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A60194 A learned commentary or exposition: upon the first chapter of the second Epistle of S. Paul to the Corinthians Being the substance of many sermons formerly preached at Grayes-Inne, London, by that reverend and judicious divine, Richard Sibbs, D.D. Sometimes Master of Catherine-Hall in Cambridge, and preacher to that honourable society. Published for the publick good and benefit of the Church of Christ. By Tho. Manton, B.D. and preacher of the Gospel at Stoake-Newington, near London. Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662.; Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1655 (1655) Wing S3738; ESTC R215702 745,441 567

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yea and amen to be yea and nay We make truth a lie and do rather believe our own lying hearts then Gods immutable and unchangeable Promises Therefore let us see the fulnesse of our hearts and complain of them to God and desire him to cure it and redresse it and he will do it This is to give glory to God indeed we cannot honour God more then to believe his Promises and build on him This will breed love when we feel the comfort of the Promises Foolish men think to honour God by complements by dead performances filly men consider that the principal honour in the world to God is to seal his truth that thou shouldest not make him a liar Hath he promised all things in the world get faith that will honour him and he will honour thy faith What makes God honour faith so much He that believes he will bring him to heaven Faith honours him it gives him the glory of his truth the glory of his goodnesse of his mercy of his truth c. as it honours him he honours it The Believer shall come to heaven when the idle fashionable Christian shall vanish with his conceits that thinks to serve God with empty vain shadowes Honour God with the obedience of faith man cast thy self upon him trust in him in life and death and then thou givest him the honour that he requireth at thy hands For as the honour of his mercy is the greatest honour he will have in this world more then that in the Creation so thou honourest him more in the Gospel to cast thy self on him for forgivenesse of sins and life everlasting and for the guidance of thy daily course of life thou honourest him more then by looking on the creature or by doing him any service He is honoured more by faith in Christ then by any other way Let faith go to him as faith honours him so he will honour it Let it be according to thy faith Let not all be lost let us bring vessels for the precious Promises the vessel of a believing heart Shall all this be lost for a vain heart that will not lodge up these promises shall we have a rich portion and neglect it shall we have so many promises and not improve them and make use of them Therefore I beseech you let it be our practice continually every day of all portions of Scripture make the Promises most familiar to us for duties follow promises if we believe the Promises with our heart they are quickning Promises we will love God and perform other duties Faith works by love If we believe love will come kindly off Therefore he saith here All the Promises are Yea and Amen insinuating that all is included in the Promises Let us empty our hearts of confidence in any thing and fill them with the Promises in Christ that are Yea and Amen Let us stablish our hearts with the Promises let us warm and season and refresh our hearts every day with these In these times of infection what do we those that are careful of themselves that go abroad in dangerous places they have Preservatives they take something to preserve their spirits and to strengthen them against the contagion abroad and it is wisdome so to do it is folly to neglect it and to tempt God not to be careful in this kind it is very well done But what is this if thou do not fence thy soul and thy spitit and take a draught of the Promises every day afresh Let us take out our pardon of course every day of the forgivenesse of sins We sin every day let us go for our pardon If we sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ and he is the propitiation for our sins And the blood of Jesus Christ shall purge us from all sin And he is in justifying us still every day he is acquitting our soules and there is a pardon of course to be taken out every day Let us renew and refresh our hearts with the Promises of pardon and forgivenesse of sins every day Let us strengthen our soules with renewing the Promises of grace for that day to walk comfortably before God that he will keep us by his Spirit from sin that he will be a shield and a Sun to us that he will give us wisdome to carry our selves as we should and he will give us his holy Spirit if we beg it Let us every day take these Promises to be Cordials in these dangerous times and then come life come death all shall be welcome why because we are in Christ and have imbraced the Promises and Christ and all in Christ is Yea and Amen it shall go well with us What a wondrous comfortable life would a Christians life be if he could yield the obedience faith answerable to the promises What a shame is it that having such rich promises we should be so loose so changeable that we should be cast down with crosses and lift up with prosperity It is because we believe not the promises of better things therefore we are proud of present things and cast down with present crosses and are fast and loose Now we have good things for the present afterward the devil comes between us and the promises and makes us let go our hold Religion stands on this which makes me to presse it the more If this were well taken to heart and digested we should know what Religion means if we know Christ and the promises all other things will come off All others are but formalities they will never comfort without the confideration of knowing God in Christ and the rich promises to us in Christ. Likewise if this be so that the promises of God in Christ are Yea and Amen This teacheth us how to make use of all former examples of others and of all former goodnesse to our selves Was God merciful to Abraham and to David Our father 's trusted in thee and were not confounded Psal. 22. Therefore he reasons If I trust in God I shall not be confounded for the Promises are Yea and Amen they are true to one as well as another And whatsoever was written afore was written for our comfort Rom. 15. And this is a singular good use we may make of reading of the stories of the Scripture and of holy men that the same God he lives for ever his arm is not shortened he that was is and is to come and therefore we should read histories with application Did God make sure his Promises to them surely he will make sure his Promises to us Had David forgivenesse of sins upon his confession surely so shall we Abraham believed and it was acc●…ed to him for righteousnesse and ●…o it shall to us if we believe It is alledged for that end Rom. 4. And S. Paul prefixeth his example to all posterity God was mercifull to me and not so onely but to all that believe in him 2 Tim. 2. This is an Use
Christ the Father of mercies c. That which to the flesh is matter of scandall and offence that to the spirit and to a spirituall man is matter of glory so contrary is the flesh and the Spirit and so opposite is the disposition and the current of the fleshly man to the spirituall man Job was so farre from cursing God for taking away that he saith Blessed be the name of God not onely for giving but for taking away too What ground there is in troubles and persecutions to blesse God we shall see in the current and passages of the Chapter To come then to the very verse it selfe where there is a blessing and praysing of God first And in this praysing consider The Act Object Reasons The Act Blessed be God which is a praysing The Object is God the Father The Reasons are inwrapped in the Object Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ because he is the God and Father of Iesus Christ therefore blessed be he Secondly another reason is because he is the Father of mercies Another reason is from the Act of this disposition of mercie in God he is the God of all comfort and as he is comfortable so he doth comfort Thou art good and doest good saith the Psalmist thou art a God of comfort and thou doest comfort For as he is so he doth he shews his Nature in his working Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of mercies and God of comfort of which I shall speake when I come to them Blessed be God the Father c. We see here the heart of the blessed Apostle being warmed with the sense and taste of the sweet mercy of God stirrs up his tongue to bless God a full heart and a full tongue We have here the exuberancie the abundance of his thankfulness breaking forth in his speech his heart had first tasted of the sweet mercies and comforts of God before he prayseth God The first thing that we will observe hence is that It is the disposition of Gods Children after they have tasted the sweet mercy and comfort and love of God to break forth into the praysing of God and to thanksgiving It is as naturall for the new creature to doe so as for the birds to sing in the Spring when the Sun hath warmed the poore creature it shews its thankfulnesse in singing and that little blood and spirits that it hath being warmed after winter it is natural for those creatures so to do and we delight in them It is as natural for the new creature when it feels the Sun of righteousness warming the soul when it tastes of the mercy of God in Christ to shew forth it self in thankfulnesse and praise and it can no more be kept from it then fire can keep from burning or water from cooling it is the nature of the new creature so to do The reason is every creature must do the the work for which God hath enabled it to the which God hath framed it the happinesse of the creature is in well doing in working according to its nature the heathen could see that Now all the creatures the new creature especially is for the glory of God in Christ Jesus All the new creature and what priviledges it hath and what graces it hath all is that God may have the glory of grace why then it must needs work answerable to that which God hath created it for therefore it must shew forth the praise and glorie of God Blessed be God saith the Apostle Ephes. 1. And the blessed Apostle St. Peter begins his Epistle Blessed be the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath begotten us to an Inheritance Immortal and undefiled which fadeth not away reserved for us in Heaven I shall not need to set down with the exposition of the word Blessed How God blesseth us and how we blesse God His blessing is a conferring of blessing our blessing is a declaring of his goodnesse it is a thing well enough known Our blessing of God is a praising of God a setting out what is in him Onely one thing is to be cleared What good can we do to God in blessing of him he is blessed though we blesse him not and he is praised whether we praise him or no he had Glorie enough before he made the world he contented himself in the Trinity the blessed Trinity in it self before there were either Angels or men or other creatures to blesse him and now he can be blessed enough though we do not blesse him It is true he can be so and he can have heaven though thou hast it not but be a damned creature and he will be blessed whether thou blesse him or no. Our blessing of him is required as a dutie to make us more capable of his graces to him that hath shall be given To him that hath and useth that he hath to the Glorie of God shall be given more we give nothing The stream gives nothing to the fountain the beam gives nothing to the Sun for it issues from the Sun our very blessing of God is a blessing of his It is from his Grace that we can praise his Grace and we run still into a new debt when we have hearts enlarged to blesse him We ought to have our hearts more enlarged that we can be enlarged to prayse God And to others it is good for others are stirred up by it Gods goodnesse and mercy is enlarged in regard of the manifestation of it to others by our blessing of God Yea this good comes to our souls besides the increase of Grace we shall find an increase of joy and comfort that is one end why God requires it of us though he himself in his essence be alway alike blessed yet he requires that we should be thankful to him alway that we should blesse and praise him even in misery and affliction why then because if we can work upon our hearts a disposition to see Gods love and to praise and blesse him we can never be uncomfortable we have some comfort against all estates and conditions by studying to praise God by working of our hearts to a disposition to praise and bless God for then crosses are light crosses are no crosses then That is the reason that the Apostles and Holy men so stirred up their hearts to praise and thansgiving that they might feele their crosses the less that they might be lesse sensible of their discomforts for undoubtedly when we search for matter of praysing God in any afliction and when we see there is some mercy yet reserved that we are not consumed the consideration that there is alway some mercy that we are yet unthankfull for will inlarge our hearts and God when he hath thanks and praise from us he gives us still more matter of thankfulnesse and the more we thank him and praise him the more we have matter of praise
others as we should let us labour to get experience of comfort in our selves God comforteth us that we might be able to comfort others He will easily kindle others that is all on fire himself and that is comforted himself he can easily comfort others with that comfort he feels himself those that have experience can do it best As we see in Physitians if there be two Physitians whereof the one hath been sick of the disease that he is to cure in another the other parhaps is more excellent then he otherwise but he hath never been sick of it the patient will sooner trust himself with the experienced Physitian then with the other for undoubtedly he is better seen in that then the other though perhaps the other may be a greater booked Physitian then he As it is with the Physitians of the body so it is with the Physitian of the soul the experienced Physitian is the best What is the reason that old men and wise men are the mercifullest of all because they have had experience of many crosses and miseries a wise man knows what crosses are he understands them best The way then to comfort others is to get experience of divine comforts our selves And that we may get experience of Gods comforts let us mark what was said before of the rules of comfort and work upon our own hearts whatsoever may be comfortable to others That we may not be empty Truncks to speak words without feeling He that is well may speak very good things to a sick man but the sick man sees that he speaks without pitty and compassion those that have been sick of the same disease when they come to comfort they do it with a great deal of meeknesse and mildnesse Those that are fit to comfort others must be spiritual themselves first As the Apostle saith Gal. 6. 1. saith the wise and holy Apostle if any man be overtaken as alas we are all overtaken with some corruption or other ye that are spiritual restore such a one set him in joynt as the word is with the spirit of meeknesse knowing that thou thy self maist ●…e tempted The Spirit of God is a Spirit of comfort the more we have of the Spirit the fitter we are to comfort others We see many men will speak very good things but they do but personate sorrow and personate comfort it comes from them without feeling as he saith if thou didst believe these things that thou speakest wouldest thou ever say them so He that speakes good things without experience he speaks as if he did never believe them Those that speak things with experience that have wrought them upon their hearts and spirits there is such a demonstration in the manner of their speaking of a spirit of love and meeknesse and compassion that it prevailes marvailously It is so true that our Saviour Christ himself that he might have the more tender bowels of compassion towards us he made it one end of his Incarnation as it is pressed again and again in Heb. 2. and Heb. 4. the Apostle dwels upon it It became him to be man to take upon him our infirmities that he might be a merciful Redeemer a merciful high Priest It was one end of his Incarnation that he might not only save us but that he might be a merciful Redeemer that he might have experience of our infirmities of persecution he was persecuted himself of want he wanted himself of temptation he was tempted himself of wrath he felt it himself my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Here is the comfort of a Christian soul that Christ hath begun to him in all therefore it became him to be mam not only to Redeem us but to be a merciful high priest a comfortable high Priest The way then you see how to comfort others is to get our own hearts sensible of spiritual comfort Two Irons if they be both hot do close together presently but unlesse both be hot they do not joyn together handsomly so that that makes us joyn together strongly is if two spirits meet and both be warm if one godly men comfort another godly man if one holy man labour to breed an impression of heat in another there is a knitting of both spirits they joyn strongly together Therefore we ought to labour to get experience that we may comfort others seeing none can comfort so well as experimental Christians Why is experience such an enabling to spiritual comfort I answer because it brings the comfort home to our own soules The Divell knowes comfort well enough but he feeles none Experience helps faith it helps all other knowledge Our Saviour Christ is said to learn by experience for he learned obedience in that he suffered Experience is such a meanes of the increasing of knowledge as that it bettered the knowledge of Christ that had all knowledge in him he had knowledge by looking upon God being the Wisedom of God yet he learned somewhat by the experience he bettered himself by experience he knew what to bear the cross was by experience he knew what infirmities were by experience he knew what he could suffer by experience so it added to his knowledge as man And so the Angels themselves are continual students in the mysteries of the Gospel they get experimental knowledge to the knowledge that they have inbred that knowledge that they have by the presence of God to that they add experimental knowledge So then if it bettered the knowledge of our blessed Saviour and increased it it was a new way increased by experience and it adds to the knowledge of the Angels much more to ours Then again it gains a great confidence in the speaker for what we speak with experience we speak with a great deal of boldnesse Again experimental comforts those that we have felt our selves and have felt likewise the grievance we speak them with such expressions as no other can do in the apprehension of the partie whom we comfort so well as an experienced person for he goes about the works tenderly and gently and lovingly because he hath been in the same himself And that is the reason that the Apostle St. Paul in the place I named before Gal. 6. 1. presseth this duty upon spiritual men especially because themselves have been tempted and may be tempted those that have been tempted and think they may be afterward this doth wondrously fit them for this work of comforting others But to add a little in this point to shew how to comfort others by our own experience and skill I spake before of an Art of comforting our selves there is a skill likewise in comforting others Even as we comfor our selves in that method we must comfort others When we comfort our selves we must first consider our need of comfort search our wounds our maladies have them fresh in our sight that so we may be forced to seek for comfort and as we ought
that upstart Religion that hath been devised for their own ends for their own profit because it would bring us under a curse They would have us to trust to our own works in matter of salvation to trust to our own satisfaction to be freed from Purgatorie c. They would have us to trust to creatures to something besides God to trust in the mediation of Saints to be our intercessors c. And what doth this false trust it breeds despair at length What is the reason that a well advised Papist that knowes what he doth cannot but despair or else renounce Popery Because Popery carries the soul to false props in matter of Justification they renounce their own Religion at the hour of death as Bellarmine did they live by one Religion and die by another which would not be if their Religion were good For their hearts tell them that they have not done so many works that they may trust in them and they have not been so well done that they may trust in them It is a dangerous thing Cursed is he that trusts in man or in any thing in man Nay we must not trust our own graces as they are in our selves not by way of merit no not by way of strength we must not trust our present graces to carrie us out without new supply to further us It was Peters fault Though all men deny thee yet will not I he trusted to his present strength he forgot that if he had not a new supply from the spring of grace that he should miserably miscarry and so he died All our righteousnesse to trust to it it is a broken reed It is somewhat if we place it in the due place to give us evidence that we are true Christians but to trust in it by way of merit the Divell will pick so many holes in that kind of title and conscience will see so many flawes in it if we bring no better title then either the holinesse in us or the works from us the Divell and our own conscience will spie so many flawes and cracks in it at the time of Death that we shall not dare to trust in it but we must run out of our selves to Christ or else we die in desperation Let us know these things all things but God the more we know them the lesse we trust in them but it is clean contrary of God the more we know him the more we shall trust in hm the more we meditate and enlarge our hearts in the consideration of his divine essence every way the more we shall trust in him They that know thy Name will trust in thee Psal. 9. Let us trust in no outward thing No not in the humanity of Christ I add that further we are very prone to trust in things sensible and the Apostles because Christ was present with them and comfortable among them as indeed he was sweet and loving bearing with their infirmities and incouraging them upon all occasions O they were loath to part with him he tells them that he must leave them but they should not fare the worse he would send them the Comforter The flesh it self profits nothing without the Godhead saith he Trust not in the Sacraments above their place It is a dangerous thing to put too much in any creature God is extreamly offended at it as not onely our adversaries the Papists but proud persons among us that are weary of the doctrine of the Church and will not submit in their pride to riper judgments they attribute too much to the Sacraments as some others do too little they attribute a presence there they make it an Idol they give it such reverence as they will not do to God himself and from a false conceit Oh there is I know not what presence Therefore the Lutherans must needs in a great degree be Idolaters by their Consubstantiation and the Papists by their Transubstantiation by their reall presence Coster saith and saith truly If Christ be not there we are the greatest Idolaters in the world But there is a more subtile kind of attributing to the Sacraments that alway God gives grace with the Sacraments the Sacraments convey grace alway as a plaister it hath a kind of power to eat out the dead flesh and as Physick hath a power to carry away the ill humours so the conveying of Grace is included in the Sacraments so they tie Gods Grace to these things Indeed there is grace by them though not in them God gives grace to the humble receiver but otherwise to him that comes not with an humble believing heart they are seals to a blanck there is no validity in them All the good use they have is to strengthen faith and if there be not something before to be strengthened and confirmed and assured they are but seals to a blanck It is in these things according to our faith and according to our preparation and then God in the holy and humble and faithful use of them blesseth his own ordinance for the increase and confirming of our faith and for the increase and strengthening of all grace So that there is not any thing in the Church but the proud naughty heart of man will take hurt by it rather then submit to the pure and powerful truth of God it will have by-wayes to have Confidence in the flesh one way or other And many men rather then they will trust to sound repentance and humiliation for sin they will trust to the words of absolution without it and when are they said go to hell with a pardon about their necks The false heart will trust to outward things though it be damned for it In their place they are good if they be used onely as helps in their kind We lay more weight upon outward things upon the Sacraments and upon the words of the Minister then they will bear and never care for the inward powerful work of grace Everything of God is excellent in their order and kind but our corrupt hearts bring an ill report upon the things You see then it is a dangerous disposition to trust any too much it is to Idolize them and to wrong God to take the honour from God it is to hurt our selves and bring our selves under a curse and to wrong the things themselves to bring an evil report upon the things It is universally true you shall never see a false bitter heart that will not stoop to Gods plain truth they will have by-wayes of their own but in some measure or other they are barren of greater matters and given up to some sensible bitternesse to self-conceitednesse and self-confidence they are alway punished in that kind with a spiritual kind of punishment We must take heed therefore of trusting too much eo any thing but God himself God is jealous of our trust he will have us trust in nothing but himself in matters of salvation no not in matters of common life
and hates as he judgeth and he speakes as he affects and judgeth and he doth as he speaks then a man is a simple man Simple that is properly that hath no mixture of the contrary as we say light is a simple thing it cannot indure darknesse fire is a simple body it cannot indure the contrary with it so the pure Majestie of God cannot indure the least stain whatsoever So it is with the holy disposition of a Christian when he is once a new creature there is a simplicity in him though there be a mixture yet he studies simplicity he studies to have nothing opposite to the Spirit of God he studies not to have any contradiction in him he labours that his heart may not go one way and his carriage another that his pretentions be not one and his intentions another He beares the Image of Christ you know Christ is compared to a Lambe a simple creature fruitfull to men innocent in himself So the holy Ghost appeared in the shape of a Dove a simple creature that hath no way to avoid danger but by flight a harmelesse creature The Divell takes on him the shape of a Serpent a subtile wild Creature The Holy Ghost appeared in the shape of a Dove You see then what simplicity is it is a frame of soule without mixture of the contrary We must not take simplicity for a defect when a man is simple because he knowes not how to be wittie simplicitie is sometimes taken in that sense for a defect of nature when a man is easily deluded but here it is taken for a grace A man that knowes how to double with the world how to run counterfeit how to be false in all kinds but he will not he knowes the world but he will not use the fashions of the World so simplicitie here is a strength of grace Likewise simplicity and plainnesse it must not be taken for rudenesse and unnecessary opening of our selves for that is simplicity in an evill sense prophane rudenesse You shall have some that will lay about them they care not what they speak they care not whom they smite but as Solomons foole they throw fire-brands they speak what they list of whom they list against whom they list Here simplicity and plainnesse is no grace this is no vertue this is but an easing of their rotten corrupt and vile heart We know there are two kind of Sepulchres open and shut sepulchres they are both naught but yet notwithstanding your hidden sepulchre is lesse offensive that which is open stinks that none can come nigh that is very offensive An hypocrite that is a hidden sepulchre a painted sepulchre without and nothing but bones within he hath a naughty rotten heart yet notwithstanding he is not so offensive as the open sepulchre which offends all that come near it So these men that say they cannot dissemble and they have a plaine heart though they will swear and dissemble and detract and throw fire-brands against any man Is this a plain heart it is an open sepulchre that sends a stench to all that are near Again let us take heed that we do not for simplicitie take credulitie The simple man saith Solomon will believe every thing This is simple credulitie A man must not believe every thing for there is much danger comes by credulity Jeremiah and Gedaliah and others they were much harmed by credulity It is a good fence not to be too hastie to believe for incredulity and hardnesse to believe is a good preservative and he is a wise man that will not believe every thing So you see there are some things that come near this simplicity as defect rudenesse and credulitie which yet are not that simplicitie that Saint Paul saith he walked in And this simplicity may well be called the simplicity of God because God is simple He is light and in him there is no darknesse at all There is no mixture of fraud or contrariety he is pure simple and sincere And as he is in his nature so he is in his carriage to men every way There is a simplicity that he doth in his Word testifie And indeed he hath shewed that he loves us would we have a better evidence of it then his own Son there is no doubling in Gods dealing to men And therefore as it comes from God so this simplicitie it resembleth God For alas if God had had by-respects what could the creature yield him doth he stand in need of us or doth he need any thing we have All counterfeiting and insincerity and doubling is for hope of gain or for fear of danger Now what can God have of the creature what cause hath he in us of his dealing toward us In his giving in his forgiving in all his dealing he is simple So every one that is the Child of God he hath the virtue of simplicity Simplicity is such a Grace as extends to all the parts of our conversation As the Apostle saith here My conversation in the world hath been in simplicity By nature man is contrary to this simplicity since the fall God made him right and straight and simple but as the Wise man saith he sought out many inventions So that a man without Grace is double in his carriage And that from Self-Love from Self-Ends and aimes And hereupon he must be double for there must be something that is good in him for else evill is destructive of it self if there were not some thing good men could never continue nor the place could never continue And if all were good and all were plain and honest that would destroy the ill which men labour to nourish Men have carnall projects to raise themselves to get riches and this must be by ill meanes there is an Idoll in their hearts which they serve which they sacrifice to their self-self-love either in honour or in riches or in pleasure they set up something Therefore a man without grace he studies to be strongly ill and because he cannot be ill except he be good for then all the World would see it hereupon comes doubling Good there must be to carrie the ill he intends the more close ill there must be or else he cannot have his aime And hence comes dissimulation and simulation the vices of these times both opposite to simplicity and such vices as proceed from want of worth and want of strength For when men have no worth to trust to and yet would have the profit of sin and the pleasure of sin and would have reputation then they carrie all dissemblingly Where there is strength of worth and of parts and reputation there is lesse dissembling alway It is a vice usually of those that have little or no vertue in them A man of strength carries things open and fair This dissimulation it comes from the want of this grace of simplicity both Before the project In After Before as you see in Herod
good behaviour Now when a man shall consider I have a witnesse within me my conscience and a witnesse without which is God who is my Judge who can strike me dead in the committing of a sin if he please this would make men if they were not atheists to fear to sin Let us labour therefore to approve our hearts to God as well as our conversations to men set our selves in the presence of God who is a discerner of our thoughts as well as of our actions and that which we should be ashamed to do before men let us be afraid to think before God that is another means to come to sincerity Another Direction to help us to walk sincerely is especially to look to the heart look to the beginning to the spring of all our desires thoughts affections and actions that is the heart the qualification of that is the qualification of the man If the heart be naught the man is naught if that be sincere the man is sincere Therefore look to the heart see what springs out thence if there spring out naughty thoughts and desires suppresse them in the beginning Let us examine every thought if we find that we do but think an evil thought execute it presently crush it for all that is naught comes from a thought and desire at the first therefore let us look to our thoughts and desires see if we have not false desires and intents and thoughts answerable God is a Spirit and he looks to our very spirits and what we are in our spirits in our hearts and affections that we are to him Therefore as a branch of this what ill we shun let us do it from the heart by hating it first A man may avoid an evil action from fear or out of other respects but that is not sincerity Therefore look to thy heart see that thou hate evil and let it come from sincere looking to God Ye that love the Lord hate the thing that is evil saith David not only avoid it but hate it and not onely hate it but hate it out of love to God And that which is good not only to do it but to labour to delight and joy in it For the outward action is not the thing that is regarded but when there is a resolution a desire and delight in it then God accounts it as done And so it is in evil if we delight in evil it is as if it were done already Therefore in doing good look to the heart joy in the good you do and then do it and in evil look to the heart judge it to be evil and then abstain from it This is the reason of all the errours in our lives because we have bad hearts we look not to God in sincerity Judas had a naughty heart he loved not the Lord Jesus Christ and therefore he had a naughty conclusion What the heart doth not is not done in Religion Thus we see how we may come to have our conversation in sincerity that we may rejoyce in the testimony of our conscience Therefore now to make an Use of Exhortation we should labour for sincerity and esteem highly of it because God so esteems of it Truth is all that we can alledge to God we cannot alledge perfection St. Paul himself saith not I have walked exactly or perfectly no but he saith This is our rejoycing that we have walked in sincerity So if a mans conscience can excuse him of hypocrisie and doubling though it cannot free him from imperfections God in the Covenant of Grace looks not so much at perfection as at truth Here I might answer an Objection of some Christians Oh but I cannot pray without distraction I cannot delight so in good things c. Though a Christians heart cannot free him from this yet his heart desires to approve it self to God in all things and his heart is ready to say to the Lord as David said Lord try me if there be any way of wickednesse in me And therefore he will attend upon all means to get this sincerity He will be diligent in the Word of God for therein the mind of God is manifestly seen The Word of God it is a begetting Word it makes us immortal it makes us new creatures it is truth and the instrument of truth Truth will make truth The true sincere Word of God not mingled with devices it will make what it is The Word of God being his Word who is Almighty it hath an Almighty transforming power from him It is accompanied and cloathed with his Almighty Spirit Truth will cause truth such as it is in it self it will work in our hearts In that mungrel false Religion Popery they have traditions and false devices of men and so they make false Christians such as they are they make strain them to the quintessence and they cannot make a true Christian Truth makes true Christians therefore attend upon Gods Ordinance with all reverence and it will make thee a sound heart it is a transforming Word Those that desire to hear the Word of God and to have their consciences to be informed by the hearing of it they are sincere Christians and those that labour to shut up the Word of God that it may not work upon the conscience they are false-hearted A heart that is sincere it prizeth the Word of God that makes us sincere the Word of God hath this effect especially being unfolded in the Ministery of it that a man may say as Jacob did Doubtlesse God is in this place It is all that is ours nothing runs upon our reckoning but sincerity For what I have not done truly Conscience saith I have not done to God and therefore I can expect no comfort for it but what I have done to God I look to have with comfort for I know that God regards not perfection but sincerity he requires not so much a great faith as a true faith not so much perfect love as true love and that I have in truth as S. Peter said Lord thou knowest that I love thee This will make us look God who is the Judge in the face It gives us not title to heaven for that is onely by Christ but it is a qualification required of us in the Gospel nothing is ours but what we do in truth And again consider That it will comfort us against Satan at the hour of death when Satan shall tempt us to despair for our sins as that he will do we may comfort our selves with this that we have been sincere We may send him to Christ for that must be the way who hath fulfilled Gods will and satisfied his Fathers wrath Satan will say This is true it is the Gospel and therefore it cannot be denied but it is for them that have walked according to the Spirit and not according to the flesh for those that have obeyed God in all things Now when our Conscience shall joyn with Satan and
to the truth of the cause and not to his own honour or profit or pleasure he was content to be no wiser then the Book of God would have him to be to be no richer or greater in the world then God would have him but committed himself to God in simplicity and sincerity how did God maintain him wondrously to admiration I instance in him to shew how base distrust causeth things to be no better carried then they are Now to incourage you to go to the grace of God to go to the Fountain and not to be held under carnal wisdome under these pretexts Oh if I do not hearken to carnal wisdome I shall be a beggar I shall never rise I shall never do this or that in the world I shall never escape this and that danger Fie upon those base conceits S. Paul here renounceth the regiment of carnal wisdome what became of him did he want a guide Grace took him up Not by carnal wisdome but by the Grace of God When we come under the government of God we come under the government of grace And we shall want nothing either for heaven or earth that is for our good Whatsoever we had that was good before we were gracious that we keep still and it is under a better guide Were we learned before were we wise before had we authority before were we noble before we lose none of these when we come under Christ but he advanceth and elevates these he makes them better If we were wise he makes us graciously wise if we were learned if we were noble he makes us doubly noble we lose nothing but we are under a sweeter government the government of grace which is a mild government a government that tends to the advancing of us above our selves that advanceth us to be the Spouse of Christ and the heires of heaven Those that are in Christ Jesus and are led by his Spirit they are his In Rom. 8. there is excellently set down the prerogatives that they have those that lead their conversation in simplicity and sincerity those that are in Christ and in the Spirit and in Grace there is no Damnation to them And then again if they suffer any thing saith he The afflictions of this world are not worthy of the glory that shall be revealed If they have any infirmities saith he The Spirit helps our infirmities The Spirit teacheth us how to pray when we know not how to pray If we suffer any evil God turns all to good All things shall work together for the best to them that fear God For infirmities in other things we have Christ and he makes intercession in heaven Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods people that are in Christ that are in Grace that are in the Spirit such as S. Paul was here it is Christ that is dead or rather that is risen again and makes intercession for us And if he have given us Christ shall he not with him give us all things else If he have given us Christ he will give us grace to bring us to heaven See the excellent estate of a Christian that is under the regiment of Christ that is led by the Spirit That Chapter may serve instead of all And see the sweet combination here how he knits these things together My rejoycing is this that I have not had my Conversation in fleshly wisdome but by the Grace of God Here is a knitting together of divers things that seem to differ as here is wisdome and simplicity I have had my conversation by the grace of God by wisdome and yet in simplicity For it is wisdome to be simple when a man hath strength of parts it is wisdome to bring them parts to simplicity It is wisdome to be simple concerning that which is evil for a man to be simple there is his best way there is wisdome joyned with his simplicity Then again besides Wisdome and Simplicity here is Our Conversation and Gods Grace both joyned together S. Paul by grace guided his conversation So God stirres us to do all that we do we see but he opens our eyes to see we hear but he opens our ears we believe but he opens our hearts to believe This I speak to reconcile some seeming difference Doth Gods Spirit do all and we do nothing We do all subordinately we move as we are moved we see as we are enlightned we hear as we are made to hear We are wise as far as he makes us wise we do but it is he that makes us do Saint Paul here led his conversation but it was grace that moved him to lead it graciously Well then he that joynes simplicity and wisdome together the wisdome of the Serpent and the simplicity of the Dove he that trusts in God and grace and yet in trusting to grace doth all that he can and goes on in a Christian course he shall rejoyce Our rejoycing is this that we have had our Conversation in simplicity and according to the rule of Grace not by fleshly wisdome Consider seriously of it what a joy will this be that we have led our lives by a rule different from the world that we have led our lives and courses according to the motion of Gods blessed Spirit this must needs bring joy and rejoycing with it in what estate soever The world joyn these together simplicity and sincerity of life where they see them that they may slander them that they may lay imputations upon them they see they are courses opposite to theirs and they lay load on them But what doth God where there is simplicity and wisdome and a holy Conversation he addes his Spirit he joyns the Spirit of grace which is a Spirit of joy alwaies As light and comfort go with the Sun so the Spirit of joy and comfort go alway with the Spirit of grace Saint Paul here in regard of the world was afflicted he received the sentence of death he was slandered and misused yet to God-ward saith he Our rejoycing is this that we have led our Conversation according to Grace according to the motion of Gods blessed Spirit and not with fleshly wisdome If this be so that the joy of Gods Spirit goes with the grace of Gods Spirit and that those that lead their conversation by grace have a rejoycing above all imputations and slanders whatsoever Let this be an incouragement to us to lead a godly life we all seek for joy every creature seeks for joy if we would have joy within us if we would have a spring of joy let us labour to lead a conversation by this rule by grace by the motion of Gods Spirit which is ready to guide us if we commit our selves to his guidance But by the Grace of God To come then to make an Use of trial whether we lead our lives by this gracious wisdome or no and not by carnal wisdome And then to come to direct us how to lead our lives
year as a good parenthesis in an unlearned and unwitty speech A good parenthesis is unseemly in a wicked speech and a good piece is unseemly in a ragged garment so their lives that make a good shew then and there are few that do so they are scarce among us men are such Atheists that there is not outward reformation but if there be if they give themselves leave to be Civill and to respect holy things a little time afterward they return to their loosenesse again Doth this patching out of a holy life please God No no I have sworn and I will perform it that I will keep thy righteous Statutes saith David And S. Paul I have resolved to be so to the end I will be my self still So where grace is there is a resolution against all sin for the time to come If you entertain not this resolution to walk in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of your life acknowledge no benefit by Christs redemption and come not near the holy things of God This is the honest heart that the Scripture speaks of that receives the seed deep into it that hates sin above all miseries and ills and that loves grace above all other good things therefore if any infirmity come he can say it is against his resolution I purposed not this I plotted it not I do not allow my self in it here is an honest heart the Word is fixed deeply in such a heart it comes with an honest resolution If you come to the Sacrament and purpose to live in sin you prophane the holy things of God the Word of God will do you no good it will never take deep root to save you So much for S. Paul's resolution for the time to come I trust 〈◊〉 shall acknowledge to the end VERSE XIV As also you have acknowledged us in part that we are your rejoycing even 〈◊〉 ye are ours in the Day of the Lord Jesus YOu have acknowledged us in part now since you have repented for when he wrote the former Epistle to them they had many corruptions among them in Doctrine and in conversation about the Sacrament many corrupt opinions they had and in conversation they endured the incestuous man among them without casting of him out and many of them doubted of the Resurrection Now when he wrote the first Epistle it took a blessed effect in their hearts they repented and began to acknowledge S. Paul notwithstanding they were disasted of him by reason of the bad information of some presumptuous Teachers saith he now again You have acknowledged us in part that now we are your rejoycing c. Observe this which I touch by way of coherence It is a sign of a repentant man of a man that hath repented of his sins and is in a good estate to acknowledge him that hath told him of his sins to acknowledge his Pastor For a false heart swells against the reproof if the Corinthians had not been sound hearted they would never have endured S. Paul's sharp Epistle but now he tells them their own plainly as indeed it is a very sharp Epistle in many passages yet now they acknowledged him to be a good and gracious man a faithful Teacher Let it be a Trial of your estate can you endure a plain a powerfull an effectual Ministery More particularly can you endure a plain effectual friend that brings that which is spoken by the Minister more particularly home to your hearts It is a sign of a good heart of a repentant heart that would be better But if not it is a sign you have a reserved love to some special sin that will be your bane it is a sign your soules have not repented As you see after in another Chapter of this Epistle where he sets down the fruits of repentance And here is one sign T●… have acknowledged us in part c. In the words First There is the thing it self acknowledgment Secondly the object matter of it That we are your rejoycing and you are ours There is a mutual entercourse of rejoycing And then the time is set down The Day of the Lord Jesus The second coming of Christ. To speak a little of Acknowledgment Acknowledgment is more then Knowledge for knowledge is a bare naked apprehension and acknowledgment is when the will and affections yield to the entertaining and the owning of the thing known As a father not onely knowes his son but acknowledgeth him a King acknowledgeth his Subjects and the Subjects their Prince It is not onely a knowledge of such men but an acknowledging of them acknowledging a relation to them So you acknowledge us that is in the relation we stand to you to be faithful and good Ministers and good men too What doth S. Paul mean by saying You have acknowledged us doth he mean himself No not altogether but you have acknowledged me in my faithful preaching of Christ to you Wheresoever the Minister is acknowledged as a Minister Christ is acknowledged For what are we We are but the Ministers of Christ no more nor no lesse Saith S. Paul Let a man esteem of us as of the Ministers of Christ. If they think of us more then Ministers that we can make and coyn things of our own they think too much of us If they think meanly and basely of us they think too little of us Let a man think of us as of the Ministers of Christ no more nor no lesse it is enough that they acknowledge us so as the Ministers of Christ. So they are never acknowledged but Christ is acknowledged by them for they have a relative office they are the Ministers of Christ. How shall we know then whether we acknowledge the Minister or no If we acknowledge Christ first by him How shall we know that we acknowledge Christ To acknowledge Christ God-man in his natures that we have a great deal of love to him that he would be born for us and a great deal of reverence in that he is God We must not think-of him but-with a great deal of reverence and meddle with nothing of him but with much love he is God-man God incarnate He acknowledgeth Christ in his Priestly Office that doth not despair that doth believe his full satisfaction to God and doth not mingle other things Popish satisfaction and Purgatory for venial sins He acknowledgeth Christs Priestly Office that goes boldly to God through Christs intercession-in heaven and boldly trusts in the satisfaction of Christ in the clamours of conscience and the accusations of Satan This is to acknowledge Christ a Priest in our boldnesse and liberty to God and confidence in our conscience of the forgivenesse of sins To acknowledge Christ as a King is to yield subjection to his Word and to suffer him to rule us To acknowledge him as a Prophet to be instructed and guided by him But now such as are ruled by their own lusts and by the examples of others and care
hath all to do again Another man sees an end of his work but in this the Devil and corruption hath undone all again We enforce good things on people on the Lords day but within one day ill company and imployment in worldly businesse overthrowes all the Sea banks are down they must be new repaired Therefore there is a necessity laid on us of the Ordinances to our lives end till our soules be in heaven there is a necessity of repairing them We cannot be too diligent in our places And those that have the oversight of others let them make conscience of it it is needful And mark here in the next Point the language of Canaan the language of the Spirit of God that he puts the name of Grace upon every benefit especially those that concern a better life Grace usually we take to be nothing but a gracious frame of heart the new creature as we call it but indeed in the language of the Holy Ghost every free gift of God that concerns our soules any way is a grace The very Ministery is a grace It is the grace and free love of God to give us the Ministery The very heart to imbrace it and to hear it is a grace The very heart to give almes is a grace saith S. Paul 2 Cor. 9. Thanks be to God for this unspeakable gift for this unspeakable grace that you had a heart to give so that every thing that is good it is a Grace a gift of God Saint Paul conceived of his coming to them as a grace Indeed the Grace of God moved and directed S. Paul to come to them It is Grace that God directs the Preacher to speak to the people It is a grace that the Minister speaks gracious things It is a greater grace when you close with and entertain that which is spoken all is of Grace Your ready minds to do good it comes of God it is a grace your acceptance of God as well as eternal life all is of free grace The ground of it is this as Austin as I said defines Predestination well It is a destinating and ordaining to a supernatural end to everlasting salvation in the world to come and a preparing of all means to that end Why now as it is a grace that God pulls oft some men to an eternal estate of salvation in heaven to a supernatural estate that they could never attain without his especial Grace so the preparing of all means to that end it falls within the compasse of Predestination within the grace So when we have any means prepared to bring us to that end the offer of the Word and the Spirit of God disposing us to imbrace the Word this preparing of the means to that end it falls within the compasse of Predestination we may gather our Election by it when we see the Word sent in favour and have gracious hearts to receive it this is a preparation wrought to bring us to heaven a man may know his Election by it all is of grace that falls within the decree of grace When God decrees to bring a man to heaven all that helps to the main must needs be grace The Minister is a grace the Word a grace opportunities to do good a grace the communion of Saints a grace all that helps a man forward is a grace A gracious heart sees God in every thing it sees Gods love in every thing it considers of every thing that befalls it as a Grace Why From this disposition especially because with the grace there is grace to make a blessed use of and to improve every thing If this be so let us look upon every benefit that concerns salvation though it be remote even the very direction of good speeches to us account it a grace It is the grace of God that I have this opportunity especially the publick Ministery Saint Paul calls it a grace let us think of it as a grace And as we do in Clocks we go from the hammer that strikes to the wheeles and from one wheel to another and so to the weights that make it strike we go to the first weight the first wheel that moves all and leads all So when we see good done look not to the good done onely but go to the wheeles to the weights what moves it and makes it strike what sets all a going The grace and free love of God when good things are spoken when any good is done go higher to the first wheel that sets all a going to the grace and free love of God This is the language of the Scripture and of the Spirit of God thus we must speak and think to the end that God may have the glory of his grace in whatsoever good is done or offered When Abigail met David and diverted him from his bloody intention to kill Nabal and gave him counsel another way O blessed be God and blessed be thou and blessed be thy counsell So when opportunities are offered to do good and to hinder us from evil intentions O blessed be thou and blessed be thy counsel When a benefit is done if it be a benefit of this life take it as a grace coming freely from God So a poor man his almes is a grace Thanks be unto God for this unspeakable gift saith S. Paul It is grace in him that hath it that God should respect him so much as to relieve him It is grace in the party that gives it that he hath a heart enlarged to do it So when any thing outward or spiritual is done that is good look on it as a grace put that respect on it and that will make you holy-minded to give God his own Our life should be a praising and blessing of God we should begin the employment of heaven while we are on earth How should we do that In all things give thanks Every good thing from God take it as a grace as a largesse not as due not as coming by chance but as a grace and this will make us improve it as a grace for the best it will make us to give God the glory and improve it to our own good when we are thankful for grace that we may have cause to account it a grace Our hearts would not be so full of Atheisme and our tongues so full of blasphemies if we had learned this lesson our lives would be a praising of God And that we may not want matter to feed a thankful spirit alway consider what good things we have are of grace we deserve not so much as a crumb of bread therefore we pray Give us this doy our daily bread Every thing is a Grace especially the things of a better life How shall I know that the Minister is a grace or a good speech from a Minister to be a grace as S. Paul saith here I intended you a second grace that is to speak gracious thing to you I shall know it if by that
certainly these promises being apprehended by faith as they have a quickning power to comfort so they purge with holinesse We may not think to carry our filthinesse to heaven Doth the swearer think to carry his blasphemies thither filthy persons and liars are banished thence there is no unclean thing He that hath these promises purgeth himself and perfecteth holinesse in the fear of God He that hath this hope purifieth himself as he is pure 1 Joh. 3. So these promises affect and quicken and purge And then the promises they do settle the soul because they be Yea and Amen they make the soul quiet If a man believe an honest man on his word he will be quiet if he be not quiet he doth not believe so much faith so much quiet Being iustified by faith we have peace with God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So much faith so much peace Philip. 4. In nothing be carefull but let your desires be known to God in prayer supplication and thanksgiving and when you have done this The peace of God which passeth all understanding shall preserve your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus So where there is prayer and thanksgiving and doing of duty The peace of God which passeth all understanding will keep the mind in Christ and where there is not quiet and peace to preserve the heart mind there is neglect of duty before not committing our selves to Gods promises to build on them Again where there is a believing the promises there is not only a staying of the soul in generall but when all things are gone when all things are contrary that is the nature of faith in the promises Put the case that a Christian that is of the right stamp have nothing in the world to take to only Gods Word and Promises surely he knowes they are Yea and Amen It is the Word of God al-sufficient he is Jehovah he gives a being to his Word and to all things else therefore he hath the Name Jehovah therefore thinks the soul Though I have nothing yet I have him that is the substance of all things all other things are but shadowes God the Father Son and Holy Ghost are the substance that give all things a being and therefore I will cast my selfe on God here now is the Tryumph of faith when there is nothing else to trust to nay when all things else are contrary when it is faith against faith and hope against hope when there is such a conflict in a man that he sees nothing but the contrary here faith will shut the eye of sense and not look to present things too much though I see all things contrary though I see rather signes of anger then otherwise yet I will hope and believe in God for this or that Here is the wisdom of a believing Christian that believes the promises he will shut his eyes and not look on the waves on the troubles they will carry him away and dazle him but he looks to the constant love of God in Christ and to the constant promises of God his nature is constant and his truth is as his nature he cannot deny himself and his own Word when he hath made himself a debtor by his promise and bound himself by his Word Therefore in contraries say as Job Though he kill me yet will I trust in him True faith when it is in strength will uphold a man when all failes nay it will hold a man when all is contrary This our Saviour Christ in whom all the promises are Yea and Amen did excellently teach us by his own example For when all was contrary and our blessed Saviour felt the wrath of God which made him sweat drops of blood and made him cry out My God My God why hast thou for saken me yet here faith wrastled with My God my God still even under the wrath of God He brake through the seeming wrath of God into the heart of God Faith hath a piercing eye it will strive through the clouds though they be never so thick through all the clouds of temptation Christ had so piercing a faith it brake through all he saw a Fathers heart under an angry semblance So a Chistian triumphs by faith in oppositions to faith when all is contrary to faith yet notwithstanding he can say My God still This is an evidence of a strong faith in the promises Again an evidence of faith in the promises is faithfulnesse in our selves in our promises to God for surely the soul that expects any thing of God that he should be faithfull it studies to be faithful in the Covenant Psal. 25. All the wayes of God are mercy and truth All his dealings to his Children are mercy and truth to them that keep his Covenant For you know the promises have conditions annexed and where God fulfils his promise he gives grace to perform the condition to walk before him to allow our selves in no sin for if we allow our selves in any sin we perform not the Covenant on our part Now God will give grace to perform the Covenant where he will perform his own Therefore those that are unfaithful in their Covenant and yet think God will be faithfull to them it is presumption When we come to the Communion we think we do God a great deal of service but we must consider we enter into Covenant with God as well as he binds himself to us He gives us Christ all his blessings he reacheth forth Christ with all in him if we will receive him I but we bind our selves to God to lead a new life and to be thankful and to shew it in obedience And so in Baptisme we do not only receive in the Sacraments but we yield we bind our selves to God And we must be careful of what we promise to God as well as expect that which he promiseth to us if we expect his truth we must be faithful and careful of performing our Covenants to him Oh but how shall I do that saith the distressed soul I have no grace God knowes that well enough therefore he that promiseth he promiseth grace to perform the condition that is one part of the Covenant to give grace to fulfil the Covenant For he that saith If we believe and repent c. he will give us hearts to repent if we ask them he hath promised to circumcise our hearts to give us new hearts and to give us his holy Spirit if we ask him Why Lord thou knowest I have no grace in my self to fulfil the Covenant no but thou must perform both parts thou givest the grace and good thing promised and grace to keep the Covenant too therefore let none be discouraged Many things are required it is true but the things are promised that are required if in the use of means we depend on him by prayer For the promises are Legacies as well as promises what is the difference between a legacy and a
Covenant A Covenant is with condition with stipulation a Legacie is an absolute thing when a man gives a thing freely without any condition So though the promises be propounded by way of Covenant with stipulations to and fro in the passages of them as a Covenant yet in regard of Gods gracious performance to them that depend upon him all the promises are Legacies Therefore Gods promises and Gods Covenant they are called a Testament as well as Promises They are called a Will A Will shewing what God will give us freely in the use of means as well as what our duty is in the Covenant Therefore our estate is happy in Christ if we depend upon God in the use of means He will give us all things that are necessary that he hath promised nay he will give grace to fulfill the Covenant if we beg it If a man be carelesse and live in sinnes against the Covenant he cannot perform the Covenant and let him not alledge this that he cannot for God will give grace to them that are careful to fulfill it Let such a man as neglects the performance on his part expect no good from God while he is so let him expect vengeance for all the threatnings of God are Yea and Amen as well as his Promises to them that live in sins against conscience Those that will not expect grace to serve him for the time to come all the threatnings are Yea and Amen there is no comfort for such I beseech you therefore consider it is a terrible thing to live in a State without God and without Christ to have no care of the performance of that that we have bound our selves to God by the Sacrament and in our particular vowes for his threatnings are effectual as well as his promises In Zech. 1. 5. there he tells the Jewes of the Prophets that had threatened many things The Prophets are dead saith he that threatned your fathers but for all that the threatnings lighted on them The Prophets where are they They were but men but when they were gone the threatnings lighted on your fathers Jeremy dyed but the Captivity that he threatned it did not dye they were carried captive 70. years So we threaten the vengeance of God on obstinate sinners that will not come in to the Gospel we are not Yea and Amen in regard of our being we die but our threanings are Yea if they be not reversed by repentance the threatnings are Amen as well as the Promises It is an evidence therefore we do not believe if we have not care to make good the Covenant on our part Again another evidence of a Child of the promises of a man that believes the promises it is inward opposition of the flesh and hatred of fleshly men for as it is Gal. 4. The son of the bond-woman persecuted the son of the free-woman A true down-right Believer is a son of the free-woman a son of promise and the flesh in us opposeth it like Ishmael like Job's wife and like Sarah that laughed when the promise was made we have an Ishmael and a Sarah in us I can this Promise of life everlasting when I am rotten and this promise of forgivenesse of sins and that good will be good to me if I crack not my conscience if I take this and that course shall these promises be performed here is opposition We cannot believe the Promises without much opposition So carnal men they mock and deride the counsel of the poor as the Psalmist saith The children of the promise that depend upon Gods mercy in Christ they are persecuted by fleshly Justitiaries and they that look to be saved by themselves without a promise they will not be beholding to God so much their proud swelling hearts rise against Christians that honour God by trusting in his promises and will be saved by promises A proud Popish person his heart riseth against a holy Christian that is a son of the promise he scorns him You intend to be saved by the righteousnesse of another no we will not be so much beholding to God we will satisfie for our selves we will merit heaven our selves God shall not be beholding to us to trust in him we will bring somewhat our selves we will buy it out Can these men have humble hearts Nay can they have any other then malicious persecuting hearts against humble believing Christians that honour God by trusting in his promises You know Isaac was a son of the Promise how was he born not according to the course of nature Sarah's womb was dead Christ was the Son of the promise how was he born not according to the course of nature for his mother was a Virgin So a Christian is a son of the Promise he is begotten where there is nothing in the course of nature likely where there is breeding for sin no works no righteousnesse then he believes in Christ. Isaac was a notable type of Christ and a son of promise he was begotten besides the course of generation so a Christian is not begotten as a proud Justitiary by works but he shewes himself therein to be a true believer he is begotten against the course of nature when he sees a barren heart and sees as little disposition in his heart to be a Christian as was in the Virgins womb for Christ to be born How was the Promise made to the Virgin She could not conceive how this should be since she knew not man It was replied again The Holy Ghost shall overshadow thee her heart closed with that speech and Christ was conceived then So the barren heart of a Christian if it can believe his sins shall he forgiven and he shall have life everlasting if he can honour God in believing that he will keep him in life and death let the heart close with these Promises and a Christian is begotten he is a son of the promise As for the proud Justitiary that will have something in himself to vaunt of and will persecute others that are true Christians he relies on no promise A Christian when he sees nothing to rely on but the promise he closeth with the promise and Christ is begotten in him at that very instant To name no more evidences you see how we may examine our selves whether we trust in and cast our selves upon the Promises of God or no if we do we shall find them Yea and Amen Consider it therefore and be glad of these Promises and when you have them go to God in Christ for the performance of them Take the counsel of that blessed man that in these latter times brought the glorious light of Religion to light Luther I mean to whom we are beholding for the doctrine of free grace more then any other Divine of later times Go to God in Christ in the Promises Christ is wrapped up in the Promises the Promises are the swadling cloathes wherein Christ is wrapped as he saith We must not think of
had at the first as Gods mending is ever for the better The state of grace and glory is better then ever the state of nature was spiritual is better then natural Therefore it is much for the glory of the wisdome of God that he can in Christ reconcile justice and mercy and shew more mercy then ever he did in making man out of the dust of the earth and all is to the glory of God These attributes especially are glorious in the promises in Christ. His Justice is glorious in punishing sin in Christ there sin is odious in the punishing of Christ God-man if we speak of justice there is justice If of Mercy to put it upon our surety for God to give his Son for us there is transcendent mercy and transcendent justice in the punishing of our sin how could it be punished greater And then the glory of his Wisdom to bring these together infinite mercy and infinite justice in Christ. Infinite Power for God to become man and without sin to be so farre abased a humble omnipotency to descend so low that God could be mortal and then to raise himself again And then the glory of his Truth that whatsoever was promised to Abraham to David to the Prophets all was performed in Christ all the Types here is glory by Christ of Mercy Justice Wisdome Truth for all are Yea and Amen in Christ. Therefore he may well say all this is To the glory of God Therefore consider how the glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ as the Apostle saith If you would see God see him shining in the face of Jesus Christ see his Mercy shining in Christ and his Justice in the punishing our sin in Christ see his Truth his Power his Wisdome shineing in Christ and shining more then in the Creation or in any thing in the world besides Can you honour God more then in believing the Gospel Can you dishonour him more then to call his truth into question that is Yea and Amen If you believe the Gospel you set to your seal that God is true 1 Joh. 3. What an honour is this that God will be honoured by you in setting to your seal that he is true you give him the glory of all his attributes In not believing what a dishonour do you do to God you deny his Mercy his Wisdome his Justice his Truth you deny all his attributes you make God a liar what a horrible sin is unbelief Therefore fortifie your faith The Devil layeth siege to our faith above all other things if he can shake that he shakes all for holy life goes when faith goes Who will love God or obey God when he knowes not whether he be his God or no Let faith flourish and it will quicken life in the heart Let the promises grow in the heart and the Word be graffed in the heart and all will flourish in a Christians life all will come off clearly and freely obedience will be chearful and free when we see God reconciled in Christ. Then love will be full of devices when I see Gods love to me what shall I do to shew love again to shew thanks to God where is there any that for Cods sake I may do good unto How shall I maintain the truth and resist all opposers of the truth Can I do too much for him that hath done so much for me Love quickens The Devil knowes if he can shake faith he shakes all Let us fortifie faith and we glorifie God more then by any thing else He is glorious in the Gospel and how shall he be so by us except we set our hearts to believe him Therefore let us seal Gods truth by our faith and set to our seales that God is true God vouchsafes to be honoured by weak sinful men believing of him and that faith that honours him he will be sure to honour By us By us Ministers How When the Gospel is preached God is carried in triumph as it were and his banner is set up and the Promises displayed and sinners called unto him and God is glorified by the discovery of these things and faith is wrought in people to whom they are discovered and they glorifie God when they believe they blesse God that ever they heard these tydings so every way God is glorified The Ministers they open as it were the box of sweet oyntment that the savour of it may be in the Church and spread far They lay open the tapestry the rich treasures of Gods mercies they dig deep and find out the treasure Therefore these Promises in Scripture being so made and performed in Christ they tend to Gods glory but by us by our Ministery God to knit man and man together will convey the good he means to convey by the despised Ministery The enemies therefore of the Ministery of the Gospel what are they here is a double prejudice against them they are enemies of the glory of God and of the comfort of Gods people for they glorifie God in the sense of his mercy when it is unfolded to them God gets glory and they comfort What do we think then of Popish spirits that feed the people only with dead and dull ceremonies but let them go I go on to the next Verse having dwelt somewhat long on this VERSE XXI Now he that stablisheth us with you in Christ is God who hath anointed us c. AS the riches of a Christian consisteth in the promises of God which as we have heard in Christ are all Yea and Amen so unlesse he be stablished and built upon this strength all is nothing What if a man stand on a rock if he be not built on it what if the foundation be never so strong if he be not stablished thereon It is not sufficient that the Promises be stablished but we must be stablished upon them The Promises of God are indeed Yea and Amen might the soul say but what is that to me Therefore the Apostle addeth He that gives the Promises will stablish us upon the promises Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ is God The first thing that I will observe before we come to the particular handling of the words shall be onely this in the general from the connexion and knitting together of this Verse with the former viz. That there must be a double Amen There is an Amen in the Promises they are in themselves true there must be an Amen likewise in us we must say Amen to them that is we must be stablished upon them There must be an Echo in a Christians heart unto God that as God saith These and these things I promise and they are all Amen so the soul by faith must Echo again These things are for me I believe them For as we say in the Schooles to good purpose there is a double certainty a double firmnesse a certainty of the Object and a
witnesse to the soul that we are the sonnes of God Secondly a voyce or speech in us again to God causing us to have accesse to the Throne of grace with boldnesse Thirdly a work of Sanctification Fourthly Peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost By these four wayes we may know the sealing of the Spirit after we believe and that our faith is a sound belief and that we are in the state of grace indeed First I say the Spirit speaks to us by a secret kind of whispering and intimation that the soul feeles better then I can expresse Be of good comfort thy sins are forgiven thee saith he to the soul I am thy salvation there is I say a sweet joyning a sweet kisse given to the soul I am thine and thou art mine God by his Spirit speaks so much there is a voyce of Gods Spirit speaking peace to his people upon their believing And then secondly the Spirit of adoption stirres up the speech of the soul to God that as he sayes to the soul Because thou believest now thou art honoured to be my child so the Spirit stirres up in the soul a Spirit of prayer to cry Abba Father it can go boldly to God as to a Father for that Abba Father it is a bold and familiar speech There are two things in a prayer of a Christian that are incompatible to any carnal man there is an inward kind of familiar boldnesse in the soul whereby a Christian goes to God as a child when he wants any thing goes to his father a child considers not his own worthinesse or meannesse but goeth to his father familiarly and boldly so I say when the Spirit of God speaks to us from God and tells the soul I am thine I am thy salvation thy sins are forgiven thee be of good comfort and when the soul again speaks to God when it can pour forth it self with a kind of familiar boldnesse and earnestnesse especially in extremity and in time of trouble and can wait in prayer and depend upon God this spiritual speech of God to the soul and of the soul to God it is a seal of the Spirit that indeed we are true believers because we can doe that that none can do but Christians God speaks to our souls he raiseth our souls and by his Spirit he puts a spirit of supplication into us and helps our infirmities for we know not what to ask but he helps our weaknesse and enables us to lay out the wants of our soules to God these are evidences of the presence and of the seal of the Spirit In the third place this sealing of the Spirit after we beleeve is known by the sanctifying work of the Spirit for as I told you before in the unfolding of the Point the Spirit seals our spirits by stamping the likenesse of the Spirit of Christ on us so that when a man finds in his soul some lineaments of that heavenly Image of Christ Jesus when he finds some love he may know by that love that he is translated from death to life when he finds his spirit subdued to be humble to be obedient when he finds his spirit to be heavenly and holy as Christ was when he finds this stamp upon the soul surely he may reason I have not this by nature naturally I am proud now I can abase my self natureally I am full of malice now I can love I can pray heartily for mine enemies as Christ did naturally I am lumpish and heavy now in afflictions I can joy in the Holy Ghost I have somewhat in me contrary to nature surely God hath vouchsafed his Spirit upon my believing in Christ to mark me to seal 〈◊〉 to stamp me for his I carry now the Image of the second Adam I know the Holy Ghost hath been in my heart I see the stamp of Christ there Know you not that Christ is in you except you be cast awayes saith the Apostle so upon search the Christian soul finds somewhat of Christ alwayes in the soul to give a sweet evidence that he is sealed to the day of redemtpion The fourth evidence that the Spirit of God hath been in a mans heart is the joy of the Holy Ghost and peace of conscience sanctification is the ordinary seal that is alwaies in the soul this is an extraordinary seal peace and joy when the soul needs incouragement then God is graciously pleased to superadd this to give such spiritual ravishings which are as the very beginnings of heaven so that a man may say of a Christian at such times that he is in heaven before his time he is in heaven upon earth but especially God doth this when he will have his children to suffer or after suffering after some special conflict after we have combated with some special corruption with some sinfull disposition with some strong temptation and have got the victory To him that overcometh will I give of the hidden Manna and a white stone and a new name that none can read it but he that hath it that is he shall have assurance that he is in the state of grace and the sweet sense of the love of God and that sweet heavenly Manna that none else can have thus God dealt with Job after he had exercised that Champion a long time at the last he discovered himself in a glorious manner to him so it is usually after some great crosse or in the middest of some great crosse when God sees that we must be supported with some spiritual comfort we sink else then there is place and time for spiritual comfort when earth cannot comfort thus St. Paul in the middest of the dungeon when he was in the stocks being sealed with the Spirit he sang at midnight Alas what would have become of blessed Paul his spirit would have sunk if God had not stamped it with Joy in the Holy Ghost and so David and the three young men in the fiery furnace and Daniel in the den God doth then even as parents smile upon their children when they are sick and need comfort so above all other times God reserves this hidden sealing of his children with a spirit of joy when they need it most sometimes in the middest of afflictions sometimes as a reward when they come out of their afflictions sometimes before so our Saviour Christ had James and John with him upon the mountain to strengthen them against the scandal of suffering after so God when he hath a great work for his children to do some suffering for them to go through as an encouragement before-hand he enlargeth their spirits with the joy of the Holy Ghost and some times also after a holy and gracious disposition in the Ordinances of God God doth adde an excellent portion of his Spirit a seal extraordinary for indeed God thinks nothing enough for his children till he have brought them to heaven seal upon seal and comfort upon comfort and the more we depend upon him
This being a truth that Gods Children when they have tasted of his mercie break forth into his praise it being the end of his favours and nature being inclined thereto this should stirre us up to this duty and that we may the better perform this holy duty let us take notice of all Gods favours and blessings Knowledge stirs up the affections blessing of God springs immediately from an inlarged heart but enlargement of heart is stirred up from apprehension for as things are reported to the knowledge so the understanding reports them to the heart and affections Therefore it is a duty that we ought to take notice of Gods favours and with taking notice of them To mind them to remember them forget not all his benefits Psal. 103. Praise the Lord O my soule and forget not all his benefits insinuating that the cause why we praise not God is the forgetting of his benefits Let us take notice of them let us register them let us mind them let us keep diaries of his mercies and favours every day he renews his mercies and favours every day and we ought to renew our blessing of him every day we should labour to do here as we shall do when we are in heaven where we shall do nothing else but praise and bless him we ought to be in Heaven while we are on the earth as much as we may let us register his favours and mercies But what favours Especially spirituall nay first spirituall favours without which we cannot heartily give thanks for any outward thing for the soule will cast with it self till it feele it selfe in Covenant with God in Christ that a man is the Child of God Indeed I have many mercies and favours God is good to me but perhaps all these are but favours of the Traytor in the prison that hath the libertie of the Tower and all things that his heart can desire but then he looks for an execution he looks for a writt to draw him forth to make him a spectacle to all and so this trembling for fear of a future ill which the soul lookes for it keepes the soul from thankfulnesse It cannot be heartily thankful for any mercy till it can be thankful for spiritual fauors Therefore first let us see that our state be good that we are in Christ that we are in the covenant of Grace that though we are weak Christians yet we are true there is truth in Grace wrought in us And then when we have tasted the best mercies spirituall mercies when we see we are taken out of the state of nature for then all is in love to us when we have the first mercy pardoning mercy that our sins are forgiven in Christ then the other are mercies indeed to us not as favours to a condemned man And that is the reason that a carnall man he hath his heart shut he cannot praise God he cannot trust in God because he staggers in his estate because he is not assured he thinks it may be God fattens me against the day of slaughter Therefore I know not whether I should praise him for this or no. But he is deceived in that for if he had his heart enlarged to blesse God for that God would shew further favour still but the heart will not yield hearty praise to God till it be perswaded of Gods love For all our love is by reflection We love him because he loved us first and we praise and blesse him because he hath blest us first in heavenly blessings in Christ. Let us take notice of his favours let us mind them let us register them especially favours and mercies in Christ. Let us after think how we were pulled out of the cursed estate of nature by what ministery by what acquaintance by what speech and how God hath followed that mercie with new acquaintance with new comfort to our souls with new refreshings that by his spirit he hath repressed our corruptions that he hath sanctified us made us more humble more careful that he hath made us more jealous more watchful these mercies and favours will make others sweet unto us And then learn to prize and value the mercies of God which will not be unlesse we compare them with our own unworthinesse lay his mercies together with our own unworthinesse and it will make us break forth into blessing of God When we consider what we are our selves as Jacob said lesse than the least of Gods mercies We forget Gods mercies every day he strives with our unthankfulnesse the comparing of his mercies with our unworthiness and our desert on the contrary will make us to blesse God for his goodnesse and patience that he will not onely be good to us in not inflicting that which our sins have deserved Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. And to name no more bút this one above all beg of God his holy spirit for this Blessing of God is nothing else but a vent from the spirit For as Organs and wind Instruments do never sound except they be blown they are dead and make no musick till there be breath put into them so we are dead and dull instruments therefore it is said we are filled with the Holy Ghost All Gods children they are filled with the spirit before they can praise God the spirit stirres them up to praise him and as it gives them matter to praise him for so it gives the Sacrifice of praise it self God gives to his children both the benefits to blesse him for and he gives the blessing of a heart to blesse him And we must beg both of God beg a heart able to discern spiritual favours to tast and relish them and to see our own unworthinesse of them and beg of God his holy spirit to awaken and quicken and enlarge our dead and dull hearts to praise his name Let us stir up our hearts to it stirr up the spirit of God in us every one that hath the spirit of God should labour to stir up the spirit as St. Paul writes to Timothy and as David stirs up himself Praise the Lord O my soul and all that is within me praise his holy name so we should raise up our selves and stir up our selves to this duty And shame our selves what hath God freed me from so great misery and hath he advanced me to so happie an estate in this world doth he put me in so certain a hope of glorie in the world to come have I a certain promise to be carried to salvation that neither things present nor things to come shall be able to separate me from the love of God in Christ Jesus doth he renew his mercies every day upon me and can I be thus dead can I be thus dull-hearted Let us shame our selves And certainly if a man were to teach a Child of God a ground of humiliation if a Child of God that is in the state of grace should ask how
Esay 28. you have made a covenant with hell and death with Gods judgments but hell and death hath not made a covenant with you You make a covenant think you shall do well but God is terrible to such his wrath shall smoak against such as make a covenant with his judgments and treasure up wrath against the day of wrath Take heed if the proclamation of mercy call thee not in if thou stand out as a Rebell and come not in but go on still then justice layes hold on thee Gods wrath shall smoak against thee As we see in Prov. 1. I will laugh at your destruction speaking of those that would not come in Chidas it is in Esay 27. 11. He that formed them and made them will have no mercy on them nor shew them favour He will have no delight in them They are Ignorant sotts and will not labour to know God and his will to do and obey it he that made them will have no delight in them and he that formed them will reject them It is a pittiful thing when God that made them and formed them in their mothers womb whose creatures they are shall have no delight in them when he that made them his heart shall not pittie them Ezek. 18. 18. he that goes on in a course of sin presumptuously and doth not repent Gods eye shall not pittie him he that made him will have no delight in him Therefore the Apostle because we are disposed and prone to abuse the goodnesse and long suffering of God and the mercies of Christ he saith Be not deceived be not deceived he oft presseth this for neither the covetous nor licentious persons shall enter into heaven Though God be mercifull if thou live in these sins be not deceived thou shalt never enter into heaven God will not be mercifull to the most of those that even now live in the bosome of the Church because they make mercy a band to their sinful courses God will harden himself he will not blesse such he hath no mercy for such to such he is a God of vengeance His mercy is to such as are weary of their sinful courses as I said he is mercifull but so as he is wise What Prince will prostitute a pardon to one that is a Rebell and yet thinks himself a good Subject all the while he is no Rebell cares he for a pardon And shall he have a pardon when he cares not for it Those that are not humbled in the sight and sence of their sins that think themselves in a good estate they are Rebells that have not sued out their pardon there is no mercie to them yet He that made them will not pittie them because they are Ignorant hardned wretches that live in blasphemy in swearing that in corrupt courses in hardnesse of heart that live in sins that their own conscience and the conscience of others about them know that they are sins devouring sins that devour all their comfort and yet notwithstanding they dream of mercy mercy Hell is their portion and not mercy that make an Idol of God Thus it is with us we are prone to presume upon Gods mercy I speak this that we should not surfet of this sweet doctrine that God is the father of Mercies He is so to repentant sinners to those that believe to those mercy is sweet We know oyl is above all other liquors Gods mercy is above all his own works and above our sins But what is the vessel for this oyl this oyl of mercy it is put in broken vessels it is kept best there a broken heart a humble heart receives and keepes mercie As for proud dispositions as all Sinners that go on in a course of sin the Psalmist terms them proud men he is a proud man that sets his own will agaist Gods command God resists the Proud it is the humble yeelding heart that will be led and lured by God that is a vessel to receive mercy It must be a deep vessel it must be a broken vessel deep with humiliation broken by contrition that must receive mercy And it must be a large vessel laid open capable to receive mercy and all mercy not only pardoning mercy but healing mercy as I said out of that Psalme That forgiveth all thy sins and healeth all thy transgressions Therefore those that have not grace and mercy to heal their corruptions to dry up that issue in some comfortable measure thay have no pardoning mercy and those that desire not their corruptions to be healed they never desired heartily their corruptions to be pardoned those mercies go together He is not the Father of mercy but of all mercies that belong to salvation and he gives them every one and he that desires the one desires the other Let us consider how the sweet descriptions of God and how his promises work upon us If they work on us to make us presume it is a fearful case it is as bad a sign as may be to be ill because God is good to turn the Grace of God into wantonnesse But as we are thus prone to presume so when conscience is awaked we are as prone to despair therefore if they work with us this way there is mercy with God therefore I will come in therefore I will cast down my weapons at his feet I will cease to resist him I will come in and take terms of peace with him I will yeeld him obedience for the time to come therefore I will fear and love so good a God If it work thus it is a sign of an elect soul of a gracious disposition And then if thou come in never consider what thy sins have been if thou come in God will imbrace thee in his mercy Thy sins are all as a spark of fire that falls into the Ocean that is drowned presently so are thy sins in the Ocean of Gods mercy There is not more light in the Sun there is not more water in the Sea then there is mercy in the Father of mercy whose bowels are opened to thee if thou be weary of thy sinful courses and come in and imbrace mercy In the Tabernacle we know there was a mercy Seat we call it a propitiatory In the Ark which this mercy Seat covered was the Law now in the Law there were curses against all sinners The Mercy-Seat was a Type of Christ covering the Law covering the curse though thou be guilty of the curse a thousand times God in Christ is merciful Christ is the Mercy Seat come to God in Christ there is mercy in Israel notwithstanding thy great sins If we cast away a purpose of living in sin and cast away our weapons and submit our selves to him he is the Father of mercies that is he is merciful from himself he is the spring of them and hath them from his own bowels they are free mercies because he is the Father of them For he is just by our fault he is severe
shut but he keepes Court every day therefore Christ in the Gospel enjoynes us to go to God every day every day we say the Lords prayer forgive us our trespasses insinuating that the Court of mercy is kept every day to take out our pardon every day there is a pardon of course taken out At what time soever a sinner repents c. How shall we improve this mercy every day Do this when thou hast made a breach in thy conscience every day believe this that God is the Father of mercies and he may well be merciful now because he hath been sufficiently satisfied by the death of Christ He is the Father of Christ and the Father of mercies This do every day And withall consider our condition and estate is a state of dependance In him we live and move and have our being this will force us to mercie that he would hold us in the same estate we are in and go on with the work of grace that he would uphold us in health for that depends upon him that he would uphold us in peace for that depends upon him he is the God of peace that he would uphold us in comfort and strength to do good and resist evil we are in a dependant state and condition in all good of body and soul. He upholds the whole world and every particular let him take away his hand of merciful protection and susteining from us and we sink presently And every day consider how we are invironed with any danger remember we have compassing mercies as we have compassing dangers as it is Psal. 32. Mercy compasseth us round about Every day indeed we have need of mercie that is the way to have mercy here is a fountain of mercie the Father of mercy bowels opened the onely way to use it is to see what need we have of mercie and to flie to God to see what need we have in our souls and in regard of outward estate and to see that our condition is a dependant condition And lastly to make a use of thanfulnesse Blessed be God the Father of mercy we have the mercie of publick continued peace when others have war and their estates are consumed blessed be God the Father of mercie we sit under our own Vines and under our own figtrees If we have any personal mercies blessed be God the Father of mercies this way if he shew mercie to our souls and pardon our sins blessed be God the Father of mercies in this kind that he hath taken us and redeemed us out of that cursed estate that others walk in that are yet in their sins Oh it is a mercie and for this we should have inlarged hearts And withal consider the fearful estate of others that God doth not shew mercie to and this will make us thankfull As for instance if a man would be thankfull that hath a pardon let him see another executed that is broken upon the Wheele or the Rack or cut in pieces and tortured and then he will think I was in the same estate as this man is and I am pardoned Oh what a gratious Soveraign have I The consideration of the fearefull estate out of mercie what a fearefull estate those are in that live in sins against conscience that they are ready to drop into Hell when God strikes them with death if they dye so what a fearefull estate they are in and that God should give me pardon and grace to enter into another course of life that though I have not much grace yet I know it is true I am the child of God the consideration of the miserie of others in part in this world without repentance and especially what they shall suffer in Hell to consider the torment of the souls that are not in the state of Grace this will make us thankfull for mercies for pardoning and forgiving mercies for protecting mercies that God hath left thousands in the course of nature going on in a wilfull course of sinne This is that that the Apostle here practiseth Blessed be God the Father of mercies The other stile here is The God of all comfort The life of a Christian is a mysterie as in many respects so in this that whereas the flesh in him though he be not altogether flesh thinks him to be a man disconsolate the spirit finds matter of comfort and glory From whence the world begins discouragement and the flesh upbraiding from thence the spirit of God in holy Saint Paul begins matter of glory they thought him a man neglected of God because he was afflicted no saith he Blessed be the God of all comfort our comforts are above our discomforts As the wisdom of the flesh is enmitie to God and his spirit in all things so in this in the judgment of the cross for that which is bitterest to the flesh is sweetest to the spirit Saint Paul therefore opposeth his comforts spirituall to his disgraces outward and because it is unfit to mention any comfort any good from God without blessing of him that is the spring and fountain from whence we have all he takes occasion together with the mention of comfort to blesse God The God of all comfort The verse contains a wise prevention of scandall at the cross Saint Paul was a man of sorrows if ever any was next to Christ himselfe and that might prevent all scandall at his crosses and disgracefull afflicted usage he doth shew his comforts under the cross which he would not have wanted to have been without his cross therefore he begins here with praysing of God We praise God for favours and indeed the comforts he had in his crosses were more then the grievance he had by them therefore had cause to bless God Blessed be God c. The God of all comfort The God of comfort and the God of All comfort we must give Saint Paul leave to be thus large for his heart was full and a full heart a full expression And he speaks not out of books but from sense and feeling though he knew well enough that God was the Father of mercie God of all comfort that way yet these be wordsthat come from the heart come from feeling rather then from the tongue they came not from Saint Pauls pen onely his pen was first dipt in his heart and soule when he wrote this God is the Father of mercie and God of all comfort I feele him so he comforts me in all tribulations The God of all comfort To explaine the word a little Comfort is either the thing it selfe a comfortable outward thing a blessing of God wherein comfort is hid or else it is reasons because a man is an understanding creature reasons from which comfort is grounded or it is a real comfort inward and spirituall by the assistance and strength of the Spirit of God when perhaps there is no outward thing to comfort and perhaps reasons and discourse are not present at that time yet
conscience of those that are awakened and Satan useth that as a means to despair in every crosse Therefore let us search and try our souls for our sins for our chief discomfort are from sin for alas what are all other comforts and what are all other discomforts If a mans conscience be quiet what are all discomforts and if conscience be on the rack what are all comforts the disquiet and vexation of sin is the greatest of all because then we have to deal with God when sin is presented before us and the judgements of God and God as an angry judge and conscience is awaked and on the rack what in the world can take up the quarrel and appease conscience when we and God are at difference when the soul speaks nothing but discomfort In this case remember that God doth so far prevent objections in this kind from the accusations of conscience that he reasons that he will comfort us from that that cöscience reasons against comfort he doth this in the hearts of his children to whom he means to shew mercy as we see in the poor Publi Lord be merciful to me a sinner saith he God taught him that reasoning Nature would have taught him to reason as Peter did Lord depart from me I am a sinful man and therefore I have nothing to do with God So our Saviour Christ Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden they think of all people they ought to run from God they are so laden with sin they have nothing to do with God Oh come unto me saith Christ. Therefore when thy conscience is awakened with the sense of sin remember what is said in the Gospel Be of good comfort be calleth thee be thou of good comfort thou art one that Christ calls Come unto me ye that are we ary and heavy laden and Blessed are those that mourn That which thou and the Divel with thy conscience would move thee to use as an argument to run away our Saviour Christ in the Gospel useth as an argument to draw thee forward he comes for such to seek and to save the lost sinners This is a faithful saying saith St. Paul that Christ came to save sinners therefore believe not Satan he presents God to the soul that is humbled and terrified in the sight of sin as cruel as a terrible judge c. He hides the mercy of God from such to men that are in a sinful course he shewes nothing but mercy I but now there is nothing but comfort to thee that art cast down and afflicted in the sence of thy sins for all the comforts in the Gospel of forgivenesse of sins and all the comforts from Christs Incarnation the end of his coming in the flesh the end of his death and of all is to save sinners Look thou therefore to the throne of mercy and grace when thy conscience shall be awakened with the sence of sin and Satan shall use that as an argument to draw thee from God consider the Scripture useth this as an argument to drive me to God to allure me to him Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden And Christ came to seek and to save that which was lost Luther a man much exercised in Spiritual conflicts he confessed this was the Balme that did most refresh his soul God hath shut up all under sin that he might have mercy upon all He shut up all under sin as prisoners to see themselves under sin and under the curse that he might have mercy upon all upon all those that are convinced with the sence and sight of their sins he hath shut up all under sin that he might have mercy upon all those that belong to him This raised up that blessed man therefore let us not be much discomforted but be of good comfort Christ calls us For such as are sinners that are given to the sins of the tongue and of the life to rotten discourse to swearing and such like to such as mean to be so and think their case good oh God is the God of comfort To such as I said before I can speak no comfort nor the word of God speaks none they must have another Word and another Scripture for this word speaks no comfort to such that are sinful and wretched and will be so and justifie themselves to be so All the judgments in the Scripture are theirs hell and damnation and wrath that is their portion to drink We can speak no comfort to such nor the word of God that we unfold it hath not a drop of comfort for them God will not be merciful to such as go on in wicked rotten scandalous courses that because hell hath not yet taken them they may live long and so make a covenant with hell and death and blesse themselves Oh but thou hast made no covenant with God nor he hath made none with thee and hell and death have made no covenant with thee though thou hast made one with them but there are two words go to a covenant Death and Hell shall seize upon thee notwithstanding thy covenant Those that will live in sin in despight of the ministery in spight of afflictions there is no comfort to such I speak only to the broken heart which are fit vessels for comfort God is the God of comfort to such What shall we say then to such as after they have had some evidence of their good estate that they are Christians are fallen into sin is there any comfort for such Yes doth not St. Paul in 2 Cor. 5. desire such to be reconciled to God we are as Ambassadors of Christ desiring you to be reconciled if you have sinned so God hath comfort for those that have sinned Christ knew that we should every day run into sins unawares therefore he teaches us in the Lords prayer to say every day forgive us our debts our trespasses there is Balme in Gilead there is mercie in Israel for such daylie trespasses as we run into Therefore let none be discouraged but flie presently to the God of comfort and Father of mercies And think not that he is wearie of pardoning as man is for he is infinite in mercy And though he be the party offended yet he desires peace with us But yet notwithstanding that we shall not love to run into his Bookes he doth with giving the comfort of the pardon of sin when we fall into it add such sharpe crosses as we shall wish we had not given him occasion to correct us so sharpely we shall buy our comfort dear we had better not have given him occasion God forgave the sin of David after he had repented though he were a good man before but David bought the pleasure of his sin dear he wished a thousand times that he had never given occasion to God to raise good out of his evil to turn his sin to his comfort yet God will do this because God
to do this daily so when we are to comfort others we ought not onely to comfort them but to search them as much as we can what sin is in them and what miserie is upon them and acquaint them with their own estate that they are in as far as we can discerne we may judge of them partly by our selves For we must not prostitute comforts to persons that are indisposed till we see them fitted God doth comfort but it is the abject Christ heales but is the wounded spirit he came to seek but it is to those that are lost he came to ease but it is those that are heavy laden Therefore that we may comfort them to purpose we ought to shew and discover to them what estate they are in that we may force them to comfort if they be not enemies to comfort and to their own souls He is an unwise Physitian that administers cordials before he gives preparatives to carry away the noysome humours they will do little good we ought therefore to prepare them this way if we intend to do them good And then when we see what need they stand in bring them to Christ and the Covenant of Grace that is the best way to comfort them to bring them to see that God is their father when we discern some signs of grace in them For this is the maine stop in all comfort that there is none but they shall find by experience they are ready to say you teach wondrous comforts that there is an inheritance in heaven that God hath provided and on earth there is an issue of all for good and there is a presence of God in troubles this is true but how shall I know this belongs to me This is the cavil of flesh and blood that turnes the back to the most heavenly comforts that are The main and principal thing therefore in dealing with others and with our own hearts is to let them see that there are some signs and evidencies that they are in the covenant of grace that they belong to God Unlesse we see that all the comfort we can give them is to tell them that they are not yet sunk into hell and that they have space to repent But as long as men live in sinful courses that they are not in the state of Grace we can tell them no comfort except they will devise a new Scripture a new Bible if they do so they may have comfort but this word of God and God herein speaks no comfort to persons that live in sin and will do so we should labour therefore to discern some evidence that they are in the state of Grace And ofttimes those are indeed most intitled to comfort that think it furthest from them therefore we should acquaint them with the conditions of the covenant of grace that God looks to truth therefore if we discern any true broken humble spirit a hungring and a thirsting after righteousnesse and a desire of comfort Blessed are those that hunger and thirst it belongs to them we may comfort them If we see spiritual poverty that they see their wants and would be supplied blessed are the poore in spirit be of good comfort Christ calls such If they see and feel the burden of their sins we may comfort them Christ calls them Come unto me yee that are weary and heavy laden If we descern spiritual and heavenly desires to grow in grace and overcome their corruptions if we discover and descern this in their practise and obedience God will fulfil the desires of them that fear him And he accepts the will for the deed There is a desire of happinesse in nature that comforts not a man it is no sign of grace to desire to be free from hell and to be in heaven it is a naturall desire every creature wishes well to heaven but if there be a desire of the meanes that tend to heaven a desire of Grace these are evidences of grace these are the pulses that we may find grace by when they see their infirmities and groane under them and would be better and complain that they are not better and are out of love with their own hearts there is a combat in their hearts they are not friends with themselves When we see this inward conflict and a desire to better and to get victories against their corruptions though there be many corruptions and weaknesses a man may safely say they are in the state of Grace they are on the mending hand For Christ will not break the brused reed nor quench the smoaking flax And where he hath begun a good work he will perfect it to the day of the Lord. He will cherish these weak beginnings therefore we may comfort them on good ground Then besides that in our dealing with them when we have discovered by some evidence that they belong to the covenant that we see by some love to good things and to Gods Image in his Children and by other evidences then we may comfort them boldly and then to fetch from our own experience what a comfort will it be to such When we can say my estate was as yours is I found those corruptions that you groane under I allowed not my self in them as you do not when a man can say from his own experience that notwithstanding these I have evident signs of Gods spirit that I am his then he can comfort others by his own experience And what a comfort is it to go to the experiments of scripture it is an excellent way As now let a man be deserted of God David will comfort him by his experience Psal. 77. Where he saith he found God as his enemie and as Job saith the terrors of God drank up his spirit be of good comfort David would come and comfort thee if he were alive If the terror of God be against thee for sin that thy conscience is awakned be of good comfort Christ if he were on earth would shew thee by his own example that he indured that desertion on the Cross. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me If thou be molested and vexed with Satan Job will comfort thee by his example his book is most of it combating and comfort and so for all other grievances go to the scriptures whatsoever is written is written for our learning Pray to God and he will heare thee as he did Elias Oh but Elias was an excellent man The scripture prevents the objection Jam. 5. he was a man subject to infirmities if God heard him he will hear thee Believe in Christ as Abraham did the Father of the faithful in the promised Messias and he will forgive thee all thy sins Oh but he had a strong faith What hath the scripture to take away this objection In Rom. 5. This was not written for Abraham onely but for those that believe with the faith of Abraham I but I am a wretched sinner there
argument of praising and blessing of God and that we should answer him in the like that as he hath devised all the waies that may be of comforting us of turning all to our good that that we suffer our selves and that that others suffer so we should study by all means and waies to set forth his glory and no way to grieve the spirit of so gracious a God that thus every way intends our comfort VERS V. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolations also abound by Christ. HEre the blessed Apostle shewes the reason why his heart was so inlarged as we see in vers 3. in the middest of his troubles and persecutions to blesse God there was good reason for as his afflictions so his consolations abounded It is a reason likewise of his ability to comfort others the reason why he was fitted to comfort others because he found comfort abound in himself in his sufferings so they have a double reference to the words before But to take the words in themselves As the Suffrings of Christ abound c. It is an excellent portion of scripture and that which I should have a great deal of encouragement to speak of if the times and disposition of the hearers were for it for it is a text of comfort for those that suffer persecution that suffer affliction for the Gospel Now because we do not suffer or at least we suffer not any great matter except it be a reproach or the like which is a matter of nothing but a chip of the cross a trifle therefore we hear these matters of comfort against the disgrace of the crosse of Christ with dead hearts But we know not what we are reserved to therefore we must learn somewhat to store up though we have not present use of it The severall branches of divine truths that may be observed from these words are first this That the sufferings of Christians may abound They are many in this world and they may be more still Secondly what we ought to think of those sufferings what judgment we are to have of them They are the sufferings of Christ. Thirdly that being the sufferings of Christ he will not destitute us of comfort but we have our comfort increased in a proportion answerable to our troubles The fourth point is by whom in whom all this is this strange work is by Christ the ballancing of these two so sweetly together crosses and comforts they come both from one hand both from one spring the sufferings of Christ and the comforts of Christ and both abound our troubles are for him and our comforts are by him So here is sufferings and comfort increase of suffering increase of comfort sufferings for Christ and comfort by Christ you see them ballanced together and you see which weighs down the ballance comfort by Christ weighes down sufferings for Christ the good is greater then the ill It is a point of wondrous comfort The Ark you know mounted up as the waters mounted up when the waters overflowed the world so it is here in this verse there is a mounting of the waters a rising of the waters above the mountaines afflictions increase and grow higher and higher but be of good comfort here is the Ark above the waters here is consolation above all as our sufferings for Christ increase so our consolations likewise by Christ increase For the first I will be very short in it The sufferings of Christ abound in us There is no bodie in this world but first or last if they live any long time they must suffer and as a man is in degrees of goodnesse so his sufferings must abound the better man the more sufferings Sufferings abounded in St. Paul it doth not abound in all that was personall in St. Paul to abound in sufferings it doth not go out of the person of St. Paul and such as St. Paul was All must suffer but not in a like measure there are several cups all do not abound in sufferings as all do not abound in grace and strength Those that are of a higher ranck their sufferings abound more God doth not use an exact proportion in afflictions but that which we call geometrical a proportion appliable to the strength of the sufferer Christ as he had more strength then any so he suffered more then any and St. Paul having an extraordinary measure of strength he suffered more then all the Apostles the sufferings of Christ abounded in him but all must suffer What is the reason of it What is the reason that troubles abound thus Surely if we look To God we shall see reasons enough the Divel the world our selves If we look to God and Christ we are ordained to be conformable to Christ we must be conformable to Christ in sufferings first before we be in glorie It is Gods decree we are called to sufferings as well as to be believing we must answer Gods call every Christian must resolve to take up his Crosse every day some degree of the Crosse or other reproach for Christs sake is a suffering the scorn of the world is the rebuke of Christ. We are called to suffering as well as to Glorie it is part of our effectual calling it is an appendix an accessorie thing to the main we must take grace with suffering and it is well we may have it so too it is well that we have the state of grace here and glorie hereafter with suffering If we look to the divel there must be suffering Satan is the Prince of the world he is the prince of an opposite Kingdom If we consider what place we live in when we are taken out of the world to the blessed estate of Christians to be members of Christ and heirs of heaven the world is strange to us and we are strangers to it Crosses and afflictions are necessarie for them that are travellers we would think else that we were at home and forget our countrie considering the condition we live in we must have sufferings If we consider the disposition of the parties among whom we live they are people of an opposite spirit therefore they maligne us because we are taken from among them And though there be no opposition shewed to them yet it upbraids enough their cursed estate when they see others taken from them that speakes loud enough that their course is naught that they see others mislike it The world that is led by the spirit of Satan malignes them that are better then themselves There is opposition between the seed of the Serpent and the seed of the woman so long as there are wicked men that are instruments and Organs of the divel Gods Children must be opposed while there is a Divell suffered to be the God of the World and so long as he hath so strong a faction in the world as he hath the Children of disobedience in whom he rules Gods Children shall never
to be there then here and if it were not for crosses who would be of that minde Therfore have we not cause to suspect our selvs that we are in smooth ways and find no crosses God doth give respit to his children they have breathing times they are not alway under crosses he is mercifull perhaps they have not strength enough he will not bring them to the lists to the stage because they are not inabled they have not strength enough But they that have a continuall tenour of prosperity may well suspect themselves If one have direction to such a place and they tell him there are such ways deep waters that except he take heed he will be drowned and step into holes and they are craggie wayes and if he meet with none of these he may wel think he is not in his way So the way to Heaven it is through afflictions we must indure many afflictions saith the Apostle here Salvation is wrought by induring the same afflictions that you see in us Now if I suffer and indure nothing if I cannot indure so much as a Filip a disgrace a frowne a scorne for Christ if the way be over smooth it is not the way to heaven certainly the way is not strewed with roses we must have our Feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel They must be well shod that go among thorns and they had need to be wel fenced that go the way to heaven it is a thorny rugged way but it is no matter what the way be so it bring us to Heaven but certainly if the way be too smooth we ought to suspect our selves Now because it may be objected many will say alas what doe we suffer and therefore our case is not good I answer Every Christian suffers one of these wayes at one time or other nay at all times either by sympathy with the Church put the case we have no afflictions of our own doe we not sympathise with the Church beyond the Seas When thou hearest ill news if thou be glad to heare it certainly thy case is bad there is a suffering by sympathy and that suffering is ours Then again There are afflictions and sufferings that arise upon scandals that men run into before our eyes which is a great grief Mine eyes gush out with rivers of waters because men keep not thy law saith David Is it not a matter of suffering to a Christian soule to see that he would not see and to hear blasphemies and oathes that he would not hear to have the understanding forced to understand that he would not living in a world of iniquity in the Kingdom of the Devill It is a great grievance Woe is me that I am forced to dwell in Meshech and to have my habitation with the Tents of Kedar It is a pittifull affliction to the Saints of God to him that hath the life of grace in his heart to have the wicked as goads and thornes as the Scripture saith the Jebusites should be to the Israelites to have thoughts forced upon us and things forced upon our soules that we would not see nor think nor hear of that which shall never be in Heaven Again Every one suffers the burthen of his calling which is a great suffering a man need not to whip himself as the Scottish Papists do if he be but faithfull in his calling it is a notable meanes of mortification God keeps a man from persecution many times because he hath burthens in his calling to exercise him he hath many crosses in his calling God hath joyned sweat to labour and trouble and paines and there is no man that is faithfull in his calling as he should be but he shall find many crosses And then that which afflicts most of all the affliction of all afflictions the inward combat between the flesh the spirit which God usually takes up in persecution and outward troubles Gods deare children in persecution find little molestation from their corruptions because God will not lay more upon them then he will give them strength to beare and now when he singles them out to outward crosses he subdues their corruptions that they do not vex them as before In the time of peace he lets loose their corruptions sometimes anger sometimes pride sometimes one base affection sometimes another and think you t his is no grief to them Oh yes it grie ves them and humbles them more then any cross would do St. Paul was grieved more at this then at all his sufferings it made him crie out Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death He doth not say oh wretched man who shall deliver me from crosses and afflictions though they made him wretched in the eye of the world yet he rejoyced in those but his griefe was that he could not doe the good that he would and that made him crie out Oh wretched m●…n that I am c. It is God that ties up our corruptions that they run not so violently on the soule at one time as they do at another for he hath the command of them by his spirit There is no Christian but one of these wayes he suffers in the greatest time of peace especially this way God exerciseth them that he makes them weary of their lives by this spirituall conflict if they know what the life of grace meanes he makes them know what it is to be absent from Heaven he makes them know that this life is a place of absence and all this is to help our disposition to salvation by helping mortification and by helping our desire to Heaven Those that go on in a smooth course that know not what this inward combate meanes and are carried away with their sins they are so farre from taking scandals to heart that if they see evill men they are ready to joyn with them to joyn with blasphemers and wicked persons And instead of sympathizing with the Church of God they are ready to joyn with them that censure them and so add affliction to the afflicted But to proceed Whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and salvation Of comfort I spake in the former verse Onely that note that I will briefly commend to you is this that Gods Children hap how it will they doe good Cast them into what estate you will they doe good they are good and doe good If they be afflicted they doe good by that if they have comfort they do good to others by that no estate is amisse to Gods Children And that is the reason of their perfect resignation The Child of God perfectly resignes himself into Gods hands Lord if thou wilt have me suffer I will suffer if thou wilt have me afflicted I yield my selfe if thou wilt have me injoy prosperity I will I know it shall be for my good and for the good of others There is an intercourse in the life of a
death in our selves St. Paul dyed not now and he had the Spirit of God in him to know what he spake how doth this agree then that he had the sentence of death passed I answer St. Paul spake according to the probability of second causes according to the appearance of things and so he might pronounce of himself without danger as being no sinfull errour that indeed I am a dead man I see no hope of escaping if I look to the probabilitie of second causes all my enemies are about me I am in the Lyons mouth there is but a step between me and death He doth not look here to the decree of God but he looks to the disposing of present causes So Gods ' children are often deceived in themselves in that respect it is no great errour for it is true what they speake in regard of second causes though it be not true in regard of Gods decree The Objections being satisfied we may observe some points of doctrine And out of the first part of St. Paul's tryall which some take it to be that in Acts 19. At Ephesus Dimetrins the Smith raised up a trouble against him when they cryed out Great is Diana of the Ephesians but those are but conjectures It may be it was some great sickness it may be some other affliction the Scripture is silent in the particular what it was To come then to the points themselves In the first part this is considerable in the first place that God suffers his Children to fall into extream perils and dangers And then secondly that They are sensible of it For the first God suffers his children to fall into great extremities This is clear here we see how he riseth by degrees We were pressed above measure above strength that we even despaired of life we received the sentence of death in our selves He riseth by five steps to shew the extremity that he was in This is no new thing that God should suffer his Children thus to be exercised It is true in the head it is true in the body and it is true of every particular member of the body It is true of our head Christ Jesus himself we see to what exigences he was brought in what danger of his life oft-times he was as when they would have cast him down from the mount Luke 4. and when in apprehension of his Fathers wrath he sweat water and blood in the garden and on the Crosse cryed out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me none was ever so abased as he was he humbled himself to the death of the Crosse nay lower then the Crosse he was in captivity in the grave three dayes They thought they had had their will on him there they thought they might have trampled on Christ and no doubt but the Divel triumphed over the grave and thought he had had him where he would but we see afterward God raised him again gloriously Now as the head was abased even unto extremity So it is true of the whole body of the Church from the beginning of the world The Church in Egypt was in extremity before Moses came therefore a learned Hebrician Capne that brought Hebrew into these western parts was wont to say When the tale of brick was doubled then comes Moses that is in extremity when there was no remedy then God sent them deliverance In what a pittiful case was the poor Church and people of God in Hesters time there was but a haires breadth between them and destruction it was decreed by Haman and they had gotten the Kings decree too they were as it were between the hammer and the anvil ready to be crushed in pieces presently had not God come between And so in Babylon the Church was in extremity insomuch as that when deliverance was told them they were as men that dream as if there had been no such matter they wondred at it And so in the times of persecution God hath suffered his Church to fall into extream danger as now at this time the Church is in other parts I might draw this truth along through all Ages It is true of the whole body of the Church It is true likewise of the particular members Take the principall members of it you see Abraham before God made good his promise he was brought to a dry body and Sarah to a dead womb that they despaired of all second causes And David though God promised him a Kingdom yet he was so straitned that he thought many times he should have died I said in my haste All men are liars they tell me this and that but there is nothing so he was hunted as a Partridge in the wildernesse It was true of St. Paul we see what extremity he was brought unto as the Psalmist saith Psal. 118. I was afflicted sore but I was not delivered to death Even as we say only not killed It is and hath been so with all the members of the Church from Abel to this day sometime or other if they live any long time they shall be like Moses at the Red-Sea we see in what a strait he and his company was there there was the Egyptians behind them the Mountaines on each side of them the Red-Sea before them what escaping was here for Moses so it is with the poore Church and Children of God oft-times there are dangers behind them and perils before them and troubles on all fides God brings them so low as deaths doore sometimes by sickness as there is an instance in Psal. 107. of those that go down to the sea in ships He brings them to deaths door saith the Psalmist What is the reason that by persecution and afflictions by one grievance or another God brings his Children to such a low ebb The reasons are many The first may be he will thus trie what mettle they are made of light afflictions light crosses will not trie them throughly great ones will Jonas that slept in the Ship he fals a praying in the Whales belly he that was pettish out of trouble and fals a quarrelling with God himself in trouble he fals to praying when he was in the bottom of hell as he saith himself Little afflictions may stand with murmuring and repining but great ones trie indeed what we are what we are in great afflictions he are indeed Againe To trie the sincerity of our estate to make us to know our selves to make us known to the world and known to our selves what good we have and what ill we have A man knows not what a deal of loosness he hath in his heart what a deal of falseness till we come to the cross to extremity Whereas before I thought I had had a great deal of patience a great deal of faith and a great deal of heavenly mindedness now I see I have not that store laid up as I thought I had And somtime a man is deceived on the contrary I thought I
be at the cost with us to exercise us It is a ground not onely of patience but of thankfulnesse when God humbles us be not discontent man grudge not murmur not God doth a work that seems strange to thee and which is not his own proper work that he may do his own work that he may bring thee nearer to himself why dost thou murmur at thy own good The Patient cries out of the Physitian that he torments him he hears him well enough but he will not be advised by his patient he means to advise him and to rule him he would faine have comfort he is in pain and cries for ease but his time is not yet come So let us wait and not murmur under crosses God is doing one work to bring to passe another he brings us out of our selves that he may bring us nearer to himself And another Use that we may make of it let us examine our selves whether our afflictions and crosses have had this effect in us to bring us to trust in him more if they have all is well but if they make us worse that we fret and murmur and feel no good by them it is an ill sign for God doth bring us low that we may not trust in our selves but in him Quem praesentia mala non corrigunt c. Whom the presence of ill and grievance amends not they bring to eternal grievance This is Ahaz saith the Scripture a strange man a wicked King that notwithstanding God followed him with judgements yet he grew worse and worse This is Ahaz he might well be branded When a man belongs to God every thing brings him nearer to God when a man is brought to be more humble and more careful and more watchful every way to be more zealous more heavenly minded it is a blessed sign that God then is working a blessed work to force him out of himself and to bring him nearer himself to trust in him This we cannot too much consider of It should teach us likewise this that we judge not amisse of the generation of the righteous when we see God much humbling them when we see him follow them with sicknesse with troubles and disgraces in the world perhaps with terrour of consience with descertions be not discouraged if he be thy friend censure him not add not affliction to his affliction is not his affliction enough thou needest not to add thy unjust censure as Job said to his friends The more we are afflicted of God the more good he intends to work to us the end is to bring us from our selves to trust in him It is a wicked disposition in men that know not the wayes of God they are ignorant of the wayes that he takes with his children when they see men that are Christians that they are humbled and cast down and troubled they think they are men forsaken of God c. alas they do not know Gods manner of dealing he casts them down that he may raise them up they receive the sentence of death against themselves that he may comfort them after that he may do them good in their latter end Let this therefore keep us from censuring of other men in our thoughts for this hard course which God seems to take with them And let us make this Use of it when we are in any grievance and God followes us still let us mourn and lament the stubbornsse of our hearts that will not yeeld God intends to draw us near to him to trust in him if we would do this the affliction would cease except it be for tryall and for the exercise of Grace and for witnesse to the truth When God afflicts sometime for tryall and for witnesse there is a spirit of Glory in such a case that a man is never afflicted in mind but I say when God followes us with sicknesse with crosses with loss of friends and we are not wrought upon let us censure our hard hearts that force God to take this course And justice God in all this Lord thou knowest I could not be good without this thou knowest I would not be drawn without this bring me near to thy self that thou mayest take away this heavy hand from me The intemperate man that is sick makes the Physitian seeme cruel It is because I set my affections too much on earthly things that thou followest me with these troubles we force God to do this A Physitian is forced to bring his Patient even to skin and bone an intemperate Patienr sometimes that hath surfetted upon a long distemper he must bring him to Deaths doore even almost to death because his distemper is so setled upon him that he cannot otherwise cure him So it is with God the Physitian of our souls he must bring us wondrous low we are so prone so desperately addicted to present things to trust to them and to be proud of them and confident in them that God must deal as a sharp Physitian he must bring us so low or else we should never be recovered of our perfect health again and all is that we might trust in God Observe we from hence another point that God in all outward things that are ill intends the good of the soul. He takes liberty to take away health and liberty and friends to take away comforts but whatsoever he takes away he intends the good of the soul in the first place And all the ills that he inflicts upon us they are to cure a worse ill the ill of the soul to cure an unbelieving heart a worldly proud carnal heart which is too much addicted to earthly things We see here how God dealt with St Paul all was to build up his soul in trust and confidence in God all was for the soul. The reason is other things are vanishing the soul is the better part the eternal part if all be well with the soul all shall be well otherwise at last If it be well with the soul the body shall do well though God take liberty to humble us with sicknesse and with death it self yet God will riase the body and make it glorious a good soul will draw it after it at last and move God to make the body glorious But if the soul be naught let us cherish and do what we will with the body both will be naught at last This life is not a life to regard the body we are dead in that while we live the sentence of death is passed we must die we are dying every day The body is dead because of sin we are going to our grave every day takes away a part of our life This is not a life for this body of ours it is a respite to get assurance of an eternal estate in heaven God takes our wealth and liberty and strength c. That he may help our souls that he may work his own blessed work in our souls that he may lay a foundation of
he goes to prayer he goes to his rock and shield to God who was his all in all He knew all this was done to drive him to trust in God Why art thou disquieted O my soule why art thou vexed in me trust in God all this is to make thee trust in God he checks and chides his own soul. A Child of God doth check himselfe when his base heart would have him sink and fall down and go to false means then he raiseth himself up trust in God O my soule But such as Saul proud confident hypocrites when all outward things are taken away they go to the Witch to the Devill to one unlawfull meanes or other and at the last to desperate conclusions to the sword it self As we desire to have evidence of a good estate in grace that we belong to God so let us desire God that we may find him drawing us so neare to him by all crosses whatsoever that we may see in him a supply of whatsoever is taken from us If we lose our friends that we may trust God the more As St. Paul speaks of the widow 1 Tim. 5. when her Husband was alive she trusted to him but now she wants her former help to goe to she gives her self to prayer she goes to God she trusts in God So it should be with all when friends are taken away we should go to God he will supply that which is wanting Those that are berest of any comfort now they should go to God What do we lose by that we had the stream before now we have the fountain we shall have it in a more excellent manner in God then we had before And that makes a Christian at a point in this world he is not much discouraged whatsoever he lose if he lose all to his life he knowes he shall have a better supply from God then he can lose in the world therefore he is never much cast down he knowes that all shall drive him nearer to God to trust in God As St. Paul saith here We received the sentence of Death that we might not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead One meanes to settle our trust the better in God reconciled to us in the Covenant of grace through Christ his beloved and our beloved is the blessed Sacrament and therefore come to it as to a seal sanctified by God for that very purpose to strengthen our trust in God How many wayes doth God condescend to strengthen our trust because it is such an honour to him for by trusting in him we give him the honour of all his attributes we make him a God we set him in his throne which we doe not when we trust not in him how many waies doth he condescend to strengthen our trust We have his promise If we believe in him we shall not perish but have everlasting life We have a seale of that promise the Sacrament and is not a broad seale a great confirmation If a man have a grant from the King if he have his broad seal it is a great confirmation though the other were good yet the seale is stronger So we have Gods promise and in regard of our weakness there is a seale added to it If that be not enough we have more we have his oath he hath pawned his life As I live saith the Lord c. he hath pawned his being as he is God he will forgive us if we repent We have his promise seale and oath whatsoever among men may strengthen trust and faith God condescends unto to strengthen our faith because he would not have us perish in unbeliefe Besides that he hath given us earnest a mans trust is strengthened when he hath earnest Every true Christian hath a blessed earnest that is the Comforter he hath the Spirit in him the first fruits where God gives and an earnest he will make good the bargain at the last where he gives the first fruits he will add the harvest God never repents of his earnest where he hath begun a good work he will finish it to the day of the Lord. An earnest is not taken away but the rest is added And the same Spirit that is an earnest is also a pawn and pledge we will trust any runnagate if we have a pawn sufficient now God hath given us this pawn of his Spirit Christ hath given us his Spirit and hath taken our flesh to heaven our flesh is there and his Spirit is in our hearts besides many evidences that we have in this life as pawns Indeed in extremity sometimes we must trust God without a pawne upon his bare word Though he kill me yet will I trust in him saith Job but God ordinarily gives us many pawns of his love The Sacrament is not onely a Seal of the promise but likewise it hath another relation to strengthen our faith it is a seizon as a piece of earth that is given to assure possession of the whole as a man saith Take here is a piece of earth here is my land here are the keyes of my house so in the promises sealed by the Sacrament here is life here is favour here is forgiveness of sins here is life everlasting what can we have more to strengthen our faith God hath condescended every way to strengthen us if we will come in and honour him so much as to trust him with our souls and our salvation Therefor let us come to the Sacrament with undoubted confidence God will keep his credit he will not deceive his credit he will never forsake those that trust in him Psal. 9. But to answer an Objection Oh! all these are confirmations indeed if I did believe and trust in God but my heart is full of unbelief Indeed all these are made to some that believe already in some measure they have this seale and oath and earnest and pawnes and first fruits and all if they believe but I cannot bring my heart to trust in God What hinders thee I am a wretched creature a sinfull creature Doest thou mean to be so still It is no matter what thou hast been but what thou wilt be The greater the sickness the more is the honour of the Physitian in curing it the greater thy sins the more honour to God in forgiving such sins Retort the temptation thus upon Satan God works by contraries and whom he will make righteous he will make them to see their sins and before he will raise us up he will make us rotten in our graves before he will make us glorious he will make us miserable I know that God by this intends that I should despaire in my self God intends that I should despaire indeed but it is that I should despair in my self as the text saith here that we should not trust in our selves when we have a sight of the vilenesse of our sins but in God that raiseth the dead that raiseth
the dead soul the despairing soul that it should trust in him Therefore retort the temptation upon Satan because I see my sins and despaire in my self therefore I trust in God He that is in darknesse and sees no light let him trust in the Lord his God Mark for thy comfort the Gospel calls men who in their own sense and feeling think themselves furthest off he that is poore and sees his want Blessed are the poore in Spirit But I have no Grace Oh that I had grace Blessed are they that hunger and thirst If thou mourn for thy sins Blessed are they that mourn Thou findest a heavy load of thy sins Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you The Gospel takes away all the objections and misdoubtings of the unbelieving heart God is so willing to come to him Therefore stand not cavilling interpret all to the best God will have us to despair in our selves that we may trust in him and then we are fittest to trust in God when we despaire in our selves then we make God all in all he hath righteousnesse enough holinesse enough satisfaction enough he hath all enough for thee And for men that are not yet believers how wondrously doth God labour to bring such men to a good hope If they yield themselves and come in there is an offer to every one that will come in and take the water of life There is a command he that hath commanded Thou shalt not murder Thou shalt not steal he layes a charge on thee that thou believe 1 John 3. This is his c●…mmand that we believe in the Son of God And think with thy self thou committest a sin against the Gospel which is worse then a sin against the law for if a man sin against the law he may have help in the Gospel but if he sin against the Gospel there is not another Gospel to help him God offers thee comfor the commands thee to trust in him and thou rebellest thou offendest him if thou do not believe Is not here incouragement if thou be not more wedded to thy sinfull course then to the good of thy soule If thou wilt still live in thy sins and wilt not trust in God then thou shalt be damned there is no help for thee if thou believe not the wrath of God hangs over thy head Thou art condemned already by nature if thou believe not thou needest no further condemnation but only the execution of Gods justice Naturally thou art born the Child of wrath and God threateneth thee to stir thee up and to make thee come in he useth sweet allurements besides the commands and threatnings Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you And Why will ye perish O house of Israel And O Jerusalem Jerusalem how oft c God complaines of thee he allures thee he sends his Embassadours We are Ministers in Christs Name to beseech you to be reconciled to come in to cast down your weapons your sins to believe in God and trust in his mercy and to hope for all good from him What should keep thee off he is willing to have thee believe Oh if I were elected c. Trouble not thy self with dark scruples of his eternall decree obey the command obey the threaning and put that out of doubt if thou yield to the command if thou obey the threatning if thou be drawn by that undoubtedly thou art the child of God Put not in these doubts and janglings things that are too high for thee till thou believe Indeed when thou believest then thou mayst comfort thy self I believe therefore I know I shall be saved Whom he hath chosen them he calls and whom he calls hè justifies I find my self freed from the sentence of condemnation in my heart therefore I know I am called I know I am elected then with comfort thou mayest go to those disputes But not before a man obeys put those cavils out and obey the Gospel when salvation is offered when Satan puts these things to thee when thou art threatned and commanded How shall this justifie God at the day of judgment against damned wretches that have lived in the bosom of the Church and yet would not believe They will believe after their own fashion if God will save them and let them live in their sinful courses but they will rather be damned then they will part with them Are they not worthy to be damned judge thy self that rather then they will alter their course and receive mercy with it rather then they will receive Christ whole Christ as a King and a Priest to rule them as well as to satisfie for them they will gild over their wicked courses and will have none of him at all they will rather be damned then take another course their damnation is just If thou take whole Christ and yield to his government he useth all meanes to strengthen thy faith after thou believest and he useth all means to allure thee to believe It is a point of much consequence and all depends upon it it is the summe of the Gospel to trust in God in Christ therefore I have been a little the longer in it till we can bring our hearts to this we have nothing When we have this then when all shall be taken from us as it will ere long all the friends we have and all our comforts yet our trust shall not be taken from us nor our God in whom we trust shall be taken from us we shall have God left and a heart to trust in God that will stand us in stead when all other things shall fail That we might not trust in our selves but in God Which raiseth the dead These words have a double force in this place First St. Paul might reason thus I am brought to death as low as I can be even to receive the sentence of death but I trust in God who will raise me when I am dead therefote he can raise me out of sicknesse though there be no means no physick he can do it himself Or if it were persecution he might reason I am now persecuted but God will raise me out of the grave therefore he can raise me out of this trouble if it be for my good It hath the force of a strong argument that way And it hath another force that is put case the worst I received the sentence of death that is if I die as I look for no other yet I trust that God that raiseth the dead he will raise me the confidence of the resurrection makes me die comfortably As we sleep quietly because we hope to rise again and we put our seed into the ground with comfort why we hope to receive it in a more glorious manner in the harvest so though my body be sowen in the earth it shall rise a glorious body I trust in God though I receive the sentence of
the soul but that which is raised must be dead first they account not themselves dead and therefore oppose this resurrection And so when we are dead in grace or comfort let us trust in God that raiseth the dead And so for outward condition in this life and the estate of the Church The conversion of the Jewes which seems a thing so strange when a man thinks how they are dispersed and thinks of their poverty and disgrace he thinks Is this a likely matter Remember what God hath said he will raise the dead And because this is a work that seems as hard as the raysing of the dead therefore their calling and conversion is called a kind of resurrection Rom. 11. Let us hope for that He that raiseth the body will raise that people as despicable as they are to be a glorious people and Church And so for the confusion of the man of sin The revelation of the Gospel when it came out of the grave of darknesse out of the Egyptian darknesse of Popery was it not a raising of the dead When Luther arose for the defence of the truth a man might have said to him What doest thou set thy self against the whole World go to thy cloyster and say Lord have mercy upon us Doest thou hope to reform the World against all the World Alas he trusted in God that raiseth the dead that raiseth men to conversion when he pleaseth and that raiseth the Church when he pleaseth even from death He raised the Church out of Babylon And he will raise the Jewes that now are in a dead state why should we doubt of these things when we believe or professe to believe the main the resurrection from the dead And every day in the Church God is raising the dead spiritually the dead hear the voyce of Christ every day when the Ministery is in power when there is a blessing upon it conveying it to the heart then he is raising the dead So Wisdom is justified of her children the Gospel is justified to be a powerful doctrine having the Spirit of God clothing it to raise people from the dead those that are dead in sin There are none that ever are spiritually raised but those that see themselves dead And that is the reason why we are to abhor Popery because it teacheth us that we are not dead in our selves and then there can be no resurrection to grace for the resurrection is of the dead the more we see a contrarietie in Nature to Grace the more fit objects we are for the divine power of God to raise He raiseth the dead Thus we see how to go along with this in all troubles God will raise the dead therefore he will bring me out of this trouble if he see it good Therefore in extremity let us thus reason with our selves Now I know not which way to turn me there is but a step between me and death if God have any purpose to use my service furthet he that raiseth the dead will raise me from the grave to him belong the issues of death Psal. 67. he can give an evasion and escape if he will if not if he will not deliver me then I die in this faith that he will raise me from the dead This is that that upholds a Christian in extremity This made the Martyrs so confident this made those three young men so resolute that were cast into the fiery Furnace what was their comfort Surely this God can deliver us if he will say they he is able to deliver us now but if he will not do this for us he will raise our bodies if he will not deliver them here there will be a final deliverance at the resurrection So in Heb. 11. those blessed men they hoped for a better resurrection and this made them confident This makes us confident to stand out against all the threatnings and all the crosses of the world that we may hold our peace with God notwithstanding all the inticements and allurements to the contrary because we trust in God that raiseth the dead Again let us learn to extract contrary principles to Satan out of Gods proceedings What doth he reason when we are dead either in sin or in misery What hast thou to do with God God hath forsaken thee No saith faith God is a God raising the dead the more dead I am in the eye of the world and in my own sense the nearer I am to Gods help I am a despairing sinner a great sinner but the more God will magnifie his merey that where sin hath abounded grace may abound much more Retort home the argument draw contrary principles to him this is a divine Art which faith hath Oh but then you may presume and do what you list Not so retort the argument again upon him if I do so God will bring me to death he will bring me to despair and who is it that delights to have that course taken with him to be brought so low So every way we may retort temptations from this dealing of God If I be carelesse he will bring me as low as hell I shall have little joy to try conclusions with him And if thou be low despair not thou art the fitter object God raiseth the dead therefore I will not add to my sins legal I will not add this Evangelical sin this destroying sin of despair and unbelief but I will cast my self upon the mercy of God and believe in him that raiseth the dead and desire him to speak to my dead soul which is as rotten as Lazaru's body which had been so long in the grave that he would say to it Come forth of that cursed estate it is but for him to speak the word to blesse his word and then it will come out by faith It is the Art of faith to draw contrary arguments to Satan and those that belong to God do so in all temptations but those that do not they sink lower and lower having nothing to uphold their souls they have not learned to trust in God that raiseth the dead God is the God that raiseth the dead Therefore let us oft think of this think what God means to do with us that we may carry out selves answerably I trust in God that raiseth the dead Therefore let us honour God while we live with that body that he will raise let us be fruitful in our place Saint Paul drawes this conclusion 1 Cor. 15. from the resurrection Finally my brethren be constant unmoveable alway abounding in the work of the Lord knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Especially considering that he will raise the dead bodies after a more glorious manner then they are now he will make a more glorious body For alway Gods second works are better then his first he raiseth the dead and will make our bodies like the glorious body of Christ. But the point of the resurrection is very large
had gotten by his policie and malice and then God delivered his Church and confounded Haman These and the like reasons may be given to shew that God in heavenly and deep wisdom doth not presently deliver his children The proper use of it is that we should learn not to be hasty and short-spirited in Gods dealing but learn to practise that which we are often injoyned to wait on God to wait his good leasure Especially considering that which is the second point let that satisfie us that After God hath done his work he will deliver Let us wait for he will deliver at length perhaps his time is not yet that he will deliver but usually when all is desperate when he may have all the glory then he delivers He delivered the three young men but they were put into the fire first and the Furnace was made seven times hotter that he might have the glory in consuming their enemies so he delivered Hezekias in his time but it was when the enemy was even ready to seize upon the City He promised St. Paul that not one man should perish in the ship but yet they suffered shipwrack they went away onely with their lives God doth so deliver his that he doth not suffer them to perish in the danger Therefore let us stay his time and waite it may be it is not Gods time yet When shall we know that it is Gods time to deliver that we may wait with comfort God knowes his own time best but usually it is when we are brought very low and when our spirits are low when we are brought very low both in regard of humane support and in regard of our spirits when we are humble when our souls cleave to the dust help Lord for we are brought very low Help Lord for vain is the help of man When the Church can plead so it is a good plea when we are at the lowest and the malice of the enemy is at the highest when the waters swell Help Lord for the waters are come into my very soul when we are very low and the enemies very high as we see in Pharaoh And so in Herod when he was in the height of his pride when he was in all his glory God takes him there Thus God delivers his and confounds his enemies I joyn them both together for the one is not commonly without the other the annoyance of Gods Children is from their enemies therefore when he delivers the one he confounds the other When the malice of the one is at the highest and the state of the other is at the lowest and their spirits are afflicted and cast down with their estate then is the time when God will deliver Again when our hearts are inlarged to pray when we can pray from a broken heart as you see here he joynes them together God will deliver me but it must be by your prayers when we have hearts to pray and when others have hearts to pray for us that is the time of deliverance Usually there goes before deliverance an enlarged heart to pray to God as we see in Daniel Dan. 9. a little before they came out of Babylon he had a large heart to pray to God And when we can plead with God his promise Remember Lord thy promise wherein thou hast caused us to trust when we can cast our selves upon Gods mercy with prayer and plead with God to remember his promise it is a sign God means to deliver us When the heart is shut and closed up that it cannot speak to God when there is some sin or other that doth stifle the spirit that it cannot vent it self with that liberty to God it is a signe that it is not the time yet of Gods deliverance God will at the length deliver therefore from both these that he doth deferre deliverance and that he will deliver at length let us inferre this lesson of waiting let us wait therefore and wait with comfort Let us remember these principles First God hath a time as for all things so for our deliverance Secondly that Gods time is the best time he is the best discerner of opportunities Thirdly remember that this shall be when he hath wrought his work upon our souls specially when he hath made us to trust in him As here when Saint Paul had learnd to trust in God then he delivered him And why should we desire to do our bodies good or our estates good till God hath wrought his cure on our souls for God intends our souls in the first place our soules they are the whole man in a manner The welfare of the soul drawes the welfare of the body and the welfare of the estate after it the body shall do well if the soul do well Therefore we should desire rather that the Lord would let the affliction stay then that it should part without the message for which God sends it Every affliction is Gods messenger we should desire the Lord to let it stay for the answer for which he hath sent it And indeed it will never part without the answer for which God sends it till it have humbled us till it have brought us to trust in God till we be such as we should be And a Christian soul rather desires to be in the Furnace to be under the affliction to be purged better yet then to have the crosse and affliction removed and not to be a whit the better for it Therefore considering that there will be a time and that Gods time is the best time and that this time will be when he hath fitted us we should learn to waite in any crosse and not to be over hasty Again consider though the time be long yet he will deliver at length by death death will end all miseries And consider that how long soever we indure any thing yet what is that that we indure here to that that we are freed from by Christ We are freed from misery from all misery from the wrath of God from damnation And what is that that we can suffer here to the glory and joy that remaines for us in heaven What is all that we can suffer here to that that Christ hath indured for us what is all that we can indure here to that that we have deserved Considering then what we are delivered from what God hath reserved for us what Christ hath indured and what we deserve it will make us wait and wait with patience Especially considering as I said before that God is working his good worke for our good though we at the first perhaps for a while doe not see the meaning of the affliction the meaning of the cross we cannot read it perfectly yet in general we may know it is for our good God of his infinite wisdom will not suffer a hair to fall from our heads without his providence And all shall work together for the best to those that love him Rom. 8. It is
truth and though with much weaknesse yet we call upon thee in truth therefore we cannot but be perswaded of thy goodnesse that thou wilt be near us so it is a prevailing course because it is obedience to Gods order And it is a prevailing course because likewise it sets God on work Faith that is in the heart and that sets prayer on work for prayer is nothing but the voyce of faith the flame of faith the fire is in the heart and spirit but the voyce the flame the expression of faith is prayer faith in the heart sets prayer on work what doth prayer that goes into heaven it pierceth heaven and that sets God on work because it brings him his promise it brings him his nature Thy nature is to be Jehovah good and gracious and merciful to thine thy promise is answerable to thy nature and thou hast made rich and precious promises As faith sets prayer on work so prayer sets God on work and when God is set on work by prayer as prayer must needs bind him bringing himself to himself bringing his word to him every man is as his work and his word is as himself God being set on work he sets all on work he sets heaven and earth on work when he is set on work by prayer therefore it is a prevailing course he sets all his attributes on work for the deliverance and rescue of his Church from danger and for the doing of any good he sets his mercy and goodnesse on work and his Love and whatsoever is in him You see then why it is a prevailing course because it is obedience to God and because it sets God on work it overcomes him which overcomes all it overcomes him that is omnipotent We see the woman of Canaan she overcame Christ by the strength that she had from Christ. And Moses he overcame God Let me alone why dost thou presse me Let me alone It offers violence to God it prevails with him and that which prevails with God prevails with all things else the prayer of faith hath the promise The prayer of a righteous man in faith it prevails much saith St. James Consider now if the prayer of one righteous man prevail much what shall the prayer of many righteous men do as St. Paul saith here my prayers and your prayers being joyned together must needs prevail For instances the Scripture is full of them how God hath vouchsafed deliverance by the help of prayer I will give but a few instances of former time and some considerations of later time For former times in Exod. 17. you see when Amaleck set upon the people Moses did more good by prayer then all the army by fighting as long as Moses hands were held up by Aaron and Hur the people of God prevailed a notable instance to shew the power of prayer In 2. Chron. 14. Asa prayed to God and presseth God with arguments and the people of God prevail In 2. Chron. 20. there you have good King Jehosaphat he prayes to God and he brings to God his former experience he presseth God with his covenant with his nature and the like arguments spoken of before and then he complaines of their necessity Lord we know not what to do our eyes are towards thee And Gods opportunity is when we are at the worst and at the lowest then he is near to help We know not what to do but our eyes are towards thee saith that blessed King and then he prevailed So the Prophet Isay and Hezechias they both joyn together in prayer to God and God heard the Prophet and the prayer of the King they spread the letter before the Lord and prayed to God when Rabshakeh rayled against God and they prevailed mightily Hester was but a woman and a good woman she was the Church was in extremity in her time she takes this course she fasted and prayed she and her people and we see what an excellent issue came of it the confusion of proud Haman and the deliverance of the Church In Act. 12. Herod having good successe in the beheading of James being flushed with the blood of James he would needs set upon Peter too the Church fearing the losse of so worthy a pillar falls to praying see the issue of it God struck him presently Wo be to the birds of prey when Gods Turtle mourns when Gods Turtle the Church mourns and prayes to God wo be to those birds that violently prey on the poor Church Wo be to Herod and all bloody persecuting Tyrants wo be to all malignant despisers of the Church when the Church begins to pray For though she direct not her prayers against them in particular yet it is enough that she prayes for her self and her self cannot be delivered without the confusion of her enemies you see these instances of old I will name but some of later times what hath not prayer done Let us not be discouraged prayer can scatter the enemies move God to command the winds and the waters and all against his enemies What cannot prayer do when the people of God have their hearts quickned and raised to pray Prayer can open heaven prayer can open the womb prayer can open the Prison and strike off the fetters it is a pick-lock We see in Act. 16. when St. Paul was cast in Prison he prayed to God at midnight and God shakes the foundations of the Prison and all flies open So St. Peter was in Prison he prayes and the Angel delivers him What cannot prayer do it is of an omnipotent power because it prevails with an omnipotent and almighty God Oh that we were perswaded of this but our hearts are so full of Atheisme naturally that we think not of it we think not that there is such efficacy in prayer but we cherish base conceits God may if he will c. and put all upon him and never serve his providence and command who commands us to call upon him and who will do things in his providence but he will do them in this order we must pray first to acknowledge our dependance upon him If we were throughly convinced of the prevailing power of prayer what good might be done by it as there hath been in former times certainly we would beg of God above all things the spirit of supplication And if we have the spirit of prayer we can never be miserable if a man have the spirit of prayer whatsoever he want he causeth it from heaven he can beg it by prayer and if he want the thing he can beg contentation he can beg patience he can beg grace and beg acquaintance with God and acquaintance with God it will put a glory upon him It is such a thing as all the world cannot take from us they cannot take God from us they cannot take prayer from us if we were convinced of this we would be much in prayer in private prayer in publick prayer for our selves for the Church of
a one as must relinquish in his purpose all wicked blasphemous scandalous unthrifty courses whatsoever he that purposeth to please God and to have his prayer accepted of God he must leave all For as the Psalmist saith If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayer For a man to come with a petition to God with a purpose to offend him is to come to practise treason in the presence Chamber To come into the presence of God and to have a purpose to stab him with his sins Doest thou purpose to live in thy filthy courses in thy scandalous evill course of life to be a blasphemer a swearer and yet dost thou think that God will hear and regard thy prayer If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayer That is another thing that thou mayest know it by whether thou be in such an estate as that thou mayest pray successefully for thy self and for others In Prov. 28. there is a third discovery He that turnes his eare from hearing the law even his prayer shall be abominable Thou mayest know it by this if thou be in such an estate as that God will regard thy prayers for thy self or for others that they may be prevailing prayers how standest thou affected to Gods Truth and Word how art thou acquainted with the reading of the Scriptures and with hearing the blessed Word of God unfolded and broken open by the blessed Ordinance of God How doest thou attend upon God Wouldest thou have him who is the great God of heaven and earth to hear thee and to regard thee when thou wilt not hear and regard him thou wouldest have him to regard thy prayers and thou regardest not him speaking by the Ministery of his Word thou despisest his ordinance which he hath left with thee he hath left thee the mysteries of his Word and thou regardest them not but spendest thy time altogether either about thy calling or about some trifling studies and neglectest the main the soul-saving truth will he hear thy prayer No saith the Wise man He that turnes his eare from hearing the Law that mans prayer shall be abominable Since prayer is so prevailing a thing so pleasing to God so helpfull to the Church and so helpfull to our selves who would be in such a case that he cannot pray or if he doth pray that his prayer should be abominable that God should turn his prayer into sin It is a miserable case that a man lives in that is in league with sin that allowes himself in any wicked course in rebellion to Gods Ordinance such men are in such a state that God doth not regard their prayers for themselves or for others Some do so exalt and lift up their pride against God that they do not regard the very Ordinance of God no not while they are hearing it but set themselves to be otherwise disposed at that very time How can such expect that God will regard them This shall be sufficient to presse that point saith Saint Paul I shall be delivered by your prayers God will deliver the Ministers by the peoples prayers God will be good to the Ministers for the prayers of the people This concerns us that are Ministers Prayer is prevailing even for us And as it is our duty to give our selves to Preaching and Prayer so it is the peoples duty to pray for us likewise and for these particulars as I named To pray for ability To pray for a willing mind to discharge that ability To pray for successe of that discharge for we must be able to Preach to the people of God and we must be willing and there must be successe It doth much discourage Gods people and those that are Ministers when they find no successe of their labours Isai. 49. saith the Prophet I have laboured in vain Elias was much discouraged in his time and Isaiah and Elias were good men yet they were much discouraged they saw little fruit of their labour Therefore let us help the Ministers with our prayers in this respect that God would enable them that God would enlarge their hearts with willingness For there are many that are of ability but they are so proud and so idle that they think themselves too good to Preach to them whom God and the Church hath called them to bestow their labours on they have ability but they want a large heart And those that have both ability and a large heart they want successe they see little fruit because the people pray not for them and they perhaps are negligent in the duty themselves their labours are not steeped in prayers Again a fourth thing that we ought to pray for for them is strength and ability of the outward man and all that fear God and have felt the benefit of the Ministery they do this and God doth answer it Likewise to pray for protection and deliverance from unreasonable men to pray for strength of spirit and likewise for protection For as St. Paul saith 2 Thess. 3. All men have not faith Pray for us that we may be delivered from unreasonable absurd men All have not Faith Men that believe not Gods truth that believe not Gods Word that are full of Atheisme full of contempt and scorn they are absurd men though they think themselves the witty men of the world yet they are unreasonable and absurd men pray for us that we may be delivered from unreasonable men Likewise from him that is the head of wicked men the Devil He sees that the Ministers they are the Standard-bearers they are the Captains of Gods Army they stand not alone and they fall not alone many others fall with them There is no calling under heaven by which God conveyes so much good as by the dispensation of his Ordinance in the Ministery therefore we should help them by our prayers There are no men better if they be good nor none more hurtfull if they be bad none worse As Christ saith They are the salt of the earth to season the unsavory world and if the salt have lost the savour it is good for nothing but to be cast on the dunghill Therefore pray that God would deliver them from the Devil who malignes them they are the Butt of his malice by his instruments There are many that come to hear the Word to carpe and to cavil and to sit as Judges to examine but how few are there that pray for the Ministers and surely because they pray not they profit not If we could pray more we should profit more I beseech you in the bowels of Christ put up your petitions to God that God would teach us that are inferiour to you in other respects setting aside our calling that we may teach you that we may instruct his people As John Baptist saith The friends of the Bride learn of the Bridegroom what to speake to the Spouse so we learn from prayer and from reading
things they set light by them Hosea 8. 12. He gave them the great things of his law and they accounted them as slight as strange things not worthy to be regarded Praise consists in taking notice and not onely in taking notice but in remembring and minding them as in Psal. 103. My soul praise the Lord and forget not all his benefits And likewise in an estimation of them and likewise in expressing this thankfulnesse in words Awake my glory our tongues are our glory especially as they are instruments to praise and glorifie God we cannot use our language better then to speak the language of Canaan in praising of God Likewise praise consists in doing good which is reall praise though we say nothing Moses cryed to God though he spake not a word Evill works have a crie although they say nothing Abels blood cried against Cain and as evill works so good works have a crie though a man praise not God with his tongue his works praise God Job saith The sides of the poore blessed him What could their sides speak No but there was a reall thanksgiving to God their sides blessed God so our good works may praise God as well as our tongues and hearts The heavens and the earth they praise God though they say nothing because they stir us up to say something Let men see your good workes that they may take occasion from thence to blesse God saith Christ. Or else your praising of God is but a meer complementing with God to give him thanks with the tongue and after to dishonour him with your lives Psal. 50. What hast thou to do to take my Name into thy mouth sith thou hatest to be reformed what hast thou to do to take my Name into thy mouth either in prayer or in praise when thou hatest to be reformed High words are unseemly for a foole saith the Wise man and what higher words then praise Therefore praise for a man that lives in a blasphemous course of life in a filthy course of life praise is too high a word for a fool we must praise God in our lives or else not at all God will not accept of it It consists in these things Now some directions how to perform it for our selves and others If we would praise God for our selves or for any then let us look about us let us looke above us and beneath us let us look backward look to the present look forward every thing puts songs of praise into our mouth Have we not matter enough of our own to praise God for let us look about us to the prosperity of others let us praise God for the Ministery praise God for the Magistracy praise God for the government wherein we live There are many grievances in the best government but a Christian heart considereth what good he hath by that government what good he hath by that ordinance and doth not onely delight to feed on the blemishes as flies do upon sores it is a sign of a naughty heart to do so Although a man should not be insensible of the ills of the times for else how should we pray against them yet he is not so sensible as to forget the good he hath by them If we would praise God let us look to the good and not so much upon the ill Look up to heaven look to the earth to the sea David occasions praise from every creature every creature ministers matter of praise from the stars to the dust from heaven to earth from the Cedar to the Hisop that growes by the wall Is there not a beam of Gods goodnesse in every creature have we not use of every creature we must praise God not only for the Majesty and order that shines in them but for the use of them in respect of us And so let us look to the works of Providence as well as to the works of Creation Look to Gods work in his Church his confounding of his enemies his deliverance of his Church the Churches abroad our owne Church our owne persons our friends thus we should feed our selves that we may have matter of praising God God gives us matter every day he renewes his favours upon the place wherein we live and upon us as itis Lam. 3. It is his mercy that we are not all consumed Let us look back to the favours that we have injoyed let us look for the present what doth he do for us The Apostle saith here God doth deliver us doth he not give deliverance and favour and grace inward grace for the time to come hath he not reserved an inheritance immortall and undefiled in the heavens for us Wherefore doth he bestow things present and wherefore doth he reveal things laid up for us for the time to come but that we should praise him but that we should praise him for that which he means to do afterwards Blessed be God the Father who hath begotten us to an inheritance immortall and undefiled c. saith St. Peter God reveals good things that are to come that we are heires apparent to the Crown of glory this is revealed that we might praise him now that we might begin the imployment of heaven upon earth Let us look upward and downward let us look about us look inward look backward look to the present look forward every thing ministreth matter of praise to God Yea our very crosses happie is he whom God vouchsafeth to be angry with that he doth not give him over to a Reprobate sense to fill up his sins but that he will correct him to pull him from ill courses happie is he that God vouchsafeth to be angry with in evill courses There is a blessing hid in ill in the Crosse. In all things give thanks saith the Apostle what in afflictions I not for the affliction it self but for the issue of it There is an effect in afflictions to draw us from the world to draw us to God to make us more heavenly-minded to make us see better into these earthly things to make us in love with heavenly things In all things give thanks When we want matter in our selves let us look abroad and give thanks to God for the prosperity of others And with all in the second place when we look about us let us dwell in the meditation of the usefulnesse of these things of the goodnesse of God in them till our Hearts be warmed It is not a slight God be thanked that will serve but we must dwell upon it let our hearts dwell so long on the favours and blessings of God till there be a blessed fire kindled in us The best bone-fire of all is to have our hearts kindled with love to God in the consideration of his mercy Let us dwell so long upon it till a flame be kindled in us A slight praise is neither acceptable to God nor man And then let us consider our own unworthinesse let us dwell upon
that I am lesse then the least of all thy favours saith good Jacob Gen. 32. If we be lesse then the least then we must be thankful for the least Humility is alway thankful a humble man thinks himself unworthy of any thing and therefore he is thankful for any thing A proud man praiseth himself above the common rate he over-values and over-prizeth himself and therefore he thinks he never hath enough when he hath a great deal he thinks he hath lesse then he deserves and therefore he is an unthankful person And that makes a proud man so intolerable to God he is alway an unthankful person a murmuring person A humble man because he undervalues himself he thinks he hath more then he deserves and he is thankfull for every thing he knowes he deserves nothing of himself it is the meere goodness of God whatsoever he hath The best direction to thansgiving is to have a humble and low heart rherefore David 1. Chron. 29. 14. when he would exercise his heart to thankfuluesse when the people had given liberally saith he Who am I or what is this people that we should be able to offer willingly after this sort all comes of thee and all is thine own that we give What am I or what is this people that we should have hearts to give liberally to the Temple see how he abaseth himself And Abraham I am dust and ashes shall I speak to my Lord And Job I abhor my self in dust and ashes when he considered Gods excellencie and his own basenesse A humble heart is alway thankful and the way to thankfulnesse is to consider our humilitie What am I saith David he had a heart to be thankfull of thine own I give thee not onely the matter to be thankfull for but of thine owne I give thee when I give thee thanks thou givest me a thankfull heart As the Sacrifice that Abraham offered was found by God so God must find the sacrifice that we offer even a thankfull heart of thine own Lord I give thee even when I give thee thanks Therefore you may make that a meanes to have a thankfull heart to pray for a thankfull heart And when we have it blesse God for it that we may be more thankfull God must vouchsafe the portion of a thankful heart with other blessings he that gives matter to be thankful must give a heart to be thankful Again to make us more thankfull do but consider the misery of our selves if we wanted the blessings we are thankfull for and the misery of others that have them not Thou that hast health if thou wouldest be thankfull for it look abroad look into hospitalls look on thy sick friends that cannot come abroad Thou that wouldest be thankfull for the libertie of the Gospell look beyond the seas look into the Palatinate and other Countries and certainly this will make thee thankfull if any thing will If we would be thankfull for spirituall blessings consider the miserie of those that are under the bondage of Satan how there is but a little step between them and hell that they are ready to sink into it there is but the short thread of this life to be cut and they are for ever miserable If we would be thankful for any blessing let us consider the misery to be without it If we would be thankful for our wits let us consider distracted persons What an excellent Engine to all things in this life and the life to come is this spark of reason If we want reason what can we do in civill things What can we do in matters of grace Grace presupposeth nature if we would be thankfull for health for strength and for reason if we would be thankful for common favours consider the miserie of those that want these things Would we be thankful for the blessed ordinance consider but the miserie of those that sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death how they are led by Satan and want the means of salvation Those that would be thankfull for the government we have let them consider those that live in Anarchie where every man lives as he lists where a man cannot enjoy his own The consideration of these things it should quicken us to thankfulnesse the consideration of our own misery if we should want them and the misery of those that do want them And let us keep a Catalogue of Gods blessings it will serve us as in regard of God to blesse him the more so in regard of our selves to establish our faith the more for God is Jehovah alway like himself whom he hath done good unto he will do good to he is constant in his love Whom he loves he loves to the end God shall have more thanks and we shall have more comfort Again to add some encouragements and motives to thankfulnesse which may be a forcible meanes to make us thankful do but consider it is Gods tribute it is Gods custom do but deny the King his custom and what will come of it deny him tribute and you forfeit all so you forfeit all for want of thankfulnesse What is the reason that God hath taken away the Gospel from countries abroad and may do from us if we be not more thankfull because they were not thankfull it is all the tribute all the impost he sets upon his blessings I will give you this but you shall glorifie me with thanksgiving It is all the honour he looks for He that praiseth me honoureth me And now O Israel what doth the Lord require of thee for all his favours but to serve him with a chearful and good heart to be thankful What is the reason that the earth denies her own to us that sometimes we have unseasonable years We deny God his own he stops the due of the creature because we stop his due When we are not thankful he is forced to make the heavens as Iron and the Earth as Brasse we force him to make the creature otherwise then it is because we deny him thankfulnesse The running of favours from heaven ceaseth when there is not a recourse back again of thankfulnesse to him For unthankfulnesse is a drying wind it dryes up the fountain of Gods favours it binds God it will not suffer him to be as good as his word If ever God give us up to publick judgments it will be because we are not thankfull to God for favours and deliverances as that in 88. by Sea and from the Gunpowder treason by land Was it not a sick State after Queen Mary when Queen Elisabeth received the Crown The Church and Common-wealth were sick Now if we be to praise God for our particular persons when we have recovered our health much more should we praise God when the State when the Church is delivered as it was at the comming in of Queen Elizabeth and afterward in 88. and of late time and continually he doth deliver us And if we
will tell them that it is another manner of sin and that it is the fountain of all sin And so for Justification by works conscience it self if there were no Book of God would say it is a false point And then they plead for Ignorance they have blind consciences their Clergy being a subtile generation that have abused the world a long time because they would sit in the conscience where God should sit they sit in the Temple of God and would be respected above that which is due to them they would be accounted as petty gods in the world therefore they keep the people from the knowledge of the true rule and make what they speak equal with Gods word Now if the people did discern this they would not be Papists long for no man would willingly be cozened Let us labour therefore for a true rule And when we have gotten rules apply them for what are rules without application Rules are instrumental things and instruments without use are nothing If a Carpenter have a rule and hang it up by him and work by conceit what is it good for So to get a company of rules by the word of God to refine natural knowledge as much as we can and then to make no use of it in our lives it is to no purpose therefore when we have rules let us apply them In this those that have the true rule and apply it not are better then they that refuse to have the rule because as hath been said an Ignorant man that hath not the rule he cannot be good But a man that hath the rule and yet squares not his life by it yet he can bring the rule to his life there is a near converse between the heart and the brain such a man he hath the rule in his memory he hath it in his understanding and therefore there is a thousand times more hope of him that cares to know that cares to hear the word of God and cares for the meanes then of sottish persons that care not to hear because they would not do that they know and because they would not have their sleepy dull and drowsie conscience awaked there is no hope of such a one It should be our care to have right rules and in the application of them to make much of conscience that it may apply aright in directing and then in comfort If we obey it in directing it will witnesse and excuse and upon witnesse and excuse there will come a sweet Paradise to the soul of joy and peace unspeakable and glorious The last thing I observe from these words is this that The testimonie and witnesse of conscience is a ground of comfort and joy The reason of the joyning these two the witnesse of a good conscience and joy it is that which I said before in the description of conscience for conscience first admonisheth and then witnesseth and then it excuseth or accuseth and then it judgeth and executeth Now the inward execution of conscience is joy if it be good for God hath so planted it in the heart and soul that where conscience doth accuse or excuse there is alway execution there is alway joy or fear the affections of joy or fear alway follow If a mans conscience excuse him that he hath done well then conscience comes to be enlarged to be a Paradise to the soul to be a Jubile a refreshing to speak peace and comfort to a man For rewards are not kept altogether for the life to come hell is begun in an ill conscience and heaven is begun in a good conscience an ill conscience is a hell upon earth a good conscience is a heaven upon earth therefore the testimony of a good conscience breeds glorying and rejoycing Again conscience when it witnesseth it comforts because when it witnesseth it witnesseth with God and where God is there is his Spirit and where the holy Spirit is there is joy for even as heat followes the fire so joy and glorying accompany the Spirit of God The Spirit of glory Now when conscience witnesseth aright it witnesseth with God and God is alway cloathed with joy he brings joy and glory into the heart Conscience witnesseth with God that I am his And it witnesseth with my self that I have led my life thus Our rejoycing is the witnesse of our conscience It is not the witnesse of another mans conscience but my own other men may witnesse and say I am thus and thus but all is to no purpose if my own conscience tell me I am another man then they take me to be But when a man 's own conscience witnesseth for him there followes rejoycing A man cannot rejoyce with the testimony of another mans conscience because another man saith I am a good man c. unlesse there be the testimony of my own conscience Now it is a sweet benefit an excusing conscience when it witnesseth well Let us see it in all the passages of life that a good conscience in excusing breeds glorying and joy It doth breed joy in Life in Death at the day of judgement In life in all the passages of life in all estates both good and ill In good the testimonie of conscience breeds joy for it enjoyes the pleasures of this life and the comforts of it with the favour of God conscience tells the man that he hath gotten the things well that he enjoyes that he hath gotten the place and advancement that he hath well that he enjoyes the comforts of this life with a good conscience and all things are pure to the pure If he have gotten them ill conscience upbraids him alway and therefore he cannot joy in the good estate he hath If a man had all the contentments in the world if he had not the testimonie of a good conscience what were all What contentment had Adam in Paradise after once by sin he had fallen from the peace of conscience none at all A little that the righteous hath is better then great riches of the ungodly because they have not peace of conscience And so for ill estate when conscience witnesseth well it breeds rejoycing In false imputations and slanders and disgraces as here it was insinuated into the Corinthians by false teachers and those that followed them that St. Paul was so and so saith St. Paul You may say what you will of me My rejoycing is this the testimony of my conscience that I am not the man which they make me to be in your hearts by their false reports The witnesse of conscience is a good and sufficient ground of rejoycing in this case Therefore holy men have retired to their conscience in all times as Saint Paul you see doth here So Job his conscience bare him out in all the false imputations of his comfortlesse friends that were miserable comforters they laboured to take away his sincerity from him the chief cause of his joy Yeu shall not
take away my sincerity saith he you would make me an hypocrite and thus and thus but my conscience tells me I am otherwise therefore you shall not take away my innocency from me And in Job 31. 35. Behold it is my desire that the Almighty would answer me and that my adversaries would write a Book against me I would take it upon my shoulder I would take it as a crown unto me Here was the force of a good conscience in Jobs troubles that if his adversaries should write a book against him yet he would bind it as a crown about him And so David in all imputations this was his joy when they laid things to his charge that he had never done he takes this for his joy the comfort of his conscience So St. Paul he retires to his conscience and being raised up with the worthinesse of a good conscience he despiseth all imputations whatsoever he sets Conscience up as a flag of defiance to all false slanders and imputations that were laid against him as we see in the storie of the Acts and in this place and others saith he in one place I passe not for mans sentence I passe not for mans day man hath his day man will have his Judgment-seat and will get upon the Bench and judge me that I am such and such I care not for mans day there is another Judgement-seat that I looke unto and to the testimony of my Conscience My rejoycing is the witnesse of my Conscience Holie men have cause to retire to their own Consciences when they would rejoyce against false imputations so holy Saint Austin what saith he to a Donatist that wronged him in his reputation Think of Austin what you please as long as my Conscience accuseth me not with God I will give you leave to think what you will If so be that a mans Conscience cleares him he cares not a whit for reports because a good man looks more to Conscience then to fame therefore if Conscience tell him truth though fame lie he cares not much for he squares not his life by report but by Conscience Indeed he lookes to a good name but that is in the last place For a good man lookes first to God who is above conscience and then he lookes to Conscience which is under God and then in the third place he lookes to report amongst men And if God and his Conscience excuse him though men accuse him and lay imputations upon him this or that he passeth little for mans judgment so the witness of conscience it comforts in all imputations whatsoever Again it comforts in sicknesse Ezechias was sick what doth he retire unto Remember Lord how I have walked uprightly before thee he goes to his Conscience In sicknesse when a man can eate nothing a good Conscience is a continuall feast In sorrow it is a Musician A good Conscience doth not onely Counsell and advise but it is a Musician to delight It is a Physitian to heal It is the best Cordiall the best Physick all other are Physitians of no value Comforts of no value If a mans Conscience be wounded if it be not quieted by faith in the blood of Christ if he have not the Spirit to witnesse the forgivenesse of his sins and to sanctifie and inable him to lead a good life all is to no purpose if there be an evill Conscience the unsound body while it is sick it is in a kind of hell already Again take a man in any crosse whatsoever a good conscience doth bear out the Crosse it bears a man up alway because a good Conscience being a witnesse with God it raiseth a man obove all earthly things whatsoever there is no Earthly discouragement that can dismay a good Conscience because there is a kind of Divinitie in Conscience put in by God and it witnesseth together with God so that in all crosses it comforts So likewise in losses in want in want of friends in want of comforts in want of liberty what doth the witnesse of a good Conscience in all these In want of friends it is a friend indeed it is an inward friend a near friend to us Put the case that a man have never a friend in the world yet he hath God and his own conscience where there is a good conscience there is God and his holy Spirit alway In want of liberty in want of outward comforts he hath the comfort of a good conscience A man on his death-bed he sees he wants all outward comforts but he hath a good conscience And so in want of libertie when a man is restrained his heart is at liberty A wicked man that hath a bad conscience is imprisoned in his own Heart though he have never such libertie though he be a Monarch a bad Conscience imprisons him at home he is in fetters his thoughts make him afraid of Thunder afraid of every thing afraid of himself and though there be no body else to awe him yet his conscience awes him Where there is a conscience under the guilt of sin unrepented there is the greatest liberty in the world there is restraint for Conscience is the worst prison Where there is a good conscience there is an inward inlargement A good man in the greatest restraint hath liberty Paul and Silas Act. 16. in the dungeon in the hell of the dungeon in the worst place of the dungeon in the stocks and at the worst time of the day of the naturall day I mean at midnight and in the worst usage when they were misused and whipped with all they had all the discouragements that could be and yet they sang at midnight these blessed men Paul and Silas because their hearts were enlarged there was a Paradise in the very Dungeon As where the King is there is his Court so it is where God is God in the prison in the noysom dungeon by his Spirit so enlarged their hearts that they sang at midnight Where as if conscience be ill if it were in Paradise Conscience would fear as we see in Adam Saint Paul in prison was better then Adam in Paradise when he had offended God Adam had outward comforts enough but when he had sinned his conscience made him afraid of him from whom he should have all comfort it made him afraid of God and hide himself among the leaves alas a poore shift We see then conscience doth witnesse and the witness of it when it is good doth cause the soul to glory and rejoyce not onely in positive ills in slanders and crosses but in losses in want of friends in want of comforts in want of liberty And so for the time to come in evills threatned a good conscience is bold It feares no ill tidings Psalme 112. My heart is fixed my heart is fixed saith David wicked men are like the trees of the forrest Isay 7. Wicked Ahaz his heart did tremble and shake as the leaves with the wind The noise of fear
is alway in their eares an ill Conscience when it is mingled with ill newes when there are two feares together it must needs be a great fear And a good conscience when it hath laid up grounds of joy in life in the worst estate and condition of life then it makes use of joy in death for when all comforts are taken from a man when his friends cannot comfort him and all earthly things leave him then that conscience that hath gone along with him that hath been a Monitor and a witnesse all his life-time now it comes to speak good things to him now it comforts him now conscience is some body at the houre of death when nothing else will be regarded when nothing will comfort then conscience doth The righteous hath hope in his death as the Wise man saith Death is called the King of feares because it makes all afraid It is the terrible of terribles saith he Philosopher but here is a King above the King of feares a good conscience is above the King of feares death A good conscience is fo farre from being discouraged by this King of feares that it is joyfull even in death because it knowes that then it is near to the place where conscience shall be fully enlarged where there shall be no annoyance nor no grievance whatsoever Death is the end of misery and the beginning of happinesse therefore a good conscience is joyful in death And after death at the day of judgment there the witnesse of conscience is a wondrous cause of joy for there a man that hath a good conscience he looks upon the Judge his Brother he looks on him with whom he hath made his peace in his life-time before and now he receives that which he had the beginnings of before then he lifts up his head with joy and comfort So you see how the witnesse of conscience causeth glory and joy in all estates whatsoever in life in death after death it speaks for a man there it never leaves him till it have brought him to heaven it self where all things else leave a man Therefore how much should we prize and value the testimony and witnesse of a good conscience And what madnesse is it for a man to humour men and displease conscience his best friend Of all persons and all things in the world we should reverence our own conscience most of all Wretched men despise the inward witnesse of this inward friend this inward divine this inward Physician this inward Comforter this inward Counsellour It is no better then madnesse that men should regard that every thing else be good and clean and yet notwithstanding in the middest of all to have foul consciences But to answer an objection and to unloose some knots It may be said that when the Hearts of people are good yet there a good conscience concludes not alway for comfort VVhere there is faith in Christ and an honest life conscience should conclude comfort here is the Rule this I have obeyed therefore I should have comfort Now this we see crossed oft-times that Christians that live exact lives are often troubled in conscience how can trouble of conscience stand with joy upon the witnesse of conscience I answer the witnesse of Conscience when it is a good conscience it doth not alway breed joy It is because our estate is imperfect here and Conscience doth not alway witnesse out of the goodnesse of it sometimee conscience is misled and so sometimes good Christians take the errour of conscience for the witnesse of Conscience These things should be distinguished Conscience sometime in the best erres as well as gives a true witnesse If we take the errour of conscience for the witnesse of conscience there will come trouble of conscience and that deservedly through our own folly Now conscience doth erre in good men sometimes when they regard Rules which they should not or when they mistake the matter and doe not argue aright As for instance when they gather thus I have not grace in such a measure and therefore I have none I am not the Child of God What a rule is this This is the errour of conscience and therefore it must needs breed perplexitie of conscience A good conscience when it is right cannot witnesse thus because the Word doth not say thus Is a nullitie and an imperfection all one No there is much difference in the whole kind A nullitie is nothing an imperfection though it be but a little degree yet it is something This is the errour of conscience and from thence comes trouble of conscience which makes men reason ill many waies As for instance I have not so much grace as such a one hath and therefore I have no grace Now that is a false reasoning for every one hath his due measure If thou be not so great a rich man as the richest in the Towne yet thou mayest be rich in thy kind Again when conscience looks to the humour you are to live by faith and not by the humour of Melancholy When the Instrument of reason that should judge is distempered by melancholy it reasons from thence falsly Because melancholy perswades me that I am so therefore conscience being led by the humour of the body saith I am so Who bid thee live by humour thou must live by rule Melancholy may tell thee sometime when it is in strength that thou art made of glasse as it hath done some it will deceive thee in bodily things wherein sense can confute melancholy much more will it if we yield to it in matters of the soule it will perswade us that we are not the Children of God that we have not Grace and goodnesse when we have Again hence it is that conscience doth not conclude comfort in Gods Children because it looks to the ill and not to the good that is in them for there are those two things in Gods Children there is good and ill now in the time of temptation they look to the ill and think they have no good because they will not see any thing but ill They fix their eyes on the remainders of their rebellious lusts which are not fully subdued in them and they look wholly on them Whereas they should have two eyes one to look on that which is good that God may have glorie and they comfort Now they fixing their eyes altogether on that which is naught and because they doe not or will not see that which is good therefore they have no comfort because they suffer conscience to be ill led that it doth not its duty And conscience in good men it looks sometimes to that that it should not in others in regard of others It looks to the flourishing of wicked men and therefore it concludes Certainly I have washed my hands in vain since such men thrive and prosper in the world Psalme 37. and Psalme 73. VVho bade thee look to this and to be uncomfortable from thence that thy
greatest torment to those that have had their wills most in the world the more their conscience is silenced and violenced in this world the more vocal it shall be at the hour of death and the day of judgement Therefore judge who are the most miserable men in the world although they have never so much regard in the world besides those that have consciences but will not suffer them to work but with sensuality within them and by pleasing flattering speech of those without them they keep it down and take order that neither conscience within nor none other without shall disturbe them if they do they shall be served as Ahab dealt with Micaia These men that are thus at peace in sinful courses of all men they are most miserable they enjoy their pleasure here for a little time but their conscience shall torment them for ever and shall say to them as Reuben said to his Brethren I told you this before but you would not hearken to me and now you shall be tormented Conscience is an evil beast it makes a man rise against himself therefore of all men those that be disordered in their courses that neglect conscience and neglect the means of salvation that should awaken conscience they are the most miserable for the longer they go on the more they sink in sin and the more they sink in sin the more they sink in terrour of conscience if not now yet they shall hereafter If we desire therefore to have joy and comfort at all times let us labour to have a good conscience that may witnesse well And therefore let us every day keep an audite within doors every day cast up our accounts every day draw the blood of Christ over our accounts every day beg forgivenesse of sins and the Spirit of Christ to lead us that so we may keep account every day that we may make our reckonings even every day that we may have the lesse to do in the time of sicknesse in the time of temptation and in the time of death when we have discharged our Consciences before by keeping session at home in our own hearts This should be the daily practice of a Christian and then he may lay himself down in peace He that sleeps with a conscience defiled is as he that sleeps among wild beasts among adders and toades that if his eyes were open to see them he would be out of his wits He that sleeps without a good conscience he is an unadvised man God may make his bed his grave he may smite him suddenly therefore let us every day labour to have a good conscience that so we may have matter of perpetual joy A good conscience especially is an Evangelicall conscience for a legall good conscience none have that is such a conscience as acquits a man that he hath obeyed the law in all things exactly A legall compleat good conscience none have except in some particular fact there is a good Conscience in fact As the Heathen could excuse themselves they were thus and thus and God ministreth much joy in that But an Evangelical good Conscience is that we must trust to that is such a Conscience that though it knowes it self guilty of sin yet it knowes that Christ hath shed his blood for sinners and such a Conscience as by meanes of faith is sprinkled with the blood of Christ and is cleared from the accusations of sin There is an Evangelicall Conscience when by faith wrought by the Spirit of God in the hearing of the Gospell we lay hold upon the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ. And such is the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ that it pacifieth the conscience which nothing else in the world will doe the conscience without a full obedience it will alway stagger And that is the reason that Conscience confounds and confutes the Popish way of salvation by works c. Because the conscience alway staggers and feares I have not done works enough I have not done them well enough those that I have done they have been corrupt and mixed and therefore I dare not bring them to the Judgement-seat of God to plead them meritorious Therefore they do well to hold uncertainty of salvation because holding merit they must needs be uncertaiu of their salvation A true Christian is certain of his salvation because his conscience layes hold on the blood of Christ because the obedience whereby he claimes heaven is a superabundant obedience it is the satisfaction of Christ as the Apostle saith in that excellent place Heb. 9. 24. The blood of Christ which offered himself by the eternall Spirit that is by the God-head shall cleanse your consciences from dead works to serve the living God The blood of Christ that offered himself his humane nature by his divine to God as a sacrifice it shall purge your consciences from dead works The blood of Christ that is the Sacrifice the obedience of Christ in offering himself fully pacified God and answered the punishment which we should have indured for he was our surety The blood of Christ speaks better then the blood of Abel It speaks better then our sins Our sins cry vengeance but the blood of Christ cries mercy The blood of Christ out-cries our sins the guilty conscience for sin cries Guiltie guiltie hell Damnation wrath and anguish but the blood of Christ cries I say mercy because it was shed by our surety in our behalf his obedience is a full satisfaction to God Now the way to have a good conscience is upon the accusations of an evill conscience by the law to come to Christ our surety and to get our consciences sprinked by faith in his blood to get a perswasion that he shed his blood for us and upon that to labour to be purged by the Spirit There are two purgers the blood of Christ from the guilt of sin and the Spirit of Christ from the stain of sin and upon that comes a compleat good conscience being justified by the blood of Christ and sanctified by the Spirit of Christ. Therefore Christ came not by blood alone or by water alone but by water and blood by blood in justification by water in sanctification and holinesse of life Why do we alleadge this now for the Sacrament We speak of a good conscience which is a continual feast How comes a good conscience to be such a continual feast An Evangelicall conscience is a feast indeed because it feeds on a higher feast it feeds on Christ he is the Passeover Lambe as the Apostle applies it 1. Cor. 5. he is the Passeover slain for us and there is represented in the Sacrament his body broken and his blood poured out for our sins he came to feast us and we shall feast with him Hereupon if we bring repentance for our sins past and faith whereby we are incorporate into Christ then our consciences speak peace and as it is in 1 Pet. 5. the conscience makes a
is unsettled Again by terrours of conscience a double-minded man that will please God and yet be a worldling is unconstant in all his wayes If his eye were single then all his body would be light that is if a man had a single judgment to know what is right to know what in life and in death to stick to all would be single the judgment and intentions go together when a mans judgment is convinced of the goodnesse of spiritual things upon judgment followes intention When a man desires and resolves to serve God and to please him in all things then all the body and his affections are lightsome his affections and his outward man goes with a single eye A man that hath a false weak judgment and thereupon a false weak double intention his body is dark he hath a darksome conversation A double-minded man is unconstant in all his wayes Therefore we should labour for this simplicity in all our conversation Again we should the rather labour for this simplicity because it is part of the Image of God therein we resemble God in whom is no mixture at all of contraries but all is alike And as it resembles God so it bears us out in the presence of God and our own conscience as he saith here Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity c. Now God is greater then conscience A man that carries himself in simplicity and in an uniform even manner to God and to men that man hath comfort in his conscience and comfort before God And of all other sins the time will come that none will lie heavier on us then doubling both with men and with God when it will appear that we have not been the men that we carried our selves to be The reason is the more will there is in a sin and the more advisednesse the greater is the sin and the greater the sin is the greater the terrour of conscience and the greater that is the more fear and trembling before God that knowes conscience better then we do Now where there is doubling where a man is not one in his outward and inward man in his conversation to men when there is a covering of hatred and of ill affections with contrary pretences there is advisement there is much will and little passion to bear a man out to excuse him but he doth it as we say in coole blood and that makes dissimulation so grosse hecause it is in cold blood The more will and advisement is in any sin the greater it is so the aggravation of sin is to be considered and where temptations are strong and the lesse a man is himself so there is a diminution and a lesse aggravation as when a man is carried with passion with infirmitie or the like But usually when men double they plot David he plotted before and after his sin he doubled before and after his sin that was laid to his charge more then all that ever he did in his life He was a man after Gods own heart except in the matter of Uriah Why Because in that he plotted We see before what many shifts and windings and turnings he had to accomplish it He sends Uriah to Joab and gives him a letter to place him in the fore front and useth many projects And after it was committed how did he cover it and when it was hid from men he would have hid it from God a great while till God pulled him from his hiding place and made him confesse roundly Psalme 32. till he dealt directly with God My bones were consumed and my moisture was turned into the drought of summer He did it from men and would have hid it from God Therefore because there was much plotting in that sin that is set down as the onely blemish in all his life He was a man after Gods own heart except in the matter of Uriah Many other faults are recorded in the Booke of God of David but because there might be some excuse they were from infirmity or out of passion or oversight c. they are not so charged on him But this was with plotting it was in cold blood there was much will and advice in it therefore this is doted for a great sin And if it be in our dealing amongst men we should consider who it is we deceive who it is we go beyond in doubling who it is that we circumvent and who it is that doth it Are we not all Christians we are or should be all new creatures And who do we do it to to our fellow-members and to our brethren Therefore in 1. Thess. 4. when the Apostle disswades the Thessalonians from this from double dealing and double carriage to men saith he You are members one of another Let us consider who we are and whom we deal with Now there be some persons and some courses that are likelier and more prone to this doubling then others for want of this grace of simplicity Wherethere is strength of parts there is oft-times a turning of them against God and against our brethren where Grace hath not subdued strong Imaginations strong thoughts and brought all under it there is a turning of those parts against God and against our brethren And as it is in particular persons So some callings are more prone to double-dealing to this carriage that is not fair and commendable before God nor comfortable to the conscience As we see now adaies it reigns every where in every street We see amongst men of Trade Merchants and the like there is not that direct dealing they know one thing and pretend another So likewise in the Lawes there are many imputations I would they were false that men set false colours upon ill causes to gild a rotten post as we say to call white black and black white There is a woe in Esay pronounced against such as justifie hard causes such as call evill good and good evil it is a greater sin then it is usually taken for So go to any rank of men they have learned the Art of dissimulation in their course they have learned to sell wind to sell words to sell nothing to sell pretexts to overthrow a man by way of commendations and flattery such tricks there are which are contrary to this simplicity To cover hatred with fair words to kill with kindnesse as we say to overthrow a man with commendations To commend a man before another who is jealous of the vertues he commends him for To commend a man for valour before a coward to commend a man and thereby to take occasion to send him out of the way To commend a man and then to come in with an exception to marre all To cover revenge and hatred with fair carriage thereby to get opportunity to revenge such tricks there are abroad which oft-times discover themselves at length For God is just he will discover all these
hidden windings and turnings for plotting makes it more odious of all men doublers are most hateful How shall we come to attain this Grace to converse in the world in simplicity First of all take it for a rule though many think it no great matter to be a dissembler our nature is full of dissimulation since the fall the heart of man is unsearchable there is deep deceit in man Take a Child and see what dissimulation he learns it is one of the first things he learns to dissemble to double to be false We see the weakest creatures what shifts what windings and turnings they have to save themselves It is a vertue to be down-right for therein a man must crosse himself It is no thanks for a man to shuffle and to shift in the world nature teacheth this to dissemble to turn and wind c. A man need not to plough to have weeds the ground it self is a mother to them though it be a stepmother to good seed So we need not teach men to dissemble every man hath it by nature but it must be strength of grace that makes a man down-right Take that for a ground There are a company of sottish men that take it for a great commendation to dissemble and rather then they will be known not to dissemble in businesse they will puzzle clear businesse when a thing is fair and clear they will have projects beyond the Moon and so carry themselves in it as if they desired to be accounted couzeners and dissemblers Alas poor souls nature teacheth men to be naught in this kind well enough Know therefore whosoever thou art that studiest this Art of dissembling and doubling thy own nature is prone enough to this and the divel is apt to lead thee into it This being laid for a ground how may we carry our selves in the world in holy simplicity that may yield comfort to our conciences in life and in death First consider that the time will come that we shall deal with that that will not dissemble with us Let the cunningest dissembler hold out as long as he can he shall meet with sicknesse or with terrour of conscience he shall meet with death it self and with the judgement of God and hell torment although now he carry himself smoothly and dance in a net as we say and double with the world though he make a fair shew yet ere long thou shalt meet with that that will deal simply with thee that will deal plain enough with thee Thou shalt be uncased and laid open to the world ere long let us consider this We see a Snake or Serpent it doubles and winds and turns when it is alive till it be killed and then it is stretched forth at length As one said seeing a Snake dead and stretched out so saith he it behoved you to have lived So the Divel that great Serpent that ancient old Serpent he gets into the Snake into the wilely wit and makes it winde and turn and shift and shuffle in the world but then some great crosse comes or death comes and then a man is stretched out at length to the view of the world and then he confesseth all and perhaps that confession is sincere when it is wrung out by terrour of conscience then he confesseth that he hath deceived the world and deceived himself and laboured to deceive God also If we would have comfort in the hour of death labour we to deal plainly and directly and of all other sins as I said before remember this is that which will lie the heaviest on us as comming nearest the sin against the holy Ghost For what is the sin against the holy Ghost when men rush against their knowledge in malice to the truth known Where there is most knowledge and most will there is the greatest sin Now in lying and dissembling and double-dealing a man comes near to the sin against the holy Ghost for he knows that he doth ill he plots the ill that he knows and when there is plotting there is time to deliberate a man is not carried away by passion Consider the time will come when you will be uncased when you will be laid open and naked and then at that time of all sins this will lie heavy on thee thy dissembling in the world Therefore every one in his calling take heed of the sins of his calling among the rest of this one of double-dealing And therefore that we may avoid it the better labour for faith to live by faith What is the reason that men live by shifts and by doubling in the world They have not faith to depend upon God in good and plain down-right courses Men are ready to say If I should not dissemble and double and carry things after that manner hwo should I live why where is thy faith The righteous man lives by his faith and not by his shifts not by his wits God will provide for us are we not in Covenant with God Do we not professe to be Gods Children Do children use to shift No a child goes about to do his fathers will and pleasure and he knowes that he will maintain him It is against the nature of the Child of God as farre as he knowes himself to be a Child of God to use any indirect course any windings and turnings in his calling let us depend upon God as a Child depends on his father and of all others God will provide most for them that in simple honesty in plain downe-right dealing depend on him in doing good For God accounts it a prerogative to defend and maintain them that cast themselves on him he will be their wisdom that can deny their own wisdom and their own shifts by nature and in conscience labour to deale directly he will be wise for them and provide for them It is his prerogative to do so and not to suffer his Children to be deserted A little faith therefore would help all this and would make us walke in simplicity If we could make God our alsufficiencie once then we should walk uprightly before God and men For what makes men to double This certainly makes men to double they think they shall be undone if they be direct for if they deale directly they shall lose their liberty or their lives or their opportunity of gaining c. Well come what will deale thou directly and know this for a rule thou shalt have more good in Gods favour if thou be a Christian then thou canst lose in the World if upon grounds of conscience thou deal directly in what estate so ever thou art If thou be a Judge if thou be a Witnesse deale directly speake the truth If thou be a divine speak directly in Gods cause deale out the Word of God as in Gods presence come what will whatsoever thou losest in thy wealth or liberty c. thou shalt gain in God Is not all good in him what is all the
good we have is it not from him And the nearer you come to him the more your happinesse is increased the more you are striped of earthly things the more you have in God Hath not he mens hearts in his hands when you think you shall endanger your selves thus and thusby plain direct dealing without doubling if you be called to the profession of the truth c. Hath not he the hearts of men in his hands to make them favour you when he pleaseth In Pro. 10. He that walketh uprightly walketh boldly He that walketh uprightly not doubling in his courses he walketh safely God will procure his safety God that hath the hearts of men in his hand as the rivers of water he can turn them to favour such a man A mans nature is inclined to favour downe-right dealing men and to hate the contrary You see the three young men when they were threatened with fire come what will O King we will not worship the Image of Gold which thou hast set up They would be burned first What lost they by it Howsoever if we should lose as it is not to be granted that we canlose any thing by direct dealing For the earth is the Lords the fulnesse thereof and the hearts of men are his But suppose they doe yet they gain in better things in comfort of conscience and expectation and hope of better things Faith is the ground of courage and the ground of all other Graces that carrie a mans courage in a course of simplicitie in this World Therefore if we would walk simply and have our conversation in the world in this grace let us labour especially for faith to depend upon Gods promises to approve our selves to him to make him our last and chief end and our communion with him and to direct all our courses to that end This is indeed to set him up a Throne in our hearts and to make him a god when rather then we will displease him or his Vicegerent his Vicar in us which is conscience that he hath placed in us as a monitor and as a witnesse we will venture the losse of the creature of any thing in the world rather then we will displease that Vicar which he hath set in our hearts This I say is to make him a god and he will take the care and protection of such a man S. Paul here in all the imputations in all crosses in the world he retires home to himself to his own house to conscience and that did bear him out that in simplicity he had had his conversation in the world The next particular is In Sincerity The Apostle addes to simplicity this Godly sincerity and he may well joyn these two together for plainnesse and truth go together a plain heart is usually a true heart Doublenesse and hypocrisie which are contrary they alwaies go together he that is not plain to men will not be sincere to God Simplicity respects our whole course with men sincerity hath an eye to God though perhaps in matters and actions towards men Sincerity is alway with a respect to God and so it is opposed to hypocrisie a vice in Religion opposite to God Now this Sincerity that the Apostle speaks of it is A blessed frame of the soul wrought by the Spirit of God whereby the soul is set straight and right in a purpose to please God in all things and in endeavours answerable to that purpose and to offend him in nothing I make a plain description because I intend practice there may be some nicer descriptions But I say It is a blessed frame of the soul wrought by the sincere Spirit of God whereby the soul is set straight and right to purpose and to endeavour all that is pleasing in Gods sight and that with an intention to please God with an eye to God or else it is not sincerity It is such a disposition and frame of soul that doth all good that hates all ill with a purpose to please God in all with an eye to God And therefore it is called sincerity of God or godly sincerity and it is called so fitly because God is not onely the authour of it but God is the aim of it and the pattern of it for he is the first thing that is sincere that is simple and unmixed God is the pattern of it it makes us like to God and he is the aim of it A man that is sincere aimes at God in all his courses wherein he aimes not at God he is not sincere It comes from God and it looks to God For naturally we are all hypocrites we look to shewes therefore sincerity is from God And it is the sincerity of God especially because where this sincerity is it makes us aime at God in all things it makes us have respect to him in all things as the creature should have respect to the Creator the servant to the Master the sonne to the Father the Subject to the Prince The relations we stand in to God should make us aime at him in all things The Observation from hence is this A Christian that hopes for joy must have his conscience witnesse to him that his conversation is in the sincerity of God As the Apostle saith here This is the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversation c. Now to go on with this sincerity and lay it open a little Sincerity it is not so much a distinct thing as that which goes with every good thing Truth and sincerity it is not so much a distinct vertue and grace as a truth joyned to all graces As sincere hope sincere faith sincere love sincere repentance sincere confession It is a grace annexed to every grace it is the life and soul of every grace and all is nothing without it Therefore it behoves us to consider of it I say not so much a distinct thing from other graces as that which makes other graces to be graces without which they are nothing at all so much sincerity so much reality So much as we have not in sincerity we have nothing to God it is but an empty shew and will be so accounted In Philosophy you know that which is true onely hath a being and consistence all truth hath a being all falshood is nothing it is a counterfeit thing it is nothing to that it is pretended to be An Image is something but S. Paul calls it nothing because it is not that which it should be and which the Idolater would have it to be he would have it to be a God but it is nothing lesse All is nothing without sincerity Therefore let us consider of it And that we may the better consider of it let us look upon it in every action All actions are either Good Ill. Indifferent How is Sincerity discovered in good actions Sincerity is tryed in good actions many waies First of all a man that is
we should be able to offer willingly after this sort All things come of thee of thiue owne I have given thee So he humbled himself in thankfulnesse to God For ill actions a true sincere Christian before-hand he intends none he regards none in his heart Psal. 66. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayers His disposition is to regard none he is in league with none if he were his heart were false his conscience would tell him he were an hypocrite He is subject to infirmities but he doth not respect them he doth not regard them he intends not in his heart to live in them Again if he fall into any sin he is sincerely grieved for them his heart is tender and he sincerely confesseth them without guile Psal. 32. Blessed is the man in whose spirit there is no guile who when he sees he hath sinned he doth not guilefully cloak and extenuate his sin As we see Saul he had many evasions and excuses for himself A true Christian will lay open his sin with all the aggravations that his conscience tells him of As David saith what a foole and what a beast was I what an unthankful creature was I to sin against so many benefits and favours he will be ashamed and confounded in himself And of all sins a sincere Christian is most carefull to avoid his personal sins you may know sinceritie by that He that takes not heed to that which he is most inclined unto he shall be tripped in it An hypocrite and false-hearted man he doth good but it is with a purpose to be favoured in some sin wherein he strengtheneth himself he will doe something that God may be favourable to him in other things But a true sincere Christian though he be inclined by temper of body or by his calling or by the former custome of his unregenerate life to some sin more then another and he hath not shaken some sin wholly off he hath not purged himself wholly of the dregs of it but he findes still a propensenesse in his nature to it yet as far as he is sincere he gets strength especially against that A false-hearted man favours himself especially in those sins and will swell if he be found out in them he will not bear a reproofe But a Christian that is sincere that intends amendment that intends to be better he would reform his heart if it be amisse and is willing to be discovered in his most particular and personall sins that he is prone to We may trie our selves by this not onely by hating sin in generall and at large but how we stand affected especially to those particular sins we are most prone to sincerity as it hates all wicked waies so it hates those sins that are most sweet that we are most prone to as well as any other nay more then any other because those especially indanger the soul. A Child of God will abstain from all evill he will be carefull not onely that others abstain from sin but he will abstain from sin himself most of all Noysome things we hate them alwaies but we hate them most when they are nearest us As a Toade we hate it a farre off much more when it is neare so a sincere Christian hates sin most in his own breast Now because sincerity hath an eye to God I must hate all sin as well as any or else I am not sincere A man that hath the point of his soule to God-ward he will hate all manner of ill little ills as well as great because all sin agrees in this all sin is against God it is contrary to the mind of God and all sin is pernicious to the soule all sin is against the pure Word of God and considering it is so therefore I must hate all sin if I hate any because God hates all and all sin is contrary to the Image of God and not onely contrary to the Image of God but contrary to the revealed will of God contrary to my soules comfort contrary to communion with God and contrary to the peace of my conscience those regards come in every sin every sin hinders that Again where the soule and conscience is sincere there will be a special care for the time to come of the sins we have been overtaken with all So we see how this sincerity may be tryed in abstaining from evill as well as in the good we do For actions that are of a more common nature that in themselves are neither good nor ill but as the doer is and as the doer stands affected a true Christian may be tryed by them thus For the actions of his calling though they be good in their kind yet they be not religious thus he stands affected if he be sincere he doth them as Gods work Common actions are as the doer is affected A sincere man considers what he doth as Gods work he is eommanded to serve God in his calling as well as in the Church and therefore he will not doe it negligently For cursed is he that doth the work of the Lord negligently He will not do it falsely he will not prophane his calling I will not prostitute my calling to serve my lust or to serve my gain doth not God see it is not he the authour of my calling is it not his work saith conscience Yes and therefore he doth common actions with an eye to God and so he makes them good and religious actions For the Grace of God is a blessed Alcumist where it toucheth it makes good and religious though the actions be not so in their own nature it raiseth the actions it elevates them higher then themselves It makes the actions of our calling that are ordinary actions to be holie when they are done with an eye of sincerity to God As Saint Paul saith the very servant serves God in serving his master And so for actions that we account most indifferent as recreations and liberty to refresh our selves a sincere man considers of them as a liberty bought to him by the blood of Christ and considers himself in the presence of God And therefore whatsoever he doth whether he eate or drink c. he still useth his refreshings as in the presence of God and doth all as in the sight of God His conversation that is his whole course whatsoever he doth is sincere with an eye to God He knowes his corruption is such that it most watcheth him in his liberties for the more lawful a thing is the more we are in danger to be intangled in it In excesse in open ills there is not so much danger as in things that seeme indifferent lawfull recreations c. Recreations and such things are lawfull but to spend whole nights unthriftily basely scandalously this way it is not onely against Religion but against civility in a civill mans judgement it is a scandall to the place and person
Therefore he that hath any truth of grace in him he will look to himself and look to God in the most free actions of all You see then how we may judge of our sincerity whatsoever we do A sincere Christian stands thus affected in some measure in some degree in the good he doth in the ill he abstaines from whatsoever it be he thinks he hath to deale with God Now to stir us up to this blessed state to labour for this frame of soul to be sincere to have our conversation in sincerity what needs be added more then this that without it all is nothing all our glorious performances are meer abominations without sincerity God will say you did it not to me you did it for vain-glory you did it for custome or out of education for vain and by-respects and not to me and do you look for a reward of me you did it not for conscience for conscience alway looks to God and what we do not in conscience and obedience to God in our generall or particular calling it stands not on our reckoning with God it is as good as if it were not done in regard of God and of the life to come You have your reward saith Christ. It is no matter what your respects be here if you carry your selves carefully in your place to have the credit of men to gain the favour of men you have your reward Will you looke for a reward from God when what you did you did it to the world What a pittifull thing is this that a man should doe many things many years together and yet do nothing that may further his day of account because it was not done out of conscience of his duty his conversation was not in sincerity to God Now if we have not truth we have nothing in Religion Saint Paul saith as I said before Of an Idol It is nothing why it is a piece of wood or a piece of Gold the materialls of it is something But it is nothing to that which it should be If a man be not true in Religion he is nothing in that he is a true hypocrite but a false Christian. He is nothing in Christianity he is something in hypocrisy but that something is nothing All the shewes in the World and all the flourishes they are nothing What is the reason that excellent Clerks men of excellent parts die comfortlesse many times VVhy God is not beholding to them for all that they did they sought their own praise As the Prophet Isay saith When you fasted did you fast to me When you did good works did you do them to me may God say there was no truth in it so much simplicity so much comfort sincerity is all that we can come to in this world perfection we cannot attain to Christ is perfection for us Truth is all that we can reach to and without that all is nothing therefore we ought to regard it especially Again on the other side this is a great encouragement to be sincere to be true-hearted in all our courses and actions because it gives acceptance to whatsoever we doe and it is that by which God values us God values us not by perfection not by glorious shewes but by what we have in truth So much truth so much worth A little pearl is worth a great deale of rubbish A little sincerity because it is Gods owne creature it is the sincerity of God it is wrought by him it is his stuffe There is an almighty power to work truth in us for by nature we are all false God gives to some men to carry themselves more civilly then others but it is nothing worth except God change a man by grace because God accepts us according to sincerity God values us by truth so much truth so much esteem of the God of truth And where this sincerity is God beares with many infirmities As in marriage the husband that is discreet that knowes what belongs to marriage if the heart of the wife be true though she have many women like infirmities he passeth by them as long as the conjugall knot is kept unviolate So a Christian if his heart be true that he looks to God in all things though he have many infirmities God passeth by them As we see in Asa how many faults had he committed he trusted in the Physitians he used the Prophet hardly and many other faults and yet it is said that his heart was upright all his daies because he had truth in him It was in passion that he did this or that otherwise So Hezechias although he had many infirmities yet he could say that he had walked uprightly before God and God did well esteeme him for it And when he speakes of those that were to come to the Passeover Be mercifull to those that prepare their hearts those that have true hearts though they have many weaknesses Now if the heart be false though a woman have many vertues yet if she want the main if she have a false heart to her husband what is all the rest So the soule that is married to God that hath sweet communion with God if the heart and soul be naught what are all the shewes in the world they are nothing Let us take it to heart therefore and labour to approve our hearts and souls to God in all that we doe more then our lives and outward conversations to the world Let them think what they will so God approve of our hearts and intentions and purposes we are not to passe what the world judgeth as Saint Paul saith of himself Again this should incourage us to labour for sincerity and truth because wheresoever that is there is a growing to perfection To him that hath shall be given If we order our conversation aright as the Psalmist saith and labour to please God in all things the more we doe the more we shall have grace to do and the more we have the more we shall have to him that hath shall be given that is he that truly hath and doth not seeme to have but hath not indeed that seemeth to have goodnesse and hath none indeed that which he hath shall be taken from him A true Christian is alway on the mending hand it is a blessed prerogative he is alway mending and bettering by Gods blessing For where God gives in truth if it be but a little if it be but a grain of mustard-seed if it be true he will cherish it till it come to be a tree he will adde grace to grace one degree of grace to another Where there is truth it is alway honoured with growth It is not onely a sign of truth but where truth is there will be an endeavour of growth it is a prerogative where God bestowes truth he will alwaies adde the grace of growth though not at all times alike yet if Christians sometimes do not grow their not growing and their failings shame
them and makes them grow more afterward and recover their former backwardnesse A true Christian is alway on the mending hand An hypocrite growes worse and worse alway till he be uncased altogether and turned into hell These and such like considerations may stirre us up to labour to have a conversation in simplicity and godly sincerity Now how shall we come to carry our selves in sincerity that we may have comfort in all estates That we may carry our selves in sincerity First we must get a change of heart our nature must be changed for by nature a man aimes at himself in all things and not at God A man makes himself his last end he makes something in the world either profits or pleasures c. the term that he looks unto therefore there must be a change of heart a man must be a good man or else he cannot be a sincere man Such as we are such our actions will be therefore we cannot be sincere till we have our hearts changed No man can aim at Gods glory but he that hath felt Gods love in himself therefore as a particular branch of that labour to get assurance of the love of God in Jesus Christ for how can we endeavour to please him unlesse we love him and how can we love him unlesse we be perswaded that he loves us in Christ Therefore let us stablish our hearts more and more in the Evidences of his love to us and then knowing that he loves us we shall love him and labour to please him in all things These are grounds that must be laid before we can be sincere to get assurance of Gods love to us in the pardon of our sins Our conscience must be purged from dead works to serve the living God as the Apostle saith that is we cannot serve God to our comfort till our consciences are sprinkled with the blood of Christ which assures us of the pardon of our sins Therefore saith Zachary We are redeemed that we might serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse before him all the dayes of our life So that unlesse a man be redeemed he cannot serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse before him all the daies of his life that is he cannot serve God in sincerity For who will labour to please his enemy Therefore the Papists maintain hypocrisie when they say we ought not to be perswaded of the love of God for then we ought to be hypocrites for how shall we seek him with the losse of favour and of credit and of life it self if we know not that his favour will stand us in stead if we lose these things for him Again that we may be sincere let us labour to mortifie all our earthly affections to the world for how can we be sincere when we seek for honours and pleasures and riches and not for better things Therefore we must know that there is more good to be had in truth in a down-right Christian profession then in all worldly good whatsoever And if we be hypocrites in our profession there is more ill in that then in any thing in the world This will make us sincere when we can be perswaded that we shall get better things by being sincere in Religion then the world can give us or take away from us For why are men insincere and false-hearted Because they think not Religion to be the true good they think it is better to have riches then to have a good mind these things therefore must be mortified and a man must know that the life of a Christian is incomparably the best life though it be with losse of liberty yea with the losse of life it self Simon Magus grew to false affections in Religion because he thought to have profit by it So the Pharisees they had naughty hearts and therefore they had no good by Religion No man can profit by Religion so long as his heart is naught so long as there is some Idol in his heart A good Christian had rather have a large heart to serve God and rather grow in the Image of God to be like him then to grow in any thing in the world and that makes him sincere out of a good judgment because Christian excellency is the best excellency incomparably For he knowes well what all else will be ere long what will all do good riches honours friends what good will they do in the hour of death There is nothing but grace and the expression of it in the whole conversation that will comfort us therefore he undervalues all things in the world to sincerity and a good conscience Again that we may have our conversation in sincerity let us labour in every thing we do to approve our selves to the eye of God We see the Scripture every where shewes that this hath made Gods Children consciencious in all their courses even when they might have sinned not only securely but with advantage What kept Joseph from committing folly with his Mistresse Shall I do this and sin against God Gen. 39. And so Job in chap 31. he shewes what awed and kept him from ill doing in vers 3. Doth not he see my wayes and account all my steps this was it that kept him in awe So the Church of God Psal. 44. being in great distresse they kept themselves from Idolatry and from the contagion of the times wherein they lived upon what ground you shall see in vers 21. If we had done thus and thus shall not God search it out for he knowes the very secrets of the heart So a Christian being perswaded of the eye of God upon him it makes him sincere The eye of God being Ten thousand times brighter then the Sun he being light it self he made the heart and he knowes all the turnings of the heart The consideration of this will make us sincere in our closets in our very thoughts for they all lie naked and open to his view What is the reason that men practise secret villainy secret wickednesse and give themselves to speculative filthinesse because they are atheists they forget that they are in the eye of God who sees the plots and projects of their hearts and the nets that they have laid for their brethren Therefore David brings them in saying Tush God sees us not And that is the reason they are unconscionable in their desires in their hearts in their secret thoughts It is from a hidden Atheisme For if we did consider that the eye of God sees us in all our intents and actions and sees us in what manner we do all and to what end that he sees every action with the circumstances the aimes and ends if the heart did well ponder this it would prevent a great deal of evil Conscience is the witnesse of our conversation a witnesse that will keep us from offending If there were a witnesse by and that witnesse were a great person a Judge c. it would keep us in our
was he walked not according to carnal wisdome as he saith afterwards where be your Nullifidians then that are of all beliefs and yet are of no belief that fashion themselves to all Religions And if they be of the true Religion yet it is their wisdome to conceal it S. Paul did not so But I shall have occasion to touch that in the negative part afterward not in fleshly wisedome c. Again where he saith My conversation hath been thus in the world He means in this life my conversation here hath been sincere I will give you a touch on that though it be not the main aim here yet notwithstanding it may well be touched That We must while we live here in this world converse in simplicity and sincerity We must not turn it off to live as we list subtilly politickly and carnally and then think to die well No we must live soberly righteously and justly in this present world Tit. 2. Do you think to begin to live well when you are gone hence No that is a time of reward and not a time of work This world is Gods Work-house here you must work This is Gods field here you must labour This is Gods Sea here we must saile here we must take pains we must sweat at it here we must plow and sowe if ever we will reap Doest thou think to carry thy self subtilly to have thy own ends in every thing here and then when death comes a Lord have mercy upon me shall serve for all No thou must converse as a Christian while thou livest here in this world in simplicity and sincerity God must have honour here by thee thou must have a care of thy salvation here Doest thou think to have that in another world which thou doest not care for here Doest thou think to have glory in another world which thou didst not think of here Doest thou think to reap in another world that which thou didst not sowe here Let us in this world stand for the glory of God openly and boldly and for the example of others for the exercise of our own graces A true Christian hath his conversation in sincerity in this world The more too blame the world then to deprave their dealing Why Because they are lights in the world and they serve the world to good purpose if the world would take benefit by them they shine in the world to lead them the way to heaven But the world is willing to let them go to heaven alone if they will But if the carriage of Gods Children be like S. Pauls as it is true for they are all of one disposition they converse in simplicity and sincerity wheresoever they are wicked slanderous malicious depraving persons are to blame that lay to their charge hypocrisie and this and that when it is nothing so They deserve well of the wicked unthankful world and God upholds the World for their sakes When the righteous are exalted the City rejoyceth saith Solomon Because wheresoever they live they live not onely in simplicity and sincerity but they live fruitfully the City the whole community all the people are the better They make the times and the places the better wherein they live Because a good man is a publike good The Spirit of God when it makes a good man it puts him out of himself and gives him a publick affection it teacheth him to deny himself it teacheth him to love others it teacheth him to imploy and improve all that is in him that is good for the service of God and of men to serve God in serving men in the place he lives in Therefore malicious and devillish is the world to deprave such kind of men as live in the world in simplicity and sincerity that serve God and the world by all the means they can Our Conversation hath been in simplicity and sincerity in the world But more abundantly to you-ward Why was it in hypocrisie to others and in sincerity to them onely No that is not the meaning but thus that wheresoever he had lived in the world in what estate soever he was he carried himself in simplicity and sincerity but to you I have made it more evident then to any other Why because he had lived longer with them and they were such as he was a Father unto in Christ therefore saith he I have evidenced my simplicity and sincerity more abundantly to you then to any other Whence we may observe That A sincere Christian is best where he is best known It is a note of a truly good and sincere man to be best where he is best known as I touched when I opened the words It is otherwise with many their carriage abroad is very plausible but follow them home what are they in their families they are Lions in their houses What are they in their retired courses and carriage they do not answer the expectation that is raised of them abroad they never pray to God c. those that know them best will trust them least It is not so with a Christian my conversation in the world hath been good wheresoever it hath been but among you with whom I have conversed more familiarly who have seen my daily carriage and course of life among you my conversation was best of all It is a note of a man that is sincere that the more he is seen into the more he shines The godly are substantially good and therefore where they are best known they are best approved For Christians they are not painted creatures that a little discovery will search them to the bottom and then shame them they are not gilded but gold and therefore the more you enter into them the more metall you shall find still They have a hidden treasury the more you search them the more stuffe you shall have still their tongues are as fined silver and their heart is a rich treasury within them A Christian he labours for a broken heart still he labours to get new grace and new knowledge of the Word of God still and the more you converse with him the more you see him the more you shall approve and love him if you be good as he is therefore saith the Apostle I have carried my self well to all but especially to you with whom I have lived longer Therefore as we would have an evidence of our sincerity which is the best evidence that we can have in this world that we may be able to say that we are sincere and true Christians which is better then if a man could say he were a Monarch that he were the greatest man in the World let us labour to carry our selves in our courses to those that know us best and in our most retired courses like to Christians And not to put on the fashion of Religion as men put on their garments their best garments when they go abroad and so to make good things serviceable to our purpose
so great a people as was committed to his charge God was so well pleased with his petition that he gave him wisdome and wealth and honour too Make this Use of it Let us consider what relation we stand in in what ranck God hath set us let us consider what good we are advantaged to do by the place we are in what helps we have to do it and what mischiefs and inconveniences may come and let every man in his place and standing consider what good he may do and what evil he may avoid and let us go to God for wisdome He that is a Magistrate let him do as Solomon did desire God above all things to give him wisdome to rule as he should that God would give him a publick heart for a publick place and he will do it And those that in their families would have wisdome to go in and out before them let them go to God for wisdome that they may avoid the snares that are incident to family-government distrustfulnesse worldlinesse unfaithfulnesse in their particular calling And so for personal wisdome to guide and manage our own persons let us desire wisdome of God to know the hidden abominations of our own hearts the deceits and subtilties of our own hearts which is out of measure deceitful To know our particular sins to know what hurts us and to know how to avoid it and how to carry our selves in our particular wayes to order our conversation aright every way We see here S. Paul led his life and conversation by that wisdome as it was needfull for him so he had it and we must go all to the same spring for it we must go to God And we must know that God will not onely make us wise to salvation that he will not onely give us wisdome in things that meerly concern heaven but the same love the same care that gives us wisdome that way will give us wisdome in our particular callings to take every step to heaven the same Spirit of God doth all He gives us grace necessary to salvation and he gives us grace likewise for the leading of a Christian life Therefore it is an abominable conceit to distinguish Religion from Policy and Government as if the reasons of Religion were one and the reasons of State were another and as if these were distinguished one against another it is an abominable Atheistical conceit for the same heavenly Spirit of God that reveales the mysteries of salvation reaveales likewise to men the mysteries of State Christ hath the keyes of heaven of the mysteries of God and he hath the keyes of all earthly policy whatsoever He hath the greater hath he not the lesse Doth he guide us by his Spirit in heavenly mysteries and then for matters of Policy and Government of States and Common-Wealths are we to be guided by the Devil by devillish carnal wisdome No he gives all wisdome in its due place even wisdome for common things Therefore consider when men will not be ruled by God by wisdome from above in the regiment and government of their lives how fearfully and shamefully they miscarry Partly by reason of the accidents of this life and the variety of businesse You know wisdome as it governs our life about the things of this world it deales with things unstable uncertain and vain as Solomon saith they continue not long in the same state therefore if a man have not a better wisdome then his own he shall be mightily to seek Partly because of the imperfection of his wisdome the things are imperfect and the wisdome without it be guided from heaven is much to seek oft-times Take the wisest man when he leaves heavenly wisdome once as we see in Solomon he thinks to strengthen himself by combination with Idolaters that were near to him did he not miscarry fouly And hath not God made the wisest man that ever were in the world exemplary for grosse miscarriages because they had too much confidence in their parts and neglected the guidance of God in the course of their lives Who was more fool then Achitophel who was a greater fool then Saul and then He●…od The Emperours had great conceits Constantine the Great a good Christian Emperour he had a conceit if he could stablish a new Seat at Bizantium Constantinople it was called afterwards He would seat the Empire there he would rule Rome by a Vice Roy by another and he would be there himself and rule all the Eastern parts of the world A goodly conceit he had of it but this proved the ruine both of East and West For hereupon when he was absent from Rome the Pope of Rome he came up and grew by little and little The Emperours they thought they did a great matter to advance the Pope who was Christs Vicar a spiritual man they consulted with Carnal wisdome and he came and over-topped them and eat them out and out-grew them as the Ivie doth the tree that nourisheth it The Pope never left growing till he had over-topped them So men when they go to carnal wisdome and neglect prayer and neglect the counsel of God and the wisdome of God to guide them in the matters of this life as well as for the life to come they come to miscarry grosly Therefore let us take S. James his counsel We all lack wisdome let us every day beg it of God desire God every day that he would Make our way plain before u in our particular goings in and out that he would discover to us what is best And here I might take occasion to reprove sharply the Atheisme of many that would be accounted great States men that bring all Religion to reasons of State They bring Heaven under earth and clean subvert and overthrow the order of things and therefore no wonder if they miscarry They care not what Religion it be so it may stand with Peace whether it be false or true if it may stand with the peace of the State all is well Give me leave to touch it but in a word It is a most abominable conceit Religion is not a thing so alterable Religion is a commanding thing it is to command all other things and all other things serve that And it is not a matter of fancy and opinion as they think out of their atheisme to keep men in awe It is stablished upon the same ground as that there is a God that upon the same ground that we say God is upon the same ground we may say Religion is It teacheth us that that God is to be observed and that Christ is equal to him as God and inferiour to him in regard of his humanity c. So that there is the same ground that there is a God and that there is a Religion And so again by the same reason that there is one God by the same reason there is but one Religion And it is not any Religion that will serve the turn For
an oath which is the sign of all truth between man and man Their abuse of the Sacrament too they have abused all Gods signs and all to ill purposes to swear with private reservations whereas the old principle of Isidore is constantly and everlastingly true Conceive the oath as you will it must be understood as he to whom it is sworn understands it and not as he that swears Therefore undoubtedly Popery must fall every day and judicious men though they be not gracious they see it must fall It should make us hate them deeply because the courses they take are the overthrow of society this abuse of expressions of that excellent gift that God hath given namely the tongue whereby what is in my heart another man may understand and also writing whereby a man may convey his mind many hundred miles Now these excellent gifts that God hath given for society for men to turn them against God and against Society it must needs provoke the Majesty of God And as it is a sin against Society so it is a sin that is punished by society All men must needs hate them that do so those that have no other argument against Popery they have argument enough from their equivocation Those that are not subtile-headed to see other things when they look to the Gun-powder Treason and to their equivocation there is argument enough for any plain simple man to hate Popery Therefore let us be like our selves in all that we do to God or to men I had occasion to presse the Point when I spake of simplicity therefore I will not dwell further on it I write no other thing then what you read or acknowledge He means they acknowledged it in their heart and conscience What I write of my conversation that which you have heard it is no other then that you read and you acknowledge it too for they had felt the power of his Ministery Whence first of all observe That Where the Minister converseth by the Grace of God and not by carnal wisdome God is not onely wise in him but for him He is gracious and good for him he gives him successe in the hearts of others When a man is led by the Spirit of God the same Spirit that guides him in speaking guides his auditors in hearing and gives a sweet and a strong report in their hearts of what he saith What I write of my self you acknowledge that my Conversation hath been in sincerity and not onely my conversation but my Doctrine every way you have acknowledged me the same Spirit that guided me to do so wrought in you an acknowledgment of it in your conscience Therefore if you would have the speeches of the Ministers to take effect you should desire God not only to guide them in what they are to say but likewise with the same Spirit to work in the hearers and when the same Spirit works in both what a glorious successe is there As we see here S. Paul carried himself in his own person and in his Ministery graciously in simplicity and sincerity for it is meant of both he taught simple doctrine without any glozing without any far-fetched beauty from wit or eloquence or the like and he looked to God in his life and conversation and as God guided him so he stirred them up to pray for him as the Word and Prayer they are alway joyned together the Word had a report in their hearts as it had in his own What I speak you acknowledge c. It is not for us to deliver our minds and there an end but when we are to speak we ought before-hand to look up to God and desire his Spirit to be effectuall in us that we may speak in the wisdome and grace of the Spirit and likewise that it may be effectual to them that they may acknowledge it that they may feel in their soules and consciences the power of what we speak and feel in our selves So you see the truth of what I said before That God was not onely wise in S. Paul but he was gracious and good for him in those that he was to deal with And there is the glory of a good Minister that is a humble man and denies carnal wisdome That God will delight to honour himself by using him as an instrument to do good to others God usually will give report of what he saith to the hearts of others Proud men that speak what they speak by carnall projects and carnall wisdome and seek themselves usually the hearts and consciences of other men give no report to them For man naturally is proud and when he sees that the most excellent man in the world hath by-aimes he will not be gone beyond by him say what he will If a man set up sailes for himself he doth not win upon others But he that discovers himself that he seeks the glory of God and the good of the soules that he deales with and denies himself in that which otherwise he could do that useth not the strength of parts which he hath because he would discover the simple Word which is most Majestical in simplicity God seeing this simple and sincere desire he honours and crownes the Ministery of such a man with successe in the hearts of the people Therefore saith S. Paul here I write no other thing concerning my self but God hath honoured me with the issue of it in your hearts likewise that you acknowledge what I say You acknowledge Acknowledge is a deep word it is more then to know it is more then a conviction of the judgment it is when the heart and affections yield when the inward Spirit upon experience yields I feel and acknowledge this is true it is more I say then knowledge The next point then that I observe is this That God doth give his Children that love him in simplicity and sincerity a place in the conscience of men He gives them place in the consciences of those that have conscience for there are some that have no science and therefore they have no conscience as Popish superstitious persons c. But those that deal faithfully that live in the Church and see the glory of God God gives them a place in the conscience of those that they live amongst and deal with And they seek more to have place in their conscience then in their fancy then in their opinion and Imagination and humour A carnal man so he may have the humour the fancy and Imagination of his hearers delighted he regards not what inwardly they may feel from him he regards not how he warms their hearts and conscience and how they acknowledge him within and therefore perhaps if he have a good word for the present Oh a glorious man c. it is all he cares for but he hath no place in their conscience because they feel him not working there and he hath no aime to be there A good man seeks to edifie and build up
why do you not take them Your justifying them in the end will be little to your comfort if you condemne them all your life against your conscience for afterwards it is not so much a work of Grace for you to justifie good courses and to acknowledge good things in most men it is not so much a work of Grace as it is the evidence of the thing and when the cloud of sensuallity and the fume that riseth out of worldly pomp is taken away then the naturall conscience comes to see clearly better things not from the love of them not that it is changed and transformed with the love of them but God so discovers it to them to make them justifie his sentence of Damnation the more he discovered to them better courses then they tooke it shall justifie their damnation We are deceived oft-times in mens ends they acknowledge good waies and good courses and on the other side some of Gods good Children they pronounce the contrary but let none trust to that good courses are so evident and clear that if men be not Atheists they must acknowledge them especially when the impediment that hindred them before is taken away You must acknowledge therefore acknowledge now not in your hearts onely but acknowledge them in laying aside your opposition in casting away your weapons and by joyning with them in good courses set not your hands against good courses and good persons set your tongues to speak for their good Take Gods part stand on Gods side it is the best side if you allow it onely hereafter it will be a barren allowance it will be no comfort to you it often falls out to be so O beloved whatsoever courses else you take they will sink and fall they will sink first in your own soules and none will be readier to condemn you then your own conscience when God shall make you wiser you will censure your selves What folly was it how was I deluded with this ill company and with that as wicked company is wondrous powerfull to infuse ill conceits as the Spies they infused discouragement by the Oration they made of the Giants in the Land c. they altered the mind of the whole people It is a dangerous thing to converse with naughty persons the Devil slides together into the soul with their carnal reasoning and alters the judgement for the time that they are not so wise as conscience would make them and as they might be if they did not hearken to the hissing of the Serpent First if you take any conrse but good your own conscience is by and will be the first that will find you out For sin is a base thing a work of darknesse it must be discovered it is a madnesse it must be manifest to all men Popery and all their slights must be discovered and the Whore must lie naked and stink nothing shall be so abominable as Popery and Popish persons ere long Truth will get the victory in the consciences of people and good courses will get approbation Therefore if you approve them not first you shall be unhappy in this life and everlastingly hereafter this shall be the principal torment in hell that you saw better courses then you lived in and you would not give your judgments leave to lead you There was something better Conscience told you but you gave way to your lusts and to the insinuations of wicked men instruments of the Devill rather then to the motions of conscience and of Gods Spirit that awakened conscience This I say will more ease your torment in hell that you might have done otherwise if you had had Grace but you willingly betrayed your selves you silenced conscience you willingly condemned your selves in the things that you acknowledged were naught you did that which you condemned and you did not practise that which your judgment did allow God will have little to do at the day of Judgment with most men in the Church to condemn them for alas their own consciences will condemn them the consciences of all will condemn them that their courses were naught And that makes wicked men so cruel especially if they get into place of authority they know they are not allowed they are not acknowledged in the consciences of those that are judicious thèy know they are condemned there and they fret and fume and think to force another opinion of themselves upon others but it will not be and that makes them that they cannot endure the sight of them that are of a contrary judgment they think themselves condemned in the hearts of such men and that makes them cruel Especially those that have some illumination they cannot abide their own conscience to take its course they cannot abide to see themselves They think themselves condemned in the judgment of others and those that think they have the prejudice of others that their courses are naught they carry an implacable hatred it is a desperate case Hast thou knowledge that they think thy courses naught and on good ground and doest thou hate them and hate to be reformed thy self will this alway hold out No as I said before truth is eternal that which thou acknowledgest must continue it will be acknowledge it will get the victory at the day of Judgment by Men and Angels truth will have the victory it is eternal Take that course for the present that thou mayest be good for the present and hold out to the end as we see the Corinthians here You do acknowledge me and you shall acknowledge me to the end and testifie to the world that you acknowledge the best things and the best persons that you may be one with them by love here and in heaven for ever hereafter I trust you shall acknowledge to the end To shut up this point Let me seal it up with this Make this Quaere to your selves what estate you are in when you come to the Communion whether it be well with you or no if not why will you live any whit at all in the uncertainty of our lives and the shortnesse of them and the danger of the wrath of God when there is so little between you and eternal Damnation in a doubtful in a dangerous estate Are you resolved to be naught then No if you be not Atheists you will not say so Do you intend to be good and come and make your Covenant with God Yes why then resolve to be so A good conscience looks not onely back to sins past to repent of them but for the time to come it resolves to please God in all things and to hold out to the end Some make a mockery of the holy things of God one part of the year they will be holy a rotten foolish affection of people that are Popish In Lent they will use a little austerity O they will please God wondrously but before and after they are devils incarnate so they make that part of the
Christ. The best things are behind our chief rejoycing is behind our rejoycing now is our hope that we shall rejoyce then The Corinthians were S. Paul's joy now because he knew they should be his main rejoycing then If we rejoyce in any thing now let it be that our names are written in heaven in the testimony of our conscience that we are Gods that our hearts are wrought on that we have something that Christ will acknowledge when he sees his stamp and Image on us when he shall look on us and see his own Image upon our hearts there will be matter of joy in that day There will be joy in our selves and joy in all the blessed instruments that are under Christ the Ministers they shall rejoyce likewise in us and all of us shall joyn in joying in Christ all shall meet there For their joying in S. Paul and he in them it was that Christ was theirs And Christ shall come as it is in 2 Thess. 4. to be glorified in his Saints not onely in himself but in his believing members for his glory shall reflect upon them as the Sun reflects upon light bodies all light bodies are made light by the Sun So the Sun of Righteousnesse shall come and all them that have glory it shall be by reflexion from him they shall be glorious in him so he is both the Ministers joy and the peoples they shall all glory in Christ whose glory is their glory He shall come to be glorious in his Saints therefore frame your courses that way to have glory then to have comfort in the hour of death and at the day of Judgment And to end the point Let us labour to be acquainted with him now before that day we shall never have comfort in the day of the Lord Jesus except we be acquainted with him and acknowledge him in the Ministery now and in the Sacraments for none shall ever be acquainted with him there that have not been acquainted with him and known him in this world How do we come to be acquainted with Christ To be present where he is present and he is present where two or three are met together in his Name He is present now in our meetings he is present when we hear the Word He is present in the Sacrament more especially we have his very body and blood As verily as we take the outward signs so verily Christ is present to our hearts at the same time from heaven he reacheth us himself with all the benefits of his passion when the Minister reacheth the bread he reacheth his body As our outward man is refreshed with the elements so our soules are refreshed with the spiritual presence of Christ. Now he is excellently present in heaven he is present to our senses in the Sacrament and by his Spirit in the Word Would you have him then at his appearing come and own you and say then Come ye blessed be acquainted with him now upon all occasions hear the Word receive the Sacrament and come to the Sacrament as acknowledging him there How is that Why then you acknowledge the bread and wine to be Seales of him and of all the blessings by him when you come prepared when you come to them as his or else you do not acknowledge them you know them to be such and such things but you acknowledge them not to be set apart for such a holy use except you come with prepared hearts Will any body acknowledge him to go to a great person when he goes deformed and in rags do you know whither you go would some say to him He considers not whither he goes that comes to the Sacrament in his old sins Come acquainted therefore with Christ to acknowledge him that shall be your Judge at the latter day therefore come prepared And then because the Sacrament is a means to seal to us all the benefits we have by Christ and to incorporate us more nearly into Christ he that comes to the Sacrament as he should must come with joy Is it not a joyful thing to be united to Christ and to have further assurance of all the good things by him Yes it is a matter of great joy Therefore when you have repented of your sins come with joy And come with holinesse The things are holy as our Liturgy hath it let us give holy things to holy persons here is presented holy bread and wine and here you are to deal with Christ therefore come with holy reverence in the whole carriage of the businesse And come with faith and assurance and then you shall acknowledge Christ in this Ordinance in the Sacrament You shall acknowledge that he deales not complementally with you to feed you with empty signes but you shall have himself with his signs you shall have the Lord himself in the Word and in the Sacraments With the field you shall have the treasure in the field as the wise Merchant had With the Word you shall have Christ wrapped in the Word and in the Sacrament you shall have Christ and all his benefits Trust to it make it your weapon against Satan he will tempt you to doubt of your interest in Christ. Think with your selves Had I grace to receive Christ to be incorporate nearer into him why should I doubt to renew my Covenant And though I have fallen by weaknesse yet I have a gracious Intercessour in heaven that makes my peace continually Come in faith Know that God in good earnest here offers Christ with all his benefits And come with a purpose and resolution to be led by him You come to renew your Covenant here is the Covenant when Christ is given to you and you give your selves to Christ. Therefore as I said if you come with a purpose to live in sin come not at all Christ will not live in a heart where there is a purpose to sin therefore esolve to leave all sin or else you cannot receive him To move you to come and to come thus do but consider that it will be your joy in this world and in the world to come before Christ that you have been thus acquainted with him herc on earth acquainted with him in the Ministery acquainted with him in the Sacrament in private prayer and meditation in all the blessed means that he hath appointed and then he will look on you as upon his old friends But now he that is a Rebel that goes away or else comes not acknowledging with whom he hath to deal him that shall be his Judge ere long the Great God of Heaven and Earth that shall come in glory and majestie with thousands of his Angels Then he shall be Wonderfull indeed as his Name is Isai. 9. 6. and as the Apostle saith 2 Thess. 2. where he useth the word he shall be wonderful in his Saints Then all the world shall wonder at the glory of a poor Christian when he shall put down the Sun and all the
to their Childrens good I come to bestow a grace on you How this is observed I list not to speak therefore I leave it and come to that which concerns us all I was minded to come to you To bestow a grace on you We see then That The Preaching of the Gospel is a special Grace It is a free and bountiful benefit of God Gracce implies freedome and mercy and bounty It is a free mercy of God to have the Gospel Why Because this is the means to work all that is savingly good in us This is a means to open to us Gods love in Christ and to work in us a disposition answerable to his love therefore it must needs be a grace Heaven is a grace life is a grace reconciliation a grace and such like therefore the Word must needs be a grace by which all these are communicated Therefore the Word hath the name of these things It is the Word of the Kingdome of heaven It is called the Kingdome of heaven the preaching of the Gospel because it puts us into the state of the Kingdome of heaven and the Word of reconciliation because by it we know our reconciliation with God it is offered and wrought in our hearts and faith to apply it by this Word It is the Word of life Act. 20. the life of grace and the life of glory all come by this Word I commend you to God and the Word of his Grace saith the Apostle All grace and spiritual life is wrought in us by the Word therefore the Word preached it is a special grace and favour of God Saint Paul here calls his coming to them to strengthen and confirm them a grace For all means come under the same decree of Gods eternal love with the decree it self When God out of grace resolves and sets down that he will bring such a one to heaven of his free love he doth out of the same grace fit him with opportunities of persons and means he accommodates him with all means for he intends in such a way to bring him to heaven And therefore S. Austin doth well define Predestination it is an ordaining to salvation and a preparing of all means tending thereto Therefore all fall in the compasse of grace both the free favour of God setting a man down to make him happy and likewise by sending men that have an outward calling and inwardly furnishing them with gifts and whatsoever all is of Grace The preaching of the Word is a grace It concerns us therefore so to esteem it Do not many sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death Is it not a grace therefore that we partake of the means of salvation What is in us by nature better then in Turks and Pagans or then many other people under Satan and under Popish Teachers and so rot away in their Ignorance nothing we differ onely by the grace of God therefore let us esteem it as a grace How shall we esteem it as a grace Receive it thankfully as a largesse and bounty and free grace of God receive it as a bounty with thankful hearts Grace begets grace it begets thankfulnesse so to receive it as a grace is to receive it with thankful minds to be more thankfull for the means of salvation then for any outward thing How shall we come to be thankful Never unlesse we find some grace wrought by the Word of Grace Therefore to receive it as a grace is to receive it as a free loving gift of God and to yield to it when by it holy motions are stirred in our hearts not to suppresse and quench holy motions but to yield to them Not to quench and resist the Spirit but to yield our selves pliable to the Word This is to acknowledge it a grace to be thankfull for it because you find your hearts wrought to holy obedience by it Give it way in your soules that it may be an ingraffed Word that all the inward and outward man may be seasoned with it and relish of it that the Word may season your thoughts and speeches and desires and season your course of life that what you think may be in the relish and strength of the Word in the strength of some Divine truth and the guide of your actions may be Divine truth or some motives from it Then you will give thanks for what is wrought on you when it is an ingraffed Word in your soules and all relish of it your speeches and actions and your whole course when a man may know by your carriage that there is something invested and ingraffed in your soules that gives a blessed relish to all the expressions of the outward man Such a one indeed will account the Word a special grace by a sweet experience wrought in his heart I will not presse that Point any further Again whereas S. Paul saith he would come to bestow a second grace on them we see here That Those that are in the state of Grace already they need a second grace Those that have initial grace to be set in a good course they need confirming and strengthening Grace S. Paul had planted them before I but he must come to water them there is alway somewhat left for the Minister to do till he see their soules safe in heaven he hath alway somewhat to do to the Christian soules under him For he must not onely get them out of Satans Kingdome into a good estate but he must labour to build them up he must water them and fence them and strengthen them against all discouragements A man is never safe till he be in heaven therefore he saith I will come to you but I will come to bestow a second Grace on you you have need of it and my love is such to you that you shall have it To enforce this a little because we set termes to our growth and go on plodding in a course and many years after we are no better then we were at the first and some out of a prophane fulnesse out of a Laodicean temper they think they have enough they are rich when indeed they are empty and miserable and wretched and poor and if temptations set upon them they have nothing in them To let you see that we stand in need of a second grace and of a third grace and a fourth grace that we need continual building up First look within what opposition there is to saving goodnesse within what rebellion of lusts what Ignorance and blindnesse and darknesse and indisposition what head the flesh makes in us against the Word of God Let a man a little continue out of the means and he shall see what growth of corruptions there will be a distasting of all means that a man shall be ready to begin anew with them almost having a double principle in them of grace and corruption there needs continually strengthening and stablishing Grace Consider outwardly what discouragements from the ill
we must swear by him And indeed it is a service of God and to good purpose when Christians swear to stablish and determine truths that otherwise are doubtfull They were doubtfull of S. Paul's doctrine and his person saith he To put you out of doubt of the truth I speak to you I dare call God to witnesse it is true and sound The Apostle doth so once after in this Chapter therefore I reserve the further handling of an oath to verse 23. because the word there is more infallible I call God to record upon my soul c. The next thing I observe hence is this That The believing that Gods Word is Gods Word and is certain it is a matter of great consequence It is of great consequence for Gods people that look to be saved to be stablished in their opinion and judgment of Divine truth that it is certain and not flexible and mutable according to our wills and conceits and dispositions but is yea alway the same as God himself the Authour of it For laying this for a ground that I said before that S. Paul takes God to witnesse he would not enterpose an oath but in a matter of great consequence therefore it is a matter of great consequence to be setled in this that the Scripture is Divine truth unalterable and unchangeable An oath is never good as I said but when it is necessary It must not onely be in truth but there must be a necessity It must not only be taken in righteousnesse but in judgment a man must do it in discretion when the thing is not determinable any other way Therefore it is a matter of great consequence that men take the Word of truth not to be as the Oracles of Apollo and of the Devill true one way and false another The Devil would escape the imputation of a lie though he be a liar but Gods Oracles be Divine they be yea And it is good that we think them to be so to be constant undoubted certain and unmovable Therefore the Apostle seales it with an oath he would not seal a slight truth by an oath but saith he As God is true our word to you was not yea and nay c. And Saint Paul saw a disposition in them to suspect the truth of God as indeed we are proner to believe the lies of our own hearts and the suggestions of Satan and the counsell of Politicians of carnall friends then to believe God himself Therefore partly for the indisposition in us and partly for the great exigence and necessity of the thing to believe that Gods Word is his Word that it is truth he seales it with an oath God is true It is a point of great consequence The reason is God can have no service else and we can have no comfort If we do not believe the Word of God to be undoubtedly true in great temptations and assaults what armour of proof shall we have we can have no comfort nor grace For sometimes subtile and strong temptations to evill come if the Word of God be not more undoubted to me then the present profit or pleasure or whatsoever if the temptation be ready and I be not built on and settled on some grounded truth that I know to be true as God is true when the temptation is strong and our faith weak where are we a man presently yields to base lusts and temptations And so in matter of danger and despair when a man is tempted to despair if he cannot build on this God is true and his Word is as true as himself he will not the death of a sinner c. here a man is swallowed up It is no matter how strong the foundation be if the building on that foundation be weak If a strong man stand in a slippery place down he falls if a man stand slippery and have a weak standing on a strong place on a strong foundation if he have a weak building on a strong foundation he shall soon be cast off So the Word of God is true in it self but if we be not perswaded so that it is infallibly true that it is alway yea we shall be shaken with temptations When we are tempted to sin the temptation is present we are sure of the temptation if we be not more sure of somewhat against the temptation somewhat out of the Word to beat back the darts of Satan when we are tempted to sin and to despair for sin down we go and therefore it is a matter of infinite consequence to be perswaded of Divine truth What makes many as they are in courses that are corrupt in their callings nothing but this they stagger whether it be true or no that there shall be a Judgment they stagger whether it be true or no that the Scripture saith if they were perswaded that it were yea as true as God is in heaven as true as they have soules so their soules must be called to Judgment for that they speak and do would they do as they do Therefore S. Paul stablisheth them by an oath God is true and as God is true our Word to you was not yea and nay Therefore take in good part with thankfulnesse the means that God hath ordained to strengthen our faith and assurance of the Word of God and the Promises of God Therefore he hath appointed the Sacrament for that purpose I say there is nothing in the world so strengthened as the soul of a Christian if he give himself to Gods truth to be ruled by it For if we will believe God we have his promise That Whosoever believes in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting life rich promises precious promises as the Scripture calls them We have not onely promises but they are sealed with an oath Now an oath is an unchangeable thing Heb. 9. 16. we have promises and oath that we might have strong consolation whatsoever might secure man we have Besides his oath we have his seal his Sacrament It was his love to condescend to make any Covenant with sinfull creatures that upon any terms he would give them life everlasting It was a higher degree of love to set Christ to be the foundation of this peace and of this Covenant that now God and we may be at peace with satisfaction to Divine Justice that he is the foundation of the peace between God and us Now God may be mercifull without wrong without impeachment to his Justice that is a higher degree of mercy to enter into Covenant and to give Christ to be the foundation of all And then it is a higher degree then that to secure us of the Covenant that Christ is ours to seal the Word with an oath and with the Sacrament which is the seal of the Covenant what could God do more What a horrible sin therefore is unbelief that we should tremble at to call Gods love and truth in question But yet we are prone to it
Promises in him Yea and Amen will he give me the greater and will he not give me the lesse Sometimes by the lesser be encouraged to hope for the greater sometimes quicken our deadnesse and dulnesse in believing the lesser with the undoubted performance of the greater Will God give me life everlasting and will he not give me provision in my pilgrimage till I come there undoubtedly he will Fear not little flock it is your Fathers will to give you a Kingdome saith Christ. They were distrustful for the things of this life Do you think saith he that he will not give you the things of this life that keeps a Kingdome for you Fear not Again when we hear any promise in the Word of God turn it into a prayer put Gods bond in suit as it were his promises are his bonds sue him on his bond he loves to be sued on his bond and he loves that we should wrastle with him by his promises Why Lord thou hast made this and this promise thou canst not deny thy self thou canst not deny thine own truth thou canst not cease to be God thou canst as well cease to be God as deny thy promise that is thy self So let us put the promises into suit as David Psal. 119. if it be his Lord remember thy promise wherein thou hast caused thy servant to trust as if God had forgotten his promise Lord remember thy primise I put thee in mind of thy promise wherein th●… hast caused thy servant to trust If I be deceived thou hast deceived me thou hast made these promises and caused me to trust in thee and thou never failest those that trust in thee What makes a man faithful Trust to a man makes him faithful so when God is honoured with our trusting of him it makes him faithful Let us therefore put in suit his promises of provision and protection every day in the way of our calling and for necessary grace and comfort that he will not fail us in any necessary grace to bring us to heaven considering that he hath filled our nature with all grace in Christ. Again let us take this course when we hear of rich and precious promises that are made labour to know them What shall we have an inheritance a portion and not labour to know it Let us labour to know all our portion and to know it of those that search the Word of God to be glad to hear any thing concerning the priviledges and prerogatives of a Christian those that dig the Mines of the Scripture which is the office of the Ministers let us labour to know all our priviledges Let not Satan rob us of one priviledge Every promise is precious they are rich promises yet they are no more then God thought necessary for us he thought all little enough to stablish our faith let us not lose one we cannot be without one let us labour to know them And when we know them work them upon our hearts by meditation and shame our selves upon it say is it true are these promises so is it true that God hath revealed these things in his Word To whom hath he made them to Angels or to beasts No to men to sinners to men in the world to comfort them they are their provision their inheritance as David saith Psal. 119. Thy word is my inheritance and my portion they are sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb Are they so Do I believe this or do I not believe it Yes I do If I do can I believe them and be so uncomfortable Let us shame our selves do I believe the promises of life everlasting the promises of perseverance the promise that God will hide me in danger that he will be my habitation and my hiding place and do I look to unlawful means Do I live without God in the world as if there were no Promise what a shame is this There is a weaknesse in my faith certainly when a branch withers there is a fault in the root so there is a defect in the radical grace that it drawes not juice out of the promises as it should there is a defect in my faith therefore I will look where the defect is and strengthen my faith Thus we should shame our selves Can I hear these Promises and be no more joyful and be no more affected Can I use indirect means and yet believe that God is Al-sufficient to me in the Covenant Certainly I cannot Therefore let us come to the tryal to some few evidences that a man doth believe in the promises He that believes the promises of God in Christ to be Yea and Amen doubtlesse he will be affected answerable to the things promised saith David Thy Statutes they are the joy of my heart The Promises will be the joy and rejoycing of our heart He that can hear of promises and not be affected certainly he believes them not When a man thinks of his inheritance and of his evidences that they are clear that he shall enjoy it without suit or trouble it comforts him he cannot think of it without comfort Cannot a man think of a little pelf of the earth without comfort when he knowes he hath assurance to it and shall we think of heaven and happinesse and not rejoyce will not these be the joy of a mans heart certainly they will affect him When good things are apprehended by faith will they not work upon the affections certainly they will Again where the promises are believed they will quicken us to all chearfull obedience certainly if God will assist me with strength and comfort if I go on in his wayes and in the end of all give me life everlasting this will quicken me to all obedience Therefore those that go deadly and dully as if they had no encouragement here nor promise of glory after they believe not the promises For God doth not set us on work as Pharaoh set the children of Israel to make brick without straw but when he bids us do any thing he promiseth us grace and gives us his Spirit and after grace he gives glory If men did believe this they would go about Gods work without dulnesse and staggering so far as we are dull and stagger in the work of God so far our faith is weak in the promises of God Again as they quicken in regard of comfort so they purge in regard of holinesse for they make men study mortification and sanctification 2 Cor. 6. and the beginning of the 7th Having these promises Let us purge our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit perfect sanctification in the fear of God Having these promises So that the promises as they have a quickning so they have a purging power and that upon sound reasoning Doth God promise that he will be my Father and I shall be his son and doth he prcmise me life everlasting and doth that estate require purity and no unclean thing shall come there
certainty of the Subject there is a firmnesse of the Promises in Jesus Christ and there must be a firmnesse in us upon those Promises It is no matter what the certainty of the thing be that we are to build upon if there be not a certainty in the person if there be not a building on that thing God shall lose the glory of his truth and we the comfort unlesse we be certain as well as the promises are certain It is no matter what the garment be if it be not put on It is no matter as I said before how firm the rock be if we plant not our selves upon it and therefore besides the writing of Gods Word on Tables unlesse he write it likewise in our hearts unlesse our hearts be stablished on that truth that in it self is certain that it may be certain to us all is to no purpose You see therefore the absolute necessity of the application of the soul unto those truths which are certain and sure in themselves there must be a stablishing of us as well as a stablishing of the promises There is a necessity of the application of the promises to our selves that they be true to us Christ is a garment we must put him on then he is the robes that we appear glorious before God in but we must put him on by faith Christ is the food of life he is so indeed but then he must be digested Meat except it be applyed except the stomach work nourishment out of it by application and so digest it to all the parts the body hath not nourishment from it Christ is the foundation of his Church I but there must be application we as living stones must be built on him Let the foundation be never so strong if the stones be not laid on the foundation the stones cannot stand Though Christ be the Spouse of the Church and be never so rich there must be application and consent we must strike up the bargain and match between Christ and us There must be our consent to tie our selves to him to give up our selves to him So look to all the comfortable relations that our blessed Saviour hath taken upon him in the book of God they all enforce application The ground I say is this that though there be never so much certainty in the thing yet if there be not a certainty in the person to found application upon all is to no purpose These two therefore must go together and they are sweet relatives promises on Gods part and faith on our part The Promises and Christ are nothing without faith For there must be a touch to draw vertue If faith have never so little touch of Christ it will draw vertue but there must be a touch there must be application Christ is nothing without faith and faith is nothing without Christ and the Promises For what is the difference between faith and presumption presumption is an empty groundlesse fruitlesse conceit faith builds on the Promises of the Word we can alledge the Promise It is nothing for a mad man to assume himself to be King of another Countrey why he hath no promise He that made account that all the ships that came to the Haven were his it was but a frantick part of him and so he was accounted So a man that thinks his estate is good and builds not himself upon the promise that hath no ground for it out of Gods Word it is but a presumptuous frantick conceit The promises are nothing without faith and faith is nothing without the promises There must be application This I thought good to observe first in the general To come now more particularly to the words themselves He that stablisheth us with you c. In the words you have first A gracious Act of building or stablishing Secondly The Basis the foundation of that stablishing or building and that is Christ. Thirdly the Authour of this stablishing God Lastly the persons who are built and stablished on that foundation with you He that stablisheth us with you in Christ is God The first thing is the Act Stablishing The point is this first That Stablishing settling grace is necessary It is necessary that there be a stablishing confirming grace It is not sufficient that we be brought out of the Kingdome of Satan for when we are gotten out of his hands and strength he pursues us with continual malice therefore there must be the same power to stablish us still in grace that first brought us into the state of grace For as Providence is a continuall creation so stablishing grace is the continuance of the new creature the same grace that sets us in the state of the new creation in Christ the same stablisheth us Stablishing grace is necessary It is necessary many wayes Man of himself is an unstable creature take him at the best but a creature God found no stability in the Angels take the best of creatures even as creatures they are unstable For God will have a creature as a creature to be a dependant thing upon the Creator who is a being of himself Jehovah There is no stability in any creature Man in his best estate was an unstable creature Since we are very unstable ready to be carried away in our judgment to the wind of any false doctrine ready to be blown over with every little temptation Nay now in the state of grace in our selves we are very unstable ready to fly off presently and therefore we have need to be established of God It is necessary in regard of the indisposition of our nature to supernatural truths we are an unprepared subject for them in our selves The Law indeed we have some principles of it but of the Gospel there are in us no seeds at all of it and that is the reason there are so many Heresies against the Gospel there are none against the Law And therefore Divine truths being contrary to our disposition as there must be a supernatural beginner so there must be a supernatural strengthener he that is Alpha must be Omega As there must be a mighty subduing of the heart to be a vessel to receive these truths an Almighty power to lay the soul on this foundation because of the contrariety of the truth to the natural heart of man so there is need of no lesse then of a Divine and supernatural stablishing Our natures are very inconstant and unsettled and wayward take us at the best before the fall you see how soon we fell being left to our selves and having no stablishing grace Much more now since the fall is there a nenecessity of Divine stablishing when we come to know the truth we are subject to fall away like little children that are ready to sink if they be not upheld by their parents or nurse God must uphold and propus and shore us up we presently sink else Moses was but in the Mount a while and we see how soon
with reasons discovering an absolute necessity of geting into Christ and of having him to be our Husband except we will lye under the wrath of God and be damned and withal discovering the fulnesse and excellency that is in Christ. Again it is God onely that must stablish the soul all the parts of it both judgment and conscience For I beseech you what can any humane creature what can any thing under God work upon the soul I mean so firmly as to stablish it and therefore our controversie with the Papists is just and good We say The reason and ground of our believing the Word of God to be the Word of God must not be the testimony of the Church and the authority thereof for alas what can the judgment of man what can the judgment of the Church do It may incline and move the will by inducing arguments and so cause a humane consent but to establish the soul and conscience and to assure me that the Word of God which is the ground of my faith is the Word of God it must be God by his Spirit that must do it the testimony of the Church will never do it The same Spirit that inspired holy men to write the Word of God works in us a belief that the Word of God is the Word of God The stablishing argument must be by the power of Gods Spirit God joyning with the soul and spirit of a man whom he intends to convert besides that inbred light that is in the soul causeth him to see a Divine Majestie shining forth in the Scriptures so that there must be an infused establishing by the Spirit to settle the heart in this first principle and indeed in all other Divine principles that the Scriptures are the Word of God And to go on a little further this is a fundamental errour in our practice For what is the reason we have so many Apostates what is the reason so many are so fruitlesse in their lives what is the reason that men despair in death but even this because men are not built and stablished aright Gods Spirit never stablished their soules in Divine truths For first concerning Apostasie ask them what is the reason they are of this or that Religion They will say they have been taught so they have been brought up to it the company with whom they have conversed have been devout men and have been alwayes led with this opinion and they see no reason to thwart it Is that all Hath not the Spirit wrought these things in thy heart hath he not given thee a taste of them hath he not convinced thee in thy judgment that it is so hast thou not found the power of the Spirit working upon thy soul changing of thee raising of thee drawing of thee out of the world nearer to God hast thou not I say felt the power of the Spirit this way No but thus I was catechized and thus I have been bred and thus I have heard in the Ministery And no otherwise Alas it will never hold out there will be a falling away for when a man believes not that which he believes from the Spirit of God he will be ready when dangerous times come when there is an onset made by the adversaries to fall and to fall clean away as we see it was in the time of Popery for whatsoever is not spiritual whatsoever knowledge is not Divine and from the Spirit of God never holds out Therefore I beseech you what 's the reason that you have many illiterate men that set upon the truth and hold out to the end and on the contrary many great seeming Scholars that are skilful in school-learning and in other Authours do not The reason is the one hath the truth from the Spirit discovering all the objections that the heart of man can make against it and the strength that is in the truth to answer and silence all those objections The other man hath onely a discoursing knowledge an ability to gather one thing from another and to prove one thing by another by strength of parts But the Spirit of God never discover'd the sleights and the corruptions of his heart never fastned and settled his heart upon the truth he never had experience of the truth For indeed nothing doth stablish so much as the experience of the truth on which we are stablished Again what is the reason of that unfruitfulnesse that is amongst men but because truths were never settled in the soul by the Spirit of God That which men know out of the Word of God concerning Christ and the priviledges by him they were never perswaded of it in their hearts therefore they come not to a fruitful conversation It is impossible but that men should be abundantly fruitful that have spiritual apprehensions of Divine things of Evangelical truths Hence comes all our unthankfulnesse and undervaluing of the Gospel The Gospel of it self is an unprized thing however we esteem of it God values it highly we value it not because our apprehensions of it are customary and formal gotten by breeding and education and discourse and not by the Spirit we feel not the spiritual and heavenly comforts of those truths we think we know How comes likewise Despair in time of temptation and in death but onely because men want this stablishing by the Spirit of God Men go on in evil courses trusting to a formal dead humane knowledge gotten by humane meanes and not settled in them by the Spirit of God that hath not sealed the truth in their hearts and hereupon when sharp tryals come they despair because they have no feeling of the truths of the Gospel and so when conscience is awakened and smarts it clamours and cryes out upon all their formall and humane knowledge For they having not a spiritual sense of the mercies of God in Christ and the perswasions of comfort are not so near to support the soul as the tentations and vexations and torments are how can they but despair Now who can still the conscience but the Spirit of God Why now if the knowledge that men had were spiritual and heavenly in all accusations of conscience it would set conscience down and still it I am a sinner indeed I am this and this but I have felt the sweet mercies of God in Christ God hath said to my soul I am thy salvation he hath intimated to my spirit by a sweet voyce Son thy sinnes are forgiven thee Where there is I say a knowledge and an apprehension of these Evangelical truths wrought by the Spirit it sets down Conscience and stills it though the heart rage at the same time There are thousands in the very bosome of the Church that miscarry because of this resting in a literall outward formall knowledge gotten onely by discourse and by reading and commerce with others and never labour to have their hearts stablished in Christ by Gods Spirit You see here then a
necessity of Gods writing his truth in our bowels he saith in the Covenant of grace I will write my Law in their inward parts thaat is I will teach their very hearts that knowledge that they have shall be spiritual For beloved the knowledge that must save us must not onely be of Divine things but it must be Divine it must not onely be of spirituall things but it must be spiritual the light that we have of spirituall things must be answerable to the things we must see them by their own light we cannot know spiritual and heavenly things by a humane light but as the things themselves are spiritual so we must have the Spirit of God that by it we may come to know spiritual things spiritually Desire God therefore to vouchsafe us his Spirit that it may teach us and convince us of the truth of those things which we read and hear God must do it he must perswade and bow the heart and will and affections and so he will do it and doth it to those that rely upon him And this is the second Branch As God must do it so God will do it What is the Reason of that It is this he will do it because he is constant where he begins a good work he will finish it to the day of the Lord. He will do it because in the Covenant of Grace he hath undertaken both parts both his own and ours He undertakes his own part which is to give us eternal life and to give us Christ and he undertakes our part too which is to believe and to cleave unto Christ c. he makes this good himself he works this in the heart by the Spirit for therefore it is called the Covenant of Grace because God himself is graciously pleased to do both parts Which must be comfortably remembred against an Objection that flesh and blood will make I might indeed come to God and Christ but I am an unworthy empty creature I have no faith Come and atrend upon the means the gift of application and confirming and stablishing is part of the Covenant The Covenant that God makes with thee is not onely to give thee life everlasting and glory but to give thee grace likewise Faith is the gift of God He that stablisheth us and confirms us upon that which is certain in it self is God Lay it up against a time of temptation for a pillar and ground of your faith that here God doth both he gives us Promises and gives us Christ whereon the Promises are founded and likewise establisheth us and seals us c. he doth all So that as none can stablish the soul but God by his Spirit so he will do it It is an excellent reason of the Apostle in Rom. 5. If when we were enemies God gave us his Son to reconcile us how much more now shall we be saved If we were saved by the Death of Christ when we were enemies much more shall we be preserved by his life he now living in heaven So I say If God when there was nothing in us but we were in a clean opposite estate did begin spiritual life in us much more will he stablish that which he hath begun in us And this stablishing as well as the beginning of grace comes likewise from God for take Grace in the whole latitude and extent of it take all that can be in grace all comes graciously from God the offer of it the beginning of it this manner of it that it should be strong the strengthning of grace it comes from God he strengtheneth us in grace as well as begins it so that Grace it self and this Modus this manner that it is strong and firm that it should hold out all comes from God A Christian needs not onely converting grace but stablishing grace God that converted him must stablish him and build him up and confirm him Peter was in the state of grace and yet when God did not stablish him you see how he fell so David was an excellent man but when God did not stablish him you see how he fell The weakest with the stablishing grace of God will stand and the strongest without the stablishing grace of God will sink and fall The Apostle doth not say he hath done but he doth stablish us This must be considered that the life of a Christian is a perpetual dependant life not onely in his conversion he lives by faith he hath his first life but ever after he lives by faith that is dependance on God for assistance and protection and strength in the whole course of his life The ignorance of this makes us subject to fail for when we trust to grace received and do not seek for a new supply we fall into Peters case Though all men for sake thee yet will not I hereupon Peter fell fouly he had too much confidence in grace received Therefore God is fain to humble his children to teach them dependance and usually therefore in Scripture where some special grace is given he hath somewhat joyned with it to put them in mind that they do not stand by their own strength In the same Chapter where Peter makes a glorious confession Thou art the Son of the living God and he was honoured of Christ by that confession yet Christ calls him Satan in the same Chapter and he forsakes his Master A strange thing To teach us that we stand not of our selves When we are strong it is by God when we are weak it is by our selves Jacob wrastled and was a prevailer with God but he was fain to halt for it he was struck with halting all the dayes of his life though he had the victory and overcame God taking upon him as I said before the person of an enemy to strive with him yet God to put him in mind that he had the strength whereby he prevailed from him and not of himself he made him limp all his dayes We need perpetual dependance upon God Therefore let us set upon nothing in our own strength as Hannah saith comfortably 1 Sam. 2. No man is strong by his own strength God is all our sufficiency Mans nature doth affect a kind of Divinity he would be a God to himself but God will teach him that he is not a God but a dependant creature He affects a Divinity thus he will set upon things in confidence of his own wisdome without prayer and thinks to work things with the strength of his own parts to compasse things with his own wit to bring things to a good issue O no it will not be so In Prov. 3. Acknowledge God in all thy wayes That is acknowledge him in thy enterprizes in any thing acknowledge him in the progresse that thou needest stabilishing grace acknowledge him in the issue that thou needest his blessing upon all thy endeavours acknowledge God in all our wayes Therefore whas do we but make our selves Gods when we set upon businesse
or whether I speak of my selfe Be true to known truths be not false in disobeying them To him that hath shall be given We have a little stablishing by an uniform obedience to the truth we shall have more God will increase it I say let us be faithful to the truths we have ' and not crosse them in any sinful course let us not keep the truth prisoner to any base affection as those in Rom. 1. that had but the light of nature yet because they imprisoned it and held it in unrighteousness and lived in sins contrary to that light rhat God had kindled in them though I say it were but the light of nature God gave them up to sins not to be named much more will he do to us if we withhold the light of the Gospel take heed therefore that we inthral not the truth to any base lust whatsoever and that is a means to be stablished in the truth And be oft in holy conference with others Conference if it be rightly used is a special means to stablish that is most certain which is certain after doubting and debate because that which is doubted of at the first we come to be resolved of at the last comparing reason with reason Remembring alwayes that of S. Ambrose That there must not be striving for victory but for truth And then when we have tryed all we must keep that which is good and not be alwayes as the Iron between two Loadstones haled this way and that way alwayes doubting and never resolved there must be a time of resolution This the Apostle observes to be an excellent way of stablishing oft to confer of things doubtful And labour to get experience of the truth in our selves nothing stablisheth more then experience Our Saviour Christ in Joh. 6. 68. when many left him out of dulnesse not understanding the spiritual things that he taught as many whose wits will serve for matters of the world and to make them great amongst men but when they come to heavenly things they have no understanding they cannot apprehend them he asks his Disciples Will you go away also Peter who had his heart opened by the Spirit of God saith he Lord whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life insinuating that the experience that he had of the power of that truth that Christ taught did so establish him in the present truth that with a holy kind of indignation at the question he replyes Whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life I have found thy words to have a spirituall life in them So when we come once to have an experimental knowledge of the truths we learn then our hearts are stablished indeed then it is an ingraffed Word as S. James saith then the Word is true leaven when it altereth and changeth the soul in such a case there is no separating from fundamentall truth when it is one with our selves and digested into us And pray to God oft as David did Psal. 86. to knit our hearts to fear his Name Lord my heart is loose and ready to fall off of it self Oh knit my heart it is unsettled Oh settle my unsettled heart settle my judgment and affections this should be our meditation And because it is God that stablisheth alway maintain spiritual poverty in the soul that is a perpetual dependance upon God see the insufficiency that is in our selves that we cannot stand out What is the reason that God suffers great men to fall from the defence of the truth and from the profession of it in their lives as we see it in the case of Peter to shew that we stand not by our own strength therefore we should be alwayes in this temper of spiritual poverty to know that as Samsons strength was in his Hair so our strength is in God God is my strength of my self I have no strength And therefore upon every new defence of the truth when we are called to it we should lift up ejaculations and dart up strong desires to God that God would strengthen and stablish our souls that we may not be traytors to the truth but that we may stand to it for in his owne strength shall no man be established And grow every day more and more in detestation of a luke-warme temper Your Ancipites as Cyprian calls them your doubtful flatterers of the times that have their Religion depending upon the State and the times that are neither fish nor flesh Bats as we say that are neither Mice nor Birds but of a doubtful Religion that out of carnal policy are fit to entertain any thing Oh this is a devilish temper Howsoever we in our luke-warm disposition value the truth God values it highly it was purchased by Christs blood and sealed by the blood of Martyrs and shall not we transmit it to our posterity as safe and as firm and retain it come what will Let us grow into dislike of this temper atemper that we should as much hate as God hates it such a temper as is in Popery they are in an adiaphorisme temper in Religion a luke-warm cold temper a temper of Religion according to reasons of flesh and reasons of policy this will make us be spued out of Gods mouth at the last Do we think to lose Religion alone Oh no never think to part with Religion alone it came with peace and prosperity and if we keep not this Depositum this truth delivered to us God will take it away and that which we betray it for Peace and Plenty Let us labour therefore to be radicated in our Judgment in our Affections in our Love in our Faith in our whole inward man in the truth revealed To be stablished in the truth it is our best inheritance it is that will stand by us when all leaves us What consistence hath a man out of the truth are you rich or honourable death will drive you out of all your riches and honours in the world and strip you of all What stablishing hath any man but in Christ in the truth Take a man that is not bottomed that is not fastened on Christ he is the changeablest creature in the world he is vanity he is nothing Oh love this state that we may say Though I be variable here though I be not so rich as I was or have not that favour of great ones that I have had or it is not with me as it hath been but in all changes I have somewhat that is unchangeable my soul is settled upon Christ and upon the truth in him which is certain As it is a glorious being to be found in Christ so it is an eternal and an everlasting being once Christs and for ever his he will never lose a member Labour we therefore to be stablished in Christ in all the changes and alterations in the world and then we shall have something that is unchangeable to fix and stay our selves upon
his bowels that is in his affections he can love and joy in God and hate sin and overcome revenge c. The Spirit sheweth him Divine things by a Divine light he sees heavenly things with a heavenly light and Divine spiritual knowledge is a working knowledge of the same nature with the things known The poorest Christian in the world having this anointing sees good things with such a convincing light and evill things with such a convincing hatred that he is doing and acting whereas a Christian that hath not the Spirit he may know heavenly things by a natural light by a discoursive knowledge he may know what he should do and so perhaps he may talk but he cannot do he may talk of death but he cannot dye he may talk and discourse of suffering but when it comes he cannot suffer he may speak much of patience but he cannot act patience when occasion is A true Christian hath the knowledge of doing things And likewise he is able to speak a word in due season to reprove to admonish to comfort Every member in the communion of Saints hath some qualification in regard of knowledge when he is put to it But especially he hath received this anointing as a Priest and a King As a Priest to stand before God and to offer up prayers for himself and others Every Christian is a Favourite in heaven he hath much credit there he hath Gods ear open at all times and he improves it for the good of the Church for the good of others as well as for his own And as to pray for our selves and others so to blesse our selves and others that was one part of the Priests Office and so as the Scipture saith we are called unto blessing and therefore those that are given unto cursing are not Priests And again a Christian that hath received this anointing as a Priest he keeps himself unspotted of the world You know the Priests were to touch no unclean thing nor to defile themselves with any manner of pollution so every Christian in some measure is enabled to abstain from the common pollutions of the times to hate even the garment spotted with the flesh he is not carried with the stream of the times he will not converse amiably with those that may stain him but as his calling leads him lest he contaminate his spirit And likewise a Christian hath his heart alwayes as the Holy of Holies that so he may offer up thanks and praise to God there is a disposition in him alwayes to praise God As the fire in the Sanctuary must never go out so the fire that is kindled by the Spirit of God in the heart of a Christian it never goes out the Holy Ghost maintains it continually he is ready to praise God upon all occasions ready to offer up himself unto God as a sacrifice The sacrifices of a Christian are a broken heart and as in the Law the sacrifices for sin must first be killed and then offered so now in the Gospel it is the work of every Christian to mortifie to kill and slay those beasts those corruptions that are in him contrary to God A Christian must not offer himself to God as a sinner but he must first slay his corruptions he must mortifie his sins and then offer up himself slain to God Therefore our care must be to mortifie every corruption every faculty of the soul and every part of the body we must circumcise our eyes that they behold not vanity and our eares that they hear not and delight not in unchaste things and our thoughts and every part our wills and affections and then offer up soul and body as a living sacrifice unto God that all may be dedicated and sanctified unto him and then it is a sweet sacrifice then when a Christian hath dedicated himself to God it is an easie matter to give him his goods when he calls for them then he will be ready to let all go as the Apostle saith of the Corinthians they first gave themselves to God and then to others other sacrifices will follow when we have first given our selves to God therefore the first sacrifice is to kill our corruptions to offer our selves to God and then we shall be ready to offer our estates and to have nothing but at Gods disposing Oh Lord of thy hand I have my body and my life and my goods and all I give them unto thee if thou wilt have me to enjoy them I do but if thou wilt have them sacrificed I am a Priest I am willing to offer my self as a burnt-sacrifice to thee even to the death and all other things when thou shalt be pleased to call for them and indeed all other sacrifices of our goods and thankfulnesse in words they will easily come off when we have offered our selves as I said before What is the reason that men will not part with a penny for good uses They have not given themselves as sacrifices unto God therefore in the Scripture we are pressed to give our selves unto God first and it useth arguments to that purpose as that we are not our own but bought with a price c. And so for the Kingly office Every Christian by this anointing is made a King Rev. 1. 6. He hath loved us and washed us and made us Kings c. But how are we Kings to take away an Objection that ariseth in the hearts of carnal men Oh say they they talk that they are Kings when perhaps they have not a penny in their purse they talk they are Kings when in the mean time they are underlings in the world here are Kings indeed think prophane conceited persons Indeed all other things are but shadowes these be realities this is a Kingdome to purpose Thou livest by sense and by fancy or else if thou haddest the spiritual eye-salve if thou haddest thine eyes open to see the dignity of a Christian thou wouldest judge him to be the onely King in the world and therefore I do not enlarge the Point to set colours upon matters but indeed I rather speak under there is no excellency that we can think of in this world that riseth high enough to set out the state of a Christian he is indeed a King For I beseech you what makes a King Victory and Conquest that makes a King Is not he a Conquerour that hath that in him that conquers the world and all things else others that are not Christians they are slaves to lusts and pleasures A Christian that is chief Conquerour in the world he conquers the world in his heart and all temptations are inferiour to him he sees them as things that he hath gotten the mastery of He subdues the principal enemy a Christian fears not death he fears not Judgment he fears not the wrath of God he knowes God is reconciled in Christ and so all things are reconciled with him God being at peace all things else are at peace so
onely so but he sealed him by many miracles by the resurrection from the dead by which he was declared to be the Son of God by the calling of the Gentiles and by many other things Christ being sealed he sealed all that he did for our redemption with his blood and for the strengthening of our faith he hath added outward seales the two Sacraments to seal our faith in this blood and in him who is sealed of the Father But here in this place is meant another manner of sealing for here is not meant the sealing of Christ but the sealing of us that have communion with Christ. The same Spirit that sealed the Redeemer seales the redeemed What is our Sealing Sealing we know hath this use First of all it doth imprint a likenesse of him that doth seal upon the wax that is sealed as when the Kings Picture or Image is stamped or sealed upon the wax every thing in the wax answers to that in the seal face to face eye to eye hand to hand foot to foot body to body So we are said to be sealed when we carry in our soules the Image of Jesus Christ for the Spirit sets the stamp of Jesus Christ upon every Christian so that there is the likenesse of Christ in all things understanding answers understanding in proportion as a child you know answers the father it hath limb for limb foot for foot finger for finger but it is not in quantity but in proportion and likenesse so it is in the soul that is sealed by the Spirit there is a likenesse to Christ something of every grace of Christ there is understanding of the same heavenly supernatural truths there is a judging of things as Christ judgeth and the affections go as Christs do he loves that which Christ loves and he hates that which he hates he joyes in that which Christ delights in Every affection of the soul is carried that way that the affections of our blessed Saviour are carried in proportion Every thing in the soul is answerable to Jesus Christ and there is no grace in Christ but there is the like in every Christian in some small measure the Obedience of Christ to his Father even to the death it is in every Christian the Humility whereby Christ abased himself it is in every Christian. Christ works in the soul that receiveth him a likenesse to himself And this is an undoubted Character of a Christian The soul that believes in Christ doth not onely believe in him for his own sake to be forgiven of his sins but together with believing feeling the forgivenesse of his sins and that Christ hath so loved him and done such things for him he is ambitious to expresse Christ in all things and it stirres him up with desire to be like him for thinks he is there such love in Christ to me and is there such grace and mercy in God to me and was Christ so good as to do and to suffer such things for me Oh how shall I improve things for him Oh that I might be like him lovely in his eyes This I say must needs be so these desires are undoubtedly universally in the soules of all those that partake of Christ it is the nature of the thing to be so we shall desire to be transformed more and more to Christ Every way to bear the Image of the second Adam who is as the Apostle saith from heaven heavenly and so shall we be heavenly-minded as he was heavenly-minded on earth talking and discoursing of the Kingdome of Heaven and sitting people for the Kingdome of heaven and drawing others from this world to meditate of a better estate there is a likenesse to these in the soul of every believer and that 's the reason that Christs Offices are put together in all those that he saves that look whosoever he is a Priest to to dye for their sins to them he is a Prophet to teach them and a King to subdue their corruptions and to change them and alter them and to rule them by his Spirit You have carnal men in presumption which leads them to destruction they sever things in Christ they will take benefit by Christ but they care not for his likenesse they will have him as a Priest but they respect him not as a King Now all that are Christs have the stamp of the Spirit upon them there are desires wrought in them by the Spirit of God to that purpose and a Spirit of Sanctification that makes them every way like Christ in their proportion And that is an evidence of the sealing of such a soul because the soul of it self hath no such impression for the soul of it self is a barren Wildernesse a stone that is cold and uncapable of impression when therefore the soul can command nature being stiffe and hard and dead we see an impression of a higher nature a man may know that undoubtedly the Spirit of God hath been in this soul for we see a loving spirit an humble spirit a gracious a believing a broken spirit an obedient spirit to every commandment of God the soul can yield it self wholly to the will of God in all things certainly I say the Spirit of God hath been here for these things grow not in a natural soul. A stone you know is cold by nature and if a man feel a stone to be hot a man may undeniably gather Certainly the Sun hath shined upon this stone Our hearts are very cold by nature undoubtedly when they are warmed with the love of God that they are made plyable to duties the Sun of righteousnesse Christ hath shined on this cold heart Gods Spirit can work on Marble can work on Brasse as Jeremy saith It was the commendations of one of the Fathers that he could work on Brasse God can work on our soules which are as brasse and make an impression of grace there and therefore when a man sees an impression upon such hard mettal certainly he may know that the finger of Gods Spirit hath been there So that the work of Sanctification is an undoubted feal of the Spirit of God A second use of a Seal is Distinction Seales are given for distinguishing for you know sealing is a stamp set upon some few out of many so this sealing of the Spirit it distinguisheth Christians from others as we shall see more at large afterwards Then again a Seal it serves for Appropriation for men seal those things that are their own Merchants seal those Wares that they either have or mean to have a right unto Men seal their own sheep and not others and stamp their own Wares and not others God here stoops so low as to make use of terms that are used in humane matters and contracts and by sealing he shewes that he hath appropriated his own to himself chosen and singled them out for himself to delight in Again sealing further serves to make things authentical to give authority and excellency to
in the meanes of salvation and the more we conflict with our corruptions the more he increaseth the sweet comforts and the hidden Manna of the Spirit Thus we see how the Spirit seals I beseech you therefore let us examine our selves by that which hath been spoken after we believe God seales those that do believe we honour him by believeing he honours us by sealing us with his Spirit Hath God spoken to thy soul by the witnesse of the Spirit and said I am thy salvation thy sins are forgiven thee doth God stirre up thy spirit to call upon him especially in extremity and to go with boldnesse and earnestnesse to him surely this boldnesse and earnestnesse is an evidence of the seal of the Spirit for a man that hath no seal of the Spirit he cannot go to God in extremity Saul in extremity he goes to the Witch and Achitophel and Judas in extremity go to desperate conclusions a man that hath not the Spirit of God speaking peace to his conscience to whom God hath not given the Spirit of Adoption to cry Abba Father in all manner of exigents he sin●…ks as lead to the bottom of the sea so heavy is the soul that is not raised by the Spirit of God he hath no consistence till he come to the Centre to hell Did you ever feel the sweet joy of the Spirit after conflict with corruptions and getting ground of them and in holy duties c. it is a sign that God hath sealed you But you will say How can that be a seal that is not alwaies a seal cotinues with the thing Gods children find not peace alwaies the joy of the Spirit comes after the work of the Spirit how then can this be a seal I Answer Yes for howsoever it be or not alway sensible yet it is alway a seal though we have not alwaies the joy of the Spirit yet we have the Spirit of joy a Christian hath not the joy of the Spirit at all times for that is moveable but he hath alwaies the Spirit of joy which Spirit though it be not known by joy yet it is known by operation and working there is the work of the Spirit where there is not alwayes the joy of the Spirit and therefore when that fails go to the work of sanctification and see what stamp and resemblance of Christ there is see if thy heart be humble and broken if thou have a loving disposition in thee like to Christ that thou hatest that which Christ hateth that thou seest a division in thy self I say when the joy of the Spirit ceaseth go to the work of the Spirit and to this work of the Spirit viz. the voice of the Spirit canst thou cry to God with prayer and supplication and if thou canst not pray with distinct words canst thou mourne and groan to God this sighing and groaning is the voice of Gods Spirit and God knowes the voice of his own Spirit But for the question propounded the soul of a Christian knowes that when it findes not extraordinary comfort from Gods Spirit that Gods love is constant It can reason thus Though I find not the comfort of the Spirit yet I have the Spirit of Comfort because I had the Spirit in former times and Gods Spirit is unchangeable and therefore though it be not with me now as in those ravishings of the Spirit yet the love of God is the same though my feeling be not the same because though I be off and on and my feeling ebb and flow yet his love is not so and here upon the extraordinary feeling of the Spirit which is superadded as an extraordinary seal it may be a sound seal of Comfort from the constancy of God who gave it and he gave it for this end that we might have recourse and retire back in our thoughts and argue it was thus and thus with me then we remember the times of old as David saith Psal. 77. and help our selves with our former feelings he that alway hath life is not alwaies alike stirred Christ may be begotten and live in us but he stirs not alwaies alike so though the Spirit of sanctification be in us and stir in us yet his stirring is not alike so sweet and the stirring of the Spirit though it be not alway yet the Spirit is alway there so the soul may have recourse to that which is unchangeable and constant even God himself and his love is as himself But to take a Christian in his worst time in the worst and greatest afflictions how shall he know then that he is sealed of the Spirit when corruption temptation and affliction meet together in the soul when temptation is joyned with our corruption and afflictions yield ground to temptations for Satan useth the afflictions we are in as temptations to shake our faith Canst thou be a child of God and be so exercised is this grace so affliction is a weapon to temptation for Satan to help his fiery darts with Now how shall a man know that God hath any part here He may know that he is sealed by the Spirit of God if he have a spirit to thwart these if he row against the stream if he go contrary to all these if he find a spirit resisting Satans temptations and raising himself above afflictions and standing against and combating with his corruptions and checking his carnal soul when it is drawing him down Why art thou discomforted O my soul saith David Psal. 42. 43. He found corruptions and afflictions and Satans temptations working with them depressing his soul downwards hereupon having the Spirit in him saith he Why art thou disquieted within me trust in God He first chides his soul Why art thou so and then he layes a charge upon it trust in God So I say when this is in the soul in the greatest extremity when I can check my soul Why art thou thus yet trust in God whatsoever is in the world yet there is hope in heaven though there be little comfort upon earth this is a sign that I am sealed with the Spirit of God and thus in the worst temptations that can come and so in the worst times a man may know that he is in the state of grace One use of a seal I told you before was to distinguish if a man therefore find in himself a distinguishing from the errours of the times Many walk saith the Apostle of whom I have told you oft their end is damnation their belly is their god they mind earthly things but what did S. Paul in the mean time what did the Spirit work in him But our conversation is in heaven saith he The whole world was overspread with a deluge of sin but what was Noah and his family God by his Spirit distinguished them they went a contrary course to the world and Lot in Sodom so a man may know that he is sealed when the Spirit leads him another way that he is not led with the
and troubled and we hear many comfortable truths let us lift up our prayers to God let there be ejaculations of spirit to God Now Lord by thy holy Spirit set and seal this truth to my soul that as it is true in it self so it may be true to me likewise This is a necessary Observation for us all Oh we desire all of us in the hour of death to find such comforts as may be standing comforts that may uphold us against the gates of Hell and against the temptations of Satan and terrours of Conscience why nothing will do this but spiritual truths spiritually known nothing but holy truths set on by the hoy Spirit of God But what course shall we take when we want comfort when we want joy and peace In the third of John there are three witnesses in heaven and three in earth to secure us of our state in grace and the certainty of our salvation The three witnesses upon earth are the Spirit the water and the blood and these three agree in one and the three that bear witnesse in heaven are the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and the three on earth and these three in heaven agree in one Now the Spirit is the feelings and the sweet motions of the Spirit The water may well be that washing of the Spirit sanctification The blood is the shedding of the blood of Christ and justification by it When therefore we find that part of the seal that extraordinary seal that I spake of before the joy of the Spirit of God that it is not in us what shall we do shall we despair No go to the water when we find not spiritual joy and comfort when the witnesse of the Spirit is silent go to the work of the Spirit in sanctification I but what shall we do if the waters be troubled in the soul as sometimes there is such a confusion in the soul that we cannot see the Image of God upon it in sanctification we cannot see the stamp of Gods Spirit there there is such a Chaos in the soul God can see somewhat of his own Spirit in that confusion but the Spirit it self cannot Then go to the blood of Christ there is alwayes comfort the fountain that is opened for Judah and Jerusalem to wash in is never dry go therefore to the blood of Christ that is if we find sin upon our consciences if we find not peace in our consciences nor sanctification in our hearts go to the blood of Christ which is shed for all those that confesse their sinnes and rely on him for pardon though we find no grace For howsoever as an evidence that we are in Christ we must find the work of the Spirit yet before we go to Christ it is sufficient that we see nothing in our selves no qualification for the graces of the Spirit they are not the condition of coming to Christ but the promise of those that receive Christ after Therefore go to Christ when thou feelest neither joy of the Spirit nor sanctification of the Spirit go to the blood of Christ and that will purge thee and wash thee from all thy sins This I onely touch for a direction what to do when our soules want comfort when perhaps we cannot see the seal of the Spirit in sanctification so clearly To go on now to the next And given us the Earnest of the Spirit Here is the third word borrowed from humane affaires to set out the work of the Spirit in our soules Anointing we had before and Sealing now here is Earnest The variety of the words shewes that there is a great remainder of unbelief in the soul of man that the Spirit of God is fain to use so many words to expresse Gods dealing to the soul to bring it to believe to be assured of salvation And indeed so it is howsoever we in the time of prosperity when all things go well with us we are prone wondrously to presume yet in the hour of death when conscience is awakened we are prone to nothing so much as to call all in question and to believe the doubts and fears of our own hearts more then the undoubted truth and promise of God therefore God takes all courses to stablish us he gives us rich and precious promises he gives us the holy Spirit to stablish us on the Promises he seales us with his Spirit and gives us the earnest of the Spirit and all to settle this wretched and unbelieving heart of ours So desirous is God that we should be well conceited of him he loves us better then we love our selves He so much prizeth our love that he labours by all means to secure us of his love to us because except we know his love to us we cannot love him again and we cannot joy in him c. But that onely in the general Here is earnest and the Earnest of the Spirit that is in plain termes he gives us the Spirit with the graces and comforts of it which doth in our hearts that which an earnest doth amongst men But what is this Spirit an earnest of It is an Earnest of our inheritance in heaven of our blessed estate there We are sons now but we are not heires invested into the blessed estate we have title to God leaves us not off in the mean time while we are in our Pilgrimage he keeps not all for heaven but he gives us somewhat to comfort us in our absence from our Husband from our Lord and King Christ he gives us the Earnest of the Spirit that is he gives the holy Ghost into our hearts which is the Earnest of that blessed everlasting glorious condition which we shall have in heaven hereafter that is the meaning of the words In what regard is the Spirit called an Earnest First of all an Earnest is for security of bargains and contracts so the Holy Ghost assures the soul of salvation being present with his graces and comforts the Holy Ghost is given for security Secondly an Earnest is part of the whole bargain though it be a very little part yet it is a part and so the Spirit of God here and the work of the Spirit and the graces and joy of the Spirit it is a part of that full joy and happinesse that shall be revealed The Spirit dwells not fully in any one he dwelleth no further then he sanctifieth and reviveth but that is an Earnest for the time to come that the Spirit shall be all in all wherein we shall have no reluctancy nor nothing to exalt it self against the sure regiment of the Spirit Thirdly an Earnest is little in comparison of the whole bargain so the work of the Spirit the comforts the joy the peace of the Spirit it is little in comparison of that which shall be in heaven in regard of the fulnesse of the Spirit which we shall have there An Earnest though it be little in quantity yet it
were not troubled that is we may believe and yet want assurance because that is another distinct act that followeth upon our casting of our selves upon God And so many of the dear children of God sometimes they can hardly say that they have any assurance but yet notwithstanding they can say if they do not belye themselves and bear false witnesse against themselves that they have cast themselves upon Gods mercy they have performed the first act of faith and this faith is not fruitlesse altogether Now there be many things that may hinder this other act viz. that act of faith whereby I am assured of my state in grace sometimes God together with my believing will present such things to the soul as wholly take it up so that a man cannot have definitive thoughts upon that that God would have him think of As when God will humble a man for his boldnesse in adventuring upon sin he takes not away the Spirit of faith but God to humble him throughly he sets before him his anger sets before him terrour even hellish terrours that will make him in a state little different from a reprobate for the time so that he is farre from saying that he hath any assurance at that time yet notwithstanding he doth not leave off he casts himself upon Gods mercy still though God kill him yet he will trust in him and yet he feels nothing but terrour and this I say God doth to school him and to humble him and to prepare him for the feeling of assurance after These things we must observe that we give not a false evidence of our selves that though we have not such assurance as we have had and as others have yet I say alway there is some ground in us where upon we may be assured that we are Gods if we could search it Such ought to labour for assurance and such will in time come to assurance And therefore we should be farre from alowing that Doctrine which is as if a man should light a candle before the Divel as we use to say to help him against our hearts by a Doctrine of doubting as if our naughty hearts were not ready enough of themselves to doubt It is the prophanenesse of the world they will not use the means that God hath appointed to this end nay they had rather stagger and take contentment assurance in their own waies if God will love me in a loose course so it is but to give diligence to make my calling and election sure I had rather believe the Popish Doctrine that I ought to doubt and only to be of a good hope Whereas we ought constantly to labour to be assured of our state in grace that God may have more honour and that we may have more comfort from him again and walk more chearfully through the troubles and temptations that are in the world A Carnal proud person he swells against this Doctrine because he feels no such thing and he thinks what is above his measure is hypocrisie he makes himself the measure of other Christians and therefore he values and esteems others by his dark state for a carnal mans heart it is like a dungeon a man in a dungeon can see nothing because he hath no light but he that hath the light he can see the dungeon the heart of a Christian hath a light in it there is the Spirit in him and therefore he can see his own estate and he can tell what is in him upon due search now in a carnal man all is dark he sees nothing because his heart is in a dungeon his eye is dark his heart is full of darknesse all is alike to him he sees no difference between flesh and Spirit and therefore he holds on in a doubting hope and confused disposition and temper of soul But a Christian that labours to walk in the comforts of the Holy Ghost he is not content with such a confused state and therefore we ought to abhor that Doctrine by all means and to justifie this Doctrine that we ought and that we may have assurance of salvation in this world The second thing which I observe and which I joyn to the former is the Doctrine of Perseverance An Earnest you know I told you is made up with the Bargain but it is never taken away so that the Point is this That Gods Children as they may be assured of their salvation So They may be assured that they shall hold out to the end I think many of you think these two Points to be so clear that it is unnecessary to divide them for if we be assured of our salvation there must needs be perseverance to the end for what kind of assurance is it to be in the state of grace to day and not to be to morrow But if you ask some degenerated followers of Luther that leave him in his sweet and comfortable Doctrines and take up some errours of his and some others that would divide these hot they are against the Papists for denying the Doctrine of assurance of salvation but when they come to perseverance they hold that a Christian may fall away altogether these things cannot stand together for undoubtedly it is most sure and just and right that these truths follow one the other assurance of salvation and perseverance and therefore if they maintain that we ought to be assured of salvation and not doubt of Gods love surely then they cannot with the same Spirit and the same ground doubt that God that hath begun a work will finish it to the day of the Lord there is no question but that the one followes the other because an earnest as it assures us of salvation so it assures us of perseverance Herein an Earnest differs from a pawn or pledge a pledge it is given but it is taken away again but an Earnest when it is once given is never taken away again but as it is a part of the bargain so it is filled and made up with the bargain so grace is a part of glory and is never taken away but made up with perfect on of glory From this we see then that he that is in the state of grace is undefeasable he perseveres to the end because he hath the earnest of the Spirit if God should take away his Spirit from him he should take away his earnest and if he take away his earnest he takes away that for which he gives it assurance of salvation and so should overthrough all But God never repents of his earnest man oft-times repents of his earnest and wisheth he had not made such a fruitlesse bargain but God never doth but where he gives the first fruits he makes up the harvest where he laies the foundation he makes up the building where he gives Earnest he makes up the bargain where he begins a good work he finisheth it to the day of the Lord once his for ever his We cannot be so sure of
nor regarded him And as you have it in Ezek. 18. I am punished for other folks sins God deales hardly with me and brings the sins of my fathers upon me and The fathers have eaten sour grapes and the childrens teeth are set on edge God knowes the cankred disposition of man since the fall Satan lyes upon the disposition of man and broods upon it to make it like himself malicious even against God himself God as it were puts himself to his purgation even with no lesse then an oath As I live saith the Lord I will not the death of a sinner You think I am severe to you and men they will rather impute it to Gods severity then their own sin that is the pride of mans nature A sinner is wondrous proud till he cometo destruction it self and the book of conscience be opened Sin will have something to shelter it self with sin is a proud thing God purgeth himself by an oath As I live saith the Lord I will not the death of a sinner If you dye you may thank your own sins though you be so bad if you will repent I will not the death of a sinner but rather that he return and live Yet notwithstanding man to countenance himself in sin he-will fly perhaps to the decree of God God perhaps doth not delight in me whereas the rule of our life is He hath shewed thee O man what is good to do good and abstain from evil and then that question will be out of question whether thou be Gods or no. But man will force upon himself that God doth not regard him that he may sin with more freedom As the unfaithful servant I knew thou wert a hard Master that exactedst that that thou hadst not given and therefore I hid my talent The bad servant forceth upon himself hardnesse in his Master when he was not so that he might be idle So men force upon themselves somewhat in God to be hard Gods dealings to be so and so that they may take more liberty For if God be so loving and so gracious as he hath discovered himself to be their hearts would melt they would never live in such courses but rather put all to the venture then to clamour upon Gods Justice Therefore God himself purgeth himself from a disposition of unkindnesse and unmercifulnesse As I live saith the Lord I will not the death of a sinner fo his whole course is to shew that he loves us And what is our Saviour Christs whole course but to free men from suspition of want of love did he ever turn any back from him but those that went away of themselves did he not shed tears for those that shed his blood so merciful and gracious was he If so be that holy men of all times have laboured to clear themselves to others We ought not to rage against the ill dispositions of men If we were as good as God and as Christ men would have false suspitions of us It is no innocency in the world that will free a man from suspition the wicked poysonful disposition that the Devill stirres up against him Therefore rage not against it but bear it with a spirit of moderation And let us decline as much as we can and free the hearts of people from evil suspition and if we cannot avoid it yet to bear it without discontent considering it is the Lot of Gods childen to be suspected as we see here S. Paul was To spare you I came not to Corinth S. Paul besides his labouring to remove suspition he sets down here the true cause of his not coming to them it was not lightnesse and inconstancy it was to spare you They had many abuses among them and amended they must be that was a conclusion But the question is De modo whether by gentle means by writing an Epistle and staying a while or afterwards by coming and telling them their sin to their face and by being severe and terrible among them Now he concludes I came not among you for this very cause that I might not be so severe and terrible among you as by office I should have been if you had not amended before I came as indeed they did for they cast out the incestuous person and reformed other abuses comfortably They prevented S. Pauls severity with their reformation they had not at the first cast out the incestuous person and they had factions among them they had Atheists among them that doubted of the resurrection many abuses were crept in among them S. Paul wrote a former Epistle upon a desire to reform those and there was a blessed reformation wrought S. Paul did not delight in austerity therefore he deferred his coming that he might have more joy and contentment then sorrow To spare you I came not Before I come to the Points take this for a ground Sin must be judged and censured when it is committed It must be undone by repentance or by eternal punishments in hell it must be censured here or hereafter For it is against Gods nature and Gods Word The soul that sinneth shall dye It must be repented of of necessity or eternally punished in hell Censured it must be one way or other It is of such a contrary nature so opposite to the holinesse of God that is a ground Now this being laid as a ground the question is What is the best way to take away sin whether by gentle means or severe by gentle means if it may be if not then by severe S. Paul would not have spared them if he had come if they had not amended So the Points are two First of all That the best way for the redressing of sin is by gentle means if it may be Secondly if that will not then by severe if men would not have men damned I came not to spare you because I desired that gentler courses might prevail So I say the first Point is this That If gentler courses will prevail they ought especially and in the first place to be taken It should be the care both of Ministers and of all those that deal with others first of all to use mild and winning and gaining courses Now to prove this First they are more suitable to the nature of man for the nature of man is best wrought on by rational courses suitable to his nature suitable to his principle man is a reasonable creature therefore rationall courses will prevail with a rational man a course of perswasion and discovery A man that is not beast-like tell him but the danger of his sin tell him the peril of it in gentle words and he will amend if so be he be not hardened by God to destruction or if God do not reserve him to a more severe redresse Gentle courses ought first to be used because they are agreeable to the nature of man Again they suit most to Gods disposition for God is love and his course to man is
sakes Now to speak of an oath a little An oath as we know is either in judgment before a Magistrate or in particular cases between private persons And it is either assertory of a thing past or promissory of a thing to come Now this oath of S. Paul's is an assertory oath of a thing that was past to secure them that he did not come to them upon this ground that he had a mind to spare them it was no promise of any thing to come but an assertion of a thing that was past An oath is either an assertion or a promise with a calling of God to be a witnesse and a Judge to be a witnesse of the truth or a Judge if he say false You have the description of an oath in this text I say it is either an assertion of a thing past or a promise of a thing to come a sealing of this by calling God to witnesse of the thing we say and to avenge the falshood if we say false As S. Paul here I call God to record that what I say is true and upon my soul if I say false Many Conclusions concerning an oath might be raised out of the text First of all concerning the person that makes an oath he should indeed be a gracious a holy and a good man As S. Paul saith Rom 1. 9. I call God to witnesse whom I serve in my spirit A man is scarce fit to swear which is a part of Gods worship that is not good otherwise Will he care for the Religion of an oath that hath no Religion in him He whose oath should be taken should be such a man as S. Paul in some degree whose oath should be taken The Turks are careful of this to the shame of Christians they will not take an oath of an ordinary swearer It must be a man that hath somewhat in him that shall have his oath regarded Again we see by whom an oath should be taken by the Name of God we ought not to swear by creatures but by God himself nor to swear by any Idol as the Masse and by Mary and such like It is a taking God to witnesse An oath is a part of Gods service a part of divine worship as it is Deut. 6. and other places now we ought to serve God only therefore we ought not to use the name of any creature in an oath He that we swear by must know the heart whether we speak true or no now who knowes the heart but God therefore we must sweare only by the Name of God These things are easie therefore I do but name them We see here again the two grand parts of an oath besides assertion or promise of the truth there must be a calling God to witnesse and imprecation Though these be not alwaies set down they are implied Sometimes the Scripture sets down the one part but alwaies the other is implied There is imprecation in every oath Sometimes imprecation implies both as God do so and so sometimes there is a calling God to witnesse without imprecation yet it is alwaies implied For whosoever swears calls God to witnesse of the truth and if it be not true that God would punish him These three go together in an oath God that can discover it he knowes my heart whether I say true or no. And he is Judge and thereupon a revenger In an oath God is considered not only as Index but as Judex and Vindex not only as a discoverer but as a Judge and revengeri f it be false Therefore it is a part of divine worship because it is with prayer and imprecation is alway implied if it be not expressed So we see in this text what an oath is and by whom it is to be taken and the parts of it Again we see here in the text that an oath ought to be taken in serious matters The rule of an oath is excellently set down by Jeremy Jerem. 4. I know no one place of Scripture more pregnant and therefore I name it Thou shalt swear How The Lord liveth in truth in judgment and in righteousnesse We must swear in truth that is that not onely the thing be true that we swear we must look to that but we must think it so too the thing must be true and we must apprehend it so We must swear in truth And then in Judgment that is with discretion we must understand throughly the matter whereof we swear and what an oath is Therefore persons under years ought not to take an oath because they cannot swear in Judgment to know what the weight and validity of an oath is and when it is a fit time to take it it must be taken in serious businesse As S. Paul here to clear himself to the soules of the Corinthians whom he laboured to edifie when he saw their ill conceit of him hindred their edification therefore he clears himself by an oath Thirdly it must be in Justice that is we must not bind our selves by an oath to any thing that is ill it is a rule a long time past Herod bound himself by an oath in that kind But an oath must never be a bond of injustice but it must be taken in righteousnesse Therefore here is condemned the equivocation and reservation of the Papists They will swear before a Magistrate but with equivocation this is not in righteousnesse For it is a rule that an oath must be taken in that sense as he to whom we swear takes it that is a constant rule among all Divines because it is to perswade him of the truth that we swear it is for his and others sakes and as he and others take it so it must be took Therefore equivocation with absurd reservations are wicked because they are absurd if they be exprest he will swear that he is not a Priest he means after the order of Melchizedeck it is a mocking and prophaning of an oath it is not to swear in Justice and righteousnesse But it is so foul and abominable a course that it is not fit to be spoken of almost and they are ashamed of it themselves S. Paul's oath was all this he sware in truth he was truly perswaded of the truth of his own affections toward them And then in Judgment it was done in discretion for being not able otherwise to clear himself having no witnesse in earth he goes to heaven for a purger he goes to God himself for a witnesse he fetcheth strength from heaven There was none on earth that knew S. Paul's affection but the Spirit of God and his own spirit and he thought his own spirit was not sufficient my own spirit tells me that I came not to spare you but if you would know my mind better 〈◊〉 all God to witnesse and to be a revenger if I speak false that I came not for this end that I might spare you to prevent the rigour and
and but helpers They do but utter and propound matter of joy grounds of joy from the Word of God but it is the Spirit of God that doth rejoyce the heart The fruit of the lips is peace it is true but it is when the Spirit of God speaks peace to the soul together with the lips God creates the fruit of the lips to be peace saith Esay The fruit of the lips is peace b●… God creates it to be so so the Ministers are comforters but God saith I even I am thy comforter We speak matters of comfort and grounds of comfort but God seals them to the heart by his holy Spirit God is the comforter himself He is the Father of comfort and the God of all consolation And the Spirit is called the comforter to shew unto us that however in the Ordinances the materials of comfort be set abroach to Gods people yet notwithstanding that that that speaks peace to the heart and sets on those comforts to the soul and conscience it is the Spirit of God God himself So there is the outward preaching and the spiritual preaching He hath his chair in heaven that teacheth the heart as S. Austin saith S. Paul speaks but God opens the heart of Lydia he hath the Key to open the heart Therefore you have all attributed to the Spirit of God In Joh. 16. I go hence but I will send you the comforter the Holy Ghost and what shall the Comforter do he shall convince the world of sin of righteousnesse and judgment Do not pretend therefore your own inability that you are unable to comfort or to cast down or to seal unto people their righteousnesse do you that that is your duty propound grounds of direction and casting down and of righteousnesse and of judgment of holy life after and then the Holy Ghost shall go with you the Comforter shall do this to the hearts of people the Holy Ghost shall convince What is Paul or what is Apollo but Ministers Paul may plant and Apollo may water but if God give not the increase what is all Therefore Christ promiseth his disciples that the Holy Ghost should accompany their teaching They might have objected Alas we shall teach the world that they are Gentiles that they are obstinate persons hardened in superstition Do not fear saith he I will send the Holy Ghost he shall fall upon you and furnish you Now when the Holy Ghost was in them and the Holy Ghost in their auditors too together with the Word inspired by the Holy Ghost when the Spirit meetes in these three there are wonders wrought When the Spirit of God is in the teacher and the Spirit of God in the hearers and the Spirit of God in the Word I say when there is one Spirit in the teacher and in the hearers and in the Word there are wonders wrought of conversion and comfort It is the Spirit that must do all we are nothing but Ministers Let a man conceive of us as Ministers and dispensers of the Gospel Ministers of comfort we are and but Ministers just so we are helpers of your joy but we are but helpers Those that account us not helpers of joy know not our calling and those that account us more that we are able to comfort people by the Word they turn the preaching of the Word to magick to a charm We can speak the Word but God must speak to the heart at the same time As it is with Physical water there is the water and there are many strong things in it What doth the water cure or purge it is a dead thing it hath no efficatious quality but to cool c. Whence comes the efficacy There are some cool herbs some strong things in it and then it doth wonders So what is the infusion of the Word but water but aqua vitae water of life the dew of heaven Rosa solis whence is it so as water no but there is a Divine influence and vigour in it that refresheth and quickeneth the soul. It doth not do it of it self but it hath a Divine influence of the Spirit So we see though Minist●…s be helpers of joy they are but helpers they are but the conduits that convey that that comes from the Spirit of God they are instruments of the Spirit You see it clear then that God only speaks comfort because the Spirit of God only knowes our spirits throughly The spirit of God can only comfort because he knowes all the discomforts of our hearts he knowes all our griefs all the corners of our hearts that the Minister cannot do The Minister may speak general comforts but the Spirit of God knowes all the windings and turnings of the heart and all the disconsolate pangs of the heart and soul every little pang and grief the Spirit of God knowes it Therefore the Spirit of God is the Comforter he strikes the nail and seales the comfort to the soul we are but helpers Then again the Spirit of God must do it because the soul must be set down with that that is stronger then it self it must be so convinced and set down that it must have more to say against the griefe or temptation then can be alledged by the Devil himself The soul before it be comforted it must be quieted and stilled Now who is above the soul and Satan that tempts the soul Let Satan be let loose to tempt the soul and the soul hath a hell in it self if God let it alone who is above those unspeakable torments of coascience if they be not allayed by the Spirit of God Who is above the soul but the Spirit of God will the soul allay it self no it will never Therefore the Spirit of God that is stronger and wiser then the soul and is the Spirit of light and strength it must set down and quiet and calm the soul that it hath nothing to say against the comfort it brings but quiets it self and saith I must rest I must see this is from heaven I am quiet This the Spirit doth Therefore make this Use of it that in all our endeavours to procure peace to our consciences and spiritual balm to the wounds of our soules let us go to this heavenly Physician not depend over-much upon the Ministery or reading or any outward task but in the use of all things lift up our hearts to God that he would comfort us by his Spirit that he would send the Comforter into our soules Though the disciples had comfort upon comfort by Christ yet till the Comforter came whose office it was to do it to seal his Word to their soules alas they were dead-hearted people but after the resurrection when the Comforter came and refreshed their memories and convinced their understandigs then they could remember all the sweet comforts that our blessed Saviour had taught them before So it is with us we hear many sweet comforts day after day out of Gods
Adam Our estate in Christ better then Adams or the Angels why p. 438 445 Affliction Gods Children subject to Afflictions and why p. 47 60 74 126 Gods people are sensible of Afflictions and why p. 129 c. Good men lying under Afflictions and Crosses are subject to rash and hard censures p. 120 124 The Afflictions of the Saints are for the good of others how p. 102 103 The good we get by others Afflictions is by stirring up grace in us p. 109 God aimes at many things in the same Affliction p. 114 Effects of Afflictions to Gods Children and to the wicked p. 163 Affliction called Death p. 171 See more in Persecution Suffering Tribulation Aime Holy men work from holy Aimes and Ends p. 347 All. Christ is all in all to us p. 391 Alone The Devil set on Christ when he was alone p. 71 See Solitarinesse Amen Amen what and how taken pag. 401 A double Amen p. 440 All Promises in Christ Yea and Amen p. 401 c. 410 c. Anointing What kind of persons were formerly anointed p. 463 464 467 The order of our Anointing in Christ p. 464 467 468 The graces of the Spirit resembled to Anointing or Oynment why pag. 464 c. Antiquity Antiquity of our Church and Religion proved against the Papists p. 394 395 396 Popish Religion not ancient pag. 396 c. Apology Christians are often driven to their Apologie p. 215 Apostle The Priviledge of Apostles above ordinary Ministers and how they differ from them p. 2 S. Paul's Prerogative above other Apostles ibid. Apostles and Prophets how subject to erre and mistake and how not p. 374 Application Necessity of application of the Promises to our selves p. 441 Assent Four degrees or kinds of Assent pag. 541 542 Assurance A Christian ought and may be assured of his estate in grace p. 487 All Christians have not a like assurance nor at all times p. 488 Gods Children may be assured that they shall persevere to the end p 489 See Perseverance We may be assured from a little measure of grace that we are in the state of grace p. 491 Authority Why S. Paul alledged humane authority in his Epistles and in his dealing with men pag. 4 What power or authority the Church gives to the Scriptures p. 3 4 545 See Church Scripture B. Believe HOw hardly mans heart is brought to believe p. 48 486 Best A true Christian is best where he is best known p. 273 Blesse To blesse God what p. 17 How God blesseth us and how we blesse G●…d ibid We adde no●…hing to God when we blesse him ibid. Wh●… we ought to blesse God ibid. We ought to blesse God for Christ p. 21 Blessing what p. 9 The Popes blessing nothing worth ibid. See Praise Thankfulnesse Brother Timothy S. Paul's Brother how p. 4 All Christians or all Believers are Brethren ibid. C. Called MEn in Scripture are often called by that which they are led and ruled by p. 275 365 Censure Against censuring those that are under crosses and afflictions p. 124 150 Men are prone to censute mens callings for some particular actions p. 375 Sin must be censured and judged when it is committed p. 510 Certainty A double Certainty p. 120 440 How the Prophets and Apostles were certain and infallible and how not p. 374 Christ. Christ three wayes taken in Scripture p. 77 Christ is the main object of preaching p. 388 Christ is all in all to us p. 391 How to think of Christ p 390 Gods love to us founded in Christ p. 404 405 How to get into Christ p. 415 Christ a Prophet Priest and King p. 467 The Scripture sets forth Christ by all comfortable terms that may be p. 55 Christian. What is done to Christians is done to Christ p 81 A true Christian is best where he is best known p. 273 A sound Christian loves and values all Christians p. 450 Christians are Prophets Priests and Kings how p. 468 c. See Saint Church Whether the Church can give authority to the Word or Scripture p. 3 4 545 God hath a Church in most wicked places and among most wicked people p. 4 Every Christian ought to be a member of some particular Church or Congregation p. 6 The Church hath its name sometimes 1. From the mixture in it 2 From the better part of it ib. Churches not to be left or forsaken for some corruptions in them p. 339 Civil A meer civil man who p. 8 Comfort Consolation Comfort or Consolation what p. 39 8●… God the God of comfort how p 39 40 What this Title attributed to God implies p. 42 Whatsoever the means of comfort be God is the Spring and Fountain of it p. 43 God can create comfort out of nothing p. 42 God can raise comfort out of contraries p 42 3 What use to be made of this that God is the God of comfort p. 43 44 c. Reasons or grounds why Christians are uncomfortable p. 45 God comforteth his people in all tribulation p. 46 48 Objection against this answered p. 47 69 God applyeth comfort answerable to all miseries in this life p. 48 To comfort wha p. 49 What use to be made of this that God is the God of all comfort who comforteth us in all our tribulation p. 49 50 c. How to derive comfort from the God of comfort p. 50 No comfort for such as go on in sin p. 51 Comforts for those that are relapsed p. 52 General comforts should be had for all kind of maladies and grievances and which be they p. 52 53 Means for obtaining of comfort p. 52 to 60 69 To keep a daily course of comfort how p. 54 to 60 Christ in Scripture is set forth by all terms that may be comfortable p. 55 Means whereby we may be enabled to comfort others p. 60 61 64 65 All Gods Children have interest in divine comforts why p. 61 Divine comforts are not impaired by being communicated ibid. God conveyes comfort to men by men p. 62 63 We should be willing ready and able to comfort one another p. 62 63 64 70 71 Experience a great help to comfort others why p. 65 66 67 Objections of such as complain of want of comfort answered p. 69 Our comforts and consolations are proportionable to our sufferings pag. 82 Greatest comforts follow greatest sufferings why ibid. What hinders comfort in affliction p. 97 No comfort for wicked men p. 98 Comfort or consolation abounds by Christ p. 99 Why Christians are no more comfortable p. 100 Suffering a necessary precedent of comfort why p. 117 Those that suffer as they should are sure of comfort p. 118 Commendation A man may speak in commendation of himself and in what cases pag. 215 Communion Bond of Communion of Saints pag. 450 Companion Companions in sin shall be companions in suffering p. 119 Conceit We should have a good conceit of others p. 322 323 It's good to have a good conceit of others p. 344
or are profitable to others p. 109 Gods children partake of the sufferings of others how p. 115 Suffering must prec●…de comfort and why p. 117 c. Those that suffer as they should are sure of comfort p. 118 See more in Affliction Persecution Tribulation Suspition Mans nature is proue to suspition pag. 356 506 Grounds of suspition from whence it ariseth p. 357 506 c. Suspition what p. 357 507 How to arm our selves against suspition p. 357 How to know when suspition is evil p. 358 Suspition is more then fear lesse then judgment p. 507 Suspition makes the worst construction ibid. Why the Devill cherisheth suspition ibid. Mischief from Suspition ibid. Swearing What meant by the prohibition Swear not at all p. 376 516 517 To swear by none but God p. 515 Swearing lawful p. 516 517 Ordinary swearing condemned p. 376 516 517 518 Objections for common and ordinary swearing answered p. 517 c. Original causes of ordinary swearing p. 518 519 Motives against ordinary swearing p. 519 520 Means against ordinary swearing pag. 519 Ordinary swearers curse themselvse p. 518 T. Thankfulnesse IT 's the disposition of Gods people to be thankfull for mercies received pag. 16 We are to be especially thankfull for spiritual favours p. 18 Meanes to become thankfull p. 18 19 20 208 209 A carnal man unthankful why pag. 19 Motives to thankfulnesse pag 20 210 211 212 Not onely verbal but real thanksgiving is required p. 212 See Blesse Praise Tradition Popish faith is built upon Traditions p. 345 346 Treasury The Popes Treasury what p 107 The Popes Treasury confuted ibid. Christ is the onely Treasury of the Church ibid. Tribulation Gods Children are subject to Tribulation p. 47 60 74 See Affliction Persecution Suffering Trust. Gods Children are prone to trust in themselves why p. 137 138 Not to trust in any thing but in God p. 139 142 143 144 Signes of trusting in these outward things as riches c. p. 139 140 It 's a dangerous thing to trust in our selves or in the creature why p. 141 Popery to be detested because it teacheth men to trust to their own works satisfactions c. p. 142 We must not trust our own graces pag. 142 Creatures may be trusted to subordinately p. 144 145 Worldlings trust in the creature above God yea against God p. 144 How to cure false confidence or trusting in ourselves and in the creature pag. 145 147 To trust in God a lesson hardly learn't p. 148 God to make us trust in him is fain to cast us out of our selves ibid. God is the sole and proper Object of trust p. 153 God in Christ the Object of trust ibid. It 's a mans duty to trust in God pag. 154 Trials of trust in God or Signes whereby to know whether we trust in God p. 155 156 157 Helps or Meanes to trust in God pag. 158 Trust in God how to be exercised in great afflictions p. 161 Trust in God how exercised in the hour of death p. 162 God to strengthen our trust hath given us his 1. Promise 2. Seal 3. Oath 4. Earnest 5. A pawn 6. Seizin p. 164 Objection against trusting in God answered ibid. A Christian may trust or rely on God for the time to come p. 178 Trust what p. 321 See Confidence Truth Truth may not be spoken at all times p. 246. God is true and faithful how p. 379 Objection against this answered pag. 380 How to know the Word of God to be true p. 386 392 It 's a matter of comfort to believe the Word of God to be true p. 377 c. The Word of God or Evangelical doctrine is most true and certain p 392 V. Vain MInisters labour is not in vain in the Lord p. 1 Vehement Carnal men are vehement p. 371 Unbelief The heart of man is full of unbelief and can hardly be settled in the perswasion of Divine truth p. 485 486 Uniformity A Christian is uniform p. 317 Union There is a threefold Union viz. 1. Of Christ and our nature 2. Of Christ and his members 3. Of one member with another p. 116 W. Wait. GRounds of waiting upon God for deliverance from trouble or Motives thereunto p. 173 c. 426 Way It 's a commendable custome for Christians to bring one another on their way p. 355 Weak The weakest creatures have the strongest shelters p. 448 Will. Every one in his calling placed by the Will of God p. 2 3 The more will advisednesse and deliberation in sin the greater the sin p. 249 Wisdome Wisdome manifold p. 274 275 Wisdome what p. 275 Carnal or fleshly wisdome described p. 275 276 277 Why called fleshly Wisdome p. 276 All carnal men have not fleshly wisdome p. 278 Fleshly wisdome is where there is no simplicity nor sincerity ibid. Gods children not ruled by fleshly wisdom why p. 279 288 289 Mischief of carnal wisdom pag. 280 281 Carnal or fleshly Wisdom hinders our joy and comfort p. 287 288 Popery is founded on carnal Wisdom p. 312 How to avoid fleshly Wisdom pag. 368 369 A Christian needs Wisdome why p. 291 Wisdom may be had p 292 We should go to God for Wisdome pag. 292 293 God gives Wisdom for the things of this life p. 293 True Wisdom toucheth conversation p. 299 Word The Preaching of the Word accompanied with Gods Spirit is able to convert and change the most wicked hearts ●…hat be pag. 4 5 See Ministery Preaching It 's a matter of consequence to believe the Word of God to be true certain and immutable p. 377 c. The Word of God is the Judge of all Controversies p. 382 Christ the Word how p. 409 467 The Word of God is most true certain and infallible p. 392 How to know the Word of God to be true p. 386 392 See Scripture World Christianity may stand with converse in the World p. 267 Religion makes a man converse in the world untainted ibid. Wicked men called the World why p. 275 4 365 Y. Yea and Nay GRounds of Yea and Nay p. 371 Dissemblers are Yea and Nay all at once p. 372 All Promises and Prophecies are Yea in Christ p. 407 408 409 c. Trin-uni Deo gloria * 1 Pet. 4. 10. Ubi Vulgat dispensatio multiformis gratiae * Isai. 54. 12. Varia gemmarum genera propter varia dona quae sunt in Ecclesiâ Sanct. * Gallica mirata est Calvinum Ecclesia nuper Quo nemo docuit doctius Est quoque te nuper mirata 〈◊〉 tonantem Quo nemo 〈◊〉 fortiùs Et miratur adhuc fundentem mella Viretum Quo nemo fatur dulcius Beza * Tunc bene multiformis Dei gratia dispensatur quando acceptum donum 〈◊〉 ejus qui hoc non habet creditur quando propter eum cui impenditur sibi datum putatur Greg●…r moral lib. 28. cap. 6. God scatters his Saints why Quest. Answ. The Church hath its name sometimes 1. from the mixture in it 2. from the better
sincerity by pleading corruptions By pleading afflictions Order in sincerity 1. A deep foundation 2. Faith 3. Love Simile Sincerity extends to all a mans life Wicked men have fits of goodnesse God judgeth by the tenour of our life Observ. Christianity may stand with converse in the world Observ. Religion makes a man converse in the world untainted Reason A Christian hath a spirit above the world Grace increased by opposition Not to tempt God by rushing into ill company Object Answ. Times appointed by God Halting in Religion brings danger Observ. We must have our conversation in sincerity while we live here Depravers of goodnesse blamed Observ. A true Christian best where he is best known Christians substantial not painted Use. To approve our selves most where we are best known Simile Ministers win by Life as well as Doctrine Wisdom either 1. Natural Simile Politick wisdome 3. Spiritual 4. Fleshly wisdom Wisdome what Carnal wisdome what Why fleshly wisdome Flesh what The Soul placed between good and evil Wisdome according as the man in whom it is All carnal men have not fleshly wisdome Observ. Fleshly wisdome where there is not sincerity Doctr. Gods Children no●… ruled by fleshly wisdome Reason 1. It is Gods enemy 2. It is our enemy Reason 2. It is base Reason 3. They must mortifie it Reas. 4. It doth all the mischief in the world It hinders from good It sets it self against good It hinders from reforming of ill It hinders from suffering It provokes to evil It keeps in ill Carnal wisdome mistaken Ground of Credulity Jealousie Use. To disclaim fleshly wisdome A great Judgement to begiven up to our selves August Use 2. To get our hearts changed Get assurance of salvation See the vanity of earthly thingse Not to walk by fleshly wisdome breeds joy To repent of carnal devices Gods Children not led onely by the rules of reason Christians renouncing fleshly wisdome have a better guide Quest. Why t●… Apostle names Grace not Wisdome Answ. Wisdome not from our selves but Gods Grace 2. We are guided not only by wisdome but other Graces 3. Our want of wisdome supplyed by grace Gods wisdome for us more then in us Why weaker christiani are sometimes safer Obser. A Christian needs wisdome 1. To avoid dangers 2. Because of the likenesse between good and evill 3. In regard of hindrances and helps to good 4. Good is not good without it 5. Good is hid under evil Wisdome may be bad Use. To go to God for wisdome God gives wisdome for the things of this life Men leaving Gods wisdome miscarry Use. Reproo●… of those that subordinate Religion to State-Policy Observ. True wisdome toucheth Conversation Use. Bad livers no bodies in Religion Grace two-fold 1. The favour of God 2. Something wrought in us 1. A Change 2. Particular graces 1. Heavenly light 2. Love 3. Hope Patience 4. Faith 3. Exciting applying strengthening Grace Doctr. All our wisdom from Grace Every thing necessary to heaven a grace Use. Not to ascribe any thing to our selves God ready to give Grace Reason Christ hath undertaken it Presumption Against Despair Consider our parts and duty Beg assistance of God Go to Christ. Go to the Promises Renounce Carnal Wisdome Incouragements to be guided by Grace Quest. Answ. Signes of being led by Grace 1. To renounce carnal wisdome Sign 2. Simplicity Sincerity Sign 3. The strength of Grace Sign 4. In men of great parts By abasing his gifts and parts In men of weaker parts Sign 5. From the ground of his actions Sign 6. Graces are together Every Grace of use to a Christian Sign 7. When a man provides for his best good Help 1. Submit all to the Spirit of Grace Self-denyal 〈◊〉 Humility 3. High esteem of wisdome 4. To acquaint our selves with God 5. To meditate on the free love and Grace of God 6. Challenge the Covenant of Grace Popery founded on carnal wisdome 1. In the Government 2. In their Worship 3. Opinions Best Statesmen who Observ. A Christian uniform Abuse of signes Observ. God is wise for those that walk by Grace Observ. Gods Children have place in the conscience of others Use. To approve our selves to mens consciences Trust what S. Paul's good conceit of the Corinthians Reason 1. Reason 2. Reas. 3. To entertain good conceits of others Saint Paul's resolution to hold to the end S. Paul's sourse to persevere How the Corinthians were S. Paul's rejoycing To imitate S. Paul in this Resolution The glory of a good life To take God in our resolutions Saint Paul's comfort Things of the world uncertain To examine what we acknowledge Men deceived in the death of others Danger of ill company Aggravation of Hell-torments Ground of ill mens cruelty To be constant in good courses Observ. A sign of a good estate to acknowledge him that hath told us of our sins Use. Tryal Acknowledgment what Christ acknowledged in the Minister Acknowledge Christ what Who acknowledgeth not Christ. To acknowledge the Word To acknowledge the Minister Ministers joyned with Christ in acceptance and neglect Doctr. A faithful Minister the joy of the people Reason He brings Christ the cause of joy Original of our joy Christ must be opened by the Ministery Use of the Ministery Ministers wooers for Christ. Ministers a gift of God The Ministery a great blessing Why God brings men to heaven by men Gods benefits come by the Ministery Use. To rejoyce in enjoying Gids Ordinance Doct. The peoples good is the Ministers joy 1. The matter of his joy 2. A meanes to increase his joy 3. The seal of his Ministery 4. To evidence that he was a good man Use. To be good under the Ministery Good communicative Wicked men draw others to sin Use. To labour to make others good The misery of opposers of goodnesse Not to leave Churches for some corruptions Observ. Christ hath a Day Simile Doctr. Christians rejoycing as it will be at the last day What will avail at the last day who take the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Application to the Sacrament How we are acquainted with Christ. To acknowledge Christ in the Sacrament what Thoughts of Judgment make us painful Observ. Good as far as may be to cherish a good opinion of others Reason 1. Reason 2. Not to cast off men for infirmities Use. Encouragement to inferiours to give occasion of good hope Observ. Personal presence hath a special power Use. To esteem Gods Ordinance Object Answ. Saint Paul's end in coming to Corinth Observ. Holy men work from holy ends Use. To look to our aimes in our actions Doctr. The preaching of the Gospel a special grace Reason It is the means to work all good in us Use. To esteem the Word as a Grace How to come to be thankful Doctr. Those that are in the state of Grace need a second grace Reason 1. From inward opposition Reas. 2. From without Reas. 3. From new temptations Reason 4. From the time to come Reason 5. From Satan Reason 6. From the capacity of the soul.
kinds of the promises whether to the promises for this life or the promises of Grace If they be promises of this life take heed we abuse not our selves in them There have been grosse miscarriages even from the beginning of the world will be to the end of the world in the false application of outward promises We see the Jews cryed The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Loed as if God had tied himself to that by a perpetual promise Trust not to lying words saith the Prophet you think you are Gods people and that he will alwayes keep you out of captivity challenge not temporal promises without reservation and subjection to Gods will as he shall see goood Babylon saith I sit as a Queen and I shall for ever So mystical Babylon in the Revelation saith I sit as a Queen till her Judgment and destruction come in one day because she trusted to her present temporal estate Let no man promise himself that that God doth not promise in his Word immunity from the crosse for whatsoever Promise of protection and provision we have all is with the exception of the Crosse remember therefore to construc the Promises aright Then again another rule about the Promises is That it is usual with God to perform them in a wonderful manner that men know not how he doth perform them notwithstanding take that for a rule How is that As Luther was wont to say Gods carriage is by contrary meanes he performs them wonderfully He promised Abraham a child but his body was dead in a manner first and Sarah's womb He promised Joseph to raise him up so high but alas the iron entred into his soul first He promised that Christ should come but all was desperate first The Scepter was departed from Judah So he hath promised that we shall rise from the dead but we must rot in our graves first He hath promised forgivenesse of sins that he will be mercifull to us but he will waken our consciences to see our desperate estate that we are forlorn creatures first and unworthy of any respect from him He hath promised us happinesse we that are Christians are the happiest creatures in the world yet in the sense and eye of the world for the present we are the most forlorn creatures that are yet he performes his promise with comfort here and at last will fully manifest his love to us So at the last his Promises shall be wonderfully performed God doth not perform his Promises according to humane policy he will not do thus because we look he should do thus and thus he will crosse our expectation and yet perform his promise Saint Paul looked to come to Rome but he thought not of coming to Cesar by whipping and perill and ship wrack Moses knew he should come to see Canaan did he think to have such a conflict in the Wildernesse alas he thought not of it God doth wondrous strangely perform his Promises by contraries he crosseth our imaginations and conceits directly and yet he is true of his promise Another branch of this is That though Gods Promises be Yea and Amen in his time yet he usually defers his promises for a time and why Among many other reasons To mortifie self-confidence to fit us for his blessings for except he deferred them we should not be fit for them he defers them that we may be fitted for them long before they come That we might mortifie self-confidence to see that he immediately and graciously performs his promise And in the mean time to exercise faith and repentance and desire and prayer therefore he defers them but yet they are Amen at last though he defer Gods time is better then ours he knowes better then we the Physician knowes his time better then the Patient Hereupon comes a duty consequently upon this dispensation of God if he perform his promises wondrously and unexpectedly and perform them in delay let thy duty be answerable to his dealing wait wait upon God tie him not to such and such courses he can transcend and go beyond thy imagination and do more then thou art able to conceive as the Apostle saith therefore wait his good time H●… that shall come will come Stay Gods leisure prevent him not run not before him And as he doth things by contraries so when thou art in contraries look for contraries when thou art in fin and feelest it on thy conscience believe that he is made righteousnesse to thee he hath promised it it is Yea and Amen in Christ. When thou shalt be turned to dust in the grave believe that he will raise thy body this promise is Yea and Amen and as a pledge of it Christ is gone to heaven when thou art miserable remember the Promise thou shalt be glorious with Christ as he is glorious All his Promises are Yea and Amen in contraries believe contraries because in contraries he performs contraries and say as Job doth Though he kill me yet will I trust in him I know thou canst not deny thy self and thy Promises are Yea and Amen In the worst estate that befalls us let us learn to wrastle with God in the Promises and implead his Promises Why Lord thou hast promised forgivenesse of sins to them that ask it thou hast promised grace and mercy and favour remember thy promise thou canst not deny thy self thou canst not deny thy gracious promise thy Word is as thy self thou art Amen and thy Word is Yea and Amen onely give me grace to wait thy good leisure yet I will not let thee depart without a blessing I will hold thee till I have received a gracious answer as Jacob wrastled with him till he had the blessing Let us labour to answer the promise with our faith and labour to bring our soules to be like his Promises they are Yea and Amen though they be not presently performed let us constantly believe a constant Promise let us cleave to God let us have a Amen for Gods Amen Are the Promises Amen Amen let the soul say Lord So be it so it shall be I will seal thy Amen in thy promise with my Amen in my faith so let us have an Amen for Christs Amen They are all and will be all Amen in Christ in fit time all the gracious Promises will be Yea and Amen let our soules echo and say Amen For our faith must answer the Promises faith and the Promises be correlatives for the promise is not except it be applyed Let faith answer the promise let us labour to be established in the Promises in Gods Word Shall we have certain Promises and shall we waver and stagger Therefore let us complain Lord thy Promises are sure and certain as thou hast said what is the reason I cannot build on them Oh my unfaithful heart Let us condemn our unbelieving our lying hearts that call the truth of God into question and make that which is