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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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a gracious power to a gracious end in a gracious manner are sins and not such works as shall have the rewards of Heaven Some may object this is an hard saying who then shall be saved I answer 1. By concession very few What is the whole company of Christians besides a very few said Salvian but a sink of vices are they only good works which are thus and thus qualified it were enough to make us all fear all the works that ever we have done But secondly here 's all our hope that in a Gospel-way Christ looks at our good works in the truth of them and not in the perfection of them Rom. 7.18 19 no man goes beyond Paul who when he would do good found evil present with him Alas there 's a perpetual opposition and conflict betwixt the flesh and the spirit so that the most spiritual man cannot do the good things he would do and yet we must not conclude that nothing is good in us because not perfectly good Sincerity and truth in the inward parts may in this case hold up our hearts from sinking as he in the Gospel cryed I believe Lord help my unbelief So if we can but say I I do good works Lord help me in the concurrence of all needful circumstances here will be our evidence that our hopes are sound and that Christ will sentence us to eternal life Come ye Blessed c. and why so For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat c. 5. If we believe in Christ then shall we live with Christ if we come to him and receive him by Faith then will he come again and receive us to himself that where he is there we may be also Good works are good evidences but of all works those of the Gospel are clearest evidences and have clearest promises come then let us try our obedience to the Commandments of Faith as well as Life let us try our submission to the Lord by believing as well as doing Surely the greatest work of God that ever any creature did it is this Gospel-work when it apprehends its own unworthyness and ventures it self and its estate upon the righteousness of Jesus Christ if we were able to perform a full exact and accurate obedience to every particular of the moral Law it were not so great a work nor so acceptable to God nor should be so gloriously rewarded in heaven as this one work of believing in his Son Jesus Christ This is the work to which in express terms salvation John 3.36 Heaven and glory is promised He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that heareth my word● and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but he hath passed from death to life And this is the will of him that sent me John 5.24 that every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life And these things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is Christ the Son of God John 6.40 John 20.31 Acts. 16.31 and that believing ye might have life through his name Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead Rom. 10.9 Heb. 10.39 thou shalt be saved And we are not of them who draw back unto perdition but of them that believe unto the saving of the soul And these things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God 1 John 5.13 that ye may know that ye have everlasting life Why this above all is the Gospel work to which are annexed those gracious promises of eternal life So that if we believe in Christ how may we be assured that we shall live with Christ O my soul gather up all these characters and try by them Every one can say that they hope well they hope to be saved they hope to meet Christ with comfort though they have no ground for it but their own vain conceits but hope on good ground is that hope that maketh not ashamed say then art thou born again Rom. 5.5 dost thou look and long for the coming of Christ in the clouds dost thou love his appearing art thou rich in good works ready to distribute willing to communicate dost thou obey the commandments of faith as well as life sure these are firm and sound and comfortable grounds of an assured hope Content not thy self with an hope of possibility or probability but reach out to that plerophory or full assurance of hope Heb. 6.11 the hope of possibility is but a weak hope the hope of probability is but a fluctuating hope but the hope of certainty is a setled hope such an hope sweetens all the thoughts of God and Christ of death and judgment of Heaven yea and of Hell too whiles we hope that we are saved from it and are not the Scriptures written to this very purpose That we might have this hope are we not justified by his grace Rom. 15.4 Tit. 3.7 Psal 119.166 psalm 24.11 that we might be heirs in hope heirs according to the hope of eternal life and was not this David's confidence Lord I have hoped for thy salvation why then art thou cast down O my soul 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 If I may here enter into a Dialogue with my own poor trembling wavering soul Person why art thou hopeless O my soul wouldst thou not hope if an honest man had made thee a promise of any thing within his power and wilt thou not hope when thou hast the promise the oath and the covenant of God in Christ Soul Yes methinks I feel some little hope but alas it is but a little a very little Person Ay but go on my soul true hope is called a lively hope and a lively hope is an efficacious hope no sooner faith commends the promise unto hope but hope takes it and hugs it and reckons it as its Treasure and feeds on it as Manna which God hath given to refresh the weary soul in the desart of sin go on then till thou comest up to the highest pitch even to that triumphant joyfull expectation and waiting for of Christ in glory Soul Why methinks I would hope I would ascend the highest step of hope but alas I cannot Oh I am exposed to many controversies I am prone to many unquiet agitations though I have a present promise yet I extend my cares and fears even to eternity Alas I cannot comprehend and therefore I am hardly satisfied my sinfull reason sees not its own way and end and because it must take all on trust and credit therefore it falls to wrangling nay Sathan himself so snarles the question and and I am so
must explain the act you must look Secondly the object you must look on Jesus CHAP. III. SECT I. An Explanation of the Act and Object 1. FOr the act you must look Looking is either ocular or mental First for ocular vision there may be some use of that in heaven for there we shall look on Jesus with these eyes shall I behold him saith Job Job 19 27. 1 John 3 2. 1 Cor. 13.12 2 Cor. 5.7 we shall see him as he is saith the Apostle now we see him as in a glass but then we shall see him face to face But till then we must walk by faith and not by sight Secondly for mental vision or the inward eye that is it that will take up our discourse and that is it which the Apostle speaks of in his prayers for the Ephesians Ephes 1.18 that the eyes of their understanding may be opened that they may know c. * Sim●●ds sight and saith Now the excellency of this mental sight is far above the ocular sight for there are more excellent things to be seen by the eye of the mind than by the eye of the body we only see a peece of the creation by the eye of the body but the mind reacheth every thing that is in it yea the mind reacheth to him that made it God is invisible yet this eye sees God Heb. 11.27 it is said of Moses that he saw him that is invisible 2. It is the sight of the mind that gives light and vigour to the sight of the eye take away the inward light and the light of the external sense is but as darkness and death 3. It is the sight of the mind that looks into the worth use c. propriety of any thing presented the eye can see a thing but not the worth of it a beast looks on gold as well as a man but the sight and knowledge of the worth of it is by the internal light of the mind so the eye can see a thing but not the use of it a child looks on a tool in the hand of a workman but the sight and knowledge of the use of it is only by a man of reason that hath internal light to judge of it and so the eye can see a thing but not the propriety of it a beast looks on his pasture but he likes it not because it is his but because it is a pasture and well furnished Now we know that the worth and use and propriety of a thing are the very cream of the things themselves and this the eye of the mind conveys Gen. 42.7 8. and not the eyes of the body It is said of Joseph that he saw hi● brethren and knew them but they knew not him this was the reason why Joseph was so exceedingly taken at the sight of his Brethren that his bowels wrought with joy and a kind of compassion towards them but they were before him as common strangers though they saw Joseph their brother a Prince yet they were taken no more with the sight of him than of any other man because they knew him not Again this mental looking is either notional and theoretical or practical and experimental the first we call barely the look of our minds it is an enlightning of our understandings with some measure of speculative sight in spiritual and heavenly mysteries the second we call the look of our minds and hearts whereby we not only see spiritual things but we are * Sub oculorum nomine-omnes affectus notari non rarum est Calv. in Ps 25.17 Phil. 3.10 affected with them we desire love believe joy and embrace them To this purpose is that rule that words of knowledge do sometimes signifie the affections in the heart and the effects thereof in our lives And this was the look which Paul longed for that I may know him and the power of his resurrection i.e. that he might have experience of that power In legendu lib●is non quaeramus scientiam sed sapo●em Dei Phil 1.9 that it might so communicate it self unto him as to work upon him to all the ends of it And this was the look that Bernard preferred above all looks In reading of books saith he let us not so much look for science as savoriness of truth upon our hearts This I pray said the Apostle that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgement i.e. in knowledge and feeling And certainly this feeling this experimental Looking on Jesus is that my Text aims at it is not a swimming knowledge of Christ but an hearty feeling of Christs inward workings it is not heady notions of Christ but hearty motions towards Christ that are implied in this inward looking 2. For the Object you must look on Jesus It is the blessed'st Object that the eye of the mind can possibly fix upon of all Objects under Heaven Jesus hath the preheminence in perfection and he should have the preheminence in our Meditation It is he that will make us most happy when we possess him and we cannot but be joyfull to look upon him especially when looking is a degree of possessing Jesus for the name signifies Saviour it is an Hebrew name the Greeks borrowed it from the Hebrews the Latines fom the Greeks and all other Languages from the Latines It is used five hundred times in Pauls Epistles saith Genebrard it comes from the Hebrew word Jehoshua or Joshua which in the Books of Ezra and Nehemiah Ezra 5.2 Nehem. 8.17 written after the Babylonian captivity is Jeshua and so is our Saviours Name always written in the Syriack translation of the new Testament This name Jesus was given to Christ the Son of God by his Father and brought from Heaven by an Angel first to Mary and then to Joseph and on the day when he was circumcised as the manner was this Name was given him by his Parents as it was commanded from the Lord by the Angel Gabriel Luke 1.26.31 Not to stand on the Name for the matter it includes both his office and his natures he is the alone Saviour of man Act. 4.12 for there is none other name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved and he is a perfect and an absolute Saviour Heb. 7.25 he is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them I will not deny but that the work of salvation is common to all the three persons of the Trinity it is a known rule Opera trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa all outward actions are equally common to the three persons for as they are all one in Nature and Will so must they be also one in Operation the Father saveth the Son saveth and the holy Ghost saveth yet we must distinguish them in the manner of saving the Father saveth by the Son the Son saveth
by paying the ransom and price of our salvation the holy Ghost saveth by a particular applying of that ransom unto men Now whereas the Son pays the price of our redemption and not the Father nor the holy Ghost therefore in this special respect he is called our Saviour our Jesus and none but he This object though contained in a word is very comprehensive herein is set forth to our view the offices of Christ the two Natures of Christ the qualities of Christ the excellencies of Christ O what variety of sweet matter is in Jesus he hath in him all the powders of the merchants an holy soul cannot tyre it self in viewing Jesus Cant. 3.6 we know one thing tyres quickly unless that one be all which so is Christ and none else he is all and in all all belonging to being and all belonging to well-being Col. 3.11 in things below Jesus some have this excellency and some have that but none have all and this withers contemplation at the root contemplation is soul recreation and recreation is kept up by variety but O what variety is in Jesus variety of time He is Alpha and Omega variety of beauty he is white and ruddy variety of quality he is a Lion and a Lamb a servant and a Son variety of the excellency in the world he is Man and God O where shall we begin in this view of Jesus Who shall declare his Generation or who shall count and reckon his Age All the Evangelists exhibit unto us the Saviour Esa 53.8 but every one of them in his particular method Mark describes not at all the genealogy of Jesus but begins his history at his Baptism Matthew searcheth out his original from Abraham Luke follows it backwards as far as Adam John passeth further upwards even to the Eternal Generation of this Word that was made flesh so they lead us to Jesus mounting up four several steps in the one we see him only among the men of his own time in the second he is seen in the Tent of Abraham in the third he is yet higher to wit in Adam and finally having traversed all ages through so many generations we come to contemplate him in the beginning in the bosom of the Father in that eternity in which he was with God before all worlds And there let us begin still Looking unto Jesus as he carries on the great work of our salvation from first to last from everlasting to everlasting SECT II. The main Doctrine and confirmation of it BUt for the foundation of our building take this Note Inward experimental looking unto Jesus such as stirs up affections in the heart Doctrine 2 and the effects thereof in our life it is an Ordinance of Christ a choice an high Gospel-ordinance Or thus Inward experimental knowing considering desiring hoping believing loving joying calling on Jesus and conforming to Jesus it is a complicate foulded compounded Ordinance of Jesus Christ I need not much to explain the Point you see here is an Ordinance or a Gospel-duty held forth many other Duties we have elsewhere described but this we have kept for this place and the rather for that this is a choice Duty a compounded Duty an high Gospel-ordinance No question but Watchfulness Self-trial Self-denial Experiences Evidences Meditation Life of Faith c. do well in their place and order yet as oars in a boat though it be carried with the tyde may help it to go faster it is Jesus lifted up as Moses lifted up the Serpent which strikes more soundly into the beholder than any other way Looking unto Jesus is that great Ordinance appointed by God for our most especial good How many souls have busied themselves in the use of other means and though in them Christ hath communicated some vertue to them yet because they did not trade more with him they had little in comparison such a one as deals immediately with Christ will do more in a day than another in a year and therefore I call it a choice a compleat a complicate an high Gospel-Ordinance Now what this Ordinance is the Text tells you it is a Looking unto Jesus 1. Jesus is the Object and Jesus † I ground this on all the Texts jointly as on Isa 45 22. Isa 65.1 Micha 7.7 Zach 12.10 Numb 21.8 John 3.15 Heb. 12.2 Phil. 3.20 2 Cor. 3.18 Mat 1.21 c. Isa 45.22 Isa 65.1 Psalm 25.15 Psalm 34 5. Heb. 12.3 as Jesus as he is our Saviour as he hath negotiated or shall yet negotiate in the great business of our salvation 2. Looking unto is the act but how it is such a Look as includes all these acts knowing considering desiring hoping believing loving joying enjoying of Jesus and conforming to Jesus It is such a look as stirs up affections in the heart and the effects thereof in our life it is such a look as leaves a quickening and enlivening upon the spirit it is such a look as works us into a warm affection raised resolution an holy and upright conversation Briefly it is an inward experimental Looking unto Jesus For confirmation of the point this was the Lords charge to the Gentiles of old Look unto me and be ye saved all the ends of the Earth And I said behold me behold me unto a Nation that was not called by my Name And according to this command was their practise Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord saith David and they looked unto him and were lightened and their faces were not ashamed Thus in the Gospel after this command Looking unto Jesus it follows Consider him that hath endured such contradiction of sinners against himself And according to this command is the practise of Gospel-believers 2 Cor. 3 18. We all with open face beholding as in a glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Instead of the vail of Mosaical figures God hath now given to his Church the clear glass of the Gospel and hence all believers under the Gospel do by contemplative Faith behold Christ together with the glorious light of his mercy truth goodness and the rest of his Divine Attributes and by means thereof they are made like unto him in the glory of Holiness and in newness of life The reasons why we are thus to Look unto Jesus will be as so many motives which we shall reserve to an use of Exhortation but the reasons why this Looking unto Jesus is 1. An Ordinance 2. An Ordinance of Christ may be these 1. Why an Ordinance here is only this reason the will of the Lord Even so father for so it seemed good in thy sight Ordinances are certain impositions set forth by an external mandate of a Lawgiver having Authority to command It is the will of Christ to impose this Law on all the sons of men that they should Look up unto him and concerning this what have we to do to enquire
Word Mark here one of Satans depths in outward things he tempts men to distrust God and to rely altogether on means but in heavenly things and matters of salvation he tempts men to lay all on Gods Decrees and Gods purposes without any regard had to the means Such men might as well say the Lord hath appointed that we shall live to such a time and till then we shall not die and therefore what need we food in health or physick in sickness Oh take heed of these reasonings Gods Decree doth not remove the use of the means but establish and confirm them 2. The Decree is the same with that book of life wherein are written the names of the Elect Phil. 4 3 Luke 12 20 Rev. 20.12 Paul tells us of some women with Clement and other fellow-labourers whose names are in the book of life And Christ bids his Disciples rejoyce because their names are written in heaven And John saw in his vision the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life As Captains have a book wherein they write the names of their Souldiers and Citizens have a book wherein they record the names of their Burgesses So God hath his Decree or book of life in which he registers all that belongs to him Exod. 32.32 33. Some other texts speak of a book of life as blot me I pray thee out of thy book which thou hast written said Moses in his zeal for Israel to whom the Lord answered whosoever sinneth against me him will I blot out of my book But this was not the book say some of Gods eternal Decree but the book of his providences God hath a double book and both in a figure he hath a book of his resolved Decrees and a book of his acted providences this latter is but a transcript or a copy of the former those huge original volumes of love and blessings which God hath laid up in his heart for his own people from all eternity is the book I mean Indeed this book is writing out every day by the hand and pen of providence in the ordering of all those affairs which concern our salvation 3. This Decree is the very same also with Gods seal the foundation of God standeth sure having this seal the Lord knoweth them that are his A seal is used in three cases 1. To keep things distinct 2. To keep things secret 3. To keep things safe In every of these respects Gods Decrees are seals but especially in the last those souls that are sealed by God they are safe in the love and favour of God as when Job tells us that God sealeth up the stars i.e. say some he preserveth the stars in their Orbs in the places where he hath set them they shall never drop out so God seals up his Saints i.e. he secures them of the eternal love of God so that they shall never drop out of his heart All these titles speak the immutability of Gods eternal emminent acts q. d. I decree I predestinate I book it seal it that such and such persons shall be eternally saved and why all this but to note the certainty and stability of the thing shall great Monarchs of the earth do thus shall they decree and book and seal to shew their greatness and wisdom that they could so resolve as no person or power whatsoever should be strong enough to cause them to change their resolutions and shall not I much more do not I know or foresee all that can or will follow is there any power or ever shall be to take them out of my hands Or is it possible that ever I should have a relenting thought at the saving of th●se souls Can any thing fall out hereafter to make me more provident more powerful more wise more merciful then now I am it may be in some things I may will a change but can I in any thing truly change my will no no I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed Mal. 3 SECT IX The Covenant THE Covenant concerning mans salvation is the last and main particular I instanced in I dare not be too curious to insist on the order of nature and the rather because I believe the Covenant betwixt God Christ from everlasting is interwoven with the Decree fore-knowledge and election above So the Apostle tells us Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world mark that in Christ There was an eternal plot betwixt the Father and the Son there was a bargain made I speak it with reverence betwixt God and Christ there was a Covenant betwixt the Lord and his Son Jesus Christ for the salvation of the Elect and of this observe we especially these following Texts In Isaiah 49.1 2 3 4. the Prophet seems to set it Dialogue-wise one expresseth it thus First Christ begins and shews his commission telling God how he had called him and fitted him for the work of redemption and he would know what reward he should have of him for so great an undertaking The Lord hath called me from the womb Isa 19 1 2. from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name and he hath made my mouth like a sharp sword in the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and made me a polished shaft in his quiver hath he bid me Upon this God answers him and tells him what reward he should have for so great an undertaking only at first he offers low viz. onely the elect people of Israel And he said unto me thou art my servant O Israel Ver. 3. in whom I will be glorified or Israel it is in whom I will be glorified by thee Christ who stood now a making his bargain with him thought these too few and not worth so great a labor and work because few of the Jews would come in but would refuse him and therefore he says he should labour in vain if this were all his recompence then said I ver 4. I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for naught and in vain yet withal he tells God that seeing his heart was so much in saving sinners he would do it howsoever for those few comforting himself with this that his work or his reward was with the Lord. Upon this God comes off more freely and opens his heart more largely to him as meaning more amply to content him for his pains in dying ver 6. it is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribe of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel that is not worth the dying for I value thy sufferings more than so I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou mayest be my salvation unto the ends of the earth Methinks I imagine as if I heard God speak unto Christ from
desire besides thee A right beholding of Christ in his eternal workings will cause a desire of Christ above all desires the heart now thirsts for nothing but him that is all all power all love all holiness all happiness tell such a soul of the world and gold and glory O what are these the soul will quickly tell you Phil. 3.8 the world is dung and gold is dung glory is dung all is but loss dung for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord. Give me God Christ saith the soul or I die Oh my desires are to him who hath done all this for me Is not this the period still of thy expression at the end of every discourse would Christ were mine thou hearest it may be some worldings talk such a one and such a one hath got so much in these times he that was yesterday as poor as Lazarus he is this day like that nameless rich man cloathed in purple Luk. 16.19 and fine linnen and faring sumptuously every day ay but dost not thou reply either in word or heart would Christ were mine and then I had got more then he Poor soul dost thou not gasp only after Christ when thou fetchest as I may say the very deepest breath canst thou read over the generation of Jesus the Son of God the time when he was begotten the manner of his begetting the mutual kindness and love of him that begets and of him that is begotten and dost not thou pant and breath and gasp after Jesus at every period canst thou read over Jesus his acts and decrees in reference to thy self canst thou turn over those many leaves in every of which is discovered those everlasting loves of God in his projects counsels foreknowledg purpose decree covenant for thy souls happiness and art thou not ready at every discovery to sing Davids Psalm Psa 42.1 2 as the hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God my soul thirsteth for God for the living God O when shall I come and appear before God O my soul hadst thou but these pantings thirstings breathings after God and Christ thou mightest comfortably conclude these are the fruits of Gods Spirit it is the Spirit of the Lord Jesus which makes those sighs and groanes in thee Rom. 8.26 which cannot be expressed He and thee sigh together one in another and one after another O therefore look Look unto Jesus and sigh and desire after him 3. We may and must desire after the full and utmost execution whereby God effectually Workes in time according to all his workings or decrees before time God that purposed and decreed from all Eternity he will not have done the full execution of that purpose or decree till that after-Eternity in that world without end Indeed some part is a fulfilling now but the main the great part is yet to come why then as we see the Plot Phil. 1.23 let us desire after the full accomplishment let us desire after the glory without end to which we were predestinated before the beginning It was Pauls desire to be dissolved to be with Christ As men burthened so should we desire and groan after the enjoyments of God in the world to come O my soul that thou were but cast in the Apostles mould that they affections were but on the wing that they might take flight and steer their course towards heaven and thereupon that thou mightest say yond is the glorious house the goodly building made without hands which God from all Eternity decreed to be my home my rest my dwelling place to all Eternity and in yond stately Fabrick is many an heavenly Inhabitant before I come there are Angels and there are all the souls of Sain●s that from Adam to this day have had their pass out of this sinful world yea there is Jesus the Son of God and there is God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost and if I am predestinated to this fellowship Lord when shall I have run through the means that I may come to this end O my end where is my end where is my Lord my God my Comforter where is my rest where is my end I cannot be at rest without my end and therefore come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a Roe Cant. 8.14 or a young Hart upon the Mountains of Spices Christians why are not your Spirits alwayes breathing thus after the glory to which you are predestinated why do not you long after full enjoyment the utmost execution of Gods decree why are not your hearts your souls your spirits already in heaven Surely there be your relations your Father is there your elder brother is there and there are many I dare say most of your other younger brethren again there is your interest your estate is there if you believe and therefore Where should your hearts be but where your treasure is come then come set in tune those desires of your souls set your affections on things above especially on that one thing Jesus Christ Looking unto Jesus SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that respect 4. WE must hope in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in that Eternity It is not enough to know and consider and desire but we must hope and maintain our hope as to our own interest Now hope is a passion whereby we expect probably or certainly some future good All the question is whether that salvation concerning which the great transaction was betwixt God and Christ belongs now to me and what are the grounds and foundations on which my hope is built I know some exceedingly abuse this Doctrine If God had before all worlds appointed me to salvation why then I may live as I list I need not hear or pray or confer or perform any holy Duty for I am sure I shall be saved And thus at once they take away all grounds of hope It is true Gods decrees are unchangeable but they do not afford any such inferences or deductions as these you might as well say the Lord hath appointed me to live to such a time and before that time I shall not cannot die and therefore I need no meat nor drink nor cloathes nor any other thing Ah silly foolish devilish arguing Gods decree is for the means as well as for the end whom God hath decreed to save them also hath he decreed to call to justifie to sanctifie before he save O my Soul look to the grounds whereon they hope is built if those be weak thy hope is weak but if those be strong thy hope will prove most strong and certain and prudent In the disquisition of these grounds say not in thine heart who shall ascend into Heaven Rom. 10.16 or who shall descend into the deep seek not above or below it is not possible for thee to go bodily into Heaven to see the Records of Eternity and to
read thy name in the Book of Life but search into these fruits and effects of thy election As 1. If thou beest within Gods decrees for salvation then sooner or later God will cause the power of his Word to come with authority and conviction upon thy conscience knowing brethren beloved your election of God for our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in power The Apostle speaks thus of others 1 Thes 1.4 5 he might know they were the Elected of God either by his judgment of charity or by a spirit of discerning which was vouchsafed to some in the Apostles times but how comes he immediately to know this truth by this glorious effe●t our Gospel came not in Word only but also in power Oh 't is good to consider with what power the Word preached falls into thy heart doth it convince thee humble thee mollie thee soften thee this argues thou belongest to God The Word preached will be more than the word of a man more than a meer human Oration or verbal declamation where it comes in power Oh! it will be like fire in thy bowels like a two edged Sword in the secret places of thy heart thou wilt cry out verily God is here Oh the power the conviction the meltings of my soul that I feel within me 2. If God hath ordained thee to Salvation then sooner or later God will effectually call thee Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called Rom. 8.30 this calling is a calling of the Soul from sin from amongst the rest of the World unto Jesus Christ it is such a call as enables the soul to follow Christ as Matthew being called by Christ he arose and followed Christ These two are linked together in Pauls golden chain predestination and effectual vocation Mat. 9.9 We are bound to give thanks alway unto God for you brethren ● Thes ●●3 14. beloved of the Lord and why so because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation Wherunto he called you by the Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ All those that belong to Gods election are sometime or other effectually called by the Word and Spirit of Christ and it must needs be so because as the Lord hath put a difference betwixt his Elect and others before the world was and he will make a final difference betwixt them and others after the end of the World so he will have them differenced and distinguished whilest thy are in this World by this inward effectual operative calling they are men of other minds wills affections dispositions Acts 26 18 Ephes 5.7 8 conversations they are called from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God As the Apostle ye were somtimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord. Be not ye therefore partakers with them 3. If thou art chosen for salvation then sooner or later thou shalt have true soul-saving justifying faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed When God hath a people to call home to himself he either brings them to the means or the means to them and those that belong to the Election of Grace believe O my soul hast thou this saving faith not a fancied faith a dead faith an easie faith but saving faith such a faith as was wrought in thee by the Word and Spirit with power such a faith as was not in any power to give nor in any power to receive untill God enable thee by his Spirit Rom 8 ●0 Rom. 5 1 then here is thy ground that thou art ordained to eternal life for whom he calls he justifies and we are justified by faith Not that the essence of faith justifies but faith justifies instrumentally in that it lays hold upon that which justifies even the righteousness of Christ Jesus 4. If thou art decreed for salvation then sooner or later the Lord will beget and increase in thee grace holiness sanctification Elect according to the foreknowledg of God the Father 1 Pet. 1.2 through sanctification of the Spirit God predestinates his people unto holiness Ephes 1.4 he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him If God appoint thee to eternal life he doth here in this World appoint thee to an holy gracious life No sanctification no election no grace no glory thou art to be a precious Jewel here ere God will make thee up at that great day Observe the chain Rom. 8.29 If I be sanctified with the Divine Nature in which glory is begun then I am justified if justified then I have been called according to purpose if called then I was predestinated and if predestinated to means then I was foreknown as one whom God would choose to the end even immarcessible and eternal glory 5. If thou art appointed and prepared for glory then God will give thee a thankful heart for so great a mercy thou canst no more keep in the heart from over-flowing when thou art sensible of this everlasting love then thou canst put bounds to the Sea See Paul praising God for the Election of himself and others after I heard of your faith and love Ephes 1.15 1● Ephes 1.3 4 I cease not to give thnaks and Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ according as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world And what glorious triumphs doth Paul in the person of all the Elect make over all kind of enemies that can be thought of he challengeth every adversary to put forth his sting and why even because God hath Elected Rom. 8.33.39 and nothing can separate them from this unchangeable love this was it that begot his thanksgiving Rom. 7.25 I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. O my soul how is thy heart affected with praise and thankfulness in this matter he that bestoweth great things looks for great return of thanks especially this being all thou canst do 6. If the project counsel love purpose decree and Covenant of God with Christ concerned thee and thy souls happiness then God will crown thee with perseverance and a stedfast continuance in the way of grace thou wast first set in final apostasie and total back-sliding from the ways of God can never befal those that are thus chosen they went from us 1 John 2.19 Mat. 24 ●4 Jer. 32.40 because they were not of us said the Apostle and if it were possible they should deceive the very Elect said Christ but it is certainly impossible and why I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall never depart from me Oh what a blessed mercy is this when there are so many hours of temptation in the world so many blustering storms and tempests that are able to raise up the very
even to them neither can a Sparrow fall to the ground nor an hair from thy head nor a leaf from the tree without the providence of our heavenly Father 3. Thou sayest I dare not believe I am astonished at Mat. 10.29 30. confounded in these thoughts of Gods eternal love it is too high for me I cannot believe it I answer herein thou sayst something I know it is an hard thing to believe these great things in reference to thy self But see now how God and Christ stoop and condescend to make thee believe God stands much upon this that the hearts of Saints should confide in him he accounts not himself honoured except they believe and therefore mark O my Soul how Christ suits himself to thy weakness what is it that may beget this Faith this confidence in thy Son what is it saith God that you poor creatures do one to another when you would make things sure between your selves why thus 1. We engage our selves by promise one to another And so will I saith God poor soul thou hast my promise my faithful promise I have made a promise both to Jews and Gentiles and thou art the one of these two sorts the promise is to you and to your children Acts 2 39. and to all that are afar off even as many as the Lord our God shall call Be only satisfied in that ground of thy hope that thou art called of God and then every promise of Eternal life is thine even thine Thou mayest find a thousand promises scattered here and there in the book of God and all these promises are a draught of that promise which was made from all Eternity and therefore it is so much the more sure it is as if Christ should say wilt thou have engagement by promise this is past long agoe my Father hath engaged himself to me before the World began yea and I have made many and many a promise since the World began Read in the Volume and thou wilt find here and there a Promise here and there a draught of the first Copy of that great Promise which my Father made unto me from all Eternity 2. When we would make things sure to one another we write it down And so will I saith God thou hast the Scripture the Holy Writ those Sacred Volumes of Truth and Life and therein thou hast the golden Lines of many gracious Promises are they not as the Stars in the Firmament of the Scripture thou hast my Bible and in the Bible thou hast many blessed glorious Truths but of all the Bible methinks thou shouldst not part with one of those promises no not for a World Luther observing the many promises writ down in Scripture expresseth thus the whole Scripture doth especially aim at this that we should not doubt but hope confide believe that God is Merciful Kind Patient and hath a purpose and a delight to save our souls 3. When we would make things sure to one another we set to our Seals And so will I saith God thou hast my Seal the Broad-Seal of Heaven my Sacraments the Seals of my Covenant and thou hast my privy Seal also the Seal of my Spirit Grieve not the Holy Spirit Ephes 4.30 whereby ye are Sealed unto the day of Redemption 4. When we would make things sure to one another we take Witnesses And so will I John 5.7 8. saith God thou shalt have witnesses as many as thou wilt witnesses of all sorts witnesses in heaven and witnesses on earth for there are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one And there are three that bear witness in earth the spirit and the water and the blood and these three agree in one 5. When we would make things sure to one another we take an oath And so will I saith God He. 6.17 God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath q. d. there is no such need of an oath but I will be abundant to thee because I would have thee trust me and confide in me throughly and as I swear saith God so will I swear the greatest Oath that ever was I swear by my self God swears by God he could swear by no greater and therefore he swear by himself and why thus but for their sakes who are the heirs of promise Heb. 6.13 he knows our frame and members that we are but dust and therefore to succour our weakness the Lord is pleased to swear and to confirm all by his Oath 6. When we would make things sure to one another we take a pawn And I will give thee a pawn saith God and such a pawn as if thou never hadst any thing more thou shouldest be happy it is the pawn of my Spirit Who also hath sealed us 2 Cor. 1.22 and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts q. d. I will send my Spirit into your hearts and this Spirit shall be a pawn an earnest in your hearts of all the good that I intend to do for you for ever 7. When we would make things sure to one another something it may be is presently done as an ingagement of all that which is to come And thus will I deal with thee saith God who livest in these last of times why thou seest the greatest part of thy Salvation already done I made a promise from all Eternity of sending my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin yea and if thou believest for thy sin and this is the greatest work of all that is to be done to all Eternity Surely if I would have failed thee in any thing it should have been in this it is not so much for me now to bring thee to Heaven to save thy Soul as it was to send my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin but when I have done so great a work have been already faithful in that Promise how shouldst thou but believe my faithfulness in making good all other promises If a man should owe thee a thousand pound and pay thee nine hundred ninety and nine thou wouldst think surely he would never break for the rest why God hath paid his nine hundred ninety and nine and all the Glory of Heaven is but as one in comparison of what he hath done we may therefore well believe that he who hath done so much for us will not leave the little undone Come then rouse up O my Soul and believe thy interest in those eternal transactions betwixt God and Christ is not here ground enough for thy Faith if thou art but called the promise of God is thine or if thou darest not rely on this promise which God forbid thou hast his Indenture his Seal and Witnesses of all sorts both in Heaven and Earth or yet if thou believest not thou hast an Oath a Pawn and the
everlastingly for it O my soul canst thou ponder on this and not love him dearly who has thus loved thee Come stir up the gift that is in thee if thou art a Christian thou hast some sparks though now it may be under the ashes come rub chase and warm thy affections at this fire love like a watch must be wound up or else it will fall downwards what dost thou why stand'st thou idle in the heat of the Day Christ hath fire in his hand 't is but looking up and reaching out thy hand to take it from him O take it with both thy hands and be thankful for it Prayer ejaculation contemplation judicious observation of the Spirits season are thy best instruments to kindle this fire of love in thee And methinks thy heart should begin now to melt methinks it should receive more easie impressions from the object before it methinks these eternal works and acts of God and Christ towards thy poor soul should begin to overcome thee Cant. 6.5 Cant 8.6 and to burne thy heart as with coales of Juniper Why Lord is it thus was I Elected from all Eternity in Christ was I ordained to a glorious inheritance before there was a World was this business to make me happy one of the cheef deep counsels of God was this one of the works of his wisdome that he was exercised about before the World began was this the great designe of God in making the World and in making Heaven the place of glory to glorifie himselfe and to glorifie such a poor wretch as I am O then how should this but mightily inflame my heart with the love God and love of Christ how should I choose but say as the Martyr did Oh that I had as many lives as I have haires on my head to lay them down for Christ Ah what flames of Divine affection what raptures of zeal what ravishments of delight what extasies of obedience can be enough for my blessed God and dearest Redeemer SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. WE must joy in Jesus as carrying on that great work of our salvation in that Eternity This joy is a passion arising from the sweetness of the Object that we enjoy O my soul dost thou believe and art thou now cast into a pang of love how then should thy joy but come on As Christ said to the 70. In this rejoyce not Luk. 10.20 that the spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven so rejoyce not thou in this that the world is thine that riches are thine that thou hast subdued men and devils but herein rejoyce that thy name is written in the Book of life O what a comfortable point is this that the Father and Christ should transact a bargaine from Eternity concerning thee by name that the Father and the Son should commune together concerning thy heaven as if their language had been thus Father what shall be given to thy justice to ransome such a one Abraham Isaac Jacob Matthew Mark Luke John Mary Martha Hannah c. why no more but this thou shalt dye my Son and whosoever believeth in thee shall live for ever Why then saith Christ I will engage for such and such a one I will enter into Bond for such and such a person Abraham shall believe in time See I have writ down his name in the Book of life And who art thou that readest art thou a believer dost thou believe in the Lord Jesus Christ Christ said the same of thee and entered into a bond for thee and entered they name in the Book of life See the certainty of this in Phil. 4.3 Phil. 4 3. Thou Thomas Andrew Peter Christ knows thee by name and thy name is written in the Book of life O go thy way and rejoyce and take strong consolation is there not cause why I tell thee thy name is in the Book of Heaven and if this may adde to thy joy know there is none in Heaven or Earth shall ever be able to blot it out again No no poor soul Rom. 8.1 there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus God hath decreed thy salvation and Gods decree shall stand let Men and Devils say what they will to the contrary Psal 33.11 The counsel of the Lord standeth for ever the thoughts of his heart to all generations it is as possible for God to deny himself as it is possible for thee a believer to perish 1 Pet. 1.5 We are kept saith the Apostle by the power of God through faith to salvation and therefore rejoyce and againe rejoyce yea raise up thy joy to that pitch of triumph which is joy elevated and elevated so high that it comes to victoriousness and magnanimous conquest of heart over all things say with the Apostle what my name written in the Book of life Rom. 8 3● 35 38 39. who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect who then shall separate me from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword nay I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate me from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus my Lord. SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. VVE must call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus This also is included in looking as David while Praying unto thee do I lift up mine Eyes Psa 123.1 O thou that dwellest in the Heavens Now this calling on God or looking to God contains Prayer and Praise 1. We must pray that all these transactions betwixt God and Christ may be assuredly ours and that God would clear up our Titles more and more yea and seeing all good things tending to Salvation were from all Eternity prepared for us we are therefore to pray that by prayer we may draw them down from Heaven for what though our Evidences be clear Yet this must not cast out means God doth not use to bestow his saving Graces on lazy sluggards those therefore who from the certainty of Predestination do pretend that the duty of Prayer is superfluous do plainly shew that they have no certainty at all Aquinas Aquinas part c q. art 8. was Orthodox in this the Predestinate must Pray because by these effects of Predestination the Salvation of Souls is best ascertained The same Spirit which Witnesseth to our Spirit that we are his Chosen is also the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication and therefore he that believes that he is one of Gods Elect he cannot but pray for those things which he believeth that God hath prepared for him before the foundation of the World 2. We must praise God what that God should look on us and Predestinate us to Life
unless we are Abrahams seed and heirs according to promise Gal. 3.29 4. Vnto thy seed I will give this Land saith God as an everlasting possession Gen. 17.8 Gen. 17.8 but how should that which the Israelites possessed only for a time be called an everlasting possession The answer is that the word translated everlasting doth not ever signifie that which shall have no end but an age a term or continuance as it was said of Samuel he should appear before the Lord and there abide for ever 1 Sam. 1.22 Ps 145.1 2 Ps 146.2 Jer. 25.9 i. as long as he lived and I will praise the Lord said David for ever and ever i. whiles I live will I praise the Lord as long as I shall have any being I will sing praises unto my God And the desolations of the captivity were called perpetual desolations i. long desolations even for seventy years Touching these blessings or priviledges I have no more to say but this that God gave more of the temporal less of the spiritual to the natural seed in the first ages but in the latter ages more of the spiritual priviledges and less of the temporal yea and thus it is this day for the most-what among the Christian seed of the Gentiles 1 Cor. 1.26 for ye see your calling brethren how that not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called 2. Of things spiritual thus we read fear not Abraham I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward I am God all-sufficient or omnipotent the almighty God Gen. 15.1 Gen. 17 1-17.7 I will be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee O what precious promises are these 1. I am thy shield to keep thee from all evil such a shield that no creature can pry through such a shield as shall cover thee over nay such a shield as shall cover thee about as sometimes God spoke of Jerusalem I saith the Lord will be unto her a wall of fire round about So here Zach. 2.3 I will be a shield a wall of fire round about not only a wall to keep thee safe but a wall of fire to consume all them that are against thee as a fire which stands about like a wall doth not only defend those that are within but it burns those without that come near unto it so is God to his people 2. I am thy exceeding great reward I am the almighty God I will be a God unto thee This is the very soul of the covenant and of all the promises of God q. d. quantus quantus sim vester ero all I am is thine my self my goods my grace my glory whatsoever is in me all that I have and all my attributes are thine my power my wisdom my counsel my goodness my riches whatsoever is mine in the whole world I will give it thee for thy portion I and all that I have are thine for thy use Christians was not this an exceeding great reward who can understand the height and depth and length and bredth of this reward surely happy is the people that is in such a case yea happy is that people whose God is the Lord Psal 144.15 but more of this hereafter 6. What is the condition of this covenant I answer the condition of the covenant of grace is faith and only faith to this purpose it is said of Abraham he believed in the Lord and he counted it to him for righteousness This text is often alledged by the Apostles Gen. 15.6 Rom. 4.3 Gal. 3.6 Jam. 2.23 Gen 45.25 26 the word believed imports that he thought the Word of God to be sure certain stable and constant it is such a belief as is opposed to fainting as it is said of Jacob when he heard the report of his sons that Joseph was alive his heart fainted because he believed not but when he believed his heart revived and David saith of himself I had fainted unless I had believed So that it is a lively motion of the heart assenting unto and trusting in God psal 27 13 and in the word of God as firm and constant This was the very condition of the covenant which God required of Abraham q. d. Abraham dost thou believe that such a Messiah shall be sent into the world art thou able to believe yes I believe Lord said Abraham well saith God I will put thee to the trial I will give thee a Son though thou art as a dead man and Sarah as a dead woman yet I will promise thee a son art thou able to believe again thou seest the land of Canaan thou hast not one foot in it yet I will give thee this land in the length and bredth of it for thy possession art thou able to believe this you will say what are these to the condition of the covenant which is only to believe in God and to believe in Jesus Christ O yes 1. These were shaddows of the great promise Christ and therefore that act of faith whereby Abraham believed that he should have a son and that his Children should possess the land of Canaan was likewise a branch a shaddow a pledge of that main act of faith whereby he believed the promised seed in whom himself all the Nations of the earth should be blessed But 2. Let this be remembred that Abraham did not only believe the temporal promises but every promise as I will be thy shield and thy exceeding great reward now who is our shield but Christ and who is our reward but Christ but especially he believed the promise of the seed and who is the head of the seed but Christ yea he believed in that promised seed in whom all the nations of the earth should be blessed and who was that but Christ your father Abraham saith Christ rejoyced to see my day J●hn 8.56 and he saw it and was glad He saw it how could he see it thou art not yet fifty years old said the Jews and hast thou seen Abraham or could Abraham see thee or thy day yes even then he saw it when he believed in Christ he could see it no other ways but by an eye of faith therefore no question he believed in Christ and that was counted to him for righteousness But may some say if faith alone be the condition of the covenant then what need is there of any obedience or works of holiness this was the old plea of loose libertines in the Apostles times Jam. 8.20 to whom James gave answer But wilt thou know O vain man that faith without works is dead a good tree saith Christ is known by its fruits and so is right and sound faith let a man believe in truth and he cannot but love and if he love he cannot but be full of good works thus Abraham was justified by faith Abraham believed God saith the Apostle and it was imputed to him for righteousness but was not
Obedience God hath ever the first work as first Jer. 31.33 Eze. 36 26 31 Ezek. 36.25 Ezek. 36.27 Zech. 12.10 I will be your God and then ye shall be my People first I will take away the stony heart and give an heart of Flesh and then you shall loath your selves for your iniquities and for your abominations first I will sprinkle water upon you and then ye shall be clean from all your filthiness first I will put my Spirit into you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and then ye shall keep my Judgments and do them first I will pour out my Spirit of Grace and supplication upon you and then ye shall mourn as a man mourning for his only Son first I will do all and then ye shall do something A perplexed troubled spirit is apt to cry out O! alas I can do nothing I can as well dissolve a Rock as make my heart of stone a heart of flesh Mark now how the Covenant stands well ordered like an Army I will do all saith God and then thou shalt do something I will strengthen and quicken you and then ye shall serve me saith the Lord. 4. It is well ordered in respect of the end and aim to which all the parts of the Covenant are referred Eph. 1.6 the end of the Covenant is the praise of the Glory of his Grace the parts of the Covenant are the Promise and the Stipulation the Promise is either Principal or Immediate and that is God and Christ or secondary and consequential and that is Pardon Justification Reconciliation Sanctification Glorification and the Stipulation on our parts are Faith and Obedience we must believe in him that Justifies the ungodly and walk before him in all well pleasing Observe now the main design and aim of the Covenant and see but how all the streams run towards that Ocean God gives himself to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace God gives Christ to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace God gives pardon justification sanctification salvation to the praise of the Glory of his Grace and we Believe we Obey to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace and good reason for all is of Grace and therefore all must tend to the Praise of the glory of his grace it is of Grace that God hath given himself Christ pardon justification reconciliation sanctification salvation to any Soul it is of grace that we believe By grace ye are saved through faith Eph. 2.8 not of your selves it is the gift of God O the sweet and comely order of this Covenant All is of Grace and all tends to the praise and glory of this grace and therefore it is called a Covenant of grace Many a sweet soul is forced to cry I cannot believe I may as well reach heaven with a finger as lay hold on Christ by the hand of faith but mark how the Covenant stands like a well marshalled army to repel this doubt Phil. 1.29 if thou canst not believe God will enable thee to believe to you it is given to believe O the Covenant of Grace is a gracious Covenant God will not only promise good things but he helps us by his Spirit to perform the condition He works our hearts to believe in God and to believe in Christ all is of Grace that all may tend to the praise of the glory of his grace 5. Wherein is the Covenant sure I answer it is sure in the performance and accomplishment of it Isa 55.3 Hence the promises of the Covenant are called the sure Mercies of David not because they are sure unto David alone but because they are sure and shall be sure unto all the Seed of David that are in Covenant with God as David was the Promises of Gods Covenant are not Yea and Nay various and uncertain but they are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.20 sure to be fulfilled Hence the stability of Gods Covenant is compared to the firmness and unmovableness of the mighty Mountains nay Mountains may depart and the hills be removed by a Miracle but my kindness shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed Isa 54.10 saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee Sooner shall the Rocks be removed the Fire cease to burn the Sun be turned into darkness and the very heavens be confounded with the earth than the promise of God shall fail psal 19.7 The testimony of the Lord is sure saith David Christ made it and writ it with his own blood to this very end was Christ appointed and it hath been all his work to ensure Heaven to his Saints Some question whether it be in Gods present power to blot a name out of the Book of Life We say no his deed was at first free but now it is necessary not absolutely but ex Hypothesi upon supposition of his eternal Covenant Hence it is that the Apostle sayes If we confess our Sins He is Faithful 1 John 1.9 and Just to forgive us our Sins It is Justice with God to pardon the Elect's Sins as the Case now stands Indeed Mercy was all that saved us primarily but now Truth saves us and stands engaged with Mercy for our Heaven And therefore David prayes Send forth Mercy and Truth and save me We find it often in the Psalms as a Prayer of David Ps●l 57.3 Ps 31.1 3 24. 119.40.143.1 Deliver me in Thy Righteousness and Judge me according to Thy Righteousness and Quicken me in Thy Righteousness and In Thy Faithfulness answer me and In Thy Righteousness Now if it had not been for the Covenant of Grace surely David durst not have said such a word The Covenant is sure in every respect Isa 55.3 I will make an Everlasting Covenant with you saith God even the sure Mercies of David 6. Whether is Christ more clearlier manifested in this Breaking-forth of the Covenant than in any of the Former The Affirmative will appear in that we find in this Manifestation these Particulars 1. That He was God and Man in One Person David's Son and yet David's Lord The Lord said unto my Lord Sit Thou on My Right Hand Psal 110.1 until I make Thine Enemies Thy Foot-stool 2. That He suffered for us and in His Sufferings How many Particulars are discovered As first His Cry My God My God Why hast Thou forsaken Me Secondly Psal 22.1 Mat. 27.46 Psal 22.8 Mat. 27.43 Ps 22.16 17 18. Mat. 27.35 Psal 16.10 Acts 2.31 Psal 68.18 Ephes 4.8 The Jews Taunts He trusted on the Lord that He would deliver Him let Him deliver Him if He delight in Him Thirdly The very Manner of His Death They pierced My Hands and My Feet I may tell all My Bones they look and stare upon Me they part My Garments among them and cast Lots upon My Vesture 3. That He Rose again for us Thou wilt not leave My Soul in Hell neither wilt Thou suffer Thine
to seek and to save that which was lost to bring home straying Souls to his Father to be the great Peace-maker between God and Man to reconcile God to man and man to God and so to be the Head and Husband of his People Is not here a world of encouragement to believe in Jesus what to consider him as one who hath made it his office to heal and relieve and to restore and to reconcile Among Merchants I remember they have an office of security that if you dare not adventure on Seas yet there you may be ensured if you will but put in at that Office in this manner Christ hath constituted and assumed the office of being a Mediator the Redeemer and the Saviour of men he hath erected and set up on purpose an office of meer love and tender compassion for the relief of all poor distressed sinners if they dare not venture otherwise yet let them put in at this office O what jealous hearts have we that will not trust Christ that will not take the word of Christ without an office of security surely Christ never so carried himself to any soul that it need be jealous of his love and faithfulndess yet this dear husband meets with many a jealous spouse O my soul take heed of this Satan hath no greater design upon thee than to perswade thee to entertain hard thoughts of Christ believe never say God will not take thee into Covenant for to this purpose he hath erected an office to save and have mercy Consider of those tenders and offers of Christ those intreaties and beseechings to accept of Christ which are made in the Gospel What is the Gospel or what is the sum of all the Gospel but this O take Christ and life in Christ that thou may'st be saved what mean these free offers Ho every one that thirsteth come to the waters and whosoever will let him take of the Waters of Life freely and God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son c. God is the first suitor and solicitor he first prayes the Soul to take Christ Hark at the door who is it that knocks there who is it that calls now Cant. 5.2 even now open unto me my Sister my Love my Dove my Vndefiled for my head is filled with dew and my locks with the drops of the night See him through the windows this can be none but Christ his sweet language of Sister Love and Dove bespeaks him Christ his suffering language that his head is filled with dew and his locks wih the drops of the Night bespeaks him Christ But harken the motion he makes to thy Soul Soul consider what price I have given to save thee this my body was crucified my hands and feet nailed my heart pierced and through anguish I was forced to cry my soul is heavy heavy unto death and now what remains for thee but onely to believe See all things ready on my part remission justification sanctification salvation I will be thy God and thou shalt be of the number of my People I offer now my self and merits and benefits flowing there-from and I intreat thee accept of this offer O take Christ and Life and Salvation in Christ What is this the voice of my beloved are these the intreaties of Jesus and O my soul wilt thou not believe wilt thou not accept of this Gracious offer of Christ O consider who is this that proclaimeth inviteth beseecheth if a poor man should offer thee mountains of gold thou mightest doubt of performance because he is not of that Power if a covetous rich man should offer thee thousands of silver thou mightest doubt of performance because it is contrary to his nature but Christ is neither poor nor covetous as he is able so his Name is gracious and his nature is to be faithful in performance his Covenant is sealed with his blood and confirmed by his oath that all shall have pardon that will but come in and believe O then let these words of Christ whose lips like lillies are dropping down pure myrrhe prevail with thy soul say Amen to his offer I believe Lord help my unbelief 5. Consider of those Commands of Christ which notwithstanding all thy excuses and pretences he fastens on thee to believe And this is his Commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ Surely this Command should infinitely outweigh and prevail against all other Countermands of Flesh and Blood of Satan Nature Reason Sense and all the World Why this Command is thy very ground and warrant against which the very Gates of Hell can never possibly prevail when Abraham had a command too kill his own only dear Son with his own hand though it was matter of as great grief as could possibly pierce his heart yet he would readily and willingly submit to it how much more shouldst thou obey when God commands no more but that thou shouldest belive on the name of his Son Jesus Christ There 's no evil in this Command no no it comprehends in it all good Imaginable have Christ and thou hast with him the excellency and variety of all blessings both of heaven and earth have Christ and thou hast with him a discharge of all those endless and easless torments of Hell have Christ and thou hast with him the glorious Deity it self to be enjoyed through him to all Eternity O then believe in Jesus suffer not the Devils cavils and the groundless exceptions of thine own heart to prevail with thee against the direct Commandment of Almighty God 6. Consider of these Messages of Christ which he daily sends by the hands of his Gospel-Ministers Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye Reconciled unto God What a wonder is here 2 Cor. 5 20. Would not an earthly Prince disdain and hold it in foul scorn to send unto his inferiour rebellious slaves for reconcilement It is otherwise with Christ he is content to put up at our hands all indignities and affronts he is glad to sue to us first and to send his Ambassadors day after day beseeching us to be reconciled unto him O incomprehensible depth of unspeakable Mercy and Incouragement to come to Christ That I may digress a little say thou that readest wilt thou take Christ to thy Bridegroom and forsake all others This is the Message which God hath bid me unworthy Ambassadour to deliver to thee the Lord Jesus expects an answer from thee and I should be glad at heart to return a fit answer to him that sent me say then dost thou like well of the Match wilt thou have Christ for thy Husband wilt thou enter into Covenant with him wilt thou surrender up thy Soul to thy God wilt thou rely on Christ and apply Christs merits particularly to thy self wilt thou believe for that is it I mean by taking and receiving and
marrying of Christ Oh happy if I could but Joyn Christ and thy Soul together this day Oh happy thou if thou wouldst this day be perswaded by a poor Ambassadour of Christ Blame me not if I am an importunate Messenger if ever I hear from thee let me hear some good News that I may return it to Heaven and give God the Glory Come say on art thou willing to have Christ wouldst thou have thy name enrolled in the Covenant of Grace shall God be thy God and Christ thy Christ wilt thou have the Person of Christ and all those priviledges flowing from the Blood of Christ sure thou art willing art thou not stay then thou must take Christ on these terms thou must believe on him i e. Thou must take him as thy Saviour and Lord thou must take him and forsake all others for him This is the true Faith the condition of the Covenant O believe in Jesus and the Match is made the hands are struck the Covenant established and all doubts removed SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6 WE must love Jesus as carrying on this great work of our Salvation in a way of Covenant I know Love is reckoned as the first and fundamental Passion of all the rest some call it the first springing and out-going affection of the Soul and therefore I might have put it in the first place before Hope or Desire but I chuse rather to place it in this Method as me thinks most agreeing if not to the order of Nature yet to the Spiritual workings as they appear in my Soul When a Good is propounded ' first I desire and then I hope and then I believe and then I love And some describing this spiritual love they tell me it is an holy disposition of the heart Dr. Preston of Love arising from Faith But to let these niceties pass for a Spiders web curious but thin certain it is that I cannot believe all these transactions of God by Christ in a Covenant-way for me but I must needs love that God love that Christ who hath thus firstly freely loved my soul go on then O my Soul put fire to the harth blow on thy little spark set before thee God's Love and thou canst not but love and therein Consider 1. The Time 2. The Properties 3. The Effects of Gods love 1. For The Time He Loved thee before the World was made hast thou not heard and wilt thou ever forget it were not those ancient Loves from all eternity admirable astonishing ravishing Loves 2 He Loved thee in the very beginning of the world was not the promise expressed to Adam intended for thee as thou sinnedst in his loins so didst thou in his loins receive the Promise It shall bruise thy head And not long after when God established his Covenant with Abraham and his Seed wast not thou one of that Seed of Abraham If ye are Christs Gal. 3.29 then are ye Abrahams Seed and heirs according to the Promise 3. He loves thee now more especially not only with a Love of benevolence as before but with a love of complacency not only hath he struck Covenant with Christ with Adam with Abraham in thy behalf but particularly and personally with thy self and O what Love is this If a woman lately conceiving love her future fruit how much more doth she love it when it is born and embraced in her Arms So if God loved thee before thou hadst a being yea before the world or any Creature in it had a being how much more now O the height and depth and length and breadth of this immeasurable Love O my Soul I cannot express the Loves of God in Christ to thee I do but draw the Picture of the Son with a coal when I endeavour to express Gods love in Christ 2. For the properties of this Love 1. Gods Love to thee is an eternal Love He was thinking in his eternity of thee in this manner At such a time there shall be such Man and such a Woman living on the earth in the last times such a one I mean thou that readest if thou believest and to that Soul I will reveal my self and communicate my loves to that soul I will offer Christ and give it the hand of Christ to lay hold on Christ and to that purpose now I write down the Name in the Book of Life and none shall be able to blot it out again Oh eternal Love Oh the blessed transactions between the Father and the Son from all eternity to manifest his Love to thy very Soul 2. Gods love to thee is a choice Love it is an elective separating Love when he passed by and left many thousands Mal. 1.2 3. then even then he sets his heart on thee Was not Esau Jacobs brother saith God yet I loved Jacob and hated Esau So wert not thou such an ones Brother or such an ones Sister that remained wicked and ungodly wert not thou of such a Family whereas many or some are passed by yet God hath loved thee and pitched his Love on thee Surely this is choice Love Hos 14.4 Deut. 7.7 8. 3. Gods Love to thee is a free Love I will love them freely saith God And the Lord did not set his Love upon you and chuse you because ye were more in number than any people but because the Lord loved you there can be no other reason why the Lord loved thee but because he loved thee We use to say this is a womans reason I will do it because I will do it but here we find it is Gods reason though it may seem strange arguing yet Moses can go no higher he loved thee why because he loved thee Gods love to thee is the Love of all relations look what a friends Love is to a friend or what a Fathers Love is towards a Child or what an Husbands Love is towards a Wife such is Gods Love to thee thou art his Friend his Son his Daughter his Spouse and God is thy All in All. 3. For the Effects of his Love 1. God so Loves thee as that he hath entered into a Covenant with thee O what a Love is this tell me O my soul is there not an infinite disparity betwixt God and thee He is God above and thou art a Worm below He is the High and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity whose Name is Holy and thou art less than the least of all the Mercies of God O wonder at such a condescention that such a Potter and such a Former of things should come on terms of bargaining with such clay as is guilty before him Had we the tongues of Men and Angels we could never express it God so loves thee as that in the Covenant he gives thee all his Promises Indeed what is the Covenant but an accumulation or heap of Promises As a cluster of stars makes a Constellation so as a mass of promises concurreth in the Covenant of Grace
to obey their Commands and to imitate their Godly Example we cannot honour God more than when we are Humbled at his Feet to receive his Word than when we renounce the Manners of the world Deut. 31.3 Ephes 5.1 to become his Followers as dear Children O think of this for when we conform indeed then are we Holy as he is Holy and Pure as he is Pure and then How should this but tend to the Honour and Glory of our Good God Thus far we have Looked on Jesus as our Jesus in that dark Time before His Coming in the Flesh Our next Work is to Look on Jesus carrying on the Great VVork of Man's Salvation in His First Coming or Incarnation LOOKING UNTO JESUS In His Birth The Fourth Book CHAP. I. Luke 2.15 Let us now go even to Bethlehem and see this Thing SECT I. Of the Tidings of Christ IN this Period as in the former we shall first lay down the Object and secondly direct you how to Look unto it The Object is Jesus carrying on the Work of Man's Salvation in His first Coming in the Flesh until His Coming again But because in this long Period we have many Transactions which we cannot with Conveniency dispatch together we shall therefore break it into smaller pieces and present this Object Jesus Christ 1. In his Birth 2. In his Life 3. In his Death 4. In his Resurrection 5. In his Ascension Session at God's Right Hand and Mission of his Holy Spirit 6. In his Intercession for his Saints in which Business he now is and will be employed till his Second Coming to Judgment 1. First For the Transactions of Jesus in His Birth Some things we must propound before and some things after his Birth so that we shall continue this Period till the Time of John's Baptism or the Exercise of his Ministry upon Earth Now in all the Transactions of this Time we shall especially handle these 1. The Tidings of Christ 2. The Conception of Christ 3. The Duplicity of Natures in Christ 4. The real Distinction in that Duty 5. The wonderful Union notwithstanding that Distinction 6. The Birth of Christ 7. Some Consequents after his Birth whil'st yet a Child of Twelve Years old The First Passage in Relation to his Birth is The Tidings of Christ This appears Luk. 1.26 27 28 c. And in the Sixth Month the Angel Gabriel wat sent from God c. Luk. 1.26 31. I shall a little ins●st on some of these Words 1. The Messenger is an Angel Man was too mean to carry the News of the Conception of God Never any Business was Conceived in Heaven that did so much concern the Earth as the Conception of the God of Heaven in a Womb of Earth no less therefore than an Angel was worthy to bear these Tidings and never Angel received a greater Honour than of this Embassage Angels have been sent to divers as to Gideon Manoah David Daniel Eliah Zechariah c. And then the Angel honoured the Message but here 's a Message that doth honour the Angel he was highly glorious before but this added to his glory Indeed the Incarnation of God could have no less a Reporter than the Angel of God When God intended to begin his Gospel he would first visit the World wirh his Angel before he would visit the World with his Son His Angel must come in the Form of Man before his Son must come in the Nature of Man This Angel salutes the Virgin Hail thou that art highly favoured the Lord is with thee blessed art thou among Women Luke 1.28 Many Men and Women have been and are the Spiritual Temples of God but never was any the material Temple of God but only Mary and therefore Blessed art thou amongst Women and yet we cannot say that she was so Blessed in Bearing Christ as she was in Believing in Christ her Bearing indeed was more Miraculous but her Believing was more Beneficial to her Soul that was her Priviledge but this was her Happiness Christians If we believe in Christ and if we obey the Word of Christ we are the Mothers of Christ Whosoever doth the Will of My Father which is in H●aven Mat. 12.50 Luke 11.27 he is my Brother and Sister and Mother Every renewed Heart is another Mary a spiritual Sanctuary of the Lord Jesus It was the Woman's Acclamation Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps that gave thee suck True said Christ but that Blessing extends only to one I will tell you how many are Blessed and rather Blessed yea Vers 28. rather Blessed are they that hear God's Word and keep it Blessed are they that so incarnate the written Word by doing it as the Blessed Virgin gave Flesh to the Eternal Word by bearing it those that hear and keep God's Word are they that Travel in Birth again until Christ be formed in them Gal. 41.9 Hearing they Receive the Immortal Seed of the Word by a firm Purpose of doing they conceive by a longing Desire they quicken by an earnest Endeavourr they travel and when the Work is wrought then have they incarnate the Word and Christ is formed in them In this Respect was Mary ●lessed and I make no question but in this Respect also the Angel calls her Blessed and Elizabeth calls her Blessed and Simeon calls her Blessed and She calls her self Blessed and all Generations call her Blessed and God Himself calls and makes her Blessed yea as Paul said Cometh this Blessedness on the Circumcision only so cometh this Blessedness on the Virgin only No Rom. 4.9 Mat. 5.3 4 5. Psal 32.2 even Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Blessed are they that mourn Blessed are the Meek and Blessed are they whose Sins are not imputed Even these hath God blessed with Spiritual Blessings in Heavenly Places and these shall Christ entertain with a Come ye Blessed of My Father Luke 1.29 3. This Virgin is Troubled at this Salute She might well be troubled For 1. If it had been but a Man that had come in so suddenly when she expected none or so secretly when she had no other Company or so strangely the Doors being probably shut she had cause to be troubled How much more when the shining Glory of the Angel so heightned the Astonishment 2. Her Sex was more subject to fear If Zachary were amazed with the sight of this Angel How much more the Virgin We flatter our selves how well we could endure such Visions but there is a difference betwixt our Faith and our Senses to apprehend here the Presence of God by Faith this goes down sweetly But should a Glorious Angel appear among us it would amaze us all But for this the Angel comforts her Vers 30. Fear not Mary for thou hast found Favour with God The Troubles of Holy Minds ever end in Peace or Comfort Joy was the Errand of the Angel and not Terrour and therefore suddenly he revives her
as one says well that had been Virgo decipiet not concipiet rather a deceiving of us than a conceiving of him 2. That of the Valentinian revived lately in the Anabaptists who hold that he had a true body but made in heaven and sent into the Virgin here on earth and if so that had been virgo recipiet not concipiet rather a receiving than conceiving yet I cannot but wonder how confidently the Anabaptists tell us that the Flesh of Christ came down from heaven and passed through the Virgin Mary as water through a Conduit-pipe without taking any substance from her Their objections are raised out of these Texts 1. No man ascendeth into heaven but he that came down from heaven John 3.13 even the son of man which is in heaven I answer first this speech must be understood firstly in respect of the God-Head which may be said in some sort to descend in that it was made manifest in the Manhood here on earth 2. This speech may be understood truly of the whole person of Christ to whom the properties of each Nature in respect of the communication of properties may be fitly ascribed but this doth no way prove that this flesh which he assumed on earth descended from heaven 1 Co. 15.47 48 2. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from heaven heavenly I answer 1. This holds forth that Christ was heavenly-minded as sometimes he told the Jews you are from below I am from above you are of the World I am not of this World Christ was not worldly-minded or swayed with the lusts of the Flesh John 8.23 John 15.19 or any way earthly affected as sometimes he could tell his Apostles ye are not of the world so much more might he say of himself that he was not of this world but his Conversation was in heaven Or 2. This holds forth that Christ was heavenly or from heaven in respect of the glorious qualities which he received after his Resurrection and not in respect of the substance of his Body many glorious qualities was Christ endowed with after he was raised I shall not now dispute them which he had not before and in respect of these he might be called heavenly or from heaven 3. This holds forth that Christ also was in some sort heavenly or from heaven in his humane nature in that the humane nature was united to the divine and withal in that the humane nature was formed by the holy Ghost so John's Baptism is said to be from heaven though neither he nor the water wherewith he Baptized descended from heaven but because he received it from God who is in heaven Christ was conceived as you heard by the Holy Ghost and in that regard his generation was divine and heavenly or from heaven 2. In way of comfort and incouragement Christ was thus conceived that he might Vse 2 sanctify our conceptions as the first Adam was the root of all Corruption so is the second Adam the root of all sanctification Christ went as far to cleanse us as ever Adam did to defile us what were our very Conceptions defiled by Adam in the first place Christ takes course for this you see he is conceived by the Holy Ghost and he was not idle whilst he was in the womb for even then and there he ea●e out the Core of corruption that cleaved close to our defiled natures so that now God will not account evil of that nature that is become the nature of his own deare Son O the Condescentions of our Jesus O that ever he would be conceived in the womb of a Virgin O that he would run through the Contumelies of our fordid Nature that he would nor refuse that which we our selves in some sort are ashamed of Some think it a reason why the Anabaptists and some others run into such Fancies and deny this Conception of Christ only to decline those soul indignities as they take them for the great God of heaven to undergo but certainly this was for us and for our sakes and therefore far be it from us to honour him the less because he laid down his honour for our sakes no no let us honour him more and love him more the lower he came for us the dearer and dearer let him be unto us consider in all these transactions Christ was carrying on the great work of our salvation otherwise he had never been conceived never had assumed to his Person humane Nature never had been Man SECT III. Of the Duplicity of Natures in Christ Isa 9.6 Gal. 4.4 3. THe duplicity of Natures in Christ appears in that he was truly God and truly Man To us a Child is born saith the Prophet there is a Nature humane and he shall be called the Mighty God there is a Nature divine God sent his Son saith the Apostle therefore truly God and this Son made of a Woman therefore truly Man one would have thought this truth would never have come into controversie in our days but these are the last days and that may take off the wonder In the last days shall come perillous times 2 Tim. 3.1 Men shall resist the Truth c. In the last days I know there will be abundance of Truth revealed Zech. 12.8 The Knowledg of the Lor● shall be as the waters that cover the Sea and every Child shall be as David And the Book that was sealed must be opened Dan 12.4 and knowledg shaall be increased but Satan even then will be busie to sow his Tares as God is in sowing of his Wheat then is Satan active to communicate errors when he sees God begin to discover truths he hopes in the heat of the Market to vent his own wares and I believe this is one reason why now the Devil sets on foot so many dangerous errors that so he may prejudice the hearts of God's People in the receiving and entertaining of many Glorious truths But that we may not pass over such a Fundamental Error as this some saying with Martian that he is God but not man and others with Arrius that he is man but not God I shall therefore confirm this truth of the two Natures of Christ against the Adversaries of both sides And 1. That Christ is true God both apparent scriptures and unanswerable Reasons drawn from scriptures do plainly evince 1. The scriptures call him God In the beginning was the word and the word was with God Dan. 12.4 John 1.1 Heb. 1.8 John 20 28. Acts. 20.8 1 John 3.16 1 John 5.20 1 Tim. 3.16 and the word was God And unto the son he saith Thy Throne O God is for ever And Thomas answered and said unto him My Lord and my God and take heed to your selves and to all the flock To feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own Blood And hereby perceive we the Love of God because he laid down his life for
into Faith I cannot tell but one would think that unbelief should be strangled quite slain upon this consideration all this O my soul thou hearest in the Gospel there is Christ incarnate set forth to the life there is Christ suing thy Loves and offering himself as thy beloved in thy own naure there it is written that God is come down in flesh with an Olive-branch of eternal peace in his hand and bids you all be witness he is not come to destroy but to save Oh that this encouragement might be of force to improve Christs glorious design to the supplying of all thy wants and to the making up of all thy losses believe Oh believe thy part in Christ incarnate SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation at his first Coming or Incarnation Now what is Love but an expansion or egress of the heart and spirits to the Object loved or to the Object whereby it is drawn or attracted Mark O my soul whatsoever hath an attractive power it is in that respect an Object or general cause of Love and canst thou possibly light on any Object more attractive than the Incarnation of Jesus Christ If Love be the Load-stone of Love what an attractive is this before thee methinks the very sight of Christ incarnate is enough to ravish thee with the apprehension of his infinite goodness see how he calls out or as it were draws out the soul to Union Vision and Participation of his Glory O come and yield up thy self unto him give him thy self and conform all thy Affections and Actions to his Will O love him not with a divided but with all thy heart But to excite this Love I shall only propound the Object which will be Argument enough Love causeth Love now as Gods first Love to man was in making man like himself so his second great Love was in making himself like to man stay then a while upon this Love for I take it this is the greater Love of the two Nay if I must speak freely I believe this was the fullest visible demonstration of Gods Love that ever was The Evangelist expresseth it thus God so loved the World John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son he gave him to be incarnate to be made flesh and to suffer Death but the extention of his Love lies in that expression he so loved So how Why so fully so fatherly so freely as no Tongue can tell no heart can think In this Love God did not only let out a mercy give out a bare grace in self but he took our nature upon him It is usually said that it is a greater love of God to save a soul than to make a World and I think it was a greater Love of God to take our nature than simply to save our souls for a King to dispense with the Law and by his own prerogative to save a Murderer from the Gallows is not such an Act of Love and Mercy as to take the Murderers Cloaths and to wear them as their Richest Livery Why God in taking our nature hath done thus and more than thus he would not save us by his meer Prerogative but he takes our Cloaths our Flesh and in that Flesh he personates us and in that Flesh he will die for us that we might not die but live through him for evermore Surely this was Love that God will be no more God as it were simply but he will take up another nature rather than the brightness of his Glory shall undo our souls It will not be amiss whil'st I am endeavouring to draw a Line of Gods love in Christ from first to last in saving Souls that here we look back a little and summarily contract the passages of Love from that eternity before all Worlds unto this present 1. God had an eternal design to discover his infinite love to some besides himself O the wonder of this was there any need or necessity of such a discovery Though God was one Deus unus licet solus non solitarius and in that respect alone as we may imagine yet God was not solitary in that eternity within his own proper essence or substance there were three Divine Persons and betwixt them there was a blessed Communication of Love Christ on Earth could say I am not alone because the Father is with me and then before the Earth was might the Father say I am not alone for the Son is with me and the Son might say I am not alone John 16.32 for the Father is with me and the Holy Ghost might say I am not alone for both the Father and the Son are with me though in that eternity there was no Creature to whom these three Persons should communicate their Love yet was there a glorious communication and breaking out of Love from one to another before there was a World the Father John 17.15 Son and Holy Ghost did infinitely glorifie themselves Joh. 17.5 Surely they loved one another and they rejoyced in the fruition of one another Prov. 8.30 Prov. 8.30 What need then was there of the discovery of Gods love to any one besides himself O my soul I know no necessity for it only thus was the pleasure of God Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight such was the love of God that it would not contain it self within that infinite Ocean of himself but it would needs have Rivers and Channels into which it might run and overflow 2. God in prosecution of his design creates a World of Creatures some rational and only capable of Love others irrational and serviceable to that one Creature which he makes the top of the whole Creation then it was that he set up one man Adam as a common person to represent the rest to him he gives abundance of glorious qualifications and him he sets over all the work of his hands as if he were the very Darling of Love if we should view the excellency of this Creature either in the outward or the inner man who would not wonder his body had its excellency which made the Psalmist say I will praise thee for I am fearfully and wonderfully made and curiously wrought in the lowest part of the Earth Psal 139.14 15. It is a speech borrowed from those who work Arras-work the body of man is a piece of curious Tapestry or Arras-work consisting of Skin Bones Muscles Sinews and the like what a goodly thing the body of man was before the Fall may be guessed by the excellent gifts found in the bodies of some men since the Fall as the Complection of David 1 Sam. 16.12 the swiftness of Hazael 2 Sam. 2.18 the beauty of Absolom 2 Sam. 14.25 If all these were but joyned in one as certainly they were in Adam what a rare Body would such a one be but what was this body in comparison of that soul
glorious but to shew that he will by that make thee glorious also Christ is the great Epitome of all the designs of God so that in him thou mayest see what thou art designed unto and how high and rich thou shalt be in the other world Beloved now are we the Sons of God 1 John 3.2 and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know when he shall appear we shall be like him he is now like us but then saith the Apostle we shall be like unto him Phil. 3.21 he will change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his Glorious body Oh consider what a frame of eternal comfort may we raise up from this ground of Christ incarnate God in the flesh 5. God in the flesh is the first opening of his eternal plot to do us good the Seed of the woman was the first word of comfort that ever was heard in the world after man was fallen the Plot was of old but the execution was not till after the Creation and then was a dim discovery of it even in the beginning of time though no clear manifestation till the fulness of time Well take it as we please whether in the beginning of time or in the fulness of time whether in the promise or in performance this discovering of Christ incarnate is the first opening of all Gods heart and Glory unto the Sons of men and from this we may raise a world of comfort for if God in the execution of his Decrees begins so gloriously how will he end if God be so full of love as to come down in flesh now in this world Oh what matter of hope is laid up before us of what God will be to us in that world to come if the Glory of God be let out to our souls so fully at first what Glorious openings of all the Glory of God will be let out to our souls at last Christians what do you think will God do with us or bring us unto when we shall be with him in heaven you see now he is manifested in flesh and he hath laid out a world of Glory in that but the Apostle tells us of another manifestation for we shall see him as he is he shall at last be manifest in himself 1 John 3.2 now we see through a glass darkly but then face to face now we know in part but then we shall know even as also we are known To what an height of knowledg or manifestation this doth arise I am now to seek and so I must be whilst I am on this side Heaven but this I believe the manifestation of God and Christ is more in Heaven than is or ever hath been or ever shall be upon earth thine eyes shall see the King in his Beauty Isa 33.17 or in his Glory saith Esay there is a great deal of difference betwixt seeing the King in his ordinary and seeing him in his Robes and upon his Throne with his Crown on his head and his Scepter in his hand and his Nobles about him in all his Glory the first openings of Christ are glorious but O what will it be to see him in his greatest Glory that ever he will manifest himself in we usually say that workmen do their meanest work at first and if the Glorious incarnation of Christ be but the beginning of Gods works in reference to our souls salvation what are those last works O my soul weigh all these passages and make an application of them to thy self and then tell me if yet thou hast not matter enough to raise up thy heart and to fill it with joy unspeakable and full of Glory Mat. 2.10 when the wise men saw but the Star of Christ they rejoyced with an exceeding great joy how much more when they saw Christ himself Your Father Abraham said Christ to the Jews rejoyced to see my day John 8 5● and he saw it and was glad he saw it indeed but afar of with the eyes of Faith they afore Christ had the promise but we see the performance how then should we rejoyce how glad shouldst thou be O my Soul at the sight and effect of Christs Incarnation if John the Baptist could leap for joy in his Mothers belly when Christ was but yet in the womb how should thy heart leap for joy who canst say with the Prophet Luke 2.28 unto me a Child is born and unto me a Son is given if Simeon waiting for the consolation of Israel took him up in his arms for joy and blessed God how shouldst thou with joy embrace him with both arms who knowest his coming in the flesh and who hast heard him come in the Gospel in the richest and most alluring expressions of his Love If the Angels of God yea if multitudes of Angels could sing for joy at his Birth Luke 2.14 Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace and good will towards men how much more shouldest thou whom it concerns more than the Angels join with them in consort and sing for joy this joyful song of good will towards men Awake awake O my Soul awake awake uttter a Song tell over these passages that God is come down into the world that God is come down in flesh that God is come down in flesh in order to thy reconciliation that God is come down in the likeness of man that he may bring thee up into the likeness of God and that all these are but the first openings of the Grace and goodness and Glory of God in Christ unto thy Soul and Oh what work will these make in thy Soul if the Spirit come in who is the comforter SECT VIII Of Calling on Jesus in that Respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus Now this calling on Jesus contains Prayer and Praise 1. We must pray that all these transactions of Jesus at his first coming or incarnation may be ours and is not here encouragement for our Prayers If we observe it this very point of Christs Incarnation opens a door of rich entrance into the presence of God we may call it a blessed Portal into Heaven b. 10. 20. not of Iron or Brass but of our own flesh this is that new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the Vail that is to say his flesh with what boldness and freeness may we now enter into the Holiest and draw near unto the Throne of Grace why Christ is incarnate God is come down in the flesh though his Deity may confound us if we should immediately and solely apply our selves unto it yet his humanity comforts our faint and feeble souls God in his humility animates our souls to come unto him and to seek of him whatsoever is needful for us Go then to Christ away away O my soul to Jesus or to God the Father in and through Jesus and O desire that the
effect the fruit the benefit of his Conception Birth and of the wonderful union of the two natures of Christ may be all thine What dost thou hope in Jesus and believe thy part in this Incarnation of Christ why then pray in hope and pray in Faith what is prayer but the stream and river of Faith an issue of the desire of that which I joyfully believe 2 Sam. 7.27 Thou O Lord God of Hosts God of Israel hast revealed to thy Servant saying I will build thee an house therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this Prayer unto thee 2. We must praise This was the special duty practised by all Saints and Angels at Christs Birth Luke 1.46 Luke 1.68 My Soul doth magnifie the Lord saith Mary and my Spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour And blessed be the Lord God of Israel said Zachary for he hath visited and redeemed his People and Glory to God in the highest said the Heavenly Host only one Angel had before brought the News Luke 2.11 unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord but immediately after there were many to sing praises not only six Cherubims as Isaiah saw nor only four and twenty Elders as John saw but a multitude of Heavenly Angels like Armies that by their Heavenly Hallelujahs gave Glory to God O my soul do thou endeavour to keep consort with those many Angels O sing Praises sing Praises unto God sing Praises Never was like case since the first Creation never was the wisdom truth justice mercy and goodness of God so manifest before I shall never forget that last speech of a dying Saint upon the stage Blessed be God for Jesus Christ O my soul living and dying let this be thought on What Christ incarnate for me why bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy Name SECT IX Of conforming to Jesus in that respect 9. LEt us conform to Jesus in reference to this great transaction of his Incarnation Looking to Jesus contains this and is the cause of this the sight of God will make us like to God and the sight of Christ will make us like to Christ for as a Looking-Glass cannot be exposed to the Sun but it will shine like the same so God receives none to contemplate his face but he transforms them into his own likeness by the irradiation of his light and Christ hath none that dive into these depths of his glorious and blessed Incarnation but they carry along with them sweet impressions of an abiding and transforming nature Come then let us once more look on Jesus in his Incarnation that we may conform and be like to Jesus in that respect But wherein lies this conformity or likeness to Jesus I answer in these and the like particulars 1. Christ was conceived in Mary by the Holy Ghost so must Christ be conceived in us by the same holy Ghost To this purpose is the seed of the Word cast in and principles of Grace are by the Holy Ghost infused he hath begotten us by the Word saith the Apostle Jam. 1.18 James 1.18 How Mean Contemptible or Impotent Men may esteem it yet God hath appointed no other means to convey supernatural life but after this manner Where no Vision is the People perish where no preaching is there is a worse judgment than that of Egypt when there was one dead in every Family By the Word and Spirit the Seeds of all Grace are sown in the heart at once and the heart closing with it immediatly Christ is conceived in the heart Concerning this spiritual Conception or Reception of Christ in us there is a great question Whether it be possible for any man to discern how it is wrought But for the Negative are these Texts Our Life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 and the Wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth Joh. 3.8 It is a wonderful hidden and secret Conception The holy Ghost sets out that state of unregeneracy in which Christ finds us by the name of Death Eph. 2.1 So that it must needs be as impossible for us to discover how it is wrought as it is impossible for one to know how he receives his own life Some say the first act of infusing or receiving Christ or Grace they are all one is wrought in an instant and not by degrees and therefore it is impossible to discern the manner And yet we grant that we may discern both the preparations to Grace and the first operations of Grace 1. The preparations to Grace are discernable such are those terrours and spiritual agonies which are often before the work of Regeneration they may be resembled to the heating of metals before they melt and are cast into the Mold to be fashioned now by the help of Natural Reason one may discern these 2. Much more may the first Motion and Operations of Grace be discerned by one truly regenerate because that in them his Spirit works together with the Spirit of Christ such are sorrow for sin as sin and seek rightly for comfort an hungring desire after Christ and his Merits neither do I think it impossible for a regenerate man to feel the very first illapse of the Spirit into the Soul for it may bring that sense with it self as to be easily discerned although it doth not alwayes see nor perhaps usually see it is true that the giving of Spiritual Life and the giving of the sense of it are two distinct acts of the Spirit yet who can deny but that both these acts may go together though alwayes they do not go together Howsoever it is yet even in such Persons as in the instant of Regeneration may feel themselves in a regenerate estate this Conclusion stands firm viz. They may know what is wrought in them but how it is wrought they cannot know nor understand we feel the Wind and perceive it in the motions and operations thereof but the Originals of it we are not able exactly to describe some think the beginnings of Winds are from the flux of the Air others from the exhalations of the Earth but there is no certainty so it is in the manner of this Conception or passive Reception of Christ and Grace into our hearts we know not how it is wrought but it nearly concerns us to know that it is wrought look we to his conformity that as Christ was conceived in Mary by the Holy Ghost so that Christ be conceived in us in a spiritual sense by the same Holy Ghost 2. Christ was sanctified in the Virgins Womb so must we be sanctified in our selves following the Commandment of God Be ye holy as I am holy Souls regenerate must be sanctified Every man saith the Apostle that hath this hope in him 1 John 3.3 purifieth himself even as he is pure I know
and Preaching of John was of a different strain from the litteral Doctrine of the Law as it is taken in the sense of the Jews for that called all for works and for exact performance do this and live but John called for Repentance and for renewing of the mind and for belief in him that was coming after disclaiming all righteousness by the works of the Law so that here was new Heavens and a new Earth began to be created a new Commandment given a new Church founded Justification by works cried down and the Doctrine of Faith and Repentance advanced and set up Hence one observes that the Evangelist Luke points out this year in a special manner it was the fifteenth year of Tiberius Cesar Lightf Harm of the Four Evang Luke 3.1 2. at which time sayes he Pilate was Governour of Judea Herod was Tetrarch of Galilee Philip was Tetrarch of Iturea Lysanias was Tetrach of Abilene and Annas and Caiaphas were high Priests And then even then the Word of God came unto John the Son of Zacharias in the Wilderness See how exact the Evangelist seems that so remarkable a year of the beginning of the Gospel might be fixed and made known to all the World In this respect I shall begin the first year of Christs Life with the beginning of John's Preaching which was sixs months current before the Ministry of Christ and in the compass of this first year I shall handle these Particulars 1. The Preaching of John Baptist 2. The Baptisme of Christ Jesus 3. The Fasting and Temptation of Christ in the wilderness 4. The first manifestation of Jesus by his several witnesses 5. Christ whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple Observe that every of these four years I shall end at one of the passeovers of which we read during Christ Ministry as of the first Passover in John 2.13 of the second Passover in John 5.1 of the third Passover John 6.4 of the fourth Passover John 13.1 And first of the first year to end at the first Passover SECT II. Of the Preaching of John Baptist FOr the Preaching of John the Baptist now was it that the Gospel began to dawn and John like the Morning-Star or the blushing day springing from the windows of the East foretells the approaching of the sun of Righteousness now was it that he laid the first rough hard and unhewen stone of the building in Mortification self-denial and doing violence to our natural affections I read not that ever John wrought a Miracle but he was a man of an austere Life and good Works convince more than Miracles themselves It is storied of one Pachomius a souldier under Constantine the Emperour that his Army being well-near starved for want of necessary Provision he came to a City of Christians and they of their own Charity relieved them speedily and freely he wondering at their so free and chearful dispensation enquired what kind of people those were whom he saw so bountiful It was Answered they were Christians whose profession is to hurt no man and to do good to every man hereupon the souldier convinced of the excellency of this Religion he threw away his Arms and became a Christian and a Saint To this purpose I suppose John the Baptist spent his time in Prayer Meditation affections and Colloquies with God eating flies and wild honey in the wilderness that he might be made a fit Instrument of preparation and dissemination of the Gospel of Christ In his Sermon he sometimes gave particular Schedules of Duty to several states of Persons he sharply reproved the Pharisees for their hypocrisie and impiety he gently guided others into the wayes of Righteousness calling them the straight wayes of the Lord and by such discourses and a Baptism he disposed the spirits of men for the entertaining of the Messias and the Doctrine of the Gospel John's Sermons were to the Sermons of Jesus as a Preface to a Discourse But observe this that his most usual Note was Repentance the Axe to the Root the Fan to the Floor the Chaff to the Fire As his Rayment was rough so was his Tongue and thus must the way be made for Christ in stubborn obstinate hearts plausibility or pleasing of the flesh is no fit Preface to Regeneration if the heart of Man had continued upright Christ might have been entertained without contradiction but now violence must be offered to our Corruptions ere we can have room for Grace if the great way-maker do not cast down Hills and raise up Vallies in the bosoms of Men there is no passage for Christ never will Christ come into that soul where the Herald of Repentance either on one motive or other hath not been before him Shall we hear that Sermon that John Preached in his own words Matthew in brief gives it in thus Repent ye for the Kingdom of Heaven is at Hand Mat. 3.2 these are the words when he first began to Preach the Gospel of Christ and indeed we find Christ himself doth preach the same Doctrine in the same words Jesus began to Preach and to say Mat. 4.17 Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at Hand In this Sermon we must observe these two parts here 's 1. A Duty and 2. A Motive to this Duty 1. The Duty is Repent It is not a Legal but an Evangelical Repentance that is here meant indeed the Law strictly takes no notice of Repentance but the Gospel true and through and consummate repentance is a Gospel-Grace 2. The Motive is this for the Kingdom of Heaven is at Hand This Phrase The Kingdom of Heaven hath several acceptations and accordingly it hath occasioned some differences 1. Sometimes it is taken for that glorious condition of the other World this may be implied but this I suppose few understand to be the sense of this place 2. Sometimes it is taken for the Church of Christ q. d. Repent for now the Pedagogy of the Jews is expiring or breathing its last and the Church of Christ is at hand a People that shall bear the very stile of Christians that shall profess Christ and close with Christ as their Saviour and Messiah of which Church that you may be a part prepare for it Repent 3. Sometimes it is taken for the spiritual Kingdom of Christ in opposition to those earthly temporal Kingdoms which bear the sway and domineered over all the World with Cruelty and Tyranny before Christs coming of this Daniel Dan. 2.44 prophesied And in the dayes of these Kings shall the God of Heaven set up a Kingdom which shall never be destroyed Now what was this Kingdom but the Kingdom of Grace It is by an Hebraism called the Kingdom of Heaven that is an Heavenly Kingdom the Jews expected the Messiah and dreamed of an outward glorious and pompous Kingdom now saith John the Messiah is come and his Kingdom is come but 't is not an Earthly but an Heavenly Kingdom and therefore Repent 4. Sometimes it
shew you the Word of the Lord. Deut. 5 5. The Vulgar renders it thus Ego sequestor medius I was a Mediatour a Midler betwixt God and you and so Christ Jesus he is a Mediatour a Midler an Interpreter an Inter-messenger betwixt God and his People 2. The Reasons of Christs being a Prophet were these 1. That he might reveal and deliver to his people the will of his Father 2. That he might open and expound the same being once delivered 3. That he might make his Saints to understand and to believe the same being once opened 1. As a Prophet he delivers to the people his Fathers will both in his own Person and by his Servants the Ministers In his own Person when he was upon earth as a Minister of the Circumcision Rom. 15.8 Heb. 2 3. and by his Servants the Ministers from the beginning of their mission till the end of the World Thus the Gospel is called A great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him Christ in his own personal preaching is said but to have begun to teach Acts 1.1 and the consummate publication was the sending of the holy Ghost to these Select Vessels who were to carry abroad this Treasure unto all the world it was begun by the Lord and it was confirmed by them that were the Disciples of the Lord. In this respect we cannot look on the publishing of the Gospel to the world but as very glorious was there not a resemblance of state and glory in the preaching of Christ You have heard how a forerunner was sent to prepare his way as an Herald to proclaim his approach and then was revealed the glory of the Lord but because the publication was not consummate till afterwards Eph. 4.8 Christ carries it on in greater state afterwards than he did before When he ascended up on high he then led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men as Princes in time of their solemn inauguration do some special Acts of magnificence and Honour they proclaim Pardons open Prisons Create Nobles fill Conduits with wine so Christ to testifie the glory of his Gospel at the day of his instalment and solemn readmission into his Fathers glory he proclaims the Gospel gives gifts unto men for the perfecting of the Saints Ver. 12. for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ 2. As a Prophet he opens and expounds the Gospel Thus being in the Synagogue on the Sabbath-day Luke 4.17 18 21. he opened the book and he found the place where it was written the Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor c. and then he closed the book and said Luke 24.27 this day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears And thus joyning himself with two of his Disciples going towards Emmaus he begun at Moses and all the Prophets and he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself the Prophesies of Christ were dark and hard to be understood and therefore Christ came down from Heaven to discover such truths John 3.13 No man hath ascended up to Heaven i.e. to be acquainted with Gods secrets but he that came down from Heaven the gracious purpose of God towards lost mankind was a secret locked up in the breast of the Father and so it had been even to this day had not Christ who was in the bosome of the Father and one of his Privy Council revealed it unto us hence Christ is called the Interpreter of God Mat. 11.27 no man knoweth the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him by his interpretation Luke 24.45 Acts 10.14 3. As a Prophet he gives us to understand and to believe the Gospel Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures and thus was the Case of Lydia whose heart the Lord opened he that first opens Scriptures at last opens hearts He is that true light which enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world John 1.9 he enlightens every believer not only with a common natural light but with a special supernatural light of saving spiritual and effectual knowledge now there is no Prophet can do this save only Jesus Christ he only is able to cause our hearts to believe and to understand the matter which he doth teach and reveal other Prophets may plant and water Paul may plant and Apollo may water but he and only he can give the increase other Prophets may teach and Baptize but unless Christ come in by the powerful presence of his Spirit 1 Pet. 2.5 Psal 127.1 they can never be able to save any one poor soul We as lively stones are built up a spiritual house saith Peter but except the Lord do build this house they labour in vain that build it O alas who is able to breath the Spirit of life into these dead stones John 5.25 but he of whom it is written The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear it shall live Who can awaken a dead soul out of a dead sleep And who can give light unto these blind eyes of ours but he of whom it is written Eph. 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light 3. The Excellencies of Christ above all other Prophets are in these respects 1. Other Prophets were but Types and shadows of this great Prophet even Moses himself was but a figure of him Acts 7.37 A Prophet shall the Lord God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me saith Moses these words Like unto me do plainly shew that Moses was at the best but an image and shadow of Christ now as substances do far excel shadows so doth Christ far excel all the Prophets they were but shadows and forerunners to him 2. Other Prophets revealed but some part of Gods will and only at sometimes God saith the Apostle at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time-past unto the Fathers by the Prophets Heb. 1.1 i.e. he let out his light by little and little till the Day-star and Sun of Righteousness arose Ver. 2. but in these last dayes he hath spoken by his Son i.e. he had spoken more fully and plainly in this respect saith the Apostle the heirs of Life and Salvation were but children before Christs incarnation Gal. 14.1 2. As now we see but through a glass darkly towards what we shall do in the life to come so did they of old in comparison of us their light in comparison of ours was but an obscure and glimmering light Christs discovery of himself then was but a standing behind the wall a looking forth of the window Cant. 2.9 a shewing of himself through the
manner of conversation Then is Christ's life mine when my actions refer to him as my Copy when I transcribe the Original of Christ's life as it were to the life Alas what am I better to observe in the life of Christ his Charity to his Enemies his Reprehensions of the Scribes and Pharisees his subordination to his heavenly Father his ingenuity towards all men his effusions of love towards all the Saints if there be no likeness of all this in my own actions The Life of Jesus is not described to be like a Picture in a chamber of Pleasure only for beauty and entertainment of the eye but like the Egyptain Hieroglyphicks whose very feature is a precept whose Images converse with men by sense and signification of excellent discourses to this purpose 2 Cor. 3.18 saith Paul we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed in the same Image from Glory to Glory Christ is the Image of his Father and we are the Images of Christ Christ is Gods Masterpeice and the most excellent device and work and frame of heaven that ever was or ever shall be now Christ being the top-excellency of all he is most fit to be the the pattern of all excellencies whatsoever and therefore he is the Image the Idea the Pattern the Platform of all our sanctification Come then O my soul look unto Jesus and look into thy self yea and look and look till thou art more transformed into his likeness Is it so that thou art changed into the same image with Christ took into his disposition as it is set forth in the Gospel look into his carriage look into his conversation at home and abroad and then reflecting on thy self look there and tell me canst thou find in thy self a disposition suitable to his disposition a carriage sutable to his carriage a conversation sutable to his conversation art thou every way like him in thy measure in Gospel allowance in some sweet resemblance why then here 's another ground of hope O rejoyce in it and bless God for it 3. If Christs life be mine then shall I admire adore believe and obey this Christ All these were the effects of those several passages in Christ's life respectively 1. They admire at his Doctrine and Miracles Luke 4.22 Matth. 15.31 For his Doctrine all bear him witness and wondered at those gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth and for his Miracles they wondred and they glorified the God the God of Israel yea sometimes their admiration was so great that they were sore amazed in themselves beyond measure and wondred Mark 6.51 Luke 9.43 They were amazed at the mighty Power of God and they wondred every one at all things which Jesus did 2. And as they admired so they adored there came a Leaper and worshipped him Matth. 8.2 Matth. 9.18 Matth. 14.33 saying if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and there came a Ruler and worshipped him saying My Daughter is even now dead come lay thy hand on her and she shall live and they that were in the Ship came and worshipped saying of a truth thou art the Son of God The very worshipping of Christ confesseth thus much that he is the Son of God 3. And as they adored so they believed If thou canst believe said Christ to the Father of the possessed Child all things are possible to him that believeth Mark 9.23 24. and straight way he cried out and said with tears Lord I believe help thou my unbelief And when many of his Disciples fell away then said Jesus to the twelve will ye also go away Peter answers for the rest to whom shall we go Why Lord we believe John 6.66 69. and are sure that thou art the Christ the Son of the living God not only worshipping of Christ but believing in Christ is a right acknowledgment that Christ is God Rom. 6.17 Mat. 4.19 20 22. 4. And as they believed so they obeyed ye have obeyed from the heart said Paul to the Romans that form of Doctrine which was delivered to you no sooner Peter and Andrew heard the voice of Christ follow me but they left all and followed him and no sooner James and John heard the same voice of Christ follow me but they left all and followed him Matth. 9.9 John 8.31 and no sooner Matthew sitting at the receipt of custom heard that voice of Christ follow me but he rose and followed him Why then are ye my Disciples indeed said Christ to the believing Jews if ye continue in my word Come then put thy self O my soul to the test thou hast seen and heard the wonderfull passages of Christ's Life the Baptism of Christ the Fasting of Christ the Temptations of Christ the Manifestations of Christ the Doctrine of Christ the Miracles of Christ the Holiness of Christ and is this the issue of all Dost thou now begin to admire and adore and believe and to obey this Christ is thy heart warmed thy affections kindled Forbs tells us that the word of God hath three degrees of opperation in the hearts of his chosen first it falleth to mens ears as the sound of many waters a mighty great and confused sound and which commonly brings neither terrour nor joy but yet a wandering and acknowledgment of a strange force and more than humane power this is that effect which many felt hearing Christ when they were astonished at his Doctrine as teaching with authority Mat. 1.22 27. Luke 4.32 John 7.46 what manner of Doctrine is this never man spake like this man the next effect is the voice of thunder which bringeth not only wonder but fear also not only filleth the ears with sound and the heart with astonishment but moreover shaketh and terrifieth the conscience the third effect is the sound of harping while the Word not only ravisheth with admiration and striketh the Conscience with terror but also lastly filleth it with sweet peace and joy In the present case give me leave to ask O my soul art thou struck into a maze at the mighty Miracles and divine Doctrine of Jesus Christ dost thou fall down and worship him as the Lord and thy God dost thou believe in him and relie on him for Life and Salvation dost thou obey him and follow the Lamb which way soever he goes dost thou act from Principles of Grace in newness of life and holiness of conversation dost thou walk answerably to the commands of Jesus Christ or at least is there in thee an earnest endeavour so to walk and is it the sorrow of thy soul when thou observest thy failings and dost thou rejoyce in spirit when thou art led by the Spirit why then here 's another ground hope that virtue is gone of Christ's life into thy soul 4. If Christ's life be mine then I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 Paul speaks out this evidence I am crucified
richer for all his treasures Col. 2.3 if I have no claim thereto or interest therein or what can I joy in another's riches when I my self am wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked Look to this O my soul peruse again and again thy grounds of hope as afore laid down do not slightly run them over thou canst not be too sure of Christ thou readest in the Gospel this and that passage of thy Jesus canst thou lay thine hand on every Line and say this passage is mine this Sermon was preached and this miracle was wrought for me that I might believe and that in believing I might have life through his Name O then how shouldst thou but rejoyce When Zacheus in the Sycamore Tree heard but Christ's voice Zacheus make haste and come down for to day I must abide in thy house Luke 19.5 6. O what haste made Zacheus to receive Christ he came down hastily and received him joyfully This offer of Christ to Zacheus is thine as well as his if thy hope be right Come down poor Soul saith Christ this day must I abide in thy house O then what joy should there be in thy heart when Christ comes in or when thou feelest Christ come in The friend of the Bridegroom rejoyceth greatly because of the Bridegroom's voice John 3.29 how much more may the Bride her self rejoyce 3. Let us come up to more and more and more fruition of Christ all other things work our delight but as they look towards this now in this fruition of Christ are contained these things first a propriety unto Christ for as a sick man doth not feel the joy of a sound mans health so neither doth a stranger to Christ feel the joy of a Believer in Christ how should he joy in Christ that can make no claim to him in the least degree But to that we have spoken Secondly a possession of Christ this exceedingly enlargeth our joy O how sweet was Christ to the Spouse when she could say Cant. 6.3 I am my Beloved's and my Beloved is mine he feedeth among the Lillies q. d. we have took possession of each other he is mine through faith and I am his through love we are both so knit by an inseparable union that nothing shall be able to separate us two he feedeth among the Lillies he refresheth himself and his Saints by his union and communion with them many are taken up with the joy and comfort of outward possessions but Christ is better than all in one Christ is comprized every scattered comfort here below Christ mine saith the soul and all mine 3. An accommodation of Christ to the soul and this is it that compleats our joy It is not bare possession of Christ which bringeth real delight but an applying of Christ unto that end and purpose for which he was appointed it is not the having of Christ but the using of Christ which makes him beneficial O the usefulness of Christ to all believing Souls The Scriptures are full of this as appears by all his Titles in Scripture he is our life our light our bread our water our milk our wine his flesh is meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed he is our father our brother our friend our husband our King our Priest our Prophet he is our justification our sanctification our wisdom our redemption he is our peace our mediation our attonement our reconciliation our all in all Alas I look on my self and I see I am nothing I have nothing without Jesus Christ here 's a temptation I cannot resist it here 's a corruption I cannot overcome it here 's a persecution I cannot down with it well but Christ is mine I have interest in Christ and I have possession of Christ and I find enough in Christ to supply all my wants he was set up on purpose to give me grace and to renew my strength so that if I make my application to Christ I can do all things Phil. 4.13 I can suffer the loss of all things Phil. 3.8 I can conquer all things nay in all things be more than a conquerour through him that loves me Rom. 8.37 Oh the joy now that this accommodation brings to my soul I see it is nothing but Christ and therefore I cannot but rejoyce in this Christ Phil. 3.3 or I must rejoyce in nothing at all Surely we are the Circumcision which rejoyce in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the flesh O my soul where is thy faculty of joy come bring it to this blessed object the Lord Jesus Christ If thou know'st not how first contemplate on Christ think on those several passages in his life those that lived with him and stood by to see them it is said of them Luke 13.17 that they all rejoyced for the glorious things that were done by him Or if thy heart be so dull and heavy that this will not raise it up then look to thy grounds of hope and confidence in Christ so long as thou doubtest of him or of thy interest in him how shouldst thou rejoyce or be cheerful in thy spirit The poor man could not speak it without tears Mark 9.24 Lord I believe help thou my unbelief a believing unbelief a wavering staggering trembling faith cannot be without some wounds in spirit O be confident and this will make thee chearful or if yet thou feelest not this affection to stir aspire to fruition yea to more and more fruition of Christ and union with Christ and to that purpose consider thy propriety to Christ thy possession of Christ and the accommodation or usefulness of Christ to thy condition whatsoever it is What will not these things move thy spiritual delight canst thou not hear Christ say All I am is thine and all I have done is thine for thy use and for thy benefit And doth not thy heart leap within thee at each word O my soul I cannot check thee for thy deadness it is said Luke 19.37 that when Christ was at the descent of the Mount of Olives that the whole multitude of the Disciples began to rejoyce and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works that they had seen What a multitude of disciples rejoycing in Christ's acts and art not thou one amongst the multitude If thou art a Disciple rejoyce thou surely it concerns thee as much as them and therefore rejoyce lift up thy voice in harmony with the rest rejoyce and again rejoyce SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus Thus we read that looking up to Jesus or lifting up the eyes to Jesus goes also for Prayer in Gods Book Psal 5.3 My prayer will I direct to thee saith David and will look up and mine eyes fail with looking upwards Psal 69.3 Faith in prayer will often come out at the eye in lieu of another door our
of greater place and calling whether it did not savour of sedition and disturbance of the State to lead about such a Crew of Disciples and followers after him and what was the reason of their flight whether it were not a token of their guiltiness of some disorder or of riotous practises It is not for me to speak how many Queries the High Priest might make to tempt Jesus but certainly he was sifted to the Bran examined to the full of all such circumstances as either might trap Christ or in the least degree advance and help forward his Condemnation to this question concerning his Disciples our Saviour answered nothing alas he knew the frailty of his followers he might have said For my Disciples you see one hath betrayed me and another will anon forswear me he stayes but for the crowing of the Cock and then you shall hear him curse and swear that he never knew me and for all the rest a pannick fear hath seized upon their hearts and they are fled and have left me alone to tread the Wine-press Ah no he will not speak evil of the Teachers of his people it was grief to him and added to his sufferings John 6.67 68 69. that all had forsaken him once before this many of his Disciples went back and walked no more with him which occasioned Jesus to say to the twelve will ye also go why no said Peter then Lord whether shall we go thou hast the words of Eternal Life and we believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the Living God Oh Peter what a strong Faith was that We believe and we are sure but how is it now that ye have no faith or why are ye so fearful O ye of little Faith I believe this sate upon the heart of Christ and yet he would not accuse them who now stood in their places and was accused for them and for us all and therefore to that question of his Disciples he answered nothing 2. He asked him of his Doctrine what his questions were of that are not set down neither but probably they might be such as these Who was his Master or instructer in that new Doctrine he had lately broached why he did seek to innovate and alter their long practised and accustomed Rites and what ground had he to bring in his own devices in their steads as Baptism for Circumcision the Lords Supper for the Passover himself and his Apostles for the high Priests and Levites when neither he nor most of them were of that Tribe why he was so bold and saucy being but three and thirty years of age to declame so bitterly and satyrically against the Pharisees and Sadduces and Scribes and Priests and Elders of the People Much of this stuffe he might bring out in his Interrogatories that so by his questioning him in many things he might trap him in something to his confusion and destruction And to this question our Saviour answers John 18.20 21. but Oh how wisely I spake openly to the World saith he I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple whither the Jews alwayes resorted and in secret have I said nothing why askest thou me ask them which heard me what I said unto them behold they know what I said q. d. I appeal to the testimony of the very enemies themselves thou suspectest me to be a seditious person and one that plots mischief against the State in secret I tell thee truth I speak nothing in secret i.e. nothing in the least manner tending to sedition my Doctrine I brought with me from the bosom of my Father it is the everlasting Gospel and not of yesterday and it containes nothing in it of Sedition Faction Rebellion Treason ask these mine Enemies these who have apprehended and bound me and brought me hither they know what I said let them speak if they can wherein I have transgressed the Law 2. For the stroke given Christ by that base servant one of the Officers which stood by stroke Jesus with the palm of his hand saying answerest thou the High Priest so John 18.22 That holy face which was designed to be the object of Heaven in the beholding of which much of the celestial glory doth consist that face which the Angels stare upon with wonder like Infants at a bright Sun-beam was now smitten by a base varlet in the presence of a Judge and howsoever the Assembly was full yet not one amongst them all reproved the fact or spake a word for Christ nay in this the injury was heightned because the blow was said to be given by Malchus an Idumean Slave it was he Chrys hom 82. in Joh. whose ear was cut off by Peter and cured by Christ and thus he requites him for his Miracle Amongst all the sufferings of Christ one would think this were but little and yet when I look into Scriptures I find it much Thus Jeremy He giveth his cheeks to him that smiteth him he is filled full with reproach Thus Micah Lam. 3.30 Mich. 5.1 speaking of Christ They shall smite the Judge of Israel with a Rod upon the Cheek there was in it a world of shame 2 Cor. 11.30 the Apostle layes it down as a sign of suffering and reproach if a man smite you on the face Nothing more disgraceful saith Chrysostom Chrys hom 82. in Joh. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 virgam crepidam significat Lei. Crit. Sacr. than to be smitten on the Cheek the diverse reading of the word speaks it out further he stroke him with a Rod or he stroke him with the palm of his hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say some refers to his striking with a rod or club or shoe or pantoffle or as others it refers to his striking with the palm of his hand of the two the palm of the hand is judged more disgraceful than either rod or shoe and therefore in the Text we translate it with the palm of the hand he struck at Jesus i.e. with open hand with his hand † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pugno 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 palmi Idem Chrys hom 81. in Joh. c. 18. stretched out The Antients commenting on this Cuff Let the Heavens be afraid saith one and let the Earth tremble at Christ's patience and this Servant's impudence O ye Angels how were ye silent how could you contain your hands when you saw his hand striking at God If we consider saith another who took the blow was not he that struck him Aug. in Tract 113. worthy to be consumed of fire or to be swallowed up of earth or to be given up to Satan and thrown down into Hell If a Subject should but lift up his hand against the Son of an earthly Soveraign would he not be accounted worthy of punishment how much more in this case when the hand is lifted up against the King of Kings and Lord of Lords
consider that my sins were the cause of all methinks I should need no more arguments for self-abhorring Christians would not your hearts rise aganst him that should kill your Father Mother Brother Wife Husband dearest Relations in all the World O then how should your hearts and souls rise against sin surely your sin it was that murthered Christ that killed him who is instead of all relations who is a thousand thousand times dearer to you than Father Mother Husband Child or whomsoever Job 42.6 one thought of this should methinks be enough to make you say as Job did I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes Oh what 's that cross on the back of Christ My sins Oh what 's that Crown on the head of Christ My sins Oh what 's that nail in the right hand and that other in the left hand of Christ My sins Oh what 's that spear in the side of Christ My sins Oh what are those nails and wounds in the feet of Christ My sins With a spiritual eye I see no other engine tormenting Christ no other Pilate Herod Annas Caiaphas condemning Christ no other Souldiers Officers Jews or Gentiles doing execution on Christ but only sin Oh my sins my sins my sins John 3.14 15. 2. Comfort we our selves in the end and aim of this death of Christ As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness so must the Son of Man be lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternal life The end of Christ's crucifying is the material business and therefore let the end be observed as well as the meritorious cause without this consideration the contemplation of Christ's death or the meditation of the story of Christ's sufferings would be altogether unprofitable now what was the end surely this John 12.32 1 Pet. 2.24 Christ lifted up that he might draw all men unto him Christ hanged on a Tree that he might bear our sins on the Tree this was the plot which God by ancient design had aimed at in the crucifying of Christ and thus our faith must take it up indeed our comfort hangs on this the intent aim and design of Christ in his sufferings is that welcome news and the very Spirit of the Gospel O remember this Christ is crucified and why so that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have life everlasting We are now at the height of Christ's sufferings and the Sun is now in his meridian or height of ascent Mat. 27.45 I shall no more count hour by hour for from the sixth hour till the nineth hour that is from twelve till three in the afternoon there was darkness over all the Land But of that and of the consequents after it in the next Section SECT VII Of the consequents after Christ's crucifying THe particulars following I shall quickly dispatch As thus 1. About twelve when the Sun is usually brightest it began now to darken This darkness was so great that it spread over all the Land of Jewry some think over all the World Luke 23.44 so we translate it in Luke And there was a darkness over all the Earth and many Gentiles besides Jews observed the same as a great miracle Dionisius the Areopagite as Suidas relates could say at first sight of it Suid. in vita Sa Dion Either the World is ending or the God of Nature is suffering This very darkness was the occasion of that Altar erected in Athens and dedicated unto the unknown God Of this prophesied Amos And it shall come to pass in that day that I will cause the Sun to go down at noon Acts 17 23. Amos 8.9 and I will darken the Earth in a clear day The cause of this darkness is diversly rendered by several Authors some think that the Sun by Divine power with-drew and held back its beams Others say Hier. in Mat. 17. Orig. tract 35. in Matth. Dionis Epist. 7. ad Policarpum that the obscurity was caused by s●me thick clouds which were miraculously produced in the air and spread themselves over all the earth Others say that this darkness was by a wonderful interpoposition of the Moon which at that time was at full but by a miracle interposed it self betwixt the Earth and Sun Whatsoever was the cause it continued for the space of three hours as dark as the darkest winters night 2. About three which the Jews call the nineth hour the Sun now beginning to receive his light Jesus cryed with a loud voice Eli Eli Lamasabachthani my God my God why hast thou forsaken me And then that the Scriptures might be fulfilled Matth. 27.46 John 19.28 30. Luke 23.46 he said I thirst And when he had received the vinegar he said it is finished And at last crying with a loud voice he said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit and having said thus he gave up the ghost I cannot stay on these seven words of Christ which he uttered on the cross his words were ever gracious but never more gracious than at this time we cannot find in all the Books and Writings of men in all the Annals and Records of time either such sufferings or such sayings as were these last words and wounds sayings and sufferings of Jesus Christ John 19.30 And having said thus he gave up the ghost Or as John relates it He bowed his head and gave up the ghost He bowed not because he was dead but first he bowed and then dyed the meaning is he dyed willingly without constraint cheerfully without murmur what a wonder is this life it self gives up his life and death it self dyes by his death Jesus Christ who is the Author of life the God of life layes down his life for us and death it self lyes for ever nailed to that bloody cross in the stead of Jesus Christ And now we may suppose him at the gates of Paradise calling with his last words to have them opened that the King of glory might come in 3. About four in the afternoon he was pierced with a spear and there issued out of his side both blood and water And one of the Souldiers with a spear pierced his side and forthwith came there out blood and water How truly may we say of the Souldiers John 19.34 that after all his sufferings they have added wounds they find him dead and yet they will scarce believe it until with a spear they have search'd for life at the well-head it self even at the heart of Christ And forthwith there came out blood and water this was the Fountain of both Sacraments the Fountain of all our happiness Zach. 13.1 The Fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness There are three that bear-witness on earth saith John the Spirit and the Water 1 John 5.8 and the Blood Out of the side of Christ being now dead there issues water and blood signifying
bottomless they pass our understandings yet they recreate our hearts they give matter of admiration yet they are not devoid of consolation O God raise up our souls to thee and if our Spirits be too weak to know thee make our affections ardent and sincere to love thee Surely the death of Christ requires this and calls for this many other motives we may draw from Christ and many other motives are laid down in the Gospel and indeed the whole Gospel is no other thing than a motive to draw man to God by the force of God's love to man in this sense the holy Scriptures may be called the book of true love seeing therein God both unfolds his love to us and also binds our love to him but of all the motives we may draw from Christ and of all the arguments we may find in the Gospel of Christ there is none to this the death of Christ the blood of Jesus is not this such a love-letter as never never was the like read the words For his great love wherewith he loved us Ephes 2.4 or if you cannot read observe the Hyeroglyphicks every stripe is a letter every nail is a capital letter every bruise is a black letter his bleeding wounds are as so many rubricks to shew upon record Oh consider it is not this a great love are not all mercies wrapt up in the blood of Christ it may be thou hast riches honours friends means Oh but thank the blood of Christ for all thou hast it may be thou hast grace and that is better than corn or wine or oyl Oh but for this thank the blood of Jesus surely it was the blood of Christ that did this for thee thou wast a rebellious soul thou hast an hard and filthy heart but Christ's blood was the fountain opened and it took away all sin and all uncleanness Christ in all and Christ above all and wilt thou not love him Oh that all our words were words of love and all our labour labour of love and all our thoughts thoughts of love that we might speak of love and muse of love and love this Christ who hath first loved us with all our heart and soul and might what wilt thou not love Jesus Christ let me ask thee then whom wilt thou love or rather whom canst thou love if thou lovest not him if thou sayest I love my Friends Parents Wife Children Oh but love Christ more than these a friend would be an enemy but that the blood of Christ doth frame his heart a Wife would be a trouble but that the blood of Christ doth frame her heart all mercies are conveyed to us through this channel Oh who would not love the Fountain consider of it again and again our Jesus thought nothing too good for us he parts with his life and blood he parts with the sense and feeling of the love of God and all this for us and for our sakes Ah my soul how shouldst thou but love him in all things and by all means It is reported of Ignatius that he so continually meditated on the great things Christ suffered for him that he was brought entirely to love him and when he was demanded why he would not forsake Christ rather than suffer himself to be torn and devoured of wild beasts he answered that he could not forget him because of his sufferings Oh his sufferings said he are not transcient words or removable objects but they are indelible characters so engraven in my heart that all the torments of earth can never raze them out And being commanded by that bloody Tyrant Trajane to be ript and unbowelled they found Jesus Christ written upon his heart in Characters of Gold Here was an heart worth Gold Oh that it might be thus with us If my hands were all of love that I could work nothing but love if my eyes were all of love that I could see nothing but love if my mind were all of love that I could think of nothing but love all were too little to love that Christ who hath thus immeasurably loved me if I had a thousand hearts to bestow on Christ and they most enlarged and scrued up to the highest pitch of affection all these were infinitely short of what I owe to my dread Lord and dearest Saviour Come let 's joyn hands He loved us and therefore let us love him if we dispute the former I argue from the Jews when he shed but a few tears out of his eyes at Lazarus's grave then said the Jews John 11.36 behold how he loved him John 11.36 how much more truly may it be said of us for whom he shed both water and blood and that from his heart Behold how he loved us why then if our hearts be not Iron yea if they be Iron how should they chuse but feel the magnetical force of this Loadstone of love for to a Loadstone doth Christ resemble himself when he saith of himself And I if I be lifted up from the earth John 12.32 will draw all men unto me SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that Respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of Salvation in his sufferings and death what hath Christ suffered for us hath he drunk off all the cup of God's wrath and left none for us how should we be but cheered Precious souls why are you afraid there is no death no hell Rom. 8.1 no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus There is no divine justice for them to undergo that have their share in this death of Christ Oh the Grace and Mercy that is purchased by this means of Christ Oh the waters of comfort that flow from the sufferings and obedience of Christ Christ was amazed that we might be cheered Christ was imprisoned that we might be delivered Christ was accused that we might be acquitted Christ was condemned that we might be redeemed Christ suffered his Fathers wrath and came under it that the victory might be ours and that in the end we might see him face to face in glory is not here matter of Joy It may be the Law and sin and justice and conscience and death and hell may appear as enemies and disturb thy comforts but is there not enough in the blood of Christ to chase them away Give me Leave but to frame the objections of some doubting souls and see whether Christ's death will not sufficiently answer and solve them all 1. One cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me my sins are ever before me against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight Psal 51.3 4. I have sinned against a most dear and gracious and merciful God and Father in our Lord Jesus O the aggravations of my sins are they not sins above measure sinful It may be so but the blood of Christ is a fountain opened for sins and for uncleanness in him we have redemption through his blood
there is a conveyance of an healing strengthning quickning vertue flowing into the Soul in the time of its viewing eying contemplating reflecting upon Christ crucified Christ lifted up and this comes from the secret presence of God blessing this our looking upon Christ as the Ordinance by which he hath appointed to make an effectual impression upon the heart It is not for us curiously to enquire how this should be Principles we say are not to be proved save only God hath said it and experience hath found it out that when Faith is occasioned to act on any sutable sacred object God by his Spirit doth not fail to answer in such a case he fills the Soul with comfort blessing vertue he returns upon the Soul by from and through the actings of Faith whatsoever by it is looked for Indeed none knoweth this but he that feels it and none feels this that knoweth how to express it as there is somewhat in the fire heat warmth and light which no Painter can express and as there is somewhat in the face heat warmth and life which no Limner can set forth so there is somewhat flowing into the soul while it is acting faith on the Death of Christ which for the rise or way or manner of its working is beyond what tongue can speak or pen can write or pencil can delineate Come then if we would have grace endure afflictions die to sin grow in our mortification let us again and again return to our duty of looking unto Jesus or believing in Jesus as he was lifted up And yet when all is done let us not think that sin will die or cease in us altogether for that is an higher perfection than this life will bear only in the use of the means and through God's blessing we may expect thus far that sin shall not reign it shall not wear a Crown it shall not sit in the Throne it shall hold no Parliaments it shall give no laws within us we shall not serve it but we shall die to the dominion of it by vertue of this Death of Jesus Christ And this He grant who died for us Amen Amen Thus far we have looked on Jesus as our Jesus in his sufferings and death Our next work is to look on Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation during the time of his Resurrection and abode upon earth until his Ascension or taking up to Heaven LOOKING UNTO JESUS In his Resurrection The Seventh Book PART VII CHAP. I. Matth. 28.6 He is risen Come see the place where the Lord lay 2 Tim. 2.8 Remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead SECT 1. Of the Time of Christ 's Resurrection THe Sun that went down in a ruddy cloud is risen again with glorious beams of light In this piece as in the former we shall first lay down the Object and then give directions how to look upon it The Object is Jesus carrying on the work of man's salvation in his Resurrection and during the time of his abode on earth after his Resurrection Now in all the transactions of this time I shall only take notice of these two things 1. Of this Resurrection 2. Of his Apparitions for first he rose and secondly he shews himself that he was risen in the first is the Position in the second is the Proof 1. For the Position the Scripture tells us that he rose again the third day In this point I shall observe these particulars 1. When he arose 2. Why he arose 3. How he arose 1. When he arose it was the third day after his crucifying Mat. 12.40 As Jonas was three dayes and three nights in the whales belly so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth This was the time he had appointed and this was the time appropriated to Christ and marked out for him in the Kalender of the Prophets of all those whom God raised from death to life there is not one that was raised on the third day but Jesus Christ some rose afore and some rose after the Son of the Shunamite the son of the widow of Sarephtah the daughter of Jairus he of Naim and some others rose afore Lazarus and the Saints that rose again from the dust when Christ rose staid longer in the grave but Christ takes the day which discovers him to be the Messiah Luke 24.46 Thus it is written and thus it behoved Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day Had he rose sooner a doubt might have been of his dying and had he lain longer a doubt might have been of his rising he would rise no sooner because in some diseases as in the Apoplexy or such like examples are given of such as seeming to be dead have indeed revived and he would lie no longer in his grave because in all dead carcasses and especially in a wounded body putrefaction and corruption begins the third day this may be gathered by the Story of Lazarus in the Gospel where Jesus commanding the stone to be rolled from his grave John 11.39 Psal 16.10 Martha his Sister answered Lord by this time he stinketh for he hath been dead four dayes Now the body of Christ as it was prophesied must not corrupt for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Mark this Text All men shall rise again but their bodies must first see corruption only the Messiah was to rise again before he saw corruption and therefore he would not delay his resurrection after the third day Hosea 6.2 Some think this and that of Hosea after two days he will revive us and in the third day he will raise us up to be the main Texts to which Christ refers when he said Luke 24.46 Thus it is written And to which the Apostle refers when he said that Christ rose again the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.4 I dare not be too curious in giving reasons for this set time and the rather because Christ is a free worker of his own affairs he doth what he pleaseth and when he pleaseth times and actions are in his own power and he needs not to give us any account of them and yet so far as Scripture discovers we may go along and amongst many others I shall lay down these following Reasons 1. Because the Types had so prefigured we see it in Isaac Jonah and Hezekiah a Patriarch a Prophet and a King 1. For Isaac from the time that God commanded Isaac to be offered for a burnt offering Isaac was a dead man but the third day he was released from death this the Text tells us expresly that it was the third day when Abraham came to Mount Moriah Gen. 22.4 Heb. 11.19 and had his Son as it were restored to him again Gen. 22.4 And Paul discovers that this was in a figure
life In some sence then and in a Mystery Christ was a Gardiner but Maries mistake was in supposing him the Gardiner of that only place and not the Gardiner of our souls Souls in desertion are full of mistakes though in their mistakes are sometimes many mysteries 2. Her speech upon her mistake If thou hast born him hence c. we may observe 1. That her words to Christ are not much unlike the answer she gave the Angels only she seems to speak more harsh to Christ than she did to the Angels to them she complains of others They have taken away my Lord but to Christ she speaks as if she would charge him with the fact as if he looked like one that had been a breaker up of graves a carrier away of Corpses out of their place of rest Sir if thou hast born him hence But pardon love as it fears where it needs not so it suspects very often where it hath no cause When love is at a loss he or any that comes but in our way hath done it hath taken him away 2. That something she spoke now to Christ which she had not mentioned to the Angels She said not unto them tell me where he is but reserved that question for himself to answer Come tell me where thou hast laid him q. d. thou art privy to the place and with the action of removing Christ my Lord Oh how she errs and yet how she hits the truth Jesus must tell her what he had done with himself sure it was fittest for his own speech to utter what was only possible for his own power to do 3. That the conclusion of her speech was a meer vant or flourish And I will take him away Alas poor woman she was not able to lift him up there are more than one or two allowed to the carrying of a corps and as for his it had more than an hundred pound weight of myrrhe and other odours upon it sure she had forgotten that women are weak and that she her self was but a woman how was it possible that she should take him away she could not do it well but she would do it though there is no essay too hard for love she exempts no place she esteems no person she speaks without fear she promises without condition she makes no exception as if nothing were impossible that love suggesteth the darkness could not fright her from setting out before day the watch could not fear her from coming to the Tomb where Christ was laid she resolved to break open the seals and to remove the stone far above her strength and now her love being more incensed with the fresh wound of her loss she speaks resolutely I will take him away never considering whether she could or no love is not ruled with reason but with love it neither regards what can be nor what should be but only what it self desireth to do 4. That through all this speech she omits the principal verb she enquires for Jesus but she never names him whom she enquires after She could say to the Angels they have taken away my Lord but now she talks of one under the term of him if thou hast born him hence tell me where thou hast layd him and I will take him away him him him but she never names him or tells who he is this is solaecismus amoris an irregular speech but loves one dialect q.d. who knows not him why all the world is bound to take notice of him he is worthy to be the owner of all thoughts no thought in my conceit can be well bestowed upon any other than him And therefore Sir Gardiner whosoever thou art if thou hast born him hence thou knowest who I mean thou canst not be ignorant of whom I love there is not such another among the sons of men as the psalmist Psal 45.2 he is the fairest among the Children of men or as the Spouse he is the chiefest of ten thousands and therefore tell me some news of him of none but him of him and only of him O tell me where thou hast laid him and I will take him away A soul sick of love thinks all the world knows her beloved and is therefore bound to tell her where he is the daughters of Jerusalem were very ignorant of Christ Can. 5.9 and yet I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem said the Spouse if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love Can. 5.8 Iohn 20.16 2. Christ appears as unknown Jesus saith unto her Mary she turned her self and saith unto him Rabboni which is to say Master Sorrow may endure for a night but joy comes in the morning she that hitherto had sought without finding and wept without comfort and called without answer even to her Christ now appears and at his apparition these passages are betwixt them first he speaks unto her Mary and then she replies unto him Rabboni which is to say Master 1. He speaks unto her Mary it was but a word but O what life what Spirit what quickening and reviving was in the word the voice of Christ is powerful if the Spirit of Christ come alone with the Word it will rouse hearts raise spirits work wonders Ah poor Mary what a case was she in before Christ speak unto her she ran up and down the Garden with O my Lord where have they layd my Lord but no sooner Christ comes and speaks to her by his Spirit and with power but her mind is enlightened her heart is quickened and her soul is revived Observe here the difference betwixt the Word of the Lord and the Lord speaking that word with power and Spirit we find sometimes the hearts of Saints are quickened fed cherished healed comforted in the use of the means and sometimes again they are dead sensless heavy and hardened nay which is more the very same truth which they hear at one time it may be affects them and at another time it doth not the reason is they hear but the Word of the Lord at one time and they hear the Lord himself speaking that word at another time Mary heard the Word of the Lord by an Angel woman why weepest thou but her tears dropped still she heard again the word of the Lord by Christ himself woman why weepest thou and yet she weeps and will not be comforted but now Christ speaks and he speaks with power Mary and at this word her tears are dried up no more tears now unless they be tears for joy and yet again observe the way how you may know and discern the effectual voice of Jesus Christ if it be effectual it usually singles a man out yea though it be generally spoken by a Minister yet the voice of Christ will speak particularly to the very heart of a man with a marvelous kind of Majesty and Glory stampt upon it and shining in it take an humble broken drooping Spirit he hears of the free offer of
grace and mercy in Jesus Christ but he refuseth the offers he hears of the precious promises of God in Christ but he casts by all promises as things that are generally spoken and applyed by man but when the Lord comes in he speaks particularly to his very heart he meets with all his objections that he thinks this is the Lord and this is to me Thus Mary before heard the voice of an Angel and the voice of Christ woman why weepest thou it was a general voice no better title was then afforded but woman thou weepest like a woman O woman and too much a woman why weepest thou but now Christ comes nearer and he singles her out by her very name Mary Oh this voice came home he shewed now that he was no stranger to her he knew her by name as somtimes God spake to Moses thou hast found Grace in my sight I know thee by name so Christ speaks to Mary thou hast found grace in my sight I know thee by name Exod. 33..17 Why how should this voice be ineffectual Oh now it works now she knows Christ which before she did not and indeed this is the right way to know Christ to be first known of Christ But now saith the Apostle after that ye have known God and then he corrects himself Gal. 4.9 or rather are known of God for till he know us we shall never know him aright Now her dead spirits are rai●ed which before were benummed and no marvel that wi h a word he revive her spirits who with a word made the W●rld and even in this very word shewed an omnipotent power The Gardiner had ●one his part ●aith one to making her all g●●en on a sudden But even now her body seemed the hearse of her dead heart and her heart the coffin of her dead soul and see how quickly all is turned out and in a new world now Christ's resurrection is Mary Mag●alens resurrection too on a sudden sh● revives raised as it were from a dead and drooping to a lively and cheerful state ● She laid u●to him Rabboni which is to say Master As she was ravished with his voice so impatient of delay she takes his talk out of his mouth and to his first and only word she answered but one other Rabboni which is to say Master A wonder that in this verse but two words should pass betwixt them two but some give this reason that a sudden joy rouzing all her passions she could neither proceed in her own nor give him leave to go forward in his speech Love would have spoken but fear enfor●ed sil●●ce hope framed words but doubt melts them in the passage her inward concei●s served them to come out but then her voice trembled her tongue faultered her breath ●●iled why such is the estate of them that are sick with a surfeit of sudden joy● her joy was so sudden that not a word more could be spoken but Rabboni which is to say Master Sudden joyes are not without some doubts or tremblings when Jacob heard that his son Joseph was alive Gen ●● 26. Ps●l 1.26.1 Acts 12.9 his heart fainted he was even astonished at so good a news when God restored the Jews out of captivity they could think of it no otherwise then as a dream when Peter was by an Angel delivered out of prison he took it only for a vision or apparition and not for truth when Christ manifested his resurrection to his Disciples Luke 24.41 it is said that for very joy they believed not their fears as it were kept back and questioned the truth of their joyes As in the Sea when a storm is over there remains still an inward working and volutation even so in the mind of man when its fears are blown over and there is a calm upon it there is still a motus trepidationis a motion of trembling or a kind of solicitous jealousie o what it enjoyes And this might be Mary Magdalens case though she suddenly answered Christ upon the first notice of his voice yet because the novelty was so strange his Person so changed his presence so unexpected and so many miracles were laid at once before her amazed eyes she found as it were a sedition in her thoughts her hope presumed best but her fear suspected it to be too good to be true and while these enterchange objections and answers she views him better but for the present cannot speak a word more save this Rabbony which is to say Master 5. For the consequents after this apparition Jesus saith unto her touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father John 20.17 but go to my brethren and say unto them I ascend unto my Father and to your Father and to my God and your God In these words we may observe a prohibition and a command the prohibition touch me not the command but go to my brethren and say unto them c. 1. Touch me not It seems Mary was now fallen at his sacred feet she was now ready to kiss with her lips his sometimes grievous but now most glorious wounds Such is the nature of love that it covets not only to be united but if it were possible to be transformed out of it self into the thing it loveth Mary is not satisfied to see her Lord nor is she satisfied to hear her Lord but she must touch him embrace his feet and kiss them with a thousand kisses Oh how she hangs and clings about his feet or at least how she offers to make towards him and to fall upon him but on a sudden he checks her forwardness touch me not What a mystery is this Mary a sinner touched him and she being now a Saint may she not do so much she was once admitted to anoint ●is head and is she now unworthy to touch his feet what meant Christ to debar her of so desired a duty she had the fi●st sight of Christ and heard the first words of Christ after his resurrection and must she not have the priviledg of his first embracing there is something of wonder in these words and it puts many to a stand and many an interpretation is given to take off the wonder I shall tell you of some of them though for my p●rt I shall cleave only to the last 1. Some think that Mary not only essayed to kiss his feet but to desire the fulfilling of the promise of the Spirit of Christ this promise Christ made to his Disciples at his last supper John 6.7 I will send you the Comforter and she expected it to be now performed after his resurrection to which Christ answered Quia nondum sanctum spiritum miserat ideo a tactu suo Mariam prohibebat dicens nondum ascendi in calem unde ipse per me spiritum sanctum ad vos mittet Cyril l. 12. in Joha c. 50. that he would not then give the Spirit unto her for that as yet he was
with man I know no reason why we should exclude civil peace out of Christ's wish many many a promise and precept we have in the Word scattered here and there to this purpose Lev. 26.6 Job 5.23.24 And I will give peace in the land and ye shall lye down and none shall make you afraid and thou shalt be in league with the stones of the field and thou shalt know that thy Tabernacle shall be in peace Ier. 29.7 Heb. 12.14 and seek the peace of the City and pray unto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace And follow peace and holiness without which no man shall see God Orbem pecatum was ever a clause in the prayers of the primitive Church Rom. 12.13 that the world might be quiet I am sure it is Christ's command if it be possible as much as lyeth in you live peaceably with all men 3. It speaks there peace among themselves peace one with another such is or should be the condition of the Church Jerusalem is builded as a City that is compact together Psal 122.3 or unity within it self the Apostle dwells in this unity there is one body Eph. 4.4 5 6. and one Spirit and one hope and one Lord and one faith and one baptism and one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all The Church is a Court whose very pillars are peace the building of Christianity knows no other material to work upon if we look upon the Church it self there is one body if upon the very soul of it there is one Spirit if upon the endowment of it there is one hope if upon the head of it there is one Lord if upon the life of it there is one faith if upon the door of it there is one Baptism if upon the Father so it there is one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all Mark 9.50 It was sometimes Christ's commands unto his Apostles have salt in your selves and have peace one with another and as a blessed effect of this salutation for I look upon them as words full of vertue the Apostles and Churches of Christ in primitive times kept a most sweet harmony the multitude of them that believed were of one heart Acts. 4.32 and of one soul 4. It speaks peace within peace of conscience the Apostles had exceedingly fallen from Christ one betrayed him and another denyed him but all run away and left him alone in the midst of all his enemies and yet to them he speaks this salutation peace be unto you I know not a better ground for comfort of poor humbled sinners than this is it may be you have dealt very unkindly with Jesus Christ you have forsook him denyed him forsworn him O but consider all this hindred not Christ's apparition to his Apostles he comes unexpected and quiets their spirits he stayes not till they had sued to him for mercy or pardon but of his meer love and free grace he speaks kindly to them all he stills the waves and becalmes their troubled Spirits working in them according to his words peace be unto you O the sweet of peace it is all wishes in one this little word is a breviary of all that is good what can they more than to have peace with God and peace with men and peace within Luke 2.14 sure there is much in it because Christ● is so much upon it at his birth the Angels sung Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace at his baptism the form of a dove lighted upon him and what meant this but peace in his life the sort of integrity was his court and what was here but peace near his death he gives peace as a legacy to his Church Iohn 14.27 peace I leave with you my peace I give you at his resurrection his first salutation to his Apostles is a wish of peace peace be unto you what can I say more to make us in love with peace Ioh. 17.2021 why all Christ did and all Christ suffered was for peace Luke 19.42 he prayed for it neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us And he wept for it if thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which do belong unto thy peace And he dyed to 〈…〉 but ye who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ for he is our peace Eph. 2 13 14. Of this we need no other proof or sign but that of the Prophet Jonah when the sea wrought and was tempestuous what shall we do unto thee said the Mariners that the sea may be calm unto us and he said take me up and cast me into the sea so shall the sea be calm Jona 1.11 12. when that great enmity was betwixt God and us what shall I do said God that my justice may be satisfied and my wrath appeased and that there may be a calm why take me said Christ and cast me forth into the sea let all thy waves and thy billows go over me make me a peace off●ring and kill me that when I am dead there may be a calm and when I am risen I may proclame it saying peace be unto you You hear what he said 3. What he shewed this is the next passage he shewed unto them his hands and his side I look upon this as a true and real manifestation of his resurrection And we find that without this Thomas professed he would never have believed except I shall see in his hands the print of the nayls and put my finger into the print of the nayls John 20.25 and thrust my hand into his side I will not believe But a question or two is here raised as whether these wounds and prints of the nayls spear can possibly agree with a glorified body and why Christ retained those wounds and prints for the first whether those prints could agree with a glorified bo●y some affirm it with much boldness and they say that Christ not only retained those prints whilest he abode upon earth but now that he is ascended into heaven he still retains them for my part I dare not go so far because Scripture is silent but the day is a coming when we shall see Christ face to face and then we shall know the truth of this only I conceive that Christ's body yet remaining on earth was not entred into that fulness of glory as it is now in heaven and therefore he might then retain some skars or blemishes to manifest the truth of his resurrection unto his Disciples which are not agreeable to his state in heaven But this I deliver not as matter of Faith reasons are produced both
most peremptory Except he see in his hands the print of the nayles and put his fingers into the print of the nayles and thrust his hand into his side he will not believe Why should any sinner despair of Mercy thou sayst I am wicked and God saith to thee As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live thou sayst I am an unbeliever Ezek. 33.11 I am shut up in the prison of unbelief under bolts and fetters that I cannot stir one inch towards Heaven Why so was Didymus and yet he obtained mercy and the Apostle tells us that God hath concluded all or shut up altogether in unbelief that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 11.32 He despiseth none rejects none abhors none unless they continue to despise reject and abhor the Lord Oh what a sweet point is here to gain sinners to move to melt to thaw hard hearts the incredulity of this Disciple turns to our profit and tends more to the confirmation of our faith if we are but weak than the very faith of all the other Disciples of Jesus Christ had not Thomas disbelieved we had not received so great encouragements to have believed in Christ as now we have Excuse me that I speak thus much to encourage sinners to come in to Christ I would be sometimes a Boanerges and sometimes a Barnabas a son of thunder to rouse hard hearts and a son of consolation to chear up drooping spirits All Ministers may learn of the great Shepheard and Bishop of our souls to have a respect in their minist●y to one sinner to one incredulous Thomas we cannot be ignorant of these Scriptures Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive you And to the weak I became as weak 1 Cor. 9.22 that I might gain the weak And we exhort you b●ethren warn them that are unruly comfort the feeble minded support the weak be patient towards all men 2 T●es 5.14 And of some have compassion making a difference and others save with f●ar pulling them out of the fire And brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual Jude 22.23 restore such a one in the spirit of meekness And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all men apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves Gal. 6.1 if God peradventure will give them repentance Dear souls 2 Tim. 2 24 25. How do we long for your conversion and salvation how are you in our hearts in our Prayers in our Sermons My little children How do we travel in birth again until Christ be formed in you how gladly would we spend and be spent for you though the more abundantly we love you the less we are loved of you If I knew but one Thomas in the great assembly of God's people I should think it as a crown and the glory of my ministry to perswade this man into faith Gal. 4.19 2 Cor. 12.15 Christ in this apparition eyes one especially above all the rest When his Disciples were within and Thomas with them then came Jesus 4. The manner how he appeared 1. He came the doors being shut 2. He stood in the midst 3. He said peace be unto you All these we have dispatched in the former apparition I shall therefore proceed to that which is peculiar to this Then said he to Thomas reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing In this apparition he argues his Resurrection Joh. 20.27 1. From words 2. From deeds 1. From words Thomas had said Except I see in his hands the print of the nayles and put my finger into the print of the nayls and thrust my hand into his side I will not believe 1. Now Christ repeats the very self-same words and therein gives in one argument of his resurrection for if Christ could know what Thomas had said how is he but alive and risen from the dead the dead have not sense much less the use of reason but least of all the knowledge of anothers mind but Christ hath sense and reason science and omniscience observe Though Christ be absent as in his bodily presence yet he understandeth all our thoughts and if need were he could repeat all our sayings word by word How then may this convince all unbelievers in the world that Christ is risen that he that was dead now liveth and that he is alive for ever more 2. He appears arguing his Resurrection from deeds wherein is an act and object 1. The act is Thomas seeing and feeling and q. d. Thomas thou wilt not believe except thou seest and feelest now this is against the nature of saith it consisteth not in seeing or feeling but on the contrary Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Indeed in things natural a man must have experience and then believe but in divine things a man must first believe and then have experience and yet to help thy unbelief saith Christ I am willing thus far to condescend Heb. 11.1 and yield unto thy weakness come feel the print of the nayls and of the spear Come reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing Christ compassionates his children though full of weakness and wants He pities them that fear him for he knoweth our frame Ps 103.12 13. he remembreth that we are but dust 2. The object is Christ seen or felt his prints and skars are the very witnesses of our redemption and of his resurrection they declare that Satan is overthrown that death and hell are swallowed up in victory that He hath spoiled principallities and powers and to this purpose are these texts Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah By Edom is meant death by Bozrah the chief City of Edom is meant the state of the dead or hell from both which Christ returned at his glorious resurrection For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell Col. 2.12 13. Isa 63.1 2 3. neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Psal 16.10 Now saith the Prophet or some Angel Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah who is this that cometh so triumphantly with the keyes of Edom and Bozrah of death and hell at his girdle to which the answer is given I that speak in righteousness mighty to save as much as to say it is I Jesus Christ I that am righteous in speaking and mighty in saying whose Word is truth and whose Work is salvation it is I even I this answer given another question is propounded Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel and thy garments like him
obedience and death depends upon Christ's resurrection for then it was that Christ himself was justified and then he was justified as a common person representing us therein so that we were then justified with him and in him and we are said to be risen with him and to sit with him in heavenly places Burges one admirably judicious saith that justification is given to Christ's resurrection as a priviledge flowing from its efficient cause Indeed Christ's death is the meritorious cause of our justification but Christ's resurrection is in some sence saith he the efficient cause because by his rising again the Spirit of God doth make us capable of justification and th●n bestoweth it on us I know there is some difference amongst these Worthies but they all agree in this that the resurrection of Christ was for our justification and that by the resurrection of Christ all the merits of his death were made appliable unto us As there was a price and ransome to be paid by Christ for the redemption of man so it was necessary that the fruit effect and benefit of Christ's redemption should be applied and conferred now this work of application and actual collation of the fruit of Christ's death began to be in fieri upon the resurrection day but it was not then finished and perfected for to the consummation thereof the Ascension of Christ the Mission of the holy Ghost Apostolical preaching of the Gospel to Jews and Gentiles the Donation of Heavenly grace and Christ's Intercession at the right hand of God were very necessary 1 Cor. 15.17 O the benefit of Christ's resurrection as to our justification If Christ be not risen again ye are yet in your sins and your faith is in vain Remission of sin which is a part of our justification though purchased by Christ's death yet could not he applied to us or possibly be made ours without Christ's resurrection and and in this respect oh how desirable is it Eph. 2.5 6. 2. He rose again for our sanctification So the Apostle He hath quickened us together with Christ and hath raised up together with Christ Our first resurrection is from Christ's resurrection if you would know how you that were blind in heart uncircumcised in spirit utterly unacquainted with the life of God are now light in the Lord affecting heavenly things walking in righteousness it comes from this blessed resurrection of Jesus Christ we are quickened with Christ it is Christ's resurrection that raised our souls Rom. 6.11 being stark dead with such a resurrection as that they shall never die more Whence the Apostle Reckon your selves to be dead unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. We are dead to sin and alive unto God by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ we may reckon thus for our selves that if we be in Christ there comes a vertue from Christ an effectual working of Christ by his Spirit into our hearts and it is such a work as will conform us to Christ dead and to Christ risen why reckon thus saith the Apostle go not by guess and say I hope it will be better with me than it hath been no no but reckon Rom. 6.4 conclude make account I must live to God I must live the life of grace for Christ is risen To the same purpose he speaks before Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life Christ rose again to a new life and herein his resurrection differed from the resurrection of those others raised by him as of Lazarus Jairus Daughter the Widow of Naims Son for they were but raised to the same life which formerly they lived but Jesus Christ was raised up to a new life and according to this ex●mplar we should now walk in newness of life this is the end of Christ's resurrection that we should be new creatures of new lives new principles new conversations he rose again for our sanctification 3. He rose again for our resurrection to eternal life Christ is the patern and pledg and cause of the resurrection of our bodies for since by man came death by man came also the resurrection of the dead for as in Adam all dye 1 Cor. 15.21 22 even so in Christ shall all be made alive There is a vertue flowing from Christ to his Saints by which they shall be raised up at the latter day as there is a vertue flowing from the head to the members or from the root to the branches so those that are Christ's shall be raised up by Christ 1 John 5.28 29. Not but that all the wicked in the world shall be raised again by the power of Christ as he is a judg for all that are in their graves shall hear his voice and they shall come forth yet with this difference they that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation In this respect the Saints shall have a peculiar resurrection and therefore they are called the Children of the resurrection because they shall obtain a better resurrection Luke 20.36 Heb. 11.35 as the Apostle calls it And is not Christ's resurrection desirable in this very respect if we should think these bodyes of ours being dust must never return from their dusts it might discourage but here is our hope Christ is risen and therefore we must rise it is the Apostles own argument against those that held there was no resurrection of the dead why saith the Apostle if there be no resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15.12 13 16 20. then is not Christ risen If the dead rise not then is not Christ raised But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep he argues plainly that Christs resurrection is the principal efficient cause of the resurrection of the just I am the resurrection and the life saith Christ i.e. I am the Author John 11.25 John 5.21 and worker of the resurrection to life As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them even so the Son quickeneth whom he will and hence it is that Christ is called a quickning Spirit Christ is the head and stock of all the Elect Christ is the Author procurer conveyor of life to all his off-spring by the communication of his Spirit Christ is a quickening Spirit quickening dead souls and quickening dead bodies 1 Cor. 15.45 the Author both of the first and second resurrection And is not this desireable He rose again for the assurance of our justification sanctification and salvation This is the reason why the Apostle useth these words to prove the resurrection of Christ I will give you the sure mercies of David Acts 13.34 none of Gods mercies had been sure to us if Christ had not risen again from the dead But now all is made sure his work of redemption being
any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his but if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you then he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodyes and I may add your mortal souls by his spirit that dwelleth in you Christs Spirit if Christs resurrection be ours will have the same operation and effect in our souls that it had in his body as it raised up the one so it will raise up the other as it quickened the one so it will quicken the other But the question here will run on how shall we know whether we have received this quickning Spirit many pretend to the Spirit never more than at this day but how may we be assured that the Spirit is ours I answer 1. The Spirit is a Spirit of illumination here is the beginning of his work he begins in light as in the first creation the first-born of God's works was light Gen. 1.3 God said let there be light and there was light so in this new creation the first work is light God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts 2 Cor. 4.6 to give the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ Hence the state of nature is called darkness and the state of grace is called light Ye were sometimes darkness but now ye have light in the Lord. Eph. 5.8 1 Pet. 2.9 And he hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light There is a light in the mind and a light in the heart of those who have the Spirit of Christ there is a speculative and an affective knowledg not only to know the truth but to love it believe it embrace it O my soul wouldst thou know whether Christs Spirit be thine consider and see then whether any of this new light of Jesus Christ hath shined into thy heart take heed deceive not thy self thou mayest have a great deal of wit and knowledg and understanding and yet go to hell this light is a light shining into thy heart this light is a Christ-discovering light this light is a sin-discoverings light this light will cause thee to find out thy hypocrisy deadness dulness in spiritual duties if thou hast not this light thou art near to eternal burnings darkness is one of the properties of hell and without this light inward darkness will to utter darkness where is nothing but weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth 2. This quickening spirit is a spirit of faith as it reveals Christ so it inclines mens hearts to close with Christ upon those Gospel-terms as he is offered I know there are degrees and measures of faith but the least measure of faith is a desiring panting breathing after the Lord Jesus and no sooner hath the soul received that new light from the spirit of Christ but it is presently at the same instant exceedingly affected with Jesus Christ O it desires Christ above all desires I know not a more undeceiving sign than this read over the whole Bible and where ever there was any soul-saving discoveries there ever followed inward desires soul-longings after Jesus Christ when Paul preached of the resurrection of Christ some there were that mocked jeered and slighted that doctrine but others whose heart the Lord stirred they were exceedingly taken with it saying we will hear thee again of this matter yea this very Sermon so wrought on some that they believed among whom was Dyonysius the Areopagite a woman named Damaris and others with them Acts 17.32 34. and when he preaced another Sermon on the same subject at Antioch the Jews were much offended but the Gentiles were so exceedingly taken with it that they besought Paul that these words the very same resurrection Sermon might be preached to them the next Sabbath day Their very hearts did so long after Christ whom Paul had preached that when the congregation was broken up Acts 13.42 many of the Jews and religious Procelites followed Paul and Barnabas and the next Sabbath day came almost the whole City together to hear the same Sermon O my soul 43. dost thou hear these Sermons of Christs resurrection dost thou hear sweet-Gospel-preaching 44. dost thou hear the free tenders and offers of Christ with all his glory and excellency to poor sinners to vile lost undone souls and art thou no whit taken with them canst thou sleep away such Sermons as these hast thou no heart-risings no stirrings workings longings desires in thy soul O take heed this is a dangerous case but on the contrary if thou sayest in thy heart Oh that I could hear this Sermon again O the sweet vertues of Christs resurrection I had not thought such honey could have dropped out of this rock O the blessed beginnings and springings of grace which I felt in my soul on such a meditation Oh the desire the delight O the longings O the comforts of Christs resurrection O the drawings of the Spirit inclining my heart to receive Jesus Christ to close with him and to rest on him and to give up my self to him why this Spirit of faith doth argue thy title and interest to the quickening spirit of Christ 3. Thy quickening Spirit is a Spirit of sanctification such was the Spirit whereby Christ was raised he was declared mightily to be the Son of God Rom. 1.4 according to the Spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead That same Spirit which raised up Jesus Christ was that same divine Spirit which sanctified his humane nature wherein it dwelt and such is that quickening Spirit to all in whom it dwelleth it is a Spirit of holiness and it works holiness changing the heart and turning the bent of it from sin to holiness 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new q. d. When once the believer is by an act of faith passed over unto Christ there goes immediately from the Spirit of Christ into his soul an effectual power which alters and changes the frame of the whole man now he is not the same that he was he is changed in his company in his discourse in his practise he is changed in his nature judgment will affections he is sanctified throughout in soul body and Spirit O my soul try thy self by this sign dost thou find such an inward change wrought in the soul dost thou find the law of God a law of holiness written on thy hearr dost thou find a law within thee contrary to the law of sin commanding with authority that which is holy and good so that thou canst say with the Apostle I delight in the law of God after the inward man Rom. 7.23 25. Rom. 8.1 and with my mind I my self serve the law of God if so surely this is no other but the
confusions distractions despondences staggering and sinking terrors Mat. 11.28 it will find it something yea it will look on it as a glorious work to discover but the morning Star through so much darkness any thing of life in such a valley and shadow of death 3. The understanding hath yet some brighter believing beams it confidently closeth with this truth that it is the will of the Lord that he should come and live and believe and lay hold on Christ it apprehends the particular designs of mercy to him and doth really principle the soul with this that God doth particularly call invite and bid him come to Christ the Fountain of life for life Now the understanding takes in general Gospel-calls in particular to himself It is my poor languishing soul which the Lord speaks to when he sayes come to me all yea that are weary and I will give you rest Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Surely this is a great work when set home by the Lord that the soul acts in its addresses to Christ in the strength of a particular call from God 2. And now the answer to this call is wrought up in the renewed will as thus 1. The will summons all its confidences and calls them off from every other bottom to bestow them wholly upon Christ and this consists in our voluntary renouncing of all other helps excepting Jesus Christ alone now the soul sayes to Idols Get ye hence Hos 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the works of our hands ye are our Gods Ashur shall not save us Not only cannot but shall not save us now as the soul is dissatisfied in Judgment as to the resting on any thing but Christ alone so the heart and will is disaffected to all other helps but Christ alone now it renounceth its own righteousness and worthyness not only because of their inability to save but mainly because their glory is swallowed up in that unmatchable excellency which appears in the way of life and salvation by Jesus Christ It calls home dependance from every other object 2. Hereupon there is a willing and chearfull receiving of Christ and resignation of our selves to his actual dispose to quicken us and save us in his own way A great part of the answer of Faith to the call of Christ lyes in this for as Faith sees life and salvation in the hands of Christ so it considers it to be given forth in the methods of Christ and so believing lyes not only in assent but consent of heart John 1 1● that Christ shall save us in his own way this is called A receiving of Christ As many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God Many a soul would be saved by Christ that sticks and boggles at his methods they will not pass to happiness by holiness nor set him up as a King and Lord whom they could consent to set up as a Saviour Oh but now Christ that stood at the door and knocked Rev. 3.10 is received in consent hath made up the match and the door is opened that never shall be shut again 3. Upon this follows the souls resting and relying the souls confidence and dependance upon Jesus Christ for life and for salvation this closeth up the whole business of believing unto righteousness those various expressions used in Scripture of committing our way and selves to God of casting our care upon God of rolling our selves on him of trusting in him of hoping in his mercy c. wrapt up faith in this affiance dependance not without some mixture of confidence and resolved resting upon Jesus Christ a clear beholding of God in Christ and of Christ in the promises doth present such variety and fulness of Arguments to bear up hope and affiance that the heart is resolved and so resolved that we commit our selves and give our souls in charge to Christ I know whom I have believed 1 Pet. 4.19 2 Tim. 1.12 and I am perswaded he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day 4. The upshot of all is this that the same close which the soul makes in believing with Jesus Christ as to justification and righteousness is not fruitless to this effect of conveying life and vertue from Jesus Christ as to grace and holiness for that union which then and thereby comes to be enjoyned with Christ is such an union as is fruitful in begetting a quickening power and principle in the heart and this is that which we ordinarily intend by saying saving faith to be operative James 2.16 that faith which brings forth nothing of holiness what is it but a dead faith As the body without the Spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also Justification and sanctification are twins of a birth and hence it is that vivification which is one part of sanctification is wrought in the soul after the self-same manner As first the understanding is illighttened 2. The will is changed 3. All the Affections are renewed 4. The internals being quickened there ensueth the renewing of the body with the outward actions life and conversation And now is fulfilled that saying of Christ in a spiritual sense John 5.25 The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Now is the soul vivified now it begins to live the life of God now it feels the power of Christ's resurrection and is made conformable to it And immediately upon this joy is made in heaven by the Angels Luke 15.24 God himself applauding it For this my Son was dead and is alive he was lost and is found Thus is the state of vivification wrought I know it is not in all men after one manner for every circumstance the methods of God are exceeding various and we cannot limit the holy one of Israel I have sometimes concerning this desired the communication of other thoughts whom I looked upon as such who had more than ordinary communication with Christ's Spirit and from one of such I received this answer I must profess to you I have in all my speculations in divinity found dissatisfaction in the writings of men in nothing more than is the work of clear and distinct conceptions concerning regeneration which yet is of such a Cardinal importance is that the great doors of heaven move upon the hinges of it the Lord enlighten us more for we see but in part and prophesie but in part For the third question what are the means of this conformity or vivification which we must use on our parts I shall answer herein both to the state and growth of our vivification As 1. Wait and Attend upon God in the ministry of the word this is a means whereby Christ ordinarily effecteth
grace well may we cry come holy Spirit Oh what a comfortable condition would it be if our Spirits never lay still but we were alwayes hungring thirsting or moving after God and goodness 6. That the holy Ghost might according to his Office comfort his Saints amidst all their afflictions this was that which Christ had so often told his Apostles John 14.16 V. 18. V. 26. John 15.26 I will not leave you comfortless I will come unto you And I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name he shall teach you all things But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me John 16.17 If I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you But how is it that the spirit comforts Saints I answer in these particulars † See at large Dr. Reynolds on Psal 116. 1. The Spirit discovers sin and bends the heart to mourn for sin and such a sorrow as this is the seed and matter of true comfort as Josephs heart was full of joy when his eyes poured out tears on Benjamin's neck so there is a certain seed and matter of joy in spiritual mourning I know they are contrary but yet they may be subordinate to each other as a dark and muddy colour may be a fit ground to lay gold upon Certainly there is a sweet complacency in an humble and spiritual heart to be vile in its own eyes But especially the fruit of it is joy and great joy John 16.21 A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow because her hour is come but as soon as she is delivered of her Child she remembreth no more the anguish for joy that a man is born into the World 22. and ye now therefore have sorrow but I will see you again and your heart shall rejoyce and your joy no man taketh from you 2. The Spirit doth not only discover but heal the corruptions of the soul and there is no comfort to the comfort of a saved and cured man the lame man that was restored by Peter expressed the abundant exaltation of his heart by leaping and praising God Act. 3.8 and for this cause the Spirit is called the Oyl of gladness because by that healing vertue that is in him he makes glad the hearts of men 3. The Spirit doth not only heal but renew and revive again when an eye is smitten with a sword there is a double mischief a wound made and a faculty perished and here though a Chirurgeon can heal the wound yet he can never restore the faculty because total privations admit no regress or recovery But the spirit doth not only heal and repair but renew and re-edifie the spirits of men as he healeth that which was torn and bindeth up that which was broken so he reviveth and raiseth up that which was dead before Hos 6.1.2 And this the Apostle calls the renovation of the Spirit Tit. 3.5 Now this renovation must needs be matter of great joy for so the Lord comforts his afflicted people O thou afflicted tossed with tempest Isa 54.11 12. and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with fair colours and lay thy foundations with Saphyres and I will make thy windows of Agates and thy gates of Carbuncles and all thy borders of pleasant stones The meaning is that all must be new and new built up as for a goodly costly and stately structure 4. The spirit doth not only renew and set the frame of the heart aright and then leave it to it self but being thus restored he abideth with it to preserve and support it and to make it victorious against all tempests and batteries and this further multiplyeth the joy and comfort of the heart victory is ever the ground of joy Isa 9.3 They joy before thee as men rejoyce when they divide the spoyle And the spirit of God is a victorious spirit A bruised reed shall he not break and smoaking flax shall he not quench Mat. 12.20 till he send forth judgment unto victory 5. The spirit doth not only preserve the heart which he hath renewed but he makes it fruitfull and abundant in the work of the Lord. And fruitfulness is a ground of comfort Sing O barren thou that didst not bear break forth into singing Isa 54.1 and cry aloud thou that didst not travail with Child for more are the Children of the desolate than the Children of the married Wife saith the Lord. 6. The Spirit doth not only make the heart fruitful but gives it the hansel and earnest of its inheritance and thereby it begets a lively hope an earnest expectation a confident attendance upon the promises and an unspeakable peace and comfort thereupon Oh when I feel a drop of heavens Joy shed abroad into my soul by the Holy Ghost and that I look upon this as a taste of glory and a forerunner of happiness how should I but rejoyce with joy unspeakable in all these respects the Spirit is our Comforter and this is another reason why the Holy Ghost is sent I will not leave you comfortless saith Christ no no for I will come unto you by my spirit Eph. 4.30 7. That the Holy Ghost might according his Office seal us unto the day of redemption By sealing is meant some work of the Spirit by which he assur●s a believer that he is Gods it is all one with the spirits witnessing only under that notion I shall speak of it another time But all the question is what is that work of the spirit by which he assures I answer this work is many-fold As 1. There is a reflex work of faith and this is the work of the Spirit too assuring our souls of our good estate to God-ward 1 John 5.10 and Christ-ward He that believeth hath the witness in himself he carries in his heart the Counterpane of all the promises this is the first seal or if you will the first degree of the Spirits sealing the first discovery of our election is manifested to us in our believing as many saith the Text as were ordained to eternal life believed Acts 13.48 2. There is a work of sanctifying grace upon the heart and this is a seal of the Spirit also 2 Tim. 2.19 for whom the Spirit sanctifieth he saveth The Lord knoweth who are his saith the Apostle ay but how should we know it why by this seal as it follows Let every one that Nameth the Name of the Lord depart from iniquity none are children of God by adoption but those that are Children also by regeneration none are heirs of Heaven 2 Pet. 1.3 4. but they are new born to it Blessed be
by reason they may be still subject to question and so they can make no firm assurance but in the soul that is graciously assured this way the Spirit of God rests the heart upon an ultimum quod sic he convinceth the soul by that which is most visible in him and so stops the mouth of cavilling reason from perplexing the question any more Indeed it is a fine skill to know whether a true assurance be meerly rationall or from the witness of the Spirit of God whether it be wrought out of a man 's own brain or wrought into his heart by the Holy Ghost now in some cases we may discern it as thus the assurance that the Spirit gives doth sometime surprise a man unexpectedly at unawares as it may be in a Sermon that he came accidentally unto or in a Scripture that I cast a transient-glancing eye upon but thus doth not reason Again The assurance that the spirit gives maintains a soul in a way of reliance and dependance when it sees no reason why he should do so or it may be when he sees a reason why it should not be so as it is said of Abraham in another case Rom. 4.18 that he believed in hope against hope faith told him there was hope that he should be the Father of many Nations when reason told him there was none Again The assurance that the spirit gives is attended with an high esteem of Prayer Duties Ordinances and in the issue which is the most principal sure mark it purifies the soul that hath it 1 John 3.3 He that hath this hope purifieth himself even as he is pure he is ever washing himself from sin and watching against sin and taking all possible care to keep himself pure and unspotted in this present evil world it keeps the soul humble and lowly it being impossible that such a testimony of the spirit and so intimate a converse with God and the light of his countenance should not reflect low thoughts upon a man's self concerning himself such a man cannot but say Lord what am I that thou hast brought me hitherto what for such a peevish unbelieving impatient soul as mine is to be carryed in thy arms and cheered with thy smiles and to enjoy the comforts of thy spirit Oh what a wonderful merciful gracious God have I Yet in all this I exclude not the Spirit in drawing a rational evidence from Scriptures certainly the spirit helps in a general way by making use of our reason only it elevates and improves our reason to a further assurance by a supernatural assistance as in Prayer and in Preaching of the Word there may be a common assistance of the Spirit of God but there is another kind of praying and preaching by the Spirit which the Scripture often speaks of and calls the spirit of supplication and the demonstration of the spirit and that is not performed by a common or general but by a special and particular assistance of the Spirit of God so there is a two-fold influence of the Spirit in putting forth acts of assurance in the heart even of a Godly and Sound Christian the very same man may act assurance sometimes rationally and sometimes spiritually in the former the spirit acts too but in a common way only in the latter is the supernatural special assistance which peculiarly is said to be the witness of the Spirit I speak not against rational evidences only it concerns us to apply our selves to the Spirit to superadd his testimony O let us not so content our selves with ratioral evidences but that we labour to elevate the evidence of reason into a testimony of the Holy Spirit of God To wind up all I have said O my soul try now the hope of the spirits indwelling by these several signs art thou enlightned savingly in the knowledg of God and of Christ art thou a Child of God one of his adopted sons for whom he hath reserved the inheritance hast thou a spirit of Grace and Supplication a spirit of Sanctification a spirit of Love art thou led by the spirit dost thou feel the drawings of thy soul in every duty to Jesus Christ dost thou feel a liberty or a delight in thy soul to walk in the way of his Commandments dost thou feel any strength to come in against thy corruptions dost thou feel the spirits help to act in Gospel-duties for Gospel ends hast thou ever had the immediate testimony of the spirit or if not so hast thou ever had the immediate testimony of the spirit without any argumentation hast thou unexpectedly dipt and lighted on some places of scripture that hath satisfied thy soul as with marrow and fatness or if not so neither hast thou the immediate testimony of the Spirit with argumentation canst thou argue thus He that believeth shall be saved but I believe therefore I shall be saved Or if any doubt be made of the assumption canst thou prove it by such other graces as accompany faith and are the fruits of faith canst thou say by the help of the spirit and shinings of the spirit that these and these graces are in me and have been acted by me yea I do love God and ●hrist I do repent of my sins c. surely then thy hope is well grounded thou hast the indwelling of the spirit it is thine even thine SECT V. Of believing in Jesus in this respect 5. LEt us believe on Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars many scruples are in many hearts What is it possible that I should have any share in Christ's ascension Christ's session Christ's mission of his spirit was it ever in God's heart that I should partake with Christ in all these glories if it must be so that he will let out his loves to so unworthy a wretch was it not sufficient for him to have come down from Heaven and to have acted my redemption here below Is it not an high Favour that a King should leave his Court to give a poor prisoner in the Jayl a visit but will he take him with him to his own home and bring him into his own presence-chamber and set him at his right hand in his throne And so that Christ should not only leave his Fathers throne and give me a visit lying in the dark dungeon of unbelief but that he should take off the bolts and set open the prison doors and take me up with him into Heaven and there set me down at his right hand and in the mean time give me the earnest and pledge of my inheritance by filling my soul with his own spirit O what an admirable incredible thing is this it was the last vision of John which was so full of wonders And I John saw the holy City the new Jerusalem coming down from God out of Heaven And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying Rev. 21.2 3. Behold the tabernacle of God is
the High-Priests that ever were before him he doth fully sympathize with us not in some but in all conditions In all our afflictions he is afflicted Isa 63.9 I believe Christ hath carried a man's heart up with him to Heaven and though there be no passions in him as he is God yet the flower the blossom the excellency of all these passions which we call compassions are infinitely in him as he is God he striketh and tryeth and yet he pittieth when Ephraim bemoaneth himself God replies Is Ephraim my dear son is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him Jer. 31.21 I do earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him Surely there 's a violence of heavenly passion in Christ's heart as God-man which makes him to break out into prayer to God and into compassions towards Men O that tempted souls would consider this it may be Christ is giving you a cup of tears and blood to drink but who knows what bowels what turnings of heart what motions of compassion are in Jesus Christ all the while those who feel the fruit of Christ's intercession know this and cannot but subscribe to this truth O ye of little faith why do ye doubt of Christ's bowels is he not our compassionate High-Priest hath not the tenderest meekest mildest heart of a man that God possibly can form met with the eternal and infinite mercy of God himself in Jesus Christ you have heard that Christ in both natures is our High-Priest Mediator Intercessor and if either God or Man know how to compassionate Heb. 4.15 Christ must do it O the bowels of Christ He is touched saith the Apostle with the feeling of our infirmities it is an allusion to the rolled and moved bowels of God in Jer. 31.20 Christ in Heaven is burning and flaming in a passion of compassion towards his weak ones and therefore he pleads intercedes and prays to God for them Thus far we have propounded the object which is Christ's intercession our next work is to direct you how to look upon Jesus in this respect CHAP. II. SECT I. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his Intercession LET us know Jesus carrying on this great work of our salvation in his Intercession Is it not a rare piece of knowledge to know what Christ is now doing in Heaven for us on Earth If I had a weighty suite at Court on which lay my estate and life if I knew that I had a friend there that could prevail and that he were just now moving in my behalf were not this worth the knowledge I dare say in the behalf of all believers in the World Christ is now interceding for us at the right hand of God ever since his ascension into Heaven he hath been doing this work it is a work already of above sixteen hundred years and Summer and Winter Night and day without any tiredness of Spirit Christ hath been still praying still interceding Christ's love hath no vacation no cessation at all yea even now whiles you read this Christ is acting as an Advorate for you Christ hath your names ingraven as a seal on his heart and standing right opposite to the eye of his Father the first opening of the eye-lids of God is terminated upon the breast of Jesus Christ Is not this worth the knowledge O my soul leave off thy vain studies of natural things if they do not conduce some way or other to the right understanding of this they are not worth the while What is it for an Aristotle to be praised where he is not and to be damned where he is O the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ such a knowledge if true is no less than saving Come study his intercession in all the former particulars I have run them over for the work is swoln under my hands and I would now abbreviate only remember this that in Christ's intercession are many secrets which we must never know on this side Heaven oh take heed of entring into this labarinth without the clew of the Word above all desire the guidance of the Spirit to enlighten thy darkness and what ever thou knowest know it still for thy self SECT II. Of considering Jesus in that respect 2. LET us consider Jesus carrying on this work of our salvation in his intercession many of God's people have found the benefit and for my part I cannot but approve of it as an excellent quickning and enlivening duty to be much in a way of meditation or consideration especially when we meet with such a blessed subject as this is Psal 104.34 My meditation of him shall be sweet saith David I will be glad in the Lord it is enough to make a meditation sweet and refreshing when it is conversant about such a subject as Christ's intercession Is it not as incense a sweet odour and perfume with God himself and shall not each thought of it be sweet to us come let us be serious in this duty and that we may do it throughly let us consider it in these several particulars As 1. Consider of the nature of Christ's intercession what is it but the gracious Will of Christ fervently desiring that for the vertue of his death and sacrifice thy person and performances might be accepted of God As Christ on earth gave himself to the death even to the death of the Cross for the abolition sin so now in Heaven he prayes the Father by his agony and bloody sweat by his his cross and passion by his death and sacrifice that thy sins may be pardoned thy service accepted and thy soul saved This is the Will of Christ even thy justification sanctification and salvation accordingly he presents his Will Father I will that all those priviledges flowing from my death may be conferred on such a person by name such a soul is now meditating and considering of my intercession and my will is that his very meditation may find acceptance with God O what workings would be in thy heart and spirit if thou didst but consider that Christ even now were speaking his Will that thy person and duty might both find acceptance and be well-pleasing with God 2. Consider of the person that intercedes for thee it is Christ in both Natures it is thy Mediator the middle one betwixt God and man in this respect thou mayst consider him as one indifferent and equally inclining to either party like a pair of scales that hang even neither side lift up or depressed more than the other Gal. 3.20 A Mediator is not of one saith the Apostle Christ indifferently partook of both Natures God-head and Manhood that so he might be fit to stand in the gap between his Father and us he is a Priest according to both Natures he is a Dayes-man wholly for God and a Dayes-man wholly for us and on our side 3. Consider of the person to whom Christ intercedes is it
will in the ears of God Surely this is the fruit the effect of Christ's intercession and therefore thou mayest comfortably conclude Christ's intercession is mine 2. If at any time in the midst of duties I am savingly affected then is Christ's intercession mine Sometimes it pleaseth God to appear in ordinances and the soul is comforted quickened enlarged affected why now I look on this as the efficacy of Christ's Blood and as the power of Christs intercession at that very instant that I feel any good in any ordinance of Christ why then even then is Christ prevailing with God his Father for what I feel then even then may I boldly say Now is the Lord Jesus who is at God's right hand in heaven remembring me a poor worm on earth Oh now I feel the fruit of his intercession Oh what is this spirit power grace comfort sweetness I drink of but a tast of the hony-comb with the end of my rod dropping from the intercessions of Jesus Christ and if this presence of Christ's Spirit be so sweet what is himself then I know we had need to be wary in laying down this sign it is clearly proved by an eminent Divine Mr. Burges of Assurance Mat. 13.20 Mark 16.20 John 5.35 that sweet motions of heart in holy things are not infallible Evidences of grace the third kind of hearers are said to receive the Word with joy they found some sweet and power in the Ordinances of Christ and Herod heard John gladly and many for a season rejoyced in John's light and Ministry Certainly affections in holy administrations with delight and joy may be in those who yet have no true grace so it may be that the novelty and strangeness of a doctrine may much affect and delight or the nature of the doctrine as it is comfortable without any respect to spiritual operation may exceedingly affect or the Ministers abilities because of his parts eloquence elocution affectionate utterance may much delight and stir up the hearers affections fine head-notions may produce some affectionate heart-motions but what symptome of grace in all this The sign therefore I lay down of my propriety in Christ's intercessions is not every sweet motion or every excited affection but that which is holy spiritual heavenly saving I may discern much of this if I will but look into the grounds and effects of my excited or stirred up affections if the ground thereof be fetched from Heaven and in their effect they tend towards Heaven if they wean my heart from the world if they elevate and raise up my affections to things above if they form and frame my conversation heaven-wards then may I be assured these motions and affections are of the right stamp for all such motions are but sparks of that heavenly fire the the flame whereof is mindful of its own original they are the fruits of Christ and they go back to Christ they work towards their center they tend towards the place from whence they came and in this respect O that I could never hear a Sermon without a savory affection of what I hear O that I could never go to prayer without some warmth and heat and life and fervency Oh that in every duty I were savingly affected that I felt the savour of Christ's ointments whose name and whose intercession is as an ointment poured forth in times of the Old Testament if they offered up a sacrifice and a material fire came down from Heaven and burnt up the sacrifice to ashes it was a certain testimony that the sacrifice was accepted Now in the time of the Gospel we must not expect material fire to come down upon our duties but hath the Lord at any time caus●d an inward and spiritual fire to fall down upon thy heart warming thy spirit in duty and carrying it up heaven-ward Surely it so thou mayest safely conclude these are the very effects of Christ's intercession his intercession is mine 3. If in my heart I feel a holy frame disposition inclination to pray and cry and intercede for others especially for the miseries and distresses of the Church of God then is Christ's intercession mine We should as near as we may in every thing conform to Christ and this conformity is an evidence or sign to us of our interest in Christ O my soul go down into the inmost closet of thy heart look what disposition there is in it towards the members of Christ and thou mayest conclude there is in Christ's heart the very same disposition towards thee Ah! do I think there is love in my bosom towards the Saints and that there is no love in Christ's bosome towards me what can I think that my narrow straitened sinful bowels are larger than those wide compassionate tender bowels of Jesus Christ as a drop of water is in comparison of the Ocean and as a gravel-stone is in comparison of the sand so is my heart to Christ's and my love to Christ's and my bowels to Christ's Come then and try by this sign Hereby we know that we are translated from death to life if we love the brethren he that loveth not his brother abideth in death Hereby perceive we the love of God 1 John 3.14.16 because he laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren is not this plain if I love the brethren Christ loveth me if I feel in my heart an holy disposition to go to God and to pray and cry and intercede for a Saint in misery surely the Lord Jesus hath as much bowels towards me to go and intercede for me and to present my prayers unto God the Father his intercession is mine 4. If I am called justified sanctified then is Christ's intercession mine are not these the subject matter of Christ's intercession I pray saith Christ that thou shouldst keep them from the evil I pray that thou wouldst sanctifie them through the truth John 17 15 17 20 24. neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me through their word or preaching Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me in glory He first prayes that we may be called and justified and then he prayes that we may be sanctified and saved he holds at both ends of this golden chain of our salvation the one end is hanged at his breast where the names of all his Saints are written and the other end is at his heart that he may be the Author and finisher the first and last the beginning and ending of our souls salvation alas there is nothing in us in our reach here below the first stirrings of grace is up in Heaven at the right hand of the Father and the far end of any gracious thought is as far above us as the heart of Christ is above the earth Come then sith all hangs on this great pin of Christ's intercession let us search and try are we called do we
believe on the Son are we sanctified in some measure are we kept from the evil that sin may not have dominion over us hath Christ put up these prayers in our behalf that now we feel as it were and experience the truth of Christ's prevailings with his Father in our hearts and lives O sure signs that Christ's intercession is ours away away all diffidence doubting wavering fluctuating hopes a soul thus grounded may with Paul cast the ganlet and bid defiance to all the world Rom. 8.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God and who also maketh intercession for us SECT V. Of believing in Jesus in that respect 5. LEt us believe in Jesus as carrying on this great work of our salvation in his intercession wounded spirits are full of scruples and thus they cry My sins will never be forgiven have not I sinned against God and Christ and the Spirit of Christ had I not my hands imbrued in the blood of his Son and have not I trodden under foot the blood of God and will that blood that I have shed and trod on intercede for my pardon Had I but gone so far as the Jews did who indeed killed and crucified Christ I might have had some hopes because they knew not what they did and therefore Christ prayed Father forgive them for they know not what they do But alas I sinned 1 Cor. 2.8 and I knew well enough what and wherein I have sinned had they known saith the Apostle they would not have crucified the Lord of glory but alas I knew it and I was fully convinced that the commission of every sin is a crucifying of Christ and yet against knowledge and judgment and light and checks of my own conscience I have crucified the Lord of glory Heb. 6.4 6. and is not the Apostle express it is impossible for those who were once enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift if they fall away to renew them again unto repentance seeing they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame Oh I fear my name is not in the roll of those for whom Christ intercedes I have crucified him afresh and will he intercede for such a dead dog as I am I cannot believe Silence unbelief be not tyrannical to thy self for Christ will not sin shall do thee no hurt nor Sathan no nor God himself for Jesus-Christ can work him to any thing if he but open his wounds in heaven he will so work his Father that thy wounds on earth shall close up presently O but I have sinned against light and what then I hope thou hast not sinned willfully maliciously despightfully against the light the Apostle tells us that if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth Heb. 10.26 27. there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins but a certain looking for of judgment and fiery indignation These two Texts in Heb. 6.4 and 10.26 are parallel and give light to each other and therefore unless thy sin be the unpardonable sin unless willfully maliciously and despightfully thou hast crucified Christ as some of the Jews did never pass a doom of final condemnation on thy soul what is there no difference betwixt a sin done willfully or purposely of malice with delight and aginst the feeling of thy own conscience and a sin done of meer ignorance inconsideracy infirmity or through a strong temptation though against light it self I know there is a light given in by God's Word and some beam of the Holy Ghost which yet never penetrated so far as to transform and regenerate the soul wholly to God's Image and in such a case a man may fall away even into an universal fall a general Apostasie but dost thou not hope better things of thy self than so I suppose thou dost O then believe O believe thy part in Christ's intercession and for the directions of thy faith that thou mayst know how or in what manner to believe observe these particulars in their order As 1. Faith must directly go to Christ 2. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh 3. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ made under the directive part of the Law by his life and under the penal part of the Law by his death 5. Faith must go to Christ as put to death in the flesh and as quickned by the Spirit 6. Faith must go to Christ as quickened by the Spirit and as going up into glory as sitting down at God's right hand and as sending the Holy Ghost of all these before 7. Faith must go to Christ as interceding for his Saints this act of Christ is for the application of all the former acts on Christ's part and our faith closing with it is for the application of this and all other the actings of Christ on our part Now is our faith led up very high if we can but reach this we may say our faith stands very lofty when it may at once see earth and heaven when it may see all that Christ hath acted for it here and all that Christ doth act and will act in heaven for it hereafter It is not an ordinary single particular act of faith that will come up to this glorious mystery no no it is a comprehensive perfective act it is such an act as puts the soul into a condition of glorious triumph Who shall condemne Goodwin Christ set forth it is Christ that will save me to the uttermost seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for me That same word to the uttermost is a good word and well put in it is a reaching word and extends it self so far that thou canst not look beyond it let thy soul be set on the highest mountain that ever any creature was yet set on and there let thy soul take in and view the most spacious prospect both of sin and misery and difficulties of being saved that ever yet any poor humbled soul did east within it self yea joyn to these all the objections and hinderances of thy salvation that the heart of man can suppose or invent against it self lift up thy eyes and look to the utmost thou canst see and Christ by his intercession is able to save thee beyond the horizon and furthest compass of thy thoughts even to the utmost and worst case the heart of man can possibly suppose it is not thy having lain long in sin or long under terrors and despairs it is not thy having sinned often under many enlightnings that can hinder thee from being saved by Christ Do but remember this same word to the uttermost and then put in what exception thou wilt or canst O the holy triumphs of that soul that can but act its saith on
souls must Judge our souls if he that hath a great interest and increase of joy in our salvation must pass our sentence will not this work us into a rejoycing frame 3. Christ's sentence is the Christian's acquittance I may call it his general acquittance from the beginning of the World to the end thereof Hence some call this the day of the believers full justification they were before made just and esteemed just but now by a lively sentence they shall be pronounced just by Christ himself now is the compleat acquittance or the full absolution from all sin now will Christ pardon and speak out his pardon once for all now will he take his book wherein all our sins as so many debts or trespasses are written and he will cancel all Acts 3.19 Your sins shall be blotted out saith Peter when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. And is not this enough to cause our joy when the spirit witnessing with our spirits doth but in part assure us of sins pardon is it not exceeding sweet Oh but how sweet will be that sentence which will fully resolve the question and leave no room of doubting any more for ever consider O my soul the day is a coming when the Judge of Heaven and Earth will acquit thee of all thy sins before all the World it is a part of his business at that day to glorifie his Justice and free grace in thy absolution O Christians how may we comfort one another with these words 4. Christ in the issue will lead us into glory As the Bridegroom after nuptials leads his Bride to his own home that there they may live together and dwell together so Christ our royal Bridegroom will lead us into the Palace of his glory And is not this joy of our Lord enough to cause our Joy Oh what embraces of love what shaking of hands what welcomes shall we have into this City there shall we see Christ in his garden there shall we be set as a seal on Christ's arme and as a seal upon his heart there shall we be filled with his love enlightned with his light encircled in his arms following his steps and praising his Name and admiring his glory there shall we joy indeed For in thy presence there is fulness of joy Psal 16.11 and at thy right hand there are pleasures evermore There is joy and full joy and fulness of joy there are pleasures and pleasures evermore and pleasures evermore at God's right hand O the musick of the sanctuary O the sinless and well-tuned Psalms O the Songs of the high Temple without either Temple or Ordinances as we have them here can we choose to joy at the thought of this joy above if God would so dispense that even now we might stand at the utmost door of Heaven and that God would strike up a window and give us a spiritual eye and an heavenly heart so that we could look in and behold the Throne and the Lamb and the troops of glorified ones cloathed in white would not this chear up our hearts and fill them with joy unspeakable and full of glory certainly this day will come when Christ will bring us not only to the dore but through the gates into the City and then we shall see all these sights and hear all the musick made in heaven how then should we but joy in the hope of the glory of God O methinks raised thoughts of our mansion in glory should make us swim through the deepest Sea of troubles and afflictions and never fear Come then O my drowzy soul and harken to these motives if yet thou seest not the Son it self appear methinks the twilight of a promise should revive thee it is but a little while And he that shall come will come and he will not tarry It may be thou art reviled and persecuted here on Earth and what then hath not Christ bid thee to rejoyce in afflictions is it not his word that in this very case thou shouldst rejoyce Matth. 5.12 1 Pet. 4.12 and be exceeding glad is it not his command Think it not strange concerning the fiery tryals but rather rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings that when his glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy We must rejoyce now that we may rejoyce then indeed our present joy is a taste of our future joy and God would have us to begin our Heaven here on Earth Come then come forth O my dull conjealed heart thou that spendest thy days in sorrow and thy breath in sighing that minglest thy bread with tears and drinkest the tears which thou weepest thou that prayest for joy and waitest for joy and longest for joy and complainest for want of joy O the times a coming when thou shalt have fulness of joy the times a coming when the Angels shall bring thee to Christ and when Christ shall take thee by the hand and lead thee into his purchased joy and present thee unspotted before his Father and give thee thy place about his Throne and dost thou not rejoyce in this art thou not exceedingly raised in such a Meditation as this surely if one drop of lively faith were but mixed with these motives thou mightest carry an Heaven within thee and go on ever singing to thy grave say then dost thou believe or dost thou not believe if thy faith be firm how should'st thou but rejoyce if thou rollest thy self on Christ and on that promise I will see you again and your heart shall rejoyce and your joy no man taketh from you how shouldst thou but rejoyce and be exceeding glad if thou lookest upon the holy Ghost as designed by the Father and the Son to bring joy and delight into thy soul how shouldst thou but be filled with the water of life with the oyl of gladness and with the new wine of the Kingdom of God O the blessed workings of faith on such a subject as this if once we are but justified by faith and that we can act our faith on Christ's glorious coming then it will follow Rom. 5.1 2 3. that we shall have peace with God and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God and not only so but we shall glory in tribulation also SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus as carrying on our souls salvation at his second coming this contains prayer and praise 1. Let us pray for the coming of Christ this was the constant prayer of the Church Come Lord Jesu come quickly The spirit and the Bride say come Well knows the Bride that the day of Christ's coming is her wedding day Rev. 22.17 her coronation day the day of presenting her unto his Father and therefore no wonder if she pray for the hastening of it Make hast my beloved and be thou like to a Roe or to a young Hart thy Kingdom come
be one person and in that person he was born and lived and died and rose again and ascended into Heaven there now he hath been sitting sending down the Holy Ghost and interceding for his Saints for above one thousand six hundred years And in this last work he will continue till the end of the World and then he will come again to judge the World and to receive his Saints to himself that where he is they may be with him to see and enjoy him to all eternity This is the epitome of all I have said onely in every particular I have set down Christ's actings towards us and our actings towards Christ in various formes and out-goings of his love he hath acted towards us and in various formes and out-goings of our souls we have been taught fitly and suitably to act towards him Now in all these actings How doth the free grace of God in Christ appear Ye are saved by grace Ephes 2.5 saith the Apostle Eph. 2.5 the decree the means the end of our salvation is grace and onely grace The decree is grace and therefore it is called the election of grace Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 3.24 Rom. 6.23 Eph. 1.7 Eph. 2.7 the means are of grace and therefore we are called according to his grace and we are justified freely by his grace And the end is of grace for eternal life is the gift of God both beginning and progress and execution is all of grace This is the riches of his grace the exceeding the hyperbolical riches of his grace the conclusion of all is this God's free grace which was first designed will at last be manifested and eternally praised by Saints and Angels the same free grace which from the beginning of the age of God from everlasting drove on the saving plot and sweet design of our salvation will at last be glorified to purpose when Heavens inhabitants will be ever digging into this golden-mine ever rolling this soul-delighting and precious stone ever beholding viewing enquiring and searching into the excellency of this same Christ and this free grace Now all is done shall I speak a word for Christ or rather for our selves in relation to Christ and so an end if I had but one word more to speak in the World it should be this Oh let all our spirits be taken up with Christ let us not busie our selves too much with toyes or trifles with ordinary and low things but look unto Jesus Surely Christ is enough to fill all our thoughts desires hopes loves joys or whatever is within us or without us Christ alone comprehends all the circumference of all our happiness Christ is the pearl hid in the large field of God's Word Christ is the scope of all the Scriptures all things and persons in the old World were Tipes of him all the Prophets foretold him all God's love runs through him all the gifts and graces of the Spirit flow from him the whole eye of God is upon him and all his designs both in Heaven and Earth meet in him Eph. 1.10 the great design of God is this That he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him All things are summed up in one Jesus Christ if we look on the creation the whole world was made by Christ if we look on providences all things subsist in Christ they have their being and their well-being in him Where may we find God but in Christ where may we see God but in this essential and eternal glass 2 Cor. 4.6 Heb. 1.3 Christ is the face of God the brightness of his glory the express image of his Fathers person the Father is as it were all Sun and all Pearl and Jesus Christ is the substantial rayes the eternal and essential irradiation of this Sun of glory Christ outs God as the seal doth the stamp Christ reveals God as the face of a man doth reveal the man so Christ to Philip He that hath seen me hath seen the Father q. d. I am as like the Father John 14.9 as God is like himself there is a perfect indivisible unity between the Father and me I and the Father are one one very God he the begetter and I the begotten Christ is the substantial Rose that grew out of the Father from eternity Christ is the essential wisdom of God Christ is the substantial Word of God the intellectual birth of the Lord 's infinite understanding Oh the worth of Christ compare we other things with Christ and they will bear no weight at all cast into the ballance with him Angels they are wise but he is wisdom cast into the ballance with him men they are lyars lighter than vanity but Christ is the Amen the faithful witness cast into the scales Kings and all Kings and all their glory why he is King of Kings cast into the scale millions of tallents-weight of glory cast in two Worlds and add to the weight millions of Heavens of Heavens and the ballance cannot down the scales are unequal Christ out-weighs all Shall I yet come nearer home what is Heaven but to be with Christ what is life eternal but to believe in God and in his Son Jesus Christ where may we find peace with God and reconciliation with God but onely in Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 where may we find compassion mercy and gentleness to sinners but onely in Christ it is Christ that takes off infinite wrath and satisfies justice and so God is a most lovely compassionate desirable God in Jesus all the goodness of God comes out of God through this golden pipe the Lord Jesus Christ It is true those essential attributes of love grace mercy goodness are onely in God and they abide in God yet the Mediatory manifestation of love grace mercy and goodness is onely in Christ Christ alone is the Treasury Store-house Magazene of the free goodness and mercy of the God-head In him we are Elected Adopted Redeemed Justified Sanctified Saved he is the ladder and every step of it betwixt Heaven and Earth he is the way the truth and the life he is honour riches beauty health peace and salvation he is a suitable and rich portion to every man's soul that which some of the Jews observe of the Mannah that it was in taste according to every man's pallate it is really true of Christ that he is to the Soul whatsoever the soul would have him to be All the spiritual blessings wherewith we are enriched are in and by Christ God hears our prayers by Christ God forgives our iniquities through Christ all we have and all we expect to have hangs onely on Christ he is the golden hinge upon which all our salvation turns Oh how should all hearts be taken with this Christ Christians turn your eyes upon the Lord Look and look again unto Jesus Why stand ye gazing on the toyes of this World when such a Christ is offered to you in the Gospel can the World dye for you can the World reconcile you to the Father can the World advance you to the Kingdom of Heaven As Christ is all in all so let him be the full and compleat subject of our desire and hope and faith and love and joy let him be in your thoughts the first in the morning and the last at night Shall I speak one word more to thee that believest Oh apply in particular all the transactions of Jesus Christ to thy very self remember how he came out of his Fathers bosom for thee wept for thee bled for thee poured out his life for thee is now risen for thee gone to Heaven for thee sits at God's right hand and rules all the World for thee makes intercession for thee and at the end of the World will come again for thee and receive thee to himself to live with him for ever and ever Surely if thus thou believest and livest thy life is comfortable and thy death will be sweet if there be any Heaven upon Earth thou wilt find it in the practise and exercise of this Gospel-duty in Looking unto Jesus A Poem of Mr. George Herbert in his Temple JESV JESV is in my heart his sacred Name Is deeply carved there but th' other week A great affliction broke the little frame Ev'n all to pieces which I went to seek And first I found the corner where was J After where ES and next where V was graved When I had got these parcels instantly I sate me down to spell them and perceived That to my broken heart he was I ease you and to my whole is JESV FINIS