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A69777 The intercourses of divine love betwixt Christ and his Church, or, The particular believing soul metaphorically expressed by Solomon in the first chapter of the Canticles, or song of songs : opened and applied in several sermons, upon that whole chapter : in which the excellencies of Christ, the yernings of his gospels towards believers, under various circumstances, the workings of their hearts towards, and in, communion with him, with many other gospel propositions of great import to souls, are handles / by John Collinges ... Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1683 (1683) Wing C5324; ESTC R16693 839,627 984

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Loves which are much our duty upon this view of our great Lord and Master 1. Love to him 2 Love to our Neighbours especially those in whom any thing of Christs appears 1. It calls to us for Loves to Christ This in point of gratitude If Saith our Saviour you love them which love you what reward have you Do not even the Publicanes the same Our Love to Christ is but a Love to him who hath Loves for us and indeed this speaketh to all men for Love to him but more especially O Love ye the Lord all you his Saints It is the opinion of great Divines that all the world is beholden to Christ as Mediator that from his Mediation there issueth some good to the worst of men But he hath eminently extended his Love to his Saints he hath loved them with a singular Love If there should be Love wanting in their hearts to Christ they should be of all men and women in the world most inexcusable what could he have done for any of the Sons of Men which he hath not done for them What greater thing could they have asked of him then he hath prevented them in asking O Love you the Lord all you they that believe Do you ask me how you should shew your Love to him The first motions of Love are in the heart Love there is seen in delighting in him breathing after him It next shews itself by the lips Speaking well of him to others defending his interest and concern in the world If we come to more external acts That of David Ps 16. 2. 3. is true here O my Soul thou hast said unto the Lord thou art my Lord my goodness extendeth not to thee but to the Saints that are in the earth to the excellent on whom is all my delight Our Love to Christ must be seen in our actings in our stations for the honour glory and concern of Christ in the world In our kindness to the poor flock of Christ Christ calls a want of Love to them a want of Love to himself 25. Math. But that brings me to the Second with a short discourse upon which I shall shut up this discourse 2. It calls you for Love to men especially to those in whom you see any thing of Christ The argument for this ariseth from our duty to study a Conformity to Christ he had a kindness for all when he was born good will towards men was proclaimed by the multitude of the Heavenly host Luke 2. 14. There also lyeth an obligation upon usfrom the law of Christ and from this great Example to be kindly affectionate toward all There lyeth also a Precept upon us to do good to all And again saith the Apostle Owe nothing to any but this That you love one another Indeed there is not the same degree of affection nor the same acts of Love due to all as to that we must be ruled by the Word of God but Love is a debt upon us which is due to all men Therefore wrath hatred anger strife malice are 〈◊〉 where reckoned up by the Apostle as the fruits not of the Spirit but of the flesh In a kind Child of God there should be a general love and kindness to all mankind though to be expressed in a Scriptural order as to the degrees and acts of it So it was in Christ 2. But secondly it calls to you for a more Special distinguishing Love to all those in whom you see any thing of Christ Do good to all saith the Apostle but especially to the houshold of Faith The Soul of every Member of Christ should cleave to these with whom he is united not onely by a common nature being the same flesh and blood with him but by a common faith by the ligament of Members of the same body whereof Christ is the head Give me leave to press this the more upon this argument because I find the Apostle St. John pressing it upon the same Topick 1. John 4. 11. If God so loved us we ought also to Love one another v. 12. If we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfected in us v. 16. He tells us that God is love and he that dwelleth in Love dwelling in God Every good Christian may see much more in the meanest poorest true Christian to ingage him to Love him or her than Christ could ever see in the highest Saint to oblige or move Christ to love him or her When thou wallowedst in thy blood when thou hadst nothing of the lineament of a Saint in thy Soul not so much as a line of any Spiritual Goodness he passed by thee and it was with him a time of Love as to thy Soul there is not a child of God in the world but there is somthing of holiness and righteousness something of the image and Superscription of Christ to be seen in his Soul something of the Divine nature resplendent in his Soul It may be there is more in some less in others but there is in all some When thou hast a temptation upon thee to aversate thy brother or to turn away thy heart or head or hand from him O remember Christ hath loves and and he that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in him And that it is he whose heart is full of of Loves for thee who hath commanded thee to Love thy Brother But I have spoken e nough to this first Proposition Sermon X. Canticles 1. 2. For thy Loves are better than Wine IN my last discourse I shewed you that Christ hath Loves kind affections and inclinations to the Children of men and more especially to the Souls of his Saints which he is ready to declare and express yea hath already expressed in acts of kindness and these not of one but various kinds suted to the respective necessities of his people a salve for every Sore a Supply for every want I come now to shew you the quality of his Loves which in my Text is set down positively and comparatively In our translation according to our Idioms or propriety of Speech the positive is to be understood in the comparative particle A thing cannot be called better than another unless it hath some positive absolute goodness in it self but in the Hebrew it is more plainly expressed That saith Are good before Wine It is their way of expressing comparatives It makes no difference in the sense Good before Wine And better than wine are phrases of the same sense In the Explication of the Text I told you that though Wine strictly signifies the juice of the Grape yet by a Synechdoche here it signifyeth all created goods whatsoever can be sweet or profitable or advantageous to us The Proposition is plainly this Prop. The Loves of Christ are good befo e or better than all created comforts and enjoyments whatever I have already shewed you what the Loves of Christ signify viz. His good will his kind affections and inclinations to the Souls of men
keep my Commandments No Soul can so much as pretend to a love to Christ that makes no conscience of keeping the Commandments of Christ 9. The Soul lastly that hath a love for Christ will suffer any thing for his sake it will rather suffer the loss of all things then the loss of Christs favour By these and such like questions and notes as these it will be no hard matter for a Soul to judge of its love to Christ and by that it will be able to judge and determine concerning its uprightness In the last place doth every Soul that is upright love Christ and are the degrees of the Souls uprightness according to the degrees of the Souls love How do we then all stand concerned to love Christ In order to it 1. The Soul must be dispossest of other loves inconsistent and incompetent with the love of Christ Such is the love of all lust of any thing that is contrary to the will of God Such is the excessive and immoderate love of the world Love not the world nor the things that are in the world saith John 1. Joh. 2. 25. If any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him in like manner we may say If any man love the world the love of Jesus Christ is not in him 2. Do what in thee lies to persuade thy self of the suitableness of Christ to the sta●e and needs of thy Soul we love nothing but what appeareth good that is some way suitable to and convenient for us All we can do as to this is to read the Scriptures which alone give a true account of the state of Souls To hear them opened and applied to our consciences by able and faithful Ministers to meditate upon what we read and hear Christ must appear to our Souls an amiable object before we can love him 3. Lastly Pray for the Spirit of Grace both effectually to discover Christs loveliness to you and also to draw out your hearts to love him if we must be taught of God to love our Brethren whom we have seen we must much more be taught of God to love Jesus Christ whom we have not seen Those that think man hath a power in his own will to love God do not consider that we have not a power in and of our selves as we often find upon experience to love a creature whom yet it were our great interest to love O pray pray without ceasing that you may love the Lord Jesus Christ remember that the upright love him there is no upright Soul in the World but loves him 2. Thus thou shalt shew thy self to be upright Nothing more discovereth an upright heart then a sincere Love to Christ Now of how great moment it is for a Christian to discern his uprightness I need not tell you I shall conclude with a bare naming of some Scriptures containing promises made to uprightness leaving them to you at your leisure to meditate upon them Psal 7. 10. The Lord saveth the upright in heart Gods Righteousness belongeth to the upright in heart Psal 36. 10. The End of the upright man is Peace Psal 37. v. 37. Gladness belongeth to the upright in heart Psal 97. v. 11. The Generation of the upright shall be blessed Psal 112. v. 2. Light shall arise upon them in obscurity v. 4. They shall dwell in Gods presence Psal 140. 13. They shall dwell in the land Prov. 2. 21. The way of the Lord is strength unto them Prov. 10. 29. The integrity of the upright shall guide him Prov. 11. 3. His Righteousness shall deliver him v. 6. The upright in the way are the Lords delight v. 20. Righteousness keepeth him that is upright in the way but wickedness overthroweth the Sinner Prov. 13 6. Sermon XXXI Cant. 1. 5. I am black but comely O you Daughter of Hierusalem as the t●nts of Kedar as the Curtaines of Solomon v. 6. Look not upon me because I am black because the Sun hath looked upon me my Mothers Children were angry with me they made me the keeper of the Vineyards but my own Vineyard I have not kept IT is the Spouse in this excellent Song of Love that yet Speaks Twice we have heard her Speaking to her Beloved Once Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth begging some distinguishing token of his Special love Her heart suggesting to her that her beloved was far more ready to imbrace her then she was to run after him She spake a Second time Draw me and we will run after thee begging the sweet and powerfull influences of divine grace Here now she interrupteth her applications to her beloved with an Apostrophe to her companions whom she here calleth The Daughters of Hierusalem The verse contains a modest apology which the maketh for her self In which are considerable 1. The persons to whom she maketh it here stiled The Daughters of Jerusalem 2. The Apology it self I am black saith she as the tents of Kedar as the Curtains of Solomon c. In the latter is considerable 1. The thing which she apologizeth for That is her Blackness which she confesseth I am black saith she and illustrateth as the teints of Kedar c. 2. The arguments of her Apology or head from whence it is drawn They are four or five 1. The mixture of comeliness with her blackness I am black but comely 2. The Influence of heaven upon her The Sun saith she hath looked upon me 3. The oppositions she had met with on earth My mothers children were angry with me 4. Her worldly diversions and imployments They made me the Keeper of the Vineyards 5. Her own neglect But my own I have not kept Finally She pleadeth with them that they would not look upon her because she was black But what needed this Apology who faulted the Spouses blackness who questioned her comeliness This is not expressed in the letter of the Text but easily understood Patet quod dett axer ant ei nigredinem improper antes It is apparent saith Bernard that they did detract from her charging her with blackness Neither did the true Church of Christ nor any truely believing Soul ever want those that reproached them The man according to Gods own heart heard some telling him There was no help for him in God We must therefore Suppose our Spouse to have heard some saying to her to this purpose Canst thou think that Christ who is the fairest of ten thousand should kiss the with the kisses of his mouth Thee That art by nature an Ethiopian and by thy renewing actuall Sins hast made thy self much more black and ugly Surely when the King of glory humbleth himself to make love to his Subjects he will chuse one much fairer then thou art Did Aaron and Miriam wonder at reproach Moses because he had married an Ethiopian Num. 12. 1. And should not Christ be the wonderment of the whole creation if he should love one so black as thou art
the light of thy Countenance upon me Psal 4. 6. Let others take the ring let her have but the kiss and it is sufficient for her but single influences of Grace will not serve her turn every look of grace is sweet and frequent influences of Grace are necessary for her Secondly Observe How she begs 1. Reverently Let him kiss me Thus we ought to draw nigh to God with Reverence and Godly fear Reverence becomes the great Majesty of Heaven and Earth those that come without it towards God understand not his greatness 2. She begs humbly But a kiss The crumbs that fall from the Lords Table the touch of the Hem of his Garment any thing of Jesus Christ that may but argue distinguishing love 3. She asketh boldly not rudely but boldly Thus we ought to come to the Throne of Grace with an holy boldness the boldness of faith the word is in the future tense and may be translated He shall kiss me or he will kiss me His Majesty requires reverence His promise gives boldness and confidence 4. Lastly she asketh fervently There is a bluntness discernable in the form Let him kiss me which speaketh the Souls fervency Besides the trina repetitio repeating the same thing by three terms denotes as Lud. de Ponte observes flagrantissimum cordis affectum The most flagrant earnest desire of the Spouses heart I have thus far opened to you the Spouses first Petition in which the believing Soul with a Reverent holy humble boldness yet with all possible fervency begs of the Lord Jesus Christ her Spiritual Husband some special distinguishing token of his love more especially a near fellowship with him in his ordinances and the sealing up of his love to her soul in Gospel Doctrines This first petition she presseth with a double Argument 1. The first drawn from the Excellency of his love This she sets out per modum comparationis comparing it with Wine and preferring it before it 2. Comparing the name of Christ with Ointment and that not shut up in a box but poured out Thy name is as an Ointment poured forth v. 3. Her 2d Argument is drawn from her Love to her Beloved in the close of the third v. The Virgins love thee and the cause of this love is expressed to be the savour of his good Ointments Because of the savour c. Let me open the terms by which these Arguments are expressed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We translate it because thy loves are better than Wine what we translate Loves the Septuagint translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whom the Vulg. Lat. and the Arab. Interp. follow Thy Breasts the Syriack translate it Bowels otherwise there is no difference in the Translations Delrio tells us that Alanus an Ancient Interpreter makes these words not the continued speech of the Spouse pressing her Petition by an Argument but the reply of her beloved to her assuring her of his love and that he valued her Breasts above all things That which probably led him into this mistake was his interpreting the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Breasts and not understanding how in any propriety of Speech the Spouse could commend the Breasts of her beloved they being parts from which usually the woman not the man is commended in ordinary Speech but as the whole stream of Interpreters runs another way so this seemeth to be no constraining argument to enforce us to acknowledge such a sudden and a subitam abruptam verborum commutationem as Delrio calls it abrupt change of words as this interpreta●io● must necessarily infer For ● Though it be true that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a breast Ezek. 23. 3. v. 21. yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies beloved And loves in the Abstract and so it is translated Ezek. 16. 8. it was a time of love Suppose we should allow more authority to the Septuagint than to our Hebrew Text for which there is no reason yet it is not improper to assert these the words of the Spouse speaking to her beloved for although the God of Nature intending the woman for the Nurse hath provided that sex with larger breasts yet the man hath breasts also and such if you will believe the Philosopher as may have milk in them However he who runs may read the expression figurative Amoris sedes est in corde in uberibus quae cordi adhaerescunt The heart is the seat of love and the Breasts are nigh to the heart and this evidenceth the difference of Interpreters as to the translation of the word as to this Text to be but a word-bate for Ubera tua and Amorestui Thy Breasts or thy loves are much the same thing in signification Neither lastly is this the only Text in Scripture where the breasts of men are mentioned if we should be constrained to that sense Isaiah 60. 16. Thou shalt suck the Breast of Kings so also God is said to bear his People from the Belly and to carry them from the Womb. They are Metaphorical expressions and it is granted on all hands that if our Interpreters with whom concur most modern Interpreters have not hit the literal signification of the word yet they have not missed the sense in translating it Thy Loves By which Interpreters generally understand either the private influences of Grace with which God refresheth the particular Souls of his Saints or The publick ordinances and institutions of the Gospel by which God expresseth his love to his Church in general and every believing Soul in particular 1. Some understand Divine institutions Ordinances are indeed the Breasts at which Christ suckleth his Children those means by and through which he conveyeth the streams of his love to them and there is a great excellency in them David prefers a day in Christ's Courts before a 1000 elsewhere Origen observes that in some copies instead of quia ubera tua c. it was quia loquelae tuae thy Speeches are better than Wine which also excellently suits with the former expression The kisses of his mouth This sense in the general notion of it much pleaseth many Interpreters though something divided in their more particular notions Origen interprets it Dogmata tua thy Doctrines and seems indifferently to understand it of the Doctrine of the Law or of the Gospel The Popish Interpreters reading it Breasts expound it concerning the two Testaments so Genebrard c. Others interpret it more strictly concerning the sweet Doctrine of the Gospel which Saint Peter 1 Pet. 2. 2. compareth unto Milk which as new born Babes we ought to desire and concerning the Apostles and Prophets which were the first Instruments which God made use of to convey that Doctrine to us The sweetness of the Gospel saith Aquinas is meant here by which as with Milk those who are Babes in Christ are nourished Mr. Brightman making this the Speech of the Jewish
and hence the soul is taught by it's own reason to thirst after these manifestations of Divine Goodness as those which above all others are proportioned to its wants and highest necessities 2. But 2dly These desires are not the product of an enlightned understanding only but of a renewed will also So wofully depraved is our corrupt nature that the inferiour powers of our Souls have withdrawn themselves from the command of reason and whereas it is the method of a reasonable Soul to imbrace or refuse a thing with the will according to the judgment which is by the understanding given in concerning it it often falls out otherwise by reason of our Souls disorder He that not only knoweth the will of God but also approveth those things which are most excellent yet hath no hearthimself to close with them he is ready to teach another like the hand of a Statue in a way which directeth a Traveller but moveth not he teacheth not himself hence the renovation of the understanding although the great wheel of the Soul is not sufficient to make the Soul to will those things which are spiritually good Mans Soul is like a Clock broken in pieces every of whose Wheels must be mended before it will again move truly But the gracious man is renewed as well in Spirit as in Body and in Mind The day of the Lords Power is come upon him and of unwilling he is made willing God hath given him to will Phil. 2. 13. taking away that natural enmity and stubborness which was in his heart and disposing and enabling him to will those things which are in themselves most desirable and which are most pleasing unto God Now there is nothing more pleasing unto our Heavenly Father than to see his Children more sond of their Fathers love than of any thing else which is in his hand to bestow upon them And this is the true reason of the gracious Souls thirst after spiritual things To which may be added secondly the Souls assurance That other things shall be added to it Mat. 6. 33. If saith the Apostle he hath given us his Son shall be not with him give us all things All inferiour good things are but appendices to these great spiritual blessings with which the Soul is blessed in Christ Jesus the Woman that hath her Husbands heart easily commandeth his purse The Child of the bosom needs not trouble itself for a new Coat It is a spiritual subrilty of a gracious heart to be most desirous of spiritual things other things will come alone they are but appurtenances to this great possession and an easy faith will assure the Soul that if Men who are evil know how to give good things to their Children who are once possessed of their Affections God will not be wanting to his People especially considering that his liberality extends to the grass of the Field and to the Birds of the Air because they are his Creatures Let this notion in the first place shew you the vast difference betwixt the renewed soul and that which is yet in its natural estate Grace considering our weak estate is not so easily discernable in us from our Actions as from our Affections The bent of the heart doth best discover the state of it whether it be renewed or no. All Men and Women in the Christian world come under one of these three ranks They are either 1. Profane and dissolute Persons Or 2. Hypocrites or seeming professors who have a form of Godliness but deny the power thereof Or 3. Such as are Disciples indeed the true Children of God God is the fountain of all mercy and goodness and nature itself teacheth man something of this Hence every ones Soul is looking out towards God for some good or other 1. The worldling and profane Person says who will shew us any good But what is the good which he thirsts after an increase of Corn and Wine and Oil The objects for the lusts of the Flesh the lust of the Eye and the Pride of life let the Swines belly be filled with these husks and he is satisfied let who will take Grace and Heaven and heavenly things as he understands not his need of them no● the excellency that is in them so neither is his Soul carried out in any desires after them 2. The Hypocrites design is of another nature he would fain appear to be something though indeed all his glorying be but a vain shew and a meer appearance when indeed he is nothing Now that which he desires is something proportioned to this end he possibly covets the best gifts like Simon Magus who when he saw That through the laying on of the Apostles hands the Holy Ghost was given said Give me this power also that on whomsoever I lay my hands he may receive the Holy Ghost Acts 8. 18. The Hypocrite may desire a gift of Prayer a gift of Prophecy and such like common gifts of the Holy Ghost which may serve his design in appearing Godly and Religious and this satisfieth him 3. But the gracious Soul is satisfied with none of these All his desire is after the gifts of special grace the obtaining of union with and reconciliation to God the light of Gods countenance c. and nothing less than this will satisfy his thirst It is reported of Luther indeed he reports it of himself that when he first Preached the Gospel in Germany he was much courted by some great Persons and presented with many gifts which made the good man jealous that God intended to put him off with these things but saith he Protestatus sum c I made a protestation to my God that I would not be so satisfied The Sons of Keturah may be put off with portions but Isaac must have the inheritance The gracious Soul is a true Artabazus he thinks his Saviours kiss is better than a Cup of Gold and indeed I know no better evidence of a gracious heart than this to be found unsatisfied without the special and distinguishing love of God yet that you may not deceive your selves I must tell you that as it is possible that one who is a stranger to God may desire these distinguishing favours from God So the desire of those good things which are but the issues of common providence is often found in gracious Souls and that in too high a degree But as the former proceedeth from some inconstant principle and lasteth not long in the unregenerate Soul nor is much in earnest while it continues but like Augustines desire to be rid of his lusts while in the mean time as he confesseth he secretly desired that God would not hear his prayer so the latter desires in the Child of God are secondary and subordinate or if irregular and immoderate no more than fits of passion out of which grace soon recovers him Secondly Let me beseech you all to make these spiritual distinguishing mercies of God the object of your desires I
Servants of God is yet to be found in the souls of such as have any acquaintance with or relation to the Lord Jesus Christ And indeed our reason will tell us that it must be so if we consider but these following particulars which will give you a reasonable account of the truth of this Proposition The least token of special distinguishing Grace is of an infinitely sweet and salvifick nature and evidence There are common gifts of the Spirit of God which indeed may be sweet and very grateful to a spiritual nature such are the gifts of Prayer and Prophecy c. but yet are not of a saving nature or evidence a man may have them and perish for ever but it is not so with such influences of the Spirit as are tokens of special distinguishing love spiritual gifts are to be coveted because of a subserviency in them to spiritual and saving ends but they are not of a saving nature and have nothing of a saving evidence in them but in the least token of special distinguishing love there is something of an evidence for Salvation the least of it is of a saving nature Faith that is but as a grain of Mustard seed is as much saving as the strongest Faith is The measures of our comforts much depend upon degrees of grace but our Salvation doth not Christ bids Zacheus go home for that day Salvation was come to his house Salvation cometh to the soul that hour in which the least of special love shineth upon it the least of that brings Salvation and consequently is exceeding sweet and must be so if you consider this soul as first seeking the Kingdom of God allarumed with the spiritual sense of its misery by nature it s lost and undone condition in Adam This is the one thing that such a soul seeks after in comparison with which all other things are as dross and dung to it That it may discern it self beloved of God one of those for whom Christ died and whose sins are washed away with his blood for this it hath wept and prayed and resolved to seek after it and resolved not to be silent There is no evidence of special Love but is suited to some great spiritual want of the soul Our souls are exposed to a great variety of wants All the tokens of God's special Love are suited to some or other of these wants Our souls are impotent and weak both to the performance of spiritual duty and to resist our spiritual adversary to this want now strengthening grace is suited They are dull and heavy and move heavily in spiritual duties to this quickening grace is suited They are sad and troubled for fear of God's wrath to this consolatory grace is suited There is no influence of the special Love of God but is suited to some special want or burden of our souls and therefore the least of them must be exceedingly desirable for so every thing is that suiteth our necessities and so much the more as it suiteth some more special and eminent wants If the Sun doth but arise upon the soul it healeth Mat. 4. 2. though it shineth not out in its fullest glory if Christ spreadeth but a wing over it there is healing in that wing His very shadow gives delight to the soul Cant. 2. 2. the least of his fruit is pleasant to its taste If saith the woman I can but touch the Hem of his Garment I shall be whole Such is the purity of the Saints Love that though they may have an Eye to the Recompence of Reward which his Love brings yet they love him for himself who appears to their souls as Totus desideria altogether desirable It is his Love which their souls thirst after now the least special token of Love sheweth that he loves it and his heart cleaveth to it He that valueth the Love of his friend regardeth not the quantum of the Token but the nature of it if it be of such a nature as he doth not ordinarily give to any common friend that is it which he eyeth If a soul can see any thing which speaketh its Lord joyned to it cleaving unto it this is it which makes it valuable A discerning soul will take little joy in gifts of common providence Riches Honours good Relations common gifts It may and will desire these things while it is in the flesh as they fill up some emptinesses in that our state but it can by no means be satisfied with these things As Haman said when he had been telling his Wife of his great preferments and honours All this doth me no good so long as I see Mordecay sitting in the King's Gate my Enemy is honoured and advanced as well as I So it saith The Lord hath given me riches honour c. but all this doth me no good so long as I see the haters of God enjoy as much of these things as I do let me have some special token of God's Love Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth Fourthly The Child of God knoweth That the least token of Christs special love is more worth than all the world There is no proport on betwixt a corp●ral and a spiritual good betwixt what is sutable to our flesh and to our wants in this life and what is sutable to our Souls and necessary for us with respect to our eternal felicity The Philosopher could say Animus cujusque est quisque The mind of a Man is the Man The Christian knows that Anima cujusque est quisque The Soul of a Man is the Man What shall it profit a Man if he should gain the whole world and lose his own Soul The sensual Man values his life above those things that are only good because of their subserviency to that The rational man valueth his mind above his flesh and accordingly sets a price upon knowledge and moral Virtue above those things that meerly gratify his sense The spiritual Man valueth his Soul his Soul considered not only as a rational Being but as a Spirit an immortal Spirit capable of the favour of God and an union and fellowship with him and ordain'd to an eternal existence not only above his body which he knoweth is made up of dust moulded up into flesh and blood and bones but above his mind It really is of more value and he is made apprehensive of it hence he cannot but value the least that tendeth to make that happy above any thing else whatsoever Besides he knows himself created to an eternity and believing that his reason teacheth him infinitely to prefer what is good for him with reference to an happy existence to eternity above any thing that can only serve him for the short time he is to be clothed with flesh and to live in this world This Election of the loves of Christ before all things else and the value he puts upon the least tokens and manifestations of it doth naturally and rationally follow his
knowledge convictions and faith and proceedeth upon the same reason upon which any reasonable creature valueth a greater and more comprehensive good above what is of an inferiour vertue and more insignificant Nor is this other than according to the workings of our Souls in other cases towards Creatures which we have made the objects of our love The good look and smile of an Husband a letter from him a small token be it never so small how welcome and acceptable is it to the Wife The reason lies in her love to her Husbands Person To you that believe saith the Apostle he is precious It is impossible indeed rationally impossible that a Soul should believe take it in what sense you will but it must love the Lord Jesus Christ Take believing as it signifies no more than a firm and steady assent to the proposition of the word revealing Christ to us as he is the eternal Son of God the brightness of his Fathers glory the express image of his Person full of kindness to the Sons of Men pitying them taking a delight in them willing to save them and to communicate of his fulness to them and to this end coming from Heaven to Earth clothing himself with out flesh encompassing himself with creature infirmities then dying upon the Cross that he might purchase us unto himself c. I say it is not possible that a Soul should firmly and steadily assent and agree to these things but he must love Christ But if you take believing in the second sense as it signifieth the Souls receiving of him as its Lord and Saviour its resting and relying upon him and trusting him with all its Spiritual and Eternal Concerns it is impossible but that the Soul should have a love for him above all created Objects and having so it cannot but naturally desire to be mutually beloved and be passionately desirous of some evidences of it and the least evidences of the reciprocations of love on his part who is so exceeding dear in the Eyes of the Soul must needs be exceedingly desirable to and valuable by that Soul This is yet further advantaged from the consideration of the exceeding low Opinion and Estimate which grace teacheth every soul upon whom it hath shined to have and make of it self The proud man valueth nothing but great things from his friend nay he scarcely thinks any thing great enough for him to put any value upon The reason lies in the high opinion which he hath of his own worth and merit but the humble man puts a value upon the least kindness because he hath a low and mean opinion of himself so he looketh upon every thing as more than he could merit or challenge Naaman huffs when the Prophet sends to him to go and wash in the waters of Jordan he expected the Prophet should have come out and stroked him and he thought the Waters of Abana and Parphar were as wholsome as those of Jordan were The Centurion desireth but a good word from Christ when Christ spake of coming to his House Mat. 8. 8. Lord saith he I am not worthy thou shouldst come under my roof The Woman of Canaan knowing her self to be a Dog challengeth no more than Crums Every gracious Soul is sensible that it deserveth nothing but Hell and Wrath this makes the least tokens of Divine love highly valuable in its Eyes who am I said Elizabeth that the Mother of my Lord should come to me who am I saith an humble Soul that the Lord should look upon me that the Sun of righteousness should shine so much as with one healing beam upon my Soul Hence it valueth the least tokens of special love It valueth nothing less than that this proceedeth from its knowledge and spiritual judgment of things that differ It valueth the least of this This proceedeth partly from its knowledge partly from that humility with which it is clothed as with a Garment 7. Lastly This Soul knoweth that Christs Love will not terminate and be bounded with little things The least tokens of distinguishing Love are but the Earnests of a greater bargain they are but the first-fruits to a larger Harvest Those that are planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God Psal 92. 13. God at first gives the soul but a good hope a glimpse of his glory but it shall go on from faith to faith and strength to strength Are the least tokens of Christs distinguishing Love so valuable so desirable what should then his fullest and largest tokens be the things which God hath prepared for them that love him which Eye hath not seen Ear hath not heard nor can it enter into the Heart of man to conceive The Assurance of his Love The Manifestations of himself to his Saints in glory If it be so sweet so desirable to see him in a glass darkly what will it be to see him face to face If his kisses be so desirable what will his imbraces be If the Hem of his Garment be so full of vertue and a touch of that so desirable what is his long white Robe which is the white linnen of his Saints If a good word a good look be so good what will it be to be set as a seal upon his Heart and upon his arm Surely that love will be as strong as death as the coales of that fire which send forth a vehement flame Let this notion of truth and the experience which any of your souls have had of the truth of it kindle in you further flames of desire after the further enjoyments of Christ in this life Imperfect tasts of desirable things use to do so in other things Quo plus sunt potae plus sitiuntur aquae Yet in all created goods there is ordinarily more in expectation than fruition but it is not so in Spiritual things The Apostle prayeth for the Ephesians That they might be able with all Saints to comprehend what is the breadth and length and depth and heighth and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that they might be filled with all the fulness of God Eph. 13. 18 19. It is most certain that there are many holy and gracious Souls that want assurance they may live they may die without it but that Soul hath nothing of grace that doth not desire it that doth not thirst and pant after it 2. What will it be to be ever with the Lord what an object of spiritual thirst and desire is a fulness of communion with our Lord in his Fathers House when we shall know as we are known see Face to Face How should this fill all our hearts with desires to be dissolved that we might be with Christ which is best of all The least of Christ is good but that full fruition is best Let this discourse leave some strong pantings in your hearts 1. After the assurance of Gods love 2. After the further manifestations of Christs strength
necessitous Creatures it also obtaineth several names and admits of several distinctions and is shewed by several Acts. The Grace of God in the sense I am now speaking to it signifyeth nothing but the free love of God looking upon the Sons of Men with respect to the several necessities of their Souls It s variety ariseth from us and our necessities it is not divided in the fountain only in the stream and thus Grace admits of several distinctions which I shall open to you in a few words that you may rightly understand the various notions of it The most famous distinction of it is into that which doth render the Soul acceptable to God and that which is love and freely given but doth not make the Soul acceptable in Gods sight at least not first acceptable or is not that for which God doth at first accept the Soul The first is that which we call the Grace of Justification which is the free love of God shining upon the Soul imputing to it a righteousness without works and not imputing transgression as the Apostle expoundeth it Rom. 4. 6. 8. the second we call the grace of Regeneration and Sanctification which is the love of God freely shewed to the Soul by which its heart is renewed and changed and filled with new habits and dispositions inclining and inabling it to what God requireth of it This is Grace it is from the power and free love of God though it be not that grace for which God at first accepteth the Soul as the Papists say This Grace of Regeneration and Sanctification is also usually distinguished into Habitual and Actual Habitual Grace is nothing else but the free love of God shining upon the Soul inabling it to will and to choose the things that are good and pleasing to God he giveth to will saith the Apostle and we are made willing in the day of his power saith the Psalmist Actual or acting Grace which is the love of God shewed to the Soul in inabling us to do the things that are good for as it is he that giveth to will so it is he who giveth to do both of his own good pleasure and our Lord told his Disciples John 15. 3. Without me you can do nothing There is another distinction of Grace into Preventing and Subsequent Preventing Grace is that love of God which preventeth and goeth before any good motions or actions of ours according to that of the Prophet I was found of them that sought me not and of those that did not inquire after me This is usually called the first grace Subsequent grace is that love of God which followeth this and is variously manifested to the Souls of Gods People In the first we are meerly passive we only receive it in the other we are active There are other notions of grace but I shall instance only in one more Special grace is the free love of God either concerning the being of a true Christian or 2dly Concerning its well being That grace which concerneth the being of a true Christian which quickneth the Soul which before was a Child of Wrath dead in trespasses and sins is either the Grace of Justification and what concerneth that this is first grace and preventing grace Or 2. The grace of Regeneration by which a new heart is given unto us and we are inclined disposed and inabled to the operations of a spiritual life Or Secondly What concerneth the better being of a Christian in the managing of all the actions and concerns of the spiritual life This again is divided into quickning grace strengthening Grace and consolatory Grace 1. Quickning grace may either signify that love of God by which our Spiritual powers habits and inclinations are drawn out into acts 2. Or that whereby a Soul is made more active and lively and free in the service of God which removes those difficulties that heaviness and deadness and dulness which we often find upon our Souls as to spiritual things For this you read David so often praying in Psal 119. Strengthening grace which is the love of God shewed to the Soul in further inabling it both to its spiritual actions and to the managing of the good fight against the World the Flesh and the Devil the Apostle calleth it a being strengthened with might in the inward Man of this Saint Paul speaketh Phil. 3. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me Consolatory grace which signifieth the love of God shining upon the Soul that is sad and heavy refreshing it either from the view and sense of the truth of its gracious habits or from the sealings of some promise giving the Soul an assurance or full persuasion of the love of God David crieth out when wilt thou comfort me Thus you see the variety of gracious dispensations the love of God is one as it is in him as the fountain but it divideth itself into several streams as it shineth upon divers Souls or the same Soul oft-times in differing circumstances or with respect to divers wants which our Souls have Secondly As there is variety in the dispensations of grace so grace discovers itself in various acts Divines say that the grace of Justification so far as it respecteth the Souls State varieth not Nor is repeated but the acts of grace referring to our justified estate they are repeated God doth not pardon sin before it is committed but repeateth his gracious act in pardoning as the Soul repeateth its transgressions Now this is that which I say in this proposition that the Spouse of Christ the truly gracious Soul is not satisfied with any single dispensation of grace nor with a single act it desires not only the first grace but further grace not only the grace of Justification but the grace of regeneration also not only gracious habits but that it may be excited and quickned to spiritual actions not only that it may do them but that it may do them with some strength and vigour with some life and chearfulness it desires renewed acts of pardon renewed influences of spiritual strength and life Let us but a little see it in the great instance of David the man according to Gods own heart we shall find him speaking to our purpose in several Psalms Psal 19. 13. Cleanse thou me from secret faults there he beggeth for pardoning love will this satisfy this holy man will he think it enough if God pardoneth his Sin see what followeth in that Psalm Keep back thy Servant from presumptuous sins let them not have dominion over me he must have strengthening as well as pardoning grace he desires to be freed from the commanding as well as from the condemning power of Sins Look into the 51 Psalm a Psalm much spent in petitions for special grace v. 7. He prays for pardon Purge me with hyssop and I shall be clean wash me and I shall be whiter than the Snow he speaks in an old Testament phrase
call Love We naturally love what we apprehend good though we view it but at a distance from us Many a man that hath no Learning nor is ever like to have it yet loves Learning as it hath in it an innate Excellency as it is an ornament to him that hath it and makes him more useful to the world than his Neighbour In Christ's excelling graces which dwell in him eminently and essentially there is such a lustre and brightness and glory that to make the Soul take a complacency in him there needeth no more than that it be enlightened to see know and understand Christ Hence it is that many a Soul convinced of the filthiness of sin and of the fulness of that Excellency which is in Christ before ever it have received him so as to apprehend its Interest in him yet loves admireth him passionately desireth a part and portion in him saith within it self Oh that my Soul were brought unto Christ Oh that this Christ were my Christ my Jesus c. 2. But there is not only a transcendent goodness and excellency in Christ's Name but also a Relative Goodness Our reasonable Natures force us to love any thing which appeareth to us to be Good and Excellent but we much more love it when we discover in it a suitableness to our state and condition and the more goodness and suitableness we discern in any Object in proportion to our state and wants the more a great deal do our hearts cleave to it and long after it Now every Child of God is apprehensive enough of the proportion which the Name of Christ bears to the wants the various wants that it hath It wants a Mediator a Saviour an Advocate an Intercessor and this that Soul is sufficiently sensible of and therefore its heart cleaveth unto Christ and cryeth out Whom have I in Heaven but thee Or what have I upon the Earth to be compared with thee This Soul seeth that there is nothing in Heaven or Earth that so suiteth the Soul of a Child of God as Christ doth Hence his love to him is stronger than the Grave and his jealousie burns like fire 3. The Virgins must needs love Christ upon the discoveries of himself to their Souls because these discoveries command and teach the Soul to love him Our love to Christ proceeds you see upon rational grounds but not wholly upon rational Principles for we are taught of God saith the Apostle to love one another and if without a Divine Teaching we cannot love our Brethren whom we have seen we shall much less love Christ whom we have not seen Indeed this is the first cause of any love from our carnal hearts to Christ at all it is true No Sacrifice from our hearts flameth or can ascend towards God until fire hath first come down from Heaven and kindled it when indeed love is thus kindled in the Soul the fire increaseth in the Soul as the apprehensions of Christ's Excellencies and discoveries of himself do increase in the Soul from the experiences we have of God or the improvements of our Reason upon Revelation to shew us more of the Excellency of Christ I come now to the Application In the first place This may convince us That even amongst Professors there are many that glory in appearance and not in reality They are no Virgins they have no love for the Lord Jesus Christ The world it is to be hoped is not so full of such as go for Virgins in a carnal sense and are none as it is of such as go for Virgins in a spiritual sense and are none Unmarried they are but you must understand it only with reference to Christ who is the only proper adequate match for a reasonable Soul they are without Christ indeed but not without a-Mate First Too many are Whores instead of Virgins You shall in Scripture observe that sin especially Apostacy is compared to Whoredom and those that live in sin to such as live in Adultery God of old complained of his People that he was broken with their whorish heart Ah! how many Professors are there in the world of whom we may say the same God is broken with their whorish heart How many spots are there in our Assemblies How many of our Virgins that have at least such black spots upon their faces as cannot be allowed to be the spots of God's Children Some are gone a whoring after other Gods Reconciled they call it to the Church of Rome Oh! tell it not in Gath publish it not in the Tents of Askelon that Protestants should ever again lick up that Vomit and be so sottish as to adore a piece of bread for God or fall down before a Graven Image Blessed be God there are not many whom God hath thus given over I mean not many Professors though too many that have been baptized into the Name of Jesus Christ But how many more have defiled themselves with damnable or at least very dangerous Opinions You read of the Daughter of Jephtah that she went up to the Mountains three months to bewail her Virginity The Mountains are places of solitude How were it to be wished for many that they would go and sit alone that they would go up to the Mountains of Solitude and bewail the loss of their Spiritual Virginity They were sound Christians in appearance but they have lost their soundness They were fond of Ordinances and Duties but they have cast off Duties and Ordinances They were of the number of Virgins as we thought and we were bound in charity so to think we judged by the outward appearance but they have defiled themselves Secondly Many are wedded and no Virgins We do not call married Women Virgins 'T is true they are not so in one sense as the notion of a Virgin signifieth a solute or single person but yet they may be so in another sense as the notion of a Virgin signifieth one that is pure and chast But now if you can imagine a Woman married to a Beast or married incestuously this marriage would spoil her Virginity in the fairest notion of it The Soul married to Christ is yet a Virgin for she is married but to one Husband and him the proper Husband for a poor Soul so that that Soul is yet a Virgin But now the voluptuous sensual Soul that is united to a base and sordid lust or the covetous worldly Soul that is united to the gain and filthy lucre of the world is no Virgin no more than an incestuous Wife is in any notion a Virgin and how many of these are to be found in the Tents of persons professing to Religion How many Demas's who have forsaken and forgotten their Religion and have embraced the present World Judas's who have betrayed their Master and their Brethren for a few pieces of Silver Surely the Soul the high-born Soul of man is of too noble an extract too spiritual a substance to be united to the Earth This is
David saith before he was afflicted he went astray but his affliction had learned him to keep Gods Statutes Psal 119. But it is said of Ahaz 2 Chron. 28. 22. In the time of his distress he trespassed more against the Lord This is that King Ahaz and I am sure the same is said of the body of Israelites Amos 4. 6 7 8 9 10 11. God followed them with judgment after judgment yet they returned not unto him Afflictions are good remembrancers to them who have learned their duty before but they must be some particular afflictions that give leisure for Instructions to be then first given or time for the digestion of them if they can be given I conclude in short whatever use God may sometimes make of Afflictions it is not the drawing by them which the Spouse here prays for Secondly There is a drawing by liberal distributions of mercies of common Providence Thus God saith Hosea 11. 4. I drew them with the Cords of a man with bands of love So Jer. 31. 3. With loving kindness have I drawn thee Love is of a drawing nature it is like the hook in the intrails of a Creature which draweth more forcibly than Cords fastened to the flesh and outward part But experience teacheth us that this is not a sufficient Cord to draw Sinners Souls to God God in his parable of the Vineyard Isaiah 5. repeats what he had done for the Israelites and concludes v. 4. What could have been done more to my Vineyard that I have not done in it Yet when he looked it should bring forth Grapes it brought forth wild Grapes Oppression instead of Judgment and a cry instead of righteousness How many thousands are there in the world that are incompassed with Mercies of this nature they have healthy bodies pleasing relations full barns plentiful estates they want nothing yet are they Enemies to God and to the Cross of Christ nor do the People of God ordinarily run most after or walk most close with God when they most abound with the good things of this life Gods People Jer. 2. that followed him in a Wilderness and in a land of droughts forsook him when they came into a land that flowed with Milk and Hony whence Agur prayed as much against Riches left he should being full blaspheme God as against poverty And even the man according to Gods own heart offended more when he was come to sit upon his Throne in Hierusalem than when he was hunted like a Partridge in the Wilderness and knew not where to rest and this is seen in our ordinary experience 3. God draweth us thirdly by the potent arguments of the Gospel as it lieth before us to be read or as it is opened and applied to us by the Ministry of the Word Man hath a tunable ear and is a reasonable Creature so as arguments have a great force upon humane nature and the more as any of us are more knowing and rational and able to raise conclusions from Principles Into this sense Interpreters do interpret those words of our Saviour John 12. 42. When I shall be lifted up I will draw all men after me after my death upon the Cross I will send my Apostles up and down the world to be witnesses of my death resurrection and ascension and to persuade men to receive me in my true notion as the true Messias and Saviour of the world Accordingly the Apostle tells the Corinthians that Christ had committed to them the word of Reconciliation Now then saith he 2 Cor. 5. 20. We as Embassadours for Christ as tho God did beseech you by us we p●ay you in Christs stead to be reconciled to God and this must be the meaning of that command to the Servants Luke 14 23. Compel them to come in Christ is not there speaking to Magistrates or of their duty but of the duty of Ministers who have no power from him to compel any but by a lively and powerful Preaching the Gospel the potent arguments of which set home upon reasonable and ingenuous Souls by the gifts God hath given to his Ministers have a kind of compulsory force and power in them and the Apostle tells us that Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10. and as men are by it drawn to Christ so they are also by it drawn after him and therefore Peter exhorts Christians 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born babes to desire the sincere milk of the Word that they might grow thereby The believing Soul followeth Christ in the scent or favour of his precious Ointments It is the publishing of the Gospel that makes the name of Christ an Ointment poured out Fourthly God may be said to draw men by the common motions of his Spirit impressing good thoughts upon us either upon occasion of his Providential dispensations or while we read or hear the word some say that there is a common Ministration of the Spirit attending the preaching of the word sufficient to assist every Soul that will to repent and believe and to do what God requires of us in order to Salvation that the holy Spirit doth ordinarily attend the preaching of the word and suggest to and imprint upon the hearts of those that hear it some good thoughts is what will not be denied I believe there are but few who have used to attend the preaching of the Gospel where it hath been faithfully and livelily preach'd but must own that he hath heard the Lord standing at his door and knocking But still the question is whether this be all the drawing which the Spouse here begs No doubt but she begs such a cause such operations of a cause as should be productive of the effect The effects are coming unto Christ running after Christ Coming is not expresly mentioned in this Text but it is Joh. 6. 44. No man cometh unto me except the Father who hath sent me draw him and it is included in the term running The question therefore must be whether such a drawing as is by common mercies by the preaching of the Gospel or by the common work of the Holy Spirit all which reprobates may have is sufficient to innable a Soul yet a stranger to God to come to Christ or to innable any Soul already come to Christ to run after him I think not and therefore I conclude in the last place 5. That both in the Souls first motions to Christ and its further motions after him the Lord putteth forth a powerful influence of his Spirit of grace beyond the arguments of the word the suasion of his Minister and the common work of the Spirit attending all faithful preaching of the Gospel This I take to be that drawing the Spouse here prayeth for and which our Saviour mentions John 6. 44. as some think with an allusion to the phrase of this Text nay some bring that Text John 6 44. to prove this Book quoted in the New Testament This I firmly believe because I am convinced there is such a work
Souls in all points equal they are both reasonable both have the same understandings the same wills the same means the same common aids and assistances I ask then whence if not from a mighty powerful influence of God upon one mans Soul one mans will more than anothers comes it to pass that the Soul of one is softned changed renewed and not the Soul of another If it be from a power in the Soul here is a mighty inequal vertue ascribed to one Soul more than to another of the same species indued with the same powers and faculties and under the same means aids and assistances which is a most inaccountable thing 4. I shall add fourthly If there be no such distinguishing powerful influence of God making the difference the Apostle is contradicted 1 Cor. 4. 7. Who maketh thee to differ from another and what hast thou that thou didst not receive That their Souls are reasonable Souls that differ one from another in Spiritual things is evident not only in gifts and endowments but in saving spiritual habits now saith the Apostle who maketh thee to differ Admit the Apostle there not speaking of spiritual saving habits but of common guifts or extraordinary gifts certainly if it be God who in these maketh one Soul to differ from another it is much more God who makes a Soul to differ as to saving spiritual habits such as make the Soul fit for the Kingdom of God and accompany salvation but according to this Doctrine man maketh himself to differ God doth no more for the believer than for the unbeliever for the elect than for the reprobate Soul so he hath not received but may glory God is beholden to man for inclining his will to him he is not beholden to God for inclining his will more than another mans From hence plainly appears that the Drawing here mentioned doth not signify the meer change of a mans heart or life from a principle within himself but a change from a new principle infused from another from God and therefore the Spouse here speaking to her beloved saith Draw me Thus far now I have evinced that the turning of the Soul from a state and course of Sin must be the work of God and 2. That it must be a special work special grace but we have yet further to enquire into the nature of this great work how God draweth the Soul that comes to him This I answer in two particulars 1. It is For●iter 2. Suaviter 1. Powerfully So as though the Soul may a long time oppose itself yet it cannot finally resist it Psal 110. 3. Thy People shall be willing in the day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of thy strength so is the Heb. Resistance implyeth the opposition of the patient to the action of the agent In all resistance there must be two parties whose strength must be either equal or inequal If it be equal there is no victory on either side If the Patient be stronger than the agent the agents intended effect is not wrought but if the power of the Agent be greater than that of the Patient then the Patient is subdued and conquered to the will of the Agent Let us take an instance in Physick we will suppose a Stomach oppressed with wind or peccant humors the Physician gives Physick to expel it if the power of the wind or noxious humors be above that of the Physick the Physick is ineffectual the wind yet rageth the peccant humors prevail or increase but if the strength of the Physick be more it expelleth the wind or the peccant humour though they may first make the Person sick and struggle a great while with the Physick such a resistance as this may be and is ordinarily if not alwaies made to the grace of God especially to his common grace God calls to the sinner for repentance faith new obedience the Spirit of God concurring with the Preaching of the Gospel stands at the door and knocks Rev. 2. 20. The Soul saith how shall I leave my sweet and pleasant lusts my sensual or carnal enjoyments But there is a resistance when the strength of the Patient is above the strength which either the Agent putteth forth or hath so as all the action of the Agent is frustrated and thus Grace cannot be resisted that is not finally resisted It is the will of God to renew and change the Sinners heart and who hath resisted his will The Spouse Cant. 5. 2. heareth Christ knocking at the door of her heart and saying Open my Love my Dove my Undefiled she maketh excuses she had put off her coat and how should she put it on she had washed her feet and how should she defile them Doth the Lord nest in that answer no see v. 3. My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door and my bowels were moved for him It is much the same case with the Soul in its first conversion God calls invites persuades intreats the Soul to leave its sinful courses and to turn unto God Saith the poor Creature I am young and how shall I abandon the lusts of youth I am ingulphed in a course of profitable sinning how shall I leave my too greedy pursuit of the world my pursuit of unjust gain c. Thus it resists a while But God will not take these answers he at length puts in his hand by the hole of the door and opens it God cannot seriously act and be finally opposed for it is certain his power must be above the power of the Creature 2. That he must act powerfully appears from hence in that the effect is upon the will otherwise inclined both by nature and by custom which is a second nature I say the effect is upon the will a Castle too strong for all the power of Hell to subdue the will can be over-ruled by none but him that made it besides this will is otherwise inclined 1. By nature hence we are said to be stubborn stiff-necked to have sinews of Brass he knoweth nothing of the heart of man by nature that knoweth not that it is averse to God Add to this that custom hath the force of a second nature how can you saith the Prophet that are accustomed to do evil do well Nothing but a powerful operation can subdue such a mighty Prince as the will of man is nor such a mighty Tyrant as custom is As to the point of resisting grace we say 1. There is a common praecedent exciting grace this may be rejected as the Pharisees rejected the counsel of God against themselves for their own Salvation thus all reprobates living under the preaching of the Gospel resist the grace of God they have an enmity to the Spirit of God Rom. 8. 6. and cannot be subject to it hence it is that God so often complains Jer. 7. 14. I speak to you rising up early and lying down late and you have not heard Psal 81. 14. I call'd you and you have not answered
most absurd to imagine that a Soul should ever call these things bitter till it be convinced of a more excellent good and the incompetency of its fruition both of the one and of the other Could it be any thing less than a powerful act of Divine Grace that could make Moses willing to refuse the pleasures of Pharaohs Court and the honour of being called his Son and to chuse rather to suffer affliction with the people of God counting the reproach of Christ greater riches then the Treasures of Aegypt O study and adore the power of faving and effectual Divine Grace Do but consider your own weakness and the mighty power of Satan in tempting and you will be convinced that there had need be a divine power exerted in the collation of saving Grace 2. But yet as it is mighty and powerful so it is also sweet we are drawn to Christ but it is with the cords of a man the divine power put forth hath the will for the object which is not forced but melted renewed changed by the influence of the mighty God upon it Indeed the will is not capable of violence but yet it is capable of a divine influence sweetly renewing and changing it the Soul is made willing and then it wills and chuseth desires delights in the things which are good and acceptable in the sight of God Grace doth not meerly exhibit and propose Christ as a lovely and beautiful object altogether desires it doth not only furnish the Gospel and fill the mouths of Ministers with suasive arguments but it fills the Soul the inward man with a powerful divine influence which quite reneweth and changeth it and altereth the byass and inclination of it This is the nature of saving grace effectual grace thus it differs from that Grace of God which may shine upon reprobates which they may finally resist and abide still in darkness This notion in the next place wonderfully commendeth the love of God to those Souls that are made partakers of this Grace of God that bringeth Salvation that maketh a Soul meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light The great boast which those who maintain the contrary systeme of Doctrine to what I have maintained make is that their Doctrine doth vastly more commend the love of God to mankind Let us try that a little According to their Notion of the Grace of God it is no more than might have been consistent with the Eternal perdition of all mankind for they say God hath determined no particular person unto eternal life Christ hath laid down a price no more for the Soul that is saved than for those that perish In the Acts of his Providence he doth no more for one than another Both have the Gospel both have the common assistances of the Spirit and one hath no more than another both have Souls of the same species indued with the same faculties both might have resisted the Grace of God and that finally Now do not these mightily magnify Grace who will allow no more of it then what is consistent with the eternal destruction of all men yet neither are they consistent to themselves in their doctrine of Grace so far as they will allow any thing to it they pretend the advancement of the love of God by their conditional Election incertain Covenant universal Redemption common Grace yet they cannot deny but that the far greater part of the world hath not so much as the means of grace the sound of the Gospel is not in their Ears and how little of it is there in Popish Countries where the People have not the Bible in their own language and hear stories and tales out of the Legends instead of the Gospel nay in Protestant Countries how many places are there where People have Stones instead of Bread Scorpions instead of Fishes where they from the Pulpit hear little of Christ or the great motives of the Gospel to faith and holiness so as to make out their notion of their Doctrines commending the love of God they must find out a way to Christ and Salvation for more than three parts of the world without Christ and that an ordinary way too or but few of them will be saved yet in this extraordinary that their Salvation must be without the Gospel and the potent motives and arguments of it the Preaching of it and the ordinary concurrence of the Holy Spirit with it The opinion of Divine● on the other side is this That God out of the Mass of Mankind whether considered as created or to be created they are not so universally agreed did chuse a certain number of Persons great in itself but small in comparison of the whole number of mankind as to whom he willed a Kingdom of life and glory and also chose them and ordained them to obtain this life by having Redemption through the Blood of Christ the forgiveness of sins and by being holy and unblameable before him and to this end sent his Son to die for them and gives to the most of them whom he thus ordained to life and to faith and holiness as the means of it his Gospel and the Ministry of it by which he intreateth all those to whom it is Preached to be reconciled to God but for those whom he hath ordained to life he powerfully and effectually worketh in them by the Spirit of his Grace by which their hearts though they may for a time oppose and resist yet are subdued to the obedience of faith and drawn unto Christ and by which also being come to Christ they are drawn after him being by his power through faith preserved to Salvation Now whether is the Love of God more seen to mankind in the certain Salvation of many though comparatively but few and ordering of causes accordingly Or in such an ordering of causes as it was possible notwithstanding any thing God had done for man all might have perished And whether is God more glorified by our predication of him as one who though from all eternity he knew who would believe and live holily and who would not yet left it possible that all men should believe if they would Or by the predication of him as one who knowing all things because he willed them so being the first cause of all good in the creature ordered all things according to the good pleasure of his own will In the mean time this Drawing Grace which we maintain infinitely commendeth the Love of God to those who are thus drawn if we consider 1. The infinite distance of God from the creature He is a self-sufficiency to himself and in order to his happiness needed not the company of any creatures Now if there were no more in drawing grace than some would make drawing with the Cords of a Man intreating and persuading Souls to be reconciled to God his love might be just matter of admiration and astonishment Who are we that God should treat us and send Embassadors to intreat
former Proposition where I told you it signified a powerful gracious influence of the Holy Spirit upon the Soul persuading alluring and commanding the Soul's Obedience It is an act both sweet and powerful Sweet for God draws with the Cords of Love as he speaks Jer. 31. 3. yet powerful for the Soul is made willing the will is not forced but melted renewed and changed and contrariwise inclined to what was before its inclination So as my meaning is that when God hath once by the sweet and powerful influence of his Spirit upon the Soul of a man allured persuaded and commanded the Soul to its duty then it will run after him The only question to be spoken to is what is meant by Running When I opened the Text I told you of several things imported by this term I shall now more largely discourse them 1. Running implieth willingness to the motion It implieth motion and so is opposed to lying or si●ting still It is a saying of Augustine Certum est nos velle quum volumus agere quum agimur It is saith he certain that we will when we are made willing that we act when we are acted sed ille facit ut velimus it is God that maketh us to be willing He giveth to will and to do Men may run that are not originally willing it is a mischief that they fear which makes them run but yet even then they move willingly though it be a danger imminent upon them which maketh them so willing But this motion is a much sweeter motion they are made willing first and then they move out of choice willingly until the Soul be renewed and changed it moveth not at all toward God it may move to natural actions from that principle of natural life of which it is possessed It may move to moral actions from that principle of life which every reasonable Soul is possessed of But it moveth not to any truly spiritual actions because it wanteth a principle of Spiritual life But this being infused in regeneration to will being given unto it it moveth in the ways of God and that from a principle within itself You saith the Apostle Eph. 2. 1. hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins It moveth not as a meer Machine or Instrument from the power and force of a forreign agent but as a living creature from itself and a principle within itself Yet not without a divine influence look as it is in natural motions though they flow from a a principle of life in a man yet they are not without an influence of more ordinary common providence upholding our natural faculties hence the Apostle saith of God in him we live move and have our being So it is as to our Spiritual motions the Soul moveth from the principles of Spiritual life infused into it from the principles of the new creature but yet not without the influence of the Spirit of Grace upon it upholding those habits of Grace which are infused into the Soul and exciting it to and assisting of it in Spiritual actions Without me saith Christ you can do nothing he doth not say without me you cannot do much or you cannot do great things but you can do nothing But yet to will is present with the Soul yea and to do though it hath no strength to do what it would And as the Soul hath need of a daily influence of Grace in its ordinary course of Spiritual action so it hath need of more special and powerful influences when it meets with a work more difficult for saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. 5. We are not sufficient to think one good thought as of our selves for now our sufficiency is from God This is now Gratia co-operans co-operating Grace in the exercises of which we are not mcerly passive as in the reception of the first Grace as it was with the Israelites in their journey towards Canaan Numb 9. 17. 18. c. They kept pace with the Cloud and with the Pillar of fire when the Cloud moved they moved when the Cloud stood still they stood still At the Commandment of the Lord they journied and at the Commandment of the Lord they pitched as long as the Cloud abode upon the Tabernacle they rested in their Tents And when the Cloud tarried long upon the Tabernacle many days then they journied not So it is with such as are Israelites indeed in their spiritual motions toward the new Hierusalem the City of God If the Grace of God assists not they move not and according to the degree of its influence they move more or less But yet they move and willingly move though not without the co-operating and assisting Grace of God 2. Secondly Running implyeth strength in the motion thus it is opposed to creeping or walking saintly The weak man may creep and go slowly but he cannot run When the Lord draweth the Soul will not only move towards God and that freely and willingly but it will move strongly it will find strength against sin and strength unto duties Job 17. 9. The righteous man will hold on in his way and he that is of clean hanas shall grow stronger and stronger God commandeth that we should love h m with all our strength Luk. 10. 27. When the Lord draweth the Soul then it runneth with all its strength loveth God with a love that is stronger than the Grave then it believeth with a strong saith and obeyeth with a perfect heart While God was present with Sampson though they tied his Hair to a Beam and shut up the Gates of the City he could carry away Beam and Gates though he had no more then the jaw-bone of an Ass he could with it slay a thousand men when God was departed from him he could not get out of his Enemies hands though he had no such opposition when a Soul finds the power and presence of Divine Grace though it hath strong corruptions and meet with strong Temptations yet they are all nothing to it it easily over all becomes more than Conqueror Peter at one time at the command of Christ walks to him upon the Sea at another time wanting the same special assistance is overcome by a silly Maid in the High Priests Hall the opposite Temptation was much the same in both cases viz. from the sear of his life which was in as apparent danger from the Sea as from the Enemies in the Hall of the High Priest 3. Running argues speed so it is opposed to walking a foot-pace or step by step When the Soul is by God drawn unto him and wants not his co-operating Grace drawing him after him it will not only move towards God and that with strength and courage but it will move with nimbleness and readiness As it is with the body sometimes though it hath its usual strength and be able to work as usually yet it is seized with a torpor and laziness there is a dulness and inactivity upon it So it
I do not misconceive him David seems in this to have failed Psal 22. 2 3 4. O my God saith he I cry in the day time but thou hearest not and in the night season and am not silent But thou art holy O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel Our Fathers trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliver them they trusted in thee and were not confounded but I am a Worm and no Man a reproach of Men and despised of the People c. To silence this corruption so exceedingly natural to us let me offer a few things to thy thoughts 1. The first shall be the Lords Prerogative to shew mercy where he will shew mercy This our Saviour hints me in the Parable of the Labourers sent into the Vineyard Mat. 20. 15. when those who had wrought all the day received their penny in proportion to those who had wrought but a few hours they complained the Master of the Vineyard saies to them May I not do with my own what I please All influxes of grace are Gods own It is a prerogative that every one of us claims for himself to dispose of his love especially some degrees of it as we please why should we deny that to God which every one of us claimeth to himself The Prince will not allow the Subject to dispose of his favour no more will the Father allow it to his Child why should we think God is not at the same liberty especially considering 2. That God by it doth us no wrong You have this in the same Text Friend I do thee no wrong Mat. 20. 15. This now dependeth upon this hypothesis that the grace of God cannot be merited by any he that hath the greatest manifestations of Divine love hath them freely he who hath the least discoveries of it hath what he hath freely without any preceding merit in himself If God will let one of his Children walk in the light of his countenance and another to walk in the dark and see no light if he will treat one in Chambers another in a low and more common Room yet he doth not wrong to any There is no injustice in the case in appearance to us he sheweth indeed more severity to the one and more goodness to the other but he is unjust to neither because neither hath merited any thing that he receiveth 3. God hath with held from thee nothing for which he agreed with thee This is a third thing which the Master of the Vineyard told those labourers that repined because they had not more then those who had laboured less Mat. 20. 15. Did I not saith he agree with thee for a peny we can lay claim to nothing of anothers but either upon the plea of a Native right thus the Child laies claim to his Patrimonial Estate as heir at law or upon the account of purchase by vertue of some compact or agreement or some valuable consideration given him for it we can lay no claim to the Grace of God as our Patrimonial right as Heirs to it we are indeed called Heirs but it is by adoption nor upon the account of any valuable consideration given who hath given first to God and it shall be repaid to him again All the claim we can lay to any thing either of Grace or Glory is upon the account of a Covenant that God hath made with us or with Christ on our behalf and by us accepted when we come to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ The question is what God hath agreed with us for he hath agreed with us for a Kingdom Fear not little Flock saith Christ it is your Fathers will to give you a Kingdom He that believes on me is not condemned saith our Saviour he is passed from death to life He hath agreed with us for all that grace and mercy which is necessary to bring us to this Kingdom That he will give us a clean heart and a new heart that we shall be kept by the power of God through faith to salvation But where hath the Lord agreed with the Souls of any of his people for equal measures of his manifestative love Nay plainly God in the Covenant of his Grace hath reserved himself a liberty to chastife and afflict his people either for the probation of Grace or for the punishment of sin and this is one species of affliction by which God doth both try the faith and patience and also correct the errors and miscarriages of the best of his people But you will say is not manifestative love promised I answer it is but so are not the measures of it nor yet the particular time for the discovery of it 2. It is but the matter of a conditional promise John 14 21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and manifest my self unto him Psal 50. 21. To him that ordereth his conversation aright I will shew the Salvation of God The promises of Eternal life and Salvation are made to Faith and holiness without which both which none shall see God but not to degrees of the one or of the other a weak faith may bring a Soul to Heaven so will an upright and sincere heart though incumbred with many lustings of the flesh against the Spirit but the case is otherwise as to some degrees of the manifestative love of God which much depend both upon degrees of faith and degrees of holiness also Our Saviour hath determined doubts and fears indications of little faith and reason will determine them inconsistent with much joy peace and comfort in the Soul that holiness in some good degree is necessary to our peace will appear to any Soul that considers that nothing but sin will break our peace with God So that if thou beest not conscious to thy self that thy faith is as strong as others and thy ways as perfect before God as theirs thou hast no reason to expect the same manifestations of Divine love No tho thou beest one who truly believest and truly lovest and fearest God God hath agreed with every believer for eternal life and salvation for pardon of sin and a clean heart and the upholding of him by his power unto salvation But he hath not agreed with every such Soul for the same measures of peace and comfort the same degrees of his manifestative love he hath reserved himself a liberty to reward those with these more special favours who walk most closely and exactly with him in their conversations Those therefore who find their Souls under temptations to repine at God for doing more for others then for them should do well to reflect upon themselves and to consider whether the faith of those others be not more strong and their walking with God more close and exact then theirs if it be they are not to wonder that their Souls are more highly favoured and more
more of our passion and excesses of affection yet the reality and truth of our love may certainly be as well discerned rewards a spiritual and invisible object as to one that is more the object of our exteriour senses let us therefore try those measures and see how we will make up our judgment of the truth of our love to a fellow creature what is that which we call love but the delight and complacency and satisfaction of the Soul in an object beloved declared by the pantings and breathings of the heart after it when absent for an union or re-union with it the acquiescence and meltings of the heart upon it when present and an union with it is obtained or apprehended the Souls intercourse and communion with it and free communications of its self unto it its kindness to every person or thing to whom or which the object beloved hath any relation its patient and pleasing bearing his reproofs its readiness to go or run or do any thing at the will and command of such a person its standing up in the defence of him or her its rising up against any that would do them injury or that it hears speak reproachfully or diminutively of him It 's readiness to suffer any thing for his sake c. Surely by some or all these notes we may try our love to Christ and be as certain of it as we can be of the sincerity of our love to any fellow creature let me therefore desire you to propound these few questions to your selves 1. How far is Christ the object of thy thoughts We say 〈◊〉 amor ibi oculus where love is there the Eye will be the reason of that is because our thoughts are much imployed about the object of our love where our treasure is saith our Saviour there will our hearts be also the Psalmist therefore speaking of the wicked man who hath no love for God saith God is not in all his thoughts Psal 10. 4. So long as we live in the world the things of it are so much and so continually the objects of our senses that it is not to be expected but that our thoughts should in a great measure be exercised about the things of it so that I would not put the issue upon that whether the world or Christ have most of our thoughts but certainly Christ will be much in the thoughts of that Soul in whom the love of Christ is Te veniente die te decedente canebat saith the Poet of the lover the Soul that loveth Christ will think of him in the evening when he lieth down and in the morning when he riseth up and David had his waking thoughts in the night season with God God will not have all of the best mans thoughts because he is but flesh and hath some thoughts to take about what he shall eat and drink and put on but God will have much of his thoughts Christ will be much in the thoughts of that Soul that truly loveth him Secondly 2. How are the motions of thy Soul after an absent Christ Christ as to his person is alwaies absent that the Heavens must contain till the end of the World but he is or may be graciously present in his institutions and with respect to his gracious influences and with respect to both these he is often or may be absent the first makes up the desertion of a Church when it is general or a particular person when it is only the affliction of a particular Soul in some cases and by some severer providences kept from the ordinances of God the second is the particular desertion of a gracious Soul not as to necessary but as to gradual influences now how is thy Soul affected to Christ absent when thou canst not enjoy the Ordinances of Christ as thou hast formerly enjoyed them You see the heart and affection of David in this cafe in divers Psalms particularly Psal 42. Psal 63. Psal 84. what breathings what longings what impatience doth he there express So when thou suspectest his absence as to the particular special influences of his grace how doth thy heart move toward him doth it move as the heart of the Spouse moved in the third and 5th Chapters of this admirable Song Seeking him sighing after him enquiring of all like to inform thee how thou mightest recover thy lost peace being restless till thou hast recovered it This is a sign of love 3. How is thy heart affected in any presence or enjoyment of Christ What pleasure what delight and complacency hath thy Soul in the institutions of Christ in the manifestations of his love to thy Soul See the instance of the Spouse as to this Can. 3. 4. I found him whom my Soul loveth I held him and would not let him go until I had brought him into my Mothers House and into the Chamber of her that conceived me v. 5. 1 charge you O you Daughters of Hierusalem by the Roes and by the Hinds of the field that you stir not up nor awake my love until he please A rejoycing in the signs of his love being glad and resolving not again to part with him a fear of offending him and care to please him are all of them signs of a love to the Lord Jesus Christ 4. A freedom of converse and communion with him also speaketh love Christ proves himself his Disciples friend because he had made known to them whatsoever he had received from the Father Joh. 15. 15. Dalilab challenged Sampson for want of love to her because he had concealed his secrets from her The withholding of prayer from God the want of frequency freedom and boldness in prayer speaks want of love to Christ in the Soul frequency freedom and boldness holy boldness speaks a Soul full of love to Christ 5. What affections hast thou to those things and persons that have a relation to Christ that bear his image and superscription the Word and Ordinances of God the Ministers and People of God by this you shall know your love to Christ Again 6. How canst thou bear the reproofs of Christ Our nature doth not love reproof we must love those very well from whom we take reproof quietly Let the righteous smite me saith David it shall be as an excellent Oil which shall not break my head When a Christian can bear the verbal reproofs of Christs Word and Ministers and the real reproofs and chastenings of his rod It is a sign of love 7. What zeal hast thou for the honour and glory of Christ Canst thou not hear him reproached but that his reproaches fall on thee thy blood riseth and thy heart is troubled It is an argument of little love for God or Christ when we can patiently hear them abused and dishonoured Psal 69. 9. The zeal of thine house saith David hath eaten me up and the reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen on me 8. I must not forget that of our Saviour If you love me
and persecutions But comely hrough an imputed righteousness and through the habits of grace with which God hath adorned her I come now to apply that discourse and First We may from hence gather the true notion of a child of God and understand how he stands distinguished from one that is a natural man and yet an unbeliever The true notion of a child of God is this He is one who is imperfectly perfect Black but comely you shall observe in Scripture that perfection is both predicated and denied concerning the People of God Not as if I had attained or were already perfect saith Paul Phil. 3. 12. We are commanded to strive after perfection to endeavour to perfect holiness in the fear of the Lord but it is a mark which no man hitteth Heaven is the only place where just Souls are made perfect both as to their fruitions and as to their Actions A thing is then said to be perfect and so a person when there is nothing wanting to it or him nothing that can be added and in this sense no man can be said to be perfect on the other side we are not only commanded to study perfection but it is said of many in holy Writ that they were perfect Noah was a just and perfect man Gen. 6. 9. Job was perfect and upright Job 1. 1. Paul saith he spake wisdom amongst them that are perfect 1 Cor. 3. 6. Phil. 3. 15. Let us as many as be perfect A Christian is perfect in the same sense that he is comely In short there is a threefold perfection may be predicated of a Christian 1. A Perfection of Justification In this sense every believer is comely through Christs righteousness put upon him and reckoned to him and he is perfect for the state of justification is a state that admits not of degrees thus we are as the Apostle speaketh to the Colossions compleat in Christ 2. There is a Perfection of Regeneration and Sanctification this is threefold 1. Of degrees thus none is perfect no not one none liveth and Sinneth not against God there is something to be added to the best mans habits and Acts of Grace 2. Of Parts thus again every believer is perfect Sanctified as the Apostle speaketh in body and mind and spirit the man is made a new creature all the faculties and powers of his Soul are renewed and Sanctified 3. Of scope design and intention This is uprightness this is called perfectness because God upon the covenant of grace accepteth the Soul upon the account of Christ as if it had fulfilled the whole Law of God Rom. 8. 3 4. What the Law could not do in that it was weak through our flesh God sending his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin or by a Sacrifice for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit God accounteth the righteousness of the Law fulfilled by those who walk after the Spirit tho personally it is not because Christ condemned sin in the flesh Thus Noah is said to be a perfect man Gen. 6. 9. and Job a perfect man and upright this is expounded v. 8. one that feareth God and escheweth Evil. For in the strict sense of perfection Job saith chap. 9. v. 20. If he justified himself his own mouth should condemn him if he should say he were perfect that should prove him perverse 3. There is a comparative perfection in this sense the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 3. 6. That he spake wisdom amongst them that were perfect and Phil. 3 15. Let us as many as be perfect be thus minded that is as many of us as are comparatively perfect whose attainments as to knowledg and faith are higher than others The State of the Saints is in no other sense a State of perfection So as I say they are imperfectly perfect which is the same with that of the Text Black but comely And this sufficiently distinguisheth the believer from the unbeliever whether the profane person or the hypocrite The unbeliever may say he is black but he cannot say he is comely What beauty can there be in any Soul not reconciled to God they are all blackness all deformity It is true there is a great deal of difference in these men some of them are black and filthy in the eyes of the rational and more orderly part of the World such is the Atheist the profane Curser and Swearer the Blasphemer the Drunkard the Thief the Oppressor the unrighteous and intemperate man these are the fots of the Earth the spots of the World the shame and reproach of the Nation or City in which they live Beasts walking in humane shapes But there are many others who have much beauty in them in the eyes of the World and humane reason yet are not comely in the eyes of Christ If a man be Sober and Temperate Just and Righteous Kind and Charitable tho he liveth not up to the strict rule of the Gospel and the Commandments of God yet living up to the conduct of humane reason and the advantages of humane society which the others infect and destroy the World counteth him a very good man full of beauty and comeliness applaudeth commends and courts him But now the Lord Christ not judging according to the outward appearance but according to the heart seeing in this mans heart no love of God constraining him to these acts nothing of the fear of God awing this mans Soul unto his duty God I say seeing him in these actions neither acting from a persuasion that this is the will of God nor from a belief of the Promises or of the Threatnings nor from an Obedience to the Precepts of God but meerly from Politick and rational principles from self ends interests that he may appear to men to be good and seeking in these actions the praise of men not of God Or meerly under the conduct of reason commanding their passions in order to their more comfortable being in this World and a more honorable and acceptable converse with the best men in it God I say seeing this judgeth these morally vertuous men black we that are Parents to Children and Masters 〈◊〉 Servants tho we cannot judge of their hearts yet can distinguish betwixt actions which they do upon and in obedience to our command and what they do not at our command nor out of obedience to us tho they be things which done please us being what we would have had done God who knoweth the heart will much more do so I remember our Saviour Matth. 23. 23. pronounceth a wo to the Scribes and Pharisees for faith he you pay Tythe of Mint and Annis and Cummin and have omitted the weightier matters of the law judgment mercy and faith these things ought you to have done and not to have left the other undone Christ judgeth the comeliness of a Soul not meerly from its external acts
can we imagine that we should be more concerned to discover our own vileness and naughtiness then Gods Grace and Mercy But of this I shall speak more fully in my handling the Second part of the Proposition Sermon XXXV Canticles 1. 5. I am Black but Comely O ye Daughters of Hierusalem c. I Come now to the second part of the Proposition I raised from these words I had no more time in my last discourse then to handle the former Prop. There are times when Christians are bound to own their graces and to declare what God hath done for their Souls There are such times when good Christians must not only say they are Black but also own that they are Comely That this is a duty appeareth from the practice of the Servants of God in holy Writ Psal 66. 16. Come and hear all ye that fear God and I will declare what he hath done for my Soul And indeed what are most of the Psalms of David but declarations of this nature to say nothing of Pauls speeches before Festus and Agrippa c. But whatsoever I intended for the proof of it I shall bring under the explication applying it to the particular cases The Question is Qu. When and in what cases are Christians concerned to own acknowledg and declare unto others their grace and what God hath done for their Souls As I said of the other piece of a Christians duty so I shall say of this It is their duty 1. To own and acknowledg it to God 2. To the Church of God 3. To the Men of the World sometimes 1. To God This is their unquestionable duty at all times and you shall find it the frequent practice of the Servants of God in Scripture If we have any Comeliness it is Christs Comliness put upon us and it is but reasonable that God should have the acknowledgment of it to his Honor and Glory But of this there is no question neither is this the acknowledgment of the Text she is here speaking not unto God but to the Daughters of Jerusalem It is our duty also in some cases to own our Comeliness through grace unto men 2. To the Church of Christ and to particular Christians 1. To the Church and that in two cases 1. Upon our Admission into it 2. Upon our Re-admission and restoring to the Priviledges of it We find in the first Plantation of Churches of the Gospel there was ordinarily such a confession and acknowledgment It is said Mat. 3. That those who were Baptized of John were Baptized in Jordan confessing their Sins Matth. 3. 6. After Christs Ascension into Heaven we read of the three thousand Souls added to the Church that they were first pricked at the Heart and said to Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we do and in Acts 8. 36. when the Eunuch said to Philip Here is Water what doth hinder me to be baptized Philip answereth if thou believest with all thine heart thou maiest and he answered and said I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God In those first admissions into the Gospel Church it is plain that Confession of Sin and Profession of a Faith in Christ were required as necessary and previous to Baptism by which Persons were admitted into a fellowship with the Church of God But altho the first admission into Gospel Churches were only of Grown Persons able to make Confessions of their Sins and a Profession of their faith in Christ which were alwaies done upon such admissions yet the Children of such persons so Baptized have been alwaies taken to be within the Covenant and so Members of the Church also but whether compleat Members or no hath been a question and indeed generally denied and something further required of them before they have been taken into a full Communion with the Church in the Ordinance of the Supper For that being an Ordinance of the Gospel which is a Seal of the Righteousness of Faith as was said of Circumcision with reference to Abraham Rom. 4. 11. It is but reasonable to conclude that none have a right unto it but such as are made Partakers of that Righteousness of Faith those that by an eye of Faith can discern the Lords Body by an hand of Faith lay hold upon Christ under those sensible signs and representations and that by Faith can Eat the Flesh and Drink the Blood of the Lord Jesus Christ while with the Mouths of their Bodies they Eat the Bread and Drink the Wine Hence the Apostle commands us to examine our selves and so to Eat of that Bread and Drink of that Cup and telleth us that whoso Earteth the Flesh and Drinketh the Blood of the Lord unworthily Eateth and Drinketh Judgment unto himself and hence it is that some evidence both of Knowledg and Regeneration is judged necessary to such as have a full Communion in this Ordinance with the Church of Christ The best evidence whereof is undoubtedly an holy conversation That a verbal declaration in this case is absolutely necessary I cannot say which may be made in hypocrisie and it made signifies nothing if not confirmed by an holy Life where it can be made in truth and with freedom of Spirit it is doubtless exceeding satisfactory both to the Ministers of Christ who are Stewards of the Ministries of God of whom it is required that they should be faithful distributing their Masters goods according to their Masters order and to the Members of the Church with which they are joined But I by no means think that it ought to be insisted on as to many Christians who may be under fears and doubts and despondencies but evidence the change of their hearts by a holiness of life Thus far I have a little digressed to give you my judgment in this point By which you may se how little the difference in this case is betwixt Brethren would they calmly listen to hear and to understand one another and not judge each other not heard 2. Upon our re-admission or restoring to the Church of God The judicial separation of Scandalous persons from the Church is a sufficient evidence that no persons unholy in their lives ought to be admitted into a communion with it and that they are no more then presumptive members of it or if you will visible members that is such as in outward appearance are so but when by any open action they discover the contrary they ought to be separated from it and not restored without repentance of which repentance indeed it being the change of the heart we are no infallible judges having no rule of judgment but being forced to trust to the sincerity of Profession joined with a visibly reformed Conversation The Church of Christ in all ages so far as we may trust any account we have had of it hath required both 1. A verbal declaration of what God hath done for the offending party working in him or her a Godly shame
affection which a woman may have for many men none of which she intendeth to make her Husband and she may do many common acts of kindness for them so there is a common love which a man may have for Christ and many common actions which they may do in his service the question therefore is how a man or woman may know whether he or she may with confidence look up to Heaven and say O thou whom my Soul loveth Let me add a word or two upon this argument here though I have before spoken much to it 1. I desire you to observe in the first place that the Spouse speaketh here in the singular number O thou whom my Soul loveth so must every Soul do that loveth Christ in truth a divided Soul is alwaies faulry That Soul which hath any thing in Heaven or Earth to be compared with Christ doth not love him It is true that love is a diffusive affection and may respect several objects but note these two things 1. These objects must be only diverse not contrary Contraries naturally expel one another there is nothing but sin and last that is contrary to Christ you cannot saith our Saviour love God Mammon he that saith to any lust O thou whom my Soul loveth cannot in truth say so unto Christ How many in the world by their fondness upon their lusts shew their want of love to Christ 2. Conjugal love admitteth neither parity nor priority The Wife that loveth her Husband as she ought to love him must neither love any other before him or better then other nor yet in a proportion equal with him she must love him before and above all things Our Saviour hath determined this in saying He that loveth Father or Mother or Brother or Sister more then me is not worthy of me and he that loveth Son or Daughter more then me is not worthy of me 2. Soul-love will be known also by Soul-longings Love teacheth the Soul to long after 1. Union with the object beloved 2. A sense of reciprocal love 3. Communion with the object beloved If thy Soul loveth the Lord Jesus Christ it will be seen in thy longings after him in the hour of his apprehended adsence or after such degrees of his presence as thou hast not yet attained and after a sense of his reciprocal love the Soul that truly loves is impatient till it discerneth itself mutually beloved it will also long after communion with Christ you read Davids temper as to this Psal 84. 1 2 3. Psal 42. 1. Psal 63. 1. Alass how few are there whose pulses beat with any strength for God 3. Love thirdly is discovered by a complacency delight satisfaction in the presence of the object beloved according to the degree of its presence As it longeth for its object when absent so it rejoyceth and melts in the embraces of it when present What satisfaction hath thy Soul in an Ordinance or Duty in which thou hast seen the power glory of God the presence of Christ in his Ordinance 4. Love again is seen by the Soul's sorrow for a departed Christ The loving Wife weepeth when she for any time parteth with her Husband and is solitary when he is gone Mary's love to Christ was discerned by her weeping because she knew not where they had laid him And the Jews cryed out when they saw Christ weeping over the grave of Lazarus Behold how he loved him The dispensations of Christ to the Soul sometimes are very dark he seems to be gone and as it were buried out of the Soul's sight how beateth thy heart at such a time art thou afflicted or art thou not 5. If thy Soul loveth the Lord Jesus Christ it will be seen by thy anger a any thing whether in or from thy self or others which grieveth or offendeth him Love to its power will suffer no injury to the Beloved The Wife will not her self abuse her Husband nor to her power will she suffer any other if unwarily ignorantly or in a passion at any time she hath done it she is angry at her self for it and if others do it she is ready to seek a revenge upon them What indignation what revenge saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 7. 11. is produced by godly sorrow which is the effect of love 6. If thy Soul loveth Christ thou wilt reveal all the Secrets of thy Soul to him he shall know all thy griefs all thy desires and wants thou wilt be much in prayer much in secret prayer Dalilah charged Sampson for want of love to her because he had concealed his secrets from her Christ on the contrary justifieth his love to his Disciples Joh. 15. 15. by his telling them all he had heard of his Father 7. If Christ be he whom the Soul loves the Soul will be much in the meditation of him Whatsoever is the object of our Love is much in our thoughts O how I love thy Law saith David Psal 119. 97 99. it is my meditation night and day What room in thy thoughts hath Christ and the things of Christ 8. The Soul that is full of love is like the Fountain which is full and must overflow If we love any persons we are often talking of them upon all occasions talking for them and very often as we can get opportunities talking with them What are thy discourses of Christ to others How dost thou use thy Tongue in discoursing for Christ when there is need What discourses hast thou with Christ in prayer 9. Soul-love is like the Sun that cannot shine upon the Glass of the house but its refracted Beams will pierce thorow and shew themselves upon the walls the floor the pavements A love to Christ will look thorow him and shew it self upon every thing that hath relation to him his People his Ministers his Word and Ordinances Psal 16. 2 3. O my Soul thou hast said unto the Lord thou art my Lord my goodness extendeth not to thee but to the Saints that are in the Earth and to the excellent in whom is all my delight 10. And lastly If you love Christ with your Souls you will keep his Commandments yea if it be to sacrifice an Isaac to pluck out a right Eye or cut off a right Hand This is our Saviour's mark Joh. 14. 15. Obedience is the first and most genuine fruit of Love and if it be such as shall speak a true Love in the Soul to Christ it must be 1. Internal as well as external 2. Universal not partial 3. Constant and not only for a fit But of these things I have spoken before and therefore shall not inlarge c. Sermon XLII Canticles 1. 7. Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at Noon I have done with the first Proposition I observed from these Words from the compellation O thou whom my Soul loveth viz. That Christ is he and the only he whom the believing Soul loveth there
Protection I from them expect Mine Enemies are afraid As soon as they see over me Thy Banners are displaid You Daughters of Hierusalem My heart is sick for love I cannot live without your help O to my poor soul move XIII My dearest Lord hath left with you Flaggons and Apples too O reach me something left I dye Unto the Scriptures go Out of those Fat 's draw out some Wine And quickly bring it me Bring me his Apples why should you Your Lords Spouse dying see XIV I shall not dye but live for he Hath put under my head His left hand or his right hand shall Imbrace me in my bed 'T is he alone my aking head Can hold and give relief They 'r his imbraces only can Assuage my poor souls grief XV. How ready is he me to help I did but cry he heard His left hand hath secured me As to the thing I fear'd His right Hand soon shall follow it And wholly me release His right and left hand both shall join My love sick soul to ease XVI O Daughters of Hierusalem I charge you by the Roes And by the Hinds the friendly Hinds Which so much love disclose One to another Do'nt provoke My Love till he withdraw By my example wisdom learn Sin not but stand in awe XVII You live amongst the Roes and Hinds Learn not their wantonness You 'l want the hand of my dear Lord When you are in distress Judgment for Sin will come as fast As if the Roes it brought Do not stir up your Lord at rest By one rebellious thought XVIII Hark! it is my Beloved's voice He comes he comes to me Leaping upon the Mountains him Skipping upon th' Hills I see He 's my Beloved though not here I know his pleasant voice And though I see him not his found Makes my heart to rejoice XIX He comes The Mountain of my Sins I see lies in his way He leapeth o're that mountain and It causeth no delay He skippeth o're the little hills Of Creatures opposition That he may come to my relief In my distrest condition XX. I see him coming O let me The glorious sight behold With th' Eye of hope behold him and With th' Eye of Faith more bold He comes like a young Hart or Roe Nimbly and pleasantly Behind the wall he standeth when In my distress I cry XXI In at the Windows see he looks And through the Lattess sees Both my behaviour and withal My sad Calamities The Lattess Lord doth give to me But an imperfect sight O break it down appear to me In a more glorious light XXII I hear him say Rise up my Love My fairest one arise And come away for I have now Put off my dark disguise The Winter and the Rain are gone The pleasant Flowers appear Upon the Earth the singing Birds Do greet the springing year XXIII The harmless Turtles pleasing voice Is heard on every Tree The Fig-trees puts forth her green figs The Vines smell pleasantly Arise my Love Thou fairest one Make hast make no delay 'T is a fit season of the year Arise and come away XXIV Black storms of perfecution Have kept thee much at home The storms are over nothing now Hinders but thou mayst come The Gospel Turtles which lay hid In Corners now come forth All have a Gospel liberty To sing their Saviours worth XXV See how the Saints bud out in grace How gracious fruits abound Upon this liberty for all To hear the joyful sound Arise you who yet sleep in Sin Make hast to come and live O go not on presumptuously My Spirit yet to grieve XXVI The Summer will not always last Your day of Grace will end Come to me while I call and am Ready to be your Friend Discourag'd Souls arise and thick To my assemblies come The weather 's good doors ope you have No plea to stay at home XXVII My Love who to the rocks dark clefts Of late didst trembling fly And under stairs secret place Chose for thy Covert lye Pursu'd by Vultures now come forth Thy Countenance let me see For it is comely and thy Voice Is pleasant unto me XXVIII The Foxes which have spoil'd the Vines The Vines with tender Grape Come forth and take them now for me Let not a young Cubb scape They shall no longer spoil my Vines Chase them into their Den I 'le be revenged on thy lusts And on malitious men XXIX I know that my Beloved's mine I know that I am his This is my Triumph this my Joy My chiefest happiness Had not he made himself first mine His I had never been He first remov'd my guilt and then Purged my Soul from sin XXX ' Midst white and fruitful Lillies he Loves to converse and feed O let my Soul a Lilly be No more a barren Weed Until the glorious morn shall break And shadows flee away O let my glorious Lord be mine And I ne're from him stray XXXI Turn my Beloved to my Soul Be like a pleasant Roe Or like the nimble Harts which do On Bethers Mountains go In my distressed State O Lord Let me not be forgot Make hast and turn and let me feel Thee while I see thee not A Prefatory Discourse UPON THE SONG of SOLOMON Canticles 1. v. 1. The Song of Songs which is Solomons HAving undertaken this excellent portion of Holy Writ for the Subject of these Exercises it is reasonable I should according to the usual and commendable order of Interpreters discourse a little concerning the Divine Authority of it concerning the Subject matter of it the Penman the time and occasion of the writing of it and concerning the form especially considering that as to some or all of these there are some difficulties to be assoiled more than concerning other portions of Scripture and concerning some of them some things more peculiar to this than any other Book The first Verse of the Song which I have now read to you gives me a sufficient foundation for the most of my discourse of this nature if in any part of it I swerve from my Text I shall yet keep to my business which is by these previous exercises to prepare you for clearer understanding of the sacred contents of this Spiritual Song The Text affords us these three propositions 1 Prop. That this Book was Solomon's 2 Prop. That it is a Song 3. Prop. That it is a Song of Songs The first will lead us to a discourse of the Penman and that to a modest Enquiry after the time and occasion of his writing it and that well known we shall easily determine the Author and both from that advantage and the auxiliary help of other Arguments conclude concerning its Divine Authority against all opposers The second leads me to the consideration of the form of the writing being Metrical and Dramatical What else occurreth concerning that shall be there added The third will lead me to
their worldly and sensual satisfactions I would speak to them as one standing this day in wisdoms Porch and crying after them in their hottest pursuits of the world Come and turn your hearts hither you that are simple ones and void of understanding I shall have a fairer opportunity to speak to these when I come to consider the argument by which the Spouse backeth her Petition But alas we had need make these cries often you can see the world and the gay and fine things therein precious and run after them with a swift pace but you can see no excellency in the kisses of Christ nothing for which they should be so desired when alas the world is but like a brave glass which whole is of some value but if broken in pieces the small pieces of it are worth nothing Christ his love is like a wedge of Gold or like a most precious perfume the least particle the least drop of which hath its value there is no emanation of his special loves but is suted to the Souls wants and to some eminent necessity under which the Soul laboureth Hear Solomon speaking to you Prov. 1. 22. How long you simple ones will you love simplicity And Fools hate knowledge Turn you at my reproof I will pour out my Spirit unto you I will make known my words unto you Your reason tells you that a vessel of Silver or Gold is much preferrible to one of Earth or Glass and as for other reasons so for this which you ordinarily say break a vessel of Earth and Glass the pieces are worth nothing but if one of those more valuable mettals be broke the least pieces have their value Why should not the same reason instruct you that Christs favour is to be prefer'd to all the world can afford you a little of the world is not much valuable a plentiful estate the highest pitches of honour a belly full of pleasure that indeed may appear desirable but the least tokens of Christs love the least expressions of his favour are most valuable things The kisses of the world are for the most part but Oscula Iscariotica or Joabitica like the kisses of Judas who in order to the betraying of his Master first kissed him or like the kiss of Joab to Amasa who under pretence of kissing him smote him under the fifth rib and slew him Christ's kisses are kisses of peace and reconciliation of love and favour Secondly This notion calleth to all those that are true Christians and that for three things For a due value of the least tokens of Christs special and distinguishing love look narrowly to make up your judgment whether what you take to be such be such or no and there you must take heed that you do not make conclusions from the gifts of common providence No man can judge of the love or hatred of God to his Soul from any thing which befalls him in this life No man can judge of any special love from Gods giving him a longer life greater measures of health a more plentiful estate or any thing of this nature God gives the worst of men their portion in such things as these No nor ●dly from common gifts such as those of knowledge utterance c. look therefore narrowly to make your judgment and the surest Judgment is from such things as more conform you to the nature or will of God but if you will find aliquid Christi any thing which you can call Christs or speaks his distinguishing love take heed of undervaluing that Secondly It calls to you for the use of all means for proficiency and growth in Grace Such as hearing the Word Prayer the use of all the Ordinances of God for in reason if the least tokens of Christs special love be desirable greater manifestations of it are much more desirable Labour for more holiness more heavenly-mindedness more subjection of your will to the will of God Hath the Lord blessed you with a faith of adherence a power given you from above to cast your Souls upon the Lord Jesus Christ Labour for faith of evidence be like the Travellers to Zion of which David speaketh Psal 84. that go from strength to strength until they all appear before the Lord in Zion It may be a good question sometimes to satisfy a troubled doubting Soul what is the Minimum quod sic the lowest degree or measure of saving grace but it is an ill hearing from a lazy wanton Soul Lastly it calls loudly to us to thirst after Heaven where the believing Soul shall be the Lambs Wife and follow him whithersoever he goes and be blessed with the clearest vision and the fullest imbraces of its beloved Oh how pleasant will the mansions of glory be to those Souls to whom the imperfect views that it hath had of Christ in this life have been so desirable while we are present in the Body even Paul himself owneth himself absent from the Lord. Now indeed we are the Sons of God now we are in a capacity of his kisses tokens of special love sufficient to uphold and refresh our Souls but there we shall be at the rivers of pleasures where there is not only pleasure but fulness of pleasures and that for evermore O Blessed are they that shall be alwaies before the Throne of God seeing their Redeemer with those Eyes and taking their fills of his love Sermon IV. Canticles 1. 2. Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth BY the beloveds Kisses mentioned in this Text I have understood Christs special and distinguishing love and the tokens of it by which either as God blessed for ever or as the Mediatour of the world he may discover his kindness to the Children of Men or the Members of his Church in common from whence I have already observed that the heart of a Believer is after distinguishing love Kisses being the least of those Evidences I have shewed That the least tokens of Christs special and distinguishing love are and will be very sweet to Believers Souls But I observe the word is in the plural number Kisses and so may signify either 1. Various dispensations of Grace Or 2. Various repetitions of the same Acts of Grace Hence the next Proposition ariseth That altho the least dispensations of special and distinguishing love be exceeding sweet and precious to Souls which have once tasted how good the Lord is yet their hearts will be after fuller and frequent dispensations and repetitions of it I take both these to be comprehended in the plurality of the term 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace is a thing which is but one piece considered as it is in God their 's nothing plural in the one Divine Being but as the Sea which is in itself but one yet as it washeth upon several coasts receiveth several names and denominations as the English Sea the Irish Sea and the Baltick Sea So as the Grace of God respecteth the several necessities and wants of us
which the Soul apprehends of obtaining all grace Let a thing appear to us never so beautiful never so useful yet if we lye under an apprehension of its impossibility to obtain it this moderateth its desires after if nay extinguisheth them for our Reason forbids our Wills to move after things which we apprehend not possible to be obtained But such is the goodness of God towards us that there is no dispensation of his love but he hath somewhere or other promised and revealed to us as possible to be obtained by us Now good apprehended possible to be obtained by us is the proper object of the desires of our Souls we are told that it hath pleased the father that in Christ all fulness should dwell And that the fulness of the God-Head dwelt in him bodily 1 Col. 19. 2 Col. 12. and of his fulness saith the Evangelist Joh. 1. 16. We have all received grace for grace To pass by other interpretations of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some understand Grace suited to all that Grace which is in Christ There is no habit of Grace in Christ suited to our human nature and state but believers may receive something from him in proportion to it There is no love of God to Christ which fitteth us or may fit us in our proportions but we may receive Nay there is no love of God which floweth from the fulness of the Divine Nature of which we are capable but the believer may receive For saith the Apostle the Fulness of the God-Head dwelt in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily In him as our mediator that he might communicate to those that are the members of his body and that I take to be the properest sense of those words Of his fulness that is of the fulness of the God-Head which dwelt in him as Mediator and dwelt in him so as that he could communicate it to those that believed in him Hence he tells us that all power was given unto him both in Heaven and Earth and that the Son of Man had power upon Earth to forgive Sins and that God had given unto him Eternal life that he might give it to whomsoever he pleased so as the Soul apprehends all grace not only beautiful and lovely but also as possible to be obtained by it from Christ and having such apprehensions of it conjoined with its before-mentioned apprehensions of the beauty and excellency of it and the usefulness of it with respect to the various and renewing wants of the Soul it must necessarily desire it This notion may as the other which I have handled shew you 〈◊〉 difference betwixt the desires of the Hypocrite and those of the true Child of God after Grace There may be some desires after Grace in Souls in whom there is no true and real change of heart but they are either terminated 1. In the common gifts and graces of the Spirit Or 2. in the Comfortable manifestations of it 3. Or at furthest in some particular dispensations of it The common gifts and graces of the Spirit of God may be desired by those in whom the love of God doth not dwell By common gifts I mean knowledge utterance an ability to pray to discourse of the things of God c. And the reason is because these may serve a double end which an Hypocrite may have 1. His honour and credit and reputation in the world Common gifts and graces may give Men and Women a great name in the Church of God though they will give a Man no place in the Kingdom of God They may especially as times may go much serve a man both as to his lust of gain and covetousness and also as to his lust of Ambition and seeking after the honour which is from men and serve him to appear as some body in the world and to make him pass for a great Professor and help him to preferments also in the Church and so serve his Belly You have an eminent instance of this in Simon Magus Acts 8. 9. of whom it is said That he used Sorcery and bewitched the People of Samaria giving out himself to be some great one v. 13. He beheld the signs and miracles that were done this Man now to augment his reputation and probably that he might be in a capacity to get more mony than he had been able to get by his tricks of Hocus Pocus and diabolical Arts seeing the Apostles conveying the Holy Ghost to their Disciples by their laying on of hands he did not only desire the graces of the Spirit thus far but offered them mony for that power that upon whomsoever he laid his hands they also might receive the Holy Ghost There is no doubt but whatsoever may promove the lusts of an Hypocrites heart may be the object of his desire Now as a National knowledge of the things of God or the common practical gifts and graces of the Spirit may serve a man as to his profit and advantage or as to his honour and reputation so they mightily gratify the lusts of an Hypocrites heart who doth all to be seen of Men and whose utmost design is but to glory in appearance and in the praise of Men. Besides this they may also serve him very far in the quieting of his natural conscience Natural light discovering to us that there is a God doth also shew us that there is some homage due to him and hence ariseth a natural obligation upon men to be doing something in discharge of this homage to which these common gifts are subservient The like might be said of moral habits which are but common grace men that are 〈◊〉 touched with the love of God or desire to please him may yet see a beauty and a profit too in a moral just and righteous conversation and desire so much grace as may keep him from the scandal and reproach of the world and from the ruining of himself and Family or Relations Nay Secondly his desires may extend to the consolatory manifestations of the love of God the pardon of his sins and the sense of that pardon what should hinder In a time when a Prince is free of his pardons it is not impossible that some of his Subjects may take out their pardons that it may be have no great sense or apprehension that they stand in need of them Hypocrites that live within the compass of the Church of God are often hearing of sin and the wrath of God due to sin to Original sin to Actual Sins to Sins of Omission and Negligence as well as those of Commission and Presumption they also hear daily proclamations of Gods grace and readiness to forgive what should hinder but that they ex abundanti cautela tho they be not touched with any great sense of sin tho they have some good opinion of their own Righteousness may yet earnestly desire to know their iniquities are forgiven and that the Righteousness of Christ might be imputed to them
sweet but these are sweeter than the Hony and the Hony-comb No portions of Scripture are like these to the believer Every verse in the book of God is a Star but as Stars differ one from another in glory so do the Revelations of the will of God in our apprehensionsa s more suited to our necessities For the proof of the proposition There is so much reason for it that were it not that it is fit your Faith for the help of which the Ministry is ordained should not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God I might for bear the use of any Scripture texts in the case The World was many hundred years old before there was any written Word of God of which we have any record The first that we read of was the Book of the Law which the King of Israel was commanded to have alwayes before him and to read therein all the daies of his life Saul was the first King of Israel he was a wicked man and regarded not the divine Law The next was David the man according to Gods own heart See his Affection to the word Superlatively exprest Psal 19. 7 8 9 10. 11. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul the Testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the simple the Statutes of the Lord are right rejoicing the heart the Commandment of the Lord is pure enlightening the Eyes The Judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether more to be desired are they than gold yea than much fine gold sweeter also than the hony and the Hony-comb Psal 119. 14 15 16. I have rejoiced in the way of thy testimonies as much as in all riches I will meditate in thy precepts and have respect unto thy ways I will delight my self in thy statutes v. 97. Oh! how I love thy law it is my meditation night and day Read over that excellent Psalm at your leisure you will find in it a strange variety of expressions setting out David's value of and thirst after the Word of the Lord. I had saith he in one passage perished in my affliction if thy Word had not been my delight For the Word of God as delivered by Ministers you shall all along the History of the Scripture observe you read not of one good King of Judah and Israel but they were very desircus in all cases of consulting with the Prophets of the Lord and no doubt but the reading the Law and the Exposition of it in the Sanctuary was the reason why David Psal 42. Psal 63. and Psal 84 so passionately bewailed his being banished from it In short look through all the New Testament you shall find no company of Believers but by some Expressions or other declaring their Zeal for and fondness of the Word of God And the same Spirit continued in gracious Souls after the times that the Scripture makes mention of I remember Hierom tells us of a good woman whom he saith he could never find without a Bible in her hand aud Mr. Fox in his Martyrology tells us a story of Three Maids in Lincolnshire if I remember right who sold their Estates in a time of Persecution to buy a few Leaves of the Bible It were infinite to tell you the instances we have in Ecclesiastical History of the great thirst after and delight in the Word of God which good people have expressed What need we any further Instance than what the Experience of our own Age do●h afford How naturally do Souls born again as new born Babes desire the sincere Milk of the Word of God It is true some Hypocrites especially in times when Religion is in credit and reputation may lay hold of the Skirts of a Jew and say We will go with you I mean may shew some fondness of hearing and reading the Word but no Child of God no regenerate man but is indeed thirsty of it So that as it was said of Paul as soon as he was converted Behold he prayeth so it may be said of every man and woman let them before have been never so loose and vain and careless as to reading and hearing the Word Behold he readeth or Behold he heareth Nor indeed is it possible it should be otherwise If we consider first That this is the Will of God concerning every Soul The Soul is unchanged till it be in some degree willing and obed ent So as what St. Paul spake more openly he saith to God though more privately Lord what wilt thou have me to do Now this is one of the first things that God calleth such a Soul to do Hear saith God and your Souls shall live As God said to Paul Go into the City and it shall be told thee what thou shouldst do So God saith unto the changed Soul Go to Church and hear my Word and go and read in my Word and there it shall be told thee what thou shouldst do Augustin tells us a story that being in a great Agony of Spirit and not knowing what to do he heard a voice as out of an inward Room saying Tolle lege Take up and read The Soul in this doth but conform himself to an impression that is made by the Spirit upon his heart and is coaevous to the hour of his New Birth and this you shall see exemplified not in this or that particular Soul but in every Soul born of God The Infant is not more naturally disposed to suck the breasts of the Mother or Nurse than such a Soul is disposed to read and hear the Word of God from the impression of the holy Spirit of God upon it in the first hour of its Conversion Nor is any thing more reasonable than such an impression if we consider God's Ordination of his Word as the pabulum animae the food and nourishment of the new born Soul 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere Milk of the Word that you may grow thereby And for this very reason this thirst after and delight in the Word of God never goeth out of a sanctified heart for the Word is the proper nourishment of the Soul in all states it is not only Milk for Babes but Meat for stronger ones By these things men live saith Hezekiah The just shall live by Faith saith the Prophet The Word is the object of this Faith You shall observe that the God of Nature hath planted in most sensitive creatures a knowledge of their proper food and an appetite or desire to it The God of Grace hath given the renewed Soul a knowledge of its proper food too and created in it an appetite to it so as no soul is born again without a knowledge of the Word as that by which it is to live or an appetite to it Nay it is not only necessary to uphold the Spiritual Being of the the Soul but to all the purposes of its well-being Such a Soul findeth the Word an inexhaustible Fountain a large
the Preachings of the Gospel which Teachings have such a constant presence of the Spirit of Grace with them that if a man will he may with those Aids and Assistances do what God requireth of him in order to his Eternal Salvation and avoid what God would have him to avoid We affirm they are and that there is no such power in the Will of Man in the use of those common Aids and Assistances and that there is a Teaching of the Spirit in the use of the Word far beyond the power and virtue of the Word The Object of this Teaching we make to be the Elect of God Reprobates as well as chosen Vessels may be taught by the Ministerial Teaching of the Word and have that external Communion with God in his Word which I before mentioned but the Elect of God and such as shall be eternally saved only know any thing of these Teachings and to such are restricted throughout all Scripture in such places as make any mention of them The more immediate Object is the Understanding Will and Affections The Ministerial Teaching reacheth the Eyes and Ears and exteriour senses and thence cometh into the thoughts and into the understanding more confusedly and imperfectly it reacheth not the more inward part of the Soul The things of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 10 12. are revealed to those who have received the Spirit V. 14. The Natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit nor can he know them because they are spiritually discerned I therefore call it an internal spiritual Communion with God in his Word But yet for the fuller understanding of this it is reasonable that I should shew you how the Spirit Teacheth the Elect Soul in and by the Ordinance that you may see and understand what there is more in this Spiritual Teaching in this internal Communion with God in his Word and Ordinances than in the meer Teaching of the Letter meer Ministerial Teaching separated from this I told you before these Teachings were not by immediate Enthusiasms Impressions or Revelations of new things for I pray observe there is a twofold Revelation the one I may call A simple immediate first Revelation Thus God of old taught the Patriarchs and Moses and the Prophets and the Apostles All Scripture was by inspiration from God and holy men spake as they were inspired by God Thus God was pleased to teach the Guides of his Church before the holy Scripture was written at least fully written and a Curse annexed as a Seal to that Book to them that should add any thing to it This is a Teaching some would be at but what need of it if the Scriptures as the Apostle tells us are able to make the man of God wise to salvation furnished to every good work Secondly There is another kind of Revelation which we may for distinction sake call a compounded mediate Revelation it is the further Revelation of what God hath revealed in his Word but we wanted a proper medium to see it in we were blind and dark and our Eyes stuck in the bark and surface of Scripture Thus it is yet true 1 Cor. 2. 10. That God revealeth to his People by his Spirit the deep things of God the things which Eye hath not seen nor hath Ear heard nor can it enter into the Heart of man to conceive the things which God hath prepared for them that love him But of this I shall speak more by and by That I may therefore give you at least my apprehension concerning the due notion of the Spirit 's Teaching so as it shall not be confounded with bare Ministerial Teachings which I take to be a great debasing of the notion of it on the one hand nor be made opposite to Ministerial Teaching and that made useless on the other hand I shall shew you that in order to the Salvation of a Soul there is a Teaching of the Spirit necessary added to or over and above Ministerial Teachings I shall open it in four or five particulars 1. The Spirit teacheth by special Illumination There is a common Illumination which is the Effect of the Spirit also but of the Spirit working in a way of common grace by which men receive the common notions of Religious Truths There are two diseases or faults in the Soul of a Christian which hinder its learning spiritual things 1. The first is a listlesness or indisposition to learn or hear any thing of that nature You may see this in mens slighting of the Word of God till God hath wrought some saving work in their hearts they have no mind to read the holy Scriptures nor yet to hear them faithfully opened and applied And could you but enter into peoples hearts which yet you may know by what was the temper of your own hearts before God wrought a change on them you would see this yet further confirmed unto you this God in conversion removes but this is not that which I have here to do with 2. There is besides this a natural blindness and deafness that a poor creature cannot see nor hear In Jer. 5. 21. you find these words Hear now this O you foolish people and void of understanding who have Eyes and see not Ears and hear not Every natural man is one of these who have Eyes and see not Ears and hear not The mysteries of the Kingdom of God are foolishness to the natural Soul what a notion of Regeneration had Nicodemus Joh. 3. what notions of Justification Union with Christ the indwelling of the Spirit Faith c. have some others discovered Natural men have rational Souls as well as others and by the workings of them understand many Propositions in Religion which shine in the light of Natural Reason but there are Mysteries of the Kingdom of God Doctrines that shine only in the light of Scripture of these they understand little or nothing Nay for the more common notions of Religion concerning the Immortality of the Soul the Nature of God the Doctrines of Faith Repentance Good works when once the heart is changed the Soul seeth them in quite another light and hath quite another notion of them than it had before while it was only under the instruction of Reason and the Ministerial instruction of Men. Paul prayeth for the Ephesians Ephes 1. 17 18. That the God of Glory would give them the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation in the knowledge of him the Eyes of their understanding being inlightened c. It is the Spirit that inlighteneth the understanding and inableth it to a fuller and further comprehension of and insight into the Spiritual Mysteries of the Kingdom of God When the Disciples came to our Saviour Matth. 13. 10. and asked him why he spake to the multitude in Parables he tells them v. 11. because it was given to his Disciples to know the Mysteries of the Kingdom of God but to the multitude it was not given From hence have proceeded the vain speculations and
the Rule which God hath given us Our Souls communion with God through the Spirit is not out of Ordinances but in and by them The Teaching of the Letter is not opposed but subordinated to the Teaching of the Spirit There is room enough for the Teaching of the holy Spirit after the Minister hath done what he can to teach us nor is it to be blasphemed by ill tongued men because themselves do not understand what it means they only speak evil of the things they know not The Power of God upon the heart fastening the words we read and hear upon our hearts and consciences as a Nail in a sure place is a thing only known unto the Souls that have had experience of it But the great thing I desire you might be instructed in from this discourse is The difference betwixt a prophane person and hypocrites and the true Children of God which may be discerned from their affections to the Word of God The prophane person wholly despiseth and slighteth the Word of God both the written Word and the Word Preached it serveth him for nothing but a subject to exercise his prophane wit upon The Hypocrite driving another design glorying in shew and appearance he must have some pretended respect at least to the Word of God but he rests meerly in reading or in hearing and regardeth not either how far God in the Word communicates himself to him nor yet how far he communicates his Soul unto God in the Ordinance Let an Hypocrite go with a multitude and hear a Sermon he hath enough if he can but say I have been at the Ordinance whether his Soul hath been at all instructed or affected whether any Word of God hath come nigh to his heart laid any hold upon his conscience yea or no he hath no true thirst after any communion with God in the Ordinance if he hath been but seen in the Lord's Courts or at most be furnished with matter of discourse to talk of amongst Christians so as they may take him to be a Disciple his ends are satisfied But it is otherwise with a Child of God he is troubled when he cometh from an Ordinance if he doth not find he hath had some communion with God in the Ordinance That God hath either more sealed and further confirmed some Truth to his Soul or convinced him of some sin or comforted him with some Promise some way or other spoken unto his heart Methinks the difference betwixt an Hypocrite and a Child of God in this case may be resembled by the going of a Child with another companion who is no Child to a Father's house where they find themselves splendidly entertained but the Child seeth not his Father's face the Child's companion is pleased and comes home talking and boasting of his entertainment but the Child's heart is sad the end of the Child's Journey was to see his Father's face and to have his Father's blessing without this the good chear doth him no good The formal Hypocrite comes home from Ordinances pleasing himself that he hath been at Church that he hath heard a quaint learned discourse and his tongue may run great descants upon such things as these The Child of God is satisfied with none of these things he went to his Father's house that he might see his Father's face if he can find no evidence of that his Soul is discontented and unsatisfied he cries I have laboured in vain I have lost another day of grace and opportunity of salvation I have been seeking the Lord in vain and waiting upon him for nothing And this is the very reason why a pious Soul cannot hear every body nor take up with all Sermons or discourses he doth not go to Church to hear the voice of a man but the Word of God and goeth with an expectation to meet with a blessing from God and therefore he will hear where the Word of God is so opened so applied as he can expect God's blessing upon it He cannot expect that God's blessing should go along with any to whom he hath said Psal 50. 16 17. What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldst take my Covenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behind thee He will not therefore sit under the Ministry of one that is openly prophane and wicked and of a scandalous life Nor one that teacheth other Doctrine than what is according to sound Doctrine and godliness and the form of sound words delivered in the Word of God or him that giveth heed to Fables and endless Genealogies which minister Questions rather than godly Edifying which is in Faith 1 Tim. 1. 4. When he goes ●o an Ordinance he goeth not to hear the words of men puffed up but the words of God and expecteth that God should meet him and bless him and therefore governs himself accordingly in hearing so as he may probably meet with a blessing from God which he cannot expect from one who so dischargeth his work as he proclaimeth to all that God never sent him though he runs In the next place this will give us another advantage to try our state with reference to God's favour An earnest desire after an inward spiritual communion with God in any Ordinance or Duty and the dissatisfaction of a Soul without it will very much argue a man or woman to be a Christian indeed whereas a bare going to an Ordinance a bare fancy or desire to hear or a meer hearing will speak a man no more than a nominal titular Christian and be an evidence that the Soul resteth in a meer bodily labour and exercise which profiteth nothing This is a great point the being in the Sanctuary will satisfie an Hypocrite nothing but the seeing the power and glory of God in the Sanctuary will satisfie David the man according to God's own heart But it is hard for us to keep a medium in any thing almost As in the heart of a Formalist there is nothing of this desire nothing of this dissatisfaction so many times in the heart of a good Christian there may be too much of this dissatisfaction and a discontent and dissatisfaction founded in some mistake let me therefore a little enlarge upon this so useful a Subject 1. A satisfaction with a bare reading or hearing the Word speaks nothing above formality nothing above what an Hypocrite may arrive at It is said that Herod heard John Baptist gladly yet he was not got up to the Hypocrite's Form There was a people in Ezekiel's time of whom God complained Ezek 33. v. 30 31 32. that talked against the Prophet by the walls and in the doors of their houses yet spake every one to his Brother saying Come I pray you and hear what is the word that cometh forth from the Lord. And came as the people came and sate before the Prophet as the Lord's people and heard his words but would not do them with their mouths the●
shewed much love but their hearts went after their covetousness And v. 32. the Prophet was to them as a very lovely Song of one that had a pleasant voice and could play well on an Instrument they heard his words but they did not do them And in the time of the Propher Isaiah there was a generation that sought the Lord daily and delighted to know the Lord's waies as a Nation that forsook not the Ordinances of God and took delight in approaching to God Isa 58. 2. yet the Lord sent his Prophet to cry aloud against them not to spare to lift up his voice like a Trumpet to shew them their transgressions and the house of Jacob their sins And doubtless there is such a generation still as a generation of prophane persons that despise the Word and Ordinances of God and blaspheme God and his Word so another generation that must read and must go and hear and may take some delight in it They may delight in the stile and phrase and wit of the Preacher or in the Learning that is mixed up with the discourse or in the Notion of the Sermon and desire to hear especially some kind of Preachers upon these accounts or to furnish their minds with some notional knowledge of the things of God that may serve them as to their credit and reputation in the world or furnish their tongues with discourse in religious company all this will speak nothing to prove a man a Christian indeed one whose heart is changed and transformed into the likeness of the Word All this may be without any desire after the kisses of Christ's mouth but a desire after the feeling the power of the Word upon our hearts and a dissatisfaction of spirit until a man findeth something of this upon his Soul this will speak a man or woman not to rest in a form of godliness without the power of it yet even this dissatisfaction may be too much and this happeneth when it proceedeth from some mistake and misapprehension of Religious Souls This principally happeneth in two cases 1. The Soul 's judging it self from its sensible experiences not from its direct motions toward God and its desires The motions of our Souls towards God must be warily distinguished from the sensible returns of God upon our Soul The first will speak the Soul beloved The latter speaks it highly favoured 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much graced by God A pious Soul is not to judge it self so much from God's returns to it in this particular as from God's workings in it kindling in it those holy desires which move it after what it may be it doth not yet seem meet to the wisdom of God that it should attain I have not told you that the Spouse of Christ doth at all times find that Christ hath kissed it with the kisses of his mouth but that such a Soul's desires will be steady and constant after such a thing and will not be satisfied with a meer bodily labour and external performance of a duty The 2d mistake may be from the Soul 's not considering the variety of those kisses by which our blessed Lord may kiss the Souls of Believers in and by the Word but keeping its Eye upon some particular influence of grace which it passionately desireth and not finding that God satisfieth it as to that it concludeth it hath had no influence from God at all As now supposing a Soul sad and troubled it is exceedingly desirous of comfort and satisfaction and saith Lord when wilt thou comfort me In expectation of meeting God in this way it goeth out to hear the Word and not meeting with that peace and comfort which it wanted it is ready to conclude that it hath met with nothing and hath had no near inward spiritual communion with God As to this the Soul must rectifie its mistake the profit of the Word is not limited to one thing it is saith the Apostle profitable for reproof and correction and instruction in righteousness There is a kiss of instruction in righteousness It may be thou canst not find that God by the Word which thou hast heard hath spoken or sealed peace to thy Soul but thou art still full of troubles and fears doubts and dejections well but if thou findest that God hath more sealed and confirmed some Truth to thee that he hath made thee to see further into the Mysteries of the Kingdom of God to see some Truths of concernment to thy Soul in a clearer and fuller light do not say that thou hast not met with God in the Ordinance The opening of the Eyes especially to discern the Mysteries of the Gospel is one of the kisses of Christ's mouth If thy love be not so far as thou canst see further influenced yet if thy Faith be promoved this is a great thing It may be thou camest to hear hoping for strength against the temptation God possibly hath met thee and hath given thee a further light to discern the temptation the methods and depth of Satan's subtilties in it this is a kiss There is an instruction in Duty as well as Doctrine which deserveth this name Thou comest to the Word hoping God will speak peace to thee and take the thorn out of thy flesh that buffeteth thee It seems not good to God to do this but thou goest home from hearing more submitting to the Will of God more resolved to wait upon God more convinced that it is thy duty to lie at the foot of God and to wait his will and good pleasure This also is a kiss of his mouth There is a kiss of Reproof and Correction When God by his Word reproves and corrects a Soul when he reproves the Soul and the Soul is reproved as is said of Abraham when the Pagan King reproved him this is a kiss of his mouth Reproof and correction are things for which God hath told us that his Word is profitable for and a Soul ought to look upon it self as having had a communion with God in his Word when a wise reproof hath met with an obedient Ear. In short if a Soul after hearing though it hath not the desired mercy yet findeth it self more prepared to want it more quieted in the present want of it more patient under the afflicting hand of God that the grace of God is more sufficient for it than it was this is an excellent kiss of Christ's mouth a certain token that God in the Word communicated himself to the Soul though it may be it hath not been just in that way and method and particular dispensation that the Soul expected I shall finish my Discourse upon this Proposition with a Word of Exhortation If this be the frame of one that is the Spouse of Christ let us labour to find our hearts in this frame I remember the words of Absolom What saith he do I at Hierusalem if I may not see the King's face Hierusalem is called the City of
be translated Let him kiss me or He shall or will kiss me with the Kisses of his Mouth Her Prayer was the Prayer of Faith This is a prime requisite in all our Prayers to God Math. 21. 22. And all things whatsoever you shall ask in Prayer believing you shall receive Jam. 5. 15. The Prayer of Faith saveth the sick He saith the Apostle that cometh unto God must believe that he is and that he is a Rewarder of those that seek him Nor is that General Faith enough for that Soul that goeth to God for any particular Mercy there must be a more particular Faith both as to Gods Power and Love with reference to that good thing that God is able to do that thing for him yea and willing also so far as in his infinite Wisdom he shall see it good When the blind men had come to Christ begging Mercy Matth. 9. 27 28. saith he Believe you that I 'am able to do this They said Yea Lord then he touched their Eyes Nay the Prayer of Faith signifieth more a trusting and relying on God for the doing of the thing we ask It is very much to observe how much the holy Scripture layeth upon this with Reference to the hearing and answering our Prayers Jam. 1 5. If any of you lack Wisdom let him ask of God But v. 6. let him ask in Faith nothing wavering According to your Faith saith Christ so be it to you The Unregenerate man cannot ask in Faith he wants the Habit his Soul is shut up in Unbelief and Gods People may be too guilty of not asking in Faith giving too much way to temptations and hearkening too much to the jealousies and suspicions of their own Souls Secondly The Spouses Phrase speaks an holy boldness He shall kiss me with the Kisses of his Mou●h Indeed this differs but gradually from the other it must be a boldness of Faith and in this Sense we are to come boldly to the Throne of Grace Eph. 3. 12. We have boldness and access with confidence through the Faith of him Hence Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that we may obtain Mercy and find Grace to help in a time of need Thirdly The abrup●ness of the Phrase speaketh Passion and Ferveney The fervent Prayer of the Righteous availeth much Jam 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The working Prayer When the whole Soul is in Prayer set on work the Understanding discerning the good the Soul prayeth for discerning God able to give it and willing also discerning the Promise by which God hath made himself a Debter to the Creature for it The Will in willing it the Affections in intense desires of it Men may pray and their Souls be hardly set at work at all only they so far as it influenceth the Eye to see Words in a Book or the Understanding to invent Words which the Tongue may utter This Prayer signifies little it is the fervent working Prayer that availeth much when the whole Soul is at work wrestling with God as Jacob did that it may receive the Blessing Fourthly The form of the Word speaks Reverence Let him kiss me O that it might please the Lord to kiss me so much the Phrase sounds in our Dialect In all our Service of God he requireth Reverence and a godly Fear He that dareth not to come to God but doubteth whether he may presume to ask of him knoweth not the Lords goodness he that dares to come without Reverence knoweth not the Lords Majesty and Greatness As boldness and Confidence without doubting becomes us with respect to his Goodness Love and Faithfulness so Fear and Reverence becomes us with reference to the Greatness and Majesty of the Divine Being Lastly her Speech speaketh Modesty She asketh but a Kiss Modesty is not opposite to an holy Boldness in Prayer She peremptorily asks somthing which might speak his special peculiar Love Yet there is a modesty imported in her words in that she asketh no more than the Kisses of his Mouth In three things we should shew a Modesty in Prayer if it be rightly ordered 1. In the asking the good things of this Life with a due Submission to the Will and Wisdom of God It speaketh too much boldness with God to be too importunate for things that are not absolutely and infallibly good for us under all circumstances It is enough for us that God hath promised to withhold from us no good thing We prefer our own to the Divine Wisdom in such importunities 2. In the asking of Spiritual Mercys Modesty ought to be shewed also in submitting our selves to the VVill of God as to Dispensations or Degrees of gracious Manifestations not absolutely necessary they may be asked but they ought to be asked with limitations if God seeth they be good for us if he that knoweth our Hearts seeth that we will use them for his Glory c. 3. In not prescribing time to God as to the granting of those things which are not in the present time necessary We ought to believe God wiser than our selves and to limit our Requests by the Terms of his Promise to beg the things which God hath promised upon the Terms which he hath promised I have now finished my Discourses as to the Spouses first Petition Let him kiss me with the Kisses of his Mouth I shall in my next exercise proceed to the Argument by which she backeth this her first Petition For thy Loves are better than VVine Sermon IX Canticles 1. 2. For thy Loves are better than Wine I Have done with the Spouses first Petition Let him kiss me with the Kisses of his Mouth Wherein as I have shewed she manifested her Desire after near and special Communion with her beloved and some distinguishing token of his favour I come now to the Argument by which she backeth this Petition that is expressed in the words I have now read to you The Argument is drawn from the value she had for his Love The reason of her before mentioned Desire was the excellency she apprehended in the favour of her Lord which she expresseth in a way of comparison She saith It is better than Wine And she makes this her Estimate of the Love of Christ an Argument for Gods manifestation of it to her Soul I shewed yon the Sense of the words before I have nothing now to do but to discourse the Propositions arising from the words so opened the first of which was Prop. That Christ hath Loves There are Loves in Christ He is not onely lovely and so the object of our Love the chiefest of Ten thousand but he is Loving and we are the Obiects of his Love Of old He rejoiced in the habitable parts of the Earth and his Delights were with the Sons of Men Prov. 8. 31. The Apostle telleth us 1 Jo. 4. 16. That God is Love It must be understood of God in Christ For take Man as he is stated upon the Fall and
further to consider the relation they stand in to the Petition considered as an argument used by the Spouse to inforce it I have already shewed you they are brought in by the Spouse 1. Partly to shew us the reason why the Spouse so earnestly desired these tokens of Christs distinguishing love viz. because she had found them good yea good before Wine as is the Hebrew Idiom 2. Partly as an argument she inforceth her Petition drawn from the value she set upon the love of Christ Each of these will afford us a distinct Proposition That the ground of Believers earnest desire after the tokens of Christs distinguishing love and nearest communion with him is their knowledge and experience of the goodness and transcendent excellency of it That it is a good argument for Christians to use in pleading with God for the choicest dispensations of his grace if they can truly tell him that his Grace is very precious to them These 2 propositions remain yet to be handled I begin with the first of them 1 Prop. The ground of Believers earnest desires after the tokens of Christs distinguishing love is their knowledge and experience of the goodness and transcendent excellency that is in it I say their knowledge of the goodness and transcendent goodness of those tokens of Divine Love By knowledge I here mean no more then their believing apprehension God hath in his word revealed the excellency of them this revelation they have read and heard and God hath wrought in their hearts a firm and steady assent to the Divine Revelation This indeed is Gods first work in the Soul the motion of the will and affections follow it I added and experience Experience is a sensible evidence Knowledge is gained by reading and hearing experience by seeing and enjoying knowledge conduceth something to move the Will and Affections experience more The reason is because good things in the fruition and enjoyment of them do not alwaies answer our first apprehensions of them and expectations from them but nothing can be imagined more potent to incline the whole Soul to any thing than knowledge in conjunction with experience justifying our apprehension As we have heard saith the Psalmist Psal 48. 8. so have we seen in the City of our God when a Soul hath not only heard of the Loves of Christ but its Eyes hath seen them the Soul hath tasted how good the Lord is this mightily engageth the Affections Especially if we further consider that whereas in all sensible objects called good the fruition or enjoyment rarely answers the report of them or the apprehension of them which the Soul first entertained and apprehended it is quite contrary here the enjoyment infinitely transcends the notion and apprehension so that as the Queen of Sheba said to Solomon It was a true report that I heard in my own land of thy Acts and of thy wisdom howbeit I believed I eved not their words until I came and mine Eyes had seen it and behold the half was not told me thy wisdom and prosperity exceedeth the fame which I heard 1 Kings 10. 6. 7. So saith the Soul that being justified by faith hath arrived to a peace with God Lord it was a true report that I read in thy word and heard from thy Ministers while I was yet in my natural state and condition of thy loves and the infinite sweetness that is in them how beit I believed not the words until my Soul came to tast something of it and behold the half of that quiet and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost the half of that serenity of conscience and satisfaction which the Soul hath from a peace with God was not told me thy loves far exceed the fame which I heard I shall lay the proof of this Doctrine upon these 2 Propositions which have a natural rational evidence to every reasonable Soul 1. The Soul of man naturally and necessarily knowing an object to be good and wanting it in whole or in part to any considerable degree doth desire it and without such knowledge it desires it not It is a rule in Philosophy we will nothing but what to us appeareth good It is our misery in our lapsed state that many things to us appear so which are not so but they must so appear or we cannot will them Three things must concur to make any thing the object of a reasonable Souls desires 1. An apprehended goodness in it That is an apprehended Sutableness in it to our state or circumstances if there be never so much goodness in a thing if we have no knowledge of it no apprehension of such goodness in it our will moveth not by desire toward it Hence it is that the Clown desires no learning and the man of learning and knowledge desireth no excess of gold or Silver Though there be a goodness in learning and knowledge Yet the Clown apprehends it not so doth not desire it and though there be some degrees of goodness in a great estate yet the Philosopher and man of contemplation apprehends it no further than as it serveth for a Viaticum a Travelling Penny to pay for food rayment whiles he passeth through the world And indeed this is the true reason why the sensual profane man saith to the Almighty depart from me and to Christ what do I care for thee for being under no conviction of his lost and miserable estate and possibly hardly believing that he hath an immortal Soul or shall have any existence beyond this Life he seeth nothing in Christ or the loves of Christ that any way suteth the necessities and wants of his Soul and Ignot i nulla cupido what good a man doth not know he never longeth for 2. A Second thing concurring to make the Object of desire is an apprehended possibility of attaining to or enjoying what he apprehends so sutable for the reason of man will not suffer his Soul to move towards what he apprehends impossible to be attained Hence as no Schollar ever heartily desired all kinds degrees of learning knowledge so no worldling ever desired all the Gold and Silver in it Hence it is also impossible that a Soul under an habituated despair should heartily desire the Love and favour of God which it apprehends not possible for it to obtain 3. The object of it must be somthing which the Soul wanteth either in whole or in part either as to the thing it self or as to some degrees of it or at least what it apprehendeth itself to want Still apprehension is necessary for De non Entibus non apparentibus eadem est ratio It is the same thing as to this motion of the Soul not to have a good and not to apprehend that it hath it for our Souls move according to their apprehensions and this is the reason none desires being though they may desire the continuance of it the healthy man desireth not health though he may bless God for it
wants but it deriveth from Christ Good things suited to the more external wants of our Body derive from God as the great preserver of man and flow from that common providence of his which dayly worketh in the upholding and preservation of created Beings but good things for our Souls derive from Christ as Mediator and as they are purchased by his blood so they are dispensed out by his Spirit This now can appear to a Soul from no other light but that of Revelation study therefore the holy Scriptures meditate therein night and day they testify all this concerning Christ A full persuasion of these two things 1. That we have immortal Souls ordained to an eternity either of happiness or misery 2. That nothing but the love of Christ can furnish them with those good things which are proper and necessary for them with respect to their Eternal Happiness are enough to convince Men and Women that the loves of Christ are as much better than Wine and to be preferred to it as the Soul is better than the Body and the things suited to its wants better than those things which are only suited to the wants of the outward man But still I say and every days experience maketh it good Non persuaseris etiamsi persuaseris you shall not persuade Men and Women tho you say enough to persuade them though you shut up their mouths and they having nothing to say such a power hath lust in the heart of man into such a debauchery is the nature of man degenerated Admitting men to believe that they have immortal Souls and that the Holy Scriptures are the Word of God there is nothing in nature hath a fuller evidence than this truth that the loves of Christ are preferrible to all things in the world and a man cannot act like a reasonable creature in preferring any thing unto them yet who believes it who lives up to this demonstration It is God must persuade the Soul of this and till the Soul hath this written and ingraven upon it by the finger of his Spirit it will never so Judge Lastly therefore Pray mightily that God would open your Ears to see this and persuade your Souls of the truth of it for till he doth it in vain are mens persuasions To move you to it consider 1. This will bear some proportion to the love of Christ to mankind Christ loved us more than these more than all the Kingdoms and pleasures and profits and honours of the world yea more than his own life yea he preferred us to the Angels the fallen Angels for he took not upon him the nature of Angels but the nature of man 2. This will speak the Soul to be a wise and understanding Soul Certain it is as I have already shewed you that the loves of Christ are good before Wine The wisdom of a Soul lyeth much in a right discerning betwixt good and evil and betwixt that which is good and that which is more good or better The excellency of a Soul lyeth in its conformity to God he is an Atheist who owneth not God to be the first Being and to be of all Beings the most excellent and perfect Being So as necessarily that Soul that comes nearest in conformity to God must be the most excellent Soul now that Soul which acteth most up to the principles of improved and pure reason and to the rule of that holy Writ which we all confess to be the revealed Will of God and liveth most up to the Divine Pattern doing what God doth that must needs be the most wise excellent understanding Soul Now will not a little reason serve to convince us that Christ is the most excelling Object and therefore to be preferred to all sublunary enjoyments Doth not the Scripture represent him to us as altogether desires as the chiefest of ten thousand as the well beloved of the Father in whom he is well pleased as he whom we ought to love with all our heart all our Soul all our Strength Doth not the Father the Heavenly Father love him above all other objects To which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Son this day I have begotten thee and again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son He was brought up with the Father and daily his delight rejoycing alwaies before him 3. This will speak an heavenly sublimated Soul purged from the dregs of sensuality and from an earthly mind a Soul risen with Christ and seeking the things which are above Col. 3. 1. The preference of Wine any sensual satisfactions or any sensible enjoyments to the loves of Christ speaks a dirty Soul that feedeth upon carrion and can be filled with wind Lastly You have heard what an argument this will supply a Soul with in all its addresses and applications to God for any grace or favour no argument can be more moving more prevailing with God none that layeth hold upon more promises or that toucheth God more as a tender Father O therefore labour for this frame of Spirit and give your Souls no rest until you find that they indeed do prefer the love of Christ before all other things in Heaven and Earth Secondly This notion calleth to all you who profess Godliness and to any thing of the Spirit of Adoption which teacheth to cry Abba Father to take heed of a Carnal mind an heart cleaving to any created comforts in excessive degrees so as for the enjoyment of them or any of them to run the hazard of the loves of Christ you will by it prejudice your souls in a great argument which you might use at the Throne of Grace There are amongst others three distempers of heart which those that would do much with God in Prayer must take heed of 1. A revengeful not forgiving frame of Spirit It is a dreadful Text Mat. 6. 15. But if you forgive not men their trespasses neither will your Heavenly Father forgive you Our Saviour hath taught us to pray Forgive us our Debts as we forgive our Debtors 2. A doubting and unbelieving frame of Spirit He that cometh unto God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him he that lifts up his hands unto God must lift up pure hands and that without doubting 3. Thirdly A Carnal heart cleaving to the world preferring the things of the world to the loves of Christ the good things of Grace Lastly Is this such an argument of force with God Let then such as can use it in truth make use of it I doubt not but I speak to many who can in truth say that they value the loves of Christ the tokens of his special and distinguishing love above all earthly contentments when you go to God plead this take unto you words and say Lord let me be made a partaker of thy special distinguishing love thou knowest that my Soul valueth it above mountains of Gold
certainly a forbidden Relation Love not the world saith the Apostle nor the things of the world yet never were more to be found amongst such who are called Christians Thirdly Marriage doth not alwaies spoil Virginity as it signifies Chastity But an heart equally cleaving and inclining to two men will especially if byast to him who is not the Woman's Husband She that hath one true and proper Husband and yet loveth another equally with him or more than he hath lost her Virgin-heart Ah! how many of these are there amongst Professors they are married to Christ in the face of the Church they were baptized into his Name and are under Vows to be the Lord's But as God said of old concerning Ephraim Their heart is divided and therefore they must be found faulty Ah! How many are there that have divided hearts that halt between two Opinions and are not able to conclude with themselves whether Baal be God and they should serve him or God be God and they shall serve him Nay they halt between two Conversations something there is of Heaven in them but alas how much of the Earth how much of sin folly and vanity how much of contradiction to their Profession where 's a Christian Caleb to be found to walk with God fully Fourthly If we have some that are Virgins yet how few beautiful Virgins where 's the beauty the glory of Professors where 's their former shining out before men Ah! call your Children Ichabods call them Ichabods The Glory is departed in a great measure from England from the Professing Party of England Where 's the former sincerity love to God zeal for God plainness of heart sincerity of conversation brotherly love heavenly walking the World the vanities of the World have spoiled Professors beauty The Sun of a little outward prosperity hath shone upon them how are they tanned But in the next place this discourse offers us a fair opportunity to try our Relation to Christ whether we be the Lambs Wife who shall hereafter follow him whithersoever he goes 1. Are you Spiritual Virgins There are tokens of Spiritual as well as Natural Virginity 1. Purity and Chastity in heart as well as outward appearance Blessed are they saith our Saviour who are pure in heart for they shall see God is not thy heart defiled with sensual affections impetuous passions doth not thy Soul cleave to sin and lust 2. Dost thou live like a Virgin an hidden life doth not the world see all that thou hast of a Spiritual life dost thou not like the Pharisees love to pray standing in the Synagogues and in the corners of the Streets more than with thy doors shut about thee in thy closet livest thou any thing of that life which is hid with Christ in God is it thy only and greatest care to please thy heavenly Father and Christ thy great Lord and Master 3. Where 's thy modesty the Virgin blusheth presently when any thing is reflected upon her Art thou ashamed when thou committest iniquity and thy heart reflects it upon thee or hast thou a Whores fore-head that cannot blush I might instance in many particulars more but these are enough to try thy Spiritual Virginity 2. A second note of the Spouse of Christ arising from this Text is a love to Christ Love is a natural plant and groweth in every Soul but love to Christ is a plant from Heaven heavenly a plant sprung up from the seed of God in the Soul If Christ should from Heaven propo und the fame question to thee which while he was on Earth he propounded to Peter couldst thou answer with him Lord Thou that knowest all things knowest that I love thee This Grace of all others is most discernable for love is of an active nature and will hardly lie hid The pantings of thy heart after him the acquiescence complacency and delight of thy heart in him will easily discover it to thee if thou lookest narrowly The natural man cannot say that his Soul cleaveth to Christ or thirsteth after Christ or taketh any complacency in the Lord Christ Thirdly As God is the fountain of good and blessing to his Creatures and as Christ hath a fair inheritance of a Crown an Heaven an incomprehensible glory which is annexed to the fruition and enjoyment of him so the worst of men may have a kind of love for Christ or rather for what he bringeth along with himself unto the Soul Lastly Therefore Dost thou love Christ for the savour of his good Ointments because his name is an Oil or Ointment poured forth He that loveth Christ meerly for his Heaven and Glory is purely selfish in his love I deny not but Moses had an Eye to the recompence of reward and so hath every honest and gracious heart without doubt Christs beneficence and goodness unto us and the benefit which our Souls have and hope to have from Christ is and ought to be a very great attractive and to draw out our hearts more and more in love to Christ but herein is the purity of the Saints love he discovereth such an excellency in the Lord Jesus Christ that were he never to have an Heaven with him yet his heart would cleave to him infinitely delight in him if thou canst say that thou thus lovest the Lord Jesus it will indeed speak thee to be a Spiritual Virgin a Spouse to the Lord Jesus I shall conclude my discourse upon this verse with a threefold word of Exhortation 1. In the first place methinks from this metaphorical expression of Saints under the notion of Virgins I have here a fair opportunity to plead with Virgins to be Saints Virgins generally have the object of their love to seek Lo here a most deserving object for every young man every young woman that heareth me Methinks the holy Spirit points out this in the Metaphor Therefore do the Virgins love thee Christ here expresseth himself under the notion of some beautiful young man beautified and adorned with all the advantages both of nature and of art So that the Virgins must love him I noted to you before that some would have the term 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be rather a term of age then either signifying Sex or State oh that I could this day prevail with you who are young men and young women to love the Lord Jesus Christ Youth is an age a time of love full of love but it usually mispends its self upon vain and worthless objects the young man loves his lusts and his pleasures the young woman loveth dancings and foolish sports and vain company and gay and costly attire but how rare is it to find a young man or woman that sincerely loveth the Lord Jesus Christ truly amongst young or old there is hardly one of a thousand but of those that are in the height and heat of their youth hardly one of ten thousand It is too frequent for us to give our marrow to the Devil
righteousness but his spiritual strength and ability also His fall causing the need of a Mediator and a coming unto him that we might have life caused also the need of the influence of the Holy Spirit upon us to quicken and innable us to com● unto him and to walk with him Hence there was a need of such a Covenant for God to make as that mentioned Jer. 32. 40. I will make an everlasting covenant with them that I will not turn from them to do them good but I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall never depart from me Thirdly That body of death which remains in the best of Gods People evinceth a necessity of a continued powerful influence of grace to keep the Soul in any motion especially in any quickness of motion after God That we have weights that pressus down a sin which easily besets us a body of death as St. Paul calls it proper lufts lustings of the flesh against the Spirit is evident in holy writ we are indeed at last more than conquerours over this inteftine adversary but it is through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 7. For lust is so connatural to us the lustings of the flesh so strong in us that our regenerate part could never else maintain the Spiritual fight Besides as I shall shew you as we have an impotency so as we cannot so much as will the thing which is good so we have also a natural dulness and aversion to it and this also remaineth in part in the regenerate Soul nor to be conquered without the influence of the holy Spirit Lastly The many hinderances which the Soul hath from its Enemies without will also hinder it from running James tells us that every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lust and enticed This is a temptation from within à carne this would be too hardfor a Soul in its own strength But it hath also Enemies from without both from its grand adversary the Devil and also from the world I must confess I have met with one never but one that would pretend to maintain a power in man to resist the strongest Temptations without any extraordinary assistance of the Spirit of grace this he would impose upon the world to believe because that Joseph resisted the temptation from his Mistriss That Joseph did resist that temptation is plain in Scripture but that he did it by no further assistance of Grace than Reuben had who defiled his Fathers Bed or Absolom who went in to his Fathers Concubines will want better proof than any I find in his discourse I cannot but think that if man without the assistance of special grace had a power as he boldly saith to resist the strongest temptations we should have none destroy themselves upon temptations to self murder Atbeistical thoughts and Despair It is an inaccountable thing why any should destroy themselves if this Doctrine were true especially if they be persons not before possest of atheistical principles believing there is neither God nor Devil Heaven or Hell who can give an account suppose it in the power of the best of men to resist the strongest temptations without any special grace how David the man according to Gods own heart came to fall into the sin first of Adultery then of Murther To will was certainly present with him as well as with Paul how came he to want a strength to perform but from Gods withdrawing his special influence of grace from him and leaving him to his own strength which though the strength of a renewed man yet is too little to grapple with a strong temptation If even the best of men without the powerful influence of special grace can resist strong temptations how came Peter to fall by denying his Master by swearing and cursing that he did not know him he manifested that to will was present with him by his telling our Saviour that altho all men should forsake him yet he would not God was pleased to with-hold his powerful influence and to leave Peter to the ordinary strength even of a renewed man he was not able to grapple with the temptation It is so far from being true that man hath a power to resist the strongest temptations that without Christs influence assisting he hath not a power to resist any temptation whether from the World the Flesh or the Devil It is Musculus his observation upon John 15. 3 Our Saviour doth not fay without me you cannot do much or all but you can do nothing Nor if it be a strong temptation such as the fear of life c. can a Christian resist and overcome it without a more than ordinary assistance of Divine Grace proportioned to the degree of temptation But vain man would be wise though he be but as an Asses Colt he would be strong though in very deed he is weaker than water he would be all to himself though he be nothing in himself 5. But for a further proof of this Proposition concerning the necessity of drawing powerful influences of Divine Grace both with reference to the Souls first motions and coming to Christ and further motions in following Christ and running after him I shall but appeal to the experience of all converted Souls If there be an heart before me which God hath truly changed any one that is not only converted from one opinion to another or one profession to another from Paganism to Christianity but indeed converted from the love of sin and lusts to the love of God and the hatred of all sin and an endeavour to walk close with God from an opinion and confidence of and in any righteousness in itself wherein it can hope to stand before God to a trusting and relying on the Lord Jesus Christ and his Righteousness I appeal to that Soul what was it thinkest thou that inclined thy heart to accept of Jesus Christ for thy Saviour to commit all the concerns of thy Soul unto him and to alter thy course of life from a principle of love to God and obedience to his will more than anothers who sate in the same Seat with thee or lived in the same House and sate under the same Ministry heard the same Sermons how camest thou to be taken thy Neighbour left how came thy will to move regularly whiles thy Neighbour under the same circumstances still retained his stiff neck and iron sinews and hard heart and continued in the same lewd and sinful courses who made thee to differ Didst thou make thy self to differ How came it that he did not also make himself to differ I know there is no Soul whose heart is truly changed but will say if almighty power had not changed me I had been as bad as any other And so since thy Soul hath been changed thou hast met with Temptations to sin thou hast resisted them overcome them triumphed over them others possibly some very good men have fallen by and under them who
Soul in which it is shed abroad through the Holy Ghost but it also constraineth others at least to some inquiries after it The Fathers kindness to one Child maketh every Child more studious to please him and the Masters kindness to one Servant encourageth others to their duty We have not perfect single Hearts to act meerly in compliance with a pree●pt even Moses himself had an eye to the recompence of reward Nor are we only incourag'd from the prospect of a futur recompence but we must also be encouraged from some promises or hopes of present assistance Solomon tells us The Sluggard saith there is a Lion in the way We are prone to fancy Lions where indeed there are none The way of holiness is a plain and lightsome way no rough nor dark way God hath said Waysaring men though fools shall not err therein but we know not how to adventure and indeed there are Lions and Mountains in the way The roaring Lion is in the way who goeth about continually seeking whom may he devour we have Mountains of Lusts and Corruptions as well as of Worldly Temptations that are in our way Christ hath told us that his Yoke is easie his burden is light We cannot understand it Is it an easie thing to deny our selves to take up the Cross and to follow Christ To keep a steady even pace with God The very Thoughts of the difficulty of a Christians life make many to turn away from it looking upon the Yoke of Christ as a Yoke which no Flesh and Blood is able to bear But now the effects of Divine Grace upon one Soul here incourageth many others We are like Travellers going toward the City of God we meet with Rivers over which we must pass the River seems deep and the Stream seems to run swift here our Hearts fail but as it is with earthly Travellers in such a case if one ventures through and gets safe on shore then many follow So when we see some that were under our discouragments from entring upon the ways of God yet through Grace got into them and finding them easie and pleasant this is a great encouragement to others I have known some who have long stumbled at this Stone Better never to know the way of Righteousness never to enter into a course of Profession than having entred into it to fall Back that I shall do I shall never be able to hold on in a course of Duty I shall never conquer such Corruptions c. Now when God draweth but one Soul others are incouraged to run Psal 40. v. 1 2 3. I waited saith David patiently for the Lord he inclined to me and heard my cry He brought me up also out of an horrible Pit out of the miry Clay and set my seet up-a Rock and established my goings and he hath put a new Song into my Mouth even praise unto our God Many shall see it and fear and trust in the Lord. One blessed Martyr is upheld by God and Burns chearfully his ashes set many others on fire From hence it is that the conversation of Christians is a Winning conversation and Christians are persuaded to walk that others may be won by them There is nothing unlovely in the effects of special Grace Serenity and peace of Conscience contentation in all Estates Justice and Charity towards men they are all the effects of Grace and exceeding lovely in the Eyes of all reasonable Creatures 2. A second ground of this lyes in that Charity or good will toward men which is the steady effect of this grace whosoever is taught of God to love God is also taught to love men all men with a love of good will though the Saints only with a love of complacency or delight Two things in pursuit of this will be found the effects of true Saving grace in every Soul that hath been made partaker of it 1. First Such a Soul will reveal the grace that it hath received 2. It will excite and quicken others to look after their share in the same grace 1. First A gracious Soul is alwayes communicative Grace in the Soul is like new Wine in the Bottle which must have vent see David Psal 66. 16. Come and hear all you that fear God and I will declare what he hath done for my Soul I cried unto him with my Mouth and he was extolled by my Tongue Christ when he healed the lame Man in the Gospel bid him that he should tell no Man of it yet he must go and publish it He never when he heals a Soul saith to it Tell no Man of it nay he saith the quite contrary When thou art converted saith he to Peter Strengthen thy Brethren Luk. 22. 32. Such a Soul cannot hold its peace Job could not eat his bodily morsels alone but much less can the Soul eat his Spiritual Morsels and let none know of it If the Woman in the parable could not find her lost Groat but she must call in her Neighbours and spend it upon them how shall a Man that discerns his lost Soul to be found his lost Peace and strength and liveliness to be recovered not call his Neighbours and tell them what God hath done for him Sorrow and joy both fill the Heart both pain it the communication of either unto others in some degree easeth it There are in the World Mysteries of other knowledge which Men have and do very studiously conceal because the more are made partakers of them the worse it is for those who got the first knowledge they get the less but it is otherwise as to Grace that is an inexhaustible Fountain all may have their fill of the Fountain of Living Waters and the Soul that makes first discovery of it to another loseth nothing by the discovery If Abraham knoweth any thing of the mind of God he will teach his Family therefore God will not hide from Abraham what he intends to do to Sodom Several reasons might be given why grace will not lye hid in the Soul Such a Soul apprehends it self under some Obligation of duty that of Christ to Peter when thou art converted strengthen thy Brethren must not be understood as a special and particular precept 2. The Joy of that Soul that hath any evidence that it hath tasted of of this grace is such as cannot be concealed little Streams may be circumscribed by the Banks of the River but great falls and flows of Water will overflow them We cannot bite in great passions Nor can a greater joy fill the Soul than that which ariseth from the sense of God's special love either in the first Collation of it upon or the returns of it unto the Soul 3. Again this Soul knoweth That much of God's praise ariseth from his Peoples telling of his wondrous works you shall in Scripture observe it as a constant piece of God's Peoples thanksgiving and what we are often called to for Now the good report which a pious Soul
that Gods appointed time to shew mercy either to a people or to a Soul is come when the Lord poureth out upon them the Spirit of grace and supplication he more specially moveth and inciteth his people to ask when it is in his heart to give the mercy that they ask of him and on the other side the restraining of prayer from God on our part or the with-holding the Spirit of Prayer on Gods part is an ill sign that our mercy is yet afar off 2. A second exercise of grace the exciting of which God aims at is that of faith Zech. 13. 9. They shall say the Lord is my God this is now when a Soul for the mercy which it desireth is brought off all dependances upon the creature and brought to a sole Eying of and dependency upon God and this is true both as to more publick and national mercies and also as to more private and personal mercies Israel were a great way off mercy when they trusted on the broken reeds of Ae●ypt and Assyria instead of helping them they ran into their hands and more wounded them but they were very near mercy when they said Hos 14. 3. Ashur shall not save us neither will we ride upon Horses neither will we say any more to the work of our hands ye are our Gods for in thee the Fatherless finds mercy Mark what God addeth in the very next words I will heal their backslidings I will love them freely for mine anger is turned away I will be as the dew unto Israel he shall grow as the lilly and cast forth his roots as Lebanon Hence again it appeareth that when People for the mercies they want and would ask of God are brought off all forreign dependencies all creature confidence and brought to a single sole confidence in God this is an excellent sign that the day is dawning upon them and the time come which God hath set in his eternal thoughts wherein he intendeth to shew them favour 3. A third end which God aimeth at in and by our afflictions is the probation and trial of grace I will melt them and try them Jer. 9. 7. I will bring the third part through the fire and will refine them as Silver is refined and will try them as Gold is tryed Faith and Patience are those two graces which are more eminently tryed in an hour of affliction you have them both mentioned together James 1. 2 3. My Brethren count it all joy when you fall into divers temptations knowing this that the trial of your faith worketh patience and again let patience have its perfect work 1 Pet. 1. 6. You are in heaviness through manisold temptations that the trial of your saith being much more precious then that of Gold that perisheth though it be tried with fire might be sound unto praise honour and glory c. by faith here is meant a relieance and dependance upon God notwithstanding our trials Job expresseth it well Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him Hence again if a Soul findeth that its affliction be it of what nature it will hath humbled it to Gods foot made it quiet and patient resolving meekly and without repining or murmuring to bear the indignation of God because he hath laid it upon it and that it hath brought him to a reliance and dependance upon God though it doth not see him this again is an excellent sign that Gods set time is come 2. A second rule to know Gods set time by is this When a people or a particular soul is wrought into such a frame as the promise of mercy is made unto David saith of God Psal 20. 17. Thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou wilt prepare their heart thou will cause thine ear to hear Mark first God prepareth the heart then he causeth his ear to hear first he prepareth the hearts of people to receive the mercy then he gives out the mercy now how doth God prepare the heart but by working of it up into such a frame as he hath promised the mercy upon and unto 1. He worketh the heart into a patient meek humble submissive frame he heareth the desire of the humble as you have it in that text but of this I have spoken but now 2. In the mountain of the Lord it shall be seen We are then prepared for mercy when we know not how longer to uphold and subsist without it Isaiah 57. 16. I will not saith God contend for ever neither will I be alwaies wroth for the Spirits would fail before me and the Souls which I have made v. 18. I have seen his ways and will heal him and will lead him also and restore comforts unto him When Peter cried out that he sank then Christ lent hhim is hand when the Soul apprehends itself as it were at the last gasp that is often Gods time for he will not suffer his peoples Spirits to fail nor the Souls which he hath made 3. In such dispensations of mercy to the People of God as must depend upon the destroying or removing of their Enemies the exceeding wickedness of the enemy is a good sign that Gods set time is near for the Salvation of his people from them I build this conclusion upon Gods Word to Abraham Gen. 15. 16. where God gives this as the reason why the seed of Abraham should not till after four hundred years take a possession of the land of Canaan for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full The wicked have their day and their day is with reference to the people of God the very power of darkness but as it is with the darkness of the night they say it is darkest just before the dawning of the day so the darkness caused to the Church of God by the wickedness of the wicked when it is at the thickest is a good presage of approaching light So as though the day of the gteatest malice oppression and wickedness of wicked men be a very sad day even the power of darkness yetin this it speaketh well that the salvation of Gods people is nevernearer 4. Lastly In regard the set times of our mercies are hidden from the best of Gods people in case they have not a present answer in kind they must be content if they have it in value I pray observe this God answereth the prayers of his people more ways then one sometimes he answereth them by denying them nor is this a way of answering to be despised for whatsoever the particular thing be which a reasonable Soul desires its general desire is some good Our reasonable natures will not suffer us to ask any thing which is bad if we so apprehend it now such is the infirmity of our state that we in all circumstances do not know what is good for our selves So that God often in denying a particular desire of our Souls answereth the general desire of our Souls we ask what would do us
hurt God denieth it because he would do us good and not hurt In this case if the Lord giveth us an heart content to be without the thing we ask he abundantly answereth our prayers and giveth us the general and true desire of our Souls God sometimes answereth our prayers by giving us idem the same thing which we ask but this he never doth but where he seeth it is for our good and that under our present circumstances sometimes he answereth us by giving us tantundem the value of the mercy though not the particular thing which we ask of God thus he answered Paul as to the thorn in his flesh and this is a real answer and with this every Child of God ought to be fully satisfied and contented But this is enough to have said to this point how Christians may know whether Gods time his set time to favour his Church or the Souls of his people is come a point of great concern in order to the satisfaction of Christians why they have not a present answer to their prayers to abate their dissatisfaction as to the inequal motions of Divine Providence in this answer of prayers 3. Lastly Something is necessary with reference to the manner of our prayers if we would so pray as to receive a present answer So two things are necessary 1. That we pray Believingly 2. Fervently 1. Believingly I opened this before under the first head and therefore shall say nothing to it here 2. Fervently That is that which alone I shall here speak to This is much mistaken if it be thought to lie in the vehemency of our tone and expression it lyeth much deeper in the intension of the mind and the Souls secret affection to and in the duty James tells us ch 5. v. 16. The effectual servent prayer of the righteous availeth much The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifieth operative and working and so working as it produceth the effect The Prophet speaking of God Isaiah 41. 4. useth this expression who hath wrought and done it the Septuagint translate the Hebrew word there by this word the Apostle useth it to express such a working as that by which God bringeth about his decrees Eph. 1. 11. Who worketh all things according to the counsel of his will and again he useth it to express the working of the Devil in wicked men whom he calleth Children of disobedience Eph. 2. 2. In the primitive times those who were acted by the Devil were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the great power and force which the evil Spirit put forth upon and shewed in those miserable creatures that were possessed Piscator upon the Text Jam. 5. 16. translates it Ardens the burning flaming prayer Beza translateth it Efficax the efficacious prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doubtless signifies that prayer which setteth the whole Soul on work There is a cold dead lazy prayer where the tongue only is set on work or only the tongue and the head or the fancy the one to invent and compose matter the other to utter it but neither of these is that fervent prayer which St. James speaketh of but that prayer which setteth the whole Soul in motion towards God where not only the fancy and imagination and understanding are imployed to invent and suggest matter the will to will it but the affections which indeed in a reasonable creature are but the motions of the will towards its object with the utmost intension to desire it to exercise an hope in God for it c. this is the fervent working prayer mentioned by St. James this prayer doth much with God Jacobs prayer was such a prayer Moses saith he wrestled with God until the morning he said unto God I will not let thee go until thou blessest me the Prophet expounds it Hosea 12. 4. He wept and made supplications unto him by this prayer he had power over the Angel and prevailed as it is there in the words immediately preceding yea and he had a present answer God blessed him before he parted with him as you read in his History Such a prayer was Daniels to which he received also a present answer Dan. 9. v. 3. I saith he set my face to the Lord God to seek by Prayer and Supplications with fasting and sackcloth and ashes such was Elijahs prayer 1 Kings 18. 42. The text saith He put his face betwixt his knees a posture signifying the great intension of his mind and spirit It is a praying with strong cries and groans which cannot be uttered which is the Apostles phrase Rom. 8. 26. This praying comes up to the first and great commandment Yhou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Soul and all thy strength This is like the drawing the arrow to the head which sendeth it with more force to the mark nor indeed is there a better sign of a sudden answer than when the Lord hath thus prepared the heart A man seldom finds his Soul more then ordinarily fervent and importunate with God for a mercy but when the Lord hath determined suddenly to give it in to him Thus now I have shewed you in what cases God ordinarily gives in speedy answers to his peoples prayer But God doth not do this alwaies David himself complaineth Psal 22. 2. O my God I cry in the day time but thou hearest not and in the night season and am not silent The Church crieth out Psal 80. 4. O Lord God of Hosts how long wilt thou be angry with the prayers of thy people And again he shutteth out my prayer Lam. 3. 8. What should be the reason of these inequal dispensations from the hand of the same God and gracious Father I answer 1 Why may not God do it that we may not track him in his ways He will be known to be a free agent He will sometimes give present answer that his people may be confirmed in their faith that God is a God hearing prayer The God that never said to the seed of Jacob seek my face in vain he will not alwaies give a present answer that we may not ascribe too much unto prayer nor will he alwaies delay that we may not ascribe too little to it If God should alwaies give a present answer we should ascribe too much to prayer and make an idol of a duty That the Lord might secure his own glory and be owned as the God of our mercies the object of our faith and dependence the free fountain of all our good things God is pleased sometimes sooner sometimes later to give in answer to his peoples prayer 2. But there may be reason enough for it fetched from the prayers themselves One prayer may be made more in faith than another more fervent than another more fitted to Gods set time for the bestowing of a mercy than another it is true nothing of these can render the prayer more meritorious our prayers take them at the best are too
climb up those steps which God hath made for us by which we may ascend into these Chambers we must blame our selves if we abide below But this is not alwaies the cause in some cases we must have recourse to Gods prerogative and must rest in this Even so O Father because it pleaseth thee Some Souls are dignified with a special communion and familiarity with God so was Abraham Moses David yet possibly if we look into the records we have of their lives we shall find more blots in some of them then in some others who we do not read were taken up into such eminent degrees of favour We cannot give just reasons and accounts of all Gods acts of Grace it is enough that God wills them In the mean time if we find but a good hope through grace an heart changed and cleaving to God if we can say with Peter Lord thou that knowest all things knowest that we love thee though we cannot boast of such special providences as others nor of such visions of peace nor of so quick an hearing of our prayers tho we dare not pretend to be such favourites of Heaven yet let us not be discouraged possibly as to us the Lords time is not yet come possibly it never will come God is a great Soveraign and unquestionably free as to these things he knows what is best for us he will deny no good thing to us We may say of the whole Family of God as the Queen of Sheba said of Solomons 1 Kings 10. 8. Happy are thy Men happy are these thy Servants which stand continually before thee and heaṙ thy wisdom There are some of Gods Servants that as to these enjoyments are more happy then others but there are none but are happy none but have reason for ever to admire the difference which God hath made betwixt them and others to admire what God hath done for their Souls bringing them out of the horrible Pit if they have not if they cannot see reason to rejoice in such a prospect of Heaven as othershave yet they have reason to rejoice in an equal deliverance from Hell I will shut up this discourse with two words of exhortation 1. The first directed to those who can say with the Spouse The King hath brought us into his Chambers 2. The second to those who walk with God but have not yet arrived at this Are there any who can speak the language of the Spouse and glory in this not only that they are brought home to Christ but that the King hath brought them into his Chambers the Lord hath dignified them with some special favours and manifested himself more to them then unto others the following words of this Text will let them know what is their duty I will saith the Spouse be glad and rejoice in thee and remember thy loves more then Wine 1. Be glad and rejoice in God we are often called to for this rejoycing in the Lord Psal 33. 1. Psal 97. 12. Phil. 3. 1. 4. 4. and in many other Texts Such is the portion of Gods Children such their state and condition that they have a continual cause of rejoycing and giving of thanks be they under what circumstances they can there is ground enough for them in all things to give thanks but they are more eminently obliged to it when they are under the highest manifestations of Divine Love This rejoycing in the Lord is I conceive opposed both to a carnal joy in sensual objects and also to a rejoycing meerly in that ease and satisfaction which the good thing giveth us for which we rejoice As now suppose a rich man giveth a poor man 20 s. it is one thing for the poor man to rejoice in the gift as suited to to ●his necessitous circumstances another thing to rejoice in the love and favour of the giver This is now the duty of the spiritual man he ought not only under the manifestations of divine love to rejoyce in the Lord more then in all the world and all the affluences and contentments of it which is expressed in the next phrase we will remember thy loves more then Wine and is commensurate to what David saith Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon me for thou shalt thereby make my heart more glad then in the day when their Corn and Wine increased I say this is not enough for a Soul thus dignified he ought more to rejoice in the favour of God shewed him in these specialties of his favour then in the ease and sati●faction which the mercy received giveth unto his Soul And herein lieth the purity of the spiritual mans joy nor is his joy genuine and perfect till it come to this pitch 2. The second phrase in the Text expressive of this dignified Souls duty is We will remember thy loves more then Wine The term remember is taken in Scripture in a great latitude and expressive both of all that affection which is due to the remembrance of the object and of all that practical duty which is consequent to it I shall touch a little upon both these and that very shortly for I shall God willing speak to both these expressions in order more fully 1. Remember Christs loves with the remembrance of the heart I shall instance but in one fruit of this and that is faith Remember his loves so as for them to trust in God more and to cast the care of thy Soul in an hour of distress the better upon him upon consideration of thy past and present experience We are too ready both to forget our sorrows and to forget our comforts to forget our sorrows by giving our selves a liberty to the same sins for which we have smarted and to forget our comforts by giving liberty to the same dejections and despondencies again after the experiences of Gods favour 2. Remember Christs loves practically so as to make them obligations upon your Souls to a close walking with God See the example of David Psal 116. 1 9 12 18. But I shall speak all this over again when I come to handle the next words and shall therefore add no more My second Branch of this Exhortation shall respect those whom God hath not thus far dignified the Lord hath as they hope admitted them into his family but he hath not yet brought them into his Chambers Some communion with God they hope they have and an heart that panteth after a more full and near communion with him but this they have not yet attained to they walk in the dark and see no light the Lord giveth them an heart to pray but they cannot glory in such a full and quick return of prayers as others have they have not that inward joy and peace which as to some Souls is consequential to believing the question is now what they should do what their duty is under their present circumstances I will open it in two particulars 1. Certainly they ought not to despond
otherwise the object of their joy then as it was an evidence of Gods favour It is a great piece of the Spiritual mans art to rejoice in God while he rejoiceth in the creature to make Christ the gladness of his joy as the Psalmist expresseth it now this motion of a pious Soul will appear to be natural supposing him to be first enlightned to discern and to be fully persuaded that the love of Christ to the Soul is the greatest good the rational Soul is capable of this will appear to you if you will but consider these three or four things 1. That the presence and e●joyment of some good of which the Soul stands in need and in the pursuit of which it is is the true and natural cause of the motion of that affection which we call joy This is evident both to sense and reason we rejoice not in evil but in good not in an absent but in a present good in the sense and manifestation and apprehension of it 2. That the loves of God and Jesus Christ are the greatest goods in the world and therefore the presence and sensible manifestations of them are the enjoyments and manifestations of the supreme good The very light of nature shewed the Heathen that the happiness of man lay in his union with the greatest good thus far they were agreed by their common reason though they could not so well agree what that chief good was nothing hindred them from agreeing this truth but their want of true knowledge of God and Christ and of the possibility of a poor creatures having an union with him or any kind of enjoyment of him or understanding the need their Souls stood of the loves of Christ for agreeing that the happiness of man lay in an union with the supreme good they wanted but the revelation we have of mans wants and the possibility of this blessed union with and fruition of God but they must have agreed this truth 3. It is but natural to the Soul to rejoice more in the obtaining of a greater good then in the obtaining of what is lesser and to rejoice most in a good most comprehensive of other particular goods though it wanteth those particular good things Who is there who doth not naturally more rejoice in the getting of five hundred pounds than of five because the five hundred pound is a greater good then five who doth not more rejoice in a great stock of mony by him then in a great quantity of Bread or a great Wardrobe of Cloaths the reason is because Mony is comprehensive of these he that hath Mony can buy Bread and Cloths 4 Lastly It is but natural to us to rejoyce in nothing which we apprehend incompetent with that good wherein our chief happiness doth lie Nor in the having of any thing which we enjoy whiles we want that which we look at most of all Rachel was a good Woman Jacob was her Husband to whom she was exceeding dear he had a plentiful estate 't is hard to say what good she wanted save Children only that blessing her heart was upon Jacob was nothing his estate nothing to her she goes to her Husband and cries Give me Children or else I die Now admit a believing Soul to be firmly persuaded that it must live for ever either in eternal happiness or in eternal misery and again to be persuaded That it can never live in eternal happiness without an union with Christ without his love manifested to it in the pardon of its sins and the imputation of his righteousness admit the Soul to be fired in the pursuit of these things as its chief good how is it possible that it should rejoice in any thing incompetent with it or that it should rejoice in any thing with an equal joy as it rejoiceth in this Hence it followeth that Christ must be the singular object of the believing Souls joy 1. Because it is impossible the Soul should rejoice in what is incompetent with the sruition and enjoyment of what it rightly judgeth its chief good Such are all sensual prohibited satisfactions 2. Because it is impossible it should rejoice in what it judgeth a lesser good more then in what it judgeth a greater and transcendent to it 3. Because it knoweth Christ and his loves are comprehensive of all other good for if he hath given us Christ saith the Apostle shall he not also with him give us all things Thus I have opened and shewed you the reason of the Proposition why the Soul rejoyceth in Christ I added and in the manifestations of his love particularly in hearing and answering its prayers I shall give you some reasons of that and then apply the whole discourse But c. Sermon XXVIII Cant. 1. 4. We will be glad and rejoice in thee I Am yet handling the Proposition at first laid down I shewed you the last day how Christ is the singular object of the Spouses joy I added then and the manifestations of his love especially in hearing and answering our prayers Indeed Christ is no otherwise the object of our joy then in the manifestations of his love All joy requireth some sensible manifestation or experience The personal excellencies of Christ make him the object of our love whom saith the Apostle having not seen yet we love Love asks for nothing but amiableness in its object no more doth desire which is the first born of love but joy requires propriety and union Christ manifested to the Soul can alone be the object of joy but I added especially in hearing and answering Prayer that was the case here the Spouse had prayed draw me and we will run after thee she presently triumpheth in the hearing of her Prayers and then addeth we will be glad and rejoice in thee I might have also added prayers put up particularly for spiritual mercies We shall all along in Scripture find this made a great matter of joy in the hearts of Gods people take the instances of Hannah and David Hannah had been 1 Sam. 1. praying unto God for a Child the Lord answered see how she rejoiceth 1 Sam. 2. 1. Hannah prayed and said My heart rejoiceth in the Lord mine Horn is exalted in the Lord my mouth is inlarged over mine Enemies because I rejoice in thy salvation Concerning David we have many instances Psal 31. 21. Blessed be the Lord for he hath shewed me his marvellous kindness in a strong City v. 22. Thou heardst the voice of my supplication when I cried unto thee Psal 3. 4. I cried unto the Lord with my voice and he heard me from his holy place in this he rejoiceth and triumpheth v. 6 8. Psal 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping the Lord hath heard my supplication he will receive my prayer So again Psal 18. 6. again Psal 28. 6. Blessed be the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplications so Psal 116. 1. But there needeth no Scripture in the
admiration Now as we cannot remember any thing but we must think upon it so the remembrance of any object maketh way for further meditation upon it the Spouse promising to remember Christ's Loves promiseth not only the revival of them in her thoughts but the seeding of her thoughts with them the fixing of her heart upon them 3. It implieth suitable affections the exciting of such inward affections in the Soul as the remembrance of so sweet and obliging objects are proper to excite Such as love to God further thirstings and breathings after God a suitable hope and confidence in God Vnbelief in Scripture is called a not remembring because forgetfulness is one cause of unbelief Psal 78. 42. v. 41. They turned back and tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel there was their unbelief v. 42. they remembred not his hand nor the day when he delivered them from the Enemy So Mat. 16. 9 10. Christ calls his Disciples men of little faith for reasoning with themselves because they had brought no bread in a distrust of his power and goodness in providing for them v. 9. 10. Do you not understand nor remember the five loaves of the five thousand and how many Baskets full you took up Our Saviour there chargeth their unbelief upon their not remembring the former works of God No man doth rightly remember the loves of Christ but he who is suitably affected with them and whose Soul moves toward God as one that remembreth his love 4. Lastly Remembring implyeth a suitable practice Thus it is often used in Holy Writ Remember thy Creator in the days of thy Youth is the same with Serve and Obey thy Creator and Remember to keep holy the Sabbath-day is the same with be diligent and make it thy busines● to sanctify the Sabbath-day So then the sense of the Proposition is plainly this Those Souls which have once tasted how good the Lord is and have had any experiences of his special saving grace will and ought to be careful to preserve the savour of it upon their hearts to think and med●tate upon them to be suitably affected toward God according to the nature and degrees of them and accordingly to manage their conversations that men may see that they value them above all the pleasures and profits of this world Thus did Asaph Psal 77. v. 10. I will remember the years of the right hand of the most high I will remember the works of the Lord surely I will remember thy wonders of old I will meditate also of thy works and talk of all thy wondrous doings these were the ancient works of God in kindness to his people as you will find v. 14. 15 16. My mouth saith David Psal 63. 6. shall praise thee with joyful lips when I remember thee upon my Bed and meditate on thee in the night watches because thou hast been my help So Psal 143. 5. I remember the days of old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hands You will find the people of God in Holy Writ much in these resolutions to remember the works of God 1. There is great reason for our remembrance of the loves of Christ more then Wine 1. Because they really are much better than Wine Every mans Soul doth naturally desire good good and evil are the two things which make impressions upon the mind of man evil leaves an impression of fear and sorrow and anger Good makes an impression of love joy delight and as are the degrees of the one and the other so are the impressions made by them Great evils make deep furrows in our Souls and leave great impressions upon our minds minute evils leave lesser impressions so things that are good in the highest degree leave impressions of joy and delight suitable to the nature of that good which is in them The manifestations of the love of Christ to the Soul are the greatest goods and therefore should make the greatest impressions upon us They are goods not suited to the Souls irregular passions but to its greatest wants Health peace success in business are things we call good but their goodness lieth only in a suitableness they have to the wants of our outward man what are any of these things to the Soul the loves of Christ are suited to the wants of the Soul and that not only considered as a reasonable being so knowledge and learning are also suited to the Souls wants and all improvements of reason or means in order to it but to the wants of the Soul considered as an immortal being capable of an eternal happiness Nothing more becomes a reasonable Soul then to put a due rate and value upon things and to prefer what is truly preferrible 2. This is one great reason of the Lords works That he might be remembred for and by them God indeed in his gracious influences aims at the supply of the Soul as to what it needeth but he hath an higher end then this viz. his own glory the glory of his goodness truth and faithfulness Psal 111. 4. He hath made his wonderful works to be remembred It is a complement we sometime● use with our Friends when we make them presents and give them gifts we say we do it that they might have something to remember us by God in the dispensations of his grace and mercy is often in Scripture said to remember his Covenant his word his holy promise and he expecteth that when we receive any such favours we should remember his loves and remember our Covenants and Vows so as that M●n or Woman that doth not remember the loves of Christ doth not answer Gods ends in the manifestations of his love to us nor the expectation which God upon that account hath upon us I shall apply this discourse 1. By reflecting upon the most of Christians for their not living up to this duty 2. By persuading to the revived practice of it Do the most of Christians such I mean as are so called remember the loves of Christ more then Wine What means ●hen the most of peoples never looking after a particular share or interest in them The love of Christ considered in itself is nothing else but his good will to the Children of Men this was evidenced in his not taking upon him the nature of Angels but the nature of the Seed of Abraham in his dying upon the Cross for us the publication of his Gospel to us the committing of the word of reconciliation to his Ministers who are sent out as the Ambassadours of Christ intreating men to be reconciled unto God Do men remember this love more then Wine who reject this counsel of God for their salvation who trample this blood under foot and do despight to the covenant of Grace and all this for what comes under no better notion than this of Wine either things pleasant or things profitable either the satisfaction of their lusts or the filling of their Coffers The world
For who is not guilty of a great Errour in this particular We think of sensible things more than of the Loves of Christ they are more the objects of our meditations the subjects of our discourses and the marks of our actions It is well for us that our Salvation doth not depend upon the perfection of our gracious acts and that we have another Righteousness than that of our own to appear in before God That when our Consciences check us in this particular and tell us that we do not remember Christ's Loves more than Wine yet the Gospel relieveth us by telling us that he was made of God for us Righteousness and we can remember that this Christ whose Loves we should remember after a better manner than we do is the Lord our Righteousness an High Priest that can have compassion on our infirmities he in whom we are compleat But yet neither will this relieve us unless we humble our selves before God for our failures in this particular Fly to him for pardon and endeavour even in this thing to perfect holiness and that bringeth me to the last thing I have to do viz. To offer you my Advice in order to the bringing up of your hearts to this just valuation and remembrance of these Loves of Christ 1. Labour to understand them We can meditate upon nothing but what we have some notion of we can remember nothing but what we have had some notion of There are the loves of God and the loves of Christ indeed the loves of Christ are the loves of him who thought it no robbery to be equal with the Father who is God over all blessed for ever but by the loves of Christ I mean the kindness which floweth to us from Christ as God-man united in one Person as our Mediator There is a love and kindness which floweth to us from the providence of God working either more generally and extending to all or more specially towards some There is also a love and kindness which floweth from Christ as our Redeemer Mediator Saviour Both these loves are to be remembred but the latter more especially are called the loves of Christ understand the loves of God in the effluxes of his good providence More especially understand the loves of Christ as the Saviour of Man there are also some of these more common to others some more special to some Of the first sort are the Gospel and the publication of it to us of the latter sort are those effects of grace which are wrought in us in the justification of our Souls the change of our hearts the renovation of our natures the strengthenings quicknings and consolations of the Spirit of Christ Labour to understand all your good things as coming from the hand of God and to understand the kindness of God in them see your good things as mercies as Divine gifts and then study them 1. In the suitableness of them to your States In this lies the nature of all good from this must be judged the degrees and measures of good that are in every grateful thing 2. In the freeness of them Freeness is indeed of the nature of grace take away freeness and you take away the nature of grace which must flow freely without any merit in the creature or it is no more grace but debt no more love but justice If you understand not Christ's Loves it is impossible you should duly remember them 2. Labour for to find the experience of the Loves of Christ in the best and most salvifi●k manifestations There is a love of God seen in giving us our Wine for it is God that gives us our Corn and Wine and Oil and multiplies our Silver and Gold We must look for higher things then these or else it is impossible we should remember them more then these The best manifestations of love must be discerned in the giving us those things which more suit our state and are suitable to greater wants Neither shall we effectually remember these till we find we have a propriety in them You will upon experience in all things find that it is propriety which gives us the sweetness in any good thing Supposs a brave and noble House or Estate we may look upon it and admire it and it may please us but it is propriety in such an estate that must make it sweet and pleasant to us We may have a kind of love for a Prince of whom we hear that he is just and merciful and endowed with many other qualities acceptable to humane nature but we shall not much delight in him nor remember his love until our selves have in some measure tasted and experienced it an interest and property in the love of another that is it which gives it an impression upon our Souls God hath commended his love to the world in sending Christ to die for sinners Christ hath commended his love to them in coming into the world and dying for them not for all but for those that shall believe in him men may talk of this love of Christ and use their Rhetorick a little about it in the magnifying of it but till their own Souls come to be washed with this blood till they come to have their iniquities forgiven and their sins covered it is not to be expected that his love should affect them much or sink any thing deep into their Souls so as to be revived by any effectual remembrance 3. Would you remember the loves of Christ as you ought to do more then Wine Set then your selves sometimes for soliloquy and meditation When the Sound of the Gofpel passeth into our ears we receive a little of it but transient things affect not much nor leave any great impressions upon us Meditation upon a Subject is the Souls standing and dwelling upon it it is like the digestion of our food there is nothing can be conceived a more rational means to affect the Soul with any thing or to make it fit for the memory to reflect upon then meditation One great reason why we remember the loves of Christ no better nor more is because we are not at leisure our heads are so unreasonably full of wordly cares and employments the cares of the world so choke and fill up our thoughts that we have no leisure to meditate or stand upon the thoughts of Christs loves or any spiritual objects Would Christians allow themselves more time to fix their thoughts upon spiritual objects to pierce into the depths of divine love to consider what Christ hath done for them in particular they would better remember them 4. Take heed of any wilful sinnings against his love Sinning as I told you before is usually set out in Scripture under the notion of a forgetting God and forgetting his loves Psal 78. 11. Psal 106. 13 21. the committing of sin frequently is like the continual dropping of water upon a thing which washeth and weareth out impressions upon it Besides it is natural to us
for I delight in the law of God after the inward man 2. Let him Secondly examine himself whether there be not a comeliness in him in and under his blackness of Affliction and worldly opposition A wicked man may be black through affliction but his blackness is like the blackness of a coal which is a dead colour and hath no beauty in it The Child of God is also black from the same cause but his is like the blackness of a polished marble which hath a great beauty and comliness in it The trial of his faith in his afflictions appeareth more precious then that of gold that perisheth his love to God then appeareth by his panting after him and firm adherence of Soul unto him his meekness his patience all shine forth under his afflictions The demeanour of People under afflictions will much discover whose they are 3. Thirdly The comeliness of the Spouse of Christ is not a comeliness without blackness but a comeliness norwithstanding blackness That is to say It is not a Native but an adventitious and Superinduced comliness nor adventitious from any good dispositions or any acts or indeavours of our own singly but a gracious imputation and infusion The imputation of Christs righteousness the infusion of gracious habits a comeliness arising from Christs comeliness put upon the Soul So as tho the poor creature hath been guilty before God and iniquity yet doth sometimes prevail against it the righteousness of Christ being reckoned to him for righteousness and his heart being renewed Sanctified through the Spirit of Christ and the bent of it being set right for God notwithstanding his blackness the Lord doth judge him comely and beautiful overlooking his blackness by reason of sin and infirmity 4. Lastly Every Child of God will own and be truly sensible of his blackness I am black saith the Spouse The hypocrite boasteth of his whiteness come saith Jehu to Jonadab and see my zeal for the Lord God of hosts God I thank thee saith the Pharisee I am not as other men are Extortioners Unjust Adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in the week I give tythes of all that I possess Luk. 18. 11 12. he owneth nothing in himself but whiteness aversates all blackness yet v. 14. he went away to his house not justified Hypocrites are hardly perswaded to own in themselves any blackness The Children of God are as hardly perswaded to own any beauty or comliness in themselves I gave you before the Instances of David and of Paul The reason is because the hypocrite trusts to a Spiders web a righteousness from himself spun out of his own Bowels and he is concerned to justify his integrity and to make it as whole as he can again all that he doth is to be seen of men and therefore he must set the best face of his actions that he can the Child of God seeketh for no such things in himself but despairing in himself he flyeth to the righteousness of Christ and freely confesseth and owneth his own nakedness that he might be clothed with that righteousness again the Child of God seeketh not the praise of men nor his own honour and glory but seeketh the praise of God and the honour and glory of Christ alone Thirdly This notion affordeth a great relief to the People of God against their own dejections and despondencies 2. Satans temptations and 3. The worlds upbraidings 1. Against his own despondencyes and dejections A Child of God living under the power of that Precept 2 Cor. 13. 5. Examine your solves prous your selves whether you be in the faith or u● is often looking into his own heart and can seldom please himself with the prospect He seeth in his own heart much of Vnbelief much of Vani●y much of Hypocrisy always some lust or other a body of death remaining in him iniquity prevailing against him he sinneth 7 times every day and he seeth it every night and oft times as much out of heart much dejected crying out Vnclean Vnclean I am black wofully black no better then a painted hypocrite I make a fair shew to the World and deceive some of my brethten but alas they do not see that luft and vanity that pride and passion that folly and hypocrisy which I can with half an Eye discorn in my own Soul surely I deceive myself I have no portion in God no relation to Christ I cannot be his Spouse Christian be of good Chear thou art black but art thou not also comely When a Child of God hath found out the best of himself all his comfort will be found to lie in that one text Rom. 8. v. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit He can neither look into his own heart and see his inward thoughts and the motions there nor consider his tongue and the issues of that nor compare the best of his actions with the Divine rule but he feeth himself by all condemned and findeth nothing to relieve him in is dark thoughts but in Christs imputed righteousness and that there no is condemnation to them that are in Christ And that is enough provided that he hath this evidence of his being in Christ That he walketh not after the flesh but after the Spirit 2. It affordeth the same relief against the most desperate temptations of our grand adversary the Devil Satan we say first tempteth to Sin and then he makes advantage of our hearkening to his temptations to tempt us to further sins and those of a more heinous and horrid nature to despair of Gods mercy to destroy our selves c. He first attempteth to make the Soul black by moving it to sinful acts then his next work is to perswade the Soul that God will never pardon such a sinner Christ can never Love such an Ethiopian Hence those strong violent impressions upon Souls under the power of temptations God is an holy God of purer eyes then to behold iniquity he can never set his heart upon such a polluted vile wretch as I am I have been guilty of thousands of willful Omissions of duty and Commissions contrary to my duty possibly some particular sin or sins lie as an heavy load upon the poor creatures conscience The Spouse here hath furnished such a Soul with an answer to the tempter The Spouse of Christ is black but yet comely Let then such a Soul thus answer these suggestions of the tempter O thou Prince of darkness it is true I have been a grievous sinner and as such Christ cannot Love me so far forth as I am black I am unlovely but I am not wholly black Christ cannot Love my sins but he can pardon my sin and Love my Soul The Lord hath been graciously pleased to pardon my sins upon my repentance and my acceptation of the Lord Jesus Christ and receiving him as my Saviour he hath said to me while I
was in my blood live he hath fixed his Love upon me who was by birth an Ethiopian he hath hung a Chain about my neck I am black but I am comely I have met with a story of a Minister who going to visit and pray with a poor creature● possessed by the Devil the Devil thought to have stopt his mouth by objecting to him some sins committed by him in his youth The holy man answered confessing the charge but Satan saith he upon my repentance Christ hath since that washed me with his blood Another story I have met with of a worthy Person who lying upon his sick bed and being alone one opens the door and comes in in the habit of a Scrivener with a Pen and Inkhorn and Paper andsetting himself down at the table in the Chapter called the sick man by name and told him he was sent from God to take account of him of all the sins he had done for which he must presently go and answer to God before his Judgment seat The good man rightly apprehending that it was the Devil had assumed an habit to tempt and distrub him bid him go on and write first Gen. 3. 15. And I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel Upon which the evil Spirit presently disappeared Speaking only from my memory I may forget some circumstances but this is the substance of the story What the Devil in these cases did by a more audible voice he doth yet every day by impressions made more secretly upon the Spirits of some or other that fear God For tho conscience will of it self often bring sin to remembrance and reflect sins upon the Soul committed long before yet they are some times reflected with such violence and degrees of terror and attended with such strong motions and sollicitations to despair of Divine mercy and to self murder that it is but reasonable to judge there is more in them then the ordinary workings of conscience In such a dark hour as this it will be a great relief to a Soul to think that the Spouse of Christ is black but comely Doth the Devil then object thy blackness whether by reason of past or present sins in bar to thy trust and confidence in God for the forgiveness of them through the blood of Christ Reply to him Satan I have been black I confess it I am black but I am comely also having my Garments washed and rouled in the blood of the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the World I am as the Tents of Kedar they are black but I am also as the Curtains of Solomon they are exceeding beautiful 3. It also relieveth a Christian under Persecutions and afflictions and against the Worlds upbraidings because of them The Barbarians concluded Paul a Murtherer because they saw a Viper cleaving to his hand and the men of the World are very prone to judge and condemn the People of God for what happeneth to them in this life they see the blackness of Gods Peoples visages under affliction and persecution but the love of God in chastening them that they might not be condemned with the World the exercises of their faith and trial of it and its appearing more precious then that of Gold their patience its perfect wor● h●se are things in which their comeliness appeareth in and under afflictions these are things which they do not see Gods People are also ready to conclude against themselves because of their tryals but there is no just reason for it afflictions are but a blackness of the skin the Child of God may notwithstanding them be within exceeding beautiful and comely The tents of Kedar though they had black and unlovely coverings and outsides yet within might be fill'd with Spices and Riches I shall shut up this discourse with some few words of exhortation to that duty which this notion of truth calls to us for 1. It calleth to all the People of God for humility a mean and low opinion of themselves beauty is often a great temptation to Pride whether it be natural or artificial The Daughters of Sion were haughty and walked with stretched forth Necks and wanton Eyes Isaiah 3. 16. Spiritual beauty gives no advantage to a Soul to think of it self above what it ought to think In all reason we should have been some cause to our selves of that whereof we glory we should have some propriety in it and there should be in it some perfection The comeliness of Gods People is neither natural nor any acquest of their own There are three things which may keep the most comely of Gods Children humble First The consideration of their former blackness Let but any of them look back to the rock out of which they are hewen and to the hole of the Pit out of which they were digged and they will see no reason to be exalted above measure their Father was a Syrian their birth was of the land of Canaan their Father was an Amorite their Mother an Hittite and in the day wherein they were born they were cast out to the loathing of their persons not salted not swadled at all Nor was this all there is none of them but had their conversation in times past according to the Prince of the power of the Air fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind Children of Wrath by nature c There is none of them but hath reason to pray that the Lord would not remember the sins of their youth against them and to beg of God that for them he would not write against them bitter things nor make them to possess their years of vanity None of them but before Christs comeliness was put upon them had been guilty of sin enough to make them to walk softly all the days of their lives Secondly The consideration of their present blackness is enough though they are comely yet they are black still they have a body of death a law of their members the lustings of the flesh against the Spirit sins that easily beset them weights that often press them down the beauty of the best of Gods People is but like the beauty of the Moon which is full of spots hath a dark part and often suffers great Eclipses and all whose light is borrowed He observeth not his own heart that doth not see enough in the imperfect and extravagant motions of it to keep him humble Thirdly The third is the consideration from whence he deriveth his beauty If men and women would but debate a little with their own reason they would see no reason to be proud of a comeliness arising from any external Ornament it is something beneath a Reasonable Being to be beholden to a Stone Jewels are no more or a little Earth such are Gold and Silver a Plant or a Fly or a Silkworm or a Sheep a little Wool or Flax for
2 Cor. 12. 6. Lest as he saith any should think of me above that which he seeth in me or that he heareth of me We are to have a care of the corruptions of others hearts as well as our own 3. Look to the simplicity of thy heart in the end of thy action This will indeed be much regulated from the principle if the principle be true the end will be so A man can do nothing out of a true principle of love to God but his end will be the honour and glory of God if the principle be self-love the end will be our own honour praise and applause to have the reputation of a religious man in the world and to appear to be what indeed we are not Now if thy end be the honour and glory of God you have heard that is no other way attainable but either by the predication of his goodness or by the doing of his will either in the doing good to others or the preventing of scandals and offences or upholding the credit and reputation of Religion c. But of all these things I have discoursed more fully before Sermon XXXVI Cant. 1. 6. Look not upon me because I am black c. I Have done with the four first Propositions which I observed in these two verses I come to the fifth from those words Look not upon me because I am black Where the Spouse or rather the Holy Ghost by her doth not forbid all looking upon the Spouse whether we understand the Church or the particular believing Soul in the day of her blackness but some particular lookings And this is very usual in Scripture to deliver Propositions generally which yet must be understood in a limited and restrained sense of which a multitude of instances might be given Mat. 18. 3. Except you ●e converted and become as little Children that is in some things as little Children you cannot enter into the Kingdom of God So where Christ saith my Doctrine is not mine the meaning is not mine alone and again If I give testimony of my self that is if I alone gave testimony of my self my testimony is not true So often in precepts and exhortations when thou makest a feast saith our Saviour Luk. 14. 12. call not thy Friends or thy Brethren or thy Kindred that is not them alone There is nothing more ordinary in the phrase of Scripture and particularly in exhortations or prohibitions So here when she saith Look not upon me her meaning is not to dissuade all intuition and beholding her in her blackness but to caution us how to look upon her hence the Proposition was It is our duty to take heed how we look upon the Church or the particular Child of God because they are black What the blackness of the Church or of the particular Soul is I have heretofore largely discoursed Both of them are black through Afflictions and black through Corruptions the Corruptions of particular Souls are personal the Corruptions of the Church are the Corruptions of the body collective through the mixture of undue and corrupt Teachers or Members the reception of false and erroneous Doctrine idolatrous or superstitious Worship or Rites c. In some sense we may not be able to avoid looking upon them as looking signifies no more then the casting of our Eyes upon obvious objects that are before us In some sense it is our duty to look upon them to pity and compassionate them and contribute what we are able toward their help and recovery But in other senses it is our sin to look upon them The business as to which I am to instruct you under this Proposition is how truly to divide betwixt our duty and our sin in this case The Eyes are the windows of the Soul through which most of our affections and passions shew themselves Pride discovereth itself by the Eye hence you read of a Generation whose Eyes are l●f●y Prov. 30. 13. and David saith of himself O Lord mine heart is not haughty nor my Eyes lofty Psal 131. 1. Love and wantonness discovereth itself by the Eye Hence Peter tells us of Eyes full of Adultery and Job tells us he had made a covenant with his Eyes that he would not look upon a Maid Covetousness and immoderate desires discover themselves by the Eye Prov. 27. 29. The Eyes of man are never satisfied The joy pleasure and satisfaction of the Soul are discerned by the Eye Mine Eyes also shall see my desire on my Enemies Psal 92. 11. Hope looketh through the Eye hence David expresseth his hope in God by the action of his Eyes Mine Eyes are towards the Lord Psal 25. 15. and in many other Texts Pity sorrow and compassion are discovered and expressed by the Eye The Eyes for sorrow wax dim and run down with tears The outward man moveth according to the bent and inclination of the will and affections as a mans will stands bent and his affections are inclined so he moveth so he acteth and this will of man and his affections discovering themselves by the Eye The motions of that are made use of in Scripture to express the several affections and inclinations of the Soul of man The Spouse in this Text must not be understood to caution the Daughters of Hierusalem against the natural motions of their Eyes with reference to her But 1. Against those unkind aff●ctions towards her which were not suitable to her state and condition 2. Against those unkind effects and actions which ordinarily follow such affections I put in those words unkind and unsuitable because there are affections and actions which are our duties towards the Spouse in the day of her blackness This will lead me to discourse two points under this Proposition 1. The du●y of Christians towards the Church of Christ black with Afflictions or through sinful mixtures and corruptions and towards particular Christians under aff●●ctions or lapses 2. How Christians may sin in their behaviours towards one or the other under such circumstances First Let me speak as to what is a Christians duty in the ease that I shall resolve in this general position That it is a Christians duty so far to look upon the Church and the particular Christian in the day of their blackness as they may be thereby affected with that due compassion which they owe unto their Brethren and quickned to those acts which brotherly love and compassion calteth to them for Thus not to look upon the Spouse because she is black is our sin So that the duty of a Christian here lieth in two or three things 1. In a sympathy or fellow feeling of a Churches or Christians burdens and misery The Eye naturally affects the heart according to the nature of the object which it seeth Nature itself teacheth a sympathy betwixt members of the same body No one member can be afflicted or pained but the whole body feeleth it and hath some sense of it The Apostle hath compared the Church the
Paraphrast expounds the term in the Text of false Prophets Ahab and Jezebel had 300 of them at a time a great number of the People were ready upon all occasions to relapse into Idolatry and Superstition as they had any Princes that would either tolerate or incourage it Jeremiah and Micaiah and Amos and Elijah and all the true Prophets of the Lord found that their Mothers Children were angry with them so did those that were good People amongst them the Priests were a snare upon Mizpeh and a net spread upon Tabor to hinder the People from attending the true Worship of God Look upon the Church of Christ In Christs little company there was a Judas a Son of perdition and amongst the multitudes that followed him there were many that followed him but for the loaves In the primitive times there was a Demas an Hymeneus and a Philetus a Simon Magus Many false Apostles that opposed Paul and the Apostle to Timothy Prophesieth that there shall not be a lesser plenty of them in the latter days 1. Nor can it be reasonably expected otherwise considering 1. Gods appointment for the exercise of such as be real and true Saints 1. Cor. 11. 19. There must be saith the Apostle heresies amongst you that those who are approved may be made manifest False brethren discover themselves either by the broaching of false doctrine to corrupt the faith of Christians Or by bringing in undue Rites Ceremonies and Superstitions to corrupt the Worship of God Or by a looseness of conversation discovering the want of the Love and fear of God in their hearts Now the Lord hath appointed such a Constitution of his Church that these shall be tolerated in it that those who are approved may be made manifest contraries near one another best discover themselves 2. Secondly Man is tyed up to a judgment according to outward appearance God alone judgeth the heart and according to the reality of things Even Christ himself tho as God he was Omniscient and needed not that any should tell him what is in the heart of man yet when he appeared in the head of his Church here upon the Earth and acted as the chief Minister in and of it he admitted a Judas into his first society of that nature teaching us in our admissions of members whether by Baptism or other wise to content our selves with a visibility and outward appearance there must be a difference betwixt the Church visible and invisible the Church Militant and Triumphant 2. But as these are contrary in their Principles and in their Ends so they must and will be contrary in their actions and they will be angry with the true and more sincere Professors of the Gospel Thus it hath been in all ages and periods of the Church thus it is and will be Cain was a false Brother in the Church in Adams Family he roseg up against his brother Abel and slew him because he offered up a better Sacrifice and God had more respect unto him then he had unto Cain Ishmael was a false Brother in Abrahams Family Esau in Isaac the Scripture tells you of the ill agreement betwixt Isaacs and Ishmael Jacob and Esau The whole story of the Church of the Jews recorded in Scripture and of the Church of Christ recorded in the New Testament is a proof of this opposition so is the whole story of the Church since the Apostles time and what need we any further proof then what we have at this day nor can any thing else be rationally expected whether we consider the falseness of such Persons hearts to God and the interest of God or the Pride of their hearts Or the looseness of such mens principles 1. The hearts of all such are false to God and the interest of God The love of God is the thing which doth distinguish a sincere Christian from an Hypocrite the Hypocrite loveth God in Word and in Tongue only the other loves him in Deed and in Truth There is no faithfulness in an Hypocrites heart his heart is not right with God the true Christian is sincere for God and serious and right down in his actings for the honour and glory of God The other doth but mock and dissemble and pursueth private interests of his own he sees that profession serveth his design and interest Observe in any other thing where two or more are joined in the prosecution of a design and one of them is serious right down and plainly pursueth his end but the other runs along with the business for some other ends or upon some otherdesigns but is not real in his scope intention and actions for the obtaining the end which he pretendeth to he whose heart is right for the work hath no greater enemythen he who is joined with him seemingly in the pursuit of it This is the case here all those who are visible Members of the Church of God are appearingly coupled in a design for the honour and glory of God It is the whole business of the Church of God which is the only body of People upon the Earth which God hath called and chosen for that purpose for the predication of his name In this Church there are some who do it from a single and right heart truly intending the honour and glory of God as their end there are others who are under an ingagement to do it as much as the others but their hearts are not right with God do not stand towards that work but drive some self end of private honour credit and applause these men may do some things night but they never walk with God fully as I remember it was said of Amaziah one of the Kings of Judah 2 Chron. 25. 2. He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart so it may be said of these it may be they may do many things which as to the matter of them are right in the sight of the Lord but they neve● do them with a perfect heart so as there can never be a good harmony betwixt them and such whose hearts are more sincere and perfect The Hypocrite will never be heartily pleased with the sincere Christian 2. Especially considering the Pride that is in the heart of every Hypocrite Though the Hypocrite doth not himself love to do much for God in the denial of himself nor will further serve the Lord then he can by the service of God serve himself yet he is too proud to be patient of being outdone by any this was the ground of that opposition which Cain gave his Brother Abel this made him so wroth and his countenance to fall because the Lord had respect to Abel and to his offering but unto Cain and his offering he had no respect Gen. 4. 4. 5. Sincere Godly Christians will be doing their utmost for God spending much of their time and strength in communion with God they will be much in praying much in hearing the
our Souls and the Souls of those that are in relation to us are a trust committed to us by the Lord of the whole Earth by Christ who hath dyed for us So that here is both the relation of a Superiour and of a friend in the case obliging us to take a due care for the keeping of our Vineyards 3. The more eyes we have upon us observing how we manage our trust the more careful we are ordinarily as to the managery of it This is a trust as to which God who hath entrusted us hath an Eye to us how we discharge it this needeth no great proof whoso believeth Gods Omnisciency and considereth the observing Eye which God keepeth upon all men and all their actions so as they are all written in a Book must know and believe this Lastly the more accountable we are for any trust the more we take our selves obliged to keep it with all diligence The trust of every mans Soul is a trust for which he must account Rom. 14. 12. So then every one of us shall give an account of himself unto God we must give an account to him who is ready to judge both the quick and the dead 1 Pet. 4 5. of what must we give an account but of our Souls their Elicit Imperate acts the Apostle tells us that it is the duty of Pastors and Governours of Churches to watch for Souls because they must give an account Certainly it is as much the duty of every particular Christian to watch over his own Soul because his Soul is a trust of which he must give an account to him that is ready to come to judge both the quick and the dead Nor are we only to give an account of our Souls but of the Souls committed to our charge This the Apostle telleth us plainly Heb. 13. 17. as to those who are Governors and Pastors of Churches and God told it Ezechiel Ezech. 3. 18. Son of man saith he I have made thee a watch-man to the house of Israel v. 18. When I say unto the wicked thou shalt surely die and thou givest him not warning nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way to save his Life the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thy hand This is that which made Chrysostom think that there were but a few Ministers that would be saved But it is as true concerning Superiors in other relations God never bringeth a wife into the bosom of any husband nor addeth a Child or Servant to any family but he saith to the husband of that wife to the Parent of that Child or those Children to the Master of those Servants All Souls are mine The Souls of these Persons I commit to thy trust if thou doest not warn them from sinful courses if thou doest not walk towards them as a man of knowledge and bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord they shall die in their ignorance in their iniquity but their Souls will I require at thy hand A consideration which if duly weighed by the Sons of men would awaken men to another kind of Government of their families and another kind of instruction of them then I fear is ordinarily to be found in families 2. I shall add but one thing more The better any man keepeth the Vineyard of his own Soul or the Vineyard of his family the more fruit he shall reap from it His Vintage will be the better there is little fruit to be expected from a neglected Vine Our Vineyards those I mean of our own Souls and the Souls of others under our trust do not only bring forth fruit to the honour and Glory of God but unto our selves and that very considerable 1. In our peace of Conscience here in this Life 2. In that glory which is the object of our future hopes The fruit of righteousness is peace and quietness and assurance for ever Keep your Vineyards that you may drink the sweet fruit and wine thereof that joy and peace which is the fruit of believing and of an holy life and conversation This will be very pleasant to us while we live much more when we come to die Lord Remember saith Ezekiah upon his sick bed how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Conscience checks us for nothing but the neglect of some Vineyard or other which the Lord hath intrusted us with 2. Your glory hereafter will be the more I know there is a question in Divinity whether there shall be any degrees of glory It is hard to shew you wherein the glory of one Saint shall excel another but I think it is plain enough that there shall be differences of glory in Saints that shall be glorified and if so doubtless those that have best kept their own Vineyards shall have the largest penny And those that have best discharged their trusts to the Souls of others shall have the larger share in glory He that winneth Souls is wise And the Prophet Daniel tells us that those who turn many to righteousness shall shine as the Stars for ever and ever Sermon XLI Cant. 1. 7 8. Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at Noon for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of thy Companions If thou knowest not O thou fairest amongst Women go thy way forth by the footsteps of the Flocks and feed thy Kids beside the Shepherds Tents IT is the Spouse who yet continueth her speech to her Beloved She hath spoken once to him desiring some tokens of his special and distinguishing love v. 2. Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth She hath spoken a second time to him desiring strength from him to run after him She now putteth up a third petition v. 7. Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at noon for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of thy companions To which her beloved replyeth v. 8. If thou knowest not O thou fairest amongst Women go thy way by the footsteps of the flocks and feed thy Kids by the Shepherds Tents The words easily fall into two parts 1. The Spouses Petition to her Beloved Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth c. v. 7. 2. Her Beloveds answer v. 8. If thou knowest not O thou fairest amongst Women c. In the Spouses Petition is considerable 1. Her compellation O thou whom my Soulloveth 2. Her Petition Tell me where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at noon 3. Her argument For why should I be as one who turneth aside by the flocks of thy companions In the answer is also considerable 1. His compellation O thou fairest amongst Women 2. His particular direction and information of her in two things If thou knowest not go thy way forth by the
have a command more then another in it to make our addresses to God nor any to which any promise is made nor concerning which it can be said God hath in it more Manifested himself to People seeking him yet there are two sort of places in which we have more advantage then in others for a communion with God 1. Places of Solitude 2. Places where 2 or 3 meet together or a greater number of Gods People so meet to pray or in any manner to Worship God 1. The first give us advantage by freeing us from the noises business and distractions of the World hence you read of Jsaac's going into the field for meditation and our Saviour's going so often up to a mountain for Prayer Mar. 6. 46. Matth. 14. 23. 2. The second gives us advantage as from the promise of God made to the assemblies of his People so from the influence that the Affections of pious Souls in holy duties have one upon another of which it is an hard thing to give an account but it is no more then I believe any good Christian will find upon his or her experience that their hearts are otherwise affected when they are in a society of serious Christians praying to God or performing any acts of Worship then when they are alone Hence it is that you find serious Christians so covetous of opportunities to withdraw into their closets or when they may join with other serious and consciencious Christians in more publick Worship If any shall for the further explication of this notion ask me from whence a more full free and uninterrupted communion with God is to be adjudged and determined I answer shortly I have before told you That all communion speaks a mutual or reciprocal communication of two or more each to other God communicateth himself to the Soul in his influences of grace the Soul communicateth it self to God in the actings and exercises of its gracious habits so as the fulness freedom and more near communion with God is to be judged from several things 1. First from the attention of the Souls thoughts in the duty A Soul hath more or less communion with God in a duty as his thoughts more or less deviate and wander from the thing he is about When there is a meer bodily service performed either by the lips or knee or Eye the duty is but a mere formality the Soul hath no communion with God in it in Praying the man doth not Pray nor in hearing hear nor in singing sing As to this the best of Gods People must cry God be merciful to us sinners so that the degree of perfection attainable in this life as to this thing is but comparative some may have more of this attention then others or more at one time then at another but none is perfect in this thing Only the pious Soul as in other things so in this thing is striving after perfection pressing forward towards the mark and daily humbling himself for his imperfection and flying to Christs intercession and advocation and exercising faith on his more perfect righteousness A second thing wherein a fuller communion with God on the Souls part lyeth is fervency of Spirit this chiefly respecteth the duties of Prayer and Praise The effectual Prayer must be servent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Prayer which setteth the whole Soul on work and while we sing we must make melody in our hearts to the Lord Eph. 5. 19. Prayer is oft times in Scripture expressed under the notion of crying wrestling with God pouring out of the heart before the Lord Psal 142. 2. Psal 62. 8. David calleth this a pressing hard after God Psal 63. 8. some think it is a metaphor from hounds pursuing their game in view 3. A third thing is a Freedom of Spirit This is as I take it that which David calls largeness of heart Psal 119. v 32. I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart There is no good man but findeth his heart more free to duty and in duty at one time then at another there is a straitness of heart which at some times is the great grievance and incumbrance of pious Souls it is caused sometimes from immoderate sorrow sometimes from fear sometimes from one cause sometimes from another but what ever the cause be it certainly abates the Souls communion with God at least its communications of it self to God And by consequence a freedom of Spirit a readiness of heart to duty with a liberty not of tongue onely but of Spirit also for without the latter the former is but hypocrisy advantageth and promoveth the Souls communion with God 4. A fourth thing which maketh the Souls communion with God more full is An ability more strongly to exercise its saith upon God without doubting whether it be in a stronger adherence or more firm persuasion 5. On Gods part the Souls communion is more full when it receiveth from God more influences of grace testifying his acceptance of the Souls addresses unto him or filling it with the sensible manifestations of his love or inabling it more fully to communicate it self unto God that it can be more attent in its thoughts more fervent in Spirit more free to and in its performances or exercise its faith more powerfully and strongly This I conceive to be enough to have spoken in the explication of the Proposition hinting you both wherein this more full and free communion with God is discernable and also what those times or places are where and when it may most ordinarily and probably be obtained which I conceive is the thing which the Spouse in the text expresseth her desire towards and which she begs that her beloved would instruct her as to That this is the desire of every good Christian appeareth 1. From its deprecation of those things which would hinder it and avoiding them so far as it can Those things that hinder it are 1. Intestine lusts and motions to sin Vanity of thoughts c. 2. Diabolical Suggestions Now there are no two things which the pious Soul more deprecateth then these two Worldly distractions Observe David how he bewailed his dwelling in Meshek And having his habitation in the tents of Kedar and how bitterly in three several Psalms he bewails his being banished from Hierusalem Psalm 42. Psal 84. Psal 63. So Psal 120. v. 5. How sadly doth St. Paul bewail his body of death Rom. 7. 24. 2. From its thirstings after times and opportunities of communion with God of which also you have instances in all the Psalms before mentioned Psal 86. 11. He prays for an heart united to fear the Lords name Psal 86. 11. And rejoiceth in a fixed heart Psal 57. 7. Psal 208. v. 1. Nor indeed can it possibly be otherwise as will appear to any Soul that understandeth what communion with God is That which is the object of any rational Souls desire must come under the notion of good and
23. 4. Though I walk through the shadow of death I shall fear none evill for thou art with me thy Rod and thy Staff comfort me 2. That done a Christian's next work is to look out the Promises which God hath made either such as are more general and respect his People under any Trial or such as are more special and relate to the People under any Trial or such as are more special and relate to the People of God under such particular pressures of Affliction that they lie under The Book of holy Scriptures is a great Store-house there is scarce any condition of Christians to which some Promises are not suited It is of great use for a Christian to know and understand and be acquainted with the Promises They are as the Jointure to the Wife all that she hath to live upon only with this difference the Woman liveth not upon the Jointure which her earthly Husband hath made her till he be dead Christ died once he dieth no more but ever lives but the Promises are what the Soul liveth upon when God seems as dead withdrawing himself from the support and protection of his People A good Christian ought not therefore to be a stranger to them 3. It is the duty of a Christian to betake himself to these shades to eye the Promises to commit himself unto them to hope in them these are acts and exercises of Faith Come my People saith God by his Prophet Isaiah Enter into the Chambers and hide thy self for a little time till the indignation be overpast Our coming is by Faith committing our selves unto God and trusting in him 1 Pet. 4. 19. Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their Souls unto him in well doing as unto a faithful Creator Christ is the primary object of our Faith the Promises are the proximate objects In such a time therefore let every good Christian call the Promises to his mind whet them upon his Soul offer his Soul to them call upon it to trust in them 4. It is the duty of a Christian at such a time to wait upon God with patience God ought to be trusted in regard of his Truth and Faithfulness his Power and Goodness He ought to be waited upon in regard of his Majesty and Greatness and Wisdom The Promises are oft-times made in general for help deliverance strength and the like without specifying the particular way and method which God will use and without limitations of time He that believeth maketh not hast 5. There must be a close walking with God though we be sore broken in the place of Dragons and covered with the shadow of death yet we must not forget the Name of our God our heart must not turn back from him we must not deal falsly in our Covenant with him nor suffer our steps to decline from his way Psal 44. The Promise Psal 37. 4. that we shall dwell in the Land and be certainly fed is prefaced with a Precept to trust in the Lord and to do good And the advice of the Apostle Peter is to commit our Souls in well doing unto God as to a faithful Creator 6. Lastly Prayer must be added the promises are Gods bonds by which he hath made himself a Debtor to his Creature Prayer is an action of ours by which we put these bonds in suit Sermon XLIII Cant. 1. 7. Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at Noon for why should I be like one of them that turneth aside by the flocks of thy Companions I Am still upon the Spouses third Petition to her Beloved Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at noon Methinks I could say with Peter when he was with his Master upon the Mount of Transfiguration It is good for us to be here let us build here two Tabernacles one for the Spouse another for her Beloved What she would have in this Petition clouded with Metaphors I have more fully before opened either a more full communion with Christ most free from interruptions Or his more special influence upon her in her hours of affliction and persecution I have spake something already to it in both these senses I have but one thing to add before I come to the words which are the reason of her Petition that is from the form of the words considered as a prayer so expressive both of her wants and desires a supply The Proposition I shall shortly speak to is this Prop. That though a Believer at all times fees a need of the presence and influence of the grace of Christ yet more especially in the time of afflictions and tryals Return unto me for I am married unto you saith the Lord was Gods language of old to his ancient Spouse the People of the Jews The Apostle largely pursueth the same metaphor Eph. 5. 32. This is a great mystery I speak concerning Christ and the Church so he concludeth his discourse the Wife desireth her Husbands presence at all times God hath made the Woman the weaker sex and the Wife stands in daily need of her Husband whom God hath made her head to guide and conduct her she is not only as a Vine for fruitfulness but for weakness and dependency also so is every believing Soul it hath alwaies need of that promise I will never leave you nor forsake you But as the Wife hath more especial need of the Influence and assistance of her Husband in times and matters of difficulty and distress so hath the believing Soul so that he at all times prayeth with David Psal 27. 9. Hide not thy face from me put not away thy Servant in anger thou hast been my help leave me not neither forsake me O God of my Salvation The Child of God knoweth what will follow at any time if the Sun of Righteousness doth not shine upon him all his protection strength life healing is in the shadow of his Wings But yet I say he or she seeth a more especial need of his presence and influence in the noon of sharp Trials and Afflictions Hence you shall observe that though the Servants of God have kept their daily courses of prayer yet at such times they have used themselves to more solemn addresses and applications to God of which you have plentiful instances in Scriptures in the solemn fasts and prayers put up to God in such times and their more special Petitions put up with reference to such times and dispensations of Providence Hence David cryeth out Psal 22. 11. Be not far from me for trouble is near for there is none to help me and again v. 19. Be not thou far from me O God make hast to help me so again Psal 35. 22. It was a time of great outward straights with David as you may see by reading all the former part of that Psalm v. 22.
This saith he thou hast seen O God keep not silence O Lord be not thou far from me so Psal 38. 21 22. Psal 71. 12. Every Christians experience is a full proof of this so as the Proposition needeth no further proof only let me shew you the reason of it The great Reason is Because we are all of us more prone to live by sight then by faith The Apostle saith we live by faith not by sight He tells you what he himself and other Christians then did and what all good Christians should do The just saith the Prophet shall live by faith But through our infirmity we do live more by sight then we do by faith It is a lesson very hard to flesh and blood could we live more by faith there would be these two consequents to such a life 1. In the day of our sensible contentments we should live more upon the word and promises of God then upon any sensible comforts and enjoyments But it is hard for us to have a staff lent us and not to lean upon it so when it breaketh we come to see our errors and see more need of the influences of Divine Grace at such then at other times 2. We should see as much in God and in Christ to uphold and maintain our selves in an evil day as at any other times for the promises are the same and Christ in whom all the promises are yea and Amen is the same and Gods all-sufficiency is the same he is at all times the God that changeth not This being premised as the great and original cause we may conceive some further and more particular reasons 2. Because in this Noon all creature comforts fail yea and in some afflictions sensible spiritual comforts sometimes fail also In trials that are more external such as bodily afflictions persecutions c. outward comforts fail when the Sun shineth upon our Tabernacles and the rod of God is not upon us we are then ready to forget God when Jeshurun waxed fat he kicked up the heel when these outward consolations are taken away then the Soul beginneth to see that it stands in need of some other supports If the Affliction be some divine desertion then the sensible consolations of the Holy Spirit fail also what Daviá said in his prosperity Psal 30. 6. I shall never be moved we are all of us too prone to say in the day of our prosperity but as it fared him with v. 7. so it fareth with us when the Lord hideth his face we are troubled It is too natural even to the best of men not to know the God of our mercies in the day of our mercies It was Israels sin Hosea 2. 8. For she did not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oil. We do not so duly attend to that which we profess to know that our Soul strength and Soul comforts are from the Lord and hence it is that in the day when they are withdrawn we see a more special need of the presence and influence of Christ upon us It is the unhappiness and infirmity of humane nature that we seldom either understand our mercies or the Author and Fountain of them till we come to want them while we have health and peace and liberty while we have inward strength and quiet we neither understand the value of these mercies nor Eye God as we should do as the Author of them but in the noon time of our tryals and afflictions whether more immediately from God in bodily afflictions or divine desertions or more immediately from men then we both understand the value of our mercies and also what need we have of the presence of God with us and the influences of God upon us At other times we live very much upon our more sensible enjoyments now we have not them to live upon and so see a more need of a God and a Christ to live upon 3. Ordinarily at such a time Our lusts and corruptions move very impetuously A man never so well knows the lusts and corruptions of his own heart as in an evil day Natura vexata prodit S●ipsam Anger a man we say and you will see his temper when God by his providence vexeth a poor creature as others will see something so he will see more what lusts and corruptions are in his heart The Devil knew this well enough when he replyed to God commending his servant Job Put forth now thine hand and touch him and he will eurse thee to thy face Now as every good Soul keepeth a watch upon his heart and observeth the motions of sin and lust in his Soul so he never seeth more of the need of the presence and influence of God upon his Soul then when Iniquities prevail against him When Paul cries out of the body of death he presently cries out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me 4. Lastly His Grand Adversary the Devil is never more busy then at such a time Times of afflictions are not only times of divine temptations when God proveth and tryeth his People whether they will adhere and keep close to him but of Diabolical Suggestions and temptations also When the Devil is making tryal whether he can pluck a Soul out of Christs hand and out of his Fathers hand The Psalmist calls the Devil The fowler and he knows hard weather is the best time for his purpose he first gets a commission against Job to take away all that he had saving his life onely and then his Wife cometh and persuadeth him to curse God and dye and he followeth him with many other Suggestions and temptations This was the reason of Saint Pauls writing to the Church of Corinth to restore the incestuous Person who by his order was cast out of their communion lest saith he he should be swallowed up of too much grief and Satan should have advantage against him for we are not ignorant of his devices We are never so sensible what need we have of our friends as when our enemies appear most busy most strong and active Hence it is that although a believer seeth a need of the presence and influence of Christ at all times yet he never seeth so great a need of him as in a time of great and sharp trials and afflictions when trouble is hard at hand I shall shut up this discourse with a Word or two of exhortation shortly This should ingage all of us so to behave our selves towards our Lord in the morning of our prosperity that we may not want his presence and influence in the noon of our trials afflictions and adversity It is a mighty folly in any of us to live as we had no Prospect of the ordinary or necessary contingencies of humane life Prudence quasi providence Solomon saith The wise man hath his Eyes in his head And these Eyes are imployed in looking forward as well as round about him at the present It is a great folly in
little into the Nature of the Believing Soul's Beauty Then I shall give you some Reasons of it and lastly Make some Application 1. It is not a corporeal visible Beauty but spiritual and invisible When we speak of Beauty we ordinarily understand a symmetry of bodily parts with a due mixture of the colours of flesh and blood commending it self to the carnal Eye This is that of which Solomon saith Favour is deceitful Beauty is vain but none I hope will have so gross a conception of the Soul's Beauty in the Eyes of Christ who seeth not as man seeth and judgeth not from any outward appearance The King's Daughter is all glorious within Psal 45. 13. This Beauty lieth in the Soul's symmetry to and with the Divine Law in a due proportion of virtues and gracious habits in the Soul's conformity to God the pattern of Perfection The Heathens by the Light of Nature could see that the inward Beauty was the true Beauty It is reported of Diogenes that meeting with a young man who was exceeding comely but very vitious he cried out O quam bona domus malus hospes What a brave house is here and how bad an inhabitant it hath It is what may be said of a great many comely men and women in the world O what brave houses hath the God of Nature made but what ill Tenants hath the Devil thrust into them Within there dwells nothing but Pride Ignorance Lust Vanity and other Inmates of corruption Our Saviour hath fitted them with a name they are Painted Sepulchres The Spouse's Beauty is spiritual her Ornaments are the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible as the Apostle speaketh 1 Pet. 3. 4. And as corporeal Beauty lieth in the due proportion of the parts of the body one to another yet this alone will not make a Beauty without a due proportion of colours and a good Air of the countenance So this Spiritual Beauty lieth in the proportion of the Soul and its several powers and faculties to the Divine Rule its Symmetry with the Divine Nature yet this will not do without the grace of Justification that grace which doth gratum facere render the Soul acceptable in the sight of God Hence this Beauty is not obvious to our senses The World saith the Apostle knoweth us not It is a Spiritual Beauty so as flesh and blood discerneth it not whereas we see things by the Eye of Sense Reason or Revelation Corporeal Beauty is discerned by a carnal Eye the object beareth a due proportion to the Organ Yea there is an inward Beauty which even the Eye of a natural man may discern it lieth in the proportion which the mind of the man or woman beareth to the Rule of Virtue and the Principles of Reason Thus a man may see more Beauty and Loveliness in one that is Learned and knowing than in one that is ignorant in one that is just chast sober temperate than in a beastly Drunkard a sottish unclean Adulterer an unjust and unrighteous man c. But the Beauty of a Child of God lieth deeper and more remote from a carnal mans apprehension in the Souls Symmetry with the pure and holy nature of God the proportions of his Soul to the pattern of a disciple of Christ as his lineaments are drawn in holy Writ This the natural Eye seeth not the Spiritual man alone discerneth nor doth he at all times discern it in ano ther Eli could not see Hannahs beauty but thought it had been only a little colour which too much wine had brought into her face The Subject of this beauty is the heart Christ seeth and knoweth that hence though a Child of God doth appear fair to his Brother yet to Christ more fair even the fairest amongst Women 2. Secondly It is not a Native but an adventitious beauty you saith the Apostle hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2. 1. Children of wrath by nature even as others v. 3. By nature there is none righteous no not one none that understandeth nor seeketh after God the Philosopher spake like a Philosopher when he determined the Soul to be naturally as white Paper or tabula rasa The Divine must speak otherwise there is in man a want justitiae debitae inesse a want of that image of God in which lies the Souls beauty He was created in honour but he is become like the Beast that perisheth he hath lost the image of the heavenly Behold saith David Psal 51. I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my Mother bring me forth What can be clean saith Job that is born of a Woman Or how can that which is clean come forth from that which is unclean The vitious inclinations of Children is matter of demonstration till they be in some measure corrected by the precepts and instructions and government of those that are set over them and by moral discipline which yet doth not cultivate and adorn them sufficiently to render them beautiful in the Eyes of Christ 3. Thirdly it is not an Artificial but created beauty The beauty of the Civil person that either from the precepts or examples of his governours or his ingenuous education hath imbibed Principles of Moral Discipline is indeed no native beauty but it is an artificial beauty as to which God hath had no hand but that of his common Providence but the Spouse's beauty is a created beauty wholly Gods work in the Soul creating faith in it uniting it to Christ changing its heart giving it new habits new qualities and inclinations Thou were comely saith God Ezech. 16. 14. through my comeliness put upon thee Corporteal beauty is the work of God in nature and it is hardly in the power of man to contribute any thing towards that The Painter dissembleth a beauty but giveth no real beauty the Taylor dissembleth a Symmetry of parts but cannot give it But Spiritual beauty is much more the gift of God that is a Gift of Special grace Art may make a woman that is not beautiful appear so but it cannot make one to be beautiful that is not so Good works do little more to the Saints beauty in the Eyes of Christ then hansome cloaths or linnen doth towards the beauty of the body If the body be comely and beautiful hansome fashioned cloaths or linnen may indeed set it off but if the body hath no true symmetry of parts all that good cloaths do is to hide deformity and to make the body that is not comely yet appear so unto others If the Soul of a man or woman be truly beautiful through an imputed righteousness and inherent grace good works much set forth this beauty to the world and are also acceptable unto God But works only Morally good that is such things as God hath commanded can never make a Spiritual Ethiopian fair nor the Soul that is naturally crooked straight The Romish Taylors and Painters labour in vain to make
and they will find at last that God will give men for them and People for their lives Possibly some will say to us but how shall we know these whom Christ calls the fairest amongst women if we knew them we should give a a due respect to them It is true the Apostle saith The world knoweth us not Nor can they perfectly know them for the Kings Daughter is glorious within saith the Psalmist But yet our Saviour tells you Math. 7. 16. By their fruits you shall know them do men gather grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit Will you know what is good fruit see Gal. 5. 22. The fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance against these there is no law No law of God Add to this Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision which Worship God in the Spirit and rejoice in Jesus Christ and have no confidence in the flesh these are the true Jews that are such inwardly in the heart and in the Spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God See you therefore any man or woman or any party of men and women in the World who disclaiming any confidence in the flesh any priviledges of birth or Church-state or the merits of any works they have done or can do place their hope for Salvation in Jesus Christ alone trust in him rejoyce in him and Worship God in the Spirit tho it may be not with those external rites and Ceremonies that you do nor under the same circumstances yet heartily Worship God according to the rules which God hath given them that Love God and have a love to all men though more especially to those that fear God and desire to live in Peace as much as in them lyes with all men that are gentle and meek not giving way to rude and boisterous Passions that are good in their behaviours temperate no drunkards no unclean Persons but squaring their lives by the rule of reason because it is also the law of God Let me tell you that against these there is no law No law of God which is the regula regulans the rule by which all the rules and laws of men must be guided or they are nullities and no rules at all These are those whom that God whom you own as your Creator and the great Lord of Heaven and Earth that Christ whom you call your Redeemer your Saviour and who most certainly shall be your Judge and give unto you at the last according to what you have done in the flesh calls the fairest amongst women the most beautiful and lovely Souls in the whole creation judge you whether you ought not so also to call so to account them so to deal with them These are the best men and women in your Cities Parishes c. Take ●reed of using hard Speeches concerning them God will for them execute Judgment as well as for ungodly deeds much more take heed of any hard actions against them he that toucheth them toucheth the apple of Gods Eye Zech. 2. 8. Deut. 32. 10. They have prayed with David Psal 17. 8. Keep me as the apple of thine Eye God hath said concerning them Zech. 2. 8. He that toucheth them toucheth the apple of his Eye Be wise now therefore O ye Princes be instructed O you men of the Earth whether great or small be assured Christ will revenge his Spouses quarrels even the quarrels of all those whom he judgeth the fairest amongst women Let none think to cover their malice against Religion and Godliness under pretences of executing humane Laws the Apostle saith against such is no law no law that will be justified by the law of God no law that will justify either the lawgivers in making it or the Executors in execution of it 1 Tim 1. 9. The law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for the ungodly and for sinners for unholy and profane for Murderers of Fathers and Murderers of Mothers for Whoremongers for those who defile themselves with mankind for Man-Stealers for Lyars for perjured Persons and other things contrary to sound Doctrine The law that is the law of God is not made for them that is to punish afflict torment them it is made for them to live according to the rule of it It is made to protect them For rulers are not a terror to good works but the evil Rom. 13. 3. And all Magistrats ought to be Ministers of God to Christians for good Rom. 13. 4. Now all humane laws must be either in affirmance of the law of God and to force that or in civil things left to their power as they shall judge to be most for the publick Peace or necessary to uphold Nations and Polities O therefore take heed what you do lest you be found fighters against God Much less let any think to cover their malice with pretences that the Persons they run upon with such a rage are hypocrites Hypocrisy can be but in the heart when there is no contradiction in the conversation that man is no judge of But is it not possible to reconcile at least some part of the men of the World to those to whom the Lord Jesus Christ hath given such a Character Is he not a better Judge then men are Will you make your selves believe for a cloak for your rage that these men are not what they pretend to be I would ask you but one question are they not more righteous then you Are they not more in reading the Word Hearing Prayer Fasting and are not these things duties commanded in that Word which you own to be your rule and to be holy just and good are they not stricter in the observation of Sabbaths Which is so great a piece of Religion that the Prophet expresseth a great part of it under that notion Isa 56. 4 6. Into their hearts you cannot look but their Words are audible do not they fear an Oath more Do they swear and curse and Blaspheme like you or many others do they exceed Heathens Dii omnes deaeque te perdant by their Dammees do they rail and revile and lye like other men Do they drink and whore steal and murder gripe and oppress is not the contrary to this the beauty of a Soul in the Eye of humane reason You have therefore no reason to judge them none of those whom Christ calls the fairest amongst women you must own they are fairer then you or any of your converse and stamp You must find some in the World that are better then your selves or they must be the most comely and beautiful Souls Sirs I beseech you consider how much it becometh a man as a man to judge according to truth And what can be a better standard then the judgment of Christ O let not the People of
when the Soul that found in itself a strength before sufficient to grapple with its temptations and to perform the several duties and operations of a Spiritual life hath suffered itself to be overcome with motions and temptations to sin it finds itself weak falls before a temptation fails in its Spiritual duties it cannot believe hope meditate rejoice and delight in God c. Thus it was with Peter that had faith enough to walk upon the Sea at Christs command when he had sinned by too much confidence in himself he falls by the hand of a silly Damsel in the High Priests Hall hence it is oft-times that the liveliness and chearfulness of the Soul in its conversation also fails and it is at a loss where to find its beloved and how to enjoy its desired communion with him 2. Sometimes these dispensations are not so much founded in the Divine Justice and intended as the punishment of guilt in the Soul as in the Divine Wisdom designing to prove and to try his People and to make them to seek more after him Job was thus tried Though Job doubtless had guilt enough of sin to have justified God in such providences yet God himself saith of him Job 2. 3. That there was none like him in the Earth that he was a perfect and an upright man one that feared God and eschewed evil yet had he not been under some divine desertion and withdrawings of grace as well as more external Trials he had never fallen into those extravagant passions in which you find him ch 3 c. 3. On our part this loss and ignorance happeneth divers ways I shall instance in some more principal causes 1. The prevailing of sin and corruption in the Soul The guile of sin alwaies causeth weakness and blindness How weak is thine heart saith the Lord seeing thou dost all these things Zech. 16 30. Weakness is the cause of sin and it is the effe ct of sin it argueth weakness in a Soul to do those things which God hath forbidden and which will certainly end in the harm of the Soul It is a weak thing wilfully to sin against God and weakness is also the effect of sin this is caused from the sour reflections and reverberations of conscience when a man would medirate on God believe and hope joy rejoice and delight in God conscience throws his sin in his face and bringeth his iniquity to remembrance he remembreth God and is troubled he cannot tell how to believe how to hope how to joy and rejoice in God whom he now looketh upon as angry with him for the proof of this though I might fetch enough from Davids Poenitential Psalms yet I need no more then the experience of every good Christian who keepeth any watch upon his own heart and ways I appeal to any of your Souls when you are conscious of any wilful slips and failings in your life can you remember and think of God as at other times Can you believe and hope in his mercy Can you pray with that boldness and courage and confidence doth not shame cover your faces so as you know not how to look upward 2. Diabolical suggestions are another cause what strange and horrid impressions do the best of Gods people find some indeed of more strength and longer continuance then others but there is scarce any who doth not find them at some times and in some degree or other and although if they be mere impressions not consented to by the Soul but abhorred by it they are not the Souls guilt yet they must be the Souls disturbance so as under them the Soul will not know how to uphold and maintain a communion with God as at other times but its communion is broken and interrupted and imperfect though the Devil cannot stain the Soul without its own concurrence yet he can trouble the Soul if God permits him by his mere suggestions and impressions and therefore we had need pray every day Lead us not into temptation The Devil in this case can do as much to a Soul as a clamorous railing fellow can do to disturb our communion with our friends though we hearken not much to him and chide him away yet he can make a noise and disturb our communion 3. Severe outward afflictions may be a cause Though afflictions be not alwaies indications of Divine Wrath for the Apostle tells us that whom he loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every Child whom he receiveth yet oftentimes they are so and whether Gods end be to punish sin or no yet there is no Soul but is conscious of so much daily guilt as gives him cause to suspect they are the punishments of some guilt and I told you before how apprehensions of guilt very ordinarily make the Soul at a loss how to uphold and maintain its wonted communion with God Besides afflictions usually excite passions particularly those of fear and sorrow Both opposite to the exercises of faith and joy and delight in God both distracting the Soul in the sweet meditations of God To this may be added that the Soul in afflictions as it standeth in more need of the divine presence and influence so it is prone to expect more or to think it hath nothing Neither can the Soul under the roilings and prevailings of passion so well discern Christs communications of himself unto it and besides they hinder the Soul in its motions and communications of it self to Christ I am so troubled saith the Psalmist that I cannot Speak The Soul is so troubled that it cannot believe it cannot hope it cannot Pray c. 4. The last cause that I shall assign is distractions caused either from worldly cares and businesses or from some false guides A Soul overwhelmed with businesses and cares of the World will many times find it self at a loss how to maintain its communion with God there is such an opposition betwixt a communion with God and the World the first being wholly a Spiritual thing the other wholly of the Earth earthly that a man overwhelmed in the World will find the maintaining of this communion difficult and be more at a loss to it then another man more free from these incumbrances Besides in the World Christians are subject to distractions from false guides one saying loe Christ is here another saying loe he is there one telling us that the way to have communion with Christ is to cast off duties and ordinances another prescribing an attendance upon them as the onely means of such communion One telling them that there is no other communion with Christ then with Christ mystical having and keeping in the communion of his Church whereas many may do so if we mean the visible Church that have no communion with Christ at all Upon Christs floor there is Chaff as well as Wheat which when Christ cometh with his fan thoroughly to purge his floor shall be cast into unquenchable fire tares as well as wheat which must grow together untill
impossible to be found This is the great thing which the Papists boast of the great thing which they contend for That those can be no true Ministers who are not ordained by Bishops in a lineal succession or a personal succession from the Apostles Rome hath only had such a succession therefore the Shepherds Tents are only to be found amongst them I am sorry to find any Protestants lisping this language of Ashdod Protestant Divines in former ages have thought it enough to prove succession in Doctrine The truth is a succession of Persons is a thing impossible to be proved if we must own no Ministers but such as can prove they are made so by Bishops in a true succession from the Apostles I am sure they must own none at all for how is it possible think you that after near 1700 years any Ministers should be able to prove such a succession All the Issue of this contest must be either to bring us all again to Rome which indeed vainly boasteth of such a succession or else to Atheism to the owning of no true Ministry at all and consequently to no Ordinances Nor is any such inquiry necessary for certainly Christ hath clothed his Church with a power to restore his institutions if they were lost or the exercise of them for any space of time were interrupted 2. Secondly The true Shepherds are to be known by their mission Christ is agreed to be the true Shepherd the principal Shepherd All true Under-Shepherds must have their mission from him He certainly sendeth none but 1. Such as are by him fitted and qualified for all parts of their work 2. Such as are disposed inclined to their work Consider but what the work of the Shepherd is viz. to seed the flock of Christ to watch over them c. And this is one way for you to know Christs Shepherds they are by him qualified for their work with gifts and abilities to pray and Preach to open and to apply the Scriptures they are also by him inclined and disposed to it desiring the Office of a Bishop and to give up themselves to it Where this is found there 's Christs Mission They are also called by the Church proved set apart to the work by fasting and Prayer but this is onely their external mission A Church may be so corrupted as to send out men who were never sent of Christ neither having any internal qualifications to fit them for it nor any inclinations and heart unto it only desiring to be put into the Priests Office for a morsel of bread No good Christian can judg these Christs Shepherds for though he hath given a power to his Church to send out Ministers yet they are limited to such as are able and faithful nor ought any to be look'd upon as a true Shepherd or Minister of Christ who apparently hath no inward qualifications for the work of the Ministry nor any heart faithfully to discharge it 3. Thirdly You shall know them by their Doctrine Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from Heaven Preach any other Gospel unto you then that which we have Preached unto you let him be accursed v. 9. As we said before so now I say again If any man Preach any other Gospel unto you then that you have received let him be accursed He that is accursed or to be accursed is none of those Shepherds by whose Tents Christians are to feed their Souls but those who bring any Doctrine to Peoples Ears that is contrary to the Doctrine delivered by Christ and his Apostles or other then that is accursed and by the Judgment of the Apostles to be accounted accursed such a one therefore can be no such Person as Christians are bound to hear or to feed their Souls by their Tents But you will say what if they be not declared so or adjudged so by the Church This is the Churches sin and neglect of their duty The Church by its judgments cannot make one hair of truth white or black she is only to declare and adjudg that to be the Doctrine of Christ which is so And to declare and adjudg that which is not so to be what it is If the Church will neglect her duty I am not to neglect mine If the Major part of the Church be so corrupted that they will call evil good and good evil determine Error to be truth and truth to be Error their Error cannot conclude me If it could we had long since been Arrians and in later times been Papists Protestants have therefore rightly determined that every true Christian hath a judgment of discretion in this case The sole judgment of truth Error is in Christ and his Word A declarative judgment is in the Church but a judgment of discretion so far as to guide a Christians particular practice is in every Christian who is to prove all things and to hold fast that only which is good I cannot I ought not to feed my Soul by the Tents of those Shepherds who bring me other Doctrine then what they can prove from the Word of God If the Church will suffer such I am not bound by their sins Gods Pastors feed his People with wisdom and understanding Jer. 3. 15. Not with meet high-swelling Words of vanity much less with lies and Erronious Doctrine contrary to Christs and the Apostles Doctrine 4. Fourthly Christ tells us that to the true Shepherd the Porter openeth John 10. v. 3. And the Sheep hear his voice God opens the hearts of his People to such as are his Shepherds The Apostle tells the Corinthians they were the seal of his Apostleships 1 Cor. 9. 2. And again 2 Cor. 3. 2 3. Ye are our Epistle Written in our hearts and known and read of all men for as much as you are manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ Ministered by us Written not with Ink but with the Spirit of the living God not in tables of stone but in the fleshly tables of the heart God hath sealed the ministry of those Ministersto be from him whose ministry he hath blessed by opening the hearts of People to it and by it there needs no further evidence this is a sufficient letter of recommendation of them to all that own the name of Christ I speak not here for that insignificant conversion of men to an opinion without a turning of their heart from sin unto God but of the real conversion or change of mens hearts This is a proof Sirs of true Shepherds a proof of a true ministry 2 Cor 13. 3. I will never question the truth of that mans ministry with whose ministry I see God going along So that their ministry opens the Eyes of the blind and turns men from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance amongst them that are Sanctified Which were the ends for which God sent out Paul Acts 26. 18. Let such men
is with them I come to the Application I shall only apply it by Exhortation to two great duties Fortitude and unity I begin with the first upon which I shall most inlarge as to which I shall shew you 1. Wherein it lies and discourse it to you as it stands distinguished from a natural Spirit and stomack 2. From a moral fortitude 2. I shall offer you some directions in order to the promoving of it 3. Lastly I shall press it by some arguments It is agreed on all hands that the object of it is dangers and sufferings That the nature of it lyeth in a bold encountring and going through them That the vices opposed to it are 1 Cowardise 2. Rashness or fool hardiness as we call it There is a courage or fortitude which ariseth only from the natural Spirit and courage of the creature Now this is to be found in beasts as much as in men yea and more then in men the reflections of whose reason makes them less Spiritful then Horses or Dogs or Lions c. This commendeth no man for no man hath more of this then many Beasts have So it removeth not man at any distance from a Brute Creature Secondly There is a moral fortitude Which though it must have some foundation in nature for none that is naturally fearful and cowardly will by reason be improved to any degree of valour yet differeth from the other As it ariseth from knowledge and some just improvement of reason and is governed by the dictates of reason and directed to some noble and rational end such now as the preservation of our honour or Country c. But now Christian fortitude is quite another thing as it ariseth 1. From a threefold principle of grace 2. As it is directed by the rule of the Word 3. As it is exercised upon and against sin As lastly it works for a more noble end the glory of God and the Salvation of the Soul you may take this Description of it It is an habit infused into the Soul by the holy Spirit of God inabling the Soul from the dread of the Eternal God a Love to him and a faith in him and his promises to despise the prospect or presence of any danger in a resistance and fighting against sin and all temptations to it governing it self by the rule of Gods Word in order to the glory of God and the Salvation of a mans Soul From hence may easily be gathered both how it differeth from Natural Spirit and stomackfulness which is under no government either of reason or Religion and is a mere natural quality and found in beasts as much and more then in man It also differeth from Moral sortitude both in the Principle the rule and manner of its exercise and the End All which I shall open I shall begin with the first of these 1. The first Principle of Christian Fortitude is the holy Spirit Fear not saith God I will strengthen thee and uphold thee with the hand of my righteousness It is indeed God as the God of Nature that puts the natural Spirit and courage into the Horse or other beasts Job 32. 19. Hast thou saith God given strength to the Horse Hast thou clothed his neck with Thunder But here God acts as the Author of saving grace The holy Spirit is the Author of all gracious habits now there is a threefold Spiritual habit from which this fortitude or Christian courage proceeds they are as it were the Parents of it 1. The first is the fear of God No man is valiant against sin when temptations to it lye from great dangers but he that hath a true dread of God in and upon his heart It is said of Moses Hebr. 11. 27. That by faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King for he indured as seeing him who is invisible He forsook Egypt in obedience to the command of God he feared not the wrath of the King When he saw he must either incur the Kings wrath or Gods displeasure he feared not the wrath of the King though as Solomon saith The wrath of the King is as the Messenger of death Yet he feared not the wrath of the King here now was courage here was Christian Fortitude Whence was it that he was so courageous The Text tells you He indured as seeing him who was invisible he had the dread of the King of Kings upon his Soul agnovit imperatorem coeli he knew there was one that was higher then the highest mortal and this is necessary and that too in a very good degree to every Soul that is valiant for God Every Person that feareth not God will be a coward in the Spiritual fight 2. A Second habit contributing to this fortitude or Christian courage is The Love of God The Apostle tells you it constrains we see in daily experience the lover will indure no difhonour to be done unto no affront to be put upon the woman that he loveth The vain Gentleman is ready to fight upon any such account The Soul which truly loveth God will fuffer no affront no dishonour which he can help to be done unto and put upon God much less can he allow his own Soul in any such thing what ever be the consequent of it 3. A third habit from which this Christian courage or fortitude ariseth is Faith Faith respecting both the Proposition of the Word and the promise of the Gospel and Person of the Mediatour Faith agreeing to all which the holy Scripture revealeth concerning the wrath of God his power justice greatness concerning the reward of those who well fight the good fight who overcome c. And also hoping and trusting in God for the fulfilling of those promises Natural courage is much from Nature and derives much from the Blood Moral Fortitude deriveth much from Education and Reason Christian Fortitude in encountring dangers ariseth from quite different principles The Christian is stout and valiant in the resistance of sin because he feareth the great and living God whose wrath is a thousand times more formidable then the wrath of the greatest man who when he hath killed the body can do no more God can cast both body and Soul into Hell-Fire Because he loveth God and will suffer any thing rather than grieve and offend him and because he believeth whatsoever God hath revealed in his holy Word concerning the greatness power wrath and justice of God against sin and concerning those who strive in the resistance of it Hence you read in that martyrology which you have Heb. 11. 33. That they through faith subdued Kingdoms v. 34. quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sword waxed valiant in the fight v. 35. they were tortured not accepting deliverance v. 36. they had Trials of cruel mockings and Scourgings yea moreover of bonds and imprisonment c. The principles of the Christian valour are not meer Natural Spirit and stomackfulness nor meer principles of honour and
derives from the radical Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in its Original and primary signification signifieth to make a diligent search and inquiry Thence the Noun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a search or the order of a search We translate it estate 1. Chron. 17. 16. David saith thou hast regarded me according to the estate of a man of high degree That is according to the rank or order of one that is of an high degree It is used to express the order in which the Maidens came in to King Ah●shuerus Esther 2. 12 15. Pagnin translateth the Noun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is used both here and in the next verse series ordo ratio dispositio forma and saith this signification ariseth out of the other and that it signifieth such a search or inquiry as is in and according to order The Word also signifieth a Turtle So it is used Levit. 12. 6. Gen. 15. 9. Cant. 2. 12 Psal 74. 19. Levit. 14. 22. Levit. 1. 14. But it is hard to put that sense of it upon this Text though the Septuagint and those that follow them do it For what sense can we make of this Thy Cheeks are comely with Turtles But some of the Hebrew Doctors tell us that the word signifieth also a kind of Womens Ornaments and Pagnin tells us that R. David saith it signifieth Pearls or Jewels set in order some think it was an Ornament that had something of the figure of the Turtle They say the Turtle hath this name from the mournful noise which it maketh sounding in our Ears like this Word Others think the French word Tour which we have now made English signifying an Ornament of the head and the English word Attire both derive from this Hebrew word From this discourse you may gather that the penury of words in the Hebrew tongue constraining them to signify several things by the same word is the reason of the difference of Interpreters in the translation of the Hebrew Text both in this and many other Texts It is most probable that Women had some Ornaments in those Countries which they expressed by this name and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek also did express it though our Lexicographers give us no such account of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The learned Mercer observes that those Interpreters who translate the words as the Turtle are mistaken both in the affix which is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the number which is Plural It must be thy Cheeks are comely in the Turtles which it would be hard to make sense of if we should interpret the word of the Turtle doves I conclude therefore that it is a very difficult Text to give a certain Interpretation of and that the sense our Interpreters have put upon it bids as fair as any other and therefore I shall adhere to that The word certainly signifieth some Ornaments in those times used by Women to adorn their heads with called by this name because of the order and exceeding neatness of them or because of their figure and fashion Our Interpreters have thought fit to Interpret the word concerning those Ornaments though we do not exactly know their fashion So then the sense must be Thy Cheeks are comely or beautiful in o● between the Ornaments of thy head It followeth Thy Neck with Chains of Gold or Pearls Two or three things I shall observe to you 1. Some Interpreters make a question whether in this expression our Saviour hath not a respect to the former comparison he had there compared to his Spouse to a company of Horses in Pharaohs Chariots it is you see a fashion with us to deck up Horses which we value with Ribbands c. It might be a custom in those richer places of the World to deck them with Jewels and Chains of Gold Mercer and other learned Interpreters think it more probable that he passed on to a new similitude comparing his Church or the particular believing Soul to a Beautiful Woman in her Ornaments 2. This blessed Lover had before commended her for her internal worth and beauty For strength and courage she was like to the Horses in Pharaohs Chariots Here he commendeth her from her external Beauty Her Cheeks were comely with Rows of Jewels her Neck with Chains of Gold or Pearls Let me now pass from the explication of terms to the understanding of things I shall only turn the words of the Text into a Proposition Prop. The Spouse of Christ hath her Cheeks comely with Ornaments and her Neck adorned with Chains The Proposition will call to us principally for Explication and Application In the Explication we will inquire 1. What is here to be understood by the Spouses Neck and Cheeks 2. What are those Rows and Chains with which the Spouse of Christ is and must be adorned As to the first of these I shall not trouble you with the several fancies of Interpreters of Luxuriant fancies but only insist upon what I conceive most proper and shew you the grounds of it 1. They are both exteriour parts and ordinarily exposed to the view of others Other parts are covered and not so exposed Mercer noteth that amongst Women if these parts have their just proportion and beauty concerning others there useth to be no inquiry their Symmetry and comeliness is judged from these So as doubtless these terms note the Spouses conversation before the World in her outward visible appearance The Spouse of Christ is as the Psalmist expresseth it all glorious within Her chief Ornament is what the Apostle Peter adviseth Women professing Godliness the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible 1 Pet. 3. 4. But that is not all her Beauty her light also shineth before men that they see her good works and glorify her Father which is in Heaven Mat. 5. The Cheeks are the path upon which the penitential tears run her tears are on her Cheeks Lam. 1 2● Her tears of affliction also run down there Her Cheeks are those parts which are exposed to the violence and injuries of others Isaiah 50. 6. I gave my Cheeks to them that plucked off the hair Lam. 3. 30. He giveth his Cheek to him that smiteth him Micaiah you know was smote on the Cheek by the false Prophet These Cheeks of the Spouse exposed to the smiters bedewed with tears either because of sin or sharp sufferings are in Christ's Eyes very lovely Thus the words afford us two notions 1. That the Spouse of Christ is very beautiful not only within but in her more external conversation 2. That even the suffering parts of the Spouse are in the Eyes of Christ very beautiful It is reported of Constantine the great that he would often kiss the hole of Puphnutius his Eye that was out for the profession of the Gospel Christ commendeth the Cheeks of his Saints bedewed with tears and given to the smiters for
instructive Corollary from this discourse Secondly observe The Laws of Christ are both rows of Jewels and also Chains 1. They are Chains of Restraint As Chains about creatures necks restrain their natural Liberty and keep them in due obedience and subjection to their Governours So doth the Law of the Lord. Man is like an un●amed Heifer which would run wildly this and that way Christ therefore puts a Chain upon him when he intendeth any Soul for his use I will faith God write my Laws in their inward parts There now is the Chain about the Spouse's Neck Joseph had this Chain about his neck How shall I do this evil saith he and sin against God Do this and live saith he for I fear God and so durst not take any revenge upon you The Children of God have in them lust and corruption but it is chained The Law of God written in their hearts is a Chain upon their lusts and this may mind us to take heed how we abuse that sweet Notion of Christian Liberty Christians are free but they must take heed that they use not their Liberty for a Cloak to maliciousness 1 Pet. 2. 16. that being the Lord's Free-men they do not make themselves Servants of corraption It is not a Liberty to the Devil's Chains but from them not a Liberty to the Flesh but to serve the Lord without fear 2. As the Precepts of the Lord are Chains of Restraint so they are also Chains Indicative of the greatest liberty and honour they are Chains but they are Chains of Gold Chains of Pearl such Chains speak both the liberty and dignity of those that wear them The Law is spiritual and just and good saith Paul But further yet the Precepts of God are also Rows of Jewels It speaks two things 1. Rows of Jewels are things as to which a great Art is seen in the orderly disposing of them There is a strange orderliness to be observed in the Divine Precepts Could you imagine a Family a Church a Common-wealth any Society of men in which the several persons both in their single and relative capacities lived up to the strictness of the Divine Rule respecting them how orderly would they appear even in the Eye of humane Reason All the ugliness and disorder that we see in mens Lives in Families Churches Cities Kingdoms if you observe it arifeth from mens deviations from the Divine Rule through the impetuousness of unmortified passions Hence sinful walking is by the Apostle called properly disorderly walking 2 Thes 3. 6 7 11. And the holy man is called one who ordereth his conversation aright in the last verse of the 50th Psalm 2. Rows of Jewels are Ornaments There is something of beauty and comeliness resulteth from them and it resulteth much from the orderly setting and wearing of them There is a great comeliness in Holiness But of this more in the third Corollary Observe thirdly That Holiness is the only Ornament of a man or woman in the Eyes of Christ The World is at this day full of gawdry Rings and Jewels Bracelets and Necklaces of Pearl Patches and Paintings Solomon hath told us that favour is deceitful and beauty is vain But a woman that seareth the Lord she shall be praised As a Jewel saith he in a Swines Snout So is a fair woman without descretion Prov. 11. 21. Christ accounts holiness the only beauty of a man or woman Our acts of holiness are in his Eyes the only ropes of Pearl and Chains of gold and rows of Jewels We live in an age of great vanity as to Artificial beauty and it would make the heart of a Christian to bleed to see even to what excesses of this nature Persons professing to Religion and Godliness run Let me therefore close this discourse with a word or two of Exhortation 1. To neglect other beauty 2. To study this beauty more and more 3. Not to Satisfy your selves with mere pretences of inward purity whiles your more exteriour conversation gives no evidence to it 1. I say first to neglect other beauty whether natural though that be a great gift of God where it is found Or Artificial which is borrowed from Gold and Silver and Precious Stones and Jewels and fine Cloaths and Linnen c. 1. Consider This is not your beauty That 's our beauty which Commends us to our Husband Jesus Christ He regards not a fine face nor well proportioned limbs he regards not Jewels and Ornaments nor fine Clothes and Linnen They are in his Eyes poor vile things Leave these things to the men and women of the world that have nothing else to Commend them to the wantons of the world The beauty of a Christian lyeth not in these things nay they are his shame and deformity as I shall by and by shew you 2. Secondly let me urge the Precept of the Apostle 1 Tim. 2. 9 Let women saith he adorn themselves in modest apparel with shamefastness and sobriety not with broidered Hair or Gold or Pearls or costly aray but which becometh women professing Godliness with good works Mark that phrase which becometh women prosessing Godliness as if he should say these vanities of broidered Hair Gold Pearl costly aray may become men and women of the world and commend them to the world but they do not become men and Women professing Godliness they are not to approve themselves to the vain Persons of the World but to Christ alone these things Commend no Soul to Christ good works an holy life and conversation according to the rule of the Gospel that and nothing but that will Commend a Soul to God that is the only adorning which becometh women that profess to Godliness You have the like in Peter 1 Pet. 3. 3. Speaking of good women whose adorning saith he let it not be the outward adorning of playting the hair and of wearing Gold and putting on of apparel but let it be the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible even the Ornament of a meek and quiet Spirit which before God is of great price for after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves I do know the Common Interpretation which some put upon these Texts as if the Apostle did not wholly forbid these Ornaments but only forbad Christians to look upon these things as their only Ornaments so as to neglect the adorning of the hidden man of the heart Nor indeed do I think these Texts to contain an absolute prohibition of these things to all women that are Christians and at all times I do know that our Saviour seemeth to allow sost rayment to those that are in Kings houses Reason alloweth an aray to Persons according to the Station and quality they take up and are in in the World Religion doth not contradict it But when I consider 1. What of men and womens estates which God hath given them to Cloth the naked to feed the hungry c.
guilt of sin and cries out if I pine away in my iniquities how can I then live And faints at the apprehension of the wrath of God due to it for every single sin and much more for the numberless number of the sins which it hath committed It smells that of the Prophet Isa Ch. 53. v. 5 6. He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities the Chastisement of our peace lay upon him and with his stripes we are healed v. 10. His Soul was made an offering for sin Or that of the Apostle Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath Redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us and this refresheth it I have deserved to dye saith the Soul but Christ hath died for me I have deserved to tread the wine press of my Fathers wrath but he hath trode the winepress of his Fathers wrath alone I was born a slave to lusts and corruptions but Christ by dying hath made me free Ah! what a bundle of Myrrh is a crucified Christ to the Soul Hence it smells Spiritual life even from his death for we have Remission of sins through his blood It smells Spiritual peace Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is Christ that died Ro. 8. 38. It smells an access unto God The holy of holies being Sprinkled with his blood and Heaven itself by it Sanctified and made accessible It smells Spiritual liberty For the blood of Christ saith the Apostle purgeth the Conscience from dead works to serve the living God It smells Spiritual strength For through the cross of Christ saith the Apostle my heart is crucified to the World Thus you see that in this action or suffering rather Christ is to the Soul a bundle of Myrrh 4. Look upon Christ as rising up from the dead He is a bundle of Myrrh there too the Soul from hence again smells Spiritual life Rom. 4. 25. He rose again for our justification Spiritual peace Rom. 8. 38. It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again Spiritual strength and quickening Rom. 6. 4. 5. We shall rise with him to newness of life Col. 3. 1. If you be risen with Christ seek the things that are above It smells life from the dead This the Apostle proves 1 Cor. 15 Rom. 8. 11. He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies Nay it smells Eternal life from hence Joh. 14. 19. Because I live you shall live also 5. Look upon Christ as the men of Galilee Acts 1. 11. Ascending up to Heaven Thus he is also a bundle of Myrrh he lives and from hence Job smelt that he should see him with his Eyes the Angels that stood to wait upon his ascension told the men of Galilee so much that as they had seen him ascend so they should see him coming again Hence the believing Soul smells that he shall ascend too for where Christ is there he must be The body is there the Eagles shall flee to it one day He is lifted up and every believer shall be drawn after him Our flesh and blood shall inherit the Kingdom of God For 't is in part there already Heaven is the place whither our forerunner is entred Heaven was an open City before the fall Adam and all his Posterity might have entred presently upon the fall it's gates were lockt up the flaming sword of divine Vengeance kept it but the Captain of our Salvation hath now entred and he keeps the gates from shutting any more till every believer be come In 6. Look upon Christ as sitting one the right hand of the Majesty on high So he is a bundle of Myrrh too Is it so saith the Soul Then he hath favour with God and power with God and what need I any more then for my God my Saviour he in whom I have believed to be in favour with the King of Kings and to have power with the Almighty Nay saith the Soul then I am half in Heaven For Eph. 2. 6. We sit together in Heavenly places in Christ Jesus Christ and I are one if he sits there I sit there too For he is flesh of my flesh 7. Lastly look upon Christ as interceding for us Rom. 8. Heb. 7. He is not there Idle his work is to plead for us to sollicit our business to act our part to do our work And thus he is a bundle of Myrrh to every believing Soul When the poor Soul sinks in the thoughts of its sins renewing after justification Christ is a bundle of Myrrh to it 1 Joh. 2 1. If we sin we have an advocate with the Father even Jesus Christ the righteous When the Soul again sinks at the thoughts of its imperfect duties to think that it cannot do a duty but with so many faults that it may fear the wrath of God for it What a bundle of Myrrh it is to the Soul to think well Christ is in Heaven and he will pick out every fault out of this Prayer this duty c. And so present it in the golden censer Incensed with his merits Thus now I have shewed you how Christ is to the believing Soul a bundle of Myrrh Considered as to his actions as our Redeemer It remains further to shew you that he is so also as to his Spiritual influeuces And Lastly in his Gospel institutions and Ordinances And then I shall come to the Application Sermon LIV. Canticles 1. 13. A bundle of Myrrh is my Beloved unto me he shall lie all night betwixt my Breasts I Proceed in opening the bundle or bag or box of Myrrh which makes my Text give a fragrant smell I have shewed that it is Christ who is thus resembled and have propounded to shew you the aptness of the comparison in five things I am yet upon the 4th He is to the believing Soul a bundle of Myrrh for sweetness I proposed to open this in three particulars shewing you that Christ is so 1. In his mediatory actions 2. In his Spiritual influences 3. In his Gospel Institutions and Ordinances I have done with the first and now proceed to the second To shew you the sweetness of Christ to the believing Soul 2. In his Spiritual influences When he ascended upon high saith the Apostle Eph. 4. he gave gifts unto men he gave gifts to his Church his Ordinances Of those the Apostle speaks but he gives other gifts likewise gifts even to the Rebellious Psal 68. All these are summed up under one head The gift of the Spirit This is that which he calls the promise of the Father He was the promise of the Father of old Ezek. 36. 27. It was his promise John 14. 16. I will pray the Father and he shall give you another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Comforter and he shall abide with you for ever Even the Spirit of truth He is sent in Christs name 26. v. he is called the Spirit of Christ hence the
night betwixt my breasts There are two Propositions which I named from these words and which yet remain to be discoursed 1. That the believing Soul is wonderfully desirous of Christ's abiding with it 2. That to engage him to such an abode she will allow him a room betwixt her breasts The latter will be a proof to the former come in collaterally while I handle the former Prop. That a gracious heart will be exceeding desirous of Christ's abiding with it I shall speak to this Proposition in this Method 1. Shewing you what are those lodgings and abidings of Christ with and upon the Soul of which the gracious heart is so exceedingly desirous 2. How it doth appear that a believing Soul is so fond of Christ's abidings with it 3 Whence it is that she is thus exceeding fond of Christ's lodgings and abidings with it 4. I shall apply the whole Qu. 1. What is to be understood by the lodging or abiding of Christ with the Soul You read in Scripture of Christ's abiding with the Soul and the Soul 's abiding with Christ The first is mentioned as our priviledge the second as our duty Of the first you read John 14. 23. My Father and I will come unto him and we will make our abode with him Of the second John 15. 6. If a man a●ide not in me he is cut off c. So again v. 6. each depending upon the other for it is God's Covenant I will never depart from you to do you good and I will put my fear into your hearts that you shall never depart from me Abiding or lodging in the primary Notion signifieth the continuance of some corporeal presence transferred to spiritual things it signifies The continuance of a priviledge or perseverance in a duty Christ's abode with us signifies the first our abiding with him signifies the latter each of them expressed in Scripture by various expressions Christ's abiding with us is expressed John 14. 16. By the abidings of the Comforter by the abiding of the anointing Oil 1 Joh. 2. 26. It is opposed to the momentany and short refreshings of grace when to use that other phrase of Scripture God is to the Soul but as a wayfaring man that tarries but for a night Our abidings with and in Christ are also variously expressed by the abidings of that in us which we have received 1. Joh. 2. 24. by abiding in light 1 Joh. 2. 10. and the Word of God abiding in us v. 14. by abiding in the Doctrine of Christ Joh. 2. ep v. 9. But I have nothing to do save only with the former Notion In short The abidings of Christ with the Soul import two things 1. The permanency of his Union with the Soul continuing the state of Justification 1 Joh. 3. 24. Hereby we know he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given to us 2. The constancy of his gracious Influences upon us which Joh. 14. v. 21. he calls A manifesting of himself unto us and v. 22. his abode with us This is also the abiding of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter mentioned v. 16. This is the lodging of Christ betwixt the Soul's breasts This it is of which the gracious Soul is so exceeding fond and covetous And so much shall serve for the first Question I come to the second Qu. 2. How doth it appear that a gracious Soul is so desirous of Christ's abidings with it There are three waies by which the Earnest desire of our friends abode with us are discernable to others 1. By Verbal Expressions 2. Real Actions 3. Vehement Passions By all these the believing Soul's desires that Christ should lodge with it have been and are discernable 1. Verbal Expressions before the World was so far debaucht as now that none knows by the Index of the Tongue what the Clock strikes in the heart were sufficient Evidences of cordial desires The Children of God cannot lye unto him we may therefore from their words conclude still If you look upon the Saints or Church in former times see what the Church saith Jer. 14. 8. O thou hope of Israel the Saviour thereof in times of trouble why shouldest thou be as a stranger in the Land as a wayfaring man that turneth aside to tarry for a night The expressions of David in the Psalms this way are very many this is it which he means by the lifting up of God's Countenance upon him which he so passionately desires above Corn Wine and Oil Psal 4. for which he prefers the place of a door-keeper in the house of God before dwelling in the Tents of wickedness Psal 84. Indeed if you look upon the whole sum of the desires both of David and other Saints who stand upon sacred Record you will find that as to spiritual things all their desires are comprehended in this one that God would abide with them lodge all night betwixt their breasts And the same Spirit yet breatheth in the Souls of all that fear the Lord. I need do no more for the proof of this than appeal to the experience of all such who have in the least degree tasted how good the Lord is what 's the sum of all their prayers what 's their language to one another and to all the Ministers of God to whom at any time they address themselves but oh that they might find the Abidings of the Comforter with their Souls the abidings of the strengthening and quickening Spirit of God with them Oh that Christ would not be as a stranger in their Souls nor as a wayfaring man that turneth in to their Souls for a night 2. The Earnest desires of gracious Souls for the abidings of Christ with them are evident also upon the consideration of what they will be ready to do for the continuance of them This is in part hinted in the Text He shall lodge or stay or lie all night betwixt my breasts which metaphorical expression signifies by interpretation these two things 1. I will deny him nothing which he shall desire of me so I may but keep his company 2. I will entertain him with the highest demonstrations of cordial Affection 1. I will deny him nothing which he shall desire of me The Mother will deny nothing to that Child nor the Wife to that Husband which either of them allow to lodge betwixt their breasts The believing Soul will deny Christ nothing so it may keep his presence with her Will he have the man do for him Lord saith Paul Act. 9. 6. What wilt thou have me to do Will he have the man to die for him I am ready saith Paul Act. 21. 11. not to be bound only but also to die at Jerusalem for the Name of the Lord Jėsus Will he have it deny it self distribute and give to the poor make satisfaction where he hath done injury No sooner is Zacheus told that Christ was come to his house but he cries Luk. 19. 5 8. Lord the half of my goods I
him I remember what the Jews said for their Centurion He hath loved our Nation and built us a Synagogue this I am sure of Christ hath loved mankind he hath purchased salvation for some of them O my Soul if thou beest forgotten of God yet love him who would so far humble himself as to pity dust and ashes 2. Hence secondly No wonder if there be some love to Christ appearing in those who have no share nor interest in him It hath been the assertion of some that Common grace and special grace differ not specifically but gradually I think the assertion amongst understanding men but a contest of Logical terms I no way doubt of the truth of this That an unbeliever may love Christ in a sense But the Love of the Child of God vastly differs being an infused habit and of another species Whatsoever is presented to us under the Notion of good whether so really or apparently is plainly the proper object of our love Now such may Christ appear even to an unbeliever who is far from having tasted how good the Lord is hence even in a carnal man there may be desires after Christ good wishes to the interest of Christ upon the Earth yea and he may do much for the Service of Christ either from a general Notion of Christs excellency or 2dly which I should have mentioned before from a supposal that he hath as good a share and interest in Christ as any other though in this possibly he may be mistaken And this is very useful for us to consider that we may not build too great confidences from such desires which we find in our Souls or any such external actions without a due inquiry after their Principle But enough of this I come to the positive part of the Proposition 2. That there is a peculiar excellency in Christ which the believing Soul sees and savours and is not discernable to others My beloved saith the Spouse is a Cluster of Camphire unto me They said to her in 5th of this Song v. 9. What is thy beloved more then another beloved O thou fairest amongst women what is thy beloved more then anothers beloved that thou so strictly chargest us She answers v. 10. My beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand c. For the opening of this I will propound two questions 1. What are those peculiar excellencies which the believer sees in Christ more then another sees 2. How comes the believing Soul to be more eagle eyed then his neighbour To the first 1. The believer sees further into the heighths and depths of redeeming love in the general then another man doth The heighth of redeeming love is too great for a reasonable man to take the Astronomer is lost at taking the heighth of this Star we must be strengthned with might by the Spirit in the inward man Christ must dwell in our hearts by saith and we must be rooted and grounded in love before we shall be able with all Saints to comprehend what is the breadth length and depth and heighth and know the Love of Christ which passeth knowledge The unbeliever living under the light of the Gospel is like the blind man whose Eyes Christ hath once touched and he seeth something of he excellency of Christ but alas he seeth men like trees Christ must touch him again before he sees things clearly the believer seeth Christ as another thing to what the unbeliever seeth 2. The believer discerns a particular respect of Christ to his Soul Ah this this is it which makes Christ as a Cluster of Camphire it is sweet to a rational Soul to see a Saviour Bu● infinitly sweet for it to see him as its Saviour to cry out my Lord my God Propriety in a good sweetens it infinitly unto a Soul the believer sees Christ as his Christ his Saviour It is sweet to poor Creatures who are so far enlightened as to see the World lyeth in darkness to know that he is the true light enlightning all that come into the World but infinitly more sweet to the Soul when it sees that he hath enlightened it in particular A good woman to a reasonable man is p●etious and he loves her quatenus good and vertuous but if she becomes his Wife that strangely indears her to him and shews her a peculiar excellency in him 'T is sweet to a reasonable man that is enlightened to see that all the Sons of Adam are by nature under misery to see that Christ came to Redeem them from this misery and Curse but how sweet must it be for this Soul to apprehend that he hath redeemed it in particular from this misery I shall not need to enlarge further upon this which in so plain Doth any ask Qu. 2. Whence it is that the believing Soul seeth such a peculiar sweetness and excellency in Christ I answer 1. From that special illumination which attends regeneration There is a Common illumination and there is a special illumination the Common illumination is the work of Gods Spirit concurring with the Preaching of the Gospel inabling men to understand and give some general assent to what is there revealed but when the Lord comes to deal savingly with the Soul it opens the Eyes of the Soul to a fuller clearer and more certain sight of Gospel mysteries 1 Cor. 2. 10. God revealeth to his Saints by his Spirit those things which the Princes of the World though they heard the Gospel never knew what things Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard nor can it enter into the heart to conceive A Commonly enlightned Soul upon the Preaching of the Gospel may see the same things that a believer sees that Christ died c. But it sees them not so fully and clearly as upon special saving illuminations when the Spirit dealeth with the Soul as it were by demonstration and gives it to see a Christ crucified as it were before its Eyes There are two things especially which the Soul upon conversion doth doubtless see after a quite other manner then it saw them before conversion 1. The sinfulness and mischief of sin A man meerly reasonable may see the ugliness and sinfulness of some sins such as are contrary to the light of nature c. A man Commonly enlightned may see more of the sinfulness and danger both of these and of other sins but when the Spirit of God cometh savingly to work in the Soul it seeth the sinfulness and danger even of these sins after another manner sin then becomes exceeding sinful Rom. 7. 13. It then thinks it sees Hell fire before it and is dropping into it and so hath a clearer sight of the danger of it 2. The excellency of Christ is doubtless seen by it too after another manner Of this there needs no greater evidence than the Souls strange workings of affections towards him its groanings after him longings for an interest in him c. 2. This proceeds also from the Souls
union to Christ and experiences of him There are three waies by which the mind of man is united to its object every one of which makes it more sweet then when it meerly contemplates it and hath it in speculation one or all of which waies every believer is united to Christ 1. The first is by hope Suppose a man hath in his Eye a beautiful and vertuous Woman there 's such a proportion to his reasonable nature in her goodness and vertue that she is pretious to him and he puts a value upon her though he never hopes to make her his Wife but if he hath any such grounded hope she is much more precious to him there 's no gracious Soul but is at least thus far united to Christ not only beholding him as an excelling object but possessed of a good hope through grace that this Christ is his Christ now this must make him more sweet then to another who hath no such hope 2. But secondly Suppose this man hath some assurance that this vertuous Woman shall be his Wife though it may be as yet they be only man and Wife before God yet this union makes her more sweet and precious to him now this is the portion of many of Gods Children they can say my Beloved is mine and I am his I am sure the death of Christ is mine the grace of Christ is mine and the glory of Christ shall be mine I shall see my Redeemer with these Eyes as Job said how much more sweet must this assurance make Christ to his Soul then to anothers that can only say there is a Saviour given to the World but whether for my Soul or no I cannot tell 3. Lastly to keep my similitude still Suppose now the man that hath taken notice of a good and vertuous Woman in the World and hath formerly had hopes to obtain her for his Wife and promises hath at last come to the enjoyment of her and to experience the fruit of her vertues in her good conversation with him you will certainly say that to this man this Woman is more sweet then to all the World besides this is the case of every believing Soul It hath had some experiences or other of the warmings quickenings strengthenings comfortings of his grace and hence it is that Christ to this Soul I say to this Soul more then to another is a bundle of Myrrh and a Cluster of Copher But I have insisted too long upon a truth so far experienced by every gracious Soul By way of application No wonder then to see the excessive Triumphs of a gracious Soul for a present Christ or the exorbitant passions of it for an absent Christ Or its excessive fondness of what may conduce to its further enjoyments of him these three things the silly World stands and wonders at 1. The excessive Triumphs of a Soul for a present Christ to hear a David call come and I will tell you what God hath done for my Soul Or a Spouse cry out I will hold him I will not let him go he shall lye all night betwixt my breasts I charge you O you daughters of Hierusalem that you stir not up nor awake my love untill he please Oh that thou wert as my Brother who sucked the breasts of my Mother when I should find thee without I would kiss thee c. I would lead thee and bring thee into my Mothers house when I should find thee without I would kiss thee c. I would lead thee and bring thee into my Mothers house c. I would cause thee to drink of spiced wine c. The World wonders to see a broken spirited Hannah rise up from Prayer and her Countenance be no more sad but 't is no wonder As a Cluster of Copher is Christ to the Soul Christ by his influence puts more gladness into a gracious Soul then the increase of corn wine and oil creates in a Worldlings heart 't is no more to be wondred at then the drunkards shouting for new wine or the farmers joy in harvest 2. The World wonders too at the exorbitant passions of a gracious heart for an absent Christ to see a gracious Soul weeping and refusing to be comforted alas her beloved hath withdrawn himself and she knows not whither he is gone and as a Cluster of Copher her beloved is to her nothing so sweet so precious as Christ is pardon her trouble she cannot help it 3. Nor lastly is she more to be wondred at for her fondness of any Ordinance where she thinks she may meet her beloved or injoy ought of his presence or obtain further influences of grace from him Wonder not then my friends to see believers going from Ordinance to Ordinance from duty to duty 't is Christ they seek in every Ordinance in every duty and as a Cluster of Copher in the Vineyards of Engedi so is their beloved unto them 2. Let this engage you then to prove your selves Christians indeed by exceeding others in duty to Christ By this you shall know if you be the Spouses of Christ if you discern more of the excellency and sweetness of Christ then others do and if you do it will be evident by your further motions towards him and actings for him what our Saviour therefore said to his disciples give me leave to say to you Tì 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What do you more for him then others I will conclude this discourse by offering you two questions to inquire upon in secret 1. Qu. What more frequent and precious thoughts hast thou of Christ then others supposing the Lord Jesus Christ a bundle of Myrrh or a Cluster of Camphire The art of smelling lies much in meditation and by how much the more sweet Christ is to thy Soul by so much the oftner wilt thou be smelling his sweetness How are thy leisurable thoughts busied I remember what David said When I am awake I am with thee Canst thou say Lord when my thoughts are at leisure from my Worldly disturbances they are with thee when I am awake in the night I am with thee when the sinner is thinking how to dishonor thee and to defile himself I am thinking Ah! what shall I render unto thee This is an excellent sign Thou hast a truth of grace where the treasure is there the heart will be Hearken to David Psal 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet See Psal 119. 97 99. Canst thou say Lord I remember thee in the night season c. Will some poor Soul say I do remember God and Christ but I cannot say 't is sweet to me to meditate on him Psal 77. I remember God and am troubled Sol. Judge not thy self from this if the act of meditation be sweet to thy Soul it is well with thee although the fruit be bitter The Woman shews her self her Husbands Wife as well by the passions which her meditations of him cause in her when he is absent as in
objects Christ now cannot shew his grace to such a Soul the bank hinders where he pleaseth indeed he worketh secretly takes away the heart of stone and makes it an heart of flesh takes away unbelief vanity earthly mindedness sensual affections and then he emptyeth the treasuries of grace upon the Soul In a word to apply this No wonder then to hear many a poor wretch complain that God never yet spake peace to his Soul others indeed have heard their beloved hath said to others behold thou art fair my love behold thou art fair but they never yet heard such a voice Let me ask thee who thus complainest this question Did Christ ever yet hear thee say as a bundle of Myrrh is my beloved unto me he shall lye all night betwixt my breasts Hast thou served Christ with Ordinary expressions of duty How canst thou expect to be feasted by him with extraordinary returns of mercy If thy breathings after him have been faint and short what reason hast thou to expect that his breathings should be so full upon thee He is indeed a full ocean of free grace but it may be thou hast cast up a bank against him it may be thou hast clogg'd him with an hard heart and unbelieving heart a vain heart a filthy sensual heart Wonder not O Christian that he is so little towards thee in a way of mercy if thou beest scant towards him in thy way of duty There is a generation of men and women in the world who are taken notice of to behave themselves as if they thought that all the World were made to serve them and they not made to serve any but they are an unreasonable generation and sober persons so account of them and accordingly slight them Oh that there might not be such an unreasonable Christian found in the World who should so much as think in his heart that Christ stands concerned to open all his Treasuries of Love upon his Soul which in the mean time hath scarce a thought of doing any thing more than ordinary for the Lord Jesus Christ if thou findest thy heart cold in duty frozen in affections toward Christ wonder not at all if thou findest the bowels of thy Saviour which yern upon others tied up towards thee And I fear me this is the cause of most complaints of this nature although it may be possible that this is not the case of every such complaining Soul witness David Psal 22. 1 2 3 4. 2. What an ingagement doth this Notion of Truth lay upon the Sons and Daughters of men to stretch out their Souls for and towards God Certainly if there be any thing in the World of force to open a Soul for Christ this will do it to hear that Divine Grace keeps pace with our duty and that the proper way to have Christ speak to us and say Thou art fair my Love Thou art fair is for us to get up our hearts in a readiness to say and say it in truth As a bundle of Myrrh is my Beloved to me The Psalmist cries out Psal 34. 12. What man is he that desireth life and loveth many days that he may see good Depart from evil and do good seek peace and pursue it Give me leave to speak to all you who fear the Lord in the same dialect What man is there amongst you who would not gladly have Christ speak peace unto your Souls and whisper the words of my Text in your Ears Thou art fair my Love thou art fair O let Christ be yet more and more precious to you let him have the strength of your Love that you may have the seal of his Love let the World know and let him know that he is dear in your Eyes that you may know that you are fair in his Eyes But this is enough for the second Circumstance which I observed I pass to a third Thou art fair my Love thou art fair It is not said thou O man or thou O woman art fair but thou my Love art fair It is both the observation of our own Annotators and some others Obs The Spouse of Christ is fair as she is His Love I observed to you before that the word signifies Amica Socia a Friend and a Companion the Object of ones love and the Companion of ones life This is not after the manner of the Children of men amongst them Beauty raiseth Love but with Christ it is Love that raiseth Beauty Locutio verbi infusio Doni Christ in calling her fair makes her fair Ezek. 16. 14. Thy Beauty was perfect through my comeliness which was put upon thee saith the Lord God A good complexion with a lovely air of the countenance and a due proportion of bodily parts makes the Children of men fair to a sensual Eye An head well furnished with Notions of Learning and a mind indued with vertuous generous dispositions makes a man fair and beautiful to a rational Eye But it is Grace alone that can make the Soul fair to the Divine Eye 1. Nature doth it not for all are by Nature Children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. like the Infant not cut not washed not swadled Ezek. 16. We are by Nature all Blackamores in the Eyes of God our Father an Amorite our Mother an Hittite 2. Art will not do it Though thou wash thee with Nitre and take thee much Sope yet thine iniquity is marked before me saith the Lord Jer. 2. 22. The Pharisees were men who used as much Art as others yet their Beauty to our Saviour's Eye rose no higher than to the Beauty of a Painted Sep●lchre that outwardly is beautiful but within full of rottenness so little that our Saviour saith Publicans and Harlots should as to the Kingdom of Heaven have the preheminence before them 3. Grace then alone must do it Those who are Christ's Love are fair only so far forth as they are his Love his Companions There is a double Grace the first of Justification the second of Sanotification according to the first the Believer is Christ's Love according to the second the Believer is Christ's Companion 1. I say first the Grace of Justification this is gratia gratum faciens that Grace by which the Soul is accepted of God It is the free Love of God shewn to the humbled Soul upon its exercise of Faith pardoning its sins reckoning over the Righteousness of Christ unto it and accepting it as righteous in and through Christ this changeth the Soul's state this is it which taketh away its filthy garments and covereth the Soul with Christ's Robes with this is conjoined the Grace of Regeneration by which God changeth the Soul's nature and disposition old things pass away with it and all things become new this is no quality infused into us or inherent in us but the free and pure love and good will of Christ imbracing us 2. The second is the Grace of Sanctification this makes the Believer the Companion of
the full understanding of our Saviours meaning in this Text is 3 Qu. What these rare and remarkable properties are in Doves or in the Eyes of Doves more then in other creatures for which our Saviour resembleth his Spouse to them either to shew us what true believers are or ought to be The Dove is a creature sufficiently known to us a creature which of old God made use of in Sacrifices rejecting others It was the creature sent out of the Ark by Noah which brought the olive branch Naturalists observe many remarkable things of the Dove Give me leave to open to you the aptness of the similitude in nine or ten particulars 1. The Doves Eyes are meek and harmless Eyes Hence Naturalists observe that the Dove presently forgets an injury and builds her nest and lays her eggs and hatcheth her young where her nest was newly destroyed and her young ones taken away Matth. 10. 16. Be harmless as Doves The cruelty and revenge of the mind is much seen in the Eye Prov. 23. 6. you read of him that hath an evil Eye there is a bewitching Eye and a flaming sparkling Eye in which you may see the sparks of that rage and envy and anger which flame in the Soul you may read rapine and cruelty and mischief in an Hawks Eye but in a Doves Eye nothing but meekness the old verse saith Felle Columba caret rostro non-laedit ungues Possidet innocuos A Dove wants gall and though it hath nails and claws yet it gripes none with them The Dove doth not wholly want gall but Naturalists say it hath but very little compared with other creatures and hence it is that it is very gentle peaceable fearful and doth no other bird hurt Believers are compared to Sheep and to Doves Sheep have horns but they hurt none with them Doves have claws but they hurt none with them and as I faid before this may be read in their Eyes in which you do not see such a sharpness and sparkling as it were of fire as in the Eyes of birds of prey Believers have or should have Doves Eyes Samuel is able to stand up and say whose Ox have I taken Or whose Ass have I taken Or whom have I defrauded Our Saviour commands us that we should be innocent as Doves in malice they are Children 1 Cor. 14. it is the Apostles Command Eph. 4 31. Let all bitterness and wrath anger and clamour and evil speaking be put away from you with all malice Believers when unregenerate lived in malice and envy hateful and hating one another Tit. 3. 3. But Col. 3. 8. They have put off all these anger wrath malice c. And it is their business to be still laying them aside every true Believer hath something of a Doves Eye and it is his work to be daily getting his heart up to it more and more 2. A Doves Eye secondly is a satisfied Eye The satisfaction of the sensible and reasonable Soul is much discerned in the Eye You shall discern a greediness in the Eye of an Hawk to let you know that if it were loose it would be tearing And you shall ordinarily know a man of a covetous spirit and a discontented spirit by his Eye Prov. 28. 22. He that hasteth to be rich hath an evil Eye You shall discern a gladness in a Doves Eye which speaks it a contented satisfied creature Such should a Believer be such is a true Believer Heb. 13. 5. Let your conve●sation be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have I have learned saith Saint Paul in all estates to be content Faith teacheth a Soul to cast its care upon God believing that he careth for it Faith teacheth him to depend upon the Promise which Godliness hath to trust to a Providebit Deus This now is a Doves Eye an Eye which is not greedy of gain which doth not covet its Neighbours House nor Ground nor Wife nor Oxe nor Ass nor any thing which is his 3. The Dove's Eye is a Benign Eye You do not only not discern any thing of rage and fury or cruelty and greediness in a Dove's Eye but you discern a certain kindness and as it were a good will in it Hence it is very friendly amongst its fellows and it loves an habitation near dwelling-houses of men Doves Eyes are Benign Eyes Believers have and should have Doves Eyes Eph. 4. 32. Be you kind one to another they are commanded to Godliness to add Brotherly kindness and Col. 3. 12. to put on kindness What Solomon saith of the good woman Prov. 31. 26. is true of a Believer in a Believer's Tongue is the Law of kindness they know the grace of the Lord Jesus and the great kindness of their Saviour to them Grace takes away that currishness and doggedness which makes men rugged in their speeches and behaviour and churlish in their spirits and if ought of this remains upon their hearts it is because their Faith is but in part and they have yet a body of death some unmortified corruption that yet remains in them which is in the fault for Grace is of a benign kind nature the Believer hath Doves Eyes Look as it is with a Dove let a Cock be feeding that 's a churlish creature and will endure none to be near it The Dove is kind and allows room to all commers such a kindness there is now in a Believer's heart where Grace hath taken its full hold 4. Doves Eyes are lowly Eyes The pride and haughtiness of the Natural disposition both in sensible and rational creatures is much seen in the Eyes You discern a proud and lofty Bird by the surliness of its Eye and so it is in a reasonable creature Hence you read of a proud look Prov. 6. 17. one of the things which God hateth and Prov. 21. 4. an high look and a proud heart are put together And in brute creatures the height of the Natural disposition is seen in the scornful Eye of Lions Hawks Parrots c. But a Dove hath lowly Eyes Now a Believer hath Doves Eyes Take carnal natural men they are proud and scornful they are sometimes in Scripture described under the Notion of the scornful Psal 1. 1. Isa 28. 14. But the believing Soul is an humble Soul It is the Law of their Profession Micah 6. 8. They must walk humbly with their God They cannot serve the Lord but with all humility of mind Acts 20. 19. It is their clothing 1 Pet. 5. 5. and they duly put it on Col. 3. 12. They talk not high things they affect not they seek not high things that is of this World indeed they se●k the things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God but this they do with all humility of mind confessing with the Prodigal that they are not worthy to be called the Sons of God 5. Doves Eyes are simple Eyes As other vertues
in a Woman free for him and not to desire her for it Man as a rational creature desires mental Beauty and it is hard for him to know of any adorned with moral Vertues and with a pleasing and ingenuous disposition and not to desire friendship and acquaintance with him or her that is so qualified Man as regenerate and a spiritual new creature desires spiritual Beauty and 't is ordinary for Christians seeing others more eminent in Grace than themselves to desire fellowship with them and to be made partakers of their Grace But lo here Christians a beautiful Object excelling all created Beauties Lo here one that is the fairest amongst the Sons of Men Lo here one to whom all the Lillies of the Field yea even Solomon himself in all his glory was never like shall not your hearts pant after Union with him Shall none say Oh that this Christ were mine his Grace mine his Beauty mine his Glory mine Shall not every Soul which hath had a glimpse of his Glory desire that he would kiss it with the kisses of his mouth that it might have further confirmations of its Interest in him 3. And thirdly Shall not all your hearts who have this day heard of his Beauty burn with further love to him Doth the Womans heart leap when she hears her Husband magnified Doth she pride her self in secret thoughts saying This is my Beloved This is my Husband and doth the commendation which others give him blow the Coals of Love in her heart and make them burn unto a flame Oh that this Discourse might have such an influence upon you this day Have not your hearts burned within you while I have discoursed in your Ears concerning Christ's loveliness O go home now and love him more But our Saviour hath said If you love me keep my Commandments 4. Lastly Therefore seeing that the Beauty of Christ is so transcendent a Beauty let all the Children of God do that one thing which St. Paul saith he did viz. Not think that he hath attained but forgetting that which is behind press on forward to that which is before unto the price of the High Calling Christ is our mark we are to learn of him to be lowly and meek to be holy and separate from sin Let no man therefore set up himself a stand short of this mark and let every one see that there is room for him yet to be more and more holy thou mayest be as holy as thy Neighbour but thou art not yet as holy as Christ that 's that thou shouldest study that 's it which thou shouldst labour after But this is enough to have spoken to the first Observation The second follow That the sense of that Value and Estimate which Jesus Christ puts upon our Souls should make us put an high value upon him The Spouse's saying Thou art fair my Love Thou art fair made her reply Thou art fair my Beloved Sermon LIX Cant. 1. 16. Yea pleasant IN my last Exercise I discoursed to you the transcendent Beauty of Christ above the creatures Beauty which is but a Beam from that Sun a Drop from that Fountain the Shadow of that Substance Our Spouse here adds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea pleasant not only fair but pleasant not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a word often made use of in Scripture signifying sometimes that which gives satisfaction to the outward Senses sometimes that which gives satisfaction to the mind You read of the pleasant harp Psal 81. 3. of pleasant riehes Prov. 24. 3. of the sweet Psalmist 2 Sam. 23. 1. in all which Texts this word is used it sometimes denotes the Satisfaction of the mind in an object thus it is said to be a pleasant thing to praise God Psal 135. 3. Psal 147. 1. and a pleasant thing to keep Gods Commandments Prov. 22. 18. and to see brethren dwelling together in unity Psal 133. 1. in all which Texts also this Word is used The Spouse here useth the word by way of auxesis adding something to what she had said before Thou art fair Yea pleasant The Proposition is plainly this Prop. Jesus Christ is not only beautiful but pleasant I shall speak to this Proposition by way of Explication and Application By way of Explication I shall enquire what is meant by pleasant 2. How the Lord Jesus Christ is not only fair but also pleasant I shall there subjoin the confirmation 1. Qu. What doth the Spouse mean when she says Christ is pleasant The word translated pleasant is sometimes used to signify what is grateful to the sensual Eye and so may be conceived Synonymous to the term fair but I conceive the Spouse here intendeth something more as I hinted to you before Amongst men beauty properly relates to the complexion pleasantness to the conversation a man may be fair and yet not pleasant he may have a fair face and a false heart a sweet countenance and a sour Soul But yet this difference will not serve us here For Christs beauty is not a corporeal sensual beauty but an inward Spiritual beauty and it is yet harder to distinguish fair and pleasant as they relate to Christ Bernard gives a double guess in the case Eminentiam decoris illâ repetitione designat Aut certe in utrâque Christi substantiâ dignam expressit omni admiratione decorem in alterâ naturâ in alterâ gratid That is the Spouse by this repetition signifies that eminency of beauty which is in Christ or else by this double term signifieth the beauty of Christs two Natures the first i. e. His Divine Nature being beautiful by Nature the second by Grace Thou art fair considered as to thy Divine Nature as thou wert from all eternity existing in the form of God God blessed for ever the bright Character of thy Fathers substance and the express Image of his glory Yea pleasant in thy form as a Servant when thou didst make thy self of no reputation for my sake c. Gregory agrees in the same Notion 2. There are others who by the pleasantness which the Spouse here entituleth her Beloved unto understand his pleasant administration of his Covenant Doctrines reproofs c. indeed the Lords staff which denotes his Covenant is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beauty And David useth this word to express the Satisfaction he took in the Ordinances of God Psal 27. 4. Psal 90. 17. And our own Annotations expound this Text by Psal 84. v. 1. The sense then is this Thou art sair O my Saviour transcendently fair and beautiful adorned with all Grace Yea pleasant in all thy administrations and dealings out of thy self in thine Ordinances thou art pleasant Thou sweetly dispensest grace from the fountain which is in thee by the Ordinances of the Gospel which are so many conduit pipes 3. I shall offer you a third Notion of the term As amongst men we may easily distinguish betwixt beauty and pleasantness whether you take beauty for the comeliness
hath it that walks with God and hath a fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ By way of Argument let me but plead with you 1. To observe the difference between sensual and intellectual pleasures And again betwixt rational and spiritual pleasures Who is there that observes not how much the satisfaction of the mind in the possession of Learning and Vertue excels all that satisfaction which the Eye hath in seeing or the Ear in hearing Christ is pleasant to the Soul not to the outward but to the inward man The pleasures of the mind are rational or spiritual The proportion which knowledge beareth to the understanding of man and which moral Vertue bears to his Reason makes them pleasant and creates an intellectual rational pleasure But alas it must be imperfect for as the Eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the Ear with hearing so neither is it possible that the Soul should be satisfied with knowledge or moral accomplishments especially when it is awakened to consider Eternity Hence the Learned man that before took pleasure in his knowledge being awakened cries out I with my Learning may go to Hell when one that knows much less may go to Heaven where 's the pleasure But now the Soul that is possessed of Christ hath its heart perfectly at rest because it sees its eternal Interest provided for and cannot discern it self in danger of future misery Furthermore the things in which it takes pleasure are above the rank of all sublimary contentments even such things as Eye hath not seen nor hath Ear heard nor can it enter into the Heart of man to conceive Besides Conscience is quiet Conscience is that which spoils much of the Worlds pleasure for as a good Conscience is a continual feast so an evil Conscience is more or less a continual torment Now Christ is he alone that quieteth the Conscience Many a poor Christless Soul drinks Wine in Bowls and boast in their outwardly happy condition but by and by a finger of a mans hand appears their Conscience begins to stir and to tell them they are damned undone sinners what becomes of their pleasure But now the Soul that is in Christ his Conscience speaks peace to him he hath peace without trouble And to give you a demonstration of this pleasantness of a Christian's life as I remember Christ said of the Lillies they neither spin nor sow yet Solomon in all his glory is not like one of them So give me leave to say Step unto the poor Cottages of Christians who have searce Bread to eat no Silken Rayments to put on no Musick to make them merry no Money to spend no Orchards or Gardens to delight them and yet there 's many a Nobleman many a Gentleman who have all these in abundance yet in all their glory are not like one of these Lillies these poor Souls have more true content and pleasure in one day than they have in all their life nor would they change conditions with them So true is that of Solomon Prov. 15. 16 17. Better is a little with the fear of the Lord than great Treasures and trouble therewith Better is a dinner of Herbs where love is than a stalled Oxe and hatred therewith I dare warrant you that the Philosopher could have dined more sweetly at home with Bread and Water than at the Tyrants Table of Dainties in view of a sharp Sword hanging over his head by a thred There 's many a poor Christian in this like a true spiritual Diogenes that satisfieth himself with the influence of the Sun upon his Tub better than an Alexander could do himself with a whole World subdued to his feet 2. Observe from hence the difference between Christ and lusts Christ and the World The Soul of man cannot be alone it is either espoused to lusts and to the World or else to the Lord Jesus There 's many a one whose Soul is united to it's lusts Lust is its beloved Can this Soul say Behold thou art fair my Beloved yea pleasant Doubtless nothing less Reason tells the Drunkard that his Drunkenness is a foul thing and Reason tells the Unclean person that his Soul is united to a filthy thing Take him that is united to the World to the Riches of it or to the Honours of it Reason tells him they have no beauty in them nor are they more pleasant than beautiful Ah! what racks of Conscience have prophane sinners oft-times The Wine tickles the throat as it passeth but it maketh the stomach sick The lusts of the flesh leave a Thorn in the Conscience which abides when the pleasure of them is vanished The World pleaseth the Eye while the figure of it passeth before it but it is no more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a great fancy and vexation of spirit spoils the pleasure of it But Christ is pleasant never any Soul that followed him repented of it yea those that follow him weeping never repent of their repentings Bring me that Soul which ever said I would I had never known or never walkt with Christ Let this therefore prevail with every Soul that hears me this day to get acquaintance with Christ And 2. With those who have interest in him to labour to grow up in him 1. The former Because he is pleasant 2. The latter Because they have not tasted the bottom of that pleasantness which attends him and the full Enjoyment of him Pleasantness is an alluring thing When Eve saw that the Apple was pleasant to the Eye she took it Gen. 3. 6. When Issachar in Jacob's Prophecy Gen. 49. 15. saw that the Land was pleasant he bowed his shoulder to bear Were you but possessed of this one Truth that Christ is pleasant that the way of Christ is a way of pleasantness it would go a great way to persuade men into it Hearken to the Wise man speaking of Wisdom of Christ indeed and his Grace under the notion of Wisdom Prov. 3. 17. Her waies are waies of pleasantness and all her paths are peace She is a Tree of Life to them that lay hold upon her Hearken you that are at ease in Zion that drink away care and spend your time in singing away the Evil day you that lie upon Beds of Ivory and stretch your selves upon Couches and eat the Lambs out of the Flock and Calves out of the midst of the stall you that chant to the sound of the Viol and invent to your selves Instruments of Musick you that drink Wine in Bowls and fare deliciously every day and dress your selves in gorgeous Apparel I tell you there 's many a poor Soul that hath Christ and is clothed with Rags and feeds upon Roots and drinks Water whose Soul is more at ease and enjoys more pleasure than yours doth O! therefore return you Shulamites return and understand aright the waies of true pleasure from those things that are meer empty shadows of vanity 2. Let this engage you that have received Christ to grow
his sake how beautiful saith he are thy Cheeks 2. Secondly the Neck is that part of a man upon which men use as to beasts to put ropes and yokes to bring them into Subjection as also upon which men of labour Porters and such like use to carry burdens Hence we often in holy Scripture read of a stiff neck to express stubbornness and disobedience Isaiah 48. 4. Thy neck was as an Iron sinew Jer. 17. 23. They made their neck stiff that they might not hear and the disobedient Israelites are often called a stiffnecked People Exod. 32. 9. 33. 3 5. And so in many other places of Scripture The Freedom and pliableness of the Neck are also often made use of to signify the Freedom and obedience of the Person So Gen. 27. 40. Thou shalt break his yoke from off thy neck So Isa 10. 27. His yoke shall be taken from off thy neck that is thou shalt be at liberty from him The neck is that part of man which the Holy Ghost maketh use of in Scripture to express disobedience by the stiff necked man is the man that is stubborn disobedient to the Law of God the man that hardened not his Neck is the Obedient man Christ hath Chains for the necks of his People wicked men put yokes upon their necks their yokes are yokes of Iron God promiseth to break these yokes but yet they are not without a yoke Christ hath a yoke Matth. 11. 29. Take my yoke upon you for my yoke is easy and my burden is l●●ht Christ hath Chains but they are of Gold the Enemies Chains are of Iron they are hard and grate but saith Christ my yoke is easy By the Spouses neck our Saviour doubtless means his Spouses Obedience whether in doing or in suffering The next Question is what is here to be understood by the Rows of Jewels and the Chains that are here mentioned I noted to you before that the Word here used signifieth an orderly disposal of things and from that word the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth the Law of God cometh in the Law of God the duties of men and women are orderly disposed To say nothing of the various●fancies of Interpreters I take the most genuine probable sense to be this thy external conversation is beautiful and comely by thy orderly walking according to the rule of my Law Holiness which lyeth in the ordering and government of a Christian steps according to a divine order and rule is exceeding beautiful comely in the Eyes of Jesus Christ To this sense the Chaldee Pharaphrast an ancient Interpreter but applying the whole song to the Jewish Church carries it for he thus Paraphraseth upon my Text How comely is this People which hath the Words of the Law given to them That they may be as an ear-ring on their Cheeks that they may not depart from the right way as the Horse that hath a bridle in his mouth is kept that he doth not go back And how beautiful are their necks or backs which bear the yoke of my commandments which are upon them as a yoke upon the neck of the Ox which ploweth in the field He as you see applyeth all to the Jews and therein he is very fond and partial but you see by the rows and Chains he understandeth the Laws and Precepts of God according to which every good man ordereth his conversation aright Chains for the most part both for the hands and necks and feet use to be made of brass or Iron or some baser metal with these Prisoners in war or Malefactors in peace use to be bound and hence the term is made use of to signify the greatest and basest subjection and servitude Chains are also made of Pearls and gold or some valuable metal Pro. 1. 9. And these Chains denote greatest liberty being used and worn by none but by Persons of Quality The Text is to be understood of the latter and the most valuable Interpreters interpret the Chains here concerning the yoke of Gods Commandments Solomon counselleth the young man Pro. 1. 8. to hear the instruction of his Father and not to forsake the law of his Mother for faith he v. 9. They shall be an Ornament of grace to thy head And Chains about thy neck Certainly the instructions and the Laws of God are much more so Holiness is a great Ornament and beauty to a Soul take Chains in which sense you will either for Chains of Iron with which Enemies load the necks of Saints for I told you those Words of Gold are added by our Interpreters or for those Chains which are of gold and Pearl and the richest Ornaments either of them are lovely in the Eyes of Christ but I rather concur with our own Translators and the most Interpreters who expound the term of the latter sort of Chains not only because our Saviour seemeth here to allude to the Ornaments of women but because the Heb. Word here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is never used to express Chains of Bondage in all those Texts of Scripture where any mention is made of such Chains And Pagnin assureth us from three of the Hebrew Rabbits that the word properly signifies Chains made of Gold or precious Stones joined with a thread together By this time you may easily understand the Proposition the sense of which according to this explication is The Spouse of Christ whether by her we understand the Church which is a body made up of several believers or a particular believer is not only inwardly comely and beautiful in respect of those habits of grace by which she is made as the Psalmist expresseth it all glorious within but she is also visibly comely in her more external appearance by her orderly conversation according to the Laws of God which is as an Ornament or Chain of well set Jewels unto her and by her ready submitting her Neck to the yoke of Christs Commandments his several Precepts being like a Chain of Gold or precious stones about her neck This is enough for the explication the Child of God is not only inwardly but outwardly holy and his holiness is a great beauty to him Here are two things 1. The Child of God is not only inwardly but externally holy 2. This external holiness is to him a great beauty A Child of God hath a good heart but that 's not all he must live a good life this is a point exceeding obvious whether we consider 1. The Rule by which he walketh Or Secondly The influence that the heart hath upon the life Or 3. The example he is to follow Or 4. The Patterns of holy men upon Scripture record 5. Or the promises of God to whom they are made Or 6. The descriptions of good men in holy writ Or 7. The end which he serveth 1. If we consider the Divine rule it reacheth not the heart alone but the outward man Let your light so shine before men saith our Saviour that they may
see your good works Shew me thy saith by thy works faith James Faith without works is dead It were endless to reckon up the several Texts of Scripture by which God hath directed the Government of our Tongues our Eyes our Ears our Hands our Feet In short the several Precepts for good works are all proofs of this 2. It must be so if we consider what influence the heart and will affections have upon our whole outward man commanding all the outward members out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh from the dictates of the heart the Eye looketh the hand moveth the mouth speaketh the Feet turn this or that way So that if the Tree be good the fruit must be good also the Fig-tree brings not forth thistles nor the Vine thorns A naughty tongue eye hand foot is a certain indication of a corrupt and naughty heart 3. The ●●liever is made conformable to Christ He went up and down doing good finishing the work which his Father had given him to do glorifying his Father on Earth doing his will manifesting his name no guile was found in his mouth no iniquity in his hand No iniquity towards God no unrighteousness towards men 4. See the Patterns of holy men upon Scriptural record Abraham and David all the holy Servants of God you will find their holiness did not lye only in the obedience of their heart but of their whole external converse a strict walking with God in obedience to his will 5. Observe the promises of God they are not onely made to Faith and Love and the more inward habits of the mind but to external acts such as Prayer hearing the Word Sanctification of the Sabbath shewing mercy to the poor doing justly walking righteously 6. The descriptions of holy men also make out this They are described to be men fearing God and eschewing evil walking in the Commandments of God Working righteousness all which expressions signify that a believer must not only be internally holy but externally so also Lastly the end which they serve shews also a necessity of it they are lights to inlighten the World and therefore they must not be hid under bushels They are Salt to season the World and therefore must be exposed to their use their end is to glorify God before men which cannot be without an external as well as an internal holiness thus the first thing appeareth I have passed over these things easy enough to have been extended into a much larger discourse Because it is a point so exceeding obvious and indeed agreed by all men The 2d thing is that holiness is a believers beauty it is so in the Eyes of Christ which is here spoken of Nor is this of any thing more difficult demonstration then the other What is that which we call beauty but an amiable external appearance of a Person arising from a Symmetry of parts a due mixture and Proportion of colours in conformity to some Original Pattern or Idea A Christians Original Pattern is God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be you holy at your Heavenly Father is holy As I am holy saith the holy Writ What can be a Christians beauty but his conformity to God and that amiableness which ariseth from that All Spiritual beauty is to be measured from the symmetry of the Soul to the divine law That which makes the Soul amiable to God and to all those who are like God This is holiness But I shall sum up all in some few Words of application I shall first observe from hence two or three Corollaries for our instruction then close all with a few words of exhortation Observe then That it is not enough for one that owneth the name of a believer to glory in a good inside There goeth a good outside as well as a good inside to make up a good Christian There are 2 Sorts of hypocrites and I am at loss with my self to determine which is worst The first sort glory in appearance but not in reality The Pharisees were of this Sort they were painted Sepulchers they made clean the outside of the platter of this Sort are men that pretend much to acts of devotion praying fasting hearing and acts of righteousness toward men and perhaps charity but are without any true faith in God or love to God full of malice and envy and cruelty and covetousness these are Pharisaical Hypocrites The 2d are such as will pretend to a good inside but they have a bad outside These men bite and devour their brethren lye and cheat and defraud and oppress neglect duties of Religion c. And yet tell you they have a good heart they have faith in God Love to God c. Thou Hypocrite shew me thy faith by thy works thy pretended Love to God by thy keeping his commandments Truly of the two these are the worst they pretend to holiness but which way will you look for it What notion of holiness have these men taken up Will you look for it in their conscientious constant attendance upon duties of publick Worship there you see their places empty or if they be filled observe their behaviour they are prating or sleeping or sporting or with their Eyes compassing the whole congregation Will you look for it in their private families There it may be you may hear the voice of Cursing or Swearing or reviling but the voice of Praying of reading the Word of those that sing praise unto God is seldom or never heard in their Houses Will you look for their holiness in their behaviour toward men you shall there find neither Justice nor Charity cheating defrauding Oppression cruelty hard-hearted behaviour c. Yet they will tell you they have good hearts Either now these men have Souls not like other mens Souls that have no command of their tongues and hands c. Or else they speak falsely I say these are of all others the Vilest Hypoerites 1. Because they have nothing good the first mentioned do some good things materially good they read fast pray walk justly give alms But these wretches have nothing do nothing at all that is good There is nothing good in their lives and that assureth us there 's nothing good in their hearts 2. These men do much more hurt then others do these are they that cause the name of God to be Bla●●●emed and evil spoken of Brethren be not deceived they are fifty men that you can impose upon but you cannot impose upon that God who searcheth the heart tryeth the reins Let none be deceived by the pretences of these Hypocrites The Spouse of Christ hath beautifull Cheeks and a beautiful Neck as well as a beautiful inside her Cheeks are comely betwixt rows of Jewels She hath a Chain of gold upon her Neck The laws and instructions of her Heavenly Father are an Ornament to her head and a Chain upon her Neck She durst not before men dishonour God Let this be the first