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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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to disobey him this renders them inexcusable at the last Secondly To those who are Atheists voto in desire Psal 14. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God the heart is the Fountain of desires he wishes there were no God this Atishem springs from the former men live as if there were no God and then wish there were none guilt always begets fear and fear hatred and that strikes at the being of the object that is hated as Malefactors desire there were no Law nor Judge that they might escape deserved punishment Well their desires are as visible to God as their actions are to men and in the day of Revelation there will be a proportion of Wrath answerable to the Wickednesse of their hearts Thirdly To those who are Atheists judicio in opinion these low running dregs of time afford us many of these Monsters for many to reconcile their principles with their practices that they may undisturbedly enjoy their lusts take this as an Opiate potion that there is no God but this is the most irrational and impious blasphemy 1. Irrational for the Name of God is written in so fair a Character upon this universal frame that even whil'st men run they may read it and therefore God never wrought a miracle to convince Atheisme because his ordinary works convince it Moreover the notion of a Deity is so deeply imprest on the Tables of all mens hearts that to deny God is to kill the soul in the eye to quench the very principles of common nature to leave never a vital spark or seed of humanity behinde 't is as if an ungracious soul should deny he ever had a Father He that does ungod God does unman himself 2. 'T is the most impious 't is formally Deicidium a killing of God as much as in them lies but there are no Atheists in hell the Divels believe and tremble he that willingly quenches that light which is planted in his breast he is passing from that voluntary darknesse to a worse like an offender on the Scaffold he doth but blinde his eyes to have his head cut off he goes from inward darknesse to utter darknesse Use 2 Vse 2. Let us stablish our hearts in the belief of Gods Being in the latter times the World is wholly disposed to Atheisme as the Scripture attributes the ruine of the Old World to their Atheisme and Profanesse so it foretells the universal disease of the last Age will be Atheisme and Infidelity Luke 18.8 Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh shall he finde faith on the earth it were impossible there should be such a palpable contradiction between the lives of men and this fundamental of Religion did they with assurance and certainty believe it Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doth good Atheisme is the root of Profanesse moreover the spiritual mysteries of Religion which exceed the flight of reason are opposed by many upon the account of their Atheisme they question the truth of Gods Being and therefore disbelieve supernatural Revelations let us then treasure up this truth First As the foundation of faith for all the truths of Religion spring from this as their common principle the watering of the root will cause the branches to flourish so the confirming of this will render our assent to the doctrine of the Gospel more clear and strong Secondly As the fountain of obedience the true and sound belief of every holy truth always includes a correspondency in the believer to the thing believed and this must descend from the understanding to the affections and the conversation Now the fundamental duties which we are to pay to God are love fear dependance and submission to the will of his Law and of his Providence 1. Love He is the supreme object of love for his excellencies and benefits Psal 5.11 Let them also that love thy Name rejoyce in thee the Name of God imports those glorious Attributes whereby he hath exprest himself to us all the excellencies of the creature meet eminently in him and all their imperfections are removed in him there is nothing unlovely in worldly things how refined soever they be there is an allay of dregs the all that is in them is mixed with corruption but in God the all that he is is perfection in the most glorious creature as a creature there is aliquid nihili some imperfection it is not exactly fitted for the soul but God is the Adequate and compleat object of our love There is such an infinite eminency in God that we are obliged to a proportionable affection the first and great Commandment is Matth. 22.36 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy strength all the kinds and degrees of our love are due to him we must put no bounds nor limits to it in him it must begin in him it must end a remisser love is a degree of hatred we disparage his excellencies by the coldnesse of our affections O had we but eyes to see his beauty how would all the excellencies of the creatures become a very Glow-worme that only glitters in the night Moreover God planted this affection in the nature of man that it might be terminated upon himself as its centre and treasure as our natural faculties are fitted for their several objects the eye for colours the ear for sounds the palate for tasts so love is fitted for God that being as the Soveraign which sways all our powers Love is called pondus animae that sets all the wheels in the clock of the soul a going this sets the understanding a work in the serious contemplation of the Divine excellencies it diverts the thoughts from other things and fixes them on God it excites strong desires and earnest aspirings after him it stirs up zeal which is flamma amoris love in a flame to remove all obstacles which hinder the most intimate union with him it produces joy when the soul reposes its self in God and with infinite sweetness possesses him it causes the greatest diligence alacrity and resolution in all our ways to please him for love is ever the spring and rule of all our actions such as it is such likewise will they be thus we may see that God as there is in him a union of all excellencies challenges the most intense and vehement degree of our love he being only fitted for it and that our love being a superlative affection is only proper to God and therefore to love any creature without God or in an equal manner to him is to Deify the creature to place it in the room of God and so it renders us guilty of Idolatry in a spiritual sense But such is the ignorance of mens minds and the depravednesse of their wills that few there be who love God 't is true there may be something like love in natural men to
in Faith without wavering is required and he that wavereth is bid not to think he shall receive any thing Yea Jam. 5.15 the efficacy of the prayer of Faith is by him asserted and throughout Scripture by remarkable expressions and instances abundantly confirmed and proved Fidelem si putaveris facies is true as to God Sen. as well as man And that of the Roman Historian Liv. Vult sibi quisque credi habita fides ipsam plerumque obligat fidem But it doth not produce this eminent effect as to Prayer only rendring it acceptable but also 5. Acceptance to the person in all services together with the distinction of and denomination of Good given to habits and actions flowes from Faith Heb. 11.6 vers 4. vers 5. Without Faith it is universally and utterly impossible to please God By Faith our Sacrifices become excellent and we with them we and they please God and therefore it is not without good reason usually accounted that Wedding garment which renders our presence welcome to the Lord in any Ordinance or service Mat. 22.11 Faith taketh away the savor of the flesh which whatsoever is born of the flesh hath and gives a divine tincture and relish it is like a vein of gold running through all duties which makes them precious though still they be somewhat earthly That it is Characteristically denominative of other Graces and distinctive of them f●om moral vertues those splendida vitia may appear if it be considered That even that eminent Grace of Love is nothing without Faith 1 Cor. 13.2 Gal. 5.6 as no Faith without it could be any thing and doth nothing without it Faith worketh by Love not Love but Faith by it Faith being first and chief in being and working Humility was eminent in the woman and Centurion Mat. 15.27 28 Mat. 8.8 10. yet not Humility but Faith was taken notice of this being the main tree that a sprig from its root receiving its excellency from it and by faith accompanying and overtopping it becoming true humility and not a degenerate meanness and abject lowness of Spirit Sorrow for sin would not deserve the name of Repentance nor Confession be ingenuous but for the hand of Faith laid on the head of the Scape-goat Faith believing Gods promise concerning the Moderation Sanctification removal of Affliction worketh in a way of Patience Jam. 1.3 and this Faith accompanying ennobles Christian Patience and makes it not to be Obstinacy or Insensibility So it makes a Christians contempt of the World not to be a Vain-glorious pretence or a sullen morose reservedness Thus might we run through many more 6. Conquest over Adversaries and hinderances in the way to heaven Isa 9.6 Heb. 2.10 Ephes 6.16 Faith in the mighty God the Captain of our salvation who hath led captivity captive disarmed the powers of darkness and triumphed over them and we in him our head makes couragious and that victorious for if we resist the General of the adverse party will flee Jam. 4.7 1. Pet. 5.9 only we must resist him stedfast in the Faith holding up that shield that will repel and quench all his darts For the life of sence in the lusts of the flesh and of the eye 2 Cor. 5.7 and the pride of life the life of Faith is diametrically opposite thereto by Faith not sight c. doth necessarily weaken it as we find in those Worthies Heb. 11. that by Faith denied themselves in so many things pleasing to flesh and blood and did and suffered so many things contrary thereto For the World as that same eleventh of the Hebrews giveth remarkable instance so St. John beareth testimony in most significant phrase to the power of Faith herein 1 Joh. 5.4 calling it the Victory whereby we overcome the world because certain victory attends and shall crown all that fight the good fight of faith against the World as the God and Prince of this world so the pleasures of the world the honors the profits the friendship of the World with their contrary troubles and the snares and temptations of both 7. Confession and profession of the Faith This is an inseparable adjunct and consequent of true Faith though I call it not a property because this may be where true faith is not but where Faith is this will be also all is not gold that glisters but that is not gold that doth not glister Can a man carry fire in his bosom and not discover it Can a man have the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 5.13 and believe yet not speak The Apostolical command is not only that we stand fast in the Faith 1 Cor. 16.13 Heb. 10.23 Rom. 10.10 but also that we hold fast the profession of our Faith for as with the heart man believeth to justification so with the mouth confession is made to salvation Let our unchristianly and irrational deriders of Professors and Profession consider this 8. It giveth the soul a sight of things invisible Heb. 11.27 Joh. 1.18 Exod. 33.20 2 Cor. 4.18 and an enjoyment of things to come By Faith Moses saw him that is invisible Jehovah whom otherwise no man hath seen nor can see and live Yea by the same St. Paul and others of the faithful looked at those eternal good things which are not seen 5.7 for they walked by Faith and not by sight By this the Saints can look within the vail By Faith the soul takes a prospect of the promised Canaan this being the Pisgah of its highest elevation Joh. 8.56 By this Abraham saw Christs day and rejoyced It gives a present subsistence to certain futures and is the evidence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 and not seen for which cause the believers conversation will be in heaven where he seeth his treasure is and where therefore his heart is 9. Joy and Peace in some degree is an immediate effect of true Faith and no true Joy is without Faith though higher degrees flow through Assurance Rom. 15.13 There is joy and peace in believing and a joy of Faith especially when conjoyned with growth Phil. 1.25 It is expressed by leaning and staying upon the Lord which speaks support fixation quietation of mind For which cause a childe of God under desertions prefers his life of Dependance before the Worldlings life of enjoyment and findes some satisfaction in present unsatisfiedness hath some glimmerings of light in the dark night of unassuredness God hath promised to keep him in peace in peace translated perfect peace whose mind is staid on him 2 Isa 26 3. Ch ron 20.20 because he trusteth in him Believing in the Lord brings establishment not only as to the condition and state of the person but also as to the disposition and frame of the mind We finde it in other cases believing the promise and relying on the power and love of another affords a great calm and some secret joy to a mind
language of Moses to the people Sanctifie your selves against to morrow for the Lord will come down amongst you and remember if he be not sanctified by you Ibid. he will be sanctified upon you if he be not sanctified by us in holinesse he will be sanctified upon us in judgment before all the people I will be glorified Christians be much in prayer for your Ministers that they may come unto you in the fulness of the blessing of the Gospel of peace say with the Psalmist Blessed be he that cometh to us in the Name of the LORD Psal 118. Pray for your selves Acts 16.14 that God would open your hearts as he did the heart of Lydia that you may attend unto the things which shall be spoken Pray that you may * Heb. 4.2 mix the Word with faith * 2 Thess 2.10 that you may receive the truth in the love of the truth that you may not be given up to believe lies Pray for others that shall hear with you pray as Christ prayed for his Disciples Sanctifie them through thy truth thy Word is truth John 17.17 Pray that some may be convinced some converted that others may be edified by the Sermons which shall be preach't amongst you 4. Stir up grace 4. Stir up your selves to come to these Evangelical exercises with Evangelical dispositions those especially prophesied of in relation to Gospel-times Isa 2.3 Isa 2.3 Many people shall go and say Come ye and let us go up to the Mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob and he will teach us of his ways and we will walk in his paths In this Gospel-promise you have three Gospel graces Charity Faith Obediential Resolutions Charity 1. COME LET VS GO c. there 's their CHARITY their mutual care and love to one anothers souls they call upon one another and consider one another to provoke one another to a diligent attendance on the means of grace Come ye and let us go gracious hearts would not go to Church or to heaven alone Psal 122.1 I was glad when they said unto me Let us go into the house of the Lord. Faith 2. HE WILL TEACH VS OF HIS WAYS here you have their FAITH they come to the Ordinance with good thoughts of God the same wherewith holy David doth encourage his own soul Good and upright is the Lord therefore will he teach sinners in the way Psal 25.8 though I am evil yet God is good though I am a sinner yet God is upright therefore I shall be taught of God it is good to come to the Ordinance with great expectations upon God You may easily over-expect men and indeed for this God sends you home often with disappointment you come to a Sermon and you say sometimes Oh there is a rare man to preach this day the man fails your expectation and you return censuring and complaining of the Preacher not considering the fault was in your selves God withdrew possibly wonted auxiliaries of grace to punish your carnal confidence Isa 2.22 to teach you to cease from man c. I say you may easily over-expect the creature but you cannot over-expect God Psal 81.10 Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it widen and dilate the desires and expectations of your souls and God is able to fill every chink to the vastest capacity this honours God when we greaten our expectation upon him it is a sanctifying of God in our hearts he will teach us his ways 3. WE WILL WALK IN HIS PATHS Obediential resolution there you have their obediential resolutions highly becoming the children of God if God be so gracious to teach us they resolve not to be so ungracious as to refus● to be taught they come with a desire to know Gods will and go home with a resolution o obey it This is the method of Gospel proficiency John 7.17 If any man will do my will he shall know my doctrine Behold here 's the pattern GO YE AND DO LIKEWISE 5. 5. Rest not in the work done Take heed of perfunctory and customary use of the Ordinance Rest not satisfied in a Popish opus operatum the work done As you should prepare before you come so you should reflect when you go home and not take up with notions in the head without motions in the heart Expressions in the lips when separate from impressions upon the conscience makes empty and formal professors and gives occasion to standers by to suspect the truth of Religion A carelesse Christian that often heareth of the glorious things of the Gospel but feeleth nothing of them doth put a temptation of Atheisme upon himself and of scandal upon others and while himself is not made better by his frequenting the means others become worse while he raiseth up an evil report upon the wayes of God Surely we need much quickning that we may not receive THIS GRACE of God in vain 6. And lastly when you have this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THIS FORM OF SOUND WORDS let it be your care to keep it when ye HAVE it then HOLD it which is the second acceptation of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and brings me upon the SECOND DOCTRINE Doct. 2. SUCH FORMS AND MODULES ARE VERY CAFEFULLY TO BE KEPT But of this in the concluding Sermon if God permit God is HEB. 11.6 But without Faith it is impossible to please God for he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him IN this Chapter faith is represented as the principle of obedience conveying vigour and strength to other graces whereby they become operative unto 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 successe of an Army redounds to the Generals Honour 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 this is intimated in the Text in which we may observe 1. A Proposition But without Faith it is impossible to please God that grace being the medium of our communion with God as it gives through Christ an admission and approach to him and in this respect is opposed to drawing back Hebr. 10.38 This is the Heathens Cred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epictetus 2. The Argument to confirme it For he that comes to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him that is our Addresses to God are grounded upon a firme assent to Gods being and bounty First An assent to his being is absolutely necessary otherwise acts of worship are as a Ball struck into the open air which returns not to us without the entire assurance of
to it 2. God hath ratified it by the death of his Son A mans last Will as soon as he is dead is in force and cannot then be disanulled The Covenant of Grace is a Testamentary Covenant which by the death of the Testator is so setled that there 's no altering of it Gal. 3.15 c. Hebr. 9.15 16. Again the Covenant of Grace is ratified by the seals which God hath annexed to it What was sealed by the Kings ring could not be altered Esther 8.8 God hath set his seal to this Covenant his broad seal in the Sacraments his privy seal in the witnesse of his Spirit and therefore 't is sure and cannot be reverst And further than all this 't is ratified in and by that Covenant which hath been now opened The Covenant of Redemption betwixt God and Christ secures the Covenant of Grace betwixt God and believers What God promises us he did before promise unto Christ and the F●ther would not make good his promise unto Christ if he should not make good his promises to the Saints And therefore as in other respects so in this also the Covenant may be said to be confirmed of God in Christ Gal. 3.17 with respect to that paction and stipulation that was betwixt them I lay all this before you for the strengthning of your Faith as to the stability of the Covenant of Grace so long as that Covenant stands you are safe and you see there 's no question but that Covenant will stand which God hath set upon such firme pillars This promise in the Text He shall see his seed will assuredly bring every believer into heaven O that faith might triumph in the consideration of this the Covenant of grace is sure Davids Faith did so when death was in his eye and affliction in his eye Yet he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure for this is all my salvation and all my desire 2 Sam. 23.5 When Faith begins to faint look up to this Covenant and reason thus God will not alter his promise to me but to be sure he will not alter his promise to his Son I may fail in such and such conditions but Christ hath been faithful in all every childe of God may take much comfort from this Vse 3 In the third and last place I would have you to enquire what this Covenant of Redemption is to you Here 's a blessed Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son how far are you and I interested in it or like to receive benefit by it Was it universal that all men should have an equal share in it Some very learned men I know tell us of Pactum universale betwixt the Father and the Son Daven de morte Christi c. but I crave leave to differ from them 1. Because that which they make their Pactum universale is rather a Proposition or a Promise than a Covenant as he that believeth shall be saved 2. I know not how to believe that there should be a solemn Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son upon which never any man should be the better Did ever any sinner get any thing by this universal Covenant 3. We may preach the Gospel to all upon an indefinite Proposition He that believeth shall be saved and we need not to assert an universal Covenant for the universal preaching of the Gospel This was the great reason that prevailed with these worthy men to assert such a Covenant I know no Covenant but that special Covenant into which the seed of Christ were only taken I am loth to fall into the dusty roade of Controversies all along in this Discourse where I could not avoide them I have but just cross'd them over and so presently falne in again into some more quiet and private way Passing by therefore this universal Covenant of men more moderate and the universal Redemption of others who go higher I shall only lay down that which I judge to be a great truth viz. That 't is the Elect only who are concerned in this Covenant Such and such persons there were individually considered whom God the Father in his Electing love doth freely give to Christ for these and only for these doth the Lord Jesus engage to lay down his life Redemption on the Sons part shall be no larger than Election on the Fathers part that there may be a perfect Harmony and Agreement betwixt them in their love So then Beloved if you would draw down comfort to your selves from this Covenant you must finde out this that you are the Elect of God chosen of him to be Vessels of his mercy before the world was Christ undertook to give his life only for those whom the Father had first given to him these he only pray'd for and therefore surely these he only dy'd for You 'le say I put you upon a very difficult search 't is true 't is very hard for a man to know his Election but yet it may be known otherwise the Apostle would never have urged this as a duty upon Christians To make their Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Paul knew that the Thessalonians were elected of God 1 Thess 1.4 And he did not know it by Revelation only No he gives another account of it he knew it by way of inference from what he saw of God in them Ver. 5. For our Gospel came not to you in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy Ghost c. If Election may be known by others why not by our selves I grant à parte ante so it cannot be known so the book is cl●sped and sealed and none can open it Rev. 5.3 5. but the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah but à parte post by such and such effects and operations upon the heart so it may be known Several of these might be set before you out of the Word but I 'le only instance in the grace of Faith He that believes is certainly in the number of Gods Elect he 's a chosen Vessel of mercy All the Elect shall believe sooner or later they shall close with Christ upon the termes of the Gospel John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me there 's Election shall come to me there 's Faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed None but the Elect can savingly believe The sum of all then for the clearing up of your interest in this Covenant of Redemption is this Have you the precious Faith of Gods Elect Are your hearts wrought up to a blessed accepting of Christ Tit. 1.1 Have you ever had such a sense of sin and guilt and misery as to go out of your selves and only to rest upon the Lord Christ Do you venture your souls upon his all-sufficient merits And is this Faith a working Faith an heart purifying Faith a sin mortifying Faith James 2.14 a world overcoming Faith a Faith that closes with Christ as a Lord Acts 15.9
of a reason God sends his Gospel proclaiming Acts 3.19 Repent ye and be converted that your sinnes may be blotted out His Ministers proclaiming We then are Embassadors of Christ 2 Cor. 5. as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled unto God Why dost thou hate thy soul and say I will not why wilt thou not Is it because it doth not concern thee or because eternal life and death are trifles small little things not worth thy considering or doth any body hinder thee No no our Saviour gives the true account Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life Let me entreat this small request of thee for Gods sake for thine own take the next opportunity and spend half an houre alone let thy spirit accomplish a diligent search pursue this inquiry to some issue am I justified or no if not what will become of me if it should happen sometimes such things fall out that I should dye now presently I cannot promise my self that I shall see to morrow morning Thus go on and bring it to something before thou leavest give not over till thou art not only clearly convinced of but heartily affected with thy guilt not only to see but feel thy self to be the man who art undone without an interest in this justification Be in good earnest thou canst not mock thy God and is there any wisdome in mocking and cheating thy own soul What thou dost do it heartily as unto the Lord as for thy life as one that would not rue thy self-deceiving folly when it cannot be recalled and if thou art hearty and serious in these reflexions 1. Thou wilt deeply humble thy self before the Majesty of the Judge of all the earth with that self-abhorrence and confusion that becomes one who feels himself even himself being Judge most righteously condemned 2. Thou wilt sollicite and assail the Throne of Grace with all redoubled favours and holy passionate importunities of prayer and supplication giving God no rest till he hath given thee his Spirit according to his own promise Luke 11.13 Ezek. 36.26 27. To help thee to performe the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant plead his own promise with him Wrestle with him for a broken and clean heart for faith for repentance unto life for these are not of thy self they are the gift of God let him not go till he hath blessed thee with these blessings in Christ Jesus This will confound every sinner at the day of Judgment that when he might have had grace yea the Spirit of grace for asking he either asked not or if he did it was so coldly as if he were contented enough to go without Now if thou art in good earnest God is I assure thee in full as good earnest as thou he is ready to meet thee Try but once whether it be in vain to seek him all that ever tryed found it good to draw near to God and found him easie to be entreated he useth not to send the hungry empty away He that commands us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling he it is that worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.12 13. Secondly To them that are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Let me beseech them 1. To walk worthy of God who hath called them to his Kingdome and Glory to adorn their holy profession take the Exhortation in Pauls words Col. 2.6 As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him Receive not this grace of God in vain the interest of your comfort obligeth you hereunto hereby you will know that you know him that you are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 that there is no cond mnation to you if you walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit and herein will your Father be glorified John 15.6 if ye bring forth much fruit 2. To live up to the comfort of their state 1 John 3.1 Ye are already the sons of God it doth not yet appear what you shall be Who shall lay any thing to your charge it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 Go eat thy bread with joy and put on thy white rayment God now hath accepted thy works Eccles 9.7 8. I conclude this particular and the whole discourse with the happy effects and fruits of Justification which every Believer hath as good a right and title to as the Gospel it self the Word of the God of truth can give him as I finde those sweet effects and consequences set down in my Text and the words next following it 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ 2. By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 3. And not only so but we glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience 4. And patience experience and experience hope 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Wherefore the righteous shall be glad in the Lord and all the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64.10 THE BELIEVERS DIGNITY and DVTY LAID OPEN In the High-Birth wherewith he is PRIVILEDGED And the honourable Employment to which He is called John 1.12 13. But as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God IN this Chapter Christ the principal Subject of the Gospel is admirably and Seraphically described 1. By his Divintiy as co-eternal and co-essential with the Father verse 1. 2. 2. By his discovery or manifestation 1. In the work of Creation ver 3. 10. 2. In the work of common providence ver 4.5 9. 3. In the work of gracious providence he being in the world and coming to his Church as our Immanuel God incarnate ver 11. 14. 3. By his entertainment which was 1. Passive his entertainment was poor the world knew him not ver 10. He was as a Prince disguised in a strange Country the Church sleighted and rejected him as Rebels do their natural Prince ver 11. And such entertainment Christ meets with at this day in his Truths Ordinances Graces Ministers and his poor members c. Object Was not Christ entertained by them what else means their harbouring him at Capèrnaum their flocking after him admiring of him seeking to make him a King c. Answ True they entertain'd him for a while civilly and formally upon self-interest but not spiritually by saving Faith Love and Obedience John 6.26 Matthew 11.21 23. Quest 1. Did Christ find no entertainment at all Answ This rejecting of Christ was not universal some did
42.3 weak as a bruised reed through dimness and scantiness of knowledge as a building laid upon a weak or narrow foundation cannot be strong weakness of assent strength of temptations natural timorousness Rom 4.19 20. Act 6. suspiciousness and lowness of spirit In others it is strong and they are full of Faith as Steven having clear and large knowledge c. Both weaker and stronger may be considered either as Habitual in the root and principle or Actual as exercised toward Christ and the promises For the Definition or Description of Faith I shall not heap up words in mentioning many but take up with that full and excellent one of the late Judicious Assemb●y in their larger Catechism that Christians may with more readiness and safety entertain it Description Faith is a Saving Grace wrought in the heart of a sinner by the Spirit and Word of God whereby he being convinced of his sin and misery and of the disability in himself and all other creatures to recover him out of that lost condition not only assenteth to the truth of the promise of the Gospel but receiveth and resteth upon Christ and his righteousness therein held forth for pardon of sin and for the a cepting and accounting of his person righteous in the sight of God for salvation It hath here for its Genus or general and common nature a Grace it being compared with Love Hope c. they herein agree The word Grace distinguisheth it from other Habits even good and vertuous that are acquired this is a Grace or gracious disposition or habit infused A Saving Grace to distinguish it from and set it above common Grace and make it one of those better things that accompany salvation Heb 6.9 The Subject is twofold Subjectum Recipiens Occupans 2. Subject Subjectum recipi ns The first the Subject receiving it or in which it is most ordinarily called the Subject and this is The heart of man a sinner elected and called 1. It is Man that believeth not Angels for of their Faith we have no ground to speak It is Man not God and the Spirit in us but man through them Yea Man singularly not of another but of him that hopeth for life the Just shall live by HIS Faith not by anothers 2. It is the Heart of man with the heart man believeth Rom 10.10 the Heart includeth Will and Affections it is not the Vnderstanding onely nor so much though that necessarily makes way Coming to Christ is a spontaneous motion of Will and Affections renewed and this is beleiving there is assent to things revealed as true and acceptance of things offered as good receiving Joh 1.12 embracing with suitable affections to the Revealer and things revealed 3. The heart of a man a sinner for man upright is not capable of this Faith which is in God through a Mediator Believing the word of another concerning restoral and reparation speaketh loss and decay acceptance of alms poverty Indeed Adam might and must thus far exercise Faith in beleiving and trusting God it belongeth to the first commandment that he continuing upright there would be a continuation of Gods love and his happiness but Faith apprehending the promise of God of acceptation through the righteousness of another necessarily speaketh man a sinner Rom. 4.5 as Justification which is by Faith is of the ungodly Rom. 11.7 4. The heart of man a sinner elected the election obtained it the rest were hardned Tit. 1.1 and therefore is it called the Faith of Gods elect Remarkable is that expression As many as were ordained unto life beleived Act. 13.48 and our Lord saith all that the Father giveth him come unto him Joh 6.37 and the Jews not believing was because they were not his sheep and therefore heard not his voyce 5. The heart of man a sinner elected and called is the Subject of Faith Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing it is the souls answer to and compliance with Gods call God vailing his omnipotency under and putting it forth with words of command Uncalled and unbelievers are the same and therefore calling is one of the links of the golden chain of Salvation Rom. 8.28 30. and goeth before Justification by Faith in which Call the Terminus â quo is Satan sin misery death we are called from and the Terminus àd quem we are called to Christ God Holiness and Life Subjectum Occupans Materiale The Subject about which Faith is employed or Object that which and in which we believe is not God immediately though primarily Heb. 6.1 but Christ immediately and the Promises which are in him yea and amen 2 Cor. 1.20 and God through Christ 1 Pet. 1.21 he that believeth not in the Son believeth not in the Father and he that hath not the Son hath not the Father Act. 20.21 Repentance is peculiarly referred to God and Faith to the Lord Jesus Christ Faith also and the Promises Heb. 10.23 or God through Christ promising are Correlates and of all Promises those that concern righteousness and life through the blood of a Mediator are the peculiar object Act. 10.43 1 Joh. 5.10 11. Believing the witness of remission and the recrod of giving eternal li e is mentioned it is called beleeving the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glad tidings in the Gospel promises of remission and salvation Mark 1.16 It is true that Faith doth believe and apply every word of God Some things reductively and secondarily are the object of Faith in a sequacious Spirit credulous to whatever is contained in Scripture as that Abimelech had a wife c. Gen 20. Some things are more directly the Word of God expressed and asserted in the History of the Bible yet being believed have not an immediate connexion with Justification and Salvation thereby But the grand testimony of and through Christ Faith as saving principally respecteth and as assenting in the mind looks upon the Promise as accepting in the Will and Affections respecteth Christ The ground on which we believe Formale called the Formal Object of Faith shall be referred to the Externally moving Cause to believe of which afterwards Of all Four Causes I shall speak in order 3. Causes Efficient Principal and first of the Efficient which is either Principal or less Principal The Principal Cause may be considered as that from which the beginning acting continuance growth and perfection of Faith do proceed and this is the Blessed Trinity or God the Father through the Son by the Spirit 1. The beginning root and habit of Faith is from God if of every a Phil 1.6 good work and b Jam 1.17 gift then this and therefore it is called the c Ephes 2.8 gift of God and to you it is d Phil 1.29 given to believe e Heb 12.2 Jesus also is called the Author this is wrought by the Spirit it is
Gods part upon supposition of his institution 1. His Justice having received a valuable price for Salvation and this price being made the sinners own in the way of Gods own appointment so that believing sinners may humbly plead with God as a righteous Judge for their Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 3.26 Gods justice being not only secured but obliged in a sense by Faith 2. His faithfulness having in his Word promised Salvation to Faith as hath been shown Secondly On Faiths part the reason why God hath conjoyned certain Salvation with it is because it giveth most glory to God of any thing Rom. 4.20 1 Sam. 2.30 therefore God entailes glory on it peculiarly it honoureth God and God will honour them that have it He that believeth sets to his seal that God is true John 3.33 and every way justifieth and advanceth him Properties and notes of Trial convertible with true Faith 5. Properties and reciprocal where Faith is there is this and that where this and that are there is Faith where Faith is not there these are not c. and farther differencing it from other Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 which is a needful work for there is true and false feigned and unfeigned alive and dead Of these some indeed belong to the former Head of Effects and some of them seem not altogether unsuitable to be referred to this Head The First shall be a more general Note True and saving faith receiveth a whole Christ upon judgement and choice on Gods term●s Lord to rule as well as Jesus to save the object of Faith in the Text no separating what God hath joyned and to have a divided Christ not a whole Christ salvation but not self-denial c. True Faith is a considerate thing that which hath least depth Mat. 13 5. springs up most suddenly the soul sits down and weigheth and casteth up all accompts and compareth all things together misery by sin undonnesse in self termes of salvation self-denial a fundamental one taking up the Crosse following Christ universally sincere obedience and what the world lust or Satan can say to the contrary and saith CONTENT to Gods terms and here the bargain is made the soul trusts God contentedly for his part even priviledge and resolvedly sets about its own part even duty Hence true faith proceeding deliberately upon Gods termes is willing to be tryed by the Word declaring those terms which farther tryal according to the Word follows Secondly True and saving Faith is ush●r'd in by godly sorrow and humility in a good degree though they are farther compleated afterward upon the sense of Gods pardoning and accepting love Ezek. 16.63 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Then shalt thou be ashamed c. Repent and believe Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ this is Gospel order The inconsistency between Faith and Pride Hab. 2.4 is evident in that opposition of the souls lifting up and living by Faith and the hinderance of the Jews believing John 5.44 The Centurions and womans Faith were attended with eminent humility Did not humility and godly sorrow accompany and bring in faith the Law could not be our School-master to bring us to Christ This shutteth out that easie merry proud faith that springs up without the dunging of humility or watering of sorrow according to God Thirdly True and saving Faith is abiding and perseverant and this upon supposition of temptations and assaults for otherwise a mock-faith may have a continuance and men dye in a pleasing dream of ungrounded presumptuous confidence Now it must be such or cannot be saving for as it is said He that believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 Mat. 24.13 so he that endureth to the end shall be saved They that have true Faith have the seed of God abiding in them the prayer of Christ for them are kept by the power of God for he that hath begun a good work will finish it his gifts being without repentance Believing and sealing for security are conjoyned Eph. 1.13 The true believer is the wise man that built on the Rock Mat. 7.24 25. his house therefore stood the good ground that hath de●th of earth Mat. 13. Heb. 10.38 39. that what springs may not wither The just shall live by his faith continue therein and so believe to the saving his soul being rooted and established therein through Christ Col. 2.7 See more of this before under the efficient cause principal and instrumental Fourthly True and saving Faith is growing though this growth be not alway discernable or alike That prayer for encrease of Faith flowed from the very nature of Faith Luk. 17.5 it is the good fight which must be carryed on to a compleat conquest running a race 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 Prov. 4.18 speaking progresse to the finishing our course for the way of the just is as light that shineth more and more to a perfect day Whatever hath life hath growth till it reach a state of consistency 1 John 5.13 Saint John wrote to those that did believe that they might believe Vt credatis credere pergatis which belongs to the last Head fide crescatis Beza in loc i. e. grow in faith according to the general Apostolical precept of growing in all grace The same Author accounts this the most plain and natural interpretation of that of Paul from Faith to Faith Fide Rom. 1.17 quae quotidiè incrementum accipiat confirming it by that of Clement of Alexandria The Apostle speaks not of a double Faith but of one and that receiving growth and perfecting The Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 furtherance of faith Col. 2.7 Phil. 1.25 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 establishing and abounding in the Faith speak encrease and growth in root and branches more fixed habit more frequent acts They therefore that have believed ever since they were born and alway alike never believed at all truly Fifthly True and saving Faith is Purging Act 1 Rom 8.1 4 purifying their hearts by Faith Believing and walking not after the flesh are joyned where there is Faith and much more assurance of Faith there will be heart and body cleansed and washed Heb. 10.22 23 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.4 1 John 3.3 pollutions of flesh and spirit taken away by faith receiving the promise of the undefiled inheritance the believer will purifie himself as he is pure in whom he trusteth and hopeth Living flesh will purge out the Sanies and corruption in it a living Fountain the mud that 's stirred up so living faith And indeeed hereby it is permanent for purity preserveth pure Faith cannot be kept but in a good even a cleane conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Sixthly True and saving faith hath other graces accompanying it in a good measure with a proportionable encrease strength and activity I know some are more eminent for this others for that grace as Moses for meekness Job patience Abraham
Faith c. yet in good measure must other graces accompany for this is an indispensable duty to add to Faith temperance 2 Pet. 1.5 patience brotherly kindnesse Faith with many other graces are called in the singular number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fruit of the Spirit because connex and inseparable Gal. 5.22 Besides that the growth and strength and activity of other graces have dependance upon it both as it pleads with Christ in prayer for all and pleads with the soul to act stir up and abound in all Abrahams faith had self-denial accompanying it there will be patience for he that believeth will not make hast See more tending to this under the fifth effect of faith Let not men speak of their faith then when other graces are no way suitable Seventhly True and saving Faith is working and fruitful though love and good works are not the form of it as the Papists plead yet it alway hath love accompanying Gal. 5.6 James 2.17 Eph. 1.15 and worketh by love and without works is dead Per opera consummatur fides non ut formatum per suam formam sed ut forma per suas operationes actus primus per actum secundum Alting Faith alone justifieth but Faith which justifieth is not alone Bona opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum They that are in Christ Jesus by Faith are described by walking in Christ and according to the Spirit Quomodo accipitur fide quomodo ambulatur in eo ad praescriptum voluntatis ejus vitam instituendo ex ejus Spiritu vivendo Zanch. in Col. 2.6 Faith is obediential Rom. 16.26 and cannot but be so for he that believeth really his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord cannot in reason and holy ingenuity 1 Cor. 15.58 but think it meet he be fruitful and abounding alway in the work of the Lord Alii cogitant pii credunt Aug. for others they do but think not know the greatness and certainty of the reward Yea indeed that assurance I before spake of proceeds from Faith through obedience By this we know that we know him know put for believe Zanch. in loc as Isa 53.11 if we keep his Commandments I shall therefore according to St. Pauls command to Titus affirm constantly this as a faithful saying Tit. 3.8 That they which have believed must be careful to maintain good works Eighthly True and saving Faith trusting God for the greater will trust him for lesser mercies To them that through Christ do believe in God 1 Pet. 1.21 this will seem forcible arguing and a necessary inference He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up I believe for me Rom 8.32 how will he not with him give me also all things freely God hath made all sorts of promises to true Faith and accordingly many of the Servants of God have expressed confidence in God when things have gone worst with them they would not be afraid what man can do unto them nor of evil tidings Psal 11.7 their hearts were fixed trusting in the Lord The just's living by Faith is true in this sence also Gal. 2.20 and that of Pauls living the life in the flesh by the Faith of the Son of God hath much in it Though I know natural timorousness and living too much the life of sense may occasion some worldly fears in a Believer as boldness of temper carelesness false confidence may much bear up an unbeliever Yet in great measure their pretences to faith are questionable I might say their faith is but pretence who say they can trust God with their Souls but will not trust him with bodies and estates Ninthly 1 Pet. 2.7 Vers 8. Isa 53.2 Cant. 5.9 True and Saving Faith makes Christ very precious to them that believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but to the unperswadable he is a stone of stumbling without form or comeliness they ask the believer What is thy beloved more than another And no wonder for none but the believer hath a cleared eye to behold things that a●e spiritually discerned Tolle meum tolle Deum Psal 34.8 Psal 104.34 None but he hath that special interest which inhanceth the price and valuation None but he hath that experience by which it is tasted and seen that the Lord is good But sight propriety and experience will make him inestimably precious and the meditation of him sweet Faith that seeth his necessity seeth also his excellency and takes him not upon constraint but choyce Those things that are ●pposite to true Faith are of two sorts 6. Opposites First Such as speak the soul void of it and are simply inconsistent with it Secondly Such as actively war against it and repel it These I shall call Contrarily Opposite those Privatively Opposite though the terms may seem not fully suitable to all the particulars Some things are Privatively Opposite to true and Saving Faith Privatively as relating to the Vnderstanding others as to the Will others as to the Life First As to the Vnderstanding and Assent 1. Ignorance bilndness darkness of the inconsistency of which with Faith see before of the Word the Instrumental Cau●e This either is invincible Ignorance Act. 17.30 where means of cure are wanting Or Vincible which carelesness sloath or affectation causeth for there are some persons willingly and wilfully ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 Joh. 3.19 and love darkness 2. Unperswadableness to assent to the truth of the Word and Promise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Impersuasibilitas Rom 11.30 31 When men are not satisfied in the grounds of believing and so assent not wherein yet somtimes there is a battery shaking the Assent and by parley bringing near a surrender Act. 26.28 an almost perswasion which yet is ineffectual 3. Error in Fundamentals especially those that concern Faith Christ the Promises Justification and salvation Corrupt minds are reprobate concerning the Faith 2 Tim. 3.8 Therefore doubtful Disputations Rom. 14.1 where on one side is error are dangerous to the weak Secondly As to the Will Affections and Consent Heb. 2.3 1. Unbelief not accepting the good things promised through ignorance or careless neglect of great salvation 2. Disbelief when men through dissatisfaction with the reasons to believe or through pride stubbornn●ss uncompliance of spirit Joh 5 39 40 44. WILL not come to Christ for life will not submit to the righteousness of God Thirdly As relating to Life practice and profession 1. Heresie is Privatively Opposite Such as joyn obstinacy and promulgation to their errors 2 Tim 2.16 whose words eat like a gangrene Tit 3.10 are to be rejected as men void of and enemies to the Faith 2. Apostasie from the truth and profession of the Gospel called denial viz. after knowing and owning These never were of the Faith 1 Joh 2.19 else would they not have gone from it This is a dangerous thing drawing
back to perdition in such God hath no pleasure Heb 10.38 2 Pet 2.21 It had been better for them never to have known c. This commonly ends in bitterest enmity to the Faith and true professors of it 3. All sins laying waste the Conscience are inconsistent with faith because Faith and a good conscience are inseparable companions 2 Tim 3.9 Contrarily By way of Contrariety there may be considered these things possibly some also under the former head in part as Opposite to true Faith First Flesh and blood these cannot enter into the kingdom of G d and oppose faith that would bring thither I name this first because it is the greatest enemy and gives advantage to all others and then indeed are we tempted to unbelief or any thing else when we ●re drawn aside of our own hearts By Flesh and blood is meant Sense 2 Cor 5.7 living by sence is the great hinderer and supplanter of Faith Also Carnal reason judging every thing by its own unsuitable apprehensions and so misrepresenting the things of God to it the Gospel is foolishness though it is the wisdom and power of God to them that believe This taketh notice of the meanness of the faithful in the world and stumbleth at it c. Abraham left both these Servants below when he went up into the Mount to the Lord to exercise that eminent Faith of his Rom 4.18.19 c. Yea indeed Sense and Rea●on appeared eminently contrary to him in his entertaining the ●romise at first else had not the great strength of his Faith been manifested nor God glorifi d so much Secondly Satans assaults He not only at first keeps out Faith by blinding mens minds 2 Cor 4.4 but afterwards doth with Faith as the King of S ria charged his Captains to do with the King of Israel He knows what an enemy to h●s kingdom Faith is 1 King 22.31 by it we resist him and consequent●y put him to flight and quench his darts He knows if our Faith fail all fails Luke 22.31 Luke 8.12 and therefore he desires to winnow the soul and get the go●d seed out of our hearts lest we should believe and be saved Thirdly The World is a great adversary 1 John 5.4 Why else is Faith called the Victory over the world but that there is hostility between the world and it Fourthly I might add m ns own delays 1. Causing hardness in their hearts from themselves To day to day believe Heb 2.15 Joh 12.38 39 40. unless you would harden your hearts 2. Provoking God to seal men up under their injudicious unperswadable minds for their long opposition to the light and word of Faith Gen 6.3 Act 7.51 The Spirit of Faith will not alway strive when men still resist him I shall improve all that hath been spoken by some few Uses and conclude Vses The first sort of Uses shall be Corollaries for Information 1. Of the certain and u ●peakable misery of ●he unbeliever Information from the sure happiness of the believer Contrariorum contraria est consequentia Remember what hath been spoken before of the excellent Effects and Consequents o● Faith Union with Christ Justification Adoption c. and that great and everlasting fruit Salvation upon all which we may co●clude with the Apostle Gal 3.9 blessed are they w●ich be of F●ith or believe with faithful Abraham Luk 45. yea therefore blessed is he tha b●liev●th because there shall be a performan●e of ●ll tho e things which have been spoken of the Lord Now turn the Table invert the sense read all backward understand all contrary of the unb●liever No union with but separation and distance fr●m Christ No pardon of sin reconciliation and justification but guilt in fu l force the curse of the Law John 3● 36 and so he is left to stand or fall by himself and the wrath of God are upon him No Adoption of Sons but rejection as spurious and a Sonship to the Devil the god of this world c. No Salvation Mark 16.16 Joh. 3.18 but inevitable condemnation He that believeth not shall be condemned yea is condemned already because he believeth not in the name of the only begotten Son of God i. e. his present state is a state of certain damnableness as sure as if he were condemned already Not that there can be no believing afterward and recovery thereby 1 Cor. 6.11 for who then should be saved for such were some yea all of them that are justified by faith in the name of the Lord Jesus as the Apostle speaks of other sinners He that believeth not maketh God a liar 1 Joh. 5.10 Joh. 3.36 but he shall find him exactly true to his cost in such words as these He that believeth not the Son shall not see life The unbelieving as well as more carnal sinners shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Rev. 21.8 which is the second death Heb. 3.12 Joh. 5.40 Act. 13.46 Matth. 13.58 Men by unbelief depart from the living God will not come for life and judge themselves unworthy of eternal life and bring a kind of impotency upon the Omnipotent as to the doing them any good No wonder then if Jesus wondered at their unbelief that held his hands from helping them Mark 6.5 6. Oh! how much better were it for them among us that believe not that they had never had offers of Salvation never heard the Gospel of the Grace of God! 2. It is no small matter to be saved since Faith is such a thing as before described and without it there is no Salvation Should Christ now come should he finde Faith on the earth Alas the small number of those that shall be saved there being so few Believers though so many Professors of Faith among Christians This is sadly manifest in the gross Ignorance of the most and suitable apprehensions in the Doctrine of Faith of very few In the Errors Heresies Apostasies of many even denying the Lord that bought them In the altogether contradictory life of most to that Faith they pretend to have which as well as Repentance should have fruits meet for it brought forth and accordingly it is known No wonder if they that take true Saving Faith to be no more than Assent a●d a professed owning the Doctrine of the Gospel a Confidence at all adventures of Gods love c. or some such thing think the way to heaven broad and wonder at any speaking of the paucity of those that shall be saved 3. Hence take notice of the Reasonableness of the Christian Religion 1. That God requireth no more but Believe Other things indeed are required but they naturally flow from faith are inseparably linked with faith and faith cannot be without them faith is the great work of God and command of the Gospel 2. That this is so suitable Without faith no salvation can be
in all their ways James 1.8 they are still beginning but never able to make any prosperous and successeful progresse in the knowledge of Christ Sixthly and lastly from hence give me leave to commend to you the benefit and advantage of THE MORNING EXERCISE which the good hand of Providence brings to your doors this ensuing month and begins to morrow morning in this place Truly God hath been pleased to make this morning Lecture a great mercy to this City ever since it was first erected which was WHEN LEYCESTER WAS BESIEGED The fruits of the morning exercise in the City it hath been like the Ark in the house of OBED-EDOM a blessing where ever it hath come a morning cloud which hath let fall sweet refreshing showres in every place In special God hath made it instrumental 1. For the strengthning of the weak hands and confirming the feeble knees of the people of God Isa 35.3 4. Comfort against fear who in this time of Englands troubles have been of a fearful heart and of a trembling spirit many poor Christians who in times of publick dangers and confusions have come to these morning Assemblies like the Maries to the Sepulchre of our Lord with their hearts full of fears and their eyes full of tears have been dismissed those Assemblies with fear and great joy their hearts have been revived Matth. 28.8 and their hands strengthned in the Lord their God 2. A preservative against Apostacy 2 Pet. 3.17 God hath made use of this exercise for the preserving of thousands from errour and damnable doctrines in these times of sad Apostacy While many ignorant and unstable souls being led away with the errour of the wicked have fallen from their own stedfastnesse there want not multitudes through grace who are ready to acknowledge that they owe their confirmation and stability in the truth under God in a very eminent manner to the labours of those godly Orthodox Divines who have bestowed their pains in these early Lectures from time to time 3. Conversion God hath commanded his blessing upon it for the conversion of many souls to Jesus Christ Blessed be God the morning exercise hath not been childless since it was set up some there be to my knowledge who have calculated their spiritual nativity from the time that this exercise was in the places of their habitation as in this place some can bring in their testimony to the honour and praise of free grace 4. It hath been a very choice instrument in the hand of the Spirit for the building up of Christians in their most holy faith Edification Many of them that have attended daily at the gates of wisdome waiting at the posts of her doors in this Ministerial course Prov. 8 34 35. have been observed to have made eminent proficiency in the School of Christ 2 Pet. 3.18 to grow in God in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ To all which blessed ends these morning Exercises have had some advantage above other Assemblies Partly by reason of the frequency and assiduity of them Sabbath-day-Sermons and Weekly-lectures being distanc't with such long intervals of worldly incumbrances are for the most part forgotten before the return of their weekly course whereas these exercises treading so close upon the heels one of another they that have constantly attended them have as it were lived under a constant vision the Sunne of the Gospel arising upon them as assiduously as the Sunne in the Firmament whereby they have been carried on in a daily progresse of Gospel-proficiency And Partly the Preachers by a kind of secret instinct of the Spirit having been directed in their order to preach seasonable things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle calls it present truth truth most proper to the present state of things carefully obviating the errors of the times and not only so but sometimes as if there had been a designe laid by mutual consent they have been guided to preach methodical truths their Sermons have been knit together not without some natural connexion into a kinde of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Module of Evangelical doctrine at least so farre as it hath not been difficult to finde out not only consent but a kinde of dependance between their successive discourses that might be of more than ordinary help to their Auditors as in this a The morning exercise at Giles in the Fields May 55. printed for Richard Gibbs in Chancery lane near Serjeants Inne place about this time foure years and since in a b The word of faith at Martins in the fields Febr. 55. printed for Fran. Tyton at the three Daggers in Fleetstreet neighbouring Congregation by some short notes published for the help of weaker Christians may appear But now brethren behold I shew you a more excellent way That which sometime hath fallen out providentially and but in a very imperfect way is now de industria and by prae-agreement and consent intended and designed among you in this course of the morning Exercise viz. that which the Apostle here commends to Timothy his care and custody an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or FORM of sound words A Series or Delineation of some of the chief points and heads of Gospel doctrine methodically collected and digested as far as the narrow circle of so few days will contain AND THIS WE WILL DO IF GOD PERMIT What remaineth Brethren Heb. 6.3 but that you stir up your selves in the strength of Christ Cautions 1. Prize these opportunities 1. To prize such a precious season and opportunity as Providence puts into your hand God is bringing a very precious treasure and depositum unto your doors Psal 147.20 He hath not dealt so with every Nation c. See my Brethren that you put a due value and estimate upon it lest God challenge your contempt with that angry question Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdome seeing he hath no heart to it Prov. 17 1● 2. Frequen● them 2. To frequent it Christians be afraid of losing a morning let not one such golden opportunity fall to the ground you do not know what you lose Borrow a little from your sleep and from your worldly employments if your Callings and Families shall not be too great sufferers by it and bestow it upon your souls will it not be fruit abounding to your account in the day of Christ While ye have the light walk in the light Jer. 6.4 Know ye not that the Shadows of the Evening are stretched out Redeem the time the days are evil Ephes 5.15 3. Stir up your selves to prepare your hearts for a solemn attendance upon God in them 3. Prepare for them Lev. 10.3 Remember what the Lord said to Moses I will be sanctified in them that come nigh me Oh profane not your accesses to such holy things I may bespeak you in the
Sure then you will have reason to plead for and to hold fast this blessed book which we call the Bible if I shall be able to make it further evident that it is tha book which God himself hath writ An Argument which you need to hear and which you had need seriously consider for as I shall anon presse it upon you if you did believe the glory the Scripture speaks of and the dreadful misery that remains for impenitent sinners in hell if things as they are stated in the Scripture were looked upon as real truths it would cause you presently to return to God by godlinesse There were even in the Apostles time seducers so you finde in the beginning of this Chapter persons that would resist the truth as Jannes and Jambres resisted Moses Not only in the present age which is like the dregs of the world in comparison of the Primitive times but even then also there were seducers and deceivers there are Comets among the Stars as well as ignis fatuus that creep upon the earth what must Timothy do ver 14. Continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of knowing of whom than hast learned them and that from a childe thou hast known the Scriptures c. From a childe Jos phus in his book against Apion tells us the children of the Jews were so instructed in their Laws that they could scarce name a Law to them but they could tell it more shame to us Christians that take no care to teach Religion that may much more easily be learned than the Jewish Religion could From a childe thou hast learned the Scriptures And it would be a shame for a person so long instructed not to continue in this doctrine a shame for an old professor well educated to desert the principles of his Religion and forsake the truths of Scripture do not forsake them why this verse gives two reasons first it is of divine revelation secondly it 's profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse A little to explain the words All Scripture is given by inspiration of God Scripture in the Text is the same with the Holy Scriptures ver 15. for you must know that in the Bible the word Scripture is commonly taken for the holy Scriptures so search the Scripture ye erre not knowing the Scripture John 5.39 Matth. 22.29 John 10.33 the Scripture cannot be broken so you must understand it here all Scripture that is not every thing that is written but the holy Scripture Is of Divine inspiration the meaning is that the things written are not of humane invention are not the contrivance of any mans wit or any mans fancy but they are the real revelations of the minde and will of God And yet those things which were thus reveal'd good men were excited to write them and assisted in it I say the inspiration of God comprehends in it these two things First the truths contained in this Scripture were not inventions of mans braine ot fancy Secondly that they who writ them were excited to it and were assisted in it by the Holy Ghost The Text is both explain'd and confirm'd by the parallel place 2 Pet. 1.21 Knowing this first that no prophesie of the Scripture is of any private interpretation for the prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost That you may a little understand this Text give me leave to glosse upon it In ver 16. the Apostle said we have not followed cunningly devised fables c. That which we have proposed and preached to you was nothing cunningly devised by us when we made known to you the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ we saw him transfigured we did not go about to tell you the story our selves but if you will not believe that ver 19. We have also a more sure word of prophesie There are predictions concerning Christ in the Old Testament whereunto ye do very well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place untill the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts Not as some Enthusiasts would interpret this that men should mind the Old Testament till the Spirit of God should tell them the truth of this Scripture and then throw away the Old Testament No it 's a light that shines in a dark place untill the day dawns and the day-star arise in your hearts I 'le give two interpretations either first that this heart is the dark place till the day-star arise and so the word untill shall not refer to the word take heed but only to dark place mans heart is the dark place But I rather take it till they saw the accomplishment of those Prophesies till you see that really fulfilled which hath been Prophesied Take heed why knowing this that no Prophesie of Scripture is of any private interpretation c. so we read the word in the Greek it is they are not of any private incitation and impulsion for the word hath reference to the custome of Racers now you know Racers do not set out when they please themselves but when he watch word is given Now no Prophesie is of any private interpretation they did not go about nor set about it till God really put them upon it for it was not the effect of their own will choice or invention but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Say the Papists the Scripture is of no private interpretation therefore you cann't understand it but that is just as if I should say you must not put what meaning you will upon my words and therefore you cann't understand them The Scriptures being from God are not to any of private interpretation that is to put any other meaning upon them than what God means but it doth not follow what God means cannot be understood Luke 1.70 it s said that God spake by the mouth of the holy Prophets c. The Apostles before they preached were endued with power from on high as you read in the Acts. Paul saith of himself it pleased God to reveal his Sonne in him Gal. 1.15 16. by the Revelation of the Gospel 1 Cor. 14.37 If any man think himself to be a Prophet or spiritual let him acknowledge that the things that I write unto you are the Commandments of the Lord. Quest The grand enquiry will be how may any man be truly satisfied that this book is the Word of God or that it hath Divine authority or Divine inspiration I confesse 't is an undertaking too great for me but yet sometimes you have seen a little boat follow a great ship That I may distinctly do it and offer my own thoughts in this great enquiry I shall give you what I have to say in these seven Propositions Sol. 1. Prop. That there may be a Revelation from God no man
shewed the expiation of sin and therefore their Sacrifices were killed and the blood shed and sprinkled Heb. 9.22 23. 2. The Covenant at Mount Sinai was not made with all without exception as Adams was but only with a select people even with Israel 3. Because the Lord still puts them in minde of his promise to Abraham which included Christ and faith in him Gal. 3.16 17. and was not null by the Law Quest 5. The last question is how long this Covenant lasted and whither any be under a Covenant of Works Answ Most strictly it was but to the giving of the first promise for then the Covenant of Grace began but was more largely and clearly revealed till the coming of Christ by the Law and the Prophets but was most perspicuously and fully by Christ himself in his doctrine and death and by the abundant pouring out of his Spirit Howbeit all along and to this day every natural man is under a Covenant of Works because out of Christ therefore under the Law and the curse of it for which cause the Covenant of Works is by some called the Covenant of nature Faedus naturae Again all they which look for righteousnesse and salvation by the power of their wills by the strength of nature and by performance of duties as Jews Turks Philosophers Papists Socinians Gal. 4.24 25. Pelagians these are all under a Covenant of Works they are not under grace they are of Hagar the Bond-woman of Mount Sinai which answers to Jerusalem which now is which is in bondage with her children as the Apostle speaks in his elegant Allegory I come now to draw some Corollaries from this doctrine of the Covenant of Works thus propounded in a practical way of application and that briefly Corol. 1. It serves for admiration to wonder with a holy astonishment at the Lords infinite condescending love in making a Covenant with poor man 1. Because it was a free act in him to do it he lay under no compulsion to it Rom. 9.15 16. nothing of merit or profit in a despicable worme appears as a motive to it it was a royal act of glorious grace from the King of heaven to vile creatures O wonderful 2. Because as it was free for him to do it so he bound his hands by it and as it were lost his freedome by it for his truth holds him fast to it Hebr. 6.18 by which its impossible for him to change O wonderful 3. He made the first offer he prevented us by his grace he loved us first 1 John 4.10 19. all this appeared in the first Covenant with us Bullinger de f●●dere Dei unios aeterno in vouchsafing us to make any at all with him Ineffabilis misericordiae Divinae Argumentum quod ipsum numen ipse inquam Deus Aeternus faedus ipsum primus offert nullis ad hoc hominum meritis adactus sed merâ nativâ bonitate impulsus nec scio an humanum ingenium hoc mysterium vel plenè toncipere vel dignis laudibus evehere possit Unspeakable mercy that the eternal God should first offer to league with us moved to it by no merit in us but by his own native goodnesse only a mystery which the minde of man cannot conceive nor his tongue praise to the worth of it thus a grave Authour which will the more inhance the love of God if we 4. Consider that he makes Covenant upon Covenant after breaches and forfeitures renews them again and ratifies them stronger than ever as he did the new Covenant after the old was broken by our high and hainous provocation in the fall and which he doth to every elect soul in the Sacraments and after grosse and grievous Apostasies See Jerem. 3.1 Ezek. 16.60 61 62 63. Hos 2. O admire and adore this love Corol. 2. Seeing there are two Covenants on foot one of Works another of grace and very many yea the farre greatest part of the world are under a Covenant of Works which is a most sad and doleful estate because a state of wrath and death a most wretched and accursed condition O try under what Covenant thou art for if thou art in the state of sinful nature a sprowt of old Adam never yet cut off from his root of bitternesse nor graffed into Christ thou art undone to be under such a Covenant is to be an enemy to God and to be lyable to all his plagues O make haste then and flee as a Post and as the young Roe into Christs Armes For consider how thou canst stand before the Bar of God in thy sins in thy nakednesse Adam fled away from the presence of God afraid and ashamed hiding himself in the Thicket because he was naked but where wilt thou hide thy nakednesse in that dreadful day of the Lord there will be no shelter in that day for a sinner Corol. 3. Labour to understand and discern aright the nature tenour and termes of both Covenants 1. Because they are easiiy mistaken and many do mistake them Rom. 10.2 3. 2. Because the mistake is dangerous like a man in the dark as he travels findes two wayes one way is wrong Prov. 14.12 yet it seems as good and safe as the other he goes on in the wrong which leads him to a Rock where he falls down headlong and breaks his neck so many a poor soul imagines he is under a Covenant of Grace and in a safe way to heaven when alas he is yet under a Covenant of Works and in the high-way to hell Labour then to discern the difference search Scriptures and thy own heart go to the Lord by prayer Job 33.23 and to his M nisters that they may shew thee thy way lest thou go on to thy destruction And therefore Corol. 4. Improve the Covenant of works for the conviction of sin righteousness and judgement for till the Lord lets thee see what it is to be under such a state thou wilt never see the evil of it nor ever desire to change it Corol. 5. Renounce thy Covenants with sin Satan and creatures or else thou wilt never be admitted into Covenant with God if thou break not with them God will never close with thee if thou be a Covenant-servant to them thou art no Covenant-servant of the Lords for how canst thou serve those two Masters Matth. 6.24 1 Joh. 2.15 16. God and Mammon both which crave thy whole man and thy whole work and which are utterly inconsistent with each other Corol. 6. Labour to relieve thy self under thy greatest straits and sears by Covenant promises I mean the promises of the new Covenant which are called better promises Hebr. 8.6 10 11 12. Joh. 15. because absolute pr●mises because they work that in us and for us which God requires of us when of our selves we can do nothing As the new Covenant is the best Covenant and the promises of it the best promises Isa 55.3 Acts
stream of Christs blood if thou beest imbarqued by faith runs directly into the Ocean of endlesse boundlesse bottomlesse happinesse If thou hast open'd the door of thine heart to let Christ in the blood of Christ hath open'd and unlock'd the door of heaven and thou canst not be shut out A crucified Christ entertained will one day make glorified believers his Humiliation is the ready Roade both to his and his peoples exaltation CHRISTS EXALTATION Phil. 2. 9 10 11. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord to the glory of God the Father THE former Verses-speak of the deep humiliation of Jesus Christ these words contain the Doctrine of Christs most glorious Exaltation If you view Christ in the words before going you will behold the Sun of righteousness ecclipsed but in this Text you will see him shining forth in his strength and splendour The Doctrine of Christs Humiliation leads you to Mount Calvary but this Doctrine will lead you to Mount Tabor to Mount Olivet There you may see Christ standing at the Bar but here you see him sitting on a Throne of Majesty and glory The former Doctrine shews you the Son of man in the forme of a servant but this represents Christ to you the Son of God like himself in the glorious estate of Triumphant Majesty You have heard how Christ died for our sins Rom. 4.25 Rom. 5.10 and how we are Reconciled by his death and now you shall heare how he rose for our justification and how we are saved by his life In his Humiliation there was neither form nor beauty Isa 53.2 Heb. 1.2 nor comliness did appear but now you will see him in the excellency and brightness of his Fathers glory In Christs Humiliation you heare how he was reproached in his Person Name Doctrine Ministry and Miracles but he is now exalted and hath a name given him above every name And whereas in his Humiliation his enemies bowed the knee in scorne to him yet in his Exaltation they must bow the knee with fear and trembling Then they cried after Christ Crucifie him crucifie him but God hath exalted him so as every tongue must confess that Jesus is the Lord to the glory of God And thus Contraries are illustrated by their contraries the sufferings of Christ like a dark shadow to a curious picture Contraria ●juxta se posita magis elucescunt or a black vaile to a beautiful face do make the glory of his Exaltation the more glorious The height of Christs Exaltation is best known by considering the depth of his humiliation the Cross of Christ as one saith being the best Jacobs staff to take the height of this morning Star or rather Sunne of Righteousness breaking forth most gloriously from under a dark Cloud In these three verses we have these Particulars considerable 1. The Connexion between the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore also God hath exalted him 2. The Doctrine of Christs Exaltation laid down God hath highly exalted him 3. The end of Christs Exaltation it was for the glory of God the Father Before we come to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation we will a little consider the connexion of these three Verses with the three preceding Verses viz. 6 7 8. where it is said that Jesus Christ being in the forme of God and thought it not Robbery to be equal with God but made himself of no Reputation and took upon him the forme of a servant and was made in the likeness of men and being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross wherefo●e God also hath highly exalted him c. It is a Question amongst Divines whether the Humiliation of Christ be the Meritorious cause or only the Antecedent of his Exaltation and yet they that dispute this do all agree in this That Jesus did not by his Humiliation and sufferings merit such things as he was invested withal before he suffered for that which is meritorious must alwayes precede the reward and therefore it cannot be said that Christ did merit the personal union of his Divine and Humane Nature nor the happiness of his soul nor his Habitual Graces which He had from the first Moment of his Incarnation Christi humiliatio est exaltationis meritum ejus exaltatio est humiliationis praemium Aug. Hac enim particula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu propter quod meritum Christi denotat quibus sibi suam exaltationem nobis totam salutem promeruit Zanch. in loc First There are some Divines who interpret the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a causal and so hold that Christ by his Humiliation did merit his Exalta●ion and of this opinion was Augustine who calls Christs Humiliation the meritori●us cause of his Exaltation and his Exaltation the r●ward of his Humiliation The Popish wr●ters go generally this way I find also amongst Protestant Writers the Learned Zanchy of this Opinion who upon this Text hath this Note By this Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherefore The Apostle notes the merits of Christ whereby he hath merited his own Exaltation and our Salvation And that which favours this Explication is that saying of the Apostle concerning Christ Heb. 12.2 That for the joy that was set before him he endured the Cross and despised the shame as if having an eye to the Recompence of the Reward enabled Christ to persevere with more patience when he became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross Neither doth it derogate from the freeness of Christs sufferings that he was rewarded for them for even that glory that Christ hath in heaven is for our good and comfort Nor was it out of indigence and necessity that Christ accepts of glory in a way of Reward of his obedience but herein he commended his love the more to us that would so far condiscend and so far even in his Exaltation humble himself to receive glory in the way of obedience which he might have challenged by vertue of his personal union Even as a Prince who though he hath right to a Kingdom by Inheritance and Succession yet he will accept of it as a Reward of his Obedience and Conquest over its enemies 2. But others understand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text not as signifying the Humiliation ●f Christ to be the meritorious cause but only the Antecedent of his Exaltat●on and so they make this particle to be not causal but connective only and so I find some of the Ancient Translations as the Aethiopick Version doth only ioyn the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ together Humilavit seipsum magnificavit
and Angels shall with one consent own acknowledge and praise Jesus Christ as the Lord and as their Lord. They shall acknowledge him to be the Lord their Maker and their Saviour and so they shall cry Hosanna to him and they shall acknowledge him to be their Lord and Soveraign and so they shall cast down their Crowns at his feet and with everlasting Hallelujahs sing Worthy is the Lamb that was slaine Rev. 5.12 13. to receive Wisdom Power and Riches and Strength and Honour and Glory and Blessing There is but one thing more to be opened in this Scripture and that is the end of Christs Exaltation which was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Glory of God the Father 1. Some by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do understand that Jesus Christ is exalted unto the same glory with the Father in Heaven being now sate down at his right hand and so they make these words to signifie not the end wny but the end whereunto Christ was exalted And thus the Arabick and the Vulgar Latine Omnis lingua confileatur quia Dominus Jesus Christus in gloriâ est Dei Patris Rev. 3.21 And though I believe that there is a truth in this viz. that Jesus Christ after he had overcome his enemies sate down in his Fathers Throne yet I cannot see how the Greek will bear this Interpretation 2. We shall therefore take these words Vnto the glory of God the Father as signifying the great end of Christs Humiliation and Exaltation to wit the glory of God As God had no motive without himself so he had no end beyond himself John 3.16 Deut. 7.7 in giving of Christ God gave Christ for us because he loved us and wherefore did he love us but because he loved us and the maine end of all was Eph. 1.6 that all might be to the praise of the glory of his grace Thus Christs Exaltation was for the honouring of God the Father Jesus Christ prayed Father glorifie thy Name then came there a voice from heaven saying I have both glo●ified it and will glorifie it againe As if God the Father had thus answered Christ Sonne I have glorified my Name in thy Humiliation John 12.28 and I will glorifie it again in thy Exaltation God the Father glorifies his Son that he might glorifie his own Name Luke 10.16 John 5.22 23. He that despise●h Christ despiseth God that sent him and he that honoureth the Son honoureth the Father Having spoken of the Exaltation of Christ as the Apostle handles the Doctrine of it in these Verses I shall conclude all with the improvement and Application thereof I. Use of Information If Christ was first humbled and then exalted Luke 24.26 Act. 14.22 we may learn from hence that as Christ first suffered and entered into his glory even so must we through many Tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven As it was with the Head so may we expect it will be with the Members the Crown of Thornes before the Crown of life the Crosse of shame Joh. 19.2 Rev. 2.10 before the Throne of Glory Humiliation before Exaltation Christ got not the Crown sine sang●ine sudore he sweat drops of blood for it and we cannot expect an easier and shorter way to glory Our way to heaven is like that of the Israelites to Canaan Psal 66.12 which was through fire and water into a wealthy land 2 Tim. 2.11 12. This is a faithful saying If we suffer with Christ we shall reign with him first suffer and then reign we pass through Marah unto Elim through Bacah to Berechah through bitterness to blessedness II. Vse of Exhortation Is Jesus Christ thus exalted then let us our tongues our knees our hearts and our lives acknowledge him to be our Lord. Joh. 19. Joh. 19. Rev 4.10 Rev. 15.3 1. What the Jews and Pilate and Herod and the Souldiers did in scorne let us do in sinc●rity They put a Crown of Thornes on his head let us cast down our Crowns at his foot-stool They bowed the knee and cryed Ave Rex Judaeorum Hayle King of the Jewes Ubi thronus Christi ubi sceptium ubi Corona ubi Pu●pura ubi Ministri Crux fuit thronus sceptrum clavi purpura sanguis Corona spinae Ministri Carnifices Aug. Tanto charior es mihi quanto vilior factus es pro me Bern. let us bow the knees of our souls unto him and say Ave Rex Sanctorum Blessed be thou O King of Saints whereas the Cross was his Throne the nailes his Scepter his Robe was made Purple with his own blood his Crown was Thornes his attendants were the Executioners Say then O blessed Saviour thou art the more p ecious to my soul because thou wast so much vilified for my sake 2. Let us take heed that we do not violate our allegiance to him whom God hath exalted to be Lord and Christ Sinners Exod. 5.2 Psal 12.2 Luke 19.27 do not say Who is the Lord that we should obey his voice Do not say Who is Lord over us Do not O do not say We will not have Christ to reign over us 1. Consider Christ is a Saviour only to th●se that su●mit unto him He is the Authour of eternal life to them that obey him Heb. 5.9 It is a vaine thing to expect the Priviledges and Dignities that come by Christ and not to submit to the duties and services which are due unto Christ Tit. 2.11 12. The Gospel is a Message of Eternal life only to those to whom it is a rule of a spiritual life What will you cry to Christ to save you and in the meane time serve the Devil and your lusts But the true believer doth not only cast himself into the armes of Christ to be saved but also casts himself at Christs feet to serve him and is as willing to be ruled by him as to be Redeemed by him Many love Christ but it is for their own sakes who desire to finde but will not be at the paines to seek him Multi amant Christum sed non propter Christum amant benedictionem non jurisdictionem multi cupiunt Christum consequi qui nolunt sequi desiderant inv●nire quem nolunt quaerere M●retricius amor est plus amare annulum quam sponsum Aug. and so instead of serving the Lord Christ they do but serve themselves upon him 2. Consider O foolish sinner that every knee must one day bow to Christ O then what folly is it to rebell against him to whom thou must at last be forced to bow Would the Brethren of Joseph think you have so despised and despitefully used Joseph if ever they had thought that there would come a day that they must supplicate to him for their lives and liberties The proudest sinner will at the last day Mat. 7.21 cry Lord Lord c. Do not then lift up the heel against him to whom thou
natural men minde something else than God would have them Phil. 3.19 they minde earthly things Herod mindeth the dancing of a lewd Strumpet more than the preaching of the holy Baptist the young man mindeth his great possessions the Epicure his belly the Farmer his barn Judas his bag the Silversmith his Shrines the Gadarenes their Swine Pila e the favour and applause of the people Let the best men speak ingenuously and they must needs confesse that there were many things if I may call them things rather nothings which they minded more than God or Christ or Heaven more than the highest concernments of their immortal souls the weightiest businesse of Eternal salvation they were all Gallios in respect of these things they cared for none of them till they were rouzed out of their waking dreams by the Effectual Call of the most gracious God This is the condition of every natural man 2. It presupposeth That it is an easie thing with God to bring us home to himself though we be never so far distant from him to awaken us to his service though in a dead sleep of sin to raise our minds to higher objects though they be never so deeply immersed in the things of this present world Is any thing hard to the Almighty with a word he made us with a word he can renew us When darknesse covered the face of the deep he did but ay Let there be light and there was light with the like facility can he shine in our hearts giving us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus He uttereth his voice saith David and the earth melteth Let but God utter his voice and the Rocks and Mountains of our corruptions will melt away like wax Come we now closer to the Point Toward the opening of which I shall entreat your Attention to the resolution of sundry Questions Question 1. What is this Calling It is the real separation of the soul unto God and a cloathing it with such gracious abilities whereby it may be enabled to repent of its sinnes and to believe in his Son It is our Translation from the state of Nature which is a state of sinne wrath death and damnation to a state of Grace which is a state of Holiness Life Peace and Eternal Salvation This Translation is wrought 1. By strong convictions of the minde First Of the guilt and filth of sin of the danger and defilement of sin of the malignity of sin and the misery that attends it Once saith the soul that is under this dispensation of Gods Grace Once I lookt upon sin as my wisdome now it is madness and folly Once I accounted it my meat and drink to fulfill the wills of the flesh sinne was a sweet morsel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I drank iniquity like water now 't is a cup of trembling to me and I fear it may prove a cup of Condemnation Once I hugged embrac't and delighted in sin as the Wife of my bosome now I clearly see that the fruit and issue of the impure copulation of my soul with her is nothing else but the shame of my face the stain of my reputation the Rack and horrour of my conscience and which is more than all these the provocation of the Almighty and therefore I begin to think within my self of an eternal divorce from her I slept securely in the lap of this Dalilah she robb'd me of my strength she delivered me up to Philistines that dealt unworthily with me that put me upon base and low employments what now should I think of but if it please the Lord to give new strength the death and destruction of them all Secondly Of the vanity and emptiness of the creature which we have Idolized confiding in it as the staff of our hopes breathing and pursuing after it as the perfection of our happiness Thirdly Of the absolute need of Christ that if he do not save vs we must perish Fourthly Of the absolute fulnesse of Christ and that in him we may be compleat if we be guilty he can justifie us if we be filthy he can purge us if we be weak he can strengthen us if we be poor he can enrich us if we be base he can ennoble us if we be deformed and ugly he can make us beautiful and lovely if we be miserable he can bless us and that with all Blessings in Heavenly places Fifthly Of the clemency goodness meekness sweetness graciousness of his disposition that if any man come to him he will in no wise reject him John 6.37 These things the minde is strongly convinc't of yet if there be not a farther work a man may carry these Convictions to Hell with him Therefore 2. In the second place this Translation is wrought by a powerful inclination and conversion of the will to close with Christ upon his own termes to embrace him as Soveraign as well as Saviour to take him as men use to do their Wives for better for worse for richer for poorer to stick to him on Mount Calvary as well as Mount Tabor to welcome him into thy bosome by bidding an everlasting farewell to thy sinnes In a word to make a voluntary tender and resignation of thy self unto him solemnly avouching that from this time forward thou wilt count thy self more his than thou art thine own and the more thy own because thou art his This work is carried on with a most efficacious sweetness so that the liberry of the will is not infringed whilst the obstinacy of the will is mastered and over-ruled If you ask me How can these things be I never studied to satisfie curiosity but if you can tell me how the bones do grow in the womb of her that is with child I also will tell you how the parts of the new man are formed in the heart but I suppose silence and humble admiration will be best on both sides if there be so great a mystery in our natural generation surely there is a far greater in our spiritual Regeneration if David could say of the former I am fearfully and wonderfully made much more might he say of the latter I am fearfully and wonderfully renewed Question 2. Who are the Called First Among creatures none but men are of the number of the called The Angels that kept not thei● first estate but left their own habitation are never recalled Jude ver 6. but reserved in everlasting chaines under darknesse to the judgement of the great day Lord what is man that thou art mindful of him Psal 8.4 or the son of man that thou so regardest him Secondly Among men none but the Elect are capable of this grace the call is limited by the purpose Whom he hath predestinated them he also called Rom. 8. Touching these Elect Persons divers things fall under our Observation As 1. In regard of their internal condition before this call they are dead in sins and trespasses
busie himself about a lump of sin and misery What but meer mercy what but rich and abundant mercy 1. It is meer mercy When by our own merits we were bgotten to death by his mercy he begat us again unto life Cum nostris meritis generati essemus ad mortem sua misericordia nos regeneravit ad vitam Beda Not by works of righteousnesse which we have done but according to his mercy he hath saved us Tit. 3.5 Indeed we cannot do any works of righteousness before our Calling that righteousness which natural men are subject to glory in is rather seeming than real and that which shineth so bright in our own eyes and perhaps in the eyes of other men is an abomination in the sight of God Luke 16.15 God and men do not measure our righteousness by the same standerd men account them righteous that conform to Customes Laws and Constitutions of men if at least they be likewise conformable to the Letter of the Law of God But God reckons none righteous besides those that have a singular regard to the Spirit of the Law if I may so call it which layeth an Obligation upon the inward man as well as the outward which binds the heart as well as the hand and commands not only that which is good but that good be done upon a good principle in a good manner to a good end A pitch of obedience that no natural man can possibly arise to so that in the sight of God there is none righteous Rom. 3.10 Ephes 2.3 no not one We are all by nature children of wrath as well as others Children of wrath we are by our own desert if ever we become Children of Grace it must be by his mercy 2. As by meer mercy so by rich and abundant mercy in God it is that we are called There is a greatnesse of love in the quickning of those that are dead in sins together with Christ There is mercy in that we have our lives for a prey Eph. 2.4 5. mercy in all the comforts and accommodations of life mercy in the influences of the Sun mercy in the dropping of the Clouds mercy in the fruitfulness of seasons mercy in the fulness of barnes the yeare is crowned with the goodness of the Lord but this is a mercy above all mercies That we are called from darkness unto marvelous light and from the power of Satan to the service of and fellowship with the only living and true God other benefits are extended to the worst of men nay the very Devils have some tastes of mercy but this of an Effectual Calling is as I said before communicated to none but those that God hath chosen Other blessings and benefits though they be good in themselves yet they cannot make us good they are but as trappings to a Horse which if he be a Jade make him not go the better but the worse but here God works a marvelous change for the better once the man ran away from God and himself but now he instantly returns once he was a hater a fighter against God but now the weapons of his hostility are laid down and he thinks he can never do enough to express his love once he was darkness but now he is light in the Lord once dead but behold he lives Finally Other blessings and benefits can never make us happy but as they finde us miserable so they leave us we may and are too apt to bless our selves in them yet God never intended to bless us in the sole enjoyment of them But oh how happy is that man that God hath effectually called to himself his bosome shall be his refuge in all storms his grace his sufficiency in all temptations his power his shield in all oppositions But let the Text speak All things shall work together for his Spiritual and Eternal good Before I part with this Point I shall acquaint you with an Exposition of my Text utterly inconsistent with the Doctrine I have delivered and the truth it self and very unworthy of the Authours of it This it is That here we are said to be call'd not according to Gods purpose Chrys Theod. Theoph. but according to our own purpose to hear and obey his call And perhaps upon this the Papists have grounded their merit of congruity but this must needs fall if we consider but this one thing among many that those that have been farthest off the Kingdome have been fetcht into it and those that have not been farre from the Kingdome of God have never come nearer it God doth not alwayes take the smoothest but the most knotty pieces of Timber to make pillars in his house He goes not alwayes to places of severest and strictest Discipline to pick out some few there to plant in his House but he goes to the Custome-House and calls one thence to the Brothel-House and calls another thence And if yet you insist upon the purpose of man as an inducement to the call of God pray tell me what was Sauls purpose when God met with him in the way to Damascus Had he any other purpose than to persecute the Disciples of the Lord Enough of that Question 5. By what means are we Called Sometimes without means as in persons not capable of the use of them there is highest Caution amongst the people of God to avoid that sin nay the very appearance of limiting the holy One of Israel Sometimes by contrary means the greatness of a sin being ordered by God to set on the conversion of a sinner as when a man is wounded with the sting and healed with the flesh of a Scorpion Gaffarel or as when we make triacle of a Viper a most poysonous creature to expel poyson Sometimes by very unlikely means as when by some great affliction we are brought home to God which in its own nature one would think should drive us farther from God as there is no question but it doth the Reprobates who are ready to tell all the world what King William Rufus told the Bishop if the partial Monk do not belye him God shall never make me good by the evil I suffer from him Nunquam me Deus bonum habebit pro malo quod mihi in●ulerit Edmerus in Hist Ser. 2. de Spirt Sanct. tom 4. or which is yet more unlikely when we are brought home by prosperity God overcoming our evil with his good heaping as it were Coals of fire upon our heads and so melting us into kindly contrition Gerson in a Sermon of his tells us of a most wicked Priest that when he was preferr'd to a Bishoprick became exemplarily holy but such a Convert is rara avis seldom to be found Alwayes this work is carried on by weak means Thus I have heard it credibly reported that a sentence written in a window and accidentally read by an inveterate sinner pierc't his heart and let out the corruption thence the sentence was that of Austin
hast his Benjamin thou shalt be sure not to go without thy Messe thy five Messes i Matth. 6.33 Seek first the Kingdome of God and all these things shall be * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added i. e. cast in as paper and packthread to the bargain 3. A loving affectionate frame Believer thou art married to Christ Jesus that Relation calls aloud for union of hand heart spirits all He is bone of thy bone flesh of thy flesh therefore to be dearly loved k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graecus Aug. count all that thou art and hast too little for him Love him dearly for what he is for what he hath for what he hath done suffered purchased promised Love him more for what he is than for what he hath more for his person than for his rings bracelets jewels joynture Love him with a cordial active conforming constant transcendent love Psal 116.1 2. 4. A truly noble heavenly frame such a frame whereby thou mayst truly contemn this poor dunghill world Believer being united unto Christ thou art indeed cloathed with the Sun and therefore thou shouldst like uhy mother tread the Moon under thy feet Rev. 12.1 We should never fix our hearts on that whereon our God would have us put our feet Such Eagles as Believers should not stoop at Flies 't is not for persons united unto Christ to be fond on these beautiful vanities fair-faced nothings chases in Arras handsome pictures drawn on Ice such are all enjoyments on this side Christ Believer thy head thy husband thy treasure is above there let thy l Anima illic potius sit ubi amat quam ubi animat heart be also Having Christ for thy portion let a little a very little of the world serve thee for thy passage 5. A pitiful compassionate frame to those that are not as yet united unto Christ That are yet without hope because without Christ Oh as the Elect of God put on * Col. 3.12 bowels toward such Poor souls they are sinking drowning thou art safe on the shoar got into the Ark. They are frying burning in Sodom Thou safe in Zoar a brand pluck't out of the fire Oh pity those that do not will not cannot pity themselves That 's the third advice 4. And lastly walk worthy of this union Let your Conversation be sutable to your Condition This I shall dispatch in these three particulars 1. Walk zealously Be wisely * Gal. 4.18 zealous in and for the promoting the honour of this Christ to whom you are united Make it your only plot and businesse to advance his honour 't is your own peculiar interest so to do Be jealous of any thing that doth or may eclipse or sully his glory He that toucheth him his Person Natures Offices Days Ordinances Ministers Servants let him be thought to touch the apple of thine eye Zech. 2.8 Let the zeal of his house even eat thee up Psal 69.9 2. Walk fruitfully so it becomes every branch ingraffed into Christ the true Vine Phil. 1.11 Thy fruitfulnesse adds much to thy Christs honour the plenty of the crop sets a glosse on the Husbandmans care The fully loaden branch reflects an honour on the root If men see our good works our fruitfulnesse in every good work they will then glorifie our Father Matth. 5.16 John 15.16 3. Walk lovingly tenderly towards believers fellow-members They that are so happy as to be united unto one head should be very careful to be of one heart Believers formerly were so of one heart and * Acts 4.32 one soul as if animated with one and the same soul sutable to the Philosophers description of true love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Formerly Believers were like Scilurus his bundle of Arrows so trust up together no breaking of them But alas now 't is sad to see how those that agree in one common faith should yet disagree as implacable foes Oh Beloved that Brethren Joseph and Benjamin Moses and Aaron Abraham and Lot should fall out especially when the Canaani●e is in the Land Shall Gebal Ammon Amal k and the Philistines shall these agree and shall Ephraim and Judah be at variance shall the Wolf Lyon Bear Leopa●d associate and shall not Lambs and Doves O let such their sin and shame never be publish't in Gath nor spoken in the street of Askelon Believers you have heard the fable of the contest between belly and members The moral of it bids you consult if not your duty yet your safety By your divisions you do but dig your own graves Remember Saints we are all one by spiritual relation why should we not be m 1 Cor. 12.13 27. 1.9 10. 1 Joh. 4.12 16 Gal. 3.28 one in our affection I shall close all with that of the Apostle Ephes 4.3 to 7. wherein he draws this arrow to the very head Keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Why because there is one Body one Spirit one Hope one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God Let me adde you are one with Christ the head 't is your duty therefore and 't will be your priviledge honour safety to be one with one another THE NATURE OF Justification OPENED Rom. 5.1 Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God c. THE words present us for the Argument of this morning exercise with the great doctrine of Justification first to be opened and then improved 1. To be opened And that we may not with Aquinas and the Papists in ipso l●mine impingere stumble the very first step we take and so quite ever after lose our way by confoundi●g justification with sanctification I shall only premise that as in sanctification ●he change is absolute and inherent so in justification the change is relative and juridical the former is wrought in the sinners person he becomes a new creature but this latter is wrought in his state he becomes absolved at the bar of divine Justice For Justification is a law-state 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it abolisheth the convincing power of sin or its guilt Our businesse therefore is to discover the processe at Gods bar in the justification of a sinner which will be best done by comparing it with that at mans which we are familiarly acquainted with To be justified therefore implies in general three things 1. The person is charg'd with guilt 2. Pleads to the charge 3. Upon that plea is discharged by the Judge 1. A justified person must be charg'd with guilt Now guilt is the Relation which sin hath to punishment for sin is the breach of the Law and punishment is the vengeance which the Law threatens for that breach And as the threatening it self is in the nature of it a guard to the Law to prevent the breach of it bidding as it were the transgressour come at his peril break the Law if he dare be wise before hand lest he rue it too late so the punishment
otherwise disturbed and perplexed Thus Faith in its own nature and direct tendency But still understand Faith as acting Faith as exercised produceth this effect the Christian so far forth as he lives by Faith and in the Improvement of Faith enjoys this quiet sedate minde even when he wants the full-blown joy of a life of Spiritual sence And not only from the nature of Faith doth this arise but also as Faiths hand casts out the Anchor of Hope which keeps the soul steddy and also as it represents and foretastes the recompence and joy to come This leads to the next Effect of Faith 10. Assurance and further joy thereby I make not this Constitutive of Faith nor inseparable from Faith lest I condemn and sadden causelesly the Generation of the just but whereever it is it proceeds from Faith Vnbelief is shut out from the Promise and can have no true Hope much less Assurance Heb. 10.22 Therefore it is called The full assurance of Faith and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldness and access with confidence and assurance is by faith in Christ Ephes 3.12 And thus believing doth through assurance the soul by a reflex act preceiving its own Faith and thence interest in the O ject of Faith brings the joy unspeakable and full of glory This though not absolutely necessary 1 Pet. 1.8 all believers should labor after that the comfort of it may confort according to the notation of the word and strengthen them Nehem. 8.10 2 Pet. 1.10 2 Joh. 5.13 for the joy of the Lord is our strength The Apostle P●ter bids give diligence to make our calling and election sure even to our selves rather than in it self And St. John wrote to those that believed that they might know they had eternal life 11. And lastly Salvation is the effect and inseparable consequent of true Faith according to the Text. Now this being that great and last effect which the others made way for the object of our desires the reward of our endeavours the only and perfect happiness of man I shall speak more distinctly to the connexion between Faith and Salvation under these three heads That How Why. First That Faith and Salvation are conjoyned and this is peculiarly one of those things which are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 6.9 having accompanying laying hold of salvation It is the Testimony of Truth it self John 3.16 that this is Gods great end in sending his Son into the world that whosoever believeth might have eternal life The Purchaser of salvation John 6.40 declares this to be the Will of him that sent him that every one that seeth the Son and believes on him might have eternal life Accordingly he that hath all power committed to him giveth commission and command to his Disciples to preach that whosoever believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 And ascertaines their salvation by his prayer for all that should believe through his Disciples word John 17.20 Saint Paul testifies Rom. 10.9 10. Rom. 5.17 he that believeth in his heart shall be saved declares that they that have the gift of righteousness which he defends to be by Faith shall reign in life Rom. 8.30 and accordingly conjoynes justified viz. by Faith and glorified and asserteth this to be according to Gods design in Election and terms in Vocation 2 Thes 2.13 14. 1 Tim. 1.14 15 16. sets forth himself as an encouraging example of the exceeding abundant grace of our Lord through Faith to all though great sinners like himself that should believe on Christ to life everlasting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril This Saint John accounts so clear and unquestionable that he writes to them that believe 1 John 5.13 that they may know that they have eternal life So unlimitedly true is that of Habakkuk The Just shall live by his Faith Hab. 2.4 Deus oleum misericordiae gloriae ponit in vase fiduciae Bern. Secondly How Salvation is the effect of Faith Here consider these three things 1. The natural aptitude and fitnesse of this grace of Faith to be made use of in the way of saving man that had broken the first Covenant and could not be saved thereby yea so fit is faith as to be necessary upon supposition of Gods saving sinners by a New Covenant in the hands of a Mediatour and Surety and his Righteousnesse There must be an appropriation of that to the sinner and making all his own and this must be by voluntary acceptance self-confidence and boasting must be prevented now faith alone could do this as before hath been shown 2. The institution of God making this fitnesse of Faith useful and effectual to this end Salvation for be it never so fit yea necessary so that Salvation could not be brought about without it and suppose per hypothesin impossibilem which yet could not be that man had believed upon the Redeemer and God had not said Believe and thou shalt be saved Faith had not reached Salvation Phil. 3.9 therefore it is called the righteousness of God which is by Faith in the Son of God even of his finding out and appointing Even as Sacramental signes are and must be fit to represent what they are appointed for as Aug. Epist 23. ad Bonif. Oportet similitudinem habeant earum rerum quarum sunt Sacramenta quam si non haberent non essent Sacramenta yet they work not naturally but by Divine institution as a means of Faiths maintaining and increase so Faith to Salvation 3. The Dignity and Merit of the object of Faith is to be considered for though it be said 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mercedem as Beza rendreth it the end the reward of your Faith yet is it not of merit for the way of Salvation by Faith is altogether of Grace as Saint Paul industriously and abundantly proveth Faith therefore may be considered either qualitativè or relativè in it self or with respect to its object Now not as an habit in us or act exerted by us though acting not dead faith saveth not as a work of the Law required in the first Commandment doth faith save but through the righteousness of Christ which it apprehends and appropriates in it self it is the most indigent and soul-emptying grace that is and cannot by its own merit do this for it is due being by God commanded Luke 17.10 imperfect in it self for who attaines the highest degrees of faith and if perfect in its kind yet but an imperfect Righteousnesse being the fulfilling but of one Gospel-command Thirdly Why there is this undivided connexion between Faith and Salvation The Prime reason and that which it must be ultimately resolved into is the good pleasure of God according to which he worketh all things There is nothing in faith bearing proportion to this effect and attainment so that we may admiringly say Even so Father because it pleaseth thee Secondary and Subordinate reasons First On
his Saviour with an I thank God through Jesus Christ I have gained the victory The weary and heavy laden are the men invited to Christ for ease and refreshment Mat. 11.28 for indeed such on●y seek him and can be satisfied in him and duly savour him the full stomach of a proud Pharisee loaths the honey-comb of Christ his righteousnesse whil'st to the hungry appetite of the humbled sinner the bitterest passions of a Saviour are exceeding sweet the deeper the sense of misery the sweeter is the sense of mercy How acceptable is the fountain of living waters to the chased panting heart Deus oleum non infundit nisi in vas contritum Bern. and the blood of Christ to the thirsty soul and conscience scorched with the sense of Gods wrath the broken and the contrite heart is the only Sacrifice acceptable to God the wounded Samaritan is the fit object of his compassion a Mary Magdalene cannot but love much when looking on her sins she seeth much is forgiven 2. To set them at enmity with sin and in due submission to his sacred Will Sin is natural to the sons of men and only smart for it will make us sick and willing to be rid of it untill God bring Israel into affliction they regard him not but then they seek him daily Hosea 5.14 An unbroken sinner is as unfit for Gods instruction as an unbroken Colt for the saddle or unfallowed ground for seed Manasseh his Bonds break in him the power of his sin ● Chron. 33.12 and the shakings of the prison to the heart-ake of the Jaylor makes him pliable to divine pleasure Act. 16.30 What shall I do to be saved Sense of sin is a principle of submission under affliction Why should a living man complaine for the punishment of his sin Sins revival unto remorse of conscience constrains Pauls outcry O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of corruption the humbled heart gives an heedy eare to divine instruction They are not stiff-necked but give their hand to the Lord to be led by him 2 Chron. 30.8 and therefore God will teach the humbl● his way Psal 25.9 A bruised heart is like soft waxe prepared for divine impression so that to the end Christ may be of esteem as a Lord and Saviour the penitent soul must on due conviction cry out Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my self before the High God shall I come before him wit● burnt-offerings with Calves of a year old will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rams or ten thousand rivers of oyle shall I give my fi●st-born for my transgression or the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul Micah 6.6 7. And to the end we may be set against sin it must sting the conscience and so work us into a willingnesse to do or suffer the Will of God making us with earnestnesse and resolution cry when pricked at the heart What shall we do to be saved so that a sight of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are parts of and essential to true repentance only before I passe from this Conclusion let it be noted that they are precursive acts Repentance cannot be constituted without them but they are precursive such as alwayes go before sometimes yea too often at least in shew and appearance without true Repentance Judas is convinced of and cast down for sin unto utter despaire crying out I have sinned in betraying innocent blood And Ahab may humble himself in all external expressions and many internal operations of the soul and yet never be turned unto the Lord. We may not indeed deny that humiliation especially in the external acts and expressions goeth many times without conversion and compleated repentance and so we must needs conclude Conviction is not true grace or an estate of saving holinesse but that sad complaints of guilt may passe from Reprobates and damned soules yet we must remember Repentance or conversion never goeth without humiliation sight of and sorrow for sinne In the order of nature men must be convinced of and confounded for the evil from which they are converted we cannot hate and avoid the evil we do not know and know to afflict us and the order of Scripture doth alwayes call to a communing with our hearts that we may stand in awe and not sin Psal 4.5 a searching and trying our wayes before we turn unto the Lord the Law must do its work as a Schoolmaster to every soule that is brought to Christ and the Gospe● ever sends the prick into the h art of such as repent unto remission of sin Acts 2.37 38. and the spirit of bondage before the spirit of Adoption of power love and a sound minde Rom. 8.15 Preaching Repentance is the opening the blind eye and the bringing the Prodigal into his right minde that in the sense of his sad estate he may go unto his father and seek mercy The work of the Word is to make them sinners of sense that shall come to Christ for cure to cast down all proud imaginations and every high thought which exalteth it self and so to bring into obedi●nce to Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 to affect men with guilt and danger that they may with fervency cry What shall we do to be saved to convince that the issues of death will be the end of the way in which they now walk that they may flee with desire and returne without delay In a word to affect the heart with the high transgressions of Gods holy Law the disobedience of a gracious Father and offence done to infinitenesse that the soule may down on its knees prostrate it self at the foot-stoole of mercy fly to Jesus Christ as its Redeemer Surety and alone satisfaction and so sue out its pardon by a serious return to God and these are as it were the pangs of the New Birth natural and necessary though sometimes abortive and miscarrying the first part of sincere repentance though not alwayes successeful to perfect and compleat it for although we must not call the convinced conscience a Gospel-Convert yet the Convert is alwayes convinced sense of and sorrow for sin is no infallible sign of saving grace yet saving grace and sincere repentance is never wrought without a sight of and sorrow for sin as committed against God for this is the precursive act of true repentance and whenever God will seale up under impenitency he stops the passage and possibility of humility making the eare heavy and the eye dim and the heart hard lest they should see with their eyes hear with their eares and be of humbled hearts and so be converted Mat. 13.15 And so much for the third Conclusion but again in the nature of repentance we must Note Conclusion 4 Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance Sincere conversion is the summa totale and ratio formalis of a Gospel-penitent Remorse for sin without a
shall enforce the necessity of Repentance from these two grounds 1. The Anticipation and removal of Gods wrath and judgments 2. The Answer unto the call of the Gospel First Then Repentance is necessary to anticipate and remove the wrath and judgments of God Repentance is the only fence to be made against feared judgments there is no way to appease Divine fury but by Repentance judgments threatned may be thus diverted and prevented and evil inflicted may be thus removed the Lord threatens before he striketh that the fear of approaching evil might force men to Repentance thus God sent Jonah to cry to Nineveh Yet forty days and Nineveh shall be destroyed and so the Lord sent his Prophets Rising up early and sending them to Judah and to Samaria The threatnings of God are but Summons unto Repentance that his hand might be stayed and therefore every threat doth either expresse or imply a promise of escape on the condition of Repentance and an assurance is given by the Lord that Repentance shall appease his anger and anticipate the denounced judgments Behold at what time I shall speak against a Nation or Kingdome if that Nation against whom I have pronounced shall turn from their evil I will repent of the evil I thought to do unto it Jerem. 18.8 Accordingly God 's hand is stayed by the but-seeming Repentance of men Ahabs formal Repentance procureth a reprieve of the judgment though not a remission of sin because Ahab humbleth himself before me I will not bring the evil in his days saith th● Lord to the Prophet 1 Kings 21.29 And so Nineveh repenting at the preaching of Jonah were spared Jonah 3.10 God saw that they repented and turned from their evil way and God repented of the evil that he said he would do unto them and he did it not Impenitency is the enforcement of Divine plagues for all denunciations run with an unlesse ye repent ye shall likewise perish Repentance is the main errand of Gods judgments and if it will be effected by reproof and threatning God will never handle the rod or inflict evil the judgments of God thunder not over Jerusalem untill they mocked the messengers of God despised his Word and misused his Prophets and then the wrath of the Lord was kindled and arose against his people untill there was no remedy 2 Chron. 36.16 God is so solicitous of Repentance that like the Lord of the Vineyard he sends his servants one after another to the rebellious husbandmen and at length his Son whom he expects they should reverence to call them to Repentance before he come with force and armes to subdue them Mat. 21.36 37 38 39 40. Gods judgments are never inflicted untill mens impenitency be upbraided he always begins his corrections with an how often would I have gathered you Mat. 23.37 and ye would not and aggravates the affliction with a thy destruction is of thy self and enforceth his utter rejection with an Oh that thou hadct known Luke 19.42 at least in this thy day the things which concern thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes he drowns not the old world without the warnings of an hundred and twenty years he damned not the souls which are now in Prison untill by Noah the Preacher of Righteousnesse he had called them to Repentance and sealed them up under disobedience We are now the Subjects of sin and that stirs up Gods wrath if we will escape that we must return from this Sin kindleth and Repentance quencheth Gods fury Man is not bound to pardon and pretermit an offence but on Repentance of the offender neither Nature nor Scripture doth require it how much lesse is the Lord thereunto obliged therefore agree with thine adversary quick●y whil'st th u art in the way with him lest he bring thee before the Judge and the Judge deliver thee over to the Jaylor and thou be cast into Prison How many plagues are there impending over our Nation Families Persons how high are the provocations of our sins have we any heart to escape evil and fear of the judgments impending deserved and ready to fall on our heads Let us humble our selves under Gods hand let the Nation repent every Family repent and every particular soul repent for Repentance is our onely remedy of absolute necessity to divert the denounced judgments and anticipate impending plagues Repentance is not only a means to prevent judgments threatned but to remove them when inflicted Impenitency kindles Gods fury but obduracy maketh it flame Impenitency pulls the judgments of God on us but obduracy sealeth us under them to our ruine it is the very heighth of obduracy not to repent under the Rod they that fear not yet cannot but relent when they feel the smart of Gods anger the proudest Pharaoh that can out-face a threat with a What is the Lord that I should let Israel go is yet apt to cry under his plagues poured out I have sinned against the Lord. Gods wrath is never so severe or his hand so smarting but it will be stayed by sincere Repentance but never without it Repentance is the errand of his Rod as well as of his reproof where this prevaileth not that must walk I will go and return unto my place Hosea 5.15 for in their affliction they will seek me early The least remorse of a repenting Ephraim moves God to pity and Repentance and stayeth his correcting hand but stubbornnesse in sin must meet with bitternesse and severity in God when God takes stubborn hearts to task he addes to the number and nature of his chastisements untill their sturdy stomacks are taken down He walks contrary unto them that walk contrary unto him Lev. 4.26 and comes on them with seven times more plagues untill the uncircumcised heart be humbled and they confesse their iniquities this God will effect or he will break in pieces none must strive against him and prosper they that are hardened under his hands he handleth to their utter ruine Repentance is the natural genuine result of the Rod of heart-rending plagues it is a note of the highest impiety to persist in sin under punishment of all the Kings of Israel Ahaz is marked with this brand of incorrigiblenesse This is that King Ahaz who in his distresse did trespass yet more against the Lord 2 Chron. 28.22 Where there is any ingenuity there will be a repenting under the Rod by them that resisted the Word It is the ordinary note of most obstinate Israel when he slew them then they sought him Psal 78.34 Though they were not good any longer than whil'st they were beaten yet they were indeed exceeding bad when they resisted correction the worst tale that ever was told against Gods children is that by the Prophet Jeremy Thou hast stricken them and they have not grieved Thou hast consumed them but they have refused to receive correction and have made their faces harder than a Rock they have refused to return Jerem.
that it shall not go well with the wicked this day of judgement is the day of recompence to the righteous wherein it shall be made manifest it is not in vaine to serve God or walk mournfully before him the iniquities of the penitent shall not be found when sought for but appear blotted out of Gods remembrance for that if there be in the soul any sence of sin and fear of judgment this is one eminently forcible argument to perswade repentance shall men continue in sin which shall erelong be laid open to their shame or pursue the pleasures which shall shortly end in perplexities and not rather judge themselves that they may not be judged by the Lord Thus then the Gospel doth by plain and powerful arguments call unto repentance and witnesse its necessity But yet again The most powerful helps conducing to Repentance are afforded by the Gospel and thereby it calls most loudly to Repentance leaving us altogether without excuse and sealing us under inevitable condemnation in case we do not repent the Gospel affords the fulnesse of knowledge for the enforcement of Repentance ignorance and unbelief those bars and locks of impenitency are broken open the Gospel opens the blinde eyes and turnes us from darkness to light makes all men from the least to the greatest to know the God that is offended to be a God of jealousie that will not endure iniquity he is a consuming fire to the hypocrite in Zion The Law that is violated is just holy and good the guilt contracted is so contrary and provoking to justice that in it there is no possibility of approach to God that therefore Christ is exalted a Prince and a Saviour to give Repentance before Remission of sin Repentance is a free gift conferred by the Covenant of grace signified and sealed in Baptism Christ Jesus the Donor we need but ask and have the death of Jesus the efficient cause of Repentance it is wrought by union with the same so that the Gospel makes us to see the necessity nature next way method and order of repentance we cannot now plead we knew not what it was to repent where or how to gain repentance or that there was so great a need of it The Gospel helps us to the Spirit that worketh Repentance The Ministry of the Gospel is the Ministry of the Spirit this awakeneth the most sleepy conscience and shaketh the most rocky heart this makes Herod heare John gladly and the Jews to rejoyce in his light this makes Foelix himself to tremble and Simon Magus to fall down like ligh●ening none can continue impenitent under the Gospel but by quenching the Spirit grieving the Spirit nay with rage resisting the Spirit and counting themselves unworthy of salvation The great work of the Gospel is to send forth the Spirit to convince the world of sin Act. 13.46 7 51. righteousnesse and judgement and the Spirit by the Gospel works conviction unto very opposition with rage and violence and malicious attempts to extinguish its light and destroy the Ministers that publish it if it do not convince unto conversion and repentance hence the sin unpardonable constituted say some but I am sure compleated by impenitency is called blasphemy against the Spirit for and by reason of its spite and rage against the Gospel We see then that the Gospel teacheth repentance as its maine doctrine offereth repentance as its prime priviledge urgeth repentance as its chief duty and enforceth repentance as its only end and so loudly calleth unto repentance that we are bound to the obedience of the Gospel as the last of Divine instructions and after which we must expect no direction to our happinesse but this must stand as the high aggravation of impenitency as a sin against the humiliation and exaltation of Jesus Christ the death sufferings resurrection of the Son of God the Covenant and Spirit of grace Repentance is absoultely and indispensably necessary So that in order to the anti●ipation of divine fury and answer of the call of the Gospel we see the necessity of repentance And this is the second general Head propounded which give me leave to dismisse with a brief but plaine rebuke and blame unto the sinful demeanour and carriage of men in the world demonstrating an insensibility of this indispensable necessity of Repentance and it consists in two things viz. the Contempt Of Repentance Neglect Of Repentance 1. Note of insensibility of repentance The sinful carriage of men evidencing their insensibility of its necessity is the contempt of Repentance whereby men scoffe at repentance despising all calls thereunto scorning it as a base and contemptible melancholy humour below the spirit of men they live like men in Covenant with hell and at an agreement with the grave who need no repentance and therefore make their hearts hard and necks stiffe become obdurate and rebellions to all calls to repentance approve themselves a scornful people nay scoffers at the Doctrine of the Gospel and day of judgement which calls them to Repentance In the haughtinesse of their spirits they 1. Disesteem the mercies and common providences of God which should lead them to repentance They say not in their hearts Let us feare the Lord our God that giveth rain both the former and latter in its season and that reserveth to us the appointed weeks of the Harvest Jer. 5.24 but despise the patience and long-sufferance of God which should lead them to repentance 2. Decline nay despise the Word of God when preaching repentance they will not hearken to the sound of the Trumpet Jer. 6.17 have line upon line yet will not heare Isa 28.13 Nay pull away the shoulder and stop their eare lest they should hear Zech. 7.11 3. Disregard the judgements of God denounced or inflicted upon others for their warning all that God doth to treacherous Israel never affects or frightens treacherous Judah to make her return Jer. 3.10 The falling of the Tower of Siloa and Pilates mingling the blood of men with Sacrifices may occasion censorious thoughts Luk. 13.1 2 3 4 5. these were worse sinners than others but never any serious reflections that unlesse we repent we must all likewise perish Obdurate children never relent at their Brethrens correction nay when threatened themselves they blesse themselves in their heart and say We shall see no evil though we go on to adde drunkennesse to thirst Deut. 29.19 By their stubbornnesse they tire and stay Gods correcting hand with a Why should you be smitten any more you revolt still more and more Isa 1.5 4. Are desperate and daring in their impiety sinning with an high hand and brazen face with utmost resolution Come say they we will fetch wine and fill our selves with strong drink and to morrow shall be as this day and more abundant Isa 56.12 are not ashamed when they commit abomination nor can they blush Jer. 6.15 they sin as Sodome not so much as seeking to hide their iniquity Isa
grace which produceth some particular and partial change but not a total and universal 4. A real change to distinguish it from hypocrisie which makes shew of a great and goodly change but is only outward and seeming not inward and real which three are often taken but as often mistaken for holinesse 5. Wrought it is neither natural nor acquired or taken up by the power of our own free will or force of others perswasion strength of reason convictions resolutions from within or without Hence we are said to be Gods workmanship Eph. 2.10 To be wrought to the same thing 2 Cor. 5.5 6. In the whole man 1 Thes 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole soul and body and spirit be k●pt blamelesse c. So that if you ask where is the seat of this holinesse is it in the head or heart or conscience or outward man I answer in no one but all of them it is as leaven that leaveneth the whole lump it is as the soul tota in toto tota in qualibet ●arte The understanding in a new sanctified person is enlightned to discern spiritual things which before he understood not his memory sanctified to retain what is good and shut out what is hurtful conscience awakened to check for sin and exc te to duty will subdued to embrace good resist evil affections orderly placed to love fear desire delight it and to hate and what is sutable to holinesse and the whole outward man for speech actions behaviour yea habit and dresse is composed as becometh holinesse 7. Of a formerly vile sinner grace makes a mighty change when it works effectually none so bad so far gone but it can br ng home Ezek. 16.6 Esay 55.13 it findes one in his blood and leaves him clean it findes a thorn and leaves a mirtl● it meets with a Publican and Harlot and leaves a Sa●nt it meets with a bloody Persecutor and hellish Blaspheme● and turns him into a Preacher or Martyr as Paul it findes men as bad as bad can be and leaves them in as good a state as the best 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. 8. By the Spirit of God we may not ascribe it to the vertue of Ordinances or worth of Instruments 1 Cor. 9.11 But ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctifi●d by the Spirit of our God Art n●ture education can do nothing here it is not by might or power but by the Spirit of God Zach. 4.6 9. Whereby the heart is purged c. here the parts of holinesse which are two mortification and vivification Esay 1.16 17 Cease to do evil learn to do well The first is privative The second positive Grace works right when there is first a leaving of old sin it is not putting a new piece on an old garment or clapping a new Creed to an old life or new duties to wonted courses Deut. 22.9 10 11. this were to sowe with divers seeds or wear a garment of woollen and linnen which God hates but there must be as to the privative part 1. A heart purged from the love of every sin there may be sin left in the heart no sin loved and liked the evil that I do I ha●e sin and grace may stand together Rom. 7.15 not love of sin and grace 2. A life from the practice and dominion of sin sin remains still but raigns no more he was a servant of sin Rom. 6.17 18. and had members enough to be instruments of sin a mouth to speak it a tongue to speak for it a wit to invent for it reason to argue for it hands and feet to work and walk fot it purse to spend upon it there is none of these now Secondly and the other part is yet much better he is in heart and life carried out after every good it is not a bare breaking off of sin that makes a Christian it is one half of a Christian but there must be a turning from sinne and bringing forth fruites meet for Repentance You have both these parts 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse c. To come to the Reasons of the point which are foure Reas 1. This is Gods great designe therefore should be ours It is the greatest design God hath upon his people in all he doth to and for them All the immediate acts of God and all his mediate tend to this 1. All Gods immediate acts Pitch where you will carry it to the first of Gods acts towards man in Election God hath chosen us before the foundation of the world Ephes 1.4 2 Thes 2.13 that we should be holy So that I may not say If I am Elected I shall be saved though I live in sinne but if Elected I must be Sanctified and dye to sinne 2. Take all the acts of the three persons apart 1 Pet. 1.14 15. 1 Thes 4.7 First The Father if he adopt if he regenerate if he call it is that we should be holy Secondly It is the end designed by all that Christ did his Incarnation Hebr. 2.11 Hebr. 13 12 Eph. 4.26 27. Life Death Doctrine Example Humiliation Exaltation Prayers Promises Threats Miracles Mercies yea of his Intercession in heaven that we might be sanctified Thirdly It is the end of all that the Holy Ghost doth All the works of the Holy Ghost may be referred to three heads 1. His gifts 2. Graces 3. Comforts and all these tend to holinesse 1. All the gifts of the Holy Ghost if a gift of prayer of conviction terror c. it is to sanctifie thee if of knowledge utterance c. it is to make others holy 2. A l his graces What is Knowledge Faith Repentance Love Hope Zeal Patience given for but to make thee holy yea they are the several parts of thy holinesse it self which is made up of nothing but the graces of the holy Spirit 3. All the comforts of the Spirit are given to strengthen our hands in holinesse What is the peace of God love of God pardon of sin assurance of salvation joy in the Holy Ghost Spirit of Adoption given for but to make us more watchful humble lively in holinesse The Privy Seals of Justification must be attested in Letters Patents under the broad Seal of Sanctification or it may be well suspected Jeremy had two Evidences of his purchase Jerem. 32.10 one sealed the other open so must we 2. The mediate acts of God whatsoever they be in Providences or Ordinances First All ways of Gods Providence to his people tend to their sanctifying 1. If God afflict he saith to sicknesse Go and pull me down that proud sinner that he may be sanctified Go saith the Lord to the winds and storms of the Sea blow and beat the Ship to awaken me that sleepy Jonah Jonah 1.17 2.10 swallow him up saith he to the Whale the Lord spake to
they must whether they will or no behold the Lord Jesus with those very eyes which have been the casements to let in iniquity into the soul They shall see that Christ whose Sabbaths and Ordinances they have despised and whose Laws they have trampled under their feet That drunken and adulterous body that swearing tongue those hands of thine which have been workers of iniquity and those feet which have been swift to shed blood shall rise at the last day to be tormented in everlasting flames That flesh of thine for which thou hast made such provision to fulfil the lusts of it shall arise into everlasting con em●t and punishment O consider what howling and lamentation will be when thy soul and body shall meet again and shall curse one another and call to the Mountains to fall upon them and rocks to hide them from the wrath of the Lamb but all in vain When thy godly Minister shall say to thee as Reuben to his Brethren Gen. 42.22 Did I not tell you before of these things but you would not hearken unto me and as Paul to the men in the ship Acts 27.21 If you had hearkened unto me you might have scaped this loss O quam miserum est Deum videre perire ante Pretii tui perire conspectum Suppose a man were to go to bed at night with an assurance that the next morning he should be hanged drawn and quartered he would have but little comfort in that nights rest And did a wicked man consider that whensoever he falls asleep and is laid in the grave he shall awake to everlasting condemnation this would make his joynts to loose and his knees to smite one against the other as Belshazzars did at the sight of the Hand-writing The Lord give you grace to perpend and weigh these things and lay them to heart before it be too late Vse 4. IF there shall be a Resurrection of the dead let us labour so to live that when we dye we may have a happy Resurrection that we may arise to the Resurrection of Life that there may be a necessary connexion between the eleventh nd twelfth Articles of our Creed and that immediately after the Rvsurrection of the body we may be received into life everlasting Here I shall briefly answer unto two Questions 1. How shall we know whether we shall have a blessed and happy Resurrection 2. What must we do that we way have a happy Resurrection Question 1. How shall we know whether we shall have a blessed and happy Resurrection Answer 1. If thou be a just man thou shalt have a happy Resurrection The Apostle tells Acts 24.15 That there shall be a Resurrection both of the just and the unjust The unjust shall come out of their graves to the Resurrection of damnation but the just to the Resurrection of life If thou be a just man just in thy dealings just in thy words and oathes just both to God and man and labourest to give God his due in the duties of the First Table and man his due in the duties of the Second Table if thou joynest justice with holiness and holiness with justice thou shalt certainly have a joyful Resurrection Job was a just man and one that feared God and therefore he believed that with those very eyes of his he should see God to his everlasting comfort 2. If thou refusest earthly Resurrections upon base terms thou shalt have a happy Resurrection The Apostle tells us Heb. 11.35 of many blessed Martyrs who would not accept deliverance that they might obtain a better Resurrection They might have risen to great preferments if they would have complied upon base terms but they would not accept of an earthly Resurrection that they might obtain a better Resurrection When S. Basil was offered great preferments if he would have subscribed to the Arian Heresie he refused them with scorn and contempt c. he would not accept deliverance upon such unworthy tearms When Hormisdas a Persian Nobl●man was devested of all his Honours for his Religion and afterwards restored again and offered greater advancements if he would renounce it He answered Si p opter ista me Christum denegaturum existimas ea denuo accipe If you think I will deny my Christ for these things take them back again But if you accept of earthly Resurrections upon base and sinful Conditions you shall have a sad and woful Resurrection 3. If thou glorifiest God with thy body here thy body shall be glorified at the Resurr●ction If thou beatest down thy body and bringest it under subjection 1 Cor. 9.27 Rom. 12.1 6.13 if thou offerest up thy body a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God if thou makest thy body an instrument of righteousness if thy body be erviceable to the soul in the worship of God then shall it be made a most glori us body But if it be the Devils instrument unto sin if thou makest it a slave to thy lust here it shall rise at the last day unto everlasting misery 4. If thou hast a gracious soul here thou shalt have a glorious body hereafter for the body followeth the soul it is but as the souls shadow If when thou dyest thy soul goeth to Hell thy body will come thither at last and if thy soul go to Heaven thy body will come thither also And therefore examine what kinde of soul thou dyest withal if thy soul be beautified with grace if sanctified and regenerated if thou mindest thy soul more then thy body and labourest for Soul-riches and Soul-honours and Soul-food then thy body shall be happy at the Resurrection But if thy soul be polluted and deformed if starved by the neglect of Gospel-Ordinances if poysoned with sin if infected by evil company if thou dicest and cardest it away if thou losest thy soul for want of looking too thy body will arise to the Resurrection of Condemnation 5. Lastly and especially If thou hast got a real interest in Christ and his righteousness then thou shalt have a most blessed Resurrection for Christ Jesus is the Resurrection and the life John 11.25 and whosoever believeth in him shall rise to life everlasting If thou gettest into Christ while thou livest thou shalt dye in Christ and sleep in Christ and be raised by Christ unto eternal happiness But if thou hast not got into him by a Christ-appropriating faith thou canst not dye in him nor sleep in him nor rise by him as Head unto life everlasting but as a revengeful Judge unto everlasting damnation Question 2. VVhat must we do that we may have a happy Resurrection Answer 1. You must labour to be just persons that you may partake of the resurrection of the just 2. You must refuse earthly resurrection upon base terms as the three Children and Daniel did 3. You must glorifie God with your bodies you must make them helpers to your souls not hinderers you must make them Temples of the Holy Ghost The
me in whose presence is fulnesse of joy * Psal 16.11.3 Thirdly After this sentence follows the Execution Mat. 13.30 Binde the tares in bundles to burn them Christ will say Bundle up these sinner here a bundle of hypocrites there a bundle of Apostates there a bundle of prophane bundle them up and throw them in the fire And now no cryes or entreaties will prevail with the Judge the sinner and the fire must keep one another company he who would not weep for his sins must burne for them and it is everlasting fire The three children were thrown into the fire but they did not stay in long The King came near to the mouth of the burning fiery surnace and said Come forth Dan. 3.26 but the fire of the damned is everlasting this word ever breaks the heart length of time cannot terminate it a Sea of-tears cannot quench it The wrath of God is the fire and the breath of God is the Bellows to blow it up to all eternity O how dreadfully tormenting will this fire be to endure it will be intolerable to avoid it will be impossible Use 1 Use 1. Let me perswade all Christians to believe this Truth that there shall be a day of judgement Eccles 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth and let thy heart chear thee in the dayes of thy youth and walk in the wayes of thy heart but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into judgement This is a great Article of our faith that Christ shall come to judge the quick and the dead yet how many live as if this Article were blotted out of their Creed we have too many Epicures and Atheists who drown themselves in sensual delights and live as if they did not believe either God or day of judgement the Lu●ianists and Platonises deny the immortality of the soul the Photinians hold there is no Hell I have read of the Duke of Silecia he was so infatuated that he did not believe either God or Devil * Usque adco ins●nus ut neque inseros neque superos esse dicat I wish there be not too many of this Dukes opinion Durst men swear be unchast live in malice if they did believe a day of judgement Oh mingle this Text with faith the Lord hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world There must be such a day not only Scripture but reason confirms it There is no Kingdom or Nation in the world but have their Sessions and Courts of Judicature and God who sets up all other Courts shall not he be allowed his that there shall be a day of judgement is engraffed by nature in the consciences of men Peter Martyr tells us that some of the Heathen Poets have written that there are certain Judges appointed Minos Radamanthus and others to examine and punish offenders after this life Use 2 Vse 2. See here the sad and deplorable estate of wicked men this Text is as the hand-writing on the wall which may make their knees to smite one against another Dan. 5.6 The wicked shall come to judgement but they shall not stand in judgement Psa 1.5 in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall not rise up When God shall be deck'd with glory and Majesty his face as the appearance of lightening his eyes as Lamps of fire and a sword of justice in his hand and shall call the sinner by name and say Stand forth answer to the charge that is brought against thee what canst thou say for thy pride oaths drunkennesse c. these sins thou hast been told of by my Ministers whom I sent rising up early and going to bed late * Jer. 7.25 but thou didst persist in thy wickedness with a neck of iron * Isa 48.4 a brow of brass * Ezek. 36.26 an heart of stone all the tools I wrought with were broken and worn out upon thy rocky spirit what canst thou say for thy self that the sentence should not passe O how amazed and confounded will the sinner be he will be found speechless he will not be able to look his Judge in the face * Job 31.14 Job 31.14 What then shall I do when God r●seth up and when he visiteth what shall I answer him O wretch thou that canst now out-face thy Minister and thy godly Parents when they tell thee of sin thou shalt not be able to out-face thy Judge when God riseth up the sinners countenance will be faln * Gen. 4 6. and when he visiteth what shall I answer him Not many years since the Bishops did use to visit in their Diocesse and call several persons before them as criminal all the world is Gods Diocesse and shortly he is coming his visitation and will call men to account Now when God shall visit how shall the impure soul be able to answer him 1 Pet. 4.18 Where shall the ungodly and the sinner appeare Thou that dyest in thy sin art sure to be cast at the Barre John 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already that is he is as sure to be condemned as if he were condemned already and if once the sentence of damnation be passed miserable man what wilt thou do whither wilt thou go * A dextris erunt peccata accusantia à sinistris infinita daemonia subtus horrendum chaos inferni desupor judex iratus soris mundus ardens intus conscientiaurens heu miser peccator quo fugies Ansel wilt thou seek help from God he is a consuming fire wilt thou seek help from the world it will be all on fire about thee from the Saints those thou didst deride upon earth from the good Angels they defie thee as Gods enemy from the bad Angels they are thine Executioners from thy conscience there is the worme that gnaws from mercy the Lease is run out O the horror and hellish despaire which will seize upon sinners at that day oh the sad convulsions their heads shall hang down their cheeks blush their lips quiver their hands shake their conscience roar their heart tremble What stupifying Physick hath the Devil given to men that they are insensible of the danger they are in the cares of the world have so filled their head and the profits of it hath so bewitched their heart that they minde neither death nor judgement Vse 3 Vse 3. Exhortation 1. Branch Possesse your selves with the thoughts of the day of judgement think of the solemnity and impartiality of this Court. Feathers swim upon the water Exhortat 1. Branch gold sinks into it light feathery spirits floate in vanity but serious Christians sink deep in the thoughts of judgement many people are like quick-silver they cannot be made to fix If the Ship be not well ballasted it will soon overturn the reason why so many are overturned with the vanities of the world is because they are not well ballasted with the thoughts of the day of judgement Were a man
natura had the charge of these sublunary things even the holy Prophet himself was liable to this temptation Psal 73.9 10 11 12 13 14. he saw that as the clean Creatures were sacrificed every day the Turtle and the Lamb the Emblems of innocency and charity whilest the Swine and other unclean Creatures were spared Plutarch and Seneca and Cicero have rendred satisfaction concerning this method of the Divine Providence So good men were harrast with troubles when the wicked were exempted and this shook his faith but by entring into the Sanctuary of God where he understood their end he comes off with victory now for the removing this Objection Consider First we are not competent Judges of Gods actions we see but one half of Ezekiels Vision the Wheels but not the eye in the Wheels nothing but the Wheels on which the world seems disorderly to run not the eye of Providence which governs them in their most vertiginous changes The actions of God do not want clearnesse but clearing What we cannot acquit is not to be charged on God as unjust the stick which is streight being in the water seems crooked by the refraction of the beams through a double medium we see through flesh and spirit and cannot distinctly judge the ways of God but when we are not able to comprehend the particular reasons of his dispensations yet we must conclude his judgements to be right as will appear by observing Secondly The sufferings of the righteous do not blemish Gods justice 1. God always strikes an offender every man being guilty in respect of his Law Now though love cannot hate yet it may be angry and upon this account where the judgements of God are a great deep unfathomable by any finite understanding yet his righteousnesse standeth like the high Mountains as it is in Psalme 36. visible to every eye if the most righteous person shall look inward and weigh his own carriage and desert he must necessarily glorifie the justice and holinesse of God in all his proceedings 2. The afflictions of good men are so far from staining Gods justice that they manifest his mercy for the least sin being a greater evil than the greatest affliction God uses temporal crosses to prevent or destroy sin he imbitters their lives to wean their affections from the World and to create in them strong desires after heaven as long as the waters of tribulation are on the earth so long they dwell in the Ark but when the Land is dry even the Dove it self will be wandring and defile its self When they are afflicted in their outward man it is that the inward man may be revived as birds are brought to perfection by the ruines of the shell that is not a real evil which God uses as an instrument to save us Who will esteem that Physitian unjust who prevents the death of his Patient by giving a bitter potion 3. If the Righteous be thus afflicted upon earth we may conclude there is a reward in the next World if they are thus sharply treated in the way their Countrey is above where God is their portion and happinesse Thirdly The temporary prosperity of the wicked reflects no dishonour upon Gods justice or holinesse for God measures all things by the Standard of eternity a thousand years to him are as one day Now we do not charge a Judge with unrighteousnesse if he defer the execution of a Malefactor for the day the longest life of a sinner bears not that proportion to eternity besides their reprieve increases and secures their ruine they are as Grapes which hang in the Sun till they are ripe and fit for the Wine-presse God spares them now but will punish them for ever he condemns them to prosperity in this world and judges them not worth his anger intending to poure forth the vials of his wrath on them in the next Fourthly The more sober Heathens have concluded from hence there is a judgement to come because otherwise the best would be most miserable and the ungodly prosperous from hence they have inferred that because all things are dispenc't in a promiscuous manner to the just and unjust in this world therefore there must be an after-reckoning Fifthly There are many visible examples of the goodnesse and justice of God in this World either in rewarding afflicted innocency or punishing prosperous iniquities He that shall read the story of Joseph and consider that wonderful chain of causes managed by the Divine Providence how God made use of the treachery of his brethren not as a sale but a conveyance how by the Prison he came to the principality must conclude there is a watchful eye which orders all things And how many instances are there of Gods severe and impartial justice there is no State or History but presents some examples wherein an exact proportion in the time measure and kind between the sin and punishment is most conspicuous the unnatural sin of Sodom was punish't with a supernatural showre of fire and brimstone Pharaoh had made the River guilty of the blood of the Hebrew Infants his first plague is the turning of the River into blood Adonibezec is just so served as he did by the seventy Kings Judas who wanted bowels for his Lord wanted bowels for himself in life and death for he hanged himself and his bowels gushed out and thus the punishment as a hand points at the sin and convinces the World of a Deity Use 1 Vse 1. This is just matter of terror to Atheists which are of three sorts 1. Vita 2. Voto 3. Judicio First To those who are practical Atheists vita in life who live down this truth denying God in their lives sad and certain it is that many who pretend they know God yet so live they as if there were no Deity to whom they must give an account Such are the secure that sleep in sin notwithstanding all Gods thunder and if ever sleep were the true image of death this is the sleep The sensual who are so lost in carnal pleasures they scarce remember whether they have a soul if at any time conscience begins to murmure they relieve their melancholy thoughts with their company and cups like Saul sending for the Musick when the evil spirit was upon him The incorrigible who notwithstanding the designes of Gods mercy to reduce them although Providences Ordinances conspire to bring them off from their evil ways yet they persist in their disobedience Let such consider it is not a loose and ineffective assent to the being and perfections of God which will save them God is not glorified by an unactive faith nay this will put the most dreadful accent and the most killing aggravations on their sins that believing there is a God they dare presumptuously offend him and provoke the Almighty to jealousie as if they were able either to evade or to sustain his wrath 't is the greatest prodigy in the World to believe there is a God and yet