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A12506 The admirable convert: or the miraculous conuersion of the thiefe on the crosse With the finall impenitency of the other. By Samuel Smith, minister of the word of God. Smith, Samuel, 1588-1665. 1632 (1632) STC 22834; ESTC S101704 154,074 540

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the hands of Moses were held vp and he besought the Lord in the behalfe of the people Yea Ioash doth acknowledge that the prayers of Elisha 2. King 13.14 an holy Prophet of God stood his kingdome in more stead then all the chariots and horsemen of Israel could do Neither is this to be wondred at that the prayers of the faithfull are of this force with God to preuaile with him For Reas 1 First God giueth vnto his chosen ones the Spirit of supplication and prayer Zach. 12. Which doth so enable the faithfull vnto this duty that they will haue no nay or receiue no repulse at Gods hand according to that of the Apostle 1. Ioh. 5.14.15 This is the assurance we haue in God that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs. And if we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we shall haue the petitions we desire of him Secondly to comfort the Reas 2 hearts of his seruants and to minister vnto them a comfortable expectation to be heard in praier he is pleased to passe his promise out of his owne mouth and to assure vs by his owne word that we shall obtaine our desires saying Aske and ye shall haue seeke Mat. 7.7 and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you For euery one that asketh receiueth c. This is indeed the very ground-worke and foundation of the Christian prayer namely Gods promise which is as true and vnchangeable as himselfe is without which wee could neuer so confidently come vnto him Obiect But many of the godly haue praied much and often vnto God and yet the Lord seemeth not to heare nor to answer Answ God doth not forget his seruants though for a time he defer to answer God made Abraham a promise of a sonne by Sarah this Abraham expected ten twentie yea almost thirtie yeares who would haue thought all this while that God had forgot his promise but yet we know at last in a seasonable time God remembred the couenant and promise that he made with Abraham and Sarah had a sonne The Lord promised the posteritie of Abraham the Land of Canaan yet in what a miserable bondage were they in in Egypt vnder Pharaoh and that for the space of foure hundred and thirtie yeares who would not haue thought that surely God had not remembred his promise to Abraham yet at last the Lord brought them out with a mightie hand and stretched out arme But what might be the reason of the Lords dealing with his people after this manner Quest Doubtlesse God delayeth to answer the requests of his seruants till a more seasonable time Ans like a skilfull Physitian whom when his Patient being sicke of a burning Feauer shall aske wine will not giue it him knowing indeed that that is no time to drink wine The Lord in whose hands are times and seasons chuseth euer a fit time to answer the requests of his seruants Secondly the Lord will haue many times the case of his seruants desperate and they themselues past all hope of deliuerie in respect of any humane helpe to the end his owne power loue goodnesse and mercy should bee acknowledged in sending vnto them vnexpected deliuerance How could the Iews but acknowledge Gods goodnesse towards them in the time of Hester when they were all appointed vnto death when besides all hope the Lord sent them deliuerance How could Israel but acknowledge his mightie power and stretched out arme when they came out of the land of Egypt when the Sea was before them the Egyptians behinde them the mountaines on each hand of them and they left voide of all humane helpe and meanes to escape Exod. 15. Now was it a seasonable time for the Lord to steppe in that his owne power and stretched-out arme might be seene At what a low ebbe did the Lord bring Daniel Dan. 3. and those three worthies when one in the Lyons den the other in the fierie fornace when all hope of deliuerance was past and humane help failed then was his power most seene and then was deliuerance most seasonable Thirdly in Gods delayes then is there a seasonable time for the exercise of all those graces that hee hath betrusted his seruants withall such as are patience faith hope c. For it is the storme that proues the Mariner and the battell the Souldier whose experience and valour till then cannot be knowne Vse 1 If the prayers of Gods seruants be thus powerfull and effectuall with him This may be a notable incouragement for all Gods people to be frequent in this dutie and to be incessant in their prayers and not to giue him ouer though wee be not answered at first No doubt Hanna and Zachary had often prayed for children yet obtained not Notwithstanding they prayed still and at last the Lord heard them So Daniel he was in heauinesse three weekes of dayes Dan. 10.12 and to his thinking God heard him not yet the Lord heard him indeed from the first day as hee said to Daniel From the first day that he had set his heart to vnderstand Paul when the pricke of the flesh was giuen vnto him the messenger of Sathan was sent to buffet him hee therefore besought the Lord that it might depart from him But he receiued this answer My grace is sufficient for thee 2 Cor. 12.7.8.9 my power is made perfect in thy weaknesse Paul was heard though not at the first and therefore when wee shall pray for some blessing of the Lord which we stand in need of or when we shall craue power of the Lord ouer some vnruly affection of ours though we haue not answer by and by yet wee are not to leaue off This Christ teacheth vs when he saith Shall not God auenge the elect that cry day and night vnto him Luk. 18. Marke there Christs sweet application of that vnrighteous Iudge to teach vs to continue our suites and to hold out and then we shall not misse in the end Secondly this shewes the happie Vse 2 priuiledge of Gods Church and people that no man should say Mal. 3.14 It is in vaine to serue the Lord and what profit is it that we haue kept the commandements and haue walked humbly before him It is sure to go well with them they are in great credit esteeme in the Court of heauen they are all Fauourites to the great King of heauen and earth and he hath commanded such at all times to haue free accesse vnto him and to inlarge their desires with a promise of a gracious answer Ioh. 16.24 Aske saith our Sauiour and ye shall receiue that your ioy may bee full What though for a time they lie vnder troubles and sorrowes miseries and afflictions Rom. 8.37 Are they not herein more then conquerours through him that hath loued them The present miseries of the faithfull cannot hinder their happinesse but through the Lords
THE ADMIRABLE CONVERT OR THE MIRACVLOVS Conuersion of the Thiefe on the Crosse With the finall Impenitency of the other By SAMVEL SMITH Minister of the Word of God LONDON Printed by Thomas Harper for Thomas Alchorne and are to be sold at his Shop in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Greene Dragon 1632. TO The Right Worship●ull Sir Richard Greeues Knight one of his Maiesties ●ustices of the Peace Quorum for the Countie of Worcester and to the vertuous and religious Lady the Lady Anne Greeues his wife increase of grace in this life and eternall glory in the life to come Right Worshipfull IT may bee wondred at of many especially in these daies wherin there is such a satietie if not a surfet of bookes and that vpon this subiect of Repentance that I should thus carry timber to the Wood or water to the Sea And the rather for that my late publication of my exercises of the same subiect The Eunuchs Conuersion my reasons are these First the good content my hearers had at the publike preaching of the same was no small motiue vnto mee to present the same things to their eares which were so acceptable to their hearts And oh that the Lord would be pleased to co-operate to make them partakers of that sauing grace Secondly for that there hath bin none in our Church for ought I know that hath fully handled the History And lastly for that no one place of Scripture or example of Gods mercy is more abused then this of the Penitent for alas how many desperate sinners haue beene imboldened to sinne by his example for what say they Did not the Thiefe on the Crosse at last repent and was hee not saued Not considering that repentance is Gods gift and that as an Antient doth well obserue Though God giue forgiuenesse of sins to al that repent Qui promisit poenitenti veniam non promisit peccanti poenitentiam Aug. he giues not repentance to all that sinne Neither consider they that the conuersion of this man was not ordinary besides it was particular and that particular examples are not to be vrged for a generall practice especially in so weighty a matter as the saluation of the soule is nor how Christ now vpon a speciall occasion to shew the effect of his bloud the power of his sufferings and to manifest to the sinfull world the truth of his God-head euen at the lowest ebbe of his humiliation would conuert a sinner These things they remaine willingly ignorant of whereas indeed it is a thousand fold more probable that such shall dye as they haue liued impenitently wickedly and desperately with the Impenitent and so be damned rather then to haue such a singular grace giuen them and mercy shewed at last hour to repent with the Penitent and so be saued This being the condition of so many in the world oh how do●● it concerne euery faithfull Minister of Christ to strike oft vpon this string to presse hard vpon this duty and to bring them to see if it be possible the miserable condition of an impenitent life These are the motiues that haue so preuailed to bring these collections to light And now Right Worshipfull I beseech you that the world may receiue them at your hands and vnder your name which why should I doubt of since your zeale for Gods house loue of the truth with that incouragement you daily giue to such as bring the tidings of peace may assure mee that a Present of this nature cannot but bee acceptable vnto you Now if this poore worke may adde to the benefit and good of Gods Church and further the worke of Repentance which these times call for as my hope is through Gods mercy it may And that you and yours who deserue so large a measure of honor respect frō Gods Church may hereby bee further incouraged in your godly course who I confesse deserue a greater gift and better Present then I am able to giue it is all I desire and therein shall much reioyce and glorifie God in that behalfe And thus I commend you both to God and to the word of his grace who is able to build you vp further and to giue you at last an Inheritance amongst all those that are truely sanctified So prayeth hee who desireth to bee and remaine Your Worships Petitioner to the Throne of grace SAMVEL SMITH THE ADMIRABLE CONVERT Luk. 23. vers 39.40 c. ANd one of the euill doers which were hanged railed on him saying If thou bee Christ saue thy self vs. But the other answering rebuked him saying Doest thou not feare God seeing thou art in the same condemnation We indeed are iustly here for we receiue the due reward of our deeds but this man hath done nothing amisse And he said vnto Iesus Lord remember me when thou comest into thy kingdome And Iesus said vnto him Verily I say vnto thee to day shalt thou be with me in Paradise OF all Doctrines to be preached none more necessarie then the Doctrine of true Repentance which as it is most necessarie to life and saluation as our Sauiour witnesseth saying Except ye repent Luk. 13.5 ye shall all perish So neuer more neglected then in these times wherein too many of Israels Watchmen bend themselues not to serue to the edification of the faith of the Church as to disturbe the peace thereof wherein the malice and policie of Sathan in the purest Churches to corrupt the purity of doctrine hath beene euer seene But to leaue such as wearie themselues and Hearers with knotty questions tending rather to strife then edification therein many times to get a name of profunditie they leade their people rather into a labyrinth then work them to true piety It is the Doctrine of true repentance we haue now in hand and herein of that Admirable Conuert or that Mirror of Gods mercy the Thiefe on the Crosse whose example as it is full of consolation vnto the godly so no one example of Gods mercy in the whole Scripture more abused by wicked and licentious men Before we come to these particulars it will not be amisse that we first cast our eyes vpon the Lord Iesus Christ himselfe who as the Prophet Isaiah saith Isa 53.12 was numbred with transgressours And as Saint Luke obserueth in this Chapter Vers 32. There were also two other malefactours led with him to be put to death Verse 33. And when they were come to the place which is called Caluary there they crucified him and the Malefactours c. The foure kindes of death in vse among the Iewes There were foure kindes of death in vse amongst the Iewes as capitall punishments for capitall offences 1 Stoning Leuit. 24.14 Deut. 17.7 First stoning a kinde of death commonly inflicted vpon Blasphemers and Idolaters where the hand of the witnesse was first to be vpon him Secondly Beheading 2 Beheading Thirdly Burning Fourthly Strangling 3 Burning Deu. 21.22 which punishment
But God hath said That at Obiect 4 what time soeuer c. It is most true that at what time soeuer c. Resp And it is the mercy of God that we haue that and the like places of Scripture left vnto vs to comfort vs as a hand reached out vnto vs to keepe vs that we sinke not in the pit of desperation being so conscious vnto our selues of so many impieties through the which wee haue forfaited Gods fauour and loue in Iesus Christ and made our selues liable vnto his wrath and vengeance for euer But though the Lord say at what time soeuer a sinner doth repent he will blot out he doth not say at what time soeuer a sinner doth sinne he will giue repentance Repentance is Gods gift prouing saith the Apostle if at any times God will giue thē repentance Qui promisit poenitenti veniam Non promisit peccanti poenitentiā Aug. And though God giue forgiuenesse euer to the penitent hee doth not euer giue repentance to the sinner And if the Lord giue not this gift and grace of repentance it is impossible for a sinner euer to repent Nay when the Lord hath once in the Gospel made tender of grace saluation conuincing our iudgements and bringing sin to fight with the wages of sin which is the wrath of God and destruction of soule and body for euer And with all tendering vs a gratious pardon in the blood of his Son that vpon our true repentance hee will bee againe reconciled vnto vs which tender of grace mercy offered when it shall bee on our part reiected and men shall perfer their owne sinfull lusts before their peace and by their obstinacy and willfull rebellion in sin trample vnder foote the blood of the Lord Iesus the time may come nay the time will come when thou wouldest faine repent thee of thy sins and canst not the Lord then may giue thee vp to hardnesse of heart and finall impenitency And therefore dally not with sin presume not to repent at thy pleasure But breake off thy sins betime by repentance remember that God will not be mocked Whatsoeuer a man soweth saith the Apostle that shall hee reape The whole life of a Christian should bee but a preparation for death for in dying well doth consist the wellfare of a Christian for euer Now it is in grace in some sort as it is in nature the seede cast into the ground must haue some time to roote to battle to spring and to bring forth fruite and according as the seede is so is the crop we must sow in teares if we wil reape in ioy And largly in the one Modica sementi detractio est magnum messis detrimentum Bern. if we will reape abundantly in the other Againe men doe not sowe tares and looke to reape wheate Besides neuer was there seene a Seed-time Spring Sommer and Haruest come together O then why should Sathan and our owne sinfull hearts thus delude vs to thinke that wee may reape the crop of glory in heauen neuer sowed the seede of grace on earth Whereas God hath ioyned these two together grace glory Without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. To returne now to the vses Vse 1 Seeing this is so then that an euill life hath commonly an euill death then the madnesse of those men is to bee mourned for as Samuel mourned for Saul that flatter themselues in their sinfull courses that they shall at last dye happily when they haue had no care nor conscience in their liues to liue holily Indeed I confesse that heauen hath many well willers who would not goe to heaven auoid the torments of hell Cursed Balam himselfe can wish that his soule might dye the death of the righteous Numb 23. though he had no regard at all to liue the life of the righteous But these are but bare wishes in the wicked they cannot properly be called desires because they come but from some sudaine passion in the heart when the thoughts of death Iudgement or Hell possesse them Whereas the desires of the godly are euer ioyned with the meanes conducing thereunto such as are the daily hatred of sinne grouth in mortification daily increase of heauenly knowledge faith repentance and the like But these men separate those whom God hath ioyned together grace and glory And though their liues be neuer so vile wretched and sinfull presume that it shall go well with them in death No question this Impenitent Thief could not but see that his sinfull course of life and his heart must needs smite him somtimes for the same And what might be the answer he gaue his heart euery man may iudge that though he ran a sinfull course for a time yet he would repent at last and become a new man Thus is it now with the drunkard swearer vsurer yea the prophanest liuing for none can be so desperately sinfull but sometimes their hearts smite them and they answer them still with a late repentance as if repentance were in their power But at last comes death and ouertakes the sinner and now is he taken as a Bird in the snare Now he sees when it is too late how Sathan and his owne cursed heart haue kept him hud winkt and now in stead of confession of sinne and sorrow of heart for their former abhominations and calling on God by earnest and hearty prayer all which they promised vnto themselues at this time Behold here in this Impenitent Thiefe hardnesse of heart and finall impenitency yea he falls to mocking and blaspheming the Lord of life from whom saluation commeth Canst thou heare these things thou that art a drunkard swearer vncleane person that lyest and liuest in thy sinnes and not haue thy heart tremble within thee I will conclude with that of Moses O that men were wise Deut. 29. then would they consider their latter end Vse 2 Secondly seeing then that the late and last houres repentance the common refuge of wicked men as it falls short of holinesse in life so it seldome reacheth to happinesse in death It shall bee our wisedome then betimes to lay for this worke of repentance and to liue an holy life that hath the promise of an happie death Get we grace in life we shall not misse of glory in death Psal 73. Marke the vpright man and behold the iust the latter end saith Dauid of that man is peace They shall enter vpon peace and shall rest in their beds Who Isa 57.2 Euery one walking before the Lord in righteousnesse So Paul I haue kept the faith 2. Tim. 4. henceforth there is laid vp for me a crowne of righteousnesse Thus runne then the promises of blessednesse in death to such and such onely who walke with God in a holy life But we see sometimes euen of Obiect 5 those holy Brethren that haue liued so purely and so godly in death they haue raged and blasphemed yea and
other men Vse 2 Secondly this may serue to admonish euery one in the feare of God to make conscience of this duty that we admonish one another and seeke to conuert one another from going astray this is the truest testimonie of loue we can shew to others For indeed no man loueth naturally that doth not loue spiritually for by how much the more excellent the soule is aboue the body by so much the more excellent is the loue to it aboue that of the body And indeed this will be a sound witnesse vnto our hearts of our loue towards others in that wee haue admonished our brethren and sought by all meanes possible to recouer them from their sinfull waies It shall be a pretious balme that shall not breake their heads Neither may these thoughts hinder vs that we haue no hope to preuaile by our admonitions and reprehensions this we are not so much to looke after as the conscionable discharge of our owne duty And thus farre we are sure we shall glorifie God to be witnesses of his word and truth when the wicked in the last day shall be put to silence not being able to plead ignorance or that they had no warning And let vs know that the Spirit of God bloweth where it listeth and the Lord can euen of Lyons Tygers and Cockatrices make at his pleasure to become the sheepe of Christ of Abraham an Idolater he can make the Father of the faithfull of bloudie and barbarous Manasses he can make an humble Conuert and of a persecuting Saul he can make a painfull preaching Paul and of a lewd gracelesse Theefe an holy confessour Let none therefore be discouraged because of the lewdnesse of the person seeing the Lord is able and many times doth call home of the sinfullest of men And last of all this may serue Vse 3 to admonish euery man in the feare of God Heb. 13.22 To suffer the word of exhortation and to labour to keepe vnder all repining thought and euill disposition that is in their hearts which bewray themselues neuer more then when they are admonished or reproued for sinne and doubtlesse Sathan himselfe bloweth the coales knowing that it is an excellent meanes to recouer a sinner out of his power O how hardly is a reproofe digested by a naturall man that hath not the worke of grace in him It is found often true which Solomon saith Reproue a scorner and he will hate thee A sharp reproofe is more hardly digested then the bitterest pill men would not be disturbed in their sinfull courses But if the Lord loue thee he will send thee one faithfull friend or other to reproue thee And surely it is a fearefull thing and a signe that God hath cast off such a soul his care and that hee intends to glorifie himselfe in the destruction of such a one that is suffered to go on in sinne without controllment Let the righteous smite mee friendly saith Dauid and reproue me And well fare that heart that can so willingly suffer a reproofe The sweetest meats are not alwayes the wholesomest neither are the sharpest reproofes worst for the soule Hee is a miserable man that if his neighbour shall tell him of his enemies purpose to kill him should hate him for his paines much more wretched and miserable is the case of that man that being put in minde of the danger of sinne how his soule is like to be made a prey vnto Sathan will requite this warning with displeasure Let vs not bee such spirituall fooles Hee hateth his sonne that spareth the rod Pro. 13.24 saith Salomon The best kindenesse is to smite while there is hope and to reproue betimes ere it bee too late But the other rebuked him Text. Here wee haue a true patterne of a true penitent and looke what affection and disposition is here wrought in the heart of this Penitent towards his fellow the same affection disposition is wrought in some measure in all those to whom the Lord hath vouchsafed the like grace Now his care is manifested towards his fellow in this to bring him if it were possible to the sight of his sins and to repentance for the same And herein will teach vs Doct. 2 That true repentance and conuersion vnto God A true Conuert desires that others may partake of the same grace begets in the heart of a godly man a desire of the like grace towards others There is no one truth more apparent throughout the whole Scriptures then this How Gods people being themselues conuerted and hauing this grace giuen them to repent and beleeue haue endeuored to bring others to the knowledge of the truth likewise Thus the faithfull in the Primitiue time of the Church hauing tasted themselues and seene how gratious the Lord is they prouoke others to imbrace the same grace together with themselues Come say they let vs goe vp to the mountaines of the Lord. Esay 2.3 A true conuert cannot but proclaim the goodnesse of God vnto others Come saith Dauid and I will shew you what God hath done for my soule Psal 66.16 Gods grace is like fire in the bones as saith the Prophet His Word was in my heart as a burning fire shut vp in my bones Ier. 20.9 and I was weary of forbearing and I could not stay Christ forbade the two blinde men in the Gospell that were cured of their blindenesse straightly that they should tell no man but what saith the Text When they were departed Mat. 9.30.31 they spred abroad his fame in all that country They could not for their liues conceale it so Andrew when hee had found Christ hee had no rest till he had acquainted Peter The like wee may see in Philip towards Nathaniel Ioh. 1.41 Verse 45. wee may see this in Dauid who hauing petitioned the Lord in this wise Make mee to heare the voyce of ioy and gladnesse c. Psal 51.12 13. what followeth Then will I teach thy waies vnto the wicked and sinners shall be conuerted vnto thee The woman of Samaria leaues her pot behinde her Io. 4.28 and runs into the town that as shee had receiued Christ she might bring the tidings of ioy to her neighbours to prouoke them also to see and to heare Christ Luk. 5.29 And what might be the reason wherefore Matthew the Publican inuited so many to his house when Christ was to come thither no question he had this good intent therein that they also that came thither might reape some good by Christ Io● 7.37 These are those riuers of waters our Sauiour prophecyed of that should flow from the bellies of true beleeuers euen to the refreshing of the dry and barren hearts of others to cause them to bring forth also the fruits of righteousnesse This will grace doe Wee may see this likewise in Onesimus whom Paul sent backe vnto his Master Philemon with this testimony that howsoeuer in times past that is before
for they shall eate the fruit of their doings The consideration of this comforted Paul ouer all his troubles I haue fought a good fight I haue finished the course henceforth there is layd vp for mee a crowne of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4.7.8 which Christ the righteous Iudge shall giue mee in that day and not to me onely c. Let vs then rest vpon the gratious promises of our God being assured that couenant he hath made with his is surer then the couenant with day and night of the Sun and of the Moone he is Yea and Amen in all his promises as iealous of his Truth with his seruants as of his iustice with the wicked Rayled on him Text. We haue heard before how the sinne of this Malefactor hath brought vpon him shame and God in his iustice hath now ouertaken him in a course of sinning and brought vpon him his deserued punishment his sinfull wretched life hath now a miserable and cursed death We are now to come to his behauiour at the time of his death He railed on Christ. First the Euangelist obserueth how this Impenitent at this time of his death fell to raile vpon Christ He is so farre from being humbled in the sense of his sinne or in any penitent maner to make confession of the same considering that now he was from a temporall to come before an eternall Iudge and from the condemnation of the one to passe vnder the condemnation of the other as that he groweth worse by his punishment and becomes more desperatly sinful He railed on Christ Note hence That when the Lord shall ouertake Doct. 1 the wicked with his iudgements Afflictions make the wicked worse which might bring them to the sense of their sinne and repentance for the same as we shall see heereafter in the Penitent they doe but make the wicked worse Doth this wretched and miserable man now that the Lords hand is vpon him come to see his sinnes and bewaile his former sinfull course confessing and crying downe his owne abominations intreating for mercy at Gods hand in the pardon of the same surely no But his heart is more obstinate Rom. 2.5 and his conscience more hardned and becoms seared as it were with a hot-yron Gen. 15.16 hee hath now a heart that cannot repent but becomes more desperately wretched and sinfull still more and more to his last breath Mat 23.32 And this is vsually seene in the wicked daily notwithstanding the Lords corrections vpon them they proceed from euill to worse vntill they haue at length filled vp the measure of their iniquities vnto their eternall destruction Gen. 4.13 When the Lord conuicted Cain of his cruell and vnnaturall murther of his owne brother how bare he the Lords reprehension did he resolue into teares of repentance did hee confesse his fault and craue pardon at Gods hand Nothing lesse Nay rather did he not complaine of God that his punishment was ouer seuere My punishment is greater then I can beare Exod. 10. We may see this in Pharaoh in those tenne plagues the Lord brought vpon him and his people they were so farre from humbling him as that they made his heart still more obdurate and hard vnto his owne destruction Euen so the people of Israel the more the Lord afflicted them in the wildernesse the more they murmured The more they were smitten the more they fell away insomuch as the Prophet taketh vp this complaint of them O Lord thou hast smitten them Ier 5.3 but they haue not sorrowed Thou hast consumed them but they haue refused to receiue correction They haue made their faces harder then a rocke they haue refused to returne Euen so the holy Ghost brings in those Antichristian Idolaters in the time of their miserie knawing their tongues for sorrow and blaspheming the God of heauen for their paines and for their sores and repented not of their works to giue God the glory Ier. 6. As siluer that is put into the fire if nothing come out but drosse is found Reprobate siluer So the wicked not refined in the fornace of affliction shew themselues but reprobate men Wheras the godly as we shall see hereafter in the Penitent Thiefe the fire of affliction purgeth their drosse and makes them purer euer after like good Hezekiah and Dauid who being once rightly humbled recounted euer after their foregoing sins to the griefe of their hearts and wounding of their soules And it must needs be thus for Reas 1 First the wicked through their custome and continuance in euill haue quite lost the sense and feeling of sinne in their owne consciences Rom. 1.28.29 as a man that is possessed with a Frenzie is insensible of wounds or stripes or blowes be they neuer so mortall but laugheth and sporteth himselfe in the middest of them all So euen so is it with a sinner possessed with a spirituall Frenzie 1. Tim. 4.2 he hath no feeling at all of his sinnes his conscience is dead and benummed And therefore as the estate of that sicke man is most desperate who is not sensible of his disease So is the case of a sinner that perceiueth not the rod of God when he striketh Secondly to profit aright by Reas 2 afflictions to bee humbled by them and to returne vnto God Hos 6.1 is the worke of grace accompanying the crosse and to bee found only in the godly who are quickned thereby in all holy duties So Dauid Psal 119.71 It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted For it is with affliction as it is with the Word when they fall vpon a gracious heart they are by Gods blessing very fruitfull and profitable but but when they light vpon a hard heart they are by accident very hurtfull and harden the same more and more to destruction As the Sunne shining vpon the waxe doth soften it and vpon the clay doth make it more hard and as by one and the same heate a sweete smell is drawne out of a precious ointment Tantum interest non qualia sed qualis quisque patiatur Aug. and a noysome smell out of any putrid matter So doth the word and affliction produce different effects in the hearts of men it skils not what the affliction be so the matter on which it works be good Vse 1 This shewes the misery of all wicked and vngodly men that liue and lie in sinne without repentance They are like vnto a man that hath lost himselfe in the night time he goeth still further and further from his way or like a cold stomacke that turneth the best food into putrefaction Euen so the most excellent things of God such as are the Word Sacraments and those afflictions which the Lord vseth many times as a means to humble the godly these are all of them abused by the wicked to their destruction Rom. 8.28 For as all things worke together for the best of them that loue God so
by the rule of contraries all things worke for the worst of the wicked They corrupt all things they defile all things Oh the misery of a wicked man that whether he enioy weale or woe prosperity or aduersitie are still posting to hel and hastening their owne destruction Secondly seeing that afflictions Vse 2 make the wicked worse wee may by the rule of this Doctrine take triall of our hearts and so consequently of our estates by considering the vse we haue made of our afflictions often hath the hand of God bene vpon vs on some in one kind and on some in another let vs consider how we haue behaued our selues vnder the same Esay 26.9 haue we learned righteousnesse When Gods iudgements haue gone abroad haue they given vs occasion to search and try our wayes and to turne vnto the Lord Lam. 3.40 this is a good signe of a gratious heart but if we finde vpon due examination that the Lords hand hath no whit humbled vs but that we find our hearts as hard as before and we the same when we came out of afflictions we were when we first came into them a fearefull signe of a gracelesse heart Thirdly this giues vs sufficient warrant what to iudge of that man who in time of affliction hath cast off to seeke the Lord hath murmured blasphemed sought to the Physitian and not to God if affliction better them not their case is miserable Rayled on him Text. Thus hee goeth on from one sin to another from euil to worse and his last sin his reuiling and reproaching of Christ worst of all And herein will teach vs That when a wicked man beginneth Doct. 2 once to fall away from God When the wicked begin once to fall away from God they haue no stay of thēselues They haue no stay of themselues but proceed on still from one sin to another neuer resting vntill at length they come to the height of all wickednesse prophanesse We may see this cleare in this present example this wicked and gracelesse man giuing himselfe vp to a sinfull course of life liuing by Theft rapine and much cruelty towards others he rests not there but falls to railing and reproaching the Lord Iesus Christ himselfe And thus indeed the corruption of our nature is like those heavy bodies which being throwne vp moue more slowly at the first the motion of the ayre hindering and restraining them but the nearer they come to their place the earth the swifter they moue So sinne moues slowly at the first by reason it is restrained by feare or shame but the nearer it brings the sinner to the graue or to hell the swifter it moues and the more hardly restrained it comes with such a violent swinge it is hardly staid as heere in this man who was most wicked when hee was nearest his end This truth may further be cleared by diuers examples in the booke of God not only in the wicked but also in the godly themselues who haue made a fearefull progresse in sin when once they began to fall from God thus was it with Eua when Sathan had once preuailed with her to lend an eare vnto his charmes First she saw the fruite Gen. 3. and set open her eyes the casements of her soule by the which the deuill wound himselfe into her heart Secondly she desired Thirdly tooke of it Fourthly she eate thereof Still the further the worse Thus was it with Cain Pharaoh Saul Iudas c. If we examine their sinnes and fallings away from God wee shall finde that all was not vpon a suddaine neither did Sathan set vpon them with his noysom temptations all at the first But brought them on by degrees according to that of the Prophet they bend their tongs like their bow to lyes Ier. 9.3 but they are not valiant for the truth vpon the earth for they proceed from euill to euill and they know not me saith the Lord. Againe the Lord complaining of his people that they made not the right vse of their afflictions saith Why should ye bee stricken any more Esay 1.5 ye will revolt more and more Yea this is true not only in the wicked but euen in the godly themselues as wee may see in Ionas the Lords Prophet Ionas 1. In Dauid who fell from one sin to another and the last the worst Mat. 26.70 Of Peter that from a bare deniall of Christ fell to curse and to sweare that hee knew not Christ Besides I dare say that he is but a titular Christian that finds not this truth in some degree or other by wofull experience in himselfe And this thing so comes to passe First in regard of Sathan who Reas 1 doth commonly so fortifie what hold soeuer hee winneth to himselfe that whensoeuer he findeth the heart of a sinner swept and garnished Luk 11. by euill thoughts and sinfull imaginations fit to entertaine Sathan Sathan will then bring with him seauen spirits worse then himselfe and these will enter in and dwell there and so the later end of that man will be worse then the first Secondly in regard of sin it Reas 2 selfe the which will fret daily more and more as the Apostle saith as doth a Canker 2 Pet. 2.17 which we see infecteth one member after another vntill at last it hath won the whole body our Sauiour compareth it to a peece of leven which is of a diffusing nature that will sower the whole lump so is it with sin when it shall once be entertained it is like a shamelesse Guest it will grow impudent and will not easily be shaken off Reas 3 Thirdly in regard of the sinner himselfe who hauing often made shipwrack of faith and of a good conscience the mouth of conscience at last comes to bee stopped that the sinner runs on in sin without controlement It is the mercy of God vnto his people that whensoeuer they sin against him they may haue a monitor within them that will giue them no peace in sin That sin becomes not sweete in their mouths as Iob speaketh of the wicked But when a man shall relish sin and goe on in a licencious course without check of conscience or any controlement such a one is not far from distruction And last of all in regard of Reas 4 God himselfe who being often and still and againe prouoked through the contempt of grace offered and through obstinacy willfulnesse in sinning is prouoked at last to cast off the sinner and to striue no more with him This was the iudgment the Lord threatned against the sinful world in the days of Noah My spirit shal no more striue with mans spirit Gen 6. Of all the iudgmēts the most fearfulest whē the Lord shal cast of a sinner his care lay the raines in the neck like a father whose son hath run riot lōg by no means wil be reclaimed This is a sure fore-runner of distruction O then happy and
not feare and expect it Now who would not be comforted in time of sorrow Surely it is Gods mercy to his people in times of affliction that they suffer not alone but haue others sympathizing with them who are ready to put vnder their hands by their godly counsels comforts prayers and supplications are ready to help to beare vp the burthen that they sinke not And indeed wee often finde this rule of our Sauiour verified amongst men with what measure we mete to others Mat. 7.3 the very same shall be measured to vs againe If we shew that godly and Christian charity to comfort others in their distresse wee shall not our selues want comfort in our greatest need as wee shall see in the penitent Thiefe hereafter If then in times of our afflictions Vse 1 the Lord hath giuen vs the comforts of our Christian brethren who haue laboured to support vs in loue and haue comforted vs ouer al our sorrowes it may teach vs to magnifie the name of our good God and to esteeme of our afflictions the more light and burden so much the more easie learne to beare them the more patiently seeing the Lord hath layd his hand farre more heauy vpon others as Christ here and most iustly might haue layd his hand as heauy vpon vs. Vse 2 Secondly it may admonish vs that wee labour more and more with our selues with our owne hearts that we get this Christian affection towards our brethren in time of misery that wee may mourne with them that mourne and be like affected one towards another and the rather for that it declares a man to bee a liuely member of that mysticall body whereof the Lord Iesus Christ is the head who is affectionate towards all his members Whereas the want of this affection argueth that wee are dead members and were neuer truely ingrafted into that body And last of all in Christ thus railed vpon and reproached by this wicked man we may see vnto what a neere ebbe the Lord brings his people many times here Doct. 3 in this life God brings his childrē often to a low ebbe in this life namely to be left destitute of all worldly helpe and comfort yet notwithstanding remaine still highly in Gods favour wee may see this in Iob Iob. 2.8 whom the Lord brought full low euen to the dunghill a man notwithstanding highly in Gods favour We may see this in Dauid in the Prophets Apostles Ps 3. yea the Lord ●esus Christ himselfe is made here the obiect of wicked mens malice And this the Lord doth Resp To magnifie his owne mercy and to endeare his helpe and releefe to his people when there is none else to deliuer I create comfort saith the Lord by his Prophet As all things were created of nothing so when there is no seeing ground of comfort God createth it out of nothing that his grace may bee the better wellcome to his afflicted children Vse 1 Which should teach vs to make the Lord our friend who is our strong helpe who will not break the brused reede nor quench the smoking flax Whose nature is to pitty men in misery hath promised to bee with his seruants in six troubles and in seauen Heb. 13. and never to leaue them nor forsake thē Vse 2 Secondly this may be a ground of patience vnto vs when miseries are vpon vs. Though our miseries are vpon vs as the Aramites yet as Elisha said there are more with vs then against vs. Vpon him therefore let vs labour to fasten all our hope and then notwithstanding our miseries wee shall finde comfort and let vs know that it were ill for vs that we had no iudgements except it were so well with vs to deserue none VERSE 39. If thou bee Christ saue thy selfe and vs Text. THIS Theefe was not acquainted with the nature of Christs Kingdome 4. In what manner which was not earthly as hee thought but spirituall he thought that Christ had spoken blasphemy because he had called himselfe the Son of God yea and as he conceiued all those miracles that Christ had wrought were not wrought by his owne power but by that power of the deuill And because he did not deliuer himselfe from the Crosse hee concluded that he could not bee the Son of God But that could Christ haue done at this time but hee would not because his time was now come to suffer So that if Christ had now come downe from the Crosse it would not haue proued him so much to bee the Son of God as being dead and buried to raise himselfe from the dead For he was declared mighitly to bee the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead it was a more glorious worke to raise vp Lazarus from the dead then if Christ had restored him to health being but sick on his bed So in Christ it was a more glorious work to raise vp himself from the graue then if hee had saued himself aliue being on the Crosse But yet notwithstanding all his diuine preaching and glorious miracles that Christ wrought by the which hee declared himselfe mightily to bee the Son of God this impenitēt wretch ouerlooks them all and calleth the truth of God into question 1 Calling the truth into question If thou be Christ where wee haue first of all to obserue How great and how dangerous Doct. 1 the sin of infidelity is Infidelity a dangerous sin it ouerlooks all the grounds of a mans comfort such as are Gods power wisdom goodnesse mercy c. and calls them all into question No doubt this man had heard of the fame of Christ of those glorious miracles that he had wrought the fame of Christ went far and neere he could not be ignorant that he was reputed the Sonne of God for so saith he to Christ If thou be the Sonne of God And yet notwithstanding all these his heart is shut vp in vnbeleefe by which meanes the way that leadeth vnto life and saluation through faith in Christ through his infidelitie is barred vp against him This was the sinne of our first parents albeit God had said Gen. 3.3 Ye shall not eate thereof neither shall ye touch it lest yee dye As the woman confessed to Sathan yet for want of faith to beleeue the truth of Gods word they eate the forbidden fruite and so brought Gods wrath vpon them and their posteritie This was the sinne of the Israelites who albeit they had experience of Gods power and might in bringing them out of Egypt and that miraculous deliuerance shewed them from the crueltie of Pharaoh and that through the Red-sea yet vpon euery light occasion called they still Gods loue power goodnesse and mercy into question as if they had no experience at any time of the same Thus then they murmure in the wildernesse when they wanted meate Numb 11.18 19. Psal 78.19.20 Can God prepare a table in the wildernesse Can
this mercy shewed him euen at the last to bee conuerted by Christ and so saued Note hence first the generall Instruction and herein first That the Lord many times of Doct. 1 his infinite mercy doth call home of the most desperate and wretched offenders God can make of great sinners great Saints and makes of great sinners great Saints Yea where there is true repentance it is not the greatnesse of sinne the numberlesse number of our sinnes no nor the long continuance in the same that can any whit hinder vs of his mercy Yea the Lord hath of all sorts and conditions of men some that belong vnto the election of grace and appertaine vnto his glorious kingdome Here wee haue an example of Gods mercifull dealing towards a most desperate malefactour one that had spent his life in a most desperate course of sinning yet now at last brought home by repentance What a fearefull estate was Paul in before his conuersion Act. 9. a grieuous persecuter and bloud-succour yet called of God and made an instrument of much good in his Church Heb. 11. Rahab an Harlot that came of cursed Cain a Cananite of a cursed people of a cursed Citie yet had mercie shewed her and is honoured with a blessed memory in the Catalogue of Gods Saints for her admirable faith Ionas the Lords Prophet Ionas 1. how fouly and fearefully fell he And so Dauid likewise in the matter of Vriah 2. Sam. 11. yet vpon their repentance restored againe to fauour Mary Magdalene branded with a brand of notable infamy yet is she one of the witnesses of Christs glorious resurrection And why should this seeme strange vnto any since First Gods gifts depend not Reas 1 vpon any respect to man but are free on Gods part and altogether vndeserued on ours Rom. 9. I will haue mercy on whom I will haue mercy Secondly the Lord herein will Reas 2 shew his owne power wisedome and goodnesse that can when it pleaseth him make his enemies his friends and such as haue been bloudly persecuters blessed Preachers and great and grieuous sinners on earth blessed Saints in heauen Reas 3 Thirdly the Lord doth it that he may magnifie his own mercy by turning the crimosin dye of scarlet sins into the whitenes of snow that where sinne hath abounded grace might superabound Vse 1 This serues first of all to magnifie the wonderfull wisedome and goodnesse of God who knoweth how to vse all things to his owne glory and can when and where it pleaseth him make of great sinners great Saints and bring backe some from their wicked wayes as a Brand plucked out of the fire Vse 2 Secondly we are taught here to esteeme of men as they are and not as sometimes they were according to their present condition and not as in times past The Apostle reckoning vp many horrible sinnes that were committed amongst the Corinthians saith Such were some of you 1 Cor. 6.11 but now ye are washed now ye are sanctified It is indeed a common fault in the world the fals and infirmities of Gods seruants are still laid in their dish albeit they haue giuen good testimony of their hearty sorrow and true repentance for the same It is not seuen yeares that can weare out of minde such a sinne in such a one the world keepes Registers of such mens faults and as occasion serueth still they shall heare of it This is not the Lords manner of dealing with vs. Thirdly this may warne vs to Vse 3 take heed how we censure others that yet wander and goe astray thou dost not know what is to come a man that should haue seene this penitent Theefe how vile and sinfull hee liued euen to the end that now a shamefull and miserable death doth ouertake him could not but haue thought him in a wretched and miserable case So likewise Paul hee that should haue seene him trotting and trudging vp and down from Office to Office to get his Commissions sealed to commit vnto prison all that made profession of Christ could not but haue thought him with Simon Magus to be in the gall of bitternesse O but stay a while this is one of Gods secrets that belongeth vnto him he in whose hands are times and seasons hath his time to call home those that belong vnto the election of grace in the meane time wee may not passe a finall doome vpon any Indeed when I see a man liue a dissolute life liuing in drunkennesse swearing vsury c. and in all manner of prophane courses I may say this man is in the way to destruction but yet there may bee a time wherein the Lord may call home such a one I may come to a tree and say here is little fruit or no fruit or bad fruit but I cannot say with Christ Neuer fruit grow on thee any more Luke 11. for God may shew mercy at last vpon their vnfained repentance And last of all this may bee a Vse 4 forcible motiue vnto vs to moue vs vnto repentance and to bee a spur in mens sides to make them speedily to returne and to seeke God art thou a Drunkard a Swearer a prophane and beastly liuer that hast spent thy time in vaine prophane and licentious courses O behold here Gods mercifull dealing now at last with this poore penitent vpon his repentance the Lord doth freely receiue him againe to fauour Be not then out of heart albeit thou art compassed about with many infirmities wrong not the Lord neither wrong thy owne soule as to thinke it will bee too late for thee at last to returne vnto him It was a cursed speech of a cursed wretch Gen. 4. My sinne is greater then God can forgiue no no labour for a broken and a contrite heart and the Lord in mercy will couer all thy sins And indeed this is the true vse we are to make of all the fals and infirmities of Gods children as they are recorded in Gods book not to incourage vs in a course of sinning by their examples The true vse of other mens fals but First to put vs in minde of our weakenesse for if Dauid Peter Ionas and the like worthy stars in the Church haue fallen whither shall we fall if the Lord shall but a little leaue vs vnto our selues Secondly to keepe vs from despaire and therefore we can as ill spare the examples of their infirmities for our consolation as the examples of their vertues for our imitation What would become of vs had not the Lord left vs the examples of great land grieuous offenders whom he hath againe receiued into fauour surely wee should euen sinke vnder the burthen of those sins whereof our own hearts cannot but condemne vs. But the other rebuked him Wonderfull are the fruits of this Penitents repentance and faith beleeuing confessing giuing testimony of Christs innocency rebuking his fellow accusing himselfe and hoping aboue hope in this crucified Sauiour whom all the world
contemned and despised to finde life the particulars whereof now follow in order But whence was this that he is become such a worthy confessor excusing Christ and pleading his cause who so lately before by his sinfull and wretched life had so dishonoured him No question this proceeded from the Lords free grace and mercy shewed vnto him giuing him to see his sins to be humbled for the same and by a liuely faith to lay hold on Christ It was Christ that had first looked on him with the eye of mercy that had in him no merit before he could behold his godhead now at this time vailed and he himselfe so much abased He was by nature in the same estate and condition with the other malefactor guiltie of the same sinne ouertaken with the same punishment and so had perished euerlastingly had not the Lord Iesus of this stone made a sonne of Abraham and framed his heart anew making a difference through grace where there was none by nature for so was it his good pleasure The instruction we may learne Doct. 2 hence then is this All men are alike by nature vntill God make a di●ference by grace that by nature there is no difference betwixt Gods children and wicked men vntill the Lord make the difference by grace we are all hewed out of the same rocke that the vildest wretch and cursedst Canibal was that euer breathed vntill the Lord doe frame the heart anew wee are all folded vp in the state of nature and are the children of wrath as well as others Doe but consider what the Scripture speaketh of this particular that we are all by nature the children of wrath Eph. 2.3 Eze. 16. that our father was an Aramite and our mother a Hittite such as wee are indeed without the couenant without God in this world Corrupted with iniquity from the womb Psal 51.7 conceiued of vncleane seed Iob 14.4 yea all the faculties of our soules how are they depraued through this originall corruption Eph. 4.18 The vnderstanding is blinde Hauing their vnderstandings darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them The will is froward and rebellious Rom. 7.15 what I would that doe I not but what I hate that I doe hauing not so much power to thinke that is good And the same is true of our affections 2. Cor. 3.5 which are likewise disordered being set vpon transitorie things which profit not and altogether auerse from heauenly things inasmuch as the Apostle saith Rom. 3.23 We are depriued of the glory of God Hauing in vs no inclination at all to any thing which is good but rather indeed an inclination to all things that are euill Gen. 6.3 And in this miserable estate and condition doth the Lord finde vs when he is pleased to call vs as we may see in Saul Zacheus Acts 9. Luke 19. Ioh. 7. Mary Magdalene this penitent Thiefe and of all the faithfull it is God Who worketh both the will and the deed Phil. 2.13 and that of his owne good pleasure 1. Cor. 4.7 Who separateth thee saith the Apostle or who causeth thee to differ It is the Lord that makes this difference betwixt vs and wicked men Yea wee shall finde the whole worke of grace of Conuersion and saluation to be wholly attributed vnto him he is the Alpha and Omega the first and the last the beginning and the end that is all in all in the worke of our saluation First Election which is the ground foundation of al grace Election this comes from him Hee hath predestinated vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe Epees 1.5 according to the good pleasure of his will Secondly vocation and a Christian mans effectuall calling Vocation outwardly by the word and inwardly by the Spirit this proceeds likewise from him and his free and vndeserued grace and fauour alone 2. Tim. 1.9 He hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling Gal. 1.6 Not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace Thirdly Faith is the instrument or the hand Faith by the which we come to lay hold vpon and apply Christ and his righteousnesse vnto our owne soules in particular Heb. 11.6 and without which we cannot please God Now from whence haue we this grace truly to beleeue Ephes 2.8 for By grace ye are saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God Fourthly Obedience from him alone proceedeth what will what power or abilitie soeuer we haue for any holy duty Ezek. 36.27 28. A new heart saith the Lord will I giue you and a new spirit will I put into you I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you a heart of flesh I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes Fifthly to haue the Word and Sacrament effectuall vnto vs this comes from him otherwise Paul may plant 1. Cor. 3.6 and Apollo water but all in vaine I haue planted and Apollo watered but God gaue the increase 6 Perseuerance Finally the gift and grace of perseuerance to hold out in our Christian race vnto the end this is likewise from him I will giue them one heart and one way Ie. 32.4.41 that they may feare me for euer I will put my feare in their hearts and they shal not depart from me And That God who hath begun that good worke Phil. 1.6.29 will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ So that it is he that is the Alpha and Omega the first and the last that is all in all in the matter of grace and saluation So as we must say with the Church Isa 26.12 O Lord thou hast wrought all our works for vs. And it must needs be thus For Reas 1 First God will haue the whole glory of this worke of our conuersion and saluation and none other That all matter of glorying in our selues might bee taken away and that we might say with the Psalmist Not vnto vs Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy Name giue the praise He will haue the glory of his owne worke and the praise of his owne mercy and will teach vs to go out of our selues and to say with Paul By the grace of God I am that I am Secondly we haue nothing of Reas 2 our owne or within vs that should moue the Lord to elect vs vnto life or to adopt vs as sonnes wee are miserable orphans and haue naught else to plead vnto God to commiserate our misery we are beggers and destitute of all good things Our penury is such as that we are faine to begge at his hands Our daily bread he oweth vs naught and they are but his owne gifts and graces giuen vnto vs that he crowneth with glory Vse 1 This serues first of all to humble vs
way bettered by their afflictions this is a signe of a fearefull induration and of a hard heart and surely the case of such a one many times proues desperate for the Lord commonly reserueth affliction and the rod of correction for the last place and if that fayle Ier. 6. the cure many times proues hopelesse and helpelesse as siluer mettall being put into the fire if nothing come out but drosse it is found to be reprobate siluer so men that haue beene fined in the furnace of affliction if they be not humbled and brought home by the same these will bee found reprobate men and the Lord will cast such off as a desperate people Esay 1. Wherefore should ye be smitten any more for yee fall away more and more saith the Lord. Secondly wee haue others againe Vse 2 that whilest the rod of God is vpon them their thoughts are in the stocks they dare not but speake and thinke humbly as a Rogue whilst he is in the stocks speakes faire to the officers but when he is out miscals them againe How many haue wee that in time of affliction will confesse their sinnes cry downe their former euill wayes and make vowes and couenants with God of new obedience like vnto Pharaoh Exod. 10. I and my people are sinfull But when the rod of God is remoued and they deliuered with Pharaoh they returne againe vnto their old sins like the dog vnto the vomit These men vse repentance as many a man vseth an old garment which they put about them in time of a shower but cast it away againe as soone as the weather is faire or as many of our Papists vse our Churches when they feare any trouble they fly thither for shelter Whereas the childe of God being once truely humbled walkes the more holily and obediently before God for euer after Vse 3 Thirdly seeing that it is not affliction of it selfe but affliction sanctified vnto a man that produceth this happy fruit of conuersion vnto God This should teach vs to be earnest with God in prayer especially in times of affliction that hee would be pleased to sanctifie the same vnto vs and to second his corrections with the inward working of his owne spirit whereby we may be moued to lay the same to heart and to bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life But the other rebuked him The Euangelist setting out the conuersion of the penitent Thiefe sheweth his behauiour at this time namely that hee did not onely leaue off his stealing as before but is now exercised in the contrary good rebuking his fellow and seeking by all meanes possible to stop him in a course of sinning and herein will teach vs Doct. 4 To cease from euill is not sufficient we must doe good Psal 34 13. That vnto true repentance a cessation from euill is not sufficient but we must doe good In the worke of true repentance these two euer goe together Depart from euill and doe good Dauid there ioyneth these both together Esay 1.17 So Esay the Prophet Cease to doe euill learne to doe well And euen herein doth the Penitent shew the truth and the fruit of his conuersion according to that precept of the Apostle Paul Let him that hath stolne Eph. 4. steale no more but let him labour with his hands that which is good And this truth is further cleared by the practise and example of all Gods people how vile and wretched soeuer they were in the time of their ignorance and vnregeneracy yet being called and conuerted haue not onely left their former euill wayes but put in practise the contrary vertues See here the mercy and compassion of this poor Penitent hee is now as rich in mercy and compassion towards the poore soule of his brother as euer hee was before full of cruelty yea such was his compassion towards him that hee seemeth to neglect himselfe his present paine and misery that now he suffered and fals to reproue his fellow makes a hearty acknowledgement of their sinfulnesse and the equitie of that their deserued punishment We may see this in Paul Acts 9. whose conuersion kept him not onely from persecuting the Church as in times past but set him on work to build vp the wals of that Sion hee had laboured before to pull downe Acts 16.27 The Iaylor of a bloudy cruell and mercilesse tormentor of Paul and Sylas after the earth-quake and soule-quake that hee came to see his sinne and to be truely and throughly humbled for the same how pittifull and compassionate became hee vnto them washing their wounds and intreating them with all kindenesse and loue This was the whole tenor of the Baptists Sermon Mat. 3 10. Now is the Axe put to the root of the tree euery tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen downe and cast into the fire He doth not say euery tree that is barren or that bringeth forth euill fruit but euery tree that bringeth not forth good fruit Iudg. 5.23 Merosh is accursed why not for ioyning with the Midianites against Israel but because the men of that city came not out to helpe the people of God And our Sauiour sheweth what his manner of proceeding shall bee with wicked and vngodly men in the last day he will say vnto them Mat. 25. Come yee blessed c. not because they did not this or that euill but because of this and that particular good as the feeding of the hungry the cloathing of the naked c. And this is indeed that speciall priuiledge that belongs vnto all the commandements of God that where they are propounded negatiuely they include an affirmatiue duty and where they bee propounded affirmatiuely they include likewise a negatiue part and there is a curse imposed as well for the breach of the one as the other Gods righteous law being violated and broken as wel by the omission of the good commanded as by the committing of the euill condemned And thus was the Fig-tree accursed by our Sauiour not because it brought forth euill fruit but because it brought not forth good fruit Reas 1 And the reason hereof may be taken from the nature of grace and of true conuersion which frameth the heart anew and causeth the same to bee fruitfull in euery good worke Mat. 7. Doe men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles saith our Sauiour implying that so long as the heart is sinfull and corrupt all manner of sinfull and corrupt abhominations spring therehence But when it comes once to be renewed and changed A good man saith he out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good fruit Reas 2 Secondly it is the end of a Christian mans election and vocation that we should shew forth the power of him that hath called vs out of darkenesse into a maruellous light Eph. 1. And surely this meetes with Vse 1 the vaine conceit that so many in the world are possest withall that
labour to get our hearts seasoned with the feare of God that we may truely say The Lord is our feare Esay 8.13 our dread This will fence vs from sinne and arme vs against euery euill way such are freed from those vile abhominations wherewith the liues of all wicked men for the most part are tainted withall Yea the feare of God is such an excellent thing that all the duties wee owe vnto God Eccl. 12.13 are comprehended therein Let vs heare the end of all saith Salomon feare God and keepe his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man The priuiledges that belong to them that truely fear God Yea to such belong all these excellent priuiledges and prerogatiues First they shall not want any temporall good thing O feare the Lord O yee his Saints Psal 34.9 Psal 112.3 for there is no want to them that feare him Secondly such hath the Lord promised to acquaint with his secrets The secrets of the Lord are with them that feare him Psal 25 ●4 Thirdly such onely are vnder the Angels protection Psal 34.7 The Angels of the Lord encampe round about them that feare him Fourthly God takes speciall notice of such Mal. 3.16 A booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord. And last of all for the life to come no man is able to expresse the excellent priuiledges of such Psal 31.19 O how great is the goodnesse which God hath laid vp for them that feare him All which may be so many motiues to stir vs vp to get this feare of God which hath the promise of this life and the life to come and to whom alone so many excellent priuiledges belong and appertaine Text. Seeing thou art in the same condemnation 3 Argument In these words wee haue his third Argument to disswade his fellow from that his rayling on Christ and this is taken from his owne present misery A presenti miseria Thou art saith he in the same condemnation q. d. Fye vpon thee most desperate wretch Is this the behauiour meete for him that is now going to giue vp his last account before the great Tribunall and that Iudge of all the world before whom thou art shortly to appeare to giue account of all the actions of thy life past especially of this thy blasphemy against the Lord Iesus the innocent And herein as before this penitent Thiefe sheweth an excellent fruit of his owne repentance pressing his fellow with this Argument the consideration of his present misery and punishment that was now vpon him Thou art in the same condemnation Note we hence That punishments and afflictions Doct. Afflictions that summon to death should in a speciall manner cause men to looke home especially such as summon to death should in a speciall manner cause vs to looke home humble vs and cause vs to breake off our sinnes by repentance and when they produce not this effect especially when death approaches and we are to come to appeare before the Lords Tribunall it is a signe indeed that the heart is desperately wretched and sinfull It is the maine end wherefore the Lord doth send afflictions to bring men home by repentance thus confesseth the Church Lam. 3.39.40 Man suffereth for his sinne let vs search and try our wayes and turne vnto the Lord and againe Come let vs returne vnto the Lord Hos 6.1 for he hath wounded vs and he will heale vs he hath smitten vs and hee will binde vs vp The happy fruit thereof Dauid confesseth by that comfortable experience he had in himselfe Psal 119.71 saying It is good for me that I haue beene in trouble that I may learne thy commandements When we are iudged saith the Apostle wee are chastened of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.32 that wee should not be condemned with the world The Rod makes the childe to stand in awe of the Father and the Scholler of the Master and the Blewnesse of the wound Pro. 20.30 saith Salomon serueth to purge the euill When did Manasses repent 2 Chro. 33 12. w●s it not when he was in tribulation When came the Prodigall sonne to himselfe Luke 15. and got the happy resolution to returne againe to his Father was it not when he was pinched with the famine It was in the time of aduersitie that the Israelites remembred GOD to bee their strength who in times of prosperity rebelled against him Iudg. 6. Ephraim may thanke the Lord for his corrections that hee was reclaimed and brought to see his owne disobedience and rebellion against God who was as an vntamed Hayfer Ier. 31.18 ●0 Esa 38.14 The like we may see in Hezechiah in Iob and in all Gods people if there be any faith any hope any grace at all in the heart of man now is the time for the exercise thereof when afflictions especially such as summon to death and iudgement are vpon vs. It seemed vnto this godly Penitent a most hainous thing indeed in his fellow yea the height and top of all impietie that now the hand of God was vpon him and hee so shortly to depart this life and to make his last account before the Iudge of all the world that he should in this reprochfull manner blaspheme an innocent euen the Lord Iesus Christ himselfe before whom he was shortly to appeare and to giue account of all the things that he had done in the flesh But what shall I say There are some whom al the torments in the world cannot moue or make them better sicknesse pouertie shame in the world all the buffettings of Sathan or miseries that can bee thought vpon alas moue them not nor any whit affect them to worke remorse of conscience compunction or sorrow for sinne to make them any whit the better But what may be the reason can any affliction presse out of the creature that was neuer in it If a whole mountaine were laid vpon a dry or rotten sticke will it yeeld any sappe no no it will first be ground to powder The impenitent Thiefe for all his misery that he was in or thoughts of death or of iudgement that now were vpon him is not brought to the least remorse of conscience for sin but the Penitent Thiefe he being vnder the same affliction yeelds the sweet sap and liquor of faith and repentance he confesseth his sinnes pleads Christs cause and compassionates the misery of his fellow and shewes most admirable fruits of repentance Yea if there bee any grace at all in the heart of man now is the time for it to shew it selfe otherwise wee perish without hope Seeing then that afflictions Vse 1 should thus make vs to looke home and that then in a speciall manner the graces of the heart will manifestly appeare This shewes the misery of euery wicked man that as he hath been a stranger from the life of grace in life so must needs want the
grace in the heart when a man is thrust forward readily to confesse his faults to God and vnto man as the case may require by whose aduice and prayers he may receiue comfort The reasons follow First acknowledgement of sin Reas 1 is necessarie vnto God because all sinne is done against God sinne reacheth euer vnto God himselfe whose righteous Law is violated and broken otherwise sinne could not be sinne This is acknowledged by Dauid when he saith Against thee onely haue I sinned Psal 51.4 The sinne of Dauid was the shedding of the innocent bloud of Vriah and the defiling of his wife But yet the violating and breaking of Gods most righteous Law wherein God became to be offended was it that went nearest the heart of Dauid Now if all sinne be against God it is requisite that we should make confession of the same to him Reas 2 Secondly without confession we haue no promise of remission of our sinnes for thus runnes the promise 1. Ioh. 1.9 If we confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse Now as wee expect that the Lord should shew vs mercy in the pardon of our sinnes it is requisite that wee should performe those conditions which are required on our part namely to come vnto him in an humble acknowledgement of the same Reas 3 Thirdly acknowledgement of sinne is necessarie vnto God because it is hee onely that hath power to forgiue sinnes This truth is confessed by the Scribes and Pharisees whose iudgements howsoeuer they were corrupt in many things yet were sound in this Who can forgiue sinnes say they but God onely Mat. 2.7 Now reason would that we make confession of our sinnes onely to him that hath power to forgiue sinnes But this is onely in God therefore to him must we go to make confession of the same Fourthly confession of sinnes Reas 4 is necessarie in regard it is an excellent thing to glorifie God As wee haue dishonoured him by sinne by an heartie confession of the same we honour him againe for herein wee acknowledge his principall attributes namely his omniscience omnipresence power iustice mercy c. And this is the reason that Iosuah vrgeth vnto Acan Ios 7.19 My sonne I pray thee giue glory to God and confesse thy fault Where he ioynes these two together Gods glory and the confession of our faults For sinne indeed doth not serue more to the dishonour of God then doth an heartie confession of the same serue to his honour And this is the reason why Gods seruants hauing sinned haue beene content to shame themselues by confessing the same knowing indeed it would bring so much glorie to God Reas 5 Fifthly the conscionable performance of this duty is an excellent meanes to keepe the heart vpright with God for future times and so a notable preseruatiue against sinne For that man that hath once done his penance before God in that kinde freely penitently and heartily it will be a corasiue vnto his heart all the dayes of his life after and make him to dread those sins that bring such a taile of sorrow with them in the end Sixthly by our acknowledgement Reas 6 of sinne we cleare the Lords iustice and iustifie his Maiestie in punishing vs for the same Thus Dauid is led vnto this duty to make an hearty confession of his sinnes Psal 51.4 That thou saith he maist be iustified in thy sayings and true when thou iudgest Nehe. 1.7 Dan. 9.5 Ezra 9.6 This is cleare likewise in those excellent prayers of Nehemiah Daniel Ezra c. And last of all by recounting Reas 7 duely our sinnes and making due acknowledgement of the same our hearts are the better fitted for prayer and for all holy duties publicke and priuate this makes vs earnest and affectio●ate in the suites we put vp to God for neuer is a poore sinner more earnest in his requests for mercy then when hee is most sensible of his owne miserie and in the sence thereof hath beene led to an heartie acknowledgement of the same This makes men importunate suters such as will haue no nay as it appeares in Daniel Dan 9 19. Ezra 9.6 Nehe. 1.11 Mat. 15. Ezra Dauid the Cananitish woman and the like Vse 1 This serues first of all to reproue diuers abuses about the performance of this duty of confession of sinnes amongst which the corruption crept into the Church of Rome is not the least vrging that their Auricular confession of sinnes in the eares of the Priest and that vpon paine of damnation Radford his Directory pag 114 for these are their own words Euery one vnder the paine of damnation is bound to confesse to a lawfull Priest his sinne A doctrine that hath not one Scripture in all the booke of God vrging the necessitie of such a confession Nay contrarily to many a one many a time did our Sauiour giue absolution of sinne where there was no particular confession thereof made vnto him as that man in the Gospell that was sicke of the palsie vpon Christs sight of his faith he pronounced thus Mat. 9.2 Sonne thy sinnes be forgiuen thee And so to penitent Mary testifying her repentance for sinne by her abundant teares our Sauiour pronounced Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Ioh. 7. But this is a subtile net which our Aduersaries like cunning Fishers of men haue framed to catch mens goods to inrich themselues to discouer mens secrets euen in the Councels of Princes and for the Priest to know where to haue one for his turne Obiect Iam. 5.18 But doth not Saint Iames say Confesse your faults one to another Answ This is the Scripture I confesse that is principally vrged by our Aduersaries to warrant their doctrine of Auricular confession But by this Scripture the Priest is bound as straightly to shriue himselfe to the penitent as the penitent to the Priest for S. Iames requires it as a mutuall duty Indeed that there is a lawfull and commendable duty to bee performed amongst Christians in confessing of their faults one to another was neuer denyed by vs it is that wee often call vpon and prouoke men vnto But yet in these two cases especially Cases of priuate confession First in priuate and personall iniuries and wrongs done one to another it is requisite that wee should come and confesse our faults one to another and to seeke forgiuenesse and to labour a reconciliation Secondly in case of trouble of conscience to the end wee may not sink vnder the burthen thereof or any way giue aduantage vnto Sathan to haue the greater power ouer vs it is an excellent thing to disburthen our soules by confession of our particular sinnes vnto some godly Minister or some faithfull Christian that is knowne to be a man of wisedome and conscience able to minister comfort in these cases it is a most commendable dutie But we hold it not as a matter
rod. Neuer childe was more submissiue to the corrections of a Father then Dauid was Memorable is that speech of his Psal 119.75 I know O Lord that thy iudgements are good and that thou of very faithfulnesse hast caused mee to be troubled To this accordeth the example of old Eli when Samuel told him That the Lord would do a thing in Israel 1 Sam. 3.18 that whosoeuer should heare thereof his eares should tingle Meaning indeed the iudgement the Lord would bring vpon him and his house how doth he behaue himselfe vnder this heauie denunciation threatned It is the Lord saith hee let him do as it pleaseth him By which answer of his we may collect how sensible he was of his own sin in his indulgent behauiour towards his sons takes the same as a iust punishment from heauen vpon the same Of this spirit no doubt sauours that of the Prodigal Luk. 15. I will go to my Father and I will say vnto him Father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee I am no more worthy to be called thy sonne Reade wee ouer the prayers of Gods Church and people at such times as Gods wrath hath broken out vpon them and his iudgements haue layne heauie vpon them Haue they not still acknowledged the Lord to bee most iust Thus Ezra in the behalfe of the people ●zra 9.10 Now our God what shall we say for wee haue forsaken thy commandements ●ch 9.33 Thus Nehemiah Surely thou art iust in all that is come vpō vs. ●an 9.7 Thus Daniel O Lord righteousnes belongs vnto thee but vnto vs shame Yea Micah personating the whole Church and people of God in times of great affliction and sore aduersity ●ich 7.9 I wil beare with patience the wrath of the Lord because I haue sinned against him By which examples and diuers more of that kinde recorded in Gods Booke we may see the propertie of a true conuert and of an heart truly humbled for sinne it can willingly and readily take all vpon it selfe and still acquite the Lord of iniustice or hard dealing when his iudgements lie most heauie vpon them Whereas on the contrary if wee looke vpon the behauiour of wicked men when the Lord most iustly hath ouertaken them in their wickednesse wee shall heare them grudging repining and complaining as if the Lord were not iust in punishing them so seuerely Gen 14.13 My punishment saith Cain is greater then I can beare Saul can plead for himselfe 1. Sam. 15.20 as if his punishment were not iust And so the Prophet Malachy brings in the wicked pleading against God Mal. 1.6 Wherein haue we despised thy Name or wherein haue we beene stout against him As if the Prophet had taken his ayme amisse and done them great wrong to charge them on that wise O the wickednesse that is in an impenitent heart The point is cleare and plaine the reasons briefely are Reas 1 First his word and spirit hath informed the iudgements of his seruants teaching them how to conceiue of the Lords distribution of his iudgements that are executed vpon them that the Lord therein cannot but bee iust Hee rewardeth euery man according to his works Psal 62 12 saith the Psalmist God doth not proceed against any in iudgement vpon malice or vpon suspition but vpon iust ground before whom all things are open and naked And hence is it that the Lord pleads this his integritie and iustice against the people of Israel Are not my wayes equall Eze. 18.2 and are not your wayes vnequall Secondly the conscience of their owne sinne causeth them to iustifie the Lord and to accuse themselues Psal 39.9 I was dumbe saith Dauid and opened not my mouth because thou didst it And againe My soule keepeth silence vnto God The godly cannot but know that they are their sinnes that haue prouoked God to anger and prouoked him to displeasure Lam. 3.39 Man suffereth for his sinne And the consideration hereof doth humble them and cause them to beare with patience the Lords corrections Seeing then in this Penitent Vse 1 Thiefe acknowledging that his punishment to be so iust we haue beene taught the propertie of a true Conuert namely to submit to Gods seuerest corrections without grudging or repining Hereby then we may take good triall of the integritie of our owne hearts and of the truth of our owne repentance Hath the hand of God beene vpon vs at any time in any kinde whether on our bodies by long and tedious sicknesse or any other misery on our goods names estates of what kinde soeuer how haue we behaued our selues and beene affected vnder the same Corrupt nature in this case will be ready to stand vpon tearmes of iustification as if wee were hardly dealt withall But a sanctified spirit and gratious heart can willingly stoope vnto God Isa 39.8 and say with Hezekiah The word of the Lord is good which thou hast spoken And with good Nehemiah Neh. 9.33 Lord thou art iust in all that is come vpon vs. If in times of affliction and aduersitie wee haue behaued our selues in this sort This is a good testimonie vnto our owne hearts of the true humiliation and conuersion of the same vnto God But if on the contrary part vpon triall had we finde that we were neuer yet so sensible of our sinnes nor apprehensiue of our misery to know and acknowledge that we haue deserued at Gods hand his sharpest plagues and seuerest corrections so that in the middest of them all wee could say Lam 3.39 It is the Lords mercy we are not consumed We can haue no sound comfort in our soules that the true worke of grace conuersion is wrought in vs. Secondly this may teach vs in all our afflictions to labour with our selues to see that sinne is the cause thereof and to learne to profit thereby to amendment of life for such men are farre enough from repentance and true conuersion which goe on sleepily in a course of life and are not humbled when the Lord correcteth And last of all wee are taught here euen in our sharpest afflictions still to iustifie God and to acknowledge that he is euer iust in his iudgements before whom the most holy that are cannot be innocent Text. But this man hath done nothing amisse 3. Iustifieth Christs innocency In these words wee haue the third proofe that manifesteth the truth of this Penitents conuersion and that is his iustifying of Christs innocency This man hath done nothing amisse 5 Argument Ab innoce●●tia Christi And this is that fift and last Argument that hee vseth to his fellow to disswade him from reproaching of Christ and so to stop him in his course of sin and this is taken from Christs innocency Q. d. Wretched man that thou art thinkest thou that because this man suffereth the like punishment with thee and me that therefore his cause was alike no Wee are
iustly punished The most righteous God hath now iustly ouertaken vs in our sinfull and wretched course of life and now wee reape but the iust reward of our owne workes But this man what euill hath he done he suffereth as an innocent he hath done nothing worthy this cursed death And herein as before we see the admirable fruit of his faith and repentance that now at this time when all mocked Christ Pilate condemneth him Iudas betrayeth him the Disciples forsake him and Peter denyeth him that now at this time he should stick thus to Christ and acknowledge his Deity in the lowest degree of his humiliation this was the fruit of an admirable faith indeed whose example may commend vnto all men a most necessary duty Doct A true Christian must at all times speake for Christ That euery faithfull Christian should bee ready at all times to speake for Christ to stand vp in the defence of the truth and not to suffer his name to bee blasphemed nor his word or truth to be dishonoured And surely the circumstance of time makes much for the commendations of the faith of this man that now that Christ was so vilified contemned despised put to this cruell shamefull ignominious and reproachfull death that in this so low a degree of his humiliation he should acknowledge his God-head and stand vp in the defence thereof This must needs be an admirable fruit of a singular faith This made much for the commendations of the Church of Pergamus that shee held fast Christs Name and denyed not the faith Reu. 2.12.13 Euen where Sathan had his throne So when religion is euery where despised then to loue it with Dauid is a blessing of blessings with Noah to bee vpright and of good conuersation when all flesh had corrupted their wayes Gen. 6. this was praise-worthy with God when idolatry and all manner of superstition and prophanenesse doth abound is maintained graced countenanced then to keepe vp the pure worship of God with Eliah where there could not be found that had not bowed the knee to Baal this must needs shew admirable fortitude Thus must all Gods people doe confesse and professe Christ not onely in prosperous times and in times of prosperity whilest religion is graced and countenanced by authoritie but euen at such times also when it seemeth to be most dangerous It is an easie matter to professe the Gospell in prosperous times whilest wee haue winde and tide with vs but then is the truth of our profession manifested in times of aduersitie The field proueth the Souldier the Marriners skill is best seene in a tempest so is the truth of a Christian profession in the times of the hottest persecution Mat. 24. And hence is it that our Sauiour doth acquaint his Disciples aforehand of those troubles that should happen vnto them to the end they should not giue backe but confesse him to the end And how resolute the Apostles were this way we may see afterwards who being conuented before the Councell and commanded to Preach no more in the name of Iesus answered thus Whether it bee right in the sight of God Acts 4.18.19 to hearken vnt● you more then vnto God iudg● ye So Paul when Agabus ●hrough the spirit of prophec● had told him of the troubles that should befall him at Ieru●alem his friends began to disswade him from going vp thither to the intent he might escape that danger but behold that godly resolution of that holy seruant of God Act. 21.13 What doe yee weeping and breaking my heart I am ready not to be bound onely but also to dye at Ierusalem for the Name of the Lord Iesus We may see this againe in those three worthies mentioned in Daniel who held out the light of their holy profession Dan. 3. not onely when they were in fauour with the King but euen at that time also when the furnace was making ready to consume them This was also the godly resolution and practise of Daniel himselfe not to shrinke backe but to go● on in his godly course euen to the extreme hazard of his owne life And for this wee haue a cloud of testimonies by the Apos●le vnto the Hebrewes of whom h● speaketh thus Some were racked some tormented and afflicted Heb. 11.35 not accepting deliuerance that they might obtain a better resurrection And this is obserued to haue been the great weakenesse of the Apostle Peter Mat. 26.70 that when Christ was apprehended hee being in the High Priests Hall should so shamefully deny Christ and that at the voyce of a silly Girle And of Nichodemus Ioh. 3 that howsoeuer he had a great loue to Christ yet was ouer-awed by the Iewes that he durst not come to Christ in the day time but in the night whereas true faith surmounts all the difficulties of this life rests only vpon Gods promises and is content to follow Christ euen to the top of Mount Caluary there to suffer with him And great reason For first this argueth Christian Reas 1 courage and resolution an excellent ornament in a Christian and that such a one is mortified vnto the world in as much as hee is content to hazard all and to part with all rather then to lose Christ And indeed the Christian herein can sustaine no losse but great aduantage Hee that loseth his life saith Christ for my sake Mat. 10.32 shall finde it and againe whosoeuer shall confesse me before men him will I confes also before my Father which is in heauen but whosoeuer shal deny me before men him also will I deny before my Father which is in heauē Reas 2 Secondly this is it that distinguisheth betweene the true Christian and the carnall professor the former is not ashamed of Christ but continueth with him in temptations Luk. 22.28 Mat. 13. the other in time of temptation falleth away Many could be content to follow Christ with Zebedeus sons so long as Christ hath any temporall honour to giue but to pledge Christ in the bitter cup of affliction to take vp his Crosse and to follow him this proues a hard saying who can beare it Vse 1 This shewes then first of all the diuelish policy of those that would bee Christians and make profession of religion yet thinke it wisedome to sleepe in a whole skin In peaceable times they will seeme very forward and zealous professors but when any trouble shall arise for the truths sake most shamefully pull in their heads againe Many such cold friends hath Christ and his truth now a dayes like Ioseph of Arimathea Ioh. 19 38 who was one of Christs Disciples but hee carried his religion secretly and couertly for feare of the Iewes And as the Parents of the blinde man Io. 9. to whom Christ had giuen sight he durst not confesse all that hee knew of Christ he was ouer-awed likewise by the Iewes And thus is it with many a man the feare of their
The Lord declared by his Prophet how detestable the sacrifices of the people were vnto him Isa 1.14 My soule hateth your new Moones and your appointed feasts c. What then must they obserue these solemne feasts no more because the Lord hated them No. What then Take away the euill of your doings from before my eyes Vers 16. Repentance will remoue the cloud and that partition wall that is betwixt God and vs and giue our prayers accesse before him Secondly this shewes the misery Vse 2 of those who trust onely to their prayers and other good deeds as they say to pacifie Gods wrath to escape the vengeance to come and to make amends for all their euill wayes Though in the meane time their consciences are defiled their conuersations are sinfull and which is worst of all their hearts are no way humbled for the same Poore soules doe they thinke the Lord will be beguiled thus Thinke they that the Lord is driuen to such a necessitie that either he must take their seruice or not to bee serued at all No no the Lord hath Angels and Saints to doe him seruice though thou serue but for his iustice vpon whom he may glorifie himselfe in thy euerlasting confusion and so will the Lord be glorified by the wicked at last Vse 3 Thirdly this may serue to admonish vs all in the feare of God that as we desire to bee heard in prayer and to auoid this fearefull curse to haue our prayers turned into sinne that wee lay a good foundation with this Penitent here By confessing our sinnes vnto God by giuing good testimonie of our vnfained sorrow and repentance for them with a godly resolution of newnesse of life That wee first wash our hands and so come to his Altar For if wee regard wickednesse in our hearts the Lord will not heare vs. Sinne stoppeth Gods eares that he cannot heare and is that cloud that hindereth the accesse of them into his presence Now what can be more vncomfortable vnto the soule of man then this Not to be heard in misery when Sathan shall tempt vs sinne disquiet vs troubles oppresse vs death affright vs what is now the last refuge of a poore soule but to flie vnto God by prayer Now alas when our prayers shall become abhominable and turned into sinne who is then able to put to silence the voice of desperation And on the contrary part what can bee more comfortable then when troubles and miseries shall come sicknesse and death it selfe shall approach that we may haue free accesse vnto the throne of grace there to powre out our soules into his bosome The very thoughts hereof comforted Dauid ouer all his sorrowes I shall saith he finde trouble and heauinesse but I will call vpon the Name of the Lord O Lord I beseech thee deliuer my soule Vse 4 And last of all this may teach vs how to esteeme of godly and righteous men howsoeuer the world esteemeth of such doubtlesse they are in high esteeme with God they are the Lords Fauourites they are seldome or neuer denyed in their suites vnto God they haue euer accesse into the presence chamber of the Almightie they preuaile for themselues and others being in grace and fauour Surely howsoeuer the world doth iudge and esteeme of Gods people there is not a wicked man liuing but fareth the better euery day for their sake They are they that with Moses and Aaron are euer and anon readie to stand in the gap to turne away the Lords wrathfull indignation against a Land and people Thus much for the generall Instruction Lord remember me when thou commest c. Text. The next thing we are to obserue is the Prayer it selfe Lord remember me c. Though faith which is the life of the soule be hidden in it selfe yet it is perceiued by the fruites thereof As we see the naturall life is a secret in nature yet perceiued by the Symptomes of life such as are motion breathing c. And as the sappe in the root is secret yet perceiued by the blossomes and fruite that the same sends forth Euen so is that spirituall life in the soule made manifest by the blessed fruites and effects thereof such as are affiance in God prayer c. The faith of the Penitent admirable in two respects Now the faith of this Penitent is admirable in two respects First in respect of the things beleeued Secondly in respect of the circumstances thereunto belonging which makes the same so much the more admirable The things he professeth here to beleeue touching Christ are 1 That he is a Lord. 2 That he is a King howbeit that his kingdome be not of this world but spirituall in the hearts of men Secondly the circumstances thereto belonging serue much to commend the excellency thereof 1 In respect of the Petitioner First in respect of the Petitioner such a one that had not beene brought vp in the schoole of Christ but rather in a den of theeues hauing none to instruct him hauing not heard Christs heauenly doctrine nor seene those glorious miracles that hee wrought and yet notwithstanding to acknowledge him thus to be a Lord and a King this serues greatly for the commendations of his faith Secondly 2 In respect of the Petitioned in respect of the Petitioned and that is Christ now at this time so much abased despised forsaken yea of his owne Disciples themselues Now there is no healing of the sicke no giuing sight to the blinde no raising vp of the dead At this time I say to acknowledge Christs Deity and to seeke at his hands for a kingdome must needs shew his faith to be admirable Lord Christ a Lord two wayes The first title that hee here assigneth vnto Christ is he calleth him Lord. Now Christ is a Lord 1 In himselfe 2 In his relation to vs. 1 In himself Ioh. 1.3 Heb. 1.3 First in himselfe and so is hee Lord ouer all blessed for euer Both in respect that he giueth essence and being vnto all things sustaining all things by his Almighty power As also for that he is the Soueraigne Lord of all Luke 2.11 Acts 10.36 and therefore called Lord of the Angels much more of all other inferiour creatures Yea the title of Soueraigntie to be called Lord is so proper vnto Christ as that many times in the Scriptures he is called by no other name As that of the Apostle Saint Paul God hath raised vp the Lord 1 Cor. 6.14 1 Cor. 12.3 and no man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost and againe 1 Cor 8.6 Vnto vs there is but one God which is the Father in whom are all things and one Lord Iesus Christ Yea this is that title which Christ doth assume and take vnto himselfe as a proper name by the which he will be knowne of vs. Ye call me Lord and Master Ioh. 13.13 and ye say well I am so Now
this title of Lord doth most truely and properly belong vnto him Christ Lord in himselfe in foure respects because he is Lord indeed and that in foure respects First by right of creation in that he made vs of nothing when we had no being Ioh. 1.3 Col. 1.15 For all things were made by him and without him was made nothing that was made Secondly by right of inheritance Heb. 1.2 for he is made Heyre of all things Thirdly by right of dominion or Lordship in regard of that power rule and dominion hee hath ouer all things of whom we hold all things wee haue and inioy bodies soules goods and all and that but in Capite and onely durante beneplacito so long as he shall please And lastly in regard hee hath no partners with him in his dominion 1 Cor. 12.5 Though there be differences of administrations yet there is but one Lord and it is hee that is sole Monarch and onely Potentate ouer the whole earth and is therefore called King of Kings 1 Tim. 6.15 and Lord of Lords 2 In his relation to vs foure wayes Secondly as he is Lord in himselfe so is hee also in his relation to vs and that foure wayes First by right of redemption for it is he that hath ransomed vs out of the hands of Sathan and power of hell to whom wee were once in bondage Now hee redeemes vs with his bloud and payes that matchlesse price for vs and thereby makes vs his owne We were not redeemed saith the Apostle with corruptible things 1 Pet. 1.18 19. as Siluer and Gold but with the pretious bloud of Christ Secondly in respect of that spirituall marriage that is betwixt Christ and euery faithfull soule For the Lord hath coupled vs vnto himselfe in holy wedlocke I will marry thee vnto me for euer Hos 2.19 yea I will marry thee vnto mee in righteousnesse in iudgement and in mercy and in compassion And againe As the Husband is the Wiues head Eph. 5.23 so Christ is the head of the Church Thirdly in the right of conseruation by whom we are kept and maintained Heb. 1.3 Sustaining all things by his mighty power For as he hath redeemed vs out of the power of Sathan he leaues vs not without any further care but still watcheth ouer vs for good for if the wings of his speciall prouidence were not spred ouer vs and mercy compassed vs about wee had not liued to this present hour but our bodies long ere this had beene in the graue and our soules in hell And last of all because all the elect of God are a chosen generation giuen him of God the Father ouer whom hee should rule and therefore called his peculiar people cast vpon him onely to bee cared for So then consider we Christ as a Redeemer as a Husband as hee that hath vndertaken for vs and his Church likewise as his peculiar people cast vpon him by good right must Christ needs be Lord. But how can Christ be such a Lord Obiect seeing he is so often called in the Scriptures by the name of a Seruant Phil. 2.7 He tooke vpon him the forme of a Seruant Christ is to be considered as a Mediator Answ and so is he in a speciall manner Esa 37.35 a Seruant vnto his Father because he faithfully serued him therein being first sent of God and therein became obedient vnto his Father in all things Yet this doth no whit derogate from Christs dignitie who still remained a Lord in himselfe and Lord ouer vs his redeemed ones The vses arising hence are these First if Christ be such a Lord in Vse 1 himselfe and such a Lord ouer vs we are taught to esteeme of him accordingly and to yeeld vp all holy obedience vnto him Doth not the Lord require it vpon this very ground Mal. 1.6 If I be a Lord where is my feare Luke 6.46 And againe Why call ye me Lord and doe not the things I command you And because an hypocrite may yeeld Christ this homage in words to cry Lord Lord Mat. 7 21. we must by our deeds yeeld vp our selues as seruants to obey him in all righteousnesse Vse 2 Secondly wee must labour to be acquainted with the will of our Lord for otherwise we can neuer performe any acceptable obedience vnto him Our good meanings will not goe for payment with him such seruice can neuer please him Pro. 19.2 for without knowledge the minde is not good Vse 3 Thirdly the consideration of this that Christ is our Lord should worke our hearts to contentation in all estates and conditions of life whatsoeuer whether weale or woe prosperity or aduersitie It was a godly resolution of old Eli when he heard of that strange iudgement the Lord would bring vpon his house It is the Lord 1 Sam. 2.18 let him doe as it pleaseth him He kisseth the rod like a good natured childe and submitteth himselfe to the Lords sharpest corrections without repining And this was Dauids case when the Lords hand lay heauy vpon him I became dumbe Psal 39. and opened not my mouth because it was thy doing And so the Church in great affliction and distresse It is the Lords mercy that wee are not consumed Lam. 3.40 Iob 1. vlt. because his compassions faile not And last of all we are taught to Vse 4 depend vpon him for food rayment and all things necessary that is our Lord and hath vndertaken for vs. Children can doe this hauing earthly fathers and seruants can doe this that haue earthly Masters and Lords ouer them Why then should not Gods people doe this with hope and boldnesse especially seeing he hath commanded vs to cast all our care vpon him being God alsufficient Gen. 17.1 Text. Thy Kingdome Secondly as he acknowledgeth Christ to be a Lord yea the Soueraigne Lord of all so doth he likewise acknowledge him to be a King yet so as that his kingdome is not of this world Lord remember me when c. 2 Christ is a King This regall and Kingly office of Christ is clearely manifested throughout the whole Scripture Psal 2.6 I haue set my King vpon my holy mountaine Christ taketh this honour vnto himselfe Mat. 28.18 Esay 9 7. All power saith he i● giuen me in heauen and earth And againe he hath vpon his garment and vpon his thigh a name written The King of Kings Reu. 19.16 Luk. 1.33 Dan. 2.44 Dan. 7.14 1 Cor. 15.24 and Lord of Lords Thus the Euangelist Saint Luke Hee shall raigne ouer the house of Iacob for euer and of his kingdome shall bee no end Againe that this kingdome of Christ is not of this world otherwise then in the hearts of men but it is a spirituall and celestiall kingdome so Christ Ioh. 18.36 Rom. 3. Ioh. 6.15 My kingdome is not of this world though he were Heyre apparent vnto the Crowne and kingdome of
looked vp higher euen vnto Gods power faithfulnesse and truth and stayeth himselfe thereon Wee haue a Catalogue of examples in this kinde mentioned by the Author of that Epistle to the Hebrewes Heb. 11. who manifested the truth of their faith by beleeuing the promises in the middest of the extremest dangers Reas And the reason is Because the ●aith of euery true beleeuer rest●th it selfe vpon two immoueable ●rops Gods power and Gods ●ruth Gods power was the ground of that admirable faith that was found in Abraham Heb. 11.19 in sacrificing of Isaac He accounted that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence also he receiued him after And the consideration of Gods truth is excellent to the same end He is a God of truth and cannot lie he cannot denie himselfe Mat. 5.18 Heauen and earth shall passe away yet shall no one iot or tittle of his word passe away Seeing then the nature of faith Vse 1 is such as that it raiseth vp the faithfull soule aboue this life to beleeue contrary vnto hope as we see in this Penitent that albeit Christ at this time was in extreme ignominie and reproach yet acknowledgeth him to be Lord and King How many sorts of mē want true faith this serues to shew the● how many thousands in the world deceiue themselues and are farre from true faith First all such whose faith is not grounded vpon Gods word but onely vpon sence such truths as they are able to apprehend in their owne iudgements they will be content to allow of but such truths as they are not able by sence and reason to apprehend they presently reiect whereas true faith hath an eye principally to the word and rests there whilest sence and reason sees nothing Secondly such as by reason of outward prosperitie concludes they must needs bee highly in Gods fauour and loue whereas indeed Eccl. 9.2 No man knoweth either loue or hatred of that that is before him Whereas the childe of God that hath faith indeed rests vpon Gods bare word though for the present he see no performance Thirdly such who because the Lords iudgements are not presently executed haue their hearts set vpon euill and are ready to say with those cursed Atheists Where are the promises of his comming They neuer tremble before the Lord vntill his rod be vpon them Wheras the godly man that hath faith indeed hee knoweth that there is an vnchangeable certaintie in Gods threatnings and seeing the sword comming hideth himselfe Secondly let this serue to admonish Vse 2 vs all in the feare of God to take heed how we consult with flesh and bloud in things appertaining vnto God vnto eternall life and saluation The Impenitent Thiefe from the consideration of Christs wonderfull abasement and that common reproach that he now lay vnder from all sorts concludeth that he could not be God He is led as a beast onely by sence Christ appearing now without forme or beautie Isa 53. So depraued are our iudgements by nature in things appertaining vnto Christs kingdome But this Penitent Thiefe is led by another principle he beholds Christ not with fleshly eyes but with the eyes of faith and so euen in his lowest degree of humiliation beholds him as Lord and King heere is the strength and power of sauing faith indeed Text. Lord remember me when thou commest c. This Penitent being now to leaue the world and to go to giue vp his last account vnto God 2. Cor. 5.10 for all the things he had done in his bodie whether they were good or euill he commends his soule vnto God in prayer and therein shewes an excellent fruite of his faith And in praier presenteth Christ vnto him vnder such names and titles as may strengthen his faith and minister vnto him a comfortable expectation to be heard and answered in those things he prayeth for Now the onely thing he desireth at this time is that since he must now leaue the world to go to a place of an euerlasting abode where he must heare that hee neuer heard and must euer heare where he must see that he neuer saw which hee must euer see and feele that hee neuer felt which hee must euer feele that Christ whose power he acknowledgeth to be all-sufficient being Lord and King of heauen and earth would now in mercy remember him Note hence Doct. In prayer wee must see God alsufficient in those things wee aske of him That wee must so consider of God in prayer as that we may see him to bee God all-sufficient in those things we desire of him It was mercy for his soule after death that was the thing this Penitent so much desired And so that it might go well with it hee neuer seeks at Christs hands any corporall or temporall deliuerance as his fellow the Impenitent Thiefe doth But this O this is the thing that hee principally doth desire aboue all things in the world that Christ would in mercy remember him when hee came into his kingdome And to the end hee may haue hope in death and that this his request may be gratiously heard and answered by Christ Gen. 17.1 hee beholdeth Christ at this time to be God all-sufficient euery way able to grant his desire he seeth and acknowledgeth him to haue all the power in heauen and earth able to giue saluation at last And thus whatsoeuer our requests are that wee put vp vnto God it is an excellent thing so to conceiue of God and such his glorious attributes as his power wisedome truth loue mercy iustice c. as that we may still behold him as God all-sufficient in those things wee seeke of him An excellent example whereof we haue in the seruant of Abraham Gen 34.12 who being sent by his Master to prouide a wife for his sonne Isaac goeth first vnto God in prayer to prosper him therein And in prayer presenteth God vnto him according to his couenant and promise hee had made with his Master Abraham O Iehouah thou God of my Master Abraham I pray thee send me good speede this day and shew kindenesse vnto my master Abraham This we may obserue likewise to haue beene in the Apostle Paul in diuers and sundry prayers of his that he made vnto God as when he exhorted the Romans to patience and consolation Hee prayes that the same gifts and graces may be bestowed vpon them and in prayer sets God before his eyes as God al-sufficient in those particular things Rom. 15.4.5 Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to be like minded one towards another Againe the same Apostle in the same Chapter cals him the God of hope Vers 13. The God of hope fill you with all ioy c. We may see this in the Prophet Dauid who when he was to pray against the enemies of the Church beholdeth God to bee al-sufficient to take vengeance vpon them O Lord God to whom
vengeance belongeth Psal 94.1 thou God to whom vengeance belongeth shew thy selfe Thus the Church when they heard that Peter was cast into prison goe presently vnto God in prayer and therein strengthen themselues in the consideration of Gods power This being an act wherein the same might be made manifest in Peters deliuery Lord thou art a God who hast made heauen and earth the Sea and all that in them is c. So the Apostle Saint Paul exhor ing the Corinthians to mutuall peace liue in peace saith he and the God of peace and loue bee with you We may see this in all the Apostles at such times as they made choyce of one in the rome and place of Iudas They pray that God would direct them therein Acts 1.24 Thou God which knowest the hearts of all men shew which of these two thou hast chosen The reasons are Reas 1 First this is to pray in iudgement which is required of euery one that would make an effectuall prayer vnto God Pro. 15.8 The sacrifices of the wicked are abhomination vnto the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is his delight And this is indeed to glorifie God in his attributes who delighteth in his seruants that can make a right vse of them Reas 2 Secondly this is an excellent prop for the faith of Gods people to leane vpon When men seeke of those that are euery way furnished to supply their wants it is no small incouragement vnto them to bee earnest in their suits vnto them Now all fulnesse and sufficiency is in God What thing doe we stand in need of wherein there is not an al-sufficiency in him How many distinct acts of his wisedome power goodnesse mercy iustice c. hath he left vs examples of in his Word and all to support our weake faith when we pray vnto him Thirdly the due consideration Reas 3 hereof makes a beleeuer more earnest and affectionate in prayer which is a thing wherein the Lord takes much delight This put life in the sute of the poore Cananite Mat. 15. who will not bee sayd nay at Christs hands albeit shee had neuer so many discouragements by Christ himselfe at the first and afterwards by his Disciples Shee saw Christs al-sufficiency that hee was able to helpe Nothing doth better stablish and settle the heart of the childe of God against doubtings and fears and worke feruency integrity and confidence all which are most requisite in prayer then the due consideration of this that God is all in all in the very thing it selfe we seeke vnto him for Vse 1 This serues first of all to condemne that horrible practice of the Church of Rome who nozell vp the people in all manner of ignorance how is it possible that such a one should make an effectuall prayer vnto God Surely where men are ignorant of the nature of God and of his principall attributes such as are his power wisedome truth iustice mercy c. which those must needs bee that are acquainted with his Word such can neuer make an effectuall prayer vnto God Secondly this may also serue Vse 2 for our instruction that as wee desire to pray effectually as wee are to take notice of our owne misery and present necessity so withall to behold in God his al-sufficiency and such speciall attributes of his we stand most of all in need of Art thou in misery and distresse conceiue of God in thy prayers as a mercifull God and such a one that is full of compassion able and willing to helpe Thus doth this Penitent here yea behold him as a God of mercy and Father of all consolation and comfort Standest thou in need of his power to helpe thee Present him vnto thy minde euen at the first entrance into thy prayers as a powerfull God And so likewise for his wisedome truth iustice c. We euer seeke those things most constantly and comfortably when we know them to bee ha● at his hands from whom we seek them This being carefully obserued of vs we shall finde it a strong prop vnto our faith and an excellent meanes to kindle affection in vs and so a thing most vsefull and necessary in prayer Text. Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome 2 His desire it selfe These two Theeues make two different requests vnto Christ the one for a corporall and temporall deliuerance If thou bee Christ saue thy selfe and vs. The request of the other is that his soule might bee saued in the day of the Lord Lord remember mee c. according to the inward principle of the heart so goes the desire They that are carnall are carnally minded but the spirituall man is spiritually minded and his ●esires are principally after spiri●uall things And herein will teach vs That the saluation of a mans soule is the thing that euery man Doct. The saluation of the soul is principally to be desired next vnto the glory of GOD ought principally to desire This Penitent had taken care of Gods glory before by iustifying Christs innocency and now in the next place he looketh after the saluation of his soule that it might goe well with that in death yea by how much the more excellent the soule is aboue the body by so much the more carefull ought a man to be of the saluation of the one aboue the other Our greatest care must be that it may goe well with our soules at death We may suppose this penitent Thiefe speaking thus at this time O Lord inasmuch as my life had beene wretched it is iust with thee that I should now at last suffer this shamefull cursed death It is not life that I desire but am willing to imbrace the sentence of death and the rather for that I see it is thy good pleasure it should be so This is the onely thing I now desire that when this life shal haue an end I shal come to appeare before thee in thy kingdome that thou wouldest bee pleased in mercy then to remember me Now if all Gods children bee led by one and the same spirit and so are alike disposed in respect of spirituall good things it must necessarily follow that this longing desire after life and saluation that was in this Penitent is wrought in some measure in the hearts of al those that are vnder the same ●ope and they are able in the witnesse of a good conscience to say as hee did here Lord remember me c. This affection was in the Prophet Dauid when hee saith O Lord I haue longed for thy saluation And indeed what other thing then the soules future happinesse can the Scriptures intend in these and the like places exhorting vs to seeke for wisedome and knowledge as for siluer Pro. 2.4 Of searching for it as for treasures of striuing to enter in at the straight gate Luk. 13.24 Ioh. 6.27 of labouring for that meate which shall indure to euerlasting life of running to
3 The time when As this Penitent Theefe at this time acknowledgeth Christs Deity that hee was Lord and King and desireth as we haue heard before principally mercy for his soule that it might goe well with it in death or after death So now he comes to the time wherein especially he desired to bee remembred of Christ ● when Christ should come into his kingdome Q.d. O Lord now is the time of thy humiliation wherein thou art pleased to vndergoe the punishment for the sinnes of all the elect and to beare the burthen of thy Fathers wrath and all to free thine from the wrath to come I know this price will be payd and this misery thou now sufferest for sinne will be ouer and thou thy selfe againe restored into thy glorious kingdome there to liue and raigne for euer I beseech thee now heare mee against that time Doct. 1 and remember mee in mercy The happinesse of a Christian not to be looked for here but hereafter when thou commest thither Note we hence That the happinesse of a Christian is not to be looked for here but hereafter The fruit of repentance of righteousnesse and of holinesse is not to bee looked for here but hereafter The Christian hath not his happinesse in present possession but in reuersion In hope and expectation are they kept here liuing by faith as the Heyre being not of ripe yeares is not possest of the inheritance but after death they come then to bee possest of that glorious inheritance layd vp for the Saints This doth this Penitent Theefe acknowledge here in this his request to Christ as if he should say O Lord it is not life for a time which cannot be long that I so much stand vpon since death I haue deserued I am willing to dye but it is this I specially desire aboue al the world besides that when this life shall haue an end I may haue a resting place in thy kingdome If in this life onely wee haue hope in Christ 1 Cor. 15.19 wee are of all men most miserable And this the holy Ghost obserueth as an admirable fruit of the admirable faith of the Primitiue Fathers Heb. 11.13 14. who albeit they receiued not the promises but saw them a farre off were perswaded of them and imbraced them and confessed that they were strangers and Pilgrims on earth declaring plainely that they seeke a Country 1 Ioh. 3.2 Now we are the Sonnes of God saith the Apostle But it doth not appeare what we shall be It is true the Lord giues vs now the first fruits of the spirit the earnest of our inheritance which is peace with God and peace in our owne consciences and ioy in the holy Ghost to comfort the hearts of his seruants and to cheare them vp in their pilgrimage But the full fruition of their happinesse is not to be expected here but in heauen This made the Apostle Paul to say ●hil 3.3 ●3 14 I forgat that which was behinde and reaching forth vnto those things which are before I presse toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus as knowing that the happy recompence of reward was not to bee looked for here but hereafter And the reason is Reas 1 First we know but in part and therefore can beleeue but in part can be sanctified but in part and so cannot be capable of the perfection of our happinesse till all our imperfections be done away ● Cor. 13.9 and our sanctification shall bee perfected Reas 2 Secondly this is the time in this life of a Christians warfare where wee are to combate with sinne Sathan and the world Now as it was said Let not him that putteth on his Armour reioyce but him that putteth it off for this battell endeth not vntill death come when then we shal be out of the Gun-shot of Sathans temptations and set free from all the enemies of our peace Besides the Lord will haue Reas 3 the graces in the hearts of his seruants first exercised and made manifest to the praise of his owne Name and that in this life before he crowne them with glory hereafter Seeing then that the happinesse Vse 1 of a Christian is not to be looked for here but hereafter in the kingdome of heauen This may teach vs in the first place to vse the world as if we vsed it not and not to pitch our Tabernacle here but rather to resolue that heauen is our portion and our inheritance Heb. 11.13 and therefore as Strangers and Pilgrims we should seek and prouide for an abiding City Vse 2 Secondly seeing our chiefest happinesse and comfort is not to be looked for here nor in any sublunary thing vnder the Sunne but reserued for vs in Gods kingdome This should teach vs to lift vp our hearts thither Col. 3.2 and to set our affections on heauenly things and not on things below nothing can more dishonour a Christian then this to make the world his chiefest study and care whereas the Lord hath reserued vs for a more durable and lasting inheritance Text. When thou commest into thy kingdome This Penitent Thiefe albeit truely humbled for his sinnes and obtayning mercy at Christs hands in the pardon of them as we shall see hereafter yet is not freed from his temporall punishment but suffereth with Christ And herein will teach vs That release from temporall Doct. 2 afflictions doth not alwayes follow true repentance Release from temporall afflictions doth not alwayes follow true repentāce but many are punished temporally that are not condemned eternally Wee may see this in that manner of the Lords dealing with Adam and Eue after they had sinned God made with them a couenant that The Seed of the woman should bruse the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 which was a cleare promise and prophecie of Christ by whom he was againe to bee restored into fauour Yet notwithstanding Cursed bee the earth for thy sake And In sorrow shalt thou bring forth c. This we may see in Moses Deu 34.5.10 an excellent seruant of God and so often stiled in Scripture a man highly in Gods fauour to whom God spake face to face a Ruler and Sauiour vnto his people Israel Yet for his sinne the Lord would not suffer him to go into the land of Canaan I do not doubt of the saluation of Miriam the sister of Moses that repined against Moses because she was no Prophetesse or at least in that authoritie as Moses himselfe was yet God stroke her with the Leprosie Though the Lord pardoned the sinne of Dauid vpon his true repentance 2. Sam. 12.10.11 yet the sword is sent against his house and his owne wiues are defiled We may see this in the Israelites in their iourneying towards the Land of Canaan for whose sinne of murmuring against Moses and Aaron Psal 90. the Lord brought heauie iudgements vpon them vntill they were almost wasted and consumed
Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my people c. And they shall all know me from the greatest of them to the least of them It is the speech of the Spouse that speaketh thus My beloued is mine Can. 2.16 and I am his The Church there was throughly perswaded of Christs loue againe Behold saith Saint Iohn what loue the Father hath shewed vnto vs 1 Ioh. 3.1 Ver. 2. Ver. 14. that we should be called the sons of God Now we are the Sonnes of God c. and hereby wee know c. Obiect But this Thiefe might know this because Christ did assure him of the certaintie of his saluation but what is that to vs doth it therefore follow that we may Resp Yes verily this comfort is not intayled and appropriated to this Penitent onely but he would haue all his seruants to make their calling and election sure 2 Cor. 13.5 and to work out their saluation in feare and trembling and for the further clearing of this truth consider First that the promises of God Reas 1 howsoeuer they be made in generall tearmes euery one is bound to make a particular application thereof vnto himselfe As in Princes Lawes and Proclamations all the Subiects stand bound to take notice ther of and to make a particular application thereof vnto himselfe as if the same law were made for his owne person Euen so the Gospell and the promises therein made vnto the faithfull runne in generall to all beleeuers Now euery soule that would haue the comfort thereof must make the particular application thereof vnto himselfe according to that of the Prophet Hab. 2.5 The iust shal liue by his owne faith Secondly euery one shall bee Reas 2 saued by a particular faith of his owne no man can bee saued by another mans beleeuing no more then one man can bee nourished by another mans feeding The iust shall liue by his owne faith No faith is of that nature that it is euer exercised about applying of Christ his merits his righteousnesse and obedience to the soule of euery true beleeuer Reas 3 Thirdly the Lord to this end hath giuen vs his Sacraments which are called the Seales of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.11 and these we know are deliuered in particular to euery one thereby to assure him of Christ the pardon of his sinnes and the saluation of his soule in particular The vses follow Vse 1 This serues then in the first place to let vs see what an vncomfortable Tenet that is in the Church of Rome that teach and hold that no man in this life can attaine to any assurance of his saluation other then coniecturall vnlesse it bee made knowne vnto him by speciall reuelation nay more by the Councell of Trent he is in danger of an Anathema that is to be accursed that shall affirme that hee is assured of his saluation He that will be a Papist is bound by the rule of that religion to the end and period of his dayes to liue in suspence a most vncomfortable religion and then the which what more vncomfortable Doctrine it being the break-necke of all true comfort vnto a Christian soule We teach and hold that a Christian may doubt which is not his vertue inasmuch as doubting is opposite vnto faith and therefore if the one bee commanded the other must needs bee forbidden They teach hold that we must doubt and let him be assured saith the Councell if hee either thinke or indeuour any certaintie or assurance Miserable comforters are they as Iob saith of his friends and herein what doe they else but rob God of his glory and depriue a Christian soule of his chiefest ioy Now I would not be mistaken as though I meant that the comfort and assurance of a Christians saluation were so firme and certaine as that the same were neuer intermixed and ouer-clouded There is no such assurance in this life to bee looked for nay rather Gods people haue felt much feare and doubtings in themselues Hezechias complaines Esa 39. that the Lord had bruised his bones like a Lyon And Dauid is full of complainings Psal 31.22 Psal 77.7 I am cast out of thy sight will the Lord shew no more fauour and hath hee shut vp his louing kindenesse in displeasure And againe Psal 69.3 My eyes faint for wayting so long vpon my God Nay I dare adde this further that hee which neuer doubted of his saluation had neuer true faith to beleeue aright the pardon of his sins and the assurance of his saluation for hadst thou faith thou mightest assure thy selfe that Sathan would winnow thee But what manner of assurance then is this you speake of Quest Not an assurance that is free from doubtings and feares Answ but such an assurance that labours after assurance Assurance that wrestles and combats with doubtings and feares It ●s the wisedome of God by this meanes to settle and stablish the hearts of his seruants A man that hath newly planted a tree will bee euer and anone shaking of it not purposing to ouerthrow it but to settle it the more and thus the Lord by suffering the faith of his chosen sometimes to be shaken will haue their hearts rooted and grounded in him whilest they learne to deny themselues and to rest in him their strength Vse 2 Secondly seeing it is the pleasure of our good God thus to cheere vp the hearts of his chosen in their Pilgrimage here to fill their hearts with such ioyes and to giue them such secret and sweet raptures in the sence of his fauour in his Sonne whereby with the Spouse they role themselues vpon the beds of roses Can. as she confesseth and that to cause them so much the more cheerefully to serue him This may serue for our instruction to try our hearts and to see whether the worke of grace and of faith be wrought in vs. It is the aduice of the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.5 Proue your selues whether ye be in the faith how shall we doe this but by making particular application vnto our selues of those things wee beleeue In the matters of this life it is euery mans care to deale vpon certainties for tenures of lands for Conueyances Leases c. Councell is entertained and euery word therein is scanned men will not deale but vpon good grounds But alas for the matter of our chiefe inheritance how simply doe men deale therein they are content to rest vpon a bare hope and thinke that a Lord haue mercy vpon mee will serue the turne What meaneth the Apostle to say Giue all diligence to make your calling and election sure but to shew that a Christians chiefest care must be for this But how may a man come to Quest this assurance of his saluation Answ Wee must get good euidence and assurance of our faith in Christ for so saith the Apostle As many as
beleeued in him Ioh. 1.12 to them gaue he this power to be made the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue on his name And againe We are saued by faith No man can haue the spirit of adoption that wants faith to beleeue Now for the obtayning of this grace of sauing faith the ordinary meanes is the preaching of the Word Rom. 10.17 faith commeth by hearing and the Gospell is called the word of faith vpon that then wee are to attend with all care and diligence as we looke to get faith and so consequently the saluation of our owne soules Vse 2 Secondly the Apostle giues this note how to know our adoption and so consequently whether wee be in the state of saluation or not Rom. 8.16 His spirit beareth witnesse to our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Now concerning this testimony of Gods spirit I will not make my selfe so skilfull to define what it is it is better felt then exprest The Prophet cals it The hearing of a voyce behinde vs Esa 38.21 whereby the heart comes to be perswaded of it reconciliation with God But how shall I know that my perswasion is not presumption Quest There be two speciall markes whereby we may distinguish betwixt them Ans First that vndoubtedly is the voyce of Gods spirit when comfort and assurance is felt in the heart after such time as the heart hath first beene humbled and cast downe in the sight and sence of sinne Psal My heart saith Dauid is as waxe it is molten in the middest of my body for in the time of a mans securitie when hee hath little or no apprehension of sinne then for a man to hope well and to conclude of his owne saluation is no strange thing nothing is more vsuall in the world amongst meer naturall men that neuer felt the smart of sinne then to bragge and boast of this assurance of saluation but alas they raise vp this building but vpon a sandy foundation which will neuer stand in the time of tryall for it is Gods manner of dealing vsually in this work of mans saluation to lay full low whom hee intendeth to aduance full high by sorrow to bring them vnto ioy by death to bring them vnto life and by their humiliation for sinne to bring them to glory so that when a man hath once truely felt the smart of sinne when a man hath once combated with Gods wrath and the terrors of hell haue possessed his soule here is a good foundation to build the hope of heauen vpon for humiliation is the ground of exaltation and after this to stay a mans selfe vpon the promise of God in Christ is vndoubtedly the voyce of Gods spirit a token of true comfort and a note of true ioy Secondly when comfort ariseth Vse 2 from the comfortable vse of the meanes God himselfe hath appointed such as are the preaching of the Word the reuerent vse of the Sacrament prayer reading of the Scripture meditation c. for the Lord is euer a maintainer of that course which hee himselfe hath sanctified and set apart to the same end so then try thy assurance thus hath it beene layd in godly sorrow for sinne hast thou attended the poasts of the Lords Sanctuary c. This is vndoubtedly the voyce of Gods spirit and not of presumption But if on the contrary part thou neuer yet feltest such griefe of heart for sinne thy conscience did neuer yet torment thee in the sight and sence of sinne neither hast thou euer had any delight in the Lords Sabbaoths nor the duties of holinesse c. O deceiue not thy own soule thy hope of heauen of eternall life and saluation is meere presumption and no true assurance Text. Thou shalt be with me 2 To whom The next thing wee are to obserue is the person to whom the promise is mad● and that is the Penitent that had confessed a good confession and h●d giuen so good testimony of his faith in Christ acknowledging his deitie at this time when all the world despised him and resting on him alone for life and saluation to him is the promise made Thou shalt be with me Whence we may note first of Doct. 1 all The prayers of the godly very effectuall with God The wonderfull force of the prayers of the godly how powerfull and effectuall the same are with God Such as lay a good foundation in humiliation for sin and haue laboured by true repentance their reconciliation with the Almightie these are they that preuaile most of all with God in prayer See we this in the example of this poore Penitent who hauing giuen good testimonie of his true repentance and conuersion vnto God how powerfull is he in prayer what a gratious answer doth the Lord giue vnto him Verily thou shalt bee with me The best way to haue our wills satisfied and our requests granted is to be godly for to such is the promise made Psal 145.18.19 God is neare to all that call vpon him yea to all that call vpon him in truth Hee will fulfill the desires of those that feare him he also will heare their cry and will helpe them We may see this in the Lords mercifull dealing with the people of Israel who being sore oppressed by the Canaanites who tooke of them prisoners they humbled themselues and besought the Lord and the Text saith The Lord heard the voyce of Israel Num. 21.3 Yea the Lord to testifie that his readie disposition to h●are and to grant the prayers of his seruants declareth by his Prophet saying Before they call I will answer Isa 65.24 and whilest they speake I will heare Thus Dauid Psal 120.1 I called vpon the Lord in trouble and he heard me The faithfull being suters vnto God are alwayes sure of good successe yea many times aboue that they aske or thinke as wee shall see hereafter in this Penitent that the Angell telleth Cornelius a godly man Act. 10.4 that his praiers were heard Yea the more Gods people can get their hearts to be broken and humbled in the sence of their sinnes the more powerfull and effectuall are their prayers with God A broken and contrite heart Psal 51.17 O God thou wilt not despise This Dauid found by comfortable experience in himselfe that when in the pride of his heart hee had numbred the people for whose sinne the Lord sent that grieuous plague vpon them When hee humbled himselfe before the Lord confessed his sinne 1. Chron. 21.17.27 It is I that haue sinned But what haue these sheepe done How suddenly vpon this did the Lord command the Angell to put vp his sword When Israel was in great affliction and distresse still They cried vnto the Lord in their troubles and the Text saith Psal 107.10 He deliuered them out of their distresse How powerfull were the prayers of Moses against the Amalekites Exod. 17. that Israel preuailed all the while
thou abhorrest thy selfe with Iob Iob 42.6 and repentest in dust and ashes Thou canst passe the sentence of condemnation against thy selfe acknowledging that if the Lord should doe thee iustice he might iustly condemne thee for euer Consider then for thy comfort this being thy case God cannot with-hold from thee comfort it cannot stand with the rule of iustice to deny thee mercy Nay more thou mayst in a holy boldnesse challenge God of his word and promise which it cannot stand with his honour and iustice not to performe God should not be iust in his promises if he should not pardon the sinnes of the penitent O how may this comfort the hearts of such as mourne in Sion that hang downe their heads as being ashamed to lift vp the same to heauen that goe mourning all the day long let such comfortably apply this doctrine vnto themselues Thou desirest nothing more in all the world then Gods fauour his countenance grace and it is thy greatest griefe that thou inioyest it not Remember to thy comfort Christ will not quench the smoaking flaxe Mat 12.20 nor breake asunder the bruised reede he can as well deny himselfe and cease to be God as to deny mercy to those that truely see their sins are humbled for them and sue vnto him for the pardon of the same And for thy further comfort herein consider that thy sins whatsoeuer they haue beene haue beene but the sinnes of a poore weake and fraile man and the mercy thou shalt haue in the pardon of them is the mercy of a God euen of a God of mercy betwixt which there is no comparison But doth not God without repentance grant remission of sins Quest how then is remission of sinnes saluation and eternall life his free gift I answer that remission of sins Answ and eternall life is his free gift First because howsoeuer they are not giuen without repentance and faith yet they are not giuen for these things sake Secondly euen these gifts and graces truely to repent and to beleeue are not of our selues neither are they common to all but they come from God prouing saith the Apostle if at any time God will giue them repentance vnto life 1 Tim. Thirdly repentance and faith are requisite not to shew for what but rather to shew to whom remission of sinnes and eternall life doth belong and appertaine and serue to qualifie Gods people for the promises of life and saluation Vse 2 Secondly seeing that repentance for sinne doth thus qualifie a man for remission of sinnes and so for life and saluation it shall then bee our wisedome to labour for repentance aboue all things in the world to lay hold vpon the opportunitie of grace offered and speedily to returne not to deferre the same from day to day lest our hearts come to bee hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin take wee heed that wee doe not abuse his patience and forbearance or take occasion of libertie to turne this grace of his into wantonnesse Rom. 2.4 Rom. 6.1.2 Shall we sinne saith the Apostle because grace should abound God forbid Nay rather let vs know that they that wait vpon lying vanities Ion. 2.8 forsake their owne mercy The longer that any remaine in the mire of sinne the faster they sticke therein God will not at all times offer the like mercy Reu. 3. neither will he euer stand and knocke at the dore of our hearts let vs then lay hold vpon the opportunitie offered lest our repentance at last come too late Thirdly seeing wee haue such Vse 3 a mercifull God louing Father that is so ready to shew mercy and to receiue vt into fauour vpon our true repentance Let vs labour to bee like vnto God and shew that wee are children of such a Father by our long sufferance towards our brethren that iniure vs. There is no one thing that doth more manifestly declare the image of God to be renewed within vs then this propensenesse and ready disposition to forgiue the iniuries of our brethren How earnestly doth the Apostle perswade vnto this duty when he saith Put on therefore as the elect of God holy and beloued bowels of mercy kindenesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long-suffering forbearing one another c. And to this end Christ propoundeth that parable in the Gospell of the King taking account of his seruants and therein shewes the mercifull dealing of him that had ten thousand talents forgiuen him yet would take his fellow by the throate for tenne talents and therein will teach vs that if we would haue pardon at Gods hand for the greater wee must forgiue the lesser whereas such as wil not forgiue the iniuries of others this shewes that they are stamped with the very image of Sathan who was malitious and a murtherer from the beginning and indeed there shall be iudgement mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy Shalt be with me Here wee haue the promise it selfe Text. 3. Promise it selfe which is to be with Christ in his glorious kingdome That in as much as by faith he was able to discerne Christs Deity in this base and low degree of his humiliation and by a liuely faith did rest on him alone for life and saluation Christ will not suffer his faith to faile nor himselfe to bee disappointed of the end thereof but grants him his hearts desire Verily thou shalt be with me The Instruction is Doct. 1 That they that in miserie seeke vnto God They that in misery wait vpon God shall not misse of comfort in the end and rest on him shall bee sure of comfort in the end There is no labour lost in seeking and seruing of him but howsoeuer their present miseries are great yet as Mordecai said to Hester Deliuerance will come Let thy heart be in the feare of the Lord continually saith Solomon for surely there is an end Pro. 23.17 and thy hope shall not bee cut off So Dauid Marke the vpright man Psal 37.37 and behold the iust the latter end of that man shall bee peace Pro. 11.7 Whereas the hope of the wicked shall perish And as Iob saith Iob 27.8 What hope hath the hypocrite when God shall take away his soule Meaning indeed hee hath no hope And againe There is no peace to the wicked Isa 48.22 saith my God So that the condition of Gods people euen in their deepest aduersities and miseries is farre better then the condition of the wicked in their chiefest prosperitie For the one is sure that the end of his life will end his misery and finish his sorrow and enter his possession of euerlasting felicitie Whereas the candle of the wicked at last shall be put out and their fleeting pleasures which they haue had for a time heere shall bring at last an eternall weight of torment as our Sauiour saith Woe to you that laugh Luk. 6. for you shall waile and weepe Would we haue some
examples for the further clearing of this truth How many miseries did the Israelites go vnder and that for the space of foure hundred and thirtie yeares yet at last the Lord gaue them rest in the promised Canaan How long was Dauid persecuted before he came to the kingdome and after yet at last the Lord gaue him rest Againe how sore were his inward feares and terrours by reason of sinne yet at the last filled with comfort How dealt the Lord with Iob both in respect of his outward man and temporall estate of a great Prince the Lord brought him to the dunghill And for his soule doth hee not often complaine that God Had set him as a But to shoote at And that the Arrowes of the Almighty had drunke vp his spirits yet at last dyed peaceably And there is reason for it Reas 1 First the Lords owne promise Call vpon mee in the time of thy trouble Psal 50.15 and I will heare thee and deliuer thee Which promise of his the Lord hath euer made good from time to time putting an end at last vnto the miseries of his seruants and giuing them rest and in this regard there is nothing in all the world more sure and certaine then the good successe of the hope of Christians it neuer misseth of that it aymeth at for their hope which is the Anchor of the soule hath faith for the ground of it Rom. 5.5 whereupon it fasteneth it selfe And further Gods truth and faithfulnesse to assure them of the truth thereof Secondly it is God that inclineth Reas 2 the heart to seeke him and causeth the soule so to hunger and thirst after him All which are cleare demonstrations that the Lord hath a purpose to giue them comfort at last Vpon this verie ground Dauid concludeth the helpe and deliuerance of Gods people in distresse Psal 10.17 Lord saith he thou hearest the desire of the poore thou preparest their heart and thine eare inclineth thereunto Thirdly God delaying to helpe his seruants by and by in time of miserie and distresse doth prouoke them to pray so much the more earnestly and frequently vnto him drawing away the heart from the world and causing the soule to haue the more secret communion with the Almightie and so must needs bring comfort in the end Vse 1 Seeing then that those that seeke vnto God and wait vpon him shall haue comfort in the end as we see in this poore Penitent here This may serue then in the first place to stay the godly in the time of their sorest trials not to despaire not to murmure repine and complaine as if their case were desperate For in due time they shall reape if they faint not What though for a time they beare the burthen and the heate of the day when the Euening commeth they shall not misse of their reward and then they shall see and acknowledge with the Apostle Luk. 21.18 That these light and momentany afflictions which are but for a season shall bring with them an eternall recompence of reward In the meane time let vs possesse our soules in patience tarrie the Lords leasure and waite vpon him our labour shall not bee in vaine in the Lord. After all the boysterous stormes in this life wrestlings against sinne Sathan and our owne corruptions and against malitious and wick d men Deliuerance will come and the godly shall find it most true in the end that they that waite vpon him shall not bee ashamed Vse 2 Secondly it may serue to admonish vs that we take heed that we do not preuent the Lord and forestall that comfortable issue we might haue of our miseries and afflictions either by not seeking of him when miserie is vpon vs or by vnlawfull wayes and means to seeke to come out of them This is indeed to rob God of that honour that is due vnto him in waiting for his helpe and our selues of that comfort wee might otherwise haue of a seasonable deliuerance if we had sought and waited vpon him Thou shalt be with me That is with the soul of Christ for his body went from the crosse to the graue q. d. Since thou hast confessed my name and desirest principally the fruition of mee thou shalt be satisfied in the thing thou desirest Thou shalt be with me Note hence That the soules of the faithfull Doct. 2 after this life haue the fruition of Christ The souls of the faithfull in death are gathered to Christ and are gathered vnto him So soone as the soule goeth out of the body it goeth immediately to heauen or hell The Scripture maketh mention but of two wayes the broad and the narrow and these leade but vnto two places either to endlesse blisse or into Euerlasting torment there is a Paradise you see here for the Penitent Luk. 23.43 or an Abrahams bosome for a Lazarus And there is again a Gulfe of hell for the Glutton Luk. 16. or Euerlasting torment for the Impenitent No third place can bee found in all the Scripture So Paul I desire to be dissolued Phil. 1.23 and to be with Christ The faithfull can bee no sooner dissolued or their soules set at libertie but they are gathered vnto Christ As for the wicked with Iudas they go to their owne place Act. 1. that is to Hell out of which there is no redemption Reas And it must needs be so in regard that Christ is the head of beleeuers and they are his body yea euery true beleeuer is a member of this body Now it is impossible that the head should be glorified but the members must needs participate with the same glory together with the head This Christ prayeth for of his Father Ioh. 17.24 Father I will that those thou hast giuen me be with mee where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast giuen me Vse 1 This meereth with the doctrine of Purgatory so much vrged and pressed by the Church of Rome as the most gainfullest doctrine of their Church It is wonderfull to see how the great Rabb●●s of that Church are troubled about this fire of Purgatory both what it is where it is how long it shall burne the conditions of those persons that shall haue that fauour to come into it and the like some holding one thing some another Some hold it to be Saint Patrickes hole in Ireland some Etna that Mountaine in Sicily that burneth continually or in the Popes Kitchin they should say where there is indeed a true fire maintained daily by the Fees that come in by that imaginarie fire But what shall I say it is a doctrine that as it hath no footing at all out of the word of God so were the Primitiue Fathers themselues either strangers vnto it or doubtfull of it Aug. de Ciuit Dei lib. 21. Ch. 26. Augustine who liued foure hundred yeares after Christ plainly sheweth that in his time it was not receiued Tertium locum penitus
ignoramus nor beleeued for any Article of faith and in some places of his writings he absolutely denieth it Fisher sometimes Bishop of Rochester ingeniously confesseth That there is no Scripture to proue Purgatory Roff contra assert Luth. and may we not iustly deny that for the which there is no Scripture to proue it Nay more he confesseth that seldome or neuer any mention is made of Purgatory either among the Greeke or Latine writers Legat qui volet Graecorum commentariose● nullū quātum opinor de Purgatorio sermonē inueniet c. Isa 57.2 Nay rather the Scriptures teach the contrary as that of Isaiah They shall enter vpon peace and they shall rest vpon their beds euery one that walketh before the Lord in righteousnesse And amongst all those sacrifices that were appointed in the time of the law for the Prince for the Priest and for the Congregation Leu. 5.6 all were appointed for the liuing and none that euer wee reade of were appointed for the dead Doubtlesse either God was very forgetfull of them or else this Doctrine of Purgatory was not hatched When Paul directs the Church how they should carry themselues towards the dead Phil. 3. he giues no direction at any time to pray for the dead Saint Iohn saith Blessed are the dead that dye in the Lord. And the holy Ghost addeth further Reu. 14.13 From henceforth they rest from their labours Now to enter vpon peace and to rest from their labours and yet to suffer hellish torments for many yeares are things incompatible and cannot stand together Besides Christ hath promised rest and refreshing to those that are heauy laden and come vnto him saying Come vnto me all ye that trauaile Mat. 11.28 and are heauie laden and I will refresh you Now what refreshing and rest is this to frie in the flames of Purgatory Surely the Scriptures know no such third place but that the souls of the righteous so soone as euer they depart out of the body they go with the soule of this Penitent here into Paradise or into heauen the place of euerlasting ioy and felicity And the soules of the wicked go immediatly to Hell a place of euerlasting torment there is no middle place betwixt these But as there are but two sorts of persons so there are but two sorts of places Besides it stands not with the rule of Iustice that the soule should be punished without the body since the body and the soule were copartners together in sinne But the Church of Rome knew well enough what it did to broach this doctrine and what they do in maintaining the same at this day But we wil leaue them and come vnto our selues This may serue for matter of Vse 2 singular comfort and consolation vnto the godly that inasmuch as the soules of the faithfull in death are gathered vnto Christ they may comfort themselues that this worke of repentance for sinne of mortification of sanctification howsoeuer it may seeme painfull for a time yet it will bee gainfull in the end Let such then comfort their hearts and say O my soule returne thou vnto thy rest for the Lord hath beene beneficiall vnto thee And say with Dauid Psal 23. Though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I will feare none ill for thou art with me This this is it that makes the true beleeuer looke death in the face and supports him against the feares of the graue an assured perswasion in death to be gathered vnto Christ yea it is a true note of an honest heart so to walke with God in life as willingly and cheerfully to imbrace the sentence of death at last Wheras on the contrary it is a note of a soule soyled with corruption or else indued but with a small measure of sanctification to bee kept vnder the continuall feare of death ●adice Vse 4 The Scriptures make mention of a twofold Paradice Place Terrestriall and Celestiall The Terrestriall or earthly Paradice is that Paradice in the which Adam was placed by God himselfe a place of excellent felicitie beauty and glory and out of the which both Adam and his posterity after him Gen. 2.8 euen vnto this day were cast by reason of their sins There is besides this the Celestiall Paradice or the kingdome of heauen into the which the Lord Iesus Christ the second Adam was now to enter and doth promise this Penitent here the fruition therof with himselfe whereby is meant indeed the happie and blessed estate of glorified souls in the kingdome of heauen as it appeareth plainly by that of the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 12. that when hee was caught vp into Paradice he was caught vp indeed into the third heauen But why doth our Sauiour call heauen by the name of Paradice Quest In regard no place on earth could better resemble the kingdome of heauen Answ and being to speake to men and not to Angels Paradice was the most excellent place a place of pleasure solace and of all delight and therefore did most fitly shadow out the variety and excellency of those delights and pleasures in the kingdome of heauen And herein will teach vs Doct. In heauen is the perfection of happinesse That in heauen there is the perfection of all happinesse of pleasure and delight The great pleasures in the garden of Eden where there were trees of all sorts and Riuers for pleasures and delight doth most excellently shadow out vnto vs those pleasures reserued for the Saints in Gods kingdome which happinesse of euery true beleeuer shall in the last day appeare to the whole world to men and Angels when he shall come as the Apostle saith 2 Thes 1.10 To be glorified in his Saints and to be made maruellous in all them that beleeue There is to bee looked for the perfection of their glory especially when the bodies of true beleeuers shall come to be glorified with their soules for so saith the Apostle Phil. 3.21 He shall change our vile body and make it like his glorious body and then their bodies and soules ioyned together and glorified together must needs inioy the perfection of their happinesse and glory and for the hastening of the consummation thereof the Saints vnder the Altar cry How long Lord Reu. 6.10 as indeed expecting and longing for the full fruition of that glory This happinesse glory what it is if we had the tongues of men and Angels wee are not able to expresse it the Apostle tearmes it A most excellent 2 Cor. 4.17 and an eternall weight of glory when hee shall appeare we shall be like vnto him saith Saint Iohn 1 Ioh. 3 2. The Church is compared to a Bride and the Lord Iesus Christ to the Bridegroome Reu. 19.8 now what can be imagined here that can yeeld more ioy and contentment then a marriage day when the married couple enioy the sweet content in the fruition of each other Thus
are true beleeuers decked and trimmed with the white robes of Christs righteousnesse as a Bride suteable and fit for so pure and glorious a Bridegroome Vse 1 This lets vs see then in the first place the great aduantage that comes vnto euery true beleeuer by death here they sow in teares there they reape in ioy they liue here in this world as in a tempestuous sea there they lye at anchor and rest as in a Hauen Now is their time of seruitude bondage then is their yeere of iubile Here are they exercised continually with sorrowes feares cares buffetings within and fightings without There they shall rest from their labours and enter into the ioy of their Lord there to inioy him in whose presence is the fulnesse of ioy and at whose right hand there is pleasure for euermore such as the Apostle saith The eye hath not seene 1 Cor. 2.9 the eare hath not heard c. We haue in our times seene many glorious sights our eares haue heard of greater but our hearts are so large that they many times conceiue great things indeed and yet the happinesse of the Saints in heauen surpasseth them all And therefore what wonderfull thing thou seest at any time say that this is not it for the eye hath not seene it what wonderfull thing thou hast heard of say this is not it for the eare hath not heard Yea whatsoeuer thou art able to comprehend in thy heart say that it is not it for the heart is not able to conceiue Now what greater happinesse can betide any of Gods seruants then to be raised vp to such a state of glory as neither eye hath seene eare hath heard c. When the Queene of the South beheld the glory of Salomon his attendants the order of his house dyet seruants and the like she concludeth thus 2 Reg. 10.18 Happy are thy men and happy are these thy seruants that stand before thee alwayes c. Did shee pronounce such to be happy that stood continually before Salomon and heard his wisedome O how great then shall be their happinesse that shall come to behold the blessed Trinitie Father Sonne and holy Ghost what ioy will bee there when we shall see those ten thousands praise the Lord day and night And if Peter Iames and Iohn vpon Mount Tabor were so rauished as that they desired to pitch their Tabernacles there O what raptures and ioyes may the godly expect when they shall see and enioy the Lord Iesus Christ their beloued Bridegroom not vpon Mount Tabor but vpon Mount Sion not to be separated suddenly asunder as the Disciples were there but to enioy the full fruition of Christ for euermore 2 Cor. 12.2 Mat. 25. This is called the third heauen the Bridegroomes Chamber an euerlasting habitation lightened with the glory of the Lambe Reu. 19.5 Reu. 21.23 The company there Saints and Angels the time of their abode for euer and euer The happinesse of the soules of the Saints after this life Furthermore these things doe manifest the happinesse of the soules bodies of the S t s there First whereas here in this life we cannot but prouoke the Lord daily by our sinnes the very consideration whereof is a dagger to the hearts of Gods people and makes them to cry out with the Apostle and to say O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of sinne there they shall cease to sinne and shall bee wholly ioyned to the Lord in truth and righteousnesse neuer to displease him any more Secondly all the imperfections of the soule shall bee done away and our knowledge shall be perfect all ignorance shall bee done away infidelity distrust c. Thirdly wee shall not neede there the Word Sacraments prayer c. And for our bodies at that day they shall likewise bee freed from sinne from corruption and from all the miseries and infirmities that cleaue vnto them here And bee made like vnto his glorious body Phil. 3.21 O how may this affect our Vse 2 hearts with a longing desire of that time when we shall thus see the face of God in glory it should moue vs to long for that time when this glory shall be reuealed Rom. 8. Surely if wee looke for a part in this kingdome of heauen wherin is all perfection of happinesse wee cannot but desire the comming of the same and to cry and say with the Church Come Lord Iesus Reu. 22.20 come quickly This day Here wee haue the fift and last circumstance in this Text at first propounded Text. Time when and that is the time when this promise shall bee fulfilled This day Verily this day thou c. q.d. what though thy misery be great and torment grieuous that thou sufferest yet thy time is but short thy deliuerance is at hand verily this day c. Where wee may note first of all the Lords bountifull liberality towards his seruants that seeke vnto him in time of misery This Penitent desireth onely to be remembred of Christ when hee should come into his kingdome but Christ promiseth more This day shalt thou be with me Doct. 1 God giues more many times vnto his children God many times giues more then his seruants aske then they either aske or thinke hee is many times larger in giuing then they in desiring It was but to be remembred when Christ came into his kingdome that the Penitent requireth Christ promiseth him not onely to be remembred but also to bee with him to bee with him this day to bee with him this day in Paradice God is vsually more liberall in giuing then his seruants in desiring Gen. 32.9.10 Iacob desires onely food and rayment at Gods hands but God giues him more as Iacob himself confesseth God gaue him two bands and abundance of goods and cattell besides 1 Reg. 3.9.13 Salomon desires onely an vnderstanding heart at Gods hand to gouerne his people God giues him not onely wisedome according to his desire but abundance of wealth besides 1 Sam. 2. ● Hannah intreates the Lord to take from her the curse of barrennesse and to giue her a sonne the Lord granted her more then she desired he gaue her many sonnes afterwards How many came to our Sauiour in the dayes of his flesh some sicke of one disease and some of another desiring help whom our Sauiour did not only make whole of their infirmities but also pronounced that their sinnes were forgiuen them Luke 19. Zacheus came onely but to see Christ and hee obtaines not onely the thing hee desired in getting a full sight of Christ but he hath this honour to talke with Christ to inuite him to his house yea more then all this to haue his soule euerlastingly saued by Christ Reas Neither is this a thing to bee wondred at for such is the Lords bounty and goodnesse towards his seruants taking pleasure in their prosperity And hence it is that
the Apostle writing to the Ephesians saith that he is rich in grace Eph. 1.7 Psal 23. a most bountifull master making the cup of his seruants to ouerflow and is therefore called the Father of mercy 2 Cor. 1. and God of all consolation Vse 1 Seeing then that God is so liberal a master giuing many times vnto his seruants more then they aske or seeke this may be an excellent motiue with vs to bring christianitie into request inasmuch as we serue such a bountifull master Seruants commonly inquire after such masters and will desire to liue in such places where they shall bee bountifully rewarded This we are sure of that the Lords seruants shall bee bountifully rewarded with him he is euer better then his word vnto his people Why are we then so backward in our suits vnto him Are we in misery and distresse As a father pittieth his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him O but I am vnworthy of mercy God giues mercy not for our merit but it is his free gift O but I am a great sinner and prouoke him daily Hee remembreth whereof wee are made hee considereth that wee are but dust He hath said it and he will doe it He will fulfill the desires of them that feare him Psal 145.18 hee also will heare their cry and will helpe them Vse 2 Secondly seeing we are to deale with so liberall a Lord that giues vnto his seruants more then they desire hence ariseth our comfort and incouragement in prayer to flye vnto him in al times of misery and distresse for so hath the Lord said Psal 50.15 Call vpon me in the time of thy trouble and I will heare thee and deliuer thee Doe wicked men persecute vs doth Sathan continually solicite vs doe our corruptions preuaile with vs doe the thoughts of death and of th● graue affright vs yet still we haue the bosome of a louing Father to flye vnto Behold this Penitent now at this time astonished no doubt at the sight of death and thoughts of his account hee is to make before the great tribunall O happy he that could now flye into the bosome of his Sauiour as the 〈◊〉 to the Arke that elsewhere could finde no rest Now may hee sing ●●at sweet Requiem vnto his soule Returne vnto thy rest O my soule for the Lord hath rewarded thee We shall not need to feare any ●xcesse in faith as if wee could beleeue more then the Lord would or could do vnto vs for his grace is euer more plentifull then our petitions hee giueth more then we aske hauing his hand ready to giue before we can get our mouthes open to desire This day As Christ is pleased to answer his seruant and to grant him the thing hee prayeth for So it is a thing remarkable to consider in the circumstance of time the speedie performance of the Lords promise This day q.d. thou shalt not onely be remembred of mee which is the thing thou desirest but thou shalt euen this present day haue an end put vnto thy miserie and thy soule receiued into glory Note hence Doct. 2 That a man may be in miserie and ioy in an houre A man may be in miserie ioy in an houre Though the afflictions of Gods seruants are many times sharpe and grieuous yet the Lord makes them many times but short and of small continuance Psal 94. Heauinesse may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning The miseries of the righteous are neither durable nor incurable In the multitude of the sorrows of my heart saith Dauid Thy comforts haue refreshed my soule The Lord doth aswell foresee their arriuall as their launcing forth and the end of their troubles as the beginning of the same Many are the troubles of the righteous Psal 34.19 but the Lord deliuereth them out of all And indeed If the Lord should not deale Reas 1 thus with his seruants they would haue their hearts ouerwhelmed with sorrow and themselues faint and sinke vnder the burthen of their sufferings Now it is his gracious will not to breake the brused reed nor quench the smocking flaxe Secondly the end of all afflictions Reas 2 and miseries that betide the godly here is but to humble them and bring them nearer vnto God Now when any affliction sent hath wrought this effect God presently remoues the affliction as a wound when it is whole the plaster falls off Thirdly life it selfe is not long Reas 3 but short and of small continuance Now miseries cannot bee long where life is so short Vse This serues then to teach vs in all our miseries still to waite on God with this Penitent here for as Mordecai said to Hester Deliuerance will come There is nothing more sure and certaine then the deliuerance of Gods people out of miserie As God makes prouision for his children of correction as of food and not at sometime to taste of correction is a signe rather of a Bastard then of a Sonne So will the Lord see to 〈◊〉 that they shall not want a se●sonable deliuerance Let no man then say in time of prosperitie Psal 30.6 I shall neuer be moued Neither let any say in times of aduersitie I shall neuer be restored For God can turne thy night into day thy heauinesse into ioy and thy mourning into gladnesse and all in a moment of time Oh but thou hast laine long among the po●● and thou hast often sought the Lord. What then By so much the more precious will deliuerance bee and thou fitted to praise his name when the Lord shall deliuer thee This day The last Instruction we are to Doct. 3 obserue hence is Such as haue shewed mercy in an euill day shall find mercy in the euill day That they that shew mercy in an euill day shall themselues find mercy in the euill day Christ being now to suffer and lying vnder many reproaches This poore Penitent pitieth Christ in his miserie pleades his cause and cleareth his innocency This man saith he hath done nothing amisse And now Christ shewes mercy to him in time of his greatest need The Penitent pitied Christ and commiserates his misery being an innocent Christ pitieth the Penitent in time of his misery and receiueth him to mercy That which our Sauiour had formerly taught his disciples Mat. 3.7 Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy hee maketh good to this poore Penitent His mercy to Christ is recompensed with mercy from Christ Onesiphorus that good man shewed mercy to Paul 2. Tim. ● 16 Hee often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was in Rome he sought me diligently and found me What then The Lord grant vnto him that he may finde mercy of the Lord in that day Verse 18. An excellent example whereof we haue in Ebedmelech who vnderstanding that Ieremy was in prison Ier. 38.9 and there ready to perish for hunger He