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A64687 Twenty sermons preached at Oxford before His Majesty, and elsewhere by the most Reverend James Usher ...; Sermons. Selections Ussher, James, 1581-1656. 1678 (1678) Wing U227; ESTC R13437 263,159 200

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to find by experience what it is What a woful thing is it that many men should take more pains to come to this place of torment then would cost them to go to h●aven that men should wilfully run themselves upon the pikes not considering how painful it is nor how sharp those pikes are And this I shall endeavour to my power to set forth unto you This Text declares unto us two things 1. Who they are for whom this place is provided 2. The place it self and the nature of it 1. For whom the place is provided The Text contains a Catalogue of that black Roll though there are many more then are expressed but here are the grand crimes the ring leaders to destruction the mother sins And here we have in the first place the Fearful whereby is not meant those that are of a timorous nature for fear simply is not a sin those that are simply fearful but such as place their fear on a wrong object not where it should be That fear not God but other things more then God Such as if affliction and iniquity were put to their choice will rather choose iniquity then affliction Rather then they will have any cross betide them rather then they will incur the indignation of a man rather then they will part with their life and goods for God's cause will adventure on any thing choosing iniquity rather then affliction Job 36.21 being afraid of what they should not fear never hearing the great and mighty God This is the fearful here meant See how Elihu in Job expresses it Job 36.21 This hast thou chosen This that is iniquity rather then affliction to sin rather then to suffer Christ biddeth us not fear poor vain man but the omnipotent God that is able both to kill and to cast into Hell The man that feareth his Landlord who is able to turn him out of his house and doth not fear God who is able to turn him into Hell this dastardly spirit is one of the Captains of those that go to hell those timerous and cowardly persons that tremble at the wrath or frowns of men more then of God But what 's the reason men should thus stand more in fear of men then of God Why it is because they are sensible of what men can do unto their bodies but they cannot with Moses by faith see what that is that is invisible They are full of unbelief for had they faith they would banish all false fears See what the Lord saith Esa. 41.14 Fear not thou worm Jacob I will help thee saith the Lord. He saith not Fear not ye men or thou man for then perhaps thou mightest be thought to have some power to resist but fear not thou worm A worm you know is a poor weak thing apt to be crushed by every foot yet be this thy case be thou a worm unable to resist the le●st opposition yet fear not thou worm Fear not why For I will help thee saith the Lord. Couldst thou but believe in God this would make thee bold and hadst thou faith thou wouldst not fear When word was brought to the house of Jacob that two Kings were come up into the Land to invade it Esay 7.2 it is said his heart was moved as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind But what is the remedy of this fear See Esay 8.12 Fear not their fear nor be afraid that was a false and a base fear sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and let hin be your dread Esay 51.12 there is an object of our faith and comfort and a remedy against fear proposed I even I am he that comforteth thee who art thou that shouldst be afraid of a man that shall dye and the son of man that is as grass What art thou one that hast God on thy side how unworthy art thou of that high favour if thou fear man The greatest man that lives cannot shield himself from death and from a covering of worms and wilt thou be afraid of a man and forget the Lord thy Maker The more thou art taken up with the fear of man the less thou fearest God and the more thou remembrest man the more thou forgettest thy Maker You have seen the Main the Ring-Leaders which are these fearful faithless dastardly unbelieving men Now see what the filthy rabble is that followeth after and they are Abominable Murtherers c. Abominable that is unnatural such as pollute themselves with things not fit to be named but to be abhorred whether it be by themselves or with others They are the abominable here meant such as Sodom and Gomorrah who were set forth to such as an example suffering the vengeance of eternal fire Jude v. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such are abominable being given up to unnatural lust Let them carry it never so secretly yet are they here ranked amongst the rest and shall have their portion in the burning Lake After these come Sorcerers Idolaters Lyars Though these may be spoken fairly of by men yet cannot that shelter them from the wrath of God they shall likewise have their part in that lake when they come to a reckoning If there be I say a generation of people that worship these say what you will of them when they come to receive their wages they shall receive their portion in that burning lake with hypocrites Those that make so fair a shew before men and yet nourish hypocrisie in their hearts these men though in regard of the outward man they so behave themselves that none can say to them black is their eye though they cannot be charged with those notorious things before mentioned yet if there be nothing but hypocrisie in their hearts let it be spun with never so fair a web never so fine a thread yet they shall have their portion in the lake they shall have their part their portion c. Then it seems these of this black guard have a peculiar interest unto this place And as it is said of Judas Acts 1.25 that he was gone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to his proper place So long as a man that is an enemy to Christ and yields him not obedience is out of Hell so long is he out of his place Hell is the place assigned to him and prepared for him he hath a share there and his part and portion he must have till he is come thither he is but a wanderer The Evangelist tells us Mat. 23.15 that the Scribes and Pharisees went about to gain Proselytes and when they had all done they made them seven times more the children of hell than themselves filios Gehennae So that a Father hath not more right in his Son than Hell hath in them He is a vessel of wrath filled top full of iniquity and a child of the Devils So that as we say the Gallows will claim its right so hell will claim its due But mistake me not all this that I speak concerning hell is
exact to be imitated amongst the men of this Generation then this good Bishop especially in these three things First in making his whole life an example of his doctrine an example in word in Conversation in Love in Spirit in faith and in purity Many there were who in that respect Reverenced him though of the Romish Synagogue as Herod did John the Baptist knowing that he was a just and an holy man This blessed Preacher did Live all his Sermons and had learned of Jesus who began both to do and to teach Nazianzens Epitaph on the life of Basil was true in him His words were Thunder his Life Lightning Secondly in making Christ and the Apostles the pattern of his preaching this great Master in Israel was the most self-denying man in the pulpit and the most Reverend and Christ-advancing Preacher He preached with great Authority as did our Saviour to the Conscience his speech was not with enticing words of Mans wisdom but in demonstration of the spirit and of power that their faith might not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God How oft have I seen my self and heard from others whilst be thus prophesyed some that believed not coming to hear him go away Convinced of all Judged of all and the secrets of their heart made manifest and so falling down on their face they have worshipped God and reported that God was in him of a truth He was an Apollos an Eloquent man and mighty in the Scriptures He was another Paul in the preaching that did compare Scripture with Scripture and so make demonstrative Proofs from the spirit speaking in them Some that affected a frothy way of preaching by strong Lines as they call them after they heard him in Oxford decry that Corinthian vanity were much ashamed and took up a more profitable way of preaching Those words of his in a Sermon at the Court before the King are worthy to be printed in Letters of Gold And oh That God would print them in the hearts of all the Ministers in the World Great Scholars said he possibly may think it standeth not with their Credit to stoop so low c. But let the Learnedst of us all try it when ever we please we shall find that to lay this ground-work right that is to apply our selves to the Capacity of the Common Auditory and to make an ignorant man to understand these mysteries in some good measure will put us to the tryal of our skill and trouble us a great deal more then if we were to discuss a Controversy or handle a subtil point of Learning in the Schools Thirdly In condescending publiquely and privately to the Capacity of the meanest that heard or conversed with him herein his wisdom was like unto Solomons stiled the Preacher because he was wise he did still teach the people knowledge yea he gave good heed and sought out and set in order many Proverbs the Preacher sought to find out acceptable words and words of truth and as our Saviour that was greater then Solomon he would let truths substantially proved into the understanding with apt similitudes and would Encourage any to move their doubts unto him in private So that notwithstanding his greatness good Christians might be very familiar with him visit them in their sickness supply their wants beg their prayers and Countenance them in whatsoever Condition all might see his delight was in the Saints and that he was as that King after Gods own heart a Companion of all them that feared God in a word he was a great proficient in that Lesson of our Saviour Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart This I say was the reason he grew so high in favour with God and man He honoured God and therefore God honoured him A great and good draw-net he was that fished for souls and catched many and let two sorts of Ministers gather from hence their respective Instructions First let all those that list not follow him in those paths of holiness painfulness and Humility take notice of Gods Justice in dealing with them as they have done with him His Covenant is with Levi of Life and Peace and he gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared him and was afraid before his name The Law of truth was in his mouth and Iniquitie was not found in his lips he walked with God in peace and equity and did turn many away from iniquity for the priests lips should keep knowledge and they should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts But saith the Lord ye are departed out of the way ye have caused many to stumble at the Law ye have corrupted the Covenant of Levi saith the Lord of hosts Therefore have I also made you contemptible and base before all the people according as you have not kept my ways but have been partial in the Law Had we all the means in the World to make us great if we either do not teach or do not make our selves Examples of what we teach 't is just with God that we should grow contemptible and vile for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it Thy teachers have transgressed against me therefore have I prophaned the rulers of my Sanctuary The Lord giveth this for a general Rule as those that honour him he will honour so they that despise him shall be despised Secondly Let all holy painful and humble Ministers who make it their design as this fair Copy did before them to advance God and fulfil the work of their Ministery trust to his faithfulness for vindicating their esteem No sort of men have greater promises for provision protection from and in trouble and for revenge of wrongs done unto them then they have What a dreadful and prophetical prayer is that Moses made for Levi smite through the Loins of them that rise against him and of them that hate him that they rise not again What though a generation of men Call even the best of such Antichristian Lyars False Prophets And what not did they not after this manner use Christ and his Apostles before them They speak evil of the things they know not None of Gods blessed truths and holy Ordinances have been otherwise used by them their general outcry is upon all truths Ordinances and ways of Religion among us as Antichristian The Apostacie of the present age makes men fall from all things in Religion and with an impudent face to deny and deride them all But did God leave these Jewels amongst men to be trodden under feet by such Swine Shall they not dearly pay for it Oh! That they would remember what words came out of the mouth of him that is the very promptuary of all sweetness and how highly he is provoked when such words are drawn from his blessed lips that drop honey Let
fire if we continue so But this is not the only sad case of a natural man but he 's very active and fruitful in the works of darkness the others were sins of omission Here he is wholly set upon the commission of sins and trespasses Heb. 6 7.7 He not only brings not forth meet fruit or good fruit or no fruit but he brings forth thorns and briars and is therefore rejected and nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burnt Thou art not only found a barren tree and so deservest to be cut down but thou bringest forth thorns and briars and deservest to be burnt not only no good fruit but noxious bad and poyson'd fruit and this doth mightily aggravate the matter Now for us that have lived so long under the Ministry and the Lord hath watered and dressed and hedged us do we think the Lord expects from us no good fruit Had we lived among heathens or where the Word is not taught then so much would not be expected but we have heard the Word often and powerfully taught and therefore it is expected that we should not only bring forth fruit but meet fruit answerable to the means Where God affords greatest means there he expects most fruit If a man live thirty or forty years under powerful means the Lord expects answerable fruit which if he bring forth he shall have a blessing from the Lord. But when a man hath lived long under the means and brings forth no fruit pleasing to God but all Gods cost is lost when notwithstanding the dew and the rain which falls oft upon him he brings forth nothing but thorns and briars he is rejected and nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burnt The earth which drinketh in the former and the latter rain c. if it bring not forth fruit answerable to the labour of the dresser it 's nigh unto the curse Now if we consider but the particulars and search into Gods Testimonies we shall see how b●d this man is But who should this man be We have Gods own word for it It 's men generally all men Gen. 6.5 God saw the wickedness of man was great in the earth and that every thought and imagination of his heart was only evil continually Every word is as it were a thunder bolt and was it not time when it was thus with them for God to bring a flood The thoughts are the original from which the words and actions do usually proceed Now all their thoughts were evil What was there no kind of goodness in their thoughts No they were only evil continually and that was the reason the flood came Well but though it were so before the flood yet I hope they were better after the flood No God said again after the flood cap. 8. The thoughts of the hearts of men are evil c. Like will to like Men are of one kind till they receive grace from Christ. We are all one nature and naturally all the thoughts and imaginations of our hearts are only evil continually See it in the understanding 1 Cor. 3.14 The natural man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God neither can he know them for they are foolishness unto him c. Look upon his will Rom. 8. It is not subject to the will of God neither indeed can it be Our Saviour Mat. 15.8 doth anatomize the heart of such a man Those things that come out of the mouth come from the heart and they defile the man for out of the heart proceed evil thoughts murthers adulteries c. these are they which defile the man because they come from his heart from within If a man go by a house and seeing great flakes of fire come out of the chimney though he see not the fire within yet he cannot know but there is fire within because he seeth the flakes without I am not able to see the heart of any man and to declare to you what I have seen with mine eyes but yet if I see such to come forth as murther thefts blasphemies lying and the like I may say there is hell-fire in the heart thy heart is a little hell within thee these manifestations from without make it appear to be so The words of this man are rotten words and stinking words and his heart is much more So this is the point we are utterly indispos'd aliens to all good and bent to all evil I am carnal saith the Apostle we are sold under sin slaves unto it sin is our Lord and we its slaves We have generally forfeited our happy estate and are servants to S●tan whom we obey Therefore this is a thing not easily to be passed over this our condition of which if we were once truly perswaded we would never give our selves any rest till we were got out of it If the party that goes to the Physician could but know his disease and cause the Physician to know it and the causes of it whether it came from a hot cause or a cold it were easily cured it were as good as half done That is the chief reason why so many miscarry because their disease is not perfectly known That is the reason we are no better because our disease is not perfec●ly known That is the reason that we are no better because we know not flow bad we are If we did once know our disease and knew our selves to be heart-sick and not like the Laodiceans which thought themselves rich and wanted nothing when they were poor blind and naked then we would seek out and were in the way to be cured So much for this time but we will have another Lecture on this point GAL. 3.22 But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe YOu see in this excellent portion of Scripture the two Covenants of Almighty God to wit the Covenant of Nature and the Covenant of Grace The first of Nature which was written by God in mans heart and this is the holy Law of God by vertue whereof a man was to continue in that integrity holiness and uprightness in which God had first created him and to serve God according to that strength he first enabled him with that so he might live thereby But now when man had broken this Covenant and enter'd into a state of Rebellion against God he 's shut up in misery but not in misery for ever as the Angels that fell ●ere being reserved in chains till the judgement of the great day Jud. v. 6. No the Lord hath shut him up in prison only for a while that so he may the better make a way for their escape and deliverance and for their entrance into the second Covenant of Grace that so making him see his own misery wherein by nature he is and cutting him off from his own stock he may be ingrafted in Christ draw sap and sweetness from him and bring forth fruits to
taste and relish of the joy of the world to come and yet are carried all this while in a fool's Paradise and think there is no fear of their safety never knowing that they are cast-aways till they come to the gates of hell and find themselves by woful experience shut out of Heaven And their case is woful that are thus deceived Know then that it is not every faith that justifies a man a man may have faith and yet not be justified The Faith that justifies is the Faith of Gods Elect. Tit. 1.1 There is a faith that may belong to them that are not Gods elect but that faith does not justifie In the Epistle of Timothy that faith which justifies must be a faith unfegn'd 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.5 Now here 's the skill of a Christian to try what that faith is which justifies him Now this justifying faith is not every work of Gods Spirit in a mans heart For there are supernatural operations of the Spirit in a mans heart that are but temporary that carry him not thorow and therefore are ineffectual but the end of this faith is the salvation of our souls 1 Pet. 1.9 We read in the Scripture of Apostacy and falling back Now they cannot be Apostates that were never in the way of truth This being an accident we must have a subject for it Now there is a certain kind of people that have supernatural workings some that are drawn up and down with every wind of Doctrine these are they that have this cold and temporary faith temporary because in the end it discovers it self to be a thing not constant and permanent We read in John 11.26 That they that are born of God that is that live and believe in Christ never see death shall never perish eternally but yet we must know withal that there may be conceptions that will never come to the birth to a right and perfect delivery And thus it may be in the soul of a man there may be conceptions that will never come to a ripe birth but let a man be born of God and come to perfection of birth and the case is clear he shall never see death He that liveth and believeth in me shall not see death And this is made a point of faith Believest thou this There is another thing called conception and that is certain dispositions to a birth that come not to full perfection True a child that is born and liveth is a perfectly alive as he that liveth an hundred years yet I say there are conceptions that come not to a birth Now the faith that justifies is a living faith there is a certain kind of dead faith this is a feigned that an unfegned faith The life that I now live I live by the faith of the Son of God Dost thou think a dead faith can make a living soul It s against reason A man cannot live by a dead thing not by a dead faith Now a dead faith there is A faith that doth not work is a dead faith Jam. 2.22 Seest thou how faith wrought with his works and by his works was faith made perfect for verse 26. As the body without the spirit is dead or without breath is dead so faith without works is dead also See how the Apostle compares it as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also The Apostle makes not works the form of faith as the soul is the form of the man But as the body without the spirit is dead so that faith that worketh not that hath no tokens of life is dead but then doth not the other word strike home Faith wrought with his works It seems here is as the Papists say fides informis and works make it up as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it But compare this with the other places of the Scripture and the difficulty will be cleared for instance weigh that place 2 Cor. 12.9 Where the Apostle pray'd to God that the messenger of Satan might be removed from him and he said unto him My grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakness What Does our weakness make Gods strength more perfect to which nothing can be added No it is My strength and the perfection of it is made known in the weakness of the means that I made use of for the delivery of mans soul from death So here the excellency and perfection of our faith is made known by works when I see that it is not an idle but a working faith then I say it is made perfect by the work When it is a dead faith that puts not a man on work never believe that will make a li●ing soul. In St. Judes Epistle ver 20. it hath another Epithete viz. The most holy faith not holy only but most holy That faith which must bring a man to God the holy of holies must be most holy It 's said that God dwells in our hearts by faith Ephes. 3.17 Now God and faith dwelling in a heart together that heart must needs be pure and clean Faith makes the heart pure It were a most dishonourable thing to entertain God in a sty a filthy and unclean heart but if faith dwell there it makes a fit house for the habitation of the King of Saints therefore it purifieth the heart Well then dost thou think thy sins are forgiven thee and that thou hast a strong faith and yet art as prophane and as filthy as ever How can it be It is a most holy faith that justifieth it is not a faith that will suffer a man to lie on a dunghil or in the gutter with the hog There may be a faith which is somewhat like this but it is but temporary and cometh short of it But now there is another thing which distinguishes it it is the peculiar work of faith In Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but the new creature Gal. 6.15 and again Gal. 5.6 Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision availeth any thing but faith which worketh by love It 's twice set down Now what is a new creature Why he that hath such a faith as works by love not a dead faith but a faith that works but how does it work it not only abstains from evil and does some good acts which a temporary may do but it s such a faith as works by love The love of God constrains him 2 Cor. 5.14 and he so loveth God as that he hates evil for Gods sake the other does it not out of love to God all the love he hath is self-love he serves his own turn on God rather than hath any true love to serve him Now that we may the better distinguish between these two I shall endeavour to shew you how far one may go farther than the other I know not a more difficult point then this nor a case more to be cut by a thread then this it being a
is put unto the same For as the Wind bloweth where it listeth and no man discerneth the coming thereof So may the Spirit seal at divers times and upon divers occasions yea and why may it not seal in time of some great suffering for the truth as we read of the Apostles in 5 Acts 41. Who went away from the Council rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his name Lastly for tryal we must now see how to distinguish this Testimony of the true Spirit from the counterfeit Illumination of the Anabaptists and some Fryars who will have strange suddain Joys the Devil no question then transforming himself into an Angel of light unto them This tryall therefore is made by three things going before and three things following after For the things that go before First see that the ground-work be true If a man be in the faith and do believe the word if upon believing and meditation there be an opening unto the knock of Christ at the first and not a delaying him like the lazy spouse in the Canticles if in this case the spirit come and fill the heart with joy then all is sure and well it comes with a promise for then Christ promised to enter but if a man have a dull dead delaying ear and therewith great fantastick Joys he may assure himself the right Spirit hath not wrought them they are but idle speculations but if this joy comes upon the surveying of our Charter and evidences it is sure we may build upon it Secondly A man must consider if he hath as yet overcome strong passions and tentations and passed thorough much hazard and peril for Christ having been buffeted with divers temptations of which he hath obtained mastery for the seal of Gods Spirit with our Spirit comes as reward of service done as you may see Revelat. 3.17 To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden Manna and I will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it Whereby he means he will give a secret love token to the soul whereby it rests assured of the unspeakable love of God and freedom from condemnation Now what was this white stone The Athenians had a custome when Malefactors were accused and arraigned to have black and white stones by them and so according to the sentence given those condemned had a black and the acquitted had a white stone given them unto this the Holy Ghost here alludes that this stone this seal shall assure them of absolute acquittance from condemnation and so free them of the cause of fear Again he tells us Christ will give a man a new Name that is write his Absolution in fair letters in the white stone with a clear evidence As if he should say when Christ hath seen a man overcoming and how he hath conflicted with tentations and yet holds out pressing for the Crown unto the end of the race Christ will come in then and stroak him on the head easing him of all his pains and sores with such a sweet refreshing as is unspeakable When a man hath won it he shews he then shall wear it Thirdly if the Spirit seal after Meditation on the word it is right the Apostle says in whom after that ye believed ye were sealed c. Examine the root of this joy the Spirit gives no comfort but by the word If a man do meditate on the promises and thereupon have a flame of love kindled this is sure a man may say the word did stir it up if it be Gods Comfort God will have his word to make way unto it some there are who find no sweetness in the word what is the cause thereof Because they chew not the word to imprint it on their memories and in their heart If comfort come whilst a man meditating on the promises doth wedge it home upon his heart it is of God otherwise it is counterfeit and false These are the forerunners to this seal In the next place there are three things that follow after this sealing which the Spirit leaves behind it As First humility as in his knowledge so in his sense it makes a man more humble There is naturally in all a certain pride which must be overcome says the Apostle What hast thou that thou hast not Received But by the contrary the nearer a man comes unto the glory of God he finds so much the more rottenness in his bones as we see in Job I have heard of thee say he unto God by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee his inference is therefore I abhor my self and Repent in dust and ashes Secondly another thing the Spirit leaves behind it if it seals rightly is a prevention of security for time to come In this case we must look for a new encounter a false perswasion makes a man to fall into security because Satan is then most malicious and busy a man must stand faster then ever The Devil hates them most that are most endued with Gods Image whom because he cannot reach he persecutes in his members And therefore in this case it must be with us as it was with Elias 1 Kings 10.8 After such an enlightning a man must now think that he hath a great Journey to go and so walk on in the strength of that a long time The Devil we see watcheth a man and when he is at the best then endeavours to overcome him As we may see in Adam and Eve no sooner were they placed in that estate of Innocency but he tempts them how much more a man having a sweeter tast of the Spirit and less strength now may he look to be set upon And therefore in these feasting days he had need to be more on his watch and pray more for we have more given us then Adam had we have a new Name given us a secret Love token further we see Christ says Rev. 3. Behold I stand at the door and knock if any man will open unto me I will come in and sup with him and he with me Now in this case if we be such persons who let our hearts fly open to let him in we are safe as if he should say if you would be sure of reconciliation to be at peace with me sup with me and I will sup with you For we know if men who were enemies be once brought to keep company together and to eat and drink one with another we use to say all is done and wrapped up in the table cloath all old reckonings are taken away now they are certainly become friends But if like the spouse in the Canticles we let him stand knocking and will not let him in we also may have great and sound knocks and blows our selves before we find him again as we read it befel the Church there whom the Watchmen found beat and took away her veil as she was seeking
c. This fellow is so far from begging any thing of God that he fills up his time with thanksgiving he thinks he wants nothing and that is his error he looks on other men and compares himself with them and thence concludes he is well enough because he is not so bad as this or that man This is the common deceit when men take this for a rule that because they are not so bad as the off-scouring of the World but are better then the ordinary sort of men therefore they suppose they are very well or as well as they need to be As if a sick man should say I am not so sick as such a man who is at the point of death therefore I am very well I would desire such men that as they look on those that are under them so they would a little cast up their eyes on those that are above them When you look on the Publican this and that man and bless your selves because you are not so bad as these who perchance are before you in points of morality If you stand on comparisons look on those that are above you that go beyond you in grace and zeal and look not so much on the sins of others as your own Another mans sins may condemn him they cannot save thee When a Thief and a Murtherer are both arraign'd at the Bar for their lives will the Thief say to the Murtherer thy sin is greater thy fault is of an higher nature therefore I shall be saved because mine is not hainous when they both are punishable with death The fault of another will not make thy case the better It 's no point of Justification thus to deceive thy self and to conclude because another is worse then thee that therefore thy estate is blessed So we see the degrees of false glasses Self-love or self conceit Then a good opinion of men and conferring a mans self with some others He 's better then they therefore his estate is good An absurd conclusion the Devil will mightily insult over such as he can so easily deceive But this man goes farther I not only compare my self with others but with my self too and find good ground to conclude the safeness of my condition I remember a time when I was vain and idle when I ran in a way contrary to God But now I have sowed my wild-oats and whereas before I was loose and dissolute I have care to do my duty to serve God c. I am not so prophane as formerly my estate must needs be good This is a very dangerous thing to say that because I am not as bad as I was I am therefore good It is as if a man had a debter a slack pay-master to whom the Creditor calls earnestly to pay the debt the best answer the debtor gives is this I am sure there are many worse paymasters in the World then I am and I my self have been a worse and more slow paymaster heretofore then I am now Well because there are worse pay-masters and he himself hath been a worse doth this make him a better now And shall this serve to excuse thee by comparing thy self with others that are worse And with thy self that because thou hast mended thy self in some particulars therefore thou art in the way to Heaven It is a fal●e and foolish Conclusion 4. Now we come to the main thing another false glass which we call Partial obedience when a man goes furthet looking upon the letter of the Commandement onely saying I thank God I forbear many sins and do many duties I am not a Thief nor a Murtherer Swearer Drunkard or covetous person I do not take Gods name in vain I have not broken the Sabbath though I doubt whether it be moral or no. I have served God in coming to his house given obedience to my Parents c. And looking on this he concludes doubtless all is well with him As when I have a thousand thorns in my feet and have three or four taken out will this help me because I have not the Stone or the Gout shall I conclude I am well as if I could not be sick without this or that disease Because I do something that God requires shall I think I do as much as I need No we must take heed of that God will not be contented with Partial Obedience He will have the whole heart or none Obj. But mine is not Partial obedience I do my endeavour as far as I am able to do what God requires Here comes in natural reason and saith I thank God I do what I can and I see no reason why more should be required I conform my self as I am able and I see it needful to the greatest duties of Christianity I lead such a blameless life that no man can tax me in any particular what God hath enabled me to do and according to moral Philosophy I know not how more can be required I go as far as Seneca's rules and somewhat farther and sure this is not Partial obedience Sol. I speak not against Morality But yet let me tell thee if thou hast no more then Morality it will not bring thee to Heaven Not but that a moral man is an excellent stock whereon to graft grace and virtue it 's a good help to Heaven yet it comes far short of bringing him thither Natural reason was once a full and fair glass till it was broken by the fall but now it is insufficient The Tables in Moses hands were excellent things God made the first Tables with his own hand and perchance they may be therein typical when these were broken Moses makes the second these not so excellent as the former though I should esteem a piece of these more excellent then all the reliques of the Papists for there was something of the first in them God writes them with his own finger This glass which then was so perfect is now broken and is not so perfect as it was though there be something yet remaining in it We may see something of its ancient lustre in the Gentiles for these having not a Law are a Law unto themselves There are practical principles yet remaining in the Tables of our hearts so that they that care not for the Law shall be judged by that natural light which is in them We have a conscience to difference between good and evil This is the truth It 's a part of the Image of God implanted in us which we are not to despise lest we be judged with those that hold the truth in unrighteousness The truth is the principle of difference betwixt good and bad The soul was to have a seat as a Queen to rule all our actions But now this Queen is taken captive and all is lost Morality and inward principles are to be much esteemed as things which God at first planted yet do they come short of bringing a man to Heaven The young man in
walk or speak or do any act of a living man so these cannot do the actions of men that are quickned and enlivened they cannot pray with the spirit they cannot love God c. They cannot do those things that shall be done hereafter in Heaven There 's not one good duty which this natural man can do If it should be said unto him Think but one good thought and for it thou shalt go to Heaven he could not think it Till God raise him from the sink of sin as he did Lazarus from the grave he cannot do any thing that is well pleasing unto God He may do the works of a moral man but to do the works of a man quickned and enlightned it 's beyond his power For if he could do so he must then have some reward from God for however we deny the merit of good works yet we deny not the reward of good works to a man that is in Christ. There 's no proportionable merit in a cup of cold water and the Kingdome of Heaven yet he that gives a cup of cold water to a Disciple in the name of a Disciple shall not lose his reward Here then is the point The best that a natural man doth cannot so relish with God as that he should take delight in it or reward it whereas the least good thing that comes from another root from a quickned spirit is acceptable and well ple●sing to him Consider for this end that which is set down Prov. 15.8 T●ke the best works of a natural man his prayers or sacrifice and see there what is said The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord. It s said again Prov. 21.27 where there are additions The Sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord How much more when he brings it with a wicked mind Suppose there should come upon this man a sit of devotion where he hath or should have some good motions is it then accepted no it is so far from being accepted that it is an Abomination to God how much more then if he brings it with wicked mind That is if he brings it not with a wicked mind it is an abomination how much more with it See the case set down in Haggai 2.12.13 14. If one bear holy flesh c. shall it be holy And the Priest answered no. Then said Haggai if an unclean person touch any of these shall it be unclean And he said it shall be unclean Then answered Haggai so is this people so is this nation before me saith the Lord and so is every work of their hands it is unclean A man may nor say prayer is a sin because it it is so in them no it 's a good duty but spoil'd in the carriage He marrs it in the carriage and therefore inste●d of doing a good work he spoils it and so in stead of a reward must look for punishment 1 Tim. 15. The end of the Commandment is love out of a ●ure h●art a good conscience and faith unfeigned Let the things thou dost be according to the Commandment Look what thou dost be in the middle end and beginning according to the Commandement If wrong in all these then though the work be never so materially good being faulty in the original middle or end it 's so far from being a good work that God will not accept of it and thou mayst rather expect a plague for spoiling it then a reward for doing it See then the beginning of a good work it must be from a pure heart A man not ingrafted into Christ is a d●filed polluted person his very mind and conscience are d●filed The consc●ence is the purest thing a man hath it holds out last and taketh part wit● God that as Jobs messenger said I only am esc●ped to tell the● Job 1 15. So conscience only remains to declare a mans faults to God and to witness against the man and yet this very light the eye of t●e soul is de●iled therefore if thou have a corrupt f●untain if the heart be naught the fountain muddy whatever stream comes from it cannot be pure Again the end of it is love Consider when thou dost any duty what puts thee on work Is it love doth constrain thee If love do not constrain thee it is manifest that thou dost not seek God but thy self and art to every good work a Reprobate Tit. 1.16 that is thou art not then able to do any thing that God will accept the best thing thou dost will not relish with God A hard estate indeed that when a man shall come to appear before God he shall not have one good thing that he hath done in all his life that God will own Some there be that take a great deal of pains in coming to the word in prayer publick and private in charity and giving to the poor Alas when thou shalt come to an account and none of these things shall stead thee not one of them shall speak for thee but all shall be lost How heavy will thy case be 2 John 8. Look to your selves that you lose not the thing that you have wrought By being indisposed to do the works of a living man we lose all that is to say God will never own nor accept them we shall never have reward for them So that here is the case thou being dead unable to perform the works of a living man canst have no reward from heaven at all until a man is quickned and hath life from Christ his works are dead as well as his person Without me saith our Saviour you can do nothing Ja. 15.5 St. Austin on this place observes that Christ saith not Without me ye can do no great matter No but unless you be cut off from your own stock taken from your own root and be ingrafted into me and have life from me and be quickned by me you can do nothing at all Nothing neither great nor small all that you do is lost So that if there were nothing but this being dead you could do no good action I know that in me that is in my flesh saith St. Paul there dwelleth no good thing Rom. 7.18 that is nothing spiritually good nothing for which I may look for a reward in heaven The Lord will say of such a man thou hast lived ten twenty forty or it may be fifty years under the Ministry and yet hast not done a good work or thought a good thought that I can own Cut down this fruitless tree why cumbers it the greund Luk. 13.7 And this is the case of every man of us while we continue in our na●ural condition till we be ingrafted into Christ and live by life God will own nothing we do But now we are not only dead and indisposed to the works of a living man though this be a very woful case and we need no more misery for this will bring us to be cut down and cast into the
it to hurt and wound us So that we may look on sin as the Barbarians looked on the viper on Pauls hand they expected continually when he would have swollen and burst Sin bites like a Snake which is called a fiery Serpent not that the Serpent is fiery but because it puts a man into such a flaming heat by their poyson And such is the sting of sin which carries poyson in it that had we but eyes to see our ugliness by it and how it inflames us we should continually every day look when we should burst with it The Apostle James 1.15 useth another metaphor Sin when it is accomplished bringeth forth death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Original sin goeth as it were with child with death The word is proper to Women in labour who are in torment till they are delivered Now as if sin were this Woman he useth it in the faeminine gender 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So it is with sin sin is in pain cries out hath no rest till it be delivered of this dead birth till it have brought forth death That is sin grows great with child with death and then it not only deserves death but it produceth and actually brings forth This is generally so Now consider with your selves death is a fearful thing When we come to talk of death how doth it amaze us The Priests of Nob are brought before Saul for relieving David and he saith Thou shalt surely die Ahimelech And this is your case you shall surely die death is terrible even to a good man As appears in Hezekiah who though he were a good man yet with how sad a heart doth he entertain the message of death The news of it affrighted him it went to his heart it made him turn to the wall and weep How cometh it to pass that we are so careless of death That we are so full of infidelity that when the word of God saith Thou shalt die Ahimelech we are not at all moved by it What can we think these are Fables Do we think God is not in earnest with us And by this means we fall into the temptation of Eve a questioning whether Gods threats are true or not That which was the deceit of our first Parents is ours Satan disputes not whether sin be lawful or not Whether eating the fruit were unlawful Whether Drunkenness c. Be lawful he 'l not deny but it is unlawful But when God saith If thou dost eat c. Thou shalt die he denies it and saith ye shall not die He would hide our eyes from the punishment of sin Thus we lost our selves at the first and the Floods of sin came on in this manner When we believed not God when he said If thou dost eat thou shalt surely die And shall we renew that Capital sin of our Parents and think if we do sin we shall not die If any thing in the World will move God to shew us no mercy it 's this when we sleight his Judgments or not believe them This adds to the height of all our sins that when God saith if thou dost live in sin thou shalt die and yet we will not believe him That when she shall come and threaten us as he doth D●ut 29. v. 19. When he shall curse and we shall bless our selves in our hearts and say we shall have peace though we go on c. v. 20. The Lord will not spare that man but the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoke against him It is no small sin when we will not believe God This is as being thirsty before we now add Drunkenness to our thirst That is when God shall thus pronounce curses he shall yet bless himself and say I hope I shall do well enough for all that There are two words to that bargain Then see what follows The anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoke against that man c. We are but now entred into the point but it would make your hearts ake and throb within you if you should hear the particulars of it All that I have done is to perswade you to make a right choice to take heed of Satans delusions Why will ye die Ezek. 33.11 Therefore cast away your sins and make you a new heart and a new spirit for why will you die Ezek. 18.31 Where the Golded Candlestick stands there Christ walks there he saith I am with you Where the Word and Sacraments are there Christ is and when the Word shakes thy heart take that time now choose life Why will you die Consider of the matter Moses put before the people life and death blessing and cursing Deut. 30.15 19. We put life and death before you in a better manner He was a Minister of the letter we of the spirit 2 Cor. 3.6 Now choose life But if you will not hearken but will needs try conclusions with God therefore because you will choose your own conclusions and will not hearken unto God because you will needs try conclusions with him will not obey him when he calls therefore he will turn his deaf ear unto you and when you call and cry he will not answer Prov. 1.28 I press this the more to move you to make a right choice But now to turn to the other side as there is nothing but death for the wages of sin and as I have shewed you where death is So give me leave to direct you to the Fountain of life There is life in our blessed Saviour if we have but an hand of faith to touch him we shall draw vertue from him to raise us up from the death of sin to the life of righteousness 1 John 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life he that hath not the Son hath not life You have heard of a death that comes by the first Adam and sin and to that stock of Original sin we had from him we have added a great heap of our own actual sins and so have treasured up unto our selves wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2.5 Now here is a great treasure of happiness on the other side in Christ have the Son and have life The question is now whether you will choose Christ and life or sin and death Consider now the Minister stands in Gods stead and beseeches you in his name he speaks not of himself but from Christ. When he draws near to thee with Christs broken body and his blood shed and thou receivest Christ then as thy natural life and strength is preserved and encreased by these Elements so hast thou also spiritual life by Christ. If a man be kept from nourishment a while we know what death he must die If we receive not Christ we cannot have life we know that there is life to be had from Christ and he that shall by a true and lively faith receive Christ shall have life by him There is as it were a pair of Indentures drawn up between God and a
welcome Christ he keeps open house but some are so fearful and so modest that unless they have a special invitation they are ashamed to come to Christ they reason thus if my case were an ordinary man's I should come but I am so vile and wretched that I am ashamed to come my sins have been so many and so heavy that I am not able to bear so great a weight they are more in number than the hairs of my head and yet farther alas they are crying ones to But hearken here 's a second word Dost thou think thy case more heavy because thou art out of measure sinful Lo it pleaseth God to send thee a special invitation who findest thy self discouraged with the great bulk and burthen of thy sins See Mat. 11.28 Though all apply it not to this use Come unto me all you that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest You of all others are they that Christ looks for Those that can walk bolt upright in their sins that desire to live and die in them they will not look upon me and I will not look upon them they scorn me and I scorn them but you that are heavy laden and feel the burthen of your sins are invited by Christ. Let not Satan then couzen you of the comfort of this word that which Christ makes the latch to open the door to let himself in we do usually by our foolishness make the bolt to shut him out Let thy wound be never so great thou hast a warrant to come and be cured be of good comfort then as it was said to blind Bartimeus Mar. 10.49 So it is to thee Loe he calleth thee When Christ bids thee come and gives thee his Word that he will heal thee Come let not the Devil or thy corruptions hinder thee or make thee stay back haste thee to this City of Refuge he hath engaged his Word for thee and he will ease thee But now after all these there is a Third Word that though Christ keeps open house so that who will may freely come and though he sends special invitations to them that are most bashful because their case is extraordinary What do you think now that Christ will come with his Soldiers and destroy those that do not come in He might do it when he is so free and invites thee and thou turnest it back again into his hand But yet here is another word of comfort Christ doth not only send a Messenger to invite thee who hast no goodness in thee but he falls to beseeching and intreating thee and that is a third word whereby faith is wrought in an Unbeliever 2 Cor 5.10 Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us observe the place We pray you in Christ's stead be reconciled unto God This is the most admirable word that ever could be spoken unto a sinner Alas thou mayest say I am afraid that God will not be friends with me why he would have thee to be friends with him do not then with the Papists m●ke such an austere God as though he might not be spoken unto as though thou mightest not presume thy self but must make friends unto him W● have not an High Priest that is not touched with our infirmities Heb. 4.15 Will the Papists tell me I am bold if I go to God or lay hands on Christ I am not more bold than welcome Let us go with boldness to the Throne of grace vers 16. We are commanded to it Do not think but that he had bowels to weep over Jerusalem and he carried the same into heaven when thou liest groaning before him he will not spurn thee We pray you and beseech you to be friends therefore in this case make no doubt it is God's good pleasure to entreat thee and therefore thou hast warrant enough Christ wept over Jerusalem and he is as ready to embrace thee You have now three words to make a man of an Vnbeliever a Believer Is there or can there be more than these Open House-keeping Special Invitations Entreaties and Beseechings Yet there is more than all this which if thou hast not a heart of stone it will make thee believe or make thee rue it And that is 4. When God seeth all these things will not work with us but we are slow of heart to believe then he quickens us and there comes a word of Command God chargeth and commands thee to come and then if thou breakest his Command be it to thy peril It is the greatest sin that can be committed Thou wilt not draw near to God because thou art a sinner thou now committest a greater sin than b●fore thou returnest back Christ unto God thou bidest him take his commodity into his hand again thou wilt not believe and this is an heinous crime Joh. 16.8 9. And when the Spirit shall come it shall reprove the world of sin of righteousness and of judgment of sin because they believe not in me This is that great sin he shall convince the world of because they believe not in him Of all sins this was the most notorious this makes us keep all other sins in possession It is not only one particular sin but it fastens all other sins upon us be they never so many When faith comes it will out them but till then they remain in thee where there is no Commandment there is no sin How could it be a sin in not believing if I were not commanded so to do But you shall hear more than so When the Apostle speaks of excluding Rejoycing under the Law Rom. 3.37 Where is boasting then saith he it is excluded By what Law by the Law of works No but by the Law of faith there is a Law of works and a Law of faith God doth not only give thee leave to come and take him and draw near unto him but he commands thee there 's a Law by the breach of that Law of faith thou art made guilty of a a high sin There is a full testimony of this 1 Joh. 3.23 And this is the Commandment that we should believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ. If a man should ask may I love my Neighbour would you not think him a fool because he must do it he is commanded So should a poor soul come and say to me may I believe thou fool thou must believe God hath laid a Command upon thee it is not left to thy choice The same Commandment that bids thee love thy brother bids thee to believe on Christ. To Entreaty is added God's Command and therefore if thou shalt argue what warrant have I to believe Why God enjoyns it thee and commands it As the impotent man said so mayest thou He that healed me said unto me take up thy bed and walk This is the very Key of the Gospel and this is the way to turn it right When being thus clean naked we have as it
were a Cable put in our hands to draw our selves out of this flesh and blood 5. The last thing is if keeping Open House Special Invitations Entreaties and Commands will not serve the turn then Christ waxeth angry What to be scorned wheh he profered Mercy and as it were invite all sorts and compel them to come in by his Preachers and by a peremptory Command Then he falls a threatning We are not of those which draw back unto perdition if thou wilt not come upon this Command thou shalt be damned Mar. 16.16 He that believeth not shall be damned Christ commands them to go into the world and preach the Gospel to every Creature unto every soul this Gospel which I speak If you will not hear and believe if you will not take God at his Word you shall be damned Joh. 3.36 He that believeth not shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Here is an iron scourge to drive thee thou that art so slow of heart to believe In Psalm 78. where is set down God's mercy unto the Israelites afterwards comes one plague upon another vers 22. it is said They believed not in God and trusted not in his salvation A like passage to this out of the 95th Psalm is applyed in Heb. 3.2 to Unbelievers And the reason of God's wrath mentioned in the 78th Psalm is said to have been the unbelief of the people The Lord heard this and was wrath a fire was kindled against Jacob and against Israel Why was this because they believed not in him because they trusted not in his salvation Nothing will more provoke God to anger than when he is liberal and gracious and we are straitned in our selves harden our hearts and not trust him never forget this Sermon while you live this is the net that Christ hath to draw you out of the world I shall hereafter tell you what faith is which is to receive Christ and to believe in his name but that will require a more particular explication And on that I shall enter the next time EPH. 1.13 In whom ye also trusted after that ye heard the Word of truth the Gospel of your salvation In whom also after you believed you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of Promise THE last time I entred on the declaration of that main point and part of Religion which is the foundation of all our hopes and comfort namely the offering of Christ unto us that as he did offer himself a Sacrifice to his Father for us upon the Cross so that which is the basis ground and foundation of our comfort is that he offereth himself unto us And here comes in th●t gracious gift of the Father which closes in with God That as God saith To us a child is born to us a Son is given c. So there is grace given us to receive him And as the greatest gift doth not enrich a man unless he accept it and receive it so this is our case God offers his Son unto us as an earnest of his love if we will not receive him we cannot be the better for him If we refuse him and turn Gods Commodity which he offers us back upon his hand then Gods storms and his wrath abides on us for evermore That it is his good pleasure that we should receive Christ it is no doubt we have his word for it All the point is how we may receive him and that is by Faith And in this Text is declared how Faith is wrought and that is by the Word of truth In whom also you trusted after you had heard the Word of Truth Now after this Faith there cometh a sealing by the Spirit of God In whom also after you believed you were sealed by the Holy Spirit of Promise Now lest a man should through ignorance and indiscretion be misled and deceived there is faith and there is feeling Where this is not feeling I mean I say not that there is no faith No For feeling is an after thing and comes after Faith If we have Faith we live by it But after you believed you were sealed You see then Faith is that whereby we receive Jesus Christ and to as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God to as many as believe on his name The blood of Christ is that which cureth our souls but as I told you it is by application A Medicine heals not by being prepared but being applied So the blood of Christ shed for us unless applied to us doth us no good In Heb. 12. It s called the blood of sprinkling and that in the 51. Psalm hath relation to it where he saith Purge me with hysop In the Passover there was blood to be shed not to be spilt but to be shed And then to be gathered up again and put into a Basin and when they had so done they were to take a bunch of Hysop and dip and sprinkle c. Faith is this bunch of Hysop that dips it self as it were into the Basin of Christs blood and our souls are purged by being sprinkled with it In Levit. 14.6 There was a bird to escape alive but see the preparation for it You shall take it and the scarlet and the Cedar wood and the Hysop and shall dip them and the living bird in the blood of the bird that was killed c. And then you shall sprinkle on him that is to be cleansed from the leprosie seven times and shall pronounce him clean and shall let the living bird loose into the open field We are thus let loose cleansed and freed but how Not unless we are dipt as the living bird was in the blood of the dead bird there is no escaping unless we are dipt in the blood of Christ Jesus this dead bird and sprinkled with this Hysop we cannot be freed So that now to come to that great matter without which Christ profiteth us nothing which is Faith The Well is deep and this is the Bucket with which we must draw This is the hand by which we must put on Christ As many as are baptized put on Christ Galat. 3.27 Thus must we be made ready We must be thus cloathed upon and by this hand attire our selves with the Sun of Righteousness Malac. 4.2 Wherefore I declared unto you that this Faith must not be a bare conceipt floating in the brain not a device of our own The Devil taking hold on this would soon lead a man into a fools Paradise To say I am Gods Child and sure I shall be saved I am perswaded so this the Devil would say Amen to and would be glad to rock men asleep in such conceipts Such are like the foolish Virgins That went to buy oyl for their Lamps And were perswaded they should come soon enouoh to enter with the Bride-groom but their perswasion was groundless and they were shut out So such groundless perswasions and assurances in a mans soul that
crucified and God by him We come now to declare 2. The Acts of faith what they are and there is some intricacy in that too There is much ado made in what part and power of the soul faith is We must not proportionate the Act of faith according to our own fancy For it 's no faith but as it hath relation to the Word now look how is the Word presented After you heard the Word of Truth the Gospel of your salvation Now the word is presented under a double respect 1. It s presented Sub ratione veri After you had heard the Word of Truth and there comes in the Vnderstanding 2. Then Sub ratione boni as a good word that so we should lay hold on it and here comes in the Will For the Will we say challenges that which is good for its Object Now the Gospel of salvation is a good Word its glad tydings worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the World to save sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 And now as the Word is presented as a good Word so must my Act of faith be answerable unto it See in Heb. 11.13 The act of faith answering hereto These all dyed in faith not having received the Promises What did their faith to them It made them see the Promises afar off and they were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims in the earth So that by comparing place with place it appears that first this Gospel was presented as the word of Truth they were perswaded of it It is the first Act of Faith to perswade men of the truth of the Word and then as it is a good word they embraced it These are the two arms of faith as true it perswades me as good I embrace it We must not now be too curious in bringing in Philosophical Disputes whether one Vertue may reside in two Faculties whether Faith may reside in the Understanding and the Will The truth is these things are not yet agreed upon and shall we trouble our selves with things not yet decided in the Schools as whether the practical Vnderstanding and the Will be distinct faculties or no The Word of God requires that I should believe with my whole heart Act. 8.37 As Philip told the Eunuch If thou believest with all thy heart thou mayest If with the heart but with what faculties may you say Why I tell thee believe with thy whole heart And what shall I piece and divide the heart when the whole is required Now to come to those two The Word is presented 1. As a true Word 2. Then as a good Word a word like Gospel like salvation 1. As a true Word And the Act of faith answering thereto is called in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledge and Acknowledgement Tit. 1.1 2 Pet. 1.3 and 2.18 1. Knowledge that is a thing requisite Why because if there be a Remedy able to cure a man's disease if he do not know it what is he the better for it Knowledge is so essential unto Faith that without it there can be no faith In Joh. 17.3 the terms are confounded the one put for the other This is life eternal to know thee to be the true God and whom c. to know thee that is to believe in thee because knowledge is so essential to belief as one cannot be without the other thou canst not believe what thou hast never heard of I know saith Job that my Redeemer liveth that is I believe he liveth Job 19 25. And hereupon it is said in Isa. 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many Knowledge is an Act primarily requisite to Faith to be justified by his knowledge is to be justified by faith in his blood This then is the first thing that I know it to be as true as Gospel then comes the acknowledgement 2. The Acknowledgment Joh. 6.69 We know and are assured that thou art that Christ. This is an assurance I say not the assurance of my salvation for that is another kind of thing But an assurance that God will keep touch with c. will not delude me but that if I take his Son I shall have life I shall have his favour When God illuminates me I find all things in him when I have him I am made When the Understanding clearly apprehends this then comes the next word it is the Gospel of salvation there being a knowing and acknowledging the Act of the Understanding then comes the Will and it being 2. Propounded as a good word then follows 1. Acceptation 2. Affiance 1. Acceptation which receives Christ Joh. 1.12 As many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God even to them that believe on his name Then a man resolves I will take God on his word and thereupon follows A resting or relying on God which is a proper act of faith I need no other place than Rom. 10.13 Whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved But how shall they call on him on whom they have not believed that is on whom they have not reposed their confidence Mark the Apostle How shall they call on him on whom they have not believed That Faith which was the Antecedent must be in the conclusion therefore our faith is a relying on God and so in this place this trust is made the same with faith as it is in the Text in whom you trusted after you had received the word of Truth for our trust and belief there is the self same word Nimium ne crede colori this Credo is to have a great confidence in fleeting and fading things and so it is in justifying faith With respect to the unshaken truths of the incorruptible and unchangeable Word of his which liveth and abideth for ever 1 Pet. 1.23 If I have a knowledge of God and acknowledgment of him and from my knowing my will is conformed to accept Christ and if when I have accepted him I will not part from him this is faith and if thou hast this faith thou wilt never perish Suppose thou never hadst one day of comfort all thy life long yet my life for thine thou art saved Perhaps by reason of thy ignorance thou hast no feeling yet if thou consent thou art justified it is the consent makes the match If thou consent to the Father and take Christ the Son know it or know it not thou hast him though thou knowest not whether thy sins are forgiven yet as long as thou keepest thy hold all the Devil's temptations shall never drive thee from him thou art justified and in a safe case though ignorance and other things in thee cause thee not to feel it if thou layest hold on him for his sake thou art apprehended Object Now then this is an easie matter you will say Sol. Not so easie a matter as you guess it to be It were
point of conscience therefore First I declared unto you the nature of faith How God first works the will and the deed and that there is a hungring and thirsting after Christ. First I say there is a will and desire to be made partaker of Christ and his righteousness then there is the deed too We are not only wishers and woulders but do actually approach unto the Throne of grace and there lay hold on Christ touch the Golden Scepter which he holdeth out unto us but Object Now you will ask Is there not an earnest and good desire in a temporary faith a desire unfeign'd Sol. Yes there may be for a time a greater and more vehement desire in a temporary then in a true believer then in the elect themselves all their life Object Where 's the difference then I thought all had been well with me when I had such a desire as I could scarce be at rest till it were accomplished Sol. I answer beloved It is a hard matter to tell you the difference but you must consider 1. From whence this desire flows whether it come from an accidental cause as if by accident my heart be made more soft and I more sensible of my condition or whether my nature be changed to give you an instance in iron when iron is put into the forge it is softned and as soon as it 's taken forth we say 't is time to strike while the iron is hot the fire hath made a change in it it 's malleable the hammer is able to work on it but let the fire be gone and it 's as hard as before nay we say steel is harder so that there is no change in the nature of iron it 's hard still redit ad ingenium it goes back into its own estate If it be softned it is by an accidental cause so here as long as the temporary faith is in the furnace of afflictions when God shall let loose the cord of his conscience and makes him see that there is no way for salvation but by Christ then the sense of his torture will make him desire with all the veins in his heart to have Christ. See a singular example of this temporary desire in Psal. 78.34 When he slew them then they sought him and returned and enquired early after God So Prov. 1.27 When their fear was on them as desolation and their destruction as a whirlwind when distress and anguish cometh upon you then shall they call upon me c. Not with a feigned desire but in truth and reality they desire relief They remembred then that God was their Rock and the high God their Redeemer they saw a Redeemer when he was slaying of them and they believed that God would free them though it was but temporary Nevertheless they flattered him with their mouths and lied unto him with their tongues for their heart was not right with him neither were they stedfast in his Covenant Observe then this was but a temporary case a temporary change there was no new creature no new nature wrought but being in the furnace of affliction as long as the fire was hot they were pliable they were not stedfast in his Covenant Let this be an admonition to them that think they never can have true faith till God slay them I am not of that opinion God sometimes useth this means but it is not so necessary as that it cannot be o●herwise and to speak truly I had rather have faith that comes another way The difference is this The temporary believers will have Christ while God is slaying of them whilst they are in the furnace of afflictions but the other in cold blood when God's hand is not on them The true believer is sick of love and when he hath no affliction nor God's hand on him with the Apostle he accounts all things dung and dross for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus Philip. 3.8 There is an ardent desire when this external cause draws not If when thou art out of the forge thou hast thy heart softned and findest this work of grace and faith to drive thee to Christ thou hast a faith unfeigned and so the faith of God's elect Again there is not only this desire in him who hath a temporary faith but having understood the Word he so desires it that when he knows there is no having Christ nor happiness or salvation by him unless he deny himself and part from his evil ways being perswaded of this out of self-love he would have Christ and seeing these be the terms that he must turn a new leaf and lead a new life or go to hell therefore he will do this too this is much yet I say he doth this too but how shall this be proved most evidently in 2 Pet. 2.20 For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ they are again intangled and overcome the latter end with them is worse than the beginning Here is that Apostacy and here is the subject of the temporary faith It had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the holy Commandment delivered unto them this was a temporary conversion as Ephraim like a broken bow turned back in the day of battel Psal. 78.9 Observe what they did they were like the foolish Virgins they kept their maiden-heads in respect of the pollutions of the world they lived very civilly they escaped the pollutions of the world and no man could challenge them of any filthy act they knew that Christ was the King of Saints and had the knowledge of him they knew that it was not fit that the King of glory and holiness should be attended on by the black guard that they must have sanctity that will follow him and therefore they laboured to be fit to attend him They escaped the pollutions of the world but yet it continues not Why so For it happened to them according to the true Proverb the Dog is returned to his vomit and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire Mark the Dog turns again to his own vomit This proceeds from some pang in his stomach that enforceth that filthy beast to disgorge it self that it may have some ease but he quickly gathers it up again as soon as the pang is over Some there are that would be content to hide their iniquity under their tongues at Job speaks chap. 20. vers 12. but there comes a pang sometimes a pang in their consciences which forceth them to vomit up their sweet bits again but well the fit is gone and being gone they like the filthy dog return to their vomit again considering the pleasure which they took in that filthy thing that they did disgorge themselves was but from that pang and present pinch not from the loathing or hatred of the thing and therefore they return again
Kingdom Luk. 12.32 We are all the children of God but it doth not appear what we shall be when he appears we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 He shall change our vile bodies and make them like his glorious body We are here sons but yet but in a strange Country no body knoweth what he is and therefore he meets with many affronts The King when he was in France went for an attendant on the Duke and is he troubled at it No he knew that the world knew it not they knew not what he was and therefore he is not troubled at it So is it with children of God but when they shall appear they shall be advanced and their enemies ashamed By the way let not the people of God be discouraged by the taunts jeers and reproaches of wicked men they know not what you are and therefore make light of you as they did of Christ himself Well besides what we have in reversion the very present hope of it works wonderful joy in the heart of a Christian. David did not live to see the glory of Solomon's Temple but he made provision for it and cast the model of it and he took much delight in the contemplation of what it would be The consideration of these hopes makes my flesh rest in hope and my heart rejoyce Psal. 16.9 The consideration of the resurrection made David's heart rejoyce The consideration of that which is to come should bring abundance of joy unto a Christian these are strange things not like the joy of a natural man for his heart is sad in the midst of laughter Prov. 34.13 but these rejoyce with a joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 Here are some sparks some beginnings of the glory of heaven and of that great joy which we shall have hereafter but I cannot speak of these things in an hour But forasmuch as the Devil transforms himself into an Angel of light there is no work of God's Spirit in the hearts of his children but Satan like an Ape labours to imitate in the hearts of wicked men to make them secure we must know that there are joys in some who are not regenerate They that receive the Word on the Rock received it with joy The Word if it be apprehended and hath but the least footing brings joy with it But now to know how I may get this joy how beneficial a thing is it to have such a comfort on earth as to know that I have this true joy and to be able to distinguish this joy from the false joy from the flashes those fleeting joys of the wicked which are but as the crackling of thorns under a pot Eccles. 7.6 for theirs is but as a blaze that suddenly goeth out Now if thou wouldst know thy joy aright and whether it differ from that counterfeit joy which flesh and blood and the Devil suggests Look to the things that go before and produce this joy 1. The first thing that goeth before true joy and produceth it is an opening unto Christ when he knocks at the door of thy heart As in that famous place in Rev. 3.20 Behold I stand at the door and knock if any man hear my voice and open the door I will come in to him and sup with him and he with me There is if thou open a sweet and familiar communication between Christ and thee he communicates himself at dinner and supper A man comes not melancholy to meals Christ will come and make merry with thee he will sup with thee familiarly But how is it with thee Hath Christ knocked and thou hast given him a slieveless answer and hast thou joy it is a false joy But when Christ knocks at the door of thy heart there must be an opening the door on thy part when he knocks by his Word and Spirit And dost thou give such an answer as the Spouse in the Canticles Cant. 5. I am come into my garden my Sister my Spouse I have gathered my myrrhe with my spice I have eaten my honey-comb with my honey Now Christ coming to Supper knockt at the door and would bring in a great deal of joy I sleep saith the Spouse but my heart waketh it is the voice of my well-beloved that knocketh saying Open to me my Sister my Love my Dove my Vndefiled When God comes and wooes us and desires to communicate himself unto us and desires us to put off our cloaths dost thou look for comfort if thou openest not At last I opened to my Beloved vers 6. But he had withdrawn himself and was gone my soul failed when he spake I sought him but I could not find him I called him but he gave me no answer When thou givest not Christ entertainment when he comes thou mayest seek and not meet with him ●t is observed that the Keepers of the Wall are the greatest strikers Those whom God hath set to be Watchmen instead of comforting they smite vers 7. The Watch-men that went about the City they found me they smote me they wounded me they took my vail from me She gets raps from them who should protect her because she did not entertain Christ if thou findest any comfort after Christ hath knocked and thou hast opened unto him then it is true joy and thou mayest make much of it 2. If it be true joy there goeth faith before it for being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. So that the exercising of the acts of faith is a spiritual means to raise comforts in our souls Joh. 6. I had need to speak of this for there is want of the exercises of faith Is it enough think you ●o have faith once exercised He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him It is not enough to eat once a year A man will not be in good liking that eats but once a year but a man must eat once a day at least A Christian should feed on Christ every day make him his ordinary food renewing every day the acts of faith receive Christ crucified by faith every day If a Christian would consider that God offers Christ unto him every day and thou renewest thy faith and claspest him every day it would be a special way whereby joy should be raised in the soul. It is said in Rom. 15.13 We rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost Thus when thou hast exercised the acts of faith in believing and then upon that rejoycest then it is seasonable and true joy and not the counterfeit joy of the wicked when it arises and springs from believing when that procureth it it likewise distinguishes it from all false joys The Apostle tells us Philip. 1.24 Having this confidence I know that I
Christ Now when the spirit hath wrought this will in me and I come and take God at his word and believe in Christ laying hold by degrees on the other promises of life winding and wrapping my self in them as I am able it is faith But that perswasion only which many have that they shall go to heaven is not faith but rather a consequent hereof The promise is made unto those that believe in Christ For in him says the Apostle all the promises are yea and Amen If a man weep much and beg hard for the remission of sins he may weep and be without comfort unto the end of his life unless he have received Christ and applyed his vertues home unto his trembling soul. A man must first receive Christ and then he hath a warrant to interest himself in all the promises So that now this being done if such a man were asked hast thou a warrant to receive Christ Yes I have a warrant says the soul for he keeps open house unto all that come wellcoming all and I have a will to come this is a good and sufficient warrant for me to come if I have a will wrought in me and then if I do come this is the first thing to be observed in the witness of our Spirit Now if a man do stagger for all the King keeps open house so as he will not or does not come then in the second place comes Invitation because we are slow to believe therefore God invites us as in Matthew 11.28 Come unto me all ye that Labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Many object O I am not worthy to come but you see here is invitation to encourage me to come yea the sorer and heavier my load is I should come so much the rather So that in this case if the question should be asked of such a one friend how came you hither What warrant had you to be so bold Then he shews forth his ticket as if he should say Lord thou gavest me a word of comfort a warrant of thy invitation in obedience to thy word and faith in thy promise I come hither Now this invitation is directed to them who as yet have no goodness in them when then my Spirits warrants this much unto me that upon this word of promise and invitation I have come in for releif and ease of may miseries unto Christ Jesus the great Physician relying on him for cure and lying as it were at his feet for mercy this is the testimony of my Spirit that I do believe and a ground for me to rest on that now I am in the way of life and justified by his grace Thirdly sometimes Christ meets with a dull and slow heart lazy and careless in a manner what becomes of it not knowing or weighing the dangerous state it is in making excuses here Christ may justly leave us for is it not much that the King should invite us for our good as he did these in the Gospel who for refusing to come to his Supper were excluded from ever tasting thereof strangers being fetched in in their places God might so deal with us but you see in 2 Corinth 5.20 God sends as Embassage to entreat us erects as it were a new office for our sakes saith he Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christ's stead to be reconcile unto God This may seem to be needless we being weaker than he Ambassadours for the most part are sent unto those that are stronger The Apostle reasons the matter are we stronger than he do we provoke the Lord to anger But here we see and may admire his infinite rich goodness that he comes and sues to us to be reconciled as we see it is a kind of indignity for a great Monarch to sue for peace to them that are far below him and his inferiours This dishonour God is willing to put up at our hands and sues unto us first when it rather became us upon our knees to beg and sue first unto him The effect of the Embassy is that we would be friends with him and receive that which is so highly for our advancement when therefore I see that this quickens in my heart so that as S. James speaks of the engrafted word that is able to save our souls I can bring it home having some sweet relish and high estimation of it in my heart that it begins to be the square and rule of my life then I am safe If this or any of these fasten upon the soul and thereupon I yield and come in it is enough to shew that I am a justified person And from hence our spirit may witness and that truly this is a third thing in the witness of our spirit Fourthly if none of all this will do then comes a farther degree a command from the highest you shall do it as in 1 Joh. 3.23 And this is his commandment that we should believe on his Son Jesus Christ and love one another as he gave us commandment In the Parliament of Grace there is a Law of Faith which binds me as strictly to believe as to keep any of the commandments Says the Apostle Rom. 3. Where is boasting then it is excluded by what Law of works nay but by the Law of Faith So that if I will not believe on the Lord Jesus who eases me of the vigour of the Law and so is my righteousness I must perish for ever What may one object must I needs believe Yes thou art as strictly bound to believe as not to murder or not to be an Idolater not to steal or commit adultery nay I will add more that thy infidelty and contempt of that gracious offer thy disobedience to the Law of Faith is greater than thy breach and disobedience to the Law of Works when thou dost fling God's grace in his face again and as it were trample under foot the blood of the Covenant See for this John 16.9 What is that great sin which Christ came to reprove even this infidelity saith he because they believe not in me which in two respects is a great sin First because it is a sin against God's mercy Secondly because it is a chain which links and binds all sins together Thus our Faith is sure when it relies on the word otherwise all other thoughts are but presumption and will fail a man in the time of need for what is faith but my assent to believe every word of God he hath commanded me to believe and so endeavour the practice of it Fifthly if none of these prevail there comes threatning then God swears that such as refuse shall never enter into his rest If a Prince should sue unto a Beggars Daughter for marriage and she should refuse and contemn him do you think he would be well pleased So it is with us when the King of Heavens Son sends unto us Will you