Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n earth_n power_n see_v 8,567 5 3.5162 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A45465 Sermons preached by ... Henry Hammond. Hammond, Henry, 1605-1660. 1675 (1675) Wing H601; ESTC R30726 329,813 328

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

place But if this soul of man be left to its own nature to its own fluid wild incontinent condition it presently runs out into an Ocean never stayes or considers or consults but rushes head-long into all inordinacy having neither the reins of reason nor God to keep it in it never thinks of either of them and unless by chance or by Gods mercy it fall into their hands 't is likely to run riot for ever Being once let loose it ranges as if there were neither power on earth to quell nor in Heaven to punish it Thus do you see how fluid how inconstant the soul is of its own accord how prone it is how naturally inclined to run over like a stream over the banks and if it be not swathed and kept in if it be left to the licentious condition of it self how ready is it to contemn both Reason and God and run head-long into Atheism Nay we need not speak so mercifully of it this very licentiousness is the actual renouncing of Religion this very walking after their own lusts is not only a motive to this sin of scoffing but the very sin it self A false Conception in the womb is only a rude confused ugly Chaos a meer lump of flesh of no kind of figure or resemblance gives only disappointment danger and torment to the Mother 'T is the soul at its entrance which defines and trims and polishes into a body that gives it eyes and ears and legs and hands which before it had not distinctly and severally but only rudely altogether with that mass or lump Thus is it with the Man till Religion hath entred into him as a soul to inform and fashion him as long as he lives thus at large having no terms or bounds or limits to his actions having no form or figure or certain motion defined him he is a Mola a meer lump of man an arrant Atheist you cannot discern any features or lineaments of a Christian in him he hath neither eyes to see nor ears to hear nor hands to practise any duty that belongs to his peace Only 't is Religion must take him up must smooth and dress him over and according to its Etymon must religare swathe and bind up this loose piece of flesh must animate and inform him must reduce him to some set form of Christianity or else he is likely after a long and fruitless travel to appear a deformed monstrous Atheist But not to deal any longer upon Simile's lest we seem to confound and perplex a truth by explaining it I told you the licentious voluptuous life was it self perfect Heathenism For can you imagine a man to be any but a Gentile who hath abandoned all love all awe all fear all care of God any one of which would much contract and draw him into compass who hath utterly put off every garb of a Christian who hath enjoy'd the reins so long that now he is not sensible or at least contemns the curb or snaff●le if he be but check't with it gets it in his teeth and runs away with it more fiercely The Heathen are noted not so much that they worshipt no God at all but that they worshipped so many and none of them the true Every great friend they had every delight and pleasure every thing that was worth praying for straight proved their God and had its special Temple erected for its Worship So that do but imagine one of them every day worshipping every God whom he acknowledged in its several Oratory spending his whole life and that too little too in running from one Temple to another and you have described our licentious man posting on perpetually to his sensual devotions worshipping adoring and sacrificing every minute of his life to some Idol-vanity and bestowing as much pains and charges in his prophane heathenish pleasures as ever the Gentiles did on their false gods or the most supererogating Papist on their true We are wont to say in Divinity and that without an Hyperbole that every commission of sin is a kind of Idolatry an incurvation and bending down of the soul to some creature which should alwayes be erect looking up to Heaven from whence it was infused like water naturally inclined to climb and ascend as high as the fountain or head from whence it sprang And then certainly a licentious life is a perpetual Idolatry a supineness and proneness and incurvation of the soul to somewhat that deserves to be called an Idol i. e. either in St. Pauls acceptation of it nothing an Idol is nothing 1 Cor. viii 4. or else in the most honourable signification only an Image or some rude likeness or representation of God We are the Image of God our selves and whatsoever is below us is but an imperfect draught of him containing some lineaments some confused resemblances of his power which created them have no being of their own but only as shadows which the light doth cast And therefore every love every bowe every cringe which we make to any creature is the wooing and worshipping of an Image at best in plain terms of an Idol nothing What degree then of Idolatry have they attained to who every minute of their lives bow down and worship make it their trade and calling for ever to be a solliciting some pleasure or other Some exquisite piece of sensuality to bless and make them happy which have no other shrines to set up but only to their own lust to which they do so crouch and creep and crawl that they are never able to stand up right again like those trees which the Papists talk of which by bowing to our Ladies house when in walks by the wood toward Loretto have ever since stood stooping Thus do you see how the latter part of my Text hath overtook the former the walking after his own lusts becomes a scoffer the licentious man proceeded Atheist and that with ease his very voluptuous life is a kind of Atheism and the reasons of this are obvious you need not seek or search far for them For first this walking in their own lusts notes an habit gathered out of many acts he hath walked there a long while and therefore now hath the skill of it walks on confidently and carelesly without any rub or thought of stopping And contrary to this the worship of God of which Atheism is a privation is an holy religious habit of Piety and Obedience Now we know two contrary habits cannot consist or be together in the same subject An habit and its opposite privation are incompetible light and darkness at the same time though they may seem to meet sometimes as in twilight but for two opposite positive habits never any mans conceit was so bold or phantastical as to joyn them you cannot imagine one but you must remove the other You may suppose a man distempered or weak which is a privation of health and yet suppose him pretty healthy as long as his natural strength is able
wooing again to tempt and sollicite even temptations to give gifts to all thy lovers to hire them that they may come unto thee on every side for thy whoredoms vers 33. of this Chapter This is a degree of stupidity and insolence of insatiable pride and lust that neither the iniquity of Sodom nor stubbornness of Capernaum nor the Rhetoricall'st Phrase almost in the very Scripture can express but only this in my Text which comes in the last place with a marvellous Emphasis Imperious The work c. In which one Epithet many of the highest degrees of sin are contein'd 1. Confidence and shamelesness in sinning an imperious Whore mulier impudicae libidinis one that is better acquainted with lust than to blush when she meets with it modesty and coyness are but infirmities rather than good qualities of youth effects of ignorance and tenderness and unexperience in sin a little more conversation in the world will season men to a bolder temper in time instruct them that this modesty is the only thing they ought to be asham'd of 'T is not ingenuity but cowardise a poor degenerous pusillanimous humour to go fearfully about a vice to sin tremblingly and with regrets This country disposition or soft temper when we come abroad into the world amongst men 't is quite out-dated Thus is impudence and a forehead of steel grown not the armour only but even the complexion of every man-like spirit He is not fit for the Devils war that is so poorly appointed either with courage or munition as to be discomfited by a look 't is part of his honour not to fear disgrace and his reputation not to stand upon so poor a thing as reputation 2. Imperious taking all authority into her own hands scorning to be afraid either of God or Devil quae regno posita neminem timeat having fancied her self in a throne never thinks either of enemy to endanger or of superiour to quell her but sins confidently in Cathedrâ Psal I. 1. in state in security and at ease and never doubts or fears to be removed And this is most primarily observable in the Jews depending on their carnal Prerogatives as being of Abrahams seed and yet thus also may we suspect do many among us some tying Gods decree of Election to their persons and individual entities without any reference to their qualifications or demeanors others by a premature perswasion that they are in Christ and so in such an irreversible estate that all the temptations all the Devils nay all the sins in Hell shall never dispossess them Others resolv'd That God can see no sin in his children in imitation of Marcus in Irenaeus whose Heresie or rather Fancie it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by the redemption they were become invisible Upon these I say and other grounds how true I will not now examine do many rash presumers abuse the grace of God unto wantonness never fear to sin because they need not fear to be punished never cease to provoke God because they are sure he is their friend and being resolved of him as a Saviour contemn him as a Judge Multiad sapientiam pervenissent c. saith he Many had come to learning enough had they not believed too soon they had attain'd it No such hindrance to proficiency as too timely a conceit of knowledge Thus might we ordinarily guess some men to have been in good towardly estates had they not made too much hast to conceive so and having once possest themselves of heaven on such slight grounds such as not a solemn examination of themselves but some gleams of their fancy had bestowed upon them 't is no wonder if all the effects of their assurance be spiritual security and supine confidence in sinning they have hid their heads in heaven by their vain speculation and then think their whole body must needs be safe be it never so open and naked and bare to all temptations Nay be they up to the shoulders in carnality nay earth nay hell yet seeing caput inter nubila their head is in the clouds there is no danger or fear of drowning be it never so deep or myrie This was Laodice as estate Rev. III. 17. She fancied her self great store of spiritual riches brought in an Inventory of a very fair estate I am rich and am encreased in goods and have need of nothing any more accession even of the graces of God would be but superfluousand burthensome not knowing all this while That she was wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked There is not a blessing upon earth that can any way hope or seem to parallel a sober wellgrounded assurance here that in time we shall be Saints in Heaven 't is such a Paradise upon Earth that Heaven it self seems but a second part of it differing from it rather in degrees and external accomplishments than in any distinct specifical kind of happiness The Lord of Heaven by his mighty working when it shall please him begin and consummate it in us But then to make use of this Patent of Heaven to engage us further in the deep to keep us not from the Devils works but from his attachments only as a protection to secure our misdemeanors not to defend our innocence for a man thus appointed to venture on a Precipice as the Turks saith Busbequius are wont to try the goodness of an horse by riding him post down the steepest hill to out-dare the Devil in his own territories as Christ is said to descend thither to triumph over him to besiege and set upon Hell presuming of our interest in Heaven as of a Magical Charm and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep us safe from death or maims in the midst of enemies nay of friends this is a piece of spiritual pride of Lucifer's own inscribing an imperious majestick garb of impiety a triumphant or processionary pomp an affected stately gate in sin that nothing but a violent rending power of the Spirit or a boisterous tempestuous judgment can force us out of Such a prophane Fiduciary as this which hath even defiled Heaven by possessing it such an Hellish Saint is like to be torn out of the third Heaven into which his speculation hath rapt him and after a long dream of Paradise find himself awake in Hell And from this degree of religious prophaneness this confidence in sinning on presumption that we are under grace from this premature resolution that no sin no Devil can endanger us from this imperious whoredom as from the danger of Hell Good Lord deliver us 3. Imperious signifies more distinctly a tyrannical Lording behaviour usurping and exercising authority over all And this the Apostate Jew and Christian Libertine doth 1. By tyrannizing over himself i. e. his faculties and estate 2. Over all that come near him Over himself by urging and driving on in a carnal course not patient of any regrets and resistances that a tender
it For 't is no less then atheism which the scorners of the last age are to fall upon by walking after their own lusts 2 Pet. iii. 3. And thus was the Pharisees practice here who makes use of his own authority to deny Christ 't was the Pharisees that said Have any of the Pharisees believed on him There is not a more dangerous mother of heresies in the midst of piety then this one that our phansie first assures us that we have the spirit and then that every phansie of ours is Theopneust the work of the spirit There are a multitude of deceits got altogether here 1. We make every idle perswasion of our own the evidence of Gods spirit then we joyn infallibility to the person being confident of the gift then we make every breath of our nostrils and flame that can break out of our hearts an immediate effect of the spirit and fire which hath spiritually enlivened us and then we are sure it is authentical and all this while we never examine either the ground or deductions from it but take all upon trust from that everlasting deceiver our own heart which we ought to sit upon and judge of by proofs and witnesses by comparing it with other mens dictates probably as godly perhaps more learned but certainly more impartial judges of thee then thou canst be of thy self Lastly If the word of God speak distinctly and clearly enforce as here by miracles done before all men to their astonishment and redargution then will I not stay my belief to wait on or follow the learnedst man in the world when Christ himself speaks to my eyes the proudest eminentest Pharisee in earth or hell nay if any of their sect have crowded into Heaven shall not be able to charm my ear or lay any clog upon my understanding So that you see the Pharisees argument in that case was sophistical the matter being so plain to them that they needed no advicè His works bore witness of him John v. 36. yet in the general it holds probable and learning remains a good guide still though an ill Master in matters of Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first thing we undertook to demonstrate And this we should draw down yet lower to our practice and that variously but that almost every Proposition insisted on hath in part spoken to your affections and so prevented store of uses This only must not be omitted For Scholars to learn to set a value on their precious blessing which God hath vouchsafed them above all the world beside to bless God infinitely that they understand and conceive what they are commanded to believe this I am sure of there is not a greater and more blessed priviledge besides Gods spirit which our humane condition is capable of then this of learning and specially divine knowledge of which Aristotle himself witnesseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 none is better then it As long as we have no evidence or demonstration from that which yet it most nearly concerns us to rely upon we cannot enjoy without an immediate supernatural irradiation a tranquillity and consistency of spirit we cannot peremptorily have resolved our selves that we have built upon the rock every temptation proves a discouragement to us many horrours take hold of us and sometimes we must needs fall to that low ebb not far from despair which the Apostles were in Luke xxiv 22. We had trusted but now we know not what to think of it that this was he that should have redeemed Israel But to see all the Articles of my faith ratified and confirmed to my understanding to see the greatest treasure and inheritance in the world sealed and delivered to me in my hand written in a character and language that I am perfectly skilled in O what a comfort is this to a Christian soul O what a fulness of joy to have all the mysteries of my salvation transcribed out of the book of the Lord and written in my heart where I can turn and survey and make use of them as much and as often as I will Nay where I have them without book though there were neither Father nor Bible in the world able out of my own stock to give an account nay a reason of my faith before the perversest Papist Heathen or Devil This serves me instead of having lived and conversed and been acquainted with Christ By this I have my fingers pit into the print of the nails and my hands thrust into his side and am as sure as ever Thomas was I see him as palpably as he that handled him that he is my Lord and my God 'T was observed by the Philosopher as an act generally practised among Tyrants to prohibit all Schools and means of learning and education in the Commonwealth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to suffer neither learning nor Schools nor common meetings that men being kept blind might be sure to obey and tyrannical commands through ignorance be mistaken for fair government And thus did Julian interdict the Christians all manner of literature and chiefly Philosophy for fear saith Nazianzen they should be able to grapple with the Heathen and cut off Goliah's head with his own weapon The continuance of these arts of spiritual tyranny you may observe in the prescribed stupidity and commanded ignorance of the Laity through all Italy All which must call for a superlative measure of thanks to be exprest not in our tongues and hearts only but in our lives and actions from us I say who have obteined not only a knowledge of his laws but almost a vision of his secrets and for as much as concerns our eternal bliss do even see things as they were acted having already comprehended in our reason not only in our faith the most impossible things in nature the bredth and length and depth and height of the conceived incarnate and crucified God and if all that will not serve our turn but we must press into his cabinet-secrets invade the book of life and oversee and divulge to all men abscondita Domini Dei nostri then are Gods mercies unworthily repaid by us and those indulgences which were to bestow civility upon the world have only taught us to be more rude In sum the reallest thanks we can perform to God for this inestimable prize is modestly and softly to make use of it 1. To the confirming of others faith and 2. to the expressing of our own For 1. he is the deepest scholar saith the Philosopher who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 best able to teach other men what himself conceives and then 2. he hath the habit most radicated who hath prest it down into his heart and there sow'd a seed which shall encrease and fructify and spread and flourish laden with the fruits of a lively faith He is the truest scholar that hath fed upon learning that hath nourished and grown and walked and lived in the strength of it And till I see you thrive and
yea sum of our belief we deny and bandy against all our lives long If the story of Christ coming to judgment set down in the xxv of Matthew after the 30. verse had ever entred through the doors of our ears to the inward closets of our hearts 't is impossible but we should observe and practise that one single duty there required of us Christ there as a Judge exacts and calls us to account for nothing in the world but only works of mercy and according to the satisfaction which we are able to give him in that one point he either entertains or repels us and therefore our care and negligence in this one business will prove us either Christians or Infidels But alas 't is too plain that in our actions we never dream either of the judgment or the arraignment our stupid neglect of this one duty argues us not only unchristian but unnatural Besides our Alms-deeds which concern only the outside of our neighbour and are but a kind of worldly mercy there are many more important but cheaper works of mercy as good counsel spiritual instructions holy education of them that are come out of our loyns or are committed to our care seasonable reproof according to that excellent place Lev xix 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart but in any wise reprove him a care of carrying our selves that we may not scandal or injure or offer violence to the soul and tender conscience of him that is flexible to follow us into any riot These and many other works of mercy in the highest degree as concerning the welfare of other mens souls and the chief thing required of us at the day of judgment are yet so out-dated in our thoughts so utterly defaced and blotted out in the whole course of our lives that it seems we never expect that Christ in his Majesty as a Judge whom we apprehend and embrace and hug in his humility as a Saviour Beloved till by some severe hand held over our lives and particularly by the daily study and exercise of some work of mercy or other we demonstrate the sincerity of our belief the Saints on Earth and Angels in Heaven will shrewdly suspect that we do only say over that part of our Creed that we believe only that which is for our turn the sufferings and satisfactions of Christ which cost us nothing but do not proceed to his office of a Judge do not either fear his judgments or desire to make our selves capable of his mercies Briefly whosoever neglects or takes no notice of this duty of exercising works of mercy whatsoever he brags of in his theory or speculation in his heart either denies or contemns Christ as Judge and so destroys the sum of his Faith and this is another kind of secret Atheism Fourthly Our Creed leads us on to a belief and acknowledgement of the Holy Ghost and 't is well we have all conn'd his name there for otherwise I should much fear that it would be said of many nominal Christians what is reported of the Ephesian Disciples Acts xix 2. They have not so much as heard whether there be an Holy Ghost or no. But not to suspect so much ignorance in any Christian we will suppose indeed men to know whatsoever they profess and enquire only whether our lives second our professions or whether indeed they are meer Infidels and Atheistical in this business concerning the Holy Ghost How many of the ignorant sort which have learnt this name in their Catechism or Creed have not yet any further use to put it to but only to make up the number of the Trinity have no special office to appoint for him no special mercy or gift or ability to beg of him in the business of their salvation but mention him only for fashion sake not that they ever think of preparing their bodies or souls to be Temples worthy to entertain him not that they ever look after the earnest of the Spirit in their hearts 2 Cor. i. 22. Further yet how many better learned amongst us do not yet in our lives acknowledge him in that Epithet annext to his title the Holy Ghost i. e. not only eminently in himself holy but causally producing the same quality in us from thence called the sanctifying and renewing Spirit How do we for the most part fly from and abandon and resist and so violently deny him when he once appears to us in this Attribute When he comes to sanctifie us we are not patient of so much sowreness so much humility so much non-conformity with the world as he begins to exact of us we shake off many blessed motions of the Spirit and keep our selves within garrison as far as we can out of his reach lest at any turn he should meet with and we should be converted Lastly the most ordinary morally qualified tame Christians amongst us who are not so violent as to profess open arms against this Spirit how do they yet reject him out of all their thoughts How seldom do many peaceable orderly men amongst us ever observe their wants or importune the assistance of this Spirit In sum 't was a shrewd speech of the Fathers which will cast many fair out-sides at the bar for Atheists That the life of an unregenerate man is but the life of an Heathen and that 't is our regeneration only that raises us up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from being still meer Gentiles He that believes in his Creed the person nay understands in the Schools the Attributes and gifts of the Holy Ghost and yet sees them only in the fountain neither finds nor seeks for any effects of them in his own soul he that is still unregenerate and continues still gaping and yawning stupid and senseless in this his condition is still for all his Creed and learning in effect an Atheist And the Lord of Heaven give him to see and endeavours to work and an heart to pray and his Spirit to draw and force him out of this condition Fifthly Not to cramp in every Article of our Creed into this Discourse we will only insist on two more We say therefore that we believe the forgiveness of sins and 't is a blessed confidence that all the treasures in the world cannot equal But do our selves keep equipage and hand in hand accompany this profession Let me catechize you a while You believe the forgiveness of sins but I hope not absolutely that the sufferings of Christ shall effectually clear every mans score at the day of judgment well then it must be meant only of those that by repentance and faith are grafted into Christ and shall appear at that great marriage in a wedding garment which shall be acknowledged the livery and colours of the Lamb. But do our lives ever stand to this explication and restriction of the Article Do they ever expect this beloved remission by performing the condition of repentance Do we ever
large but in a nearer obligation as a Spouse We shall more opportunely handle that in the next Part where we shall consider Indulgence in sin as the work of a whorish Woman where whoredome noting adultery presupposes wedlock and consists in unfaithfulness to the Husband the thing in the next place to be discovered The Work c. That Christ is offered by his Father to all the Church for an Husband that he waits and begs and sends presents to us all to accept of the proposal the whole Book of Canticles that Song of spiritual love that affectionate wooing Sonnet will demonstrate That every Christian accepts of this Match and is Sacramentally espoused to Christ at his Baptism his being call'd by the Husbands Name imports For that is the meaning of the phrase Isai IV. 1. Let us be called by thy Name i. e. marry us That Faith is the only thing that makes up the Match and entitles us to his Name and Estate is observable both from many places of Scripture and by the opposition which is set betwixt a Christian and all others Jews and Infidels betwixt the Spouse and either the destitute Widow or barren Virgin the ground of which is only Faith So then every Christian at his Baptism being supposed a Believer and thereby espoused sacramentally to Christ and so obliged to all the observances as partaker of all the priviledges of a Wife doth at every unchaste thought or adulterous motion offend against the fidelity promised in marriage by every actual breach of this faith is for the present guilty of Adultery but by indulgence in it is downright a whore i. e. either one that came to Christ with an unchaste adulterous love to gain somewhat not for any sincere affection to his person but insidious to his estate and having got that is soon weary of his person or else one that came to him with pure virgin thoughts resolving her self a perpetual captive to his love and never to be tyred with those beloved fetters of his embraces but in time meets with a more flattering amiable piece of beauty and is soon hurried after that and so forgetteth both her vows and love Thus shall you see an handsome modest maidenly Christian espoused to Christ at the Font and fully wedded by his Ring at Confirmation Nay come nearer yet to him and upon many solemn expressions of fidelity and obedience vouchsafed the seal of his very heart in the Sacrament of his Blood Another that hath liv'd with him a long while in uniform constant loyalty noted by all the neighborhood for an absolute Wife a grave solemn matronly Christian yet either upon the allurements of some fresh sprightful sin or the sollicitations of an old-acquaintance lust the insinuations of some wily intruder or a specious shew of a glorious glittering temptation or when these are all wanting upon the breaking out of an evil heart of unbelief which some outward restraints formerly kept in departing from the living God profess open neglect and despight against the Husband which before they so wooed and flattered and made love to 'T were long to number out to you and give you by tale a Catalogue of those defections and adulterous practices which Christians are ordinarily observed to be guilty of which whether they go so far as to make a divorce betwixt the soul and Christ or whether only to provoke him to jealousie whether by an intercision of Grace and Faith or by an interruption and suspension of the acts I will not now examine I will go no farther than the Text which censures it here as a piece of spiritual whoredom of treacherous unfaithful dealing to be light unconstant and false to Christ whose Spouse they are esteemed whose Name they bear and Estate they pretend title to And so indeed it is for what greater degree of unfaithfulness can be imagined What fouler breach of Matrimonial Covenants than to value every ordinary prostitute sin before the precious chastest embraces of an Husband and a Saviour to be caught and captivate with the meanest vanity upon earth when it appears in competition with all the treasures in Heaven Besides that spiritual Armor which Faith bestows on a Christian Eph. vi 16. sufficient to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked or as the Greek hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that wicked one the Devil methinks there is a kind of moral influence from Faith on any wise prudent heart enough to enliven and animate and give it spirit against the force or threatnings of any the strongest temptation and to encourage him in the most crabbed uncooth disconsolate undertakings of godly obedience For what sin didst thou ever look upon with the fullest delight of all thy senses in the enjoying of which thy most covetous troublesome importunate lusts would all rest satisfied but one minute of Heaven truly represented to thy heart would infinitely out-weigh A Turk is so affected with the expectation of his carnal Paradise those Catholick everlasting Stews which he fancies to himself for heaven that he will scarce taste any wine all his life-time for fear of disabling and depriving him of his lust he will be very stanch from sin that he may merit and be sure to have his fill of it And then certainly one clear single apprehension of that infinite bliss which the Eye of Faith represents to us were enough to ravish a world of souls to preponderate all other delights which the most poetical fancy of man or Devil could possess us with Were but the love of Christ to us ever suffered to come into our hearts as Species to the Eye by introreception had we but come to the least taste and relish of it what would we not do to recompence and answer and entertain that love what difficulty would it not ingratiate to us what exquisite pleasure or carnal rival would not be cheap and contemptible in its presence If thou hast but faith to the size of a grain of Mustard-seed speak to this mountain and it shall be removed the tallest cumbersome unweildy temptation which all the giants in Hell can mould together as once they are feign'd to do the Hills to get up to Heaven Pelion Ossae c. if thou dost but live or breath by Faith shall vanish at the least blast of thy nostrils The clear representation of more valuable pleasures and more horrid dangers than any the flesh can propose certainly attending the performances or breach of our Vow of Wedlock is enough to charm and force us to perpetual chastity to fright or scoff all other wooers out of our sights to reprobate and damn them as soon as they appear There is on this husband of ours a confluence of all infinite imaginable delights which whosoever hath but once tasted but from a kiss of his mouth he is not unconstant but sottish if he ever be brought to any new embraces But then openly to contemn to profess neglects to go a
amongst us to witness his compassion to satisfie for us by his own death and attach himself for our liberty to undergo such hard conditions rather than be forced to a cheap severity and that he might appear to love his Enemies to hate his Son In brief to fulfil the Work without any aid required from us and make Salvation ready to our hands as Manna is called in the sixth of Wisdom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bread baked and sent down ready from Heaven Wisd xvi 20. to drop it in our mouths and exact nothing of us but to accept of it this is an act of love and singleness that all the malice we carry about us knows not how to suspect so far from possibility of a treacherous intent or double dealing that if I were an Heathen nay a Devil I would bestow no other appellation on the Christians God than what the Author of the Book of Wisdom doth so often 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the friend or the lover of Souls But this is a vulgar though precious subject and therefore I shall no longer insist on it Only before I leave it would I could see the effect of it exprest in our Souls as well as acknowledged in our looks your hearts ravished as thorowly as your brains convinc'd your breasts as open to value and receive this superlative mercy as your tongues to confess it then could I triumph over Hell and death and scoff them out of countenance then should the Devil be reduced to his old pittance confined to an empty corner of the World and suffer as much by the solitariness as darkness of his abode all his engines and arts of torment should be busied upon himself and his whole exercise to curse Christ for ever that hath thus deprived him of Associates But alas we are too sollicitous in the Devil's behalf careful to furnish him with Companions to keep him warm in the midst of fire 't is to be feared we shall at last thrust him out of his Inheritance 'T is a probable argument that God desires our Salvation because that Hell wheresoever it is whether at the Center of the Earth or Concave of the Moon must needs be far less than Heaven and that makes us so besiege the gate as if we feared weshould find no room there We begin our journey betimes left we should be forestall'd and had rather venture a throng or crowd in Hell than to expect that glorious liberty of the Sons of God 'T is to be feared that at the day of Judgment when each Body comes to accompany its Soul in torment Hell must be let out and enlarge its territories to receive its Guests Beloved there is not a Creature here that hath reason to doubt but Christ was sent to die for him and by that death hath purchased his right to life Only do but come in do but suffer your selves to live and Christ to have died do not uncrucifie Christ by crucifying him again by your unbelief do not disclaim the Salvation that even claims right and title to you and then the Angels shall be as full of joy to see you in Heaven as God is willing nay desirous to bring you thither and Christ as ready to bestow that Inheritance upon you at his second coming as at his first to purchase it Nothing but Infidelity restrains Christs sufferings and confines them to a few Were but this one Devil cast out of the World I should be straight of Origens Religion and preach unto you Universal Catholick Salvation A second Argument of God's good meaning towards us of his willingness that we should live is the calling of the Gentiles the dispatching of Posts Heralds over the whole ignorant Heathen World and giving them notice of this treasure of Christs blood Do but observe what a degree of prophaneness unnatural abominations the Gentile World was then arrived to as you may read in all their stories and in the first to the Romans how well grown and ripe for the Devil Christ found them all of them damnably Superstitious and Idolatrous in their Worship damnably unclean in their lives nay engaged for ever in this rode of damnation by a Law they had made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 never to entertain any new Laws or Religion not to innovate though it were to get Salvation as besides their own Histories may be gathered out of Act. xvii 18. And lastly consider how they were hook'd in by the Devil to joyn in crucifying of Christ that they might be guilty of that blood which might otherwise have saved them and then you will find no argument to perswade you 't was possible that God should have any design of mercy on them Peter was so resolv'd of the point that the whole succession of the Gentiles should be damned that God could scarce perswade him to go and Preach to one of them Act. x. He was fain to be cast into a Trance and see a Vision about it and for all that he is much troubled about the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their prophaneness and uncleanness that they were not fit for an Apostle to defile himself about their Conversion And this was the general opinion of all the Jews they of the Circumcision were astonished at the news Act. x. 45. Nay this is it that the Angels wondred at so when they saw it wrought at the Church by Pauls Ministery never dreaming it possible till it was effected as may appear Eph. iii. 10. This was the Mystery which from the beginning of the World had been hid in God V. 9. One of God's Cabinet Counsels a Mercy decreed in secret that no Creature ever wist of till it was performed And in this behalf are we all being lineally descended from the Gentiles bound over to an infinite measure both of humiliation and gratitude for our deliverance from the guilt and reign of that second original sin that Heathenism of our Ancestors and Catholick damnation that Sixteen hundred years ago we were allinvolv'd in Beloved we were long ago set right again and the obligation lies heavy upon us to shew this change to have been wrought in us to some purpose to prove our selves Christians in grain so fixed and established that all the Devils in Hell shall not be able to reduce us again to that abhorred condition If we that are thus called out shall fall back after so much Gospel to Heathen practices and set up Shrines and Altars in our hearts to every poor delight that our sottishness can call a God if we are not called out of their sins as well as out of their ignorance then have we advanced but the further toward Hell we are still but Heathen Gospellers our Christian Infidelity and practical Atheism will but help to charge their guilt upon us and damn us the deeper for being Christians Do but examine your selves on this one Interrogatory whether this calling the Gentiles hath found any effect in your
to Countenance them And 't is much to be feared they are otherwise possessed and rather than this shall not be followed Christ shall be left alone rather than they shall speak in vain the Word it self shall be put to silence and if they which were appointed to take and bring him to judgment shall be caught by him they came to apprehend and turn their accusations into reverence the Pharisees will not be without their reply they are doctors in the Law and therefore for a need can be their own Advocates Then answered the Pharisees are ye also deceived have any of the rulers and Pharisees believed on him Concerning the infidelity of the rulers in my Text as being not so directly appliable to my audience I shall forbear to speak My discourse shall retire it self to the Pharisee as being a professor of learning brought up at the University in Jerusalem and God grant his vices and infidelity be not also Academical The words we shall divide not into several parts but considerations and read them either as spoken by the Pharisee or recorded by the Evangelist In the first we have the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rational force of them as they are part of an argument that they which believed in Christ were deceived sub hâc formâ he that would judge of the truth of his life is to look which way the greatest scholars are affected and then though in that case it concluded fallaciously yet the argument was probable and the point worth our discussion that the judgment of learning and learned men is much to be heeded in matters of Religion In the second we have the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rational sense of the words being resolved as affirmative interrogations are wont into a negative Proposition Have any c. The Pharisees did not believe on him i. e. the greatest Scholars are not always the best Christians And first of the first the authority of learning and learned men in matters of Religion noted from the logical force of the words Have any c. Amongst other acts of Gods Providence and wise Oeconomy of all things there is not one more observable than the succession of his Church and dispensation of his most precious gifts attending it you shall not in any age find the flourishing of learning sever'd from the profession of Religion and the proposition shall be granted without exception Gods people were always the learnedst part of the world Before the flood we are not so confident as to define and set down the studies and proficiency in all kinds of knowledge amongst those long-liv'd ancients how far soever they went belongs little to us The Deluge made a great chasm betwixt us and 't would be hard for the liveliest eyes to pierce at such distance through so much water let those who fancy the two Pillars in which all learning was engraven the one of brick the other of marble to prevent the malice either of fire or water please themselves with the fable and seem to have deduc'd all arts from Adam Thus far 't is agreed on that in those times every Father being both a Priest and a King in his own Family bestowed on his son all knowledge both secular and sacred which himself had attained to Adam by tradition instructing Seth and Seth Enoch in all knowledge as well as righteousness For 't is Josephus his observation that whilest Cain and his progeny employed themselves about wicked and illiberal inventions groveling upon the earth Seth and his bore up their thoughts as well as eyes towards heaven and observed the course and discipline of the stars wherein it was easy to be exquisite every mans age shewing him the several conjunctions and oppositions and other appearances of the luminaries and so needing no successors to perfect his observations Hence Philo calls Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and says his knowledge in Astronomy led him to the notice of a Deity and that his sublime speculation gave him the name of Abram a high exalted Father before his Faith had given the better Compellation of Abraham Father of many Nations hence from him 1 Chaldaea 2 Aegypt 3 Greece came all to the skill they brag of so that Proclus made a good conjecture that the Wisdom of the Chaldaeans was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gift of some of the gods it coming from Abraham who was both a friend and in a manner an acquaintance of the true God and far ancienter and wiser than any of their false In sum all learning as well as religion was pure and classical only among the Hebrews as may appear by Moses in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the only true natural Philosophy that ever came into the World so that even Longinus which took the story of the Creation to be a fable yet commends Moses his expression of it Let there be light and there was light for a speech admirably suited to a God for the greatest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or sublimity that any Rhetorician could strain for And Demetrius Phalareus commends the Pentateuch to Ptolomy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as the most Philosophical accurate discourse he had ever heard of And if by chance any scraps or shreds of knowledge were ever scattered among the Gentiles they certainly fell from the Chaldaeans table from whence in time the poor beggarly world gathered such baskets-ful that they began to feed full and be in good likeing and take upon them to be richer than their Benefactors and Athens at last begins to set up as the only University in the World But 't is Austins observation that 't was in respect of Christ and for the propagation of the Church that learning was ever suffered to travel out of Jewry Christ was to be preached and received among the Gentiles and therefore they must be civiliz'd before-hand lest such holy things being cast abruptly before swine should only have been trampled on or as Moses his books falling among the ●oets have been only distorted into fables turned also into prodigies Metamorphoses and Mythical divinity Cum enim prophetae c. Under Abraham and Moses whilest the learning and the sermons of the Prophets were for Israels use the Heathen world was as ignorant as irreligious but about Romulus his time when the Prophecies of Christ which belonged also to the Gentiles were no longer whispered but proclaimed by the mouth of Hosea Amos Isaiah Micah and Jonas from the reign of Uzziah to Hezekiah Kings of Judah then also began learning to flourish abroad among the Nations to dilate it self over the World Greece began to hearken after wisdom and brag of its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thales and the like ut fontes divinae humanae sapientiae pariter erupisse videantur That then secular knowledge might dare to shed it self among the nations when Christ began to be revealed the expectation of the Gentiles 'T were
want and necessity put them upon and now they have got their ends all those are soon out-dated they have faith and so are justified and sure of their estate and so now they may sin securely there is no condemnation to them they are in Christ and all the sins nay all the devils in the world shall never separate them And this is a sanctified religious piece of infidelity in men which think they have made sure of the main and so never think of the Consectaries they have faith and so T' is no matter for good works the lease is sealed the wedding solemniz'd and then never dream or care for Covenants And these mens fate is like to be the same spiritually which we read of Samson's bodily strength he vowed the vow of a Nazarite and as long as he kept unshaven no opposition could prevail against him but as soon as he broke his vow when he had let his Mistress cut his locks his strength departed from him All the promises and priviledges of our being in Christ are upon condition of our obedience and our vow being broken the Devil and the Philistins within us will soon deprive us of our eyes and life Whatsoever livelihood we presume we have in Christ we are deceived we are still dead in trespasses and sins Thus do you see the three degrees of infidelity frequent amongst Christians 1. a not taking him at all 2. a mistaking of his person 3. a breaking off the Covenants now that you may abhor and fly from and get out of each of them by a lively faith my next particular shall warn you the greatness of this sin and that first positively in its self it shall be very tolerable for that City Faith may be conceived in a threefold relation either to men the subjects of it and those sinners or 2. to Christ and his suffering the objects of it with all the effects remission of sins and salvation attending it or 3. to God the Father the Author and Commander of it as the only condition annext to all his promises And consequently infidelity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be aggravated by these three depths or degrees each adding to its exceeding sinfulness As Faith respects its subject and that a sinful miserable one engaged and fixt in an unremediable necessity of sinning and suffering for ever so is it the only means upon earth nay in the very counsel of God able to do us any help all the arts and spiritual engins even in Heaven besides this are unprofitable Nay the second Covenant now being seal'd and God for ever having establisht the rule and method of it I say things thus standing God himself cannot be presum'd to have mercy upon any one but who is thus qualified it being the only foundation on which our heaven is built the only ground we have to hope for any thing as is manifest by that place Heb. xi 1. being rightly weighed Now faith is the substance of things hoped for where the Greek phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the ground or foundation of every of those things which can be the object of a Christians hope So that where no ground-work no building if no faith no hope no possibility of Heaven If the Devil could have but stoln this jewel out of the world he had shut up Heaven gates eternally and had left it as empty of Saints as it is full of glory not capable of any flesh but what Christ's hypostatical union brought thither And this is no more then I conceive the learned mean by necessitas medii that faith is necessary as a means i. e. there is no means besides of power either absolutely or ex hypothesi of it self or on supposition of Gods Covenant to bring us to Heaven Nothing is of force besides in reason to prepare or morally accommodate and God hath not promised to accept in mercy of any thing else For whereas the promises are sometimes made to repentance sometimes to obedience as whosoever repenteth shall be saved and the like you are to know that it is on this ground of the necessary union of these graces that where one of them is truly and sincerely there the rest are always in some degree there being no example of penitence or obedience in any subject which had not faith also For he that comes to God must believe that he is c. Heb. xi 6. And he that heartily believes he is and is a rewarder of them that seek him will not fail to search pursue and follow after him So that though the promises are made promiscuously to any one which hath either of these graces yet 't is upon supposal of the rest if it be made of faith 't is in confidence that faith works by love Gal. v. 6. and as St. James enforces it is made perfect by works James ii 22. So that in the first place infidelity is sufficiently aggravated in respect of the subject it being a Catholick destroyer an intervenient that despoils him of all means all hope all possibility of salvation finding him in the state of damnation it sets him going suffers him not to lay hold on any thing that may stay him in his precipice and in the midst of his shipwrack when there be planks and refuges enough about him hath numm'd his hands depriv'd him of any power of taking hold of them In the second place in respect of Christ and his sufferings the objects of our Faith so Faith is in a manner the Soul of them giving them life and efficacy making things which are excellent in themselves prove so in effect to others Thus the whole splendor and beauty of the world the most accurate proportions and images of nature are beholding to the Eye though not for their absolute excellency yet for both the account and use that is made of them for if all men were blind the proudest workmanship of nature would not be worth the valuing Thus is a learned piece cast away upon the ignorant and the understanding of the auditor is the best commendation of a speech or Sermon In like manner those infinite unvaluable sufferings of Christ if they be not believed in are but as Aristotle saith of divine knowledge a most honourable thing but of no manner of use if they be not apprehended they are lost Christ ' s blood if not caught up in our hearts by Faith but suffered to be poured out upon the earth will prove no better then that of Abel's Gen. iv 10. crying for judgment from the ground that which is spilt is clamorous and its voice is toward Heaven for vengeance only that which is gathered up as it falls from his side by faith will prove a medicine to heal the Nations So that infidelity makes the death of Christ no more then the death of an ordinary man in which there is no remedy Wisd ii 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no cure no physick in
distorted and defaced it once was light in the Lord almost an Angel of light it shone as the Sun in the Firmament in majesty and full brightness but is now only as the Moon pale and dim scarce able to do us any service unless it borrows some rays from the Sun of Righteousness The fall hath done somewhat with it I know not what to call it either much impaired it and diminisht its light in its essence or else much incumbred or opprest it in its operations as a candle under a vail or lanthorn which though it burn and shine as truly as on a candlestick yet doth not so much service in enlightning the room the soul within us is much changed either is not in its essence so perfect and active and bright as once it was or else being infused in a sufficient perfection is yet terribly overcast with a gloom and cloud of corruptions that it can scarce find any passage to get through and shew it self in our actions for the corruptible body presseth down the soul c. Wisd ix 15. And from this caution grow many lower branches whence we may gather some fruit as in the second place infinitely to humble our selves before God for the first sin of Adam which brought this darkness on our souls and account it not the meanest or slightest of our miseries that our whole nature is defiled and bruised and weakned to aggravate every circumstance and effect of that sin against thy self which has so libera●ly afforded f●el to the flames of lust of rage and wild desire and thereby without Gods gracious mercy to the flames of Hell This is a most profitable point yet little thought on and therefore would deserve a whole Sermon to discuss to you 3. To observe and acknowledge the necessity of some brighter light then this of nature can afford us and with all the care and vigilancy of our hearts all the means that Scripture will lend us and at last with all the importunities and groans and violence of our souls to petition and sollicit and urge Gods illuminating spirit to break out and shine on us To undertake to interpret any antient Author requires say the Grammarians a man of deep and various knowledge because there may be some passage or other in that book which will refer to every sort of learning in the world whence 't is observed that the old Scholiasts and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were most exquisit Scholars Thus certainly will not any ordinary skill serve turn to interpret and explain many dark sayings which were at first written in the book of our hearts but are now almost past reading only that omniscient Spirit that hath no shadow of ignorance the finger that first writ must be beseeched to read and point out the riddle We must make use of that rotten staffe of nature as far as its strength will bear and that very gingerly too never daring to lean or lay our whole weight upon it lest it either wound with its splinter or else break under us our help and stay and subsistence and trust must be in the Lord our eyes must wait on his inlightning Spirit and never lose a ray that falls from it Fourthly to clear up as much as we can and reinliven this light within us And that first By stirring up and blowing and so nourishing every spark we find within us The least particle of fire left in a coal may by pains be improved into a flame 't is held possible to restore or at least preserve for a time any thing that is not quite departed If thou findest but a spark of Religion in thee which saith A God is to be worship't care and ●edulity and the breath of prayers may in time by this inflame the whole man into a bright fire of Zeal towards God In brief whatever thou dost let not any the least atome of that fire which thou once feelest within thee ever go out quench not the weakest motion or inclination even of reason towards God or goodness how unpolish't soever this Diamond be yet if it do but glissen 't is too pretious to be cast away And then 2. By removing all hindrances or incumbrances that may any way weaken or oppress it and these you have learnt to be corrupt affections That democracy and croud and press and common people of the soul raises a tumult in every street within us that no voice of law or reason can be heard If you will but disgorge and purge the stomach which hath been thus long opprest if you will but remove this cloud of crudities then will the brain be able to send some rayes down to the heart which till then are sure to be caught up by the way anticipated and devoured For the naked simplicity of the soul the absence of all disordered passions is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Aphrodiseus that kindly familiar good temper of the soul by which it is able to find out and judge of truth In brief if thou canst crop thy luxuriant passions if thou canst either expel or tame all the wild beasts within thee which are born to devour any thing which is weak or innocent then will that mild voice within thee in the cave take heart and shew it self In the mean time this hurry of thy senses drowns that reason and thou canst not hope to see as long as like old Tobit the dung and white film doth remain upon thine eyes If thou canst use any means to dissolve this dung of affections which an habit of sin hath baked within thee the scales will fall off from thine eyes and the blind Tobit shall be restored to his sight In brief do but fortifie thy reasonable soul against all the undermining and faction and violence of these sensual passions do but either depose or put to the sword that Atheistical Tyrant and Usurper as Iamblichus calls the affections do but set reason in the chair and hear and observe his dictates and thou hast disburthened thy self of a great company of weights and pressures thou wilt be able to look more like a man to hold thy head more couragiously and bend thy thoughts more resolutely toward Heaven and I shall expect and hope and pray and almost be confident that if thou dost perform sincerely what thy own soul prompts thee to Gods spirit is nigh at hand to perfect and crown and seal thee up to the day of redemption In the next place thou maist see thine own guilts the clearer call thy self to an account even of those things which thou thinkest thou art freest from that which the Apostle in this chapter and part of my discourse hath charged the Heathens with and if thou lookest narrowly I am afraid thou wilt spy thine own picture in that glass and find thy self in many things as arrant a Gentile as any of them For any sincere care of God or Religion how few of us are there that ever entertained so unpleasant