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A70945 Christ all and in all. Or, several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy Scriptures Being the substance of many sermons preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. Ralph Robinson, late pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the reverend author on his death-bed (if his brethren should think fit) to be published. Robinson, Ralph, 1614-1655. 1656 (1656) Wing R1705; ESTC R223720 320,677 592

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now shining at the right hand of God we should say the Sun were but like sackcloth in comparison of it how much more bright is he in his Godhead this is so glorious that no man can see it and live The face of Jesus Christ is that which makes and constitutes the very glory of heaven And then 2. His omniscience The Sunne in the firmament travels up and down and beholds every part of the world David saith there is nothing hid from the heat of it Psalm 19. 6. Jesus Christ as he is the Sonne of God is perfectly omniscient The Apostle speaks of his omniscience Heb. 4. 13. There is no creature that is not manifest in his sight c. Yea he sees every thing not by moving up and down as the Sunne doth but by one fixed and constant view There can be no fence made to keep out the sight of his eye he doth simul semel together and at once behold all creatures with all their motions thoughts and imaginations This is the first II. In respect of his effects and workings upon his people There is a great resemblance between the Suns effects upon the creatures and Christs effects upon his people I shall instance in eight particulars 1. The Sunne hath an enlightning vertue The Sunne is the great luminary which God hath appointed and made to carry the light abroad to the inhabitants of the earth The presence of the Sunne makes day The Sunne is the great torch of heaven by which men and other creatures see what to do and where to go Gen. 1. 14 16. By his light we see it and all other things Jesus Christ hath an enlightning power and doth actually enlighten the hearts of men The soul is by nature in darknesse and never sees till Christ beame down his light upon it All men by nature in regard of spiritual light are as that blinde man was John 9. 1. without any spiritual sight They see neither sinnes blacknesse nor their own misery by reason of sinne They see not Christs beauty not graces excellency till their eyes are opened They have thick skales upon their eyes as Paul had before his conversion Act. 9. 18. Therefore they are called darknesse and their state a state of darknesse Eph. 5. 8. Now Christ gives them light When he riseth upon them savingly then and not till then do they see their condition and the way out of it Eph. 5. 14 As the Sun is speculum munds the worlds looking glasse so is Christ speculum Animae the souls looking glasse All spiritual light which is given to the soul is in and thorough Jesus Christ So the Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 4. 6. The Gospel is the vehiculum lucis the great chariot that carries this light abroad but the fountaine of it is this bright Sunne of righteousnesse Jesus Christ Spiritual illumination is Christs work This is that which the Evangelist saith John 1. 9. John Baptist carried the ●orch but Christ himself was the light Till this Sun be up the soul lies in grosse darknesse but when it appeares then light comes Presently Esay 60. 1. When the glory of the Lord is risen upon the soule then is darknesse expell'd and the soul shines forth The heart that is as dark as any dungeon when the beames of this Sunne are darted down into it is as light as a Paradise Christ turnes Egypt into Goshen And then 2. The Sunne hath a warming vertue Though it be not formally hot yet it is hot in its effect Psal 19. 6. The beames of the Sunne warme the earth and the ayre the bodies of the rational and irrational creatures Experience teacheth that the Sunne hath a heating power the light and motion of it causes heat The Lord Jesus Christ hath a warning vertue in him The heart that is as cold as yee is heated and warmed by the influences of his Spirit into a good temper The luke-warme heart when Christ shines upon it is set into a burning heat The beames which are cast from Christ in his Ordinances put the cold soul into a spiritual sweat We have an instance of this in the two Disciples Luke 24. 32. They were in a freezing temper till Christ overtook them but when they had continued a while in that spiritual sun-shine their hearts were put into a violent flame Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way The forerunner of Christ tells the Jews that he that came after him did baptize men with the holy Ghost and with fire Matth. 3. 11. Christ can kindle the sparks of grace which seeme to be as dead and put them into a burning flame Many a Saint hath come to the Ordinances with his heart like the cold earth and before he hath departed Christ hath sent him away like a burning lamp the cold water hath been put into a vehement boyling that the heart hath runne over again eruct●vit cor meum Psal 45. 1. Peter grew cold at the high Priests fire when the beames of Christ were withdrawn but when Christ shone upon him his cold heart was heated when Elisha had lien a while upon the Shunamites dead childe his flesh waxed warme 2 King 4. 24. Though a soule be as cold as death if Jesus Christ do but once stretch himself upon it it waxes warme And then 3. The Sunne hath a comforting vertue The Sunne is in Scripture put for comfort Job 30. 28. To walk without the Sunne is to walk without comfort and Solomon tells us that it 's a pleasant thing for the eyes to behold the Sun Eccles 11. 7. Weak and sickly persons when they are brought into the Sunshine finde their spirits cheered by it The Lord Jesus Christ hath a heart-comforting vertue He is the first inlet of comfort into the soul He is the preserver of joy in the soule and he it is that restores joy unto the soul after dejections and droopings of heart Noah was herein a figure of Christ see what his father Prophecies of him Gen. 5. ●9 Jesus Christ is the true Noah the great comforter of his people in all the griefs and sorrows of this world Christ is the foundation of all true comfort to thy soule Tolle Christum tolle sol●●●um that reconci●iation which he hath made between God and man is the very basis of all consolation Whatsoever in God in the Scriptures yeilds any comfort to the soul is so on●y in and through Christ that comfort which is not built upon Christ is bastard comfort which will end in terrour The Spirit of God is called the comforter John 15. 20. his office is immediately to cheer the soul How doth he comfort but even by making application to the soul of a sinner of that which is merited for him All the arguments whereby the spirit comforts the heart are drawn from Christ he seales up to the soul that Christ is his and so fills it with comfort And then 4. The Sune hath a
the light Jesus Christ hath a penetrating and searching power No heart so close but his eye is in it no conscience so dark but he sees to the bottome of it See what the Apostle saith of him Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open to his eyes and every creature is manifest in his sight 4. Light hath a chearing and 〈…〉 The light contributes much 〈…〉 and growth and life of 〈…〉 creatures Light and motion are the c●me of that heat which the heavenly bodies send down upon the earth Light is that instrument whereby all the influences of heaven are communicated and dispensed to the world The motions of nature are both quickned and comforted by the light and by it all the births of nature are cheared and comforted Jesus Christ hath a chearing comforting and quickning vertue 'T is by influences from Christ spiritual life and comfort are obtained and preserved The Prophet speaks of this vertue of Christ under this very Metaphor of light Mal. 4. 2. All that spiritual livelinesse and brisknesse that beleevers have at any time in their hearts is from the beaming wings of Christ the Sonne of righteousnesse He is a heart-chearing a heart-warming a heart-quickening Saviour 5. Light hath a Purifying vertue Fogs and Mists that are gathered in darknesse are dispersed and scattered when the light comes When a candle is lighted and set up in a room if there be any damps they gather about it Light is the fining pot of Nature The world would be an unwholsom Pest-house if it had not light Jesus Christ hath a purifying and cleansing vertue By vertue from him it is that those nasty filthinesses of sinne which are in the soul are purged away Heb. 8. 14. All the Levitical Ceremonial purifications used in the Law were types of him The Prophet compares him to a refiner and purifier of silver Mal. 3. 3. By his blood he purifies the soul from the guilt of sin By his grace he cleanseth the soul from the filth of sinne The Prophet compares him to a fountaine set open for purification Ezek. 13. 1. All that ever were all that ever shall be cleansed from the filthinesse of sin are cleansed by Jesus Christ 6. Light is of an undefilable nature Though it passe through sinks and the most polluted places yet it contracts no defilement It cleanseth all things but is defiled by nothing It is a quality so spiritual that nothing can fasten upon it to pollute it Jesus Christ is fitly resembled to light in this respect He is not capable of any defilement He assumed sinful nature without the least sinne He had the likenesse of sinful flesh Rom 8. 3. but not the least sinne in his flesh In the dayes of his flesh he did as a spiritual Physician repaire to all sorts of sinners but he carried away from them no pollution at all He conversed with Mary Magdalen with Zacheus the Publican and other Publicans and sinners without the least taint of corruption He was born he lived and died in a corrupt generation in a very Pest-house of sinne without the least tincture of sinne He lived and died holy harmlesse undefiled and separated from sinners as the Apostle saith Heb. 7. 26. 7. The nature of the light is hard to be known The Philosophers are much troubled about the defining and describing of it 'T is not a substantial forme because it is perceived by the sight which no substantial forme is 'T is not a body because then when the light passeth through a perspicuous body two bodies would be in one place which is against 〈…〉 and reason Nor is it an 〈◊〉 from a luminous body for then the Sonne by his continual shining would be deprived of ●ig●t but it is an accidental forme or a patib●e quality and so very hard to be described The Scripture speaks of the difficulty of searching out the nature of the light perfectly by any mortal man Job 38. 19 20 21 24. Onely he who is the Father of lights doth perfectly understand it Jesus Christ is not perfectly to be understood by any living man Who can declare his generation as he is the Sonne of God Esay 53. 8. Who can declare his conception exactly as he is the Sonne of man the Holy Ghost hath overshadowed it Luke 1. 35. He that created the flesh of Christ is onely able perfectly to understand the manner of it Who is able to declare the mystery of the hypostatical union of the two natures in one person exactly We beleeve these things comprehend them perfectly we are not able His Name is wonderful Esay 9. 6. there are such wonderful mysteries in the nature of this light as no man no creature can fully and perfectly comprehend Secondly Christ dispenses this light these two wayes 1. By the preaching of his Gospel in the publick Ministery thereof The Ministers are called Stars and the Ministery or preaching of the Gospel is that Orb in which this light shines and by which it is communicated and dispensed to the world We preach Christ crucified 1 Cor. 1. 23. Where the Gospel hath never been preached this light hath never yet shined This is the chariot in which this glorious light is carried about ordinarily in the world 2 Cor. 4. 3 4 5 6. 2. By the vertuous efficacy of his Spirit in the Ministery The most powerful preaching of Christ that can be will be to no purpose without these inward workings of the Spirit By the Spirit of Christ three things are done 1 The blindnesse of the minde is removed The holy Ghost causes the skales to fall off the eyes 2 A visive faculty is bestowed This is that which the Apostle calls the enlightening of the eyes of the understanding Ephes 1. 18. 3 Power is given actually to close with the light The soule is enabled to follow the light or to walk in the light as our Saviours phrase is John 12. 35. So that by these two meanes this light is communicated By the preaching of the Gospel the object is made present and by the Spirit of Christ the object is made visible the faculty of sight is bestowed and a power of following the light is created Thirdly Christ is differenced from all other lights viz. Prophets Apostles who are called lights Mat. 5. 14. He is differenced from all them five ways 1. They are lights onely Ministerially They are lights onely as they do by their office hold out this light They are lights as the candlestick may be called a light because it carries the candle where the light is But Christ is a light of and in himselfe He is a light not Ministerially but Originally The fountaine of light 2. They are small lights Christ i● 〈…〉 light They were but like little ●●thing 〈◊〉 Christ is as a great Torch which teacheth from heaven to earth They are light as the Stars are light a little glimmering borrowed light Christ is light as the Sunne and therefore he is called The
is called That great Shepherd First the parallel between Christ and a shepherd stands in these five particulars viz 1. A shepherd ●●ed this stock 'T is his work to provide both pasture and water for his sheep Pastour ● Pasc●nd● Ezek. 34. 2. Should not the shepherds feed the flocks A good shepherd will take care that his flock may have both grasse and water When they have eat one place bare he drives them to another when one fountaine is dry he leads them to another he had rather want bread himself then that his sheep should want provision He feeds them with his own flesh and blood John 6 5. Jesus Christ provides sufficient food and nourishment for his sheep Three things 〈…〉 1 He hath provided Ordinan●● 〈…〉 very Ordinance is a spiritual 〈…〉 fountaine for the feeding of Chris● 〈…〉 Psalmist speaks of this Psal 23. 2. He 〈…〉 to lie down in green pastures he leadeth me beside the still waters What are those pastures of tender grasse What are those waters of quietnesse but the Ordinances of the Gospel the fields where Christs sheep feed the rivers where they drink The variety of the Ordinances shewes the variety of ●eeding the richnesse and fulnesse of the Ordinances shewes the plentifulnesse of Christs feeding here are many pastures and every pas●ure so rich that it can never be eaten bare here are many streames and every streame so deep and broad that it can never be drawn dry the sheep have been eating in these pastures ever since Christ had a Church on earth and yet they are as full of grasse as ever The sheep have been drinking at these streams ever since Adam and yet they are brim full to this very day they will so continue till the sheep be above the use of them in heaven 2 He hath provided shepherd● to d●spense these Ordinances The sheep can neither feed themselves nor water themselves unlesse they have some to help them The Ministers of the Gospel do by vertue of their office open these pastures and lead the sheep into them they roll away the stone from the mouth of these Wells and draw water for them that they may drink and be satisfied The Apostle tells us that Pastou●s and Teachers are given of Christ for the edification of his Church Eph. 4. 11 12. This was the work of the Prophers in their 〈…〉 Apostles and Evangelists in their genera●on and of Pastours and Teachers the present Ministers of the Church yea we shall finde how severely Christ bath charged them under the paine of his highest displeasure to be diligent in feeding the flock See 2 Tim. 4. 1 2. and he ●ath allured them by the most glorious promises that they should be careful in this work See 1 Pet. 5. 2 4. and John 21. 15 16. And he furnisheth them with gifts and abilities for this very purpose Vid. Luke 12. 42. 3 He doth by his Spirit blesse the feeding which he hath provided He hath promised to be present with the sheep and shepherds when ever they come to feed in these pastures and drink at these waters he hath promised I say to be present to blesse their fo●d and water for the good or their soules He promised it Mat. 28. ult and he doth to this day make it good he doth walk and he will walk in the middest of the Golden Candle sticks to bless the seeding of the sheep to the end of the world He hath purchased the Holy Ghost to be bestowed both on the sheep and shepherds for this very purpose 2 A Shepherd k●owes 〈◊〉 He knows the number of his sheep and he knows them particularly 〈…〉 sheep Those phrases which are 〈…〉 concerning the sheeps p●ssing 〈…〉 rod ● ev 27. 32. and of passing under the 〈◊〉 of him that tel●eth them Jer. 33. 13. shew ●●e knowledge that good Shepherds have of their flocks they know one of their own sheep though it be in the midst of a strange flock Jesus Christ knows his sheep exactly He knows his people qu●t sint quinam sint both the 〈…〉 ticular persons John 10. 11. 〈…〉 dungeons prisons though the 〈…〉 off and the skin torne by persecution yet 〈◊〉 they are within the knowledge of Christ Consider four things First He knows them as they are given to him by the Father in his eternal Election God the Father hath given all the Elect unto Christ from eternity Iohn 17. 6. By vertue of this donation doth Christ know them He hath taken them by number from the Father and he is to surrender them by number to him againe Their names are all written from eternity in the Lambs book of life Rev. 21. 27. while this book continues they cannot wear out of the knowledge of Christ Secondly He knows them as he sees in them his own image Every sheep of Christ doth partake by grace of the image of Christ There is a conformity of likenesse between him and them His Fathers Name is written upon their foreheads Rev. 14. 1. What is this Name of God but that Divine nature which is from Christ communicated to every sheep of the fold So long as this Name abides on their foreheads and it shall abide for ever they cannot weare out of the knowledge of Christ Thirdly He knows them as he sees the sprinklings of his own blood upon them Every sheep of Christ is washed white in the Lambs blood Rev. 7. 14. They are cloathed with his righteousnesse for the justification of their persons They have his merits in which they are invested Now so long as this garment remaines 〈…〉 and it can never be worn off or ●●ollen off Jesus Christ must needs know them Fourthly He knows them as he remembers the service they have done fox him in the world Every sheep of Christ that hath attained unto years of discretion hath with care served Christ in its generation They have often prayed to him they have often worshipped him they have to their very uttermost laid out themselves for his glory in the world c. Jesus Christ hath recorded and set down all their good actions and as long as he remember● their works he cannot forget or be ig●orant of their persons This we may gather from that which stands on record Mat. 25. 34 ●5 c. They have fed him in his hungry members they have clo●thed him in his naked m●mbers c. Christ will never forget these holy actions therefore he can never forget the persons of them by whom they were performed They have both done for him and suf●ered for him therefore he knows them and will know them 3. A Shepherd preserves his st●ck 'T is the work of ● Shepherd to defend his sheep David bazarded his own li●e to de●end his sheep from the inv●ding ●●on and ●●venous bear 1. Sam. 17. 34. Shepherds watch their flocks by night as well as by day to pre●erve th●m from the dev●uring creatures So did Jacob Gen. 31. 40. So did those Shepherds to
faint when the Sun beat upon the head of Jonah he fainted Ch. 4. 8. 3. The fruits of the earth are many times scorched and withered to nothing by the violent heat of the Sunne Mat. 13. 6. If God do withhold the raine and send out the burning heat of the Sunne the fruits of the earth mourn and languish But now Jesus Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath no hurtful quality his beames neither make the face black nor the spirits faint He ripens the fruits of grace in the soul but he never withers them his beames are destructive to none but to such as will not suffer him to shine upon them Those fruits that have no root Christ withers but where there is root and ●p the beams of Christ are never prejudicial The Sunne hath a hardning vertue but Christ never hardens any unlesse it be by accident because they will not suffer his beames to enter into their hearts 'T is rather the want of Christs beames then the presence of them that occasions hardning in any heart 4. The natural Sunne is the creature of this Sunne of righteousnesse Jesus Christ as he is God made this Sunne that shines in the Firmament and put into it all the glory which is in it For the Evangelist tells us that all things were made by him and without him was not made any thing that was made Joh. 1. 3. He gave it both the light and heat which it gives to us He hath set and appointed it the course which it runs and which it hath run since its creation and he doth by his providence order its setting and rising for the good of the world He is the light of all that light which the Sunne hath He is the fountain both of the being and preservation of all that influence which the Sunne doth cause to descend upon the world The dependence of the Sunne of righteousnesse is upon himself but the dependence of the natural Sunne is upon him 5. The natural Sunne doth communicate his light and heat equally to all He shines as much upon the house and lands of the wicked as he doth upon the righteous He doth impart and dispense his influences alike to all in the same manner and in the same measure This our Saviour notes as an act of the bounty of God Mat. 5. 45. But now it is not so with Jesus Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse He gives light and heat to one and not to another Though all that live under the shining of the Ordinances do receive so much from Jesus Christ as is sufficient to leave them without excuse yet doth he cause peculiar beames to fall upon the hearts of some which do not fall upon another He shines upon one only to conviction on another to conversion He shines only upon the eares of some He lets down hot gleames into the very hearts of others 2 Cor. 4. 6. We have an instance of this in Paul and those that were in company with him Act. 9. 6 7. They saw the light and heard a voice too a confused voice which they did not understand and therefore chap. 22. 9. Paul saith they heard not the voice of him that spake They heard an inarticulate sound or a confused voice but they knew neither who spake nor what was spoken therefore they heard the voice and yet heard it not but now Paul both heard the voice and understood it and was converted by it which we do not finde recorded of any of the rest Some common beames doth Christ cast forth upon all but his special beames and influences are imparted to none but the Elect Nor is this any derogation to the freeness of the grace of Christ or to the fulnesse of it The fulnesse and freenesse of grace consists more in the greatnesse of that he bestowes then in the multitude of them that enjoy what he gives them Read of hidden Manna of a white stone and a new name which Christ gives to some and not to others Rev. 2. 17. This Sunne of righteness shines sometimes on one in a house and leavs the rest still in darknesse 6. The natural Sunne is an inanimate thing Though it be in some sence called the fountaine of life yet it is in it self without life It hath neither the rational nor the sensitive nor the vegetative life And in this respect the least-living creature is more glorious then the Sunne a living dog is better then an inanimate jewel But now Jesus Christ is a living Sunne This Sunne of righteousnesse hath life as well as light and heat Joh. 1. 4. All that spiritual life which is in the soul is communicated from Christ and preserved by Christ the soul is dead till it be imbreathened by Jesus Christ And hence it is that Christ is so often in Scripture called our life as Col. 3. 3 4. because he gives and maintaines both the natural and spiritual life Yea the brightest beame the soul ever had from Christ here is but a little glimpse in respect of what shall be in heaven There he shall shine 1. Perpendicularly 2. In all his strength 3. Without over-casting 7. The natural Sunne is the servant of men It is called Shemesh in the Hebrew from a root that signifieth to minister because it is the great servant of the world in giving light But now Jesus Christ is not our servant but our Lord whom men and Angels must worship It is grosse Idolatry to worship the natural Sunne Job vindicates himself from it chap. 31. 26. Josiah demolished all Sunne worship in his reformation 2 King 23. 5. It s idolatry to worship the Sunne but its grosse impiety not to worship Christ the very Angels of heaven are commanded to worship him Heb. 1. 6. 8. The natural Sunne is onely useful for the time and state of this life Whether the heavens shall be abolished and annihilated at the day of judgement or only renewed is a great question amongst learned men If they shall be only renewed as they probably will be yet they shall not be useful to men in that way they now are The glorified bodies of the Saints have no need in heaven of the light of the Sunne to shine upon them as now they have Rev. 2● 5. The Saints in heaven shall be above the shining of Ordinances and above the shining of the natural Sunne Every glorified body shall shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father They shall be farther above the Sunne then the Sunne is now above them But the Sunne of righteousnesse is useful in heaven the Saints shall have the benefit of Christs shining upon them for ever and ever This Sunne of righteousnesse shall cast his beames upon the soul and body glorified for ever Rev. 7. 17. All the glory of heaven is communicated to the Saints through the Lord Jesus Christ The uses of these are Information Exhortation Consolation 1. For Information It teacheth us these foure lessons 1. Behold from hence the glory of
the Gospel The Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the glorious Gospel or the Gospel of glory 1 Tim. 1. 11. The Gospel is exceeding full of glory there 's nothing in it but that which is very glorious This is enough to proclaim the glory of it because in it the Lord Jesus Christ is discovered the Gospel is the Orbe in which the Sunne of righteousnesse shineth it is the Chariot in which Christ rides It is the Golden vessel which carries this glorious light about the world The Gospel is the true Bethshemesh or house of the Sunne it is called the Word of Christ Col. 3. 16. Because by this Word Jesus Christ is discovered and manifested to the world David doth admire the heavens for this that in them God hath set a Tabernacle for the Sunne Psal 19. 4. The Gospel is that glorious Tabernacle which God hath set and established for this great Sunne of righteousnesse Where the Gospel is not Christ is not known remove the Gospel and Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse is totally removed 2. The exceeding great glory of heaven The Scripture makes mention of heaven as of a glorious place Amongst other things this shewes the glory of it that this Sunne of righteousnesse shines in it Rev. 21. 23. and 22. 3 This will further appear if we consider how far Christs shining in heaven dazzels his shining here on earth I will instance in these three particulars 1. In heaven Christ shines upon the soul immediately There is nothing to interpose between Christ and the soul his shinings in this life are immediate through the Ordinances We see his beames in this life through the thick glasse of Ordinances the Churh tells us the manner of his shining in this life Cant. 2. 9. We have his beames here only by reflection but in heaven they are immediately darted down upon the soul There is no Temple in heaven Rev. 21. 22. Christ himselfe is the Temple Now if the mediate beamings of Christ upon the soul he so glorious What abundant glory will there be in his immediate shinings 2. In heaven he shines with his full strength upon the soul All have here on earth but small beames of this Sunne A beam in one Ordinance and a beam in another here a little and there a little as we are able to bear it the eye of the soul while it is unglorified is not able without dazling to look upon Jesus Christ shining in his full strength Thou shalt see my back parts but my face cannot be seen Exod. 33. 22 23. but in heaven the soul shall be able to take a full view of Christs face 1 Cor. 12. 12. All that ever we have seen of Christ in this world will be but darknesse in respect of that full sight of his glory we shall have in heaven 3. In heaven Christ shines without intermission The soul here doth often lose the sight of Christs face every day is not a Sunne-shine day There are some dark and gloomy dayes even to them that have the greatest interest in Christ Esay 50. 10. but in heaven the Sunne is alwayes up There are no clouds to Eclipse the light of Christs face in that region There 's no night in heaven Rev. 27. 25. That which causes the soul here to lose the sight of Christ shall not be in heaven No sinne enters into that holy place if the immediate perfect uninterrupted shining of Christ can make a place glorious heaven is a most glorious place 3. The miserable condition of those that have no interest in Jesus Christ The Scripture makes it the top of all misery to be without Christ Eph. 2. 12. This text beares witnesse to it How uncomfortable would the world be if there were no Sunne If God had not made the Sunne the world would have been but an uncomfortable prison What a muse and astonishment are men put into when the Sunne is Eclipsed but for a few houres How doleful is their condition upon whom the Sunne of righteousnesse hath never risen They have neither spiritual light nor spiritual warmth nor spiritual healing nor spiritual softnesse that are without Christ They want both the righteousnesse of justification and of sanctification that have not a saving interest in this Sunne of righteousnesse There are no people upon the earth that stand in more need both of your compassions and prayers then those that want Jesus Christ And they are so much the more miserable because they want eyes to see their misery 4. That there is no righteousnesse either of justification or sanctification without Christ he is called the Sunne of righteousnesse in both these respects and therefore till he arise upon the soule it hath no righteousnesse in either of these respects 1. For the righteousnesse of justification The Papists they teach and maintain that a person must have in himself inherent righteousnesse to justifie him before Gods tribunall They say that Christs righteousnesse is not the proper cause of justification but that whereby God is pleased to accept of the habits of righteousnesse in us placing the matter of justification either in something habitually inherent in us or flowing from us This Doctrine doth devest Jesus Christ of this name which God hath here given him He is called the Lord our righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. If he be our righteousnesse then we are not our own righteousnesse I would not be found saith a good Divine in the righteousnesse of the best prayers I ever made at the day of judgement To take off men from this Popish doctrine I shall lay down these Arguments against it 1. The righteousnesse of God and the righteousnesse of man are opposed in Scripture as things inconsistent in the matter of justification Phil. 3. 9. To mingle these two together were to wear a garment of linnen and woolen which God forbade in his Law He that submits to the one cannot submit to the other So the Apostle teacheth us expresly Rom. 10. 3. he that trusts to the righteousnesse of man cannot trust to the righteous of God Our righteousnesse is that which we do in obedience to the Law but Christs righteousnesse is that by which we are reckoned righteous in the sight of God 2. If righteousnesse be by workes then it is not of free grace but of due debt This is the Apostles argument Rom. 11. 6. The Papists answer this by understanding by works there the works of nature and unregeneracy only and not of works flowing from faith But this is a meer falshood for the Apostle proves Rom. 4. 2. that works flowing from faith cannot justifie before God Abraham was regenerate Abrahams works were works flowing from faith yet were not those works his righteousnesse but Christ apprehended by faith 3. That righteousnesse by which and for which a person is justified must exactly answer Gods justice It must be so every way perfect that justice it self can require no more but the best of our works are imperfect and
the preaching of the Gospel Thus Iesus Christ was manifested to all that received the Gospel and is still manifested The Apostle speaks of this manifestation Gal. 3. 1 O foolish Galatians c. before whose eyes Iesus Christ hath been evidently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set forth crucifyed among you And of this the Apostle makes mention 1 Iohn 1. 2. The life Venit in homines was manifested we have seen it 2 Tim. 1. 10. Neither of these appearances are to be understood in this Text for it speaks of an appearance that is yet to be made Therefore 3. A glorious manifestation of Christ yet to be made at his second coming to judgement And this is that appearance of which the Apostle here Venict contra homines August speaks for then it shall be and not till then that the Saints shall appear with Christ in glory So the Apostle tells us 2 Tim. 4. 8. Henceforth it laid up for me a Crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me in that day and not to me only but to all them also that love his appearing 'T is at this day of Christs appearing that the Saints shall be perfectly glorious Having found out what is meant by Christs appearing I shall in the prosecution of the Point handle these five particulars 1. That there shall be such an appearance of Christ 2. Why Christ shall thus appear the ends of this appearance 3. After what manner Christ shall appear 4. When shall be the time of this appearance of Christ 5. Why it is deferred I. That Iesus Christ shall appear I shall evince this 1. By many expresse testimonies of Scripture There is not any Article of our Faith more clearly set down in the Book of God then this Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appear the signe of the Sonne of man in heaven and they shall see the Sonne of man coming in the clouds of heaven Act. 1. 11. This same Iesus which was taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven The Apostle Paul asserts this truth in expresse termes Heb. 9. 28. Vnto them that look for him he shall appeare the second time without sinne unto salvation 1 Iohn 3. 2. When he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is And as the Scripture doth expressely affirme it So 2. God hath taught his people to wait for it and to pray for it Cant. 8. 8. Come away my beloved c. Rev. 22. 20. the last prayer of the Church is for this very thing Even so come Lord Iesus And Luk. 12. 35 36. they are commanded to wait for this appearance Let your loynes be girded and your lamps burning And you your selves like unto men that wait for their Lord c. God never commanded his people to pray and wait for a fiction or dream which shal never come to passe 3. From the absurdities which would follow upon the denial of it We may say of this as the Apostle saith of the denial of the resurrection of the body 1 Cor. 15. 17 18 19. If Christ should not appear our faith would be in vaine The dead in Christ were perished and we should onely have hope in Christ in this life and of all men should be most miserable The whole comfort of a Christian turnes upon the hinge of this Doctrine of Christs appearing Ioh. 14. 18. II. The ends of Christs appearing are such as these 1. To declare that sin is abolished This is the meaning of that Heb 9. 28. 2. That he may be admired in his Saints c. This end of his coming the Apostle sets down 2 Thes 1. 10. he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that beleev One end of the second coming of Iesus Christ is to communicate his glory to his Saints that have beleeved in him He shall put his glory upon them and so shall be glorified in them Iesus Christ is glorified in his Saints now That holinesse and grace which he hath communicated to them already doth render them very glorious but at his second coming his glory will shine in them with greater splendor then now it doth He will then communicate unto them all his glory and make them glorious as he is glorious Our Saviour mentions this Iohn 14. 3. I will come again and receive you unto my self He comes to fetch all his Elect to heaven and to reveale his glory both to their soules and bodies He shall then actually put soule and body into the full possession of that glorious redemption which he hath purchased for them 'T is called the day of redemption Luke 21. 28. 3. To execute the sentence of his wrath upon all his enemies and the enemies of his people Iesus Christ hath severely threatned all wicked men that he will visibly take vengeance on them for the dishonours they have done to him and the wrongs they have done to his people And in this second manifestation of himself he will put all those threatnings into execution Of this the Apostle speaks 2 Thes 1. 7 8 9. The Lord Iesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God c. And of this Enoch prophecyed long ago Iude 15. Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints to execute judgement on all c. Wicked men are now secure they reproach God and wrong his people but Iesus Christ will one day visibly come from heaven to punish these contempts and injuries The evil Angels and sinful men shall then be publickly adjudged to suffer that torment which they have deserved 4. To put an end to his Churches sufferings Rev. 20. 10. Then shall the devil that deceived the world be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false Prophet are and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever 5. To gather together his Elect. This the Evangelist sets down Mat. 24. 30. 31. They shall see the Sonne of man coming in the clouds And he shall send his Angels and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds c. The Elect of God are scattered up and down in the several quarters of the world scarce two or three of them are now together in one family at the same time but then they shall be collected never to part asunder to all eternity III. What manner of appearing this shall be Consider for that these four things 1. It shall be a real and corporal appearance Christ shall not appear imaginarily as some have thought nor shall he only appear according to his Divine nature but he shall appeare bodily and truly the same humane nature which was in the grave and afterwards ascended into heaven shall descend from heaven Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appeare the signe of the Sonne of man The humanity
Winde 2. A remedy discovered in which are 1. The Protector A man 'T is ille vir 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an Article this man 'T is the King mentioned in the former verse he that is there called King is here called a man 'T is Christ who is a man and more then a man God-man This is the Protector 2. The Protection This is set down by way of comparison Here are foure resemblances 1. As a hiding place from the winde 2. As a covert from the tempest 3. As rivers of water in a drie place 4. As the shadow of a great rock in a weary land I am now to speak of the first namely a hiding place from the winde By winde we are to understand troubles afflictions tempestuous stormes whether they be outward or inward Here are four words which all signifie one and the same thing onely they are varyed a little that they may be fitted to the several metaphors winde tempest a dry place a weary land Trials tribulations temptations are usually called winde in Scripture as Matth. 25. 27. The raine descended and the windes blew and the floods came c. Two Observations lie cleere in the Text. 1. That godly men must expect windy days even in the times of the Gospel 2. That Jesus Christ is a hiding place to beleevers in all the windy dayes which they meet with in this life I shall begin with the first viz. Doct. 1. That godly men must expect to meet with windy dayes even under the Kingdome of Christ Christs Kingdom though it be a glorious Kingdome yet it is not without stormy windes and tempests There is under the Kingdome of Christ a great deal of inward peace serenity and calmnesse under the Kingdome of Christ The Scripture foretels this Psal 72. 7. In his dayes shall the righteous flourish and abundance of peace so long as the moone endureth Esay 32. 17 18. The work of righteousnesse shall be peace c. And my people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation and in sure dwellings and in quiet resting places And the Scripture makes mention of external peace and quietnesse which shall be under the Kingdome of Christ Esay 11. 6 7 8. The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb c. And Mic. 4. 3 4 He shall judge among many people and rebuke strong Nations afar off and they shall break their swords into plow-shares and their spears into pruning books c. These and many prophecies of this nature are yet I suppose to be fulfilled and they shall have their accomplishment before the end of this life But yet beleevers are to meet with windy dayes even in Gospel times 1. Windy dayes of outward troubles Outward afflictions of all sorts are to be expected sicknesse weaknesse poverty reproach persecution and all other evils These windes have blown very sharp upon the Apostles Disciples Martyrs and other servants of God in their generations yea upon whole Churches the seven Churches are overturned by them And they do so continue to this very day Through many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdome of heaven This was Pauls Doctrine Act. 14. 22. Ye shall have tribulation ten days this message is sent by Christ to the Church of Smyrna Rev. 3. 10. And our Saviour himself foretold the Church before his departure that these winds would arise Joh. 16. 33. In the world ye shall have tribulation And Rev. 11. 22. the holy City is given unto the Gentiles to be trod under foot fourty two moneths and ver 3. of that Chapter the witnesses shall for the space of one thousand two hundred sixty dayes which is the whole time of Antichrists reigne prophecy in sackcloth and to this very day we see they have their sackcloth upon their loynes Till the fall of Antichrist these windy dayes will not be over 2. Windy dayes of inward troubles Temptations desertions inward fears and shakings in the soul There will be these spiritual earthquakes and agonies in the soules of Gods people even in Gospel-times This winde did beat violently upon the Apostles without were sightings within were feares 2 Cor. 7. 5. Paul felt these windes make a horrible noise in his bowels in those fierce buffettings of Satan which he speaks of 2 Cor. 12. 7. yea these windes blew fiercely upon Christ himself when he uttered those doleful words Eli Eli Lamasab achthani My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27. ●6 And if the King of the Church met with such a windy day of temptation as we read Mat. 4. init and of desertion as we read in this Text the subjects must expect to meet with them I shall give you a treble account of this point 1. There is a devil an Antichrist wicked men even under Christs Kingdom 2. There is sinne under the Gospel And where there is sinne there cannot but be windes The winde is as the Philosopher teacheth us an exhalation arising from the earth drawn upwards by the power of the Sunne which meeting with the cold of the middle region of the aire is beaten back againe it is so light that it cannot descend and so violently resisted that it cannot ascend therefore it is carried aslaunt with a mighty violence through the aire The matter of windes is an exhalation mixed for the Magir. Phys most part with vapours from whence it is that the winde is sometimes moist The same exhalations or vapours inclosed in the bowels of the earth and not finding an open passage cause an earthquake Sinne is the matter of spiritual windes without and spiritual earthquakes within Now as there will be windes and earthquakes where there is the matter of them so there cannot but be the windes of outward troubles and the earthquakes of spiritual troubles where sinne is which doth ingender and breed both these Now the people of God sinne under the Gospel and from their sinnes do these windes and earthquakes proceed Sinne creates stormes in Gospel-dayes 3. These windes are for the advantage of beleevers even under the Gospel ye are in affliction if need be through manifold temptations 1 Pet 16. The windes are not more necessary for the world then these windes are for the soules of Gods people even in Gospel times I shall shew you the usefulnesse of the windes of heaven for the earth and shew you the usefulnesse of these spiritual windes in the same respects to the soul Consider the parallel in five things 1. The winde is useful for purification The winde cleanseth and sweetens the aire carries away disperses noysom and infectious vapours that are hurtful to the bodies of men and other creatures the winde is ventilabrum naturae natures fan by which all putrefying vapours are driven away Vid. Job 37. 21. Men see not the bright light which is in the clouds but the winde passeth and cleanseth them These spiritual winds both inward and outward have when sanctified by God a purifying vertue Those corrupting infectious mists and
20. 20. 1 Kings 11. 36. 12. For God himself 1 Job 1. 5. 13. For Christ so 't is used in the Text. In what respects we shall afterwards see The World The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 M●ndus from that real and orderly digestion and composition of things that are in the world God hath made all things in number weight and measure The world is an orderly beautiful piece It 's used here some think to take away the difference between Jewes and Gentiles Others think it 's taken for the world of the Elect But I rather think in this place it 's taken for all sorts of men to whom this light is offered This benefit saith Calvin is not offered to one or a few but to all the world though few receive it yet the tender of it is made to all according to that of our Saviour Mark 16. 15. The words are a Proposition In 〈…〉 1. The Subject Jesus Christ 2. The Predicate The light of the world 3. The Copulate joyning these together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All put together make this Observation Doct. That Jesus Christ is the spiritual light of the world Jesus Christ in three respects is the natural light of the world as he is God 1. He created the light The first light that ever shined in the world was his creature The Sunne Moon and Starres which are the vessels of natural light are the works of his hands He as well as the Father is that Jehovah who at first said Let there be light and there was light Gen. 1. 3. For all things were made by him and without him was not made any thing that was made John 1. 3. All the luminaries of heaven which carry the light of nature abroad are his creatures 2. He preserves the light The sinne of mankinde would extinguish those vessels of light those lamps of the world did not the Lord Jesus Christ by his Divine power and Providence keep them burning When the Sunne is set and darknesse spread upon the world it would never rise again if Christ did not give it a Command 3. He it is that created the eye of man and endued it with power to set the light It is he that as God formed the eye of man and gave it power to behold the light of the Sunne It is he also that by his providence opens the eye when it is by sleep shut up in darknesse These windows of the body would be pitched up for ever if Christ did not open them morning by morning Davids prayer Psal 13. 3. must be our daily prayer Lighten mine eyes lest I sleep the sleep of death In all these respects Christ according as he is God is the natural light of the world And as Mediator he is the spiritual light of the world He was so when he was on earth and that both by his Doctrine and by his example And he is still the spiritual light of men The Scripture doth often affirme this of Christ See a few places John 1. 9. that was speaking of Christ the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world John 12. 35 36 46. What can be more expresse The Prophets who Prophecyed of him spake of him as a light Esay 42. 6. I give thee for a Covenant of the people for a light of the Gentiles And Esay 49. 6. I will give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou mayest be my salvation to the end of the earth He is therefore compared to the day-star Luke 1. 78. To the Sunne Mal. 4. 2. As all natural light is collected into the vessel of the Sunne and by it dispensed to the world so all spiritual light is gathered together and placed in Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse and by him communicated unto all those whom God hath given him In the opening of this Doctrine I shall handle three things 1. Wherein the proportion between Christ and light stands 2. How Christ doth dispense the light which is in him 3. How Christ is differenced from all ●ther lights First the resemblance between Christ and light stands in seven things 1. Light hath a manifestative quality It doth discover and cause to appear things that do in darkness lie unseen Darkness is a thick veile and shadow under which things and persons are concealed but light removes that shadow and shews both it self and every other thing in its own nature When you would see what a thing is if you do not know it you bring it forth to the light and then it appears Whatsoever doth make manifest the same is light Eph. 5. 13. Jesus Christ in this respect is well compared to light He discovers and makes manifest to men that which they never saw before How many rare mysteries hath Christ discovered to the sonnes of men When he came into the world he revealed those secrets that before were either not known or not so fully known The Apostle speaks of this Eph. 3. 2. 3 4 5 6 8 9. When Christ comes to a soul what discoveries doth he make there 1 That sin which lay hid for many years is now manifest that pride that unbelief that covetousnesse which was not discovered before is now made manifest The very secrets of the heart are made known when this light begin to shine 1 Corinth 14. 25. The soule wonders that so much wickednesse should be so long undiscerned 2 That shining beauty which is in grace which was not before discerned is now made manifest He sees godlinesse to be another kinde of thing then he ever apprehended it to be He sees a lovelinesse in every duty of Gods worship a lovelinesse in every act of holinesse which he could have not believed so that he is able to say with the blinde man restored by Christ This I know that whereas I was blinde now I see Christ hath the discovering quality of light 2. Light hath a Directive vertue It guids men in their way The Traveller by the benefit of the light sees what path to keep which way to turne to his intended journey Our Saviour mentions this effect of light John 11. 9 10. Now Christ is fitly called a light in this regard He it is that doth direct the sonnes of men in the way to life And therefore he is called not onely the light by which we see but the guide that leads us Luke 1. 79. Yea he is called not onely the light and the guide but the way in which we walk John 14. 6. Jesus Christ is sent by his Father from heaven to direct his Elect to heaven He is the great Pilot of his Church that doth steer it through the tempestuous seas of this world to the Haven of glory 3. Light hath a Penetrating vertue Light is of all creatures that are material the most immaterial it is of so subtile a nature that it conveys it selfe into the least crevise You can hardly make any fence so close as wholly to keep out
Sonne of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. All the Prophets and Apostles were but Scintillulae lucis little sparks of light meer glow-worms but Jesus Christ is an immense incomprehensible light Esay 9. 2. 3. They are lights that have some darknesse in them The clearest and brightest of the Prophets and Apostles were not without some darknesse and obscurity But Jesus Christ is light and in him there is no darknesse at all Christ is a light that hath no snuff in him He ever burns and shines brightly 4. They were lights that could not give sight They were not able to make men either see their light or follow their light They could not give eyes to the blinde but Jesus Christ is such a light as can give sight He can open the blinde eyes He can over-power the soul to follow the light 5. They were setting lights They when they had runne their course left shining they were wasting decaying lights John Baptist was a burning and shining light but now he is neither as to this world onely his example and Doctrine shines still in the Scripture But Jesus Christ is an everlasting light He hath been shining ever since that promise made to Adam Gen. 3. 15. and he shall be a light for ever and ever He is the light of grace here and he shall be the light of glory in heaven The Uses are Information Exhortation Consolation 1. Information In foure particulars First Behold the necessity of Christ He is as necessary for the soul as light is for the body Light is a very needful and pleasant thing Jesus Christ is as necessary as he is pleasant Secondly The miserable condition of such as want an interest in Christ Whether they be Nations or Persons their condition is marvellous sad They are indeed in a state of darknesse The Scripture affirmes all to be in darknesse that are without Christ Eph. 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darknesse c. Luke 1. 79. Esay 9. 2. The people that sate in darknesse have seen a great light Where this day-star did never yet shine 't is yet mid-night with that soul A dark condition is a very miserable condition The misery of it will appear in three particulars 1 A dark condition is a condition of feare Those that can be bold in the light are usually surprized with feares in darknesse A black day is a terrible day Job 3. 5. Let the blackness of the day terrifie it Those that are without Jesus Christ are subject to many terrours and fears which the children of light are delivered from The Scripture makes mention of horrible dread which the wicked are exposed unto The name of Pashur may be given to every one that is without Christ Magor Missabib Jer. 20. 3. because they are liable to such shaking pannick feares Prov. 28. 1. The ●●cked 〈◊〉 when no man pursueth them God threatens fears to the wicked as their portion Lev. 26. 3● I will send a faintnesse in their hearts the sound of a shaken leaf shall chase them Wicked men are sometimes without actual shakings they have some kinde of Joy Peace and Security But 1 They are alwayes liable to feares They are under guilt which lays the foundation of fear 2 Their peace when it seems to be most strong and settled is presently upon the least spark of Gods anger thrown into their consciences turned into terror We have an instance of it in Belshazzar Dan. 5. 5 6. The least manifestation of Gods anger dashes all their joy and creates great trembling in their spirits The Prophet sets out this terrour by an excellent Metaphor Esay 5● 20. The sea is sometimes so calme and smooth that you may cast a dye upon the face of it but one quarter of an houres tempest puts it into a dreadful combustion 2 A dark condition is a misguiding condition 'T is full of wandrings When men want the light of this world how do they mislead others how easily are they mislead by others He that walketh in darknesse saith our Saviour knoweth not whither he goeth John 12. 35. Those that are without Jesus Christ are in a spirituall maze or labyrinth They mislead all that follow them they are mislead by every blinde guide that goes before them Men that are without Christ are great wanderers You may easily carry them into the most dangerous wayes This is the true reason of all those sad ●and●ings and deviations of men from the truth of God and from the old wayes of holinesse which are at this very day Though they pretend not onely light but a greater measure of light then others have attained unto yet the truth is they want this true light this coelestial light and therefore are carried away after the shining of every ignis fatuus that Satan casts in their way They wander from verity to falshood from a seeming strictnesse to prophanenesse from one corrupt principle to another till they turn meere Skepticks meere Atheists without all Religion The Apostle calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jude 13. to whom if they returne not from their wandrings is reserved the blacknesse of darknesse for ever 3 A dark condition is a condition unfit for action We call darknesse blinde mans holy-day because in darknesse a seeing man can work no more then a blinde man When that fearful darknesse was over the land of Egypt they did not stir from their seats for three dayes together Exod. 10. 23. Man goeth forth to his work and labour until the evening Psal 104. 23. When the black shadow of the night hath drawn the curtaine of nature over the world then are instruments of working laid aside Those that are without Jesus Christ are unfit for any spiritual work They can neither pray nor repent nor beleeve c. Whatever work of this nature they take in hand they spoile it utterly They mar all the work of God for want of light John 15. 5. The Apostle tells us that the natural man doth not understand the things of the Spirit neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned 〈…〉 to polish● a jewel a● 〈…〉 as man that i● 〈…〉 is able handsomly to perfect any 〈…〉 This is the second inference the misery of men without Christ 3 The excellency of Jesus Christ Light is a very excellent and glorious creature Truly light is pleasant saith Solomon and a joyful thing it is for the eyes to see the Sun Eccl. 11. 7. Jesus Christ is an excellent and precious person He is very pleasant and desirable to those that have eyes to behold him He is all things spiritually to the soule which it wants which it can desire bread drink physick life rayment light all in all The Scripture speaks much of his glory and brightnesse No creature comparable to the light for glory God is therefore said to be cloathed with light as with a garment Psalme 104. 2. Christ is unglorious to the eyes of blinde men so the Prophets foretold Esay 53. 2 3. But
to them that have eyes to see him he is a very glorious person Jesus Christ hath a foure-fold excellency above other lights First They are created lights The Sun Moon and Stars the vessels of light are but creatures Gen. 1. You reade of the time and manner of their creation But Christ is an uncreated light The humanity indeed is a creature but the Divinity which doth enlighten the humanity is not a creature Athanasius calls him light of lights very God of very God He is the Father of Lights in regard of his Divinitie Secondly They are lights that cannot give 〈◊〉 Bring men that are blinde to the Sunne let it shine with his greatest splendor upon them and they will not be recovered The light of the Sun hath dazeld and helpt to put out many seeing eyes it never restored to sight one blinde eye But Jesus Christ is a light that gives sight to the blinde He is an enlightning ●ight he doth by his shining upon the soule create in the soule a faculty of seeing which it never had before 2 Cor. 4. 6. When this light shines in the heart the light of the knowledge of God is created Hence the Apostle calls Christ a light that enlightneth every man that cometh into the world Joh. 1. 9. Thirdly They are lights onely to the body The soul is not better for the light of the Sun But Christ is a spiritual light he is a light to the conscience to the will to the affections to the whole inward man Fourthly They give light but in one place at once The Sunne shines but in one Hemisphaere at once 'T is night with us when 't is day with our Antipodes and when the Sunne shines there it is darknesse with us But now Jesus Christ shines as a light in all places of the world at one and the same time He can cast his beams when he pleaseth all the world over Christ shines in England and in America at one and the same moment And he hath told us of a time when he will give light to all the world This is the third inference Christs excellency 4 Behold from hence the excellency of the Gospel Jesus Christ is the light of the world as he is held out in the Gospel The Gospel is the Candlestick in which this Candle is set the Gospel is the O●● in 〈…〉 There is no other sufficient and 〈…〉 ●●●covery of Christ besides the Gospe● There are three lights which God hath ●●●●●ed to the Heathen The light of Creation Rom. 1. 19. 20. The light of righteousnesse which the Schools call Synter●sin The light of a natural conscience Rom. 2. 15. Now although these be true lights yet they are not sufficient lights They make a discovery of a God-head unto men Rom. 1. 19 20. They discover so much to men as to ●eave them without excuse Rom. 1. 20. but they cannot discover a Saviour to man They cannot discover a Mediator God and man in one person None of the wise Philosophers of the world that had studied the mysteries of nature and attained to very great experience in them were able to finde out reconciliation by Christ No no the Gospel is the onely ordinary way of this discovery John 5. 39. Search the Scriptures They are they which testifie of me Rom. 1. 16. 17. I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ For therein is the righteousnesse of God revealed from faith to faith So 1 Cor. 1. 21. After that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdome knew not God It pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to save them that beleeve Now then the Gospel being the onely standing-way of discoverning Christ to men it must needs be a very excellent thing Hence it is that the Gospel is called a light as well as Christ Psal 119. 105. Thy Word is as a lamp unto my feet c. And 2 Pet. 1. 18 19 We have a more sure word of prophecy c. Herein lies the great glory and dignity of the Gospel that it is the onely mediate fixed Candlestick in and by which Jesus Christ the true light is discovered and made known This is the first Use Use 2. Exhortation It commends sour things to us 1. Blesse God for this light We have very great cause to blesse God for tho natural light that he hath set up so glorious a Torch as the Sunne is to give light to the inhabitants of the earth What cause have we then to blesse God for this spiritual light that this day-star from on high hath visited us We might have wandred in darknesse as the Heathen do if this light had not in the glorious Gospel sh●ned amongst us Blesse God every day for this light especially you that have Christ not only a light to you but a light in you You that have this Sunne risen and shining in your hearts in and by conversion you have cause to blesse God Many shall be damned and perish that have Christ as a light to them but they shall eternally be saved that have Christ the true light shining in them How much cause had the Israelites in Goshen to blesse God that had light in their dwellings Exod. 10. 23. when there was thick darknesse in the land of Egypt much more cause have you to blesse his great Name that the Lord Christ is a burning light set up in your hearts when as abundance that live under the same light you do are still in the darknesse of an unconverted estate Ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord Eph. 5. 8. This 〈…〉 loud cordial lasting everlasting praises to God and Jesus Christ that this light is made a saving light to you when it is a damning light occasionally to very many 2. When ever you see the light remember Jesus Christ When you open your eyes in the morning and behold the light of the Sunne then thin● of Christ the true Sunne of righteousnesse When you see the necessity of light when you see the benefit of light then think of the necessity and benefit which men receive by Jesus Christ He is far more useful then the natural light in as much as he enlightens the soule God would have us to spirituallize the whole Creation There is hardly any creature which is of special and common use but it doth or may serve as a ladder on which we may ascend into Heaven and be brought neerer to God bread water garments the raine the dew the light and a thousand other creatures do daily preach some spiritual Doctrine to us It will be happy for us if we can take out spiritual lessons from earthly things 3. Improve the light In three things 1. Be not contented that Christ is a light to you but labour that he may be a light within you Get Christ into your hearts into your consciences 'T is damnable to live in darknesse even when the light of the creatures shines Rom. 1. 20. 'T is
double damnation to live in darknesse where Jesus Christ the true light shines Arise shine for the light is come saith the Prophet to the Church Esay 60. 1. If you be not enlightned savingly by this light it had been better for you you had never heard of it that you had never seen it Better you had never seen this pillar of fire then not to be savingly enlightned by it 2 Be sure to walk in the light This is our Saviours counsel John 12. 35. What is it to walk in the light but to translate the light into our life To walk as children of the light Ephesians 5. 8. To walk in the light of Christs example To walk according to the d●rection of Christs Doctrine To walk regularly evenly inoffensively to have our conversation as becometh the Gospel Philippians 1. 27. This is the way to honour the light this is the way to communicate the light to others He that walks as Christ walked holds out this light to the world a holy Conversation makes a Christian as a golden Cand●estick to hold ou● Christ to such as do not see him 3 Acknowledge from whence all your light comes That you have the light of knowledge the light of saving grace the l●ght of spiritual comfort it is from Jesus Christ He is the fountaine of all true spiritual light The light you have is a beame of this Sunne You had never enjoyed one spark of it had not Christ freely communicated it 4 Receive nothing as light but what comes from Jesus Christ That that thwarts Jesus Christ is not light but darknesse That which comes not from Christs Word is not light but darknesse Men ta●● of much light now adayes They 〈…〉 light darknesse light Well the 〈◊〉 way to judge of true light is to bring it to Christ and to bring it to Christ is to bring it to the Scriptures There it is that Christ shines there it is that truth shines A written Revelation from S●ripture is more sure then an immediate Revelation from Heaven So the Apostle tells us 2 Peter 1. 18 19. I must try all Revelations by Scripture Now the touchstone is more sure then that whi●h is tried by it There are some things which men cry up as lights which quench Christ the true light the doctrine of the Socinians Arminians Papists c. Use 3. Consolation This may comfort the children of God in all their present darknesses The Saints of God are in this life under many darknesses They are under the darknesse of sinne not under the power of it Colossians 1. 13. Yet they have still some of this darknesse in them They are under the darknesse of ignorance for they know but in part They are under the darknesse of outward affliction Micah 7. 8. They are under the darknesse of spiritual discomfort sometimes Esay 50. 10. Well here is your comfort Christ is light in all these respects He is a full light He is a communicative light He is a light alwayes present Go to him in all these cases depend upon him put him in minde of this Name of his and you shall finde that he will turne your darknesse into light He will be a light to deliver you to instruct to comfort you to quicken you He hath received all the light he hath as Mediatour that he may communicate it to you HEB. 13. 20. Our Lord Jesus Christ that XIII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Aug. 8. 1652. great shepherd of the sheep THis verse is a part of the Epilogue or conclusion of the whole Epistle The conclusion begins at ver 18. and it reacheth to the end of the Chapter He had ver 18 19 intreated their remembrance of him in this verse as an Argument to perswade them he falls a praying for them The thing he prayes for on their behalf is laid down ver 21. Make you perfect c. The person to whom he prayes is God whom he describes by that glorious title The God of peace The Arguments he hath to support his faith for the Audience of his prayer are these three First the power of God this he expresseth by one great act of his power The resurrection of Christ from the dead The second is from Christs office or relation to the Church for whom he prays He is the great Shepherd of the sheep He prays in his Name who was neerly related to the Church therefore he did not doubt of audience The third is the way whereby he expected his requells to be granted The blood of the everlasting Covenant he came to a God of peace by a Mediator through a Covenant of blood therefore he did not fear the speeding and issuing of his requests The words which I have read have two things in them which shall be the parts of the Text. 1. A description of the people of God They are sheep 2. A description of Christ in relation to them That great Shepherd Sheep This word is taken in Scripture either Properly or Metaphorically Properly for that kinde of creatures which are known by this name Improperly or Metaphorically and so it hath a double signification It 's taken sometimes for harmlesse and innocent people So it 's used 2 Sam. 24. 17. 2. For the Elect of God especially such of them as are regenerated and called And so it 's used in this Text. Shepherd This word is likewise used in a Proper and in a Metaphorical sense In a proper sense it 's used for such as keep and feed flocks whether they be flocks of sheep or of other cattel In this sense Abel is called a shepherd Gen. 4. 2. The sonnes of Jacob that kept cattel are called shepherds in this sense because they dealt in sheep and other cattel Gen 46. 32 34. In this sense Moses is called a shepherd Exod. 3. 1. And David before his anointing to the office of a King Psalme 78. 70 71. In a Metaphorical sense and so it s referred to other persons and emplovments as they carry some resemblance to this office As 1. Magistrates are called shepherd● 〈…〉 hath this name given him of God Esay ●4 ●● Thus Moses the Ruler of Israel is called 〈◊〉 sh●pherd of Gods flock Esay 63. 1● 〈…〉 Agamemnon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is an usual expression in Scripture to call Magistrates Shepherds Jer. 6. 3. The shepherds with their flocks shall come unto her That is forreigne Princes with their souldiers prepared for Warre So Micab 55. We shall raise against him seven shepherds and eight principal men 2. Ministers Governours of the Church are called shepherds Jer. 3. 15. I will give you pastours or shepherds after mine own heart Jer. 17. 16. I have not hastened from being a pastour or shepherd from following thee Esay 56. 11. speaking of the sloathful Ministers he saith They are shepherds that cannot understand And the usual notion whereby Ministers are set out in the New Testament is Pastours and Teachers Eph. 4. 11. There is a great affinity
Vine I shall present you with four clusters by which you may judge of the rest First the fruits of his death There are many particulars in this cluster I name but six 1. The satisfaction of Divine Justice The appeasing of Gods anger towards the Elect Esay 53. 6. Christ by his death did as perfectly satisfie the demands of justice as though God had never been offended he made full payment 2. The reconciliation of beleevers to God He hath not onely paid what justice required but he hath perfectly made agreement between God and the sin●er that now thorough Christ God is as well appeased and is become as perfect a friend to the beleever as he was to Adam i● Paradise God hath not in his heart the least gr●dge towards his person Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 14 15. and Col. 1. 21 22. 3. The working out of a compleat righteousness for the sinner Such a righteousnesse as that the sinner may with a holy boldnesse chalenge the Law of God to finde fault with it Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 5. 17 18 19. This is called in divers respects righteousnesse of God Rom. 1. 17. The righteousnesse of faith Phil. 3. 9. Rom. 4. 13. The righteousnesse of Christ Rom. 5. 18. 4. The destroying of him that had the power of death Of this you may ●eade Col. 2. 15. and Heb. 2. 14. Sa●ans supremacy over the soule is abolished and the captived soul made the Lords freeman 5. The sweetning and per●uming of the grave and the freedome of the sinner from the fear of death This fruit is mentioned by the Apostle Heb. 2. 15. 6. The killing of the power of sinne Christ by dying for sinne slew sinne so as that it can never damne any of the Elect. Of this you m●y read Rom. 6. 4 6. Secondly the ●ruits of his resurrection These are many I shall set a few before you these foure 1. Spiritual vivifi●ntion The soule of a beleever is raised up and empowred to walk in ●●●●nesse of life This the Apostle applieth principally to the resu●●● 〈…〉 2. 12 13. You being de●● i● 〈…〉 He ●ath quick●ed together 〈…〉 2. An assured evidence 〈…〉 from sinne This the Apostle 〈…〉 resurrection of Christ Rom. 4. 25. He was 〈◊〉 again for our justification The resurrection of Christ from the grave is a full proof that all the debt is paid the discharge of the prisoner is a cleare testimony of the discharge of the debt The Prophet puts them together Esay 53. 8. He was taken from prison and from judgement And hence the Apostle argues against those that deny the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ be not raised we are yet in our sinnes 3. An Argument of the resurrection of our bodies at the last day If the Head be raised the body shall not lie for ever in the grave the Resurrection of Christ is a pledge of ours as the first fruits were unto the Jewes a pledge of the ensuing harvest The Apostle alludes to that 1 Cor. 15. 20. And therefore the Apostle saith that Beleevers are raised up together with Christ Ephes 2. 6. They did rise in their representative when Christ was raised 4. The Confirmation of our hope of heaven This fruit of Christs Resurrection the Apostle sets down 1 Pet. 1. 3. We are begotten againe to a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead The Doctrine of Christs Resurrection is the nourishment of the grace of Hope Thirdly The fruits of his Ascension This is a very rich cluster I shall name a few these five 1. Leading captivity captive The Apostle mentions this Eph. 4. 8. By ●eturning to he●ven from whence he came he did publickly ●ar●y his spoile with him he did declare that ●ll the enemies of our salvation were perfectly brought under As great Conquerours when they have subdued their enemies do lead captive those whom they have overcome so Christ the great Captaine of our salvation did by his Ascension let his people see that their spiritual enemies were all eternally vanquished 2. The conferring of M●nisterial gifts yea of the office of Ministery on his Church Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 4 8. The Ministery of the Church is a fruit of Christs Ascension And t is as possible to pull him out of Heaven as to destroy that which he so solemnly settled at his Ascension 3. The more ple●tiful effusion of his Spirit upon his Church Of this fruit of his Ascension our Saviour speaks John 16 7. If I go not away the Comforter will not come but if I go away I will send him Christ when he departed powred forth his Spirit in greater plenty then ever it was before to supply the want of his bodily presence And then 4. Preparations of Mansions for his members This fruit is mentioned John 14. 3. As a man when he hath espoused a wife provides a house for her abode against the day of marriage so Christ having espoused the Church goes to heaven before-hand to make all things ready for their entertainment against the marriage day 5. An assured evidence of their corporal As●ension Christ ascended and 〈…〉 as the fore-runner of his Chur●● 〈…〉 The Apostle tells us that Christ 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not onely for ou● 〈…〉 our stead to give us an undoubted 〈…〉 that we● also shall personally entertaine the ascension of the head is the praeludium of the glorification of the members Fourthly The fruits of his Intercession These are very many I shall name these four 1. Assurance of the Application of all his benefits Whatsoever Christ purchased by his death ●e doth actually apply to the Elect by his intercession The Prophet puts them together Esay 53. ult This is one fruit of Christs intercession beleevers are sure to be put into full possession of all that which Christ hath merited for them by his blood-shed This some make to be the meaning of that Scripture John 14 3. They refer it to his intercession Christ by his satisfaction obtained for the Elect a right to heaven and by his intercession he doth actually apply it to them 2. The superseding and stopping of all Accusations made against them The Law accuseth Satan pleads the Law against beleevers and hence accuseth them Christ is interceding continually at Gods right hand to invalidate all these accusations There can no sooner come in any complaint but Christ throws it out Of this fruit of his intercession the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 33 34. 3. Manuduction into the presence of the Father with boldnesse Christ is at Gods right hand for this very purpose that when ever a beleever hath any request to pre●er to God he may take them by the hand and bring the● to the Father with confidence This fruit of his inter●ession is set down by the Apostle Heb. 4. 14. 16. 4. Assurance of the acceptance of our weakest services This fruit of his intercession is mentioned Rev. 8. 3 4. The ascending
2. 10. To shew that this eternal 〈…〉 from him 1. He hath merited this salvation for the Elect 'T is his purchase 2. He keeps it for them and them 〈…〉 1 John 5. 11. 3. He will actually put them into full possession of it when he returnes from heaven in the latter end of the world of which he speaks John 14. 3. Thus much for the first particular namely the extent of that salvation of which Christ is said to be an Horn. He is the salvation of the Elect Privatively from all evil Positively to all good till he have brought them to heaven the place of eternal salvation 2. Why Christ is called an Horn of salvation That we may come to the full understanding of this let us consider how the word is used in Scripture Now we finde that this word doth Metaphorically denote two things especially 1. Glory and dignity So we finde it used Lam. 2. 3. where the Church complaining of the misery which had befallen her hath these expressions The Lord hath cut off in his fierce anger all the Horn of Israel That is whatsoever was glorious or excellent in Israel God hath now removed So we may see cleerly if we reade the first verse The Lord hath cast down from heaven unto earth the beauty of Israel he hath covered the daughter of Sion with a cloud c. and then it follows He hath cut off all the Horne of Israel The glory of God manifested in his appearings when he brought Israel out of Egypt is expressed by this Metaphor Hab. 3. 3 4. His glory covered the heavens c. His brightnesse was as the light He had hornes coming out of his hand c. So Psal 9● 10. My Horn saith the Psalmist shalt thou exalt like the horn of an Vnicorn that is thou shalt encrease my glory and dignity 2. Serength and Power So 't is used Lam. 2. 17. He hath set up the horn of thine Adversaries saith the Church that is he hath encreased the power and strength of thine Adversaries So when God threatens to weaken the power of Moab he doth it by this Metaphor Jerem. 48. 25. The Horn of Moab is cut off and his arme is broken The breaking of the arme doth fully expound the cutting off of the Horn. And when God promiseth to give his people power to subdue their enemies he useth this expression Micah 4. 13. Arise and thresh c. for I will make thine horne Iron Now then when Christ is called an Horn of salvation the meaning of the Holy Ghost is 1. The glory of his salvation 2. The strength of his salvation First The glory of his salvation Jesus Christ is a glorious Saviour and the salvation which he brings to his people is a glorious salvation in three respects 1. Consider the person of Christ. God raised up many hornes of salvation for his people when they were in distresse The History mentions them Neh. 9. 27. According to thy manifold mercy thou gavest them Saviours which saved them Gideon and Jepthah and Sampson c. they are called Saviours because they saved instrumentally the people of God from their enemies But they were but mean Saviours in respect of Christ his person 〈…〉 They were but men He God 〈…〉 person Though his glory was 〈…〉 eyes of carnal men yet they that had spiritual eyes did behold it John ● 14. We 〈…〉 glory the glory as of the 〈◊〉 begotten of the Father If the person of Christ be compared with the persons of other saviours it will appeare that he is a glorious Saviour All other horns of salvation were but wooden horns Christ is a golden Horn of salvation 2. Consider the nature of the salvation it self 'T is spiritual salvation 't is eternal salvation All those hornes of salvation which were raised up in sundry ages for the defence of the Church were but horns of outward salvation and of temporary salvation They saved onely the outward man and that neither but for a time The Church was in as much peril after they had wrought salvation for them as ever they were before When Gideon was dead the children of Israel fell into as great danger as they were in before So after the death of Jepthah and after the death of Sampson they were overwhelmed with as great hazards as before as you may reade in the story in the book of Judges But now Christ is a Horn of salvation to their soules as well as to their bodies He saves them from their spiritual enemies Sinne Satan as well as from men He saves them from the wrath to come 1 Thes 1. 10. And then he saves them for ever The Church never can be never will be in that danger again as they were before this Horn of salvation was raised He hath for ever perfected them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. 3. Consider the glorious manner of the working of this salvation Never any salvation so glorious at this There are three things in it 1 He saved the Elect by his own power The power by which all other hornes of salvation delivered the Church was by a power one of themselves the strength they had was none of their own but the power by which Christ saved and still saves his Church is from himselfe the Divinity impowered the Humanity Psal 98. 1. His own right hand and his own holy Arme hath gotten him the victory 2 He saved the Elect solely Other horns of salvation had the concurrence of many besides themselves Gideon and Jepthah and Sampson c. They blew the trumpet and gathered multitudes to assist them in the battels which they fought for the salvation of the Church All Israel came after them But this Horn of salvation wrought the Churches deliverance alone Esay 63. 3 5. I have troden the wine-presse alone c. He had no other Horne to help him He entred the field and fought the battel alone and by himself obtained the victory 3. He saved the Church by his own death Other hornes of salvation delivered the Church by the death of the enemy Ehud slew Eglon but he himself did not die Iudges 3. 21 22. Gideon shew Zeha and Zalmunna the enemies of Israel Judges 8. 21. but he himself was not slain But now this Horn of salvation got the victory by dying his Crosse was his Conquest He triumphed over principalities and powers on the Crosse as the Apostle speaks Col. 2. 15. He subdued all the horne of the 〈…〉 of his blood 〈…〉 life his grave is our victory 〈…〉 do fully prove that Jesus 〈…〉 salvation that is a gloriou●●●lvation 〈…〉 first Secondly The strength of his 〈…〉 Christ is a strong Saviour the salvation 〈…〉 he works for his people hath strength in it He hath raised up a mighty salvation for us so some translations render this text To this agrees that of the Prophet Psal 89. 19. I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the
Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1. 19. 'T is precious not onely because of the dignity of the person who shed it called therefore the blood of God Acts 20. 28. but because of the great value and merit of it and because of the precious effects of it By the vertue of this blood which Christ shed remission of sin is purchased the redemption of the Elect is perfected Rom. 3. 25. Heb. 9. 12. By his own blood he entred once into the holy place having obtained eternal redemption for us By the preciousnesse of this blood is God and man reconciled Col. 1. 20 21 32. By this blood is the conscience sanctified Heb. 9. 14. By this blood is the way to heaven opened for all the Elect Heb. 10. 19. The sufferings of Christ are so precious that if ten thousand worlds were there would be redundancy of merit in Christ to save them all This is the third 2. For the second Christ is so meanly esteemed of by men of the greatest part of men because of three things viz. Ignorance Pride Prejudice 1. They are ignorant of him The greatest part of the world is quite blinde in spiritual things 1 Cor. 2. 14. As in other spiritual things so in this of the worth of Christ A blinde man can see no more excellency in a precious stone then in a common stone A blinde Christian can see no more worth in Christ then in another person This you may see from that question which is propounded by the daughters of Jerusalem Cant. 5. 9. What is thy beloved more then another beloved O thou fairest among women c. Their very question bewrays their ignorance had they known any thing of him they would not have said What is thy beloved The wisdome of the Gospel whereby Jesus Christ is made known is hidden wisdom 'T is wisdom in a mystery 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. which none can understand but those that are savingly enlightened This ignorance of Christ under which the greatest part of men are held ariseth 1 Partly from the negligence and slothfulnesse that is in men They are idle and will not take paines to study the Word of God which sets out Christ They cast the Scriptures from them Our Saviour saith John 5. 39. That the Scriptures testifie of him men do not search this blessed book as they should either they read not at all or else they reade superficially they do not pray that God would discover Christ to them in and by the Word Hence they are ignorant of him 2 Partly from their Atheistical unbelief of what they heare reported by others Though they cannot but hear sometimes the reports of Christ in the publick Ministry yet they will give no ass●nt of faith to them but oppose and reject them as the fancies of men This is that which the Prophet alledgeth Esay 53. 1. Who hath beleeved our report and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed Ex iis qui Evangelicum audiunt vix centesimum quemque fidelem fore saith Calvin upon the place Scarce the hundreth part of those that heare the Gospel do yeild a cordial assent to the Gosspel 3 Partly from a judiciary hand of God upon them God usually punisheth voluntary blindnesse with a penal and judiciary blindnesse This is that which the Prophet is taught of God Esay 6. ult Go and preach to this people saying Seeing ye shall see and not perceive and hearing ye shall heare and not understand c. The Apostle makes application of this Text to the unbeleeving Jewes who would not receive what he had with so much clearnesse proved concerning Jesus Christ both out of Moses and out of the Prophets Acts 28. 23 24 25 26. When men that live under the Gospel shut their own eyes God doth ratifie it by an act of his justice and saith Be thou blinded for ever When a man hardens his own heart God is pleased to ratifie it in heaven and saith Let that heart never be softned See that of our Saviour to this purpose John 12. 37 c. Now because men neglect the study of the Gospel which shewes what Christ is because they refuse to assent to and close with what the Ministers of God report out of the Gospel concerning Christ because God punisheth the voluntary blinding their eyes with a judicial blinding therefore do they remaine ignorant of the preciousnesse of Christ And because they are ignorant of him therefore they disesteeme him 2. Their pride The greatest part of men even of those that live under the Gospel are puft up with arrogancy and self-conceit They dreame that they are in so good a condition already that Christ cannot make them better They are ful of vaine confidences some fleshly boasting or other they have in their hearts some carnal City of refuge they erect for themselves besides Christ and this makes Christ lesse precious to them then he would otherwise he We are the circumcision saith the Apostle which worship God in the Spirit and rejoyce in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the flesh Phil. 3. 3. He that creates any fleshly ground of confidence to himself and all confidences are fleshly which are not bottom'd on Christ such a man will not much rejoyce in Christ Jesus Now there are in the mindes of men abundance of false confidences and carnal imaginations the Apostle hints at them though he do not expresly name them 2 Corinth 10. 4 5. There are many significant words used by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 munitions fortifications strongs holds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reasonings Abundance of fond reasonings are in the mindes of men they reason themselves into heaven upon very poor and slender premisses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strange heightnings of themselves have men in which they rejoyce which will be found groundlesse another day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Swarmes of foolish thoughts have men by nature which they bandy up and down in their soules One man makes wealth his strong hold Another reasons himselfe into heaven because of some Church Priviledge A third is mightily heightned upon his civil righteousnesse A fourth thinks all is well with him because others have a good opinion of him Every man by nature abounds with some or all of these Therefore is Christ so mean and inconsiderable in their esteeme 3. They are prejudiced against Christ Though no man hath any reason or good Argument against Christ yet have they many prejudices which they take up against him And these prejudices lay him low in their hearts What those prejudices are I shall name when I come to handle that in the eighth Verse where Christ is said to be a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence I shall shew what prejudices men have against his Doctrine worship followers c. And while prejudices lie against Christ he will never finde that esteeme which is meet A man can never think highly of any person or thing against which he