Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n believe_v faith_n power_n 4,181 5 5.2665 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A89503 A practical commentary, or An exposition with notes on the Epistle of Jude. Delivered (for the most part) in sundry weekly lectures at Stoke-Newington in Middlesex. By Thomas Manton, B.D. and minister of Covent-Garden. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1657 (1657) Wing M530; Thomason E930_1; ESTC R202855 471,190 600

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

under the power and reign of their sins and yet pretend to rest upon Christ for salvation they set up another Christ then the word holdeth forth and as the Christ is mistaken so is the Faith 't is not an Idle trust but such as is effectual to purge the heart for the true faith purifieth the heart Acts 15. 9. If besides profession knowledge assent and a loose trust they should pretend to assurance or to a strong conceit that Christ died for them and they shal certainly go to heaven this will not excuse them from unbelief this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the grand mistake that the strength of Faith lieth in a strong perswasion of the goodness of our condition and the stronger the perswasion the better the faith If this were true hardness of heart would make the best faith and he that could presume most and be most secure and free from doubts would be the truest believer and the goodness of our condition would lie in the strength of our Imagina ion and conceit Alas many make full account they shall go to heaven that shall never come there The foolish Virgins were very confident and the foolish Builder goeth on with the building never suspecting the foundation nay let me tell you Assurance of a good condition as long as we lie under the power and reigne of sin is the grossest unbelief in the world for 't is to believe the flat contrary to that which God hath revealed in the word therefore none abuse the Lord and question his Truth so much as these do Where hath God said that men that live in their sins shall be saved nay he hath expresly said the contrary be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Adulterers nor Idolaters c. 1 Cor. 6. 9. so that you give God the lie or conceit that he will break his word for your sakes nay in a sense you even dare him to make good his truth He hath said Be not deceived you shall never enter c. and you say Though I am an Adulterer a Drunkard a Worldling I shall go to heaven for all that Now in a little while you shall see whose word shall stand God's or yours Jer. 44. 28. Once more The word is not supposed to be without all kinde of power men may have some relish of good things and some experience of the powers of the world to come and yet be in an unbelieving state See Heb. 6. 5. Where the Apostle speaketh of a common work opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to things that do accompany salvation v. 9. or have salvation necessarily annexed to them they may have some feeling of the power of the truth and yet afterwards make defection out of a love to the world and worldly things they may have many spiritual gifts change their outward conversation make a glorious profession and be thereupon enrolled among the Saints yea be of great use and service in the Church though for their own ends and interests remaining all this while unrenewed and having their worldly inclinations to honour esteem pleasure profit unbroken and unmortified for there is no such enemy to faith as a carnal worldly heart Therefore let men pretend what they will when they are as eager upon the world as if they had no other matters to mind and the love of outward greatness doth sway with them more then the love of heaven and the praise of men more then the approbation of God and carnal ease and pleasure more then delight in God How can they be said to believe John 5. 44. for such kind of lusts and earthly affections are inconsistent with the power and vigour of saving faith therefore till the bent of the heart be towards heavenly things and carnal affections be soundly mortified unbelief reigneth I pitch it upon this evidence partly because the great drift of conversion is to draw off the soul as from self to Christ and from ●in to holiness so from the world to heaven See 1 Pet. 1. 3. Begotten to a lively hope and 1 John 5. 4. He that is born of God overcometh the world Assoon as we are converted the heart is drawn and set towards heavenly things partly because the main thing to be believed next to God's Being is his Bounty Heb. 6. that we may make God our rewarder and partly because the main work of Faith is to draw off the soul from sensible things to things unseen and to come Heb. 11. 1. so that whatsoever glorious profession men make or whatsoever service they perform in the Church or whatsoever experience they have in the enlargement of gifts yet if they be careless of things to come and eager after the things of the world Faith is not throughly planted for a main thing wanting in these temporaries was a resolution to serve God for God's sake or to make him their pay-master which can never be till carnal inclinations to the honours pleasures and profits of the world be subdued and we are willing to lay down all these things at Christ's feet taking only so much as he shall fairly allow us for our use Thus much for the hainousness of unbelief in the General 2. Let me tell you that all unbelief is not alike hainous as will appear by these considerations 1. Total reigning unbelief is a black mark such as lie under it are in the high way to hell John 3. 18. He that be-@2lieveth not is condemned already The Law hath condemned him and whilest he remaineth in that estate the Gospel yeildeth him no hope John 3. 36 The wrath of God abideth on him and if he die in it he is miserable for ever Rev. 21. 8. Fearful and Vnbelievers are reckoned among the Inhabitants of hell First he is condemned by that ancient sentence That whosoever sinneth shall die which is not reversed but standeth in full force till faith in Christ John 8. 24. If ye believe not that I am he ye shall die in your sins and if we continue refusing the counsels of the Gospel to the condemnation that is already to the condemnation of the Law there is added a new condemnation for despising the Gospel But now partial unbelief where faith prevaileth though there be many doubts and fears leaveth a man obnoxious to temporal judgements but not to eternal ruine 2. All unbelief is the more hainous the more means you have to the contrary as counsels warnings promises clearly held forth See John 15. 22. If I had not spoken to them c. and John 2 19. Light is come into the world c. The word is preached 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a witness Matth. 24. 14. with Mark 13. 9. first to them and if not received then against them Did not I warn you saith Reuben to his Brethren Every offer and warning will be as so many swords in your Consciences One observeth well That twice Christ marvelled once at the unbelief of his Countrymen the Galileans that
20. not so much for crucifying the Lord of life the Gospel was tendred to them after Christ was slain 't was for not believing or refusing the Gospel If you will know what company there is in hell that Catalogue will inform you Fearful and Vnbelievers c. Rev. 21. 8. if you look to temporal Judgements that Nobleman was trodden to death for distrusting Gods power 2 Kings 8. 2. and could only see the plenty but not taste of it Nay 't is such a sin as God hath not spared in his own children Moses and Aaron could not enter into the land of promise because of their unbelief Numb 20 12. So Luke ● Zechary was struck dumb for not believing what God had revealed Christ did never chide his Disciples so much for any thing as for their unbelief Luke 24. 25. O ye fools and slow of heart to believe and Why doubt ye O ye of little Faith Matth. 8. 26. he chideth them before he chideth the wind the storm first began in their own hearts 3. 'T is the mother of all sin the first sin was the fruit of unbelief we may plainly observe a ●aultring of assent Gen. 3. 3 4 5. and still 't is the ground of all miscarriages of hardness of heart and Apostasie Heb. 3. 12 13. He that believeth not the judgements and threatnings of the word will not stick to do any evil and he that doth not believe the promises will not be forward to any good All our neglect and coldness in holy duties cometh from the weakness of our faith there is a decay at the 〈…〉 did we believe heaven and things to come we should be more earnest and zealous Many are ashamed of Adultery Theft Murder but not of Vnbelief which is the mother of all these 4. Final Vnbelief is an undoubted evidence of Reprobation See John 10. 26. Ye believe not because ye are not of my sheep And Acts 1● 48. Unbelief is God's prison wherein he keepeth the reprobate world Rom. 11. 32. He hath shut them up under unbelief c. And shall I continue such a black note upon my self I know not how soon God may cut me off and if I die in this estate I am miserable for ever Lord I desire to believe help my unbelief 5. 'T is a sin that depriveth us of much good of the comforts of providence Nothing doth ponere obicem bar and shut out God's operation in order to our relief so much as this sin Mark 6 5. He could do no mighty work c. So John 11. 40. Said I not unto thee if thou would'st believe thou shouldst see the glory of God So also of the comfort of Ordinances Heb. 4. 2. The Word profited not because it was not mixed with faith in them that heard it So for Prayer James 1. 7 8 9. Nay it barreth heaven gates it excluded Adam out of Paradise the Israelites out of Canaan and us out of the Kingdom of heaven Heb. 3. 17 18. Well then Let us see if we be guilty of this sin Take heed saith the Apostle Heb. 3. 12. lest there be in any of you an evil heart of Vnbelief Many have an unbelieving heart when they least think of it 'T is easie to declaim against it but hard to convince men of it either of the sin or of lying in a state of Vnbelief 't is the Spirit 's work The Spirit shall convince of sin because they believe not in me There are many pretenses by which men excuse themselves some more gross others more subtile Many think that all Insidels are without the pale among Turks and Heathens alas many too many are to be found in the very bosome of the Church The Israelites were God's own people and yet destroyed because they believed not Others think none are unbelievers but those that are given up to the violences and horrors of despair and do grosly reject or refuse the comforts of the Gospel but they are mistaken the wholl word is the object of Faith the commandments and threatnings as well as the promises and carelesness and neglect of the comforts of the Gospel is unbelief as well as doubts and despairing fears Matth. 22. 5. But they made light of it He is the worst unbeliever that scorns and slighteth the tenders of Gods grace in Christ as things wherein he is not concerned Briefly then Men may make a general profession of the name of Christ as the Turks do of Mahomet because 't is the Religion professed there where they are born a man may take up the opinions of a Christian Country and not be a whit better then Turks Jews or Infidels as he is not the taller of stature that walketh in an higher Walk then others do They may understand their Religion and be able to give a reason of the hope that is in them and yet lie under the power of unbelief for all that as many may see Countries in a Map which they never enter into The Divel hath knowledge Jesus I know and Paul I know c. And those that pretend to knowledge without answerable practise do but give themselves the lye 1 John 2. 29. Besides Knowledge there may be assent and yet unbelief still the Divels assent as well as know they believe there is one God James 2. and 't is not a naked and inefficacious assent but such as causeth horrors and tremblings They believe and tremble and they do not only believe that one article that there is one God but other articles also Jesus thou Son of God Art thou come to torment me before my time was the Divel's speech where there is an acknowledging of Christ and him as the Son of God and Judge of the world and increase of their torment at the last day upon his sentence Assent is necessary but not sufficient Laws are not sufficiently owned when they are believed to be the Kings Laws there is somthing to be done as well as believed In the primitive times Assent was more then it is now and yet then an unactive assent was never allowed to pass for faith Confident resting on Christ for salvation if it be not a resting according to the word will not serve the turn there were some that leaned upon the Lord Micah 3. 11. whom he disclaimeth 't is a mistaken Christ they rest upon and upon him by a mistaken Faith 'T is a mistaken Christ for the true Christ is the eternal Son of God that was born of a Virgin and died at Jerusalem Bearing our sins in his Body upon a Tree that we being dead unto sin might be alive unto righteousness 1 Pet 2. 24. the true Christ is one that gave himself for us that he might purifie us to be a peculiar people zealous of good works and is now gone into heaven there to make Intercession for us and will come again from heaven in a glorious manner to take an account of our works Tit. 2. 13 14. But now when men lie
lustred with some general profession and gained to some owning of Christ but do not fully believe in him not cordially embrace him either through the weakness of their assent looking upon the Gospel only as probable or out of the strength of their worldly and carnal affections they relish not and esteem not the counsels and comforts of the Gospel not the comforts and hopes of the Gospel because they are matters of another world and lie out of sight and reach but worldly comforts act more forcibly upon them as being more suited to their hearts and at hand and ready to be enjoyed Thus Israel out of Unbelief despised the pleasant land Psal 106. 24. counted it not worth the looking after and the counsels of the Gospel they refuse out of an indulgence to fleshly lusts as there is in the Gospel the History and Doctrine of salvation so there are counsels of salvation which must be obeyed and therefore we hear of obeying the Gospel 2 Thes 1. 8. and the obedience of Faith elsewhere This unbelief is again two-fold 1. Reigning 2. In part broken though not wholly subdued 1. Reigning Vnbelief is in all natural men who are not only guilty of unbelief but described by the term unbelievers as being persons never throughly gained to the obedience of the Gospel or the acceptance of Christ and life and peace in him It bewrayeth it self 1. By hardness of heart they are not moved nor affected with their own misery nor with redemption by Christ and the great things of eternity depending thereupon nor the invitations of grace calling them to the enjoyment of them Acts 19 9. And divers w●re hardned and believed not c. an hard heart is one of the Divel 's impregnable Forts not easily attached by the force and power of the Word Men are born with an hard heart we bring the stone with us into the world and by positive unbelief or by slighting offers of grace made to us it increaseth upon us Hardness of heart is known by the foolishness of it when seeing we see not and hearing we hear not Acts 28. 26 27. when we have a grammatical knowledge of things but no spiritual discerning 't is also known by the insensibleness of it when men have no feeling of terrors by the Law of peace joy and hope by the Gospel no taste of the good word at all but are as stones unmoved with all that is spoken 2. By a neglect of spiritual and heavenly things they do not make it their business and work to look after those things Matth. 22. 5. But they made light of it and went one to his Farm another to his Merchandise Your callings are not your 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your work and main business that is to look after an interest in Christ therefore when this is the least thought of and the Farm and the Merchandise ingrosseth all our time and care men believe not Could they slight Christ and holy things if they did soundly and throughly believe the Word of God Would they not find some time to mind their souls Looking after the inward man that 's the main care and men would first regard it if they did believe that the soul were so concern'd both in point of danger and hope surely when men take no heed to the great offers of the Gospel they do not look upon it as a certain truth 3dly By secret suspicions in their own souls against the truth of the Gospel that prophane wretch said hae● fabula Christi they look upon it as a Golden dream to make fools fond with it and that all opinions in religion are but a Logomachy a meer strife of words or a Doctrine to set the World together by the ears as Gallio Acts 18. 15. or a fancy and fond superstition Acts 25. 29. and that we need not trouble our heads about it these are the natural thoughts which men have of the Gospel such thoughts may rush into the heart of a Godly man but they are abhominated and cast out with indignation but in wicked men they reign and dwell they live by these kind of principles I remember Christ saith of his Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 17. 8. they have known surely that I came out from thee the light of faith is an undoubted certain light but in wicked men their assent is mingled with doubting ignorance errour and sottish prejudices against the Doctrine and Worship of God Matth. 3. 14. natural Atheism in them is not cured and that faith which they pretend to and professe is but a loose wavering opinion not a grounded and setled perswasion of the truth of the Gospel the assurance of understanding as the Apostle calleth it dependeth upon experience and an inward sense of the truth and is wrought by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 4. and therefore I suppose proper to the Godly 4 By rejecting the counsels of Salvation see Acts 13. 46. Luke 7. 31. all natural men are children of disobedience ●ph 2. 2. out of pride scorning either the messages of God folly ●o him 1 Cor. 2. 14. or the messengers ●s not this the Carpenters Son Mark 6. 3. ●oining and fencing with the word and defeating the methods of Grace used to gain them Rom. 10. 21. guilty of an obstinate frowardnesse it is a people that do erre in their hearts Psal 95. 11. not in their minds onely but their heart as if they did say we desire not the knowledge of t●y w●i●s Job 21. 14. 5. By the unholinesse of their lives the Apostle saith 2 Peter 3. 11. We that look for such things what manner of persons ought we to be in all holinesse and godlinesse of Conversation from whence we may plainly infer that they which are not such manner of persons do not look for such things as faith inferreth obedience where the Prince is there his train will be so is unbeleef known by disobedience when men live as carnally and carelesly as an Infidel there is not a pin to chuse between them 6. When men hear the Word and never make application or convert it to their own use 't is a sign they are under the power of reigning unbelief in faith there is assent or believing the Word to be the Word of God or that it is a faithfull saying 1 Tim. 1. 15. and then consent or approbation of the Word as a good word or worthy saying and then application or converting the Word to our own use so in unbelief many doubt of the truth of the Word others acknowledge not the worth of it they do not glorifie the word Acts 13. 48. most that speaks well of the word and approve it in their consciences do not urge their own hearts with it What do we say to these things Rom. 8. 32. and know it for thy good Job 5. 27. the Word is far sooner approved then applied and yet till it be applied it worketh not when we see our selves involved
heart be opprest with sins in the mean time and be not upright with God 1 Cor. 13. 1. Though I speak with the tongues of men and Angels and have not charity I am become but as a sounding Brass and tinkling Cymbal Though you can speak of the things of God with much enlargement and affection pray sweetly all is but as tinkling with God if there be not saving grace It is a great evidence that we are such as the Apostle speaketh of when the affection doth not answer the expression of a duty nor the life our knowledg and gifts have not a proportionable influence upon practise So much for that Point Having spoken of the State I come now to speak of the Author of it God the Father But why is it so distinctly attributed to the Father is not Christ our Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. and is it not called the Sanctification of the Spirit 2 Thes 2. 14. The Answer shall draw out the strength of the phrase in these Propositions 1. It is true that the whole Trinity one way or other concurreth to the work of holiness those works ad extra are indivisa common to all the Persons the Father sanctifieth the Son sanctifieth and the Holy Ghost sanctifieth the same may be said of preserving and calling 2. Though all work joyntly yet there are distinct personal operations by which they make way for the glory of each other the love of the Father for the glory of the Son and the glory of the Son for the power of the Spirit See how the Scripture followeth these things You shall find first that no man cometh to the Son but from the Father by Election Iohn 6. 37. All that the Father giveth shall come to me so vers 65. No man cometh unto me unless it be given him of my Father Look again and you shall find that no man cometh to the Father from the bondage of sin and Satan but by the Son through his Redemption and Mediation John 14. 6. I am the Way the Truth and the Life no man cometh unto the Father but by me Again you shall see no man is united to the Son but by the Holy Ghost who worketh in those whom the Father did choose and the Son redeem and therefore the Sanctification of the Spirit is as necessary as the Blood of Jesus 1 Pet. 1. 2. So that you see all have their distinct work the Inchoation is from the Father the Dispensation by the Son and the Consummation by the Spirit from the Father in the Son and through the Spirit there is Gods choyce Christs purchase and the Spirits application all are joyned in one Verse for indeed they must not be severed even in the place last alledged 1 Pet. 1. 2. 3. Because the first distinct operation is the Fathers therefore the whole work in Scripture is often ascribed to him he is said to justifie The Iustifier of them that beleeve in Iesus Rom. 3. 26. So he is said elsewhere to purge Iohn 15. 1 2. I am the Vine and my Father is the Husbandman he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit All dependeth upon the decree of his love Christ doth not work upon a person unless he be given to him by the Father and therefore he being first in order and operation the whole work is made his work Sanctified in God the Father Observe That Sanctification is Gods work wrought in us by the Father To cleanse the heart is beyond the power of the creature it can no more make it self holy then make its self to be We could defile our selves but we cannot cleanse our selves as the sheep can go astray of its self but it can never return to the fold without the shepherds care and help Lusts are too hard for us and so are the duties of obedience God that gave us his Image at first must again plant it in the Soul Who can repair Nature depraved but the Author of Nature When a Watch is out of order we send it to the Workman We are his workmanship in Christ Ephes 2. 10. God taketh it to be his Prerogative Levit. 21. 8. I am the Lord that sanctifieth thee Grace is his immediate creature Mans will contributeth nothing to the work but resistance and rebellion and outward means work not unless God put in with them else why should the same Word preached by the same Minister work in some and harden others all the difference ariseth from Gods grace which acteth according to pleasure Well then 1. Let us wait upon God till the work be accomplished Our wills are obstinate and perverse but God never made a creature too hard for himself he is able to do this thing for us and 't is our comfort we have such a God to go to The Heathens that groped and felt after God were to seek of a power to quell their lusts and therefore were put upon sad remedies whereas all is made easie to you in the power of God through Christ Crates gave this advice to one that came to him to know how he should subdue the lust of uncleanness he answered that he should either famish himself or hang himself they knew no remedy but offering violence to Nature or else death and despair Democritus blinded himself because he could not look upon women without lusting after them Now God teacheth us to put out the eye of our lust not of our bodies Bless God that you know whose work it is and to whom to go for Sanctification 2 Vse Praise the Lord when ever this work is accomplished Not I but grace it must not be ascribed to our works or to any power that is in our selves but to Gods mercy Christs merits and the Spirits efficacy There is Gods grant To her it was granted to be covered with fine linnen the righteousness of the Saints Rev. 19. 18. God the Father giveth leave or issueth forth an Authentick Act and Decree in the Court of Heaven as Esther by the grant of the King was supplyed out of the Kings Wardrobe Then there is Christs merit the stream wherein we are washed floweth out of Christs own heart 1 John 1. 7. The Blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin Then there is the Spirits efficacy no less power will vanquish the proud heart of man 'T is notable that grace is expressed not only by the notion of Creation which is a making things out of nothing but also by Victory or a powerful overcoming of opposition In Creation as there was nothing to help so there was nothing to resist and hinder but in man there is besides a death of sin a life of resistance against grace therefore Sanctification must entirely be ascribed to God we deserve it not it cometh from the Fathers good-will and Christs merit we work i● not 't is accomplished by the power of the Holy Ghost Again observe That though the work of grace be immediately
with the widows clamour be it as you imagine that I have no bowels for creatures miseries nor ears for their requests which yet is a blasphemy confuted by every object in the world the young Ravens will tell you otherwise but be it so you are undone if I be not merciful see what I will do for constant asking Upon all these encouragements be perswaded to make an essay faith at first standeth but upon one weak foot Who knoweth but that God will be gracious There is encouragement enough to venture though we do not know what will come of it Take up a resolution to make tryal you will find better welcome then you can expect God desires to exercise mercy as much as you desire to feel it It presseth us in all our enjoyments to acknowledg Mercy The Saints are wont to do so 'T is good to refer all things to their head and proper fountain Every thing that we enjoy is the fruit of Mercy especially saving grace 'T is a sure sign a man hath received no benefit by grace if his heart be not stirred up to praise it We have cause to praise God for his mercy above the Angels I mean not only the bad Angels with whom God entered not into a treaty he dealt with them in justice and not in mercy but even the good Angels in some respects we have more cause to bless God then they have Gratitude respecteth the freeness and graciousness in giving rather then the greatness of the benefit God was bountiful to the Angels in making them such excellent creatures out of nothing but he is merciful to us notwithstanding the demerit of our sins There was no let in his doing good to the Angels Goodness floweth out freely from an holy God to righteous creatures but wronged Justice interposed and put in a bar against us so that his Justice must be satisfied before Mercy can have a free course We are a generation of sinful men the wretched off-spring of fallen Adam we had forsaken God and cast him off which the Angels had not and therefore though they have a large experience of Gods goodness yet they wonder at the grace shewed to us 1 Pet. 1. 12. But now much more is this mercy to be acknowledged if we consider the difference between us and other men who it may be excelled us in moral accomplishments but God hath passed them by choosing us poor things of nought poor base creatures that the glory might entirely redound to his own grace But especially should this Mercy affect us when it hath made a distinction between us and others that were involved in the same guilt when one is taken and another left as the bad thief went to his own place when the good thief was taken to Paradise and many of Gods Elect were as deep in sin as those in Hell I say in all such cases we should still be crying out Mercy mercy for certainly Justice could make no such distinction it awardeth a like punishment to all that are found in a like crime but Gods infinite and eternal Mercy only maketh the difference 'T is Caution Do not wrong Grace and Mercy if it be the cause of all the good which we enjoy this is to close up the Fountain and to make Mercy our Enemy and if Mercy be our Enemy who shall plead for us If Mercy be an Accuser where shall we get an Advocate But how do we wrong Grace I answer Partly by neglecting the offers of it when you make God speak in vain 2 Cor. 6. 2. 'T is a great affront we put upon God to despise him when he speaketh to us in the still voyce and all the woi●gs and pleading of Mercy do not move to look after our Salvation though you do not despise there is danger in bare neglect Heb. 2. 3. When all the charms of Mercy do no more work with you then a story of golden mountains or Rubies and Diamonds faln from Heaven in a night dream this neglect argueth a greater suspition and distrust of Gods mercy then doubts and troubles of Conscience do Mercy speaketh to them and they do not think the message worth the hearing or regarding Again You wrong Grace by refusing it out of legal dejection for by this means you straiten the riches and darken the glory of it as if there were not more in Grace then there is in sin or as if an Emperors Revenue could not discharge a beggars debt The Prodigal could say there was bread enough in his fathers house If we perish 't is not for want of mercy but for want of faith Grace is Gods treasure he is rich in mercy Ephes 2. 4. As far as we straiten grace we make him a poorer God Again We wrong Grace and Mercy by intercepting the glory of it 'T is the greatest sacriledg that can be to rob God of his Glory especially of the glory of his Grace for that 's his great aim in all his transactions with man to make his Grace and Mercy glorious see Ephes 1. 6. Now when you think God accepteth you rather then others for some worth and good qualities that he seeth in you more then others it may be in this light of the Gospel which we now enjoy such thoughts are not expressed but if they lurk secretly in the heart you think God foresaw you would bring him more glory you take the Crown from Grace's head and put it upon your own So also you wrong Grace when you ascribe any thing to your power and strength as Joab sent for David to take the honour of winning Rabbath 2 Sam. 12. 28. Lest I take the City and it be called after my own name So send for God to take the honour Not I but grace 1 Cor. 15. 10. Throw the Crown at Grace's feet The industrious servant said Thy pound hath gained ten pounds Luke 19. 16. not my industry but thy pound Once more We wrong Grace by turning it into wantonness see Vers 4. 't is made there to be an heavy charge and black note when men presume on Grace and use it only as a dung-cart to carry away their filth Grace must bear all and pardon all as riotous children that have a rich father care not how they spend his estate shall pay for all 'T is a mighty wrong to Grace this when you make it pliable to such vile purposes and father the bastards of your own carnal hearts upon Gospel encouragements 'T is the Devils Covenant not Gods when you think that you may live as you list be at your own dispose and mercy shall be at your beck and you shall have comfort when you please and that you may sin freely because God pardoneth freely as if Mercy gave you a priviledg and liberty to sin In short If a man slackens any part of his duty for Mercy 's sake or le ts loose the reins to vile affections with more freedom upon the
presumption that God will not be rigorous he wrongeth Grace exceedingly I say if he grow more careless secure negligent not so constant in duty not so watchful and strict in conversation or abateth ought of his humiliation for sin he is a spider that sucketh poyson out of this flower Lastly We wrong Grace by slighting it after a taste At first coming to Christ we make an essay and tryal and usually then God giveth us a taste to engage us to look for more Now after tryal you are not satisfied but return to your sinful courses again and so do as it were proclaim to the World that you found carnal comforts and pleasures to be better then communion with God This is but the interpretation of your Apostacy The whole aim of the Word is to perswade us to make tryal of the sweetness of Grace Now you that have once tasted of it and grow weary do by your practise tell the World that there is no sweetness in it at all which is a great wrong to Grace and Mercy 'T is high time now to speak of the second thing prayed for which is Peace Whence observe That Peace is a great Blessing one of the main Priviledges of the Gospel I shall first Shew you what it is Secondly Give you some Observations concerning it and thirdly Come to Application 1. What it is 'T is a tranquillity of mind arising from the sense of a sure estate with God To this Peace two things concur First A sure estate or terms of amity with God this is called in Scripture peace with God and is the immediate effect and fruit of actual Justification Rom. 5. 1. And then secondly There is a sense of this sure estate or the reflex of this amity upon the Conscience and is usually called peace of Conscience and is a special priviledg of Christs spiritual Kingdom see Rom. 14. 17. the Apostle speaketh there of a peace which is ranked with joy in the Holy Ghost But it will be better opened to you in the ensuing Propositions 1. Man by Nature is at enmity with God and upon ill terms with him When we lost Gods Image we lost his favour This enmity is mutual Man is an enemy to God and God is an enemy to man On Gods part there is wrath which is all that we are born to by Nature Ephes 2. 3. and on mans part there is hatred we hate God because we love sin Col. 1. 21. Gods enmity is suspended in the day of his patience Now and then Wrath breaketh out but 't is not executed to the full sentence is past but not executed nay it may be reversed if we take sanctuary at Grace for God is now upon a treaty with us or offer of peace therefore 't is said Peace on Earth Luke 2. 14. The next World is a time of vengeance and recompence but during our earthly state God woeth us and enviteth us to lay down the weapons of our defiance and accept of terms of Peace Thus matters stand on Gods part But now on our part this enmity is carryed on with a great deal of spight We seek to destroy God and to deface all the memorials of him that are impressed upon the Conscience we ungod him in our thoughts and affections 't is a pleasing thought to us to suppose if there were no God as guilty prisoners wish there were no Judg no Assizes that they may not be called to account 2. Man being at enmity with God all Gods creatures are at enmity with him Angels men fire ayr water they are all at Gods beck and are ready to destroy man when ever the Lord biddeth them as good Subjects take part with their Prince against Rebels The Angels harken for the voyce of his Word Psal 103. If he do but hiss for the fly of Egypt Isa 7 't is ready presently 'T is ill contesting with him that can command Legions The fire saith Let me burn his house or dwelling place the water saith Let me drown his ships the Earth Let me swallow him up quick as I did Corah and his complices Certainly the Lord cannot want instruments of Vengeance Man as Gods creature is his own enemy God needeth not fetch forces from without there is enough within the humors of the body the passions of the mind all these are willing to serve God as creatures for our punishment so that if God should but arm our own thoughts our own affections against us man is soon overwhelmed Who can bear the wounds given him by his own Conscience 3. We being in this estate can only be reconciled by Jesus Christ He obtaineth it by his Merit and conferreth it by his Power For his Merit see Col. 1. 20. and Isai 53. 5. The chastisement of our Peace was upon him It will not stand with the Majesty of God to make Peace with us without satisfaction That there might be no wrong done to his Soveraignty his Law his Truth his Justice his Holiness it was meet that we should be chastised either in our own persons or in our Surety and also all the notions of the Godhead are kept inviolable Then for his Power He worketh it at first and then maintaineth and keepeth it afoot between God and us He worketh it at first and bringeth it about thus by opening the Gospel wherein God is revealed as pacified in Christ which is the only doctrine that can calm the Conscience and establish the Soul in peace and hope All false Religions are accompanied with scruples and jealousies Jer. 6. 16. there is no rest for the Soul And then he applyeth the Gospel by his Spirit The Gospel is a soveraign Plaister but Christs own hand must make it stick There is a double ground of enmity in mans heart the guilt and power of sin Christ wipeth guilt out of the conscience by the application of his own blood and weakeneth the power of sin more and more Sin is the Makebate and Christ is the Prince of Peace Isa 9. 6. The great end for which God set him up was to plant grace in our hearts and so to work a friendship between God and us But Christ is not only the Author but the great Conservator of the Peace between us and Heaven Partly by his Intercession as forreign States have their Agents in Princes Courts to preserve a mutual Correspondence so Christ taketh up all differences that fall out between us and God that no breach may ensue Heb. 9. 24. Partly by a further declaration of Gods love to the conscience Isai 26. 3. Partly by stirring us up to watchfulness that no occasion may be given on our part by returning to folly Psal 85. 8. Thus you see what Christ doth all is briefly summed up by the Apostle in 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World Where note that our peace with God is a reconciliation or a peace after a breach and this reconciliation is mutual God appeareth in a form
he pleaseth but hath expresly commanded it nay this is the great Commandment Certainly God is very desirous of our love when he layeth such an obligation upon us Was there ever such a Master that made this to be his servants chiefest duty that they should love him Again I observe in Gods Command that the Precept runneth thus Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy might The Lord would not lose one grain of the creatures love Surely he valued it when he is so sollicitous about it If we should see a wise man careful to preserve the reliques of what we counted a neglected weed it would make us think there were somewhat in it We lavish away our love upon trifles and God prizeth every grain of it you see he speaketh as if he would not lose one dust of love all thy soul all thy heart and all thy might When he biddeth us love our neighbor he sets limits to it Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self but when he biddeth us love God he requireth all the heart The only measure is to love him without measure The next place that I shall take notice of where the Precept is recorded is Deut. 10. 12. And now Israel what doth the Lord require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God and to walk in all his ways and to love him and to serve the Lord with all thy heart and with all thy soul God doth not require of us things without the sphere of duty that we should go into the depths of the Sea toss mountains in the ayr pluck the stars from Heaven c. these things lie out of the power of man He doth not require of us barbarous austerities to offer our first-born to lance our selves to mangle our flesh with whips and scourges He doth not require of us absolutely such things which some men can and ought to perform not such a measure of alms what then would become of the poor not such a degree of wisdom and learning what then would become of the simple and unlearned But O Israel what hath the Lord required of thee but that thou shouldst love the Lord thy God A duty to be performed by poor and rich learned and unlearned what ever their estate and condition be they may all love God There are many in Heaven that never were in a condition to give but to receive that were never learned and skilled in sciences but none that never loved God Secondly God hath deserved love Let us a little take notice of Gods love to us He beginneth and loveth us that we may love him again 1 John 4. 19. If God should hate us we were bound to love him because of his excellency and because of our duty and obligation as we are creatures how much more when God hath loved us and bestowed so many benefits upon us Love is an affection which God will have repayed in kind When he chideth us he doth not expect that we should chide him again when he judgeth us we must not judg him again in these things the creature is not to retaliate 'T is true we do it too often but still to our ●oss and blame But now when he loveth us he willeth us to love him again he loveth us for no other cause but that he may be loved Love must be payd in kind As water is cast into a Pump when the springs lie low to bring up more water so God sheddeth abroad his love into our hearts that our love may rise up to him again by way of gratitude and recompence Now in the Love of God we may take notice of the 1. Properties and of it 2. Effects of it First For the Properties of Gods Love consider 1. The Ancientness of it Psal 103. 17. From everlasting to everlasting c. With reverence we may speak ever since God was God he was our God You may track his Love from one Eternity to another Before the world was he loved us and when the world is no more he loveth us still His Love began in eternal purposes of Grace and it endeth in our eternal possession of Glory 'T is not a thing of yesterday he is our ancient Friend He loved us not only before we were lovely but before we were at all We adjourn and put off our love of God to old age and thrust it into a narrow corner When we have wasted and spent our strength in the world we dream of a devout retirement But the Lord thinketh he could never love us early enough From everlasting to everlasting c. We receive the fruits and effects of Love in time but all cometh out of Gods ancient and eternal Love this grace was provided for us before we were born Yea look upon Gods Love in time how merciful was God to us before we could shew the least sign of thankefulness to him He loved us a long time before ever we had a thought of him In infancy we could not so much as know that he loved us When we came to years of discretion we knew how to offend him before we knew how to love and serve him How many are there of whom it may be said God is not in all their thoughts and yet all this while God hath thoughts of peace and blessing towards them 2. Consider the Freeness of Gods Love The value of all benefits ariseth from the necessity of him that receiveth and the good-will of him that giveth God wanted not us our love is no benefit to him but we wanted him we are undone without him yet he hath more delight in pardoning then we in salvation and he is more ready to give then we to ask He often calleth upon us to call upon him as if he were afraid we would not ask or not enough or not soon enough or not often enough A man would think that our wants should be importunate enough to put us upon requests and that we needed not enforcements to prayer yet you see God doth not only prevent the request but make the prayer and stirreth us up to utter it But we are not only needy creatures but guilty creatures and that God should love us When we were in our blood and filthiness 't was a time of loves Ezek. 16. 7. This is the great Miracle of divine Love that a time of loathing is a time of loves And we will wonder at it more if we consider the active and endless hatred of his Holiness against sin and therefore why not against sinners The holiness of his Nature and Essence sets him against them and natural antipathies and aversations can never be reconciled as a Man can never be brought to delight in a Toad or a Lamb in a Wolf And consider again his infinite Wisdom We may love that which is not lovely because we are often blinded by inordinate affection but now Gods Love is not blind
of folly mixed with popular Rites and Customs There are many things necessary to Religion which the Angels themselves could not have known if they had not been revealed therefore their knowledg increaseth by observing Gods dispensations to the Church Ephes 3. 10. The way of Salvation by Christ is such a Mystery as could not have entred into the heart of any creature no not of an Angel If an Angel had been to set down which way man should be redeemed nay if all the Cherubim and Seraphim Thrones Dominions and Powers had met together in a Synod and Council and had taken in all the world to their assistance it would have posed them all to have found out such a Way as God hath appointed But not to speak of Mysteries There is in the Word some Moralities suitable to the Law of Nature which was once written upon mans heart but alas now there remains only some scattered fragments and obscure characters so defaced that they cannot be read and how blind are we in these things without the Word Witness the sottish Idolatry of those Nations that want it worshipping stocks or stones yea a piece of red cloth or what ever they saw first in the morning And witness those brutish Customs among other Nations whereby uncleanness and unnatural sins have been authorized by a Law Therefore 't is a great mercy that something is delivered and given out as a Rule of Faith and Manners 2. That this Tradition is written and put into a stated course in those Books which we call Scriptures If the Revelation of Gods Will had been left to the tradition of men of such a rank or order what a liberty might they take of coyning Oracles and obtruding their fancies upon the world 'T is a great mercy that our faith doth not depend upon uncertain suggestions but some main publique Records to which all may appeal and find satisfaction Heretofore the Lord revealed himself by Visions Oracles and Dreams to persons of ancient holiness and sanctity that they might instruct others which course was sure enough while the people of the world were but a few families and the persons intrusted with Gods message had authority and credit sufficient with the present age and lived long to continue the tradition with the more certainty to future ages But afterwards the Lord was pleased to speak to his Church both by Word and writing His Word was necessary for further revealing and clearing up the doctrine of Salvation and writing was necessary because when Precepts were multiplyed it was needful for mens memories that they should be written the long life of Gods Witnesses was lessened corruptions began to increase Satan giving out lying oracles and visions idolatrous Rites and customs crept into the best families the people of God were grown numerous enough to make a Comm●nwealth and Politick Body therefore to avoyd mans corruptions and Satans deceits the Lord thought fit that we should have a written Rule at hand as a publique Standard for the tryal of all Doctrines God himself wrote the first Scripture with his own Finger upon tables of stone and he commanded Moses and the Prophets to do the same Exod. 17. 14. and 34. 17. which dispensation of Word and Writing continued till Christs time who as the great Doctor of the Church perfected the Rule of Faith and by the Apostles as so many publique Notaries consigned it to the use of the Church in all Ages When the Canon began to be compleat the latter Apostles pressed the receiving of it and John as the last and as one who outlived all the rest closeth up his Prophecy thus Rev. 22. 18 19. If any man add c. and if any man take away c. which doth not only seal up the Book of the Revelations but the whole Canon and Rule of Faith which indeed was a great mercy to the world the Lord knew to what a liberty we inclined in divine things and therefore we needed to be tyed up to a Rule which here is given us 3. The mercy of God appeareth in preserving it that it may be delivered from one age to another No Doctrine so ancient as the Doctrine of the Scriptures it describeth the whole History of the World from the very Creation and the original of all things Where are there Records so ancient and yet they have been preserved even to our time We have some ancient writings of the Heathens though nothing so ancient as Scripture but these are not contrary to mens lusts and have been cherished by them and yet they have felt the tooth of time and are in a great measure mangled but the Word of God hath been maligned and opposed and yet it continueth and holdeth up its head in the world not only the main Doctrine of the Scriptures hath been continued but no part of the Word hath been falsified corrupted destroyed the world wanted not malice nor opportunity the powers of the world have been bent against it and corrupt persons in the Church have been always given to other gospelling but still the Scriptures have been wonderfully preserved as the three children in the furnace not an hair singed not a jot and tittle of Truth perished 4. That God doth continually stir up men in the Church and bestow gifts upon them for the opening and application of this faith and doctrine of Salvation Christ that hath given Prophets and Apostles to the Church to write Scripture hath also given Pastors and Teachers to open and apply Scripture that so still it might be delivered to the Saints and also to vindicate the doctrine of it when opposed Every age that hath yeilded the Poyson hath also yeilded the Antidote that the world might not be without a Witness if there hath been an Arrius there hath been an Athanasius if a Pelagius there is also an Austin the Church hath never wanted help in this kind Look as in War as the Arts of Battery and methods of destruction do increase so also doth skill in Fortification and in the Church God still bestoweth gifts for the further explication of Truth 5. That the Light cometh to us and shineth in this Land The Gospel is a great National Priviledg To you is this Word of Salvation sent Acts 13. 26. Pray mark 't is sent he doth not say we have brought it to you but 't is sent 't is a token sent from Heaven in love there is a mighty Providence accompanieth the Gospel the journeys of the Apostles as I said but now were ordered by the Spirit as well as their doctrine Acts 8. 26. The Angel of the Lord said to Philip Arise and go towards the South towards the way that goeth down to Jerusalem They went not as their own good affection carryed them but according to the Spirits direction So Acts 17. 7 8 9. The Spirit suffered them not c. as prophecy came not by the will of man 2 Pet. 1. 20. that is the doctrine it self
be ashamed 3. None are fit publiquely to defend the Truth but the holy they speak with more power as from the heart and inward experience and are more zealous as being more nearly concerned they that partake of Gods Nature will soonest espouse Gods Cause and Quarrel and their zeal is most pure Carnal men pervert religious differences they change the nature of them turning them into a strife of words or a contention for interests matters are not managed so purely as when there is conscience on both sides The Saints contend best for the Saints faith Zeal in carnal men is like fire in straw quickly up and quickly down but in the godly 't is like fire in wood longer kept Wisdom is justified of her children Mat. 11. 19. they are fittest to interpose Again false zeal is most passionate without pity and meekness but the flame is most pure and bright in an holy heart which is subdued to the power of Truth 4. None receive the Truth so willingly as the Saints do Holy persons can best understand what was written by holy men they pierce into it more deeply as Iron that is red hot runneth further into the board then a sharp tool that is cold God unbosometh himself to his familiars Holy hearts are not clouded with the mists of lusts and interests Where there is purity there is brightness the mind being separated from gross things is fitted for the reception of spiritual mysteries Paul saw most of God when he was blind to the world the heart being taken off from the world is erected to things supernatural and of an higher cognizance 5. None retain the Truth more firmly then the Saints do Manna was kept in a golden Vessel and so is Truth in a pure Soul Titus 3. 9. Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience An unclean vessel sowreth the liquor that is put into it so doth a carnal heart pervert the faith and teint the judgment Let a man once be given up to some great lust and you shall soon find him to be given up to some roaring error also and when once they come to make shipwrack of a good conscience they do not long hold the faith that was once given to the Saints for grace and truth always thrive together I come now to the main Observation that is to be drawn from these words That 't is the Duty of Christians in times of Error and Seducement to contend earnestly for the Faith once given to the Saints 'T is their duty at all times but then especially 1. That we may not discredit our selves and the Truth 2. That we may not hazard our selves and the Truth 1. Let me first speak to the Discredit and there I shall shew 1. That Truth is honoured by a bold and resolute Defence of it We are not ashamed of it though it be questioned and scorned in the world Wisdom is justified of her children Neither Johns doctrine nor Christs doctrine would relish with the world yet some had a reverend opinion of it for all that Psal 119. 26 27. They make voyd thy Law therefore I love it above pure gold In times of defection our love to God and the ways of God should be the greater as Fountain water is hottest in coldest weather 'T was an honour to the Christian Religion that the primitive Professors were glad of an occasion to dye for it and the more it was despised and persecuted the more did they own it falshoods cannot endure the brunt of opposition 2. That we may not dishonour our selves and discredit our own profession He is but an ill servant of Christ that will not serve him when the Lord hath need of him when God distinguisheth sides and cryeth out Who is of my side who Times of Error and Seducement are searching trying times Light chaff is carryed about with every wind but the solid grain lieth still upon the ground The approved are made manifest 1 Cor. 11. 19. There is a time not only to shew love but valor Jer. 9. 3. They are not valiant for the Truth upon the Earth To be valiant for Truth is to defend it in time of opposition and to sparkle so much the more in an holy zeal because they pervert the right ways of the Lord A Christian must an heart as well as a liver not onely love the Truth but contend for it and the more earnestly the more 't is opposed The Apostle saith that a Bishop must hold fast the Word of Truth Titus 1. 9. The word signifieth an holding it fast against a contrary force as when a man seeketh to wrest a staff out of anothers hand he holdeth it the faster 2. The next Reason is That we may not endanger and hazard our selves and the Truth 1. That we may not endanger our selves 'T is good to be able to defend Religion when 't is questioned ignorant secure and careless spirits will certainly miscarry Present Truths and present Errors have an aspect upon our interests we must determine one way or another Now how easily are they carryed away with interests that have no principles no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 3. 17. no proper ballast in their own spirits Therefore let us strive to know the Truth to own the Truth in a time of tryal 't is needful All Errors and Heresies are but mens natural thoughts gotten into some valuable opinion because backed with the defences of wit and parts What are all the learned Disputes against the Truth but the props of those vulgar misprisions and gross conceits that are in the heart of every natural and ignorant man We have all an heretick in our bosoms and are by nature prepared to drink in all kind of errors and lyes and therefore we are said Psal 58. 3. to speaklyes from the womb because these things are in our natures we are born Pelagians and Libertines and Papists As in the new nature there is a cognation and proportion between us and Truth so in the old nature there is an inclination to all manner of Errors Luther saith Every man is born with a Pope in his belly And Mr Greenham hath a saying That if all Errors and the memorials of them were annihilated by the absolute Power of God so that there should not the least remembrance of them remain yet there is enough in the heart of one man to revive them again the next day Certainly what ever is suggested from without doth very well suit with the carnal thoughts that are in our own bosoms Look upon any error or blasphemy that is broached in the world and you will find it true Is Atheism vented The fool hath said in his heart there is no God Psal 14. 1. Gentilism or the doctrine of many Gods So do we set up many Gods what ever we fear or love that we worship Whose god is the belly Phil. 3. 19. Every man naturally is a Pagan and Idolater
maker of all things without himself And to these four Notions or principles are suited the four preceps of the first Table in the first we have Gods unity in the second Gods Invisible Nature and therefore Images are forebidden upon that ground Deut. 4. 12. In the third the knowledge of humane affairs even of mens thoughts and that 's the foundation of an oath for the third Commandment doth principally forbid perjury and in an Oath God is invoked as a witness chiefly of the heart in which his Omnisciency is acknowledged and appealed to as a Judge and Avenger in which his Justice and Power is acknowledged the next principle that God is Creator and Governour of all things is established by the forth Commandment for the Sabath at first was instituted for that purpose to keep up the memorial of the Creation in the world Now out of these specula●ive notions practicals flow of their own accord c. that God is alone to be worshiped obeyed honoured trusted and as far as we set up other confidences or are ignorant of his excellency or deny God his worship and service or serve him after an unworthy manner superstitiously carelesly hypocritically or have gross opinions of his Essence or exclude the dominion of his Providence or cease to invocate his name so far we are guilty of ungodlyness More Distinctly and closely yet let me note that God is to be acknowledged as 1. The first cause 2. The chiefest good 3. As the supream Truth and Authority 4. As the last end God is to be honoured as the first cause that giveth being to all things and hath his being from none and so if we do not trust in him or can trust any creature rather then God our Estates rather then God or do not observe him in his Providence the effects of his Mercy Justice and Power or do not acknowledge his Dominion in all events and sanctifie the things which we use by asking his leave and blessing in prayer we are guilty of ungodlyness Again God is to be acknowledged as the chiefest good and therefore if we do not know him often think of him delight in communion with him fear to offend him care to please him this neglect and contempt of God is ungodgodlyness Again God is to be acknowledged as the Supream truth and Authority and therefore if we are not moved with his promises threats Counsels as the Gentiles were moved with the Oracles of their Gods as Gods people of old when that dispensation was in use with a voyce from Heaven and do not submit to him reverence him in Worship subject our hearts and lives to his Lawes 't is ungodliness once more God is the last end and therefore if in all acts Spiritual Moral Natural even those of the lightest consequence we do not ayme at Gods glory Still 't is ungodliness In this Method I shall endeavour to open this argument And 1. Let us consider God as the first cause and under that consideration 1. Ignorance is a branch of ungodliness I name it first because 't is the cause of all disorder in worship or conversation the Apostle saith 3. Epist John 11. He that doth evil hath not seen God right thoughts of God are the fuel which maintaineth the fire of Religion which otherwise would soon decay and be extinguished now generally people are ignorant of God they know him as men born blind do fire they can tell there is such a thing as fire because it warmeth them but what it is they cannot tell So the whole world and conscience proclaimeth there is a God the blindest man may see that but they know little or nothing of his Essence as he hath revealed himself in his word The Athenians had an Altar and the Inscription was to the unknown God and so do most Christians go on in a track of customary worship and so worship an Idol rather then God so Christ telleth the Samaritans John 4. 22. Ye worship ye know not what 'T is usual with men in a dark and blind superstition to conform to the worship of their place not considering why or whom it is they worship gross ignorance is a signe of no grace for God hath no childe so little but he knoweth his Father Jer. 31. 34. They shall all know me from the last to the greatest some have better education then others greater helps and advantages of parts and Instruction but they all have a necessary knowledge of God Again gross ignorance is a pledge of future judgement 2 Thes 1. 7. God will come in flaming fire to render vengeance on them that know not God and obey not the Gospel many poor ignorant creatures are harmless they do no wrong Oh but they know not God and that 's wrong enough God will avenge it to be ignorant of God that made them is a matter of sadder consequence then you are aware by those that know not God in this place is meant Pagans for 't is contradistinct to those that obey no● the Gospel but if there be vengeance for Pagans who have no other Apostles sent to them but those natural Apostles of Sun Moon and Stars and have no other Books wherein to study God but Showrs of raine and fruitful seasons if there be vengeance for them because they did not see and own a first cause what is there for those that shut their eyes against the light of the Gospel surely to be ignorant now is a greater sin then we think of 2. When we do not depend upon him 't is ungodlyness trust and dependance is the ground of all commerce between us and God and the greatest homage and respect which we yield to the Creator and first cause now when men trust any creature rather then God their estates rather then God they rob him of his peculiar Honour That there is such a sin appeareth by that Job 31. 34. If I had made gold my hope or said to the fine gold thou art my confidence If I rejoyced because my wealth is great and my hand had gotten much c. Job to vindicate himself from Hypocricie reckoneth up the usual sins of Hypocrites amongst the rest this is one to make gold our confidence men are apt to think it the staff of their lives and the stay of their posterity and so their trust being intercepted their hearts are diverted from God 't is an usual sin though little thought of the great danger of riches is by trusting in them Mark 10. 23 24. When men are intrenched within an estate they think they are safe secured against what ever shall happen and so God is layd aside let a man be intrenched within a promise and yet he is full of fears and doubts but wealth breedeth security therefore coveteousness is called Idolatry Eph. 5. 3. and the covetous man an Idolater Col. 3. 5. not so much because of his love of money as his trust in money the glutton loveth his belly
and the gratifications of the Appetite yet he doth not trust in his belly cheer he thinketh not to be protected by it and therefore though he rob God of his love yet he doth not as the covetous rob God of his trust we are all apt to make such an Idol of the creature poor men if they had wealth this were enough to make them happy and therefore they trust in those which have it which is Idolatry upon Idolatry whence 't is said Psal 62. 9. Men of low degree are vanity and men of high degree a lye to appeareance men of low degree are nothing but men of high degree are wont to be trusted in and therefore a lye because by a righteous judgement of God they disappoint our trust But chiefly is this secret Idolatry incident to the rich though they do not pray to their wealth or offer sacrifice but use it as familiarly as any other thing yet if it intercept their trust they are guilty of Idolatry many that smile at the vanity Gentiles that worshipped stocks and stones and Idols of gold and silver do worse themselves though more spiritually whilest they build their happiness and security upon their estates it may be they do not say to their riches ye shall deliver me or to their gold thou art my confidence they do not use such gross language for covetous men may speak as basely of wealth as another man they may say I know 't is but refined earth c. but their hearts make it their only refuge and stay and their inward thoughts is that they and their children cannot be happy without it which is a great sin a setting up another God for by this means is their heart withdrawn from the true God to the world and kept from good works least they part with that which is the staff and stay of their lives 3. When we do not observe his Providence the blinde world sets up an Idol called chance and doth not acknowledge God at the other end of causes as swaying all things by his Wisdome and Power 1. In afflictions they think they come by chance and ill luck 1 Sam. 6. 9. and Isa 26. 11 As if instruments and second causes did all and the Lord were an Idle spectatour and looker on and had no hand in all that befalleth us Job better The Lord giveth the Lord taketh he doth not look onely to the Chald●an the Sab●an the Thief but the Lord in all afflictions we should look beyond the creature and not complain of ill fortune and chance or stars or constellations or any thing on this sid● God 2. In mercies 't is ungodliness when we do not see God in all our mercies wicked men receive blessings and never look up they live upon God every moment they have life and breath and motion and hourly maintenance from him and yet God is not in all their thoughts as swine ravine upon the Acorns and never look up to the Oak from whence they fall so they look no higher then the next hand but Gods children may be compared to Chickns that sip and look upwards The Lord complaineth of Israel Hos 2. 8. She did not know that I gave her corn and wine and oyl● and silver and gold there cannot be a greater signe of an ungodly spirit then this unthankful profaneness this is that which God expecteth from reasonable creatures by way of homage that we should own him as Author of al the good which we enjoy other creatures live upon God but they are not capable of knowing the first cause as we are Idolatry and Atheism had never crept into the world if men had considered who it was that gave them fruitfull seasons and showres of rain and filled their hearts with food and gladnesse Acts 14 16 17. And surely nothing feedeth piety and maintaineth a constant awe of God so much as thinking of God every time we eat and drink and enjoy any new mercy from him but alasse usually we forget God when he remembreth us most he is never so much dishonoured as in eating and drinking and in the plentifull enjoyment of outward comforts 4. Another part of ungodlinesse is when we doe not acknowledge his dominion over all events sanctifying the things we use and undertake by asking his leave and blessing 'T is robbery to use goods without the owners leave so to use any creature food or physick without sanctifying it by the Word and Prayer that is knowing our liberty and right from the Word of promise and asking God leave and blessing in prayer or to go about any businesse or journey or fixing our abode without inquiring at the Oracle all this is ungodlinesse 'T is our duty still to consult with God Ye ought to say if the Lord will c. Jam. 4. 15. 'T is a peece of religious manners we forget to bid our selves Good speed when we do not acknowledge the dominion of God in all these cases Prov. 3. 5. In all thy wayes acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths Gods children dare not resolve upon any course til they have first consulted with God Secondly God will be acknowledged as the chiefest good and so we are guilty of ungodlinesse 1. If we doe not often think of him if we did not want hearts we cannot want objects to put us in mind of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is not far from every one of us Acts 17. 27. But though God be not far from us yet we are far from God he that is every where is seldom found in our hearts We are not so near to our selves as God is near to us who can keep his breath in his body for a minute if God were not there He is within us and round about us in the effects of his power and goodnesse but we are at too great a distance from him in our mind and affections How many trifles occupy our minds but the Lord can seldome find any room there God is not in all their thoughts Psal 10. 3. Yea when thoughts of God rush into our minds they are like unwelcome ghuests we wish to be rid of them wicked men abhorre their own thoughts of God because the more they think of God the more they tremble as the divels doe therefore the Apostle saith They like not to retain God in their knowledge Rom. 1. This is far from the temper of Gods children David saith Psal 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet 'T is the spiritual feast and entertainment of a gracious soul to think of God none deserveth our thoughts more than he and we cannot put them to better use He thought of us before the world was and stil great is the multitude of his thoughts to us ward therefore 't is vile ingratitude not to think of him again when we hate a person we cannot endure to look upon him and the hatred of the mind is shewed by the aversation and turning away of the
the Gospel is called the Mysterie of godliness 1 Tim. 3. 16. and a Doctrine according to godliness 1 Tim. 6. 3. men might be ungodly at a cheaper rate then now they can in these days of the Gospel now we have more means to know God and more obligations to respect God more clear and certain notions of his excellency and glory 4. Vngodliness is the root of all irregular courses Abraham was afraid of himself in Gerar Why The fear of God is not in this place Gen. 20. 11. Godliness is the great bulwork of Laws and all honest discipline subjects are not afraid of Princes nor Princes of subjects where the fear of God prevaileth there can be no true honesty without piety the first part of the Law provideth for respects to God as being the proper foundation of the second which containeth respects to our neighbour often it cometh to pass by Gods just judgement that spiritual wickedness is punished with civil See Hos 4. 12. 13. and where men are not tender of Gods Interests they do also incroach upon civil rights and freedomes Means and directions are these 1. Purge the heart from principles of ungodliness there are many gross Maximes ingrafted in mans heart as that 't is folly to be precise that it was better when there was l●ss knowledge that 't is in vain to serve God that thoughts are free if we carry it fair before men we need trouble our selves no further when men do their best petty sins are not to be stood upon that Religion is but a notion and fancy the Gospel a g●lden dream c. That such principles are within us appeareth by the sottishness of our practices and course of living for actions are the best Image of our thoughts and these are purged away by waiting upon the word which discovereth them Heb. 4. 12. and layeth in good principles Psal 119. 9. by which means they are destroyed 2. Suppress all ungodly thoughts assoon as they do arise as that there is n● God Psal 14. 1. Shame may lay a restraint upon the tongue but the heart is ever casting up such a thought as this is So that God is not so harsh but we may take a little liberty in sinning see Psal 50. 21. or that he taketh no notice of what we speak or do he cannot see through the dark clouds Job 22. 12 13. When any such thoughts rush into your minde check them and actually rebuke them least they settle into a rooted Atheism 3. Mortisie vile affections the judgement is tainted by the contagion of lusts as a foul stomack sendeth up fumes and gross vapours into the head and so the principles of godliness do quickly suffer an Eclipse The pure in heart see most of God Mat. 5. 8. In fenny Countries the Ayre is seldom cleer so in hearts that lye under the power of br●itish lusts there are seldom clear and distinct thoughts of God 4. Keep close to Gods institutions these keep up his presence and memorial in the world and so are the best preservative of godliness false worships are full of ceremonies which darken the Nature of God Images beget a gross opinion of God no wonder if people grow blockish that worship God in a senseless stock or store V●rro in Austin observed that those that first invented Images did but increase errour and take away all fear of Religion God knoweth what is best for himself and how by his own Institutions to keep up the repute of his Nature and Essence when man presumeth to be wiser then God and leaveth the certainty of Gods Institutions for additions and innovations of our own that please us better because they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shew of wisdom Col. 2. 22 23. all Religion goeth to wrack 5. Let us often exercise our selves unto godliness 1 Tim. 4. 7. delight to give to God the Honour due to him Love Delight Fear to worship him often to do all things as ayming at his glory The next clause in the description of these seducers is That Turning the grace of our God into wantonness Where you may take notice 1. Of their Filthyness and bruitish course of life implyed in the word wantonness in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word proper to luxury and the impurities of lust it is derived from Alpha an augmentative Particle and Selga the name of a Town in Pisidia saith Suidus whose inhabitants were infamous for Sodomi and weakening Nature by such prodigious filthiness as is not fit to be named among Saints and the persons here noted the school of Simon The Nicholaitans the Gnostickes and other impure Hereticks of that age were for promiscuous commixtures and the free use of their fellow creatures as some carnal wretches in our age have learned to speak without any respect to conjugal relation and those restraints which God and nature and all civil Nations have layd upon the lusts of man as if men should use no more distinction and confinement then the bests yea gave up themselves to all manner of unnatural lust as in the process of this Epistle we shall more fully discover 2. The occasion and incouragement of this wantonness which doubleth the iniquity of it and is the grace of God by which is meant the Gospel when he called the grace of God as Tit. 2. 11 the grace of God hath appeared unto us teaching us c. and in the Gospel chiefly they abused the Doctrine of Christian liberty and free justification by Christ this is primarily intended you may by analogie inlarge the expression to commit all those other Doctrines which libertines are apt to abuse yea those gracious providences which wicked men do convert into fuel and nourishment for their sins 3. The manner how so excellent a thing as the grace of God was made pliable to so vile a purpose for a man would wounder that things at so great and infinite a distance as the grace of God and filthy lusts should ever be brought to cast an aspect upon one another that is shewed in the word turning in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 resting transferring from its proper use They offered violence to the Doctrine of grace that it might be conscious to such a monstrous birth and production as filthy lusts and carnal pleasures 4. You have an hint of the reason why the Apostle writeth against them with such a zealous indignation in that word Our as if he said that grace whose sweetness we have tasted whose power we have felt of that God who hath been so kinde to us in Christ whose glory we are bound to promote shall we see our God and that grace upon which all our hopes stand to be abused to such an unclean use From the words thus opened I Observe 1. That the Gospel and grace of God in its self is not pliable to carnal purposes yeildeth no carnal conclusions They turn it saith the Apostle there is no such thing gotten out of
a Priest sinfull creatures therefore sanctification miserable creatures liable to deach and hell therefore redemp●ion and both these as a King 't was necessary that the way of our salvation should be opened effected and applyed therefore did Christ first come from heaven as a Prophet to preach the Gospel and then offer up himself through the eternal Spirit as a Priest and last of all seise upon the Mediatorial throne as King of the Church Well then if our blindnesse and ignorance troubleth us let us make use of Christs Prophetical Office that he may teach us the whole counsel of God if we are haunted by troubles and the accusations of our own conscience let us sprinkle our hearts with the blood of our high Priest that they may be pacified if we have any desire to be granted let us make use of his intercession if we be discouraged by our own weaknesse and the power of our spiritual enemies let us run for protection to our King through whom the Saints are more then Conquerors 2. It noteth the Authority upon which his Office is founded he was annointed thereto by God the Father who in the work of Redemption is represented as the offended party and supream Judge and so 't is a great comfort to us that Christ is a Mediatour of Gods chusing when Moses interposed of his own accord he was refused blot me out of thy book no saith the Lord The soul that sinneth him will I blot out of my Book but now Jesus Christ took not this honour upon him but was called of God thereunto 't was the will of the Father so that when we come to God though we cannot say he is mine yet we can say Lord he is thine a Saviour of thy setting up thou hast Authorized him and wilt own thine own way c. Once more observe which indeed is a point that lyeth full in the eye of the Text That Jesus Christ the master of the world and Lord of the Church is true God For 't is said here denying the onely Lord God and our Lord Jesus Christ It would seem a strange thing that I should go about to prove the God head of Christ were not blasphemy grown so common and appearing abroad with so bold a forehead heretofore it was a grievous abhomina●ion to the children of God when such a thought rushed into their minds but now some promote it as a settled oppinion 't is Satans policy to loosen a corner stone though he cannot wholly pull it out he striveth all that he can to make the main Articles of Religion seem at least questionable But Christians be not shaken in minde the foundation of the Lord standeth sure I confess I should wholly omit such disputes in fundamental Articles we shouldnot allow a scruple Thou shalt not enquire after their Gods Deut. 12. 30. But when such conceits are not onely Sathanical injections but mens settled opinions 't is good to establish the heart in such principles as this is that Christ is God appeareth by express Scripture where he is called th● true God 1 John 5. 20. the great God Tit. 2. 13. to shew that he is not a God Inferiour to the Father but equal in power and glory and that not by courtesie and grant but by Nature So he is called the Mighty God the everlasting father Isa 9. 6. and God over all Rom. 9. 6. proofs so evident and pregnant that they need no illustration and that he is a God equal to the Father appeareth also by express Texts of Scripture Phil. 2. 6. He was in the form of God and thought it no robbery to be equal with God and Col. 2. 9. in him dwelleth the fulness of the God-head bodily the Saints are made partakers of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 5. but in him the whole God-head dwelt personally and all this was no usurpation of a mothers right the Jews would have stoned him because he said God was his Father making himself equal with God therefore he meant it not in an ordinary sense and indeed if he be a God he is a God by Nature for God will not give his glory to another Again God he must needs be if you consider the work he ought to do the work of the Mediator could be dispatched by no inferiour agent as Prophet he was to be greater then all other Prophets and Apostles for the great Doctor of the Church ought to be Authentick a Law-giver from whose sentence there is no appeal A Lord in his own house Heb. 3 6 one to whom Moses was but a servant for to him he gave the Law Heb. 12. 29. One that is to be a Foun●ain of wisdom to all the Elect 1 Cor. 1. 30. One that must not onely teach but give eyes to see and ears to hear and an heart to learn consider him as a King a finite power cannot break the force of enemies pour out the spirit raise the dead bestow grace and glory and become an original fountain of life to all the Elect all these things are proper to God the glory which he will not give to another Consider him as a Priest and there is two Acts Oblation and Intercession and still you will finde that he must be God for his Oblation he must be one that could offer up himself Heb. 9. 14. and therefore must have power over his own life Iohn 10. 18. to lay it down and take it up which no creature hath And he must offer himself one for all 2 Cor. 5. 15. the person that suffered was to be infinite as good and better then all theirs that should have suffered as they said to David thou art better then a thousand of us and this suffering was to be but once now the wages of sin are eternal death something there must be to compensate the eternity of the punishment and nothing could counterpose eternity but the infiniteness and excellency of Christs person as a payment in Gold taketh up less room then a payment in silver but the value is a● much 't was necessary that he should overcome the punishment for if he were always suffering we could have no assureance that God were satisfied and the end was to expiate sin nothing but an infinite Good could remedy so great an evil the person wronged is infinite so is the person suffering and then his death was not only to be a ransome but a price not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a surety to an ordinary creditor payeth the debt and freeth the debtor from bonds Christ was to bring us into grace and favour with God and to merit Heaven for us now for the other act of his Priesthood his Intercession so he was to know our persons and our wants and necessities as the high Priest had the names of the twelve Tribes on his Breast and shoulders Exod. 28. 12 29. and then he is to negotiate with God in the behalf of all
had so much means Mark 6. 8. and another time at the faith of the Centurion a stranger Mat. 8. 10. who had so little means 't is a thing to be marvelled at that a people should have so much means and profit but little Wonder is a thing that proceedeth from ignorance and Christ though not ignorant yet would express all humane affections and the rather that we might look upon it as a strange and uncomly thing not to believe after so many helps vouchsafed to us 3 The more experiences comforts evidences and manifestations of God's power and presence we have had the great●r the unbelief This was that which provoked the Lord against Israel to destroy them in the Wilderness Numb 14. 11. How long will it be ere ye believe in me for all the words that I have shewed God traineth up his people by experience that they may know what he can or will do for them and therefore by every experience we should grow up into a greater courage and strength of faith and as David draw inferences of hope against the present danger from the Lyon and the Bear 1 Sam. 17. 36. or as Paul he hath and doth and therefore will 2 Cor. 1. 10. otherwise these experiences are given in vain Christ was angry with his Disciples for not rememb●ing the miracle of the loaves Matth. 16. 9. when they were in a li●e stra●t again when we shew a child a letter here and the same letter again in another word and the same again in a third if he should be to seek when we shew him again the same letter in the next word we are angry and think our teaching lost So when God giveth an evidence of his power and care in this strait and in a condescention to our weakness giveth us a like evidence again and in a third strait he teacheth us how to read and apply a promise and yet upon the next difficulty we are to seek again God is angry with us because his condescentions are lost and in this sense God is more angry with the unbelief of his children then of others because they have more experiences and are so ready to distrust him that never failed them 4. The more deliberate our unbelief is the worse in times of inconsiderate passion and in a fit of temptation it may break out from God's children David when he spake in haste was fain to eat his words Psal 116. 11. I said in my haste all men are lyars Samuel and all who had told him of the Kingdom I shall never live to see the promise fulfilled so Psal 31. 22. I said in my haste I am cut off nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my Supplications in a fit discontent may break out but 't is presently opposed and checked but when it groweth into a setled dist●mper then 't is worse as that in Psal 73. was a more lasting temptation therefore David calleth himself Be●st vers 22. for his foolish and brutish thoughts of providence 5. Where unbelief is expressed and put into words there 't is more hainous Vnbelieving thoughts are a great evil but when they break out into murmurings and bold expostula●ions with or against God then they are worse 't is better to keep the temptation within doors that if the fire be kindled the sparks may not fly abroad to enkindle others you grieve God by your thoughts but you dishonour and disparage him when they break out into words Mal. 3. 13. Your words have been stout against me saith the Lord 'T is a greater daring to avow openly and publish our suspicions of God ●nd discontents against him Deut. 1. 34. The ●ord heard he voice of your words and was wroth saying not one of these shall enter my rest Others may be perverted and make ill use of our infirmities 6. Where there are professions to the contrary there the unbelief is the worse After these things do the Gentiles seek Matth. 6. 32. Christians are not only instructed to do better but profess to do otherwise Distrust is a Pagan sin you are acquainted with a particular providence with an heavenly father with the happiness of another world and for you to be worldly distrustful to make it your business what you shall eat and drink that 's a most unworthy thing for a professed Infidel that believeth not eternity that never heard of God's fatherly care nor of heaven or hell to be altogether in the world this were no such marvel but for you that profess to believe the Gospel to have your hearts fail and sink upon every occasion and to be under the tyrannie of distracting cares how sad is it Thus much for the hainousness of Vnbelief which I was willing to represent thus at large that you might see what just reason there was that God should destroy those in the wilderness that believed not The next thing thing is to open the nature of it I shall here give 1. The kinds 2. The Notes whereby this sin may be discovered For the kinds of it Unbelief is two-fold Negative Positive 1. Negative Vnbelief is found in those to whom the sound of the Gospel never came or to whom God hath denyed the means whereby faith might be wrought in them the want of means is not their sin but their punishment or misery at least and therefore they are not condemned so much for want of Faith in Christ as for not obeying the Law of Nature for sinning against that knowledge which they received in Adam now they never received the light of the Gospel in Adam neither had Adam the knowledge thereof revealed to him but by special grace after the fall when he stood in the quality of a private person then was the promise of the Womans seed revealed to him therefore they that never heard of Christ are not condemned simply for not believing in him ● for their sins against the law they are condemned not for their unbelief against the Gospel that 's the reason why Christ when he had said John 3. 18. Every one that believeth not is condemned already presently addeth by way of explication This is the condemnation that light is come into the world c. as restraining it to positive Infidelity though without Christ they can never be saved yet God will not damn them for this reason for not believing in Christ for he never gave them the means of the knowledge of Christ 2. Positive Vnbelief which is found in them that have means to believe in Christ and yet neglect and refuse him and the offers of grace and life in him and so continue in the state of nature This is two-fold 1. Total 2. Partial 1. Total unbelief in those that continue professed Infidels after the tenders of the Gospel as the Word where it came found different success as at Antioch Acts 13. 48. at Iconium Acts 14. 1 2. at Athens Acts 17. 34. many refused to make any profession 2. Partial When men are
continually behold his face and stand before him Dan. 7. 10. In such a blessed place and in such blessed company was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their abode or habitation when God disposed the several Creatures into proper mansions and places of abode he took the Angels into his own train and glorious attendants that they might be still with him other Creatures were his Servants those his Courtiers that is his Houshold and ordinary Servants that were to attend as in his Chamber of Presence 2. In this place they were to enjoy God and glorifie God their happiness was to enjoy God their duty to glorifie him there they behold his face Matth. 18. 10. for vision and sight of God is the happiness of rational Creatures and therefore our happy estate is expressed by beholding him face to face and David saith Psal 16. 11. in thy presence or in thy face is fulnesse of joy in Heaven then did God manifest himselfe to them there they were to applaud his Counsels receive his Commands to love God with the most perfect embraces of their will and to fulfil his Commandments hearkning to the voice of his Word 3. From this place they are now driven into the lower parts of the World as being a place more fit for sin and misery that the place into which they are driven is the bottom and center of the Earth cannot be shewen out of Scripture rather the contrary for sometimes they are said to fly up and down in the air and therefore is Sathan called the Prince of the power of the air Eph. 2. 3. and the other Divels Principalities and spiritual wickednesses in high places Eph. 6. 12. They aspire to get as high as they can but they can get no further then the Regions of the ●ire and sometimes they are said to compasse the earth to and fro Job 1. 7. The Earth is Sathans walk and circuit where he seeks to do mischief and sometimes they are in the Sea Matth. 8. 33. for as yet they are not in that prison and place of torments where they shall abide for ever under the wrath of the Lord therefore when Christ checketh their power in the world they expostulate with him Jesus thou Son of David ar● thou come to torment us before our time Matth. 8. 29. and besought him that he would not cast them into the great deep by which some understand the final place of their residence and torments even the lowest place of the world most remote from the highest Heavens which place as yet they have not entred but how is it said that they are already cast down into Hell 2 Pet. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I Answer that expression doth onely note the dreadfulnesse of their fal from so glorious a mansion to such a place of misery and because where ever they are they carry their own Hell with them though by Gods permission they are as yet suffered to remain in the Air or Earth 4. Departing from Heaven they departed from all the happiness and glory which they enjoyed there namely that light which they had in their understandings to behold God that power in their wills to love and s●rve him in stead of which they are filled with darknesse and malice and become the unreconsilable enemies of God and Man as to their light their gracious knowledge is quite extinct their natural knowledge much Eclipsed and their experimental knowledge not enongh to engage their hearts to God as to their integrity and holiness in stead of a will to love and serve God there are nothing but obstinate purposes to do evil and endeavours to hinder the glory of God and the good of Man 1 Pet. 5. 8. lest we should enjoy that happiness which he hath left Hence those titles given then in Scripture as Divel which signifieth a Slanderer Sathan which signifieth an Enemy the Tempter Matth. 4. 1. because he dayly solliciteth us to evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the evil one Matth. 5. being full of wickedness himselfe he maketh it his study and care to propagate it in others Belial 2 Cor. 6. 15. unprofitable as good for nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the destroyer because he worketh mischief the old Serpent Rev. 12. 6. because under the shape of the serpent he poysoned Eve as to their power it is much broken and limitted they are held in the chains of providence they could not do hurt to the herd of Swine without permission Luke 9. 26. 5. Though they have lost much of the glory and power annexed to their habitation yet many tokens of the divine image do as yet remain in them holiness is as we said utterly lost he sinneth from the beginning 1 John 3. 8. that is doth nothing else but sin and Acquinas saith well Hoc est Angelis casus quod hominibus mors their fall into sin to them is as death to us but now in other things they have much left as man after his fall is like a drisled picture and had onely enough left to shew what he once was so the Angels though they are much fallen from the excellency of their nature yet there is enough left to shew that once they were glorions creatures that which remaineth may be referred to two heads their great cunning and active power 1. Their knowledge and cunning is great they have much natural and experimental knowledge so as they can discern hidden causes and virtues which scape the flight of mans reason and understanding they know how to apply active to passive things can guess notably at future events but as for a certain knowledge of them unless of such things as depend upon necessary causes that is proper to God and accordingly he challengeth it Isa 41. 23. shew the things that are to come that we may know that ye are Gods c. Therefore the Divels Oracles were either false or doubtful as 2 Kings 22. 16. great skill in Arts and tongues they have as appeareth by their teaching those things with wonderful facility to those that have familiarity with them in divine things they know enough of God and his justice as to feel an horror impressed upon themselves Jam. 2. 19 Luk. 4. 34. Acts 19. 15 besides they are of wonderful sagarity to judge of mens hearts by the gestures the motion of the blood and spirits and other such external signes for directly they do not know the thoughts that is the priviledge of God 2. Their power is great still though limited so that it cannot be exercised but when and where and as God will they are able to raise tempests to bring fire from Heaven as they did to ruine Jobs house and children Job 1. they can deceive with lying miracles but true miracles can onely be wrought by a divine power being of much sagacity and skill in the secrets of nature they may poyson the air destroy the bodies of men infest and trouble beasts and cattel in short do all
in one place 't is said The Kingdom prepared for you in another Vessels of mercy aforehand prepared unto glory so is Hell fitted for the wicked and they fit themselves for Hell God prepareth the Saints and sitteth them but endureth the wicked and beareth with them whilst they fit themselves for destruction see Rom. 9. 22 23. Carnal men may lord it abroad for a while and ruffle and shine in worldly pomp but the blackness of darkness is kept for them 3. Observe the suitableness of the judgment to the sin he saith darkness not fire Clouds that darken the truth are justly punished with the mists of darkness for ever see 2 Pet 2. 17. they that would quen●h the true light are cast into eternal darkness God loveth to retaliate that men may read their sin in their judgment here in the world we may do it in mercy to the Saints Jacob that came the younger for the elder to blinde Isaac had the elder daughter given him instead of the younger Asa that put the Prophet in the stocks was diseased in his feet but in Hell he doth it for the greater horror to the wicked they that chuse left hand blessings Prov. 3. 16 are justly placed with the Goats on the left hand Mat. 25. he that denyeth a crumb could not receive a drop they that cared not for Gods company are then banished out of his presence and to those that loved darkness more then light is the mist of darkness reserved for ever Verse 14. And Enoch also the seventh from Adam Prophesied of these saying Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints THe Apostle urgeth another Argument to imply the destruction of those Seducers and that is The Prophesie of Enoch whether this Prophesie were written or no● the same spirit that spake in Enoch inspired our Apostle if he received it by Tradition 't is here made Authentick and put into the Canon The Jews have some Relicks of this Prophesie in their Writings and some talk of a Volume extant in the primitive times consisting of 4082. lives called she Prophesie of Enoch but that was condemned for spurious and Apocryphal Tertullian saith there was a Prophesie of Enoch kept by Noah in the Ark which book is now lost be it so many good books may be lost but no Scripture but most probably 't was a Prophesie that went from hand to hand from father to son Jude saith Enoch Prophesied he doth not say 't is written as quoting a passage of Scripture But why should he rather produce Enochs Prophesie rather then a passage out of the Authentique books of Scripture where are many such to this purpose I Answer 1. It was done by the providence of God to preserve this memorial to the Church 2. Because ancient things are more venerable for by all mens confession those times were most simple and free partium studio from factions and partialities therefore all along the Apostle bringeth instances of the most ancient date And Enoch the seventh from Adam that is inclusive putting Adam for the first but why is this circumstance mentioned I Answer 1. To commend the Antiquity of the Doctrine the seventh in discent from Adam intimates that judgment was to be administred by Christ 2. Some observe a mystery the seventh person was a Prophet as the seventh day was holy 3. I think 't is to distinguish him from Enoch the son of Cain who was the third from Adam as Enoch the son of Seth was the seventh see Gen. 4. 17. Prophesied that Enoch was a Prophet is clear here and may begathered from Gen 5 2● where he is said to walk with God a phrase proper to those that served the Lord in some near way of ministration 't is there applyed to Enoch who was a Prophet and to Noah Gen. 6. 9. who was a Preacher of righteousness 2 Pet. 2. 5. and to Eli. 1 Sam 2. 30. who was a Priest Of these saying Of these because of such like 't is a general Prophe sie brought down to a particular case and instance The Lord cometh that is the Lord Jesus appointed to be the Judge of the world nay mark it Behold the Lord cometh as putting it before their eyes commeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is come that is he shall as certainly come as if he were come already the Jews say the great excommunication Maranatha was instituted by Enoch the word signifieth The Lord commeth with ten thousand of his Saints it may be rendred with his holy Myriads or ten thousands an uncertain number for a certain that was their highest and roundest reckoning the meaning is with huge multitudes of Angels and Saints as the Apostle 1 Thes 3. 13. At the coming of the Lord Jesus with all his Saints Zech. 14. 5. The Lord my God shall come and all thy Saints with thee not only the Angels but the Saints do help to make up the tryumphs of that day The Notes are these 1. That what is spoken in the word in general doth as much concern us as if it were spoken to our own persons Enoch Prophesied of these c. Particulars are comprized in their generals some Scriptures speak directly to every single person the Decalogue is most express this way Thou thou c. as aiming to awaken every one to a sense of their duty God doth as it were talk with every of our persons imediately the Gospel indeed speaketh largely come all yee c. as excluding and exempting none out of the hopes of it yet sometimes the Gospel speaking as particularly as the Law especially where the condition is annexed to the offer as Rom. 10. 9. If thou beleevest in the Lord Jesus with thine heart c. if you as speaking to me if thou as speaking to thee and every other man in particular Well then though the word speaketh generally take home your own share as men cut a passage out of the common River to water their own fields let not the Scriptures speak in vain James 4. 5 we are all concerned when his speech is directed to men of our condition Psal 27. 8. Thou saidest seek ye my face and David sub-sumeth Thy face Lord will I seek 2. Prophesie or Preaching the word is ancient for Enoch the seventh from Adam Prophesied still some have been set a part for this work Enoch was a Prophet and Noah a Preacher of righteousness 't is said that in the latter end of six thousand years we should be rooting up an ancient Ordinance that hath stood from the beginning of the world till now in the old time before the Law there were some to teach every master in his family churches were then in houses and some special Prophets to instruct in publique and continue the tradition under the Law also there were some solemnly set apart for the work of the Tabernacle and Prophets immediately called to deliver the special messages of God not only for the instruction of the present age but to
of a man the vigor of nature is abated gallant and active spirits effeminated and brave hopes drowned and quenched in the puddle of ex●ess and masculine agilioy and vivacity melted away in ease and pleasure The Romans were wont to have their sunerals at the gates of Venus Temple 2. The souls welfare is of chief consideration we must take ●eed that the soul be not either disfited for duty or disposed for sin 1. Dis fitted for duty when the soul cannot lift up it self to God and divine things and findeth less aptitude for his service you are inordinate Luk. 21. 36. Let not your hearts be over charged with surfeitting and drunkenness c. the heart may be over-charged when the stomach is not when we are warned of surfeitting and drunkenness we think of vomiting staggering reeling fauliring in speech or gate Oh Christians you are guilty of it when the heart is over-charged and driveth on heavily in holy things when we are warned of adultery we think only of defiling other mens wives or scattering our lusts promis●uo●sly as the beasts do but alass we are guilty of it when the inordinate use of a lawful wife doth quench our vigor and alacrity in our heavenly calling si vinum ●x ● potheca tua c. a man may drink too freely of his hogshead 2. We must take care that the soul be not more disposed to sin diver lusts and pleasures are fitly joined by the Apostle Tit. 3. 3. if we do not watch over pleasures the heart groweth more wanton and libidinous the restraints of grace are weaker and carnal motions more urgent and violent the heart is nourished c Jam. 5. 5. the enemy put in strength and heart 1 Pet. 2. 11. Well then let us beware of sensuality other things defile a part as ceveto●sness the soul but sensual lusts defile the soul and body to they leave guilt upon the soul and dishonour upon the body while 't is made a streiner for meats and drinks and a channel for lusts to run in other lusts seem to gratifie the ambition of man and to exalt him but these debase him and turn him out among the beasts to renounce pleasures is the first thing you must do if you mean to do any thing in Religion otherwise you lye open to every temptation Pro 25. 18. The water of the Sanctuary could not heal the mirery places Ezek. 47. 11 which is usually appled to sensual hearts preasures bring a brawn and a deadness upon the conscience and a cloud upon the understanding Daniel that had the high visions of God lived by pulse John Baptist that had the most eminent Gospel dispensation Mat. 11. fed upon locusts and wilde honey among the Heathens he was counted the most accomplished man that spent more oyl in the Lamp then wine in the bottle certainly the baser a man is the more he affects carnal delights Eccles 7. 4. The heart of a so●l is in the house of mirth that which wise men prefer is better then that which fools make choice of pleasures are the choice of fools wise men know them to be baits and snares that if they be not watched they soon put us out of frame and unfit us for communion with God Eccles 2. 2. Once more this sort of sins enslaveth and by custome gaineth upon the heart more then others do and bringeth us under a power which we cannot easily break 1 Cor. 6. 12 Therefore use pleasures with care and caution that when we take them they may not take us Gods people I suppose are not so easily tempted to adultery and drunkenness but beware of gluttony the throat is a sl●pery place and instead of supplying nature we feed lust be not too much in the use of carnal delights least you suffer this distemper of spirit to take root Dives fared deliciously every day there are times of abstinence as well as liberal rejoycing in the creature when our lives are but a diversion from one pleasure to another nature groweth wanton and unsatisfied and men live as if they were born to eat drink play sport and sleep Luk. 17. 27. Lastly take heed of solliciting lusts when you should quench them Rom. 13. 14. The next thing that we may observe is That sensual persons have not the spirit these two are contrary flesh and spirit Gal. 5. 17. and they that cherish the one do necessarily banish the other and as they enlarge the one they streighten the other the spirit is a free spirit and sensual persons are very slaves the spirit is a pure spirit and they are unclean the spirit is active and they are gross and muddy of a dull and stupid nature the spirit worketh intellectual and chast delights and they are altogether for base and dreggy pleasures such a perfect contrariety is there between them more distinctly take it thus 1. Sensual men have little of the inlightning of the spirit their palate is better then their understanding Eph. 5. 16. Be not drunken with wine wherein is excess but be filled with the spirit where the fumes of wine and the motions of the spirit are composed as things incompatible in marish countreys we do not expect a clear air so sensual persons have seldom any clear and raised thoughts of God men given to pleasures can taste meats and drinks but not Doctrines 2. Sensual men have little of the quickenings and efficacy of the spirit the more they dissolve and melt away their precious hours and spirits in pleasures the more do they grow sapless dead and careless and loose all tenderness of conscience and livelyness of affection they quench the vigor of nature much more do they quench the spirit Voluptuaries are said to be past feeling Eph. 9. 19. 3. They have little of the comforts of the Spirit the comforts of the spirit arise from meditating on the works of God Psal 104 34. or tasting his love 1 Pet. 2. 3. or contemplating our great hopes 2 Cor. 4. 18. Now carnal men can relish none of this they cannot exercise love or faith or hope that they may delight themselves in God and have some lively tasts of eternal life when the soul lyeth under the dominion of carnal and dreggy pleasures 't is uncapable of thinking upon God and his works or relishing inward consolation love is pre-occupied Well then we should the more take heed that we be not sensual never had any sensual person any great measure and portion of the holy Ghost in gifts or graces the Devil easily entereth into swine but the holy spirit of God will not dwell there a man is put to his choice which he wil have pleasures or the spirit 't wil be sad for you if you love pleasures more then God 2 Tim. 3. 4. and prefer these dreggy delights before those masculine joys which will ac●rue to you by communion with God if we were altogether to renounce delight 't would be more ●● some no you are only
promises of God Let us now apply this 1. It informeth us that we may look for the reward without sin Those men would be wiser than God that deny us a liberty to make use of the Spirits motives they begrudg Gods bounty to what end should the Lord propound rewards but that we should close with them by faith graces may be exercised about their proper objects without sin it requireth some faith to aim at things not seen the world is drowned in sense and present satisfactions they are Mercenaries that must have pay in hand their Souls droop and languish if they do not meet with credit applause and profit they make man their pay master they have the spirit of a servant that prefer present wages before the inheritance but to do all upon the incouragements of the mercy of Jesus Christ unto eternal life argueth grace 'T was a relief to the Soul of Christ to think of the reward Heb. 12. 2. Christ as man was to have rational comforts and humane incouragements that is sinful indeed when we would have the reward but neglect the work when we would be Mercenarii but not Operarii we sever the reward from the duty like Ephraim are willing to ●●ead the corn but not break the clods Hos 10. 11. Again we look amiss upon the reward when we have a carnal notion of heaven as some Jews looked for a carnal Messiah so do some Christians for a carnal Heaven for base pleasure and fleshly delights for a Turkish Paradis● such kind of hopes debase the heart or else when we look for it as merited by us as if we could challenge it by our works then we are Mercinaries indeed 't is here looking for the mercy of Jesus Christ c. Again our own happiness must not be our last end there is a personal happiness that results to us from the enjoyment of God now the glory of God must be preferred before it 2. If you would persevere in the love of God and a good frame of heart revive your hopes and set the Soul a looking and a longing for eternal life if we keep the rejoycing of our hope firm to the end then we are safe Heb. 3. 6. Courtiers are more polite in their manners than ordinary subjects because they are more in their Princes eye and company the oftner we are in Gods Court the more holy Well then be as much as you can in actual expectation of this blessedness To this end 1. Believe it there is a mist upon eternity to a carnal heart they are led by sense and reason and believe no more than is evident to a natural principle but now faith is the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11. 1. fancy and nature cannot ou●-see time and look beyond death faith holdeth the candle to hope and then we have a prospect into the other world and can see an happy estate to come 2. Apply it 't is a poor comfortless meditation to think of a blessed hope and the certainty of it unless we have an interest in these things an hungry man taketh little pleasure in gazing upon a feast when he tastes not of it the reprobate hereafter are lookers on and David speaketh of a table spread for him in the sight of his enemies hope hath never a more lively influence than when we can make out our own propriety and interest 1. Job 19. 26. I know that my Redeemer liveth 2 Cor 5. 1. We know that if this earthly Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building not made with hands eternal in the Heavens 2 Tim. 4. 8. Hence forth there is laid up for me c they do not only believe there is an Heaven but apply it for me You will say is hope only the fruit assurance I answer 't is the fruit of faith as well as of assurance or experience but the sense of our interest is very comfortable and in some sort necessary before we can hope any thing for our selves our qualification is to be supposed in a matter of such moment a man should not be at an uncertainty canst thou be quiet and not sure of Heaven not to look after it is a bad sign a godly man may want it but a godly man cannot slight it 'T is possible a man may make an hard ●hift to creep to Heaven through doubts and fears and may be scarcely saved whilest others have an abundant entrance but then you lose your Heaven upon earth which consisteth in peace and joy in the Holy Ghost and lose much of the efficacy of hope for uncertain wavering thoughts work little therefore assurance cannot be sleighted further I adde by shewing what application there must be if we cannot attain to assurance there are three deg●ees of application beneath assurance there is acceptation adherence and affiance 1. Acceptation of Gods offer upon Gods terms Job 5. 27. Know thou it for thy good put in for these hopes and take God to his word upon this confidence make good thy part of the stipation in the Covenant and he will not fail thee this application there must be in all an answer to the demands of the Covenant 1 Pet. 3. 21. Exod. 24. 6 7 8. 2. Adherence Stick close to this hope in a course of obedience if we do Gods work we shall not fail of wages 1 Car. 9. 26. I run not as one that is uncertain 3. Affiance resting waiting upon God for the accomplishment of this blessedness though not without some doubts and fears as to our own interest though you cannot say 't is yours yet you will cast your self upon the mercy of God in Christ as 't is in the Text. Looking for the mercy of Christ you dare venture your Soul in that bottom this is that committing your selves to him as unto a merciful and faithful Creator which the Apostle speaketh of 1 Pet. 4. 18. You will go on with your work and put your selves in Gods hand for your eternal happiness because he is merciful faithful See also Rom. 2. 7. 3. Meditate on it often med ta●ion is a temperate extasie a survey of the Land of promise God biddeth Abraham take a view of Canaan Gen. 13. 14 15. Surely the more we lift up our thoughts in the contemplation of this blessed estate the more lively will our hopes be if every morning we spent a thought this way it would season the heart against the love of present things the morning is an emblem of the Resurrection when we awake out of the sleep of death and the day cometh which will never have night more Psal 17. 15. So in time of troubles we should be reckoning upon a better estate Rom. 8. 18 so when you are by bodily sickness summoned to the grave and you are going down to converse with worms and skulls then think of a blessed eternity Job 19. 26. The next Point is from that elause the mercy The ground of our waiting and looking for
increaseth our love to God Luc. 7. 47. and putteth us upon the study of holiness 4. At the last day all is fully accomplished 1 Col. 22. Well then let us wait upon God with incouragement and press on to perfection upon these hopes surely we shall be faultless Christ would never have given us earnest if he meant not to stand to his bargain The next clause is before the presence of his glory note thence that Christs presence at the day of Judgment will be exceeding glorious for he will then appear not only as the Son of man but as the Son of God Matth. 16 27. he will then appear not only as the Saviour but as the Judg of the world both for the terror of the wicked 2 Thess 1. 8. and as a pattern of that glory which shall be put upon the godly Col. 3. 4. and Phil. 3. 21. Well then let us not despise Christ now he lieth hid under the vail of the Gospel but with comfort let us expect his coming for when he is glorious we shall share with him and appear also in glory And let us not think shame of his service what ever disireputation the world shall put upon it The last particle in the words is that with exceeding joy from thence note The day of Christ to the godly is a joyful day when others howl you shall triumph when others are dejected and call upon the Mountains to cover them Rev. 6. 16. you shall lift up the head for your redemption draweth nigh Luc. 21. 28. Christ will be glad to see you whom he hath carried in his heart from all eternity for whose sake he came into the world and dyed and for whom he went back again into Heaven that he might negotiate with God in your behalf and whom he now cometh to receive unto himself that you may be for ever there where he is and surely you that have received Christ into your hearts and loved him though unseen and served him though with the loss and hazard of all will be glad to see him in all his glory and royalty especially when you shall hear him calling upon you Come ye blessed of my Father enter into the Kingdom prepared for you Oh that we could act over this joy aforehand faith is a bird that can sing in winter before Christ came in the flesh the Patriarchs got a sight of him by the Eagle-eye of faith and rejoyced at the thought of it John 8. 56. Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Oh surely our hearts should be warmed with the thought of that blessed day when we shall be able to say Yonder even there is our great Lord Verse 25. To the only wise God our Saviour be glory and majesty dominion and power now and ever Amen THe Apostle in this verse goeth on with that doxology which he had begun in the former here you may take notice of the description of the person to whom the praise is given he is discribed 1. By his excellency the only wise God 2. By our interest and the benefit we receive by him and our Saviour 2. The ascription of praise Be glory c. there is 1. what is ascribed glory majesty dominion and power 2. The duration how long he would have this ascribed now and ever 3. Manner in what fashion 't is ascribed in the particle Amen with which all is sealed and closed up this particle implieth 1. Our confidence that it shall be so 2. our hearty affection that it might be so love saith let it be and faith it shall be for faith is a prophetick grace in prayer it answereth its self But let us go over these particulars more fully and distinctly from the description of the person to the only wise God our Saviour that Christ is God we proved before on verse 4. see pag. 222. and 230 231 232 233 234 and that Christ is a Saviour and how on the same verse pag. 227 228 229 I shall only now observe 1. That God is wise 2. That God is only wise 3. That Jesus Christ as Mediator hath a right to this attribute I begin with the first That wisdom is ascribed to God Gods wisdom is a distinct notion from his knowledge he doth not only know all things but hath ordered and disposed them with much counsel the wisdom of God is asserted in the word Job 9. 4. and Job 12 13 and proved there by what he hath bestowed upon man he that teacheth man knowledg shall not he know Psal 94. 10. what ever man hath from God God hath it in himself in a more eminent degree and 't is also evidenced by the works of God as in the works of creation providence and the methods of his graces 1. Much of his wisdom is seen in creation there his wisdom is discovered in the excellent order of all his works their mutual correspondence and fitness for the several ends and services for which they were appointed the order of the world sheweth the wisdom of God the order of placing the creatures see Pro. 3. 19 20. the Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth by understanding hath he established the Heavens by his knowledg the depths are broken up and the clouds drop down the dew the earth is set lowermost as the foundation of all the rest the Sea pent up within its channels the air above them both and the Heavens higher than all the Stars and Planets placed in the Firmament and the fishes in the Sea the order of making God proceeding from things imperfect to perfect first the rude mass then the Heavens and the vast earth and glorious creatures but without life then the herbs and plants that have life but not sense and motion then the brute creatures that have sense and motion but not reason then man with a reasonable Soul after his own image in this order you may observe first the dwelling place is appointed then the food then the creature that feedeth upon it the beasts upon the herbs and man upon the beasts The Queen of Sheba was astonished at Solomons wisdom when she perceived the well ordering of his family certainly if we did observe the order of nature we would stand wondering more at the wisdom of God Next observe the correspondence that is between all the parts of the world compared sometimes to a building wherefore God is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an artificial Builder Heb. 11. 10. In this great house every part conspireth to the beauty service and dece●cy of the whole the roof is Heaven and therefore the Spheres are called chambers and stories in the Heavens Amos 9. 6. The foundation is earth Job 38. 5 6. The Stars and glorious Luminaries are the windows the Sea the water course c. Sometimes 't is compared to the frame and structure of mans body Heb. 11. 3. The worlds were framed 't is in the original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 set in joynt as all the members of the body are tied together by several ligaments c. Sometimes to an Army Gen. 2. 1. The Heavens were finished and all the hoast of them Order is necessary every where but especially in an hoast there every one must keep in his rank and station thus the Stars have their courses Judges 5. 20. and the clouds their courses Job 37. 12. yea the Grashoppers march as an army Joel 2. 15. The next thing that sheweth the wisdom of God is their fitness for use and service the work mans skill is as much commended in the use of an instrument as in the making and framing of it the upper Heaven'● fitted to be the everlasting mansion of the Saints the middle Heaven to give us light and heat and influence the air or lower Heaven for breath the earth for habitation the Seas for navigation the herbs and plants for food and medicine c. Look upon the bodies of living creatures and tell me if there be not a wise God Galen saith there are 600 muscles in the body of man and every one fitted for ten uses so for bones nerves arteries and veins whosoever observeth their use scituation and correspondence of them cannot but fall into admiration of the wisdom of the Maker who hath thus exactly framed all things at first out of nothing and still out of the froth of the blood The wisdom of men and Angels cannot mend the least thing in a flye the figure colour quality quantity of every worm and every flower with what exactness is it ordered as if God had nothing else to do but to bring forth such a creature into the world as the product of his infinite Wisdom 2. Providence Gods wisdom is much seen in the sustentation and governing of all things Eph. 1. 11. He worketh all things according to the Council of his will do but observe a little now all things are put into a subserviency to Gods purpose sometimes the smallest things occasion events of the highest concernment the occasion of Josephs greatness in Egypt was a dream a lye cast him into prison and a dream fetched him out sometimes the most casual things to us are the most necessary means to accomplish that which God aimeth at A certain man drew a bow at peradventure and slew the King of Israel between the joints of the harness 1 King 22. 24. Contingencies to us are infallihle events as to the purposes of God voluntary things that depend upon the will of man fall under the ordination of the will of God there is more wisdom shewn in ruling a skittish horse then in rolling a stone or dead thing God sheweth his wisdom in guiding the courses of the stars but much more in disposing the heart of man Prov. 21. 1. there is nothing so confused but if you look upon it in its result and final tendency there is beauty and order in it the tumults of the world the prosperity of the wicked carnal men think them the disgrace and blemish of providence whereas they are the ornament of it Psal 92. 5. Lord how glorious are thy works thy thoughts are very deep man is discontented because he cannot fathom the deep thoughts of providence nothing so opposite so bad but God can bring good out of it the sins of men set forth the beauty of providence as shadows and black lines in a Picture set it off the more see Acts 4. 28 and Job 5. 12 13. Christ hath been beholding to his enemies as much as to his friends their potent opposition hath occasioned the further increase of his Kingdom 3. In the methods of his grace so I call all the transactions of God about the salvation of sinners from first to last the rejection of the Jews and calling of the Gentiles Rom. 11. 33. Oh the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledg of God the various dispensations used in the Church before the Law under the Law and time of the Gospel these are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manifold wisdom of God Eph. 3. 10. Redemption by Christ the great plots of Heaven called the hidden wisdom of God in a mystery and without controversie a great mystery 1 Tim. 3. 16. that which Angels desire to pry into Gods Master piece wherein all things by a rare contrivance are ordered for Gods glory and mans good the wonder of it will take up our hearts to all eternity to see the ruins of the fall so exactly repaired the glory of God salved the comfort of man provided for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh the depth of this glorious mistery Again The various acts of love whereby God subdueth sinners to himself this taking sinners in their moneth and disposing of unthought of circumstances and passages of providence in order to their conversion Once more the over-ruling of all events to further the eternal blessedness of the Saints Rom. 8. 28. In all these I have forborn particular illustrations that the discourse may not swell up into too great a bulk Now whosoever shall seriously consider these things will certainly conclude God is wise but further consider the usual concomitants of Gods wisdom and then we may come to make some use of this meditation Wisdom in God is accompanied with immaculate holiness and infinite power in the Devils there is great cunning great power and much wickedness in man there is much shame little power and less wisdom Gods power and wisdom are often counted in the expressions of Scripture Job 9 4. He is wise in heart and mighty in power so Job 3● 5. He is mighty in strength and wisdom the two for midable properties in an adversary and the desire able properties in a friend so see 1 Cor. 1. 25. Again 't is joyned with holiness he is most wise and most holy glorious in holiness and rich in wisdom Well then let us often admire the Wisdom of God look up to the Heavens and what do you find there The work of a wise God Jer. 10. 12. Look to the structure of all things round about you and what offereth its self to your thoughts by his wisdom he hath established the world Jer. 10. 12. Look within you and you cannot chuse but say Oh God I will praise thee for I am fearfully and wonderfully made Psal 139. 14. Look into the Scriptures and consider the stupendious mysteries that are revealed there of the Trinity in unity God manifested in our flesh a Virgin conceiving Christ dying and can you hold from crying out Oh the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledg of God Rom. 11. 33. view these things again and again we cannot take up all of God in one or many or all our meditations 2. Let not it be a bare speculation but improve it 1. To quicken you to prayer where should we go for wisdom when we need it but to the wise God see Job 28. 12. James 1. 5.
Christ is set forth praise and blessing praise hath respect to his excellency and blessing to his benefits Eph 1. 3. We may praise a man for his worth though we have no benefit by him and so we are bound to praise God for the excellency of his nature though he had never done us good but now when he is our God and our Saviour and hath shewed us so much of his goodness and mercy in Christ we should be ever praising him Phil. 4. 20. Now unto God and our Father be glory for ever and ever Amen Glory is due to him as God much more as our Father his worth and excellency though he were a stranger to us doth deserve an acknowledgment but when we consider what he is to us and what he hath done for us then we can hold no longer the heart being affected with a sense of his kindness breaketh out to our Father to our Saviour be glory for ever and ever Well then consider the Lords excellencies more and observe his benefits and work them upon the heart till you be filled with a deep sense of his love and find such an impulsion in your Spirits as you cannot hold from breaking out into his praise I come now from the description to the ascription to him be glory c. Can we bestow any thing upon God or wish any real worth and excellency to be super-added to him I answer no the meaning is that those which are in God already may be first more sensibly manifested Isa 64. 2. Make thy name known among the nations 'T is a great satisfaction to Gods people when any thing of God is discovered they value it above their own benefit and safety see Psal 115. 1. they preferre the glory of mercy and truth before their deliverance 2. More seriously and frequently acknowledged 't is a great pleasure to the Saints to see others praise God Psal 107. 8. Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and for his wonderful works to the children of men 3. More deeply esteemed that God may be more in request more in the hearts of men and Angels Gods children no not count it enough that God is glorified by themselves but they desire also that God may be glorified by others as fire turneth all things near it into its own nature so is grace diffusive good men are loath to go to Heaven alone they would travel thither by troops and in company But let us more particularly take a view of this ascription and so first what is ascribed glory majesty dominion and power Let us open these words Glory is clara cum laude notitia excellency discovered with praise and approbation and notech that high honour and esteem that is due to Christ Majesty is the next word which implieth such greatness excellency as maketh one honoured preferr'd above all therefore a stile usually given to Kings but none so due as unto Christ who is King of Kings and Lord of our Lords The third term is dominion which implieth the foveraignty of Christ over all things especially over the people whom he hath purchased with his blood The last word is power which signifieth that all sufficiency in God whereby he is able to do all things according to the good pleasure of his will From hence observe 1. A gracious heart hath such a sense of Gods worth and perfection that it would have all things that are honourable and glorious ascribed to him therefore are divers words here used When we have done our utmost we come short for Gods name is exalted above all blessing and above all praise Nehem. 9. 5. Yet 't is good to do as much as we can Love to God will not be satisfied with a little praise I will praise him yet more and more love inlargeth the heart towards God if there be any thing more excellent he shall have it well then 't is a sign of a dead heart to be a niggard in praises to be sparing careless or cold this way 2. When we think of God 't is a relief to the Soul to consider of his glory majesty dominion and power for this is that which the Apostle would have to be manifested acknowledged and esteemed in God as the ground of our respect to him it incourageth us in our service we need not think shame of his service to whom glory and power and majesty and dominion belongeth It hearteneth us against dangers surely the great and glorious God will bear us out in his work it increaseth our awe and reverence shall we serve God in such slight fashion as we would not serve the Governour Mal. 1. 8. 't is a lessening of Gods majesty you do not treat him as a great and glorious Potentate Mal. 1. 14. It inviteth our Prayers to whom should we go in our necessities but to him that hath Dominion over all things and power to dispose of them for the glory of his majesty It increaseth our Dependance God is glorious and will maintain the honour of his name and truth of his promises When we are daunted by earthly Potentates 't is a relief to think of the majesty of God in comparison of which all earthly Grandure is but the dream of a shadow Again God that hath a soveraignty over all things and such an almighty power to back it will not be wanting to do that which shall make for his glory 2. The next consideration in this Ascription is the duration now and ever Thence note The Saints have such large desires for Gods glory that they would have him glorified everlastingly and without ceasing they desire the pre sent age may not only glorifie God but the future when they are dead and gone the Lord remaineth and they would not have him remain without honour they do not take death so bitterly if there be any hopes that God will have a people to praise him and their great comfort now is the expectation of a great Congregation gathered from the four winds united to Christ presented to God that they may remain with him and glorifie him for evermore 't is the comfort of their hearts to see this Congregation a making up every day that there are Saints and Angels to praise God whilest others grieve and dishonour him they prize their own salvation upon this ground that they shall live for ever to glorifie God for ever see Eph. 3. 21. Ps 41. 13 Psal 106 48. Now this they do partly from their love to Gods glory which they prize above their own salvation Rom. 9. 3. Partly in thankfulness to God for his everlasting love to them God is from everlasting to everlasting and his love is from everlasting to everlasting Psal 10● 17. he was their God and will be their God for ever and ever and therefore they purpose to be his people and to praise him for ever and ever Well then get these large desires for Gods glory that he may be