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
A40515 Select sermons preached upon Sundry occasions by John Frost ... ; now newly published together with two positions for explication and confirmation of these questions, I. Tota Christi justitia credentibus imputatur, 2, Fides justificat sub ratione instrumenti. Frost, John, 1626?-1656. 1657 (1657) Wing F2246; ESTC R31718 315,416 365

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

5. 9. The Doctrine of universalitie of grace destroys all thankfulness unless to our selves makes all the sacrifices of praises needless sacrificing to our own nets applauding the power and freedome of our own wills It is discriminating grace will raise the soul to thankfull admirations of God in that language of Judas not Iscariot Lord how is it that thou wilt manifest thy self unto us and not unto the world John 14. 22. II. To love both to God who thus peculiariz'd you and to love one another However your heads may differ let your hearts unite you are Temples of the same Spirit spouse of the same husband members of the same bodie 1 Cor. 12 25 27. and what greater argument of love you are purchased by the same bloud sanctified by the same Spirit objects of the same special love and I am sure the Apostle from hence argues strongly for brotherly love Beloved if God so loved us saith he 1 John 4. 10 11. we ought also to love one another You are eodem sanguine glutinati as Augustine expresseth it and is Christ divided It is the check the Apostle gives to the uncharitable dissentions of the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 1. 13. And lastly you are designed for the same glorie III. To special service for and obedience to God Discriminating mercies are in all reason to be improved as arguments to peculiar services 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5. 47. What do ye more then others as if he had said more is expected from my disciples then from the Publicans as your priviledges are peculiar so should your services be too For 1. This is the proper intendment of distinguishing mercie the end of God's peculiar dispensations to a person or nation Observe what God saith of Israel Deut. 26. 18. The Lord hath avouched thee this day to be his peculiar people but to what end that thou shouldest keep his commandments Hath God distinguished thee by Electing love the end of it is thy Holiness He hath chosen us that we may be holy and without blame before him Ephes 1. 4. Hath he peculiariz'd thee by Effectual grace and Vocation It is that thou mayst be holy 1 Thessal 4. 7. For God hath not called us unto uncleanness but unto holiness Art thou Christ's by a peculiar purchase the end of it is thy Holiness 1 Cor. 6. 20. For you are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirits Hath God exercised any peculiar providences towards thee the end of them is thy obedience The Psalmist having spoken of all the Providences God exercised over Israel infers this as the just issue of them That they might observe his statutes and keep his laws Psal 105. 45. So God's peculiar Covenant engageth to Holiness for it is mutual The end of God's peculiar Chastisements is his peoples Holiness Hebr. 12. 10. God chasteneth saith he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness And then the hopes of that peculiar Glorie we are designed to should engage to Holiness 1 John 3. 3. Every man that hath this hope purifieth himself The special Sealing of the Spirit tends to this that we be careful that by sin we do not grieve him Ephes 4. 30. so the end of Communion with God is Holiness what else makes the Angels and Saints in heaven more holy but this Thus you see you frustrate the end of Mercy if it doth not make you more holy 2. It is the most ingenuous return of gratitude which we can make to God for his distinguishing love Sins under mercies as they have the highest guilt so are arguments of the greatest disingenuitie What Do you thus requite the Lord Deut. 32. 6. Obedience is the best thankfulness without which our verbal returns for mercy are but a complement The thankfulness of the life redounds to the honour and praise of God in the world and this God expects from his peculiar people if you consult that pregnant Scripture 1 Pet. 2. 9. Ye are a chosen peculiar people that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you c. Otherwise God is thus reproached by your sinfulness Yonder 's a people who boast of being God's peculiar do not you observe they live as other men do they can cheat in their shops dissemble in their dealings be frothy and vain in their discourses live in neglect of Familie-duties as deeply immersed in the love of the world as compliant with every foolish fashion as ambitious of honour as false in their promises as others whom they censure as of the world and cast-awaies But now saith Christ Herein is my Father glorified if ye bear much fruit c. John 15. 8. But how shall I know whether I be one of God's peculiar people Question or not The Text is hemmed in with a double evidence so that which Answer way soever you cast your eyes you may discover if you examine impartially 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purifie goes before and zealous of good works comes after so that inward Purity and outward Conformitie a pure Heart and a holy Life are the two special Evidences of God's peculiar for they are both the issue and fruits of that faith whereby we have a peculiar interest in Christ Acts 15. 9. Purifying their hearts by faith there is the former and for the latter Gal. 5. 6. Faith works by love I. Then art thou inwardly purified from spiritual pollutions else thou art none of God's peculiar as yet Thou becamest mine saies God Ezek. 16. 8. What then Why then washed I thee with water yea I throughly washed away thy bloud verse 9. Else thou art no branch engrafted into Christ for every branch he purgeth John 15. 2. II. Art thou holy in thy outward conversation God's peculiar are an holy people Deut. 14. 1 2. For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God and the Lord hath chosen thee to be a peculiar people To pretend to a peculiarity of interest in God while men willingly continue wallowing in the mire of iniquitie is a desperate soul-damning presumption If you would lay any claim to God's privie-Seal of Election you must bring and be able to shew the broad-Seal of Holiness Mark how the Apostle joyns these together 2. Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God standeth sure having this seal The Lord knoweth them that are his And Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity yea and follow Holiness too The Apostle speaks fully 2 Corinth 7. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text Zealous not cold or luke-warm but chearfull and industrious in the practise of Pietie and thus you may evidence your selves to be of that peculiar people whom Christ gave himself to redeem so saith the Text Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from
are or at least resolve to be holy 3. Every ungodly and wicked man is really prejudiced against Scripture-light and knowledge Joh. 3. 19. Light is come into the world and men love darkness So many corruptions and lusts have all wicked men reigning in their hearts so many real bolts and bars they have against the true Scripture-knowledge it is irkesome and troublesome to them to entertain that truth which will discover their sins and so break and disturb the security they have been in a long time and therefore they rather with those in Job desire God to depart from them As the Philosopher observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist M●ta●● lib. 1. men desire a doctrine suitable to their corruptions and this is the reason of that variety of doctrines and religions now in the world which the doctrine of the Scripture will not in the least comply with and that is the true cause of mens averseness from an effectual entertainment of the Gospel and of their shutting eyes against Scripture-light and convictions The Philosopher gives this as the reason why young men are not fit scholars in morality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they are guided by lust and passion and the Apostle gives the same reason why some are learning and never come to the knowledge of the truth because they are such as are led about by diverse lusts in 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. That soul which is resolved to give up it self unto obedience of the Scripture is that which will readily embrace the doctrine of Scripture because inwardly complyant with and conforming to the will of God Whereas a wicked man when he searches Scripture he hath something within him that rises up against the truths of God a carnal minde within him that is enmity to God which disputes the commands and quarrels with the truths of God ● A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Heathen that is What we learn that we may do while we do it we further learn it As knowledge must regulate our practise so our practise will promote and increase our knowledge of the Scripture VII The praying searcher that interchangeably reads and prays This the Wise-man directs unto Prov. 2. 4 5. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord c. This is an excellent way sure for as the Scriptures will afford us matter for our prayer so prayer will lead us into the knowledge of the Scriptures Searching scripture will enflame our zeal in prayer and prayer will promote and facilitate our study of Scripture Moses when the Ark set forward and when it rested again prayed devoutly as we may read Numb 10. 35 36. so when you set upon reading of the Scripture and when you rest from it do it with prayer S. Austin August prafat ad lib. de Doct. Christ hath two remarkable stories to this purpose One of Antonius the Hermite who was so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he could though he knew not one letter fully understand and by heart repeat the whole Bible the other of a certain servant converted from Heathenisme to Christianity Qui triduanis precibus obtinuit ut codicem oblatum stupentibus qui aderant legendo percurreret who by praying three daies obtain'd of God that he read through the Bible when offered him to the amazement of them that were present This was it the Apostle directs unto If any want wisedome let him ask it of God Jam. 1. 5. and David practised Psal 119. 18. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous thing out of thy law God infuseth not knowledge into us by miracles immediately as into the Apostles but by the use of means compare Prov. 2. 4 6. The freeness of God in giving does not dismiss us from endeavouring for though faith is said to be the gift of God Ephes 2. 8. yet it is said also faith comes by preaching Rom. 10. 17. Prayer is the way to come by the spirit which discovers the depths and treasures of the Scriptures Luke 11. 13. Your heavenly father will give the holy spirit to them that ask him This is the onely key to unlock those rich cabinets wherein are contained those precious jewels of saving truth and knowledge VIII The believing searcher and indeed without the eye of faith we are like to do little good in searching the Gospel is an hidden thing saith the Apostle to them that perish 2 Cor. 4. 3. who those are you may see at vers 4. those who believe not They who come not with faith may search into the letter and historie of Scripture but not into the mystery and spirit of Scripture The Apostle tells us the Jews had a veil upon their hearts and their minds were blinded while Moses was read 2 Cor. 3. 14 15. viz. the veil of unbelief that they could not see through those ceremonies or those clearer prophesies which in the old Testament were made of Christ So there is still a veil of unbelief upon every natural mans heart which veil is done away in Christ ver 14. viz. by faith in him then God reveales himself to such God when he manifested himself to Moses put him into a rock Exod. 33. 22. and this wo●k resembled Christ God discovers himself and his minde to those who are in Christ by faith We have the minde of Christ saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 16. that is we believers Scriptura peculiaris est filiorum Dei schola saith Calvin They are the onely good scholars who read the Scriptures with faith The Scriptures are able to make perfect the man of God in 2 Tim. 3. 17. The man of God Nihil hic faciet filius hujus seculi saith Musculus A carnal heart will hardly be a proficient here IX The Christian searcher He who searcheth Scripture that thereby he may come to know and enjoy Christ and indeed without this all is in vain The most curious exact learned searcher doth but search them to his own destruction if he doth not hereby come to a saving knowledge of Christ They testifie of me saith Christ and therefore or to this end that you may know me whom they testifie of Search In searching the Scriptures search that you may know me And this brancheth it self into two parts First No knowledge of Christ without the Scriptures The things that are seen may lead us to the invisible things of God that is his eternal God-head and power as it is in Rom. 1. 20. but these lead us not to the knowledge of Christ Secondly The whole Scripture gives us a full testimony and discoverie of Christ more darkly in the Old more expressely in the New Testament That testifies of Christ to come this of Christ as alreadie come this is but the fulfilling of that Our Saviour here sends these to the Old Testament in which they were exactly versed so as Joscphus cont Appion l. 2. Josephus
the Spirit in 2 Cor. 4. 6. and Prayer is the way to come by the Spirit Luke 11. 13. How much more shall your heavenly Father give the Spirit to them that ask him The third argument for Scripture-search is Scriptures authority which is divine and infallible S. Paul affirms that it is of divine inspiration in 2 Tim. 3. 16. and it is said to be a more sure word of prophesie by S. Peter 2 Pet. 1. 19. And herein I shall demonstrate this one thing That these Scriptures are the word of God That these Scriptures are the word of God I shall not trouble you with a multitude of arguments to evince it but yet I could not wholly omit it because all who do profess it do not really and fully believe it as I shall evidence to you anon and the faith of many Christians through the strength of Satans temptations and the corruption of their own hearts may sometimes doubt of it that I may therefore convince some and strengthen others I shall present to you these considerations I. The testimony of the Church is not the first or chief ground nor is it a sufficient argument of that faith whereby we believe the Scriptures to be the word of God Into this indeed the Church of Rome doth ultimately resolve its faith Bellarmine openly professes that He would believe the Bible no more then the Alcoran if it were not for the testimony of the Church It is true the outward testimony of the Church may be a motive or a means of our belief of the Scripture for so she is called the pillar and ground of truth to hold it forth and declare it as the pillar holds forth the Princes Proclamation but adds no authoritie to it It may inform us of the truth but not perswade us of the truth The Church hath the charge of Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Oracles of God being committed to her as it is said of the Jewish Rom. 3. 2. as a Trustee of Divine truth to maintain uphold expound and declare Scripture but not the first ground of our belief of it As the Queen of Sheba believed the report of Solomons wisdome by others but more when she heard it her self or as the Samaritans believed because of the report of the woman but more when they heard him John 4. 30 40. The Church may hand the Scriptures to us and we may believe them by but not for the testimony of it Or as a mother may shew the childe the sun and tell him that is the sun but yet the sun manifests its self by its own light so the Church may tell us this is Scripture but it is impossible that the ultimate resolution of a divine faith of supernatural truths should be made into any humane and so consequently fallible and uncertain testimony when as we are to judge of the true Church by the Scripture Nor can this be a conviction to any that the Scriptures are the word of God for either it must be to believers and to them it is unnecessary for they have already effectually entertained it upon other grounds viz. The inward evidences of the word and Testimony of the Spirit and it cannot be to unbelievers for they reject the Church as well as the Scripture and therefore they must be convinced of the true Church before they will admit its testimony and of this there is no other possible means to convince them then by the Scriptures which must be first evidenced unto them Therefore II. There are in Scripture sufficient evidences and convictions even to ingenuous reason that it is the word of God And this is necessary for though after any testimony appears to be Divine reason must not be suffered to dispute and question the thing so attested yet I cannot see why reason should not be used as an instrument or means to evidence such a Revelation to be divine otherwise though I may be otherwise convinced my self it is impossible to convince an Heathen or gainsayer that this is the word of God Our faith is not irrational and though the things revealed be above reason yet that it is supernaturally revealed must be evidenced to reason otherwise my belief is rash precipitate and irrational nor can I give a reason of the hope that is in me as the Apostle requires 1 Pet. 3. 15. Therefore omitting those which I conceive less evincing I shall lay down these few considerations to evidence this 1. Consider the sublimitie of and mysteriousness of the things revealed in Scripture such as the most prying reason could never search into nor the most improved raised parts and abilities ever reach such as the Philosophers never dreamt of such is the fall of man and our corruption by it of which if the Philosophers had some ruder notions yet the means of mans sin and misery viz. by the wilfull transgression of that Covenant made between God and man of not eating of the tree of knowledge c. this they were wholly ignorant of and much less could reason fathom the depth of that Wisdome and Mercy which Scripture discovers in mans recovery by Christ this is a depth which the very Angels desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 1 Pet. 1. 12. to look earnestly into That Apostatized fallen miserable man should again be brought to life by the death of the onely Son of God and that in a way of such unspeakable wisdome and security to all the attributes of God with such a full reconcilement of justice and mercy is a mysterie reason can scarce apprehend now it is revealed much less discover and finde out at first So God's entring into Covenant with lapsed man an Unity in Trinity Redemption by the bloud of Christ Regeneration by the Spirit you know Nicodemus's reason was non-pluss'd here with a Quomodo How can this be John 3. Resurrection of the body being crumbled into dust A last judgement before the tribunal of that Christ who was crucified here these are things which the eye of reason could never have discerned and which the most acute profound Philosophers knew nothing of What Plato knew of God it is very probable he had from Moses of whom he was very studious if we will believe Clemens Alexandrinus S. August l. 7. c. 21. confess S. Augustin confesseth when he had diligently perused Plato he found nothing of our miserie by sin and recovery by Christ nothing of the blotting out the hand-writing of Ordinances by the blood of Christ Hoc illae literae non habent saith he He could finde none there crying out with S. Paul Quid faciet miser homo c. What shall miserable man do Who shall deliver him None crying out Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ yet saith he Haec mihi inviscerabantur miris modis cùm minimum Apostolorum tuorum legerem c. Lord these truths were incorporated in me when I read the least of thy Apostles And truely one end of Gods giving us
Jews pricked at the heart and a John Baptist convince a Herod of his unlawfull and wicked enjoyment of his beloved Herodias How doth the word of God oft drive men from those forts and succours and delusions which they had framed to deceive themselves and encourage themselves in the ways of sin as others sin as well as I what saith Scripture to this Follow not a multitude to commit iniquity and Though hand Exod. 23. 2. Prov. 11. 21. joyn in hand the wicked shall not be unpunished I may deferre my repentance from youth to old age saith another See what Scripture saith to this Remember thy Creatour in the daies of thy youth c. and Eccles ' 12. 1. Hebr. 3. 15. Rom. 6. 23. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts This is but a peccadillo saith another Scripture saith The ways of sin is death Such flatteries and deceits the deceitfull heart of man is apt to gull it self with The power of the word is to such as the voice of God was to Adam Where art thou and then he could lie hid no longer it convinceth and discovers them This is the effect of preaching the word as the Apostie saith If all prophesie to wit of the nature of sin Gods wrath against it and the like as Pareus glosses if there come in one that believeth not he is convinced of all he is judged of all and the secrets of his heart are Mr. Dod. made manifest When a reverend Divine amongst our selves had by a powerfull Sermon convinced a licentious wretch who heard him he fretting and very angry as wicked men cōmonly are at a convincing Minister came to him and charged him with preaching that Sermon against him out of malice and envy he returned him this answer If this Sermon had been preached in the dark when I could not have seen my Auditors this very word of God would have found thee out and convinced thee of thy sins In a word Rectum verum est mensura sui obliqui therefore Scripture containing all fundamental doctrines of faith and essential duties of holiness necessary to salvation must consequently be sufficient to confute and reprove all contrary sin and errour 4. That he may instruct the people and inform them of their whole duty Here they must expect and require their knowledge for The Mal. 2. 7. Priests lips shall preserve knowledge and the people shall require it at his mouth Unless their doctrine distill as the dew the field of the Lord the Church must needs be barren in holiness and fruitless in knowledge This is the last vse the Apostle saith the Scripture is profitable for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for instruction in righteousness 2 Tim. 3. 18. True indeed may the people say it is fit and necessary that Objection Apollos's Ministers should be mighty in the Scriptures but we hope we may be excused from searching the Scriptures it is not our duty we are to expect it from our teachers Indeed this is Rome's language If you were at Rome you might Answer be exempted that Church will gratifie you in this and thank you too they account it no better to suffer lay-men to read the Bible then sanctum canibus margaritas ante porcos projicere it is the expression of Hosius to cast pearles before swine or that which is holy to dogs you are little beholding to them for this But believe it though Antichrist will exempt you from reading the Scripture Christ will not who enjoynes it as a duty upon all to search the Joh. 5. 39. Scriptures and observe the argument he useth to enforce this duty for in them ye think to have eternal life If then you expect any interest in that happiness you are concerned and engaged in this duty of Scripture-search which is both commanded and cōmended in Scripture Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome Coloss 3. 16. Acts. 17. 11 saith S. Paul and it was the commendation of the Bereans that they searched the Scriptures daily whether the things that Paul and Silas preached were true or no. The Church of Rome accuse and charge this promiscuous searching of the Scripture as the cause of Heresy pride and faction I deny not Scripture misunderstood is sometimes abused to promote these ends but this is not the natural and proper effect of reading the Scripture the ignorance of which if we believe our Saviour is the cause of Heresy and error Ye erre saith Christ to Matt. 22. 29. the Sadduces not knowing the Scriptures and indeed if wee be robbed of the Compass of Scripture we must needs split upon the rock of errour In a word then it is the Tyrannie of Rome to withhold it and it will be your sin to neglect it Application 1. This condemns and corrects that general neglect and undervaluing of Scripture which now Atheisme is justly feared to be growing upon us prevailes in the world men preferring every thing else before this The Papist exalts his unwritten Tradition above the written Word Pari pietatis affectu suscipimus veneramur may seem a modest determination of the Tridentine convention and much less then their practise speaks The Enthusiast magnifies his pretended revelation and Scripture to him is but a dead letter and the searcher of it but literalis and vocalis too But let us return home and see whither we can plead not guilty where are our Nepotians who by diligent perusal of the Scripture make their souls Bibliothecam Christi as Hierom saith of him Where shall we finde an Alphonsus who is reported to have read the Bible ten times over with a comment or like that Transylvanian Prince whom Maccovius reports to have read the Bible over twentie seven times Where shall we finde a David who meditates in the Law of God day and night preferring it before the honey and the honey-combe Psal 19. 10. Psal 119. 72. Job 23. 12. before thoughts of gold and silver or a Job who esteemeth the words of Gods mouth more then his necessarie food Nay have we not many proud cursed Politians who think it a disparagement to their parts and learning to condiscend to the studie of Scripture and as he said think they never spend their time worse then in reading it Do not idle Romances and lascivious Poems and the like take up the most of our youth-studies nay amongst us who look towards the Ministrie doth not a nice and intricate School-man an uncertain Father an antiquated Rabby justle out the Scripture I speak not against those in their due order and measure but I would not have Hagar drive Sarah out of doors I would not have the Hand-maids courted and the Mistress neglected If they be our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let Scripture be our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Preposterous studying these before we be well grounded and setled in Scripture-knowledge doth oft fill the soule with such
notions speculations and prepossessions as we shall finde it very hard afterwards to vail and submit to the simplicitie and truth of the Gospel Nay if the most pious practicall devout writings of men with which this age to the glorie of it abounds hinder our studie of Scripture it is our sin and provocation and a high disparagement of the word of God Nor indeed can we with the same confidence and securitie read them as being oft mixed with errour interest and inconsiderate zeal and those other imperfections which the frailtie of the best spirit betraies them to as waters though never so pure in the fountain will relish of that mine they run through as we may promise our selves from these Oracles of God penned by the unerring dictates and guidance of the Spirit of God It is well known what worth Luther's works are of yet he professeth Odi libros meos saepe opto interire quòd metuo nè morentur lectores abducant à lectione ipsius Scripturae quae sola omnis sapientiae fons est That he hated his own books and oft wished them perished lest they should be a means to withdraw men from the studie of the Scripture which is the onely fountain of true and saving wisdome 2. This should put every one of us upon the search and studie of Scripture Which that we may do successfully 1. Be much in prayer that 's the key to unlock these cabinets of precious jewels S. Augustine hath two remarkable stories to this purpose the one of Antonius the Hermite who was so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God that he could though he knew not one letter fully understand and by heart repeat the whole Scripture the other of a certain servant converted from Heathenisme to Christianitie who triduanis precibus obtinuit codicem oblatum stupentibus qui aderant legendo percurreret by three days continuing in prayer had such revelations that to the admiration of the beholders he could read the whole Bible This is the course the Wiseman directs to Prov. 2. 3 4 5. If thou searchest after knowledge and liftest up thy voice for understanding c. Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God This S. James exhorts to James 1. 5. If any man lack wisdome let him ask of God This David practised Open my eyes as he praies to God Psal 119. 18. that I may see wondrous things out of thy Law The Spirit is the best nay onely rerevealer and true interpreter of Scripture What is said of the Jews that when Moses is read the vail is upon their heart may be 2 Cor. 3. 15 16. Rev. 3. 16. said of every one who is not enlightned by the Spirit of God whose eyes are not anointed with this eye-salve a vail of flesh a vail of ignorance a vail of corruption is upon their hearts To think to discover the things of the Spirit without the Spirit is to dream of seeing without light now prayer is the way to come to the Spirit How shall not your heavenly Father saith Christ Luke 11. 13. give the holy Spirit to them that ask him 2. Avoid a proud and prying curiositie this darkens Scripture when men are not content to know what God would have revealed but wrest out of the Scriptures what was never intended in them These are those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which S. Peter speaks of 2 Pet. 3. 16. to whom he therefore saith the Scriptures are dark and obscure who play the Chymists with Scripture and as they endeavour to do with natural bodies extort that out of them which God and nature never put into them How have the forced Allegories obscure Cabbalas impertinent nice Criticismes obscured and darkned revealed truth which I am so charitable as to think rather Essays for exercising mens wits then for interpreting and clearing the Scripture I think it a good way to understand Scripture never to leave the literal sence unless when it is inconsistent and repugnant to the analogie of faith then we must seek a figurative else not as when Matt. 5. 29 30. we are commanded to pluck out our right eye and cut off our right hand which in the letter is repugnant to the command of not killing this must be interpreted figuratively of parting with our nearest and dearest corruptions which are as near and dear unto us as a right hand or a right eye 3. Resolve to practise what you read and understand in Scripture this is the reason men profit no more in the Scriptures they hear out of fashion and custome they read out of curiositie not conscience It is grace in the heart and obedience in the life which makes men fruitfull in Scripture-knowledge upon which the Apostle Peter grounds his exhortation 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7. to adde to our faith virtue to virtue knowledge to knowledge temperance c. he subjoyns the reason v. 8 9. If these things be in you and abound they make you that you shall not be barren and unfruitfull in the work of the Lord Jesus Christ but he that lacketh these things is blinde The Turk writes upon the out-side of his Alkoran Let no man touch this book but he that is pure and the Philosopher gives this reason why a Arist lib. 1. Ethic. cap. 3. young man cannot be a profitable scholar in Moralitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because guided by lust and passion and the Apostle gives the same reason why some were ever learning and could never come to the knowledge of the truth because they were led away by divers 2 Tim. 3. 6 7. lusts on the contrarie nothing improves knowledge more then holiness which David gives as an account of his knowledge Psal 119. 100. I understand more then the Ancients because I keep thy precepts 4. Be diligent in reading the Scriptures which was Pauls charge to Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 13. Give attendance to reading make it thy work and business God is not wanting to the diligent and constant searchers of Scripture When the Eunuch was reading the Prophet Esay God provides him an instructer sends Philip to Acts. 8. 9. him to teach him I shall end all this with the exhortation of S. Paul Coloss 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdome and S. Peters conclusion of his Epistles 2 Pet. 3. 18. shall be the Conclusion of my Sermon Grow in grace and in the Scripture-knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to him be glory both now and for ever AMEN FINIS THESIS DE FIDE JUSTIFICANTE SUB RATIONE INSTRUMENTI Quam SUB PRAESIDIO ANTONII TUCKNEY S. T. D. Ac in eadem Professoris Regii Kalend. Julii 1656. in die Comitiorum CANTABRIGIAE Tuebatur JOANNES FROST Collegii D. Joannis ibidem Socius pro gradu Baccalaureatûs in Theologia CANTABRIGIAE Ex Officina Joannis Field Almae Academiae Typographi Anno Dom. MDCLVII ORNATISSIMO DIGNISSIMOQUE VIRO
which consequently must rust and decay An unprofitable hearer oft makes a cold careless dull preacher and besides God for your unprofitableness may withdraw his assistance and gifts and drie up the breast for your neglect of the sincere milk of the Word 3. As that which sweetens all his enjoyments A large revenue a great living a fair repute a fulness of outward accomodations satisfie not a faithfull Minister while the people remain unprofitable that he sees not the fruit of his labours 4. It is your own concernment and interest For it is sad if the Word preached profits you not for if not this probably nothing else will as Abraham told Dives soliciting for one to be sent from Luke 16. 51. the dead to his brethren If the Word profits you not the case is desperate You had better never have heard of the Word a Turk and an Indian will come off better then you at the last day Mat. 10. 14 15. It will be sad for Capernaum exalted up to heaven in the enjoyment of the word and ordinances at that day for not profiting by them to be thrown down to hell so for those unbelieving Jews here to whom the Gospel was preached as well as to us but the word did not profit them HEBR. 4. 2. The word preached did not profit them THe second ground of not profiting by the word preached is in respect of hearers II. Sermon First A careless negligent non-attendance to the word preached when mens thoughts are not gathered up but roving their eyes gazing about their ears not fixed upon the word of God when they bring their bodies hither as so many carcasses but their souls are elswhere The covetous mans soul is locked up in his chest at home and there idolizing in his thoughts his Mammon of unrighteousness while he should be serving God in the Temple the voluptuous Gallant comes there for fashion in the mean time his thoughts are taken up with the newest fashion or perhaps with his hawks and hounds the ambitious man while taking a nap at Church dreams of honours and preferments so that we may say as Seneca did of the Philosophers schools Magnam hanc anditorum Scnec ●p 108. partem videbis cui Philosophi scholae diversorium otii fit Many make the Church a meeting-place of idleness indeed God complains of this himself Ezek. 33. 31. They come unto thee as the people cometh and they sit before thee as my people and they hear thy words but they will not do them forwith their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousness their thoughts are wandring in the world while their bodies are confined to the Church And this non-attendance is much to be lamented that many whom you shall observe with a constant unweariedness attentive to a ballad idle tale or at a stage-play at an hours Sermon and preaching of the word of God are tired dull heavy drowsie and unattentive so that we may lay it to the charge of our Auditours that Demosthenes reproves the Athenians for that when he made an Oration de Asini umbra they were all very attentive to hear him but making another 〈◊〉 C●s Con. de salute Graeciae they all deserted him Many can lend an eare to a tale a fable or Romance who are negligent and non-attendant upon the word of God and this must needs prove unprofitable upon a double account I. It is so in the acquiring of all other knowledge if he that learns regards not what is read unto him as suppose a scholar his Tutours lectures or an apprentice his masters directions he is not like to profit by them so it is in getting wisdome by the word of God if we would profit by it we must be such as the Auditours were in Luke 19. 47 48. of whom it is said they were very attentive to hear him II. When God comes by his Spirit to make the word effectual to any soul he raiseth it to an holy and careful attention to the word preached This is most evident in that pregnant place Act. 16. 14. concerning Lydia whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things spoken by Paul and how oft does our Saviour provoke the attention of his Auditours by this expression He that hath an ear to hear let him hear You must bring an holy attention of body and intention of minde if ever you intend savingly to profit by the word of God as it is said of those in Acts 8. 6. They gave heed unto those things which Philip spake Secondly The proposall of wrong ends in hearing the generality of hearers do not propound to themselves those ends for which God hath appointed the preaching of the word such are the inlightning strengthning comforting quickning convincing of souls and upon search it will be found but a few come for those ends Some come into the Church as if a man should go into an Apothecaries shop not for a medicine to cure them that were well but for a Recipe to sleep I call to witness the drowsiness and laziness of many Others are Athenian Auditours come onely to hear something that is new Others out of custome because others do Acts 17. 21. and themselves have been accustomed to it Others out of fashion more then devotion Others come to contradict and oppose as the Jews did Paul Acts 13. 45. Others not as they should do willing to be judged by the word of God but to judge it and the preacher for it which make the pulpit not a tribunal before which they should be judged but a bar before which the preacher must be cited censured and judged these come to pick a hole in the preachers coat not out of a conscience of their dutie in hearing and obeying the word of God Others come out of affectation of eloquence as a man goes to an Oration or Comedy and then it is no wonder that whiles he catches at the shadow of Rhetorick as the dog in the fable he looses his spiritual food the bread of life These are like the proud Greeks which seek after wisdome to whom the preaching of the Gospel seems but foolishness Others come perhaps 1 Cor. 1. 13. to promote their interest in the world like those hearers of our Saviour John 6. that followed him for the loaves Others come onely to hear not to learn or practise Sicut in theatrum voluptatis Seneca ep 108. causâ ad delectandas aures as Seneca speaks of some who came to hear Lectures of Philosophy Non id agunt ut aliqua vitia deponant ut aliquam legem vitae accipiant mores suos exigant sed ut oblectamento aurium perfruantur Aliqui cum pugillaribus veniunt non ut res accipiant sed verba c. Others come with their table-books which though good is not sufficient Others to see and to be seen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Clemens expresses it as Clem. pag.
the Pharisees hypocrisie they are enraged against him and plot his death Herod must not endure to hear of his Herodias see Prov. 1. 25. where it is said Ye set at nought all my counsel and would none of my reproof these were proud scorners at the 22. verse and you may easily judge how little like these are to profit He is not like to have his wound healed that cannot endure to have it searched 3. Because God will have nothing to do with such in his Ordinances He gives more grace to the humble but resists the proud James 4. 6. God is his enemy God as I may say every Sabbath keeps open houses every one may come but believe it a proud heart is like to go away without his alms He fills the hungry with good things but sends the rich emptie away Luke 1. 53. and we finde at Isaiah 66. 5. that God speaks comfort to such as tremble at his word not that scoff at it and sleight it as a proud heart doth God pours the oyl of grace and knowledge into emptie vessels and therefore as you desire to profit by the word preached so labour for an humble frame of spirit It is said by the Wiseman Prov. 11. 2. with the lowly is wisdome and to this end I shall suggest onely three notes I. This is the proper qualification of scholars in any science Nothing hinders knowledge more then pride this was intimated in the posture which scholars amongst the Jews were wont to use viz. to sit at their Master's feet so we finde it Acts 22. 3. as an expression of humilitie It is Philo's observation that when the Essens came into the Synagogue each scholar according to their standing was wont to sit at their Masters feet this expression speaks aptness to learn and also a modest humility Quòd si haec reverentia terrenis praeceptoribus debetur quantò magis nos ad Christi pedes jacere convenit ut ex coelesti solio loquenti dociles nos prestemus saies Calvin Calv. in locum We read of Mary Luke 10. 39. that she sate at Jesus feet and heard his word upon which saies S. Augustine Quantò humilior ad pedes Domini sedebat Maria tantò ampliùs capiebat We must cast our selves at the feet of Christ in his Ordinances if we will be his scholars It is said that the people stood at the feet of the mount when the Law was given Exod. 19. 17. so must we sit at the feet of Christ when the Gospel is preached II. This humilitie will make us teachable by the word of God An humble heart is like melted wax which is fit to receive the impression of the word of God and willing to be moulded and fashioned according to it An humble heart trembles at the threatnings and so is like to profit God will dwell with such Isaiah 66. 2. It closes with the commands of it as Cornelius said to Peter Acts 10. 33. We are all here present to hear all that is commanded of God and David tells us that he will hear what God speaks Psal 85. 8. It submits to the reproofes of the word of God it accounts of them as precious oyl whereas a proud heart holds up against the threatnings Psal 141. 5. slights the commands and rages against the reproofs of the word of God That place of the Prophet Jeremiah Jerem. 13. 15. is full and worth our observation Hear ye and give ear be not proud for the Lord hath spoken as if he had said If you continue in your pride you will never give an ear to the word of God But III. To make all sure an humble heart shall have the Spirit of God for its teacher and then such shall be effectually and profitably taught the humble he will teach Psal 25. 8 9. it shall have the Spirit to lead into all truth John 16. 13. The more humble the more of the teachings of God It is said that the Spirit descended upon Christ in the form of a dove the dove is a meek creature to teach us that the discoveries of the Spirit are made to humble hearts Sixthly The sixth ground is carnal reasonings and prejudices in the hearts of men which pre-possessing the soul make the word ineffectual which prejudices while they remain obstruct the soul against the word of God these are as so many bolts upon the doors of our hearts that the word can get no entrance these are naturally in every one of our hearts and they are of two sorts I. Against the word it self II. Against the preacher of it I shall discover and remove some of them I. Against the word it self which although it be admirable in it self and appointed for most excellent ends by God yet are many prejudices against it in mens hearts as 1. The meanness of this Ordinance and seeming outward inconsiderableness of some hours speaking which makes many to disesteem it whence the Apostle calls it the foolishness of preaching 1 Cor. 1. 21. because most men are apt to judge it so The ground of this prejudice is mens non-attendance to the authoritie of God's institution as if a man should consider the matter not the stamp of the coyn which may make baser mettals currant we should attend to Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon it which makes it valuable as the diamond in a ring makes the ring much more precious and as the seal upon a scedule which makes it effectual to the purposes contained in it so is it the institution of God that makes this Ordinance so worthy and considerable and if we would profit by the word we must remove this prejudice against the word for the means of it in it self and come to it as Gods institution and in obedience to his command and then are you like to thrive and profit by it The Apostle gives you this as an account of the Thessalonians thriving under the Gospel that they received the word not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God 1 Thes 2. 13. and this made it to work effectually in their hearts 2. The pre-possession of some politick opinion it may be in compliance of some great ones and the strain of the times hence the word of God finds no entrance much truth is stifled upon this account because it will not comply with mens politick concernments and the opinions they have taken up in compliance with their outward advantages when truth comes to cross these then it is rejected This is no new thing it was so in our Saviours time amongst the chief Rulers John 12. 42. and with the chief Priests and Pharisees John 11. 48. and upon this account both Christ and his doctrine was rejected and hence it is said that the great ones received it not John 7. 48. Thus many make truth to stoop and vail to politick designs and this makes the word of God ineffectual Ahab would not make restitution of Naboth's
19. 10 11. and by Moses his putting off his shoe before God spake and discovered himself to him Exod. 3. 5 6. intimating a putting off our carnal affections and purging our souls before we come to hear the word this is necessarie because to come without this preparation I. Is irreverent You esteem it justly a high incivilitie to press into a Princes Palace with ragged dirtie clothes or to sit at his table with unwashen hands How much do men affect cleanness and studie neatness when they present themselves to the presence of any great man and is it not much more irreverent to appear before God in his Temple in our sins and corruptions May we not justly fear to be an offence to his pure eyes How do men studie words and gestures suitable to the person of any great one to whom they make their applications and doth not a resolved prepared reverence much more become us when we address our selves to God David resolved himself upon this preparation Psal 26. 6. I will wash mine hands in innocencie so will I compass thine altar Thus when Jacob went to worship God at Bethel he purged his house of all the Idols and made his sons to wash their clothes Gen. 35. 2 3. We should not onely have our hearts raised to awfull apprehensions of Gods Majestie and presence but our outward man also composed to a decent becomingness and holy reverence as Jacob said of Bethel Gen. 28. 16 17. How dreadfull is this place And thus did Cornelius when Peter was to preach unto him set himself in the presence of God Acts 10. 33. So should we come with that reverence and preparedness as becomes the presence of God II. Unprofitable Hence that caution Luke 18. Take heed therefore how you hear Thornes grow naturally but seed you know thrives not but when the ground is first fitted and prepared sin encreaseth naturally in our corrupt hearts but they are no fit soil naturally for the word of God they must be first fitted and prepared before the seed will grow and thrive there Unpreparedness makes every duty to be ineffectual as you may see in Job 11. 13 14. Give me leave to allude to that of the Wiseman prepare thy work without and make it fit for thy self in the field and afterward build thine house Prov. 24. 27. so say I Prepare thy self at home and then come to build up thy self in faith and holiness And unprepared hearer will be an unprofitable hearer Eleventhly The eleventh ground is Curiosity when men come to the Word affecting more the elegancy of the expression then the wholesomeness of the truth Cui nullus in dicendo sermo placet nisi Grammaticè fuerit conceptus Dialecticè imaginatus Rhetoricè purpuratus as S. Augustine expresses it Such like not their spiritual food unless it be adorned with the flowers of Rhetorick who regard more how handsome the provision be than how wholesome Hence errour many times handsomely dressed findes more entertainment then a plain truth So men take poyson instead of nourishment thus when men catch more at an elegancy in a Sermon then a promise they may be pleased perhaps but little profited In seed you look not at leaves as you doe in flowers but at the inward vertue whereby it hath an aptitude to fructifie so should we in the seed of the word not prize the outward seeming dress and beauty of it so much as the inward efficacy of it whereby it may fructifie in your hearts and lives Qui maturitatis fructum quaerit despicit amaena camporum saies Chrysologus Chrysolog serm 18. He that desires profit from a field lookes to the ripeness of the corn not to the beauty of the cockle which may more gratifie the eye but not fill the barn and granary so he that desires to profit by the word must not attend the adorning of Rhetorick which may perhaps more please the fancy but not at all rellish the soul such may more gratify the palate but it is not so good for nourishment The affected elegancy of a Sermon may more gratify curiosity but not profit and nourish the soul It is true that S. Augustin observes that propter fastidia plurimorum etiam ea sine quibus vivere non possumus alimenta condienda sunt But they live miserablely that live altogether upon sauces There is another curiosity much like this which makes the word unprofitable and that is a nice squemishness that men nauseate truth that they have heard of before as an ill squeasy stomach which cannot make two meales of the same meat whereas we had need considering our dulness to understand our forgetfulness of what we have heard to have the same truths preached over and over again and yet shall we finde all little enough We may see what was the temper of those in Acts 13. 42. they besought the Apostles that the same words might be taught again the next Sabbath this I speak not to patronize laziness in the preacher but to correct the curiosity of the hearer which makes the word become so unprofitable to them Twelfthly The twelfth ground is Not attending upon a constant settled ministery This is that which God hath used from the first planting of Churches for the edification of his people as appears from Acts 20. 28. and confirmed by the practise of the whole primitive Church Trees oft transplanted can take no firm rooting a rolling stone we say gathers no moss those whose fickle unsettledness prompts them to run from this Minister to that and to settle under none are like to profit very little by the word This S. Paul reproves sharply in his Corinthians 1 Cor. 1. 12 13. He walkes securely that is guided by some fixed star whiles he who followes some meteor is led into some bog or pit so those who walk by the light of some settled Minister as a star fixed to his orb are preserved safe in the way of Religion but those who follow wandring meteors fall into some pit of errour Many thrive and live healthfully on one dish while others surfeit of variety By attending upon a settled Minister you come to be acquainted with his style familiar with his phrase and learn his method which will facilitate and strengthen memory that you may carry away and profit more by him Thirteenthly The thirteenth ground is want of love to the word of God Men come out of custome and not out of a real sense of the want of the word or with any love unto it If men had such affections to the word as David professeth of himself that he had Psal 119. 20. that his soul did even break for the longings he had after Gods word much more would they profit by it If with Job they prized it more then their ordinary food Job 23. 12. A man that sits down to his meals when he hath no liking to the meat set before him he will not nourish kindly by it neither will any
1. qu. 23. art 5. p. 94. c. 3. merita sua illis applicasse qui praedestinati electi fuerunt consonant to this is Ioh. 17. 24. I will that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me c. they determinately not others 4. In respect of peculiar communications from Christ which proceed from that special relation which they have unto and peculiar union with Christ as members to the head for though there be a laying out of grace for some in divine purposes yet there is no effectual partaking of it till actual believing for communion is founded in union the bond of which is faith Eph. 3. 17. by means of this union a Christian partakes of grace of sense motion growth life from Christ as the head onely communicates to the united members Christ is the Saviour onely of his body Eph. 5. 23. III. This peculiarity appears in the peculiar workings of the spirit and here is a four-fold peculiarity 1. In respect of peculiar illumination The Apostle speaking of the shortness of natural light as to saving discoveries 1 Cor. 2. 9 14. yet addes ver 10. but God hath revealed them to us by his spirit c. so in that most excellent Scripture 2 Cor. 4. having said ver 3 4. that the Gospel is hid to those that are lost he addes ver 6. an intimation of a special illumination indulged to Saints For however he dealt with others God who commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ David makes this an argument in begging illumination of God I am thy servant saith he Psal 119. 125. give me understanding A wicked man may have much common illumination but such as vastly differs from the illumination of the Saints those puff them up with pride these humble them though I confess this leaven is apt to infect the best as Paul 2 Cor. 12. 7. Notwithstanding those the soul stands at a distance and enmitie from Christ nay oft apostatizeth from the profession of him but Heb. 6. 4. these bring the soul effectually to close with Christ Every man saith Christ Ioh. 6. 45. that hath learned of the Father cometh unto me That 's a head-floating illumination this an heart-affecting illumination that like the light of a glow-worm which hath no heat in it this like the light of the sun warmeth and quickneth where it comes it is called the light of life Joh. 8. 12. it provokes Saints to love God and to trust in God Psal 9. 10. they which know thy name will put their trust in thee Common illumination in a wicked man is like the sun shining upon a dung-hill calls out its stench and corruption whereas this illumination is a heart-changing and a life-reforming knowledge See Ephes 4. 20 21 22. 2. In respect of a peculiar sanctification so in the text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he might purifie unto himself a peculiar people so Tit. 3. 5. He saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost Sometimes Gods peculiar lie wallowing in the mire Ezek. 36. 25. of sin a long time with the rest of the world in the grossest pollutions till God by his grace and spirit sanctifies them to himself as a peculiar Therefore God promiseth in the Prophet his spirit as clean water to sanctifie the people I am sure so it was with the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6. 10 11. And such were some of you but how come they to be otherwise why ye are washed ye are sanctified by the spirit of our God Christ is made Sanctification as well as Righteousness 1 Co● 1. 30. to his people Righteousness by imputation Sanctification by powerfull and gracious energie and operation 3. In respect of peculiar sealing Seals note propriety we seal what is our own God sets the seal of his spirit upon believers to note that proprietie he hath in them it is peculiar to such Eph. 1. 13. in whom also after you believed you were sealed with that holy spirit of promise So 2 Cor. 1. 21 22. who hath sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts It notes that esteem God hath of his people we do not use to seal up trifles but jewels which we most value and his special love to his chosen ones Christ set his spouse as a seal Cant. 8. 6. upon his heart the seat of love thus you finde out of every tribe a peculiar number sealed to God Rev. 7. 5. God seals none with his spirit but whom he hath sealed with the privie seal of election of which the Apostle speaks 2 Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God standeth sure having this seal The Lord knoweth them that are his 4. In respect of special and peculiar communions with God Eph. 2. 18. For through him we both have an access by one spirit to the father through Christ as Mediatour meriting our access to God by the spirit directing and assisting us in our addresses to him 1 John 1. 3. Our fellowship is with the Father and the Son a thing which wicked men are wholly strangers to men in a natural condition are described to be without Christ and God that is can have no communion Eph. 2. 12. with him for as the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 6. 15 16. What concord hath Christ with Belial what communion hath light with darkness fellowship with sin and communion with Christ are inconsistent all communion with God is grounded in a covenant-interest by the fall man lost all communion with God and cannot be restored to it but through a Mediatour in whom we have interest upon the account onely of the covenant of grace but wicked men are strangers to the covenant Ephes 2. 12. communion flowes from union now the spirit being the bond of union must also be the means of Communion and this is the Saints Peculiar whose communion with God here is mediate in Ordinances in which a wicked man enjoys nothing of Gods which is the Saints priviledge here as immediate Communion is their happiness and glory hereafter sed quorsum haec may some say This I shall endeavour now to shew you by some short and plain Application First It serves to silence those who rob God of his peculiar or at Applicati ∣ on least of his glory in having a peculiar people as those do who assert the death of Christ to have been equally intended for all those who lay all the success of Christs undertakings and of grace offered upon the arbitrary uncertain determination and compliance of mans fallible nay corrupted will By which means it may come to pass nay were it so it would come to pass certainly that God should have no peculiar people for the corrupt will cannot encline to close with grace till grace subdue the perversness of it or to speak the best should God have a peculiar upon
had not come for venial sins onely that assertion being built upon a false ground viz. that any sin is in its own nature and demerit venial which is contrary to Rom. 6. 23. The wages of sin is death But that 's certain had there been no sin there had been no need of Christ for Tolle morbos tolle vulnera nulla est medicinae Aug. serm 9. de verbis Dom. p. 198. causa saith Austin What need of a Physitian where there is no disease therefore I observe that each Scripture-expression whereby Christ is set out to us speakes a reference unto this He is called a Saviour Tit. 1. 3 4. and what need of a Saviour where there is no sin He is called a Mediatour 1 Tim. 2. 5. that had bin needless had God and man continued friends a Physitian Isa 61. 1. that speaks a reference to a disease a ransome 1 Tim. 2. 6. that too had been needless had we not been in bondage to sin and satan a surety Hebr. 7. 22. and that needless too had there been no debt contracted no obligation to divine justice a fountain Zech. 13. 1. no use of that if man had not been defiled by sin a reconciler Col. 1. 21. what need of that had not man been estranged and at enmity to God a shepherd usefull when sheep are strayed 1 Pet. 2. 25. 'T is the reason of his name Jesus Matth. 1. 21. Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall save his people from their sins II. Scripture every where asserts the salvation of sinners as the great end of Christs coming into the world as Luke 9. 10. The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost Had not the sheep gone astray the groat been lost the son a prodigal they had never been sought for Luke 18. So Matth. 20. 28. The son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a ransome for many that is for the purchase of their salvation and again Iohn 10. 18. I am come that they-might have life and that they might have it more abundantly and Christ saith he came to call sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. Now it is a known rule sublato fine tolluntur media ad finem if you suppose not the ordination of the means to the end you make them wholly useless for the necessitie of them is relative to the end and therefore supposing man not to have sinned we cannot rationally imagine Christ should have come into the world the Scripture laying down this as the principal end of his coming Two cautions here must be observed 1. This was his principal end not in opposition to the advancing of Gods glory which was the ultimate end of all Christs undertakings The salvation of sinners was but subordinate to this see Ioh. 17. 4. and the glory both of justice and mercy was magnified in this for at the first coming of Christ was proclaimed glory to God on high Luk. 2. 2. Not in opposition to the other subordinate ends as setting Christians an example revealing the way of life and salvation all which were in order to this design as shall appear presently III. Each undertaking of Christ had an influence upon and ordination to this end his birth as the Angels said shepherds Luke 2. 11. his death that was the price of our salvation 1 Pet. 1. 19. he came on purpose to take away sin 1 Joh. 3. 5. to destroy the works of Satan v. 8. to set us an exact example of pietie to reveal to us the way of salvation to perform all those actions to which he was anointed and designed Isa 61. 1. and all these in order to the promoting this great end of his coming the salvation of sinners Now that to which a man orders and levels all his actions we conclude to be his principal end so here c. The prayers he put up Joh. 17. the sorrows he suffered the shedding his tears in the garden his bloud upon the cross was all to this end his conflicts with the storms of the world the frowns and anger of his Father were all in order to this end IV. Scripture highly extolls and magnifies the love of God in sending Christ upon this very account that he came to save sinners as in Rom. 5. 8. The love of God would have been less admirable in sending his Son if he should have taken our nature though we had never sinned Observe I pray with what account the Apostle advanceth the love of God 1 Joh. 4. 10. Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his son to be the propitiation for our sins not for the greater perfection of the world which is Scotus his account The Scripture is wholly silent as to any such reason of Christs coming but as a propitiation for sin V. This was the most suitable means to such an end Christs coming into the world as I have formerly opened it is a most proportionable means for saving sinners for man by sin having endeavoured to Estius lib. 3. pag. 2. lift himself above the condition of his creation could by no means be more suitably restored then by Christs humiliation and taking upon him the form of a servant Man at first affected to be like God eritis sicut dii and God now to save him condescends to appear in the likeness of sinfull flesh Phil. 2. 7. and he humbled himself to the death of the cross c. VI. Consider Christ did not come into the world by assuming our nature for the dignity of it for then he might have assumed the angelical nature when on the contrary the Apostle tells us he took not on him the nature of Angels Hebr. 2. 16. but propter indigentiam Bonavent in d. 3. Art 2. qu. 2. because of our want and indigencie that we had been utterly undone without him and therefore the Angels themselves when they proclaimed the birth of Christ to the shepherds proclaimed this at the end of it Luke 2. 11 14. Good will towards men Therefore had not man been in this indigent helpless hopeless condition Christ had not come into the world Si homo non periisset filius hominis August Tom. 10. p. 195. non venisset perierat homo venit Deus homo inventus est homo VII And lastly this doth most heighten that mysterie of Christs incarnation or coming into the world serves most to enflame Christians hearts with pious affection to and holy admiration of the love of Christ in coming into the world the first because this had not been unless upon the most cogent weightie reasons as the undoing and ruine of one of Gods noblest creatures and the offence and dishonour of an infinite God and the latter that Christ should come and condescend to take our nature and a state of humiliation for our salvation which no other motive could have provoked him
Scripture was to supply the defect of reason This consideration will yet be more valid if you consider whom God was pleased to make use of as instruments to convey these mysteries to us not an eloquent Tully profound Plato but Amos an Heardsman David a Shepheard Paul a Tent-maker and many of the Apostles poor fishermen men no waies enabled by acquired parts Moses indeed was learned in all the wisdome of the Egyptians Acts 7. 22. but there he could not learn the Law and Truths of God where Idolatry was so much overspread So Paul was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel but there he did not learn the mysteries of the Gospel but during that time he thought himself bound to blaspheme the truth and to persecute the Professours of the Gospel which himself afterwards preached Matthew a Publican made a Pen-man of the Scripture All which speak as the admirable wisdome and omnipotent power of Gods grace in conquering their hearts to a closing with the Gospel so Gods revealing these things unto them and in an extraordinary manner furnishing them and acting them by his Spirit to write the Scriptures 2. The exactness of Scripture-holiness such as you shall meet with in no humane writings faith purifying the heart working by love What exact patterns and examples does Scripture hold forth of Purity and Holiness Enoch walking with God Abraham the friend of God and David a man after Gods own heart What strict laws does it prescribe whereas Humane laws tolerate some sins this discovers the wages of the least sin to be death Rom. 6. 23. whereas other Religions are fitted with Fleshly liberties to gratifie mens corruptions witness Mahomet's Alcoran indulging a libertie to the flesh this commands those pieces of holiness which are most contrarie and repugnant to our natural corruptions such as self-denial taking up the cross c. It discovers Original sin and man by the guilt thereof liable to the challenge of God the censure of the law in the first moment of his being and that the least sin every idle word must be accounted for Matth. 12. 36. Had it been an Humane invention you shall have found the flesh gratified as all Religions in the world have some way or other to do it Non habent saith S. Augustin of Plato istae Paginae vultum pietatis hujus lachrymas confessionis sacrificium tuum spiritum contribulatum cor contritum nemo ibi cantat Nonne Deo subdita erit anima mea that is All the Heathen Philosophie hath not so much as a shew of this piety the tears of a broken heart and a contrite spirit which is thy sacrifice no man here crys out with David Let all that is within me praise his holy name Psal 103. 1. The principles of moralitie might deck and granish the outward man but Scripture holiness onely repairs and renews the soul commands the very thoughts and curbs the very first irregular motions of the heart In a word this onely transforms the soul into the image of God from glorie to glorie by the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 18. 3. The excellency of Gospel-promises such as Philosophers never hinted such as the apprehensions of man cannot comprehend now they are revealed much less could they imagine or invent It would be infinite to enlarge I shall therefore instance but in two Ease to troubled wearied souls Nemo ibi audit Venite ad me qui laboratis saith S. Augustine speaking of the writings of Philosophers He could not among all the Platonick Philosophers finde such an expression so comfortable a promise as this Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden No sanctuary for troubled souls but the bloud of Christ which this Scripture onely discovers Isai 40. 1 2. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem c. And another Promise in Isai 43. 2. I will be with thee when thou passest through the fire and through the water not such a Promise in all the writings of men a Promise of Gods gracious presence here and then the Promise of eternal rest in another world The Heathens might dream of an Elysium Mahomet promise a confluence of sensual carnal delights in green meadows to his followers but an happiness made up of an eternal enjoying God by vision and love is a thing their reason could never reach but must certainly be a Divine Revelation as being that which Eye hath not seen ear hath not heard nor can enter into the heart of man to conceive of 4. The nature and event of Scripture prophesies which are such as the eye of omniscience onely can reach as being beyond the foresight of the most perfect creature Moses foretold the seed of the woman should break the serpents head much above three thousand years er'e it was accomplished So Jacobs prophesie of the coming of Shiloh upon the departure of the Scepter from Judah Gen. 49. fell out accordingly a little before Christs birth when the Jews were subjected to the power of the Romans Thus all the Prophets foretelling the calling of the Gentiles a thing so strange that when accomplished many did not understand it and more were offended at it Isaiah prophesied the captivitie and destruction of Jerusalem even then when the kingdome was in a flourishing condition both which afterward fell out Thus Josiah's name and actions were foretold three hundred years before his birth 1 Kings 13. 2. and Cyrus's an hundred years before his birth Isai 45. 1 2. c. And what doth all this speak but a Divine revelation Man may see some things future as they are in their causes but to foretel such future events as are merely dependant upon the Divine will such as these are is onely proper to God Testimonium divinitatis veritas divinationis saies Tertullian The certainty of foretelling is a sure Testimony of Divinity And so we finde that in Isai 41. 22 23. the foretelling such futurities is made a distinction of the true God from all false ones 5. Consider how these Scriptures have gained authority and acceptance from the world by quite contrary means to other writings not by sinfull compliances with the humours and lusts of men which hath much promoted the Alcoran of Mahomet for these it impartially and severely taxes and condemns not insinuated into mens mindes by the pomp and pleasantness of Rhetorick no adornings with the flowers of Rhetorick to make them seem gratefull to the world but by a plain stile and homely expression It gains acceptance by the mysteriousness of the things more then eloquence of the stile so the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 2. 4. My speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of mans wisdome but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power It is the custome of men to slatter Great ones by a complemental dedication and thereby to gain honour and repute to their writings but observe the dedications of the Scriptures they are to the poor condemned scattered Saints at Corinth and elsewhere so 1 Pet. 1. 1.
dangerous But because many things may be pretended for the neglect hereof I shall remove a scruple or two First Object Say some I am unlearned I cannot search into it Answ To this I answer I wish thou wert learned and able to read they self but then know thou oughtest so much the more carefully to attend and conscienciously wait upon the publick reading of the Scripture in these publick assemblies This hath been the constant practise of the Church in all ages as is evident partly in Luke 4 16 17. and partly in Acts 13. 15. where you see in both places it was the usual custome to have the Scriptures read in their publick assemblies and after reading followed preaching The ground whereof was surely as to preserve the purity of Scripture-doctrine in the Church that the people hearing the word so frequently read might not be imposed upon by errour or delusions of men so also for the profit advantage and edification of those who cannot read or search the Scriptures and that the preaching of the word might come with more light and power upon their hearts If you cannot read your selves get others to read unto you and be you so much the more in prayer and meditation Second Object I have so much employment in the world that I have no leisure to search the Scriptures If I should privately search Scripture and attend frequently upon the preaching of the word it would set me behinde hand in the world and hinder my thriving Answ I answer This is much what the Apologie that those made who pretended their farms and oxen as an excuse for not coming unto the wedding Matth. 22. But Christians break through your worldly employments prefer God before the world and your souls before your bodies an act of Religion before all worldly business and believe it you will be no losers by it God will succeed and bless your labours more Never was any man a loser by his Religion See what God promised to the lews Exod. 34. 24. that He would secure their land for them while they went up to Jerusalem to worship the Lord. And what our Saviour said to the Disciples Luke 22. 35. When I sent you out without purse and scrip and shoes lacked ye anything Thou pretendest no leisure the truth is Non parùm temporis habemus sed multùm perdimus saies Seneca Yes we have time enough but we loose too much of it Thou hast no leisure for this but Art thou at leisure for thy pleasures and not for Religion for the world and not for God for shame cheat not your own souls with such vain pretences but as thou desirest the knowledge of Christ here and the enjoyment of Christ hereafter be consciencious in this duty of Searching the Scriptures Use Third It reproves those who believe not this truth that the Scripture is the word of God But you will say This concerns not us Go charge the Turks and Indians with this No my Brethren many of our selves here are guilty of this for though mens mouths profess it yet their hearts deny it as the Apostle speaks of some In words they profess God but in works they deny him Tit. 1. 16. Did men really believe the corruptions of their natures and their constant liableness unto wrath would there be so much pride so much confidence in sin Did men really believe that of every idle word they must give an account would there be so much idle frothy ungodly profane lascivious talking and discourse Did men believe the Apostle Gal. 5. 19 20 21. that all those vices there rehearsed were the works of the flesh would those sins so much abound Did men believe that they who did no wrong to their neighbour should enter into and dwell in the Tabernacle of God Psal 15. 1 5. would there be so much oppression and extortion Did men believe that God will come in flaming fire to render vengeance upon all them that know not God and obey not his Gospel as in 2 Thess 1. 8. would there be such a contented wilfull ignorance of God Truth where it is effectually entertained will have an influence upon the life How do most men hold Gospel-truth in unrighteousness as the Apostle saies the Gentiles did the light of nature Rom. 1. 18. so these with-hold Gospel-truths for certainly wickedness in the life speaks an ineffectual entertainment of the truth Use Fourth It condemns those who do not value and prize the Scripture How did the Heathens prize their Oracles yet the generalitie of Christians do not prize these Oracles of God as the Apostle calls them Rom. 3. 2. Three things there are that make this out unto us 1. Mens wilfull and contented ignorance of Scripture What things we prize we search into How does the Scholar pry and search into those notions he affects and values So would men do if they did value and prize the word aright but the contrarie to this rather is evident by their language Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways Job 21. 14. II. Mens weariness in searching the Scripture What things we prize in the search of them we finde delight but how are men tyred at a Sermon or Sabbath in which the Scriptures are read Is not the language of those Israelites in Amos 8. 5. the language of too many among us When will the Sabbath be ended c. Men are sooner weary of this then any other III. Mens seldom discoursing of Scripture As they said to Peter in another case Matth. 26. 73. Thy speech bewrayeth thee so mens speeches bewray their want of affections to the Scriptures The Scholar upon every occasion is discoursing of those notions which he prizeth but men are far more wise to discourse of the world then of heaven and heavenly things Use Fifth Of exhortation That you would endeavour to get your faith well grounded in this fundamental truth that neither Satan tempt you nor men dispute you out of it for till then I. Your faith will be uncertain and weak as a building without a foundation as a ship without ballast or anchor soon tossed and ship-wrackt and this we may think is the cause of most mens Apostacie in these declining times II. Your lives will be but loose If you be not throughly convinced of your dutie of walking by Scripture-rule you will walk at uncertainties and so amiss III. Your comforts weak if not grounded on Scripture-promises This is one main reason why mens comforts ebb and flow so much they are not grounded on a sure belief of Scripture and if once your faith in this truth waver the foundation of your comfort must needs be shaken For the attaining whereof I can give you no better direction then that you Pray earnestly for the Spirit that he would please I. To open the eyes of your minde illightning and irradiating the understanding to see those arguments and evidences of this truth which lie in the Scriptures So S. John tells us I John 2. 26. These things have I written unto you that no man seduce you And without this all other arguments will be ineffectual to the begetting of a saving and through belief of this truth As Agar when her eyes were opened saw a well of water Gen. 21. 19. so there are arguments to evince this truth sufficient in the Scriptures but they will never be brought home to the soul with a full conviction till the Spirit open our eyes to see them for this is one end why the Spirit of God is given to us and received of us that we may know the things that are freely given unto us by the Spirit of God as in I Cor. 2. 12. 2. To remove that natural enmitie and prejudice that we have against an effectual assent to the Gospel and so sanctifie our hearts as to make it close with and heartily embrace it as the truth and word of God Truth resists our corruptions and they it What is the great Gospel truth but Christ his coming to undertake as our Jesus this we cannot savingly assent unto but by the Spirit as in I Cor 12. 3. No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Spirit Corruption fills the soul with prejudices against the truth The Philosopher observes that the Mathematicks though abstruse in themselves are sooner learnt by a young man dissolute and that hath not tamed his passions then morality because those being mere speculations bring no oppositions to his lusts which the precepts of morality curb and restrain So mens corruptions and unsubdued lusts prejudice the soul against the belief of Gospel-truth which the sanctifying work of the Spirit doth subdue and remove and so disposes the soul for the entertainment of the truth of the Gospel as we see in S. Paul who having his lusts subdued once came to preach that Gospel which before he had persecuted FINIS