations could reach and more weight of sweetness delight joy and glory in a sight of God then the seeing eye the hearing ear yea the vast understanding and heart which can multiply and adde to former thoughts can be able to fathom 1 Cor. 2.9 When ye seek and ask Christ from the Father you know not his weight and worth when you shal injoy Christ immediately up at the wel head this shal much fill the soul with admiration I believed to see much in Christ having some twilight afternoon or Moonlight glances of him down in the earth But O blind I narrow I could never have Faith opinion thought or imagination to fathom the thousand thousand part of the worth and incomparable excellencie I now see in him You may over-think and over-praise Paradice Rome Naples the Isles where there be two Summers in one year but you cannot over-think or in your thoughts reach Christ and the invisible things of God only glorified thoughts not thoughts graced only are comprehensive in any due measure of God of heaven The glorified soul shal be a far wider more capacious circle the Diameter of it in length many thousand cubits larger in mind thoughts glorified reason will heart desires love joy reverence c then it is now We would in seeking asking praying in adoring God in Christ inlarge our own desires heart will and affections broad and deep that we may take in more of Christ broad prayers flow from broad desires narrow prayers from niggard and narrow hearts we may collect the bignesse of a ship from the proportion and quantity of its bottom in its new framing If the bottom draw but to the proportion of a small vessell which can indure no more but a pair of oares the vessel cannot be five hundred Tun or be able to bear 60. peeces of Ordnance Prayer bottomed on deep and broad hunger and extreame pain of love-sicknesse for Christ and great pinching poverty of spirit must be in proportion wide and deep O but our vessels are narrow our affections ebbe and low the ballance that weigheth Christ weak it is as if we should labour to cast three or four great Mountains in a scale of a Merchants ordinary ballance we are proportioned in our
changed before God p. 407. To be justified by Faith is not barely to come to the knowledge that we are justified before we beleeve p. 410. Justification not Eternall p. 411 Faith is not only given for our joy and consolation but also for our justification both in our own soul before God 415 There 's no warrant in Scripture for two reconciliations one of mans reconciliation to God and another of Gods reconciliation to man p. 419. Christs merits no cause but an effect of Gods eternall love ibid. What reconciliation is ibid. Joy without all sorrow for sin no fruit of the Kingdome of God p. 420 The seeing of God Heb. 12.14 and the Kingdom 1 Cor. 6. Joh. 3.3 Not the Kingdom of Grace but of Glory p. 421. All acts of blood and rough dealing in God to his own acts of mercy ibid. SERM. XXV Omnipotency hath influence on 1. Satan 2. Diseases 3. Stark death 4. Mother-nothing 5. On all creatures 6. On sin to speak to them p. 424. Obedientiall power in the creation what it is p. 425. Omnipotency is as it were a servant to Faith p. 428. We worship a dependent God p. 429. We have need of the devil and other temptations for our humiliation p. 432. Immediate mercies are the sweetest mercies cleared 1. In Christ. 2. Grace 3. Glory 4· Comfort 5. The rarest of Gods works p. 433. The deceitfulnesse of our confidence when God and the creature are joyned in one work p. 442. SERM. XXVI Christ in four relations hath dominion over Devils p. 446. Satan goeth no where without a Passe p. 448. We often sign Satans conditionall Passe ibid. A renewed will is a renewed man p. 451. Eight positions concerning the will and affections ibid. A civill will is not a sanctified will ibid. The yeelding of the soul to God and to his light a special note of a renewed will ibid. Affections sanctified especially desires p. 453. The lesse mixture in the affections the stronger are their operations ibid. Minde and affections do reciprocally vitiate one another p. 454. Spirituall desires seek naturall things spiritually Carnall desires seek spirituall things naturally p. 455. God submitteth his liberality of Grace to the measure of a sanctified will in four considerations ibid. Our affections in their acts and comprehension are far below spirituall objects Christ and Heaven p. 456. More in Christ and Heaven then our faith can reach in this life p. 457. SERM. XXVII Satan not cast out of a land or a person but by violence both to Satan and the party amplified in four considerations p. 460. False peace known p. 462. A roaring and a raging Devil is better then a calm and a sleeping Devil ibid. Gods way of hardning as it is mysterious so it is silent and invisible p. 465. The Triall and Triumph of Faith SERMON I. Mar. 7.24 And from thence he arose and went into the borders of Tyre and Sidon and went into an house and would that no man should know it but he could not be hid Matth. 15.21 Then Jesus went thence and came into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon V. 22. And behold a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts and cryed unto him saying Have mercy on me O Lord thou son of David for my daughter is grievously vexed with a Devil Mar. 7.25 For a certain woman whose young little daughter had an unclean spirit heard of him and came and fell at his feet V. 26. The woman was a Greek a Syrophoenician by Nation and she besought him that hee would cast forth the Devil out of her daughter THis Text being with childe of Free-Grace holdeth forth to us a Miracle of note and because Christ is in the work in an eminent manner and there is here also much of Christs new creation and a floor planted and watered by Christs own hand a strong faith in a tryed woman it requireth the bending of our heart to attention for to any seeking Iesus Christ this Text cryeth Come and see The words for their scope drive at the wakening of beleevers in Praying when an answer is not given at the first to a fixed and resolved lying and dying at Christs door by continuing in Prayer while the King come out and open and answer the desire of the hungry and poor 2. For the subject they are a History of a rare Miracle wrought by Christ in casting forth a Devil out of the Daughter of a Woman of Canaan and for Christ to throw the Devill out of a Canaanite was very like the white Banner of Christs Love displayed to the Nations and the Kings Royall Standard set up to gather in the Heathen under his colours The parts of the Miracle are 1. The place where it was wrought Math. 15.21 2. The parties on whom the Mother and the possessed Daughter she is described by her Nation 3. The impulsive cause she hearing came and prayed to Iesus for her little Daughter In which there is a Dialogue between Christ and the Woman containing Christs trying of her 1. With no answer 2. With a refusal 3. With the reproach of a dog 4. Her instancy of Faith 1. In crying till the Disciples interposed themselves 2. Her going on in adoring 3. Praying 4. Arguing by Faith with Christ that she had some interest in Christ though amongst the dogs yet withall as Grace hath no evil eye not envying because the morning market of Christ and the high Table was the Jews due as the Kings Children so she might be amongst the dogs to eat the crumbs under Christs Table knowing that the very refuse of Christ is more excellent then ten worlds 4. The Miracle it self wrought by the womans faith in which we have Christs heightning of her Faith 2. The granting of her desire 3. The measure of Christs bounty as thou wilt 4. The healing of her Daughter Mark saith that the woman came to Christ in a house Matthew seemeth to say that she came to him in the way as these words do make good send her away for she cryeth after us Augustine thinketh that the woman first came to Christ while he was in the house and desired to be hid either because he did not for offending the Jews openly offer himself to the Gentiles having forbidden his Disciples to go to the Samaritans or because he would have his glory hid for a time or rather of purpose he did hide himself from the woman that her faith might finde him out and then refusing to answer the woman in the house she still followeth him in the way and cryeth after him as Matthew saith For Christs Love is 1. Liberal but yet it must be suited and Christ though he sell not his Love for the penny worth of our sweating and paines yet must we dig low for such a gold-mine as Christ. 2. Christs Love is wise he holdeth us knocking while our desire be love-sick for him and knoweth that delayes raiseth and heighteth the market and
Nay but if thou canst pray thou dost set the whole wheels of Omnipotency on work for the building of the Lords house in which regard the Prayer of a sick and poor man shall do more in War for the Cause of God then twenty thousand men It was not Ahasuerus nor the grace that Esther found in the eyes of the King that saved the whole Church of the Iews from destruction but the Prayers of Esther and her maids It s true an Angel broght Peter out of Prison Act. 12. But what stirred that wheel in Heaven vers 5. Here 's the Cause Prayer was made without ceasing to God for Peter by the Church Quod est causa causae est etiam causa causati Prayer Prayer can put a reeling and tottering on King and Court Pope Prelate and Babylon we are to pray the King of the bottomlesse pit the man of sin the graven Images of Apostate Rome out of the world Prayer can yoke all the swords in Europe against the Whore every one who hath the Spirit of Adoption though poor and rejected of men by prayer have powerfull influence on all the Nations of the earth on all Europe on the ends of the earth on the hearts of the Jews on Turkes and Indians Prayer can reach as far as Omnipotency accompanied by the wise decree of our Lord And the poorest Girle or Maid that can pray doth lend a strong lift to heighten the footstool of Christs Royall Throne children and poor Maids by Prayer may put the Crown on Christs head and hold up his Throne and may store and increase heaven by praying Thy Kingdome come and inlarge Hell and fill the pits with the dead bodies of Christs enemies and may by prayer binde Kings in Fetters chaine up and confine Devils subdue Kingdoms Great is thy Faith For the clearing of these words we are to consider three points 1. What Faith is 2. What a great Faith is 3. Why he saith thy Faith appropriating it to the woman Now of Faith I shall speak 1. A word of preparations for Faith 2. Of the grounds and necessary motives to Faith 3. Of the Ingredients of Faith 4. Of the sinners warrants to believe 5. Of divers sorts of false and ill rooted Faiths 1. There be some preparations which go before Faith 1. Faith is a seed of heaven it is not sowen by the good husbandman in unplowed and in Fallow ground Christ soweth not amongst thornes we are builded on the Faith stones are hewen rubbish removed before one stone be laid 2. Every act of Grace in God is an act of Omnipotency and so requireth not time or succession God might have set up the frame of the world in all its fulnesse with lesse then one thought or act of his will put forth by Omnipotency yet did our Lord subject the acts of creating the first world to the rule of time and to a circle of evening and morning nights and dayes so doth the Lord set up a new world of Faith in a soul void of Faith by degrees There 's a time when there 's neither perfect night nor perfect day but the twilight of the morning and God not withstanding created the morning no lesse then the noon day Sun There 's a half Summer and a half Spring in the close of the Spring which God made The Embrio or birth not yet animated is neither seed onely nor a man-child only so is a Convert in his first framing neither perfectly untamed corruption because there 's a crack and a throw in the iron sinew of the neck nor is he a thorow child of light but as we say in the dead-throw in the place of breaking forth of children as Hosea speaketh A child with his head come forth of the womb and no more and so half born only so is the Convert while he is in the making not taken off Christs wheels half in the borders of hell and looking a far off at the Suburbs of Heaven not far from the Kingdom of Heaven But 2. This bridge over the water between the kingdom of darknesse and the state of saving Grace hath no necessary connexion with that Kingdom of the Son of Gods love but such as it hath from the sole and meer decree of the free Election of Grace and therefore many Reprobates may enter the Bridge and never go along to the other Banke of the River God breaketh the Bridge this being the very division and parting of these two unsearchable wayes of Election and Reprobation yet so as the sin in cutting the bridge is the guilt of the Reprobate man As many births die in the breaking forth out of the womb divers Roses in the Bud are blasted and never see harvest through the fault of the seed not of the Sun 3. It s true the new creation and life of God is vertually Seminaliter in these preparations as the seed is a tree in hope the blossome an apple the foundation a Palace in its beginning so half a desire in the Non-converted is love sicknesse for Christ in the seed legall humiliation is in hope Evangelick Repentance and mortification But as the seed and the growing tree differ not gradually only but in nature specifically as a thing without life is not of that same nature and essence with a creature that hath a vegetative life and groweth so the preparatory good affections of desire hunger sorrow humiliation going before conversion differ specifically from those renewed affections which follow after The former being acts of Grace but not of saving grace which goeth along with the decree of Election of Grace and of like Latitude with it the latter being the native and connaturall fruits of the Spirit of which the Apostle speaketh Gal. 5.22.23 In which regard no man is morally and in regard of a divine promise such as this Do this and this and God shall bestow on you the Grace of conversion fitter and in a nearer disposition to conversion then another 1. Because we read not of any such promise in the Gospel 2. Because amongst things void of life all are equally void of life and there 's here no degrees of more or lesse life no intention no remission or flacking of the degrees of life for even as an Ape or an Horse are as equally no men as stones and dead earth are no men though an Ape or an Horse have life common to them with men which stones and earth have not yet they are equally as destitute of reason and an intellectual life which is the only life of a man as a man as stones and earth are So Saul only humbled by the terrours of the Law and sick of half raw desires of Christ is no lesse yet a creature void of the life of God then when he was in the highest pitch of obstinacy spitting out blood and murthers on the face of that Lord Jesus whom he persecuted and in this regard conversion is no lesse pure
neither should we believe for this because we see with our eyes and hear with our ears even while we are in this life daily pieces and little parcels of Hell for we see and hear daily some tumbling in their blood thousands cut down of our Brethren Children Fathers Malefactors hanged and quartered Death in every house These these be little hells and little coals and sparkles of the great fire of hell and certain Documents to us that there is a Hell Yet we neither hear nor come to Christ. Nay suppose a Preacher come from Hel to the rich Gluttons five brethren Luk. 16. and should bring with him all the lashes and print of the whips of Satans Scorpions on back and side on thighs arms and legs and though he should bring up to us out of hell ten thousand damned and bring with him the fire the red coals of the Fury of God every coal as great as a mountain and offer them all to our eyes and ears senses such is the power of our deafnesse and blindnes that we should not believe For when many little hells work so little by length of time this one great hell should never bring us to hear and come to Christ. See how little we are affected with the blood of so many thousands of our own flesh in the three Kingdoms Alas our senses are confined within time The other thing observable is That it is good to be neer the place where Christ is It was advantage that the woman dwelt upon the borders of the Land where Christ was It s good for the poor to be a Neighbour beside the rich and for the thirsty to take up house and dwell at the Fountain and for the sick to border with the Physician O love the ground that Christ walketh on To be born in Sion is an honour Psal 87.6 because there the Lord dwelleth It s a blessing to hear and see Christ Mat. 13.16 we do not weigh nor duely esteem what a favour it is that Christ walketh in the midst of the golden Candlesticks that the voice of the Turtle is heard in our Land it s ours to build him a pallace of Silver For the sixth Article which is Her adoring of Christ it shall be spoken of in another place I hasten therefore to her Prayer SERMON VI. IN her Prayer as it is expressed by Matthew we have 1. The maner of it She cryed 2. The compellation or party to whom she prayeth O Lord thou son of David 3. The Petition Have mercy on me 4. The Reason For my daughter is vexed with a Devil She cryed The poor woman prayed as we say with good will with a bent affection Why is crying used in praying Had it not been more modesty to speak to this soul-redeeming Saviour who heareth sometimes before we pray then to cry out and shout For the Disciples do after complain that She cryeth so after them Was Christ so difficile to be intreated The reasons of crying are 1. Want cannot blush the pinching necessity of the Saints is not tyed to the law of Modesty Hunger cannot be ashamed Psal. 55.2 I mourn in my complaint and make a noise saith David and Ezekiah Esa. 38.14 Like a Crane or a Swallow so did I chatter I did mourn as a Dove Job 30.28 I went mourning without the Sun I stood up and I cryed in the congregation 2. Though God hear Prayer onely as Prayer offered in Christ not because very fervent yet fervour is a heavenly ingredient in Prayer an arrow drawn with full strength hath a speedier issue therefore the Prayers of the Saints are expressed by crying in Scripture Ps. 22.2 O my God I cry by day and thou hearest not Ps. 55.17 At noon wil I pray and cry aloud Ps 18.6 In my distresse I cryed to the Lord Ps. 88.13 Vnto thee have I cryed O Lord Ps. 130.1 Out of the depths have I cryed Jon. 2.2 Out of the belly of Hell I cryed Psal. 28.1 Vnto thee will I cry O Lord my Rock Yea it goeth to somewhat more then crying Job 19.7 I cry out of wrong but am not heard Lam. 3.8 Also when I cry and shout he shutteth out my Prayers He who may teach us all to pray sweet Jesus Heb. 5.7 In the days of his flesh offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears he prayed with war shouts 3. And these prayers are so prevalent that God answereth them Psal. 34.6 This poor man cried and the Lord heard and saved him from all his fears Ps. 18.6 My cry came before him even to his ears the cry addeth wings to the prayer As a speedy Post sent to Court upon life and death Ps. 22.5 Our fathers cryed unto thee and were delivered Psal. 34.17 The righteous cry and the Lord heareth We all know the Parable of the poor Widow and the unrighteous judge if the oppressed be not delivered Christ and his Father and Heaven shall hear of it hence 4. Importunity in praying I will not let thee go saith Iacob to his Lord till thou blesse me So James calleth it chap. 5. v. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prayer possessed with a spi●it but a good spirit-Prayer steeled with fervor of spirit so fervent that David is like the Post who layeth by three horses as breathlesse his heart his throat his eyes Ps. 69.3 I am wearie of my crying my throat is dried mine eyes fail while I wait for my God 5. There is violence offered to God in fervent prayer Exod. 32.10 Moses is answered when he is wrestling with God by Prayer for the people Now therefore let me alone that my anger may wax hot against them Let me alone is a word of putting violent hands in any there be bones and sinews in such prayers by them the King is held in his Galleries Cant. 7.5 Object But if so be that prayers must bee fervent even to vocal crying and shouting then I cannot pray who am often so confounded that I cannot speak one word Ans. So was the servant of God in a Spirituall kind of praying in uttering the Psal. 77. when he saith v. 4. Thou holdest mine eyes waking I am so troubled that I cannot speak yea groaning goeth for praying to God Psal. 102.20 The Lord looked down from heaven to hear the groaning of the prisoner Rom. 8.26 The spirit intercedeth for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with sighes that none can speak Faith doth sigh prayers to heaven Christ receiveth sighs in his censure for Prayer words are but the body the garment the outside of Prayer sighs are neerer the heart-work a dumb beggar getteth an almes at Christs gates even by making signes when his tongue cannot plead for him and the rather because he is dumb Object 2. I have not so much as a voice to utter to God and Christ saith Cant. 2.14 Cause me hear thy voice Ans. Yea but some other thing hath a voice beside the tongue Psal. 6.8 The Lord
him be hated of Christ if that were possible Heaven should be Hell Imagine devils were standing with their black chains of darknesse even up in the Heaven of Heavens and the Plague of being hated of Christ on their soul and that they could see him that sitteth on the Throne and somewhat of the Rayes and Beames of that fulness of God that is in Christ yet should Devils still be Devils they wanting Christ the heaven of Angels and glorified men What a flower What a Rose of love and light must CHRIST be who filleth with smell light beautie the four sides East and West South and North of the Heaven of Heavens and his glory Suppose in the hour of our last farewell to time all creatures void of Reason Heavens Stars Light Air Earth Sea dry Land Birds Fishes Beasts were in a capacity to love us and they with Men and Angels should let out upon us the fulnesse yea the Sea of all their love as it s a sweet thing to be lovely and desireable to many yet this were nothing to him who is Cant. 5.16 All desires or all loves So Vatablus rendereth it Christus est totus desideria He is a Masse of love and love it self lovely in the womb the ancient of dayes became young for me lovely in the Crosse even when despised and numbred with theeves lovely in the grave lovely at the right hand of God lovely in his second appearance in glory yea all desirable Cant. 6.10 his countenance white and ruddy 11. his head a golden head his headship and government desirable his locks bushie and black his counsels deep various unsearchable his eyes as Doves chaste pure and can behold no iniquity his cheeks or two sides of his face as a bed of spice and sweet smelling flowers his face manly comely as Lebanon his lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling Myrrhe his Gospel smelleth of heaven his hands pure his works holy fair as Gold-rings set with Beril his belly or breast and bowels as bright Yvory overlaid with Saphires that is his breast and belly that containeth his bowels his heart and affections are as Yvory bright and glorious and Yvory overlaid covered and adorned with Saphires that are precious stones of a sea-blue and heavenly colour because his bowels and inward affections are full of love tendernesse of mercy and the compassion of his heart most heavenly his legs are pillars of marble set upon sockets of fine gold his wayes and government like marble-pillars upright white pure and set on gold solid firm stable that Christ cannot slip or fall his Scepter a Scepter of righteousnesse and his Kingdom eternall and cannot be shaken his countenance as the mountain Lebanon his person eminent goodly high great tall fruitfull as Cedars his mouth most sweet his words and testimonies as honey or the honey comb yea ●ll creatures are weak and Christ strong all ●●se he precious all empty he full all black ●e fair all foolish and vain he wise and the ●●ly Counseller deep in his counsels and wayes The speciall Evangelick sin that we are guilty of is unbelief Joh. 16.9 and this floweth from a low estimation that we have of Christ and therefore these considerations are to be weighed in our estimation of Christ. 1. The wisdom or folly of any man is most seen in the estimative faculty for it denominateth a man wise many are great Judges and learned as the Magicians of Chaldea and Philosophers who know wonders hidden things and causes of things and yet are not wise but fools Rom. 1.21 and vain in their imaginations because there is a great defect in their estimative faculty in the choice of a God ver 22.23 the practicall mind is blinded and they chuse darknesse for light evill for good a creature for their God By faith Moses when he was come to age refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter and chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season And how is his faith made faith And how is it evident that he was not a raw ignorant and foolish childe when he made the choise But a man ripe come to years and so as wise as he was old It is proved because his estimative faculty was right v. 26. Esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt He is a wise man who maketh a wise choise and for thi● cause Esau is called Heb. 12.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a profane man from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confudit he had not wise●dom to put a difference between the excellency of the birth-right and a morsell of meat so Ezech. 22.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to confound Gods Sabbath with another day A profane wicked man hath not wisdome to esteem God and Christ above the creature but confoundeth the one with the other 2. Our esteem of Christ is to be pure chaste spirituall and so to work purely that is the formall reason why we esteem of Christ must be because he is Christ and not because Summer goeth with Christ nay not because he comforteth but because he is God the Redeemer and Mediatour it s a chaste love and a chaste esteem if the wife chuse to love her husband because he is her husband as the sense esteemeth white to be white under the notion of such a colour The operation of every faculty is most pure and kindly when it is carried toward its object according to its formall reason without any mixture of other respects extraneous and by-reasons are more whorish lesse con-naturall not so chaste there is some wax in our honey and this we should take heed unto the elective power is a tender piece of the soul. 3. Estimation produceth love even the love of Christ and love is a great Favourite and is much at Court and dwelleth constantly with the King to be much with Christ especially in secret late and early and to give much time to converse with Christ speaketh much love and the love of Christ is of the same bignesse and quantity with Grace for Grace and Love keep proportion one with another 4. He who duely esteemeth Christ is a noble bidder and so a noble and liberall buyer he outbiddeth Esau. What is pottage to Christ He overbiddeth Iudas What is silver to Christ Yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things is the greatest count can be cast up for it includeth all prices all summes it taketh in heaven as its a created thing Then all things the vast and huge Globle and Cirle of the capacious world and all excellencies within its bosome or belly nations all nations Angels all Angels Gold all Gold Jewels all Jewels Honour and delights all honour all delights and every all beside lieth before Christ as feathers dung shadows nothing To wash a sinner is the eminencie of love and the highest esteem of him But O what a mercy that Christ should
nature 2. And the light of Faith is to moderate us in eating drinking sleeping according to Christian sobriety in the measure of the action 3. Faith teacheth us not to eat that we may eat or for an naturall or civill end Grace hightneth the naturall intention to a supernaturall end and to do all these for God and his service 1 Cor. 10.31 And whatsoever we do though but civil service as servants to earthly masters in a civill calling in trading in arts we are to do all as to the Lord not unto men Col. 3.23 Then Christ acting moving by the light of Faith is the formal reason and principle in which lastly and formally ultimate all our actions are resolved 2. Look of how much worth and price thy soul is of as great necessity is Faith except thou wouldst look for the Gospel-vengeance the day or the ages of Eternall vengeance at Christs appearance 2 Thes. 1.8 Isa. 61.2 Ioh. 3.18.36 chap. 8.24 But if it be so that Faith is required in all that I do the businesse of Salvation may some say is hard and difficill work Where shall I have Faith for every stirring of my foot I Answer as all our actions except where Imagination is Principle of the act must be deliberate and so the actions of a rational man so must they be morall now there is no morality in a man who is a citizen of the Church but the morality of faith for its a duty laid upon every one within the visible Church that all his actions morall be watred and lustered with Faith And the truth is the work of our salvation being compared to sailing Heb. 6.19 and to fighting 2 Tim. 4.7 2 Tim. 2.3 4. It s very like a ship which requireth many hands and much attentive carefulness in the owner and sailors Now the Mast is hurt then somewhat wanting in the Deck now the Helm is faulty then the Cords are to be repaired or the Anchor is broken or she taketh in under-water or the Sail is torn or the motion slow There 's charges to the owner and much work to all hands and how many things are required to a huge body of an Army So many thousand men must be lyable to so many thousand wants Some are sick some wounded some a dying some hungry some naked some fall off the Army and are catched by the enemy some be faint some too bold and precipitate yea Armour Houses Bread Drink Fire Tents Physitions Workmen Mattocks Spades Bridges Lathers Horses Engines of War Art and Skill Medicine Councell Courage Intelligence and a thousand things of this kinde are requisite And seldome is an Army but there be some one inconvenient or other in this needy and cumbersome huge body And when is the businesse of Salvation not at a stand one way or other Is there not either on piece or other the shield of Faith or the Anchor of Hope or the Brestplate of righteousnes or some the like broken or faulty Is not our guide who hath seven eyes ten times a day cumbered with us Must not Christ soader our broken Weapons Sow our torn sails Repair one breach or other in us In a thousand the like Faith is to improve the Free-grace the omnipotence the unchangeable love of Christ to promove his own work and to work in us to will and to do according to his good pleasure Phil. 2.13 Now for the ingredients of Faith 1. There be in us 2 Cor. 10.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Great Forts raised against the light of Faith These natural discourses in the mind that are great works and heights strong holds builded against Christ. The prime faculty reason the discoursive power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that thinketh she hath wit enough against Christ and to keep the man out of all danger of eternall salvation over toppeth and out-groweth all Gospel-truths Christ must over-power carnall fate rank and heady souldiers called thoughts every thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so kill some that will not be taken and led captive other thoughts to the obedience of Faith Reason is a predominant bone in it self The carnall minde neither will no● can keep rank as an obedient souldier under the Law of God Rom. 8.7 It s much for fine silken and golden reason to say to Christ Lord Prov 30.2 There 's more of a beast in me then of a man I have not the understanding of a man The learned the schoolmen seldome beleeve except gray haired wit turn a childe and go to school again to learn from Christ the new art of beleeving for there was never an act of unbeleef in any but it grew out of this proud and rank stalke of a lofty wit Therefore Christ breaks out a new window in the soul and brings in a new sun that flesh and blood never saw nor heard of before Mat. 16.17 2. Faith hath low and creeping affections to the creature But when the affections are big with childe of the creature as 1. They are strained and swelled in their acts Faith is no faith but a delusion the rich man speaketh with all his heart and with good will of his full barns and its clear he had neither Faith nor Hope toward eternity Luke 12. v. 19.20 For every word being as we say of the length of a cubit a foot and a half Luke 12.18 He casteth forth words of pulling down building greater houses and scraping in all his goods are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my goods all my births and bowels and all my good things For he had no other good things and there 's no apostrophe in the words he speaketh them with their full sound and we speak with good will these things that we tell to our soul. Faith hath but half words and half affections ●●●ching the world half acts or broken acts in 〈◊〉 affections closing with the creature smell 〈◊〉 a Faith with child of ●●ernity to make the excellency of the creature a matter of meer opinion to reckon the worlds witchcrafts of lust gain glory but uncertain and topick arguments to conclude a God-head and a golden heaven in the creature is the height of the wisdom of Faith So Paul Gal. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ. O then may some say Paul you are a dead man He saith no. Neverthelesse I live but I live the life of Faith For Christ liveth in me All his motions toward the creature were half dead like the vitall motions of a crucified man half out of the world and his acts of Faith were lively and vitall and high tuned like the highest note in the musick song Faith cannot break and violently rent in sunder the two sides of the affections with too violent and intense acts of love joy fear desire sorrow as these are terminated upon the creature It s true Faith clippeth nothing from the outmost and most superlative pitch of the love of God of desire fear sorrow joy as they act upon God but addeth wind
to the sails in that flux of the souls way toward God But Faith moderateth and lesseneth all these in relation to the creature so the Faith which hath its direct aspect toward eternity and looketh on the shortnesse of sliding away time and the trans●ent wheeling away o● the poor figure of this world 1 Cor. 7. v. 29.31 turneth all these acts into but half a face on th● creature and into leasurely and leaden motions or to half non-acts as if made up of heavenl● contradictions v. 29 30 31. Having wives having no wives Weeping no weeping Rejoicing no rejoicing Buying no possessing Vsing the world not using the world When the Saints throng through the presse and croud of the creatures for the world is a bushie and rank wood thorns take hold of their garments and retard them in their way Faith looseth their garments riddeth them of such thornie friends as are too kind to them in their journy who diggeth for Iron and Tin in the earth with mattocks of Gold What wise man would make a Web of cloth of gold a net to catch fish Expences should over-grow gains There 's much of the mettall of heaven in the soul Faith would forbid us to wear out the threds of this immortall spirit such as are love joy fear sorrow upon peeces of corruptible clay Alas is it Faiths light that setteth men a work to make the soul a golden-needle and the precious powers and affections thereof threds of silver to sow together peeces of sackcloth and old rotten rags What better I pray you is the finest of the web in the whole systeme of creation Certainly the heavens must be a thred of better wool then the clay-earth yet if you should break your immortal spirit and bend all the acts to the highest extent of your affections to conquer thousands of Acres of ground in the Heavens and intitle your soul to that inheritance as to your onely patrimonie without Christ Faiths day-light should discover to you that this finest part of that web of Creation with which you desire to cloth your precious soul is but base wool and rotten thred and though beautifull and well dyed to the eye yet Psal. 102.26 The heavens even all of them shall wax old like a garment And the wisdome of Faith knoweth a shop where there 's a more excellent suit of clothes for the soul 2 Cor. 5.1 2. And a more precious peece of the Heaven to dwell in even a House which is from Heaven with which you shall bee clothed When life shall eat up death and mortality 2. The creatures are below the affections of the believer and his affections conquer them as having the vantage of the mount above all the creatures So Paul maketh an elegant contrariety Phil. 3.19 20. Between those whose heart senses minde findeth neither smell taste nor wisedome but in earthly things for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to minde things of the earth importeth all these and those who by Faith look to Heaven and dwell there And the temporaries heart is below the world and the creatures are up in the mount above him So Mat. 13. v. 7.22 The thorns or cares of riches have the fore-start of the earth and sap above Faith or the good seed For the seed was cast in the earth when the thorns had been there before and had the vantage of the season and the soil both The first love is often strongest The Martyrs Heb. 11.35 had poor and weak thoughts of this life and would not accept and welcome life and deliverance from death but had strong acts of Faith and love toward a better resurrection It s a souls strong Faith that bringeth him to nil admirari and to wonder at nothing Never to love much nor fear much nor sorrow much nor joy much nor weep much nor laugh much nor hope much nor dispaire much when the creature is the object of all these acts there is nothing great not the worlds All things or their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to him who is possessed with that Righteousnes which is of God by Faith Phil. 3.8 9. Men that talketh with good will and all their heart of their learning books of their own Acts good Works Wisdom Court Honour valour in War Flocks Lands Gold Moneys Children Friends Travels are to Examine If Faith be not a chaste thing and that acts of whoredome with the creature and of believing in Christ are scarce consistent Let your affections move toward the creature without sound of feet 3. There must be self-forsaking in believing 1. An affirming and an ay to grace is a negation and deniall to it self 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured more abundantly then they all Yet not I but the grace of God which was with me To deny that you are Christs or that you have any grace if Christ have any thing of his in you is not self-deniall but grace deniall and God-deniall deny the work of the spirit and deny himself It s a saying of humility Cant. 1.5 I am black and of Faith but comely as the tents of Kedar as the curtains of Solomon And Cant. 5.1 I slept but my heart waked It s Faith to hold fast your state of adoption Lord I am thine 2. When our self maketh a suit to self and putteth in a bill to the flesh O pitie thy self Rejoice O young man in thy youth It s self-renouncing to deny this request to the flesh And Faith only can give an answer to self-declining the crosse He that denieth me before men him will I deny before my Father and his holy Angels saith Christ. And another answer Faith giveth Rom. 8.12 I am not debtor to thee O flesh I owe thee nothing And its Faiths word of answer Eccles. 11.9 But know thou that for all these things God will bring thee unto judgement 3. Faith putteth the soul in that condition that self may be plucked from self without great violence as an apple full of the tree and of harvest-sap is with a small motion pluckt off the stalk Act. 21.13 I am ready 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have my self in readinesse not only to be bound but also to dye at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus Certainly Faith saw here more in Jesus of excellency and sweetnesse then there could be of bitternes in bonds and death to self 4. There 's a deniall of the creature and a bill of defiance sent to all the lovers of the world when Ephraim is brought to this act of believing Hos. 14.3 For in thee the Fatherlesse findeth mercy Then it s said Ashur shall not save us We will not ride upon horses That creature that we trust on we ride upon it as Israel did upon the horses of Assyria and Aegypt But in this regard Faith dismounteth the believer and abaseth him to walk on foot All the creatures are ships to the believer without a bottome They are empty and weak David forbiddeth us to ride on a Prince
not walk with God then the sun can leave off to give light or fire to cast heat or a fountain to send out streams in regard that the spirit acteth them to walk with God by such a necessary impulsion that destroyeth all freedom of will and if they sin they are not to be blamed because the spirit moveth them not to abstinence from sin and to holy walking But Paul a chosen vessel and a strong believer Rom. 7.14 15 16 17 c. Complaineth of the in-dwelling of sin of his carnality and the fleshes lusting against the spirit and of his captivity under sin which must argue his imperfect Faith liable to the distemper of sinfull doubtings It is also a great errour to say that to call in question whether God be my Father after or upon the commission of some hainous sins as murther incest c. Doth prove a man to be in the covenant of works Now there be sundry sorts of doubtings opposite to Faith In the renewed There 's 1. A naturall doubting and as all Popery is naturall and carnall so this strangenesse of affection by which men are unkind to Christ and never perswaded of Gods favour in Jesus Christ argueth the party to be under the law and not in Christ. This doubting may and doth in carnall men consist with presumption and a morall false perswasion that naturall men have all of them while their conscience be wakened that they shall be saved Why I am not a Murtherer a Sorcerer c. Why Or how can God throw me into Hell So it s made up of reall lies and contradictions Yet they have no divine certainty of Salvation For ask a naturall man Have you a full assurance of salvation as you say that you alwayes believe and doubt not he shall be there at a stand and answer Who can have a full assurance But I hope well I believe well night and day And so doubt Papists also and they have a lie in their right hand it cannot stand with Gods mercy or justice since I am not this and this to throw me into hell So is unbelief a lie Esa. 57.11 And of whom hast thou been afraid and feared that thou hast lied and hast not remembered me 2. There 's an occasionall doubting that riseth by starts upon wicked men out of an evill conscience of sin but it vanisheth as a cloud as in Pharaohs confession I and my people have sinned This argueth a law-spirit rising and falling a sleep again 3. There 's a finall doubting of despair like the doom past on the condemned malefactor as in Cain Gen. 4.13.14 In Saul 1 Sam. 28.15 16. All these conclude men under the law and the curse of it But there 's 4. A doubting in the believers which though a sin yet if I might have leave to borrow the expression is a godly sin Not because it is not a sin indeed and so opposit to grace and godlinesse but a gracious sin Ratione subjecti in regard of the person and adjuncts it being a neighbour to saving Grace and no reprobate can be capable of this sin no more then Pagans or flagitious and extreamly wicked men can be capable of the sinne against the Holy Ghost So beggars are remotest from high and personall treason because they have never that honour to come near the Kings Person So Davids bones not Sauls bones were broken Ps. 51.10 Humbled bones For a humbled heart is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nidcheh Broken and bruised with a fear of Gods wrath for sin And the converted souls moisture is turned to the drought of summer Psal. 32.3 4. And his bones waxen old with roaring all the day God withholding the joy of his salvation This doubting befalleth never any reprobate under the law or covenant of works and so though it be an ill thing yet it s a good sign as out-breakings of boils in the body are in themselves diseases infirmities distempers and contrary to perfect health yet they are often good signs and arguments of strength of life and much vitall heat and healthinesse of constitution That affections of the childe of God under incest murther or other hainous sins be stirred that sorrow be wakened and rise when our Father is offended and when our Lord frowneth and standeth behind the wall and goeth away is lawfull yea it speaketh tendernesse of love softnesse of heart but that they be so far wakened as to doubt and fear that the Lord be changed that he hath forgotten to be mercifull that is sinfull doubting but doth no wayes conclude that the person is under the Covenant of Works but the contrary rather that Grace sitteth and bordereth with this doubting And so that the person is under Grace not under the Law Even where Faith is strong it is not ever in the same temper Health most vigorou● will vary in its degrees and decrease at times of 〈…〉 and yet be strong and have much of life in it Take the strong and experienced Christians life in its whole continued frame and for the most part he hath the better of all temptations but take him in a certain stage or nick of providence when he is not himself and he is below his ordinary strength even in that wherein he excelleth If a gracious temper of meeknesse like Christ was not the predominant element of grace in Moses yet it was in a great measure in him he bearing the name with him who best knoweth names and things of the meekest man in the earth Yet in that which was his flour he proved weaker then himself and spake unadvisedly with his lips Our highest Graces may meet with an ill hour Job by the testimony of the Holy Ghost is patient Ye have heard of the patience of Job And Chap. 3. We have heard of the cursing passion of Job also Believing is like sailing which is not alwayes equall often strength of wind will blow the ship twenty miles backward 2. The smallest measure of Faith The minimum quod sic is sincere adherence to Christ. Not that negative adherence simply by which some one may say I dare not for a world quit my part in Christ or give up with him Naturall spirits may have a naturall tendernesse by which they dare not quit Christ and give up with him Yet there 's no saving faith in naturall spirits but there 's in the beleever some positive adherence under or with the negative by which there 's a power of love and kindnesse making the soul to cleave to Christ There may be great weaknesse with this and great failings and yet faith unfained We have need of much charity to these that are weak in Faith A reed a broken reed may grow and Christ will not break it A buried believer is a believer if Christ have a neer relation of blood to a peece of blew clay and the dead corps of a believer seeing in his flesh there 's the seed and hope of
sinless reason naturall far above Adam was strong in the acts of the former kinde and moderat in the other especially being a high Priest that marcheth us in naturall passions Heb. 4.15 Even in a Sympathie and having these same passions that we have He weeped over Jerusalem Luk. 19. When they were crying Hosanna to him and occasion of joy furnished to him yet ver 41.42 He wept over the City and spake words of compassion but broken and imprisoned with sighing and sorrow O if thou knew even thou c. Now what compassion must be in him when his affection had such an edge Joseph is nothing to him he having taken a mans heart to go along with the Saints to heaven sighing weeping mourning Tempted in all these as we are but without sin Heb. 4.15 Now though there be no passions as there 's no infirmities in God yet the flower the blossome the excellency of all these are infinitly in God he striketh tryeth and yet pittieth Judg. 10. Israel cryeth to the Lord in their bondage he giveth them a hard answer Go to the Gods saith he that ye have chosen and let them deliver you they still are in bondage and weep upon him v. 16. The Lords soul was grieved Heb. Cut short for the miserie of Israel so Jer. 31. Two evils befall Ephraim one is Gods correcting hand another is bemoaning and sorrow for sin both are trials but how doth God express himself toward Ephraim v. 20. Is Ephraim my dear son Is he a son of consolations so the Hebrew Is he my dainty childe for since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him Observe the income of Gods consolations after sad and heavy tryals Isa. 54.11 O thou afflicted tossed with tempest and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with fair colours and thy foundation with Saphires Isa. 40.1 Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith our God 2. Speak to the heart of Jerusalem and cry to her that her warfare is accomplished There is a violence of heavenly passion in Christs love it will come out at length tempted ones wait on you shall see Christ as Christ in the end of the day Christ is well worthy a dayes weeping and a dayes waiting on compassion strangled and inclosed in Christ must break out it easeth Christs minde that his bowels of mercy findeth a vent pitty kept within Gods bowels to speak so paineth him it must come out Hos. 11.8 Mine heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together O how rude and inhumane hath sin made our nature His love who died for us brake Heaven and rent the two sides of the Firmament as it were asunder our Lord descended and was made a man in all things like us except sin But O the first nay the doubled summons of Christs love are not obeyed Love cryeth we are deaf Christs love hunteth no other prey but our heart and he cannot have it After Christ hath tempted a soul he must put it in his heart it s an ease and comfort to Christ to ease and comfort the tempted he is now trying Britain and giving his Bride a cup of blood and tears to drink But who knowes what bowels what turnings of heart what motions of compassion are in the man Christ now in Heaven Those who shall live to see the Lord take his Bride in his armes and embrace her after these many temptations that now your eyes seeth shall subscribe to the truth of this and those who finde Christs love-embracements after Desertions know this Should we suppose that there were in Christ but this one attribute of tender compassion toward his own tempted ones it should make him altogether lovely to us for the motion of tender mercy in Christ upon the supposition of Free-love that he died for his own is naturall he having taken a mans heart to Heaven with him and borrowed nature from us as our compassionate High-Priest he cannot but pitty mercy acteth as a naturall agent in him Now suppose we that the mother were eternall and her child eternall but eternally weak compassion should eternally flow from the mother to the child suppose a fair rose to grow eternally and the Summer Sun to shine near it eternally and life and sap to keep it vigorous eternally it should cast out a sweet smell and offer its beauty to the eyes and senses eternally In Jesus Christ the heart and tender bowels of the sweetest mildest and most compassionate nature of man that God can possibly form hath met with eternall and infinite mercy in God Christ and to say nothing that mercy in Christ man hath been putting forth the sweet smelling acts of love without tiring summer and winter night and day these sixteen hundred years and that even now while you read this he is casting out acts of love and mercy an eternall High Priest could do no other thing for ever but compassionate his own redeemed flesh Mercy chuseth a lover freely Jacob not Esau this man not that man the fool not the wise man the beggar not the Prince the servant not the master but having once made choice it worketh necessarily and eternally Christs love hath no vacation no cessation but when he tempteth smiteth afflicteth trieth Love and tender mercy worketh in the dark Josephs bowels were upon action and busie when his Brethren saw no such thing even when he was accusing them as spies and dealing roughly with them When the sword of the Lord drunken swelled and fatted with blood is now raging in the three Kingdoms mercy in our High Priest and his bowels are rouled within him though we cannot see Christs inner side It is like the place Hebrews 4.15 is but an allusive Exposition of the rowled and moved bowels of GOD Jeremiah 31.20 CHRIST is as it were in Heaven burning and flaming in a passion of compassion toward his weak ones he is not only touched but pained with our infirmities so the word doth bear we shall not do well to make the tempted condition that either the Church or a soul is in the rule of Gods love Gods fiery dispensation in Zion or in a soul in the burning bush speaketh not alwayes wrath make not false Commentaries on Christs tempting dispensation Hell is accidentall to the love of Christ and cannot change it Suppose Christs tender mercy were in the midst of the flames of Hell yet there mercy should be mercy and work as mercy and not belie it self never a rod of God upon any elect childe of God save upon Christ only did speak satisfactory vengeance for sin Quest. Why is not Christ now red in his apparell and his garments dyed and dipped in blood and hath he not put on vengeance as a garment in the three Kingdoms Ans. Yes and for the provocations of England their unrepented Idolatry superstition vanity pride security unthankfulnesse to God who hath broken the rod of the
body of Christ that ye should be married to another 5. For when we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death 6. But now we are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein we were held we should serve in newnesse of spirit and not in the oldnesse of the Letter Hence it is clear that there was a time in which Paul and the Elect at Rome were servants of sin Rom. 6.20 21. Under the lusts and motions of sin which work in their Members to bring forth fruit that is sins to death eternall Ro. 7.5 Ergo They were then under the curse of the Law and so far from blessednesse and the servants of sin Rom. 6.20 and persons in the flesh But the case is changed they are now not the servants of sin but servants of righteousnesse Rom. 6.22 Married to a new husband Iesus Christ Rom. 7.4 Whence came this change of two contrary states yea and before God contrary for before God it cannot be one state to be servants of sin under the Law and servants of God and under Grace Certainly from Faith on our part or some other grace in us at least there must be something of grace by which the alteration from a cursed estate to a blessed estate is made then faith is not a naked manifestation of the blessednesse of justification to the which we was intitled before we believed for before we believed we was in a cursed estate This also may be added that if Faith be but a Declaration or manifestation that we are justified before we believe Paul had no reason to deny that we are justified that is that we know to our comfort by works of holinesse that we are justified for works of sanctification are evident witnesses that we are in Christ and are justified 2 Cor. 5.17 1 Joh. 3.14 1 Joh. 2.3 Jam. 2.24.25 2 Pet. 1.10 3. It layeth down this false ground that grace is nothing in us but a meer comfortable sense and apprehension of Free-love and Grace is conceived to be only and wholly in Christ so that there is no inherent grace in the Believer by which he is differenced from an unbeliever sanctification and duties flowing from the habit of grace are nothing but dreams of Legall men Christ justifying the sinner is all and some in the Elect strict and precise walking conduce nothing to salvation To think that it can do any thing in order to salvation is to worship saith Mr. Denne an angry deity 2. To satisfie justice with our works fasting tears duties Therefore our 6. Propos. Is that it is a vain distinction of Master Denne who would have a reconciliation of God to man and of man to God 1. Because we read that man is reconciled to God Rom. 5.10 2 Cor. 5.18 19 20. Col. 1.20 21. Eph. 2.16 Man is the enemy whereas in Adam he was a friend and in Christ the second Adam he is made a friend but that God is reconciled to man or changed toward his own Elect from an enemy and a God that hateth their persons into a friend and lover of them I never read if at any time God be said to be comforted toward his people or eased these are borrowed speeches 2. Love of Election yea the love that putteth God on work to Redeem Call Justifie Sanctifie the Elect is no love bought with hire yea the price of Redemption which Christ gave for sinners cannot buy eternall love blood and the blood of God shed cannot woodset ancient love all the sins of Devils of men cannot forfeit it make sins floods and seas and ten thousand worlds of rivers they cannot quench that eternall coal and flame in the brest of so free a Lover as God in a word the shed blood of Christ is an ●ffect not a cause of infinite love 3. What ●hen doth reconciliation place any new thing in God No Doth it turn him from an Hater to a Lover No Reconciliation active on the Lords ●art is a change of his outward dispensation not ●f his inward affections Fury is not in me he ●ith himself Isa. 27.4 He cannot wax hot and ●●ry in the Acts of his spotlesse and holy will Reconciliation turneth not the heart but the hand of the Lord upon the little ones as he speaketh so that he cannot deal with or punish his elect as otherways he would do The Lords justice may be satisfied his love cannot be budded or hired and the effect of justice the inflicting of infinite wrath is diverted as a River that runneth East hath been made to run West and an issue of blood in one member of the body hath been diverted to run at another channell justice was to run through the Elect of God in the due legal punishing of the sinner which yet is extraneous to the just and eternall will of God but infinite wise mercy caused that River to run in another veine through the soul of Iesus Christ. 7. Propos. Joy of the holy Ghost is a fruit of the Kingdom of Grace Rom. 14.17 But not that joy spoken of Rev. 21.4 and Is. 35.10 Which excludeth all tears death sorrow crying all sighing as Mr. Denne dreameth so as joy can no more be separated from the Subjects of that kingdom then light from the Sun heat from the fire or ebbing and flowing can be stopped in waters as he saith far lesse is it true that actuall love and obedience doth inseparably follow this condition except we were made Angels when we are once justified nor is the Kingdom of God spoken of 1 Cor. 6.9 10. And the seeing of God Heb. 12.14 The Kingdom or state of Grace or the seeing of God in a vision of Faith here in this life but of the Kingdom of glory and of the vision of God in the other life as M. Denne expoundeth it that he may elude all necessity of holinesse but that which floweth from no obligation of any Law or Commandement of God But which is in our power of love to perform or not perform if we perform it not it s no transgression of any Law of God 1. M. Denne himself granteth pag. 84. God is not like some nigardly man who will not bid us welcome to his house unlesse we bring our cost with us Nor is holinesse required of us without Faith and before we believe and enter Citizens of the kingdom of Grace Nay by this interpretation 1 Cor. 6. We must be Justified and washed before we can inherit this Kingdom v. 9 10.11 But we are not to be washed and justified before we inherit the Kingdom of Grace and before we believe for so we should be justified and washed before we be justified and washed and the like I say of the Kingdom of God John 3.3 For it should follow that a man must be born again ere he be born again if he must be born again ere
over Satan I do not mean as Arminians do that free-will by order of nature beginneth first to resist Satan then Gods grace followeth as a hand-maide but I intend this that because Peter is self-strong his flesh saith to Christ that Christ is mistaken and looketh beside the spirit of prophesie for Mat. 26.35 He saith Though I should die with thee yet will I not deny thee Belike if he had been diffident of his own strength and watched and trusted in the strength of an intercessor he should not have been deserted so as to deny his Lord we put not Christ to it to put forth his omnipotency in every act to save us that wee yeeld not I deny not but there is a necessity in regard of Gods wise providence that the Saints must sin and that they be passive vessels to carry the lustre hold forth the rayes and beams of pardoning Grace Yet certain it is there be hypotheticall connexions of supernaturall Providence in Gods eternall Decree never put forth in action because of our lazinesse As if God shal suffer Iob to be tempted and he by grace sin not as Job 1.22 The Lord shall also strengthen him when he is tempted the second time not to sin and if Abraham be tempted to effer up his only Son for God and if he yeeld obedience God shall surely blesse him with the blessing of sanctification promised in the Covenant as is clear Gen. 22.16.17 Heb. 6.12.13.14 For we see these connexions some times put forth in Asts But other connexions are not put forth in Acts Math. 11.21 Luke 16.31 1 Sam. 23.12 Such as these if David be tempted by Satan he shall not resist but shall number the people if Peter be tempted he shall not stand out in confessing his Master Certain it is that as we come short of these comforts of a communion with God which we might injoy by our loose walking so upon the same reason we fall short of many victories over Satan which we might have if we should improve the dominion and Kingly power of Christ over that restles spirit As thou wilt As thou desirest God maketh of his free dispensation a sanctified will and affection in prayer the measure of his gifts to us a word then 1. Of a sanctified will and affections 2. How these are ●he measure of Gods goodnesse toward us in these Positions Posit 1. The soul is never renewed while the will be renewed for the will is the heart of the heart and the new heart is the new man Ezek. 36.26 Deut. 30.6 For the heart is the King and Soveraign of obedience Deut. 30.19 Posit 2. All sanctified affections are threded upon the will saving Grace can lodge no where but in the center of the heart and that 's the renewed will presupposing new light in the mind Grace taketh this first Castle Posit 3. Hence how many grains of sanctified will as many grains of new obedience so love is the fire of our obedience and willingnesse the fa● of obedience which is set on fire by love Posit 4. A civil will is not a sanctified wil in some men the will is more Morall lesse raging then the motions of it being lesse tumultuous as in some carnal spirits the wheels go with lesse noise all rivers make not alike action and stirring on their Banks but that taketh nothing from either their nature or deepnesse or occasionall over-swelling Posit 5. The speciall mark of a sanctified wil is that its a broken thing as it were fallen in the midst in two pieces and yeelding to God and saving light there was a sea of grace and saving light in Christ no created will stooped to the light of a revealed Decree in such a submissive measure in a Hel of fear sorrow and anguish for an evil of punishment more then any creature was able to bear as he did Neverthelesse not my wil but thy wil be done Far more in other things of lesse pain should we suffer especially in these the wil is to stoop 1. In opposing our lusts as we would testifie that the proudest piece in us the will hath felt the influence of Christs death on it That we no longer should live the rest of our time to the lusts of men 1 Pet. 4.2 But to the will of God 1 Pet. 2.24 Rom. 6.6 The dominion of wil is the dominion of sin 2. In that the soul speaketh out of the dust and is put to silence before God and sitteth alone as Melancholicks do Lam. 3.28 29. A tamed man is broken in his will in which the Pride of opposing God consisteth Then Isa. 11.6 The wolfe dwelleth with the Lamb. 3. The subordination of the will to God is a great signe of a subdued spirit nothing affecteth Independency more then the vain will Psal. 37.7 Rest on the Lord Heb. Be silent toward the Lord Vatablus Be quiet Repine not as disobedient neither answer again Isa. 61.1 Christ is sent to bind up those that are broken in will or heart the Hebrew will include both Prov. 15.31 He that hearkeneth to reproof getteth a heart possesseth his heart so Vatablus The meek spirit which in obedience submitteth to rebukes possesseth his heart and possesseth his own will now the contrary must bee in the undaunted man his will and heart must have dominion over him and his will must possesse him as Prov. 17.18 The unconverted man is a man wanting a heart and a will a will not broken to God is as good as no will and no heart at all the broken heart is the heart to God and the broken wil the wil. Posit 6. The affections in their naturals be●ng corrupt grace only maketh them pure and when they are purest they are strongest it s most of the Element of the earth that is all earth and wanteth all mixture of other Elements that is most fire that hath least of earth in it that is finest gold that hath in it least of other mettals least drosse least oare When affections are most steeled with Grace they have the least mixture in them love having much of Grace hath least of lust zeal with much grace hath least of the wild-fire of carnall wrath and these are known by the swiftnesse of their motion toward their kindly objects the more of earth in the body the swifter is the motion downward toward the earth fire worketh most as fire when it carrieth up in the Air nothing but it self or fiery sparks like it self but when it ascendeth and carrieth up with it houses mountains and great loads of earth the motion is the slower Grace being essentiall to gracious affections they run and move kindly and swiftly therefore is supernaturall love strong as death hard as the grave In the Martyrs it was stronger then burning quick then the wheels racks and the most exquisite torments and Christs love was stronger then Hell of all loves that is the strongest that bringeth sicknes
Debtor both to the Greeks and the Barbarians both to the wise and unwise Grace awed him as a Debt layeth fetters on an ingenious minde he cannot but out his free and honest mind in paying what he oweth 6. Gods Desertion cannot so hide and over-cloud Christ but against sense the Childe of God must beleeve yea and pray in Faith Ps 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 2. O my God I cry by day Though sin over-cloud Christ and David fall in Adultery and blood there 's a seed of Christ that must cast out blossoms he cannot but repent and sorrow Gods Decree of grace in the execution of it may be broken in a link by some great sin but Christ cannot but soader the chain and raise the fallen sinner It shall be usefull then for the Saints when the spirit cometh in his stirrings and impetuous acts to co-operate with him and to answer his wind-blowing It s good to hoyse up sail and make out when a fair wind and a strong tide calleth sometime Grace maketh the heart as a hot Iron its good then to smite with the hammer When your spirit is Docile and there cometh a gale of Christs sweet West-wind and rusheth in with a warmnesse of heart in a praying disposition to retire to a corner and powre out the soul before the Lord as we are to take Christ at his word so are we to take Christs spirit at his work He knocketh knock thou with him His fingers make a stirring upon the handles of the bar and drop down pure myrhe Let thy heart make a stirring with his fingers also I grant wind maketh sailing and all the powers on Earth cannot make wind yet when God maketh wind the Sea-men may draw sails and lance forth God preventeth in all these the spirit beateth fire out of our slint we are to lay to a match and receive reach in the heart under the stirrings of Free-grace obey dispositions of Grace as God himself when the Sun riseth the Birds may sing but their singing is no cause of the Sun rising 2. It s no truth of God that some teach that the justified in Christ are of duty always tied to one and the same constant act of rejoycing with out any mixture of sadnesse and sorrow for so they cannot 1. Obey and follow the various impressions of the Lords absence and presence of Christs Sea ebbing and flowing of his shining and smiling and his lowring and frowning 2. The Faith of a justified condition doth not root out all affections nay not Love Faith desire and joy if there be sin remaining in the justified there 's place of sadnesse for fear for sorrow for the scumme of affections are removed by Christ not the affections themselves 3. Christ for meer triall sometimes for sin other times doth cover himself with a cloud and withdraw the sense of his favour and it s a cursed joy that is on foot when the Lord hideth his face The Love of Christ must be sick and sad I mean the Lover when the beloved is under a cloud It is not the new world with the Regenerate man here nor a Land where there 's nothing but all Summer all Sun neither night nor clouds nor Rain nor Storm that is the condition of the second Paradice of the better Adam 4. It s a just and an innocent sorrow to be grieved at that which grieveth the Holy spirit and when the Lyon roareth all the Beasts of the field are afraid Grace maketh not Iob a stock nor Christ a man who cannot weep And behold a Woman of Canaan And a certain Woman Of the Woman 1. But one person of all Tyrus and Sidon came to him 2. She was a Syrophenician by Nation 3. Her condition She had a Daughter vexed with a Devill 4. With an unclean Devill 5. The nearer occasion She heard of him 6. She adored 7. She prayed and so way is made to the conference between Christ and her And to the Triall and Miracle A certain Woman There is but one of all Tyrus and Sidon who came to Christ. 1. It beseemeth the mercy of the good shepherd to leave ninety and nine sheep in the Wildernesse and go after one which is lost Luke 15.4 And when all is done alas he hath but one of an whole hundred Christ hath not the tithe of mankinde He maketh a Journey while he is wearied and thirsty through Samaria yea and wanteth his dinner for one Woman at that draught of his net and thinketh he dineth like a King and above if he save one Ioh. 4.33 34. O sweet husbands word Jer. 3.14 I am married to you and I will take you one of a citie and two of a Tribe and I will bring you to Zion Christ taketh sinners not by dozens not by thousands its but once in all the word Act. 2. that three Thousand are converted at once but by one's and two 's Though Israel be as the sand of the Sea yet a Remnant shall but bee saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.27 Esa. 10.22 The Reliques and Refuse shall be saved only 2. Common Love scarce amounteth to Grace because Grace is separative and singleth out one of many all graced persons are priviledged persons Heaven is a house of chosen and priveledged ones there 's no common stones in the New Jerusalem but all precious stones the foundations Saphirs the windows Agats and Carbuncles all the Borders of pleasant stones Esa. 54.11 12. 3. Christs way lyeth so of two grinding at the mil of two in the field together of two in one bed Christ wil have but one Christ often wil not have both husband and wife both Father and Son but the one Brother Iacob not Esau of a whole house Christ cometh to the Devils fire side and chuseth one and draweth him out and leaveth all the Family to the devil 4. Christ knoweth them well whom he chuseth Grace is a rare peece of the choise and the floor of the love of Heaven there bee many common stones not many Pearls not many Diamonds and Saphirs The multitude be all Arminians from the womb every Heresie is a peece of the old Adams wanton wit thousands go to Hell black Hereticks and Heterodox as touching the Doctrine of themselves every man hath Grace if you believe himself Vnusquisque est in eâ heresi every man taketh Heaven for his home and heritage Dogs think to rest in Christs bosome men naturally believe though they be but up and down with Christ yet Christ doth so bear them at good-will as to give Grace and Glory Obj. 1. Gods Love is not infinite if it bee limited to a few Ans. This should conclude that there be an infinite number of Men and Angels to whom Gods Love to Salvation is betrothed in affection but his love is infinite in its Act not in its Object The way of carrying on his love is infinite Obj. 2. To ascribe
Gods not loving of men to Gods disposition heart will and pleasure and not to our defects is blasphemy Ans. The Lord ascribeth his having mercy and his hardning to his own Free-will Rom. 9.17 Exod. 33.19 and his love is as free as his mercy and by this means Gods first love to us should arise from our love preventing his contrary to his own word Deut. 7.7 Eph. 2.3 4. Tit. 3.3 2 Tim. 1.9 and man should be the first lover of the two the creature then putteth the Lord in his debt and giveth first to God and God cannot but recompence Esa. 40.13 14. Rom. 11.34 35. now it s no shame for us to live and dye in the debt of Christ The Heaven of Angels and men is an house of the debtors of Christ Eternally engaged to him and shall stand in his Debt-book ages without end Obj. 3. Infinite goodnesse may as soon cease to be as not be good to all or withhold mercy from any Ans. Every being of Reprobate Men and Devils is a fruit of Gods goodness but of Free-goodnesse else God should cease to be if he should turn his Creatures to nothing for he should cease to be good to things without himself if these were all turned to their poor mother-Nothing 2. Mercy floweth not from God essentially especially the mercy of Conversion Remission of sins Eternall life but of mer Gracc for then God could not be God and deny these favours to Reprobats Freedome of mercy and salvation is as infinitely sweet and admirable in God as mercy and salvation it self Obj. 4. But God is so essentially good to all as he must communicate his goodnesse by way of Justice in order to free obedience and that is life Eternal to those who freely beleeve and obey Ans. But the great Enemy of Grace Ja. Arminius teacheth us that all the freedom of Grace Rom. 9. is resolved in the free pleasure of God in which he freely and without hire purposed to reward Faith not the works of the Law with life Eternall whereas it was free to him to keep another order if so it shuld seem good to him and by this means God is yet freely and by an act of pure grace not essentially good to all even in communicating his goodnesse by way of Justice For what God doth by necessity of his nature and essence that he canot but do but sure it is by no necessity of nature doth the Lord reward works faith or any obedience in us with the Crown of life Eternal He may give heaven freely without our Obedience at all as he giveth the first Grace freely Eze. 16.6 7 8. Rom. 5.10 Ephes. 2.3 4 But this is surer the fewer have Grace Grace is the more Grace and the more like it selfe and free Obj. 5. But I have a good heart to GOD. Ans. A quiet heart sleeping in a false peace is a bad heart most of sinners give their souls to the Devil by theft they think they are sailing to heaven and know nothing till they shoare sleeping in the land of Death Matth. 7.21 22 23. Luk. 16.27 28. Obj. 6. Why But God hath bestowed on me many favours and riches in this world Ans. Gods Grace is not graven on gold it should be but the Logick of a beast if the slaughter Oxe should say The Master favoureth me more then any Oxe in the stall I am free of the yoak which is upon the neck of others and my pasture is fatter then theirs Obj. 7. The Saints love me Ans. The Saints can mis-father their love and love where God loveth not Obj. 8. All the world loveth me Ans. You are the liker to be a step-childe of Jerusalem and of Heaven for The world loveth its own Ioh. 15.19 better it were to have the world a step-Mother then to be no other but to lye in such a womb and suck such breasts Obj. 9. I believe life Eternall Ans. That Faith is with childe of Heaven but see it be not a false Birth few or none come to age and none clothed in white and Crowned but they were jealous of their Faith and feared their own wayes Naturall men stand aloof from Hell and Wrath. SERMON IV. The Woman was a Greek a Syrophenician by Nation MUch woe is denounced by the Prophets against Tyrus and Sidon yet sweet Jesus draweth by the curtain and openeth a window of the partition and saveth this Woman Loe here Christ planting in the wildernesse the Cedar the Shittah tree the Mirttle the Oyle tree Esa. 41.19 and here Esa. 55.13 is fulfilled And in stead of the thorn what better are Sidonians then thornes shall come up the Firre tree and in stead of the Bryar shall come up the Mirtle tree and no praise to the ground but to the good husband-man And it shall be to the Lord for a name for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off Christ then can make frame a fair Heaven out of an ugly Hell and out of the knottiest timber he can make vessels of mercy for service in the high Pallace of glory 1. What are they all who are now glorified The fairest face that standeth before the throne of Redeemed ones was once inked and blacked with sin you should not know Paul now with a Crown of a King on his head he looketh not now like a Blasphemer a Persecuter an injurious person The woman that had once seven Devils in her is a Marie Magdalen far changed and Grace made the change 2. Grace is a new world Heb. 2.5 The Land of Grace hath two Summers in one year Esa. 33.24 The inhabitant shall not say I am sick the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity Ioh. 11.26 Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never dye They are not mortall men that are in Grace there 's neither sicknesse nor death in that Land 3. We say of such a Physician he hath cured diseases that never man could hee cured stark death then you may commit your body to him he is a tryed Physician 1 Tim. 1.16 Christ hath made a rare copy a curious samplar of mercy of the Apostle Paul For in him he hath shewn all long-suffering for a pattern to them that should hereafter believe in him to life Eternall Heaven is a house full of miracles yea of spectacles and Images of Free-Grace you may intrust your soul with all its diseases to Christ he hath given many rare proofs of his tried art of Grace he hath made many black limbs of Hell fair Saints in Heaven such a man such an Artificier threw down an old dungeon of clay and made it up a fair Palace of Gold Obj. But what am I a lump of unrepenting guiltinesse and sin to such a vessel of mercy as holy Paul and repenting Mary Magdalen Ans. Grace as its in God and fitnesse to receive Grace in us is just alike to all There was no more
that you were upon the borders of Hell yet the Gospel though it except you from actuall mercy yet not from the duty of believing and comming to Christ and though such think and imagine that they believe Christ is able to save and redeem them only they doubt of his will yet the truth is the doubt of unbelief is more of the power of mercy and infinite Grace in Christ then of his will and my reason is that whosoever believeth Joh. 3.33 hath set to his seal that God is true and 1 Ioh. 5.10 He that believeth not God hath made him a Liar because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son Now it is not Gods Testimony nor any Gospel-Truth that such as sin against the holy Ghost shall be pardoned yea the contrary is said Mat. 12.31 32. Yet these that sin against the holy Ghost are condemned for unbelief as all other unbelievers are Ioh. 3.18 36. Then such as fall in this sin though they say Infinite mercy can pardon them but infinite mercy will not pardon them should not bely God by unbelieving these truths for they are Gospel-truths then must the unbelief of those that sin against the Holy Ghost put a lie upon some Gospel-truth and this can be only on the power of infinite mercy and so they must say Christ cannot save though he would for there 's a power of Christ in mercie no lesse then a will If F. Spira go for a despairing Reprobate which I dare not averre yet when he said he believed Christ was able to save him but he doubted of his will he must not be so understood as if it were so indeed Unbelievers know not all the mysterious turnings of lying self deceiving unbelief Unbelief may lie to men of it self when it dare belie the worth of that soul-redeeming ransome of Christs blood if he that sinneth against the holy Ghost could believe the power of infinite mercy he should also believe the will and inclination of infinite mercy for the power of mercy is the very power of a mercifull will I shall not then be afraid that soul is lost which hath high and capacious apprehensions of the worth value dignity and power of that dear ransome and of infinite mercy It s faith to believe this Gospel-truth which is Heb. 7.25 That Christ is able to save to the utmost all those that come to him if I believe soundly what free grace can do I believe also soundly what free grace will do It s true Christ can save many whom he never will save but the faith of the power of mercie and of his will to save is of a far other consideration 4. It must then be the prevailing of a temptation not to dare to come to Christ because I am a dog and unworthy 1. Because sin is no porter put to watch the door of Christs house of free-grace mercy keepeth the keys sin may object my evill deserving but it cannot object Christs rich deserving 2. That which maketh me unworthy and gracelesse and unfit to be saved may make Christ worthy and gracious to save my sin may be Christs rich grace Though sin maketh me unworthy of Christ yet it maketh me a fit passive object for the Physitian Christ to work on and maketh not Christ unworthy to save If I feel sin it then saith Thou art the very person by name that Christ seeketh Therefore is the sense of sin required as a condition in all that cometh to Christ whether it be before conversion or after conversion when acts of faith are renewed Obj. But we finde by experience that true poverty of spirit and sense of sinfull wretchednesse doth kill and destroy any sight of guilt and wickednesse in my self if I rightly see Christ I shall not also see any unworthinesse in my self Answ. This experience is not warranted by the word of truth These may well consist together 1. That felt and apprehended wretchednesse of a sinner may stand with a sight of Christs riches of grace is as evident as the felt pain of the sting of the fiery Scorpion may stand with looking up to the brazen Serpent and being saved yea when the poor man Mark 9.24 said Lord I believe help my unbeleefe he both was sensible of faith and unbeleefe 2. Yea the converted may well see grace and holinesse in himself else how shall he be thankfull to Christ the giver and also see Christ and beleeve his righteousnesse for holy walking commeth under a threefold consideration 1. As a duty 2. As a mean ordained of God that we should walk in Eph. 2.10 3. As a promise or a thing promised in the new Covenant and in this threefold consideration we may know how far we may build our peace upon any duties as upon evidences of our state of grace 1. as holy walking is a duty coming from us it s no ground of true peace beleevers often seek in themselves what they should seek in Christ this is naturall merit often we argue from the measure of obedience to deny grace altogether this is a false way especially its a false way of logick to argue Negatively from want of such such a measure of obedience to deny you are in Christ how we may argue Affirmatively we shall hear hereafter 2. The dutie is Christs mean not injoyned in a strict Law-way but in a Gospel-way as the commandement is oiled with a Gospel-spirit of love Law and love are not contrary as Antinomians do imagine Christ has united not only persons but also graces and vertues This way the duty is a mean and a way not to the right of salvation but to the actuall possession of it and as it is or standeth stated before us in the letter of the Gospel in a Morall commanding or a Doctrinall or directing way without the efficacy of grace it can be nothing but a Doctrinall-mean no more then the Law-way is for all Gospel-precepts without grace are as little available to us as the Law But in the third Notion holy walking as performed by that efficacious grace promised in the Covenant of grace is an Argument on which we may build our peace not as a cause or a merit-deserving peace but as a grace threeded upon the free promise of God so the Saints have builded upon their sincere walking as on a fruit of the Covenant of Grace promised to us Jer. 31.33 Jer. 32. for so duties speak the mercies promised in the Covenant 38. And I will give them one heart and one way that they may fear me for ever See Ezech. 36.27 Isa. 54.13 Upon this ground Ezekiah pleadeth with God when he heard the sentence of death Isa. 38.3 Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight And David putteth his faith upon this as a gracious fruit of grace promised in the
Covenant of Grace So David pleadeth and in faith Psal. 86.2 Preserve my soul here is a prayer in faith and upon what ground for I am holy Now this would seem Pharisaicall and merit-like if holinesse did not relate to the free promise of the Covenant of Grace in which God hath promised and tyed himself by Covenant to make his own children holy and also is resolved upon a proposition of the covenant of grace God hath both promised to cause his covenanted ones walk before him in truth as did Ezekiah as we have it Ezek. 36.27 and he has promised to save and deliver the upright in heart as is clear Ps. 50.23 Ps. 34.15 1 Pet. 3.12 Ps. 145.18 19. So all the peace we can collect for our comfort from holy walking is resolved on a promise of free-grace and the duty as performed by the grace of the covenant may and doth lead us to the promise so no wise from Christ but to Christ. Holy walking is a faithfull witnesse and a true witnesse may lead any accused man to Law-right holinesse may lead me to the promise and that is good Law-right if we cannot gather any assurance of our spirituall estate from holy duties in us such as are universall obedience sincerity in keeping closse to Christ and love to the Saints because they may deceive us and may be in Hypocrites as Doctor Crispe saith then may faith also deceive us for there be as many kindes of false faiths as there be of counterfeit loves to the Saints and there is somewhat of Christ peculiar to the regenerate in their love obedience and sincerity which they may discern to be a saving Character and badge of Christ no lesse then in faith 2. But here 's the mystery neither faith nor any thing inherent in us can yeeld us certainty that we are in Christ or any peace with God in regard all grace all evidences of our good estate is without us in Christ inherent holinesse and duties are but fancies When we then refuse the comforts of God and Peace from holy walking as its thred and linked to the Promise we refuse Christ especially under desertion wee bid Christ look away from us and there 's a wilfulnesse of unbelieving sorrow so that Rachel will not be comforted But when we refuse Christs comforts we refuse himself she who refuseth to accept of a Bracelet or of a Gold-ring from him who s●iteth her in marriage she refuseth both his love and himself in that she refuseth his love-token Observe also that Christ bringeth himself in as a great House-holder in the Gospel in his house there be divers children servants Dogs and the house is broad and open to all that comes There 's bread in our Fathers house for all What bread A great Marriage Supper here 's a Kings Son Married Matth. 22. Luk. 14 and many excellent dainties and all dainties is Christ the marrow of the Gospel that bread of life Iohn 6.48 I am that bread of life he was the wheat Ioh. 12.24 That dieth and rotteth in the earth and then taketh life and bringeth forth fruit he is the wheat that suffered the Winter Frosts and storms rain and windes and went through the milstones of Gods wrath and was bruised for our iniquities Isa. 53.5 For it pleased the Lord to bruise him ver 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dakeo is Contundere to grinde us in a Morter or Mill and he went through the Oven and Fierie furnace of the anger of God before he could be bread for the Kings table the children 2. Every bread is not the bread of children Christ is not a loaf nor a Feast for the man that wanteth his wedding-garment such a friend was never invited to the banquet Matth. 22.11.12 and of those that loaths Christ and loveth their lusts better then him Christ saith Luk. 14.24 None of these men that were bidden shall taste of my supper The children are parts of the house and are more then children heirs even joynt heires with the eldest heir Christ Rom. 8.17 1. Because Christ and the younger heirs divideth Heaven to speak so between them and 1. the spirit that raised Christ from the dead Rom. 8.11 dwelleth in them 2. They have one GOD and one Father CHRIST and we are Fathers Children Joh. 20.17 Go to my brethren and say to them I ascend unto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God 3. We must be together in one place all the children must be in one house together Ioh. 17.24 Ioh. 14.3 And if I go it s not an if of doubting And prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also Joh. 12.26 And where I am there shall also my servant be 4. On Resurrection Ioh. 14.19 Because I live ye shall live also 1 Cor. 15.23 Every believer is raised in Christ but in order Every man in his own order Christ first as the first fruits 5. One Heaven and one Kingdom and one Throne Luk. 22.29 Rev. 3.21 2. There be great oddes between the spirit or minde of an heir or a son and a servant the heire will do much for the birth-right take his life from him ere you take his Heritage from him Esaws face dryed he weeped no more when his father blessed him with the dew of Heaven and the fatnesse of the earth a servant will not contend to be an heire 3. Joh. 8.35 The servant abideth not in the house for ever but the Son abideth ever The sons reward is all hope as some courtiers attend Princes upon hopes servants have hand-payment and present wages everie Professor trie his spirit and nature if the spirit bend toward the inheritance and Heaven-ward its right see who looketh to the last year of Nonage and minority and hath not an eye and heart on time their 's a latent hope in all troubles in sons as in a Kings heire in a farre Country where he is not known not honoured as one of a Princes blood but neglected injured yea in want and necessity yet when he casteth his eye upon his over-sea hope it cometh home to his heart with ease One day I shall be a King in honour and wealth 2. Try the free and ingenuous spirit of a son toward the Father there 's not a nature or an instinct in the servant nor such an inward principle toward the lord of the house as in a son blood and nature is strong and prevalent blood-bonds nature-relations are mighty Mark 7.27 But Jesus said unto her let the children first be filled Christ denied not but the woman and the Gentiles have a right to the bread of Christs house only Grace must keep an order let the Jews first have the loaf broken to them and then let the Gentiles have the by-board or the second Table of Christ hence observe Christs wise attempterating of the temptation in these particulars 1.