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A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

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Life they are called to by a perfect revolution or circuit as there is said of the Sun it visites all Ranks and Estates its going forth is from the end of Heaven and his circuit unto the ends of it and there is nothing hid from the heat of it disdains not to teach the very Servants in their low condition and employments how to behave themselves and sets before them no meaner Example than that of Iesus Christ which is the highest of all Examples and here the Apostle proceeds to give Rules to that Relation which is the main in Families Husbands and Wives for the Order it 's indifferent yet possibly he begins here at the Wives because his former Rules were to inseriours to Subjects and Servants and the duty he commends particularly here to them is Subjecti●n Likewise ye Wives be in Subjection c. 〈◊〉 Men have said all and much it may be to little purpose in the Parallel of these two Estates of Life the Result will be sound I conceive all being truly reckoned to be very little odds even in Natural Respects in the thing it self saving only as the particular Condition of Persons and the Hand of Divine Providence turns the Ballance the one way or other and the writing of Satyrs against either or Laudatives for the one in prejudice of the other is but a Caprice of Man's Mind according to their own humor but in Respect of Religion the Apostle having scann'd the Subject to the full leaves it indifferent only requiring in those that are so ingaged Hearts as disingaged as may be that they that Marry be as if they Married not c. Within a while it will be all one as he adds that grave reason for the Fashion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of this World passeth 't is but a Pageant a Show of an hour long 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goes by and is no more seen thus the great Pomps and Solemnities of Marriages of Kings and Princes in former times where are they Oh! how unseemly is it to have an immortal Soul drowned in the esteem and affection of any thing that perishes and to be cold and indifferent in seeking after a Good that will last as long as it self Aspire to that Good which is the only Match for the Soul that close Union with God which cannot be dissolved which he calls an Everlasting Marriage that will make you happy either with the other or without it All the happiness of the most excellent Persons and top of all Affection and Prosperity meeting in Humane Marriages are but a dark and weak Representation of the solid joy that is in that Mysterious Divine Union of the Spirit of Man with the Father of Spirits from whence it issues But this by the way The Common Spring of all mutual Duties on both sides is to be supposed Love That peculiar conjugal Love that makes them one that will infuse such sweetness into the Authority of the Husband and Obedience of the Wise as will make their Lives harmonious like the sound of a well tun'd instrument whereas without that having such an Universal conjuncture of interest in all their Affairs they cannot escape frequent contests and discords which is a sound more unpleasant than the jarring of untuned Strings to an exact Ear. And this should be considered in the choice that it be not as it is too often which causeth so many Domestick ills contracted only as a Bargain of outward Advantages but as an Union of Hearts And where this is not and that there is something wanting in this point of Affection there if the Parties or either of them have any saving knowledge of God and access to him in Prayer they will be earnest Suiters for his help in this that his Hand may right what no other can that he who is Love it self may infuse that mutual Love into their Hearts now which they should have sought sooner And certainly they that sensibly want this and yet seek it not of him what wonder though they find much bitterness and discontent and where they agree only in Natural Affection their observance of the Duties requir'd is not by far either so comfortable and pleasing or so sure and lasting as when it ariseth from a Religious and Christian Love on both sides that will cover many failings and take things by the best side Love is the prime Duty in both the basis of all but because the particular Character of it as proper to the Wise is conjugal Obedience and Subjection therefore that is usually specified Eph 5. 12. Wives submit your selves unto your own Husbands as unto the Lord So here Now if it be such obedience as ought to arise from a special kind of Love then the Wife would remember this that it must not be constrained unchearful obedience and the Husband would remember that he ought not to require base and servile Obedience for both these are contrary to that Love whereof this obedience must carry the true tincture and relish as slowing from it there it will hold right where Love commands and Love obeys This Subjection as all other is qualified thus that it be in the Lord. His Authority is Primitive and binds first and all other have their Patents and Priviledges from him therefore he is supremely and absolutely to be observed in all if the Husband would draw the Wife to an irreligious course of Life and looseness he is not to be followed in this but in all things indifferent this obedience must hold which for●ids not neither a modest advice and representment to the Husband of that which is more convenient but that done a submissive yielding to the Husbands will is the suiting of this rule Yea possibly the Husband may not only imprudently but unlawfully will that which if not in its own Nature a thing unlawful the Wife by reason of his will may obey lawfully yea could not lawfully disobey Now though this Subjection was a Fundamental Law of pure Nature and came from that hand that made all things in perfect order yet sin that hath imbitter'd all humane things with a Curse hath disrelisht this Subjection and made it taste somewhat of a punishment Gen. 3. 16. and that as a suitable punishment of the abuse of that power she had with him to the drawing of him to disobedience against God The bitterness in this Subjection arises from the corruption of Nature in both in the Wife a perverse desire rather to command or at least a repining discontent at the obligation to obey and this is increased by the disorder and imprudence and harshness of Husbands in the use of their Authority But in a Christian the Conscience of Divine appointment will carry it and weigh down all difficulties for the Wife considers her Station that she is set in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is the Rank the Lord's hand hath plac'd her in and therefore she will not break it for respect and love to him she
in Heaven it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven But alas where is ours The greatest part of Hearts say nothing and others with such wavering and such a jarring harsh noise being out of tune earthly too low set that they spoil all and disappoint the Answers Were the Censer fill'd with those united Prayers Heaven-wards it would be fill'd with Fire Earth-wards against the Enemies of the Church And in your private Society seek unanimously your own and each anothers Spiritual Good not only agreeing in your affairs and civil converse but having one heart and mind as Christians to eat and drink together if no more is such Society as Beasts may have to do these in the excess to guzzle and drink intemperately together is a Society wo●se than that of Beasts and below them to discourse together of civil business is to converse as men but the peculiar converse of Christians in that notion as born again to Immortality an unfading Inheritance above is to further one another towards that to put one another in mind of Heaven and things that are Heavenly And 't is strange that men that profess to be Christians when they meet either fill one anothers ears with Lies and prophane Speeches or with Vanities and Trifles or at the best with the Affairs of Earth and not a word of those things that should most possess the Heart and where the minds should be most set but are ready to reproach and taunt any such thing in others What are you asham'd of Christ and R●ligion Why do you profess it then Is there such a thing think ye as Communion of Saints if not why say you believe it 'T is a Truth think of it as you will the Publick Ministry will profit little any where where a People or some part of them are not thus one and do not live together as of one mind and use diligently all due means of edifying one another in their holy Faith How much of the primitive Christians praise and profit is involv'd in the word they were together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with one accord with one mind and so they grew the Lord added to the Church Consider 1. How the Wicked are one in their ungodly Designs and Practices the Scales of Leviathan as Luther expresses are linkt together shall not the Lord's Followers be one in him They unite to undermine the Peace of the Church shall not the Godly joyn their Prayers to countermine them 2. There is in the Heart of all the Saints one Spirit how can they be but one since they have the same purpose and journey tend to the same home and why shall they not walk together in that way When they shall arrive there they shall be fully one and of one mind not a jar nor difference all their Harps perfectly in tune to that one new Song Having Compassion This testifies that 't is not a bare speculative agreement of opinions that is the badge of Christian Unity for this may accidentally be where there is no further Union but that they are themselves one have one life in that they feel how it is one with another there is a living sympathy amongst them as making up one Body animated with one Spirit for that 's the reason why the Members of the Body have that mutual feeling even the remotest and distantest and the most excellent with the meanest this the Apostle urges at large Rom. 12. 4. and 1 Cor. 12. And this lively Sense is in every living Member of the Body of Christ towards the whole and towards each other particular part This makes a Christian rejoyce in the welfare and good of another as if it were his own and feel their griefs and distresses as if himself were really sharer in them for the word comprehends all feeling together feeling of j●y as well as of grief Heb. 13. 3. 1 Cor. 12. 26. And always where there is most of Grace and of the Spirit of Jesus Christ there is most of this Sympathy The Apostle St. Paul as he was eminent in all Grace had a large Portion of this 2 Cor. 11. 29. And if this ought to be in reference to their outward condition much more in spiritual things rejoycing at the increases and flourishing of Grace in others That base envy that dwells in the hearts of rotten Hypocrites that would have all ingross'd to themsel●es argues that they move not further than the compass of self that the pure love of God and the sincere love of their Brethren flowing from it is not in them but when the heart can unfeigne●ly rejoyce in the Lords bounty to others and the lustre of Grace in others far out-shining their own truly 't is an evidence that what Grace such a one hath is upright and good and that the law of Love is engraven in their hearts And where that is there will be likewise on the otherside a compassionate tender sense of the infirmities and frailties of their Brethren Whereas some accou●t it a sign of much advancement and spiritual proficiency to be able to sit upon the qualifications and actions of oth●rs and to lavish out severe censures round about them to sentence one weak and of poor abilities and another proud and lofty and a third covetous c. And thus to go on in a Censor-like-magisterial strain it were truly an evidence of more Grace not to get upon the Bench to judge them but sit down rather and mourn for them when they are manifestly and rea●ly faulty and for their ordinary infirmi●ies to consider and bear them These are the characters we find in the Scriptures of stronger Christians Rom. 15. 1. Gal. 6. 1. This holy and humble sympathy argues indeed a strong Christian and nothing truly as one says shews a spiritual Man so much as the dealing with another Mans sin far will he be from the ordinary way of insulting and trampling upon the weak or using rigour and bitterness even against some gross falls of a Christian but will rather vent his compassion in tears than his passion in fiery raylings will bewail the frailty of Man and or dangerous condition in this Life amidst so many snares and tentations and such strong and subtle enemies 2dly As this sympathy works to particular Christians in their several conditions so by the same reason it acts and acts more eminently towards the Church and the publick Affairs that concern its good And this is it that we find hath breath'd forth from the hearts of the Saints in former times in so many pathetical complaints and Prayers for Sion Thus David in his saddest times when he might seem most dispensable to forget other things and be wholly taken up with lamenting his own fall Psal. 51. yet even there he leaves not out the Church ver 17. in thy good pleasure do good to Zion And his heart broken all to pieces yet the very pieces cry no less for the building of
diligent endeavour to observe them that vehemently hate what most pleases their corrupt Nature and love the command that crosses it most this is an imperfect kind of perfection Phil. 3. 12 15. On the otherside Evil-doers are they that commit sin with greediness that walk in it make it their way that live in sin as their Element take pleasure in unrighteousness as the Apostle speaks their great faculty and their great delight lyes in sin they are skillful and cheerful Evil doers not any one Man in all kind of sins that 's impossible there is a concatenation of sin and one disposes and induces to another but yet one ungodly Man is readily more vers'd in and delighted with some one kind of sin another with some other forbears none because evil and hateful to God but as he cannot travel over the whole globe of wickedness go the full circuit he walks up and down in his accustomed way of sin No one Mechanick is good at all Trades nor any Man expert in all Arts but he is an evil doer that follows the particular Trade of the sin he hath chosen is active and diligent in that and finds it sweet In a word the main of this opposition lyeth in the bent of the affection what way it is set The godly Man hates the evil he possibly by tentation hath been drawn to do and loves the good he is frustrate of and having intended hath not attain'd to do the sinner that hath his denomination from sin as his course hates the good that sometimes he is forc'd to do and loves that sin which many times he does not either wants occasion and means and so cannot do or through check of an enlightened conscience possibly dares not do tho'so bound up from the act as a Dog in a Chain yet the habit the natural inclination and desire in him is still the same the strength of his affection is carried to sin As in the weakest godly Man there is that predominant sincerity and desire of holy walking according to which he is call'd a righteous person the Lord is pleas'd to give him that Name and account him so being upright in Heart tho' often failing There is a righteousness of a higher strain upon which his Salvation hangs that is not in him but upon him he is cloath'd with it but this other of sincerity and of true and hearty tho' imperfect obedience is the righteousness here meant oppos'd to evil doing 2dly Their opposite condition or portion is express'd in the highest notion of it that wherein the very being of happiness and misery lyeth the favour and anger of God As their natures differ most by the habitude of their affection towards God as their main distinguishing character so the differences of their estate consists in the point of his affection towards them spoke here in our language by the divers aspects of his countenance for that our love and hate usually look's out and shews it self that way Now for the other word expressing his favour to the righteous by the openness of his Ear the opposition in the other needed not for either the wicked pray not or if they do 't is indeed no Prayer the Lord doth not account nor receive it as such and if his face be set against them certainly his ear is shut against them too and so shut that it openeth not to their loudest Prayer Tho they cry in mine ears with a loud voice yet will I not hear them sayes the Lord. And before we pass to the particulars of their condition as here we have them this we would consider a little and apply it to our present business what are these Persons the Lord thus regards and opens his ear to their Prayer This we pretend to be seeking after that the Lord would look favourably upon us and hearken to our Suits for our selves and this Land and the whole Church of God within these Kingdomes Indeed the fervent Prayer of a faithful man availeth much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is of great strength a mighty thing that can bind and loose the influences of Heaven as there is instanc'd and the Prayer of a Righteous Man be it but of one Righteous Man how much the combined cries of many of them together And that we judge not the Righteousness there and here mention'd a thing above human estate Elias sayes the Apostle was a man and a man subject to like passions as we are and yet such a righteous Person as the Lord had an eye and gave ear to in so great a matter but where are those righteous fasters and prayers in great Congregations How few if any to be found that are but such in the lowest sense and measure real Lovers and Inquirers after holiness What are our meetings here but Assemblies of Evil doers rebellious Children ignorant and prophane Persons or dead formal Professors and so the more of us the worse incensing the Lord more and the multitude of Prayers tho we could and would continue many days all to no purpose from such as we Though ye make many prayers when ye multiply prayer I will not hear And when ye spread forth your hands I will h●de mine eyes from you your hands so filthy that if you would follow me to lay hold on me with them you drive me further off as one with foul hands following a Person that is neat to catch hold of him and if you spread them out before me my eyes are pure you will make me turn away I cannot endure to look upon them I will hide mine eyes from you And fasting added with prayer will not do it not make it pass when they fast I will not hear their cry Jer. 14 'T is the sin of his People that provokes him instead of favourable looking on them to have his eyes upon them for evil and not for good as he threatens and therefore without puting way of that prayer is lost breath doth no good They that retain still their sins will not hearken to his voice how can they expect but that justly threatned retaliation Prov. 1. and that the Lord in holy scorn in the day of their distress should send them for help and comfort to these things they have made their Gods have preferr'd before him in their trouble They will say arise and save us but where are the Gods that thou hast made thee let them arise if they can save thee in the time of thy trouble Jer. 2. 28. And not only do fouler Impieties thus disappoint our prayers but the lodging of any sin in our affection if I regard iniquity in my heart says the Psalmist the Lord will not hear my voice if I see iniquity the word is if mine eye look pleasantly upon it his will not look so upon me nor shall I find his ear so ready and open Says not if I do sin but if I regard it in my heart The heart entertaining and embracing a sin be
of a ready memory nor rich invention acting it self in the performance these may draw a neat picture of it but still the life is wanting The motion of the Heart Godwards holy and divine affection makes prayer real and lively and acceptable to the Living God to whom it is presented the pouring out of thy heart to him that made it and therefore hears it and understands what it speaks and how it s moved and affected in calling on him It is not the guilded Paper and good writing of a Petition that prevailes with a Man but the moving Sense of it and to the King that discerns the heart heart sense is the sense of all and that which he alone regards listens what that speaks and takes all as nothing where that is silent all other excellence i● prayer is but the outside and fashion of it that is the life of it Though Prayer precisely taken is only petition yet in its ●uller and usual sense it comprises the vent of our humble sense of vileness and sin in the sincere confession and the extolling withal and praising the holy name of our God his excellency and goodness and thankful acknowledgment of received mercies Of these sweet ingredient perfumes is the incense of prayer composed and by the divine fire of love ascends unto God the Heart and all with it and when the Hearts of the Saints unite in joynt prayer the Pillar of sweet smoke goes up the greater and fuller Thus says that Song of the Spouse going up from the Wilderness as Pillars of smoak perfumed with Myrrh and Frankincense and all the Powders of the Merchant and as the word there signifies streight Pillars like the tallest streightest kind of trees Indeed the sincerity and unfeignedness of prayer makes it go up as a streight Pillar no crookedness in it tending streight towards Heaven and bowing to no side by the way Oh! the single and fixed viewing of God as in other ways it is the thing makes all holy and sweet so particularly in this Divine Work of Prayer It is true we have to deal with a God who of himself needs not this our pains either to inform or excite him he fully knows our thoughts before we express them and our wants before we feel them or think of them Nor doth his affection and gracious bent to do his Children good wax remiss or admit the least abate and forgetfulness of them But instead of necessity on God's part which cannot be imagined we shall find that Equity and that singular Dignity and Utility of it on our part which cannot be denied 1. Equity that thus the Creaturesignifie his homage to and dependance on his Creator for his being and well-being takes all the good he enjoys or expects from that Sovereign Good declaring himself unworthy waiting for all upon the terms of free goodness and acknowledging all from that Spring 2. Dignity Man was made for communion with God his Maker 't is the Excellency of his Nature to be capable of this end the happiness of it to be raised to enjoy it Now in nothing more in this Life is this communion actually and highly enjoyed than in the exercise of prayer that he may freely impart his affairs and estate and wants to God as the faithfullest and powerfullest Friend the richest and lovingest Father may use the liberty of a Child telling his Father what he stands in need of and desires and communing with him with humble confidence admitted to so frequent presence with so great a King 3. The Vtility of it 1. Easing the Soul in times of strait when it is prest with griefs and fears giving the vent and that in so advantageous a way emptying them into the bosom of God The very vent were it but into the Air gives ease or speak it to a Statue rather than smother it much more ease poured forth into the lap of a Confident and sympathising Friend though unable to help yet much more of one that can and of all Friends our God the surest and most affectionate and most powerful so Isa. 63. 9. both compassion and effectual salvation exprest In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angel of his presence saved them in his love and in his pity he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the days of old And so resting on his Love Power and gracious Promises quiets it self in God upon this assurance that it s not vain to seek him and that he despiseth not the sighing of the poor 2. The Soul is more spiritually affected with its own condition by opening it up before the Lord more deeply sensible of sin and ashamed in his sight in confessing it before him more dilated and enlarged to receive the mercies suited for as the opening wide of the mouth of the soul that it may be filled more disposed to observe the Lord in answering and to bless him and trust on him upon the renewed experiences of his regard to their distresses and desires 3. All the Graces of the Spirit in Prayer are stirr'd and acted and by acting strengthned and increased Faith in applying the Divine Promises which are the very Ground that the Soul goes upon to God and Hope looking out to their performance and Love particularly expressing it self in that sweet converse and delighting in it as love doth in the company of the Person loved thinks all hours too short in speaking with him Oh how the Soul is refresht with freedom of Speech with its beloved Lord and as it delights in that so it is continually advanced and grows by each meeting and conference beholding the excellency of God and relishing the pure and sublime pleasures that is in near communion with him looking upon the Father in the face of Christ and using him as a mediator in prayer as still it must is drawn to further admiration of that bottomless love that found that way of agreement that new and living way of our access when all was shut up and we to have been shut out for ever And then the affectionate expressions of that reflex love to find that vent in prayer do kindle higher as it were ●ann'd and blown up rise to a greater and higher and purer flame and so tend upwards the more strongly David as he doth profess his love to God in Prayer in his Psalms so no doubt it grew in the expressing I will love thee O Lord my strength Psal 18. and Psal. 116. doth raise an incentive of love out of this very consideration of the correspondence of prayers I love the Lord because he hath heard and resolves thereafter upon persistence in that course therefore will I call upon him as long as I live And as the Graces of the Spirit are advanced in prayer by their actings so for this reason further because prayer sets the soul particularly near unto God in Jesus Christ 't is then in his presence and being much with God in this way it is
cannot consist with the love of God as St. Iohn tells us drunk with the inordinate unlawful love even of their lawful calling and the lawful gain they pursue by it their hearts going after it and so reeling to and fro never fixed on God and heavenly Things but either hurried up and down with uncessant business or if sometimes at ease it is as the ease of a drunken man not compos'd to better and wiser thoughts but falling into a dead sleep contrary to the watching here joyned with sobriety Watch. There is a Christian Rule to be observed in the very moderating of bodily sleep and that particularly for the interest of Prayer but Watching as Sobriety here is chiefly the spiritual circumspectness and vigilancy of the mind in a wary walking posture that it be not surprized by the assaults or slights of Satan by the World nor its nearest and most deceiving enemy the corruption that dwells within that being so near doth most readily watch unperceived advantages and easily circumvents us Heb. 12. 1. The Soul of a Christian being surrounded with enemies of so great both power and wrath and so watch●ul to undoe it should it not be watchful for its own safety and live in a military vigilancy continually keeping constant watch and sentinel and suffering nothing to pass that may carry the least suspicion of danger to be distrustful and jealous of all the motions of his own Heart and the smilings of the World and in relation to these it will be a wise course to take that word as a good caveat be watchful and remember to mistrust Under the Garment of some harmless pleasure or some lawful liberties may be conveyed into thy Soul some thief or traytor that will either betray thee to the enemy or at least pilser and steal of the preciousest things thou hast Do we not by experience find how easily our foolish hearts are seduc'd and deceived and so apt to deceive themselves and by things that seem to have no evil in them yet are drawn from the height of affection to our highest good and from our Communion with God and study to please him which should not be intermitted for then it will abate but ought still be growing 2. Now the Relation of these is clear they are inseparably link't together each of them assistant and helpful to the other in their nature as they are here in the words Sobriety the friend of watchfulness and prayer of both Intemperance doth of necessity draw on sleep excessive eating or drinking sending up too many and so gross vapours surcharge the brain and when the body is thus deaded how unfit is it for any active imployment Thus the mind by a surcharge of delights or desires or cares of earth is made so heavy and dull that it cannot awake hath not spiritual activeness and clearness that spiritual exercises particularly Prayer do require Yea as bodily insobriety full feeding and drinking not only for the time indisposes to action but by custome of it brings the body to so gross and heavy a temper that the very natural spirits cannot stir to and fro in it with freedom but are clog'd and stick as the Wheels of a Coach in a deep miry way Thus is it with the Soul glutted with earthly things the affections bemir'd with them make it resist and unactive in spiritual things and the motions of the spirit heavy and obscured in it grows carnally secure and sleepy prayer comes heavily off But when the affections are soberly acted and even in lawful things that they have not liberty with the reins laid on their Necks to follow the World and carnal projects and delight when the unavoidable affairs of this life are done with a spiritual mind a heart kept free and disingaged Then is the Soul more nimble for spiritual things for Divine Meditation and Prayer it can watch and continue in these things and spend it self in that excellent way with more alacrity Again as the Sobriety and the watchful temper attending it enables for Prayer so Prayer preserves these it winds up the Soul from the Earth raises it above these things that intemperance feeds on acquaints it with the transcending sweetness of Divine Comforts the love and the loveliness of Jesus Christ and these most powerfully wean the Soul from these low creeping pleasures that the World gapes after and swallows with such greediness He that is admitted to nearest intimacy with the King and is called daily to his presence not only in the view and company of others but likewse in secret will he be so mad as to sit down and drink with the kitchin boys or the common guards so far below what he may enjoy surely no. Prayer being our near Communion with the great God certainly it sublimates the Soul and makes it look down upon the base ways of the World with disdain and despise the truly besotting pleasures of it Yea the Lord doth sometime fill these Souls that converse much with him with such beautiful delights such inebriating sweetness as I may call it that 't is in a happy manner drunk with those and the more of this the more is the Soul above base intemper●nce in the delights of the World as common drunkenness makes a Man less than a Man this makes him more that throws him below himself makes him a beast this raises him above makes him an Angel Would you as sure you ought have much faculty for Prayer and be frequent in 〈◊〉 and find much the pure sweetness of it then 〈…〉 selves more the muddy pleasures and sweetness of the World if you would pray much and with much advantage then be sober and watch unto prayer 〈…〉 your hearts to long so after ease and wealth 〈◊〉 esteem in the World these will make your hearts if they mix with them become like them and take 〈◊〉 quality will make them gross and earthly and unable to mount up will clog the wings of pray●r and you shall find the loss when your Soul is heavy and drowsie and falls off from delighting in God and your Communion with him Will such things as those you follow be able to countervail your damage can they speak you peace and uphold you in a day of darkness and distress or may it not be such now as will make them all a burden and vexation to you But on the otherside the more you abate and let go of these and come empty and hungry to God in prayer the more room shall you have for his consolations and therefore the more plentifully will he pour in of them and enrich your Soul with them the more the less you take in of the other 2. Would you have your selves raised to and continued and advanced in a spiritual heavenly temper free from the surfeits of earth and awake and active for heaven be uncessant in prayer But thou wilt say I find nothing but heavy indisposedness in it nothing but roving and vanity of
can digest much frowardness of a Husband and make that her patient subjection a sacrifice to God Lord I offer this to thee and for thy sake I humbly bear it The worth and love of a Husband may cause that respect where this Rule moves not but the Christian Wife that hath love to God tho her Husband be not so comely nor so wise nor any way so amiable as many others yet because her own Husband and because of the Lord's command in the general and his Providence in the particular dispose of his own therefore she loves and obeys That if any obey not the Word This supposes a particular Case and applies the Rule to it takes it for granted a believing Wi●e will chearfully observe and respect a believing Husband but if an Unbeliever yet that unties not this engagement yea there is something in it presses it and binds it the more a singular good that probably may follow upon obeying such by that good Conversation they may be gained that believe not the Word not that they could be fully converted without the Word but having a prejudice against the Word that may be remov'd by the carriage of a believing Wife and they may be somewhat mollified and prepar'd and induc'd to hearken to Religion and take it into consideration This gives not Christians warrant to draw on this Task and make themselves this Work by chusing to be joyned to an Unbeliever either a prophane or meer natural Husband or Wife but teaches them being so matched what should be their great desire and their suitable carriage to the attainment of it And in the primitive Christian times this fell out often that by the Gospel preached the Husband might be converted from gross Infidelity Judaism or Paganism and not the Wife or the Wife which is the supposition here and not the Husband and there came in the use of this consideration And in this is the freedom of Divine Grace to pick and chuse where he will one of a Family or two of a Tribe as the Prophet hath it and according to our Saviour's word two in one Bed the one taken and the other left Some selected Ones in a Congregation and in a House a Child possibly or Servant or Wife and leave the rest The Apostle seems to imply particularly that there were many instances of this Wives Converts and Husbands unbelieving We can determine nothing of their conjecture that think there shall be more of that Sex here call'd the weaker Vessel than of the other that shall be Vessels of honour which God seasons with Grace here and hereafter will fill with Glory but this is clear that many of them are converted while many Men and divers of them very wise and learned Men having the same and far greater means and opportunities do perish in unbelief This I say evidences the Liberty and the Power of the Spirit of God that Wind that bloweth where it listeth and withal it suits with that word of the Apostle that the Lord this way abases these things that men account so much of and hath chosen the weak things of the World to confound the mighty c. Nor doth the pliableness and tenderness of their affections tho Grace once wrought may make good use of that make their conversion the easier but the harder rather for through Natures corruption they would by that yield more to evil than to good but the efficacy of Grace appears much in establishing their hearts in the love of God and making them once possess'd with that to be inflexible and invincible by the tentations of the World and the strength and ●lights of Satan That which is here said of their Conversation holds of the Husband in the like case and of Friends and Kindred and generally of all Christians in reference to them with whom they converse that their spotless holy carriage as Christians and in their particular stations as Christian Husbands or Wives or Friends is a very likely and hopeful means of converting others that believe not Men that are prejudic'd observe actions a great deal more than words In those first times especially the blameless carriage of Christians did much to the increasing of their number Strive ye Wives and others to adorn and commend the Religion you profess to others especially those nearest you that are averse Give no just cause of scandal and prejudice against Religion beware not only of gross ●ailings and ways of sin but of such imprudencies as may expose you and your Profession study both holy and wise carriage and pray much for it Iam. 1. 5. If any of you lack Wisdom l●t him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him But if Wives and other private Christians be thus oblig'd how much more the Ministers of the Word● Oh! that we could remember our deep engagement to Holiness of life he said right either teach none or let your life teach too Cohelleth anima conci●natrix must the Preacher be the Word of Life springing from inward Affection and then Vita conci●natrix The Sundays Sermon lasts but an hour or two but holines● of Life is a continued Sermon all the Week long They also without the Words may he won The Conversion of a So●l is an inesti●●a●● gai● 't is a high trading and design to go about it Oh! the precious Soul but disvalu'd by most Will we believe him that knew well the price of it for he p●id it that the whole visible World is not worth one Soul the gaining it all cannot countervail that less This Wives and Husbands and Parents and Friend● i● themselves converted would consider seriously and apply themselves to pray much that their unconverted Relations in nature dead may be enliven'd and they may receive them from death and esteem of nothing rest in no natural content nor gain without that at least using unc●s●●nt diligence in seeking it and their utmost skill and p●●ns in it but above all this is the peculiar task of Ministers as the Apostle often repeats it of himself 1 Cor. 9. all gains on earth base for this a Soul converted is gained to it self gained to the Pastor or Friend or Wife or Husband that sought it and gained to Jesus Christ added to his Treasury who thought not his own precious Blood too dear to lay out for this Gain Verse 2. While they behold your chast Conversation coupled with fear AS all Graces are connexed in their own Nature so 't is altogether necessary that they be found so for the end here propounded the conversion of those that are strangers to Religion and possest with false notions of it and prejudices against it 'T is not the regularness of some particular actions nor the observance of some duties that will serve but it is an even uniform frame of Life that the Apostle here teaches Christian Wives particularly in reference to this end the gaining or conversion
unto God looking upon misery as a sufficient incentive of pity and mercy without the ingredient of any other consideration 'T is a pure vulgar piece of goodness to be helpful and bountiful to Friends or to such as are within appearance of requital 't is a trading kind of Commerce that but pity and bounty that needs no inducements but the meeting of a fit Object to work on where it can expect nothing save only the priviledge of doing good which in it self is so sweet is God-like indeed who is rich in bounty without any necessity yea or possibility of return from us for we have neither any thing to confer upon him nor hath he need of receiving any thing who is the spring of Goodness and of Being And that we may the better understand him in this he is pleas'd to express this merciful nature in our notion and language by bowels of mercy and pity and the stirring and sounding of them and Ps. 103. The pity of a Father and Is. 49. of a Mother nothing tender and significant enough to express his compassions Hence our Redemptions Is 63. 9. hence all our hopes of Happiness The gracious Lord saw his poor Creatures undone by sin and no power in Heaven nor in Earth able to rescue but his own alone therefore his pity was moved and his hand answers his heart his own arm brought Salvation he sent the Deliverer out of Sion to turn away iniquity from Iacob And in all exigences of his Children he is overcome with their Complaints cannot hold out against their moanings he may as Ioseph seem strange for a while but cannot act that strangeness long his heart moves and sounds to theirs gives the Eccho to their Griess and Groans as they say of two strings that are perfect Unisons touch the one the other also sounds Ier. 31. 19. Oh the unspeakable priviledge to have him for our Father who is the Father of Mercies and Compassions and those not barren fruitless pityings for he is withal the God of all consolations do not think that he can shut out a bleeding Soul that comes to him and refuse to take and to bind up and heal a broken heart that offers it self to him puts it self into his hand and intreats his help doth he require pity of us and doth he give it to us and is it not infinitely more in himself all that is in Angels and Men is but an insensible drop to that Ocean Let us then consider both that we are oblig'd to pity especially to our Christian Brethren and to use all means for their help within our reach to have bowels stirr'd with the reports of such bloodsheds and cruelties as come to our ears and to bestir our selves according to our Places and Power for them but sure all are to move this one way for their help to run to the Throne of Grace if your bowels sound for your Brethren let them sound that way for them to represent their estate to him that hath highest both pity and power for he expects to be rememoranced by us he put that office upon his People to be his Recorders for Zion and they are Traytors to it that neglect the discharge of that place Courteous The former relates to the Afflictions of others this to our whole carriage with them in any condition and yet there is a particular regard of it in communicating good supplying their wants or com●orting them that are distress'd that it be not done or rather I may say undone in doing with such supercilious roughness venting either in looks or words or any way that sowrs it and destroys the very being of a Benefit and turns it rather into an injury and generally the whole Conversation of Men is made unpleasant by cynical harshness and disdain This the Apostle recommends is contrary to that Evil not only in the Superfice and outward Behaviour No Religion doth not prescribe nor is satisfied with such courtesie as goes no deeper than words and gestures which sometimes is most contrary to that singl●ness Religion owns these are the upper Garments of Malice siluting him aloud in the Morning whom they are undermining all the day and sometimes tho' more innocent yet it may be troublesome meerly by the vain affectation and excess of it and even this becomes not a wise Man much less a Christian an over study or acting of that is a token of emptiness and is below a solid mind though they know such things and could outdo the studiers of it yet they as it indeeds deserves do despise it Nor is it that graver and wiser way of external plausible Deportment that answers fully this Word 't is the outer half indeed but the thing is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a radical sweetness in the Temper of the Mind that spreads it self into a Man's Words and Actions and this n●t meerly natural a gentle kind disposition which is indeed a natural advantage that some have but this is spiritual from a new Nature descended from Heaven and so in its Original and Nature far excels the other supplies it where it is not in Nature and doth not only increase it where it is but elevates it above it self renews it and sets a 〈◊〉 excellent stamp upon it Religion is in this mistaken sometimes in that men think it imprints an unkindly roughness and austerity upon the mind and carriage indeed it bars and banishes all vanity and lightness and all compliance and easie partaking with sin Religion strains and quite breaks that point of false and injurious courtesie to suffer thy Brother's Soul to run hazard of perishing and to share of his guiltiness by not admonishing him after that seasonable and prudent and gentle manner for that indeed would be studied that becomes thee as a Christian and that particular re●●●ctive manner that becomes thy Station These things rightly qualifying it it doth no wrong to good manners and the courtesie here enjoyn'd but is truly a part of it by due admonishments and reproofs to seek to recla●● a Sinner 't were worst unkindness not to do 't thou shalt not hate thy Brother c. But that which is true lovingness of heart and carriage Religion doth not only no way prejudice but you see requires it in the Rule and where it is wrought in the Heart works and causes it there fetches out that crookedness and harshness that is otherwise invincible in some humours Isa. 11. Makes the Wolf dwell with the Lamb. This Christians should study and belie the prejudices of the World that they take up against the Power of Godlinefs to be inwardly so Minded and of such outward Behaviour as becomes that Spirit of Grace that dwells in them to endeavour to gain those that are without by their kind obliging Conversation In some copies 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 humble and indeed as this is excellent in it self and a chief character of a Christian it agrees well with all these
propension of his heart towards them The Eye is the servant of the affection turns readily that way most where the heart is Therefore thus the Lord is pleased to speak of his love to his own he views still all the world but he looks upon them with a peculiar delight his eye still on them as it were towards them from all the rest of the world tho he doth not alwaies let them see these his looks for 't is not said they alwayes are in sight of it no not here yet still his Eye is indeed upon them by the beauty of Grace in them his own work indeed the beauty that he himself hath put upon them And so the other of his Ear too he is willing to do for them what they ask he loves even to hear them speak finds a sweetness in the voice of their Prayers that makes his ear not only open to their Prayers but desirous of them as sweet Musick Thus he speaks of both Cant. 2. 14. My dove let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely 2. His good Providence and readiness to do them good to supply their wants and order their affairs for them to answer their desires and thus to let them find the fruits of that love that so leads his eye and ear towards them his eye is upon them he is devising and thinking what to do for them 't is the thing he thinks on most his eyes are on all but they are busied as he is pleased to express it they run to and fro through the earth to shew himself strong in behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him c. 2 Chron. 16. 9. so Deut. 11. 12 his Eyes all the year on the land And no wonder then he answers their Suits in what is good for them when it is still in his thoughts before he prevents they cannot be so mindful of themselves as he is of them This is an unspeakable Comfort when a poor Believer is in great perplexity of any kind in his outward or spiritual condition Well I see no way I am blind in this but there are eyes upon me that see well what is best the Lord is minding me and bringing about all to my advantage I am poor and needy indeed but the Lord thinketh on me that casteth the ballance Would not a man tho he had nothing think himself happy if some great Prince were busily thinking how to advance and inrich him much more if a number of Kings were upon this thought and devising together yet these thoughts might perish as the Psalmist speaks how much solider happiness is it to have him whose power is greatest and whose thoughts sail not eying thee and devising thy good and asking us as it were What shall be done to the man whom the King will honour And his Ears What suits thou hast thou mayst speak freely he will not refuse thee any thing that is for thy good O! but I am not righteous and all this is for them only yet thou wouldst be such a one wouldst thou indeed then in part thou art as he modestly and wisely chang'd the name of Wisemen into Philosophers art thou not righteous yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Lover of Righteousness thou art then one of these but if still thine own unrighteousness be in thine eye it may and should be so to humble thee but if it should scare thee from coming unto God and offering thy suits with this perswasion that his ear is open make thee think that his favourable eye is not toward thee yet there is mercy creep in under the Robe of his Son thou art sure he is Iesus Christ the righteous and that the Father's eye is on him with delight and then it shall be so on thee being in him and put thy petitions into his hand that is Great Master of Requests thou canst not doubt that he hath access and that ear open which thou thinkest shut to thee The Exercise of Prayer being so important and bearing so great a part in the life and comfort of a Christian it deserves to be very seriously considered We will therefore subjoyn some few Considerations concerning it 1. Prayer is considerable in a threefold Notion 1. As a duty we owe to God being he from whom we expect and receive all 't is a very reasonable homage and acknowledgement thus to testify the dependance of our Being and Life on him and the dependance of our Souls upon him for Being and Life and all good that we be daily Suiters before his Throne and go to him for all 2. As the Dignity and the delight of a spiritual Mind to have so near access unto God and such liberty to speak to him 3. As a proper and sure means by Divine Appointment and Promise of obtaining at the hands of God those good things that are needful and convenient for us And altho some Believers of lower Knowledge do not it may be so distinctly know and others not so particularly consider all these in it yet there is a latent Notion of all these in the heart of every Godly Person that stirs them and puts them on to the constant use of prayer and to a love of it And as they are in these respects inclin'd and bent to the exercise of prayer the Lord's ear is in like manner inclin'd to hear their prayer in these respects 1. He takes it well at their hands that they do offer it up as due worship to him that they desire thus as they can to serve him accepts of those offerings graciously passes by the imperfections in them and hath regard to their sincere intention and desire 2. It pleases him well that they delight in Prayer as converse with him that they love to be much with him and to speak to him often and still aspire by this way to more acquaintance with him that they are ambitious of this 3. He willingly hears their prayers as the Expressions of their Necessities and Desires being both rich and bountiful loves to have blessings drawn out of his hands that way as full breasts delight to be drawn the Lord's Treasure always full and therefore always Communicative In the first respect prayer is acceptable to the Lord as Incense and Sacrifice as David desires the Lord receives it as Divine Worship done to him In the second prayer is as the Visits and sweet Entertainment and Discourse of Friends together and so pleasing to the Lord the free opening of the mind pouring out of the heart to him as 't is called in the Psalm and so done calls it his Words and his Meditation and the Word for that signifies Discourse or Conference And in the third sense he receives prayer as the suites of petitioners that are in favour with him and that he readily accords to And thus the words for Supplication in the Original and the word here for Prayer and
and Body do not and possibly cannot well joyn with it Fears and Loves and Trusts in him which properly the outward Man cannot do tho' it does follow and is acted by these affections and so hath share in them in its capacity Beware of an external superficial sanctifying of God for he takes it not so he will interpret that a prophaning of him and his name be not deceived he is not mocked he looks through all Visages and Appearances in upon the Heart ●ees how it entertains him and stands affected to him if it be possess'd with reverence and love more than either thy tongue or carriage can express and if it be not so all thy seeming-worship is but injury and thy speaking of him i● but babling be thy Discourse never so Excellent and the more thou hast seemed to sanctifie God while thy heart hath not been chief in the business thou shalt not by such service have the less but the more fear and trouble in the day of trouble when it comes upon thee No estate so far off from true consolation and so full of horrors as that of the rotten-hearted Hypocrite his rotten Heart is sooner shakt to pieces than any other If you would have heart-peace in God you must have this heart sanctifying of him 'T is the heart that is vex'd and troubled with fears the disease is there and if the prescribed remedy reach not thither 't will do no good but let your hearts sanctifie him and then he shall fortifie and establish your hearts This sanctifying of God in the Heart composes the Heart and frees it from fears 1. In general the turning of the Heart to consider and regard God takes its off from those vain empty windy things that are the usual causes and matter of its fears it feeds on wind and therefore the bowels are tormented within the Heart is subject to disturbance because it lets out it self to such things and lets in such things into it self as are ever in motion and full of instability and restlesness and so cannot be at quiet till God come in and cast out these to keep the Heart within that it wander out no more to them 2. The particulars of Fear and Faith work particularly in this 1. That Fear as greatest overtops and nullifies all losser fears the Hear● possess'd with this fear hath no room for the other it resolves the Heart in point of duty what it should and must do not offend God by any means lays that down as indisputable and so eases it of doubtings and debates in that kind whether shall I comply with the World and abate somewhat of the sincerity and exact way of Religion to please Men or to escape persecution or reproaches no 't is unquestionably best and only necessary to obey him rather than Men to retain his favour be it with displeasing the most respected and considerable Persons we know yea rather chuse the universal and highest displeasure of all the World for ever than his smallest discountenance for a moment counts that the only indispensible necessity to cleave unto God and obey him If I pray I shall be accused might Daniel think but yet pray I must come on 't what will so if I worship God in my Prayer they will mock me I shall pass for a Fool no matter for that it must be done I must call on God and strive to walk with him this puts the mind to an ease not to be hanging betwixt two but resolv'd what to do we are not careful said they to answer thee O King our God can deliver us but however this we have put out of deliberation we will not worship the Image As one said non oportet vivere sed oportet navigare 't is not necessary to have the Favour of the World nor to have Riches nor to Live but 't is necessary to hold fast the Truth and to walk Holily to sanctifie the name of our Lord and Honour him whether in Life or Death 2. Faith in God clears the mind and dispels carnal fears the most sure help what time I am afraid says David I will trust in thee It resolves the mind concerning the event and scatters the multitude of perplexing thoughts that arise about that what shall become of this and that what if such an enemy prevail what if the place of our abode grow dangerous and we be not provided as others are for a removal no matter says Faith though all fail I know of one thing will not I have a Refuge that all the strength of Nature and Art cannot break in upon or demolish a high Defence my Rock in whom I trust c. Psal. 62. 5 6. The firm belief of and resting on his Power and Wisdom and Love gives a clear satisfying answer to all doubts and fears It suffers us not to stand to jangle with each triffling grumbling objection but carries all before it makes day in the Soul and so chases away those fears that vex us only in the dark as affrightful fancies do This is indeed to sanctifie God and give him his own Glory to rest on him and it is a fruitful homage done to him returning us so much Peace and Victory over Fears and Troubles perswades us that nothing can separate from his Love and that only we fear'd and so the things that cannot reach that can be easily despised Seek to have the Lord in your Hearts and sanctifie him there he shall make them strong and carry them through all dangers though I walk says David through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no ill for thou art with me Psal. 23. so Psal. 27. 1. What is it makes the Church so firm and stout though the Sea roar and the Mountains be cast into the midst of the Sea yet we will not fear that 's it God is in the midst of her she shall not be moved No wonder he immoveable and therefore doth establish all where he resides If the World in the middle of the Heart it will be often shaken for all there is continual motion and change but God in it keeps it stable Labour to get God into your Hearts residing in the midst of them and then in the midst of all Conditions they shall not move In your hearts Our condition universally exposed to search and troubles and no man so stupid but studies and projects for some Fence against them some Bulwark to break the incursion of Evils and so put his mind to some ease ridding it of the fear of them thus the most vulgar Spirits in their way for even the Brutes from whom such do not much differ in their actings and course of Life too are instructed by Nature to provide themselves and their young Ones of Shelters and the Birds their Nests and the Beasts their Holes and Dens Thus men gape and pant after gain with a confus'd ill-examin'd fancy of quiet and safety in it once to reach such a day as
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an account of words and if for idle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worklets words how much more of lying or biting words Learn more humility and self-censure blunt that fire-edge upon your own hardand disordered hearts that others may meet with nothing but charity and lenity at your hands But particularly beware this in more or less earnest or in jest to reproach Religion or those that profess it know how particularly the glorious name of God is interess'd in that and they that dare to be assronting him what shall they say how shall they stand when he calls them to account If you have not attained to it yet do not bark against it but the rather esteem highly of Religion love it and the very appearance of it where you f●●d it give it respect and your good word at least and from an external approbation Oh! that you would aspire to inward acquaintance with it and then no more were needful to be said in this it would commend it self to you sufficiently but in the mean time be ashamed be 〈◊〉 of that prosess'd enm●y against God that is amongst you a malignant hateful Spirit against those that desire to walk holily whetting your Tongues against them 1. Consider What do you mean this Religion we all profess is it the way to Heaven or is it not do you believe this word or no If you do not what do you here If you do then you must believe too that they that walk closest by this Rule are surest in that way they that dare not share with your Oaths and excessive Cups and prophane Conversation what can you say it is not possible to open your mouth against them without renouncing this Word and Faith Therefore either declare you are no Christians and Christ not yours or in his name I enjoyn you that you dare no more speak an ill word of Christianity and the power of Religion and those that seek after it There be not many higher signs of a reprobate Mind than to have a bitter virulent Spirit against the Children of God Seek that tie of affection and fraternity for hereby we know says the beloved Apostle St. Iohn that we are translated from death to life because we love the Brethren But because those hissings are the natural Voice of the Serpents Seed expect them you that have a mind to follow Christ and take this guard against them that is here directed you having a good Conscience 'T is a fruitless verbal debate whether Conscience be a Faculty or Habit or not and as in other things so in this that most of all reqaires more solid and useful Consideration the vain mind of man feedeth on the wind loves to be busie to no purpose How much better is it to have this supernatural goodness of Conscience than to dispute about the Nature of it to find it duely teaching and admonishing reproving and comforting rather than to define it most exactly When all is examin'd 't will be found to be no other but the mind of man under the Notion of a particular Reference to himself and his own Actions And there is a twofold goodness of the Conscience Purity and Tranquillity and this flows from the other so that the former is the thing we ought primely to study and the latter will follow of it self for a time indeed the Conscience that is in a good measure pure may be unpeaceable but still it is the apprehension and sense of present or former impurity that makes it so for without the consideration of guiltiness there is nothing that can trouble it it cannot apprehend the wrath of God but with relation unto sin The Goodness of Conscience here recommended is the integrity and holiness of the whole inward Man in a Christian so the Ingredients of it are 1. A due Light or Knowledge of our Rule that as the Lamps in the Temple must be still burning within as filthiness is always the companion of darkness therefore if you would have a good Conscience you must by all means have so much Light so much Knowledge of the Will of God as may regulate you and shew you your way teach you how to do and speak and think as in his presence 2. A constant regard and using of this Light applying it to all not sleeping but working by it still seeking a nearer conformity with the known will of our God daily redressing and ordering the affections by it not sparing to knock off whatsoever we find irregular within that our hearts may be polish'd and brought to a right Frame by that Rui● and this is the daily inward Work of the Christian his great business to purifie himself as his Lord is pure And 3. For the advancing of this work is needful a frequent search of our Hearts and of our Actions not only to consider what we are to do but what we have done these reflex inquiries as they are a main part of the Conscience's proper work they are a chief means of making and keeping the Conscience good 1 Acquainting the Soul with its own estate with the motions and inclinations that are most natural to it 2. Stirring it up to work out and purge away by repentance the pollution it h●th contracted by any outward act or inward motion of sin 3. This search both excites and enables the conscience to be more watchful teaches how to avoid and prevent the like errors for the time to come as natural wise Men labour to gain thus out of their former oversight in their affairs to be the wiser and warier by them and lay up that as bought wit that they have payed dear for and therefore are careful to make their best advantage on 't God makes the consideration of their falls preservatives to his Children from falling makes a medicine of this poyson Thus that the Conscience may be good it must be enlighten'd and it must be watchful both advising before and after censuring according to that light The most little regard this they walk by guess either ignorant Consciences and the blind you say swallow many a fly yea how many Consciences without sense as feared with an hot Iron stupified that feel nothing others satisfied with a civil righteousness an imagin'd goodness of conscience because they are free from gross crimes others that know the rule of Christianity yet study not a conscientiou respect to it in all things some transient looks upon the rule and their own hearts it may be but sit not down make it not their business have time for any thing but that share not with St. Paul do not exercise themselves in this to have a conscience void of offence towards God and Men. Those were his asceticks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he breath'd himself in striving against what might defile the Conscience or as the word signifies elaborately wrought and dress'd his conscience Think you that other things cannot be done without diligence and
fruitful 2. By this Spirit it s said here he preacht not only did he so in the Days of his abode on Earth but in all times both before and after never left his Church altogether destitute of saving light which he dispenced himself and conveyed by the hands of his Servants therefore it s said he preacht that this be no excuse for times after he is ascended into Heaven no nor for times before he descended to the Earth in humane flesh though he preached not then nor does now in his flesh yet by his Spirit he then preacht and still doth so according to what was chief in him he was still present with his Church and preaching in it and is so to the end of the World This his infinite Spirit being every where yet 't is said here by it he went and preached signifying the remarkable clearness of his Administration that way as when he appears eminently in any work of his own or taking notice of our works God is said to come down so to those Cities Gen. 11. Let us go down So Exod. 3. 8. Thus here so clearly did he admonish them by Noah coming as it were himself on purpose to declare his Mind to them And this word I conceive is the rather used to shew what equality there is in this He came indeed visibly and dwelt amongst Men when he became flesh yet before that he visited by his Spirit he went by that and preached And so in after times himself being ascended and not having come visibly in his flesh to all but to the Jews only yet in the preaching of the Apostles to the Gentiles as the great Apostle says of him in this expression Eph. 2. 17. He came and preached to you which were asar off and this he continues to do in the ministry of his word and therefore says he he that despiseth you despiseth me c. Were this considered it could not but procure far more respect to the word and more acceptance of it Would you think that in his word Christ speaks by his eternal Spirit yea he comes and preaches addresses himself particularly to you in it could you slight him thus and turn him off with daily refusals or delays at least Think it is too long you have so unworthily used so great a Lord that brings unto you so great Salvation that came once in so wonderful a way to work that Salvation for us in his flesh and is still coming to offer it unto us by his Spirit does himself preach to us tells us what he undertook on our behalf and how he hath performed all and now nothing rests but that we receive him and believe on him and all is ours But alas from the most the return is that we have here disobedience Sometimes disobedient Two things in the hearers by which they are charactared their present condition in the time the Apostle was speaking of them and this by-past disposition when the Spirit of Christ was preaching to them this latter went first in time and was the cause of the other Therefore of it first If you look to their visible subordinate Preacher a holy Man and an able and diligent Preacher of righteousness both in his Doctrine and in the tract of his life which is the powerfullest preaching it seems strange that he prevailed so little But much more if we look higher this hight as the Apostle points to us to look to that Almighty Spirit of Christ that preacht to them and yet they were disobedient The word is they were not perswaded and it signifies both unbelief and disobedience and that very fitly unbelief being in it self the grand disobedience the mind not yielding to Divine Truth and so the spring of all disobedience in affection and action And this root of bitterness this unbelief is deep ●a●●ened in our natural hearts and without a change in them a taking them to pieces they cannot be good it is as a Tree firm rooted cannot be pluckt up without loosening the ground round about it and this accursed root brings forth fruit unto death because the Word is not believed the threats of the Law and promises of the Gospel therefore Men cleave unto their sins and speak peace unto themselves while they are under the Curse It may se●m very strange that the Gospel is so fruitless amongst us yea that neither word nor rod both preaching aloud to us the Doctrine of Humiliation and Repentance yet perswades any Man to return or so much to turn inward and question himself to say what have I done But thus it will be till the Spirit be poured from on high to open and soften hearts It is to be desired as much wanting in the Ministery of the Word but were it there that would not serve unless it were by a concurrent work within the Heart meeting the Word and making the impressions of it there for here we find the Spirit went and preacht and yet the Spirits of the Hearers still unbelieving and disobedient it s a combined work of this Spirit in the Preacher and Hearers that makes it successful otherwise it is but shouting in a dead man's ear there must be something within as one said in a like case To the Spirits in Prison That 's now their Posture and because he speaks of them as in that Posture he calls them Spirits for it s their Spirits that are in that Prison As likewise calls them Spirits that the Spirit of Christ preacht to because it is indeed that that the preaching of the Word aims at it hath to do with the Spirits of Men is not content to be at their ear with a sound but works on their Minds and Spirits some way either to believe and receive or to be hardened and sealed up to Judgement by it which is for Rebels If disobedience follow on the preaching of that word the prison follows on that disobed●ence and that Word which they would not be bound by to obedience binds them over to that Prison whence they shall never escape nor be released for ever Take notice of it and know that you are warned you will not receive Salvation offering pressing it self upon you You are every day in that way of disobedience hastening to this perpetual Imprisonment Consider you now sit and hear this Word so did these that are here spoken of they had their time on Earth and much patience used towards them and though not to be swept away by a flood of Waters yet daily carried on by the flood of ●imes 90 Psal. and mortality And how soon you shall be on the other side set into Eternity you know not I beseech you be yet wise hearken to the offers yet made you for in his name I yet once again make a tender of Jesus Christ and Salvation in him to all that will let go their sins to lay hold on him Oh! do not destroy your selves you are in Prison he proclaims you Liberty Christ is still following
save as the Apostle here avers of Baptism Now that which is intended for our help our carnal minds are ready to turn into a hinderance and disadvantage The Lord representing invisible things to the eye and confirming his Promises even by visible seals we are apt by the grossness of our unspiritual hearts instead of steping up by that which is earthly to the Divine Spiritual things represented to stay on the outward Element and go no further therefore the Apostle to lead us into the inside of this Seal of Baptism is very clear in designing the effect and fruit of it Not says he putting away the silth of the flesh and water if you look no further can do no more There is an invisible impurity upon our Nature chiefly on our invisible Part our Soul this washing means the taking away of that● and where it reaches its true effect it doth so purifie the Conscience and makes it good truly so in the sight of God who is the ●udge of it Consi 1. ●s a pitiful thing to see the Ignorance of the most professing Christianity and partaking of the outward Seals of it and yet knowing not what they mean know not the spiritual dignity and vertue of them blind in the Mysteries of the Kingdom and not so much as sensible of that blindness And being ignorant of the Nature of these holy things cannot have a due esteem of them which arises out of the view of their inward worth and efficacy A confused fancy of some good in them and this rising to the other extream to a superstitious confidence in the simple performance and participance of them as if that carried some inseparable Vertue with it which none could miss of that are sprinkled with the Waters of Baptism and share in the Elements of Bread and Wine in the Lord's Supper And what is the utmost Plea of the most for their Title to Heaven but in these relative and external things they are Christians are Baptized hear the Word and are admitted to the Lord's Table not considering how many through all these have gone and daily are going on in the ways of death never coming near Jesus Christ who is the Way and Truth and the Life whom the Word and the Seals of it hold forth to Believers and they are washt in his Blood and quickened with his Life and made like him and Coheirs of Glory with him 2. Even th●y that have some clearer Notion of the Nature and 〈◊〉 of the Seals of Grace yet are in a practi●● Error that they look not with due diligence into themselves enquiring after the efficiency of them in their hearts do not study the Life of Christ to know more what it is and then to search into themselves for the Truth and the growth of that Life within them Is it not an unbelieving thing for a Christian when he is about to appear before the Lord's Table and so looks something more narrowly within to find as little Faith as little Divine Affection a Heart as unmortified to the World as cold towards Christ as before his last Address to the same Table after the intervening possibly of many Months in which time had he been careful often to reflect inwards on his Heart and look back upon that new sealing in his last Participation he might likely have been more suitable And truly as there is much guiltiness cleaves to us in this so readily much more in reference to this other Sacrament that is here the Apostles Subject Baptism because but once administred and that in Infancy very seldom and slightly considered by many even real Christians And so we are at a loss in that Profit and Comfort that increase of both Holiness and Faith that the frequent recollecting of it after a Spiritual manner would no doubt advance us to And not only neglect to put our selves upon the thoughts of it in private but in the frequent opportunities of such thoughts in publick let it pass unregarded are idle inconsiderate and so truly guilty beholders and the more frequent we have them are the less toucht with them they become common and work not and the ●lighting of them grows so common with us as the thing Yea when the Engagement is more special and personal when Parents are to present their Infants to this Ordinance and then might and certainly ought to have a more particular and fixed eye upon it and themselves as being sealed with it to ask within after the Fruit and Power of it and to stir up themselves anew to the Actings of Faith and Ambition after newness of Life and with earnest prayer for their Children to be Su●ters for themselves for further evidence of their interest in Christ yet possibly many are not much in these things at such times but are more busied to prepare their House for entertaining their Friends than to prepare their hearts for offering up their Infant unto God to be sealed and withal to make a new offer of their own hearts to him to have renewed on them the inward Seal of the Covenant of Grace the outward Seal whereof they did receive as it is now to be conferr'd upon their Infant Did we often look upon the Face of our Souls the seeing of the many spots we have defil'd them with after our washing it might work us to shame and grief and would drive us by renewed Application to wash often in that blood which that water figures which alone can ●etch out the stain of sin and then it would set us upon renewed Purposes of Purity to walk more carefully to avoid the pollutions of the World we walk in and to purge out the pollutions of the Hearts that we carry about with us that de●ile us more than all the World besides It would work an holy disdain o● sin often to contemplate our selves as washed in so precious a ●aver shall I would the Christian say considering that I am now cleansed in the precious blood of my Lord Jesus run again into that puddle where he so graciously took me out and made me clean Let the Swine wallow in it he hath made me of his She●p●old he hath made me of that excellent order for which all are consecrated by that washing that partake of it washt us in his Blood and made us Kings and P●●ests unto God the Father Am I of these and shall I debase my self to the 〈◊〉 pleasures of sin No I will think my self too good to serve any sinful lust seeing he hath lookt on me and taken me up and washt and dignified me I am wholly his all my study and business shall be to honour and magnifie him The Answer of a Good Conscience c. The taking away of Spiritual 〈◊〉 as the true and saving effect of Baptism the Apostle here expresses by that which is the further result and effect of it The answer of a good Conscience unto God For its the washing of that filthiness which makes both the Conscience
who are spotless sinless Spirits but their flesh in their Redeemer dignified with a Glory so far beyond them This is that Mystery they are intent in looking and prying into and cannot nor never shall see the bottom of it for it hath none 2. Jesus Christ is not only exalted above the Angels in absolute Dignity but in relative Authority over them he is made Captain over those Heavenly Bands they are all under his Command for all Services wherein it pleases him to employ them and the great Employment he hath is the attending on his Church and particular Elect Ones are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth c. They are the Servants of Christ and in him and at his appointment the Servants of every Believer and are many ways serviceable and useful for their good which truely we do not duly consider There is no danger of overvaluing them and inclining to Worship them upon this Consideration yea if we take it right it will rather take off from that The Angel judg'd his Argument strong enough to St. Iohn against that that he was but his fellow Servant but this is more that they are Servants to us although not therefore inferiour it being a honorary service yet certainly inferiour to our Head and so to his mystical body taken in that Nation as a part of him Obs. 1. The hight of this our Saviour's Glory will appear the more if we reflect on the descent by which he ascended to it Oh! how low did we bring down so high a Majesty into the pit wherein we had fallen by climbing to be higher than he had set us it was high by reason we fell so low and yet he against whom it was committed came down to help us up again and to take hold of us took us on so the Word is Heb. 2. he took not hold of the Angels let them go hath left them to die for ever But he took hold of the Seed of Abraham and took on him indeed their flesh dwelling amongst us and in a mean part emptied himself and became of no repute and further after he descended into the Earth and into our flesh in it he became obedient to death upon the Cross and descended into the Grave And by these steps was walking towards that Glory wherein now he is Phil. 1. he abased himself wherefore says the Apostle God hath highly exalted him so he himself Luk. 24. Ought not Christ first to suffer these things and so enter into his Glory Now this indeed it is pertinent to consider and the Apostle is here upon point of suffering that 's his theam and therefore he is so particular in the ascending of Christ to his Glory who of those that would come thither will refuse to follow him in the way where he led 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leader of our Faith Heb. 12. and who of those that follow him will not love and delight to follow him through any way the lowest and darkest its excellent and safe and then it ends you see where 2. Think not strange of the Lord's method with his Church bringing her to so low and desperate a Posture many times can she be in a more seeming desperate condition than was her head not only in ignominous sufferings but dead and laid in the Grave and the Stone roll'd to it and sealed and made all sure and yet arose and ascended and now sits in Glory and shall sit till all his Enemies become his Footstool do not fear for him that they shall overtop yea or be able to reach him who is exalted higher than the Heavens be not affraid neither for his Church which is his Body and if his Head be safe and live cannot but partake of safety and life with him though she were to sight dead and laid in the Grave yet shall she rise thence and be more glorious than before and still the lower brought in distress shall rise the higher in the day of deliverance Thus in his dealing with a Soul observe the Lord's method think it not strange that he brings a Soul low very low which he means to comfort and exalt very high in Grace and Glory leads it by Hell-gates to Heaven that it be at that point my God my God why hast thou forsaken me was not the Head put to use that Word and so to speak it as the Head speaks for the Body seasoning it for his Members and sweetning that bitter cup by his own drinking of it Oh! what a hard condition may a soul be brought unto and put to think can he love me and intend mercy for me that leaves me to this And yet in all the Lord preparing it thus for comfort and blessedness 3. Turn your thoughts more frequently to this Excellent Subject the glorious high Estate of our great high Priest The Angels admire this Mystery and we flight it they rejoyce in it and we whom it certainly more nearly concerns are not moved with it do not draw that comfort and that instruction from it which it would plentifully afford if it were drawn It comforts us against all troubles and fears is he not on high who hath undertaken for us doth any thing befall us but it is past first in Heaven and shall any thing pass there to our prejudice or damage he ●its there and is upon the Counsel of all who hath loved us and given himself for us yea who as he descended thence for us did likewise ascend thither again for us hath made our Inheritance he purchas'd there sure to us taking Possession for us and in our name since he is there not only as the Son of God but as our Surety and as our Head and so the Believer may think himself even already possest of this Right in as much as his Christ is there The Saints are glorified already in their head where he reigns Where he reigns there I believe my self to reign says Aug. And consider in all thy straights and troubles outward and inward they are not hid from him he knows them and feels them a compassionate high Priest hath a gracious sense of thy frailties and griefs and fears and tentation and will not suffer thee to be surcharg'd is still presenting thy Estate to the Father and using that interest and power he hath in his affection for thy good And what wouldst thou more art thou one whose heart desires to rest upon him and cleave to him thou art knit so to him that his resurrection and glory secures thee thine his life and thine are not two but one life as that of the Head and Members and if he could not be overcome of death thou canst not neither Oh! that sweet word Because I live you shall live also Let thy thoughts and carriage be moulded in this contemplation rightly ever to look on thy exalted head consider his glory see not only thy Nature raised in him above the Angels but thy person interested by
he likes and desires and alters not so now thou knowest whom thou hast to do withal and what to do whom to please and what will please him and this cannot but much settle thy mind and put thee to ease and thou maist say heartily as rejoycing in the change of so many for one and such for such a one as the Church says Isa. 26 13. O Lord our God other Lords beside thee have had dominion over me but now by thee only will I make mention of thy name now none but thy self not so much as the name of them any more away with them through thy Grace thou only shalt be my God It cannot endure any thing be named with thee Now that it may be thus that we may wholly live to the will of God we must know his will what it is Persons grosly ignorant of God and of his will cannot live to him we cannot have fellowship with him and walk in darkness for he is light This takes off a great many amongst us that have not so much as a common Notion of the Will of God but besides that Knowledge which is a part and I may say the first part of the renewed Image of God is not a Natural Knowledge of Spiritual Things meerly attained by human teaching or industry but it s a beam of God's own issuing from himself both enlightening and enlivening the whole Soul gains the affection and stirs to action and so indeed it acts and increases by acting for the more we walk according to that of the Will of God which we know the more we shall be advanced to know more that is the real proving what is his good and holy and acceptable will Rom 12. 2. so says Christ if any will do the Will of my Father he shall know of the Doctrine our lying off from the lively use of known Truth keeps us low in the Knowledge of God and Communion with him 2. So then upon that Knowledge of God's Will where it is Spiritual and from himself follows the suiting of the Heart with it the affections taking the stamp of it and agreeing with it receiving the Truth in the love of it the Heart transformed into it and now not driven to obedience violently but sweetly moving to it by love within the Heart framed to the love of God and so of his Will 3. As Divine Knowledge begets this affection so this affection will bring forth action real obedience For these three are inseparably linkt and dependant on the product of another in this way the affection is not blind but flowing from knowledge nor actual obedience constrained but flowing from affection and the affection is not idle seeing it brings forth obedience nor the knowledge dead seeing it begets affection Thus the renewed the living Christian is all for God a sacrifice entirely offer'd up to God and a living sacrifice lives to God Takes no more notice of his own carnal will hath renounc't that to embrace the holy will of God and therefore though there is a contrary Law and will in him yet he does not acknowledge it but only the Law of Christ as now establisht in him that Law of Love by which he is sweetly and willingly led Real Obedience consults not now in his ways with Flesh and Blood what will please them but only enquires what will please his God and knowing his mind thus resolves to demur no more nor to ask consent of any other that he will do and its reason enough to him my Lord will's it therefore in his strength I will do it for now I live to his will it is my Life to study and obey it Now we know what is the true Character of the redeemed of Christ that they are freed from the service of themselves and of the World yea dead to it and have no Life but for God as all his Let this then be our study and ambition to attain this and to grow in it to be daily further freed from all other ways and desires and more wholly addicted to the will of our God displeased when we find any thing else stir or move within us but that that he Spring of our Motion in every work 1. Because we know his Soveraign Will and most justly so is the Glory of his Name therefore not to rest till this be set up in our view as our end in all and to count all our plausible doings as hateful as indeed they are that are not aimed at this end yea endeavouring to have it as much frequent and express before us as we can attain still our eye on the mark throwing away yea undoing our own interest not seeking our selves in any thing but him in all 2. As living to his will in the end of all so in all the way to every step of it For we cannot attain his end but in his way nor can we intend it without a resignation of the way to his prescript taking all our directions from him how we shall honour him in all The Soul that lives to him hath enough not only to make any thing warrantable but amiable to seek his will and not only does it but delights to do it that 's to live to him to find it our life as we speak of a work wherein Men do most and with most deligh employ themselves In that such a lust be Crucified is it thy will Lord then no more advising no more delay how dear soever that was when I lived to it it is now as hateful seeing I live to thee who it thou hatest Wilt thou have me ●orget an injury though a great one and love the person that hath wronged me While I lived to my self and my passions this had been hard But now how sweet is it seeing I live to thee and am glad to be put upon things most opposite to my corrupt heart glad to trample upon my own will to follow thine and this I daily aspire to and aim at to have no will of my own but that thine be in me that I may live to thee as one with thee and thou my rule and delight Yea not to use the very natural comforts of my Life but for thee to eat and drink and sleep for thee and not to please my self but to be enabled to serve and please thee to make one offering of my self and all my actions to thee my Lord. Oh! it s the only sweet life to be living thus and daily learning to live more fully thus it is Heaven this a little scantling of it here and a pledge of whole Heaven this is indeed the life of Christ not only like his but one with his it is his Spirit his Life derived into the Soul And therefore both the most excellent and certainly most permanent for he dieth no more and therefore this his Life cannot be extinguisht hence is the perseverance of the Saints Because being one Life with Christ alive unto God one for all for
of God And perceiving their short day so far spent ere they set out will account years precious and make the more hast and desire with holy David enlarged hearts to run the way of God's commandments will study to live much in a little time having lived all the past time to no purpose none now to spare upon the lusts and ways of the flesh and vain societies and visits yea will be rescuing all they can from their very necessary Affairs for that which is more necessary than all other necessities that one thing needful to learn the Will of our God and live to it this is our Business our high Calling the main and excellent of all our Employments Not that we are to cast off our particular Callings our due diligence in them for that will prove a snare and involve a Person in things more opposite to godliness But certainly this living to God requires 1. A fit measuring of thy own ability for affairs and as far as thou canst chuse ●itting thy load to thy shoulders not surcharging thy self with it overburden of businesses either by the greatness or multitude of them will not fail to entangle thee and depress thy mind and will hold it so down that thou shalt not find it possible to walk upright and look upwards with that freedom and frequency that becomes Heirs of Heaven 2. The measure of thy affairs being adapted look to thy affection in them that it be regulated too thy heart may be engaged in thy little business as much if thou watch it not a Man may drown in a little brook or pool as well as in a great river if he be down and plunge himself into it and put his head under water Some care thou must have that thou maist not care these things that are thorns indeed thou must make a hedge of them to keep out those tentations that accompany floth and extream want that waits on it but let them be the hedge suffer them not to grow within the Garden though they increase set not thy heart on them nor them in thy heart That place is due to another is made to be the Garden of thy beloved Lord made for the best plants and flowers and there they ought to grow The love of God and Faith and Meekness and the other fragrant Graces of the Spirit and know that this is no common nor easie matter to keep the heart disingaged in the midst of affairs that still it be reserved for him whose right it is 3. Not only labour to keep thy mind Spiritual in it self but by it put a spiritual stamp even upon thy temporal employments And so thou shalt live to God not only without prejudice of thy Calling but even in it and shall converse with him in thy Shop or in the Field or in thy Journey doing all in obedience to him and offering all and thy self withal as a sacrifice to him thou st●ll with him and he still with thee in all This is to live to the will of God indeed to follow his direction and intend his glory in all thus the wife in the very exercise of her house and the husband in his aff●irs abroad may be living to God raising their low employments to a high quality this way Lord even this mean work I do for thee complying with thy will who hast put me in this Station and given me this task thy will be done Lord I offer up even this work to thee accept of me and of my desire to obey thee in all and as in their work so in their refreshments and rest all for him whether you eat or drink doing all for this reason because it is his will and for this end that he may have glory bending the use of all our strength and all his mercies that way setting this mark on all our designs and ways this for the glory of my God and this further for his glory so from one thing to another throughout our life This is the art of keeping the heart spiritual in all affairs yea of spiritualizing the affairs themselves in their use that in themselves are earthly This the Elixir that turns lower mettal into gold the mean actions of this life in a Christians hands into obedience and holy offering unto God And were we acquainted with the way of intermixing holy thoughts ejaculatory eyings of God in our ordinary ways it would keep the heart in a sweet temper all the day long and have an excellent influence into all our ordinary actions and holy performances at those times when we apply our selves solemnly to them our hearts would be near them not so far off to seek and call in as usually they are through the neglect of this This were to walk with God indeed to go all the day long as in our Fathers hand whereas without this our praying morning and evening looks but as a formal visit not delighting in that constant converse which yet is our happiness and honour and makes all estates sweet This would refresh us in the hardest Labour as they that carry the spices from Arabia are refresht with the smell of them in their Journey and some observe that it keeps their strength and frees them from fainting If you would then live to God indeed be not satisfied without the constant regard of him and whosoever hath attained most of it study it yet more to set the Lord always before you as David professeth and then shall you have that comfort that he adds ●e shall be still at your right hand that you shall not be moved And you that are yet to begin to this think what his patience is that after you have fitten so many calls you may yet begin to seek him and live to him and then consider if you still despise all this goodness how soon it may be otherwise you may be past the reach of this Call and may not begin but be cut off for ever from the hopes of it Oh how sad an Estate and the more by the remembrance of these flighted offers and invitations will you then yet return you that would share in Christ let go these lusts to which you have hitherto lived and embrace him and in him there is Spirit and Life for you he shall enable you to live this heavenly life to the will of God his God and your God and his Father and your Father Oh! delay no longer this happy change how soon may that puff of breath that is in thy Nostrils that hearest this be extinguisht and art thou willing to dye in thy sins rather than that they dye before thee thinkest thou it a pain to live to the will of God sure it will be more pain to lie under his eternal wrath Oh! thou knowest not how sweet they find it that have tryed it or thinkest thou I will afterwards who can make thee sure either of that afterwards or of that will if but afterwards why not now presently without
further advisement hast thou not served sin long enough may not the time past in that service serve is it not too much wouldest thou only live unto God as little time as may be and think the dregs of thy life good enough for him what ingratitude and gross folly is this yea though thou wert sure of coming in to him and being accepted yet if thou knowest him in any measure thou wouldest not think it a priviledge to defer it but willingly chuse to be free from the World and thy Lusts to be forthwithal his and wouldest with David make hast and not delay to keep his righteous Iudgments all the time thou livest without him what a filthy wretched life is it if life it can be called that is without him to live to sin is to live still in a dungeon but to live to the will of God is to walk in liberty and light to walk by light unto light by the beginnings of it to the fullness of it that is in his presence Verses 4 5. 4. Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to the same excess of riot speaking evil of you 5. Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead GRace until it reach home and end in glory is still in conflict a restless party within and without the whole World against it it is a stranger here and is accounted and used so they think it strange that you run not with them and they speak evil of you these wondring thoughts they vent in reproaching words In these two verses we have these three things 1. The Christians opposite course to the World 2. Their opposite thoughts and speeches of this course 3. The supream and final Judgement of both 1. The opposite course in that They run to excesses of riot 2. You run not with them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ri●t or luxury though all natural Men are not in the grossest kind guilty of this yet they are all of them some way truly riotous or luxurious lavishing away themselves and their days upon the poor perishing delights of sin each according to his own palate and humour as all persons t●at are riotous in the common sense of it gluttons or drunkards do not love the same kind of meats or drink but have several relishes and appetites yet agree in the nature of the sin so the notion enlarged after that same manner to the different custome of corrupt nature takes in all the ways of sin some glutting in and continually drunk with pleasures and carnal enjoyments others with the cares of this life which our Saviour reckons with surfeiting and drunkenness as being a kind of it and surcharging the heart as they do as there he expresses it take h●ed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and cares of this life Whatsoever it is that draws away the heart from God that how plausible soever doth debauch and destroy us we spend and undo our selves upon it as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies making havock of all And the other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 profusion and dissolute lavishing pouring out the affections upon vanity it is scattered and defiled as water spilt on the ground that cannot be cleansed nor gathered up again and it passes all our skill and strength indeed to recover and recollect our hearts for God only he can do it for himself he that made it can gather it and cleanse it and ●ake it new and unite it to himself Oh! what a scatter'd broken unstable thing is the carnal heart till it be changed falling in love with every gay folly it meets withal and running out to rest profusely upon things like its vain self that suit and agree with it and serve its Lusts can dream and muse upon these long enough any thing that ●eeds the earthliness or pride of it can be prodigal of hours and let ●ut floods of thoughts where a little is too much but bounded and pincht where all are too little hath not one fixed thought in a whole day to spare for God And truly this runni●g out of the heart is a continual drunkeness and madness is not capable of reason will not be stopt in its current by any perswasion it is mad upon its Idols as the Prophet speaks You may as well speak to a River in its course and bid it stay as speak to an impenitent sinner in the course of his iniquity and all the other means you can use is but as the putting of your finger to a rapid stream to stay it but there is a hand can both stop and turn the most impetuous torrent of the Heart be it even of a King that will least endure any other controulment Now as the ungodly World naturally moves to this profusion with a strong and swift motion runs to it so it runs together to it and that makes the current both the stronger and swifter as a number of Brooks falling into one main Channel make a mighty stream and every man naturally is in his birth and the course of his li●e just as a Brook that of it self is carried to that stream of sin that is in the World and then falling into it is carried rapidly along with it And if every sinner taken a part be so inconvertible by all created Power how much more harder a task is a publick Reformation and turning a Land from its course of wickedness all that is set to dam up their way doth at the best but stay them a little and they swell and rise and run over with a noise more violently than if they had not been stopt thus we find outward restraints prove and the very publick Judgements of God on us may have made a little interruption but upon the abatement of them the course of sin in all kinds seems to be now more fierce as it were to regain the time lost in that constrain'd forbearance so that we see the need of much prayer to intreat his powerful hand that can turn the course of Iordan that he would work not a temporary but an abiding change of the course of this Land and cause many Souls to look upon Jesus Christ and flow into him as the word is Ps. 34 5. This is their course but you run not with them The Godly a small and weak company and yet run counter to the grand Torrent of the World just against them and there is a Spirit within them whence that their contrary motion flows and a Spirit strong enough to maintain it in them against all the crowd and combin●d course of the ungodly 1 Joh. 4. 4. greater is he that is in you than he that is in the World as Lot in Sodom his righteous Soul not carried with them but vexed with their ungodly doings There is to a Believer the Example of Christ to set against the Example of the World and the
Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt And besides many other things to animate this that is here exprest Oh! how full is it They shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead And this in readiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath the day set and it shall surely come though you think it far off Though the wicked themselves forget them and the Christian slight them and let them pass they pass not so they are all registred and the great Court-day shall call them to account for all these riots and excesses and withal for all their reproaches of the godly that would not run with them in these ways Tremble then you despisers and mockers of Holiness though you come not near it What will you do when these you reviled shall appear glorious in your sight and their King the King of Saints here much more glorious and his glory their joy and all terror to you Oh! then all faces that could look out disdainfully upon Religion and the Professors of it shall gather blackness and be bathed with shame and the more the despised Saints of God shall shout for joy You that would rejoyce then in the appearing of that holy Lord and Judge of the World let your way be now in holiness avoid and hate the common ways of the wicked World they live in their foolish opinion and that shall quickly end But the Sentence of that day shall stand for ever Verse 6. 6. For for this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are dead that they might be judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit IT is a thing of prime concernment for a Christian to be rightly inform'd and frequently remembred what is the true estate and nature of a Christian for this the Multitude of those that bear that name either knows not or commonly forgets and so is carried away with the vain fancies and mistakes of the World The Apostle hath charactered Christianity very clearly to us in this place by that which is the very nature of it conformity with Christ and that which is necessarily consequent upon that disconformity with the World And as the nature and natural properties of things hold universally thus it is in those that in all ages are effectually called by the Gospel are moulded and framed thus by it thus it was says the Apostle with your Brethren that are now at rest as many as received the Gospel and for this end was it preacht to them that they might be judg'd according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit We have first here the preaching of the Gospel or suitable means to a certain end 2. The express Nature of that end 1. For this Cause There is a particular end and that very important which the preaching of the Gospel is aimed at this end many consider not hearing it as if it were to no end not propounding a fixed determined end in our hearing This therefore is to be considered by those that preach this Gospel that they aim right in it at this end and no other no self end The legal Priests not to be squint eyed nor evangelical Ministers thus squinting to base gain vain applause and also that they make it their study to find in themselves this work this living to God otherwise they cannot skillfully nor faithfully apply their gifts to this effect on their hearers and therefore acquaintance with God most necessary How sounds it to many of us at the least but as a well couched story whose use is to amuse us and possibly delight us a little and there is an end and indeed no end and turns the most serious and most glorious of all Messages unto an empty sound and if we awake and give it hearing it is much but for any thing further how few deeply before hand consider I have a dead heart therefore will I go unto the word of Life that it may be quickened it is frozen I will go and lay it before the warm Beams of that Sun that shines in the Gospel my corruptions mighty and strong and grace if any exceeding weak there is in the Gospel a power to weaken and to kill sin and to strengthen grace and this being the intent of my wise God in appointing it it shall be my desire and purpose in resorting to it to find it to me according to his gracious intendment to have faith in my Christ the Fountain of my Life more enabled and more active in drawing from him to have my heart more refined and spiritualized and to have the Sluse of Repentance opened and my Affections to Divine things enlarged more hatred of sin and more love of God and communion with him Ask your selves concerning former times and to take your selves even now enquire within why came I hither this day what had I in mine eye and desires this morning ere I came forth and in my way as I was coming did I seriously propound an end or no and what was my end Nor doth the meer custome of mentioning this in prayer satisfie the question for this as other such things usually do in our hand may turn to a lifeless form and have no heat of spiritual affection none of David's panting and breathing after God in his ordinances such desires as will not be still'd without a measure of attainment as the Childs desire of the breast as our Apostle resembles it chap. 2. And then again being returned home reflect on your hearts much hath been heard but is there any thing done by it have I gained my point it was not to pass a little time simply that I went or to pass it with delight in hearing rejoycing in that light as they did in S. Iohn Baptists for a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as long as the hour lasts it was not to have my earpleased but my heart changed not to learn some new notions and carry them cold in my head but to be quickened and purified and renewed in the Spirit of my mind is this done think I now more esteemingly of Christ and the life of faith and the happiness of a Christian and are such thoughts solid and abiding with me what sin have I left behind what Grace of the Spirit have I brought home or what new degree or at least new desire of it a living desire that will follow its point Oh! this were good repetition A strange folly of multitudes of us to set our selves no mark to propound no end in the hearing of the Gospel The Merchant sails not only that he may sail but for traffick and trafficks that he may be rich The Husband Man plows not only to keep himself busie with no further end but plows that he may sow and sows that he may reap with advantage and shall we do the most excellent and fruitful work fruitlesly hear only to hear and look no
the heart But sure this one thing would make the Soul more calm and sober in the pursuit of present things if their term were truly computed and considered How soon shall youth and health and carnal delights be at an end how soon shall State craft and King-craft and all the great Projects of the highest Wits and Spirits be laid in the dust This casts a damp upon all those fine things but to a Soul acquainted with God and in affection removed hence already no thought so sweet as this helps much to carry it chearfully through wrestlings and difficulties through better and worse they see Land near and shall quickly be at home that 's the way The end of all things is at hand an end of a few poor delights and the many vexations of this wretched life an end of tentations and sins the worst of all evils yea an end of the imperfect fashion of our best things here an end of prayer it self to which succeeds that new Song of endless praises Verse 8. And above all things have fervent charity among your selves for charity shall cover the multitude of sins THE Graces of the Spirit are an entire frame making up the new Creature and none of them can be wanting therefore the Doctrine and Exhortation of the Apostles speak of them usually not only as inseparable but as one But there is amongst them all none more cemprehensive than this of Love insomuch that St. Paul calls it the fullfilling of the Law love to God the sum of all relative to him and so likewise is it towards our Brethren Love to God is that which makes us live to him and be wholly his that which most powerfully weans us from this World and causeth us delight in communion with him in holy Meditation and Prayer Now the Apostle adding here of the duty of Christians to one another gives this the prime yea the sum of all Above all have fervent love Concerning this Consider 1. The Nature of it 2. The Eminent Degree of it 3 The Excellent Fruit of it 1. It is an union therefore called a bond or chain that links things together 2. 'T is not a meer external union that holds in customs or words or outward carriage but an union of hearts 3. 'T is here not a natural but a spiritual supernatural union it is that mutual love of Christians as Brethren There is a common benevolence and good-will due to all but a more particular uniting affection interchangeably one amongst Christians The Devil being an Apostate Spirit revolted and separated from God doth naturally project and work division This was his first exploit and still his grand design and business in the World he first divided Man from God put them at an enmity by the first Sin of our first Parents and the next we read of in their first Child was enmity against his Brother so Satan is called by our Saviour justly a liar and a murderer from the beginning murdered man by lying and made him a murderer And as the Devil's work is Division Christ's work is Union he came to dissolve the works of Satan by a contrary work he came to make all Friends to recollect and reunite all Men to God and Man to Man and both those unions hold in him by vertue of that marvellous union of Natures in his Person and that Mysterious Union of the Persons of Believers with him as their Head so the word Eph. 1. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To unite all in one head Thus his great project in all this he died and suffered for and this he prayed for Iohn 17. and this is strong above all ties natural or civil union in Christ this they have that are indeed Christians this they pretend to have if they understood it that profess themselves Christians If natural friendship be capable of that expression one spirit in two bodies Christian union hath it much more really and properly for there is indeed one Spirit more extensive in all the Faithful yea so one Spirit that it makes them up into one body more intensive they are not so much as divers bodies only divers members of one body Now this love of our Brethren is not another from the love of God 't is but the streaming forth of it or the reflex of it Jesus Christ sending in his Spirit into the heart unites it to God in himself by love which is all indeed that loving of God supreamly and entirely with all the mind and soul all the combined strength of the heart and then that same love first wholly carried to him is not divided or impared by the love of our Brethren 't is but dilated and derived from the other he allows yea commands yea causes that it stream forth and act it self toward them remaining still in him as in its source and center beginning at him and returning to him as the Beams that diffuse themselves from the Sun and the Light and Heat yet are not divided or cut off from it but remain in it and by emanation issue from it Loving our Brethren in God and for him not only because he commands us to love them and so the Law of Love to him ties us to it as his Will but because that love of God doth naturally extend it self thus and acts thus in loving our Brethren after a Spiritual Christian manner we do even in that love our God Loving of God makes us one with God and so gives us an impression of his divine bounty in his Spirit and his love the proper work of his Spirit dwelling in the Heart enlarges and dilates it as self-love contracts and streightens it so that as self-love is the perfect opposite to the love of God it is likewise so to brotherly-love shuts out and undoes both and where the love of God is rekindled and enters the Heart it destroys and burns up self love and so carries the affection up to himself and in him forth to our Brethren This is that bitter root of all enmity in man against God and amongst Men against one another Self Man's Heart turned from God towards himself and the very work of renewing Grace is to annual and destroy Self to replace God in his Right that the Heart and all its Affections and Motions be at his dispose so that instead of self-will and self-love that rul'd before now the Will of God and the Love of God commands all And where it is thus there this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this love of our Brethren will be sincere Whence is it that Wars and Contests and mutual Disgracings and Despisings abound so but that men love themselves and nothing but themselves or in relation to themselves as it pleases or is advantageous to them that 's the Standard and Rule all is carried by interest so thence are stri●es and defamings and bitterness against one another but the Spirit of Christ coming in und●es all selfishness And now according to God what he
partakes life with the rest it imparts service to the rest but there be some more eminent and as I may say organick parts of this body and these are more emine●tly useful to the whole body Therefore the Apostle having enlarg'd himself into a general precept adds a word in special to these special parts the Preachers of the Word and which here I conceive is meant by Deacons or Ministers the other assistent Officers of the Church of God These are coordained by Jesus Christ as Lord of his own house to be serviceable to him in it he fits and sanctifies for this great work all that are called unto it by himself And they are directed for the acquitting of their great Work 1. By a clear rule of the due manner 2. The main end of it Particular rules for the preaching of the Word may be many but this is one most comprehensive that the Apostle gives if any speak let him speak as the Oracles of God If any speak that is clear from the rule what speaking is regulated and for brevity once exprest If any speak the Oracles of God let him speak them like themselves as the Oracles of God It is a chief thing in all serious actions to take the nature of them aright for this mainly regulates them and directs in their performance And this especially would be regarded in those things that are of highest worth and greatest weight in spiritual imployments wherein it is most dangerous and yet with us most ordinary to mistake and miscarry Were prayer considered as presence and speech with the great God the King of Glory Oh! how would this mould the mind what a watchful holy and humble deportment would it teach so that truly all directions for prayer might be summed up after this same model in this one if any Man pray let him speak as speaking with God just as here for preaching if any Man speak in that way let him do it as speaking from God that is as the Oracles of God Under this all the due qualifications of this holy work are comprised I shall name but these three which are prime and others may be easily reduced to these 1. Faithfully 2. Holily 3. Wisely In the first it s supposed that a Man have competent insight and Knowledge in these Divine Oracles that first he learn before he teach which many of us do not though we pass through the Schools and Classes and through the books too wherein these things are taught and bring with us some provision such as may be had there He that would faithfully teach of God must be taught of God be God-learned and this will help to all the rest to be faithful in delivering the message as he receives it not detracting or adding nor altering and as in setting forth that in general truths so in the particular setting them home declaring to his people their sins and his judgements following sin especially in his own people 2. Holily With that high esteem that reverence of the great majesty whose message he carries and the Divinness of the Message it self those deep mysteries that no created Spirits are able to fathom Oh! this would make us tremble in the dispensing of these Oracles considering our impurities and weaknesses and unspeakable disproportion to so high a task He had reason that said I am seiz'd with amazement and horrour or often as I begin to speak of God And with this humble reverence is to joyn ardent love to our Lord to his truth to his glory and his peoples Souls These holy affections stand opposite to our blind boldness in rushing on this sublime exercise as a common work our dead coldness in speaking things that our hearts are not warm'd with and so no wonder what we say doth seldom reach further than the ear or at furthest than the understanding and memory of our hearers There is a correspondence it is the heart speaks to the heart and the understanding and memory the same and the tongue speaks but to the ear further this holy temper shuts out all private passion in delivering Divine Truths it is high prophaning of his name and holy things to make them speak our private pleas and quarrels yea to reprove sin after this manner is a heinous sin to fly out into invectives that though not exprest so yet are aimed as blows of self revenge for injuries done to us or fancied by us this is to wind and draw the Holy Word of God to serve our unholy distempers and make it speak not his meaning but our own sure this is not to speak as the Oracles of God but basely to abuse the Word as impostors in Religion of old did their Images speaking behind them and through them what might make for their advantage True that the Word is to be particularly applyed to reprove most the particular sins that most abound amongst a people but this to be done not in anger but in love 3. Wisely By this I mean in the way of delivering it that it be done gravely and decently that light expressions and affected flourishes and unseemly gestures be avoided and that there be a sweet contemperature of authority and mildness But who is sufficient for these things Now you that hear would certainly meet and suit in this too If any hear let him hear as the Oracles of God not as a well tuned sound to help you to sleep an hour not as a humane Speech or Oration to displease or please you an hour according to the suiting of its strain and your palate Not as a School lesson to add somewhat to your stock of Knowledge to tell you somewhat you knew not before or as a feast of new notions Thus the most relish a preacher while till they try his gift and its new with them but a little time disgusts them But hear as the Oracles of God the discovery of sin and death lying on us and the discovery of a Saviour that takes these off the sweet word of reconciliation God wooing Man the great King intreating for peace with a company of rebels not that are too strong for him Oh! no but on the contrary he could utterly destroy in one moment These are the things brought you in this word Therefore come to it with sutable reverence with ardent desires and hearts open to receive it with meekness as the engrafted word that is able to save your Souls it were well worth one days pains of speaking and hearing that we could learn somewhat at least how to speak and hear henceforward to speak and hear a● the Oracles of God The other of ministring as of the ability that God giveth In this 1. Ability and that received from God for other there is none for any good work least for the peculiar ministration of his spiritual affairs in this House 2. The using of this ability received from him for them And this truly is a chief thing for Ministers and for each Christian still to
Glory cannot endure the ballance is found too light a great Monarch and so many Principalities and Provinces put in one after another ●till no weight yea possibly as a late politick Writer wittily observes of a certain Monarch the more Kingdoms you cast in the scale is still the lighter Men are naturally desirous of Glory and gape after it but they are naturally ignorant of the true nature and place of it they seek it where it is not and as Solomon says of riches set their hearts on that which is not hath no subsistence nor reality But the Glory above is true real Glory and bears weight and so bears aright the name of Glory which in the Hebrew signifies weight and the Apostles Expression seems to allude to that sense speaking of this same Glory to come calls it a far more excellent weight of glory it weighs down all labour and sufferings in the way so far as they are not once worth the speaking of in respect of it it is the hyperbole other Glory is overspoke but this Glory over glorious to be duly spoke exceeds and rises above all that can be spoke of it Eternal Oh! that adds much the glory here such as it is yet were it lasting Men would presume upon some more reason so to affect and think if it stayed with them when they have caught it and they stay'd with it to enjoy it but how soon do they part they pass away and the glory passes away both as smoak● as a vapour our life and all the pomp and magnificence of those that have the greatest outward glory and make the fairest shew it is but a shew a pageant goes thro● the Street and is seen no more But this hath length of days with it Eternal Glory Oh! a thought of that swallows up all the grandeur of the World and the noise of reckoning years and ages had one Man continued from the Creation to the end of the World and in the top of Earthly Dignity and glory admired by all yet at the end everlasting oblivion being the close how nothing were it to Eternal Glory but alas we cannot be brought to believe and deeply take the impression of Eternity and that is our undoing By Iesus Christ. Your portion out of him eternal shame and misery but by him even all Glory and this hath likewise an evidence of the greatness of this glory it can be no small estate that the blood of the Son of God was let out to purchase His. That which he gives and gives as his choice of all to his chosen his Children and if there is any thing here that hath delight or worth in it which he gives in common even to his enemies if such a World and variety of good things for them that hate him Oh! how excellent must those things be he hath reserved for his friends for those he loves and causes to love him As 't is his gift it is indeed himself the beholding and enjoying of himself Now this we cannot conceive Oh! that blessed Day when the Soul shall be full of God shall be satisfy'd and ravisht with full vision should we not admire that such a condition is provided for Man wretched sinful Man Lord what is Man c. and for me as wretched as any that are left and fallen short of this Glory a base worm taken out of the mire and washt in the Blood of Christ and within a while set to shine in Glory without sin Oh! the wonder of this how would it stir to praise when we think of such an one there who will bring us up in the way to this Crown how will this hope sweeten the short sufferings of this Life and Death it self which is otherwise the bitterest in it self most of all sweetned by this as being nearest it and setting us unto it what though thou art poor and diseased and despised here Oh! consider what is there how worthy the affection worthy the earnest eye look of an heir of this Glory what can he either desire or fear whose heart is thus deeply fixed Who would refuse this other clause to suffer a while a little while any thing outward inward he thinks fit how soon shall all this be overpast and then overpayed in the very entry the beginning of this Glory that shall never end Verse 11. To him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever Amen THEY know little of their own wants and emptiness that are not much in Prayer and they know little of the greatness and goodness of God that are not much in praises The humble Christian hath a heart in some measure fram'd to both he hath within him the best School Master that teaches him how to pray and how to praise and makes him delight in the exercise of them both The Apostle having added Prayer to his Doctrine adds here you see praise to his Prayer To him be Glory and Dominion for ever The living praises of God spring from much holy affection and that affection springs from a Divine Light in the Understanding so says the Psalmist sing ye praises with understanding or you that have understanding Psal. 47. It is a spiritual Knowledge of God that sets the Soul in tune for his praises and therefore the most can bear no part in this Song they mistune it quite through their ignorance of God and unacquain ance with him Praise is unseemly in the mouth of fools they spoil and mistune it Obs. 1. The thing ascribed 2. The term or endurance of it The former in two words Glory and Power Glory the shining forth of his Dignity the Knowledge and acknowledgment of it by his Creatures that his excellency may be confest and praised his name exalted that service and homage may be done to him which all adds nothing to him for how can that be but as it is the duty 't is the happiness of his creature to render it such as he hath sitted for that all the creatures indeed declare and spea● him glorious the Heaven's sound it forth and the Earth and ●ea resounds and ●cchoes it back but his reasonable Creature hath he peculiarly framed both to take notice of Glory in all the rest and to return it from and for all the rest in a more express and lively way And in this lower World 't is Man alone that is made capable of observing the Glory of God and offering him praises he expresses it well that calls Man the World's High-Priest all the creatures bring their oblations of praise to him to offer up for them and for himself for whose use and comfort they are made the Light and Motion of the Heaven's and all the variety of creatures below them speak this to Man He that made us and you and made us for you is great and wise and worthy to be praised and you are better able to say this than we therefore praise him on our behalf and your own Oh! he is great and mighty
he is the Lord our maker Power Is here not only ability but authority and Royal Soveraignity that as he can do all things he rules and governs all things is King of all the World Lord paramount all hold their Crowns of him and the Shields of the Earth belong unto God he is greatly to be exalted disposeth of States and Kingdoms at his pleasure establisheth or changeth turns and overturns as seems him good and hath not only might but right to do so He is the Most High ruling in the Kingdoms of the Children of Men and giving them to whomsoever he will and readily pours contempt upon Princes when they contemn his power The term for ever Even in the short Life of Man Men that are raised very high in place and popular esteem may and often do out live their own Glory but the Glory of God lasteth as long as himself for he is unchangeable his Throne is for ever and his wrath for ever and his mercy for ever and therefore Glory for ever Inf. 1. Is it not to be lamented that he is so little glorify'd and prais'd that the Earth being so full of his goodness is so empty of his praise from them that enjoy and live upon it How far are the greatest part from making this their great work to exalt God and ascribe power and glory to his name for that all their ways are his dishonour seek to advance and raise themselves to serve their own Lusts and pleasures and altogether mindless of his glory the Apostles complaint holding good against us all seeking our own things and none the things of the Lord Iesus Christ true some there are but as his meaning is so few that they are as it were drown'd and smother'd in the crowd of self seekers so that they appear not After all the judgments of God upon us how doth still luxury and excess uncleanness and all kind of profaness out-dare the very light of the Gospel and rule of holiness shining in it scarce any thing a matter of common shame and scorn but the power of godliness turning indeed our true glory into shame and glorying in that which is indeed our shame Holiness not only our true glory but that wherein the ever glorious God doth especially glory and hath made known himself so much by that name the holy God And that which is the express stile of his glorious praises uttered by Seraphims Isa. 6. Holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole Earth is full of his Glory Instead of sanctifying and glorifying this holy name how doth the Language of Hell oaths and curs●s abound in our Streets and Houses that blessed name that Angels are blessing and praising abused by base worms Again notwithstanding all the mercies multiply'd upon us in this Land where are our praises our Songs of deliverance our ascribing glory and ●ower to our God who hath prevented us with loving kindness and tender mercies hath removed the stroaks of his hand and made Cities and Villages populous again that were left desolate without Inhabitants Oh! why do we not stir up our hearts and one another to extol the name of our God and say give unto the Lord Glory and strength● give unto the Lord the glory due to his name have we not seen the pride and glory of all flesh stain'd and abased were there ever affairs and times that more discovered the folly and weakness of Men and the Wisdom and power of God Oh! were our hearts set to magnifie him that word often repeated in that Psalm Psal. 107. Oh! that Men would praise the Lord for his goodness and his wonderful works to the Children of Men. Inf. 2. But what wonder that the Lord loses the reverence of his praises at the hands of the common ungodly World when even his own people fall so far behind in it as usually they do the dead cannot praise him but that they that he hath quickned by his Spirit should yet be so surprised with deadness and dullness as to this Exercise of exalting God this is very strange for help of this 1. We should seek after a fit temper labour to have our hearts brought to a due disposition for his praises and 1. That they be spiritual spiritual services require that but this most as being indeed the most spiritual of all affection to the things of this Earth draw down the Soul and make it so low set that it cannot rise to the height of a Song of praise and thus if we observ'd our selves we would find that when we let our hearts fall and entangle themselves in any inferiour desires and delights as they are unfitted generally for holy things so especially for the praises of our holy God Creature loves abase the Soul and turn it to Earth and praise is altogether heavenly 2. Seek a heart purify'd from self-love and possest with the love of God the heart that is ruled by its own interest is scarce ever content still subject to new disquiet self is a vexing thing for readily all things do not sute our humours and wills and the least touch that is wrong to a selfish mind distempers it and disrelishes all the good things about it a childish condition it is if crost but in a toy throw away all Whence are our frequent frettings and grumblings and that we can drown a hundred high favours in one little displeasure and still our finger is upon that string more male-content and repining for one little cross than praises for all the mercies we have received Is not this evidently the self-love that abounds in us Whereas were the love of God predominant in us we would love his doings and disposals and bless his name in all whatsoever were his will would in that view be amiable and sweet to us however in it self harsh and unpleasant Thus would we say in all this is the will and the hand of my Father who doth all wisely and well blessed be his name The Soul thus framed would praise in the deep of troubles not only in outward afflictions but in the saddest inward condition would be still extolling God and saying however he deal with me he is worthy to be loved and praised he is great and holy he is good and gra●cious and whatsoever be his way and thoughts towards me I wish him glory if he will be pleased to give me light and refreshment blessed be he and if he will have me to be darkness again blessed be he glory to his name yea what though he should utterly reject me is he not for that to be accounted infinitely merciful in the saving of others must he cease to be praise worthy for my sake if he condemn yet he is to be praised being merciful to so many others yea even in so dealing with me is he to be praised for in that he is just Thus would pure love reason for him and render praise to him but our ordinary way is most untoward
eyes upon the Righteous Now the perswasion of this Truth is the main establishment of a godly mind amidst all the present confusions that appear in things and 't is so here intended and in the Psalm and throughout the Scriptures To look upon the present flourishing and prosperity of Evil doers and distresses and sorrows of the Godly is a dark obscure matter in it self but the way to be cleared and comforted is to look above them to the Lord they lo●k'd unto him and were lightned Psal. 34. 5. that answers all doubts to believe this undoubted providence and justice the Eye of God that sees all yea rules all these things and in the midst of all the painted happiness of Wicked Men this is enough to make them miserable the Lord's Face is against them and they shall surely find it so he hath wrath and judgement in store and will bring it forth to light will execute it in due time he is preparing for them that cup spoke of and they shall drink it so in the saddest condition of his Church and a believing Soul to know this that the Lord's eye is even then upon them and that he is upon thoughts of peace and love to them is that which settles and composes the mind Thus in that Psalm before cited it was such difficulties that did drive David's thoughts to that for satisfaction if the Foundations be destroy'd what can the righteous do in the time of such great shakings and confusions the righteous Man can do nothing to 't but the righteous Lord can do enough he can do all the righteous Lord that loveth righteousness while all seems to go upside down he is on his Throne he is trying and judging and will appear to be Judge This is the thing that a faithful Soul should learn to look to and not lose view and firm belief of and desire the Lord himself to raise their minds to it when they are like to sink Natural strength and resolution will not serve turn floods may come that will arise above that something above a man's own must support him Therefore say with David when my Spirit is overwhelm'd lead me to the Rock that is higher than I They think sometimes 't is so hard with them he regards not but he assures them the contrary Is. 49. I have graven thee upon the palms of mine hands I cannot look upon my own hands but I must remember thee and thy walls are continually before me this is that the Spouse seeks for set me as a Seal upon thine Arm Cant. 8. Now a little more particularly to consider the Expressions and their Scope here how is it made good that the former words teach that they that walk in the ways of wickedness can expect no good are certainly miserable Thus the face of the Lord is against them Prosper they may in their Affairs and Estates may have Riches and Posterity and Friends and the World caressing them and smiling on them on all hands but there is that one thing that damps all the Face of the Lord is against them this they feel not indeed for the time 't is an invisible ill out of sight and out of mind with them but there is a time of the appearing of this Face of the Lord against them the revelation of his just Iudgment as the Apostle speaks sometimes precursory days of it here but however one great prefixed day a day of darkness to them indeed wherein they shall know what this is that now founds so light to have the Face of the Lord against them a look of it more terrible than all present miseries combined together what then shall the Eternity of it be to be punished as the Apostle speaks with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and the glory of his Power Are we not then impertinent foolish Creatures that are so thoughtful how our poor businesses here succeed with us and how we are accounted of in the World and how the faces of men are towards us and scarce ever enter into a secret serious enquiry how the countenance of God is to us whether favourably shining on us or still angrily set against us as it is against all impenitent sinners The Face of the Soul being towards God turn'd away from the World and Sin argues to it that his Face is not against it but that he hath graciously look'd upon it and by a look of love hath drawn it towards himself for we act not first in that non amatur Deus nisi de Deo 't is he that prevents us and by the beam of his kindles love in our hearts Now the Soul that 's thus set towards him it may be doth not constantly see here his face shining full and clear upon it but often clouded it may be hath not not yet at all seen it sensibly yet this it may conclude seeing my desires are toward him and my chief desire is the sweet light of his countenance though as yet I find not his face shining on me yet I am perswaded it is not set against me to destroy me Misbelief when the Soul is much under and distemper'd may suggest this sometimes too but yet still there is some spark of hope that it is otherwise and that the eye of the Lord's pity is even in that estate upon us and will in time manifest it self to be so To the other what assurance have the Godly for that seeing of good these blessings you speak of This the Eyes of the Lord are upon them and his Ears open to their prayer if you think him wise enough to know what is good for them and rich enough to afford it they are sure of one thing he loves them they have his good will his heart is towards them and therefore his Eye and his Ear can they then want any good If many Days and outward good things be indeed good for them they cannot miss of these he hath given them already much better things than these come to and hath yet far better in in store for them and what way soever the World go with them this it self is happiness enough that they are in his love whose loving kindness is better than Life sweet days have they that live in it what better days would a Courtier wish than to be still in the eye and savour of the King to be certain of his good will towards them and to know of access and of a gracious acceptance of all their Suits Now thus it is with all the Servants of the great King without prejudice one to another he is ready to receive their Requests and able and willing to do them all good Happy estate of a Believer he must not account himself poor and destitute in any condition for he hath favour at Court he hath the Kings eye and his ear the eyes of the Lord are upon him and his ears open to his prayers The Eyes This hath in it 1. His love the