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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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with Gods displeasure Thus how often is it that God prepares man to become some excellent structure even when he seems to be turning him into a ruinous heap As men intending to repair seem to demolish the building they take away some beams but it is to put in stronger they stop up some lights but it is to make larger Thus is it with the faithful who are Gods building 1 Cor. 3 9. He removes their props of sense to fix the pillars of faith He darkens the light of their spiritual joys but it is to enlarge their fuller comforts The Rules of Direction 1. Search what root of bitterness it is that hath taken away the taste of all heavenly sweetness what guilt of sin that hath depriv'd thee of the comforts of the Spirit Enter the Court of thy Conscience where God hath set up his tribunal and hear what charge is there laid against thee Is it not some stubbornness of spirit some unrepented disobedience which God chastiseth with those rebukes of conscience and terrors of soul For commonly God deals with his backsliding Saints as a King with his rebellious Subjects when neither the proffers of grace nor the promises of pardon when neither the edicts of command nor the threatenings of wrath when neither gracious counsel nor a bearing patience can prevail then does God arm himself to the battel letting flie the arrows of his indignation into their soul Job 6.4 as Job complains The arrows of the Almighty are within me the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit the terrors of God do set themselvs in array against me This is certain upon all known experience that disobedience and impenitence they are the bitter springs of much spiritual distress And truly God need not go far for a rod to chastise our disobedience if he withdraw his comforting Spirit we shall soon find and feel our own will become an afflicting Spirit our own dreadful thoughts will be our sorest scourges 2. Is it not some spiritual lethargy of remisness and sloth that hath seised thine inward man If so no wonder if the Physitian of thy soul prescribe thee so sharp a medicine administer thee so strong a potion all being little enough to rouse thy drowsie spirits and quicken thy dead heart Holy performances whether in the Closet or in the Church they are not only debts we pay to Gods justice but also oblations we owe to Gods mercy Ps ●1 18 19. and therefore either wholly to omit them or slightly to slubber them over is not only unfaithfulness but also unthankfulness both the majesty and the mercy of God being despised and where his majesty and mercy is despised no wonder if his favor and presence be withheld 3. Is it not the want of reverence and godly fear And therefore by the rebukes of his Spirit God severely tutors thee to what he requires of thee to serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear Heb 12.23 Heb. ● 16 God likes well that we come with boldness to the throne of grace yet a boldness of humble confidence not of a careless irreverence The awe of Majesty is much preserv'd by avoiding too much familiarity and therefore some Monarchs have withdrawn themselves from vulgar eyes to keep up the more sacred esteem and awe of their Soveraignty Thus God he deals with his Saints when much indulg'd they become wanton proud and irreverent God intermixeth Majesty with Mercy and tempers their favours with frowns he withholds his comfortable presence and awes their souls with secret rebukes that they may learn to put in practice what the Church gives in pattern even to walk in the fear of the Lord Act. 9 31. Phil. 2.12 and comfort of the Holy Ghost yea work out their salvation with fear and trembling This is indeed a sure Maxim that he who bears his spiritual afflictions with a distrustful impatience it is more then probable that he stains his devout enlargements with spiritual pride and pride and irreverence go together 4. Is it not thy heart playing false with thy God leaning in its affections too much to the world For that then God usually comes with bitterness to wean the soul when we are upon making the world our Home which should be our Inne when we are upon taking our rest in these earthly things then God brings on an evil day of temptation and trial upon us to discover how vain Earth is when Heaven is clouded how insufficient to sanctifie which cannot comfort When the soul will prove disloyal J●m 4.4 and enter an adulterous league with the World then comes God with his Bill of Divorce that she may know what is the vanity and folly the guilt and curse of her falling off to such wretched beggerly and worthless lovers for that in a day of terrors the soul will know that there is none but Christ none but he that can bring comfort peace and safety Thus then search whether it be not some stubbornness and disobedience some lethargie of sloth some wantonness irreverence or spiritual pride some love of the world Search whether they are not these or some other enormous iniquities which have separated betwixt thee and thy God Isa 59.2 whether they are not these or some such hainous sins which have hid his face from thee and if so no wonder if he who does the works of the Devil find an Hell in his Conscience And to still the clamor and quench the flashes of this Hell observe the second Rule of Direction which follows 2. Confess and bewail thy sin in the deepest of humiliations The reason indeed oftentimes why God puts the soul to the rack it is because it will not confess it is so loth to leave that it is unwilling to acknowledg its sin But as there is no full discovery of sin without examination Prov. 28.13 so nor is there any full pardon of sin without confession Wherefore set thy sins in order before thee and if thy Conscience pleads guilty to none other impiety yet thine ignorance diffidence passion and impatience in thy trial of spiritual afflictions do bring guilt enough for the deepest of humiliations Job 40.4 Thus it was with Job he confesseth unto God saying I am vile what shall I answer I will lay my hand upon my mouth And humbly submitting to the justice of Gods plea Job 42.36 and the reproof of his conviction in the sense of his impatience and pride he abhors himself and repents in dust and ashes And after God gives testimony of his love in accepting a sacrifice from his hands Thus then having set thy sins in order before thee let their guilt affect thine heart with sorrow that sorrow affect thine eyes with tears and then in the anguish of thy soul do thou crouch and crawl to the Throne of Grace solliciting earnestly with strong cries the mercies of thy God through the merits of thy Saviour for the pardon of thy sin the peace
knowledge do write to communicate it and by writing to communicate it do improve their knowledge O how much precious truth should we have wanted in the Treasury of the Churches stock especially concerning the great Mystery of the Blessed Trinity and Personal Unity and of the Catholick Church if the Sabellians Photinians Arians Eunomians Nestorians Eutycheans Donatists Novations and the like if these and others ejusdem farinae of the same Leaven if they had not rose up by their oppositions of Heresie and Schism to stir up the Study Prayer Zeal and Argumentations of the Holy Learned and Orthodox Fathers Yea let us look home a while and upon an easie observation we may finde That this benefit and advantage our Church hath gained by the eager contentions of spightful Tongues and perverse Mindes That her holy Form of Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government hath been more fully discussed and more clearly vindicated against all the false Imputations and strongest Arguments of her Schismatical and Heretical opposers So that if God shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor as that he will do it in his due time you helping forward by your Prayers I nothing doubt and I would not you should distrust If God I say shall please to repair the Churches unity and peace and restore her purity and splendor those stale calumnies and unjust cavils of Bishops being Antichristian our Liturgy the Mass our Litany Conjuring our Doctrine Popish our Ceremonies Superstitious our Temples Idolatrous our Ministers Baal 's Priests these and the like clamors of Error and Ignorance of Malice and Madness These I say If God pleaseth to repair and restore our Church they will become then as odious and hateful as they are now acceptable and useful with the vulgar then as much hist down as now cried up then as vain and insufferable as now unjust and unreasonable But if for the sins of the people God shall unchurch the Nation if for our contempt of the light and truth of his Word Rev. 2 5. he shall remove the Candlestick and deprive us of his Ordinances Such is the full conviction of Errors to a confirming all sober mindes in the Faith that I doubt not to say There are many which hear me this day would rather chuse to die and fall with truth then live and flourish with Heresie This the first particular of our first general part the Apostles fore-arming his Corinthians with constancy in the Faith that they be approved 2. With comfort in their Tryal That being approved they shall be made manifest Manifest on Earth and manifest in Heaven 1. Manifest on Earth The furious Zeal and violent Persecution of Heresie is the Furnace Mal. 3.3 4. wherein God oftentimes purifies the faith and faithful separating the dross from the Gold it is that strong wind which shakes down the rotten boughs and corrupt fruit severing it from the strong and sound it is that overflowing floud which overturns the sandy foundation whilst the rocks stand firm or lastly Matth. 7.25 it is that fan which severs the chaff from the Corn men of light fancies Matth. 3.12 and loose affections from those of solid judgments and established hearts How is it with many mens hearts as with musical instruments They are in good tune and temper whilst the pleasant and fair season of peace and prosperity lasts But as upon change of weather the strings do either slack or break so upon change of times do their resolutions either yeeld or faint But oh Beloved an heart established a spirit resolved a minde stedfast Oh how is it the honor and ornament of our Christian Faith By this it is That the Confessors Graces like Lebanons Spices have the sweeter smell in being bruised and in their tryal of Faith they become as more acceptable Sacrifices of Obedience offered unto God so more choice examples of Holiness manifest and set forth in the Church Had it not been then for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of the former ages those antient Fathers Irenaeus Athanasius Hilary Nazianzen Basil Chrysostome Hierome Augustine and others They had not been Stars of so great a magnitude in the Firmament of Christs Church And indeed were it not for the Heresies Schisms and Apostacies of these latter days our Church would not have so much to glory of her Cranmer Tindal Whitaker Whitgift Bancroft Bilson Andrews Hooker and others Men famous in their Generations yea our Jewel would not have had his lustre nor our Laud his praise our Dypticks and Church Records of Learned Worthies yea of Royal Patriots would not be so large so venerable and so glorious These and all other Strenui propugnatores fidei stout Champions of the Churches faith They are by a blessing of God made manifest and observe made manifest not onely in the Orthodoxes love but also in the Hereticks hate it is with them as with St. Augustine whose industry and piety in quelling and extinguishing the Pelagian Heresie Hieron ep 80. St. Hierome thus congratulates telling him That his name was venerable in the City and honorable in the Church as the Founder again of the ancient Faith and Quod signum majoris gloriae est omnes Haeretici detestantur and which was a signal of greater glory all the Heretical did hate him However then black-mouthed malice doth spit calumny upon the whitest innocence yet that encomium St. Paul gives the ancient Heroes Heb. 11.39 the Patriarchs Prophets and Martyrs of old the same we may justly give our Protestant Worthies of late That by Faith they have obtained a good report a name that shall out-live all Heresie and Schism a name precious and honorable in the memory of the faithful Thus they who in their oppositions of Heresie become constant in the Faith they are made manifest on Earth But further 2. Manifest also in Heaven For this then observe The Church on Earth is Militant and therefore the Church in right order is said to be terrible as an army with banners Cant. 6.4 Though in disorder an army with banners becomes terrible to the Church The then I say on Earth is Militant 1 Cor. 15.32 and St. Pauls fighting with Beasts at Ephesus was not a combate more honorable and glorious then that of contending for the Faith Jude 3. against the rage of Heresies This this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Certamen illud praeclarum as Beza renders it that good 2 Tim. 4.7 that honorable fight of Faith which hath for its reward a Crown of life Rev. 2.10 or if a Crown of life be the reward of Faith to all the blessed yet then the stout Champions of the Faith shall have some special Jewels in their Crown some particular glory in that blessed life and so being manifest on Earth they are manifest also in Heaven being manifest in the Church Militant for their eminent Grace they shall be manifest also in
it deprives of communion with God is the most afflicting Ps 61.11 12. In which affliction these are the words of Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh! how how can mine heart be right with God which so often revolts from him How can mine heart be sound which is continually sore When with sighs and groans in humiliation I have confess'd and bewail'd my sin presently upon temptation I commit and repeat it Thus my wounds daily bleed afresh and thereby my spirit faints and my hope fails I shall one day perish by the hand of sin as David complain'd he should do by the hand of Saul for that daily my strength decays my grace diminisheth my comforts fade mine Evidences for Heaven ar blotted my seals defac'd my life is become my trouble and death it is my terror I fear to die and yet have no joy to live Wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin and of death The Grounds of Comfort 1. The holy dispensation of the all-wise God according to which it is that neither the merit of Christs blood nor the sanctification of Christs Spirit doth yet so far prevail as to root out the being of corruption though it wipe off the guilt and weaken the power of sin Damnatum est peccatum sed non extinctum Christ hath condemn'd sin in the flesh condemn'd but not extinguished 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom 8 3. Cajet in loc he hath condemn'd The word is metaphorical for that Condemnation implies a depr vation of all preceding priviledges and power Thus our Lord Jesus Christ he hath dealt with sin he hath so disanull'd it in the faithful that it hath no more place to appear in judgment Col. 2.14 no more guilt to bind over unto death Rom. 8.1 there being no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus 2. Our nature is pure and perfect in Christ in which he h th satisfied the justice of our God Joh. 2.29 as being the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world even the sin of nature as well as of our lives our original as well as our actual sin Col. 1 19. Joh. 1.16 And seeing it hath pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell He will communicate to us of his fulness till he hath wholly destroyed the Serpents seed 1 Joh 3.3 1 Pet. 1.16 till he hath made us pure even as he is pure not only subduing the dominion and reign of sin by grace but also destroying the life and being of sin by glory 3. No man is sensible of sickness but who hath life and therefore sense of sin is a sure symptome of the life of grace So that O thou afflicted soul in thy conflict with sin thy very grief is a ground of comfort this being a sure testimony of true Sanctification Gal. 5.16 17 18. that thou canst not endure the close workings of thy secret corruption but art still sollicitous to cast out the enemy to establish the peace to vomit up the poison to preserve the health of thy soul 4. It is a free and willing subjection to the commands of sin Rom. 6.12 14. which declares the soul to be under the power and dominion of sin but by our opposing and resisting our lamenting and bewailing our sin we manifest plainly sin does rebell but does not reign prevails as a Tyrant but rules not as a King And where Grace hath the Throne of the heart and sways the Scepter the●e Christ rules by his Spirit and will in the end make us to overcome by his power The battel is the Lords and the victory shall be ours notwithstanding all oppositions of sin and Satan of the flesh and the world of earth and of hell 1 Pet. 1.5 we shall be kept by the power of God through faith to salvation For what hath our Lord Jesus Christ begun and shall he not perfect the work of grace Hath he made the purchase Phil. 1.6 and shall he not make us to possess the inheritance of glory Lastly Seeing thou cleavest unto the Lord with purpose of heart though thou servest him not in per●ection of holiness these infirmities and failings which are thy burden they shall not be thy bane If the ravisht Virgin cry out Deut. 22.27 she is in the censure of rhe Law guiltless by her cry having prov'd her rape And thus a sure testimony it is Sin hath committed a rape upon our souls and ravish'd our hearts when we cry out in our trouble unto the Lord And sure God who commanded indulgence unto the ravish'd Virgin will vouchsafe pardon to the ravish'd Soul The Rules of Direction 1. Be constant in thy Conflict in the sense of thine own wants looking unto the Lord Jesus Christ in his fulness and in the weakness of thine own strength Phil 4 13. Joh. 15.5 relying upon the almightiness of Christs power Be not dishearten'd by some losses not discourag'd by some foils not dismayed by some wounds but by fasting and prayer renew thy strength and then by diligence and Zeal renew the combat Thus shalt thou gain by thy losses get ground by thy falls increase thy graces by thine infirmities Phil. 1 9 10. 2. Preserve the judgment of thy mind clear and the frame of thine heart tender that so the Understanding may discover to thee what is evil by its light and the Heart restrain thee from it by its tenderness Restrain by some secret checks of Conscience upon the first risings of corruptions Psal 19.13 Eph. 4.30 that so they get not head by any rebellious wickedness to grieve Gods Spirit and to disquiet yea wound thine own Let it be thy pious policie to fight thine Enemy when he is at the weakest Thus set upon Sin in its first motions quell it in its first risings for indeed that which increaseth our guilt and destroyeth our peace is our willing entertainment of sinful motions our ready cherishing corrupt desires Prov. 4.23 3. Keep up an holy jealousie over thine own heart for it is not in the power of Satan to hurt the soul but by its self it s own weapons must wound it it s own treacherous affections must betray and destroy it Jer. 17.9 And such is the Hearts deceitfulness that those corruptions lurk in it which we think have no affinity with our nature but are most contrary to our frame and disposition As who could have imagin'd Moses's his meekness could have become guilty of murmuring Ps 106.32 33. Psal 51.14 Matth. 26.24 or David's tenderness guilty of murder or Peter's zeal of denying his Master Wherefore in this holy jealousie over thy self search diligently and examine frequently the state of thy soul the temper of thine heart and know assuredly this strict examination will weary the soul of sin thereby subduing thy heart from allowing approving or delighting in it And thus however with the Sheep thou slip
God my Jesus be gone from me yet will I mourn after him if happily I may find him whom my soul loveth O return return my joy my Jesus For till thou dost return I shall lie down in sorrow without thee my soul refuseth to be comforted The Grounds of Comfort 1. As thy distress is not without a promise thy misery without a Redeemer so nor is thy state and condition without many presidents even a cloud of witnesses whose sad experience will give full testimony to this certain truth Ps 55.5 That God oftentimes not only withholds the comforts of his good Spirit but also afflicts with the terror of our own hearts That oftentimes he hides the grace of the Gospel and discovers the rigor of the Law Ps 88.14 15.16 revealing guilt and concealing mercy yea oftentimes he rebukes the heart with secret checks of conscience and convictions of Spirit so that in the sad apprehension of sin and guilt death and hell the soul languisheth with frights and fears with horror and amazements Yet further he oftentimes renews the charge of former sins in the Court of Conscience making a man to possess the iniquities of his youth Job 13.26 and by his Spirit writing such bitter things against him that the soul is struck with the deep impressions of dread and horror in the apprehension of Gods shutting the gate of mercy and peace Ps 77.7 8 9. his refusing to be intreated or to hearken to any terms of reconciliation so that no holy duties or sacred ordinances for a time either administer comfort or discover love That this is the sad experience of the most eminent Saints the Book of Job and Psalms of David will sufficiently testifie And yet withall this testimony too they give of God and of Christ that he lifteth up those that are cast down Ps 37 24 42.11 147.7 8. 148.3 he healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds yea he gives liberty to the Captive health to the sick life to the dead and the divinest comforts to the most dejected souls so that they rejoice in his salvation and exult in his praises 2. This the condition of our present estate to be freed from the discomforts of afflictions as from the power of sin but in part Our graces are imperfect and therefore needs must our peace Our life 's a pilgrimage 1 Pet. 2.11 2 Cor. 10.4 a warfare and so hardship travel danger distress yea conflicts and wounds they are proper to our condition and therefore we may not think them strange but expect them with resolution bear them with patience and pass them through with constancie The day that hath no night no cloud the joy that hath no mourning no grief the crown that hath no cross no care is reserv'd for heaven not found on earth peculiar it is to the state of blessedness and eternity So that I cannot but question the uprightness of that mans heart who never question'd the goodness of his estate I cannot but doubt that mans assurance who never doubted and fear those comforts which were never discomforted There is certainly a woe to that peace which Satan does not sometimes disquiet True it is God could send forth his Saints as the Sun in its course to attract the eyes of all Beholders and make them in their splendor of graces ou●vie Solomon in his lustre of glory But this God hath not thought so agreeable to his wisdom in his dispensations to his Church and chosen 1 Cor. 1. ●3 14 c. he will rather have the Saints excellencie cloth'd with humane frailty and their inward worth vail'd with outward contempt Yea their life is so hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 that themselves oftentimes feel not the quickenings discover not the actings of their own graces for that a cloud of secret trouble darkens the light of all their comforts Doubtless had Adam continued in his primitive integrity God would have communicated himself to man not only by faith and reason but also by sense and external manifestation But now he conveys spiritual things in a spiritual manner We walk by faith and not by sight As is the manifestation of the Divine presence 2 Cor. 5 7 1 Cor. 13 9. such is our participation of Divine comforts all in part and imperfect 3. Though thy comforts are fled from thee yet the God of thy comforts abides with thee though thou wantest Christ in that blest Communion of joy and peace yet thou hast not lost him in that best communion of grace and life Spiritual joy though a sweet flower of Paradise yet a fading flower though a spiritual yet a temporal blessing a separable adjunct of grace and so not of the necessary being but of the happy well-being of a Christian a partial reward rather then a particular vertue Let this then be a firm ground of solid comfort That though thy light of Joy be extinguisht yet thy seeds of Grace are preserv'd thy heart hath its holy affections though emptied of its divine consolations For tell me who is' t that supports thy soul but the same God who conceals his love Does he not incline thine heart to fear and faithful obedience Ps 23 3 4. Isa 2● 8 even when now he withdraws himself from thy soul in the light and comforts of his countenance And if so what thou dost possess is far more precious then what thou hast lost Communion w th Christ in the sanctifying influence is more excellent then communion with him in the comforting light of his Spirit Besides having the fountain thou wilt not be long without the streams having Christ the fulness of comforts thy soul shall not long remain discomforted God will lighten thy candle uncloud thy sun restore thy comforts Ps 7 120 21. This is Davids confidence Thou Lord which hast shewed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth thou shalt increase my g eatness and comfort ●e on every side Hear Gods profession and promise Isa 57.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity whose name is Holy I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones And how revive them why by healing them with his grace leading them with his councels and restoring comforts to them See then the mercy is thine the promise is thine only thou must know and acknowledge the time of dispensing the season of performing is Gods who orders all things in number weight and measure 4. Those rebukes of the Spirit which so much torture thy conscience and that hiding his face which so much sads thy heart is all from a fatherly tenderness of care and love not from an avenging severity of justice and wrath God deals with the soul as David
with Absalom 2 Sam. 14.24 Notwithstanding Absalom hath Davids heart yet must he not see his face Thus when God rebukes the soul for sin though his love be great yet his face shall not appear gracious And this for wise and holy ends most advancing his own glory and the souls good Some of which ends may be these 1. To chastise some stubbornness of spirit and to correct some wilful disobedience Be the Saints of God never so dear to him yet if they put out the light of councel he will put out the light of comfort if they break his bonds of rule he will bind them in chains of distress Wilful disobedience is that cursed bramble Judg. 9.15 from whence as in Jotham's parable there does come forth the fire of divine displeasure to parch and wither the tallest Cedars of Lebanon the devoutest Saints of Christs Church Or 2. It may be we grow wanton with Gods ordinances and he therefore uncloaths them of their quickening vertue and refreshing vigor because we approach them without awful reverence and an holy fear Or 3. It may be the Heart begins to harden and exalt it self and therefore God withdraws his favor and secretly rebukes the soul with terrors to bring the offender upon his knees and lay him low in humiliations melting him like wax thereby fitted as more pliable to receive the impressions of his grace and the seal of his love O the streams of spiritual comforts Jam. 4.6 which water the fruitful vallies of humble souls whilst the lofty mountains of spiritual pride are parch'd with thirst Or 4. It maybe God withdraws himself in his gracious presence from the soul to sweeten enlarge and establish its fuller comforts The toil and troubles of a barren Wilderness make more sweet the milk and honey of a fruitful Canaan As Nature hath its times and seasons so hath Grace the Winter-frosts prepare for Summer-fruits and the pruning furthers a better growth Thus Spiritual afflictions make for the Spirits further consolations Heb. 12 11. and to be exercised with inward distresses helps to the increase of grace and a further strengthening of the inward man It is indeed the method of Gods dealing with a soul first to humble it by a spirit of bondage Rom. 8 15. then to raise it by a spirit of adoption Again he withdraws himself in his spiritual comforts wherewith he cherisht our faith and love that he may try their strength and prove their sincerity further rooting the soul in humility and godly fear and after this Grace having taken deep root in the heart it brings forth the more abundant fruit of peace and comfort to the soul Yea hereby God not only tries our love to him but the more endears his love to us in that when we seem'd in our selves to be wholly lost and quite cast off he then appeared in the Mount in our greatest extremity for succor and salvation turning the signs of his wrath into testimonies of his love and changing our dismal estate of doubts and fears and mournings into a glad condition of holy confidence enlarg'd hope and refreshing comforts Oh how must this needs win the heart to a greater enlargement of love when it feels it self restor'd to so great an enlargement of delight yea so cleer an evidence of Gods favor in having brought us through the fire Mal. 3.2.3 2 Tim 2 21. 1 Pet. 2.9 and purified us to himself a peculiar treasure even vessels of honor Lastly To this end also God hides his face and withholds the light of his countenance even to quicken our longing desires after Christ and to convince the soul of its immediate dependance upon him For by how much we are the more dejected distressed and restless in our selves by so much shall we be the more eager in our longings after and the more zealous in our enjoyments of the Lord Jesus who alone can bring peace and comfort and rest to the inward man The brightest stars in the firmament of heaven the holiest Saints in the Church of Christ derive their light as of grace so of peace as of life so of comfort from Christ the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4 2. and therefore that they may know and own their dependance upon him he oftentimes shuts in his light and then the soul presently finds it self in a dismal and darksom deep of mournful distress And oh what a shop of fears is this gulf of darkness what sad apprehensions amaze the soul But now when Christ breaks forth in his light of comfort and peace oh the transporting joy that attends this return of love The devout Saint as they redeem'd from Babylons Captivity becomes as one that dreams Ps 126 1. he is strangely enwrapt with spiritual rejoycings so that he makes his boast of the Lord and his praise is continually in his mouth his thankfulness is redoubled with his joys Ps 34.1 2. and his duties enlarged with his delights 5. Though God is least in appearance yet is he most in power though he is not chearing and refreshing with his favor yet is he guiding and supporting with his hand making spiritual temptations his chief preparations when he designs any of his Saints to eminent actings or glorious sufferings David's Worthies are best acquainted with the experiences of War the skilful Pilate knows well what it is to be in winds and storms the choise Vessel is the oftner cast into the fire for its refining and certain it is the eminentest Saints in Christ Church have been well tutor'd in his School of temptations Hear Elihu Job 33.22 speaking of a man whose soul draweth near to the grave and his life to the destroyers v. 23. He tels us that Messenger that Interpreter who can shew unto him his uprightness raising him in his dejections 2 Cor. 12.7 he is as rare as excellent one of a thousand That S. Paul was so strongly tempted so fiercely buffeted it was not so much to his personal as to his ministerial advantage that he might the better have the tongue of the learned learn'd by experience in himself how to speak a word in season to him that is weary Isa 50.4 And see what Cordials the Apostle doth administer such as himself had tasted and tryed That he comforts others 2 Cor. 1.4 it is by the same comfort wherewith he himself was comforted of God And as thus spiritual temptations are Gods chief preparations when he designs any of his Saints to eminent actings so secondly when he designs them to glorious sufferings For he who hath been exercised in spiritual afflictions knows well how insufficient and vain the best things of the world are to administer true solace to the soul and therefore he will not be so loth to part with and despise that which he knows by best experience to be empty and vain yea the soul will not fear to grapple with the Worlds fury which hath once wrestled
there nothing more hateful to Gods nature and what Gods soul perfectly hates his hand will most severely punish however it may seem to prosper for the present Let David's advice then be as acceptable as it is seasonable Fret not thy self because of evil doers Ps 37.1 neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity v. 2. And the reason is good for they shall be cut down like the grass and wither as the green herb Sometimes the wicked like the green herb they wither in their spring they fall in their rise they perish in the beginnings of their mischievous designs but if they do come to a full growth they grow but to harvest the fit season of their cutting off See another Simile very emphatical The w cked shall perish v. 20. and the enemies of the Lord shall be as the fat of lambs they shall consume into smoke shall they consume away The Metaphor is very expressive and full The thriving worldlings like the fatted lambs God reserves them for the sacrifices of his vengeance and they shall consume even as the smoke so shall they consume away as the smoke when it is at its highest ascent so the wicked when at their highest advancement they then suddenly vanish and come to nothing The wicked of the world though ne'r so high and mighty they shall be written in the earth Jer. 17 13. Luk. 10.20 Ps 17.14 opposite directly to that of the godly though ne'r so low and weak whose names are written in heaven The men of this world they have their portion in this life but as for the Citizens of heaven their inheritance is eternal As the godly then are made blessed in an heavenly happiness so sometimes the wicked in an earthly But as the men of the world are said to have their names written in the earth for their temporal felicitie so also for their certain instability yea their sudden destruction For how suddenly are their names wip'd out by the hand of Providence who are only written in the earth whose foundation of felicity is no more then vanity yea is sin it self Further yet what we prize and would preserve in memory we engrave in marble or in brass but what we lightly esteem Prov. 10 7 quasi per lusum as it were in a sport we write it in the dust or upon the ground Thus the godly shall be had in everlasting remembrance but the memory of the wicked shall rot The former are written in heaven the latter in the earth The godly though temporally miserable yet shall they be eternally happy the wicked though temporally happy yet shall they be eternally miserable Away then with all envious repinings or murmuring impatience at the flourishing prosperity of the wicked What! dost thou wonder that so just a God should suffer so horrid injustice to go unpun●shed Know'st thou not that God oft-times deals with men of a reprobate sense as the Physitian with his Patient in a desperate sickness He gives them over and permits them to have whatsoever they desire A condition this sure not to be envied at in thy worst of enemies And thus Magna yea maxima ira est Hier. ep 33 in Ps 140. quando peccantibus non irascitur Deus God is most severe when being provoked by sin he withholds from punishing and is then most angry when he least discovers his wrath leaving men to their own wills and so to work their own perdition by their own profaneness The liberty of lust is the greatest bondage and uncontroll'd prosperity the sorest plague which made Tertullian say Tert. de pat c. 11. O servum illum beatum cujus emendationi Dominus instat cui dignatur irasci O blessed is that servant with whom the Lord will vouchsafe to be angry that he may amend him 2. The Churches assured preservation notwithstanding her present persecution Which assurance is founded upon Gods promise and her own experience 1. This assurance is founded upon Gods promise and that confirm'd by oath when speaking of the Royal Prophet as a Type of Christ who alone in person and kingdom is eternal of him saith God once and that once for all Ps 89 35 36. yea for ever once have I sworn by my holiness that I will not fail David but his seed shall endure for ever and his throne as the sun before me His seed that is Christ and Christ in his Saints begotten of God through the Spirit they shall endure for ever And however the throne of Christ in his Church like the body of the Sun in the heavens may sometimes be clouded yet is not the power of Christ any more then the light of the Sun extinguished but at length He shall arise and the enemies of the Lord shall be scattered Ps 68.1 like clouds before the sun they shall suddenly vanish and utterly be dispel'd And as we have heard the promise of God unto Christ so hear we the promise of Christ unto his Church That the gates of hell shall not prevail against her The gates For the understanding of this Mat. 16.18 it is easie to observe even in Scripture how of old in the gate was held the Court and the Guard the Judgment and the defence of the City there the Soldier kept his watch his guard for defence and there the Judge had his Tribunal his Court for Judgment So that by the gates of hell is meant in a Figure all the power and policie of hell all which saith Christ of his Church they shall not prevail against it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non superabunt eam so Beza they shall not overcome her yea they shall be overcome by her for so the word as Scultetus observes it is verbum bellicum a warlike word which signifies the combat and contest of enemies till one party be subdued and overthrown The power and policie then of Satan and hell they may valere but they cannot praevalere they may vertere but they cannot subvertere they may shake the Church but being founded upon the rock Christ Jesus they cannot throw her down they cannot do with the Church as with her Temples rase her foundation no Christ will preserve her from levelling We may observe the Fabrick of the Universe was not fram'd but that the Church might be constituted and therefore God did not rest from his works of creation till he came to a Church to worship him the Creator Seeing then the end of forming the world was to constitute a Church easier it is to shatter in pieces the frame of Nature then bring to ruine the Church of God 2. The Churches assurance of preservation founded upon her own experience 2 Cor. 1.10 The Church frames her argument of faith with S. Paul God hath deliver'd me and doth deliver me and I trust also he will deliver me And therefore if we be not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nazianzen speaks Naz. stilit 1. Ps
77.5 mancipia praesentium captived in our judgment to things present but do with David consider the days of old and the years of antient times the Church presents us with a view of that her so glorious a deliverance from under the bondage of Egypt and from under the captivity of Babylon and these so eminent before Christs coming in the flesh And since his ascension to heaven the Church presents us with that her so glorious deliverance from under the Roman tyranny and after from under the Arian fury and of later years from under the Anabaptists frensie These the deliverances of the Church Oecumenical But which is more full to our present and particular comfort the Church presents us with her deliverances here at home which have been national as that from the Danish inundation of Idolatry that from the Romish infatuation of Popery and that from the Marian deluge of blood and flames of violent persecution Thus God having delivered this his Church from the conspiracies and violence of forein and homebred enemies from the fire and sword the wit and malice of cruel persecutors From these experiments of deliverance she raiseth her faith to an humble assurance that he will in the end of all deliver her from the compendium of all the present rage of Heresie and furious zeal of Schism 3. The pleadings of Gods providence thereby justifying the cause of his Church and discovering the wickedness of her enemies Thus it was of old Corah and his company mov'd with malice and envy conspire against Moses and Aaron Num. 16.1 c. thereby striking at the root of Magistracy and Ministry But see the event cleer contrary to their design and expectation God so orders the matter in the pleadings and disposings of his providence that thereby Moses becomes more honorable and Aaron more eminent both the Kingly and Priestly office more illustrious in the eyes of the People And if we pass from the sacred Scripture to Ecclesiastical History we find that whilst the cruel Persecutors of the Primitive Saints thought to have drowned Christianity in a sea of blood yet then was sanguis martyrum semen ecclesiae the blood of the Martyrs the seed of the Church which became enlarg'd not destroyed by the sufferings of the Saints In all those flames of persecutions the Church like Moses bush Exod 3 2. Num 17 8. it consumed not but like Aarons rod after her night of distress she became more fresh and flourishing more eminent for the purity of her faith and holiness Christs conquest over his enemies is not only military by a potent and prevailing force but especially it is judiciary by just and righteous pleadings Jer. 2 9. Mic. 6 9. and therefore he first strikes with the rod of his mouth to conviction and then with the rod of his hand to destruction God in the execution of his judgments upon the wicked he likes well that mens consciences subscribe to the equity of his proceedings their own practises witnessing against themselves and their own witness and law too condemning them Open we our eyes then and see In the Churches distress whilst God frowns upon his people in correcting their sin how does he still own them in pleading their cause justifying their profession of righteousness and faith by the very cross actings of their enemies designs Yea it is worthy our observation That whereas the Enemies of Christs Church have urg'd Gods owning them and their cause by a continued series of temporal successes though this in its self a Turkish argument and so not fit to overthrow or stagger a Christians faith how does God retort the argument by giving such signal and remarkable passages of his Providence that they seem very near giving up to a reprobate sense who after the voice of Gods word shall stop their ear to the voice of his providence in which he brings the pens and tongues and practises of the Churches adversaries to make good her cause and justifie what she hath taught and profest Look we upon the present estate of the Church of England and how do we find it too unhappily like that of the Church of Judah For that we may say of our several Factions and Schisms what they say of the children of Ammon Moab and Mount Seir 2 Chro. 20.10 we may truly say of them that the Church not invading and subduing not quelling and suppressing them when we came out of Egypt even when by a religious Reformation we forsook the Romish superstition Behold how they reward us even to cast us out of our possessions v. 11. not only the possession of our own temporal estates but even of Gods holy worship Now in the depth of this calamity in which we seem to be forsaken of God herein does God own his people that he lays upon their adversaries the curse of the Midianites Ammonites and Edomites v. 23. even one to defeat and destroy another True it is Gods power is invincible Ps 44 4. his wisdom unsearchable and his judgment unavoidable so that he can command deliverance for Jacob or if that will not do it he can create help for his people Yet such is the wonder of his providence that he orders seeming casualties particular unexpected and unthought of emergencies to bring forward his peoples deliverance Of which we have ample testimony in the history of Ioseph's advancement by Pharoah and Esther's by Ahasuerus the one to preserve Israel in the cradle and the other to restore him from the grave Things independent in their relation unsubordinate in their being God oftentimes makes them concur in the order of his providence for his Church's restauration that the World may know it is the counsel of his will and the work of his hand acted to this end even the greater glorification of his own name and the clearer justification of his peoples cause Let the providence of God frame the Argument of Divine conviction in what mood or figure he please sure I am God will so order the Premises that the Conclusion shal be his own glory and his Church's good which two are never more eminent then when in the pleadings of his providence God justifies the cause of his Church and discovers the wickedness of her adversaries The Rules of Direction Ps 73.17 1. With David enter the Sanctuary of God Interiora veritatis penetralia so S. Ambrose Search the more secret mysteries of Gods truth So shalt thou find the ground of thine impatience is thine ignorance v. 22. that thou art velut jumentum as a beast before the Lord As a beast thou look'st upon the affairs of this life in their outward appearance with the eye of sense thou doest not so well view them in their secret providence by the eye of faith For that thus viewing the ungodly in their prosperity we understand their latter end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we become spectators of their last Scene and thereby see their sad
pretences deceive you to a destroying that soul for which Christ died 2. Accept you this necessary Exhortation To bring your tender Infants your dear Babes unto Christ Dedicate them to him in Baptism Eph. 2 3. thereby to secure their safety and your comfort For being by nature children of disobedience and of wrath what greater need then to be given up unto him the Author of life and grace His all-sufficiency will answer their necessity though not in their apprehending him yet in his comprehending them Are not your children your greatest wealth then fittest sure to be returned unto God that gave them and they will not be any whit the less yours by being his no but they become more your blessing in being dedicated unto Gods service But what Beloved hath the Church dedicated your children unto God and do you tutour them for the Devil Are they in a state of salvation whilst Infants and do you oh do you bring them into a state of damnation when adult Your selves being Precedents of evil you infect their tender years with your exemplary impieties which they suck in by imitation There is certainly not a greater reverence due to any age then that of Childhood how is it then that you not only prompt them to be evil by your example but also encourage them by your approbation whilst their obscenities lyings and other evil speeches and actions you do risu osculis excipere Quintil. Instit entertain them with laughter and delight with kisses and embraces By which means it is that many otherwise ingenuous children vitia miseri discunt priusquam vitia esse sciant they poor wretches learn vices before they know them to be such But know this Nursery of young Plants must be weeded and watered Isa 61.3 if we expect they should become Trees of righteousness If we will have our children Christs disciples we must betimes instruct them in the first principles of faith make them to know what they were by nature and what they are by grace that love unto God and unto Christ may be stampt upon their souls before malice creep into their hearts Let them whilst innocent learn to be religious and when they know what was undertaken for them in their names at Baptism bring them to Episcopal hands for Confirmation and after that take care for their further education in divine knowledge as well as humane literature that they may be receiv'd into the full communion of the Church in being admitted to the consummating Ordinance of Christ the blessed Eucharist And thus you performing the duties of Religion to your children they shall become dutiful in their obedience unto you unto the Church and unto God And hereby you parents shall be blessed in your children and your children blessed in their parents and all blessed in him who is the Fountain of all blessings Christ Jesus blessed for ever 3. Be mindful of this serious Caution To beware of apostatizing from Christ to whom we gave up our selves by vow and covenant in Baptism Who art thou O man who hast now the vows of God upon thee that sacred and solemn vow of Baptism Know in that thou didst give up thy self unto God and Christ Ps 56.12 with an abrenuncio to the Devil the World and the Flesh And therefore now after this Baptismal abrenunciation of sin and Satan this Federal consecration unto God and Christ to fulfill the lusts of the flesh to walk in the course of the world and to do the works of the Devil oh how how shall it lie as an heavy aggravation of guilt upon thy soul pressing it down into the torture and without timely repentance into the desperation of hell Yea consider consider O man how this thy Apostacie doth expose thee to the insultation of Satan at the last day As S. Augustine brings in the Devil pleading against the Apostate Christian which breaks the vow and covenant of his baptism Thus saith Satan to the Lord Christ against the Apostate Christian AEquissime Judex judica quod aquum est Most just Judge judge what is right judge him to be mine who refused to be thine even after he had renounced me in Baptism Ut quid invasit pannos meos What had he to do to wear my livery What had he to do with gluttony drunkenness pride malice envy heresie sacriledge and the rest of mine infernal ware Haec omnia mea post renunciationem invasit All this my merchandise he hath traded for even after he had renounced all commerce with me Meus esse voluit mea concupivit It was his own will to be my servant his own lust to be my vassal Judge therefore righteous judgment quoniam quem tu non dedignatus es tanto pretio liberare ipse mihi postmodum voluit obligare because he whom thou hadst redeem'd to be thine by so great a price of blood hath revolted from thee to be mine in so great a guilt of Apostacie Consider oh consider how this plea of Satan shall be thy confusion of face and horror of soul Be convinc'd then O man whosoever thou art that quittest the covenant of thy God be convinc'd that by thy Apostacie thou dost enter covenant with the Devil in quitting the service of Christ the Prince of light thou art enslav'd to Satan the Prince of darkness And now set these together Satan and Christ darkness and light The covenant of Satan a covenant of sin and death of bondage and corruption of damnation and hell The covenant of Christ a covenant of righteousness and life of liberty and glory of holiness and of happiness all which Christ the Mediator hath purchased by his sufferings proclaimed in his Gospel and sealed by his Sacrament Wherefore then O man let this this one consideration more sink deep into thy heart Even what shame and confusion shall cover thy face what dread and horror shall seise thy soul when at the last day Satan shall thus plead against thee before Christs tribunal saying As for this wicked person and wilful Apostate I never created him nor redeemed him and that himself well knew I never suffered buffetings or scourgings for his sake I was never crucified or slain for his sin I never promised heaven and the fellowship of the blessed upon his obedience And yet O Christ he hath obeyed me and hath contemned thee and this after he had covenanted to be thine even covenanted in the sight of those Angels which now stand in thy presence and can give testimony to this truth Who art thou upon whose guilty soul this Satans plea takes firm impression Remember O remember thy vow in Baptism when thou didst oblige thy self by covenant to be the faithful soldier and servant of Jesus Christ And remembring this fight no longer under Satans colours Heresie Schism and Profaneness but betake thy self by faith and repentance to the Captain of thy salvation Heb. 2.10 Christ Jesus and so in the sincere profession of
go out upon the Altar not letting our devotion cool in Gods presence especially when we present our selves at the Table of the Lord that sacred solemnity of the blessed Eucharist Oh that we could here compose our Souls to Davids frame That seeing God in Christ is the Center of all holy delights we may make the enjoyment of his presence and communion the Center of all hearty desires and then say in an humble faith and ardent fervor of devotion One thing have I desired of the Lord and that I will seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON PSAL. 27.4 To behold the Beauty of Lord and to enquire in his Temple Introduction Psal 87.2 GOD that loveth the Gates of Sion above all the habitations of Jacob he prefers the Publick Services of the Church before the Private Worship of the Closet 2 Sam. 7.16 Zech. 3.8 Wherefore Davids zeal to the Building and Zorobabels to the rebuilding the Temple and House of God it was rewarded and incouraged by the promise of the Messiah issuing from their loyns And if the holy zeal of building and restoring the House of God had the promise of Christ in the flesh sure I am the blinde zeal of prophaneing and destroying Gods House can have no communion with Christ in the Spirit For observe we how the Prophet Haggai foretels That Hag. 11.9 the glory of the latter House should be greater then that of the former the glory of Zorobabels Temple greater then that of Solomons which could not be meant as to the outward structure or the inward ornaments the latter House wanting what gave the excellency to the former even the Ark of the Covenant the Heavenly Fire the overshadowing Cloud the Urim and Thummim and the gift of Prophecy which gift of Prophecy was onely supplied by an Eccho which the Hebrews call Bath Kol the Daughter of a Voice revealing sometimes something of the Will of God Such a Voice was heard in the Temple before Titus besieged Jerusalem Joseph Bel. Jud. l. 7. c. 12. Migremus hinc Let us be gone hence Now all that glory being wanting in the latter Temple What made it more glorious then the former I answer It was the presence and manifestation of Christ in the flesh who was the substance of those Figures the Body of which the Temples glory was but a shadow And if this was the glory of the Jews Temple That Christ in the flesh was there manifested and presented unto God shall it not be much more the glory of our Christian Oratories That there Christ in his Word and Sacraments is preached and exhibited unto us Christ is present in all places Rev. 2.1 but is said To walk in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks Present he is in the Congregation of the Saints by a special ministration of the Spirit declaration of his Will and communication of his Grace there his Power is evidenced his Arm revealed his Body and Blood exhibited Who is it then but will delight to dwell in that House where the refreshing Food is Christs Body and the chearing Wine his Blood the ravishing Beauty the light of his countenance and the sweet repose his Arms of Love yea where the blest Fellowship is that of Angels and Saints and the onely service Gods holy worship However then the ambitious mindes sore aloft and with restless wing pursue their wordly glory yea how ever voluptuous Epicures set themselves to the injoyment of their sensual delights whatsoever they cost them though body and soul and all yet fix we our desires on Davids one thing which is as much beyond comparison as it is above exception even To dwell in the House of the Lord This the centre of Davids Prayer the main object of his longing desires and eager importunities the thing he sues and seeks for so says the Psalmist One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple We proceed to the second General part The Divine Reason of Davids Petition which is twofold of Delight and of Devotion First Of Delight To behold the Beauty of the Lord Secondly Of Devotion To enquire in his Temple We begin with the first particular that of Delight To behold the Beauty of the Lord. To behold the Beauty of the Lord Why what commerce hath Earth with Heaven finite with infinite flesh with spirit dust and ashes with majesty and glory man with God O the gracious sweetness of divine love God descends to exalt man the Creator humbles himself to a communion with his Creature and to so near a communion as to make his Spirit mans life his grace mans comliness his wing mans shadow his hand mans strength his heart mans rest his beauty mans delight and his embraces mans repose This Beauty of the Lord is of too glorious a ray to be beheld otherways then under avail and therefore it is the goodness of our Maker to exhibite himself not according to the strength of his glory but according to the weakness of our capacity The object is proportioned to the faculty the Creatures are as the Waters and his Word and Sacraments as the Mirrors which represent God by reflexion whose glory we cannot look upon in a direct Beam And thus did David behold the Beauty of the Lord in his Sanctuary Heb. 9.2 3 c. as represented in Types and Figures for we finde in the first Tabernacle called Holy the Candlestick and the Table and the Shew-bread and in the second Tabernacle called The Holy of Holies we finde the Golden Censer the Ark the Manna Aarons Rod the Tables of the Covenant the Cherubims of Glory and the Mercy Seat Now this Tabernacle and Sanctuary did aptly represent the Church of Christ whose Militant part through the vail of Faith does contemplate the glory of God and our Lord Jesus Christ is our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Great High Priest Heb 4.14 by whom we have access unto the Father in the Holy of Holies that is the Highest Heavens The Brazen Laver did signifie our Baptism and Repentance the Sacrifice of Burnt offerings the Mortification of our Lusts the Altar of Incensé our Oblations of Prayers the Golden Candlestick the Preachers of the Gospel and the Lights thereof their holy Doctrine the Table of Shew-bread did prefigure the Sacrament of the Eucharist and the Communion of Saints The Holy of Holies did represent the Heavenly State of the Church Triumphant there being the Ark of the Covenant the Personal and Corporal presence of Christ the Golden Propitiatory his glorious Humanity and the Table of the Law his perfect Obedience the Cherubims wings did represent the Ministry of Angels from above which heavenly Spirits God shews forth his glory in a beatifical
Reverence and Devotion in the Publick worship of her daily service and Sacramental administrations as is really attractive of every eye and heart except what is prejudiced by Error and Interest Wherefore though the unparalel'd prophaneness of the present age throw contempt upon the Sanctuary and House of God yet do we there acknowledge a Beauty of Holiness as the object of our desires and delight So that we can say with David in a zeal to Gods Publick worship One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after c. The second Reason of Davids Petition That of Devotion To enquire in his Temple As Cities had their original from single Families so Temples their beginning from single Altars We no sooner read That the holy Seed became propagated into several Families but we presently finde those Families met in a Publick Congregation For so in the days of Enosh did men begin Gen. 4 26. publickly to call upon the Name of the Lord then even in the morning of the World did the Church keep her first Mattins for so doth St. Chrysostom and the Antients yea the best and most of Modern Expositors all interpret that of Mens calling upon the Lord as to his Publick worship and service So that we may well plead Church Liturgy as antient as Church Communion and Church Communion as to Gods Publick worship contemporary with the third generation of mankinde and the third century of the World And if the Church had then their Publick service they had also some publick place to be a Bethel an House of God Gen. 28.19 22. where was consecrated an Altar unto the Lord. No doubt from the beginning of the World God had his Sabbaths and his Sacrifices his Priests and his Altar and his Tithes and therefore times persons place and things consecrate and appropriate to his Worship Of this and all this we are assured from Reasons dictate and Scriptures proof And as it was thus from the beginning so it shall be also unto the end of the World though not in the same kinde yet in the like Analogy for which we have St. Johns prophecy in his Revelation and Christs promise in his Gospel Altar and Priests to the most high God we read to have been from Adam to Melchisedech but a Tabernacle and Temple we finde not till Moses and Solomon The Tabernacle that a Type of our Earthly pilgrimage and temporary sojourning as still flitting and removing in the Wilderness The Temple a Figure of our heavenly rest and eternal habitation as founded and fixt in Canaan When Moses framed the Tabernacle Exod. 25.40 it was according to the pattern in the Mount which pattern was that of Spiritual Mysteries which God shadowed forth by Moses in Mysterial Representations This Tabernacle being pitcht Exod 40.34 38. Moses goes up no more to God in the Mount but God comes down to Moses in the Cloud which Cloud was light and fiery and in that Clem. Alex. ●ta● adhort ad Gent. as Clemens of Alexandria observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a token of grace and fear If Israel were sincere and constant in their obedience God was a light to lead them but if froward and perverse in their iniquity he was a fire to consume them And though God is not now present in our Churches by a visible light and fire which was but a Type yet is he present in grace and fury which is the thing typified grace to accept the prayers of his people and fury to avenge the prophanation of his Sanctuary From which fury it is that never any Nation or Family or Person prospered to the third Generation John 2.16 which either made Gods house a place of Merchandise by prophaning it or Merchandise of Gods house by destroying it The Eagle that takes flesh from the Altar carries coals to fi●e his own Nest and never did any man seek to build his house with the stones of Gods Temple but his honor was laid in the dust and his ruine hath been remarkable Of this it were easie to give you multitudes of sad examples in Gods late and severe judgments upon this Nation and in some neighboring Countreys by which judgments he hath sealed this truth That he owns our Christian Oratories for his holy Temples vindicating their prophanation and mens sacriledge by most dreadful punishments I might set before you the examples of Gods vengeance but I shall wave that and present you rather the evidence of Gods Word confirming to you the relative holiness of Gods Sanctuary and this from that one place of St. Paul where he makes it an Argument unto holiness 1 Cor. 6.19 That we are Gods Temples Which how vain had it been 2 Cor. 3.11 if either God hath no Temple or those Temples be not holy Besides it is St. Pauls argument If that which is done away was glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious If the Gospel then excel the Law and Christs presence in his Sacraments his presence in the Sanctuary then must our Christian Churches excel the Jewish Temple as excel in glory so in beauty even the beauty of Holiness Psal 93.6 For Holiness becometh the House of the Lord for ever And therefore Psal 96.9 the Psalmists admonition still stands good Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness And worship him not onely by praying at his Altar but also by inquiring at his Oracle Both the inseparable parts and appurtenances of his Temple for saith David I will dwell in the House of the Lord all the days of my life to behold the Beauty of the Lord and to inquire in his Temple To inquire in his Temple Inquire of what why of our right way to Heaven for we are Pilgrims and Travellers and that in the World too as in a Wilderness where it is easie to lose but hard to finde our way Therefore it is well worthy our diligent and frequent inquiry whether we be right or no Now Jacobs Vision will tell us Gen. 28.17 That the House of God it is Scala Janua Cali the Ladder and Gate of Heaven So that our sure way to ascend and enter Heaven it is to hold Communion with Gods Church in the Profession and Devotion of his Publick Worship And to confirm us in this truth we may behold the Servants of the Family who know well the way to their Masters house we may behold the Angels ascending and descending Heb. 1.14 in their several Ministries for the good of those whom God makes Heirs of Salvation And O how much need have we to inquire in Gods Temple seeing David himself is in so great a hazard of being dejected with the tribulations of the godly and seduced by the prosperity of the wicked till he goes into the Sanctuary of the Lord Psal 73.17 there to inquire at his Oracle But what is then Gods Oracle Why it is his sacred Word the sure Interpreter of his holy