Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n believe_v love_n see_v 2,286 5 3.2960 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

There are 32 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

breach of Covenant and resolve to keep that inviolable which we made in a day of distress and for which there will be a day of account we are a sinking kingdom and cry out Lord save us or else we perish Hope even holds us up by the chin We are just as the Israelites coming out of Egypt in straights and intanglements amidst Rocks When they were in Egypt O what servitude did they meet withal and cruel bondage Now they come out of Egypt they meet with difficulties the Enemy overtakes them at Pihahiroth between Migdol and the Sea over against Baal-zephon Pihahiroth was a Cave hem'd in with Rocks Migdol signifieth a Cavernac rumbus inclusae Tower Baal was their God and Zephon signifies ruri speculatus est And see what counsel is given Moses said unto the people Exod. 14. 13. fear ye not stand still and see the salvation of the Lord which he will shew to you to day For the Egyptians whom ye have seen to day ye shall see them again no more for ever We are just as Jehoshaphat was in great straits and know not what to do but his practice must be ours to fall a praying O Lord our God wilt thou not judge them for we have no might against this great company that cometh against us neither 2 Chron. 20. 12. know we what to doe but our eyes are unto thee Hold out hope and thus it will argue and plead The Lord hath delivered us from our enemies we hope he will not suffer us to destroy one another The Lord hath done us much good and wrought miraculous salvations for us we trust he will not now destroy us after he hath done us so much good Joyn Faith Hope and Patience and thou wilt then wait to good purpose Sense fails contrivances are disappointed Faith bids dispute not but believe But Faith grows weak then Hope interposeth its good to hope in God Happy is that man whose hope the Lord is Art thou a tottering ready to fall hope underprops thee Art thou ready to sink hope findes out a twig to lay hold on but hope deferred makes the heart sick Then patience steps in and argueth thus Art thou a Believer consider A Believer makes not haste Hast thou hope thou must wait for that thou seest not quiet thy spirit and vvait upon God cast thy self upon his providence stay upon his wisdom rowl thy self upon his love and vvait quietly for his salvation He that vvaits chearfully submissively and patiently with Faith and Hope is put into a ready capacity of receiving a gracious ansvver from God Thus did the people of God they waited upon a word of Promise and relyed upon God for the fulfilling of the vision and they enjoyed the accomplishment thereof which is the second Head propounded viz. the illustration of the Point from the practice and example of the Saints in former times 2. The Doctrine illustrated by examples 2. I 'le first instance in the promises made to Abraham long before they were fulfilled There were two Promises made to Abraham 1. That the Countrey which God vvould give him should flovv with Milk and Honey 2. That his Seed should be as the Stars of Heaven Here 's Gods Word but his works seem strange to run quite cross unto it This vvould appear to a carnal eye to be a very dark vision Abraham vvas commanded out of his ovvn Countrey Now the Lord said unto Gen. 12. 1. Abraham Get thee from out of thy countrey and from thy kindred and from thy fathers house unto a land that I will shew thee As soon as he came into Canaan there was a Famine he vvas ready to starve There was a famine in the land and Abram went down into Egypt to sojourn Gen. 12. 10. there for the famine was grievous in the land This Promise was not made good till the Israelites vvere seated in Canaan many hundred years after and that his Seed should be as the stars of Heaven this vvas strangely brought about against all humane apprehension as by the sequel may appear for Abraham stayed many years before he had Isaac the childe of the promise and Isaac stayed 20 years before he had a childe and God bad Abraham kill Isaac These vvorks seem directly opposite to the Word of God But vve must not lay too much vveight upon the vvorks and thwarting passages of Gods providence but depend wholly upon the word What God promised unto Abraham was fulfilled every tittle in its season So the vision was dark to the Children of Israel Joseph told them that God would surely visit them and bring them out of that Land yet they must wait the limitted time And it came to pass at the end of the Exod. 12. 41. four hundred and thirty years even the self-same day it came to pass that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt Hannah Rachel Rebeckah waited Gods time and Sarah waited for a childe though against the ordinary course of nature God had promised and they must vvait upon his Word Seventy years were appointed for the Babyl●nish Captivity The Jews must vvait till the expiration then and not till then came deliverance The impotent Cripple waited 38 years at the Pool of Bethesdah then Christ came and put him into the water and healed him The daughter of Abraham waited 18 years then Christ loosned her from her infirmity The Woman waited 12 years on Physitians who had the bloody Issue and they left her uncured and poverty to boot when that time was expired Christ came and healed her Ten days tribulation were appointed to the Angel of the Church of Smyrna Three days Plague to David God in wisdom hath set certain periods of time known onely to himself all which while he will exercise the Faith and Patience of his children at the end whereof and not before he will relieve and comfort them What time God hath set for Englands deliverance is a grand secret locked up in his Cabinet And whether our eyes may see a right settlement a Peace establisht upon the basis of Truth no man can determine We can say no more then Psal 74. 9. with the Psalmist We see not our signs there is no more any Prophet neither is there among us that knoweth how long Yet let us fall upon our knees and be earnest in Prayer for Zion O that the salvation of Israel were come out of Zion When the Lord bringeth back the captivity of his people Jacob shall rejoyce and Israel shall be glad Let us leave off murmuring and fall a praying let 's take off from anxious cares and adde more fervency to our Prayers let 's not be so saucy as to prescribe times and seasons unto God not to limit the holy one of Israel to times or means It 's a received rule of Augustine Let him Eligal opportunitation qui dat miscricordiam Aug. who shews mercy choose his season We
Conscience worketh by love and labour for more accession of it and God will accept the quality for the quantity pence for pounds the will for the deed We read Heb. 11. 17. By faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac The faithfull intentions of Abraham was accepted in the accompt of God as a reall performance Let 's all labour to be sincere and upright hearted and this perfection of parts i. e. sincerity will be accepted instead of perfection of degrees which is an absolute perfection without spot or wrinkle which cannot be attained on earth by Militant Saints who are Viatores but only by such who are Comprehensores glorified Saints in Heaven JOY IN THE LORD AS A STRONG GROUND OF COMFORT AGAINST ALL DISCOMFORTS Unfolded from Hab. 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation MY Text is an apposite close of a devout Prophets Sermon 9. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Jan 8. 1659 60. Prayer composed of two excellent ingredients faith and fervency for in the time of Jacobs troubles when sad tidings were renewed every moment and each relation like Jobs disconsolate messengers aggravated the miseries and made them exceeding miserable then my Prophet Habakkuk could discerne a Sun of righteousnesse with healing wings dissipating all Mal. 4. 2. the clouds of sorrowes and miseries I say amidst all these diastrous occurrences this spirituall man by the eye of faith could see a Believer and apprehend his Jesus the God of his salvation this is an evidence of the strength of faith and where faith is it sets the affections a working it 's never idle but alwaies operative as soone as faith gives thee an insight into the beauty and excellency of thy God how sweet and amiable will he be unto thy soule thy affections will be transported with my Prophet I will rejoyce I will joy his expressions were too short they cannot reach his heart and therefore he iterates his resolution hee 's a true lover indeed who delights to discourse of his beloved odject and make frequent repetitions of his love this is an argument of his fervency So then you see as I before intimated that faith and fervency are the essentiall parts of this accurate prayer The words read are promissory and by way of covenant or you may call them a comfortable conclusion drawne from sad and dolefull premissesse Upon perusall of the precedent words you will find matter of terrour and astonishment enough to make you quake and tremble Before him went the Pestilence and burning coles went forth at his feet vers 5. The earth is measured and the Nations are drove a sunder and the everlasting mountaines were scattered and the perpetuall hills did bow vers 6. Unheard of miracles earthquakes against the course of nature the mountaines tremble there 's a great inundation of waters the Sun and the Moon cease from their motion vers 10. 11. And as before there went out pestilence and burning coles or burning diseases so now to adde a complement to the judgment here are arrowes by day which wound as much as the other in the night the speares glitters and the Lord marcheth on in his indignation the heathen feele the sore brunt of it vers 12. Thou didst thresh the heathen in anger Yet out of all these bitter hearbs Gods people can suck sweetnesse For God is good to his Israel Thou wentest forth for the salvation of thy people vers 13. It 's worthy of your notice that amidst greatest extremities God extends his speciall eye of care and providence unto his owne people he never failes to be their Protector It followeth Thou woundest the head of the house of the wicked by discovering the foundation unto the neck i. e. God will pluck these up by the roots that they shall never grow againe By this Me●aphor of a foundation according to * Intelligit quicquid erat stabilitatis in ipsis hostibus hoc fuisse evulsumusque ad collum Calv. in loc Calvins interpretation I understand Whatsoever strength and stability they seem'd to have was quite overthrowne from the top to the bottome The weapons God useth are described vers 4. Thou didst strike through with his staves i. e. God gives them over to themselves and they proove their own executioners and every mans hand was against his fellow Their particular sinnes are mentioned They came out as a whirlewind to scatter me their rejoycing was to devoure ●he poore secretly Behold their insolent rage and precipitant fury Their motions are too violent to hold their rage was against God like unto Senacherib but their tumult came up unto his eares and they fare alike I will saith the Lord put a bridle in thy lipps and a hook in thy nostrills Isa 37. 29. And thus God abaseth the sons of pride but yet their malice ceaseth not their doggish nature discovers it selfe they rejoyce and devoure the poore and that secretly one way or other they are a working if not by open hostility yet by secret plots and underminings so as they may contrive their ruine But view further Gods power and method which he useth for the preservation of his people Thou didst walk through the sea with thine horses through the heapes of great waters this is an Allusion to that wonderfull passage over the red sea Hence learne that in the greatest dangers God makes away for his servants escape And now le ts see how all these wonders affect the Prophet you may guesse at his disease by these symptomes trembling in his belly quivering in his lipps rottennesse in his bones here 's a man of the right stamp you may discerne of what currant mettall he is by his sympathy and fellow feeling of the afflictions of others It 's the duty of a good man to be alike affected with others calamities and miseries as if they were his own To draw downe the Context unto the Text my Prophet is no idle Spectator but he with Mary keepes all these things and ponders them in his heart he makes a soveraingne Compound of bitter Ingredients and with the Laborious Bee he suckes sweetnesse out of the sowrest herbes and with Sampson findes a honey comb in a Lions mouth I meane he makes a dungeon a paradise an abounding misery a superabundant comfort by a wise and spirituall application for come what will come his resolution is inviolably fixt upon a principle of faith that although the figg tree shall not blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines the labour of the Olive shall faile and the fields shall yeeld no meate the flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalles yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation Here is an enumeration of the choysest comforts such as are of highest estimation amongst men The Fig-tree hath much sweetnesse and brings forth good fruit the fruit of the Vine makes
contemnunt c. Rollocus in Joh. 6. 45. 1. Divine knowledg is humble Rolloc observes on the place And that you may know where this knowledge resides let me assure you That it ever lodgeth in an humble breast The knowledg taught of God is an humble knowledge But when God opens a mans eyes and gives him the spirit of understanding he then discernes in himselfe more ignorance and folly then knowledge After that he hath studied this domum interiorem his own conscience as Bernard sti●es it he knowes more ill by himselfe then all the world can acquaint him withall As the consideration of his primitive integrity may be scientia inflaens so the review of his originall praevarication may be scientia humilians As that may pusse up so this may humble It 's the greatest honour of the learned'st Rabbies to be men of the humblest spirits And the more humble they are the greater proficiency they make in knowledg Let them consider what they have is derivative Quid habes quod non accepisti Their abilities are not their own but so many talents concredited unto them of Quinto quis decrescit in despectione sui tanto amplius proficit in cogni tione Dei Bern. 2. It s a reforming knowledg which they must stand accomptable unto him who is their Lord and Master It 's undoubtedly true that the most ignorant are apt to think best of themselves The Laodiceans were well conceited of themselves and the reason was because their eyes were not opened Neither doth divine knowledge float in thy brain but secondly it workes a reformation upon thy heart and life To depart from evill is understanding Job 28. 28. Hereby we are sure that we know him if we keepe his commandements 1 Joh. 2. 3. this is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed of a man of knowledg Hath thy knowledg an effectuall influence upon thy life and conversation Doth it quicken thy love to Christ and inkindle thy zeale for his glory When the spirit of wisdome breaks in upon thy soule just as when the spirit of God came upon Saul it makes thee another manner of man this spirit is a fire to purge thy corruptions It 's water to allay thy passion It 's a winde to blow and scatter thy swelling thoughts of vanity May that popular rumor never be verify'd of our age that never was more knowledg and never lesse practise Now when knowledg abounds as the waters cover the seas where 's the returne of a sanctify'd conversation Hee 's truly the knowing man who reduceth his knowledg into practise Knowledg and practise should goe together in a mutuall equipage being conjoyn'd in an indissoluble union by the Holy-Ghost If then God hath advanced you to places of higher dignity God expects from you more duty and obedience If God hath bestowed greater gifts on you he expects better fruits of holinesse to be manifested throughout your whole life and conversation For where much is given much is required Hee 's a man of learning that is a man of a sanctify'd conversation I remember Berr Suber 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 37. that Bernard gives a direction or two for knowledg ut scias quo ordine quo studio quo sine For order that must be known in the first place which most nearly conduceth unto thy salvation For study that must be studied which is most worthy of thy love and as for the end that must not be curiosity but the edification of thy own and thy brothers soule These directions in my Text meet as lines in the same center Christ Jesus is first to be known worthiest of our love and the end of all our knowledg This puts me in mind of my second particular the object of my Apostles resolution 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to know Jesus Christ 2. Part Concerning the Knowledg of Jesus Christ In these Epistles St Paul useth the name of Jesus above 500 times and no wonder for in this name there are above 5000 treasures Yea in it all the treasures of wisdome and knowledg are reposited If you would Anatomize all Pauls Epistles you should find the sacred name of Jesus written in the heart of them in golden characters as truely as they falsly report it was seen in the heart of Ignatius Loyola that grand Impostor I have read that Phidias made a buckler for Minerva wherein his own name was so curiously ingraven that it could not be took out without the dissolution of the whole frame So Christ hath divinely wrought his name in the Scriptures and that so accurately in so much that you cannot take it out but the truth will fall to the ground Christ is the complement and perfection of all science the ground of all consolation Hereupon the Prophet concludes triumphantly I will rejoice in the God of my salvation Hab. 3. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. strom 6. Our knowledge and spirituall paradise is our Saviour So * Clemens Alexandrinus O then above all thy gettings labour to get this understanding to know Christ and him crucisi'd Have this and thou needest no more It 's that unum necessarium the onely requisite A man may read 20 Lectures in Aristle and yet be never the more moralliz'd man All Platoes and Aristotles Precepts meddle not with heart pollutions nor tend to the Reformation of the inward man A man onely acted by principles of nature cannot correct the least vice It 's beyond the sphaere of it's activity to discover sin in it's proper colours I mean the siafulnesse and pollution that is in sin 'T is true a temperate Socrates a just Aristides a covenant-keeping Regulus shame many of us Christians and will rise up in judgment against us and condemne us but their morality could not advance them to the third Heaven The eye of naturall reason was too dimme to discerne Christ erected upon a pole Their charity then justly deserves the check who inlarge the way where Christ hath streightn'd it The text is expresse there 's no other name given under Heaven whereby we must be saved Till this truth be expung'd out of Canonicall Acts 4 12. Scripture I shall never admit any scientiam mediam or posterne dore to let in those who are without the pale of the Christian world As for those Jesuited persons who advance nature and deprave grace the time may come when upon conviction of conscience they may be forc'd to conclude with Bellarmines Tutissimum est c. It 's Bellarm. 1. 5. de Iustif the safest way to rely upon the grace of God when as that idolized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will prove an Aegyptian reed to give them the slip in their greatest necessity Now it 's requisite that I should put a difference between the 3 Characters of Knowledg precious and the vile and distinguish that knowledg which is so in reality and truth from that which is counterfeit and only personates a Christian View it in these distinguishing
in me in the night season and my sinew's take no rest Job 30. 17. Ponder seriously with thy selfe how David was a man of warres and the sword never departed from his house so perhaps God hath not yet intended for thee a blessing of peace Hee 'l make a souldier of thee to fight his battles hee 'l put thee upon hard services in hard times to try what mettall thou art made of he intends thee for a valiant champion and combatant Take heed then of incurring that fearfull curse of M●roz Jud. 3. 23. who came not to the helpe of the Lord to the helpe of the Lord against the mighty Would'st thou faine sleep in a whole skin when thousands fall besides thee and ten thousands at thy right hand Thinkest thou to be at rest free from all enemies within and without May be God sees it fit in wisdome to exercise thee with some smarting crosse lest otherwise with Jeshurun thou should'st wax fat and kick against the Rock of thy salvation God know's what 's better for thee then thou dost for thy selfe May be its a speciall providence that thou shalt not receive good things in this life nor take thy rest in this world Non ad hoc noc de paradiso voluptatis Bern. ejecit saith Bernard God hath not cast a man out of paradise for him to find another paradise in this world All our rest and quietnesse is in God It 's an observation of the Rabbines that all the letters in the name Jehovah are quiescent And they say ther 's a mystery in it to shew that all our rest is in God alone Domine August fecisti nos pro te in quietum est cor nostrum donec veniat ad te Lord thou hast made us for thee and our heart● is never at rest untill it come unto thee so Augustine We cannot chuse but expect crosses in this world since we live in the valley of teares The Canaanites were thornes in the Israelites sides which the Lord left for their triall such a man is of a proud and haughty spirit God sends an affliction and bids it take downe his pride Another loves his ease and lives carelesly God sends some sharp crosse to scoure away his rust contracted by want of usage The emulation between Rome and Carthage was a foyle to set out each others renoune and valour The skilfullnesse of a Pilot is unknown but in a tempest a Captains valour appeares in the day of battle and a Christians Magnanimity in a fiery triall so then to summe up this particular Let me aske thee are peace and quietnesse an exemption from cares and troubles the great things which thou seekest after O how wilt thou be deceiv'd of thy expectation quaeris magna scilicet quietem tranquilitatem thou seekest great things i. e. rest ease and tranquility invenies misera scilicet motus proc●llas thou shalt find quite contrary hurley-burleyes stormes and tempests Another man seek's for promotion and high places these are A Second man seeks promotions the grandia his great things for the attainment whereof he becomes as very a Parasite as were those sordid flatterers of Dionysius who lick't up his spittle and preferr'd it before N●ctor this is indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unstable man as St James phraseth him who Jam. 1. 8. runs with the tide and varies with the practise of the times so that oft times the humour of his honourable Mecoenas becomes the compasse whereby hee 'l steere the course of his life and conversation But pause a while thou who runst in an eager pursuit after promotion let me aske thee art thou fit for it or if so art thou sure thou shalt not misse of it honor fugientem s●quitur sequentem fugit Honour like the shadow when a man looks towards it it avoids him but if a man turne his back from it it followes him And whence comes promotion It comes neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South But God is the Iudge he●utt●th down one and sett●th up another Psal 75. 6 7. How many verify the proverbe of the Ambitious who have a Pope in their belly How many are their aspiring projects and how unsatiable are their desires Me thinks the practise of David should curbe them who went into the Sanctuary of God and understood their end and that 's specified Psal 73. 18. surely thou did'st set them in slippery places then castest them down into destruction Agrippina temper'd her poysons in that meat which Claudius most delighted And so thy greatest honours may prove thy greatest torments It 's the observation Abulensis of Abulensis that those men of renoune who have been most glorious in the worlds accompt have come to most inglorious ends as Absaloms beauty Sampsons strength Achitophels policy Asahels swiftnesse proved their overthrowes and Alexand●r notwithstanding his great conquests was at the last poisoned Those quatuor summa imperia the Assyrian Persian Graecian and Roman Empires presently came to ruine You know the fatall end of Haman the greatest favourite in King Ahashuerosh Court who erst while was advanc't above all the princes and presently after was elevated higher upon a gallowes O then take heed lest any preferment choake the grace of God in thy soule C. A Lapide hath a story of C. A Lapide Pius quintus Cùm essem religiosus bene sperabam de salute animae meae Cardinalis factus extimui Pontifex creatus pene desper● Every degree of preferment made his condition more disconsolate But my charity hopes better things of you my brethren and such as accompany salvation When I see the failings of my elder Brethren as on ●●e side I abhorre daubing and flattery so on the other side I can in no wise brooke the practise of an undutifull Cham to discover their nakednesse where is probable hopes of amendment If it were possible we should have peace with all men and cover one anothers errors with the mantle of love A bad sense must not be entertain'd when words can admit of a better construction May it never be verifyed of any of us that our young yeares condemne our old and that we grow worse by those dignities which should make us more dutifull Let not O let not your talents be as so many prices put into the hands of fooles for want of hearts to make the best improvement of them What pitty 't is to see and I cannot see it without a bleeding heart that excellent gifts and abilities are so often buried in a napkin or else imployed the contrary way by such who are ingeniose nequam witty enough to their shame and infamy To dismisse this particular instance thou that art so ambitious of honours It 's a great hazard whether thou canst get honours or if got it 's a greater hazard whether thou canst keepe them miserrimum est fuisse faelicem Quaeris magna Honours promotions Invenies
after however the prologue may promise a comedy yet the Epilogue will discover a fatall tragedy whatever laughter was extorted was but risus Sardonicus All the pleasures are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bitter-sweets will there not in all these be bitternesse in the end Thus drawing an induction from these and the rest I may hence collect an universall conclusion That nothing under the sunne is worthy of the labour and pursuite of the sonnes of men Thou then ex meliore luto sictus who art fram'd of a better mold who art imploy'd in a more peculiar service for the God of Heaven O tread not Antipodes be not unsutable to thy Lord and master A shame for a child to be so unlike his Father Tu tibi ipsi quaeris grandia dost thou O Baruch Baruch the person seeking seeke great things thou for thy selfe which is the person seeking and now bespeaks the continuance of your patience This string sounds harsh It 's strange that a man so highly advanc't in the service of God should so much forget himselfe C. A La●ide checks him thus solus vis otiari nil vis pati pro conversione salute C. A Lapide in Loc. populi would'st thou enjoy thy rest alone and venter nothing for the conversion and safety of the people of God There 's an Emphasis in the word wilt thou seeke for thy selfe As supposing the Church and State should be put into one ballance and thy life in another would'st thou desire to outweigh them both Is thy life more pretious then so many millions Would'st thou be advanc't when the Church is brought low Would'st thou warme thy selfe at home by thine own fire when the temple of the Lord is a burning Questionlesse my brethren it 's the duty of a child of God to haue a fellow-feeling of his brethrens calamities to lay to heart their miseries as if they were his own Private interests must give place to publick miseries Particular relations must be swallowed up in the weale publick Private affaires must cease and be suspended when mighty and urgent businesse of Church and state require our helping hand Good old Elyes heart trembled for the Arke of God he could heare with patience the flight of Israel and the slaughter of his sonnes but as soone as the messenger made mention that the Arke of God was taken he fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate and his neck brake and he died 1 Sam. 4. 18. And his daughter in law Phineas wife bowed her selfe and travailed and called her child I●habod saying the glory is departed from Israel because the Arke of God was taken vers 22. You heare how deeply these two were affected with the Churches misery It were a prudent and profitable course in such times as these wherein we live to read leasurely over the booke of Lamentations that so our hearts might be fram'd into a broken temper And in the fayling of this man of God it should be our wisdome profitably to reflect upon our selves and see where 's our sympathy in these times of nationall calamities I feare most of our Consciences if they be not cauteris'd will give in evidence to the contrary How many are there who grow worse and worse in these perillous times adding d●unkennesse to thirst living in all manner of Epicurisme and sensuality Now Gods judgments are abroad how few are there that learne righteousnesse at home Where 's the man that makes such an excellent use of these distractions as to labour to walke more closely with God and to make his peace with him Where 's the man of Jer●mies temper who makes his head waters and his eyes a fountaine of teares Jer. 9. 1. Who eats no pleasant bread with Daniel who with Job abhorres himselfe and repents in dust and ashes we have many water-breaches and we may feare an innundation It nearly concernes us to put in practise the prophet Jo●ls counsell To turne unto the Lord with all our hearts and with fasting and with weeping and with mourning Joel 2. 12. would we were better acquainted that our Benonies will prove our Benjamins our sons of sorrow the sons of our right hand we should mourn with those that mourn and share with our brethren in their sufferings There 's more comfort to be extracted out of one daies communion with the Saints of God though in a suffering condition then in all the joviall society in the universe It 's storyed of Godfrey of Bullen that he refus'd to be crownd at Jerusalem with a crowne of Gold where Hist of God frey of Bullen in Fullers Holy Warr. Christ was crown'd with a crown of thorns A modest act that would not admit such a vast disproportion between him and Christ and shall we crown our selves with rose buds abate nothing of our former delights amidst all these dangers and perplexities When one ask't Plato how he came to such a perfection of wisdome he returnes this answer plus olei consumpsi in lampade quâm vini in calice that he spent more oyle in the lampe then wine in the cup. May the same be verified of us all And may not the complaint of the Prophet Isaiah Is 22. 12. find us guilty and in that day did the Lord God of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with sack-cloth and behold joy and gladnesse slaying Oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine Let us eat and drinke Magnificè tibi prospectum vis in omnibus procellis c. Junius in locum for to morrow we shall die Blessed be God we have fasting daies enjoyn'd by publick authority but have not we just cause to fast for our fasting and mourne and be heartily sorrowfull that we have mourn'd and sorrow'd no more what a fearfull woe is there pronounc'd against those that are at ease in Zion Magnificè tibi prospectum vis in omnibus procellis ac tempestatibus tanquam è portu naufragium publicum prospectare So Junius upon my text tells us wilt thou sit at the haven and see others in a ship-wrack and not beare a share in their sufferings My brethren we sit here in peace our profession is a profession of peace We are Ministers of the Gospell and the Gospell is a Gospell of peace How should we with united hearts pray for the peace of Jerusalem our weapons should be preces lachrymae prayers and teares are the best armour of proofe most sutable to men of our coats The Apostles advise must be put in practise study to be quiet and to doe your own businesse 1 Thes 4. 11. Our eyes must be bedew'd with teares Our soules must be afflicted with sorrow and with our indefatigable supplications never give the Lord any rest untill he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth Isay 62. 6 7. O then give not liberty to thy nor satisfie thy selfe to the utmost though in a lawfull pleasure
evil entreaties and unfruitfulness of our labors Le ts not bauk our duty because we fear we shal do no good let 's put that to the venture fall a working In the morning sow thy seed and in the evening with-hold not Eccles 11. 6. thy hands for thou knowest not whether shall prosper either this or that or ● King 22. 24. whether they both be alike good We read That a certain man drew a bow at a venture and smote the king of Israel between the joynts of the harness So though Ministers shoot at a venture personating no man yet it may please God so to direct the word that it may hit the right mark Now let 's all become Merchant-Venturers The Church is the Ship tost up and down with Tempests and Storms It 's exceeding great folly to trim up our Cabbin if the Ship be a sinking Fear not this Ship will at last come to a safe Harbor here then let us venture Counsels Pains Prayers Estates Liberties Lives and all Deliverance will come to the Church of God we have received earnest already let 's tug harder at the Oar and wrestle with Prayers and Supplications as we read Isa 62. 1. v. 6 7. When deliverance comes as a Samuel of our Prayers when we apprehend it the returne of prayers O how welcome will be that deliverance To see the ship so well fraught in the returne will be our rejoycing that we have ventur'd so liberally in the stock Fourthly A Merchant must be a man of singular Patience his Prop 4. A Merchant must be a man of Patie●ce stock is in a ship whose voyage is to the Indies he therefore must wait patiently for the returne So must every spirituall Merchant venturer wait patiently upon God Learne hence O Christian to wait upon the God of thy salvation the Charriot wheeles of deliverance are long a coming sense failes reason is non-plus't but faith bids thee wait longer It bids thee leave off disputing and reasoning and learn to believe But when faith a little flags then hope encourageth as it did Ezrah amid'st multitudes of teares But Ezrah 10. 2 hope sayeth I have hoped long and hope d●forr'd makes the heart sicke then comes patience and bids thee wait and stay Gods time his time is the best time Do not Limit the holy one of Israell to times or meanes this or that instrument Eligat Opp●rtunitatem qui libere August dat misericordiam O be perswaded to possesse thy soule with patience Ther 's need of patience Heb 10 36. Ther 's a certaine Period or Limit of time set downe by God though unknowne to us when Deliverance shall come Thirty yeares was appointed to the impotent Cripple which time expired Christ healed him Eighteene yeares to the daughter of Abraham and then was shee healed 70. yeares to the Jewish captivity and then deliverance came Wee are to observe that ther 's a great talke amongst the houshold of Christs coming the feilds looke white to harvest the Gods of Babylon are in disgrace ther 's great powring out of the spirit and a gracious answer of prayers ther 's earnest thirsting and longing after deliverance And these are usuall Harbingers of Deliverance But to determine the punctuall time 't is above all our knowledge we can say no more then with the Psalmist We see not our signes there is no more Ps 4. 9. any Prophet neither is there amongst us that knoweth h●w long Le ts imitate those who through faith and patience have inherited the promises Le ts resolve come what will come to wait on God as the Church professes Is 8. 17 and Mich 7. 7. God waits to do us good let us wait for the reception of his mercy Is 30. 8 5. 5 A Merchant frequents the places of Merchandize where he may Prop. 5. A Merchant must frequents the places of merchandise heare of his factors and receive intelligence of his Merchandize He 's frequently at the Exchange or such like meeting places So doth every spirituall Merchant frequent the publike Assemblies which are as it were spirituall Exchanges Places of concourse where he may heare news from heaven and receive Intelligence for the best Emolument of his soule Wait then O Christian at these Bethesdaes wait at the Posts of wisedomes gate Lie in this way where Christ frequently comes by Omit not through Negligence any Sermon that peradventure may be a convincing a converting and a confirming word unto thee It 's a mercy promised to an afflicted people Isay 30. 20. And though the Lord give you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction yet shall not thy teachers be removed into a corner any more but thine eyes shall see thy teachers That you have publick Assemblies frequent opportunities inlarged meanes and that your eyes behold your faithfull teachers these are singular mercies vouchsafed to you your duty is to improve them to the glory of God and the best advantage of your pretious soules 6ly and lastly A Merchant must improve his estate to his best Prop 6. A Merchant must improve his estate to his best advantage Mat 25. 27. advantage He hath been at great paines cost and charges therefore hee 'l put off his commodities to his best emolument The Lord in the Parable expects his own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with increase An honest gaine is commendable in the trade So a spirituall Merchant must improve all he hath his time Talents Graces Ordinances to the advantage of his pretious soule He must endeavour to gaine by various dispensations adversity as well as prosperity he must endeavour to prosit by every Sermon he heareth by every mans company with whom he converseth Hee 's skill'd in the soule thriving trade He stores up a stock of Divine graces faith love humility meeknesse c. And there with he would be adorned He stores up a stock of attributes he knowes there 's wisedom in God to counsell him mercy in God to pardon him power in God to defend him and with these he supports and stayes his spirit He stores up a stock of promises He reads and beleeves that they are pretious promises and that they are 2 Cor 11. 20. all in Christ Yea and Amen These he gathers up and applyes to his particular condition This spirituall Merchant this true beleever is the best Husband in all the world He not onely hath grace but is still a growing in more grace Hee 's a plant planted in Gods garden and therefore brings forth more fruit in his elder age Hee 's not contented with what grace he hath allready but with Paul he forgets those things which are behind and reacheth forth unto those things which are before pressing forward towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus Hee 's still on the getting hand getting more Phil 3. 13. 14. accession unto his faith love and humility adding one degree
will follow the Lamb where ever he goeth be it to mount Calvary as well as to mount Tabor this is rare to be found Here then is Shibboleth and Sibb●leth a note of distinction between a common and a speciall faith the faith of the world and the faith of the saints to be found in the text not onely to believe but to suffer Then here 's the object specified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It s a true observation but not more common then true N●n poena sed causa facit Martyrem there are sufferings for our faults mentioned 1 Pet. 2. 20. For what glory is it if when ye be buffetted for your faults ye shall take it patiently but if when ye doe well and suffer for it and take it patiently this is acceptable with God If so we may thank our selves But to die in Christ and for Christ makes the suffering glorious Now how we may know whether we suffer for Christ you shall heare anon in the particular Application From the words thus divided and expounded I shall collect this entire point of Doctrine which I lay for the ground worke of my ensuing meditation That its the duty of true believers not onely to b●lieve on Christ but Dectrine likewise chearfully and readily to suffer for him when he calls them thereunto I interpose on purpose this limitation when Christ calls Because we may not create evill to our selves nor run without a calling so farre as we have a lawfull calling in doing or suffering we may expect Method propound●d a blessing and no farther Now that I may handle this Doctrine as I desire in a profitable method I shall use all plainenesse and perspicuity of speech I shall onely propound three Heads of discourse something by way of Illustration something by way of Confirmation and something by way of Application 1. First for Illustration time would faile me to inlarge my selfe 1 For Illu●●ation in so great a cloud of witnesses The 11 of the Hebrewes is an Epitome of a larger Booke of Martyrs Abraham did not onely believe but suffer for Christ Heb. 11. 8 9 10. By Faith Abraham when he was called to goe out into a place which he should afterwards receive for an in heritance obeyed and he went out not knowing whither he went by Faith he sojourned in the land of promise as in a strange country dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob the heires with him of the same promise For he looked for a City which hath foundations whose builder and maker is God Moses did not onely believe but suffer Heb. 11. 24 25. By faith Moses when he was come to yeares refused to be called the sonne of Pharaohs daughter chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season vers 37. They were stoned they were sawn asunder were tempted were slain with the sword they wandered about in sheepskins and goat skins being destitute afflicted tormented Paul makes a catalogue of his sufferings 2 Cor. 1. 23 24. Are they the Ministers of Jesus Christ I speake as a foole I am in labours more abundant in stripes above measure in prisons more frequent in deaths oft Of the Jewes five times received I fourty stripes save one Paul's sufferings were abounding sufferings 2 Cor. 1. 5. for as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ Review his protestations Acts 21. 13. Then Paul answered what meane ye to weepe and to break mine heart for I am ready not to be bound only but also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus and see what Doctrine he teacheth Acts 14. 22. Confirming the soules of the Disciples and exhorting them to continue in the faith and that we must through much tribulation enter into the Kingdome of God● and see the confirmation of his doctrine Acts 20. 22 23. And now behold I goe bound in the spirit to Jerusalem not knowing the things that shall befall me there save that the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every City saying that bonds and afflictions abide me Through all Centuries we read of the sufferings of the Saints Abel was the Protomartyr in the old Testament Stephen in the new Noahs arke toss'd up and down upon the surface of the waters was a Type of the militant Church David was hunted as a Partridge in the wildernesse see the inscription of Psal 22. The passage of the Israelites through A●●cloth shahar or the hind of the morning the red sea to Canaan was a type of the afflicted condition of the Church of God Elias was persecuted by Jezabel The Prophet Esaiah was sawn asunder Jeremy was put into a dungeon and afterwards ston'd to death in Egipt Ezekiel was slaine in Babylon Micah thrown down a steep place and his neck broke All the Apostles as Ecclesiasticall writers mention were put to death excepting John that was banished into the Isle of Patmos Peter Andrew and Philip were Crucified James was slaine by the sword of Herod Bartholomew preaching in Armenia was beaten down with slaves had his skin flead off and afterwards beheaded Thomas was slaine with a dart at Calamina in India Matthew was run through with a speare James sirnamed the just was killed with a ●ullers club Lebbeus was slaine by Agbarus King of Ed●ssa Simon and Jude as some say were kill'd in a tumult Matthias was stoned and Paul beheaded at Rome These primitive persecutions were so bitter as Jerome saith that there was not one day in a whole yeare unto which the number of 5000 martyrs could not be ascribed excepting onely the first day of January Some tooke Nero as Austine de Civitate D●i relates to be the Antichrist Quaesissimis suppliciis aff●cit Aug. de Civ Dei Dei Tacitus Christianos so Tacitus writes of him All the foure Elements were witnesses of that Monsters cruelty some were drowned others hanged some were burnt to death others were buried alive Ignatius was torne in pieces with wild beasts and when he felt himselfe grinding in their teeth now saith he I am become meale for Christs tooth Lawrence was fryed on a Gridiron Vin entius had his body indented with wounds then thrown into a dungeon where the floare was spread with sharpe shells and his naked body was laid upon them Romanus a Noble man sealed the profession of the truth with his blood he accounted his Christian profession his chiefest nobility Policarpus venerable for his yeares and more venerable for his heroicall spirit in the cause of Christ being prest to recant answer'd fourscore yeares I have served Christ and he never did me any hurt and shall I now turne Apostate Eusebius Zozomen Socrates Theodoritus and our Martyrologers exaggerate the sufferings of the Saints and however Romish Rabsheka's brand our booke of Martyrs wrote by an eminently Mr John Fox learned and Godly man Mr Iohn Fox for a Legend of lies yet it shall be
made conformable unto Christ the head and Captaine of their salvation in a way of suffering Heb. 2. 10. And sayth the Apostle Peter For hereunto were yee called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that yee should follow his steps I Pet. 2. 21 and this is that which the Apostle did so earnestly desire to know even the sellowship of Christs sufferings Phil 3 10. Now between the head and the members there ought to bee a conformity Christ went into his glory by the way of sufferings Christ suffered in his name hee was called a Wine-Bibb●r a Deceiver a Samaritan an Heretick a Devill hee was scoft at scorn'd crucified And his singular patience is upon record 1 Pet. 2. 23 who wh●n hee was reviled reviled not again when hee suffered hee threatned not but committed himselfe to him that judgeth righteously Yea hee suffered in every place hunger in the desert resistance and reproaches in the temple an Agony in the garden contumelies in the judgment hall crucifying without the city likewise hee suffered in every part his eyes ran down with teares his temples with blood his eares tingled with buffetings and the hearing of their blasphemies and glowed with their reproaches they afflicted his tast with gall and vinegar pierced his hands with nailes his sides with a spear his heart was full of sorrow his soule of anguish hee gave his back to the smiters and his cheeks to those that plucked off the hair Isai 50. 6. Never was any sorrow like unto his sorrow the wrath of God was powred upon him in a full bitter cup and all was to this end that hee might leave us an ensample to follow his steps Heb. 12. 3. For consider him that endured such contradictions of sinners against himselfe lest yee bee wearied and faint in your minds Now then let us expostulate the case did our master suffer and shall not wee his servants did the head suffer and shall not the members sympathise Learne therefore to follow Christ to Golgotha and bee conformed to Christ in the vaile of his misery in his temptations if ever you look to abide with him in his kingdome Look for it make account of it whoever thou beest that art a Disciple of Jesus Christ Thou shalt one time or other drink of the Fathers cup of affliction in via before thou shalt drink a cup of new wine in Patria Doe you look for better usage and entertainment than Christ and all his witnesses have met withall before you Herein Man hath a priviledge above Angels hee hath a body and can suffer and so hath not Angels The 4th and last reason shall be drawn from those singular benefits Reas 4. Drawn from the benefit of suff●ring for Christ 1. that accrew unto God's people from their sufferings 1. Their suffering places are furnaces not to consume but to purify and refine them Dan. 11. 35. And some of understanding shall fall to try them and purge them and to make them white even to the time of the end because it is yet for a time appointed and likewise the same Prophet tels us Dand. 12. 10 many shall be purified and made white and tryed but the wicked shall doe wickedly and none of the wicked shall understand but the wise shall underst and. To the same effect the Prophet speaks Zech. 13. 9 and I will bring the third part thorow the fire and will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tryed and to purge them and to take away their dresse and Tinne Is 1. 25. Suffering places are Gods framing houses wherin he fashions and casts his people into a new mold hee makes their graces shine the the brighter as candles doe by snuffing Wee had not got so great knowledge of the patience of Job and courage of Paul Jeremy and Daniel were it not for their sufferings Their suffering places are as so many consecrated Oratories Act. 16. 25 and at midnight Paul and Silas prayed and sang prayses unto God and the prisoners heard them In prison Manasseh fell a praying Hee got more good by a Prison then by a Throne how sweetly did the Martyrs pray in prison what ravishing letters did Bradford Philpot Carel●sse and others write out of prison Men may imprison the body but cannot imprison the spirit The hearts of God's children are enlarged though thir bodies are imprisoned The Lord Jesus Christ is the supporter of the Saints in their sufferings and applyeth his cordial comforts to them in their languishing condition An Angel comforted Jacob when he was afraid of his brother Esau and hee saw a vision at Bethell An Angel comforted Elias when Jezabel had designed him to destruction an Angel delivered Peter out of Prison and supporting grace strengthened Paul 2 Cor. 12. 9 and hee said unto mee my grace is suffici●nt for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakness most gladly therefore will I rather glory in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may rest upon mee Suffering is the way to prevent sufferings suffering loss of goods liberty life for Christs sake is the way to prevente eternal sufferings For 6ly and lastly suffering for and with Christ hath an ample reward Rom. 8. 17 if so bee that wee suffer with him that wee also may bee glorified together Compare our sufferings and glory together vers 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be rev●aled in us 2 Cor. 4. 16 17 For which cause wee faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renew●d day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory And thus much for explication and confirmation of the doctrine Applic. I now descend to particular application In the first place this reproves the paucity of those that will suffer Vse 1 for Jesus Christ you know how Peter boasted of his courage and how lamentably he was foyld Many pretend valour and resolution For reproof for the truth and are voces praeterea nihil Ther●s a notable story in the book of Martyrs concerning Dr. Pendl●ton and M. Saund●rs Mr Saunders was timerous and affraid lest he should deny Christ The Dr was confident and sayd being a corpulent man that each gobbet of fat in his body should fry at the stake but this Braggadocian turn'd Apostate and the other timorous Christian suffered Martyrdome I may not shoot at Randome but levell at some particular persons these ' I le single out that are of all others unlikely to suffer when persecution comes 1. They that will not endure a lesser evill for Christ will never endure 1. They that will not endure a l●sser suffering are unlikely to to suffer greater a greater If thou hast runn● with footmen and they have weari●d thee then how canst thou contend with horses Jer.
12. 5. If thou canst not brook a by-word a nick-name a scoff or a reproach for Christ how wilt thou resist unto blood Art thou loath to venture thy breath to plead the cause of God how wilt thou venture thy life when the water is but to the ancles and then you will not wet your feet how will you pass over when it becomes a river Bilney the Martyr tryed the fire with his finger If thou canst not endure the burning of thy finger how wilt thou endure the burning of thy body If a lesser cross foyl thee how wilt thou grapple with a greater If a reproach a jear the fear of displeasing a Relation carnal interests and selfishness make thee flie of and apostatise surely thou wilt never kiss the stake and welcome fire and fagot when Persecution comes The glozing Hypocrite and Machivilian Politician will never 2. The Hypocrite and Polititian will not suffer suffer for Christ his Policy is not to follow Religion too close in the heels lest it dash out his brains not to launch further in the deep then he can come safe unto the Haven his design is not to discover his conscience farther then he can save his skin This is the man that chooseth sin rather then affliction Job 36. 21. The Hypocrite hath no sure rooting nor firm foundation for he builds on the Sands Superficial outsides Popularity Relations Revolution of times byass his motions and stears all his practices and not the glory of God nor the love of Jesus Christ The carnal Mamonist will not suffer for Christ The world is his master he serves it and makes it his Idol and no man can serve two masters 3. The carnall Mamonist will not suffer His Gold Corn Buildings Dignities Revenues are his Gods he sets up these as the Idols and stumbling blocks of his own heart Demas loved the world and therefore deserted the society of the Apostles Judas loved money and therefore betrayed Jesus Christ The foolish Gadarenes preferred their Swine before a Jesus The young man preferr'd Treasures on Earth before Treasures in Heaven Mark 10. 22. And he was sad at that saying and went away grieved for he had great possessions The root of this lamentable choice was covetousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the Apostles Character is the root of all evil 1 Tim. 6. 10. For the love of money is the root of all evil which will become coveted after they have errid from the faith and pierced themselves thorow with many sorrows The covetous man dreams of an Eternity upon Earth he 's earthed before his time he will not forgoe his Oxen his Farm his Gold or Silver for Jesus Christ he 'l follow Christ no farther then he may gain by and make a good Market of him as the people followed Christ for the loaves But if it come to the parting with some of his Idols of gold silver he 'l not let them goe he 'l sit on them as Rachel did on the stuff They are his Gods and what hath he more whoever you are that are in love with the world whose breath smells of earth whose discourse is earthly and whose hearts are glued fast to the Pelf of the world and swallowed up with worldly intanglements of all men you are unlikely to suffer for Jesus Christ And as for you the younger sort are herein most faulty that follow the fashions of the world the Antick Exotick garbs and weare ridiculous monstrous fowl heads of Hair borrowing other folks Hair I may thus argue with you if you will not part with a fashion of ill report how will you part with your lives for Christ Tertullian hath a saying Timeo Tertul. lib. 3. de cultu Faeminarum cervicem c. I fear that Neck that hath on it a Neck-lace of Pearls that it will not lay it self down upon the block for Jesus Christ 4. The formal Professor will not suffer for Jesus Christ these are 4. The formal professor will not suffer for Jesus Christ the high-way hearers mentioned Matth. 13. 19. When any one heareth the word of the kingdom and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked one and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart this is he which received seed by the way side A formal Gospeller that doth all for form will fly off and flinch when suffering comes Many reduce Religion to a meer form and come to the Ordinances as a fashion and a custom and many Scholars come to Prayers and Sermons because they are engaged to it by local Statutes But what doe they in their Studies Doe they pray there in secret I beseech you chatechife every one his own heart ask thy felf Do I keep time and touch with God in private Do I pray when no eye of man seeth me Doe I walk closely with God how doe I carry my self in my private addresses to God Fly from Formality beware of resting on a formall out-side Profession Formalists are so odious as that we may not associate our selves with them 2 Tim. 3. 5. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof from such turn away 5. Your luke-warm La●diceans will not suffer for Christ These 5. Lukewarm Laodiceans will not suffer for Christ halt between two Opinions and have two Faces they are of the worst temper neither hot nor cold some calls them Ambidexters other Neuters some Vterques some omnia These will not suffer for Christ these will not stand for Religion when it 's under Hatches Many that pretend to this moderation are much of this Laodicean temper Erasmus like hanging between Heaven and Hell you cannot tell what to make of them like cunning Gaimsters who will stand by a great while and then bet on the winning side I would saith the Spirit that thou wert either hot or cold Rev. 3. 15 16. I know thy works that thou art neither cold nor hot I would thou wert cold or hot So then because thou art luke-warm and neither cold nor hot I will spue thee out of my mouth Those are either of Gallio's temper that will not take pains in the work of God or else with Agrippa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in some small things they will appear for Christ so far forth as it will not cross shins with their ovvn Politick Designs Of all others these are the greatest enemies to reformation and because they would comply with both sides God in Judgement will make them odious unto both Lastly Profane Libertines will not suffer for Jesus Christ these 6. Profane Libertines wil not suffer for Christ are enemies unto the Cross of Christ running headlong into all excess of riot these are drunk with the Drunkards and swear with the Swearers how can these be put into any possibility of suffering For first They will not bate a Lust forgoe a Corruption for Christ how then can they suffer for him Secondly They hate Christ and his Servants now its love
to Christ that onely constrains us to suffer for him Thirdly They cannot sympathize with the sufferings of Gods people they are so far from being afflicted with them that they rejoyce in their afflictions and adde affliction unto affliction They that are of this temper will never suffer for Iesus Christ The second use shall be for Tryal and Examination whether you Vse 2. For Tryal and examination have a suffering Faith yea or no Many springs move many to suffer as a natural Conscience and a natural Pride and stoutness of Spirit A man may give his Body to be burnt and yet want love to Iesus Christ Here 's the grand Question What 's that Faith which will be a true Q. What 's that faith which wil be a suffering faith A Faith is a Christians life effectual suffering Faith For Answ 1. That Faith which is thy life amidst all deaths thy supply amidst all wants thy supportation consolation amidst all troubles thy meat and drink houshold-stuff thy Riches and Revenues this will carry thee through sufferings that Faith which makes thee live upon Christ in all straights srovvns crosses losses and hardships this will make thee undergoe the worst of evils for him who is the chiefest good It 's not said that a man shall live by his Wits Lands or Labours but by his Faith Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith 2. That Faith which is rooted and grounded upon the love of Christ will constrain thee to suffer for him Love made Jacob endure 2. Faith is grounded upon the love of Christ his hard service chearfully for his beloved Rachel Love made Moses wish himself to be blotted out of the Book of Life And Paul wisht himself Anathema for the Jews none so ready to die for Christ as the love-sick Spouse Many waters cannot quench her love Cant. 8. 7. It s love to Christ that will make thee willing to do and suffer any thing for him 3. If thy Faith can carry thee well through the temptations of 3. Faith carryeth through temptations of Prosperity and Adversity Foelix ille quem nec fortuita attollunt nec adversa deprimūt Senec. 4. Faith keeps up the heart in the use of means prosperity it is probable that it will carry thee through the tryal of Adversity If Faith will keep thee from swelling in prosperity it will keep thee from breaking in adversity 'T is a strong Stomack that will digest much Honey It 's a strong Faith that will not be allured by the sweetness pleasures and profits of the world He 's happy whom prosperity lifts not up nor adversity breaks 4. That Faith will make thee suffer that keeps thy heart up in the use of good means even then when all things goe against thee David then most repairs to the Sanctuary Psal 73 17. Vntil I went into the Sanctuary of God I knew it not but hereby I understood their end And see his behaviour at Ziglag 1 Sam 30. 6. And David was greatly distressed for the People spake of stoning of him because the soul of all the People was grieved every man for his sons and for his daughters but David encouraged himself in the Lord his God Rabshekah falls a railing and Hezekiah falls a Praying Observe well if Faith keep you in love to frequent Exercise of holy Duties though as yet you feel nothing coming in yet still continue in the practice of them and dare in no case sit loose from them but follow Christ from Ordinance to Ordinance and enquire every where after your Beloved this is that Faith questionless that will carry you through sufferings 5. That Faith which purifies thy Conscience reforms thy Life 5. Faith purifieth the heart and resigns thy Will wholly to the will of God this will make thee suffer for Christ Onely an holy unfained Faith will make thee to suffer Such a Faith the Apostle had which made him not be afraid of the King of Terrors Phil. 1. 21. For to me to live is Christ to die is gain That Faith will prove a sound suffering Faith that will engage thee to venture soul estate and body upon the free grace of God in Iesus Christ This will make thee to cast thy burthen upon the Lord and flie to him as a Sanctuary as a refuge from the Storm and as a shadow from the heat Examine whether thou canst produce these Symptomes of thy Faith The third Use shall be for Exhortation Be willing to undergoe Vse 3. For Exhortation any hardship loss or cross for Jesus Christ Consider what times you live in what contempt is powred out upon those great Ordinances of Divine Institution viz. Magistracy and Ministry Perhaps God intends thee for a Martyr A few preparations I conceive seasonable 1. Make account of suffering We may fear God is bringing confusion Prepar 1. Make account of sufferings and desolation upon the Kingdom If we consider the Ataxies and Anarchy's thereof we may take up that complaint Ezek. 19. 14. A fire is gone out of a rod of her branches which hath devoured her fruit so that she hath no strong rod to be a Scepter to rule this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation I neither profess my self Statesman nor Politician neither do I intermeddle out of my own Sphear and Calling onely as a Minister of God I counsel you in the Language of the Holy Ghost Jer. 6. 8. Be thou instructed O Jerusalem l●st my soul depart from thee lest I make thee desolate a land not inhabited Prepare for troubles and afflictions for the end of one trouble may be the beginning of another as when a man hath escaped a Beare a Lyon meets him and after he hath escaped the Lyon and leans his hand upon the wall a Serpent out of the Wall comes and bites him know then that you are fore-appointed unto sufferings so saith the Apostle 1 Thess 3. 3. That no man may be moved by these afflictions for your selves know that we are apointed thereunto Praecogitati mali mollior ictus Xeno suffering Ship-wrack said Jam didici Philosophari By our sufferings let us learn to be better Christians The second preparative is to get a self-denying spirit 't is self Prepar 2. Get a self-denying spirit that makes us shye of the Crosse selfe must be first denyed Severall selfes must be denyed selfe-opinion selfe-counsels selfe-righteousness self-excellencies self-will self-comforts self●ends All these selves must be denyed for Jesus Christ let it suffice onely to mention these at present I proceed to another Preparative And that 3. Is to set upon the practice of Mortification The Apostle protesteth Prepar 3. Set upon the practice of Mortification that he dyeth daily 1 Cor. 15. 31. I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord I die daily Strive to get thy corruptions mortified thy ill humors purged thy affections crucified thy filthy garments took away
strength and power in the hands of men if they mis-imploy it God can give strength to wounded men to do great exploits For though ye had smitten the Jer. 37. 10. whole army of the Caldeans that fight against you and there remained but wounded men among them yet should they rise up every man in his tent and burn this city with fire And God can cause the lame to take the prey Thy tacklings are loosed they could not well strengthen their Isa 33. 23. mast they could not spread the sail then is the prey of a great spoil divided the lame take the prey Let us leave off murmuring and repining and wait to see what God will do with us and for us His time is next He will bring to pass his own work his own way to his own glory The third and last Argument I shall name shall be drawn from Arg. 3. Drawn from the benefit of waiting Isa 40. 31. the singular benefit and utility of the duty Art thou weak wait and thou shalt receive strength They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall mount up on wings as eagles they shall run and not be weary they shall walk and not faint Art thou afraid of shame and disgrace lest contempt and ignominy be cast upon the Church of God see what the Prophet Isaiah saith It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth and the inhabitants thereof are as grashoppers Isa 40. 22 23. that stretcheth out the heaven as a curtain and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in that bringeth the Princes to nothing he maketh the Judges of the earth as vanity Dost thou desire Gods blessing wait and thou shalt have it And therefore doth the Lord wait that he Isa 30. 18. may be gracious unto you and therefore will he be exalted that he may have mercy upon you For the Lord is a God of judgement Blessed are all they that wait for him God knows when and how to help his Cum duplicātur lateres venit Deus Isa 3● 9 10 people In the mount God will be seen When the Bricks were doubled then came God and delivered the Israelites from their Aegyptian bondage The earth mourneth languisheth Leban●n is ashamed and hewed down Sharon is like a wilderness and Bashan and Carm●l shake off their fruits Now will I rise saith the Lord now will I be exalted now will I lift up my self When helps from earth have been cut off then help came from Heaven When Abraham was stretching forth his hand to kill Isaac then the Angel said Stay thy hand When David was hemm'd in on every side then a way was made for his escape by the Philistines Invasion When Paul was a killing and they were beating of him to beat out his life then came news of an Insurrection in Jerusalem and by that diversion Paul was repreived God hath a way of escape for his people in Fire and Water When thou passest thorow the waters I will be with thee and thorow the Isa 43. 2 3. rivers they shall not over-fl●w thee when thou walk●st thorow the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee Sometimes they have their lives for a prey other times they are made a prey and suffer in a common calamity Yet though the Saints suffer they have an hiding-place And a man shall be as an hiding-place from Isa 32. 2. the wind and a covert from the tempest as rivers of water in a dry place as the shaddow of a great rock in a weary land They have a Pella a Zoar sometimes where they may securely escape with their lives yet they have always a refuge and shelter in the Divine Promises They have a rock higher then themselves from the end of the earth saith the Psalmist will I cry unto thee when my heart is overwhelmed Psalm 61. 2. lead me to the rock that is higher then I. It 's an obliged duty to wait upon the Counsels of God By waiting we may look for good successe because we goe Gods way by murmuring or reviling we cannot look for comfort because we goe the way of flesh and blood By patience the pain and anguish of our fore is mitigated by impatience it corrodes and is inrag'd Thus far of the Doctrinal part I shall improve all unto four Use 1. For Terror Uses viz. For Reprehension Exhortation Direction and Consolation It breathes forth terror and severe reproof unto the murmuring spirits of these present times Never more complaining in our Streets Oh! we would have peace upon any tearms when will the Sword be put into the sheath when shall the Kingdom be setled That complaint is frequently taken up Hast thou utterly rejected Judah Hath thy soul loathed Zion Why hast thou smitten us and Jer. 14. 1● there is no healing for us we looked for peace and there is no good and for the time of healing but behold trouble For Answer I expostulate with Jehu What Peace What Peace with Rome What Peace with Benhadad What Peace with falshood Peace upon such tearms will prove but a Body massacring a Soul-murdering Peace What Peace with our lusts and corruptions Till they be slaughtered what peace can we expect Can we expect a cessation of punishing before there be a cessation of sinning Can we expect peace with men as long as we continue at War with God For all those Monethly Fasts and days of Humiliation where 's a serious Reformation of our hearts and lives You know how hasty Saul was he forced himself to sacrifice and would not stay till Samuel came it cost him his Kingdom The Israelites would not wait Gods time but were hasty for an encounter with the Amalekites and you may see what they got by it they fell before them and were discomfited unto Hormah Then the Amalekites came down and the Canaanites that dwelt in the hill and smote Numb 14. 45. them and discomfited them even unto Hormah And what 's the ground of this hastiness of spirit It 's infidelity because we believe not God upon his Word we are such hot spurres we out-run Providence and antidate Deliverance We go devised ways untract pathes according to secret impulses quite contrary to the rode of the Word did we believe the faithfulness of God That he is faithful that hath promised that the gates of hell shall not prevail against his Church we should possess our selves with patience and wait quietly for deliverance We usually say that hasty men never want woe Rash preproperous and preposterous practices are the ruine of practitioners An impatient man is a gate without an hinge Janua sine cardine What shame is it for a Christian to be like Hercules furens or like the Demoniack mentioned in the Gospel rending and tearing himself An impatient male-contented person is Felo de se his own Executioner What a weakness was it in
but when they are got up into the Air. When Gods children are out of their course of duties when they are in Meseck and have their habitation in the Tents of Kedar their spirits are dumpish But when their hearts are set in a right frame when they are exercising holy Duties amongst the society of Saints then are their hearts chearful then are their spirits revived then are they merry indeed 4. Thou complainest of Gods peoples sadness maybe it 's thy company that makes them so They hear thee Swear see thee Drunk O Consid 4. Bad company cause Gods peoples sadness how this troubles them It so troubles the children of God to see any dishonor offered to God as they cannot be merry Psal 119. 136. Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy law But let them come amongst Believers and joyn with them in religious Exercises their wonted joy comes to them again Then their joy is above the joy of Harvest and the dividing of the spoil with the mighty 5. It is not Religion that makes Gods children sad but because Consid 5. Gods people are sad because they are no better they are no more religious They grieve that they can grieve no more They are sorry that they are no more sorry for their sinns They finde many failings they want former Love-tokens and feelings then they mourn and cry out Restore to me the joy of thy salvation They want Gods gracious countenance wherefore they cry out Psal 4. 6. There be many that say Who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us 6. This Joy is secret an inward thing which strangers shall not Consid 6. Joy is a secret inward thing intermeddle withal A worldly man cannot judge of this Joy Rev. 2. 17. To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden Manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it The joy of the godly is not in outward flashes nor is it to be measur'd by outward aspect This is a hidden thing which so ravisheth their hearts as they cannot utter it Saul could not be merry without a Musitian nor Ahab without Naboth's Vineyard nor Gardiner that bloody Persecutor till he had receiv'd the news of the Martyrs death A godly Mans v Fox Acts and Monum in Q. Mary's Raign joy proceeds from no outward principle A covetous man joys and takes pleasure in his Barns heap'd with Corn and Coffers cramm'd with Gold A voluptuous man joys in Cards Dice Hauks Hounds A Drunkard in his Cups An ambitious man in his Titles Pedegree Preferments But a godly man can rejoyce and be merry without all these His joy ariseth from another principle even the reconciled countenance of God in Jesus Christ Now these Objections being remov'd and my passage thus cleared I come in the second place to prove the truth of the Doctrine 2. The Doctrine proved by particular instances by particular instances And I shall instance in particular Scriptures which give testimony to this truth then in particular persons who by their own experience subscribe to the truth of it And lastly I shall survey the particular ways of godliness and discover the pleasantness of them all and so from an Induction of Particulars sufficiently numbred I shall collect this universal Conclusion That all the ways of godliness are ways of pleasantness 1. For Scripture Testimony meer Quotations would fill a Sermon 1. By Scripture Testimony But I shall gather sparingly from the heap Prov. 22. 17. Bow down thine ear and hear the words of the wise and apply thine heart unto my knowledge for it is a pleasant thing if thou keep them within thee If Pleasure consists in Honors then Wisdom affords it abundantly Prov. 4. 7 8 9. Wisdom is the principal thing therefore get wisdom and with all thy getting get understanding She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a crown of glory shall she deliver to thee Exalt her and she shall promote thee she shall bring thee to honor when thou dost embrace her Prov. 8. 15 16 17 18 and 31. By me Kings reign and Princes decree Justice By me Princes rule and Nobles even all the Judges of the earth I love them that love me and they that seek me early shall finde me riches and honor are with me yea durable riches and righteousness If Life be a pleasure it 's to be found in Wisdom verse 35. For whoso findeth me findeth life and shall obtain favor of the Lord. If there be pleasure in Singing and Rejoycing it 's promised to the people of God Isa 51. 11 12. Therefore the redeemed of the Lord shall return and come with singing unto Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their head they shall obtain gladn●ss and joy and sorrow and mourning shall flee away I even I am he that comforteth you who art thou that thou shouldst be afraid of a man that shall die and of the son of man which shall be made as grass I 'le instance in particular Persons who by experience confesse the ways of godliness ways of pleasantness They call the Sabbath a delight Isa 58. 13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight not doing thine own ways nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking thine own words then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord. Nehemiah accounts the joy of the Lord their strength Neh. 8. 10. Then he said unto them Go your way eat the fat and drink the sweet and sena portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared for this day is holy unto our Lord neither be ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So Habakkuk cap. 3. 17 18. Although the fig-tree shall not bl●ssom neither shall fruit be in the vines the labor of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the f●ld and there shall be no Herd in the stalls yet I will rejoyce in the Lord and will joy in the God of my salvation So David danced before the Ark with all his might He makes it the Character of a blessed Man Psal 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night And his counsel is Psal 37. 4. Delight thy self also in the Lord and he shall give th●e the desires of thine heart And his own practice is Psal 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O God yea thy law is within my heart Psal 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul Psal 119. 16. I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word ver 35. Make me to go in the path of thy commandments for therein do I
delight ver 47. And I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved ver 70. Their heart is as fat as grease but I delight in thy law So Paul Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the law of God in the inward man There was joy in the whole City when Christ was Preached Acts 8. 8. Joy in the Eunuch converted Joy in the Jaylor Acts 16. 34. And when he had brought them into his h●use he set meat before them and rejoyced believing in God with all his house Great joy in rearing the material Temple great joy at the bringing of the Ark and celebration of the Passover And such joy and delight is in the hearts of all Gods people They do not onely perform duties but delight in them As a man drinks when he 's dry eats when he 's hungry and delights in meat and drink so it 's the meat and drink of the Saints to do the will of God 3. Wee 'l survey the particular ways of godliness and see what cause of delight there 's in them The ways of Wisdom are either the ways of Gods Ordinances or ways of exercise of the Graces of the Spirit or ways of obedience to the Commandments These are all ways of Divine Wisdom and Godlinesse and all these ways are top full of delight and pleasure 1. The ways of Gods Ordinances are ways of pleasure Every Ordinance is a pleasant sweet and delightful Ordinance 1. The Word is a sweet Ordinance Psal 119. 103. How sweet 1. The word is a sweet Ordinance are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then honey to my mouth It was his comfort in all afflictions Psal 119. 50. This is my comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickned me 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 rejoycing the heart the commandment of the Lord is pure enlightning the eyes The fear of the Lord is clean enduring for ever the judgements of the Lord are true and righteous altogether more to be desired are they then gold yea then much fine gold sweeter also then the h●ney or the honey comb Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in k●eping of th●m there is great reward God speaks to us in his Word by the mouth of his Messengers O what sweetness doth God communicate to the soul out of this Ordinance Therefore Mary chose the better part Luke 10. 42. You may read her practice ver 39. She sat at Jesus feet and heard his Word Prov. 8. 34. Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my dores 2. Prayer is a sweet Ordinance The Saints have conference with 2. Prayer is a sweet Ordinance God and feel much sweetness and delight coming in Therefore Prayer is called incense Lev. 16. 12. And he shall take a censer full of burning coals of fire from off the altar before the Lord and his hands full of sweet incense beaten small and bring it within the vail Numb 16. 46. And Moses said to Aaron Take a censer and put fire therein from off the altar and put on incense and go quickly and make an atonement Psal 141. 2. Let my prayer be set before thee as incense and the lifting up of mine hands an evening sacrifice Rev. 8. 3 4. And another angel came and stood at the altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne And the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the saints ascended Solatium ●st habere cui pectus aperias Ambr. up before God out of the angels hand Hannah after all her tears felt joy coming in and she was no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. When we are in great afflictions we account it matter of comfort to have a friend to whom we may ease our selves by way of communicating our condition and unbosoming our selves to him These are such times when we can trust no person never so near nor dear Micah 7. 6 7. For the son dishonoreth the father the daughter riseth up against her mother the daughter in law against her mother in law a mans enemies are the men of his own house Therefore I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation my God will hear me Yet at all times we may goe to God unbosom our selves to him make our requests known unto him in the name of Christ And though riches forsake thee and friends forsake thee yet all 's abundantly recompensed in this sweet promise Heb. 13. 5. Let your conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have For he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee VVhatever thou wantest yet if thou wantest not a heart to pray thou wilt finde comfort The children of God would not loose the benefit of their Prayers nor a good look from Christ smiling upon them in answer to their Prayers for all the Joys and Delights in the Universe 3. The Sacraments are sweet delightful Ordinances For the Sacrament 3. The Sacraments are sweet Ordinances of initiation Baptism it 's a comfort to be admitted one of Christs Family 'T is that which Theodosius preferred before his Empire But the fruit of this joy and comfort will appear when God hath regenerated thee and made thee a new Creature Titus 3. 5. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the holy Gh●st Now compare this Sacrament of Baptism with Circumcision and we may see how much God indulgeth us under the Gospel That was a hard and irksome service in cutting away the fore-skin from the flesh Simeon and Levi overcame the Sichemites when they were sore Now Baptism is far easier the dipping or sprinkling in Water More delight and pleasantness was in this Ordinance then that Then for the Lords Supper This is a spiritual Banquet a Feast of fat things such as is promised Isa 25. 6. And in this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things a feast of wines on lees of fat things full of marrow of wines on the lees well refined 'T is a sealing Ordinance The word writes the evidence fair Prayer prevails with God for a sight of it The Sacrament comes and sets a seal to it and when there 's such a sealing day then salvation is come unto thy soul And these Ordinances must needs be full of delight and consolation which are the means of our eternal salvation 3. As the Ordinances are full of delight so are all the Graces of 3. All the Graces of the Spirit are sweet Ordinances Gods spirit Cant.
pleasures which last but for a season If carnall wisdome bee sensuall much more carnall lusts Jam. 3. 15. This wisdome descendeth not from above but is earthly sensuall devilish Will the glutton please his brutish appetite will the drunkard dare to make his throat his tunnell his belly his barrell for a little sensuall pleasure and hazard his immortall soule to all eternity 2. Ther 's much mixture of inward sadness many damps of spirit amidst all the carnall pleasures of wicked men Prov. 20. 17. Convict 2. There 's inward sadness amidst outward sinfull pleasures Bread of deceit is sweet to a man but afterwards his mouth shall bee filled with gravell And in the midst of laughter the heart is sorrowfull Ambrose hath a notable expression to this purpose Vides convivium peccatoris interroga ejus conscientiam c. Thou seest the wicked man's feasting but question with his Conscience doth not that stink more filthily than any sepulchre Thou seest his joy his lustinesse thou wonderest at the abundance of his riches children but couldst thou look within thou wouldst see wounds of Conscience sadnesse and heaviness of spirit A wicked man may put on a merry countenance though his heart may bee sad When Belshazar was a carrowsing a damp of heart seazed upon him presently as soon as hee saw the hand writing Damocles at a great feast had a sword hanging over his head with a twined thread All these pleasures are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mixt with sorrow and vexation of spirit 3. Carnall pleasures produce the curse of God What delight Convict 3 Carnal pleasures bring a curse couldst thou take in a time of infection to have a brave suit of apparrell with the plague in it what delight in drinking poyson in a guilded cup. Aggrippina tempered poyson for Claudius in that meat wherein hee most delighted Thou followest the careere and swinge of thy affections God makes thy strongest affections thy thy strongest afflictions David was most crost in Absolom and Adonijab Amnon in Tamar Jonah in his Gourd A volup●uous man delights in gameing by gameing God bringes him to poverty A glutton makes his belly his God God makes his table his snare The drunkards cup is become his poyson What seavers dropsies and diseases accompany him The slothfull man who sleeps out his time is cloath'd with ragges Give mee saith Chrysostome one voluptuous man that is idle and hath his health Idleness is the chamber of all diseases Drunkards pull the houses of their bodies about their eares 4. Carnall pleasures are vanishing and momentary All the Convict 4. Carnal pleasures are vanishing momentary merry meetings sports pastimes are but flashes a blaze and soon gone like crackling of thornes Eccles 7. 6. For as the crackling of thornes under a pot so is the laughter of the foole Either they leave us or wee them Haman was banqueting and in great request with the King upon a sudden out of favour and hang'd uppon a gallowes Can any man of wisdome delight in fickle flashie vaine things Isai 55. 2. Wherefore doe yee spend money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not hearken diligently unto mee and eat yee that which is good and let your soule delight it selfe in fatness If the pleasures of the wicked would hold for ever then they would have somewhat to say for themselves But they are gone upon a suddaine 1. They are gone from thee They are like a snow-ball presently they melt away Riches make themselves winges They are gone from thee in thy youth The candle of the wicked is soone put out Or else when thou comest to bee old thou wilt say as Barzilla● did 2 Sam. 19. 34. How long have I to live that I should goe up with the King unto Jerusalem Or else 2. Thou art gone from them When death arrests thee to appeare before the Judge of Heaven and earth then farewell all pleasures merry meetings boon companions All sports will leave thee then thou must bee in eternity And O how dolefull will that sound bee to thee The season is past now the Judge hath vaild his face thy cursed delights in burning lusts will end in eternall burnings 5. All the carnall pleasures in the world are not able to satisfie Convict 5. the soule Haman was discontent amidst all his glory for want of Mordecaies bended knee Witty jests melodious musick stately buildings delicate cheare how can these satisfie the soule Doe they leave any sweet contentment behind them No ther 's a sting in the Conscience What man of wisdome can comfort himselfe when hee goes to bed when hee hath spent the day past in carnall lusts sinful pleasures Let mee aske thee and O that thou wouldst aske thy soule the question what benefit have I got by the societie of debaucht Ruffians what comfort can I take from my chambring and wantonness what delight in my drinking carrowzing healthing O aske thy Conscience and if it bee not feared it will tell thee all these are miserable comforters Believe it Christians soule delights only leave a sweet relish in our soules after their acts are past When wee are reading hearing praying meditating Oh! what joy doth there remaine upon our spirits One dram of such spirituall joy will more chear up our spirits then all the joy in harvest and the dividing the spoile with the mighty But on the contrary sensuall carnal pleasures when theire acts are over then is the beginning of our torment 6ly and lastly The finall period and end of all finfull pleasures is eternall destruction Job 20. 12. Though wickednesse be sweet in Convict 6 The end of sinfull pleasures is eternall destruction the mouth though he hide it under his tongue yet his meate in his bowells is turned it is the gall of asps within him Prov. 23. 31 32. Looke not thou upon the wine when it is red when it giveth his colour in the cup when it mooveth it selfe aright At the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder Prov. 7. 22. 23. He goeth after her straightway as an Ox goeth to the slaughter or as a foole to the correction of the stockes till a dart strike thorow his liver as a bird hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life Prov. 5. 11 And th●u mourne at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed Sensuall pleasures lead to and fit us for destruction Isai 5. 14. Therefore hell hath enlarged herselfe and opened her mouth without measure and their glory and their multitude and their pompe and he that rejoyceth shall descend into it Job 21 12 13. They take the timbrel and harpe and rejoyce at the sound of the organ they spend their dayes in wealth and in a moment goe downe unto the grave These are they that come to a fearefull end Your sorrow shall be proportionable to your joy Rev. 18. 7. How much shee hath glorified
her selfe and lived deliciously so much torment and sorrow give her For shee saith in her heart I set a queene and am no widd●w and shall see no sorrow O that these premises might deeply affect all voluptuous livers Consider amid'st all thy delights what will there not be bitternesse in the end will not dayes of mourning come cups of trembling for cups of healthing and carrowsing Eccl. 11. 9. Rejoyc● O young man in thy youth and let thine heart cheare thee in the day●s of thy youth and walk in the wayes of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes But know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into judgment If after every intemperate draught a cup of scalding lead were poured downe thy throat how grievous would that be The end of all thy intemperate pleasures will be worse Job 2. 20. His eyes shall see his destruction and he shall drinke of the wrath of the almighty Now thou delights in long sitting amongst drunkards though thou canst not patiently stay out a sermon but thou shalt drinke of the cup of Gods wrath eternally O that what hath been said might terrify all prophane persons voluptuous livers that seeing the sad dismall condition of carnall pleasures they would make a better choice To which purpose I presse a second use for exhortation Let me beseech you as you consult the eternall good of your immortall Vse 2. For Exortation soules to delight your soules in the waies of godlinesse No true pleasure to be found else where O make God your delight your joy let your spirits be solaced in the waies of God David would rather be a dore-keeper in the house of God then to dwell in the tents of wickednesse Be your condition never so mean your sorrowes in the world multiply'd yet all 's abundantly made up in the joy of Gods loveing and reconciled countenance Account then the sabbath a delight Heare with delight pray read and meditate with delight If you take a delight in the waies of God assure your selves God will come in and you shall see and tast more sweetnesse in God then ever you did all the daies of your life I formerlysurveyed all the waies of God and concluded they were the only pleasant delightful waies in all the world And the more I meditate on them the more delight I find in them The young Levit's heart was merry when preferment was offered to him much more joy is in that soule which is prefer'd to a sweet communion with Jesus Christ The soule is ravished with the love of Jesus Christ The joy is unutterable A stranger cannot intermeddle with it It 's a saying of Bernard Vis nunquam esse tristis bene vive I perswade you to make a blessed change ofearthly to get heavenly of carnal to get spiritual of momentany and transient to get permanent pleasures A rich man delights in his riches a voluptuous man in his pleasures an ambitious man in his titles of honour And what reall contentment can be found in all these but a godly man delights in Christ Christ is his joy his hope his love his desire his honour 1 Pet. 2. 7. Vnto you which believe he is precious But unto them which be dissobedient the stone which the builders dissallowed is made the head of the corner Will beauty delight you Christ is the fairest of ten thousand Will riches and honour take you In the left hand of wisdome are riches and honnour 's What are your desires Be they what they will and the desires are boundlesse yet read Ps 37. 4. Delight thy selfe in the Lord and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart O! then be no longer a stranger to the wayes of wisdome O delight in the promises and you shall suck sweetnesse out of these breasts of consolation Delight your selves in the divine ordinances and with joy you shall draw water out of these wells of salvation O delight in Jesus Christ Isaih 12. 3. let your whole desires beset upon him And hee 's faire and pleasant for delight Cant. 7. 6. How faire and how pleasant art thou O love for delights Get your hearts in Love with Christ and his ways And one sparke of love will beget a flame of seraphicall affections What you love you will most delight in I proceed to a third Use for tryal and examination Every one Use 1. for examination lays claim to the duty They profess delight in Christ and in his ways As it was said When the Son of man comes shall he finde Faith on the earth so when Christ calls us to account shall he finde this true delight in his ways This pleasantness may be much mistaken and many pretend to it who have no right nor portion in it Many mistake natural pleasantness for spiritual pleasantness Therefore it nearly concerns us to examine our selves whether this pleasantness be natural or spiritual I 'le lay down some Qualifications of spiritual joy and pleasantness 1. Spiritual joy and pleasantness is serious grave composed Gods Qual 1 children rejoyce with prudence Whereas in a natural pleasantness there 's much lightness in carriage much vanity and indiscretion Gods children are careful to let no misplac'd word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 come from them Natural joy wants this circumspect considerate behaviour 2. Spiritual Joy is such as can stand with fear and the work of Qual 2 Repentance and Humiliation Psal 2. 11. Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with trembling Psal 112. 1. Praise ye the Lord blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his commandments This transcends the sphear of the activity of natural joy It never looks at Humiliation and godly sorrow for sinne These dash its mirth presently and spoils all the sport of a naturall man 3. Spiritual Joy hath God for its object The joy of the Lord Qual 3 saith Neh●miah is your strength So David encouraged himself in God Now natural joy looks no higher then Farms Pleasures Friends Profits in the World If riches encrease then are their hearts set on them 4. Spiritual Joy delights in all ways of Wisdom It 's said of Herod Qual 4 that he heard John 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sweetly but he could not brook the seventh Commandment Many natural men can delight in some way of wisdom so far forth as they please their fancies The stony ground received some truths with joy but could not close with other truths That joy which is spiritual delights in all the Commandments of God respectively There 's an equal and indifferent respect unto all Gods Commandments 5. Spiritual Joy is the strength of the soul and carrys it on in the Qual 5 ways of God more fully It s as Oyl to the Wheels to facilitate its motion Are your spirits reviv'd in the ways of God Are you carryed on with vigor and delight in the ways of Godlyness Are your motions more quick and nimble VVhat life have you felt
sensible of their thirst and therefore they will not come God affords food for our body and food for our soule in abundance now an hungry man will goe apace for corporall food and had we a spirituall appetite a soule hunger we should quicken our pace and run as fast for the sood of our soules see Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation God puts a prize into our hands if we neglect to use it our condemnation will be the greater A sluggard will tell of this Lyon that mountaine and that shrubbe in the way so your lazy negligent people will tell and reckon up all the difficulties they can to flatter themselves in their idlenesse whereas indeed when we consider the battell we are to fight the race to runne the strait gate to passe through and the great difficulty to attaine salvation this should excite and provoke us to beg strength from God and act in his strength tugge hard at the Oare wrestle harder mend our pace that we may enter in at the strait gate fight the good fight of faith and so runne that we may obtaine A third sort of persons to be reproved are unbelievers They believe 3. Vnbelievers not such worth and excellency in the soule as we speak of This is the grand capitall damning sin of the Gospel Unbeliefe is a complication of many sins made up of a fraternity of iniquity See John 8 24. Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse caused the yong man to preferre treasures on earth before treasures in heaven Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse made the foolish Gadarens to preferre their swine before a Saviour Did people in good earnest believe that the soule is more worth then a world that the soule is of a heavenly-borne beeing and runnes parralell with eternity they durst not graspe the world make an Idol of Mammon Volupia c. and put their pretious soules in jeopardy What hindred Christ's miracles see Matth. 13. 28. What 's the portion of unbeleevers see Luk 12. 46. Rev. 21. 8. The Jewes had a saying that every sinne that they committed had a spice of the golden calfe Every sinne without question hath a spice of infidelity Unbeliefe and misbeliefe are destructive to the soule 4ly Impatient sinners are to be reproved these are worst of all 4. Impenitent sinners they throw away the remedy spurne away the plaister that God ordaineth for their cure Wee say falling into the water drownes not but lying there for a man may fall into a water and may be plucked out alive so falling into sinne damnes not but lying in it without repentance 'T is true that every sinne deserves damnation but all sinnes doe not actually damne otherwise who could be saved There are two sorts of sinners penitent and impenitent sinners Penitent broken hearted sinners are received into mercy through Christ their sinnes are wash't away in his bloud their sinnes are imputed to his score and his righteousness imputed to them for justification But impenitent sinners such as sweare and will sweare are drunke and will be so breake sabbaths and will doe so without remorse or regret of conscience these shut the dore of mercy against themselves An impenitent person is Felo de se his own executioner see Rev. 16. 11. Rom. 2. 5. Impenitent persons take not the dignity of their soules into consideration little doe they think what will become of their soules unto all eternity The law requires exact obedience will not abate a tittle not the least transgression God hath given us a Court of mercy the Gospel and in it a surety Christ and the instrumentall meanes faith and repentance Now impenitent Persons despise the Gospel the suerty the remedy they reject the great salvation tendred in the Gospel and so they are left unexcusable Their bloud be upon their own heads God would heale them they will not be healed they are filthy and impure the Lord proclaimes a fountaine to wash in it but they will not come unto it and so their damnation is just and they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 selfe condemned and their destruction is from themselves Of all judgments deprecate this of impenitency The Lord never give you over to impenitency 2. The next Use shall be for expostulation and here I would expostulate Vse 2. For expostulation the case as Isai 55. 2. Rom. 6. 21. Who of any understanding would serve so unprofitable a master as sinne is who would bee so mad as to be penny wise and pound foolish as to get riches lands revenues by cozenage fraud oppression and hazzard their pretious soules What if you could get never so much gold purchase never so much land honestly and justly and yet with the care and turmoyle of getting and keeping all you neglect your soule what advantage would all this be unto you Call your selves to an account and reckon what you get by purchaseing the world and loseing your soules cast up your accounts and you will find you have made a miserable bad bargain ' I le draw this Use unto particular instances 1. Let me expostulate the case with the voluptuous persons who eate and drinke and rise up to play Hawkes hounds cardes dice whores cups are the voluptuous man's companions Hee 's lul'd a sleep on the lap of pleasures and followes his own swinge and careere against the counter-blasts of a reclaiming conscience Let me aske the voluptuous liver what doe all his pleasures conduce to the advantage of his soul what comfort can a man take at night when he goeth to bed when all the day he hath past away in gameing drinking and carrowsing How many spend more upon their houndes then they doe towards the maintainance of a faithful Ministry How many preferre a pack of cards a pack of houndes a cast of hawkes before the word of God How many preferre a drunken merry meeting before a Sermon They can sit whole days and nights at cards and dice and at their cups upon ale-benches and yet how weary at a Sermon Double duties are tedious to them sabbaths fasts are heavy burdens unto them This sin of voluptuousness is the crying sin of the nation for which God lets us bloud by his heavy judgments at this very time O that all voluptuous Epicures would seriously lay to heart the sacred Irony of the wise man Eccles 11 9. O! that God would perswade you to have special regard of your pretious soules O that God would open your eyes to see your vanities and wicked pleasures and turne the streame into the right channel as Prov. 3. 17. To account the wayes of wisdome the only wayes of pleasantness 2. Let me expostulate the case with the covetous Mammonist He riseth early c hee 's a scrapeing and carking for the world the trash and pelfe here below filling his barnes with corne his coffers with gold still labouring for corne and oyle never satisfied never thinking he hath enough But what 's
thou a purging rinsing and cleansing thy soule Art thou unwilling to allow thy selfe in any sin unconfest unrepented of If so it 's evident that thou takest care for thy soule 5. Dost thou make use of those meanes which God hath appointed for the good of thy soule God gives thee ordinances dost Qu. 5. thou feed on them he scatters many pretious promises dost thou gather them up and apply them for thy comfort God reveales many pretious graces as faith love c. dost thou attire and beautify thy soule with them God affordes meanes publikely privately hearing reading praying meditation conference dost thou make use of these meanes dost thou improve this prize put into thy hand for the good of thy soule if so thou takest care for thy soule 6ly And lastly Dost thou goe to the fountain of the bloud of Qu. 6. Christ Dost thou look to the brazen serpent to cure thy soule Dost thou see Christ with the eye of faith and lay hold on him with the hand of faith believe on him with the heart of faith If when thou hast done all thou canst thou lookest through all unto Christ and actest all thy duties not in thy own strength but in the strength of Christ questionlesse thou hast a speciall regard of thy soule Examine your selves by these 6 Queries and if in truth and sincerity you can give affirmative answers to them I may safely pronounce you such as regard the eternall advantage of your immortall soules The Fifth Use shall be for Direction To handle this Use for your Use 5. For Direction greater advantage I shall acquaint you with some Impediments which must be removed and then I shall prescribe some Duties that must be performed These Impediments must be removed 1. Love of the world This is the soules clog and hinderance Imped 1. Love of the world which keeps it from soaring aloft The earth wormes of the world love their Mammon their Gold is their confidence Luk. 16. 14. The young man in the Gospel Judas the Gadarens preferred the world before Christ If you would regard your soules you must sit loose off the world your hearts must be alienated from the love of it 2. Too much love of the body such pampering a carcase with Imped 2. Too much love of the body variety of delicate meates so much time spent inter pectinem speculum in trimming up the body these hinder the care of the soule The body must be loved in a subordinate way shall we take more care of the carcase which must be wormes meat and neglect the soule which runs parallel with eternity The soule is animae mancipium will you preferre the servant and the drudge before the Master 3. Remissenesse in spirituall duties These are the spiritual viands Imped 3. Remissenesse in spirituall duties which keep the soule in heart Take away these you starve the soul they are as necessary as meat and drink for the body If you keep not time and touch with God in a constant conscientious performance of duties it 's evident you have no care of your soules The soule hath need of all duties prayer reading hearing meditation conference these are Pabula animae animae vehicula they wing the soule and make it soar aloft As you love your soules neglect not spiritual duties 4. Presumption of long life It s a dangerous thing to presume of Imped 4. Presumption of long life long life when as neither space nor grace is in our power This is that soule-murtherer that hath slaine many thousands Many presume of time God cuts them off in the midst of their sins Many have time and presume of grace though God gives them space he denies them Grace as he did to Jezabell Rev. 2. 21. It s an exceeding great folly to presume of that which is out of our power it s an high contempt and affront offered to God to offer him the lame and the blind to offer him that I may speak it with reverence the Devils leavings when the Devill hath sucked out the marrow to leave unto the Great God the empty dry bones 5ly Carnall security See dreadfull judgments of carnally secure Imped 5. Carnall security persons Deut. 29. 19 20. Having removed these Impediments and dangerous stumbling blocks out of the way I shall prescribe some Duties which you must put in practise 1. Labour as much as in thee lieth to keep thy soule unpolluted Duty 1. Keep thy soul pure with sin Every sin pollutes thy soule watch therefore against sin fight against it account sin thy soul's enemy Harbour not hugge not in thy bosome thy desperate enemy but stir especially against that encompassing sin mentioned Heb. 12. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Consider that the Lord seeth all thy sins he loatheth and abhorreth them Do thou hate that which God hates make no peace with Gods enemies give not quarter to Benhadad make no league with any Gibeonites spare no Agag foster no Delilah no Herodias c. 2. Covenant in the strength of God against thy corruptions Duty 2. Covenant against corruptions Resolve I will swear no more be drunken no more c. All sin defiles my soule Lord give me grace to crucifie my corruptions and to get victory over my sins Lord I cannot of my selfe get victory over any one sin I have covenanted against my pride and I am proud still against my passions and I am froward still against my earthly-mindednesse and yet am earthly-minded still I desire now to get out of my own strength and to act in thy strength Lord give me thy strength then I shall do thy work I can do nothing without thee but I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me 3. Set time apart every day for a serious search and examination Duty 3. Set times apart for selfe searching of thy soule Examine how it fares with thy soule Doth it grow leaner or fatter doth it thrive or decay How doth the Pulse of thy Devotion beat are there not many intermissions Fourthly Frequently and seriously consider of the inestimable price paid to redeem a soule No lesse price than the bloud of Christ Duty 4. Consider the price of the soule shall I neglect that which cost Christ so dear shall I disregard that which extracted the pretious bloud of Christ out of his veines Didst thou frequently consider the worth of thy soule the inestimable price paid to purchase it it would make thee look to thy soule 5. Labour to get all thy soule-pollutions washt away in the Duty 5. Goe to the fountaine Duty 6. bloud of the covenant go to the fountaine and wash there Sixthly and lastly Make use of all meanes God hath ordained for the good of thy soule Apply the Promises feed on the Ordinances Make use of all meanes appointed Vse 6. For Comfort support thy selfe on the Attributes The last Use shall be for comfort unto those whose
man is like a wild Asses Colt Aristotle accounts him an unfit hearer of morall Philosophy Neither Aristotle his Ethicks nor Tullyes offices can break a young colt This one word Volo is the bane of many young men They are refractory and will have their own will and a self-willed-man is felo de se his own executitioner with what violence doe young men pursue their lusts They leaue no stone unmoved for the satisfaction of their humours They measure not things by the light of judgment much lesse by the rule of the word but they act according to fancy and passion And there is an Anarchy in their passions or such a tumult or Ataxy in them as that they love what they should loath desire what they should abhorre rejoyce when they should mourn Nitimur in vetitum is the main trade they drive And thus unbridled youth without all government is like a City without gates and walls Satan and all his instruments will enter in speedily and surprize them A Second aggravation is because s●nnes commited in dayes of 2. Aggrav Because youthful sins are committed with greater delight youth are with abundance of delight and complacency acted by sinners Old men cannot act some ●innes though their hearts are as naught as ever by reason of naturall Impedements and indisposition of their present constitution But yong-men whose bones are full of marrow they delight in joviall company drinking gameing seeing Theatricall Enterludes They are young and therefore they put far from them the evil day Let them read that dreadfull woe Amos 6. 3. 4. 5. 6. It s the young man voyd of understanding that was enticed by the Whore Prov. 7. 22. Absolon was a young man that rebelled against hi● Father O what eager pursuits was there what delight what desire and endeavour to accomplish his designes He falls a fawning and flattring and so steales away the hearts of the people and then he will not tarry till his fathers death but on hee goeth with his designe A vow to God he pretends in his mouth but he meditates Treason and ●ebellion in his heart And you know what became of him David seemes to extenuatet he matter when he bids deal gently with the young man Absolom However the Rebell is no whit lesse in excuseble A Third aggravation is drawn from the many Pleas and vain 3 Aggravat is drawn from the waine pretences which young men make pretences that young men make they will tell you that youth must have a grain allowed what 's a Gentleman but his pleasure Now they are young hereafter they will think upon their soules They must haue a time to sow their wild Oates They can quote the * Laetitia juvenem Frons ●ecet tristis senem Sen. Trag. Tragedian Mirth becomes a young man gravity an old man Would they were as well verst in the book of God there they may read 2 Tim. 2. 22. Flee youthfull Lusts I have often seriously thought that Its no wonder to see so many wanton youths when as there remaine so many wanton Authours Poets I mean especially such as Horace Martiall Catullus Tibullus Propertius c. ●ho corrupt many young men It s high time that all such bookes were either throughly purged or els condemned to the fire as theirs were Act. 19. 19. You youngmen doe not plead for your pleasures Solomon tells you that Childhood and youth are vanities I remember Tertullian hath a saying Vides convivium peccatoris interroga ejus conscientiam c. There is death in the Pot In the middest of Tertul. laughter the heart is sorrowfull There is death in the Adulterers bed death in the Drunkards cup death in the deceivers false weights never plead pleasure in sinfull wayes But youth will plead will you allow no Recreation Eph. 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Emercantes hoc est dato pretio ●sserrere in libertatem Erasm Est curiose merces considerare u● emas meliores C. a Lap I Answer that no recreation that is sinfull may at any time be allowed no recreation of ill report and scandalous no recreation as a vocation no mispending of time for we are commanded to redeeme time or making a good Market of time Only such recreations may be used as are of Good report which may serve as files and whetstones to devotion to draw thee neerer to God and not to keep thee farther off I may say of recreations as a Reverend Divine said of Ceremonyes some are tollerable none necessary but most be abominable Would you know the right pleasure It 's in the ways of wisdome Prov. 3 17. would you know the right object of rejoycing Vis nunquam esse tristis bene vive Bern. de modo bene vivendi It 's in God Phil. 4. 4. Bernard hath an excellent saying Wouldest thou never be sad live well Lay aside all your vaine pleadings study the scripture be much in prayer much in meditation and s●earching your own hearts and then you will find by experience that there is more true pleasure in one moments communion with God then in all the delights and vanityes of the whole world were they all put together The fourth and last Aggravation that I shall name is this Sins 4 Aggravat Sins of youth are greater because committed against warning and invitations of youth are greater sins and will cause the greatest bitterness because yong men sin after so many invitations calls and warnings from God The soul of God loves the first ripe fruits The Holy Ghost calls to day not to morrow Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth Thou must consecrate thy fresh green years to God Thou must dedicate the first fruits the●● first born the Mich. 7. 1. Eccles 12. 1. ●●●●dren of Israel were to give their first fruits their first born the best of their flock a Lamb withot blemish God calls for thy youth Wilt thou put him off with the refuse thy old crazy bones that I may speak it with reverence when the Devil hath suckt out the Marrow Wilt thou offer God empty bones Mal. 1. 8. Thy Governor will not accept of it Now thy sin is aggravated Hin● colligit se affici nimis gravi Injuriâ quod Judaei audeant offerre quod mortalis homo respueret Calv. because thou dost refuse Gods call at present upon presumption of space and grace for the future neither of which are in thy power He may give thee neither whilest thou art a refusing at the call of God to give him thy youth and thy fresh green years he may be a sweating that there shall be no more time and cut thee asunder in the midst of thy sins and cast thee into eternal torments or if God give theespace it 's doubtful whether he will give thee grace It 's said of Jezabell Rev. 2. 21 I gave her space to repent but she repented not There is a Peradventure 2 Tim. 2. 25.
subjiciuntur Contra ingenium naturae suae agnoscamus naturam Dei quae cogit illa nostris usibus inservire Pet. Mart. Poenitentia Dei est Mutādorum immutabilis ratio August Hunc adulterinum degenerum pro meo jam agnoscere dedignor Calv. in Loc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omni die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Inter. Sedes vitae sedes animae principium intellectus vo luntatis affectnum mo●um to vanity and destruction through Mans iniquity Rom. 8. 20 22. But this sharp Sentence God pronounceth with a great deal of reluctancy he is said to repent in this verse and v. 6. both to repent and be grieved at his heart This is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repentance cannot in a proper sense be attributed to God Repentance in God is the unchangeable disposition of changeable things as Augustine observes God may will a change where he doth not change his will There 's no change in the Creator the change is in the Creature and here we may see how God takes upon him our affections and so condescends to our capacity As we repent and are grieved when any thing displeaseth us so God here speaking after the manner of men is said to repent and grieve Hence we may observe what an hainous and abominable thing sin is that causeth God to grieve Calvin on the place supposeth God pleading on this wise This is not my work this is not the man created after mine Image endowed with such noble faculties this adulterous and degenerate world I scorn to own for mine But wherein consists the greatness of the sins of the old World against whom the Lord threatens destruction You have a general charge given in by God himself v. 5. compared with Gen. 8. 21. It 's said there The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth They were habituated in wickedness generally both heart and life stark n●ught they were gray hair'd in wickedness and now arrived at the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the highest point and degree of impiety and the heart which the Philosophers say is the seat of life and Scripture saith It is the seat of the soul and principle of the understanding will affections and motions this is depraved and become the forge of all abominations It 's said Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart were onely evil continually Of this change in general the Lord gives a clear proof by particulars v. 2. The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair c. By sons of God some understand Angels This was the conjecture of Tertullian Justin Martyr Clemens Alexardrinus and others But Chrysostome urgeth that Scripture which to me seems a full confutation of their opinion Matth. 22. 30. In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the angels of God in heaven Others understand by sons of God the sons of Princes and those great Personages that liv'd in those days I shall rather wave these ●xpositions and concur with Calvin Luther Musculus Ainsworth and other solid Commentators who unanimously by Sons of God understand the Posterity of Seth such as were the sons of God by external Profession the men of the Church of God and these took the daughters of men i. e. The Posterity of Cain The holy Seed mingled themselves with the prophane Seed they looked at naught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Interp. else besides Beauty and satisfaction of ●usts Beauty was the * object of their Love This desire of Beauty was the Harbinger of their ruine It seems they took any Women whatsoever having no regard to goodness no regard to God none to their Parents advice they made their own choice Beauty Lust Violence their own will was the rule they went by and might prevail'd above right Violence and power carryed all before them v. 4. some derive the word quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sons of the Earth This Etymology savors of a Poetical Figment therefore I discard it altogether The word in the Original is Nephilim it comes from Naphal to fall they were Apo●ates and fell from God and by reason of their tyranny and cruelty caused many to fall before them It 's said Haggibburim they were mighty men The Caldee calls them Gibbaraja mighty men So Nimrod was Gibbor mighty Gen. 10. 8. He hunted souls he was a monstrous Tyrant and Persecutor of the Church of God These men were famous they had a great name but they were famous onely for oppression and cruelty their Will was their L●w and their strength and might bore down all before them They got power and a name by the Injuries and Persecutions which they exercised upon the Church of God Calvin gives a remarkable observation That it was the Haec prima fuit mundi nobilitas nequis longa famosa imaginum serie nimium sibi placeat Calv. in Loc. first Nobility of the world That no one should too much please himself with a long and famous series of Images of Ancestors And Luther gives another note writing of the fame of these wicked Gyants and the renown they got by their Villanies he compares them to the Popes Cardinals and Bishops who would not be called by those names they deserved they would not be called Tyrants Impious Qui salutantur principes regna tenerent non Tyranni c. sed clementissimi sanctissimi reverendissimi appellantur Luth. Sacrilegious but Merciful Holy Reverend So the renown of these Gyants is mentioned for their Villanies They were famous Oppressors cruel Blood-suckers wicked Tyrants And thus you have a draught of the old World set before your view Their crying sins were prophaneness of heart and life promiscuous Marriages Polygamies contempt of God and Parents Oppressions Cruelty and Persecution They had many warnings from God many reproofs and admonitions by the Ministry of the Patriarchs and all in vain wherefore the Lord threatens in the Text My spirit shall not always strive c. Which words are a Sermon Preach'd by the great God of Heaven and Earth to the old wicked World which Sermon is a Patern and the Archetipam for Ministers to Preach by and consists of Judgement and Mercy 1. Here 's a dreadful Judgement or a sad Commination of Divis 1. A Judgement and the reason thereof the heaviest punishment that can befall a people on this side Hell My spirit c. 2. Here 's a strong reason to enforce For that he also is flesh In the Mercy contained in the Text. 1. You have something implyed It s said Not always implying that it hath striven some time and a long time too In Justice God might cut sinners asunder in the midst of their rebellions and send them to Hell But O the infinite mercy and patience of God thus to strive at all and to strive so long with rebellious sinners 2. Here 's a mercy
us to repentance to Dan. 4. 27. break off our sins by repentance that our tranquillity may be lengthned and that there may be a healing of our errors The use we are to make is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Let us not pass uncharitable censures upon others as greater sinners for greater sufferings but remember that except we Luke 13. 5. repent we shall likewise perish Seventhly and lastly Let us consider how the Spirit of God 7 The Spirit strives by personal judgements strives by personal Judgements inslicted on our selves There is a Judgement of chastisement and a Judgement of revenge God sends Judgements by way of revenge upon the wicked of the World but by way of chastisement unto his own children When God takes away thy riches and other outward comforts as a childe a wife c. by these the Spirit of God strives with thee and sends thee to God to inquire into the cause and walk more closely and humbly with God and thy duty is to pray to God to teach thee what thou understandest not If God send thee a sore disease a grievous pain suppose the Stone Strangury Collick c. by all these the Spirit strives with thee and reads thee a Lecture of thy Mortality and warneth thee to make a serious and speedy preparation for death Afflictions are sent by God as Scullions to scour away the rust and canker of Gods children They are the Shepheards Dogs to bring home the straying Sheep Luther saith Afflictions teach us to understand Scripture Where God teacheth with the rod there he bestoweth a choice blessing Psal 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law God sends affliction on an errand Go affliction take down such a mans pride goe awaken another from his security Affliction is Gods Ordinance and with the same hand he gives Jesus Christ that he gives correction to his own children Thus the Spirit strives by personal judgements and afflictions The use we must continually make is Heb. 12. 5 6. My son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Hence saith the Apo●●le Rom. 5. 3. We glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience and Jam●s 1. 2. My brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations The rod hath a voice and we are call'd upon Mich. 6. 9. Hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Thus you have heard how Gods Spirit strives by its motions by the Ministery of the Word the checks of Conscience tenders of Mercy exercise of patience and long-suffering inslicting of exemplary and signal Judgements upon others and personal Judgements upon our selves Now the Lord give us his Grace and teach us to make much of and cherish the strivings of his holy Spirit and let us all deprecate the fearful judgement in the Text My spirit shall no longer strive with you Iudgement and Mercy Set forth from Gen. 6. 3. HAving dispatcht those two Particulars according to my Serm. 3. at St. Mary's Oxon Jan. 19. 1651. Three Reasons of the Doctrine Reas 1. From the Text because man is flesh method propounded in the unfolding of this Text In the third place I am to enquire into the Grounds and ●easons for the further confirmation of the Point Amongst many that may be given I shall reduce the Reasons of the Text into three Heads The first shall be drawn from the very reason in the Text for that he also is flesh Man is corrupted by reason of sin Man was created statu integro in integrity and innocency resembling the Image of God in righteousness and holiness but now statu corrupto by reason of Adams prevarication he became depraved in the faculties of his soul and all the members of his body and they are become instruments unto wickedness The Holy Ghost sets forth sinful man in a full Character Psal 14. 1 2 3. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doeth good The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the children of men to see whether there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside they are become altogether filthy there is none that doth good no not one Suppose we heard the Lord thus expostulating the case Is this man Is this he that I advanced to the highest rank of visible Creatures whom I created after mine own Image whom I endowed with noble faculties an understanding the bright luminary of the soul to know his Maker and a will to obey him Is he now become flesh fleshly in his imagination fleshly minded Doth he walk after the flesh minding the things of the flesh Hath he thus turn'd Apostate rebell'd against his Lord and Maker This charge being all very true wherefore should I have any more to do with him wherefore should my Spirit strive with vile sinful flesh Thus God might plead and in judgement withdraw the strivings of his holy Spirit Betwixt the spirit and the flesh what agreement can there be The Spirit will not thus be unequally yoaked since man is become thus fleshly thus depraved such a degenerate Plant so corrupt its just with Gods spirit to strive no longer with man By flesh in Scripture is comprehended a Mass of corruption Apostoli verba docent haec duo affectuum genera esse opposita Quae ut intelligamus constitutū fit affectum carnis nihil aliud esse quam usum virium humanaru● semotâ gratiâ Affectus autem spiritus est impulsus divini afflatus usus gratiae Christi Pet. Mart. in Loc. man in his worst estate Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh doe minde the things of the flesh What is predicated of it v. 6 7 8 9. To be carnally minded is death because the carnal minde is enmity against God So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God And what an Antithesis is there between flesh and spirit v. 13. For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live The same disproportion there is as between death and life heaven and hell salvation and damnation That God strives with any is a great mercy that the Spirit waits knocking at our doors when as he might knock us down dead O great mercy But when the Spirit strives and flesh resists its motions the Spirit spends his sacred breath wooing us and inviting us to do good unto our own souls and the carnal minde bids defiance unto the Spirit of grace when notwithstanding all the beseechings wooings and sollicitations of the Spirit the flesh rebels carnal
fruits thereof And these judgements God oftentimes inflicts upon those that contemne his Ordinances and often ●imes causeth a people to know the worth of them by the want of them Aggrav 2. God will not suffer his Spirit to wo●ke in the Ordinances Or secondly if God continue his Ordinances and a people still resist the strivings of his Spirit this is another aggravation that the Lord wil not suffer his Spirit to work in the Ordinances What 's the Word without the Spirit but a dead letter The Word is the seed it is the Spirit that quickens it Now when God denieth his Spirit in an Ordinance and people hear onely a bare sound which goeth in at one ear and out of another and reap no profit and are never a whit wrought upon by an Ordinance this is a lamentable condition Enthusiasts cry up the Spirit and cry down the Word Formalists cry up the Word they keep their Church well that 's their own phrase but they regard not the workings of the Spirit This is Argumentum à bene conjunctis ad male divisa We have no warrant to leave the bright shining light of the Word and to follow a wild rambling light of our own The Spirit works by the Word and tyes us to the rule New devised lights may Levit. 10. 2 meet with the same judgement as Nadab and Abihu met withall for offering strange fire unto the Lord. Neither may we as Formalists doe rest in our comming to and hearing of Ordinances we must examine the working of Gods Spirit upon our soules When God gives quickning Ordinances let us pray for the energetical effectual working of Gods Spirit Deadnesse of Spirit saith Mr. Greenham is the grave of spiritual graces Between a lazy and a fervent performer of duties you may see the difference Greenham 2 Kings 4. 31 32 33 34. Gehazi went on in a carelesse formall manner and layd his staffe upon the child but there was neither voice nor hearing But when Elisha put his eyes upon the childs eyes and his mouth on the childs mouth the flesh of the child waxed warm O beware of slighting or resis●ing the ●pirit in an Ordinance lest in judgement God may give thee a bare Ordinance or resting contented with a bare outside formall service without any lively workings of the Spirit upon thine heart and that will be but as a carkasse when the soul is gone When people drive away Gods Spirit and will not regard its strivings Aggrav 3. God gives over those that resist his Spirit unto a spirit of delusion then God gives them over in judgement to a spirit of delusion 2 Thes 2. 11. For this cause God shall send them strong delusions that they shall believe a lye VVhen Ministery the Lords-day and other Sabbath-Ordinances are trampled under feet when the plain infallible rule of the Scriptures is laid aside when some flatter themselves with high swelling conceits of their own gifts upon pretence of a Light within them Dreams and Revelations then God in judgement gives them over to a spirit of delusion The Devil works upon their fancies and puffs them up with pride and their pride swels them and bursts them Beware of Pride and above all Pride of spiritual Pride Beware of itching eares after novel Doctrines Upon pretence of new truths many suck in antiquated long since explo●ed ●rrours And if it be an errour though I take it not so yet account it an errour of love I advise especially young beginners to beware of Scepticism high-slown curiosities in the study of divinity It 's a ground of experience Scepticism Rom. 14. 1. Quod si observassent Scholastici non tot● spinosas salebrosas ne dicā impi●s sacrilegas quaestiones in eorn̄ libris habere mus P. Mart. Aggrav 4. God gives those over to a hard heart who resist the motions of the Spirit frequently produceth Heresie ●ere●e terminatesin Atheisme and my counsel is grounded upon the known rule Him that is weak in the faith receive you but not in doubtfull disputat●ons Would Schoolmen saith Pet. Martyr had observed this Scripture Study Fundamentals get a Body of Divinity in your heads and hearts before you venture upon Polemicals Be well provided and furnished with weapons from the Principles of Divinity before you grapple with gain-sayers A fourth and last aggravation I shall mention is this when Gods Spirit hath stroven long knockt and waited and is abused and resisted then God gives over such persons to an hard heart and a reprobate mind And an hard heart and a reprobate mind is an hell upon earth Isa 6. 9 10. Go and tell this people Hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed It 's cited by all the four Evangelists and in the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistle to the Romans by such frequent repetition of the self-same thing aggravating the greatnesse of the judgement It 's accounted the grand curse of the Gospel Joh. 9. 39. For judgement am I come into this John 9. 39. world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blind When men have been a long time under the sound of the Gospel and the Spirit hath moved and woed beseeching us to amend our lives and walk in an holy obedience and conformity to the will of God and yet we stand out and bid defiance to the Spirit of Grace then it is just for God to say hard heart seize upon such a one reprobate sense take hold of another let them be Sermon-proof and Judgement-proof let them remain insensible let their consciences be cauterized O wha● a fearfull judgement is this as the Apostle mentions But after thy hardnesse Ro● 2. 5. and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God May these aggravations make deep impressions upon all our spirits and make us fear and tremble any more to withstand the sweet motions and whispers of the Spirit of God A second use is for Exhortation I entreat beseech exhort conjure Vse 2. For Exhortation you by all the motions of the Spirit by all the tenders of mercies patience and long-suffering of God that you would take heed of quenching resisting sadding the holy Spirit of God but cherish embrace make much of all the strivings of the Spirit of God with your soules To day the Spirit calls hear his voice to day the Spirit woes and would make a contract with your soules O now accept of him to day the Spirit invites lay aside all excuses and come It 's the Embassie that Gods Ministers are sent upon Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though
to love Jesus Christ so the Martyr in the flames cried out None but Christ Thus highly did John Baptist testifie of Christ Joh. 3. 30. so Christ may be exalted hee cares not what becomes o● himself So every faithful Minister puts the highest value upon Jesus Christ so Christs honour may be advanced Christs cause and interest promoted he cares not what sufferings what persecutions he mee●s withall Though he encounter with Beasts at Ephesus Sons of Anak and frie at a stake none of these things move him so Christ may be glorified in him and by him It 's a signe of true grace to prize Christ highly and enhaunce his esteem and honour above all things besides 3. The heart is in love with holynesse for it self ●olynesse is Charact. 3. The heart is in love with holyness the image of God Ephes 4. 24. and there is beauty in Gods im●ge to enamour the soul What was said of Moral virtue may be much more said of Theological Si ●erreno oculo possit cerni admirabile sui desiderium excitaret Could we discern by a spiritual eye the lustre and excellency of Holynesse O how would our hearts bee in love with it Multitudes followed Christ for the Loaves and accounted gain their godlynesse Self-seeking interests covetousnesse is that Master-wheele that sets many on working but a true Beleever accounts Godlynesse his gain Christ his honour ●eligion his preferment His eye is single his heart sincere He 'l do his duty do his work faithfully and trust God for his wages Nay Jsa 49. 4. Psal 119. 7 the work is a reward O how I love thy law saith David It was his delight he loved the Commandements above sine gold And what was the Law it was holy just and good Holynesse was the object of his love To love God for himself Holynesse for it self is a good sign 4. There must an ingenuous sorrow for sinne I call it ingenuous Charact. 4. An ingenuous sorrow for sinne in opposition to all slavish howling under the rod. There is a vast difference between Ahab and Paul between that sorrow which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7. 10. and you have there seven Apostolical characters of godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7. 11. There 's a vast difference between the howling of dogges and crying of children between the crying of wicked persons as Pharaoh Ahab Cain under a heavy judgement for the punishment and smart upon them and the crying of Paul Peter and Mary Magdalen Pharaoh said Take away this plague the plague of Locusts Caterpillars c. he never was affected with the plague of his heart which was the greatest plague of all But take away my sinnes cries David Wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sinnes here 's a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of godly sorrow it mourns for sinne more than the punishment it mourns for sin because it is sinne because it is a breach of Gods holy Law because thereby God is dishonoured this sorrow is kindly ingenuous when the heart is melted and mourns and is broken for displeasing so good and gracious a Lord God 5. There wil be a cordial mourning for others sinnes This affection Charact. 5. Thheres mourning for others sins Psal 119. 136 was singular in David Rivers of water run down mine eyes because men keep not thy Law A godly man layes to heart the sins of the times and the place where he lives It grieves him at the heart to see God dishonoured by any Bradford that rare spirited man grieved at the miscarriages of one of his Scholars and laid the fault upon himself for not looking better to him If he so charged himself surely our faces will gather blacknesse and a great deal of guilt will lye at our do●es for not discharging our trust as we ought to doe concerning so many Scholars as so many Depositums committed to our charge But let 's doe our duties and mourn over them that are refractory and keep them strict to discipline Le ts pray for them and mourn over them and questionlesse praiers and tears are prevalent weapons When thou hearest a man swear feest him drunk break Sabbaths takes no heed nor makes any conscience to walk in the way of the Lord O mourn for him and weep that God is dishonoured and reflect upon thy self thy nature is as bad as his Who art thou that differs from thy brother What difference there is it is not of thy making it 's Grace free Grace that makes all the difference 6. The heart approves it self to God so did David put himself Charact. 6. The hearts approving it self to God upon Gods Examination Such a one walks alwaies as in the presence of God knowing that God is all eye to see all ear to hear all hand to write down all He stands not to mans day and mans judgement he appeales to God the searcher of all hearts whose eyes are ten thousand times brighter than the Sun Hereupon Job raised a ground of comfort and confidence because his Redeemer was his Judge he that was his Saviour should acquit him his Witnesse was on high See his excellent protestation that his heart should not reproach him Job 27. 4 5 6. Now when a Christian is hardly censured and condemned by the world yet if he can approve his heart to God that hee hath walkt before God with an upright heart here 's ground of abundant comfort If God be for us who can bee against us If God speake peace who can speak trouble It 's God that justifieth who 's he then that condemneth Let 's all then labour to tread even paths to keep close to the rule of the Word alwaies Rom. 8. 31. to set the fear of God before our eyes that whatsoever evil entreaties we may meet withall from abroad wee may have comfort at home having approved our hearts to God who searcheth all hearts and tryeth the reins and rendereth unto every one according to the fruits of their doings 7. There wil be a pressing forward toward perfection A heart Charact. 7. There will be a pressing forward towards perfection that approves it self to God as it labours for truth of every grace so it labours for growth of them Joshuahs Sun stood stil Hezechiahs Sun went back Neither of these are for their imitation but they are like Davids Sun which like a Giant refresht with wine runnes its course I wel know that there are Lambs as wel as Sheep weak as well as strong Christians Christians of the Lower and of the Vpper Form and that Faith admits degrees yet every true Beleever contents not himself with that measure of grace whereunto he hath attained but labours after perfection as you may see Phil. 3. 12 13 14. Psal 48. 6 7. 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7 8. There are many things which a godly man finds lacking in his Faith Love Humility and therefore
he desires and endeavours after the encrease of every grace more Faith more Love more Humility thus hee cries as the Horsleach's daughter give give 8. There 's a careful strict watch set upon the heart life against Charact. 8. Ther 's a care full watch ov●r the heart and life bosom sins Be they ancient customary constitution complexion sins as dear as a right hand and a right eye they must be cut off pluckt out David profest I kept my self from mine iniquity Psal 18. 23. Be it peccatum in deliciis an Herodias a Delilah away with them be it a Gibeonite a pretending sinne m●ke no league with it be it a Benhadad an Agag give no quarter to them bid adieu to every sin though delightful and pleasing to flesh and blood say to it as to a menstruous cloath get thee hence Let Josephs resolution be as a Monitor and as a Frontlet before thine eyes How can I doe this great wickednesse and sin against God 9. Yet further the desire and endeavour must be universally extensive as to hate and turn from every sinne so to have respect to Charact. 9. The desi●er ●ndeavour must be vniversall every commandement Psal 119. 101. It is an argument of a gracious heart neither to divide in duties nor commands neither to pleade a dispensation in the first nor in the second Table This was Pauls exercise he as it were drove that trade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this is consonant to the doctrine of the Gospel Universality is a divisive difference it distinguisheth a Sheep from a ●oat a true from a formal Professour and a constitutive difference to constitute Act. 24. 16. Ti● 2. 11 12 Psal 119. 6. a child of God The universality respects as I now mentioned the object the whole Law all Gods Commandements the subject the whole man at all places and in all companies to walk closely with God all the daies of our lives 10. The Spirit is without guile Here 's an Israelite indeed without Charact. 10. A spirit without guile Psal 32. 2. Joh. 1. 17. guile such was that excellent commendation that Christ gave Nathaniel There are three words whereof a godly man is compounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 singlenesse of heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 simplicity and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sincerity You have two of them in one verse and thence was matter enough of rejoycing 2 Cor. 1. 12. This we must labour for even singleness simplicity and sincerity and acting upon these principles wee may with comfort look the King of terrours in the face when all carnal Machiavilian policies wil prove Physitians of no value 11. There wil bee the practise of Mortification and Vivisication Charact. 11. The practice of mortification The mortifying of the deeds of the body and the quickning of the graces of the Spirit these are fruits of Regeneration and Repentance Col. 3. 5. Rom. 8. 13. Never dream of a shorter cut to h●aven than the rule of the Word prescribes Mr. Perkins saith He that was never truly humbled never truly believed O set upon the practise of Mortification put to death these br●ts of Babylon crucifie slay mortifie thy corruptions ●et this day be a slaughter day for thy sins spare not an an●ient sinne let not thine eye pity thy most delightful sinne butlet thy ●ow be like the Bow of Jonathan that never returned empty without the blood of the slaine This is a severe way but there 's comfort in it The Apostle useth two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the making of the body black and blew and the bringing it into subjection There may be no toleration of any sinne Take heed of easie lazy wayes pleasing to thy corrupt nature they are dangerous wayes Follow the old light of the Word that presseth Repentance Humiliation Mortification that 's Gods Law Take heed of any Antinomian Ignes fatuos which decrie so row for sin if thou followest them thou wilt follow a blinde guide and if the blinde lead the blinde both will fall into the ditch 12. And lastly there wil be a burning in love to Jesus Christ Charact. 12. There wil be a burning in love to Jesus Christ such a love as many waters cannot quench nor stood-gates drown it Cant. 8. 7. The love of Christ wil con●●rain him 2 Cor. 5. 14. He wil doe and suffer out of a principle of love to Jesus Christ This man loves Christs image holynesse Christs Members Joh. 13. 35. Christs ●rdinances they are his delight and counsellors Christs Messengers the appearance of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4. 8. Tit. 2. 13. He longs for Christs comming Rev. 22. 20. By all these signes and discriminating characters we may judge of the Tree by the fruit and conclude that heart to be a gracious heart that can produce these evidences and where the heart is upright and holy the conversation cannot but be suitable when the heart is inlarged the feet wil runne the wayes of Gods commandements Put your selves to these Tryals proved to you from the Word of God and your own consciences The fo●rah Vse shall be for Direction how we shall make the best Use 4. For direction use of this day of Judgement In pursuance of this consideration what rules of directions must we observe that from hence we may be engaged to a holy conversation amongst many I shall presse six Rules to be reduced to point of practise 1. Pray for the Spirit of Sanctification It 's Gods will our Sanctification we must pray that his will may be done in us and by Rule 1. Pray for the Spirit of Sanctificatiō us that Christs kingdome may be within us that Christ would love and wash us and make us Kings and Priests unto God This is a new creation and requires an omnipotent hand Psal 51. 10. This is the Apostles prayer for the Thessalonians that the God of peace would sanctifie them This is the prayer suitable to Gods will and if ●e● ask any thing according to Gods will he heareth us We read of a spirit of holynesse Rom. 1. 4. and sanctification of the spirit Pray hard for holynesse wrestle with God be importunate for Grace and when it 's begunne pray for the consummation of it that hee that hath begun a good work will not leave it unfinished till the day of Jesus Christ 2. Be much employed in washing and cleansing thy heart This Rule 2. Be much employed in washing thy heart God calls for Jer. 4. 14. There 's a great deal of filthinesse that lyes lurking in thy heart many foul corners O wash and rinse thy heart there are many vain and wicked thoughts there 's in thy heart a stye a sink of filthinesse a cage of uncleane birds Many nasty rotten thoughts and wicked imaginations doth this womb conceive Try thy heart throughly be better acquainted at home doest thou hope to have benefit by Christ see to thy duty to purifie
1 Joh 3 3. Jam. 14 8 thy self to cleanse thy hands and purifie thy heart this is a needfull study its time well imployed in searching our hearts in washing and purifying of the inward man 3. Be much exercised in divine meditation Meditate frequently Rule 3. Be exercised the divine in art of meditation of the four last things Death Judgement Hell and Heaven Entertain frequent and serious thoughts of ●ternity It 's a poynt of understanding and wisdome to consider our latter end Meditate what a holy place heaven is what holy company and what holy employments aret here Nothing that defileth shall ever come there Get up into the Mount with Moses let thy affections soare aloft being carried aloft with the wings of heavenly meditation This was Isaacs practise Davids and Pauls Were you acquainted with the singular benefit of Meditation you would not lye groveling here below your words thoughts whole conversations would bee in heaven 4. Consider the omnipresence and omniscience of God whither Rule 4. Consider Gods omnipresence canst thou goe from his presence how canst thou escape his knowledge If I sinne saith Job he marketh me Job 10. 14 15. God seeth thy secret sinnes hee knoweth all thy reservations and cunning conveyances All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale and without holynesse thou shalt never see the face of God with comfort The serious consideration of the Omnipresence and Omniscience of God through the grace of God may prevaile with us to a circumspect and holy conversation 5. Set an high estimate upon and frequent diligently the holy Rule 5 Consider Gods Ordinances Ordinances of God They are called The beauties of Holynesse Psal 110. 3. There is a cleansing virtue in the Word of God Psal 119. 9. Gods face is beautifull his holynesse is his beauty Now by the face of God Calvin understands the Ordinances of God Psal 27. 8. Wait then O Christian at the posts of Wisdoms gate lye in the way where Christ comes by tarry at these Bethesdaes The Ordinances are the golden Pipes to conveigh the golden Oyle take heed of sitting loose from them Blesse God that your eyes behold your Teachers and that your Gospel is not driven into corners Improve these prices and spiritual advantages for the good of your precious souls 6. And lastly associate your selves with holy company Love Rule 6. Associa●e your selves with holy company where God loves now the Lord loveth his Saints It was Davids profession that his delight was in the Saints Psal 16. 2 3. Bee a companion to those that fear God If a dead coale be neare a live co●le it may be inkindled by it but if two live coales be together what abundance of heate will they give We read Mal. 3. 16. That they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Let not Christians be strange and shie of one anothers company But let 's unite as one man to conserre all our interests to give each other a lift to heaven Make them thy companions on earth whom thou hopest to enjoy in heaven to all eternity The last Use and so in a few words to conclude is a word of Use 5. For Consolation Consolation unto holy persons true beleevers the adopted sonnes and daughters of God when the day of Judgement comes and the whole world is in a flame they shall bee of good comfort That day which will be a day of terrour and revenge to the wicked shall be a day of refreshing and restitution unto them The Saints that sleep in the grave shall be awakned at the sound of the Trumpet and their bodies and soules shall bee reunited and they sh●ll receive the consummation of their happynesse The Saints that are alive shall be caught up together with those that are dead in Christ in the cloudes to meet the ●ord in the air and so shall be ever with the Lord. The inference the Apostle makes should be ours wherefore 1 Thes 4. 18. comfort one another with these words O but I cannot see this in me I would be holy yet I cannot find this growth of holynesse in me Is this thy case goe thy way to God challenge him with his promise put his bond in suit Hee commands make you a clean heart but doth he not promise to give it Ezek. 36. 25. Comfort thy self with Christs praier to the Father He prayes Father sanctifie them through thy truth And know there may be grace where feeling may be wanting It s an excellent Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 1. 13. saying of Mr. Greenham We hold Christ by faith and not by feeling Feeling is an after thing After ye beleeved ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise Is it the desire and endeavour of thy soule to be holy Notwithstanding infirmities yet is thy heart single and without guile be of good comfort thou shalt hold up thy head with comfort at that great day of accompt when the wicked shall wish that the mountains might fall upon them and the hills cover them from the face of the Lamb thou shalt behold Christ in the face with comfort when all these visible things shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat thou shalt be glad and rejoice at that day and enjoy eternall felloship with the blessed Trinity in whose presence there is fulness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore Did we but seriously consider of Psal 16. 11. these things wee should desire to bee dissolved and to be with Christ we should cry Come Lord Jesus come quickly we should have the Moon under our feet we should negotiate for the great things of eternity May all things that have been said make deep impression upon our spirits and prevaile with us to the love and practise of holynesse looking for and hasting unto the comming of God Though at that day the world be on fire we shall be safe though there shall be a general Assize wee shall be acquitted and that day of Judgement will be the Saints refreshing day Christ is their Redeemer and Intercessour VVho would not now be in love with holyness holyness will be holyness indeed at that day Only holy persons shall hold up their heads with comfort they only shall be able to stand in judgement God onely that made the heart can cleanse it Christ doth love and wash his people Le ts therefore pray for holynesse follow after holynesse Thus our fruit being unto holynesse our end will be happynesse The Necessity of the Knowledge of Regeneration Discovered from Joh. 3. v. 10. Jesus answered and said unto him Art thou a Master of Israel and knowest not these things THE report of Christs Miracles being famous every where Serm. 5. at St. Maries Oxon. Aug. 14. 1654. v. 1. insomuch that multitudes followed him at last one of an eminent Rank comes to visit and conferre with Christ v. 1. By degree he
to every one according to the fruit of their doings And Reas 2. Drawn from Gods Justice this is the end of our appearance before Christs Judgement seat 2 Cor. 15. 10. It 's impossible but that the Judge of all the world should doe right secret Murders secret Adulteries secret Thefts secret Abominations secret Cousenage secret malicious Heart-burnings Murtherous intentions secret Back-bitings Detractings Calumniatings all these shall be made manifest at the day of Judgment Now Justice requireth that as the sinner soweth so hee should reap that as he hath sowen seeds of wickedness so he should reap the fruits of destruction 3. The secrets of men shall be judged for the vindicating acquitting Reas 3. For the acquitting of the godly and clearing of the godly What se●ret wickednesses are unjustly and falsly layd to their charge What calumnies forgeries are invented to blast the name and reputation of those that feare God The Primitive Christians in their night meetings were slandered and such horrible aspersions cast upon them as the Father of Lyes could invent What horrible slanders have been cast on Luther Calvin and other eminent Pillars of the Church How are the Prayers Fasts strict walkings of Gods children traduced reproached and scandalized How do the men of the world reproach the Saints for hypocrisie false-heartedness but at the day of Judgment the innocency of the Saints will be cleared What hard measure doe the godly meet withall from the wicked of the world They are buffeted tormented slain all the day long All they say think and do are misconstrued and reproached But at the grand day of Accompt God will clear where men have reproached God will justifie where men have condemned so that secret Prayers Fasts Watches secret communion with God will appear and be openly known and made manifest to the honour of the Godly and to the shame and infamy of their malicious enemies 4. The secrets of mens hearts shall be judged for the further Reas 4. For the further condemnation of the wicked condemation of the wicked All their cunning conveyances secret pollutions all the impure abhominations of their hearts shall bee layd open in the sight of men and Angels We read Psal 50. 21. I will reprove and set them in order before thine eyes God will at that day set all a mans secret villanies and closset abhominations in order before him And this will adde further to the condemnation of the wicked that their most secret wickednesses shall be disclosed to their eternal confusion and horrour These things being premised I shall inferre three Uses for Ter●our unto the wicked Comfort unto the godly and Counsel to both 1. For terrour unto the wicked Is it so that at that day the secrets Vse 1. For terror unto the wicked of all hearts shall be made manifest and judged then in vain doe hypocrites digge deep and seeke to hide their counsell from the Lord as if they thought themselves secure and undiscovered Though no eye of man can see them yet the eye of God which is tenne thousand times brighter than the Sunne will descry and discover all Then will all varnishes painted glosses vain pretences and out-side professions be discovered and all such who plead for them appear in their colours In vain doe Adulterers wait for the Twi-light as Job speaks c. 24. 15. Though the doors be bolted and though it bee dark night yet the All-seeing eye of God findes out all What shall wee say of secret cheating Tradesmen who thinke themselves secure because man cannot find them out Yet let them know that all their mysteries of cousenage in their Trade all their secret fraudulent dealings shall be discovered at the day of Judgement When men professe one thing and practise another pretending friendship with their mouthes but meditating ruine and destruction in their hearts When men make but Religion a stalking-horse for getting a prey and as a cloak to cover wicked projects When men have no regard to the All-seeing eye of God so they can but escape the eye of men what shall we say of them but put them in mind of the words of the Wise man Eccl. 11. 9. But know thou that for all these things God wil bring thee to judgement Then every vain thought every idle word every lascivious glance all mental reservations all hypocriticall collusions all time-serving complyances self-interests ends and aims shall be all called to account and laid open in the sight of men and Angels 2. Here 's matter of comfort to the godly At that day their secret desires breathings longings and pantings after God shall be Vse 2. For comfort to the godly discovered The broken prayers fighs cries inward compunctions of heart shall be all made manifest The imputations scandals ignominies cast upon the Saints shall then be wiped away Many that have been condemned by men shall be at that great day pronounced innocent Holy Martyrs that laid down their lives for Christ against whom the wicked of the world pronounced a sentence of condemnation shall at that day have a sentence of absolution pronounced by Jesus Christ and bee acquitted before that impartial Tribunal It 's a ground of great comfort to Gods children that God knows their hearts how vehemently their desires are towards him as Psalme 42. 1. Isaiah 26. 9. Though the Saints cannot ofttimes expresse how their hearts stand affected and are not able fully to discover themselves and open their condition to man yet God knoweth their inward groanings their secret breathings vehement desires after Christ Now all these are regarded by God for there is not a tear nor a desire nor a sigh which are not taken notice of by the great God of Heaven and Earth The secret closset devotions fastings prayings meditations which the world knows not of nor understand the value of such divine services all these shall be made known at the day of Judgement Thou seest one chearfull thou knowest not why It 's neither corne nor wine nor oyle nor any thing of the world that revives his spirit It 's onely the light of Gods countenance Psal 4. 6. that's the cause hidden to thee but a childe of God knows it Thou seest another sad and troubled though he may have riches and honours in abundance yet there is a secret damp upon his spirit a secret cause of grief It may be God hides his face from him it may be thou art the cause of his grief he seeth and heareth God dishonoured by thee and this is matter of mourning and sadness to his spirit Let then Gods children amidst all sorrows comfort themselves with the consideration of a day of refreshing a day of restitution a day of redemption and consolation which will one day be at the great and general Assize of the just Judge of Heaven and Earth Thirdly Here 's matter of counsel both to the ungodly godly Vse 3. For counsel to the ungodly 1. To the ungodly Will there
Scripture For the Inlargement whereof I shall propound severall questions and give in Answers to them that shall constitute the doctrinall part of the Text which done I shall draw inferences for our instruction and practice and those shall constitute the use and application For the resuming the first thing propounded The first question is what Angells are I have read many curious Q. 1. What Angells are observations of Fathers and School-men concerning Angells which I conceive not fit to communicate being altogether unwilling to stu●e a Sermon with Curiosities and conjectures which tend not to edification For if Moses knowing the originall of the world had it not revealed what to write of Angels if Col. 2. 18. Demissio illa animi vitiosa parit cultum superstitiosum Monentur hoc in loco Colossenfes ne decepti ab Impostoribus tribuant Angelis cultum divinum Daven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à Nuntiando Stephen who had the heavens opened saw not those orders of Angells what they were if Paul who was taken up into the third heaven saw yet so little of Angells that whosoever will teach so curiously of them he saith they be puft up of a fleshly mind to speak of things which they never saw Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of Angells intruding into those things which he hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind If John in all his revelations had no such knowledge revealed of Angells then it 's a duty to be modest and sober in inquisitions to be wise unto Sobriety and to avoyd curious speculations of Schoolmen and confine our selves unto the Word of God Now what they are we shall shew from their names and Nature First from their names they are Messengers who carry a Their Name message they are Gods messengers * This name Angell is attributed unto Christ † Gen. 48. 16 The Angell that delivered me from all evill blesse the lads c. ‖ Ex. 23. 20. Behold I send an Angell before thee to keep thee in the way and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared † Nomen non naturae sed officii Aug. * Isa 63. 9. In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angell of his presence saved them in his love and in his pitty he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the daies of old Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuntius Dei Steph. the Angell of his presence and the Angell of the Covenant Behold I will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom yee seeke shall suddenly come unto his Temple even the Mal. 3. 1. messenger of the Covenant whom yee delight in This name of Angell is ascribed there unto John Baptist who came in the spirit of Elias and unto Christ also and likewise to our Ministers pastours and teachrs Rev. 2. 12. Rev. 3. 1. Angells are took for Spirits Messengers of God imployed for the fulfilling of his will and commands in Heaven or in earth And so in my Text. For their Nature Damascene giveth this definition of Angells 2. The Nature of Angells 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Damasc A most pure and perfect intellectuall immateriall and immortall creature created and appointed to be Gods attendants and messengers between God and man Not that God hath any necessity of help or cooperation of his creatures but that he is pleased in his will and pleasure to imploy those Instruments So I will and so I command God only can say and we may not question what he doth But to set down their Nature more fully I 'le take notice of these properties 1. Angells are Spirits He maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flaming fire In that they are called spirits that declares 1. Angells are spirits Psal 104. 4. Spiritus vox naturam declarat flammae vero ●orū potentiam Gomarus Facit Deus instar ventorum velocissimos Ministros eosdemque facit flammam ignis hoc est celerrime instar fulg●ris exequendi jussa paratissimos Pareus in loc their Nature and flaming fire that shewes their power Windes and fire are swift in their motion and so are Angells God makes his Ministers swift like wind and like a flame of fire that is most ready like lightning speedily to execute his commands They are not compounded of matter and forme for Luk. 8. 30. Many Devills entred into one man and the Devills themselves were once Angells of light And though we read that they have appeared in bodily shapes yet we must know that those bodies were assumtitious They might assume a body for a time for the discharge of that particular service they went about And whereas we read of their wings faces hands and tongues all those are to be understood Metaphorically The disciples were terrified and afrighted and supposed that they had seen a spirit And he said unto them why are ye troubled and why do thoughts Luk. 24. 37 38 39. arise in your hearts Behold my hands and my feet that it is I my self handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have Angells are incorporeall and though we read of their eating and drinking as the Angells with Abraham Lot and others we must know that when they assumed bodies God might give them those faculties that belonged to bodies or they might consume the foode and work miraculously above mans apprehension 2. Angells are invisible By him were all things created that are 2. Angells are invisible Col. 1. 16. in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be Thrones Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him And they acted invisibly when they took upon them shapes and assumed bodies for a time indeed they appeared unto men but as spirits they are as Invisible as a mans soule Who hath seen a spirit at any time or the soul of man or an Angell 3. They are Immortall Good Angells are so neither can the● 3. They are immortall Luk. 20. 36. dye any more for they are equall unto the Angells and are the children of God being the children of the resurrection Bad Angells are so Then shall we say to them on his left hand depart from me Matt. 25 41. ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devill an his Angells 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Hence Chrysostome 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Luk. 10. 33. confutes their opinion who from Gen. 6. 2. by the Sons of God understand the Angells this must needs be a very corrupt exposition because they neither marry nor are given in marriage 5. They are most numerous a great multitude * Gen. 32. 1 2. Jacob went 5. They are most numerous on his way and the Angells of God met him
spoken 2. Consider those that pray most for Jerusalem shall reape 2. Mot. Those that pray for Jerusalem shall reap the greatest comfort the greatest comfort in Jerusalem's establishment They that have ventured most in the flock shall receive most in the return In Jerusalem's peace we shall have peace Our fraught is imbark● in this ship As we have sowen so shall we reape We have had a wet seed time and have wept and fasted for the Church but we shall have a joyfull harvest Wherefore confirme the weak knees and strengthen the feeble hands But I proceed to a third use for Direction How must we give Vse 3. For Direction God no rest After what manner Must we thus present our supplications to the Throne of grace Amongst many I shall fix only on three properties of such a prayer as consists in giving God no rest according to the Text and they are Faith Fervency and perseverance 1. We must pray in faith The promise is that what we ask believing 1. We must pray in faith we shall receive No prayer unlesse coming from a Principle of faith can obtain acceptance Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God And whatsoever is not of faith is sinne All prayers must be put up in faith believing in Christ and expecting from him only help and comfort In all our approaches to the Father let us come in the name of Christ believing and relying only on his merits Christ is the Bridegroom and the Church his spouse Christ is the Head the Church his body Faith is an Instrument of Union to unite the members unto the Head 2. We must pray with fervency as Jacob wrastled Hannah 2. We should pray with fervency poured out her Heart We must imitate the Importunate widdow Luk. 18. 1. Christ spake a Parable to this end that men ought alwaies to pray and not to faint The woman of Canaan who would have no nay And so Luk. 11. 8. Though he will not rise and give him because he is his friend yet because of his Importunity he will rise c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must besiege Heaven and offer an holy Violence to the Throne of grace The violent take it by force and the effectuall fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much James 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an inward working or an inwrought prayer Those that were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did great things 3. We must pray with perseverance We must pray and not faint 3. We must pray with perseverance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 18. 1. The Word as Eustathius observes is derived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à cedendo from shrinking back as some cowardly Souldiers do in time of danger Our duty is to pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 19. Job makes it the mark of an Hypocrite that he will not pray alwaies he will not alwaies call upon God The fourth and last Use is a word of Consolation to praying Vse 4. For Consolation Christians Such as are much in Prayer who tugg hard at the Throne of grace and in joy frequent Communion with God in this Ordinance They use prayer not only as a duty commanded but as a meanes to obtaine a blessing Their Hearts are heated their affections warmed and prayer is their Priviledge as well as service For they have accesse unto the Throne of grace they cry Abba Father they pray from a spirit of Adoption they come to God as Children to a Father and such have strong hopes to speed The Lords secret is with the Righteous they are his jewells his peculiar treasure Now the Prayers of the righteous availe much for themselves and for the publick wherefore O Christians hold on praying lift up your Hearts with your Hands to God in the Heavens continue to be Jerusalems Advocates and what ever things you see coming as the Answers of Prayers those will be most highly valued Go on then pray for Jerusalem fast and weep for Jerusalem and in Gods good time you shall see Jerusalem a praise in the earth THE CRUCIFIED CHRISTIAN REPRESENTED From Gal 5. vers 24. And they that are Christ's have Crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts UPON a review of the precedent verses you will Sermon 5. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Feb. 13. 1658. observe a double Catalogue one of the deeds of the flesh vers 19 20 21. Another of the fruits of the spirit vers 22. Concerning these the Apostle determines that against such there is no law i. e. 1. There is no law to Condemne them 2. There is no law to compell them Because they as freely obey God as if there were no law Their freedome obligeth more to obedience not in the least to disobedience Now the scope of my Text is to prove what was immediatly delivered before that there is no law against spirituall men and the Text gives a double reason one is because spirituall men are Christ's therefore there is no law against them the other is because that is crucified in spirituall men which the law condemneth namely the flesh with the affections and lusts therefore there is no law to condemne the spirituall man The words then in their d●ift and Latitude containe a description or a Character of true believers and the scope of the Words lyes obviously before us in these fundamentall Doctrines 1. That there are a peculiar people that are Christ's and have speciall Doct. 1 interest in him 2. All those that are Christ's and have speciall interest in him are Doct. 2 such as have crucified the flesh with it's affections and lusts These two points contain the full scope and substance of the words and what needs explication in the Text shall be given in upon the prosecution of the Doctrines as I go a long I resume the first That there are a p●culiar people c. This I Doct. 1 Method propounded shall endeavour to cleare from severall distinguishing names the nature grounds and benefits of those that are Christs and have interest in him and after this manner I shall handle the Doctrinall part of my Text which done I shall inquire how all this may concerne us as reducible unto point of practise this shall constitute the particular Use and Application of all 1. To prove my Assertion It 's plain if we inquire into Scripture 1. The Doctrine proved Testimony what speciall distinguishing names and Titles are appropriated unto those who are Christs and have speciall interest in him Sometimes Christ calls them his friends Joh. 15. 14 15. Sometimes he calls them disciples Joh. 13. 35. Children Matth. 17. 26. They are a chosen Generation a royall Priesthood a holy Nation a peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. They are Kings and Priests unto God Rev. 1. 6. They are a peculiar treasure unto God Exod. 19. 5. A Crowne of Glory a Royall Diadem in the hand of God Isai 62. 3. The dearly beloved
profession because they are baptized Christians borne in the bosome of the Church where Christ is knowne descended of Christian Par●nts and yet notwithstanding are ignorant of the life of Christ of the Laver of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Some crye up their Baptisme too much though Infant-Baptisme in my judgment without question is Gods Ordinance as the Jewes did the Temple Templum Domini Templum Domini And yet were altogether unacquainted with the God of the Temple Let such remember He is not a Jew which is one outwardly Rom. 2. 28 29. neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Jew who is inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter But there are others who go yet higher in their own conceits and because they are admitted into Church-fellowship and called Saints and reputed Church Members therefore they think all 's well with them and their condition is very safe But who knoweth not that there are many Nominall Saints which are farre from being Reall Saints Many there are that think it religion enough to joyne in such or such a Society under such or such a Teacher who is a leading Popular man and yet many of them are acted by no other Principle but selfe-interest Compliance with men for carnall advantages Many Matth. 7. 20. shall say saith Christ in that day Lord we have prophecied in thy name and in thy name cast out Devills and in thy name done Luk. 13. 26. wonderfull workes We have eate and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets but he shall say I tell you I know not whence you are How many Protestants have we at large who are contented with the bare name of Christians yet in their lives are Antichristians To bid such deny their Baptisme renounce Christ they will tell you they would spit in your faces and yet their lives declare them no better then Turkes Jewes Atheists without God in the world It 's a sad thing to consider that the Profession of religion hath amongst many Ti●ular Professors justled out the practice and a bare forme and an outside profession many think sufficient just like one of Machivells principles Take the profession that will do no harme but not the practice of Religion Psal 51. 6. But be not deceived God is not God will not be mocked The Lord requireth truth in the inward parts God will be worshipped in spirit Joh. 4. 24. and in truth All the painted glosses faire outsides formall pretences will be accounted no better than chaffe straw or stubble at the great day of account I am fully perswaded that since Adams Creation there were never so many false conversions as now a daies Many think they are converted when only they are of such or such an opinion Some are turned from Brownists to Semi-Brownists and from Brownists to Anabaptists from them to Familists and afterwards to Quakers Ranters c. And all these boast themselves to be Saints and to be of the Church of Christ though many I censure not all are of the Synagogue of Satan Some poore soules are seduced by false teachers and run like Absoloms followers in their simplicity knowing nothing Such God may in mercy bring home by a thorough change and reformation and make them sensible of their evill waies and back-slidings and in due time deliver them out of Satans snare But multitudes there are which call themselves Saints and Christians and have nothing but the bare name witnesse their lives farre from Saintship and Christianity How greedy are some of filthy lucre ambitious proud boasters idle drones sleepy sluggards eating the bread of idlenesse when they were in a poorer condition they were industrious and laboured abundantly in their callings now being advanced they grow lazie Some in their younger yeares preached often but now they are elder they are more lazie neither preaching frequently themselves nor hearing frequently others that doe and yet none of these but will take it ill if you call them not Christians and Saints too But where 's any thing of the life of Christ Christ watched prayed went about doing good Can they count themselves Disciples who are so unsutable to their Master Is it lawfull to take a Writ of ease and to rest from our labours before we be dead But leaving them hopeing better things of you I proceed to a second Use viz. Examination 2. For Examination The question is wherein consists that Vse 2. For Examination conversa●ion which is answerable unto our profession I shall give an Answer in these distinguishing Characters 1. This Conversation must be a holy Conversation As he that Char. 1. This Conversation must be holy 1 Pet. 1. 15. Mat. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. Char. 2. This Conversation must be s●n●●ere 2 Cor. 1. 12. hath called you is holy So be yee holy in all manner of Conversation Gods people are an holy people Heaven is an holy place The Society there an holy Society the imployment an holy imployment and only holy persons shall see the blessed vision Bless●d are the pure in heart for they shall see God Follow peace and ●olinesse without the which no man shall see God 2. This Conversation must be sincere This is our rejoycing even the testimony of a good Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our Conversation in the world It 's called there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I shall not overcuriously stand upon Criticismes whether sincerus sine cerâ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But yet I cannot let passe the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 judicio an Allusion to the custome of Eagles who held their young ones before the Sun if they could not look up unto the Sun then were they accompted spurious Surely if our actions cannot endure the test and triall of the Sun of righteousnesse they are to be accompted spurious and illegitimate altogether Sincerity is the constitutive difference of a Child of God and a divisive difference which distingui●●eth one that feareth God from him that feareth him not This is that which will comfort a man in life and in death So it did Enoch whose commendation it was that he walked with God and Gen. 5. 24. Gen. 6. 9. was not for God took him It was Noahs comfort that he was a just man and perfect in his generation And it will comfort us in death if we can sincerely professe with Hezekiah Remember O Lord 2 King 20. 3. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Wherefore it especially concernes us all to labour after sincerity even truth in the inward parts that so we may approve our hearts unto God and make it our daily exercise to keep Consciences void of offence both towards God and towards men 3. This Conversation must be pruden●
For every wise man Char. 3. this Conversation must be prudent must order his affaires with discretion We usually say Ignis in foco is good but not in tecto Many have a good cause but through indiscretion spoile it in the carriage There is required as well the wisdome of the Serpent as the innocency of the Dove Every wise woman saith Solomon buildeth her house but the foolish pulleth Prov. 14. 1. it downe with her hands Now by wisdome I meane not the wisdome of the times we see too much of that Machiavilian wisdome which is a turning and returning and complying with all times and humours be they never so bad for personall interest This wisdome hath no portion in this businesse But I understand spirituall wisdome that which cometh from above such as the Apostle mentioneth with distinguishing qualifications which is pure peaceable gentle easy to be intreated full of mercy and good Jam. 3. 17. fruits without partiality and without hypocrisy Neither would I be mistaken I count not that wisdome which alwaies joynes with the winning side at a venture nor that which suites with the fashion of ancient Persians now adaies revived to worship the rising sun Too many we have of that temper in these times whom we account wise though indeed they be errand fooles and their wisdome like Achitophels may in time be turned into foolishnesse But that I account wisdome which hath a spirit of discerning to understand the things that differ to understand what is the right rule and to walk accordingly And to adde no more I l'e rest in the determination of Job The feare of the Lord that is wisdome and to Job 28. 28. depart from evill is understanding 4. And lastly This Conversation that consists in the departing Char 4 this Conversation consi●ts in departing from iniquity from iniquity and accords with a holy profession is Universall thorough-paced and every way compleat There 's a threefold Universality of Subject Object and Time 1. For the Subject The whole man is ingaged to Obedience all the members of the body and faculties of the soule With my whole heart have I sought thee saith David O let me not wander Psal 119. 10. from thy Commandments 2. There must be Universality of the Object Then shall I not Psal 119. 6. be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandments 3. Universality of Time Being delivered out of the hands of Luk. 1. 74. our enemies We must serve him without feare in holinesse und righteousnesse before him all the daies of our lives 3. I proceed to a third Use for Exhortation to presse home Vse 2. For Exhortation unto us all the duty of the Text To depart from Iniquity If we be Christians let 's evidence it by our Conversations let 's walke as becometh Christians What will Heathens Turkes and Jewes say when Christians walke loosely and carelesly they will blesse themselves in their owne erroneous waies and thus by our loose walking we give advantage unto the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme Amongst others take two or three motives to perswade you to your duty 1. Consider the eye of God his omniscience and omnipresence Mot. 1. Consider Gods Omniscience Job 10. 14 15. His eye-lids try the Children of men The eyes of the Lord are every where beholding the evill and the good This was a monitor to Joseph to David to Job If I sinne then thou markest me c. The Lord knoweth all hearts seeth the inmost recesse and diverticles of thy spirit All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale 2. Consider the eyes of men Good men observe our carriages Mot. 2. Consider the eyes of men professours are much observed how they walke They are Beacons set upon a hill top multitudes behold them Good men observe that they may gaine some spirituall advantage They expect the performance of our duty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to stirre up and exuscitate graces to quicken or inliven them and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is expected to edify and build them up in their holy faith Now if we are not what we pretend if we be no more but formall professours if our practice accord not with our profession we sadden the hearts of the righteous And likewise bad mens eyes are upon us they watch for our haltings as Benhadads servants they lye at the catch Now if we do not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walk with a straight foot if we are loose in our lives and carelesse in ordering our footsteps notwithstanding our profession be never so strict we strengthen the hands of the wicked A bad life is a confutation of a good profession Although the Profession it selfe is not the worse because there are some hypocriticall professours yet ignorant and malicious men endeavour to wound the profession it selfe and asperse it by reason of scandalous professours 3. Integrity and uprightnesse of heart and life will comfort us Mot. 3. Integrity of life will comfort u● when pretences cannot help us 2 Cor. 1. 12. when all pretences formes outside professions will no whit availe us This was the ground of the Saints rejoycing O●r rejoycing is this the Te●timony of a good Conscience This was the Apostles exercise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Duties of both Tables must be regarded respectively To pretend to the duties of the first and neglect righteousnesse and equity to thy Brother as the second table injoynes this discovers thee to be an hypocrite To pretend just dealing according to the second table and neglect keeping the sabbath Act. 24. 12. and other duties of the first this sheweth thee to be only a Formalist But in the last place The fourth Use is for direction in two Vse 4. For Direction particulars 1. How we ought to depart from iniquity Q. 1. How we must depart from iniquity 1. We must depart speedily Ezek. 47. 3 4 5. 2. What meanes may be of speciall Use conducing thereunto 1. For the first particular how we ought to depart from iniquity 1. We must depart speedily We must not excuse sinne and say at such a time I hope to leave it Give not quarter to Benhadad sinne reprived resembles Ezekie'ls waters first up to the ankles then to the knees then up to the loines and afterward a River not to be passed over If thou delayest to depart from sinne to day it gaines ground and gets more and more advantage against thee to morrow 2. Depart willingly Do not leave a sinne as Phaltiel was forced 2. We must depart willingly to leave Michal and afterwards followed her weeping that he could not injoy her Some are restrained against their wills who for feare of the law dare not sweare in some companies neither dare be drunk and yet their hearts are as bad as ever 3. We must depart from sinne thoroughly Ps 119. 110. 4. We must depart constantly 2 Pet. 2. 22. 3. We must
This sinne labours to cut of the whole Gospell by denying of Christ his Word falsifying his promises accounting him an unsufficient Saviour undervaluing the price of his blood and contemning that great salvation tendred in the Gospell but this particular will fall in amongst the Reasons of the Doctrine which follow now in the next place to be handled for the further confirmation of the point we have strong reasons drawn from Scripture contributing further evidence to the Doctrine amongst many I le reduce them unto these demonstrative Arguments 1. Because unbeliefe refuseth Gods remedy offered to heale Arg. 1. Vnbeliefe refuseth Gods remedy and rejecteth a pardon tendred by despising Jesus Christ the only mediatour the only Saviour and price paid for our redemption God offereth the pearle of price the Lord Jesus an unbeliever cares not for it and bids God take againe his commodity Exod. 5. 2. unto himselfe Pharaoh said Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce so an unbeliever saith who is Christ that we should believe in him these are those Gadarenish Mammonists who all petitioned that Christ might depart out of their coasts they preferred Mar. 5. 17. their swine before Christ There were three predominant sinnes in those Gadarenes viz Ignorance covetousnesse and Infidelity these are they that will not have Christ to raigne over them see their doome Luk. 19. 27. These are they that despise Christ and in despising of Christ they despise God the Father Luk. 10. 16. God would heale them and they would not be healed Jer. 15. 18. Christ invites them they all with one consent make excuses Luk. 14. 18. Christ would gather them as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings but they would not Luk. 13. 34. Christ sendeth Embassadors to entreat them to be reconciled but they will not 2 Cor. 5. 20. Christ tenders a great salvation to them but they neglect it Heb. 2. 3. And how shall such escape their perdition is from themselves Hos 13. 9. Their condemnation is Just they are their owne murtherers The riches of Gods mercy is Jesus Christ unbelievers despise the riches of Gods mercy the blood of Christ is the only soveraigne plaister and healing Remedy unbelievers throw away this plaister trample under feet this medicine and thus they judge themselves unworthy of eternall life 2. Unbelievers accuse God and his Word of falshood wherefore Arg. 2. Vnbelievers accuse God and his word of falshood the sinne of Infidelity must needs be a grand God-provoking sinne To give a man the lye is accounted a great reproach and indignity what is it then to put the lye upon the God of eternall truth And so unbelievers endeavour to doe 1 Joh. 5. 10. An unbeliever makes the Gospell a Fable what in him lyes and Christ an Impostor The comminations and Judgments against sinners are lookt on by unbelievers but as so many scarre-crowes they blesse themselves and promise to themselves peace notwithstanding all their rebellions and as for the promises they look upon them but as flattering and deceitfull they believe no further then sense guides them As for a reward to come a resurrection a day of Judgment they are in their hearts Sadduces either absolutely denying the thing or else wishing in their hearts and hoping that there shall be no such thing 3. Unbeliefe after a sort may be said to binde the hands of Arg. 3. Vnbeliefe binds the hands of God God God will have his word believed and he workes faith in those whom he makes objects of mercy though the fore sight of faith doth not move him to set his heart on them that 's his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alone which moves him to set his heart on any yet those whom he loveth he washeth and whom he elects unto happinesse and eternall salvation he elects unto faith and repentance and perseverance in them both Now Infidelity damnes up the streame barres and bolts the dore and hinders mercyes and puts them in an incapacity of receiving any mercyes Christ would do no mighty workes at Nazareth because of their unbeliefe Christ Mat. 13. 58. would not suffer Pearles to be trampled under feet he would not loose the glory of a Miracle and cast away great workes upon an unbelieving people The unbelieving Jewes entred not into rest because of unbeliefe Unbeliefe barr'd multitudes out of Heb. 4. 6. temporall Canaan and it barres multitudes out of the eternall Canaan 4. Unbeliefe makes the Ordinances unfruitfull and ineffectuall Arg. 4. Vnbeliefe makes Ordinances unfruitfull Jam. 1. 6. Jam. 5. 15. For instance it makes the Word Heb. 4. 2. Prayer unfruitfull Mat. 21. 22. Jam. 1. 6. Jam. 5. 15. To pray formally in a rode as a lip-labour only without faith and fervency so farre an Unbeliever may goe and reape no fruit from such formall services Unbelievers hinder the working of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for indeed that is a distinguishing Ordinance and appertaines not to unbelievers It is childrens bread It s a holy Sacrament and holy things belong to holy persons as in the Primitive time they were wont to speak with a loud voyce before the receiving of the Sacrament But what do Unbelievers get by this Ordinance 2 Cor. 11. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if they will thrust in and participate thereof it prooves but common bread common wine to them and further they eate and drink Judgment to themselves 5. And lastly Unbeliefe causeth dreadfull Judgments Temporall and Eternall to the profane Prince 2 Kings 7. 2. vers ult To the Israelites how many of their Carcasses perished in the wildernesse Moses himselfe was shut out of Canaan Psal 106. 33. Comp. with Numb 20. 10. which words heare now yee rebells betrayed some distrust of God and eternall Judgments are the portion of all unbelievers Luk. 12. 40. More I shall not adde to the Doctrinall part but through Christ that strengtheneth me I intend to make six Uses of this Doctrine 1. For Reproofe 2. For Caution 3. For Exhortation 4. For Examination 5. For Direction And 6. For Consolation 1. For Reproofe and Terror unto all unbelievers how dreadfull Vse 1. For Reproofe is their condition and they are not sensible of it nor a whit affected with it their Doome is terrible in the Text they shall dye in their sinnes Their sinne of Infidelity is enough of it selfe to damne them but this is never alone it hath a fraternity of sinnes and abominations joyn'd with it as Pride unthankfulnesse earthly-mindednesse Atheisme and many such like fruits issuing out of the womb of Infidelity What sinne is there that hath not some spice some tincture of Infidelity As for instance the sinne of lying in Abraham and Isaac was mixt with Infidelity Abraham denied Sarah and Isaac denied Rebeccah to be their wives they were afraid of their lives and that feare exposed their wives to sad temptations Did not God tell Abraham that in him should all
portion for eternall life is their inheritance Joh. 10. 28. Secondly Faith is a hand to lay hold on Christ But not a working hand as that hand of a labourer that earnes his living upon his desert and for his work receives his wages But faith is a receiving hand of a poore man that layes hold on a pearle and receives all of mercy and favour from God Hence faith is exprest by receiving Joh. 1. 12. Thirdly Faith gives insight into heaven and communion with God Heb. 11. 27. Fourthly From Justification by faith flowes all our comforts and priviledges Rom. 5. 1. 2. But if the Consideration of the benefit of Faith take no Motive 2. From the mischiefe of unbeliefe place on the contrary take notice of the mischiefe of Insidelity You heard before the reasons of the Doctrine after another sort how Infidelity bound Gods hands refused the remedy I will adde other great mischiefes which spring from the fountaine of unbeliefe viz. these following 1. Unbeliefe makes all our prayers unavailable To pray and not in faith is sinne for whatever is not of faith is sinne 2. Unbeliefe causeth diffidence of and staggering at promises Rom. 4. 20. 3. It hinders and deprives men of Communion with believers 2 Cor. 6. 15. 4. Every thing is uncleane and desiled to unbelivers Tit. 1. 15. Their spirituall uncleannesse makes every thing uncleane unto them The distinction of cleane and uncleane meates is disanulled by the Gospell the use of them is pure to them who are cleansed by Christs blood and sanctified by his spirit but of unbelievers it is said Their mind and Conscience is defiled 5. Unbelievers are given up to damnable delusions 2 Thes 2. 10 11 12. That they all might be damned who believed not the truth The fourth Use is for Examination and Triall of Faith and Vse 4. For Examination Infidelity Every one is ready to say he believes but the number of believers is very small But where there is true faith it hath these singular Qualifications to inlighten the understanding to purify the heart to sanctify the life and Conversation to trust God with all to live by faith for that is the life of a Christian To inlarge a little these Qualifications First True faith inlightens the understanding Paul when of Qualific 1. True faith inlightens the understanding an unbeliever he became a believer it 's said And immediatly there fell from his eyes as it had been scales Act. 9. 18. Where God worketh faith he illuminates the understanding Act. 26. 18. Joh. 2. 20. Secondly faith purifieth the heart it 's a purifying grace Act. Qualific 2. Faith purifieth the heart 15. 9. The heart is purged and cleansed from malice this God calleth for Jam. 4. 8. Jer. 4. 14. Thirdly Faith reformes the life hence faith is called a holy faith Jude 20. An unfained faith the Faith of Gods elect a Pretious Qualific 3. Reformes the life Faith For a true believer is a man of another Conversation As it was said of Caleb Num. 14. 24. He had another spirit with in him So true believers are of another spirit i. e. of a gracious spirit farre different from what they were in the State of unregeneracy and farre different from the men of the world Qualific 4. Faith trusts God with all Qualific 5. the ju●t lives by faith Fourthly Faith trusts God with all David calls God his Rock Fortresse Bulwark c. Psal 18. 2. Psal 27. 1. A Believers heart is fixed and setled in unsetled times Psal 112. 7. Fiftly Faith is that whereby the just lives Hab. 2. 4. Gal. 2. 20. A believer in a storme gets himselfe upon a Rock he hides himselfe in the clefts of a Rock Christ is the Rock of Ages A believer climbes up thither and there rests In dangers he goeth to God hee 's his Refuge strong Tower and Bulwark of defence In doubts God is his Counsellour in distresse God is his comforter Now le ts inquire after some signes and symptomes of an unbeliever The first which is to be reckoned in the fore front is partiall Signe 1. Partiall obedience obedience an unbeliever whatever he pretends is but obedient to halves so was Saul in sparing Agag c. So was Ananias and Saphira in keeping back part of the price Agrippa would be a Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 26. 28. We have many such al-most Christians halfe baked cakes like Ephraim a cake not turn'd Hos 7. 18. The second signe of Unbeliefe is murmuring and impatience Signe 2. Murmuring The Lord complaines often of the murmuring of the Children of Israell Psal 106. 25. vers 29. And this is forbidden 1 Cor. 10. 10. See their impatience Num. 14. 44 45. Murmuring and impatience go togeather when God answers not at our time we begin to murmur and wax exceeding impatient so did they Psal 78. 19. Can God furnish a Table in the wildernesse Thirdly Unbeliefe appeares evidently by that refuge which Signe 3. Broken Refuge men betake themselves unto in streights and difficulties Saul went to a witch Judas and Achitophel to a halter Ahaziah sent to Baalzebub the god of Ekron The Foole in the Gospell comforts himselfe with his riches voluptuous men betake themselves to their pleasures Ambitious men to their titles of honour but all these are broken and deceitfull refuges and wi●l faile in the greatest difficulties like cloath that shrinks in the wetting The fifth Use is for Direction And this I shall branch into a Vse 5. For Direction few Duties First be sure to act faith upon the promises have a word for Dir. 1. Act Faith upon promises your warrant I trust in this word saith David I hoped in this word Study promises and apply them live upon them we read Joh. 3. 36. He that believeth hath eternall life But I am a believer c. make good this Assumption and thou maist conclude that thou shalt be saved Secondly Content not your selves with those attainments and Dir. 2. Content not thy selfe with former attainments measures of faith you have already got but pray with the Apostles Lord increase our faith we read of some thing lacking in the faith of the Thessalonians 1 Thes 3. 10. Labour to get thy faith strengthned and thy heart established upon God It s no easy matter to believe when the Son of man comes shall he find faith in the earth Dir. 3. Be Conscientious in the use of Ordinances Dir. 4. Often search thy heart Vse 6. For Consolation Thirdly Be diligent and conscientious in the Use of Ordinances as hearing Gods Word Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God Rom. 10. 17. And adde praying and receiving the Sacraments Fourthly Often search thy heart for feare least a Temporary Faith lurke there Much unbeliefe lurketh in thy heart therefore watch and pray against it labour to get it rooted out The last Use is for Consolation unto Gods
had the Angell of the Lord to shut the Lions mouth Job saw a redeemer comforting him in the dunghill Peter had an Angell to deliver him God will have the prisoner the shackles fall off the dores fly open the Iron gate opens of it's owne accord Herod though he thought that he had made all sure worke must be disappointed 'T is true Peter was a sleepe he might dream of no such thing Gods people who have peace with God and their Consciences can enjoy quiet rest and repose in a prison Thus you see how God performes his promise to his people in giving unto them the oyle of joy for mourning beauty for ashes the garment of praises for the spirit of heavinesse God is alwaies at hand to support his servants to bring them out of the greatest streights O that thou wouldst in the greatest feares and dangers expostulate on this wise with the Kingly Prophet David Psal 42. 11. Why art cast downe O my Soule and why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God and with the blessed Apostle thou may'st argue What Rom. 3. 31. shall we say then to these things if God be for us who can be against us Let the world the flesh and the Devill the three grand enemies of thy soule muster up all their forces against thee yet raise up thy spirit be of good courage and feare not if the Lord be on thy side thou hast more with thee then against thee For the further confirmation of this truth I find foure Arguments 4. Argum. drawn from the Text. to my hand in my Text I say in the most piercing sorrows there 's still left matter of rejoycing in God 1. Because he is stiled Lord. 2. He is stiled a God 3. A God of Salvation 4. A God of our Salvation 1. He is the Lord Jehovah and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are promiscuously used 1. Lord. in the Septuagint this is a name of Dominion Soveraignty and Majesty he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of himselfe Lord of all David pickt much comfort out of this name the Lord was his shepheard refuge buckler rock of defence and therefore the close of Psal 144. 15. is full of comfort Happy is that people that is in such a case yea happy is that people whose God is the Lord. O do not stand in thy own light and inhance thy griefe by refusing comfort with Rachell Art thou in a tottering condition ready to sink under thy burthen Consider the promise Psal 37. 17. The Lord upholdeth the righteous and vers 24. The Lord upholdeth him with his hand Art thou as weak as water and thy heart failes thee like water spilt upon the ground Yet couldst thou believe with David The Psal 29. 11. Lord will give strength unto his people and the Lord will blesse his people with peace then thy life would be more comfortable thou wouldst go on couragiously in the strength of the Lord and be confident in the power of his might Although no comfort appeares in thy Horrizon yet could'st thou but wait upon the Lord and by patience possesse thy soule so many thoughts of Infidelity would not arise in thy soule didst thou but delight thy self in the Lord thou wouldst soone discerne all thy desires satisfied This name of Lord as it 's a name of Power and Majesty so of joy and Consolation and hence we are instructed in a submissive deportment fixing our resolutions upon this argument with old Elie 1 Sa. 3. 18. It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good and with Hezekiah when he received heavy tidings Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken The consideration hereof makes a dutifull child kisse the rod because the Lord sends it it holds up a mans heart and makes a man cheerefull under the pressure of a smarting crosse because the soule can discerne the hand of the Lord. Thus you see what 's the fuell to inkindle thy joy what matter of rejoycing this comfortable name of Lord administers unto thy soule and therefore this should be a prevailing argument with thee to rejoyce because it is in the Lord. 2. From the glorious name of God abundant matter of joy 2 God is derived upon thy soule I stand not upon usuall Etymologies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For it is undoubtedly true that God fills all places and knowes all things Omnipresence and Omniscience are his peculiar Attributes Men are circumscribed to a place and when they are present with us are unable to afford the least help and succour unto us but the Lord is every where and hath a store house of comforts for the supplying of our necessities David professeth that God is our refuge and strength a Psal 46. 1. very present help in time of trouble God is good to Israel even to such as are of a cleane heart Let God arise and let his enemies be scattered Psal 73. 1. and let those that hate him fly before him When God goeth Psal 68. 1. forth with an Army one shall be able to chase a thousand and two to put ten thousand to fleight When a man hath a lingring sicknesse and hee 's become a very Skeleton let him know that unto God belongs the issues from death When the church is under hatches and a furious enemie makes havock of it yet there 's a God in heaven which judgeth the Nations who will wound the hairy Scalpe of the wicked his heire will not be his safe-guard God can bring light out of darknesse and now in the times of afflictions hee brings out the most pretious Cordialls unto his people when friends the dearest and nearest forsake thee thou art no looser when thy God takes care for thee when thy heart is overwhelmed with sorrow if God let downe some spirituall refreshments then thou canst hold up thy head with comfort If where ever thou goest bonds imprisonments and afflictions and all the calumnies and Nick-names which the malice of man or Devill can invent continually attend thee yet all these shall cooperate for thy good they shall do no more harme then the Arrow did Christ which Julian the Apostate threw into the ayre or the doggs unto the Moon notwithstanding their daily barking It was the sweet saying of a devout Martyr Who would have thought that in a prison I should have found a Palace in an infernall dungeon a Paradise of pleasure Where God is sweetnesse may be extracted from the most bitter pill of affliction This is a second Argument of Comfort drawne from the sacred name of God But if these names are not effectuall to set thy affections a working 3. God of Salvation here 's an unparalled expression in the third Argument the sweet name of a Jesus hee 's a God of Salvation and therefore saith a Father Exultabo in Deo Jesu meo Salvation belongs to