Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n believe_v faith_n holy_a 4,881 5 5.2910 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A31258 The Christian's crown of glory, or, Holiness the way to happiness shewing the necessity of sanctity, or a Holy life, from a serious consideration of the life of the Holy Jesus, who is Christ our sanctification : also a plain discovery of the formalist or hyppocrite : together with the doctrine of justification opened and applied. T. C. 1671 (1671) Wing C129; ESTC R10329 137,037 229

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

5. 20. Phil. 1. 9 10. are excellent he hath now a new spiritual clear affectionate knowledge of and a more distinct piercing knowledge in the Mysteries of the Gospel than ever he had bef●r● An enlightned head and a sanctified heart go both together This is the second effect or rather sweet Concomitant of Sanctification viz. Illumination 3. The third Effect or rather Concomitant or Adjunct of our Sanctification is Faith hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est eandem fidem ex ejusdem spiritus afflatu dono Beza that hath the spirit of Holiness hath also the spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4. 13. wee having the same spirit of Faith the spirit of Sanctification is also the Author of Faith for Faith is formally a special part of Sanctification 1 Joh. 5. 1. Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God that is our faith in Christ is a certain sign and evidence of our Regeneration He that believeth that Jesus is the Christ i. e. the promised Messiah is born of God The learned Blasphemia pessima Haeresis erat apud Judaeos Consiteri Iesum Mariae filium esse Christum upon the place observe that there was a great Controversie in the Apostle Johns days whether Jesus the Son of Mary was the Christ the promised Messiah or not And the blasphemous and blinded Jewes counted it the worst of Heresies to confess Jesus the Son of Mary to be Christ The Jews were many wayes offended in him offended in the vileness of his Appearance in the humility of his Conversation in the ignobleness of his Parentage in the sharpness and Authority of his Doctrine in the knowledge of his Countrey as I might demonstrate easily when Christ shall come say they we know not whence hee is but we know whence this man is i. e. of what Parentage and of what Countrey John 7. 27. The Scriptures had fore-told that the promised Messiah when he came should redeem Israel restore all things pardon sins seek and save that which was lost proclaim liberty to the Captives Comfort those that mourn bind up the broken-hearted bring in everlasting Righteousness and save his people with an everlasting salvation But the obstinate and heretical Jewes would not grant all this to the son of Mary They denyed Christ to be the true Messiah They Traduced the Son of God and blasphemously in thought and word reputed him an Impostor Therefore 't is said 1 John 11. 12 13. verses He came to his own and his own received him not Hee came to his own creature man and generally the generation of mankind did not receive him but refuse him so some expound it but others as Calvin give a better sense Thus he came to his own i. e. to his own Country men the Jewes of whom according to the flesh he came who is over all God blessed for ever but they received him not i. e. * Rom. 9. 5. Sed rectius sentiunt qui referunt ad solos Judaeos Calvin 1 Joh. 11. as their King and Saviour but to as many as received him to them gave he power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only power but also dignity priviledge to b●come the sons of God even to as many as believed his Name and who are these that thus believe in Christ and receive him into the hearts Why such as are not born of blood of an high and noble Parentage which the Jews gloried in being descended from Abr●ham nor of the flesh nor of the will of man n●● by any principle of corrupted nature not b● the meer power of our own will but by the will and grace or gracious will of God we Jam. 1. 18. Ephes 2. 4. are born again or sanctified Now who are they that born of the will of God Why they that believe in Christ and receive him by Faith into their hearts as God hath promised and propounded him in the Gospel as Prephet Priest and King in all his Offices or a● the Text hath it as wisdome righteousness sa●ctification and redemption Through Faith the soul doth receive in and Secundum diversos respectus fides regenerationis nostrae pars est ex regeneratione tanquam ex fonte manat fides Calv. conceive with the incorruptible seed of the Word of God whereby Christ is formed the new creature is produced the soul is regenerate or born again into a new and divine life wherefore if you are born again or sanctifie● which is the same you have faith in Chri●● crucified at Jerusalem 1. You do believe that Jesus is the Christ 2. You do believe on Jesus Christ 1. You do believe that Jesus is the Christ that Jesus is the Saviour that there is no sa●vation by any other Acts 4. 12. That he was ●nointed by the Father as Prophet Priest and Ki●● Isa 61 1. for the perfecting of your salvation 〈◊〉 the obtaining of eternal Redemption for you Heb. 9. 12. Luther hath a notable speech upon Psal Ego saepe libenter hoc inculco ut extra Christum oculos aures claudatis dicatis nullum vos scrire Deum nisi qui fuit in Gremio Mariae suxit ubera ejus Luther Credere quod sit Christus est ab eo sperare quaecunque de Messia promissa sunt Calv. Comment in 1 John 5. 1. 130. Often and willingly saith he do I inculcate this that you should shut your eyes and your ears and say you know no God out of Christ none but he that was in the lap of Mary and sucked her breasts He means none out of him I● is not a mystical Christ within you but the man Christ Jesus without you who was conceived by the Holy Ghost born of the Virgin Mary crucified at Jerusalem rose again and ascended up into Glory that you must believe in for the remission of all your sins for the justification of your persons and for your eternal life Wee finde it recorded in Scripture and in History that this was the Grand Test of a Believer in the Primitive times Dost thou believe that Jesus is the Christ or that Jesus Christ is the son of God because in those dayes it was little less than Death among the Jews thus to own and confesse Christ 2. If you are born again or sanctified you do believe on Jesus you believe on the Name of the Son of God This is Gods great Commandment and our great Duty 1 John 3. 23. As God doth offer and propound him in the Gospel so accordingly ye do receive him into your hearts with all his Offices with all his Graces with all his inconveniencies You look upon Gods Terms as holy equitable and most advantagious to you Ye trust to Christ and rely on him alone for wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption God tenders his Son in the Gospel as the desire of all Nations a● the chiefest Hag. 2. 7. Cant. 5 10. Isa 63. 1. Heb 7. 25. Heb. 2. 17.
become operative to several ends and Objects Hence those Acts which immediately spring from other graces as their proper stock are attributed to faith that being the principle of their heavenly working in this respect as the success of an Army redounds to the Generals Honor so the victory which is effected by other Christian qualities is here ascribed to Faith which animates them and leads them forth as their chief Captain 6. Faith Amplifies dilates enlargeth the heart to run the wayes of Gods Commandments 1 John 5. 1. and 3. verses compared together whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God c. vers 1. For this is the love of God that we keep his Commandments c. verse 3. Faith is the ground of Love and Love the Author of Obedience holy obedience is the daughter of a lively Faith when and where Christ dwels in the heart by faith that soul being rooted and grounded in love comprehends with all Saints secundum quid what is the breadth and length and depth and heighth of the love of Christ Ephes 3. 17 18 19. Which love like a fire in his bones like a flame in his bowels enflames his soul with love to God and Christ opens and enlargeth his heart to duties of obedience to serve the Lord with a most free and Princely spirit The soul of an affectionate Believer runs swiftly chearfully nobly in the wayes of God like the Chariots of Aminnadib Cant. 6. 12. Faith thus argues Amminadib i. e. my voluntary free bounteous or noble people Ainsworth in Cant. 6. 12. Psal 103. 3 4. Ephe. 1. 3. Hath God loved me in his Son from everlasting and will hee love me to everlasting Hath God in Christ forgiven such a wretch as I all mine iniquities redeemed my life from destruction and crowned me even me with loving-kindness and tender mercies yea with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus Then what shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits Nothing I can do nothing I can suffer too much for him I am and will be his for ever at his Command and for his service Thus the faith of a sanctified Person reasons 7. Faith Corroborates it strengthens the weak it revives the faint it supports the desponding and sinking spirit The Psalmist in great tryals and troubles had great experience of the supports of faith Psalm 27. 13. I had fainted unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the Living Love keeps you from dissembling Hope keeps you from desponding Patience keeps you from tyring but 't is Faith that keeps you from fainting When a * 2 Chron. 2. 20. Psal 57. 7. My heart is fixed in some translations 't is suffultum est cormeum my heart is underpropt great multitude from beyond the Sea on this side Syria came up against Judah and the people were in sore distress Jehosaphat their good King encouraged the people saying believe in the Lord your God so shall ye be established believe his Prophets so shall ye prosper 2 Chron. 20. 20. Faith in God is the souls establishment wherefore a Believer shall not be affraid of evil tydings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord his heart is established he shall not be affraid until he see his desire upon his enemies Thus the Psalmist sweetly sings Psalm 112. 7 8. The fixation of the soul by faith on God on Christ on his Attributes on his Promises yields the surest strength the speediest and sweetest relief and succour in the Crisis of any Exigence When David for fear of Saul was got into a Wood Jonathan leaves his Father and privately came to David 1 Sam. 23. 16. into the Wood and strengthened his hand in God So when a Believer is in a wood of fears and dangers he strengthens his hand the hand of his faith in God and the more his faith is up the more his fears are down Divines use to compare the base fears of men and the embondaging fears of Death to the Lead that weighs the Net under water and faith to the Cork that keeps up the Net from sinking Hope the eldest daughter of Faith is an Anchor sure and stedfast Heb. 6. 19. but Faith is the Rock which this Anchor rests on according to the Proverb were it not for Hope heart would break and the Scripture tels us Rom. 8. 24. We are saved by hope but Hope receives all its subsistence strength Faith is both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 substantia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 argumentum Heb. 11. 1. from Faith Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11. 1. 8. Faith exhilarates comforts cheers the soul fils it with joy and peace in believing Rom. 15. 13. The God of hope fils the soul with joy and peace in believing Faith is as a twinkling star in a dark Night as a shining Sun in a cloudy Day as Rivers of water in a dry place as the shadow of a great Rock in a weary Land The Apostle Peter elegantly expresseth the soul-exulting operation of saving faith 1 Pet. 1. 8. Whom that is Christ having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory Faith opens a crevis of light and springs a Mine of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exultatis gaudio ineffabili gloriosa Beza exulting joy in the most insulting danger When once a Believer is justified by faith and hath peace with God hee then rejoiceth in the most glorious Hope viz. in the hope of the glory of God and not only so but he glories also in tribulations hee glories in them and he glories over them because the love of God is shed abroad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 effusa est is poured forth into his heart by the Holy Ghost Rom. 5. 1 2 and 5. verses by faith in Christ and by communion with Christ in his Conquests hee knows he shal be more than a Conqueror over all his Enemies Rom. 8. 37. * Neque enim simpliciter dixit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idest ut vertit Cyprianus Epist 26. supervincimus Amplius quam victores sumus Beza 't is not only said Conquerours but more than Conquerors as Cyprian and Beza on the place Thus I have endeavoured to present you with some of the precious properties and vital operations of precious Faith which every one that is born of God or sanctified doth enjoy to his inestimable benefit Faith is an inseparable Concomitant with and an infallible evidence of our Sanctification for whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God 1 John 5. 1. This is the third Adjunct and evidence of our Regeneration 4th Effect and evidence of our sanctification is love to God and to the Brethren As Christ dwels in the heart by faith Ephes 3. 17. so the soul
the world to seem and not to be just he converseth more with men than with God Yet the godly can appeal to God for their sincerity though they tremble at their defects and impurity like Peter John 20. 17. He appeals to Christs Omnisciency Lord thou knowest all things and thou knowest that I love thee So holy Job expostulates the case thus Let me be weighed in an even ballance that God may know mine integrity Job 31. 6. He could appeal to God the un-erring Rule of Righteousness in this matter he knew his integrity would hold weight And at another time he hath this self-abasing expression Mine eye seeth thee therefore I abhor my self in dust and ashes Job 42. 5. 6. As he could hold fast his integ●ity so he could also loath and abhor himself in dust and ashes at the sight of Gods glorious Majesty and purity and in the sense of his own defects and failings Mark 3 3. False grace grows not better and better but rather worse and worse pretences wither rather than thrive an hypocrite goes backward rather than forward every day Jer. 7. 24. The Lord by the Prophet complains there that his people hearkned not nor enclined their ear but walked in the counsels and in the imaginations of their evil hearts and went backward and not forward False grace like bad salt grows worse and worse til it be cast out into the Dunghil but true grace from a grain groweth unto a Tree from a morning glympse to a perfect Noon Prov. 4. 18. The path of the just is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect Day from smoaking flaxe it is blown up to fragrant flame Nicodemnus that came to Christ at first by night for fear of the Jews afterwards openly declareth for him and bestowed much cost upon the dead body of our Lord. Grace gets John 19. 39. ground upon the flesh and by degrees advanceth to a Victory Now examine your hearts whether ye encrease or decrease whether ye go forward or backward whether your faith love zeal patience heavenly-mindedness Rev. 2. 4. c. thrive or not If ye have left your first Love if ye have lost your care of Duty sense of sin and hungring and thirsting appetite after Christ and his Righteousness 't is a sad sign Remember therefore from whence ye are fallen and repent and do your first works be also watchful and strengthen the things which remain that are ready to dye 'T is Christs Blessed Counsel Revel 2. 5. Revel 3. 2. Mark 4 4. False grace is not humble Formalists are commonly proud and self-conceited persons with true Grace there goeth alwayes Notare verò operae pretium est neminem spiritu esse pauperem nisi qui in nihilum apud se redactus in Dei misericordiam recumbit Calv. in Matth. 5. 3. a spiritual poverty or a sense of spiritual wants the poor in spirit are first in order of the Beatitudes Matth. 5. 3. The more knowledge the Saints have the more they discern their ignorance the more faith the more they bewail their unbelief Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief Mark 9. 24. The more they love him the more they blame their hearts for loving h●m no more they call upon their souls to love him most intensively Grace grows most and thrives best in a low and humble soyl the lowest Valleys are far more fruitful than the highest Mountains 't is a good sign when the soul is kept hungry and humble in the sense of its wants amidst the height of its enjoyments 3. The next is Restraining Grace which What restraining Grace is is nothing else but an awe put by God upon the Conscience constraining a man to forbear sin though he doth not hate it You may discern it by these signs Sign 1 1. Love is of little use and force with such spirits They are under a spirit of bondage chained up by their own fears not moved by the great Gospel Motive viz. Mercy 'T is our Rom. 12. 1. Duty to serve God with Reverence and filial fear but not with a servile and distrustful fear a servile fear hath little of Grace in it Heb. 12. 28. much of Torment We ought to fear God much but to love him more Love is the very life and soul of all Gospel-obedience Sign 2 2. Restraining Grace doth not destroy sin but only prohibit the acts of it Abimelechs lust was not mortified when God with-held him from Sarah Gen. 20. 6. 't was only suspended not subdued the heart was not renewed though the action was curbed as Israel had an adulterous heart towards other Lovers when their way was hedged up with Hos 2. 6. thorns But when the Spirit of holinesse in power comes he comes as a Spirit of Liberty 2 Cor. 3. 17. He frees the soul from the servitude of base lusts and mortifies them and both strongly and sweetly turns and enclines the heart to hate every false way and to run the wayes of Gods Commandments with an enlarged Psal 119. 32. heart 4. The fourth thing that looks like Sanctification and yet is not is common or temporary grace This is a distinct thing from all the rest 't is higher than all the former it differs from Civility because 't is more Christian and Evangelical it differs from Formality because that is in shew only but this is a real work on the soul 'T is better than restraining grace because that avoids sin and performs Duties out of slavish fear but this seemeth to have some affection for Christ his Word and Kingdom 't is good in it self but not the best not throughly sanctifying and saving this a man may have and yet fall away and depart from God so it was with the stony and thorny ground Matth. 13. This is the nearest to true Grace of all the former of this the Apostle speaks Heb. 6. 4 5. which is called an enlightning a taste of Christ and of the powers of the world to come and a partaking of the Holy Ghost i. e. of the common gifts of the Spirit abilities for holy duties great parts c. from whence I shall briefly note these three things 1. That the Light here spoken of is not Quam perniciosum sit inflari notiti● sine charitate in sacris legitur Prov. 26. 12. P. M. humbling 2. The taste is not ravishing 3. Their gifts are not renewing 1. Their light is not humbling Knowledge puffeth up love edifieth 1 Cor. 8. 1. Foundations sink that are not laid deep enough you can never magnifie Christ enough nor abase self enough Christ is most magnified when self is most abased This Dagon Isa 2. 19. must fall down before the Ark sound humiliation brings sure and solid Consolation we must not rashly close with Christ in the pride of our hearts as they did but be sure we have depth of earth broken and contrite spirits 2. Their tast was not ravishing nor
whence and in whom all your springs and supplies are against the guilt punishment dominion and filth of sin viz. in your Mediatour Christ Jesus 2. Holinesse is most excellent most excellent in Col. 1. 19. 1. It s Authour 2. It s Nature 3. It s End 1. T is excellent in its Authour it hath a divine Origination The High and lofty One that Isa 57. 15. Ephes 2. 10. inhabiteth Eternity his Name is Holy he that is the Creatour and former of all things is the former and Creatour of the new Birth 2. 'T is excellent in its Nature more precious than Rubies than the Topaz of Aethiopia than the Treasures of the Indies or any sublunary excellency whatsoever it hath the Image and Life of the Authour in it it hath the Name and Glory of God upon it 't is divine Nature Therefore 2 Pet. 1. 4. most excellent because divinely Excellent 3. 'T is excellent in its end salvation We use 1 Pet. 1. 9. Finis Coronat opus to say that is well which ends well for the end Crowns the work If Holiness be implanted in ye it will not only march about the world with ye in all conditions and estates of Life and be your Companion in labours but it will also follow ye yea go along out of the World with ye and be your Companion in Glory as Samuel Revel 14. 13. 1 Sam. 16. 13. annointed Saul aforehand for the Kingdome so the Holy Oyl of Grace sets ye apart aforehand for the fruition of Glory it never leaves ye till it hath placed ye on Thrones arrayed ye with Robes put Palmes into your hands and incircled your heads with a Crown of Life and immortality The perfection of Grace is Glory 3. The Doctrine of Sanctification or Holiness is very Comfortable There are two Rivers of joy springing or having their Well-head in the precious side and heart of Christ 1. The Blood for Justification 2. The Water for Sanctification Both streaming from one Fountain equally cheering refreshing and making glad the City of Psalm 46. God and nourishing up the Believer to eternal life Amongst my Acquaintance I have observed two sorts of dejected souls as also two sorts of Causes of their dejection and two sorts of means or helps for their Cure and recovery 1. Some trembling hearts do much despond and droop for want of the sense of pardon their justification is dark unto them they know not whether God hath pardoned them The children of Light may sometime walk in darkness And then they would give millions of worlds did they Isa 50. 10. possess them for God the fathers face to shine upon them and for the holy Spirit the Comforter to pronounce peace and proclaim pardon to them 2. Other deserted souls mourn sore like Doves for want of holinesse Comparing their hearts with the perfect nature of God and their lives with the pure shining Law of God they are alwayes complaining for their defects and decays of Grace for the strength and prevalence of corruption and for the manifold spots and staines of their conversations Wherefore they are afraid their spot is not the spot of Gods Children Deut 32. 5. and that such deadness dulnesse vanity of thought and disorders of spirit and life cannot be consistent with saving grace And hereupon they wander in Meanders of perplexities and disquietments The Indies if they had them they would freely part with for the plentifull effusion and influence of Christs Unction and to see him clearly to be made of God sanctification to them But O yee Bruised reeds and smoaking flax the Captain of your Salvation will bring forth judgement unto Victory and perfect your Grace in Glory There is Balm in Gilead there is a Physitian there Christ is a Saviour and a Sanctifier to the uttermost The Plaister is as Heb. 7. 25. broad as the soar the blood of Christ is both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price of our Redemption and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Laver of Regeneration also 1. Let the first sort Trust in the Name of Isa 50. 10. See Dr. Goodwins Childe of Light the Lord and stay themselves upon their God Trust in the name of the Lord that is the infinite mercy of God through the merit of Christ God is rich in Mercy Plenteous in Redemption abundant in goodnesse and Truth the mercy of God is the Name of God yea the very first letter of his Name Mercy leads the Exod. 34. 6 chorum in that Catalogue of the Divine Attributes Exo. 34. 6. 2. Trust in the infinite Merit and Righteousnesse of Jesus Christ for this is his Name the Lord our Righteousnesse Let Faith drive Jer. 23. 6. thee quite out of self and thy own righteousnesse and lay fast hold on Christs Righteousnesse Know that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse Phil. 3. 8 9 to every one that believeth Consider him that hath satisfied Justice fulfilled all righteousness Rom. 10. 4. in his own Person and brought in everlasting righteousnesse for thee who loved thee Dan. 9. 24. and gave himself for thee And so let faith grow up unto Assurance for this Righteousnesse is Gal. 2. 20. revealed from Faith to Faith called the Righteousnesse of God because 't is the righteousnesse Rom. 1. 17. of God as well as man and which God appointeth and accepteth for thy justification This divine Righteousness thou must live upon as thy daily food and bread of life 2. Let the second sort of disconsolate souls consider these Particulars 1. That an enlightned soul that communes with his own heart seeth more vileness filthiness and contrariety in himself to the holy nature and Law of God than such as are in a state of gross darkness who are strangers to God and in this sense perfect strangers to their own hearts 2. Let such consider a Christian state in this world is militant there must be warring and wrastling not only with flesh and blood but also with Eph. 6. 12. Principalities and Powers i. e. with the Devils of hell and the corruptions of the world every day Shall any say because I fight I am a Coward because I finde a law in my members warring against the law of my minde a double interest flesh and spirit lusting in the same soul yea in the Luke 11 21 self-same faculty therefore I am no Christian this very warring evinceth the clean contrary for when the strong man armed keeps the house all things are in peace thy very sensibility of sin and Gal. 5. 17. groaning under the burden and bondage of it thy strugling with it and sincere endeavours to subdue it are evident signs of sanctification begun in thee 3. Consider Grace begun destroyes not sin utterly nor carries away a compleat Victory presently thou must be trained and exercised a long time in Christs School and endure hardness like a good Souldier of Christ
it restored in the second Adam Christ received the spirit above measure we have but some drops or drams of it he was Joh. 3. 34. annointed with the Oyl of gladness above his fellows yet for his fellows whole Christ was given to us Isa 9. 6. To us a Child is born to us a Son is given His sanctification also must needs be for us for our good and benefit For their sakes I sanctifie my self saith Christ that they might be sanctified by the truth Joh. 17. 19. Holiness in Christ is as the light in the Sun ever shining and as water in a living fountain never failing ever running He is both an ever-flowing Simile and an over-flowing fountain of grace to us as 't is endless and boundless in Christ so it is diffusive and communicative to his members Jesus Christ is the Candlestick from whence the Golden Pipes do empty the golden oyl through themselves Zech. 4. 11 12. Christ is this Candlestick the two Olive-trees See the Dutch Annotat on the place signifie his Kingly and Priestly Offices the Golden Oyl signifieth the gifts and graces of the Spirit It must needs be so because it is the pleasure of the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Col. 1. 19. What is this fulness It is all the fulness of the Godhead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily i. e. personally substantially for as the Hebrews put souls for persons as so many souls went down into Egypt c. so the Greeks put bodies for persons Our Lord Jesus is his Fathers Gazophylacium the great Magazine of infinite riches and treasures Note here a Climax yea three gradations the Godhead the fulness of the Godhead yea all the fulness of the Godhead dwells in Christ bodily Now our holiness is a stream derived from this Fountain a part or parcel of this fulness 4. What is the formal cause of our Sanctification 4 The formal cause I answer 'T is the infusion of the habits of grace into us as the School-men call them 't is the endowment of the soul with inward holiness So Mr. Perkins 'T is the infusion of or communion with the spirit So D. Reynolds 'T is the operation of the spirit dwelling in us as a spirit of sanctification Luke 11. 13. Joh. 14. 16 17. 'T is the deriving or drawing down the holiness that is in Christ our Head by the spirit of holiness who is the Bond of union and communion between him and us 't is the spirits transforming of us into the likeness of our Lord Jesus or the delineation of the Picture of Christ by the spirit of Christ in the The spirit looks directly upon the glorious Image of Christ represented in the Gospel and draws exactly the picture thereof in a Saints heart Mr. Rich. Vines in ●oc Zech. 13. 1. soul of man 2 Cor. 3. 18. It s Synonima's in Scripture are very emphatical 't is called a quickning Ephes 2. 1. a birth Joh. 3. 3. a forming of Christ Gal. 4. 19. a Regeneration or begetting again 1 Pet. 1. 3. a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36. 26. a renewing of the mind Rom. 12. 2. a new creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. the new man Ephes 4. 24. the renewing of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3. 5. And the Divine Nature and the Image or likeness of Christ in respect of its Divine original and transcendent excellency The Father sends the Son into the world to work out eternal Redemption for us and to that end to open a fountain in his side and heart for our purification he furnisht him with an instrumental fulness and fitness to be the Lord our righteousness and our Fountain of grace and holiness the Son finisheth his Joh. 17. 4. Eph 4. 8. work ascends up on high receiveth gifts for men sends the holy spirit the sanctifier and comforter as his Vice-Roy to dwell in us and abide with us for ever and not only to dwell in us as our heavenly companion and comforter but also to work in us as our Sanctifier Joh 14 16 17. and therefore called The Spirit of holiness Rom. 1. 4. He receives from the Son wisdome righteousness holiness all gifts and graces wherewith Joh. 16. 14. He shall glorifie me saith Christ for he shal receive of mine Christ was annointed and bestows them upon the Saints annoints them with this Unction implants in them these gifts and graces imprints upon them the Divine Nature and therewith sanctifies them which very impression of the Divine Nature or likeness of Christ on the soul of man by the energy of the spirit I conceive to be the very formality of sanctification For the better explication and dilucidation of this Argument give me leave to shew what it is to sanctifie The word Sanctifie hath many acceptions the most famous are these two 1. To set apart 2. To cleanse In each of which we suppose something privative and something positive 1. When it signifies to set apart we must conceive not only a setting a thing or a person apart from a common or prophane use but also it s or his actual dedication to holy uses or setting apart for God which is the proper notion of it 2. When it signifies to cleanse you must not only conceive a purgation from filthiness but also a plantation of the seed of grace called the seed of God The abolition of natural corruption is the privative part the renovation of Gods Image is the positive part of Sanctification 1. To sanctifie is to set apart and dedicate Thus Gods people are set apart and dedicated by God and for God 1. Before time 2. In time 1. Before time They are set apart by Gods Decree to be an holy seed to himself in and by Christ separate from the reprobate and perishing world to be Vessels of Honor whereas the Reprobates are called Vessels of wrath and dishonour Psa 1. 4. Him that is godly God M. Burroughs in his Saints Treasury hath set apart for himself i. e. as a good man saith Not only actually set apart in vocation but vertually set apart by God from eternity in Election Ephes 1. 4. Having chosen us in him before the foundation of the world c. 2. In time They are regenerated called or actually sanctified or set apart to be Vessels of Honour sanctified and meet for the Masters service 2 Tim. 2. 21. Sanctification is an actual W●llebius in his Body of Divinity Election by which we are set apart from the miserable and vain world to act for God by Jesus Christ and to seek the things that make for his glory Thus by Regeneration we are called his First-fruits which under the Law were the Lords portion Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us by the word of truth that we should be a kind of the first fruits of his new creatures as they are born from above Joh. 3. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so they are born for
called a Royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2. 9. To be sanctified is more than to be purified for besides the expulsion of sin in Sanctification there is an infusion of grace a new disposition and frame of soul called a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. i. e. a new mind new apprehensions a new will new desires new affections from whence there follows newness of life and conversation 1. There is a new heart that is conformity to Gods Nature when the heart of man is like the heart of God as David is said to be a man after Gods own heart Conformity to the 2 Pet. 1. 4. Divine Nature is this new heart The Nature of God is the pattern of that Sanctification which is wrought in the heart of man 2. There is a new life that is our conformity to Gods Law or revealed Will whose will is our Sanctification 1 Thes 4. 3. An holy heart breathes and breaks out into an heavenly conversation Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven The first is our habitual holiness the second is our actual The sum is this our habitual conformity to the Nature or Image of God and our actual conformity to the Will of God thereon depending is formally our Sanctification Thus I have shewed what it is to sanctifie and have opened the more eminent acceptations of it We come now to the fifth thing propounded 5. The Spirit of Christ is the efficient cause of our Sanctification The work of Creation is commonly ascribed to God the Father the work of Redemption to God the Son and the work of Sanctification to God the Holy Spirit yet Sanctification being a work ad extra is common to all the persons 1. It is ascribed to God the Father Jude 1. to them which are called and sanctified of God the Father 1 Pet. 1. 3. Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope c. 2. Christ is said to sanctifie us He is made of God to us Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 2. To the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus Heb. 13. 12. Wherefore Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate 3. The Spirit is said to sanctifie Hence these phrases the sanctification of the Spirit 1 Pet. 1. 2. 2 Thes 2. 13 14. and the spirit of holiness Rom. 1. 4. The Sanctification of the Spirit is as necessary as the mercy of the Father or the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ by the redundancy of his Merit hath impetrated and obtained the Spirit of the Father to sanctifie those whom he means to save to purifie and make them meet for glory whom he died for and justified by his blood The Inchoation is from the Father the Dispensation is by the Son the Consummation by the Spirit 'T is from the love of the Father and by vertue of the Merit of the Son that we are sanctified but 't is properly the Office and the distinct personal operation of the spirit of holiness to sanctifie and it must be the mighty power of the eternal spirit that converts or sanctifies because 't is such a power as is commensurate and proportionate to the raising of the dead Ephes 1. 19 20. called the exceeding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Supereminens magnitudo Montan. greatness of his power c. We are not sanctified or converted as the Papists and Arminians say by a moral suasion or by the bare improvement of our own free will nor by the accession of some additional help to Nature but by the most strong and yet most sweet efficacy of the Almighty Spirit Psa 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power or as some render it in the day of thy Armies 't is therefore called a Regeneration a begetting In die Copiarum So M. Ainsworth a soul again 't is a new Creation 't is a Vivification or quickning a man before dead in sins and trespasses not languishing and declining but in a moral sense stark dead nay 't is a Resurrection a rising out of the grave of sin and death All these works of wonder or rather this one mysterious work of Sanctification illustrated by these Metaphors bespeaks no less than the Almighty power of a God who is able to subdue all things to himself Phil. 3. 2● 1. 'T is a Regeneration or a begetting again 1 Pet. 1. 3. Jam. 1. 18. 2. 'T is a Creation Ephes 2. 10. We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works 2 Cor. 5. 17. He that is in Christ is a new creature Behold saith Christ I make all things new 3. 'T is a vivification or quickning Eph. 2. 1. You hath he quickned who were dead in sins and trespasses A natural man is both legally an morally dead till the Spirit of Life breaths upon him and quickens him Joh. 5. 25. That promise is still in fulfilling now that the dead shall hea● the voice of the Son of God and they that hea● shall live 4. 'T is a Resurrection Col. 3. 1. If ye then ●● risen with Christ seek the things that are above yea 't is more a kind of con-session or sitting together with Christ Eph. 2. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus If we live to God we live the life of heaven Now to regenerate to create to make all things new to revive a m●● dead to raise up a man out of the grave ● Lazarus both dead and buried all these ar● the Acts of Omnipotency the works of ● God and all those works are done in this o●● work by the invincible efficiency of the Spirit 6. The word and faith are the Ministring are Instrumental causes of our Sanctification The Spirit is called the Spirit of Faith Aristotle calls the hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the instrument of instruments Faith being the gift of God and wrought by the operation of the Spirit unites the soul to Christ the Fountain of Holiness and Hea● of Influence and having united the soul ●● him continually receives supplies from him 'T is the hand of the soul that useful instrument whereby we apprehend Christ and whereby we draw down vertue from Christ Hence as an Organ or Instrument it is said to purifie Acts 15. 9. Having purified their heart by faith As Faith hath the Noblest Objects so Faith for its use and ●ffice here is the Noblest grace Faith indeed infused and created in us by the Spirit is commonly called the See Dr. Owens death of death p. 126. Simile Mother grace and is it self formally a great part of our sanctification As the woman sick of the Bloody Issue put forth her hand and touching the Hem of Christs garment drew vertue from him and was healed So that soul to whom
annointed that ever expect to be glorified Though men may talk much of God and brag much of their Interest in heaven and happiness yet without these habits and seeds of holiness I am sure they shall never reap a crop of blessedness 2. Holiness lies in the use and lively exercise of those supernatural graces or holy habits in the soul Holy habits must be brought forth into holy acts gracious habits are and and must be attended with gracious motions gracious operations and a gracious Conversation Act. 10. 35. 1 Joh. 1. 3. 7. 2 Pet. 1. 8. Tit. 2. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eth c. 1. outward works must be suitable to inward habits as the Phylosophers speak concerning the summum bonum it consists say they neque in Idearum contemplatione neque in virtutis habitu neither in the contemplation of Idea's nor in the habit of vertue But the summum bonum or chief good say they is the operation or action of the reasonable soul according to the best and most perfect vertue in a perfect life I am sure Sanctification which is the true felicity and beauty of the soul of man consists in both viz. in internal holy principles and in external holy practises Holy habits are golden Talents that must be imployed and improved they are the Candles of the Lord set up in us not to idle by but to work and Where there are the seeds there will appear the Flowers of Holiness and walk by Where is holiness of disposition there is and will be holiness of Conversation An holy heart expresseth it self in an holy life In the next place I shall endeavour as I promised to shew the difference between Justification and Sanctification and then the transcendent excellencies of Sanctification as appears by the honourable and excellent title● the Scriptures put upon it and cloathe it with them as its proper Robes and due Ornaments And then something as to the Concomitants adjuncts and fruits of sanctification And then lastly Close all with Application 1. Wherein Justification and Sanctification differs How Justification and Sanctification differ 1. They differ in their kind 2. In order of Nature 3. In the manner or form 4. They differ in degrees 1. They differ in their kind The righteousness 1 ●n genere of Justification is in the Category of Relation the righteousness of Sanctification is in the predicament of quality Justification is a change of a mans Relation and estate not a change of a mans person 't is a change without a man or upon a man not a change within a man But Sanctification is not properly a Relative but a real inherent change not a change without a man but a change within a man 't is the expulsion of sin and the infusion of grace or holiness into the soul of Man 2. They differ in the order of nature in order 2 In ordine Naturae of nature Divines hold justification precedes sanctification though in order of time they are both wrought together In the description of the order of causes Rom. 8. 30. the Link of Justification is set before Glorification in that golden Chain The best Expositors I Beza Polanus M. Jeremy Burroughs cum multis aliis c. have met withall and many I have read upon the place do generally conclude that sanctification is essentially though not gradually the same with Glorification and must of necessity be included in it because sanctification is the seed glorification is the flower sanctification is the first fruits glorification is the full crop or vintage sanctification is the New-born Babe Glorification is the perfect Eph. 4. 13. man arrived to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Sanctification is like the dawning of the day like the early glittering and guilding of Cum sol medium superaverat axim the Mountains by the Sun-beams but Glorification is the Sun shining in the Meridian in his greatest strength and splendour The difference between Glorification and Sanctification is not specifical but gradual We are justified by the Merit of Christ from the guilt and punishment of sin in order of Nature before we are sanctified by the spirit from the pollution and filth of sin and endowed with inward holiness though in order of time Qui justificantur sanctificantur Hae gratiae individuo nexu cohaerent as Calvin speaks they are wrought together as the most precious effects of the free grace of God through the blood of Christ 3. They differ in their form Take three 3 Modo ceu forma Notes 1. In Justification a believer by the hand of Faith receives Christ and layes hold upon him as the Lord his righteousness and inwrappeth his soul with this glorious Robe and Garment of Salvation but in Sanctification Faith is considered as a new quality formally a part of our holiness and as the root and beginning of good works In Justification Faith is considered as an useful instrument in Sanctification as a special grace or new quality 2. In Justification sin is taken away in respect of guilt and condemnation that it be Ne imputetur not imputed but in Sanctification sin is taken away as to the dominion or reigning Ne regnet power of it that it may not reign as in glorification which is the perfection of sanctification sin all the remainders of it shall be quite taken away that it shall not exist or have any Ne restet being left 3. In Justification Christs righteousness is imputed to us in Sanctification a new inherent righteousness is implanted in us in the first our sins are pardoned our persons absolved acquitted and accepted through the imputation of Christs righteousness Rom. 4. 6 7. By the second our souls are renewed our Natures changed decked and adorned with the graces of the Spirit Eph. 4. 23 24. by the participation of Christs holiness Thus Justification and Sanctification do differ in their form 4. Justification and Sanctification do differ 4 In gradibus in degrees 1. Justification is one individual perfect act contingent to all the godly Some of our best Divines do hold that Justification is transacted in our first union and incorporation into Christ when the pardon of sin is sealed to a believer at once How at once I answer with Reverend Downam at once as excluding Bishop Downam on Justification Burgess upon Justification degrees our justification is perfect at first as well as at last Or as Learned Burgess at once as connoting a state we are put into upon our believing And indeed thereupon some godly learned persons take Justification for one continued act from our vocation to our glorification and in that sense we are justified but once A justified person is rectus in curia acquitted by God the Judge of all in foro coeli he hath shot the Gulph he is gone beyond the Gun-shot of condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 1.
Comfort at Death and Judgment Lastly 't is the dawning of Salvation the Aurora of Glory THat Christ is given of the Father to be our Sanctification we have proved how Christ may be said to be our Sanctification we have shewed what are the several Causes concurring to our Sanctification we have explained The definition of Sanctification wee have given Something of its glory and excellency we shadowed forth in the last Discourse and now are arrived at the last Stage the last General in the doctrinal part propounded viz. what are the sweet streams that issue from this Fountain What are the precious Fruits that grow upon this Tree of Sanctification They may also serve for Tryals of your estate You may also call them the inseparable Concomitants and Adjuncts of Sanctification if you please 1. If you have received the spirit of Sanctification ye have also received the spirit of Supplication Zech. 12. 10. The Spirit is entitled both the spirit of Grace and the spirit of Supplication where he is the former there he is the other also where he dwels as the spirit of holinesse there he dwels as the spirit of prayer Every sanctified heart is an Harp or Cymbal to found forth Gods praises an habitation of God through the Spirit Ephes 2. ult and the Temple of the Holy Ghost The Temple of old was an holy place a place of relative and Typical holiness and an house of Prayer Every gracious heart like Gods Altar offers up to God the sweet sacrifice and incense of praises and Prayers Every new-born Babe for the most part comes into the world crying I am sure every spiritual new-born Babe cryes The word Abba signifieth Father in the Syriack tongue which the Apostle here reteineth which also young Children retein almost in all Languages Annotat. Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. And because ye are sons God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Now if ye are Prayer-less persons ye are graceless persons persons without Prayer are 'T was the saying of an old Disciple A man of much prayer is a man of much Grace persons without Holiness or though ye pray yet if ye pray not in the Spirit according to the caution Ephes 6. 18. i. e. in Faith in fervency with the vigor and intension of the Spirit or inner-man if it be not * Jam. 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If ye have not Commun●on rav●sh●ng have yee Communion sanctifying an in-wrought prayer as the phrase is if yee wrestle not with God in the strength of God as Jacob did if ye have no holy boldness or Confidence at Gods Throne if ye never feel the sweet melting quickening warming moving breathings of the Spiri in your souls In a word if ye find no growing conformity in your hearts to the divine Nature by Duty no sweet sanctifying refreshing communion with God in Duty 't is an evident sign to me the Spirit of holiness dwels not in yee and consequently if ye have not the spirit of Christ ye are none of his Rom. 8. 9. But as for such as pray in the Spirit as make conscience of this Duty and of the spiritual performance of it and find the rellish of God and Heaven in private prayer 't is one happy sign and symptome of their translation from death to life from a state of Nature to a state o● Grace Secondly If the spirit of Sanctification dwel● in thee the same Spirit as a spirit of Illumination There are diversities of Gifts but the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4. dwels in thee If Jesus Christ be thy sanctification he is thy wisdome also as thy holiness to sanctifie thee so thy wisdome to instruct thee It is the godly or holy man that feels the vertue and influence of that blessed Promise I will instruct then and teach thee in the way that thou shouldst go I will guide thee by mine eye Psalm 32. 6 8. verses compared together That Text is famous for this purpose * Non acumine proprii sensus rectè sapere homines sed illuminatione Spiritus Buling in loc What Unction is per unctionem Gratiam Sp. S. intelligit Beza in loc 1 Jo● 2. 20. Ye have received an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things By this Unction or annointing is meant the gracious operation of the holy Spiri● whereby they that are regenerate or sanctified are also enlightened with the saving Knowledge of Christ This is compared to the pouring ou● of costly Ointment Psalm 45. 8. and 137. 2. Unction properly signifies the separation and consecration of a person to the Lord together with the gifts of Wisdome Knowledge Faith Love c. Wherefore it must follow that a person annointed consecrated unto God is also illuminated by God if his person be sanctified his eyes are opened annointed with Eye-salve if annointed with Grace then instructed in Knowledge if a Vessel full of 2 Cor. 1. ●1 Rev. 3. 18. Grace then a Vessel full of oyl a burning lamp and shining light For in Vnction sanctification and illumination are both together inseparably and indivisibly as light and heat in the Sun-beams The holy oyl of Grace casts a sweet perfume and splendid light in the hearts and lives of the annointed By vertue of this Unction Darkness is now in a great measure scattered and the man is made light in the Lord Ephes 5. 8. An enlightned soul admires how foolish he was and ignorant even bruitish in his knowledge before Conversion he neither knew God nor himself he neither knew his present danger nor his future misery he neither saw sin as a vicious or as a Penal evil neither the evil in it nor the evil after it but went on like a Fool to the stocks like an Oxe to the slaughter and ran like a mad man toward the Gulf of Ruine Before sanctification he neither saw his want of Christ nor knew the worth of Christ The glory of Christs Person the beauty of his wayes the merits of his Blood the benefits of his Offices the comforts of his Spirit the sweetness of his Fellowship the savour of his Ointments the blessings of his Kingdome All these before Conversion were hid from his eyes for the God of this world had blinded him 2 Cor. 4. 4. Besides the natural Veil of darkness he brought into the world with him he is blinded by another viz. a diabolical but in and by Conversion comes in illumination in turning from Satan to God his eyes are opened and his understanding turns from darknesse to light Acts 26. 18. Now the eyes of his understanding being enlightned by the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation Ephes 1. 17 18. He comes to know what is the hope of his Calling and the riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Every word is a word of weight he hath now a visive faculty an understanding given him to know things that 1 John
sweetly reposeth it self in the ●osome of God by love 1 John 4 7 8. Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God he that loveth not knoweth not God for God is Love You see love to God and to the Brethren is both a sure sign and a genuine effect of Regeneration which is synomminous with Sanctification This grace of Love is the very soul of all Religion the very life of the new Creature the closure of the soul with God in the sweetest manner he that hath most of this grace hath most of all graces This is one of the precious things promised in the new Covenant Deut. 30. 6. viz. An heart to love the Lord the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul This is made a special effect and evidence of thy spiritual Circumcision or Sanctification In Sanctification as the understanding is enlightned to know God so the will and affections are renewed changed rightly ordered and enclined to love God as his chiefest good and as his utmost End Corn and Wine and Oyl and all the world is then counted nothing to the light of Gods countenance All other Beloveds are no body to Jesus Psalm 4. 6 7. Cant. 5. 10. Christ the chiefest of ten thousands A sanctified soul exactly viewing and well weighing the glittering pomp and splendor of this world all natural and moral excellencies on the one hand and Jesus Christ on the other cryes out with the Martyr Lambert None Foxes Acts and Monuments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter eminentiam cognitionis Christi Iesu Mo●● but Christ none but Christ Counts all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dogs-meat garbage to the excellency of the Knowledge of Jesus Christ Phil. 3. 8. A Christian loves himself his Relations and worldly comforts with a common love but God and Jesus Christ with a special love He loves his temporal Enjoiments secondarily and subordinately but he loves God and Christ primarily intensively and superlatively yea so highly intensive is his love to God his Father to Christ his Saviour to the holy Spirit his souls Comforter to Heaven and heavenly things his only Treasure that his love to other things comparatively may be called an Hatred i. e. a much inferiour a far more remiss love See Luke 14. 26. more distinctly First A sanctified heart loves God with a Amore desideri● love of desire The strength of the heart goeth out in love this is called the breathing thirsting and panting of the heart after God Psalm 42. 1 2. The soul that loves God above all things desires God above all things both intensivè with the greatest vigor and Adequatè as its Adequate and compleat Object Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee 2. A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Union as the heart of Shechem Amore unionis clave to Dinah Gen. 34. 3. So an holy soul cleaves unto God in Christ Barnabas exhorted the Disciples that with purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord Acts 11. 23. As the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David 1 Sam. 1. 18. So this Love is as it were a knitting of the soul with God Faith makes a mystical union of Persons Love makes a moral union of affections This is the very essence of Gospel-love God bestows himself A●or ●o● est nisi d●num amantis in amatum on us and we freely surrender our selves to God Thirdly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of good will or Benevolence we wish and will give and ascribe all honour and 〈◊〉 Benevolentia praise all glory and dominion unto him This is the genuine product of his love in Christ to us as Revel 1. 5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Lord saith an holy soul let all thine be mine and let all mine be thine and let thine be for thy glory let every person Cant ● 16 and creature and thing in Heaven above and in earth beneath be a shril Trumpet a loud Cymbal to sound forth thy praises Fourthly A sanctified heart loves God with Amore complacentiae acquiescentiae a love of Complacence and Rest Where we love the eye of the soul the mind is fixed with a delightful stay ubi amor ibi oculus the Object dwels in the 〈◊〉 we are still looking where we love When I awake saith the Psalmist Anima plus est ubi amat quàm ubi animat I am still with thee in my contemplations and affections My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord Psalm 104. 34. Love goeth forth upon the feet of Desire and rests in the bosome of Delight There is an holy acquiescence of the heart in God God saith of his Saints This is my Rest for ever Psal 132. 14. Psal 116. 7. Psal 91. 9. Ephes 3. ult here will I dwell the Saint saith of God Return to thy rest O my soul A Saintt makes God the most High his Habitation and a Saints heart is the Habitation of God through the Spirit Here lyes the sweetness of holiness the marrow and fatness of Religion This World would be a Dungeon and Heaven it self a melancholly shade without the love of God 't is this that makes Heaven and Earth sweet unto the sanctified Heaven would be no Heaven God could not be the joy if he were not the love of Saints but there both love and Psal 16. ult joy shall be full But whilst the Saints are solacing themselves with Heaven and delighting themselves in God other men are following after other Lovers The covetous man makes Mammon his God the voluptuous man makes Pleasure his God the Ambitious man makes Honour his God the Formalist and Hypocrite makes Common grace self-righteousness a bare profession or the meer externals of Devotion his God and Saviour because every one of these make some of these their only Treasure and Happiness They dote upon them addict themselves to them trust to them and in them and love them more than God But a Saint that knows God makes Jehovah his God he hath but one the living and true God to honour love and serve who is the fountain of his life and blessedness Psal 36. 9. Psal 87. 7. Col. 3. 3. in whom all his springs are in whom with Jesus Christ all his Comforts live and from whom by Jesus Christ all his felicity is conveyed to make him happy in both worlds The new creature hath a new heart according to that full and free Promise Ezek. 36. 26. A new heart will
with that Cooling-Card 2 Pet. 2. 19. While they promise them liberty they themselves are the servants of Corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage They are the slaves of Satan in the bonds of lust I wish that all Prodigals and presumptuous sinners would seriously mind that Text But my Brethren I trust that ye have otherwise learned Christ If so be ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus then ye do put off concerning the former conversation the old man c. ye do put on the new man which after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in sanctitate veritatis vulg God is created in righteousness and true holiness or holiness of Truth Ephes 4. 22. 23 24. I trust the Lord hath given ye an understanding to know things that are excellent and to approve them that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ as the Apostles prays for the Phillippians Phil. 1. 9 10. Many excellent Gifts the Father of Lights bestows upon his Children indeed every good and perfect gift comes from him Christ himself is the Jam. 1. 17. first Best Gift of God A Gift of Gifts and sanctification in or by Christ Jesus I take to Joh. 1. 10. be the next Best Now you that are righteous with this inherent Righteousness hold on 1 Cor. 1. 2. your way and prosper the Lord be with ye The Angel of his presence save ye The Spirit of Jesus guide ye to the Hill of holiness and help you to perfect holiness in the fear of God You are under the vertue of sure and sweet promises for your great encouragement in Heavens way The Righteous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger Job 17. 9. The Lord strengthen your hearts and quicken your See these Texts Isa 40. 2 last verses Phil. 1. 6. Heb. 12. 2. Ezek. 36. 27. speed by these powerful and precious Promises and give ye a prosperous arrival at the fair Havens of rest and peace Amen We come now to close the whole with these two uses 1. By way of Conviction 2. By way of Caution Though I know the Rules of Method and the exigence of the Subject Command me yet I shall not proceed directly by way of Examination because that hath been already done from that Text Rom. 1. 7. To all that be at Rome beloved of God called to be Saints from whence the doctrine of calling hath been discussed the nature of Saintship and the signs and tryals of Sanctification have been largely shewn We shall therefore God willing proceed to the next in order viz. the Use of Conviction Use 8. This Doctrine of Sanctification we have so long insisted on serveth for Conviction If those that are Gods and Christs are sanctified in Christ Jesus if God the Father hath given them Christ his Son for their sanctification to make them holy Then this Point brings doleful news sad tidings in the mouth of it to three sorts of Persons To the Prophane To the Persecutors To the Scorners 1. The profane who mock at sin and slight holiness are hereby convicted and condemned 1. The prophane God hath no Birthright for such profane Esaus The people who are the Lords portion are an holy Nation washed from their filthinesse If ye are converted ye are washed and sanctified in the name and by the spirit of the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 6. 11. but prophane ones have ● spot upon them which is not the spot of Gods Children Deut. 32. 5. see what St. John speaketh of such kinde of persons as wallow in their filthiness 1 John 3. 8. He that committeth sin is of the Devil for the Devil sinneth from the beginning he that tradeth in sin and maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui operam dat peccato So Beza sin his constant businesse work or practise as a workman doth his calling and followeth the same daily and deliberately A godly man may slip into sin through humane frailty and in the hurry of temptation may be overtaken with a fault But it is the profane man that is a trader in sin and a constant worker of iniquity Though such men may presume that they belong to God yet our Saviour expresly speaks they are the Devils Children John 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil for his works ye do c. These men have not the least pretence of a claim to Heaven they come exceeding short of Hypocrites who pretend to holiness and seem to be so but the prophane are neither civil nor moral Such gross sinners are called Dogs and Swine They are wel●●ing in the gall of bitterness and bound fast with the bond of iniquity as Peter told Simon Magus Acts 8. 23. All that such kinde of sinners have to say for the most part for themselves is this 1. That God is merciful 2. That their hearts are better than their lives To the first I answer that God is holy and just as well as mercifull and gracious The Lamb will turn a Lion the Saviour of the world will come as a terrible Judge in flaming fire to render vengeance to the ignorant and disobediext 2 Thes 1. 8. And if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and ungodly appear 1 Pet. 4. 18. They shall appear indeed but like as chaffe before the Whirl-wind and as stubble before the flames Sinners do little All the Attributes of God a● justice mercy c. do run in the channel of his Holiness think that Gods mercy is an holy mercy which in a saving manner he will dispence to none out of Christ Sinners do err exceedingly to think that God is prodigal either of his own mercy or of his Sons Blood 't is only the sanctified in Christ Jesus exclusively who shall be the objects of his saving mercy the mercy of God and the merit of Christ are most sacred and precious things 1 Pet. 1. 18. The former is bestowed on none the latter is spilt for none but an holy and a peculiar people Justice must be satisfied else mercy can be never 1 Pet. 2. 9. dispensed if the merit of Christ be thine then the mercy of the Father is thine otherwise though the Ocean of Gods pardoning mercy be boundless and bottomless thou shalt not taste one drop of it Well then wouldst thou know that God will be mercifull to thy soul at the last day it highly concerns thee to know Christ in the power of his Resurrection and in the fellowship of his sufferings in this thy Phil. 3. 10. Day 2. To the other Plea That their hearts are better than their lives I answer This is to appeal to a witness that cannot be found to a witness that is as to us invisible 't is as if a man should lay claim to another mans Land and pretend he hath lost the evidences the
distance Omne simile non est idem look like Sanctification but at a nearer view and by an exacter tryal and scrutiny they appear in their colours to be quite contrary not only diversa but adversa also I might mention many but I shall name these four only inclusive of all the rest which in my reading I have received from worthy hands Civility Formality Restreining Grace Temporary or Common Grace 1. Civility which is nothing else but a fine smooth demeanour in the world a fair Gal. 6. 12. shew in the flesh as the Apostle phraseth it rather heathenish strictness than Christian holiness it is something to be a Civilian but much more to be a Christian Ye may descry it by these Notes Note 1 1. Meer Civility is usually accompanied with ignorance of God and of the Mysteries of his Kingdome Men may be no Drunkards no Swearers no * As Alexander kept himself from Darius his Virgins and Scipio from a most beautiful Captive Lady Adulterets no rude debauched persons and yet grosly ignorant of spiritual matters as Nichodomus was John 3. 10. a Ruler in Israel a strict Pharisee a civil Person but a meer Ignoramus in the new birth Now spiritual life or holinesse where-ever it is begins with Knowledge where is Quarta expositio ●orum est qui putant allu●isse Paulum ad mundi creationem c. Buling in 2 Cor. 4. 6. Life there is Light indeed the grace of God is the light of Life As in the old so in the new Creation the beginning of the Creation of God is Light Gen. 1. 3. 2 Cor. 4. 6. A sanctified person called out of darkness into Gods marvellous light he sees his way and knows his Duty he hath received an Unction from the holy One And what he doth he doth 1 John 2. 20. Omne bonum fit ex integrd Causá upon right Principles by a right Rule and to a right End Civil men live plausibly but know not the ground nor end of their Actions Faith in God through Jesus Christ is not the Principle the word of God is not the Rule the Glory of God is not the End of their Actings They neither live to God nor for God not according to his Will revealed in his VVord nor for the honour and glory of his Name The Spirit of Wisdome and Revelation Ephes 1. 17 18. hath not enlightned their understanding to see into the mysterie of his Will they do not act out of faith in Christ and pure love to God in what they do Note 2 2. Jesus Christ is little prized by civil men they are satisfied with their own but do not hunger and thirst after Christs Righteousness The Law is more natural to men than the Gospel men naturally are more for doing than than for believing Therefore legal straines and moral Maxims suit more with them than Gospel Doctrines and promises that breed Faith Men naturally desire to be under a Covenant of works because ignorant of the glory of the Covenant of Grace Meer civil men see not the mer it of Christs blood they apprehend not the sweetness of his fellowship nor the efficacy of his Spirit but go on smoothly without rub and difficulty whereas to a true Christian Jesus Christ is All in All the Author and maintainer of his Heb. 12. 2. life the Alpha and Omega of his happinesse the man doth not live so much as Christ lives in him and every day he seeth an indispensible Gal. 2. 20. need of Christ and what abundant cause he hath to bless God for Christ who is made to him wisdome righteousness sanctifitation and redemption Note 3 3. Usually some reigning lust keeps company with Civility Civility is but a freer slavery one way or other Satan holds them captive by one fetter of sin or other they are entangled I have observed commonly this sin is Covetousness The young man in the Gospel was a civil honest man a fair Dealer in the world and had kept all those sayings from his youth as to the letter of them but his possessions were a snare unto him at the narrow Bridge of self-denial Christ and Matth. 19. 22. his soul parted There is some sweet morsel rolled under the Tongue some delicate Dalilah lying in the Bosome some reigning sin kept with greater allowance from Conscience Commonly this Viper is worldly-mindedness Note 4 4. Civil men take more care about their actions than about their lusts wrath pride concupiscence vain worldly unclean thoughts and affections are digested because the conversation seems to be smooth and fair these crawling Vermine swarm without controul Civilility is all for an outward carriage it minds not the frame of the heart nor the right tempering of the affections But holy Paul complaines of the law in his members and of the motions of lust within him which fall not under the cognizance of the light of Nature Rom. 7. 7 23 24 25. the first risings of sin the least rebellion of Nature forbidden in the Tenth Commandment a true Saint is sensible of and deeply humbled for But the affairs of the inward 1 King 6. 8. man the workings of the heart are not minded by meer civil men but the eyes of sound Christians like the windows of the Temple are broad inwards they look much within they mourn over the sins of their hearts as well as over the sins of their lives 2. Formality or pretended grace The Apostle speaks of true holiness Ephes 4. 24. in opposition to that which is feigned and counterfeit Ye may discover it also by these four Marks Mark 1 1. False grace is acted from forreign considerations The Hypocrites principles of motion are without him as popular applause carnal respects by-ends just as Puppets that want the natural motion of life within them and are artificially moved by an outward He may be forma assistens to him but not forma informans in him force The Spirit of God may assist an bypocrite in some duties but he is not in him as an informing quickning renewing principle But true Grace in the heart of the sanctified is like a living Fountain naturally bubling up and working towards God and heaven out of his belly shall flow forth Rivers of living Joh. 7. 37. 38. Waters True Grace hath an inward propensity a natural tendency to comply with the will of God The Law of God is written in his heart he delighteth in the Law in the inner-man Rom. 7. 22. This is the peculiar Character of a Saint which no Formalist or hypocrite in the world can do Mark 2 2. False grace is shy of Gods sight and presence Hypocrites neither can nor do appeal Hypocrita cupit videri justu● Hypocrita in verbis sanctus in corde vanus intus Nero foris Cato c. to God for their sincerity nor do they live as in the eye of his Omniscience and Omnipresence but their chiefest care is to blind
divine Justice in finishing Transgression in making an end of sin in bringing in everlasting Righteousnesse and so in bringing us to God 1 Pet. 3. 18. Now as he is our merciful and faithful High Priest so he is our Righteousnesse 1 our Justifyer endowing us with a perfect Righteousness Justitia hoc est justificator noster donans nos vera justitiâ coram Deo per fidem Ad sacerdotale munus Christi hoc pertinet Pareus in 1 Cor. 1. 30. before God through faith this belongs to the Priestly Office of Christ Jesus Christ is the Author or the procuting cause of our justification as he is the Author of our eternal Salvation And this he Heb. 5. 9. doth two wayes 1. By making an Atonement for us on Earth 2. By making intercession for us in Heaven He hath made reconciliation for us by his blood upon the Crosse Rom. 5. 10. and he doth continue to make intercession for us by the prevalent and loud cryes of the same blood in Heaven Heb. 12. 24. He is gone up to Heaven to appear in the presence of God for us just as Aaron a type of Christ Exod. Heb. 9. 24. 28. 12 29. and 30. verses was to bear the name of the children of Israel a figure of all the Elect of God engraven in precious stones upon his Shoulders and upon his Heart when he went into the holy Place for a memorial before the Lord continually So our Lord Christ is entred into the Heavens with red and glorious Garments to appear in the presence of God for us there is not the least Believer but his name is as it were engraven upon the Shoulders Breast-plate and Heart of Christ Of all cryes the cryes of blood are the strongest the loudest whether for or against a guilty person Abels blood cryed aloud to God for vengeance but this blood of Gen. 4. 10. sprinkling speaketh better things than that of Abels it pleads sues presses hard for a discharge from all thy sins and enemies it cryes aloud for mercy peace and pardon Lord saith Christ here is my price and my purchase my Redemption and my redeemed Ones here is my Righteousness and here are the persons justified by it whatever charge or guilt lyes upon them here are the shoulders that have sustained the weight of thy wrath which was their due upon these shoulders and in this heart thou mayest behold all their names engraven acquit and absolve them for my sake Father I will that they be righteous by my Righteousness and glorious with my Glory My tears my stripes my wounds my groans my anguish my Blood the tortures of my Body the torments of my Soul do all pray and plead prevailingly that all believing sinners be justified and saved Thus Christ appears in Heaven with red Garments with Garments rolled in blood and with the whites of peace pardon justification and absolution upon the red with all the names of his justified sanctified ones engraven upon his shoulders and upon his heart before the Lord continually to present his everlasting Righteousness to the Father for us to present our persons as righteous and spotless enwrap'd in that glorious Robe of Righteousness and to impropriate and apply his everlasting Righteousness to us Thus I have proved that Christ is our Righteousness 2. We come in the next place to open the Vox justificandi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inde justificationis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propriè fere semper forinseca forensis actio est judicis judicii scilicet in rei absolutione condemnationi opposita Synop. Pur. Theol. p. 434. Justificare absolvere à est morte non condemnare Syntag. Polan p. 455. meaning of the word justifie Justification is a Law-state and the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are verba forensia or judicial or Court-Terms taken from Courts of Justice It imports the absolution of a guilty person the word justification is in holy Writ opposed to condemnation To justifie saith Polanus is to absolve from death not to condemn Though justificare sometimes may note as much as justum facere if you respect the notation of the Latin word as magnificare importeth to magnifie or make great neither is it to be doubted but that the Lord doth constitute or make those just whom he justifieth they are just both by the imputation of Christs Righteousness which is out of them in Christ as being his personal righteousness and by infusion of righteousness as it were by influence into them from Christ their Head to the faithful belongs a two-fold Righteousness the one of Justification the other of Sanct●fication I shall make it evident saith the Reverend Downam's Treatise of Justification p. 2 3. learned Bishop Downame that the Hebrew Hitsdique and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is verbum forense a judicial word taken from Courts of justice which being attributed to the Judge is opposed to Condemnation and signifieth to absolve or to give sentence with the party Justificare est justum reputare justum pronunciare questioned Thus far he So that to justifie both from Scriptures and the writings of the Fathers is as much as to absolve or a quit a believing sinner from guilt and condemnation and to accept him as righteous through the righteousness of Jesus Christ To justifie is to repute and pronounce a man just or righteous Justification is opposed to Condemnation Rom. 8. 33. it is God that justifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. 1. i. e. acquits absolves who shall condemn so the word is taken Deut. 25. 1. The Judges are commanded to justifie the righteous and to condemn the wicked likewise Prov. 17. 15. he that justifies the wicked and condemns the righteous they are both an abomination to the Lord. So also is this word taken in a Law sense Psalm 143. 2. Lord enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man be justified Rom. 5. 16. Judgment was by one to condemnation but the free Gift is of many offences to justification Now the Scripture speaks of a righteousness of the Cause and of a righteousness of the Person 1. Of the Cause When a man in other 1. Justitia Causae respects sinful may be said in this or that particular cause or matter to be innocent or just as in the case of Abimelech touching the Gen. 20. 5. matter of Sarah he pleads the integrity of his heart and the innocency of his hands c. 2. Of the Person That is the universal 2. Justitia Personae conformity of the whole man and of all his actions to the holy Law of God and this twofold 1. Legal 2. Evangelical 1. Legal By the Law and the works thereof hereby the Man Christ Jesus and none Hac justificatione Angeli sancti fruuntur