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A32723 Several discourses upon the existence and attributes of God by that late eminent minister in Christ, Mr. Stephen Charnocke ...; Discourses upon the existence and attributes of God Charnock, Stephen, 1628-1680. 1682 (1682) Wing C3711; ESTC R15604 1,378,961 866

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in its Brightness we may behold it through a colour'd Glass whereby the lustre of it is moderated without dazling our eyes The sense of it will furnish us with a greatness of mind that little things will be contemned by us Motives of a greater alloy would have little influence upon us we should have the highest Motives to every Duty and Motives of the same strain which influence ●he Angels above It would change us not only into an Angelical Nature but a Divine Nature We should act like men of another Sphere as if we had received our Original in another World and seen with Angels the ravishing Beauties of Heaven How little would the mean Imployments of the World sink us into dirt and mud How often hath the Meditation of the Courage of a Valiant Man or Acuteness and Industry of a Learned Person spur'd on some men to an imitation of them and transform'd them into the same Nature As the looking upon the Sun imprints an Image of the Sun upon our eye that we seem to behold nothing but the Sun a while after The view of the Divine Purity would fill us with a holy generosity to imitate him more than the Examples of the best men upon Earth It was a saying of a Heathen That if Vertue were visible it would kindle a noble flame of Love to it in the heart by its ravishing beauty Shall the Infinite Purity of the Author of all Vertue come short of the strength of a Creature Can we not render that visible to us by frequent Meditation which though it be invisible in his Nature is made visible in his Law in his Ways in his Son It would make us ready to obey him since we know he cannot Command any thing that is sinful but what is holy just and good It would put all our Aff ctions in their due place elevate them above the Creature and subject them to the Creator 6. It would make us patient and contented under all God's Dispensations All penal Evils are the Fruits of his Holiness as he is Judge and Governour of the World He is not an Arbitrary Judge nor doth any Sentence pronounc'd nor Warrant for Execution issue from him but what bears upon it a Stamp of the Righteousness of his Nature he doth nothing by Passion or Unrighteousness but according to the Eternal Law of his own unstained Nature which is the Rule to him in his Works the Basis and Foundation of his Throne and Soveraign Dominion Psal 89.14 Justice or Righteousness and Judgment are the Habitation of thy Throne upon these his Soveraign Power is established So that there can be no just Complaint or Indict●●●t brought against any of his Proceedings with men How doth our Saviour who had the highest Apprehensions of God's Holiness justifie God in his deepest Distresses when he cried and was not answered in the particular he desired in that Prophetick Psalm of him Psal 22.2 3. I cry day and night but thou hearest not Thou seemest to be deaf to all my Petitions afar off from the words of my roaring but thou art holy I cast no blame upon thee All thy dealings are squar'd by thy holiness this is the only Law to thee in this I acquiesce 'T is part of thy holiness to hide thy face from me to shew thereby thy detestation of sin Our Saviour adores the Divine Purity in his sharpest Agony and a like sense of it would guide us in the same steps to acknowledge and glorifie it in our greatest desertions and afflictions especially since as they are the fruit of the holiness of his Nature so they are the means to impart to us clearer stamps of holiness according to that in himself which is the original Copy * Heb. 12.10 He melts us down as Gold to fit us for the receiving a new Impression to mortifie the Affections of the Flesh and clothe us with the Graces of his Spirit The due sense of this would make us to submit to his stroke and to wait upon him for a good issue of his dealings 2. Exhortation Is holiness a Perfection of the Divine Nature Is it the glory of the Deity Then let us glorifie this holiness of God Moses glorifies it in the Text and glorifies it in a Song which was a Copy for all Ages The whole Corporation of Seraphims have their Mouths fill'd with the praises of it The Saints whither Militant on Earth or Triumphant in Heaven are to continue the same Acclamation Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts † Rev. 4.8 Neither Angels nor glorified Spirits exalt at the same rate the Power which formed them Creatures nor Goodness which preserves them in a blessed Immortality As they do holiness which they bear some beams of in their own Nature and whereby they are capacitated to stand before his Throne Upon the account of this a Debt of Praise is demanded of all Rational Creatures by the Psalmist Psal 99.3 Let them praise thy great and terrible Name for it is holy Not so much for the greatness of his Majesty or the treasures of his Justice but as they are considered in conjunction with his holiness which renders them beautiful for it is holy Grandeur and Majesty simply in themselves are not Objects of Praise nor do they merit the Acclamations of men when destitute of Righteousness This only renders every thing else adorable and this adorns the Divine Greatness with an amiableness Isa 12.6 Great is the holy One of Israel in the midst of thee and makes his Might worthy of Praise Luke 1.49 In honouring this which is the soul and spirit of all the rest we give a glory to all the Perfections which constitute and beautifie his Nature And without the glorifying this we glorifie nothing of them though we should extoll every other single Attribute a thousand times He values no other Adoration of his Creatures unless this be interested nor accepts any thing as a glory from them Levit. 10.3 I will be sanctified in them that come near me and I will be glorified As if he had said in manifesting my Name to be holy you truly you only honour me And as the Scripture seldom speaks of this Perfection without a particular Emphasis it teaches us not to think of it without a special Elevation of heart By this act only while we are on Earth can we joyn consort with the Angels in Heaven he that doth not honour it delight in it and in the meditation of it hath no resemblance of it he hath none of the Image that delights not in the Original Every thing of God is glorious but this most of all If he built the World principally for any thing it was for the communication of his Goodness and display of his Holiness He formed the Rational Creature to manifest his Holiness in that Law whereby he was to be governed Then deprive not God of the design of his own Glory We honour this Attribute 1. When we make it
He sends but a few drops out of the Cloud which he might make to break in the gross and fall down upon our heads to overwhelm us he abates much of what he might do When he might sweep away a whole Nation by deluges of water corruption of the Air or convulsions of the Earth or by other wayes that are not wanting at his order He picks out only some Persons some Families some Cities sends a plague into one house and not into another here is Patience to the stock of a Nation while he inflicts punishment upon some of the most notorious sinners in it Herod is suddenly snatcht away being willingly flattered into the thoughts of his being a God God singl'd out the chief in the herd for whose sake he had been affronted by the rabble Act. 12.22 23. Some find him sparing them while others feel him destroying them He arrests some when he might seize all all being his Debtors And often in great desolations brought upon a people for their sin he hath left a stump in the Earth as Daniel speakes Dan. 4.15 for a Nation to grow upon it again and arise to a stronger constitution He doth punish less than our iniquities deserve Ezra 9.13 and rewards us not according to our iniquities Psal 103.10 The greatness of any punishment in this Life answers not the greatness of the crime Though there be an equity in whatsoever he doth yet there is not an equality to what we deserve Our iniquities would justifie a severer treating of us His Justice goes not here to the end of its line 't is stopped in its progress and the blows of it weakned by his Patience He did not curse the Earth after Adam's fall that it should bring forth no fruit but that it should not bring forth fruit without the wearysome toyl of man and subjected him to distempers presently but inflicted not death immediately while he punished him he supported him And while he expelled him from Paradise he did not order him not to cast his eye towards it and conceive some hopes of regaining that happy place 5. His Patience is seen in giving great mercies after provocations He is so slow to anger that he heaps many kindnesses upon a rebel instead of punishment There is a prosperous wickedness wherein the provokers strength continues firm The troubles which like Clouds drop upon others are blown away from them and they are not plagued like other men that have a more worthy demeanour towards God Psal 73.3 4 5. He doth not only continue their lives but sends out fresh beams of his goodness upon them and calls them by his Blessings that they may acknowledge their own fault and his bounty which he is not obliged to by any gratitude he meets with from them but by the richness of his own patient nature for he finds the unthank fulness of men as great as his benefits to them He doth not only continue his outward mercies while we continue our sins but sometimes gives fresh benefits after new provocations that if possible he might excite an ingenuity in men When Israel at the Red Sea flung dirt in the face of God by quarrelling with his servant Moses for bringing them out of Egypt and mis-judging God in his design of deliverance and were ready to submit themselves to their former oppressors Exod. 14.11 12. which might justly have urged God to say to them take your own course yet he is not only patient under their unjust charge but makes bare his Arm in a deliverance at the Red Sea that was to be an amazing monument to the World in all Ages and afterwards when they repiningly quarrelled with him in their wants in the Wilderness he did not only not revenge himself upon them or cast off the conduct of them but bore with them by a miraculous long suffering and supplyed them with miraculous provision Manna from Heaven and Water from a Rock Food is given to support us and Cloaths to cover us and Divine Patience makes the creatures which we turn to another use than what they were at first intended for serve us contrary to their own Genius For had they reason no question but they would complain to be subjected to the service of man who hath been so ungrateful to their Creator and groan at the abuse of God's Patience in the abuse they themselves suffer from the hands of man 6. All this is more manifest if we consider the provocations he hath Wherein his slowness to Anger infinitely transcends the Patience of any creature nay the Spirits of all the Angels and Glorified Saints in Heaven would be too narrow to bear the sins of the World for one day nay not so much as the sins of Churches which is a little spot in the whole World 't is because he is the Lord one of an infinite power over himself that not only the whole Mass of the Rebellious World but of the Sons of Jacob either considered as a Church and Nation springing from the loyns of Jacob or considered as the Regenerate part of the World sometimes called the Seed of Jacob are not consumed Mal. 3.6 A Jonah was angry with God for recalling his Anger from a sinful people Had God committed the Government of the World to the Glorified Saints who are perfect in Love and Holiness the World would have had an end long ago They would have acted that which they sue for at the hands of God and is not granted them Rev. 6.10 How long Lord holy and true dost thou not avenge our blood on them that dwell on the Earth God hath designs of Patience above the World above the unsinning Angels and perfectly renewed Spirits in Glory The greatest Created long suffering is infinitely disproportion'd to the Divine Fire from Heaven would have been showred down before the greatest part of a day were spent if a Created Patience had the conduct of the World though that creature were possessed with the spirit of Patience extracted from all the creatures which are in Heaven or are or ever were upon the earth Methinks Moses intimates this for as soon as God had passed by proclaiming his Name gracious and long suffering As soon as ever Moses had paid his Adoration he falls a Praying that God would go with the Israelites Exod. 34.8 9. For it is a stiffneck'd people What an Argument is here for God to go along with them He might rather since he had heard him but just before say he would by no means clear the guilty desire God to stand further off from them for fear the fire of his wrath should burst out from him to burn them as he did the Sodomites But he considers that as none but God had such anger to destroy them so none but God had such a Patience to bear with them 'T is as much as if he should have said Lord if thou should'st send the most tender hearted Angel in Heaven to have the guidance of this people
will to please him longings to enjoy him as a holy and sanctifying God in his Ordinances as well as a blessed and glorified God in Heaven What do we expect in our approaches from him That which may make divine impressions upon us and more exactly conform us to the divine nature Or do we design nothing but an empty formality a rowling eye and a filling the Air with a few words without any openings of heart to receive the incomes which according to the nature of the duty might be conveyed to us Can this be a spiritual worship The Soul then closely waits upon him when its expectation is only from him Psal 62.6 Are our hearts seasoned with a sense of sin a sight of our spiritual wants raised notions of God glowing affections to Him strong appetite after a spiritual fulness Do we rouze up our sleepy Spirits and make a Covenant with all that is within us to attend upon him So much as we want of this so much we come short of a spiritual worship In Psal 57.7 My heart is fixed oh God my heart is fixed David would fix his heart before he would engage in a praising act of worship He appeals to God about it and that with doubling the expression as being certain of an inward preparedness Can we make the same appeals in a fixation of Spirit 2. How are our hearts fixed upon him How do they cleave to him in the duty Do we resign our Spirits to God and make them an intire Holocaust a whole burnt-offering in his worship Or do we not willingly admit carnal thoughts to mix themselves with spiritual duties and fasten our minds to the Creature under pretences of directing them to the Creator Do we not pass a meer complement on God by some superficial act of devotion while some covetous envious ambitious voluptuous imagination may possess our minds Do we not invert Gods Order and worship a Lust instead of God with our Spirits that should not have the least service either from our Souls or Bodies but with a spiritual disdain be sacrificed to the just indignation of God How often do we fight against his Will while we cry hail Master instead of crucifying our own thoughts crucifying the Lord of our Lives Our outward carriage plausible and our inward stark naught Do we not often regard iniquity more than God in our hearts in a time of worship Roul some filthy imagination as a sweet morsel under our tongues and taste more sweetness in that than in God Do not our Spirits smell rank of Earth while we offer to Heaven and have we not hearts full of thick Clay as their hands were full of blood * Isa 1.15 When we sacrifice do we not wrap up our Souls in communion with some sordid fancy when we should entwine our Spirits about an amiable God While we have some fear of him may we not have a love to something else above him This is to worship or swear by the Lord and by Malchom * Zeph. 1.5 How often doth an Apish-fancy render a service inwardly ridiculous under a grave outward posture skipping to the Shop Ware-house Compting-house in the space of a short Prayer And we are before God as a Babel a confusion of internal languages and this in those parts of worship which are in the right use most agreeable to God profitable for our selves ruinous to the Kingdom of Sin and Satan and means to bring us into a closer communion with the Divine Majesty Can this be a spiritual worship 3. How do we act our graces in worship Though the Instrument be strung if the str●ngs be not wound up what melody can be the issue All readiness and alacrity discover a strength of nature and a readiness in Spirituals discovers a spirituality in the heart As unaffecting thoughts of God are not spiritual thoughts so unaffecting addresses to God are not spiritual addresses Well t●en what awakenings and elevations of Faith and Love have we What strong outflowings of our Souls to him What indignation against Sin What admirations of redeeming Grace How low have we brought our corruptions to the foot-stool of Christ to be made his conquered Enemies How straitly have we claspt ou● Faith about the Cross and Throne of Christ to become his intimate Spouse Do we in hearing hang upon the lips of Christ in prayer take hold of God and wil not let him go in confessions rent the Caul of our hearts and indite our Souls before him with a deep humility Do we act more by a soaring love than a drooping fear So far as our Spitits are servile so far they are legal and carnal so much as they are free and spontaneous so much they are evangelical and spiritual As men under the Law are subject to the constraint of Bondage * Heb. 2.15 all their life-time in all their worship so under the Gospel they are under a constraint of love * 2 Cor. 5.14 How then are believing affections exercised which are alway accompanied with holy fear a fear of his goodness that admits us into his presence and a fear to offend him in our act of worship So much as we have of forced or feeble affection so much we have of carnality 4. How do we find our hearts after worship By an after carriage we may judge of the spirituality of it 1. How are we as to inward strength When a worship is spiritually performed grace is more strengthened corruption more mortified The Soul like Sampson after his awakening goes out with a renewed strength As the inward man is renewed day by day that is every day so it is renewed in every worship Every shower makes the grass and fruit grow in good ground where the root is good and the weeds where the ground is naught The more prepared the heart is to obedience in other duties after worship the more evidence there is that it hath been spiritual in the exercise of it 'T is the end of God in every dispensation as in that of John Baptist To make ready a People prepared for the Lord * Luke 1 17. When the heart is by worship prepared for fresh acts of obedience and hath a more exact watchfulness against the incroachments of Sin As carnal men after worship sprout up in spiritual wickedness so do spiritual Worshippers in spiritual graces Spiritual fruits are a sign of a spiritual frame When men are more prone to sin after duty 't is a sign there was but little communion with God in it and a greater strength of sin because such an act is contrary to the end of worship which is the subduing of Sin 'T is a sign the Physick hath wrought well when the stomach hath a better appetite to its appointed food and worship hath been well performed when we have a stronger inclination to other acts well pleasing to God and a more sensible distaste of those temptations we too much relisht before 'T is a sign of
than this and Millions of Heavens greater than this Heaven he hath already Created if so he is then in unconceivable spaces beyond this World for his Essence is not less and narrower than his Power and his Power is not to be thought of a further extent than his Essence he cannot be excluded therefore from those vast spaces where his Power may fix those Worlds if he please if so 't is no wonder that he should fill this World and there is no reason to exclude God from the narrow space of this World that is not contain'd in infinite spaces beyond the World God is wheresoever he hath a Power to act but he hath a power to act every where in the World every where out of the World he is therefore every where in the World every where out of the World Before this World was made he had a Power to make it in the space where now it stands Was he not then unlimitedly where the World now is before the World received a Being by his powerful Word Why should he not then be in every part of the World now Can it be thought that God who was immense before should after he had Created the World contract himself to the limits of one of his Creatures and tie himself to a particular place of his own Creation and be less after his Creation than he was before This might also be prosecuted by an Argument from his Eternity What is eternal in duration is immense in essence the same reason which renders him eternal renders him immense That which proves him to be always will prove him to be every where The third thing is Propositions for the further clearing this Doctrine from any exceptions 1. This truth is not weakned by the expressions in Scripture where God is said to dwell in Heaven and in the Temple 1. He is indeed said to sit in heaven * Psal 2.4 and to dwell on high * Psal 113 5. but he is no where said to dwell only in the heavens as confin'd to them 'T is the Court of his Majestical presence but not the Prison of his Essence For when we are told that the heaven is his throne we are told with the same breath that the earth is his footstool Isa 66. ● He dwells on high in regard of the excellency of his nature but he is in all places in regard of the diffusion of his presence The soul is essentially in all parts of the body but it doth not exert the same operations in all the more noble discoveries of it are in the Head and Heart In the Head where it exerciseth the chiefest senses for the enriching the understanding In the Heart where it vitally resides and communicates life and motion to the rest of the body It doth not understand with the foot or toe tho' it be in all parts of the body it informs And so God may be said to dwell in Heaven in regard of the more excellent and majestick representations of himself both to the Creatures that inhabit the place as Angels and blessed spirits and also in those marks of his greatness which he hath planted there those spiritual natures which have a nobler stamp of God upon them and those excellent bodies as Sun and Stars which as so many Tapers light us to behold his glory Psal 19.1 and astonish the minds of men when they gaze upon them 'T is his Court where he hath the most solemn Worship from his Creatures all his Courtiers attending there with a pure love and glowing zeal He reigns there in a special manner without any opposition to his government 't is therefore call'd his holy dwelling-place 2 Chron 3.27 The Earth hath not that title since sin cast a stain and a ruining curse upon it The Earth is not his Throne because his government is oppos'd But Heaven is none of Satan's precinct and the Rule of God is uncontradicted by the Inhabitants of it 'T is from thence also he hath given the greatest discoveries of himself Thence he sends the Angels his Messengers his Son upon Redemption his Spirit for Sanctification From Heaven his gifts drop down upon our heads and his grace upon our hearts James 3.15 From thence the chiefest blessings of Earth descend The motions of the heavens fatten the earth and the heavenly bodies are but stewards to the earthly comforts for man by their influence Heaven is the richest vastest most stedfast and majestick part of the visible Creation 'T is there where he will at last manifest himself to his people in a full conjunction of grace and glory and be for ever open to his people in uninterrupted expressions of goodness and discoveries of his presence as a reward of their labour and service And in these respects it may peculiarly be call'd his Throne And this doth no more hinder his essential presence in all parts of the earth than it doth his gracious presence in all the hearts of his people God is in heaven in regard of the manifestation of his glory in hell by the expressions of his justice in the earth by the discoveries of his Wisdom Power Patience and Compassion in his people by the monuments of his grace and in all in regard of his substance 2. He is said also to dwell in the Ark and Temple 'T is called Psal 26.8 The habitation of his house and the place where his honour dwells and to dwell in Jerusalem as in his holy Mountain The Mountain of the Lord of Hosts Zec. 8.3 in regard of publishing his Oracles answering their prayers manifesting more of his goodness to the Israelites than to any other Nation in the world erecting his true Worship among them which was not setled in any part of the world besides and his worship is principally intended in that Psalm The Ark is the place where his honour dwells the worship of God is called the glory of God They changed the glory of God into an image made like to corruptible man Rom. 1.23 i. e. they changed the worship of God into dolatry and to that also doth the place in Zechary refer Now because he is said to dwell in heaven is he essentially only there Is he not as essentially in the Temple and Ark as he is in Heaven since there are as high expressions of his habitation there as of his dwelling in heaven If he dwell only in heaven how came he to dwell in the Temple both are asserted in Scripture one as much as the other If his dwelling in heaven did not hinder his dwelling in the Ark it could as little hinder the presence of his essence on the earth To dwell in heaven and in one part of the earth at the same time is all one as to dwell in all parts of heaven and all parts of earth If he were in Heaven and in the Ark and Temple it was the same essence in both tho' not the same kind of
Calvary Unspotted Righteousness must be made Sin and unblemisht Blessedness be made a Curse He was at no other Expence than the Breath of his Mouth to form Man the Fruits of the Earth could have maintained Innocent Man without any other Cost but his broken Nature cannot be heal'd without the invaluable Medicine of the Blood of God View Christ in the Womb and in the Manger in his weary Steps and hungry Bowels in his Prostrations in the Garden and in his clodded drops of Bloody Sweat View his Head pierced with a Crown of Thorns and his Face besmeared with the Soldiers Slabber View him in his march to Calvary and his Elevation on the painful Cross with his Head hanged down and his Side streaming Blood View him pelted with the Scoffs of the Governours and the Derisions of the Rabble And see in all this what Cost Goodness was at for Mans Redemption In Creation his Power made the Sun to shine upon us and in Redemption his Bowels sent a Son to die for us 3. This Goodness of God in Redemption is greater than that manifested in Creation in regard of Mans desert of the contrary In the Creation as thre was nothing without him to allure him to the Expressions of his Bounty so there was nothing that did damp the Inclinations of his Goodness The nothing from whence the World was drawn could never merit nor demerit a Being because it was nothing As there was nothing to engage him so there was nothing to disoblige him As his Favour could not be merited so neither could his Anger be deserved But in this he finds ingratitude against the former Marks of his Goodness and Rebellion against the sweetness of his Soveraignty Crimes unworthy of the dews of Goodness and worthy of the sharpest stroaks of Vengeance And therefore the Scripture advanceth the honour of it above the Title of meer Goodness to that of Grace * Rom. 5.2 Tit. 2.11 because Men were not only unworthy of a Blessing but worthy of a Curse An Innocent Nothing more deserves Creation than a Culpable Creature deserves an exemption from Destruction When Man fell and gave occasion to God to repent of his Created Work his ravishing Goodness surmounted the occasions he had of repenting and the provocations he had to the destruction of his Frame 4. It was a greater Goodness than was exprest towards the Angels 1. A greater Goodness than was exprest towards the standing Angels The Son of God did no more expose his Life for the confirmation of those that stood than for the restoration of those that fell The Death of Christ was not for the holy Angels but for sinful Man They needed the Grace of God to confirm them but not the Death of Christ to restore or preserve them They had a beloved Holiness to be established by the powerful Grace of God but not any abominable Sin to be expiated and blotted out by the Blood of God They had no Debt to pay but that of Obedience but we had both a Debt of Obedience to the Precepts and a Debt of Suffering to the Penalty after the Fall Whether the holy Angels were confirm'd by Christ or no is a question some think they were from Colos 1.20 where things in Heaven are said to be reconcil'd but some think that place signifies no more than the Reconciliation of things in Heaven if meant of the Angels to things on Earth with whom they were at enmity in the Cause of their Soveraign or the Reconciliation of things in Heaven to God is meant the glorified Saints who were once in a State of Sin and whom the Death of Christ upon the Cross reached though dead long before But if Angels were confirm'd by Christ it was by him not as a slain Sacrifice but as the Soveraign head of the whole Creation appointed by God to gather all things into one which some think to be the intendment of Ephes 1.10 where all things as well those in Heaven as those in Earth are said to be gathered together in one in Christ Where is a syllable in Scripture of his being Crucified for Angels but only for Sinners Not for the Confirmation of the one but the Reconciliation of the other So that the Goodness whereby God continued those Blessed Spirits in Heaven through the effusions of his Grace is a small thing to the restoring us to our forfeited Happiness through the Streams of Divine Blood The preserving a Man in life is a little thing and a smaller benefit than the raising a Man from Death The rescuing a Man from an ignominious Punishment lays a greater obligation than barely to prevent him from committing a capital Crime The preserving a Man standing upon the top of a steep Hill is more easie than to bring a Crippled and Tissical Man from the bottom to the top The continuance God gave to the Angels is not so signal a Mark of Goodness as the deliverance he gave to us since they were not sunk into Sin nor by any Crime fallen into Misery 2. His Goodness in Redemption is greater than any Goodness expressed to the Fallen Angels 'T is the wonder of his Goodness to us that he was mindful of Fall'n Man and careless of Fall'n Angels That he should visit Man wallowing in Death and Blood with the Day-spring from on high and never turn the Aegyptian darkness of Devils into a chearful day When they Sinn'd Divine Thunder dasht them into Hell When Man Sinn'd Divine Blood wafts the Fallen Creature from his Misery The Angels wallow in their own Blood for ever while Christ is made partaker of our Blood and wallows in his Blood that we might not for ever corrupt in ours They tumbled down from Heaven and Divine Goodness would not vouchsafe to catch them Man tumbles down and Divine Goodness holds out a hand drencht in the Blood of him that was from the Foundations of the World to lift us up Heb. 2.16 He spared not those dignified Spirits when they Revolted and spared not punishing his Son for dusty Man when he offended when he might as well for ever have let Man lie in the Chains wherein he had intangled himself as them We were as fit Objects of Justice as they and they as fit Objects of Goodness as we they were not more wretched by their Fall than we and the poverty of our Nature rendred us more unable to recover our selves than the dignity of theirs did them They were his Reuben his first born they were his Might and the beginning of his Strength yet those Elder Sons he neglected to prefer the Younger They were the Prime and Golden Pieces of Creation not laden with gross Matter yet they lie under the Ruines of their Fall while Man Lead in comparison of them is refin'd for another World They seem'd to be fitter Objects of Divine Goodness in regard of the eminency of their Nature above the Humane One Angel excelled in Endowments of Mind and Spirit vastness of
other in its operations Is not this more admirable than to be the work of chance which is uncapable to settle such an order and fix particular and general ends causing an exact correspondency of all the parts with one another and every part to conspire together for one common end One thing is fitted for another The Eye is fitted for the Sun and the Sun fitted for the Eye Several sorts of food are fitted for several Creatures and those Creatures fitted with Organs for the partaking that food 1. Subserviency of Heavenly bodies * Lessius The Sun the heart of the world is not for it self but for the good of the World as the heart of man is for the good of the body How conveniently is the Sun placed at a distance from the Earth and the upper Heavens to enlighten the Stars above and enliven the Earth below If it were either higher or lower one part would want its influences T is not in the higher parts of the Heavens the Earth then which lives and fructifies by its influence would have been exposed to a perpetual Winter and chilness unable to have produced any thing for the sustenance of man or beast If seated lower the Earth had been parch'd up the world made uninhabitable and long since had been consumed to ashes by the strength of its heat Consider the motion as well as the Situation of the Sun Had it stood still one part of the World had been cherished by its beams and the other left in a desolate Widow-hood in a disconsolate darkness Besides the Earth would have had no shelter from its perpendicular beams striking perpetually and without any remission upon it The same incommodities would have followed upon its fixedness as upon its too great nearness By a constant day the beauty of the Stars had been obscured the knowledge of their motions been prevented and a considerable part of the Glorious wisdom of the Creator in those choice works of his fingers * Psal 8.3 had been vail'd from our eyes It moves in a fixed line visits all parts of the Earth scatters in the day its refreshing blessings in every creeke of the Earth and removes the mask from the other beauties of Heaven in the night which sparkle out to the glory of the Creator It spreads its Light warms the Earth cherisheth the Seeds excites the Spirit in the Earth and brings Fruit to maturity View also the Air the vast extent between Heaven and Earth which serves for a Water-course a Cistern for water to bedew the face of the Sun-burnt Earth to satisfie the desolate ground and to cause the bud of the tender herb to spring forth * Job 38.25 27. Could Chance appoint the Clouds of the Air to interpose as fans between the scorching heat of the Sun and the faint bodies of the Creatures Can that be the Father of the Rain or beget the drops of dew * Job 38.28 Could any thing so blind settle those ordinances of Heaven for the preservation of Creatures on the Earth Can this either bring or stay the bottles of Heaven when the dust grows into hardness and the Clods cleave fast together * Job 38.37.38 2. Subserviency of the lower World the Earth and Sea which was Created to be inhabited Isa 45.18 The Sea affords water to the Rivers the Rivers like so many veins are spread through the whole body of the Earth to refresh and enable it to bring forth fruit for the sustenance of man and beast Psal 104.10.11 He sends the Springs into the Vallies which run among the Hills they give drink to every Beast of the Field the wild Asses quench their thirst He causes the Grass to grow for the Cattle and the herb for the service of man that he may bring forth food out of the Earth v. 14. The Trees are provided for shades against the extremity of heat a refuge for the panting beasts an habitation for Birds wherein to make their nests ver 17. and a Basket for their provision How are the Vallies and Mountains of the Earth disposed for the pleasure and profit of man Every year are the Feilds covered with Harvests for the nourishing the Creatures no part is Barren but beneficial to man The Mountains that are not cloathed with grass for his food are set with stones to make him an Habitation they have their peculiar services of metals and minerals for the conveniency and comfort and benefit of man Things which are not fit for his food are medicines for his cure under some painful sickness Where the Earth brings not forth Corn it brings forth Roots for the service of other Creatures Wood abounds more in those Countries where the cold is stronger than in others Can this be the result of Chance or not rather of an infinite Wisdom Consider the usefulness of the Sea for the supply of Rivers to refresh the Earth Which go up by the Mountains and down by the Vallies into the place God hath founded for them Psal 104.8 A store-house for fish for the nourishment of other Creatures a shop of Medicines for cure and Pearls for ornament The band that ties remote Nations together by giving opportunity of passage to and commerce with one another How should that natural inclination of the Sea to cover the Earth submit to this subserviency to the Creatures Who hath pounded in this fluid mass of Water in certain limits and confin'd it to its own Channel for the accommodation of such Creatures who by its common Law can only be upon the Earth Naturally the Earth was covered with the deep as with a Garment the waters stood above the Mountains Who set a bound that they might not pass over that they return not again to cover the Earth * Psa 104.6.9 Was it blind Chance or an Infinite Power that shut up the Sea with doors and made thick darkness a swadling band for it and said hitherto shall thou come and no further and here shall thy proud waves be staid * Job 38.8.9.11 All things are so ordered that they are not propter se but propter aliud What advantage accrues to the Sun by its unwearied rouling about the World Doth it increase the perfection of its nature by all its Circuits No but it serves the inferior world it impregnates things by its heat Not the most abject thing but hath its end and use There is a strait connexion the Earth could not bring forth fruit without the Heavens the Heavens could not water the Earth without vapours from it 3. All this Subserviency of Creatures centers in man Other Creatures are served by those things as well as our selves and they are provided for their nourishment and refreshment as well as ours * Amirald de Trinitate pa. 13. and pag. 18. yet both they and all Creatures meet in man as lines in their Centers Things that have no life or sense are made for those that have both life and
lay the Plot of our own Affairs and then come to God not for Counsel but Blessing Self only shall give us counsel how to act but because we believe there is a God that governs the world we will desire him to contribute success God is not consulted with till the Counsel of self be fixed then God must be the Executor of our Will Self must be the Principal and God the Instrument to hatch what we have contrived 'T is worse when we beg of God to favour some sinful Aim the Psalmist implies this Psal 66.18 If I regard Iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Iniquity regarded as the aim in Prayer renders the Prayer succesless and the Suppliant an Atheist in debasing God to back his Lust by his holy Providence The Disciples had determined Revenge and because they could not act it without their Master they would have him be their Second in their vindictive passion Luke 9.55 Call for fire from Heaven We scarce seek God till we have modell'd the whole Contrivance in our own Brains and resolved upon the Methods of Performance as though there were not a fullness of Wisdom in God to guide us in our resolves as well as Power to breath Success upon them 4. In impatience upon the refusal of our desires How often do mens Spirits rise against God when he steps not in with the Assistance they want If the glory of God swayed more with them than their private interest they would let God be Judge of his own glory and rather magnifie his Wisdom than complain of his want of Goodness Selfish hearts will charge God with neglect of them if he be not as quick in their supplies as they are in their desires like those in Isa 58.3 Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our Souls and thou takest no knowledge When we aim at Gods glory in our importunities we shall fall down in humble Submissions when he denies us whereas self riseth up in bold Expostulations as if God were our Servant and had neglected the service he owed us not to come at our call We over-value the satisfactions of self above the honour of God Besides if what we desire be a sin our impatience at a refusal is more intolerable 'T is an anger that God will not lay aside his holiness to serve our corruption 5. In the actual aims men have in their Duties In Prayer for temporal things when we desire Health for our own ease Wealth for our own sensuality Strength for our revenge Children for the increase of our Family Gifts for our applause as Simon Magus did the Holy-Ghost or when some of those ends are aimed at This is to desire God not to serve himself of us but to be a Servant to our worldly interest our vain glory the greatning of our names c. In spiritual mercies begged for When pardon of sin is desired only for our own security from eternal Vengeance Sanctification desired only to make us fit for everlasting blessedness Peace of Conscience only that we may lead our lives more comfortably in the world when we have not actual intentions for the glory of God or when our thoughts of Gods honour are overtopt by the aims of self advantage Not but that as God hath prest us to those things by motives drawn from the Blessedness derived to our selves by them so we may desire them with a resepect to our selves but this respect must be contained within the due banks in subordination to the glory of God not above it nor in an equal ballance with it Gurnall Part. 3. Pag. 337. That which is nourishing or medicinal in the first or second degree is in the fourth or fifth degree meer destructive poyson Let us consider it seriously though a Duty be heavenly doth not some base end smut us in it 1. How is it with our Confessions of Sin Are they not more to procure our Pardon than to shame our selves before God or to be freed from the chains that hinder us from bringing him the glory for which we were created or more to partake of his benefits than to honour him in acknowledging the rights of his Justice Do we not bewail sin as it hath ruined us not as it opposed the Holiness of God Do we not shuffle with God and confess one sin while we reserve another as if we would allure God by declaring our dislike of one to give us liberty to commit Wantoness with another not to abhor our selves but to daub with God 2. Is it any better in our private and Family Worship Are not such Assemblies frequented by some where some upon whom they have a dependance may eye them and have a better opinion of them and affection to them If God were the sole end of our hearts would they not be as glowing under the sole eye of God as our tongues or carriages are seemingly serious under the eye of man Are not Family duties performed by some that their voices may be heard and their reputation supported among Godly Neighbours 3. Is not the Charity of many men tainted with this end self * Mat. 6.1 as the Pharisees were while they set the miserable Object before them but not the Lord bestowing Alms not so much upon the necessities of the people as the friendship we owe them for some particular respects Or casting our bread upon those Waters which stream down in the sight of the world that our Doles may be visible to them and commended by them Or when we think to oblige God to pardon our transgressions as if we merited it and Heaven too at his hands by bestowing a few pence upon indigent persons And 4. Is it not the same with the Reproofs of men Is not Heat and Anger carried out with full Sail when our worldly interest is prejudic'd and becalm'd in the concerns of God Do not many Masters reprove their Servants with more vehemency for the neglect of their Trade and Business than the neglect of Divine Duties and that upon Religious Arguments pretending the honour of God that they may mind their own interest But when they are negligent in what they owe to God no noyse is made they pass without rebuke Is not this to make God and Religion a Stale to their own ends 'T is a part of Atheism not to regard the injuries done to God as Tiberius * Dei injuria Deo curae Let Gods wrongs be looked to or cared for by himself 5. Is it not thus in our seeming Zeal for Religion As Demetrius and the Craftsmen at Ephesus cried up aloud the greatness of Diana of the Ephesians not out of any true zeal they had for her but their gain which was increased by the confluence of her Worshippers and the Sale of her own Shrines Acts 19.24.28 4. In making use of the Name of God to countenance our Sin When we set up an opinion that is a
must be utterly deposed Now it is difficult to leave a Law beloved for a Law long agoe discarded The mind of man will hunt after any thing the will of man embrace any thing upon the proposal of mean Objects the Spirit of man spreads its wings flyes to catch them becomes one with them But attempt to bring it under the Power of God the wings flag the Creature looks liveless as though there were no spring of motion in it 'T is as much crucified to God as the holy Apostle was to the world The sin of the heart discovers its strength the more God discovers the holiness of his Will * Rom. 7.9 10 11 12. The love of Sin hath been predominant in our Nature has quasht a love to God if not extinguisht it Hence also is the difficulty of Mortification This is a work tending to the honour of God the abasing of that inordinatley aspiring humour in our selves If the Nature of Man be inclin'd to Sin as it is it must needs be bent against any thing that opposes it 'T is impossible to strike any true blow at any Lust till the true Sense of God be re-entertained in the Soyl where it ought to grow Who can be naturally willing to crucifie what is incorporated with him his flesh what is dearest to him himself Is it an easie thing for man the Competitor with God to turn his Arms against himself that self should overthrow its own Empire lay aside all its pretensions to and designs for a God-head to hew off its own members and subdue its own affections 'T is the Nature of Man to cover his sin to hide it in his bosom * Job 13.33 If I cover my Transgression as Adam not to destroy it and as unwillingly part with his carnal affections as the Legion of Devils were with the man that had been long possessed And when he is forced and fired from one he will endeavour to espouse some other Lust as those Devils desired to possess Swine when they were chased from their possession of that man 5. Here we see the reason of unbelief That which hath most of God in it meets with most aversion from us That which hath least of God finds better and stronger inclinations in us What is the reason that the heart of Man is more unwilling to embrace the Gospel than acknowledge the equity of the Law Because there is more of Gods Nature and perfection evident in the Gospel than in the Law Besides there is more reliance on God and distance from self commanded in the Gospel The Law puts a man upon his own strength the Gospel takes him off from his own bottom The Law acknowledges him to have a power in himself and to act for his own reward the Gospel strips him of all his proud and towring thoughts * 2 Cor. 10.5 brings him to his due place the foot of God orders him to deny himself as his own Rule Righteousness and End and henceforth not to live to himself * 2 Cor. 5.15 This is the true reason why men are more against the Gospel than against the Law because it doth more deify God and debase Man Hence it is easier to reduce men to some Moral Vertue than to Faith to make men blush at their outward Vices but not at the inward impurity of their Natures Hence it is observed that those that asserted that all happiness did arise from something in a mans self as the Stoicks and Epicureans did and that a wise man was equal with God were greater Enemies to the truths of the Gospel than others Acts 17.18 because it lays the Ax to the root of their principal Opinion Takes the one from their self-sufficiency and the other from their self-gratification It opposeth the brutish principle of the one which placed happiness in the pleasures of the body and the more noble principle of the other which placed happiness in the vertue of the mind The one was for a sensual the other for a moral self both disowned by the Doctrin of the Gospel 6. It informs us consequently who can be the Author of Grace and Conversion and every other good Work No practical Atheist ever yet turned to God but was turned by God and not to acknowledge it to God is a part of this Atheism since it is a robbing God of the honour of one of his most glorious Works If this practical Atheism be natural to man ever since the first taint of Nature in Paradice what can be expected from it but a resisting of the work of God and setting up all the forces of Nature against the operations of Grace till a day of power dawn and clear up upon the Soul * Psal 110.3 Not all the Angels in Heaven or men upon Earth can be imagined to be able to perswade a Man to fall out with himself Nothing can turn the Tide of Nature but a Power above Nature God took away the sanctifying Spirit from man as a Penalty for the first sin Who can regain it but by his Will and Pleasure Who can restore it but he that remov'd it Since every man hath the same fundamental Atheism in him by Nature and would be a Rule to himself and his own End he is so far from dethroning himself that all the strength of his corrupted Nature is alarm'd up to stand to their Arms upon any attempt God makes to regain the Fort. The Will is so strong against God that 't is like many wills twisted together Eph. 2.3 Wills of the Flesh we translate it the desires of the flesh Like many Threds twisted in a Cable never to be snapt asunder by a human Arm a Power and Will above ours can only untwist so many Wills in a knot Man cannot rise to an acknowledgement of God without God Hell may as well become Heaven the Devil be changed into an Angel of Light The Devil cannot but desire happiness he knows the misery into which he is fallen he cannot be desirous of that punishment he knows is reserved for him Why doth he not sanctifie God and glorifie his Creator wherein there is abundantly more pleasure than in his malicious course Why doth he not petition to recover his ancient standing He will not there are Chains of Darkness upon his faculties he will not be otherwise than he is His desire to be God of the World sways him against his own interest and out of love to his malice he will not sin at a less rate to make a diminution of his punishment Man if God utterly refuseth to work upon him is no better and to maintain his Atheism would venture a Hell How is it possible for a man to turn himself to that God against whom he hath a quarrel in his Nature the most rooted and settled habit in him being to set himself in the place of God An Atheist by Nature can no more alter his own temper and engrave in himself the Divine Nature
as well as Heathens who used the outward Ceremonies not as signs of better things but as if they did of themselves please God and render the worshippers accepted with him without any sutable frame of the inward man * Amirald in loc It is as if he had said now you must separate your selves from all carnal modes to which the service of God is now tyed and render a worship chiefly consisting in the affectionate motions of the heart and accommodated more exactly to the condition of the object who is a Spirit In Spirit and Truth * Amirald in loc The Evangelical Service now required has the advantage of the former that was a Shadow and Figure this the Body and Truth * Muscul Spirit say some is here opposed to the legal Ceremonies Truth to hypocritical services or * Chemnit rather truth is opposed to shadows and an opinion of worth in the outward action 't is principally opposed to external Rites because our Saviour saith v. 23. The hour comes and ●o● is c. Had it been opposed to Hypocrisy Christ had said no new thing For God always required Truth in the inward parts and all true Worshippers had served him with a sincere Conscience and single Heart The old Patriarks did worship God in Spirit and Truth as taken for sincerity Such a Worship was always and is perpetually due to God because he always was and eternally will be a Spirit * Mus●al And it is said the Father seeks such to worship him not shall seek He always sought it it always was performed to him by one or other in the world And the Prophets had always rebuked them for resting upon their outward Solemnities Isa 58.7 and Micah 6.8 But a Worship without legal Rites was proper to an Evangelical State and the times of the Gospel God having then exhibited Christ and brought into the world the substance of those shadows and the end of those institutions There was no more need to continue them when the true reason of them was ceased All Laws do naturally expire when the true reason upon which they were first framed is changed Or by Spirit may be meant such a Worship as is kindled in the heart by the breath of the holy Ghost Since we are dead in sin a spiritual light and flame in the heart sutable to the nature of the object of our worship cannot be raised in us without the operation of a supernatural Grace And though the Fathers could not worship God without the Spirit yet in the Gospel-times there being a fuller effusion of the Spirit the Evangelical State is called the administration of the Spirit and the newness of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 in opposition to the legal Oeconomy entitled the oldness of the Letter * Rom. 7.6 The Evangelical State is more suted to the Nature of God than any other Such a Worship God must have whereby he is acknowledged to be the true Sanctifier and Quickner of the Soul The nearer God doth approach to us and the more full his manifestations are the more spiritual is the Worship we return to God The Gospel pares off the rugged parts of the Law and Heaven shall remove what is material in the Gospel and change the Ordinances of Worship into that of a Spiritual Praise In the words there is 1. A Proposition God is a Spirit The Foundation of all Religion 2. An Inference they that worship him c. As God a Worship belongs to him as a Spirit a spiritual Worship is due to him in the inference we have 1. The manner of Worship in Spirit and Truth 2. The necessity of such a Worship must The Proposition declares the Nature of God the Inference the Duty of Man The Observations lie plain Ob. 1. God is a pure spiritual Being He is a Spirit 2. The Worship due from the Creature to God must be agreeable to the Nature of God and purely spiritual 3. The Evangelical State is suted to the Nature of God For the first D. God is a pure spiritual Being 'T is the Observation of one * Episcop insti tut l. 4. c. 3. that the plain assertion of Gods being a Spirit is found but once in the whole Bible and that is in this place which may well be wondred at because God is so often described with hands feet eyes and ears in the form and figure of a Man The spiritual Nature of God is deducible from many places but not any where as I remember asserted totidem verbis but in this Text Some alledge that place 2 Cor. 3.17 the Lord is that Spirit for the proof of it but that seems to have a different sense In the Text the Nature of God is described in that place the operations of God in the Gospel * Amyrald in loc 'T is not the Ministry of Moses or that old Covenant which communicates to you that Spirit it speaks of but it is the Lord Jesus and the Doctrin of the Gospel delivered by him whereby this Spirit and Liberty is dispensed to you He opposes here the Liberty of the Gospel to the Servitude of the Law 'T is from Christ that a Divine Vertue diffuseth it self by the Gospel 't is by him not by the Law that we partake of that Spirit * Suarez de Deo vol. 1. P. 9. Col. 2. The Spirituality of God is as evident as his Being If we grant that God is we must necessarily grant that he cannot be corporeal because a Body is of an imperfect Nature It will appear incredible to any that acknowledge God the first Being and Creator of all things that he should be a massy heavy Body and have Eyes and Ears Feet and hands as we have For the explication of it 1. Spirit is taken various ways in Scripture It signifies sometimes an aereal substance as Psal 11.6 A horrible Tempest Heb. A Spirit of Tempest Sometimes the breath which is a thin substance Gen. 6.17 All Flesh wherein is the breath of Life Heb. Spirit of Life A thin substance though it be material and corporeal is called Spirit And in the bodies of living Creatures that which is the principle of their actions is called Spirits the animal and vital Spirits And the finer parts extracted from Plants and Minerals we call Spirits Those volatile parts separated from that gross matter wherein they were immerst because they come nearest to the nature of an incorporeal substance And from this notion of the word 't is translated to signifie those substances that are purely immaterial as Angels and the Souls of Men. Angels are called Spirits Psal 104.4 who makes his Angels Spirits * Heb. 1.14 And not only good Angels are so called but evil Angels Mark 1.27 Souls of men are called Spirits Eccl. 12. And the Soul of Christ is called so John 19.30 whence God is called the God of the Spirits of all Flesh Numb 22.16 and Spirit is opposed to Flesh Isa
the Soul of Man more excellent than other Animals Angels more excellent than Men They contain in their own nature whatsoever dignity there is in the inferior Creatures God must have therefore an excellency above all those and therefore is intirely remote from the conditions of a Body * Calov Socin Proflig P. 129. 130. 'T is a gross conceit therefore to think that God is such a Spirit as the Air is for that is to be a body as the Air is though it be a thin one and if God were no more a Spirit than that or than Angels he would not be the most simple Being * Amirald Sup. Heb. 9. p. 146. c. Yet some think that the spiritual Deity was represented by the Air in the Ark of the Testament It was unlawful to represent him by any Image that God had prohibited Every thing about the Ark had a particular signification The Gold and other Ornaments about it signified something of Christ but were unfit to represent the Nature of God A thing purely invisible and falling under nothing of sense could not represent him to the mind of Man The Air in the Ark was the fittest it represented the invisibility of God Air being imperceptible to our eyes Air diffuseth it self through all parts of the world it glides through secret passages into all Creatures it fills the space between Heaven and Earth there is no place wherein God is not present To evidence this 1. If God were not a Spirit he could not be Creator All multitude begins in and is reduced to unity As above multitude there is an absolute unity So above mixt Creatures there is an absolute simplicity You cannot conceive number without conceiving the beginning of it in that which was not number viz. a unite You cannot conceive any mixture but you must conceive some simple thing to be the Original and Basis of it The works of Art done by rational Creatures have their Foundation in something Spiritual Every Artificer Watch-maker Carpenter hath a model in his own mind of the work he designs to frame The material and outward Fabrick is squared according to an inward and Spiritual Idea A Spiritual Idea speaks a Spiritual faculty as the subject of it God could not have an Idea of that vast number of Creatures he brought into being if he had not had a Spiritual Nature * Amiral moral Tom. 1. pa. 282. The wisdom whereby the world was Created could never be the fruit of a Corporeal nature such natures are not capable of understanding and comprehending the things which are within the compass of their nature much less of produ them And therefore beasts which have only Corporeal faculties move to objects by the force of their sense and have no knowledge of things as they are comprehended by the understanding of Man All acts of wisdom speak an intelligent and Spiritual agent The effects of wisdom goodness power are so great and admirable that they bespeak him a more perfect and eminent being than can possibly be beheld under a bodily shape Can a Coporeal substance put Wisdom in the inward parts and give understanding to the heart * Job 38.16 2. If God were not a pure Spirit he could not be one If God had a body consisting of distinct members as ours or all of one nature as the water and air are yet he were then capable of division and therefore could not be entirely one Either those parts would be finite or infinite if finite they are not parts of God for to be God and finite is a contradiction If infinite then there are as many infinites as distinct members and therefore as many Deities Suppose this body had all parts of the same nature as air and water hath every little part of air is as much air as the greatest and every little part of water is as much water as the Ocean so every little part of God would be as much God as the whole as many particular Deities to make up God as little Atomes to compose a body What can be more absurd If God had a body like a human body and were compounded of body and Soul of substance and quality he could not be the most perfect unity he would be made up of distinct parts and those of a distinct nature as the members of a human body are Where there is the greatest unity there must be the greatest simplicity but God is one As he is free from any change so he is void of any multitude Deut. 6.4 The Lord our God is one Lord. 3. If God had a body as we have he would not be invisible Every material thing is not visible The Air is a body yet invisible but it is sensible the cooling quality of it is felt by us at every breath and we know it by our touch which is the most material sense Every body that hath Members like to bodies is visible But God is invisible * Daille in Tim The Apostle reckons it amongst his other perfections 1 Tim. 1.17 Now unto the King Eternal Immortal Invisible He is invisible to our sense which beholds nothing but material and coloured things and incomprehensible to our understanding that conceives nothing but what is finite God is therefore a Spirit uncapable of being seen and infinitely uncapable of being understood If he be invisible he is also Spiritual If he had a body and hid it from our eyes he might be said not to be seen but could not be said to be invisible When we say a thing is visible we understand that it hath such qualities which are the objects of sense tho we may never see that which is in its own nature is to be seen God hath no such qualities as fall under the perception of our sense His works are visible to us but not his God-head * Rom. 1.20 The nature of a human body is to be seen and handled Christ gives us such a description of it Luke 24.39 Handle me and see for a Spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have But man hath been so far from seeing God that it is impossible he can see him 1 Tim. 6.16 There is such a disproportion between an infinite object and a finite sense and understanding that it is utterly impossible either to behold or comprehend him But if God had a body more luminous and glorious than that of the Sun he would be as well visible to us as the Sun tho the immensity of that light would dazle our eyes and forbid any close inspection into him by the vertue of our sence We have seen the shape and figure of the Sun but no man hath ever seen the shape of God * Joh. 5.37 If God had a body he were visible tho he might not perfectly and fully be seen by us * Goulart de Dieu pa. 94. As we see the Heavens tho we see not the extension latitude and greatness of them
Essence as in his Veracity and Faithfulness They are perfections belonging to his Nature But if he were not a pure Spirit he could not be immutable by Nature 7. If God were not a pure Spirit He could not be omnipresent He is in Heaven above and the Earth below * Deut. 4.39 He fills Heaven and Earth * Jer. 23.24 The Divine Essence is at once in Heaven and Earth but it is impossible a Body can be in two places at one and the same time Since God is every where he must be spiritual Had he a Body he could not penetrate all things he would be circumscribed in place He could not be every where but in parts not in the whole one member in one place and another in another for to be confined to a particlar place is the property of a Body But since he is diffused through the whole World higher than Heaven deeper than Hell longer than the Earth broader than the Sea * Job 11.8 he hath not any corporeal matter If he had a Body wherewith to fill Heaven and Earth there could be no Body besides his own 'T is the Nature of Bodies to bound one another and hinder the extending of one another Two Bodies cannot be in the same place in the same point of Earth one excludes the other And it will follow hence that we are nothing no substances meer illusions there could be no place for any Body else * Gamacheus Theol. Tom. 1. Quos 3. C. 1. If his Body were as bigg as the World as it must be if with that he filled Heaven and Earth there would not be room for him to move a hand or a foot or extend a finger for there would be no place remaining for the motion 8. If God were not a Spirit he could not be the most perfect Being The more perfect any thing is in the rank of Creatures the more spiritual and simple it is as Gold is the more pure and perfect that hath least mixture of other Metals If God were not a Spirit there would be Creatures of a more excellent Nature than God as Angels and Souls which the Scripture calls Spirits in opposition to Bodies There is more of perfection in the first notion of a Spirit than in the notion of a Body God cannot be less perfect than his Creatures and contribute an excellency of being to them which he wants himself If Angels and Souls possess such an excellency and God want that excellency he would be less than his Creatures and the excellency of the Effect would exceed the excellency of the Cause But every Creature even the highest Creature is infinitely short of the perfection of God for whatsoever excellency they have is finite and limited 't is but a spark from the Sun a drop from the Ocean but God is unboundedly perfect in the highest manner without any limitation and therefore above Spirits Angels the highest Creatures that were made by him An infinite sublimity a pure act to which nothing can be added from which nothing can be taken In him there is light and no darkness * 1 John 1.5 spirituality without any matter perfection without any shadow or taint of imperfection Light pierceth into all things preserves its own purity and admits of no mixture of any thing else with it Question It may be said If God be a Spirit and it is impossible he can be otherwise than a Spirit how comes God so often to have such Members as we have in our Bodies ascribed to him not only a Soul but particular bodily parts as heart arms hands eyes ears face and back-parts And how is it that he is never called a Spirit in plain words but in this Text by our Saviour Answ 'T is true many parts of the Body and natural affections of the human nature are reported of God in Scripture Head * Dan. 7.9 Eyes and Eye-lids * Psal 11.4 Apple of the Eye Mouth c. our Affections also Grief Joy Anger c. But it is to be considered 1. That this is in condescension to our weakness God being desirous to make himself known to Man * Loquitur lex secund ling. filiorum hominum was the H. saying whom he created for his Glory humbles as it were his own Nature to such representations as may sute and assists the capacity of the Creature Since by the condition of our nature nothing erects a notion of it self in our understanding but as it is conducted in by our sence God hath served himself of those things which are most exposed to our sence most obvious to our understandings to give us some acquaintance with his own Nature and those things which otherwise we were not capable of having any notion of As our Souls are linkt with our Bodies so our knowledge is linkt with our sence that we can scarce imagin any thing at first but under a corporeal form and figure till we come by great attention to the Object to make by the help of reason a separation of the spiritual substance from the corporeal fancy and consider it in its own nature We are not able to conceive a Spirit without some kind of resemblance to something below it nor understand the actions of a Spirit without considering the operations of a human Body in its several Members As the Glories of another Life are signified to us by the pleasures of this so the Nature of God by a gracious condescension to our capacities is signified to us by a likeness to our own The more familiar the things are to us which God uses to this purpose the more proper they are to teach us what he intends by them Answ 2. All such representations are to signifie the acts of God as they hear some likeness to those which we perform by those members he ascribes to himself So that those members ascribed to him rather note his visible operations to us than his invisible Nature and signifie that God doth some works like to those which men do by the assistance of those Organs of their Bodies * Amyral de Trin. p. 218. 219. So the wisdom of God is called his Eye because he knows that with his mind which we see with our eyes The efficiency of God is called his Hand and Arm because as we act with our hands so doth God with his Power The divine Efficacies are signified By his eyes and ears we understand his Omniscience by his face the manifestation of his Favour by his mouth the revelation of his Will by his nostrils the acceptation of our Prayers by his bowels the tenderness of his Compassion by his heart the sincerity of his Affections by his hand the strength of his Power by his feet the ubiquity of his Presence And in this he intends instruction and comfort By his eyes he signifies his watchfulness over us By his ears his readiness to hear the crys of the oppressed * Psal 34.15 By his Arm his
of our Natures in the practice of the Israelites a People chosen out of the whole world to bear up Gods name and preserve his glory And in that the Images of God were so soon set up in the Christian Church and to this day the picture of God in the shape of an old man is visible in the Temples of the Romanists 'T is prone to the Nature of Man 4. To represent God by a corporeal Image and to worship him in and by that Image is Idolatry Though the Israelites did not acknowledge the Calf to be God nor intended a worship to any of the Egyptian Deities by it but worshipped that God in it who had so lately and miraculously delivered them from a cruel Servitude and could not in natural reason judge him to be clothed with a bodily shape much less to be like an Ox that eateth grass yet the Apostle brings no less a charge against them than that of Idolatry 1 Cor. 10.7 he calls them Idolaters who before that Calf kept a Feast to Jehovah citing Exod. 32.5 Suppose we could make such an Image of God as might perfectly represent him yet since God hath prohibited it shall we be wiser than God He hath sufficiently manifested himself in his Works without Images He is seen in the Creatures more particularly in the Heavens which declare his Glory His Works are more excellent representations of him as being the works of his own hands than any thing that is the Product of the Art of Man His Glory sparkles in the Heavens Sun Moon and Stars as being magnificent pieces of his Wisdom and Power yet the kissing the hand to the Sun or the Heavens as representatives of the Excellency and Majesty of God is Idolatry in Scripture account and a denial of God * Job 31.26 27 28. Chin. Predict Part. 2. P. 252. a prostituting the glory of God to a Creature * Lawson Body Divin P. 161 Either the worship is terminated on the Image it self and then it is confessed by all to be Idolatry because it is a giving that worship to a Creature which is the sole right of God or not terminated in the Image but in the Object represented by it 't is then a foolish thing we may as well terminate our worship on the true Object without as with an Image An erected Statue is no sign or symbol of Gods special presence as the Ark Tabernacle Temple were It is no part of divine institution has no Authority of a Command to support it no Cordial of a promise to encourage it and the Image being infinitely distant from and below the Majesty and Spirituality of God cannot constitute one object of worship with him To put a Religious Character upon any Image formed by the corrupt imagination of Man as a representation of the invisible and spiritual Deity is to think the Godhead to be like silver and gold or stone graven by art and mans device * Acts 17.29 3. This Doctrine will direct us in our conceptions of God as a pure perfect Spirit than which nothing can be imagined more perfect more pure more spiritual 1. We cannot have an adequate or sutable conception of God He dwells in inaccessible light inaccessible to the acuteness of our fancy as well as the weakness of our sense If we could have thoughts of him as high and excellent as his Nature our conceptions must be as infinite as his Nature All our imaginations of him cannot represent him because every created species is finite it cannot therefore represent to us a full and substantial notion of an infinite Being We cannot speak or think worthily enough of him who is greater than our words vaster than our understandings Whatsoever we speak or think of God is handed first to us by the notice we have of some perfection in the Creature and explains to us some particular excellency of God rather than the fulness of his Essence No Creature nor all Creatures together can furnish us with such a magnificent notion of God as can give us a clear view of him Yet God in his word is pleased to step below his own excellency and point us to those excellencies in his works whereby we may ascend to the knowledge of those excellencies which are in his Nature But the Creatures whence we draw our lessons being finite and our understandings being finite 't is utterly impossile to have a notion of God commensurate to the immensity and spirituality of his Being * Amyraut Moral Tom. 1. P. 289. God is not like to visible Creatures nor is there any proportion between him and the most spiritual We cannot have a full notion of a spiritual Nature much less can we have of God who is a Spirit above Spirits No Spirit can clearly represent him The Angels that are great Spirits are bounded in their extent finite in their being and of a mutable Nature Yet though we cannot have a sutable conception of God we must not content our selves without any conception of him 'T is our sin not to endeavour after a true notion of him 'T is our sin to rest in a mean and low notion of him when our reason tells us we are capable of having higher But if we ascend as high as we can though we shall then come short of a sutable notion of him this is not our sin but our weakness God is infinitely superior to the choicest conceptions not only of a sinner but of a Creature If all conceptions of God below the true nature of God were sin there is not a holy Angel in Heaven free from sin because tho they are the most capacious Creatures yet they cannot have such a Notion of an infinite being as is fully sutable to his nature unless they were infinite as he himself is 2. But however we must by no means conceive of God under a human or Corporeal shape Since we cannot have conceptions honourable enough for his nature we must take heed we entertain not any which may debase his nature Tho we cannot comprehend him as he is we must be careful not to fancy him to be what he is not 'T is a vain thing to conceive him with human lineaments We must think higher of him than to ascribe to him so mean a shape We deny his Spirituality when we fancy him under such a form He is Spiritual and between that which is Spiritual and that which is Corporeal there is no resemblance * Episco institu li. 4. § 2. c. 10. Indeed Daniel saw God in a human form Daniel 7.9 The Ancient of days did sit whose garment was white as snow and the hairs of his head like pure Wool he is described as coming to Judgment t is not meant of Christ probably because Christ ver 13. is called the Son of Man coming near to the Ancient of days This is not the proper shape of God for no man hath seen his shape It was a vision wherein such
understanding So we are not able to conceive of spiritual Beings in the purity of their own nature without such a temperament and such shadows to usher them into our minds And therefore we find the Spirit of God accommodates himself to our contracted and teddered capacities and uses such expressions of God as are suted to us in this state of flesh wherein we are And therefore because we cannot apprehend God in the simplicity of his own Being and his undivided Essence he draws the representations of himself from several Creatures and several actions of those Creatures As sometimes he is said to be angry to walk to sit to fly not that we should rest in such conceptions of him but take our rise from this foundation and such perfections in the Creatures to mount up to a knowledge of Gods nature by those several steps and conceive of him by those divided Excellencies because we cannot conceive of him in the purity of his own Essence * Lessius We cannot possibly think or speak of God unless we transfer the names of created perfections to him yet we are to conceive of them in a higher manner when we apply them to the Divine Nature than when we consider them in the several Creatures formally exceeding those perfections and excellencies which are in the Creature and in a more excellent manner * Towerson on the Commandments P. 112. as one saith though we cannot comprehend God without the help of such resemblances yet we may without making an Image of him so that inability of ours excuseth those apprehensions of him from any way offending against his Divine Nature These are not notions so much suted to the nature of God as the weakness of man They are helps to our meditations but ought not to be formal conceptions of him We may assist our selves in our apprehensions of him by considering the subtilty and spirituality of Air and considering the members of a body without thinking him to be air or to have any corporeal member Our reason tells us that whatsoever is a body is limited and bounded and the notion of infiniteness and bodiliness cannot agree and consist together And therefore what is offered by our fancy should be purified by our reason 4. Therefore we are to elevate and refine all our notions of God and spiritualize our conceptions of him Every man is to have a conception of God therefore he ought to have one of the highest elevation Since we cannot have a full notion of him we should endeavour to make it as high and as pure as we can Though we cannot conceive of God but some corporeal representations or images in our minds will be conversant with us as motes in the Air when we look upon the Heavens yet our conceptions may and must rise higher As when we see the draught of the Heavens and Earth in a Globe or a Kingdom in a Map it helps our conceptions but doth not terminate them We conceive them to be of a vast extent far beyond that short description of them So we should endeavour to refine every representation of God to rise higher and higher and have our apprehensions still more purified separating the perfect from the imperfect casting away the one and greatning the other conceive him to be a Spirit diffused through all containing all perceiving all All the perfections of God are infinitely elevated above the excellencies of the Creatures above whatsoever can be conceived by the clearest and most piercing understanding The Nature of God as a Spirit is infinitely superior to whatsoever we can conceive perfect in the notion of a created Spirit Whatsoever God is he is infinitely so He is infinite Wisdom infinite Goodness infinite Knowledge infinite Power infinite Spirit infinitely distant from the weakness of Creatures infinitely mounted above the excellencies of Creatures As easie to be known that he is as impossible to be comprehended what he is Conceive of him as excellent without any imperfection A Spirit without parts great without quantity perfect without quality every where without place Powerful without members understanding without ignorance wise without reasoning light without darkness infinitely more excelling the beauty of all Creatures than the light in the Sun pure and unviolated exceeds the splendor of the Sun dispersed and divided through a cloudy and misty Air And when you have risen to the highest conceive him yet infinitely above all you can conceive of Spirit and acknowledge the infirmity of your own minds And whatsoever conception comes into your minds say this is not God God is more than this If I could conceive him he were not God for God is incomprehensibly above whatsoever I can say whatsoever I can think and conceive of him 4. Inference If God be a Spirit no corporeal thing can defile him Some bring an Argument against the Omnipresence of God that it is a disparagement to the Divine Essence to be every where in nasty Cottages as well as beautiful Palaces and garnisht Temples What place can defile a Spirit Is Light which approaches to the nature of Spirit polluted by shining upon a Dung-hill or a Sun-beam tainted by darting upon a Quag-mire Doth an Angel contract any soyl by stepping into a nasty Prison to deliver Peter What can steam from the most noysom body to pollute the spiritual nature of God As he is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity * Heb. 1.13 so he is of a more spiritual substance than to contract any physical pollution from the places where he doth diffuse himself Did our Saviour who had a true body derive any taint from the Lepers he touched the diseases he cured or the Devils he expell'd God is a pure Spirit plungeth himself into no filth is dasht with no spot by being present with all bodies Bodies only receive defilement from bodies 5. Inference If God be a Spirit he is active and communicative He is not clogg'd with heavy and sluggish matter which is cause of dulness and inactivity The more subtil thin and approaching neerer the Nature of a Spirit any thing is the more diffusive it is Air is a gliding substance spreads it self through all Regions peirceth into all bodies it fills the space between Heaven and Earth there is nothing but partakes of the vertue of it Light which is an emblem of Spirit insinuates it self into all places refresheth all things As Spirits are fuller so they are more overflowing more piercing more operative than bodies The Egyptian Horses were weak things because they were Flesh and not Spirit * Isay 31.3 The Soul being a Spirit conveys more to the Body than the Body can to it What cannot so great a Spirit do for us What cannot so great a Spirit work in us God being a Spirit above all Spirits can pierce into the Center of all Spirits make his way into the most secret recesses stamp what he pleases 'T is no more to him to turn our Spirits than to make
the Majesty of the Creator of the world and the excellency of Religion No Nation no person did ever assert that the vilest part of man was enough for the most excellent Being as God is That a bodily service could be a sufficient acknowledgment of the greatness of God or a sufficient return for the bounty of God * Amyraut Ib. Man could not but know that he was to act in Religion conformably to the Object of Religion and to the excellency of his own Soul The notion of a God was sufficient to fill the mind of man with admiration and reverence and the first conclusion from it would be to honour God and that he have all the affection placed on him that so infinite and spiritual a Being did deserve The progress then would be that this excellent Being was to be honoured with the motions of the Understanding and Will with the purest and most spiritual powers in the nature of man because he was a spiritual Being and had nothing of matter mingled with him Such a brutish imagination to suppose that blood and fumes beasts and incense could please a Deity without a spiritual frame cannot be supposed to befal any but those that had lost their reason in the rubbish of sense Meer rational nature could never conclude that so excellent a Spirit would be put off with a meer animal service an attendance of matter and body without Spirit when they themselves of an inferior nature would be loath to sit down contented with an outside service from those that belong to them So that this instruction of our Saviour that God is to be worshipped in Spirit and Truth is conformable to the sentiments of nature and drawn from the most undeniable principles of it The excellency of Gods nature and the excellent constitution of human faculties concur naturally to support this perswasion This was as natural to be known by men as the necessity of Justice and Temperance for the support of human societies and bodies 'T is to be feared that if there be not among us such brutish apprehensions there are such brutish dealings with God in our services against the light of nature when we place all our worship of God in outward attendances and drooping countenances with unbelieving frames and formal devotions when Prayer is muttered over in private slightly as a Parrot learns lessons by rote not understanding what it speaks or to what end it speaks it not glorifying God in Thought and Spirit with Understanding and Will 3. Spiritual Worship therefore was always required by God and always offered to him by one or other Man had a perpetual obligation upon him to such a worship from the nature of God and what is founded upon the nature of God is unvariable This and that particular mode of worship may wax old as a Garment and as a Vesture may be folded up and changed as the expression is of the Heavens * Heb. 1.11 12. But God endures for ever his spirituality fails not therefore a worship of him in Spirit must run through all ways and rites of Worship God must cease to be Spirit before any service but that which is spiritual can be accepted by him The light of Nature is the light of God the light of nature being unchangeable what was dictated by that was alway and will alway be required by God The worship of God being perpetually due from the Creature the worshipping him as God is as perpetually his right Though the outward expressions of this Honour were different one way in Paradice for a worship was then due since a solemn time for that worship was appointed another under the Law another under the Gospel the Angels also worship God in Heaven and fall down before his Throne yet though they differ in rites they agree in this necessary ingredient All rites though of a different shape must be offered to him not as Carcasses but animated with the affections of the Soul Abels Sacrifice had not been so excellent in Gods esteem without those gracious habits and affections working in his Soul * Heb. 11.4 Faith works by Love his heart was on fire as well as his Sacrifice Cain rested upon his Present perhaps thought he had obliged God he depended upon the outward Ceremony but sought not for the inward purity It was an offering brought to the Lord * Gen. 4.5 he had the right object but not the right manner Gen. 4.7 If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted And in the Command afterwards to Abraham Walk before me and be thou perfect was the direction in all our religious acts and walkings with God A sincere act of the Mind and Will looking above and beyond all Symbolls extending the Soul to a pitch far above the Body and seeing the day of Christ through the vail of the Ceremonies was required by God And though Moses by Gods order had instituted a multitude of carnal Ordinances Sacrifices Washings Oblations of sensible things and recomended to the people the diligent observation of those Statutes by the allurements of promises and denouncing of threatnings as if there were nothing else to be regarded and the true workings of Grace were to be buried under a heap of Ceremonies yet sometimes he doth point them to the inward worship and by the Command of God requires of them the Circumcision of the Heart Deut. 10.16 the turning to God with all their heart and all their Soul Deut. 30.10 whereby they might recollect that it was the engagement of the Heart and the worship of the Spirit that was most agreeable to God and that he took not any pleasure in their observance of Ceremonies without true Piety within and the true purity of their thoughts 4. 'T is therefore as much every mans duty to worship God in Spirit as it is their duty to worship him Worship is so due to him as God as that he that denies it disowns his Deity And spiritual worship is so due that he that waves it denies his spirituality 'T is a debt of Justice we owe to God to worship him and it is as much a debt of Justice to worship him according to his Nature Worship is nothing else but a rendring to God the honour that is due to him and therefore the right posture of our Spirits in it is as much or more due than the material worship in the modes of his own prescribing that is grounded both upon his Nature and upon his Command this only upon his Command that is perpetually due whereas the Channel wherein outward worship runs may be dryed up and the River diverted another way Such a worship wherein the mind thinks of God feels a sense of God has the Spirit consecrated to God the Heart glowing with affections to God 'T is else a mocking God with a feather A rational Nature must worship God with that wherein the Glory of God doth most sparkle in him God is most visible in the frame
All Spiritual acts must be acts of reason otherwise they are not human acts because they want that principle which is constitutive of man and doth difference him from other Creatures Acts done only by sense are the acts of a brute acts done by reason are the acts of a man That which is only an act of sense cannot be an act of Religion The sense without the conduct of reason is not the subject of Religious acts for then beasts were capable of Religion as well as Men There cannot be Religion where there is not reason and there cannot be the exercise of Religion where there is not an exercise of the rational faculties Nothing can be a Christian act that is not a human act Besides all worship must be for some end the worship of God must be for God t is by the exercise of our rational faculties that we only can intend an end An Ignorant and Carnal worship is a brutish worship Particularly 1. Spiritual Worship is a Worship from a spiritual Nature Not only Physically spiritual so our Souls are in their frame but morally spiritual by a renewing principle The heart must be first cast into the Mould of the Gospel before it can perform a Worship required by the Gospel Adam living in Paradice might perform a spiritual worship but Adam fallen from his rectitude could not We being Heirs of his Nature are Heirs of his Impotence Restoration to a spiritual Life must precede any act of spiritual Worship As no work can be good so no worship can be spiritual till we are created in Christ * Eph. 2.10 Christ is our Life * Col. 3.4 As no natural action can be performed without life in the root or heart so no spiritual act without Christ in the Soul Our being in Christ is as necessary to every spiritual act as the union of our Soul with our Body is necessary to natural action Nothing can exceed the limits of its nature for then it should exceed it self in acting and do that which it hath no principle to doe A Beast cannot act like a Man without partaking of the nature of a Man nor a Man act like an Angel without partaking of the Angelical nature How can we perform spiritual acts without a spiritual principle Whatsoever worship proceeds from the corrupted nature cannot deserve the title of spiritual worship because it springs not from a spiritual habit If those that are evil cannot speak good things those that are carnal cannot offer a spiritual service Poyson is the fruit of a Vipers nature Mat. 12.34 Oh Generation of Vipers how can you being evil speak good things For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks As the root is so is the fruit If the Soul be habitually carnal the worship cannot be actually spiritual There may be an intention of Spirit but there is no spiritual principle as a root of that intention A heart may be sensibly united with a duty when it is not spiritually united with Christ in it Carnal motives and carnal ends may fix the mind in an act of worship as the sense of some pressing affliction may enlarge a mans mind in Prayer Whatsoever is agreeable to the nature of God must have a stamp of Christ upon it a stamp of his grace in performance as well as of his mediation in the acceptance The Apostle lived not but Christ lived in him * Gal. 2.20 the Soul worships not but Christ in him Not that Christ performs the act of Worship but enables us spiritually to worship after he enables us spiritually to live As God counts not any Soul living but in Christ so he counts not any a spiritual Worshipper but in Christ The goodness and fatness of the fruit comes from the fatness of the Olive wherein we are engrafted We must find healing in Christs wings before God can find spirituality in our services All worship issuing from a dead nature is but a dead service A living action cannot be performed without being knit to a living root 2. Spiritual Worship is done by the influence and with the assistance of the Spirit of God A Heart may be spiritual when a particular act of Worship may not be spiritual The Spirit may dwell in the Heart when he may suspend his influence on the act Our worship is then spiritual when the fire that kindles our affections comes from Heaven as that fire upon the Altar wherewith the Sacrifices were consumed God tasts a sweetness in no service but as it is drest up by the hand of the Mediator and hath the Air of his own Spirit in it They are but natural acts without a supernatural assistance Without an actual influence we cannot act from spiritual motives nor for spiritual ends nor in a spiritual manner We cannot mortifie a Lust without the Spirit * Rom. 8.13 nor quicken a service without the Spirit Whatsoever corruption is killed is slain by his Power whatsoever duty is spiritualized is refined by his Breath He quickens our dead bodies in our Resurection * Rom. 8.11 He renews our dead Souls in our Regeneration He quickens our carnal services in our adorations The choicest acts of worship are but infirmities without his auxiliary help * Rom. 8.26 We are Loggs unable to move our selves till he raise our faculties to a pitch agreeable to God puts his hand to the duty and lifts that up and us with it Never any great act was performed by the Apostles to God or for God but they are said to be filled with the Holy-Ghost Christ could not have been conceived immaculate as that holy thing without the Spirits overshadowing the Virgin nor any spiritual act conceived in our heart without the Spirits moving upon us to bring forth a living Religion from us The acts of worship are said to be in the Spirit Supplication in the Spirit * Eph. 6.18 not only with the strength and affection of our own Spirits but with the mighty operation of the Holy-Ghost if Jude may be the Interpreter * Jude 20. The Holy-Ghost exciting us impelling us and firing our Souls by his divine flame raising up the affections and making the Soul cry with a holy importunity Abba Father To render our worship spiritual we should before every ingagement in it implore the actual presence of the Spirit without which we are not able to send forth one spiritual breath or groan but be Wind-bound like a Ship without a Gale and our worship be no better than carnal How doth the Spouse solicite the Spirit with an awake oh North-wind and come thou South-wind c. * Cant. 4.16 3. Spiritual Worship is done with Sincerity When the heart stands right to God and the Soul performs what it pretends to perform When we serve God with our Spirits as the Apostle Rom. 1.9 God is my Witness whom I serve with my Spirit in the Gospel of his Son This is not meant of the
there but to behold the beauty of the Lord * Psal 27.4 and taste the ravishing sweetness of his presence No doubt but Elijah's desires for the enjoyment of God while he was mounting to Heaven were as fiery as the Chariot wherein he was carried Unutterable groans acted in worship are the fruit of the Spirit and certainly render it a spiritual service * Rom. 8.26 Strong appetites are agreeable to God and prepare us to eat the fruit of worship A spiritual Paul presseth forward to know Christ and the power of his Resurrection and a spiritual Worshipper actually aspires in every duty to know God and the power of his Grace To desire worship as an end is carnal to desire it as a means and act desires in it for communion with God in it is spiritual and the fruit of a spiritual life 5. Thankfulness and admiration are to be exercised in spiritual services This is a worship of Spirits Praise is the adoration of the blessed Angels * Isa 6.3 and of glorified Spirits Rev. 4.11 Thou art worthy oh Lord to receive Glory and Honour and Power And Rev. 5.13.14 they worship him ascribing Blessing Honour Glory and Power to him that sits upon the Throne and to the Lamb for ever and ever Other acts of worship are confined to this Life and leave us as soon as we have set our foot in Heaven There no notes but this of Praise are warbled out The Power Wisdom Love and Grace in the dispensation of the Gospel seat themselves in the thoughts and tongues of blessed Souls Can a worship on Earth be spiritual that hath no mixture of an eternal heavenly duty with it The worship of God in Innocence had been chiefly an admiration of him in the works of Creation and should not our Evangelical worship be an admiration of him in the works of Redemption which is a restoration to a better State After the petitioning for pardoning Grace * Hos 14.2 there is a rendring the Calves or Heifers of our lips alluding to the Heifers used in Eucharistical Sacrifices The Praise of God is the choicest Sacrifice and Worship under a dispensation of redeeming Grace This is the prime and eternal part of worship under the Gospel The Psalmist Psalm 149. and 150. speaking of the Gospel times spurrs on to this kind of worship Sing to the Lord a new Song Let the Children of Zion be joyful i●●●●ir King Let the Saints be joyful in glory and sing aloud upon their beds Let the high praises of God be in their mouths He begins and ends both Psalms with praise ye the Lord. That cannot be a spiritual and evangelical worship that hath nothing of the praise of God in the heart The consideration of Gods adorable perfections discovered in the Gospel will make us come to him with more seriousness beg blessings of him with more confidence fly to him with a winged Faith and Love and more spiritually glorify him in our attendances upon him 7. Spiritual Worship is performed with delight The Evangelical worship is prophetically signified by keeping the Feast of Tabernacles * Zach. 14.16 they shall go up from year to year to worship the King the Lord of Hosts and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles Why that Feast when there were other Feasts observed by the Jews That was a Feast celebrated with the greatest joy typical of the gladness which was to be under the exhibition of the Messiah and a thankful comemmoration of the Redemption wrought by him It was to be celebrated five days after the solemn day of Atonement Levit. 23.34 compared with v. 27. wherein there was one of the solemnest types of the Sacrifice of the death of Christ In this Feast they commemorated their exchange of Egypt for Canaan the Manna wherewith they were fed the Water out of the Rock wherewith they were refresht In remembrance of this they poured water on the ground pronouncing those words in Isaiah they shall draw waters out of the Wells of Salvation which our Saviour referrs to himself John 7.37 inviting them to him to drink upon the last day the great day of the Feast of Tabernacles wherein this solemn Ceremony was observed Since we are freed by the death of the Redeemer from the Curses of the Law God requires of us a Joy in spiritual priviledges A sad frame in worship gives the lye to all Gospel-liberty to the Purchase of the Redeemers Death the Triumphs of his Resurrection 'T is a carriage as if we were under the influences of the legal Fire and Lightning and an entring a Protest against the Freedom of the Gospel The Evangelical worship is a Spiritual worship and Praise Joy and Delight are prophecied of as great ingredients in attendance on Gospel Ordinances Isa 12.3 4 5. What was occasion of terror in the worship of God under the Law is the occasion of delight in the worship of God under the Gospel The Justice and Holiness of God so terrible in the Law becomes comfortable under the Gospel since they have feasted themselves on the active and passive obedience of the Redeemer The approach is to God as gracious not to God as unpacified as a Son to a Father not as a Criminal to a Judge Under the Law God was represented as a Judge remembring their Sin in their Sacrifices and representing the punishment they had merited in the Gospel as a Father accepting the Atonement and publishing the Reconciliation wrought by the Redeemer Delight in God is a Gospel frame therefore the more joyful the more spiritual The Sabbath is to be a delight not only in regard of the Day but in regard of the Duties of it * Isa 58.13 in regard of the marvelous work he wrought on it raising up our blessed Redeemer on that day whereby a foundation was laid for the rendring our persons and services acceptable to God Psal 118.24 This is the day which the Lord hath made we will be glad and rejoyce in it A lumpish frame becomes not a day and a duty that hath so noble and spiritual a mark upon it The Angels in the first act of worship after the Creation were highly joyful Job 38.7 They shouted for joy c. The Saints have particularly acted this in their Worship David would not content himself with an approach to the Altar without going to God as his exceeding joy Psal 43.4 My triumphant joy When he danced before the Ark he seems to be transformed into delight and pleasure 2 Sam. 6.14 16. He had as much delight in Worship as others had in their Harvest and Vintage And those that took joyfully the spoiling of their Goods would as joyfully attend upon the Communications of God Where there is a fullness of the Spirit there is a waking melody to God in the heart * Eph. 5.18.19 and where there is an acting of love as there is in all spiritual services the proper fruit of it is joy in a neer
approach to the Object of the Souls affection Love is appetitus unionis The more love the more delight in the approachings of God to the Soul or the out-goings of the Soul to God As the Object of Worship is amiable in a spiritual eye so the ●●●hs tending to a communion with this Object are delightful in the exercise Where there is no delight in a duty there is no delight in the object of the duty The more of grace the more of pleasure in the actings of it As the more of nature there is in any natural Agent the more of pleasure in the Act So the more heavenly the Worship the more spiritual Delight is the frame and temper of Glory A heart filled up to the brim with joy is a heart filled up to the brim with the Spirit Joy is the fruit of the Holy-Ghost * Gal. 5.22 1. Not the joy of Gods dispensation flowing from God but a gracious active joy streaming to God There is a joy when the Comforts of God are dropt into the Soul as Oyle upon the Wheel which indeed makes the faculties move with more speed and activity in his service like the Chariots of Aminadab And a Soul may serve God in the strength of this taste and its delight terminated in the sensible comfort This is not the joy I mean but such a joy that hath God for its Object delighting in him as the term in worship as the way to him The first is Gods dispensation the other is our duty The first is an act of Gods favour to us the second a sprout of habitual grace in us The Comforts we have from God may elevate our duties but the grace we have within doth spiritualize our duties 2. Nor is every delight an argument of a spiritual service All the the requisites to worship must be taken in A man may invent a worship and delight in it as Micah in the adoration of his Idol when he was glad he had got both an Ephod and a Levite * Judges 17. As a man may have a contentment in Sin so he may have a contentment in Worship not because it is a worship of God but the worship of his own invention agreeable to his own humor and design as Isa 58.2 't is said they delighted in approaching to God but it was for carnal ends Novelty ingenders Complacency but it must be a worship wherein God will delight and that must be a worship according to his own Rule and infinite Wisdom and not our shallow fancies God requires a cheerfulness in his service especially under the Gospel where he sits upon a Throne of Grace discovers himself in his amiableness and acts the Covenant of Grace and the sweet relation of a Father The Priests of old were not to fully themselves with any sorrow when they were in the exercise of their functions God put a bar to the natural affections of Aaron and his Sons when Nadab and Abihu had been cut off by a severe hand of God * Lev. 10.6 Every true Christian in a higher order of Priest-hood is a person dedicated to joy and peace offering himself a lively Sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving And there is no Christian duty but is to be set off and seasoned with cheerfulness He that loves a cheerful Giver in acts of Charity requires no less a cheerful Spirit in acts of Worship As this is an ingredient in worship so it is the means to make your Spirits intent in worship When the heart triumphs in the consideration of Divine excellency and goodness it will be angry at any thing that offers to jogg and disturb it 8. Spiritual worship is to be performed though with a delight in God yet with a deep reverence of God The Gospel in advancing the spirituality of worship takes off the terror but not the reverence of God which is nothing else in its own nature but a due and high esteem of the excellency of a thing according to the nature of it And therefore the Gospel presenting us with more illustrious notices of the glorious nature of God is so far from indulging any disesteem of him that it requires of us a greater reverence sutable to the hight of its discovery above what could be spell'd in the Book of Creation The Gospel worship is therefore exprest by trembling Hos 11.10 They shall walk after the Lord he shall roar like a Lion when he shall roar then the Children shall tremble from the West When the Lion of the Tribe of Judah shall lift up his powerful voice in the Gospel the Western Gentiles shall run trembling to walk after the Lord. God hath alway attended his greatest manifestations with remarkable Characters of Majesty to create a reverence in his Creature He caused the wind to March before him to cut the Mountain when he manifested himself to Elijah 1 Kings 19.11 A Wind and a Cloud of Fire before that magnificent Vision to Ezekiel Ezek. 1.4 5. Thunders and Lightnings before the giving the Law Exod. 19.18 And a mighty wind before the giving the Spirit Acts 2. God requires of us an aw of him in the very act of performance The Angels are pure and cannot fear him as Sinners but in reverence they cover their Faces when they stand before him * Isa 6.2 His power should make us reverence him as we are Creatures His Justice as we are Sinners His goodness as we are restored Creatures * Daille Sur. 3. Jean P. 150. God is clothed with unspeakable Majesty the glory of his face shines brighter than the Lights of Heaven in their beauty Before him the Angels tremble and the Heavens melt we ought not therefore to come before him with the Sacrifice of Fools nor tender a duty to him without falling low upon our faces and bowing the knees of our hearts in token of reverence Not a slavish fear like that of Devils but a Godly fear like that of Saints * Heb. 12.28 joyned with a sense of an unmoveable Kingdom becomth us And this the Apostle calls a grace necessary to make our service acceptable And therefore the grace necessary to make it spiritual since nothing finds admission to God but what is of a spiritual nature The consideration of his glorious nature should imprint an awful respect upon our Souls to him His goodness should make his Majesty more adorable to us as his Majesty makes his goodness more admirable in his condescensions to us As God is a Spirit our worship must be spiritual and being he is the supream Spirit our worship must be reverential We must observe the State he takes upon him in his Ordinances He is in Heaven we upon the Earth we must not therefore be hasty to utter any thing before God Eccles 5.7 Consider him a Spirit in the highest Heavens and our selves Spirits dwelling in a dreggy Earth Loose and garish frames debase him to our own quality Slight postures of Spirit intimate him to
Majesty of God and the reason of a Creature to give him a trivial thing 'T is unworthy to bestow the best of our strength on our Lust and the worst and weakest in the service of God An infinite Spirit should have affections as near to infinite as we can As he is a Spirit without bounds so he should have a service without limits When we have given him all we cannot serve him according to the excellency of his nature * Josh 24.19 and shall we give him less than all His infinite excellency and our dependance on him as Creatures demands the choicest adoration Our Spirits being the noblest part of our nature are as due to him as the service of our bodies which are the vilest To serve him with the worst only is to diminish his honour 2. Vnder the Law God commanded the best to be offered him He would have the Males the best of the kind the fat the best of the Creature * Exod. 29.13 The inward fat not the of-fails He commanded them to offer him the Firstlings of the flock not the Firstlings of the Womb but the Firstlings of the Year The Jewish Cattle having two breeding times in the beginning of the Spring and the beginning of September The latter breed was the weaker which Jacob knew * Gen. 30. when he laid the Rods before the Cattle when they were strong in the Spring and witheld them when they were feeble in the Autumn One reason as the Jews say why God accepted not the offering of Cain was because he brought the meanest not the best of the fruit and therefore 't is said only that he brought of the fruit of the Ground Gen. 4.3 not the first of the fruit or the best of the fruit as Abel who brought the Firstling of his Flock and the Fat thereof v. 4. 3. And this the Heathen practiced by the light of Nature They for the most part offered Males as being more worthy and burnt the Male not the Female Frank incense as it is divided into those two kinds They offered the best when they offered their Children to Molock Nothing more excellent than Man and nothing dearer to Parents than their Children which are parts of themselves When the Israelites would have a Golden-Calf for a representation of God they would dedicate their Jewels and strip their Wives and Children of their richest Ornaments to shew their devotion Shall men serve their dumb Idols with the best of their substance and the strength of their Souls and shall the living God have a duller service from us than Idols had from them God requires no such hard but delightful worship from us our spirits 4. All Creatures serve Man by the providential order of God with the best they have As we by Gods appointment receive from Creatures the best they can give ought we not with a free will render to God the best we can offer The Beasts give us their best Fat the Trees their best Fruit the Sun its best Light the Fountains their best Streams Shall God order us the best from Creatures and we put him off with the worst from our selves 5. God hath given us the choicest thing he had A Redeemer that was the Power of God and the Wisdom of God The best he had in Heaven his own Son and in himself a Sacrifice for us that we might be enabled to present our selves a Sacrifice to Him And Christ offered himself for us the best he had and that with the strength of the Deity through the Eternal Spirit and shall we grudge God the best part of our selves As God would have a worship from his Creature so it must be with the best part of his Creature If we have given our selves to the Lord * 2 Cor. 8.5 we can worship with no less than our selves What is the Man without his Spirit If we are to worship God with all that we have received from him we must worship him with the best part we have received from him 'T is but a small glory we can give him with the best and shall we deprive him of his right by giving him the worst As what we are is from God so what we are ought to be for God Creation is the foundation of worship Psal 100.2 3. Serve the Lord with gladness Know ye that the Lord he is God 't is he that hath made us He hath ennobled us with spiritual affections where is it fittest for us to employ them but upon him and at what time but when we come solemnly to converse with him Is it Justice to deny him the honour of his best gift to us Our Souls are more his gift to us than any thing in the World Other things are so given that they are often taken from us but our Spirits are the most durable gift Rational faculties cannot be removed without a dissolution of nature Well then * Amyraut Mor. Tom. 2. P. 311. As he is God he is to be honoured with all the propensions and ardor that the infiniteness and excellency of such a Being requires and the incomparable obligations he hath laid upon us in this state deserve at our hands In all our worship therefore our minds ought to be filled with the highest admiration love and reverence Since our end was to glorifie God we answer not our end and honour him not unless we give him the choicest we have Reason 2. We cannot else act towards God according to the nature of rational Creatures Spiritual worship is due to God because of his nature and due from us because of our nature As we are to adore God so we are to adore him as men The nature of a rational Creature makes this impression upon him He cannot view his own nature without having this duty striking upon his mind As he knows by inspection into himself that there was a God that made him so that he is made to be in subjection to God subjection to him in his Spirit as well as his Body and ought morally to testifie this natural dependance on him His constitution informs him that he hath a capacity to converse with God that he cannot converse with him but by those inward faculties If it could be managed by his Body without his Spirit Beasts might as well converse with God as Men. It can never be a reasonable service as it ought to be * Rom. 12.1 unless the reasonable faculties be employed in the management of it It must be a worship prodigiously lame without the concurrence of the cheifest part of Man with it As we are to act conformably to the nature of the object so also to the nature of our own faculties Our faculties in the very gift of them to us were destined to be exercised about what What All other things but the Author of them 'T is a conceit cannot enter into the heart of a rational Creature that he should act as such a Creature in other things
and as a stone in things relating to the Donor of them as a man with his mind about him in the affairs of the world as a Beast without reason in his acts towards God If a man did not employ his reason in other things he would be an unprofitable Creature in the world If he do not employ his spiritual faculties in worship he denies them the proper end and use for which they were given him 't is a practical denial that God hath given him a Soul and that God hath any right to the exercise of it If there were no worship appointed by God in the world the natural inclination of man to some kind of Religion would be in vain and if our inward faculties were not employed in the duties of Religion they would be in vain The true end of God in the endowment of us with them would be defeated by us as much as lies in us if we did not serve him with that which we have from him solely at his own cost As no man can with reason conclude that the Rest commanded on the Sabbath and the Sanctification of it was only a rest of the body that had been performed by the Beasts as well as Men but some higher end was aimed at for the rational Creature So no man can think that the Command for worship terminated only in the presence of the Body that God should give the Command to Man as a reasonable Creature and expect no other service from him than that of a Brute God did not require a worship from man for any want he had or any essential honour that could accrue to him but that men might testifie their gratitude to him and dependance on him 'T is the most horrid ingratitude not to have lively and deep sentiments of gratitude after such obligations and not to make those due acknowledgments that are proper for a rational Creature Religion is the highest and choicest act of a reasonable Creature No Creature under Heaven is capable of it that wants reason As it is a violation of reason not to worship God so it is no less a violation of reason not to worship him with the Heart and Spirit It is a high dishonour to God and defeats him not only of the service due to him from Man but that which is due to him from all the Creatures Every Creature as it is an effect of Gods Power and Wisdom doth passively worship God that is it doth afford matter of adoration to man that hath reason to collect it and return it where it is due Without the exercise of the Soul we can no more hand it to God than without such an exercise we can gather it from the Creature So that by this neglect the Creatures are restrained from answering their chief end they cannot pay any service to God without man nor can man without the employment of his rational faculties render a homage to God any more than beasts can This engagement of our inward power stands firm and unviolable let the modes of worship be what they will or the changes of them by the Soveraign Authority of God never so frequent this could not expire or be changed as long as the nature of Man endured As Man had not been capable of a Command for Worship unless he had been endued with spiritual faculties so he is not active in a true practice of Worship unless they be imployed by him in it The constitution of Man makes this manner of worship perpetually obligatory and the oblation can never cease till man cease to be a Creature furnisht with such faculties In our worship therefore if we would act like rational Creatures we should extend all the powers of our Souls to the utmost pitch and essay to have apprehensions of God equal to the excellency of his Nature which though we may attempt we can never attain Reason 3. Without this engagement of our Spirits no act is an act of worship True worship being an acknowledgment of God and the perfections of his Nature results only from the Soul that being only capable of knowing God and those perfections which are the object and motive of worship The posture of the body is but to testifie the inward temper and affection of the mind If therefore it testifies what it is not 't is a lye and no worship The cringes a Beast may be taught to make to an Altar may as well be called Worship since a man thinks as little of that God he pretends to honour as the beast doth of the Altar to which he bowes Worship is a reverent remembrance of God and giving some honour to him with the intention of the Soul It cannot justly have the name of Worship that wants the essential part of it 'T is an ascribing to God the glory of his Nature an owning subjection and obedience to him as our soveraign Lord This is as impossible to be performed without the Spirit as that there can be life and motion in a body without a Soul 'T is a drawing neer to God not in regard of his essential presence so all things are neer to God but in an acknowledgement of his excellency which is an act of the Spirit without this the worst of men in a place of worship are as neer to God as the best The necessity of the conjunction of our Soul ariseth from the nature of worship which being the most serious thing we can be employed in the highest converse with the highest object requires the choicest temper of Spirit in the performance That cannot be an act of worship which is not an act of Piety and Vertue but there is no act of vertue done by the members of the Body without the concurrence of the Powers of the Soul We may as well call the presence of a dead Carcass in a place of worship an act of Religion as the presence of a living body without an intent Spirit The separation of the Soul from one is natural the other moral that renders the body lifeless but this renders the act loathsome to God As the being of the Soul gives life to the Body so the operation of the Soul gives life to the actions As he cannot be a man that wants the form of a man a rational Soul so that cannot be a worship that wants an essential part the act of the Spirit God will not vouchsafe any acts of man so noble a title without the requisite qualifications Hos 5.6 They shall go with their Flocks and their Herds to seek the Lord c. A multitude of Lambs and Bullocks for Sacrifice to appease Gods Anger God would not give it the title of worship though instituted by himself when it wanted the qualities of such a service The Spirit of Whoredom was in the midst of them v. 4. In the judgment of our Savior it is a vain worship when the Traditions of Men are taught for the Doctrins of God * Mat. 15.9 and no
be purged as well as the Temple was by our Saviour of the Thieves that would rob God of his due worship Antiquity had some Temples wherein it was a crime to bring any gold therefore those that came to worship laid their gold aside before they went into the Temple We should lay aside our worldly and trading thoughts before we address to worship Isa 26.9 With my Spirit within me will I seek thee early Let not our minds be gadding abroad and exil'd from God and themselves It will be thus when the desire of our Soul is to his name and the remembrance of him ver 8. When he hath given so great and admirable a gift as that of his Son in whom are all things necessary to Salvation Righteousness Peace and pardon of sin we should manage the remembrance of his name in worship with the closest unitedness of heart and the most Spiritual affections The motion of the Spirit is the first act in Religion to this we are obliged in every act The Devil requires the Spirit of his votaries should God have a less dedication than the Devil Motives to back this exhortation 1. Not to give God our Spirit is a great sin T is a mockery of God not worship contempt not adoration whatever our outward fervency or protestations may be * N●n valet pr●testatio c●ntra jactum is a rule in the civil law Every alienation of our hearts from him is a real scorn put upon him The acts of the Soul are real and more the acts of the man than the acts of the body because they are the acts of the choicest part of man and of that which is the first spring of all bodily motions 't is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Inrenal speech whereby we must speak with God To give him therefore only an external form of worship without the life of it is a taking his name in vain We mock him when we mind not what we are speaking to him or what he is speaking to us when the motions of our hearts are contrary to the motions of our tongues when we do any thing before him slovenly impudently or rashly As in a Lutinisi it is absurd to sing one Tune and play another so it is a foul thing to tell God one thing with our lips and think another thing with our hearts 't is a sin like that the Apostle chargeth the Heathens with Rom. 1.28 they like not to retain God in their knowledge their stomachs are sick while they are upon any duty and never leave working till they have thrown up all the spiritual part of Worship and rid themselves of the thoughts of God which are as unwelcome and troublesome Guests to them When men behave themselves in the sight of God as if God were not God they do not only defame him but deny him and violate the unchangeable perfections of the Divine Nature 1. 'T is against the Majesty of God When we have not awful thoughts of that great Majesty to whom we address when our Souls cleave not to him when we petition him in Prayer or when he gives out his Orders to us in his Word 'T is a contempt of the Majesty of a Prince if whiles he is speaking to us we listen not to him with reverence and attention but turn our backs on him to play with one of his Hounds or talk with a Begger or while we speak to him to rake in a Dunghill Solomon adviseth us to keep our foot when we go to the House of God * Eccles 5.1 Our affections should be steady and not slip away again why v. 2. because God is in Heaven c. He is a God of Majesty earthly durty frames are unsutable to the God of Heaven low Spirits are unsutable to the most High We would not bring our mean Servants or durty Dogs into a Princes Presence Chamber yet we bring not only our worldly but our prophane affections into Gods presence We give in this case those services to God which our Governour would think unworthy of him * Mal. 1.8 The more excellent and glorious God is the greater contempt of him it is to suffer such foolish affections to be Competitors with him for our hearts 'T is a scorn put upon him to converse with a Creature while we are dealing with him but a greater to converse in our thoughts and fancies with some sordid lust which is most hateful to him And the more aggravation it attracts in that we are to apprehend him the most glorious Object sitting upon his Throne in time of worship and our selves standing as vile Creatures before him supplicating for our lives and the conveyances of grace and mercy to our Souls As if a grand Mutineer instead of humbly begging the pardon of his offended Prince should present his Petition not only scribled and blotted but besmeared with some loathsome excrement 'T is unbecoming the Majesty both of God and the worship it self to present him with a Picture instead of Substance and bring a world of nasty affections in our hearts and ridiculous toys in our heads before him and worship with indisposed and heedless Souls Malac. 1.14 He is a great King therefore address to him with fear and reverence 2. 'T is against the Life of God Is a dead worship proportioned to a living God The separation of heavenly affections from our Souls before God makes them as much a Carcass in his sight as the divorce of the Soul makes the Body a Carcass When the affections are separated worship is no longer worship but a dead offering a liveless bulk for the essence and spirit of worship is departed Though the Soul be present with the Body in a way of information yet it is not present in a way of affection and this is the worst for it is not the separation of the Soul from informing that doth separate a man from God but the removal of our affections from him If a man pretend an application to God and sleep and snore all the time without question such a one did not worship In a careless worship the heart is morally dead while the eyes are open The heart of the Spouse * Cant. 5.2 waked whiles her eyes slept and our hearts on the contrary sleep while our eyes wake Our blessed Saviour hath died to purge our Consciences from dead works and frames that we may serve the living God * Heb. 9.14 to serve God as a God of Life Davids Soul cried and fainted for God under this consideration * Psal 42.2 But to present our Bodies without our Spirits is such a usage of God that implies he is a dead Image not worthy of any but a dead and heartless service Like one of those Idols the Psalmist speaks of * Psal 115.5 that have eyes and see not ears and hear not no life in it Though it be not an objective Idolatry because the worship is directed to the true
God yet I may call it a subjective Idolatry in regard of the frame fit only to be presented to some sensless stock We intimate God to be no better than an Idol and to have no more knowledge of us and insight into us than an Idol can have If we did believe him to be the living God we durst not come before him with services so unsutable to him and reproaches of him 3. 'T is against the infiniteness of God We should worship God with those boundless affections which bear upon them a Shadow or Image of his Infiniteness such are the desires of the Soul which know no limits but start out beyond whatsoever enjoyment the heart of man possesses No creeping Creature was to be offered to God in Sacrifice but such as had leggs to run or wings to fly For us to come before God with a light creeping frame is to worship him with the lowest finite affections as though any thing though never so mean or torn might satisfie an infinite Being as though a poor shallow Creature could give enough to God without giving him the heart when indeed we cannot give him a worship proportionable to his infiniteness did our hearts swell as large as Heaven in our desires for him in every act of our duties 4. 'T is against the spirituality of God God being a Spirit calls for a worship in Spirit to withold this from him implies him to be some gross corporeal matter As a Spirit he looks for the heart a wrestling heart in Prayer a trembling heart in the Word * Isa 66.2 To bring nothing but the Body when we come to a spiritual God to beg spiritual benefits to wait for spiritual communications which can only be dispensed to us in a spiritual manner is unsutable to the spiritual nature of God A meer carnal service implicitely denies his spirituality which requires of us higher engagements than meer corporeal ones Worship should be rational not an imaginative service wherein is required the activity of our noblest faculties and our fancy ought to have no share in it but in subserviency to the more spiritual part of our Soul 5. 'T is against the supremacy of God As God is one and the only Soveraign so our hearts should be one cleaving wholly to him and undivided from him In pretending to deal with him we acknowledge his Deity and Soveraignty but in with holding our choicest faculties and affections from him and the starting of our minds to vain Objects we intimate their equality with God and their right as well as his to our hearts and affections 'T is as if a Princess should commit Adultery with some base Scullion while she is before her Husband which would be a plain denial of his sole right to her It intimates that other things are superior to God they are true Soveraigns that ingross our hearts If a man were addressing himself to a Prince and should in an instant turn his back upon him upon a beck or nod from some inconsiderable person is it not an evidence that that person that invited him away hath a greater soveraignty over him than that Prince to whom he was applying himself And do we not discard Gods absolute dominion over us when at the least beck of a corrupt inclination we can dispose of our hearts to it and alienate them from God As they in Ezek. 33.32 left the service of God for the service of their covetousness which evidenced that they owned the authority of sin more than the authority of God This is not to serve God as our Lord and absolute Master but to make God serve our turn and submit his Soveraignity to the Supremacy of some unworthy affection The Creature is preferred before the Creator when the heart runs most upon it in time of religious worship and our own carnal interest swallows up the affections that are due to God 'T is an an Idol set up in the heart * Ezek. 14.4 in his solemn presence and attracts that devotion to it self which we only owe to our Soveraign Lord and the more base and contemptible that is to which the Spirit is devoted the more contempt there is of Gods dominion Judas his kiss with a hail Master was no act of worship or an owning his Masters authority but a designing the satisfaction of his Covetousness in the betraying of him 6. 'T is against the Wisdom of God God as a God of order has put earthly things in subordination to heavenly and we by this unworthy carriage invert this order and put heavenly things in subordination to earthly in placing mean and low things in our hearts and bringing them so placed into Gods presence which his Wisdom at the Creation put under our feet A service without spiritual affections is a sacrifice of Fools Eccles 5.1 which have lost their Brains and Understandings A foolish Spirit is very unsutable to an infinitely wise God Well may God say of such a one as Achish of David who seemed mad Why have you brought this Fellow to play the Mad-man in my presence Shall this Fellow come into my House 1 Sam. 21.15 7. 'T is against the Omnisciency of God To carry it fair without and impertinently within is as though God had not an all-seeing eye that could pierce into the heart and understand every motion of the inward faculties As though God were easily cheated with an outward fawning service like an Apothecaries box with a guilded title that may be full of Cobwebs within What is such a carriage but a design to deceive God when with Herod we pretend to worship Christ and intend to murder all the motions of Christ in our Souls A heedless Spirit an estrangement of our Souls a giving the Rains to them to run out from the presence of God to see every Reed shaken with the Wind is to deny him to be the Searcher of hearts and the Discerner of secret thoughts as though he could not look through us to the darkness and remoteness of our minds but were an ignorant God who might be put off with the worst as well as the best in our Flock If we did really believe there were a God of infinite Knowledge who saw our frames and whether we came drest with Wedding-garments sutable to the duties we are about to perform should we be so garish and put him off with such trivial stuff without any reverence of his Majesty 8. 'T is against the Holiness of God To alienate our Spirits is to offend him while we pretend to worship him Though we may be mighty officious in the external part yet our base and carnal affections make all our worship but as a heap of Dung and who would not look upon it as an affront to lay Dung before a Prince's Throne Pro. 21.27 The Sacrifice of the Wicked is an abomination How much more when he brings it with a wicked mind A putrified Carcass under the Law had not been so great an affront
the Creature as Being is the title of God Nothing is so holy as God because nothing hath being as God * 1 Sam. 2.2 There is none holy as the Lord for there is none besides thee Mans life is an Image a dream which are next to nothing and if compar'd with God worse than nothing a nullity as well as a vanity Because with God only is the fountain of life * Psal 36.9 The Creature is but a drop of life from him dependent on him A drop of water is a nothing if compar'd with the vast conflux of waters and numberless drops in the Ocean How unworthy is it for dust and ashes kneaded together in time to strut against the Father of Eternity Much more unworthy for that which is nothing worse than nothing to quarrel with that which is only being and equal himself with him that Inhabits Eternity 2. What being we have had a beginning After an unaccountable Eternity was run out in the very dregs of time a few years ago we were created and made of the basest and vilest dross of the world the slime and dust of the Earth made of that wherewith Birds build their nests made of that which Creeping things make their habitation and beasts trample upon How monstrous is pride in such a Creature to aspire as if he were the Father of Eternity and as Eternal as God and so his own Eternity 3. What being we have is but of a short duration in regard of our life in this World Our life is in a constant change and flux we remain not the same an intire day youth quickly succeeds Child-hood and age as speedily treads upon the heels of youth there is a continual defluxion of minutes as there is of sands in a glass He is as a Watch wound up at the beginning of his life and from that time is running down till he comes to the bottom some part of our lives is cut off every day every minute Life is but a moment what is past cannot be recalled what is future cannot be ensured If we enjoy this moment we have lost that which is past and shall presently lose this by the next that is to come The short duration of men is set out in Scripture by such Creatures as soon disappear A worm * Job 25.6 that can scarce out live a winter Grass that withers by the summer Sun Life is a flower soon withering * Job 14.2 a vapour soon vanishing * James 4.14 a smoak soon disappearing * Psal 102.3 The strongest man is but compacted dust the fabrick must moulder the highest Mountain falls and comes to nought Time gives place to Eternity we live now and die to morrow Not a Man since the world began ever lived a day in Gods sight For no man ever lived a thousand years The longest day of any mans life never amounted to twenty four hours in the account of divine Eternity A life of so many hundred years with the addition he dyed makes up the greatest part of the History of the Patriarchs * Gen. 5. And since the life of man hath been curtaild if any be in the world eighty years he scarce properly lives sixty of them since the fourth part of time is at least consumed in sleep A greater difference there is between the duration of God and that of a Creature than between the life of one for a minute and the life of one that should live as many years as the whole globe of Heaven and Earth if changed into papers could contain figures And this life tho but of a short duration according to the period God hath determined is easily cut off the treasure of life is deposited in a brittle vessel A small stone hitting against Nebuchadnezzars Statue will tumble it down into a poor and nasty grave A Grape stone the bone of a fish a small fly in the throat a moist damp are enough to destroy an Earthly Eternity and reduce it to nothing What a Nothing then is our shortness if compared with Gods Eternity Our frailty with Gods duration How humble then should perishing Creatures be before an Eternal God with whom our days are as a hands breadth and our age as nothing * Psal 39 5. The Angels that have been of as long a duration as Heaven and Earth tremble before him the Heavens melt at his presence and shall we that are but of yesterday approach a Divine Eternity with unhumbled Souls and offer the Calves of our lips with the pride of Devils and stand upon our terms with him without falling upon our faces with a sense that we are but dust and ashes and Creatures of time How easily is it to reason out mans humility but how hard is it to reason man into it 3. Let the consideration of Gods Eternity take off our love and confidence from the world and the things thereof The Eternity of God reproaches a pursuit of the world as preferring a momentary pleasure before an everlasting God as tho a temporal world could be a better supply than a God whose years never fail Alas what is this Earth men are so greedy of and will get tho by blood and sweat What is this whole Earth if we had the entire possession of it if compared with the vast Heavens the seat of Angels and blessed Spirits T is but as an Atome to the greatest Mountain or as a drop of dew to the immense Ocean How foolish is it to prefer a drop before the Sea or an Atome before the world The Earth is but a point to the Sun the Sun with its whole Orb but a little part of the Heavens if compared with the whole Fabrick If a man had the possession of all those there could be no comparison between those that have had a beginning and shall have an end and God who is without either of them Yet how many are there that make nothing of the divine Eternity and imagine an Eternity of nothing 1. The world hath been but a of short standing T is not yet six thousand years since the foundations of it were laid and therefore it cannot have a boundless excellency as that God who hath been from everlasting doth possess If Adam had liv'd to this day and been as absolute Lord of his posterity as he was of the other Creatures had it been a competent object to take up his heart had he not been a mad man to have prefer'd this little created pleasure before an everlasting uncreated God A thing that had a dependent Beginning before that which had an independent Eternity 2. The beauties of the world are transitory and perishing The whole world is nothing else but a fluid thing the Fashion of it is a Pageantry passing away * 1 Cor. 7.31 tho the glories of it might be conceived greater than they are yet they are not consistent but transient There cannot be an entire enjoyment of them because they grow up
word perish the raising a new frame is signified by the word changed as if the Spirit of God would prevent any wrong meaning of the word perish by alleviating the sense of that by another which signifies only a mutation and change as when we change a Habit and Garment we quit the old to receive the new As a Garment as a Vesture Thou shalt change them * Septuag 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou shalt fold them up The Heavens are compared to a Curtain * Psal 104.2 and shall in due time be folded up as Clothes and Curtains are As a Garment encompasseth the whole body so do the Heavens encircle the Earth * Estius in Heb. 1. Some say as a Garment is folded up to be laid aside that when there is need it may be taken again for use so shalt thou fold up the Heavens like a Garment that when they are repaired thou mayest again stretch them out about the Earth Thou shalt fold them up so that what did appear shall not now appear It may be illustrated by the metaphor of a Scrole or Book which the Spirit of God useth Isa 34.4 Rev. 6.14 The Heavens departed as a Scrole when it is rouled together When a Book is rouled up or shut nothing can be read in it till it be opened again so the Face of the Heavens wherein the Stars are as Letters declaring the Glory of God shall be shut or rouled together so that nothing shall appear till by its renovation it be opened again As a Garment it shall be changed not to be used in the same fashion and for the same use again It seems indeed to be for the worse an old Garment is not changed but into raggs to be put to other uses and afterwards thrown upon the Dung-hill But Similitudes are not to be pressed too far and this will not agree with the new Heavens and new Earth physically so as well as metaphorically so 'T is not likely the Heavens will be put to a worse use than God designed them for in Creation However a change as a Garment speaks not a total corruption but an alteration of qualities as a Garment not to be used in the same fashion as before We may observe 1. That 〈◊〉 probable the world shall not be annihilated but refin'd It shall lose its present form and fashion but not its foundation Indeed as God raised it from nothing so he can reduce it into nothing yet it doth not appear that God will annihilate it and utterly destroy both the matter and form of it part shall be consumed and part purified 2 Pet. 3.12 13. The Heavens shall be on fire and dissolved nevertheless we according to his promise look for a new Heaven and a new Earth They shall be melted down as Gold by the Artificer to be refined from its Dross and wrought into a more beautiful fashion that they may serve the design of God for those that shall reside therein a new world wherein Righteousness shall dwell The Apostle opposing it thereby to the old world wherein wickedness did reside The Heavens are to be purged as the Vessels that held the Sin-offering were to be purified by the fire of the Sanctuary God indeed will take down this Scaffold which he hath built to publish his Glory As every Individual hath a certain term of its duration so an end is appointed for th● universal nature of Heaven and Earth Isa 51.6 The Heavens shall vanish like Smoke which disappears As Smoke is resolved and attenuated into Air not annihilated So shall the world assume a new face and have a greater clearness and splendor As the Bodies of Men dissolved into Dust shall have more glorious qualities at their Resurrection As a Vessel of Gold is melted down to remove the batterings in it and receive a more comely Form by the Skill of the Workman 1. The world was not destroyed by the Deluge It was rather washed by water than consumed So it shall be rather refined by the last fire than lie under an irrecoverable ruin 2. 'T is not likely God would liken the everlastingness of his Covenant and the perpetuity of his spiritual Israel to the duration of the ordinances of the Heavens as he doth in Jer. 21.35 36. if they were wholly to depart from before him* Though that place may only tend to an assurance of a Church in the world while the world endures yet it would be but small comfort if the happiness of Believers should endure no longer than the Heavens and Earth if they were to have a total period 3. Besides the Bodies of the Saints must have place for their support to move in and glorious objects suted to these glorious senses which shall be restored to them Not in any carnal way which our Saviour rejects when he saith there is no eating or drinking or marrying c. in the other world but whereby they may glorify God though how or in what manner their senses shall be used would be rashness to determine only something is necessary for the corporeal state of men that there may be an employment for their Senses as well as their Souls 4. Again How could the Creature the world or any part of it be said to be delivered from the bondage of Corruption * Rom. 8.21 into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God if the whole Frame of Heaven and Earth were to be annihilated Rom. 8.21 The Apostle saith also that the Creature waits with an earnest expectation for this manifestation of the Sons of God v. 19. which would have no foundation if the whole frame should be reduced to nothing What joyful expectation can there be in any of a total ruin How should the Creature be capable of partaking in this glorious liberty of the Sons of God * H●per in Heb. 1. As the World for the sin of man lost its first dignity and was cursed after the fall and the beauty bestowed upon it by creation defaced So it shall recover that ancient glory when he shall be fully restored by the Resurrection to that dignity he lost by his first sin As Man shall be freed from his corruptibility to receive that glory which is prepared for him so shall the Creatures be freed from that imperfection or corruptibility those stains and spots upon the face of them to receive a new glory suted to their nature and answerable to the design of God when the glorious liberty of the Saints shall be accomplisht * Mestraezat sur Heb. 1. As when a Princes Nuptials are solemnized the whole Country eccho's with joy So the inanimate Creatures when the time of the Marriage of the Lamb is come shall have a delight and pleasure from that renovation The Apostle sets forth the whole world as a person groaning and the Scripture is frequent in such Metaphors as when the Creatures are said to wait upon God and to be troubled * Psal 104.27 29. the
the Creation till this day and are of so great antiquity yet they must bow down to a change before the Will and Word of their Creator and shall we rest upon that which shall vanish like Smoke Shall we take any Creature for our support like Ice that will crack under our feet and must by the order of their Lord Creator deceive our hopes Perishing things can be no support to the Soul If we would have rest we must run to God and rest in God How contemptible should that be to us whose fashion shall pass away which shall not endure long in its present form and appearance contemptible as a rest not contemptible as the work of God contemptible as an end not contemptible as a means to attain our end If these must be changed how unworthy are other things to be the Center of our Souls that change in our very using of them and slide away in our very enjoyment of them Thou art the same The Essence of God with all the perfections of his nature are pronounced the same without any variation from Eternity to Eternity So that the Text doth not only assert the eternal duration of God but his Immutability in that duration his Eternity is signified in that expression thou shalt endure his Immutability in this thou art the same 〈…〉 ●eb To endure argues indeed his Immutability as well as Eternity For what endures is not changed and what is changed doth not endure But thou art the same 〈◊〉 ●●om 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth more fully signifie it He could not be the same if he could be changed into any other thing than what he is The Psalmist therefore puts not thou hast been or shalt be but thou art the same without any alteration thou art the same that is the same God the same in Essence and Nature the same in Will and Purpose Thou dost change all other things as thou pleasest but thou art immutable in every respect and receivest no shadow of change though never so light and small * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 above all change Theodor. The Psalmist here alludes to the name Jehovah I am and doth not only ascribe Immutability to God but exclude every thing else from partaking in that perfection All things else are tottering God sees all other things in continual motion under his feet like Water passing away and no more seen while he remains fixed and immoveable His Wisdom and Power his Knowledge and Will are alway the same His Essence can receive no alteration neither by it self nor by any external Cause whereas other things either naturally decline to destruction pass from one term to another till they come to their period or shall at the last day be wrapped up after God hath compleated his Will in them and by them as a man doth a Garment he intends to repair and transform to another use So that in the Text God as immutable is opposed to all Creatures as perishing and changeable Doct. God is unchangeable in his Essence Nature and Perfections Immutability and Eternity are linkt together and indeed true Eternity is true Immutability whence Eternity is defin'd the Possession of an immutable Life Yet Immutability differs from Eternity in our conception Immutability respects the Essence or Existence of a thing Eternity respects the duration of a Being in that State or rather * Gamacheus Immutability is the State it self Eternity is the measure of that State A thing is said to be changed when it is otherwise now in regard of Nature State Will or any Quality than it was before when either something is added to it or taken from it when it either loses or acquires But now it is the essential property of God not to have any accession to or diminution of his Essence or Attributes but to remain entirely the same He wants nothing He loses nothing but doth uniformly exist by himself without any new nature new thoughts new will new purpose or new place * Amyraut sur Heb. 9. p. 153. This unchangeableness of God was anciently represented by the figure of a Cube a piece of Metal or Wood framed four-square when every side is exactly of the same equality cast it which way you will it will always be in the same posture because it is equal to it self in all its dimensions He was therefore said to be the Center of all things and other things the Circumference the Center is never moved while the Circumference is it remains immoveable in the midst of the Circle There is no variableness nor shadow of turning with him * James 1.17 The Moon hath her Spots so hath the Sun there is a mixture of Light and Darkness it hath its changes sometimes it is in the increase sometimes in the wane it is always either gaining or losing and by the turnings and motions either of the Heavenly-bodies or of the Earth 't is in its Eclipse by the interposition of the Earth between that and the Sun The Sun also hath its diurnal and annual motion it riseth and sets and puts on a different Face It doth not alway shine with a noon-day light 't is sometimes vail'd with Clouds and Vapours it is always going from one Tropick to another whereby it makes various shadows on the Earth and produceth the various seasons of the year 't is not always in our Hemisphere nor doth it always shine with an equal force and brightness in it Such shadows and variations have no place in the eternal Father of Lights He hath not the least spot or diminution of Brightness nothing can cloud him or eclipse him For the better understanding this Perfection of God I shall Premise three things 1. The Immutability of God is a Perfection Immutability considered in it self without relation to other things is not a Perfection 'T is the greatest misery and imperfection of the evil Angels that they are immutable in malice against God But as God is infinite in Essence infinitely good wise holy so it is a Perfection necessary to his Nature that he should be immutably all this all excellency goodness wisdom immutably all that heis without this he would be an imperfect Being Are not the Angels in Heaven who are confirmed in a holy and happy state more perfect than when they were in a possibility of committing evil and becoming miserable Are not the Saints in Heaven whose Wills by Grace do unalterably cleave to God and goodness more perfect than if they were as Adam in Paradise capable of losing their Felicity as well as preserving it We count a Rock in regard of its stability more excellent than the Dust of the Ground or a Feather that is tossed about with every Wind Is it not also the perfection of the Body to have a constant tenor of health and the glory of a man not to warp aside from what is just and right by the perswasions of any temptations 2. Immutability is a
any Creature is from Grace and Gift Naturally we tend to nothing as we come from nothing This Creature-mutability is not our sin yet it should cause us to lye down under a sense of our own nothingness in the presence of the Creator The Angels as Creatures though not corrupt cover their faces before him And the Arguments God uses to humble Job though a fallen Creature are not from his Corruption for I do not remember that he taxed him with that but from the greatness of his Majesty and excellency of his Nature declared in his Works * Job 38.39 40.41 And therefore Men that have no sense of God and humility before him forget that they are Creatures as well as corrupt ones How great is the distance between God and us in regard of our inconstancy in good which is not natural to us by Creation For the mind and affections were regular and by the great Artificer were pointed to God as the Object of Knowledge and Love We have the same faculties of Understanding Will and Affection as Adam had in Innocence but not with the same Light the same Bias and the same Ballast Man by his fall wounded his head and heart the wound in his head made him unstable in the Truth and that in his heart unstedfast in his Affections He changed himself from the Image of God to that of the Devil from Innocence to Corruption and from an ability to be stedfast to a perpetual Inconstancy His Silver became Dross and his Wine was mixed with Water * Isa 1.22 He changed 1. To inconstancy in Truth opposed to the Immutability of Knowledge in God How are our Minds floating between Ignorance and Knowledge Truth in us is like those Ephemera Creatures of a days continuance springs up in the Morning and expires at Night How soon doth that fly away from us which we have had not only some weak flashes of but which we have learned and have had some relish of The Devil stood not in the Truth * John 8.44 and therefore manages his Engines to make us as unstable as himself Our Minds reel and corrupt reasonings oversway us like Spunges we suck up Water and a light compression makes us spout it out again Truths are not engraven upon our hearts but writ as in Dust defaced by the next puff of Wind carried about with every Wind of Doctrin Eph. 4.14 Like a Ship without a Pilot and Sails at the courtesy of the next Storm or like Clouds that are Tenants to the Wind and Sun moved by the Wind and melted by the Sun The Galatians were no sooner called into the Grace of God but they were removed from it * Gal. 1.6 Some have been reported to have menstruam fidem kept an Opinion for a Month and many are like him that believed the Souls Immortality no longer than he had Plato's Book of that Subject in his hand * Sedgwick Christs Counsel p. 230. One likens such to Children they play with Truths as Children do with Babies one while embrace them and a little after throw them into the Durt How soon do we forget what the Truth is delivered to us and what it represented us to be * James 1.23.24 Is it not a thing to be bewailed that Man should be such a Weathercock turned about with every Breath of Wind and shifting Aspects as the Wind shifts Points 2. Inconstancy in Will and Affections opposed to the Immutability of Will in God We waver between God and Baal and while we are not only resolving but upon motion a little way look back with a hankring after Sodom Sometimes lifted up with heavenly intentions and presently cast down with earthly cares like a Ship that by an advancing Wave seems to aspire to Heaven and the next fall of the Waves makes it sink down to the Depths We change Purposes oftner than Fashions and our Resolutions are like Letters in water whereof no mark remains We will be as John to day to love Christ and as Judas to morrow to betray him and by an unworthy levity pass into the Camp of the Enemies of God resolv'd to be as holy as Angels in the Morning when the Evening beholds us as impure as Devils How often do we hate what before we loved and shun what before we longed for And our Resolutions are like Vessels of Christal which break at the first knock are dasht in pieces by the next Temptation Saul resolved not to persecute David any more but you soon find him upon his old game Pharaoh more than once promised and probably resolved to let Israel go but at the end of the storm his purposes vanish * Exod. 8.27 32. When an Affliction pincheth Men they intend to change their course and the next news of ease changes their intentions Like a Bow not fully bent in their inclinations they cannot reach the Mark but live many years between resolutions of Obedience and affections to Rebellion * Psal 78.17 And what promises men make to God are often the fruit of their Passion their Fear not of their Will The Israelites were startled at the terrors wherewith the Law was delivered and promised obedience * Exod. 20.19 but a Month after forgat them and make a Golden Calf and in the sight of Sinai call for and dance before their Gods * Exod. 32. Never people more unconstant Peter who vowed an Allegiance to his Master and a Courage to stick to him forswears him almost with the same breath Those that cry out with a zeal the Lord he is God shortly after return to the service of their Idols * 1 Kings 18.39 That which seems to be our pleasure this day is our vexation to morrow A Fear of a Judgment puts us into a religious pang and a Love to our Lusts reduceth us to a rebellious inclination As soon as the danger is over the Saint is forgotten Salvation and Damnation present themselves to us touch us and ingender some weak wishes which are dissolved by the next allurements of a carnal interest No hold can be taken of our promises no credit is to be given to our resolutions 3. Inconstancy in practice How much beginning in the Spirit and ending in the Flesh one day in the Sanctuary another in the Stews clear in the morning as the Sun and clouded before noon in Heaven by an excellency of Gifts in Hell by a course of prophanness Like a Flower which some mention that changes its colour three times a day one part white then purple then yellow The Spirit lusts against the Flesh and the Flesh quickly triumphs over the Spirit In a good man how often is there a Spiritual Lethargy Tho he doth not openly defame God yet he doth not alwayes glorifie him He doth not forsake the truth but he doth not alwayes make the attainment of it and settlement in it his business This levity discovers it self in religious duties when I would do
righteous person to keep the truth Isa 26.2 And it is as positively said that he that abides not in the Doctrine of Christ hath not God 2 Epist John 9. but he that doth hath both the Father and the Son So much of uncertainty so much of nature so much of firmness in duty so much of Grace We can never honour God unless we finish his work as Christ did not glorifie God but in finishing the work God gave him to do * John 17.4 The nearer the world comes to an end the more is Gods immutability seen in his promises and predictions and the more must our unchangeableness be seen in our obedience Heb. 10.23 25. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering and so much the more as you see the day approaching The Christian Jews were to be the more tenacious of their faith the nearer they saw the day approaching the day of Jerusalems destruction prophesied of by Daniel * Dan. 9.26 which accomplishment must be a great argument to establish the Christian Jews in the profession of Christ to be the Messiah because the destruction of the City was not to be before the cutting off the Messiah Let us be therefore constant in our profession and service of God and not suffer our selves to be driven from him by the ill usage or flatter'd from him by the Caresses of the world 1. T is reasonable If God be unchangeable in doing us good it is reason we should be unchangeable in doing him service If he assure us that he is our God our I am he would also that we should be his people His we are If he declare himself constant in his promises he expects we should be so in our obedience As a spouse we should be unchangeably faithful to him as a Husband As subjects have an unchangeable allegiance to him as our Prince He would not have us faithful to him for an hour or a day but to the death * Rev. 2.10 And it is reason we should be his and if we be his Children imitate him in his constancy of his holy purposes 2. T is our glory and interest To be a reed shaken with every wind is no commendation among men and t is less a ground of praise with God It was Jobs glory that he held fast his integrity * Job 1.22 In all this Job sinned not In all this which whole Cities and Kingdoms would have thought ground enough of high exclamations against God And also against the temptation of his Wife he retained his integrity Job 2.9 Dost thou still retain thy integrity The Devil who by Gods permission stript him of his goods and health yet could not strip him of his grace As a Traveller when the wind and snow beats in his face wraps his cloak more closely about him to preserve that and himself Better we had never made profession than afterwards to abandon it such a withering profession serves for no other use than to aggravate the crime if any of us fly like a coward or revolt like a Traytor What profit will it be to a Souldier if he hath withstood many assaults and turn his back at last If we would have God Crown us with an immutable glory we must Crown our beginnings with a happy perseverance Rev. 2.10 Be faithful to the Death and I will give thee a Crown of life Not as tho this were the cause to merit it but a necessary condition to possess it Constancy in good is accompanied with an immutability of Glory 3. By an unchangeable disposition to good we should begin the happiness of Heaven upon Earth This is the perfection of blessed Spirits those that are nearest to God as Angels and glorified Souls they are immutable Not indeed by nature but by grace yet not only by a necessity of grace but a liberty of Will Grace will not let them change and that grace doth animate their Wills that they would not change an immutable God fills their understandings and affections and gives satisfaction to their desires The Saints when they were below tried other things and found them deficient But now they are so fully satisfied with the beatifick vision that if Satan should have entrance among the Angels and Sons of God 't is not likely he should have any influence upon them he could not present to their understandings any thing that could either at the first glance or upon a deliberate view be preferrable to what they enjoy and are fixed in Well then let us be immoveable in the Knowledge and Love of God 'T is the delight of God to see his Creatures resemble him in what they are able Let not our Affections to him be as Jonah's Goard growing up in one Night and withering the next Let us not only fight a good Fight but do so till we have finished our course and imitate God in an unchangeableness of holy purposes and to that purpose examin our selves daily what fixedness we have arrived unto And to prevent any temptation to a revolt let us often possess our minds with thoughts of the immutability of Gods Nature and Will which like Fire under Water will keep a good matter boiling up in us and make it both retain and increase its heat 4. Let this Doctrin teach us to have recourse to God and aim at a near conjunction with him When our Spirits begin to flag and a cold aguish temper is drawing upon us let us go to him who can only fix our hearts and furnish us with a Ballast to render them stedfast As he is only immutable in his Nature so he is the only Principle of Immutability as well as Being in the Creature Without his Grace we shall be as changeable in our appearances as a Chamelion and in our turnings as the Wind. When Peter trusted in himself he changed to the worse It was his Masters recourse to God for him that preserved in him a reducing Principle which changed him again for the better and fixed him in it * Luke 22.32 It will be our Interest to be in conjunction with him that moves not about with the Heavens nor is turned by the force of Nature nor changed by the accidents in the world but sits in the Heavens moving all things by his powerful Arm according to his infinite Skill While we have him for our God we have his Immutability as well as any other Perfection of his Nature for our advantage The nearer we come to him the more stability we shall have in our selves the further from him the more lyable to change The Line that is nearest to the place where it is first fixed is least subject to motion the further it is stretched from it the weaker it is and more liable to be shaken Let us also affect those things which are nearest to him in this perfection the righteousness of Christ that shall never wear out and the graces of the Spirit that shall never burn
thus That he is not every where by parts as Bodies are as Air and Light are He is every where i. e. his Nature hath no bounds he is not tyed to any place as the Creature is who when he is present in one place is absent from another As no place can be without God so no place can compass and contain him 2. There is an influential Omnipresence of God 1. Vniversal with all Creatures He is present with all things by his Authority because all things are subject to him By his power because all things are sustained by him By his Knowledge because all things are naked before him He is present in the World as a King is in all parts of his Kingdom Regally present Providentially present with all since his Care extends to the meanest of his Creatures His Power reacheth all and his Knowledge pierceth all As every thing in the World was Created by God so every thing in the World is preserved by God and since Preservation is not wholly distinct from Creation 't is necessary God should be present with every thing while he preserves it as well as present with it when he Created it * Psal 36.6 Thou preservest man and Beast † Heb. 1.3 He upholds all things by the word of his Power There is a vertue sustaining every Creature that it may not fall back into that nothing from whence it was elevated by the Power of God All those natural Vertues we call the Principles of Operation are Fountains springing from his Goodness and Power all things are acted and managed by him as well as preserved by him and in this sense God is present with all Creatures for whatsoever acts another is present with that which it acts by sending forth some vertue and influence whereby it acts If free Agents do not only live but move in him and by him * Acts 17.28 much more are the motions of other natural Agents by a vertue communicated to them and upheld in them in the time of their acting This vertual presence of God is evident to our sense a presence we feel his essential presence is evident in our Reason This influential presence may be compar'd to that of the Sun which though at so great a distance from the Earth is present in the Air and Earth by its Light and within the Earth by its influence in concocting those Metals which are in the Bowels of it without being substantially either of them God is thus so intimate with every Creature that there is not the least particle of any Creature but the marks of his Power and Goodness are seen in it and his Goodness doth attend them and is more swift in its effluxes than the breakings out of Light from the Sun which yet are more swift than can be declar'd but to say he is in the World only by his Vertue is to acknowledge only the effects of his Power and Wisdom in the World That his Eye sees all his Arm supports all his Goodness nourisheth all but Himself and his Essence at a distance from them * Zanch. and so the Soul of man according to its measure would have in some kind a more excellent manner of Presence in the body than God according to the Infiniteness of his Being with his Creatures for that doth not only communicate Life to the Body but is actually present with it and spreads its whole Essence through the Body and every Member of it All grant That God is efficaciously in every Creek of the World but some say he is only substantially in Heaven 2. Limited to such Subjects that are capacitated for this or that kind of Presen●e Yet it is an Omnipresence because it is a Presence in all the Subjects capacitated for it thus there is a special Providential Presence of God with some in assisting them when he sets them on work as his Instruments for some special Service in the World As with Cyrus * Isa 4● 2 I will go before thee and with Nebuchadnezzar and Alexander whom he Protected and Directed to execute his Counsels in the World such a presence Judas and others † Mat. 7.22 that shall not enjoy his glorious Presence had in the working of Miracles in the world In thy name we have done many wonderful works Besides * Cajetan in Aquin Par. 1. Qu 8 Artic. 3. as there is an effective Presence of God with all Creatures because he produced them and preserves them so there is an objective Presence of God with rational Creatures because he offers himself to them to be known and loved by them He is near to Wicked men in the offers of his Grace * Isa 55.6 call ye upon him while he is near Besides there is a gracious Presence of God with his People in whom he dwells and makes his abode as in a Temple Consecrated to him by the Graces of the Spirit † John 14.23 We will come i. e. the Father and the Son and make our abode with him He is present with all by the Presence of his Divinity but only in his Saints by a Presence of a gracious Efficacy he walks in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks and hath Dignifi'd the Congregation of his People with the Title of Jehovah Sbammah * Ezek. 48.35 The Lord is there In Salem is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion † Psal 76.2 As he filled the Tabernacle so he doth the Church with the Signs of his Presence this is not the Presence wherewith he fills Heaven and Earth His Spirit is not bestowed upon all to reside in their hearts enlighten their minds and bedew them with refreshing Comforts When the Apostle speaks of Gods being Above all and through all * Eph. 4.6 Above all in his Majesty Through all in his Providence he doth not appropriate that as he doth what follows and in you all in you all by a special Grace as God was specially present with Christ by the Grace of Union so he is specially present with his People by the Grace of Regeneration So there are several manifestations of his Presence he hath a Presence of Glory in Heaven whereby he Comforts the Saints a Presence of Wrath in Hell whereby he Torments the Damned in Heaven he is a God spreading his Beams of Light in Hell a God distributing his Strokes of Justice by the one he fills Heaven by the other he fills Hell by his Providence and Essence he fills both Heaven and Earth 3. There is an Essential Presence of God in the World He is not only every where by his Power upholding the Creatures by his Wisdom understanding them but by his Essence containing them That any thing is essentially present any where it hath from God God is therefore much more present every where for he cannot give that which he hath not 1. He is Essentially present in all places * Ficin 'T is as reasonable to think the
Essence of God to be every where as to be always Immensity is as rational as Eternity That indivisible Essence which reaches through all times may as well reach through all places 'T is more excellent to be always than to be every where for to be always in duration is Intrinsical to be every where is Extrinsick If the greater belongs to God why not the less As all times are a Moment to his Eternity so all places are as a Point to his Essence As he is larger than all time so he is vaster than all place The Nations of the World are to him as the Dust of the Ballance or Drop of a Bucket * Isa 40.15 The Nations are accounted as the small Dust the Essence of God may well be thought to be present every where with that which is no more than a grain of Dust to him and in all those Isles which if put together are a very little thing in his hand Therefore saith a Learned Jew * Maimonid If a man were set in the highest Heavens he would not be nearer to the Essence of God than if he were in the Center of the Earth Why may not the Presence of God in the World be as noble as that of the Soul in the Body which is generally granted to be essentially in every part of the body of man which is but a little World and animates every Member by its actual presence though it exerts not the same operation in every part * Ficin the World is less to the Creator than the Body to the Soul and needs more the Presence of God than the Body needs the presence of the Soul That glorious body of the Sun visits every part of the Habitable Earth in 24 hours by its beams which reaches the Troughs of the lowest Valleys as well as the Pinacles of the highest Mountains must we not acknowledg in the Creator of this Sun an infinite greater proportion of Presence Is it not as easy with the Essence of God to over-spread the whole body of Heaven and Earth as it is for the Sun to pierce and diffuse its self through the whole Air between it and the Earth and send up its light also as far to the Regions above Do we not see something like it in Sounds and Voices Is not the same Sound of a Trumpet or any other Musical Instrument at the first breaking out of a Blast in several places within such a compass at the same time Doth not every Ear that hears it receive alike the whole sound of it And fragrant Odors scented in several places at the same time in the same manner and the Organ proper for Smelling takes in the same in every person within the compass of it How far is the noise of Thunder heard alike to every Ear in places something distant from one another And do we daily find such a manner of presence in those things of so low a concern and not imagine a kind of Presence of God greater than all those Is the sound of Thunder the Voice of God as it is call'd every where in such a compass and shall not the Essence of an Infinite God be much more every where Those that would confine the Essence of God only to Heaven and exclude it from the Earth run into great inconveniencies It may be demanded whether he be in one part of the Heavens or in the whole vast body of them If in one part of them his Essence is bounded if he moves from that part he is mutable for he changes a place wherein he was for another wherein he was not If he be always fixed in one part of the Heavens such a notion would render him little better than a living Statue * Hornheck Soun Part 1. p. 303. If he be in the whole Heaven why cannot his Essence possess a greater space than the whole Heavens which are so vast How comes he to be confin'd within the compass of that since the whole Heaven compasseth the Earth If he be in the whole Heaven he is in places farther distant one from another than any part of the Earth can be from the Heavens since the Earth is like a Center in the midst of a Circle it must be nearer to every part of the Circle than some parts of the Circle can be to one another If therefore his Essence possesses the whole Heavens no reason can be render'd why he doth not also possess the Earth since also the Earth is but a little point in comparison of the vastness of the Heavens If therefore he be in every part of the Heavens why not in every part of the Earth The Scripture is plain Psal 139.7.8 9. Whither shall I go from thy Spirit Or whither shall I flie from thy Presence If I ascend up to Heaven thou art there If I make my Bed in Hell behold thou art there If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the Sea even there shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand shall uphold me If he be in Heaven Earth Hell Sea he fills all places with his Presence his Presence is here asserted in places the most distant from one another all the places then between Heaven and Earth are possessed by his Presence 'T is not meant of his Knowledge for that the Psalmist had spoken of before ver 2.3 Thou understandest my thoughts afar off thou art acquainted with all my ways Besides Thou art there not thy wisdom or knowledge but Thou thy Essence not only thy Vertue For having before spoken of his Omniscience he proves that such Knowledg could not be in God unless he were present in his Essence in all places so as to be excluded from none He fills the depths of Hell the extension of the Earth and the heights of the Heavens When the Scripture mentions the Power of God only it expresseth it by Hand or Arm but when it mentions the Spirit of God and doth not intend the Third Person in the Trinity it signifies the Nature and Essence of God And so here when he saith Whither shall I go from thy Spirit he adds exegetically Whither shall I flie from thy Presence or Heb. Face and the Face of God in Scripture signifies the Essence of God † Exod 33.20.23 Thou canst not see my face and my face shall not be seen the effects of his Power Wisdom Providence are seen which are his Back-parts but not his face The effects of his Power and Wisdom are seen in the World but his Essence is invisible and this the Psalmist elegantly expresseth Had I Wings endued with as much quickness as the first Dawnings of the morning light or the first darts of any Sun-beam that spreads its self through the Hemisphere and passes many Miles in as short a space as I can think a Thought I should find thy presence in all places before me and could not flie out of the infinite
cannot be sever'd from his Power nor his Power from his Essence for the Power of God is nothing but God acting and the wisdom of God nothing but God knowing As the power of God is always so is his Essence as the power of God is every where so is his Essence whatsoever God is he is alway and every where To confine him to a place is to measure his Essence as to confine his actions is to limit his power his Essence being no less infinite than his Power and his Wisdom can be no more bounded than his Power and Wisdom but they are not separable from his Essence yea they are his Essence if God did not fill the whole World he would be determin'd to some place and excluded from others and so his substance would have bounds and limits and then something might be conceived greater than God for we may conceive that a Creature may be made by God of so vast a greatness as to fill the whole World for the power of God is able to make a body that should take up the whole space between Heaven and Earth and reach to every corner of it but nothing can be conceived by any Creature greater than God he exceeds all things and is exceeded by none God therefore cannot be included in Heaven nor included in the Earth cannot be contained in either of them for if we should imagine them vaster than they are yet still they would be finite and if his Essence were contain'd in them it could be no more infinite than the World which contains it As water is not of a larger compass than the Vessel which contains it If the Essence of God were limited either in the Heavens or Earth it must needs be finite as the Heaven and Earth are But there is no proportion between finite and infinite God therefore cannot be contain'd in them If there were an infinite body that must be every where certainly then an infinite Spirit must be every where Unless we will account him finite we can render no reason why he should not be in one Creature as well as in another if he be in Heaven which is his Creature why can he not be in the Earth which is as well his Creature as the Heavens 2. Reason Because of the continual operation of God in the World This was one reason made the Heathen believe that there was an infinite Spirit in the vast body of the World acting in every thing and producing those admirable motions which we see every where in Nature That cause which acts in the most perfect manner is also in the most perfect manner present with its effects God preserves all and therefore is in all the Apostle thought it a good induction Acts 17.27 He is not far from us for in him we live For being as much as because shews that from his operation he concluded his real presence with all 'T is not his vertue is not far from every one of us but He his Substance himself for none that acknowledge a God will deny the absence of the vertue of God from any part of the World He works in every thing every thing lives and works in him therefore he is present with all * Pont. or rather if things live they are in God who gives them life If things live God is in them and gives them life If things move God is in them and gives them motion If things have any Being God is in them and gives them Being if God withdraws himself they presently lose their Being and therefore some have compar'd the Creature to the impression of a Seal upon the water that cannot be preserved but by the Presence of the Seal As his Presence was actual with what he Created so his Presence is actual with what he preserves since Creation and Preservation do so little differ if God creates things by his Essential Presence by the same he supports them If his substance cannot be disjoyn'd from his preserving Power his power and wisdom cannot be separated from his Essence where there are the marks of the one there is the presence of the other for it is by his Essence that he is powerful and wise no man can distinguish the one from the other in a simple Being God doth not preserve and act things by a vertue diffus'd from him N.B. It may be demanded whether that vertue be distinct from God if it be not 't is then the Essence of God if it be distinct 't is a Creature and then it may be ask't how that vertue which preserves other things is preserved it self it must be ultimately resolv'd into the Essence of God or else there must be a running in infinitum or else * Amyrald de Trinitat p. 106. 107. is that vertue of God a substance or not Is it endued with understanding or not If it hath understanding how doth it differ from God If it wants understanding can any imagine that the support of the World the guidance of all Creatures the wonders of Nature can be wrought preserv'd manag'd by a vertue that hath nothing of understanding in it If it be not a substance it can much less be able to produce such excellent Operations as the preserving all the kinds of things in the World and ordering them to perform such excellent ends this Vertue is therefore God himself the infinite Power and Wisdom of God and therefore wheresoever the effects of these are seen in the World God is essentially present some Creatures indeed act at a distance by a vertue diffus'd but such a manner of acting comes from a limitedness of nature that such a nature cannot be every where present and extend its substance to all parts To act by a vertue speaks the Subject finite and it is a part of indigence Kings act in their Kingdoms by Ministers and Messengers because they cannot act otherwise but God being infinitely perfect works all things in all immediately 1 Cor. 12.6 Illumination Sanctification Grace c. are the immediate Works of God in the heart and immediate Agents are present with what they do 't is an Argument of the greater Perfection of a Being to know things immediately which are done in several places than to know them at the second hand by Instruments 't is no less a Perfection to be every where rather than to be tyed to one place of action and to act in other places by Instruments for want of a Power to act immediately it self God indeed acts by means and second causes in his Providential Dispensations in the World but this is not out of any Defect of Power to Work all immediately himself but he thereby accommodates his way of acting to the nature of the Creature and the Order of Things which he hath setled in the World And when he Works by means he acts with those means in those means sustains their faculties and vertues in them concurs with them by his Power so
in bringing in a Carved Image into the House of God 1 Chron. 33.7 had it been a good Answer to the Charge God is present here and therefore every thing may be Worshipped as God if he be only Essentially in Heaven would it not be Idolatry to direct a Worship to the Heavens or any part of it as a due object because of the Presence of God there Though we look up to the Heavens where we Pray and Worship God yet Heaven is not the object of Worship the Soul abstracts God from the Creature 6. Nor is God defil'd by being present with those Creatures which seem filthy to us Nothing is filthy in the Eye of God as his Creature he could never else have pronounced all good whatsoever is filthy to us yet as it is a Creature it ows it self to the Power of God His Essence is no more defild by being present with it than his Power by producing it No Creature is foul in it self tho' it may seem so to us Doth not an Infant lye in a Womb of filthiness and rottenness yet is not the Power of God present with it in working it curiously in the lower parts of the Earth are his eyes defil'd by seeing the Substance when it it is yet imperfect or his hand defiled by writing every Member in his Book † Psal 139.15 16. Have not the vilest and most noisom things excellent Medicinal Vertues How are they endued with them How are those qualities preserved in them by any thing without God or no every Artificer looks with Pleasure upon the work he hath wrought with Art and Skill can his Essence be defil'd by being present with them any more than it was in giving them such vertues and preserving them in them God measures the Heaven and the Earth with his hand is his hand defil'd by the evil influences of the Planets or the Corporeal Impurities of the Earth nothing can be filthy in the Eye of God but Sin since every thing else owes its Being to him What may appear deform'd and unworthy to us is not so to the Creator he sees Beauty where we see Deformity finds goodness where we behold what is nauseous to us All Creatures being the effects of his Power may be the objects of his Presence Can any place be more foul than Hell if you take it either for the Hell of the Damned or for the Grave where there is rottenness yet there he is † Psal 139.8 When Satan appear'd before God and God spake with him † Job 1.7 Could God contract any impurity by being present where that filthy Spirit was more impure than any corporeal noysom and defiling thing can be No God is purity to himself in the midst of noysomness a Heaven to himself in the midst of Hell Who ever heard of a Sun-beam stain'd by shining upon a Quag mire any more than sweetned by breaking into a Perfum'd Room Shelford of the Attributes p. 170. Tho' the Light shines upon pure and impure things yet it mixes not its self with either of them so tho' God be present with Devils and Wicked men yet without any mixture he is present with their essence to sustain it and support it not in their defection wherein lies their defilement and which is not a Physical but a Moral evil Bodily filth can never touch an incorporeal substance Spirits are not present with us in the same manner that one body is present with another bodies can by a touch only defile bodies Is the Glory of an Angel stained by being in a Coal-mine or could the Angel that came into the Lions Den to deliver Daniel be any more disturb'd by the stench of the place * Dan. 6.22 than he could be scratcht by the Paws or torn by the Teeth of the Beasts their Spiritual nature secures them against any infection when they are ministring Spirits to Persecuted Believers in their nasty Prisons * Acts 12.7 The Soul is straitly united with the Body but it is not made white or black by the whiteness or blackness of its habitation is it infected by the corporeal impurities of the Body while it continually dwells in a Sea of filthy Pollution If the Body be cast into a Common-shore is the Soul defil'd by it Can a Diseased body derive a Contagion to the Spirit that animates it Is it not often the purer by Grace the more the body is infected by nature Hezekiah's Spirit was scarce ever more fervent with God than when the Sore which some think to be a Plague Sore was upon him * Isa 38.3 How can any Corporeal filth impair the purity of the Divine Essence it may as well be said That God is not present in Battels and Fights for his People Joshua 23.10 because he would not be disturbed by the noise of Canons and clashing of Swords as that he is not present in the World because of the ill scents Let us therefore conclude this with the Expression of a Learned man of our own Dr. More To deny the Omnipresence of God because of ill scented places is to measure God rather by the nicety of Sense than by the sagacity of Reason IV. VSE I. Of Information 1. Christ hath a divine nature As Eternity and Immutability two incommunicable properties of the Divine nature are ascrib'd to Christ so also is this of Omnipresence or Immensity John 3.13 No man hath ascended up to heaven but he that came down from heaven even the Son of man which is in heaven Not which was but which is He comes from heaven by incarnation and remains in heaven by his Divinity He was while he spake to Nicodemus locally on earth in regard of his humanity but in heaven according to his Deity as well as upon earth in the union of his divine and human nature He descended upon earth but he left not heaven He was in the World before he came in the flesh John 1.10 He was in the world and the world was made by him He was in the world as the light that enlightens every man that comes into the world In the world as God before he was in the world as man He was then in the world as man while he discoursed with Nicodemus yet so that he was also in heaven as God No creature but is bounded in place either circumscribed as body or determin'd as Spirit to be in one space so as not to be in another at the same time to leave a place where they were and possess a place where they were not But Christ is so on earth that at the same time he is in heaven he is therefore infinite To be in heaven and earth at the same moment of time is a property solely belonging to the Deity wherein no creature can be a partner with him He was in the world before he came to the world and the world was made by him * John 1.10 His coming was
ignorant of vvhat is done vvithin and vvithout no ignorance can be fastned upon him vvho hath an Universal Presence Hence by the way we may take notice of the wonderful Patience of God who bears with so many provocations not from a Principle of Ignorance for he bears with Sins that are committed near him in his sight Sins that he sees and cannot but see 5. Hence may be infer'd the Incomprehensibility of God He that fills Heaven and Earth cannot be contain'd in any thing he fills the Understandings of Men the Understandings of Angels but is comprehended by neither 't is a rashness to think to find out any bounds of God there 's no measuring of an infinite Being if it were to be measur'd it were not infinite but because it is infinite it is not to be measured God sits above the Cherubims * Ezek. 10.1 above the fulness above the brightness not only of a humane but a created understanding Nothing is more present than God yet nothing more hid he is Light and yet obscurity * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dyonisius called God his Perfections are visible yet unsearchable We know there is an infinite God but it surpasseth the compass of our minds we know there is no Number so great but another may be added to it but no man can put it in practice without losing himself in a maze of Figures What is the reason we comprehend not many nay most things in the World partly from the Excellency of the object and partly from the Imperfection of our understandings How can we then comprehend God who exceeds all and is exceeded by none contains all and is contained by none is above our understanding as well as above our sense as considered in himself infinite as consider'd in comparison with our understandings incomprehensible who can with his eye measure the breadth length and depth of the Sea and at one cast view every dimension of the Heavens God is greater and we cannot know him Job 36.26 he fills the understanding as he fills Heaven and Earth yet is above the understanding as he is above Heaven and Earth He is known by Faith enjoy'd by love but comprehended by no mind God is not contain'd in that one Syllable God by it we apprehend an excellent and unlimited nature himself only understands himself and can unveil himself 6. How wonderful is God and how nothing are Creatures Ascribe the Greatness to our God * Deut. 33.3 He is admirable in the consideration of his Power in the extent of his understanding and no less wonderful in the immensity of his Essence That as Austin saith he is in the World yet not confin'd to it he is out of the World yet not debarr'd from it he is above the World yet not elevated by it he is below the World yet not deprest by it he is above all equall'd by none he is in all not because he needs them but they stand in need of him this as well as Eternity makes a vast disproportion between God and the Creature The Creature is bounded by a little space and no space is so great as to bound the Creator By this we may take a prospect of our own nothingness as in the consideration of Gods Holiness we are minded of our own impurity and in the thoughts of his Wisdom have a view of our own folly and in the meditation of his Power have a sense of our weakness so his Immensity should make us according to our own nature appear little in our own eyes What little little little things are we to God less than an Atome in the Beams of the Sun poor drops to a God that fills Heaven and Earth and yet dare we to strut against him and dash our selves against a Rock If the consideration of our selves in comparison with others be apt to puff us up the consideration of our selves in comparison with God will be sufficient to pull us down if we consider him in the greatness of his Essence there is but little more proportion between him and us than between being and not being than between a Drop and the Ocean How should we never think of God without a Holy Admiration of his Greatness and a deep sense of our own littleness and as the Angels cover their faces before him with what awe should creeping Worms come into his Sight and since God fills Heaven and Earth with his Presence we should fill Heaven and Earth with his Glory for this end he Created Angels to Praise him in Heaven and men to Worship him on Earth that the Places he fills with his Presence may be filled with his Praise We should be swallow'd up in admirations of the Immensity of God as men are at the first sight of the Sea when they behold a mass of Waters without beholding the bounds and immense depth of it 7. How much is this Attribute of God forgotten or contemned We pretend to believe him to be present every where and yet many live as if he were present no where 1. 'T is commonly forgotten or not believ'd All the extravagancies of men may be traced to the forgetfulness of this Attribute as their Spring The first Speech Adam spake in Paradice after his fall testified his unbelief of this * Gen. 3.10 I heard thy Voyce in the Garden and I hid my self his ear understood the voice of God but his mind did not conclude the Presence of God he thought the Trees could shelter him from him whose eye was present in the minutest parts of the Earth he that thought after his Sin that he could hide himself from the Presence of his Justice thought before that he could hide himself from the Presence of his Knowledge and being deceived in the one he would try what would be the fruit of the other In both he forgets if not denies this Attribute either corrupt notions of God or a slight belief of what in general men assent unto gives Birth to every Sin In all Transgressions there is something of Atheism either denying the Being of God or a dash upon some Perfection of God a not believing his Holiness to hate it his Truth that threatens his Justice to punish it and his Presence to observe it Tho' God be not afar off in his Essence he is afar off in the apprehension of the Sinner Drexel Nicet lib. 2. cap. 10. There is no wicked man but if he be an Atheist he is a Heretick and to gratify his Lust will fancy himself to be out of the Presence of his Judge His reason tells him God is present with him his Lust presseth him to embrace the season of a sensual Pleasure he will forsake his Reason and prove a Heretick that he may be an undisturbed Sinner and Sins doubly both in the error of his mind and the vileness of his practice he will conceit God with those in Job Job 22.14 Vail'd with thick Clouds and not able to
cannot be well governed but by one endowed with infinite Discretion Providential government can be no more without infinite wisdom than infinite wisdom can be without Providence Reas 3. The Creatures working for an end without their own knowledge demonstrates the wisdom of God that guides them All things in the World work for some end the ends are unknown to them though many of their ends are visible to us As there was some prime Cause which by his power inspir'd them with their several instincts so there must be some supream wisdom which moves and guides them to their end As their Being manifests his power that endowed them so the acting according to the rules of their Nature which they themselves understand not manifests his wisdom in directing them Every thing that acts for an end must know that end or be directed by another to attain that end The Arrow doth not know who shoots it or to what end it is shot or what Mark is aimed at but the Archer that puts it in and darts it out of the Bow knows A Watch hath a regular motion but neither the Spring nor the Wheels that move know the end of their motion no man will judge a wisdom to be in the Watch but in the Artificer that dispos'd the Wheels and Spring by a joint combination to produce such a motion for such an end Doth either the Sun that enlivens the Earth or the Earth that travels with the Plant know what Plant it produceth in such a Soil what temper it should be of what fruit it should bear and of what colour What Plant knows its own medicinal qualities it s own beautiful flowers and for what use they are ordain'd When it strikes up its head from the Earth doth it know what proportion of them there will be Yet it produceth all these things in a state of ignorance The Sun warms the Earth concocts the humours excites the vertue of it and cherishes the Seeds which are cast into her lap yet all unknown to the Sun or the Earth Since therefore that Nature that is the immediate cause of those things doth not understand its own quality nor operation nor the end of its action that which thus directs them must be conceived to have an infinite wisdom When things act by a Rule they know not and move for an end they understand not and yet work harmoniously together for one end that all of them we are sure are ignorant of it mounts up our minds to acknowledge the wisdom of that supream Cause that hath rang'd all these inferiour Causes in their order and imprinted upon them the Laws of their motions according to the Ideas in his own Mind who orders the Rule by which they act and the end for which they act and directs every motion according to their several Natures and therefore is possessed with infinite wisdom in his own Nature Reas 4. God is the fountain of all wisdom in the creatures and therefore is infinitely wise himself As he hath a fulness of being in himself because the streams of being are derived to other things from him So he hath a fulness of wisdom because he is the spring of wisdom to Angels and men That Being must be infinitely wise from whence all other wisdom derives its original For nothing can be in the effect which is not eminently in the cause the cause is alway more perfect than the effect If therefore the creatures are wise the Creator must be much more wise If the Creator were destitute of wisdom the creature would be much more perfect than the Creator If you consider the wisdom of the Spider in her web which is both her house and net the artifice of the Bee in her Comb which is both her chamber and granary the provision of the Pismire in her repositories for corn the wisdom of the Creator is illustrated by them whatsoever excellency you see in any creature is an Image of some excellency in God The skill of the artificer is visible in the fruits of his Art a workman transcribes his spirit in the work of his hands But the wisdom of rational creatures as men doth more illustrate it All Arts among men are the rayes of divine Wisdom shining upon them and by a common gift of the Spirit enlightning their minds to curious inventions as Prov. 8.12 I wisdom find out the knowledge of witty inventions that is I give a faculty to men to find them out without my wisdom all things would be buried in darkness and ignorance Whatsoever wisdom there is in the World it is but a shadow of the wisdom of God a small Rivulet derived from him a spark leaping out from Uncreated Wisdom Isa 54.16 He created the Smith that bloweth the coals in the fire and makes the Instruments The skill to use those weapons in War-like Enterprises is from him I have created the waster to destroy 'T is not meant of creating their Persons but communicating to them their Art He speaks it there to expell fear from the Church of all war-like preparations against them He had given Men the skill to form and use Weapons and could as well strip them of it and defeat their purposes The Art of husbandry is a fruit of divine teaching Isa 28.24 25. If those lower kinds of Knowledge that are common to all Nations and easily learn'd by all are discoveries of Divine Wisdom much more the nobler Sciences intellectual and Political Wisdom Dan. 2.21 He gives Wisdom to the wise and knowledge to them that know understanding speaking of the more abstruse parts of knowledge The inspiration of the Almighty gives Vnderstanding Job 32.8 Hence the Wisdom which Solomon exprest in the Harlots case 1 Kings 3.28 was in the Judgment of all Israel the Wisdom of God that is a fruit of Divine Wisdom a beam communicated to him from God Every mans Soul is endowed more or less with those noble qualities The Soul of every man exceeds that of a Brute If the streams be so excellent the Fountain must be fuller and clearer The first Spirit must infinitely more possess what other Spirits derive from him by Creation Were the Wisdom of all the Angels in Heaven and men on Earth collected in one Spirit it must be infinitely less than what is in the Spring for no Creature can be equal to the Creator As the highest Creature already made or that we can conceive may be made by Infinite Power would be infinitely below God in the Notion of a Creature so it would be infinitely below God in the Notion of Wise IV. The fourth Thing is Wherein the Wisdom of God appears It appears 1. In Creation 2. In Government 3. In Redemption 1. In Creation As in a Musical Instrument there is first the skill of the Workman in the frame then the skill of the Musician in stringing it proper for such Musical Notes as he will express upon it and after that the tempering of the Strings by
of his goodness and wisdom † Lessius Winds are fitted to purifie the Air to preserve it from Putrefaction to carry the Clouds to several parts to refresh the parched Earth and assist her Fruits And also to serve for the Commerce of one Nation with another by Navigation God in his wisdom and goodness walks upon the wings of the Wind Psal 104.3 ‖ Daille melan part 2. p. 472 473. Rivers are appointed to bathe the Ground and render it fresh and lively they fortifie Cities are the limits of Countreys serve for Commerce they are the Watring-pots of the Earth and the Vessels for Drink for the living Creatures that dwell upon the Earth God cut those Chanels for the wild Asses the Beasts of the Desart which are his Creatures as well as the rest Psal 104.10 12 13. Trees are appointed for the Habitations of Birds Shadows for the Earth Nourishment for the Creatures Materials for Building and Fuel for the relief of man against Cold. The Seasons of the Year have their use the Winter makes the Juice retire into the Earth fortifies Plants and fixes their Roots It moystens the Earth that was dried before by the heat of Summer and cleanseth and prepares it for a new fruitfulness The Spring calls out the Sap in new Leaves and Fruit The Summer consumes the superfluous moisture and produceth Nourishment for the Inhabitants of the World * Daille melang part 1. p. 477 c. The Day and Night have also their usefulness The Day gives Life to Labour and is a guide to Motion and Action Psal 104.23 The Sun ariseth man goeth forth to his labour until the Evening It warms the Air and quickens Nature without Day the World would be a Chaos an unseen Beauty The Night indeed casts a Vail upon the bravery of the Earth but it draws the Curtains from that of Heaven though it darkens below it makes us see the Beauty of the World above and discovers to us a glorious part of the Creation of God the Tapistry of Heaven and the Motion of the Stars hid from us by the eminent light of the Day It procures a Truce from Labour and refresheth the Bodies of Creatures by recruiting the Spirits which are scattered by watching It prevents the ruin of Life by a reparation of what was wasted in the Day It takes from us the sight of Flowers and Plants but it washeth their Face with Dews for a new Appearance next Morning The length of the Day and Night is not without a Mark of Wisdom were they of a greater length as the length of a Week or Month the one would too much dry and the other too much moisten and for want of Action the Members would be stupified The perpetual Succession of Day and Night is an Evidence of the Divine Wisdom in tempering the travel and rest of Creatures Hence the Psalmist tells us Psal 74.16 17. The day is thine and the night is thine thou hast prepared the light of the Sun and made Summer and Winter i. e. they are of God's framing not without a wise counsel and end Hence let us ascend to the Bodies of living Creatures and we shall find every Member fitted for use What a Curiosity is there in every Member Every one fitted to a particular use in their situation form temper and mutual agreement for the good of the whole The Eye to direct the Ear to receive Directions from others the Hands to act the Feet to move Every Creature hath Members fitted for that Element wherein it resides And in the Body some parts are appointed to change the Food into Blood others to refine it and others to distribute and convey it to several parts for the maintenance of the whole The Heart to mint vital Spirits for preserving Life and the Brain to coin Animal Spirits for Life and Motion the Lungs to serve for the cooling the Heart which else would be parcht as the ground in Summer The Motion of the Members of the Body by one act of the Will and also without the Will by a natural Instinct is an admirable Evidence of Divine Skill in the Structure of the Body so that well might the Psalmist cry out Psal 139.14 I am fearfully and wonderfully made But how much more of this Divine Perfection is seen in the Soul A Nature furnisht with a Faculty of Understanding to judge of things to gather in things that are distant and to reason and draw Conclusions from one thing to another with a Memory to treasure up things that are past with a Will to apply it self so readily to what the Mind judges fit and comely and fly so speedily from what it judges ill and hurtful The whole World is a Stage every Creature in it hath a part to act and a Nature suted to that part and end 't is design'd for and all concur in a joint Language to publish the Glory of Divine Wisdom they have a Voice to proclaim the Glory of God Psal 19.1 3. And it is not the least part of God's Skill in framing the Creatures so that upon Man's Obedience they are the Chanels of his Goodness and upon Man's Disobedience they can in their Natures be the Ministers of his Justice for the punishing of offending Creatures 4. Fourthly This Wisdom is apparent in the linking all these useful parts together so that one is subordinate to the other for a common end All parts are exactly suted to one another and every part to the whole though they are of different Natures as Lines distant in themselves yet they meet in one common Center the good and the preservation of the Universe they are all joynted together as the word translated framed * Heb. 11.3 signifies knit by fit Bands and Ligaments to contribute mutual Beauty Strength and Assistance to one another like so many Links of a Chain coupled together that though there be a distance in place there is a unity in regard of connexion and end there is a consent in the whole Hosea 2.21 22. The Heavens hear the Earth and the Earth hears the Corn and the Wine and the Oyl The Heavens communicate their qualities to the Earth and the Earth conveys them to the Fruits she bears † Dalle 15. Serm. p. 17● The Air distributes Light Wind and Rain to the Earth the Earth and the Sea render to the Air Exhalations and Vapours and all together charitably give to the Plants and Animals that which is necessary for their nourishment and refreshment The Influences of the Heavens animate the Earth and the Earth affords matter in part for the Influences it receives from the Regions above Living Creatures are maintain'd by Nourishment Nourishment is conveyed to them by the Fruits of the Earth the Fruits of the Earth are produced by means of Rain and Heat Matter for Rain and Dew is raised by the heat of the Sun and the Sun by its motion distributes heat and quickning vertue to all parts of
crucis Lib. 3 cap. 7. p. 211. It is not like the Union of Stones in a Building or of two pieces of Timber fastned together which touch one anot●er only in their Superficies and outside without any intimacy with one another By such a kind of Union God would not be man The Word could ●ot so be made Flesh Nor is it a Union of Parts to the whole as the Members and the Body the Members are Parts the Body is the whole for the whole results from the Parts and depends upon the Parts But Christ being God is independent upon any thing The parts are in order of Nature before the whole but nothing can be in order of Nature before God Nor is it as the Union of two Liquors as when Wine and Water are mixed together for they are so Incorporated as not to be distinguish'd from one another no man can tell which Particle is Wine and which is Water But the Properties of the Divine Nature are distinguishable from the Properties of the Humane Nor is it as the Union of the Soul and Body so as that the Deity is the form of the Humanity as the Soul is the form of the Body For as the Soul is but a part of the Man so the Divinity would be then but a part of the Humanity as a Form or the Soul is in a state of Imperfection without that which it is to inform so the Divinity of Christ would have been Imperfect till it had assumed the Humanity And so the perfection of an Eternal Deity would have depended on a Creature of Time This Union of two Natures in Christ is incomprehensible And it is a mystery we cannot arrive to the top of How the Divine Nature which is the same with that of the Father and the Holy Ghost should be united to the Human Nature without its being said that the Father and the Holy Ghost were united to the Flesh but the Scripture doth not encourage any such Notion It speaks only of the Word the Person of the Word being made Flesh And in his being made Flesh distinguisheth him from the Father as the only begotten of the Father Joh. 1.14 The Person of the Son was the term of this Union 1. This Vnion doth not confound the Properties of the Deity and those of the Humanity They remain distinct and entire in each other The Deity is not changed into Flesh nor the Flesh transform'd into God They are distinct and yet united They are conjoined and yet unmixt The Dues of either Nature are preserved 'T is impossible that the Majesty of the Divinity can receive an alteration 'T is as impossible that the meaness of the Humanity can receive the Impressions of the Deity so as to be changed into it and a creature be metamorphos'd into the Creator and Temporary Flesh become Eternal and Finite mount up into Infinity As the Soul and Body are united and make one Person yet the Soul is not changed into the perfections of the Body nor the Body into the perfections of the Soul There is a change made in the Humanity by being advanced to a more Excellent Union but not in the Diety as a change is made in the Air when it is enlightned by the Sun not in the Sun which communicates that brightness to the Air. Athanasius makes the burning Bush to be a type of Christs Incarnation Exod. 3.2 The Fire signifying the Divine Nature and the Bush the human The Bush is a branch springing up from the Earth and the Fire descends from Heaven as the Bush was united to the Fire yet was not hurt by the slame nor converted into Fire there remained a difference between the Bush and the Fire yet the properties of the Fire shined in the Bush so that the whole Bush seemed to be on Fire So in the Incarnation of Christ the Human Nature is not swallowed up by the Divine nor changed into it nor confounded with it But so united that the properties of both remain firme Two are so become one that they remain two still One person in Two Natures containing the glorious perfections of the Divine and the weaknesses of the Humane The fulness of the Deity dwels bodily in Christ Col. 2.9 2. The Divine Nature is vnited to every part of the Humanity The whole Divinity to the whole Humanity so that no part but may be said to be the Member of God as well as the Blood is said to be the Blood of God Acts 20.28 By the same reason it may be said the Hand of God the Eye of God the Arm of God As God is infinitely present every where so as to be excluded from no place so is the Deity hypostatically every where in the Humanity not excluded from any part of it As the light of the Sun in every part of the Air as a sparkling splendor in every part of the Diamond Therefore it is concluded by all that acknowledge the Deity of Christ that when his Soul was separated from the Body the Deity remained united both to Soul and Body as light doth in every part of a broken Christal 3. Therefore perpetually united Coloss 2.9 The fulness of the Godhead dwells in him bodily It Dwels in him not lodges in him as a Traveller in an Inn It resides in him as a fixed habitation As God describes the perpetuity of his presence in the Ark by his habitation or dwelling in it Exod. 29.44 so doth the Apostle the inseparable duration of the Deity in the Humanity and the indissoluble Union of the Humanity with the Deity It was united on Earth it remains united in Heaven It was not an Image or an Apparition as the Tongues wherein the Spirit came upon the Apostles were a Temporary Representation not a thing united perpetually to the person of the Holy Ghost 4. It was a personal Vnion It was not an union of persons though it was a personal union So Davenant expounds Col. 2.9 Christ did not take the Person of Man but the Nature of Man into subsistence with himself The Body and Soul of Christ were not united in themselves had no subsistence in themselves till they were united to the Person of the Son of God If the Person of a Man were united to him the Human Nature would have been the Nature of the Person so united to him and not the Nature of the Son of God Heb. 2.14 16. Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil For verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham He took flesh and blood to be his own Nature perpetually to subsist in the Person of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which must be by a Personal Union or no way The Deity united to the Humanity and both Natures to be one Person This
embrace it whence the Prophet Isaiah after the Prophecy of the Death of Christ Isai 53. calls upon the Church to enlarge her Tents and lengthen out her Cords to receive those Multitudes of Children that should call her Mother Isai 54.2 3. for she should break forth on the right hand and on the left and her seed should inherit the Gentiles The Idolaters and Persecutors should list their Names in the Muster-Roll of the Church Presently after the Descent of the Holy Ghost from Heaven upon the Apostles you find the hearts of Three thousand melted by a plain declaration of this Doctrine who were a little before so far from having a Favourable thought of it that some of them at least if not all had exprest their Rage against it in Voting for the Condemning and Crucifying the Author of it † Acts 2.41 42. But in a moment they were so altered that they breath out Affections instead of Fury neither the respect they had to their Rulers nor the honour they bore to their Priests not the derisions of the People nor the threatning of Punishment could stop them from owning it in the face of multitudes of Discouragements How wonderful is it that they should so soon and by such small Means pay a reverence to the Servants who had none for the Master that they should hear them with patience without the same Clamor against them as against Christ Crucifie them Crucifie them But that their hearts should so suddenly be enflam'd with Devotion to him dead whom they so much abhorred when living It had gained footing not in a Corner of the World but in the most famous Cities in Jerusalem where Christ had been Crucified in Antioch where the Name of Christians first began in Corinth a place of Ingenious Arts and Ephesus the Seat of a noted Idol In less than Twenty years there was never a Province of the Roman Empire and scarce any part of the known World but was stor'd with the Professors of it Rome that was the Metropolis of the Idolatrous World had multitudes of them sprinkled in every Corner whose Faith was spoken of throughout the World * Rom. 1.8 The Court of Nero that Monster of Mankind and the cruellest and sordid'st Tyrant that ever breathed was not empty of sincere Votaries to it there were Saints in Caesars house while Paul was under Nero's Chain ‖ Phil. 4. And it maintain'd its standing and flourish'd in spite of all the force of Hell 250 years before any Soveraign Prince espoused it The Potentates of the Earth had conquer'd the Lands of Men and subdued their Bodies these vanquisht Hearts and Wills and brought the most beloved Thoughts under the Yoke of Christ So much did this Doctrine overmaster the Consciences of its Followers that they rejoyced more at their Yoke than others at their Liberty and counted it more a glory to die for the honour of it than to live in the profession of it Thus did our Saviour Reign and gather Subjects in the midst of his Enemies in which respect in the first discovery of the Gospel he is describ'd as a Mighty Conqueror Revel 6.2 and still conquering in the greatness of his strength How great a Testimony of his Power is it that from so small a Cloud should rise so glorious a Sun that should chase before it the Darkness and Power of Hell Triumph over the Idolatry Superstition and Prophaness of the World This plain Doctrine vanquisht the Obstinacy of the Jews baffled the Understanding of the Greeks humbled the Pride of the Grandees threw the Devil not only out of Bodies but Hearts tore up the foundation of his Empire and planted the Cross where the Devil had for many Ages before established his Standard How much more than a humane Force is illustrious in this whole Conduct Nothing in any Age of the World can parallel it it being so much against the Methods of Nature the Disposition of the World and considering the Resistance against it seems to surmount even the Work of Creation Never were there in any Profession such multitudes not of Bedlams but Men of Sobriety Acuteness and Wisdom that expos'd themselves to the fury of the Flames and challenged Death in the most terrifying shapes for the Honour of this Doctrine To conclude This should be often meditated upon to form our Understandings to a full assent to the Gospel and the Truth of it the want of which Consideration of Power and the Customariness of an Education in the outward Profession of it is the ground of all the Prophaneness under it and Apostacy from it the disesteem of the Truth it declares and the neglect of the Duties it enjoyns The more we have a prospect and sense of the Impressions of Divine Power in it the more we shall have a Reverence of the Divine Precepts III. The Third thing is The Power of God appears in the application of Redemption as well as in the Person Redeeming and the publication and propagation of the Doctrine of Redemption 1. In the planting Grace 2. In the Pardon of Sin 3. In the preserving Grace 1. In the planting Grace There is no Expression which the Spirit of God hath thought fit in Scripture to resemble this Work to but argues the exerting of a Divine Power for the effecting of it When it is exprest by Light it is as much as the Power of God in creating the Sun when by Regeneration 't is as much as the Power of God in forming an Infant and fashioning all the Parts of a Man when it is called Resurrection 't is as much as the rearing of the Body again out of putrified Matter when it is called Creation 't is as much as erecting a comly World out of meer Nothing or an inform and uncomly Mass As we could not contrive the Death of Christ for our Redemption so we cannot form our Souls to the Acceptation of it the Infinite efficacy of Grace is as necessary for the one as the Infinite Wisdom of God was for laying the Platform of the other 'T is by his Power we have whatsoever pertains to Godliness as well as Life * 2 Pet. 1.3 He puts his Fingers upon the handle of the Lock and turns the Heart to what Point he pleases the Action whereby he performs this is exprest by a word of Force † Colos 1.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath snatcht us from the power of Darkness the Action whereby it is perform'd manifests it In reference to this Power it is called Creation which is a production from Nothing and Conversion is a production from something more uncapable of that state than meer Nothing is of Being There is a greater distance between the Terms of Sin and Righteousness Corruption and Grace than between the Terms of Nothing and Being The greater the distance is the more Power is requir'd to the producing any thing As in Miracles the Miracle is the greater where the Change is the greater
Justice abus'd his Goodness done injury to all those Attributes which are necessary to his relief It was not so in Creation nothing was uncapable of disobliging God from bringing it into Being The Dust which was the Matter of Adams Body need●d only the extrinsick Power of God to form it into a Man and inspire it with a living Soul It had not render'd it self obnoxious to Divine Justice nor was capable to excite any disputes between his Perfections But after the entrance of Sin and the merit of Death thereby there was a resistance in Justice to the free Remission of Man God was to exercise a Power over himself to answer his Justice and pardon the Sinner as well as a power over the Creature to reduce the Run-away and Rebel Unless we have recourse to the Infiniteness of Gods Power the infiniteness of our Guilt will weigh us down We must consider not only that we have a mighty Guilt to press us but a mighty God to relieve us In the same act of his being our Righteousness he is our Strength In the Lord have I righteousness and strength Isai 45.24 2. In the sense of Pardon When the Soul hath been wounded with the sense of sin and its Iniquities have star'd it in the face the raising the Soul from a despairing condition and lifting it above those Waters which terrified it to cast the light of Comfort as well as the light of Grace into a heart covered with more than an Egyptian Darkness is an act of his Infinite and Creating Power Isai 57.19 I create the fruit of the lips peace Men may wear out their Lips with numbring up the Promises of Grace and Arguments of Peace but all will signifie no more without a Creative Power than if all Men and Angels should call to that White upon the Wall to shine as splendidly as the Sun God only can create Jerusalem and every Child of Jerusalem a rejoycing * Isai 65.18 A Man is no more able to apply to himself any word of Comfort under the sense of Sin than he is able to Convert himself and turn the proposals of the Word into gracious Affections in his heart To restore the joy of Salvation is in Davids Judgment an act of Soveraign Power equal to that of creating a clean heart Psal 51.10 12. Alas 't is a state like to that of Death as Infinite Power can only raise from Natural death so from a Spiritual death also from a Comfortless death In his favour there is life in the want of his Favour there is death The Power of God hath so placed Light in the Sun that all Creatures in the World all the Torches upon Earth kindled together cannot make it Day if that doth not rise so all the Angels in Heaven and Men upon Earth are not competent Chirurgions for a wounded Spirit The cure of our Spiritual Ulcers and the pouring in Balm is an Act of Soveraign Creative Power 'T is more visible in silencing a Tempestuous Conscience than the Power of our Saviour was in the stilling the stormy Winds and the roaring Waves As none but Infinite Power can remove the Guilt of Sin so none but Infinite Power can remove the Despairing sense of it III. This Power is evident in the preserving Grace As the Providence of God is a manifestation of his Power in a continued Creation so the preservation of Grace is a manifestation of his Power in a continued Regeneration To keep a Nation under the Yoke is an act of the same Power that subdu'd it 'T is this that strengthens Men in suffering against the Fury of Hell † Colos 1.13 't is this that keeps them from falling against the force of Hell the Fathers hand John 10.29 His strength abates and moderates the violence of Temptations his Staff sustains his People under them his Might defeats the Power of Satan and bruiseth him under a Believers feet The Counterworkings of Indwelling Corruption the reluctances of the Flesh against the breathings of the Spirit the fallacy of the Senses and the rovings of the Mind have ability quickly to stifle and extinguish Grace if it were not maintain'd by that Powerful blast that first inbreathed it No less Power is seen in perfecting it than was in planting it ‖ 2 Pet. 1.3 no less in fulfilling the work of Faith than in ingrafting the Word of Faith 2 Thess 1.11 The Apostle well understood the Necessity and Efficacy of it in the preservation of Faith as well as in the fir●t infusion when he expresses himself in those terms of a Greatness or Hyperbole of Power his Mighty Power or the Power of his Might Ephes 1.19 The Salvation he bestows and the Strength whereby he effects it are joyned together in the Prophets Song Isai 12.2 The Lord is my strength and my salvation And indeed God doth more magnifie his Power in continuing a Believer in the World a weak and half-rigg'd Vessel in the midst of so many Sands whereon it might split so many Rocks whereon it might dash so many Corruptions within and so many Temptations without than if he did immediately transport him into Heaven and cloth him with a perfectly Sanctified Nature To Conclude What is there then in the World which is destitute of Notices of Divine Power Every Creature affords us the Lesson all acts of Divine Government are the marks of it Look into the Word and the manner of its propagation instructs us in it your Changed Natures your Pardoned Guilt your Shining Comfort your quell'd Corruptions the standing of your staggering Graces are sufficient to preserve a sense and prevent a forgetfulness of this great Attribute so necessary for your support and conducing so much to your comfort Vses I. Of Information and Instruction 1. If Incomprehensible and Infinite Power belongs to the Nature of God then Jesus Christ hath a Divine Nature because the Acts of Power proper to God are ascribed to him This Perfection of Omnipotence doth unquestionably pertain to the Deity and is an incommunicable Property and the same with the Essence of God He therefore to whom this Attribute is ascribed is essentially God This is challenged by Christ in conjunction with Eternity Revel 1.8 I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty This the Lord Christ speaks of himself He who was equal with God proclaims himself by the Essential title of the Godhead part of which he repeats again verse 11. and this is the Person which walks in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks the Person that was dead and now lives vers 17 18. which cannot possibly be meant of the Father the first Person who can never come under that denomination of having been dead Being therefore adorn'd with the same Title he hath the same Deity and though his Omnipotence be only positively asserted v. 8. yet his Eternity being asserted v. 11 17. it inferreth
1 Cor. 1.9 Is he the Instrumental or Principal cause of our effectual Vocation And can the Will of God be the Instrument of putting Paul into the Apostleship or the Soveraign cause of investing him with that Dignity when he calls himself an Apostle by the will of God Ephes 1.3 And when all things are said to be through God as well as of him must he be counted the Instrumental cause of his own Creation Counsels and Judgments * Rom. 11.36 When we mortifie the deeds of the Body through the Spirit Rom. 8.13 or keep the Treasure of the Word by the Holy Ghost 2 Tim. 1.14 Is the Holy Ghost of no more dignity in such acts than Instrument Nor doth the gaining a thing by a Person make him a meer Instrument or Inferior as when a Man gains his Right in a way of Justice against his Adversary by the Magistrate is the Judge inferiour to the Suppliant If the Word were an Instrument in Creation it must be a created or uncreated Instrument If Created it could not be true what the Evangelist saith that All things were made by him since himself the Principal thing could not be made by himself if Uncreated he was God and so acted by a Divine Omnipotency which surmounts an Instrumental cause But indeed an Instrument is impossible in Creation since it is wrought only by an act of the Divine Will Do we need any Organ to an act of Volition the efficacious Will of the Creator is the cause of the Original of the Body of the World with its particular Members and exact Harmony It was form'd by a Word and establish'd by a Command † Psal 33.9 the beauty of the Creation stood up at the Precept of his Will Nor was the Son a Partial cause as when many are said to build a House one works one part and another frames another part God created all things by the immediate operation of the Son in the unity of Essence Goodness Power Wisdom not an extrinsick but a connatural Instrument As the Sun doth illustrate all things by his Light and quickens all things by his Heat so God created the Worlds by Christ as he was the brightness or splendor of his Glory the exact image of his Person which follows the declaration of his making the Worlds by him ‖ Heb. 1.3 4. to shew that he acted not as an Instrument but one in Essential conjunction with him as Light and Brightness with the Sun But suppose he did make the World as a kind of Instrument He was then before the World not bounded by Time and Eternity cannot well be conceiv'd belonging to a Being without Omnipotency He is the End as well as the Author of the Creatures * Colos 1.16 not only the Principle which gave them Being but the Sea into whose glory they run and dissolve themselves which consists not with the meaness of an Instrument 2. As Creation so Preservation is ascribed to him Colos 1.17 By him all things consist As he preceded all things in his Eternity so he establishes all things by his Omnipotency and fixes them in their several Centers that they sink not into that nothing from whence he fetched them By him they flourish in their several Beings and observe the Laws and Orders he first appointed That Power of his which extracted them from insensible Nothing upholds them in their several Beings with the same facility as he spake Being into them even by the word of his Power ‖ Heb. 1 3. and by one Creative continued Voice called all Generations from the beginning to the Period of the World * Isai 41.4 and causes them to flourish in their several seasons 'T is by him Kings reign and Princes decree justice and all things are confin'd within the limits of Government All which are Acts of an Infinite Power 3. Resurrection is also ascrib'd to him The Body crumbled to Dust and that Dust blown to several quarters of the World cannot be gathered in its distinct parts and new formed for the entertainment of the Soul without the strength of an Infinite Arm. This he will do and more change the vileness of an Earthly Body into the glory of an Heavenly one a Dusty flesh into a Spiritual Body which is an argument of a Power Invincible to which all things cannot but stoop for it is by such an operation which testifies an ability to subdue all things to himself † Phil. 3.21 especially when he works it with the same ease as he did the Creation by the power of his Voice John 5.28 All that are in the Graves shall hear his voice and shall come forth Speaking them into a restored life from insensible Dust as he did into Being from an empty Nothing The greatest acts of Power are own'd to belong to Creation Preservation Resurrection Omnipotence therefore is his Right and therefore a Deity cannot be denied to him that inherits a Perfection essential to none but God and impossible to be intrusted in or managed by the hands of any Creatures And this is no mean comfort to those that believe in him He is in regard of his Power the Horn of salvation so Zachariah sings of him Luke 1.69 Nor could there be any more Mighty found out upon whom God could have laid our help ‖ Psal 89.19 No reason therefore to doubt his ability to save to the utmost who hath the Power of Creation Preservation and Resurrection in his hands His Promises must be accomplished since nothing can resist him He hath Power to fulfil his Word and bring all things to a final issue because he is Almighty by his Outstretched Arm in the Deliverance of his Israel from Egypt for it was his Arm 1 Cor. 10. he shewed that he was able to deliver us from Spiritual Egypt The charge of Mediator to expiate Sin vanquish Hell form a Church conduct and perfect it are not to be effected by a Person of less ability than Infinite Let this Almightiness of his be the Bottom wherein to cast and fix the Anchor of our Hopes 2. Information Hence may be inferred the Deity of the Holy Ghost Works of Omnipotency are ascrib'd to the Spirit of God By the motion of the Wings of this Spirit as a Bird over her Eggs was that rude and unshapen Mass hatcht into a comly World * Gen. 1.2 So the word Moved properly signifies The Stars or perhaps the Angels are meant by the garnishing of the Heavens in the Verse before the Text were brought forth in their comliness and dignity as the ornaments of the upper World by this Spirit By his Spirit he hath garnished the Heavens To this Spirit Job ascribes the formation both of the Body and Soul under the Title of Almighty Job 33.4 The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Resurrection another work of Omnipotency is attributed to him Rom. 8.11 The Conception of our Saviour
of God Righteousness a Perfection as referred to others in his Actions towards them and upon them In Particular This Property of the Divine Nature is First An essential and necessary Perfection He is essentially and necessarily Holy 'T is the essential glory of his Nature His Holiness is as necessary as his Being as necessary as his Omniscience As he cannot but know what is right so he cannot but do what is just His Understanding is not as Created Understandings capable of Ignorance as well as Knowledge so his Will is not as Created Wills capable of Unrighteousness as well as Righteousness There can be no contradiction or contrariety in the Divine Nature to know what is right and to do what is wrong If so there would be a diminu ion of his Blessedness he would not be a God alway blessed Blessed for ever as he is * Rom. 9 5. He is as necessarily Holy as he is necessarily God as necessarily without Sin as without Change As he was God from Eternity so he was Holy from Eternity † Turre●in de Satisfact p. 28. He was Gracious Merciful Just in his own Nature and also Holy though no Creature had been framed by him to exercise his Grace Mercy Justice or Holiness upon If God had not created a World he had in his own Nature been Almighty and able to Create a World If there never had been any thing but himself yet he had been Omniscient knowing every thing that was within the verge and compass of his Infinite Power so he was Pure in his own Nature though he never had brought forth any Rational Creature whereby to manifest this Purity These Perfections are so necessary that the Nature of God could not subsist without them And the acts of those ad intra or within himself are necessary for being Omniscient in Nature there must be an act of knowledge of himself and his own Nature Being Infinitely Holy an act of Holiness in Infinitely loving himself must necessarily flow from this Perfection ‖ Ochino Predic part 3. Bodic 51. p. 347 348. As the Divine Will cannot but be perfect so it cannot be wanting to render the highest Love to it self to its Goodness to the Divine Nature which is due to him Indeed the acts of those ad extra are not necessary but upon a condition To love Righteousness without himself or to detest Sin or inflict Punishment for the committing of it could not have been had there been no Righteous Creature for him to love no Sinning Creature for him to loath and to exercise his Justice upon as the Object of Punishment Some Attributes require a Condition to make the Acts of them necessary As it is at Gods liberty whether he will create a Rational Creature or no But when he decrees to make either Angel or Man 't is necessary from the Perfection of his Nature to make them Righteous 'T is at Gods liberty whether he will speak to Man or no but if he doth 't is impossible for him to speak that which is false because of his Infinite Perfection of Veracity 'T is at his liberty whether he will permit a Creature to Sin but if he sees good to suffer it 't is impossible but that he should detest that Creature that goes cross to his Righteous Nature His Holiness is not solely an Act of his Will for then he might be Unholy as well as Holy he might love Iniquity and hate Righteousness he might then command that which is good and afterwards command that which is bad and unworthy For what is only an Act of his Will and not belonging to his Nature is indifferenr to him As the positive Law he gave to Adam of not eating the Forbidden Fruit was a pure Act of his Will he might have given him liberty to eat of it if he had pleased as well as prohibited him But what is Moral and good in its own Nature is necessarily willed by God and cannot be changed by him because of the transcendent Eminency of his Nature and Righteousness of his Will As it is impossible for God to command his Creature to hate him or to dispence with a Creature for not loving him for this would be to command a thing intrinsically Evil the highest Ingratitude the very Spirit of all Wickedness which consists in the hating God Yet though God be thus necessarily Holy he is not so by a bare and simple necessity as the Sun shines or the Fire burns but by a free necessity not compelled thereunto but inclined from the fulness of the Perfection of his own Nature and Will so as by no means he can be Unholy because he will not be Unholy 't is against his Nature to be so 2. God is only absolutely Holy There is none Holy as the Lord. 1 Sam. 2.2 'T is the peculiar glory of his Nature As there is none Good but God so none Holy but God No Creature can be essentially Holy because Mutable Holiness is the substance of God but a Quality and Accident in a Creature God is Infinitely Holy Creatures Finitely Holy He is holy from Himself Creatures are holy by derivation from him He is not only Holy but Holiness Holiness in the highest degree is his sole Prerogative As the highest Heaven is called the Heaven of Heavens because it embraceth in its Circle all the Heavens and contains the Magnitude of them and hath a greater vastness above all that it incloseth so is God the Holy of Holies He contains the Holiness of all Creatures put together and Infinitely more As all the Wisdom Excellency and Power of the Creatures if compar'd with the Wisdom Excellency and Power of God is but Folly Vileness and Weakness so the highest created Purity if set in parallel with God is but Impurity and Uncleaness Revel 15.4 Thou only art Holy 'T is like the light of a Glow-worm to that of the Sun † Job 15.15 The Heavens are not pure in his sight and his Angels he charged with folly Job 4 18. Though God hath Crowned the Angels with an unspotted Sanctity and placed them in a habitation of Glory yet as Illustrious as they are they have an Unworthiness in their own Nature to appear before the Throne of so Holy a God Their holiness grows dim and pale in his Presence 'T is but a weak shadow of that Divine Purity whose Light is so glorious that it makes them cover their faces out of weakness to behold it and cover their Feet out of shame in themselves They are not pure in his sight because though they love God which is a Principle of Holiness as much as they can yet not so much as he deserves They love him with the intensest degree according to their Power but not with the intensest degree according to his own Amiableness For they cannot infinitely love God unless they were as Infinite as God and had an understanding of his Perfections equal with himself and as immense
Minds and Consciences of Men as the Author of Nature for the preservation of the World manifests the Holiness of the Law-maker and Governour 2. His Holiness appears in the Ceremonial Law In the variety of Sacrifices for Sin wherein he writ his detestation of Vnrighteousness in bloody Characters His Holiness was more constantly exprest in the continual Sacrifices than in those rarer sprinklings of Judgments now and then upon the World which often reached not the worst but the most moderate Sinners and were the occasions of the questioning of the Righteousness of his Providence both by Jews and Gentiles In Judgments his Purity was only now and then manifest By his long Patience he might be imagin'd by some reconcil'd to their Crimes or not much concern'd in them but by the Morning and Evening Sacrifice he witness'd a perpetual and uninterrupted Abhorrence of whatsoever was Evil. Besides those the occasional Washings and Sprinklings upon Ceremonial Defilements which polluted only the Body gave an evidence that every thing that had a resemblance to Evil was loathsom to him Add also the Prohibitions of eating such and such Creatures that were filthy as the Swine that wallowed in the Mire a fit Emblem for the prophane and brutish Sinner which had a Moral signification both of the loathsomness of Sin to God and the aversion themselves ought to have to every thing that was filthy 3. This Holiness appears in the Allurements annex'd to the Law for keeping it and the Affrightments to restrain from the breaking of it Both Promises and Threatnings have their Fundamental Root in the Holiness of God and are both Branches of this peculiar Perfection As they respect the Nature of God they are Declarations of his hatred of Sin and his love of Righteousness the one belong to his Threatnings the other to his Promises both joyn together to represent this Divine Perfection to the Creature and to excite to an imitation in the Creature In the one God would render Sin odious because dangerous and curb the practice of Evil which would otherwise be Licentious In the other he would commend Righteousness and excite a love of it which would otherwise be cold By these God sutes the two great Affections of Men Fear and Hope both the branches of Self-love in Man The Promises and Threatnings are both the Branches of Holiness in God The end of the Promises is the same with the Exhortation the Apostle concludes from them 2 Cor. 7.1 Having these Promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holiness in the fear of God As the end of Precepts is to direct the end of Threatnings is to deter from Iniquity so that of the Promises is to allure to Obedience Thus God breaths out his Love to Righteousness in every Promise his Hatred of Sin in every Threatning The Rewards offerd in the one are the Smiles of pleased Holiness and the Curses thundred in the other are the Sparklings of enraged Righteousness 4. His Holiness appears in the Judgments inflicted for the violation of this Law Divine Holiness is the Root of Divine Justice and Divine Justice is the Triumph of Divine Holiness Hence both are expressed in Scripture by one word of Righteousness which sometimes signifies the rectitude of the Divine Nature and sometimes the vindicative stroak of his Arm Psal 103.6 The Lord executeth Righteousness and Judgment for all that are oppressed So Dan. 9.7 Righteousness that is Justice belongs to thee The Vials of his Wrath are filled from his implacable aversion to Iniquity All Penal Evils showred down upon the heads of Wicked men spread their root in and branch out from this Perfection All the dreadful Storms and Tempests in the World are blown up by it Why doth he rain Snares Fire and Brimstone and a horrible Tempest because the righteous Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.6 7. And as was observed before when he was going about the dreadfullest Work that ever was in the World the overturning the Jewish State hardening the Hearts of that Unbelieving People and casheiring a Nation once dear to him from the honour of his Protection His Holiness as the Spring of all this is applauded by the Seraphims Isai 6.3 compared with Vers 9 10 11 c. Impunity argues the approbation of a Crime and Punishment the abhorrency of it The greatness of the Crime and the Righteousness of the Judge are the first Natural Sentiments that arise in the Minds of Men upon the appearance of Divine Judgments in the World by those that are near them † Amirant Moral Tom. 5. p. 388. As when Men see Gibbets erected Scaffolds prepared Instruments of Death and Torture provided and grievous Punishments inflicted the first reflection in the Spectators is the malignity of the Crime and the detestation the Governours are possessed with 1. How severely hath he punish'd his most Noble Creatures for it The once glorious Angels upon whom he had been at greater cost than upon other Creatures and drawn more lively Lineaments of his own Excellency upon the Transgression of his Law are thrown into the Furnace of Justice without any Mercy to pity them Jude 6. And though there were but one sort of Creatures upon the Earth that bore his Image and were only fit to publish and keep up his Honour below the Heavens yet upon their Apostacy though upon a Temptation from a subtile and insinuating Spirit the Man with all his Posterity is sentenc'd to Misery in Life and Death at last and the Woman with all her Sex have standing Punishments inflicted on them which as they begun in their Persons were to reach as far as the last Member of their successive Generations So Holy is God that he will not endure a Spot in his choicest Work Men indeed when there is a crack in an excellent piece of Work or a stain upon a rich Garment do not cast it away they value it for the remaining Excellency more than hate it for the contracted Spot But God saw no Excellency in his Creature worthy regarding after the Image of that which he most esteemed in himself was defaced 2. How detestable to him are the very Instruments of Sin For the Ill use the Serpent an Irrational Creature was put to by the Devil as an Instrument in the Fall of Man the whole brood of those Animals are Curst Gen. 3.14 Cursed above all Cattle and above every Beast of the field Not only the Devils Head is threatned to be for ever bruised and as some think render'd irrecoverable upon this further Testimony of his Malice in the Seduction of Man who perhaps without this new Act might have been admitted into the Arms of Mercy notwithstanding his first Sin though the Scripture gives us no account of this only this is the only Sentence we read of pronounc'd against the Devil which puts him into an irrecoverable state by a Mortal bruising of his Head But I say He is not only punish'd but the
no more in mind of the Holiness of God and the Holiness of his Law 't is a troublesom thing for us to hear of it Let him be gone from us since he will not countenance our Vices and indulge our Crimes We would rather hear there is no God than you should tell us of a Holy one We are contrary to the Law when we wish it were not so exact and therefore contrary to the Holiness of God which set the stamp of Exactness and Righteousness upon it We think him Injurious to our Liberty when by his Precept he thwarts our Pleasure we wish it of another frame more mild more sutable to our Minds 'T is the same as if we should openly blame God for consulting with his own Righteousness and not with our Humors before he setled his Law that he should not have drawn it from the depths of his Righteous Nature but squar'd it to accommodate our Corruption This being the language of such Complaints is a reproving God because he would not be Unholy that we might be Unrighteous with Impunity Had the Divine Law been suted to our Corrupt state God must have been Unholy to have complied with his Rebellious Creature To charge the Law with rigidness either in Language or Practice is the highest contempt of Gods Holiness for it is an Implicit Wish that God were as defil'd polluted disorderly as our Corrupted Selves 10 The Holiness of God is injur'd Opinionatively 1. In the Opinion of Venial sins The Romanists divide Sins into Venial and Mortal Mortal are those which deserve Eternal Death Venial the lighter sort of Sins which rather deserve to be pardon'd than punish'd or if punish'd not with an Eternal but Temporal Punishment This Opinion hath no foundation in but is contrary to Scripture How can any Sin be in its own nature Venial when the due Wages of every Sin is death Rom. 6.23 and he who continues not in every thing that the Law commands falls under a Curse Gal. 3.10 'T is a mean thought of the Holiness and Majesty of God to imagine that any Sin which is against an Infinite Majesty and as Infinite a Purity both in the Nature of God and the Law of God should not be considered as infinitely hainous All Sins are Transgressions of the Eternal Law and in every one the Infinite Holiness of God is some way slighted 2. In the Opinion of Works of Supererogation That is such Works as are not commanded by God which yet have such a dignity and worth in their own nature that the Performers of them do not only merit at Gods hands for themselves but fill up a Treasure of Merits for others that come short of fulfilling the Precepts God hath enjoyn'd 'T is such a mean thought of Gods Holiness that the Jews in all the Charges brought against them in Scripture were never guilty of And if you consider what pitiful things they are which are within the compass of such Works you have sufficient reason to bewail the Ignorance of Man and the low esteem he hath of so glorious a Perfection The Whipping themselves often in a Week extraordinary Watchings Fastings Macerating their Bodies wearing a Capuchins Habit c. are pitiful things to give content to an Infinite Purity As if the Precept of God requir'd only the Inferiour degrees of Vertue and the Counsels the more high and excellent as if the Law of God which the Psalmist counts perfect † Psal 19.7 did not command all Good and forbid all Evil as if the Holiness of God had forgotten it self in the framing the Law and made it a scanty and defective Rule and the Righteousness of a Creature were not only able to make an Eternal Righteousness but surmount it As Man would be at first as knowing as God so some of his Posterity would be more holy than God set up a Wisdom against the Wisdom of God and a Purity above the Divine Purity Adam was not so presumptuous he intended no more than an equalling God in Knowledge but those would exceed him in Righteousness and not only presume to render a Satisfaction for themselves to the Holiness they have injur'd but to make a Purse for the supply of others that are Indigent that they may stand before the Tribunal of God with a Confidence in the Imaginary Righteousness of a Creature How horrible is it for those that come short of the Law of God themselves to think that they can have enough for a Loan to their Neighbours An unworthy Opinion 2. Information It may Inform us how great is our Fall from God and how distant we are from him View the Holiness of God and take a prospect of the Nature of Man and be astonished to see a Person created in the Divine Image degenerated into the Image of the Devil We are as far fallen from the Holiness of God which consists in a Hatred of Sin as the lowest Point of the Earth is from the highest Point of the Heavens The Devil is not more fallen from the rectitude of his Nature and likeness to God than we are and that we are not in the same condition with those Apostate Spirits is not from any thing in our Nature but from the Mediation of Christ upon which account God hath indulged in us a continuance of some Remainders of that which Satan is wholly deprived of We are departed from our Original Pattern we were created to live the life of God that is a life of Holiness but now we are alienated from the life of God * Eph. 4.18 and of a beautiful piece we are become deformed daub'd over with the most defiling Mud We work uncleaness with greediness according to our ability as Creatures as God doth work Holiness with affection and ardency according to his Infiniteness as Creator More distant we are from God by reason of Sin than the vilest Creature the most deform'd Toad or poysonous Serpent is from the highest and most glorious Angel By forsaking our Innocence we departed from God as our Original Copy The Apostle might well say Rom. 3.23 that by Sin we are come short of the glory of God Interpreters trouble themselves much about that place Man is come short of the glory of God that is of the Holiness of God which is the glory of the Divine Nature and was pictur'd in the Rational Innocent Creature By the Glory of God is meant the Holiness of God As 1 Cor. 3.18 Beholding as in a glass the Glory of the Lord we are changed into the same Image from glory to glory that is the Glory of God in the Text into the Image of which we are changed but the Scripture speaks of no other Image of God but that of Holiness We are come short of the glory of God of the Holiness of God which is the glory of God and the Image of it which was the glory of Man By Sin which is particular in opposition to the Purity of God Man was left
of the Body and Service of the Soul What is there in the whole Structure that doth not inform us of the Goodness of God 2. But what is this to that goodness which shines in the Nature of the Soul Who can express the wonders of that Comeliness that is wrapt up in this Mask of Clay A Soul endued with a clearness of Understanding and freedom of Will Faculties no sooner fram'd but they were able to produce the Operations they were intended for A Soul that excelled the whole World that comprehended the whole Creation A Soul that evidenced the extent of its Skill in giving names to all that variety of Creatures which had issued out of the hand of Divine Power * Gen. 2.19 A Soul able to discover the Nature of other Creatures and manage and conduct their Motions In the Ruines of a Palace we may see the Curiosity display'd and the Cost expended in the building of it In the Ruines of this fallen Structure we still find it capable of a mighty Knowledge a Reason able to regulate Affairs govern States order more Mighty and Massy Creatures find out witty Inventions There is still an Understanding to irradiate the other Faculties a Mind to contemplate its own Creator a Judgment to discern the differences between Good and Evil Vice and Vertue which the Goodness of God hath not granted to any lower Creature These Excellent Faculties together with the Power of Self-reflection and the swiftness of the Mind in running over the things of the Creation are astonishing Gleams of the vast Goodness of that Divine Hand which ennobled this Frame To the other Creatures of this World God had given out some small Mites from his Treasury but in the Perfections of Man he hath opened the more secret parts of his Exchequer and liberally bestow'd those Doles which he hath not expended upon the other Creatures on Earth 3. Besides this He did not only make Man so noble a Creature in his Frame but he made him after his own Image in Holiness He imparted to him a Spark of his own Comeliness in order to a communion with himself in Happiness had Man stood his ground in his tryal and used those Faculties well which had been the gift of his Bountiful Creator He made Man after his Image after his own Image † Gen. 1.26 27. That as a Coyn bears the Image of the Prince so did the Soul of Man the Image of God Not the Image of Angels though the speech be in the Plural Number Let us make Man 'T is not to a Creature but to a Creator Let us that are his Makers make him in the Image of his Makers God Created Man Angels did not Create him God Created Man in his own Image not therefore in the Image of Angels The Nature of God and the Nature of Angels are not the same Where in the whole Scripture is Man said to be made after the Image of Angels God made Man not in the Image of Angels to be conformed to them as his Prototype but in the Image of the Blessed God to be conformed to the Divine Nature That as he was conform'd to the Image of his Holiness he might also partake of the Image of his Blessedness which without it could not be attained For as the felicity of God could not be clear without an unspotted Holiness so neither can there be a glorious Happiness without Purity in the Creature This God provided for in his Creation of Man giving him such accomplishments in those two Excellent Pieces of Soul and Body that nothing was wanting to him but his own will to instate him in an invariable Felicity He was possessed with such a Nature by the hand of Divine Goodness such a loftiness of Understanding and purity of Faculties that he might have been for ever Happy as well as the standing Angels And he was placed in such a Condition that moved the envy of fallen Spirits He had as much Grace bestow'd upon him as was proportionable to that Covenant God then made with him The Tenor of which was That his Life should continue so long as his Obedience and his Happiness endure so long as his Integrity And as God by Creation had given him an Integrity of Nature so he had given him a power to persist in it if he would Herein is the Goodness of God display'd that he made Man after his own Image 4. As to the Life of Man in this World God by an immense Goodness Copied out in him the whole Creation and made him an Abridgment of the higher and lower World a little World in a greater one The Link of the two Worlds of Heaven and Earth as the Spiritual and Corporeal Natures are united in him the Earth in the Dust of his Body and the Heavens in the Chrystal of his Soul He hath the upper Springs of the Life of Angels in his Reason and the neather Springs of the Life of Animals in his Sense God display'd those Vertues in Man which he had discover'd in the rest of the lower Creation but besides the communication which he had with Earth in his Nature God gave him a participation with Heaven in his Spirit A meer Bodily Being he hath given to the Heavens Earth Elements a Vegetative Life or a Life of Growth he hath vouchsafed to the Plants of the Ground He hath stretched out his Liberality more to Animals and Beasts by giving them Sense All these hath his Goodness linkt in Man Being Life Sense with a richer Dole than any of those Creatures have receiv'd in a Rational Intellectual Life whereby he approacheth to the Nature of Angels This some of the Jews understood * Gen. 2.7 God breathed into his Nostrils the Breath of Life and Man became a living Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Breath of Lives in the Hebrew not one sort of Life but that variety of Lives which he had imparted to other Creatures All the Perfections scattered in other Creatures do unitedly meet in Man So that Philo might well call him every Creature the Model of the whole Creation His Soul is Heaven and his Body is Earth † Eugubin lib. 5. cap. 9. So that the Immensity of his Goodness to Man is as great as all that Goodness you behold in Sensitive and Intelligible things 5. All this was free Goodness God Eternally possessed his own Felicity in himself and had no need of the Existence of any thing without himself for his satisfaction Man before his Being could have no good qualities to invite God to make him so Excellent a Fabrick For being nothing he was as unable to allure and merit as to bring himself into Being Nay he Created a Multitude of Men who he foresaw would behave themselves in as ungrateful a manner as if they had not been his Creatures but had bestow'd that rich variety upon themselves without the hand of a Superior Benefactor How great is this Goodness that hath made us Models
Himself By giving his Son he hath given himself and in both Gifts he hath given all things to us The Creator of all things is eminently all things He hath given all things into the hands of his Son * Joh. 3.35 and by consequence given all things into the hands of his Redeem'd Creatures by giving them him to whom he gave all things Whatsoever we were invested in by Creation whatsoever we were depriv'd of by Corruption and more he hath deposited in safe hands for our enjoyment And what can Divine Goodness do more for us What further can it give unto us than what it hath given and in that Gift design'd for us 3. This Goodness is enhanc'd by considering the State of Man in the first Transgression and since 1. Mans first Transgression If we should rip up every Vein of that first Sin should we find any want of Wickedness to excite a just Indignation What was there but ingratitude to Divine Bounty and Rebellion against Divine Soveraignty The Royalty of God was attempted the Supremacy of Divine knowledge above Mans own knowledge envied the Riches of Goodness whereby he lived and breathed slighted There is a discontent with God upon an unreasonable Sentiment that God had denied a knowledge to him which was his right and due when there should have been an humble acknowledgment of that unmerited Goodness which had not only given him a Being above other Creatures but placed him the Governor and Lord of those that were inferior to him What alienation of his understanding was there from knowing God and of his will from loving him A Debauch of all his Faculties A Spiritual Adultery in preferring not only one of Gods Creatures but one of his desperate Enemies before him thinking him a wiser Counsellor than Infinite Wisdom and imagining him possessed with kinder affections to him than that God who had newly Created him Thus he joyns in League with Hell against Heaven with a Fallen Spirit against his Bountiful Benefactor and enters into Society with Rebels that just before commenc'd a War against his and their common Soveraign He did not only falter in but cast off the Obedience due to his Creator endeavoured to purloin his Glory and actually murder'd all those that were vertually in his Loyns * Rom. 5.12 Sin enter'd into the World by him and Death by Sin and passed upon all Men taking them off from their Subjection to God to be Slaves to the damn'd Spirits and Heirs of their Misery And after all this he adds a foul imputation on God taxing him as the Author of his Sin and thereby stains the Beauty of his Holiness But notwithstanding all this God stops not up the Floodgates of his Goodness nor doth he entertain Fiery Resolutions against Man but brings forth a healing Promise and sends not an Angel upon Commission to Reveal it to him but Preaches it himself to this Forlorn and Rebellious Creature † Gen. 3.15 2. Could there be any thing in this Fallen Creature to allure God to the Expression of his Goodness Was there any good action in all his Carriage that could plead for a readmission of him to his former State Was there one good quality left that could be an Orator to perswade Divine Goodness to such a gracious Procedure Was there any Moral Goodness in Man after this Debauch that might be an Object of Divine Love What was there in him that was not rather a provocation than an allurement Could you expect that any Perfection in God should find a Motive in this ungrateful Apostate to open a Mouth for him and be an Advocate to support him and bring him off from a just Tribunal Or after Divine Goodness had begun to pity and plead for Man is it not wonderful that it should not discontinue the Plea after it found Mans Excuse to be as black as his Crime * Gen. 3.12 and his Carriage upon his Examination to be as disobliging as his first Revolt It might well be expected that all the Perfections in the Divine Nature would have entered into an association eternally to treat this Rebel according to his deserts What attractives were there in a silly Worm much less in such compleat Wickedness inexcusable Enmity infamous Rebellion to design a Redeemer for him and such a Person as the Son of God to a Fleshy Body an Eclipse of Glory and an ignominious Cross The meaness of Man was further from alluring God to it than the dignity of Angels 3. Was there not a World of demerit in Man to animate Grace as well as Wrath against him We were so far from deserving the opening any Streams of Goodness that we had merited Floods of devouring Wrath. What were all Men but Enemies to God in a high manner Every offence was infinite as being committed against a Being of Infinite Dignity it was a stroke at the very Being of God A resistance of all his Attributes it would degrade him from the height and Perfection of his Nature it would not by its good will suffer God to be God If he that hates his Brother is a Murderer of his Brother he that hates his Creator is a Murderer of the Deity * Joh. 1.3.15 and every Carnal mind is Enmity to God † Rom. 8.7 Every Sin envies him his Authority by breaking his Precept and envies him his Goodness by defacing the Marks of it Every Sin comprehends in it more than Men or Angels can conceive That God who only hath the clear apprehensions of his own Dignity hath the sole clear apprehensions of Sins Malignity All Men were thus by Nature those that Sinned before the coming of the Redeemer had been in a State of Sin those that were to come after him would be in a State of Sin by their Birth and be Criminals as soon as ever they were Creatures All Men as well the Glorifi'd as those in the Flesh at the coming of the Redeemer and those that were to be born after were consider'd in a State of Sin by God when he bruis'd the Redeemer for them All were filthy and unworthy of the Eye of God All had employ'd the Faculties of their Souls and the Members of their Bodies which they enjoyed by his Goodness against the interest of his Glory Every Rational Creature had made himself a Slave to those Creatures over whom he had been appointed a Lord subjected himself as a Servant to his Inferior and strutted as a Superior against his Liberal Soveraign and by every Sin rendred himself more a Child of Satan and Enemy of God and more worthy of the Curses of the Law and the Torments of Hell Was it not now a mighty Goodness that would surmount those high Mountains of Demerit and elevate such Creatures by the Depression of his Son Had we been possessed of the highest Holiness a Reward had been the natural effect of Goodness It was not possible that God should be unkind to a Righteous and Innocent Creature
happiness This he doth not only in his general proclamations but in his particular wooings those inward courtings of his Spirit solliciting them with more diligence if they would observe it to their happiness than the Devil tempts them to the ways of their Misery As he was first in Christ reconciling the World when the World looked not after him so he is first in his Spirit wooing the World to accept of that Reconciliation when the World will not listen to him How often doth he flash up the Light of Nature and the Light of the Word in Mens hearts to move them not to lie down in sparks of their own kindling but to aspire to a better happiness and prepare them to be subject to a higher Mercy If they would improve his present intreaties to such an end And what are his Threatnings design'd for but to move the Wheel of our Fears that the Wheel of our Desire and Love might be set on Motion for the embracing his Promise They are not so much the Thunders of his Justice as the loud Rhetorick of his good Will to prevent Mens Misery under the Vials of Wrath. 'T is his kindness to feare Men by threatnings that Justice might not strike them with the Sword 'T is not the destruction but the preserving Reformation that he aims at He hath no pleasure in the death of the Wicked This he confirms by his Oath * Ezek. 33.11 His threatnings are gracious Expostulations with them Why will ye die O house of Israel They are like the noise a favourable Officer makes in the Street to warn the Criminal he comes to seize upon to make his escape He never used his Justice to crush Men till he had used his Kindness to allure them All the dreadful descriptions of a future Wrath as well as the lively descriptions of the happiness of another World are designed to perswade Men The Honey of his Goodness is in the Bowels of those roaring Lyons such pains doth Goodness take with Men to make them Candidates for Heaven 2. How readily doth he receive Men when they do return We have Davids Experience for it † Psal 32.5 I said I will confess my Transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my Sin Selah A sincere look from the Creature draws out his Arms and opens his Bosom he is ready with his Physick to heal us upon a resolution to acquaint him with our Disease and by his Medicines prevents the putting our Resolution into a Petition The Psalmist adds a Selah to it as a special Note of Thankfulness for Divine Goodness He doth not only stand ready to receive our Petitions while we are speaking but answers us before we call * Isai 65.24 listening to the Motions of our Hearts as well as to the supplications of our Lips He is the true Father that hath a quicker pace in meeting than the Prodigal hath in returning Who would not have his Embraces and Caresses interrupted by his Confession † Luke 15.20 21 22. The Confession follows doth not precede the Fathers Compassion How doth he rejoyce in having an opportunity to express his Grace when he hath prevail'd with a Rebel to throw down his Arms and lie at his Feet and this because he delights in Mercy * Mic. 7.18 He delights in the Expressions of it from himself and the acceptance of it by his Creature 3. How meltingly doth he bewail Mans wilful refusal of his Goodness 'T is a mighty Goddness to offer Grace to a Rebel a mighty Goodness to give it him after he hath a while stood off from the terms An astonishing Goodness to regret and lament his wilful perdition He seems to utter those words in a sigh † Psal 81.13 Oh that my People had hearkned unto me and Israel had walked in my way 'T is true God hath not Humane Passions but his Affections can not be exprest otherwise in a way intelligible to us The Excellency of his Nature is above the Passions of Men but such Expressions of himself manifest to us the sincerity of his Goodness and that were he capable of our Passions he would express himself in such a manner as we do And we find incarnate Goodness bewailing with tears and sighs the ruine of Jerusalem * Luke 19.42 By the same reason that when a Sinner returns there is joy in Heaven upon his obstinacy there is sorrow in Earth The one is as if a Prince should Cloth all his Court in Triumphant Scarlet upon a Rebels Repentance And the other as if a Prince should put himself and his Court in Mourning for a Rebels obstinate refusal of a Pardon when he lies at his Mercy Are not now these affectionate invitations and deep bewailings of their perversity high Testimonies of Divine Goodness Do not the unwearied repetitions of Gracious Encouragements deserve a higher name than that of meer Goodness What can be a stronger Evidence of the sincerity of it than the sound of his saving voice in our enjoyments the motion of his Spirit in our hearts and his grief for the neglect of all These are not Testimonies of any want of Goodness in his Nature to answer us or willingness to express it to his Creature Hath he any mind to deceive us that thus entreats us The Majesty of his Nature is too great for such shifts or if it were not the despicableness of our condition would render him above the using any Who would charge that Physician with want of kindness that freely offers his Soveraign Medicine importunes Men by the love they have to their health to take it and is dissolved into tears and sorrow when he finds it rejected by their peevish and conceited humor 7. Divine Goodness is eminent in the Sacraments he hath affixt to this Covenant especially in the Lords Supper As he gave himself in his Son so he gives his Son in the Sacrament He doth not only give him as a Sacrifice upon the Cross for the Expiation of our Crimes but as a Feast upon the Table for the no●●ishment of our Souls In the one he was given to be offer'd in this he gives him to be partaked of with all the Fruits of his Death Under the Image of the Sacramental Signs every Believer doth eat the Flesh and drink the Blood of the great Mediator of the Covenant The words of Christ This is my Body and this is my Blood are true to the end of the World * Matth. 26.26 28. This is the most delicious Viand of Heaven the most exquisite Dainty Food God can feed us with the delight of the Deity the admiration of Angels A Feast with God is great but a Feast on God is greater Under those Signs that Body is presented that which was conceived by the Spirit inhabited by the Godhead bruised by the Father to be our Food as well as our Propitiation is presented to us on the Table That Blood which satisfied Justice washt
to guide us and a Cordial to refresh us 'T is a Lamp to our Feet and a Medicine for our Diseases a Purifier of our Filth and a Restorer of us in our faintings He hath by his Goodness seal'd the truth of it by his efficacy on multitudes of Men He hath made it the Word of Regeneration * Jam. 1.18 Men wilder and more monstrous than Beasts have been tam'd and chang'd by the power of it It hath rais'd multitudes of dead Men from a Grave fuller of horrour than any Earthly one Again Goodness was in all ages sending his Letters of Advice and Counsel from Heaven till the Canon of the Scripture was clos'd Sometimes he wrote to chide a froward People sometimes to chear up an oppressed and disconsolate People according to the State wherein they were as we may observe by the several Seasons wherein parts of Scripture were written It was his Goodness that he first reveal'd any thing of his Will after the Fall it was a further degree of Goodness that he would add more Cubits to its Stature before he would lay aside his Pensil it grew up to that bulk wherein we have it And his Goodness is further seen in the preserving it He hath triumphed over the powers that opposed it and shewed himself good in the Instruments that propagated it He hath maintain'd it against the blasts of Hell and spread it in all Languages against the obstructions of Men and Devils The Sun of his Word is by his kindness preserv'd in our Horizon as well as the Sun in the Heavens How admirable is Divine Goodness He hath sent his Son to die for us and his written Word to instruct us and his Spirit to edge it for an entrance into our Souls He hath open'd the Womb of the Earth to nourish us and sent down the Records of Heaven to direct us in our Pilgrimage He hath provided the Earth for our habitation while we are Travellers and sent his Word to acquaint us with a felicity at the end of our Journey and the way to attain in another World what we want in this viz. a happy Immortality 5. His Goodness in his Government is evident In Conversions of Men. Though this Work be wrought by his Power yet his Power was first sollicited by his Goodness It was his rich Goodness that he would employ his power to pierce the scales of a heart as hard as those of the Leviathan It was this that opened the Ears of Men to hear him and draws them from the hurry of Worldly cares and the Charms of Sensual Pleasures and which is the top of all the impostures and Cheats of their own hearts It is this that sends a spark of his wrath into Mens consciencies to put them to a stand in sin that he might not send down a shower of Brimstone eternally to consume their persons This it was that first shewed you the Excellency of the Redeemer and brought you to taste the sweetness of his Bloud and find your security in the Agonies of his Death 'T is his Goodness to call one man and not another to turn Paul in his course and lay hold of no other of his companions 'T is his Goodness to call any when he is not bound to call one 1. 'T is his Goodness To pitch upon mean and despicable Men in the eye of the World To call this poor Publican and over-look that proud Pharisee this Man that sits upon a Dunghil and neglect him that glisters in his Purple His Majesty is not enticed by the lofty Titles of Men nor which is more worth by the Learning and Knowledge of Men. Not many Wise not many Mighty * Cor. 1.26 27 28. not many Doct●rs not many Lords though some of them but his Goodness condescends to the base things of the World and things which are despised The Poor receive the Gospel * Mat. 11.5 when those that are more acute and furnisht with a more apprehensive Reason are not toucht by it 2. The worst Men. He seizeth sometimes upon Men most soyl'd and neglects others that seem more clean and less polluted He turns Men in their course in sin that by their infernal practices have seem'd to have gone to School to Hell and to have suckt in the sole instructions of the Devil He lays hold upon some when they are most under actual demerit and snatcheth them as Fire-brands out of the Fire as upon Paul when fullest of rage against him And shoots a Beam of Grace where nothing could be justly expected but a Thunder-bolt of Wrath. 'T is his Goodness to visit any when they lie putrifying in their loathsome Lusts To draw near to them who have been guilty of the greatest contempt of God and the light of Nature The murdering Manassehs persecuting Sauls Christ-crucifying Jews Persons in whom Lusts had had a peaceable possession and Empire for many years 3. His Goodness appears In converting Men possest with the greatest enmity against him while he was dealing with them All were in such a state and framing contrivances against him when Divine Goodness knockt at the door * Col. 1.21 He lookt after us when our backs were turned upon him and sought us when we slighted him and were a gain-saying People * Rom. 10.21 when we had shaken off his convictions and contended with our Maker and mustered up the Powers of Nature against the Alarms of Conscience strugled like wild Bulls in a Net and blunted those Darts which stuck in our Souls Not a Man that is turn'd to him but had lifted up the heel against his Gospel-Grace as well as made light of his Creating Goodness Yet it hath employed it self about such ungrateful Wretches to polish those knotty and rugged pieces for Heaven And so invincibly that he would not have his Goodness defeated by the fierceness and rebellion of the Flesh Though the thing was more difficult in it self if any thing may be said to have a difficulty to Omnipotency than to make a Stone live or to turn a Straw into a Marble-Pillar The Malice of the Flesh makes a Man more unfit for the one than the nature of the straw unfits it for the other 4. His Goodness appears in turning Men When they were pleased with their own misery and unable to deliver themselves When they preferr'd a Hell before him and were in love with their own Vileness when his Call was our torment and his neglect of us had been accounted our felicity Was it not a mighty Goodness to keep the Light close to our Eyes when we endeavoured to blow it out and the corrosive near to our hearts when we endeavoured to tear it off being more fond of our Disease than the Remedy We should have been scalded to death with the Sodomites had not God laid his good hand upon us and drawn us from the approaching ruine we affected and were loath to be freed from And had we been displeased with our state
yet we had been as unable Spiritually to raise our selves from Sin to Grace as to raise our selves naturally from Nothing to Being In this state we were when his Goodness triumphed over us when he put a hook into our nostrils to turn us in order to our Salvation and drew us out of the Pit which we had digged when he might left us to sink under the rigors of his Justice we had merited Now this Goodness in Conversion is greater than that in Creation as in Creation there was nothing to oppose him so there was nothing to disoblige him Creation was terminated to the good of a mutable Nature and Conversion tends to a supernatural Good God pronounced all Creatures good at first and Man among the rest but did not pronounce any of them or Man himself his Portion his Inheritance his Segullah his House his Diadem He speaks slightly of all those things which he made the noblest Heavens as well as the lowest Earth in comparison of a true Convert * Isa 66.1 2. All those things hath mine hand made and all those things have been but to this Man will I look to him that is of a contrite Spirit 'T is more goodness to give the espousing Grace of the Covenant than the compleating Glory of Heaven As it is more for a Prince to marry a Beggar than only to bring her to live deliciously in his Courts all other benefits are of a meaner strain if compar'd with this there is little less of Goodness in imparting the Holiness of his Nature than imputing the Righteousness of his Son 6. The Divine Goodness doth appear in answering Prayers He delights to be familiarly acquainted with his People and to hear them call upon him He indulgeth them a free access to him and delights in every address of an upright Man * Prov. 15.8 The wonderful efficacy of Prayet depends not upon the nature of our Petitions or the temper of our Soul but the Goodness of God to whom we address Christ establisheth it upon this bottom when he exhorts to ask in his name he tells them the Spring of all their Grants is the Fathers love * Joh. 16.26 27. I say not I will pray the Father for you for the Father himself loves you And since it is of it self incredible that a Majesty exalted above the Cherubims should stoop so low as to give a miserable and rebellious Creature admittance to him and afford him a gracious hearing and a quick supply Christ ushers in the Promise of answering Prayer with a Note of great Assurance * Luk. 11.9 10. I say unto you ask and it shall be given you I that know the Mind of my Father and his good disposition assure you your Prayer shall not be in vain Perhaps you will not be so ready of your selves to imagine so great a Liberality but take it upon my word 't is true and so you will find it And his Bounty travels as it were in Birth to give the greatest Blessings upon our asking rather than the smallest * Verse 13. Your Heavenly Father shall give his Holy Sp●rit to them that ask him Which in Mat. 7.11 is called good things Of all the good and rich things Divine Goodness hath in its Treasury he delights to give the best upon asking because God doth act so as to manifest the greatness of his Bounty and Magnificence to Men and therefore is delighted when Men by their Petitioning him own such a liberal disposition in him and put him upon the manifesting it He would rather you should ask the greatest things Heaven can afford than the trifles of this World Because his Bounty is not discovered in meaner Gifts he loves to have an opportunity to manifest his affection above the liberality and tenderness of Worldly Fathers He doth more wait to give in a way of Grace than we to beg * Isai 30.18 And therefore will the Lord wait that he may be gracious unto you He stands expecting your Suits and employs his Wisdom in pitching upon the fittest seasons when the manifestation of his Goodness may be most gracious in it self and the Mercy you want most welcome to you as it follows for the Lord is a God of Judgment He chooseth the time wherein his doles may be most acceptable to his Suppliants * Isai 49.8 In an acceptable time have I heard thee He often opens his hand while we are opening our Lips and his Blessings meet our Petitions at the first setting out upon their Journey to Heaven * Isai 65.24 While they are yet speaking I will hear How often do we hear a secret Voice within us while we are Praying saying Your Prayer is granted As well as hear a Voice behind us while we are Erring saying This is the way walk in it And his liberality exceeds often our desires as well as our deserts and gives out more than we had the wisdom or confidence to ask The Apostle intimates it in that Doxology * Eph 3.20 Vnto him who is able to do abundantly above all that we ask or think This Power would not have been so strong an Argument of comfort if it were never put in practice He is more liberal than his Creatures are craving Abraham petition'd for the life of Ishmael and God promiseth him the birth of Isaac * Gen. 17.18 19. Isaac asks for a Child and God gives him two Gen. 25.21 22. Jacob desires Food to eat and Raiment to put on God confines not his Bounty within the narrow limits of his Petition but instead of a Staff wherewith he passed Jordan makes him repass it with two Bands * Gen. 28.20 David askt life of God and he gave him Life and a Crown to boot † Psal 21.2 3 4 5. The Israelites would have been contented with a free life in Egypt they only cried to have their Chains struck off God gave them that and adopts them to be his peculiar People and raises them into a famous State 'T is a wonder that God should condescend so much that he should hear Prayers so weak so cold so wandring and gather up our sincere Petitions from the dung of our distractions and diffidence David vents his astonishment at it * Psal 31.21 22. Blessed be God for he hath shewed me marvellous kindness I said in my haste I am cut off from before thy Eyes nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplication How do we wonder at the goodness of a petty Man in granting our desires how much more should we at the Humility and Goodness of the most Soveraign Majesty of Heaven and Earth 6. The Goodness of God is seen in bearing with the infirmities of his People and accepting imperfect Obedience Though Asa had many blots in his Scutcheon yet they are over-lookt and this Note set upon Record by Divine Goodness That his heart was perfect towards the Lord all his days * 1 Kings 15.14 But
not to own it but erect an Idol in its place Ezra was of another mind when he ascribed to the good hand of God the providing Ministers for the Temple and not to his own care and diligence * Ezra 8.18 And Nehemiah the success he had with the King in the behalf of his Nation and not solely to his favour with the Prince * Neh. 2.8 or the arts he used to please him 2. The second Information is this If God be so good 't is a certain Argument that Man is fallen from his Original State 'T is the complaint of Man sometimes that other Creatures have more of Earthly Happiness than Men have live freer from cares and trouble and are not rackt with that sollicitousness and anxiety as Man is Have not such distempers to embitter their lives 'T is a good ground for Man to look into himself and consider whether he hath not some ways or other disobliged God more than other Creatures can possibly do We often find that the Creatures Men have need of in this State do not answer the expectation of Man Cursed be the ground for thy sake * Gen. 3.17 A fruitful Land is made barren Thorns and Thistles triumph upon the face of the Earth instead of good Fruit. Is it like that that Goodness which is as infinite as his Power and knows no more limits than his Almightiness should imprint so many scars upon the World if he had not been hainously provoked by some miscarriage of his Creature Infinite Goodness could never move Infinite Justice to inflict Punishment upon Creatures if they had not highly Merited it We cannot think that any Creature was blemisht with a Principle of Disturbance as it came first out of the hand of God All things were certainly settled in a due order and dependance upon one another Nothing could be ungrateful and unuseful to Man by the Original Law of their Creation If there had it had not been Goodness but Evil and Baseness that had Created the World When we see therefore the Course of Nature overturn'd the Order Divine Goodness had placed disturb'd and the Creatures pronounced good and useful to Man employ'd as Instruments of Vengeance against him We must conclude some horrible blot upon Humane Nature and very odious to a God of Infinite Goodness And that this blot was dasht upon Man by himself and his own fault for it is repugnant to the Infinite Goodness of God to put into the Creature a Sinning Nature to hurry him into Sin and then punish him for that which he had imprest upon him The Goodness of God inclines him to love goodness wherever he finds it and not to punish any that have not deserved it by their own Crimes The Curse we therefore see the Creatures groan under the disorders in Nature the frustrating the expectations of Man in the Fruits of the Earth and plentiful Harvests the trouble he is continually expos'd to in the World which tedders down his Spirit from more generous Employments shews that Man is not what he was when Divine Goodness first Erected him but hath admitted into his Nature something more uncomely in the Eye of God and so hainous that it puts his Goodness sometimes to a stand and makes him lay aside the Blessings his hand was fill'd with to take up the Arms of Vengeance wherewith to fight against the World Divine Goodness would have secur'd his Creatures from any such invasions and never us'd those things against Man which he design'd in the first frame for Mans service were there not some detestable disorder risen in the Nature of Man which makes God with-hold his Liberality and change the dispensation of his numerous Benefits into Legions of Judgments The Consideration of the Divine Goodness which is a Notion that Man naturally concludes to be inseparable from the Deity would to an unbyast Reason verifie the History of those Punishments settled upon Man in the third Chapter of Genesis and make the whole seem more probable to Reason at the first Relation This instruction naturally flows from the Doctrine of Divine Goodness If God be so good it is a certain Argument that Man is fallen from his Original State 3. The third Information is this If God be infinitely good there can be no just complaint against God if Men be punisht for abusing his Goodness Man had nothing nay it was impossible he could have any thing from infinite Goodness to disoblige him but to engage him God never did nay never could draw his Sword against Man till Man had had slighted him and affronted him by the strength of his own Bounty 'T is by this God doth justifie his severest proceedings against Men and very seldom charges them with any else as the matter of their provocations * Hosea 2.9 Therefore will I return and take away my Corn in the time thereof and my Wine in the season thereof and will recover my Wool and my Flax. And in Ezek. 16. after he had drawn out a Bill of Complaint against them and inserted on●y the abuse of his Benefits as a justification of what he intended to do He concludes Verse 27. Behold therefore I have stretched out my hand over thee and dim●nisht thy ordinary food and delivered thee unto the will of them that hate thee When Men suffer they suffer justly they were not constrained by any Violence or forced by any necessity nor provok't by any ill usage to turn head against God but broke the bands of the strongest Obligations and most tender Allurements What Man what Devil can justly blame God for punishing them after they had been so intolerably bold as to fly in the face of that Goodness that had oblig'd them by giving them beings of a higher elevation than to inferior Creatures and furnishing them with sufficient strength to continue in their first Habitation Man seems to have less reason to accuse God of rigor than Devils since after his unreasonable Revolt a more express Goodness than that which Created him hath sollicited him to Repentance Courted him by melting Promises and Expostulations added undeniable Arguments of Bounty and drawn out the choicest Treasures of Heaven in the gift of his Son to prevail over Mens perversity And yet Man after he might arrive to the height and happiness of an Angel will be fond of continuing in the meanness and misery of a Devil and more strongly link himself to the Society of the damn'd Spirits wherein by his first Rebellion he had incorporated himself Who can blame God for vindicating his own Goodness from such desperate contempts and the extream ingratitude of Man * Petav. Theolog. Dogmat Vol. 1. p. 407. If God be good 't is our happiness to adhere to him If we depart from him we depart from Goodness and if Evil happen to us we cannot blame God but our selves for our departure Why are Men happy Because they cleave to God Why are Men miserable Because they
2. Readiness to exercise it upon due occasions He hath prepared his Throne he is not at a loss he needs not stay for a Commission or Instructions from any how to act He hath all things ready for the assistance of his People he hath Rewards and Punishments his Treasures and Axes the great marks of Authority lying by him the one for the good the other for the wicked His Mercy he keeps by him for Thousands Exod. 34.7 His Arrows he hath prepared by him for Rebels Psal 7.13 3. Wise management of it 'T is prepared preparations imply prudence the Government of God is not a rash and heady Authority A Prince upon his Throne a Judge upon the Bench manages things with the greatest discretion or should be supposed so to do 4. Successfulness and duration of it He hath prepared or Established 'T is fixed not tottering 't is an immoveable Dominion all the strugglings of Men and Devils cannot overturn it nor so much as shake it 'T is Established above the reach of obstinate Rebels he cannot be deposed from it he cannot be mated in it His Dominion as himself abides for ever And as his Counsel so his Authority shall stand and he will do all his pleasure Isaiah 46.10 His Throne in the Heavens This is an expression to signifie the Authority of God for as God hath no member properly though he be so represented to us so he hath properly no Throne It signifies his power of Reigning and Judging A Throne is proper to Royalty the Seat of Majesty in its excellency and the place where the deepest respect and homage of Subjects is paid and their Petitions presented That the Throne of God is in the Heavens that there he sits as a Soveraign is the opinion of all that acknowledge a God when they stand in need of his Authority to assist them their eyes are lifted up and their heads stretched out to Heaven so his Son Christ prayed he lifted up his Eyes to Heaven as the place where his Father sat in Majesty as the most adorable object John 17.1 Heaven hath the Title of his Throne as the Earth hath that of his Footstool Isaiah 66.1 And therefore Heaven is sometimes put for the Authority of God Dan. 4.26 After that thou shalt have known that the Heavens do rule i. e. That God who hath his Throne in the Heavens orders earthly Princes and Scepters as he pleases and rules over the Kingdoms of the World His Throne in the Heavens Notes 1. The Glory of his Dominion The Heavens are the most stately and comely peices of the Creation His Majesty is there most visible his glory most splendid Psal 19.1 The Heavens speak out with a full mouth his Glory 'T is therefore called the Habitation of his Holiness and of his Glory Isaiah 63.15 There is the greater glister and brightness of his Glory The whole Earth indeed is full of his Glory full of the beams of it the Heaven is full of the body of it as the rayes of the Sun reach the Earth but the full Glory of it is in the Firmament In Heaven his Dominion is more acknowledged by the Angels standing at his beck and by their readiness and swiftness obeying his Commands going and returning as a flash of lightning Ezek. 1.14 His Throne may well be said to be in the Heavens since his Dominion is not disputed there by the Angels that attend him as it is on Earth by the Rebels that arm themselves against him 2. The Supremacy of his Empire The Heavens are the loftiest part of the Creation and the only fit Palace for him 't is in the Heavens his Majesty and Dignity are so sublime that they are elevated above all Earthly Empires 3. Peculiarly of this Dominion He rules in the Heavens alone There is some shadow of Empire in the World Royalty is communicated to men as his Substitutes He hath disposed a vicarious Dominion to men in his footstool the Earth he gives them some share in his Authority and therefore the Title of his Name Psal 82.6 I have said ye are Gods but in Heaven he reigns alone without any Substitutes his Throne is there He gives out his orders to the Angels himself the marks of his Immediate soveraignty are there most visible He hath no Vicars General of that Empire His Authority is not delegated to any Creature he rules the blessed Spirits by himself but he rules Men that are on his Footstool by others of the same kind men of their own nature 4. The vastness of his Empire The Earth is but a spot to the Heavens What is England in a Mapp to the whole Earth but a spot you may cover with your Finger Much less must the whole Earth be to the extended Heavens 'T is but a little point or Atome to what is visible the Sun is vastly bigger than it and several Stars are supposed to be of a greater bulk than the Earth and how many and what Heavens are beyond the ignorance of man cannot understand If the Throne of God be there 't is a larger Circuit he rules in than can well be conceived You cannot conceive the many millions of little particles there are in the Earth and if all put together be but as one point to that place where the Throne of God is seated how vast must his Empire be He rules there over the Angels which excell in strength those Hosts of his which do his pleasure in comparison of whom all the Men in the World and the power of the greatest Potentates is no more than the strength of an Ant or Fly multitudes of them encircle his Throne and listen to his orders without roving and execute them without disputing And since his Throne is in the Heavens it will follow that all things under the Heaven are parts of his Dominion his Throne being in the highest place the inferior things of Earth cannot but be subject to him and it necessarily includes his influence on all things below because the Heavens are the cause of all the motion in the World the immediate thing the Earth doth naturally address to for Corn Wine and Oyl above which there is no superior but the Lord. Hosea 2.21 22. The Earth hears the Corn Wine and Oyl the Heavens hear the Earth and the Lord hears the Heavens 5. The easiness of managing this Government His Throne being placed on high he cannot but behold all things that are done below the height of a place gives advantage to a pure and clear Eye to behold things below it Had the Sun an Eye nothing could be done in the open Air out of its ken The Throne of God being in Heaven he easily looks from thence upon all the Children of Men. Psal 14.2 The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the Children of Men to see if there were any that did understand He looks not down from Heaven as if he were in regard of his presence confined there but he looks down
though Divines take notice of other sins in the fall of Adam yet God in his tryal chargeth him with none but this and doth put upon his question an Emphasis of his own Authority Gen. 3.11 Hast thou eaten of the Tree whereof I commanded ye that thou sho●ld'st not eat This I am displeased with that thou shouldest disown my dominion over thy self and this Garden This was the inlet to all the other sins as the acknowledgment of God's soveraignty is the first step to the practice of all the duties of a Creature so the disowning his soveraignty is the first spring of all the extravagancies of a Creature Every sin against the soveraign Law-giver is worthy of Death The Transgression of this positive command des●rved death and procured it to spread it self over the face of the World God's dominion cannot be despis'd without meriting the greatest punishment 1. Punishment necessarily follows upon the Doctrine of Soveraignty 'T is a faint and a feeble Soveraignty that cannot preserve it self and vindicate its own wrongs against r●bellious subjects The height of God's dominion infers a vengeance on the contemners of it If God be an Eternal King he is an Eternal Judge Since sin unlinks the dependance between God the Soveraign and man the subject if God did not vindicate the rights of his Soveraignty and the Authority of his Law he would seem to despise his own dominion be weary of it and not act the part of a good Governour But God is tender of his prerogative and doth most bestir himself when men exalt themselves proudly against him Exod. 18.11 In the thing wherein they dealt proudly he will be above them When Pharaoh thought himself a mate for God and proudly rejected his commands as if they had been the messages of some petty Arabian Lord God rights his own Authority upon the life of his enemy by the ministry of the Red Sea He turned a great King into a beast to make him know that the most high ruled in the Kingdoms of men Dan. 4.16 17. The demand is by the word of the Holy ones to the intent that the living may know that the most High ruleth in the Kingdoms of men And that by the Petitions of the Angels who cannot endure that the Empire of God should be obscur'd and diminisht by the pride of man Besides the tender respect he hath to his own glory he is constantly presented with the sollicitations of the Angels to punish the proud ones of the earth that darken the glory of his Majesty 'T is necessary for the rescue of his honour and necessary for the satisfaction of his illustrious attendants who would think it a shame to them to serve a Lord that were always unconcern'd in the rebellions of his creatures and tamely suffer their spurns at his Throne and therefore there is a day wherein the haughtiness of man shall be bowed down the Cedars of Lebanon over-thrown and high Mountains levell'd that God may be exalted in that day Isa 2.11 12. c. Pride is a sin that immediately swells against God's Authority this shall be brought down that God may be exalted not that he should have a real exaltation as if he were actually depos'd from his Government but that he shall be manifested to be the Soveraign of the whole World 'T is necessary there should be a day to chase away those clouds that are upon his Throne that the lustre of his Majesty may break forth to the confusion of all the children of pride that vaunt against him God hath a dominion over us as a Law-giver as we are his creatures and a dominion over us in away of Justice as we are his criminals 2. This punishment is unavoidable 1. None can escape him He hath the sole Authority over Hell and Death the Keyes of both are in his hand The greatest Caesar can no more escape him than the meanest Peasant Who art thou O great Mountain before Zerubbabel Zac. 4.7 The height of Angels is no match for him much less that of the mortal grandees of the World they can no more resist him than the meanest person But are rather as the highest Steeples the fittest marks for his crushing thunder If he speaks the word the principalities of men come down and the Crown of their glory Jer. 13.18 He can take the Mighty away in a moment and that without hands i. e. without instruments Job 34.20 The strongest are like the feet of Nebuchadnezzar's Image Iron and Clay Iron to man but Clay to God to be crumbled to nothing 2. What comfort can be reapt from a creature when the Soveraign of the World arms himself with terrors and begins his visitation Isa 10.3 What will you do in the day of visitation to whom will you flie for help and where will you leave your glory The torments from a Subject may be releived by the Prince but where can there be an appeal from the Soveraign of the World Where is there any above him to controul him if he will overthrow us who is there to call him to account and say to him what dost thou He works by an uncontroulable Authority he needs not ask leave of any Isa 43.13 He works and none can let it As when he will relieve none can afflict so when he will wound none can relieve If a King appoint the punishment of a rebel the greatest Favorite in the Court cannot speak a comfortable word to him The most beloved Angel in Heaven cannot sweeten and ease the spirit of a man that the Soveraign power is set against to make the butt of his wrath The Devils lye under his sentence and wear their chains as marks of their condemnation without hope of ever having them filed off since they are laid upon them by the Authority of an unaccountable Soveraign 3. By his Soveraign Authority God can make any creature the instrument of his vengeance He hath all the creatures at his beck and can Commission any of them to be a dreadful scourge Strong winds and tempests fulfil his word Psal 148.8 The Lightnings answer him at his call and cry aloud here are we Job 38.35 By his Soveraign Authority he can render Locusts as mischievous as Lions forge the meanest creatures into Swords and Arrows and commission the most despicable to be his Executioners He can cut off joy from our spirits and make our own hearts be our tormentors our most confident friends our persecutors our nearest relations to be his avengers They are more his who is their Soveraign than ours who place a vain confidence in them Rather than Abraham shall want children he can raise up stones and adopt them into his Family And rather than not execute his vengeance he can array the stones in the streets and make them his armed subjects against us If he speak the word a hair shall drop from our heads to choak us or a vapour congeal'd into Rheum in our heads shall dropdown and putrifie our
that their corruption should be so deep and strong that so much patience could not overcome it It would certainly make a man asham'd of his nature as well as his actions 3. The consideration of his patience would make us resent more the injuries done by others to God A Patient sufferer though a deserving sufferer attracts the pity of men that have a value for any vertue though clouded with a heap of vice How much more should we have a concern for God who suffers so many abuses from others And be grieved that so admirable a patience should be slighted by men who solely live by and under the daily influence of it The impression of this would make us take Gods part as it is usual with men to take the part of good dispositions that lie under oppression 4. It would make us patient under Gods hand His slowness to Anger and his forbearance is visible in the very strokes we feel in this Life We have no reason to murmur against him who gives us so little cause and in the greatest afflictions gives us more occasion of thankfulness than of repining Did not slowness to the extreamest Anger moderate every affliction it had been a Scorpion instead of a rod. We have reason to bless him who from his long-suffering sends temporal sufferings where eternal are justly due Ezra 9.13 Thou hast punished us less than our iniquities do deserve His indulgences towards us have been more than our corrections and the length of his patience hath exceeded the sharpness of his rod Upon the account of his long-suffering our mutinies against God have as little to excuse them as our sins against him have to deserve his forbearance The consideration of this would shew us more reason to repine at our own repinings than at any of his smarter dealings And the consideration of this would make us submissive under the Judgments we expect His undeserved patience hath been more than our merited judgments can possibly be thought to be If we fear the removal of the Gospel for a season as we have reason to do we should rather bless him that by his waiting patience he hath continued it so long then murmur that he threatens to take it away so late He hath born with us many a year since the light of it was re-kindled when our Ancestors had but six years of patience between the rise of Edward the VI and the ascent of Queen Mary to the Crown 2. Exhortation is to admire and stand astonisht at his patience and bless him for it If you should have defil'd your Neighbors bed or sullyed his reputation or rifled his Goods would he have withheld his vengeance unless he had been too weak to execute it We have done worse to God then we can do to man and yet he draws not that Sword of Wrath out of the scabbard of his patience to sheath it in our hearts 'T is not so much a wonder that any Judgments are sent as that there are no more and sharper That the World shall be fired at last is not a thing so strange as that fire doth not come down every day upon some part of it Had the disciples that saw such excellent patterns of mildness from their Master and were so often urg'd to learn of him that was lowly and meek the Government of the World it had been long since turn'd into ashes since they were too forward to desire him to open his magazine of judgments and kindle a fire to consume a Samaritan Village for a slight affront in comparison of what he received from others and afterwards from themselves in their forsaking of him Luke 9.52 53 54. We should admire and praise that here which shall be prais'd in Heaven though patience shall cease as to its exercise after the consummation of the World it shall not cease from receiving the acknowledgments of what it did when it traversed the stage of this Earth If the Name of God be glorified and acknowledged in Heaven no question but this will also since long-suffering is one of his Divine Titles a letter in his name as well as Merciful and Gracious Abundant in Goodness and Truth And there is good reason to think that the patience exercised towards some before converting grace was ordered to seize upon them will bear a great part in the Anthems of Heaven The greater his long-suffering hath been to men that lay covered with their own dung a long time before they were freed by grace from their filth the more admiringly and loudly they will cry up his Mercy to them after they have past the gulf and see a deserv'd Hell at a distance from them and many in that place of torments who never had the tasts of so much forbearance If mercy will be prais'd there that which began the Alphabet of it cannot be forgot If Paul speak so highly of it in a damping World and under the pull-backs of a body of death as he doth 1 Tim. 1.16 17. For this cause I obtained mercy that Christ might shew forth all long-suffering Now unto the King Eternal Immortal Invisible the Only Wise God be Honour and Glory for ever and ever Amen No doubt but he will have a higher note for it when he is surrounded with a heavenly flame and freed from all remains of dullness shall it be praised above and have we no notes for it here below Admire Christ too who sued out your repreive upon the account of his merit As mercy acts not upon any but in Christ so neither had patience born with any but in Christ The pronouncing the arrest of Judgment Gen. 8.21 was when God smell'd a sweet savour from Noahs sacrifice not from the Beasts offer'd but the Antitypical sacrifice represented That we may be raised to bless God for it let us consider 1. The multitude of our provocations Though some have blacker guilt than others and deeper stains yet let none wipe his mouth but rather imagine himself to have but little reason to bless it Are not all our offences as many as their have been minutes in our lives All the moments of our continuance in the World have been moments of his Patience and our ingratitude Adam was punished for one sin Moses excluded Canaan for a passionate unbelieving word Ananias and Saphira lost their lives for one sin against the Holy Ghost One sin sullyed the beauty of the World defaced the works of God had crackt Heaven and Earth in pieces had not infinite satisfaction been proposed to the provoked Justice by the Redeemer And not one sin committed but is of the same venemous nature How many of those contradictions against himself hath he born with Had we been only unprofitable to him his forbearance of us had been miraculous But how much doth it exceed a miracle and lift it self above the meanness of a conjunction with such an Epithet since we have been provoking Had there been no more than our impudent or careless
rushings into his presence in Worship Had they been only sins of Omission and sins of Ignorance it had been enough to have put a stand to any further operations of this perfection towards us But add to those sins of Commission sins against knowledge sins against spiritual motions sins against repeated resolutions and pressing admonitions the neglects of all the opportunities of Repentance put them all together and we can as little recount them as the sands on the sea shore But what do I only speak of particular men view the whole World and if our own iniquities render it an amazing Patience what a mighty supply will be made to it in all the numerous and weighty provocations under which he hath continued the World for so many revolutions of Years and Ages Have not all those pressed into his presence with a loud cry and demanded a sentence from Justice yet hath not the Judge been overcome by the importunity of our sins * Pont. part 1. 42. Were the Devils punished for one sin a proud thought and that not committed against the blood of Christ as we have done numberless times yet hath not God made us partakers in their punishment though we have exceeded them in the quality of their sin Oh admirable patience that would bear with me under so many while he would not bear with the sinning Angels for one 2. Consider how mean things we are who have provoked him What is man but a vile thing that a God abounding with all riches should take care of so abject a thing much more to bear so many affronts from such a drop of matter such a nothing creature That he that hath anger at his command as well as pity should endure such a detestable deformed creature by sin to fly in his face What is man that thou art mindful of him Psal 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 miserable incurable man derived from a word that signifies to be incurably sick Man is Adam Earth from his Earthly Original and Enosh incurable from his corruption Is it not worthy to be admired that a God of infinite Glory should wait on such Adams worms of earth and be as it were a servant and attendant to such Enoshes sickly and peevish creatures 3. Consider who it is that is thus patient He it is that with one breath could turn Heaven and Earth and all the inhabitants of both into nothing That could by one Thunderbolt have razed up the Foundations of a cursed World He that wants not instruments without to ruine us that can arm our own Consciences against us and can drown us in our own Phlegm And by taking out one pin from our bodies cause the whole frame to fall asunder Besides 't is a God that while he suffers the sinner hates the sin more than all the Holy men upon Earth or Angels in Heaven can do So that his patience for a minute transcends the patience of all creatures from the Creation to the Dissolution of the World because it is the patience of a God infinitely more sensible of the cursed quality of sin and infinitely more detesting it 4. Consider how long he hath forborn his anger A reprieve for a Week or a Month is accounted a great favour in Civil States The Civil Law enacts * Cod. Lib. 9. Titul 47 6. 20. that if the Emperour commanded a man to be condemned the Execution was to be deferred 30 dayes because in that time the Princes anger might be appeased But how great a favour is it to be reprieved 30 years for many offences every one of which deserves death more at the hands of God than any offence can at the hands of man Paul was according to the common account but about 30 years Old at his Conversion and how much doth he elevate Divine long suffering Certainly there are many who have more reason as having larger quantities of patience cut out to them who have lived to see their own gray hairs in a rebellious posture against God before Grace brought them to a surrender We were all condemn'd in the Womb our Lives were forfeited the first moment of our breath but patience hath stopt the Arrest The merciful Creditor deserves to have acknowledgment from us who hath laid by his Bond so many years without putting it in suit against us Many of your companions in sin have perhaps been surprized long ago and haled to an Eternal Prison Nothing is remaining of them but their dust and the time is not yet come for your Funeral Let it be considered that that God that would not wait upon the fallen Angels one instant after their sin nor give them a moments space of Repentance hath prolonged the Life of many a sinner in the World to innumerable moments to 420000 minutes in the space of a Year to 8 Millions and 400000 Minutes in the space of 20 Years The damned in Hell would think it a great kindness to have but a Year's Month's nay Daye 's respite as a space to Repent in 5. Consider also how many have been taken away under shorter measures of patience Some have been struck into a Hell of misery while thou remainest upon an Earth of forbearance In a Plague the destroying Angel hath hew'd down others and past by us The Arrows have flew about our heads past over us and stuck in the heart of a neighbour How many Rich men How many of our Friends and Familiars have been seiz'd by death since the beginning of the year when they least thought of it and imagin'd it far from them Have you not known some of your acquaintance snatcht away in the height of a crime Was not the same wrath due to you as well as to them And had it not been as dreadful for you to be so surprized by him as it was for them Why should he take a less sturdy sinner out of thy company and let thee remain still upon the Earth If God had dealt so with you how had you been cut off not only from the enjoyment of this Life but the hopes of a better And if God hath made such a Providence beneficial for reclaiming you how much reason have you to acknowledge him He that hath had least patience hath cause to admire but those that have more ought to exceed others in blessing him for it If God had put an end to your natural Life before you had made provision for Eternal how deplorable would your condition have been Consider also who ever have been sinners formerly of a deeper note Might not God have struck a man in the embraces of his Harlots and choaked him in the moment of his excessive and intemperate healths or on the sudden have spurted Fire and Brimstone into a blasphemers mouth What if God had snatcht you away when you had been sleeping in some great iniquity or sent you while burning in lust to the fire it merited Might he not have crackt the string that linkt your souls to your
be a slight and mean Being Our being in Covenant with him must not lower our awful apprehensions of him As he is the Lord thy God 't is a gloririous and fearful Name or wonderful * Deut. 28.58 Though he lay by his Justice to Believers he doth not lay by his Majesty When we have a confidence in him because he is the Lord our God we must have awful thoughts of his Majesty because his name is glorious God is terrible from his Holy-places in regard of the great things he doth for his Israel * Psal 68.35 We should behave our selves with that inward honour and respect of him as if he were present to our bodily eyes The higher apprehensions we have of his Majesty the greater aw will be upon our hearts in his presence and the greater spirituality in our acts We should manage our hearts so as if we had a view of God in his heavenly glory 9. Spiritual Worship is to be performed with humility in our Spirits This is to follow upon the reverence of God As we are to have high thoughts of God that we may not debase him we must have low thoughts of our selves not to vaunt before him When we have right notions of the Divine Majesty we shall be as Worms in our own thoughts and creep as Worms into his presence We can never consider him in his Glory but we have a fit opportunity to reflect upon our selves and consider how basely we revolted from him and how graciously we are restored by him As the Gospel affords us greater discoveries of Gods nature and so enhaunceth our reverence of him so it helps us to a fuller understanding of our own vileness and weakness and therefore is proper to ingender Humility The more spiritual and evangelical therefore any service is the more humble it is That is a spiritual service that doth most manifest the glory of God and this cannot be manifested by us without manifesting our own emptiness and nothingness The Heathens were sensible of the necessity of Humility by the Light of Nature * Plutarch Moral P. 344. after the Name of God signified by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inscribed on the Temple at Delphos followed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby was insinuated that when we have to do with God who is the only Ens we should behave our selves with a sense of our own infirmity and infinite distance from him As a person so a duty leavened with Pride hath nothing of sincerity and therefore nothing of spirituality in it Hab. 2.4 His Soul which is lifted up is not upright in him The Elders that were crowned by God to be Kings and Priests to offer spiritual Sacrifices uncrown themselves in their worship of him and cast down their Ornaments at his feet * Revel 4 1● compared with 5. and the 1● The Greek word to worship 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to creep like a Dog upon his belly before his Master to lye low How deep should our sense be of the priviledge of Gods admitting us to his worship and affording us such a mercy under our deserts of wrath How mean should be our thoughts both of our persons and performances How patiently should we wait upon God for the success of worship How did Abraham the Father of the Faithful equal himself to the Earth when he supplicated the God of Heaven and devote himself to him under the title of very Dust and Ashes * Gen. 18.27 Isaiah did but behold an Evangelical Apparition of God and the Angels worshipping him and presently reflects upon his own uncleaness * Isa 6.5 Gods presence both requires and causes Humility How lowly is David in his own opinion after a magnificent duty performed by himself and his people 1 Chron. 29.14 Who am I And what is my people that we should be able to offer so willingly The more spiritual the Soul is in its carriage to God the more humble it is and the more gracious God is in his communications to the Soul the lower it lies God commanded not the fiercer Creatures to be offered to him in Sacrifices but Lambs and Kids meek and lowly Creatures none that had stings in their tails or venom in their tongues * Caudam aculeatam vel linguam nigram Alexand. ab Alex. l. 3. c. 12. The meek Lamb was the daily Sacrifice The Doves were to be offered by Pairs God would not have Hony mixed with any Sacrifice Levit. 2.11 That breeds Choler and Choler Pride but Oyle he commanded to be used that supples and mollifies the parts Swelling Pride and boiling Passions render our services carnal they cannot be spiritual without an humble sweetness and an innocent sincerity One grain of this transcends the most costly Sacrifices A Contrite Heart puts a gloss upon Worship * Psal 51.16 17 The departure of men and Angels from God began in Pride Our approaches and return to him must begin in Humility And therefore all those Graces which are bottom'd on Humility must be acted in worship as Faith and a sense of our own indigence Our blessed Saviour the most spiritual Worshipper prostrated himself in the Garden with the greatest lowliness and offered himself upon the Cross a Sacrifice with the greatest humility Melted Souls in worship have the most spiritual conformity to the person of Christ in the state of humiliation and his design in that state As worship without it is not sutable to God so neither is it advantageous for us A time of worship is a time of Gods Communication The Vessel must be melted to receive the Mould it is designed for Softned wax is fittest to receive a stamp and a spiritually melted Soul fittest to receive a spiritual impression We cannot perform duty in an evangelical and spiritual strain without the meltingness and meaness in our selves which the Gospel requires 10. Spiritual worship is to be performed with Holiness God is a holy Spirit a likeness to God must attend the worshipping of God as he is Holiness is alway in season It becomes his house for ever * Psal 91.5 We can never serve the living God till we have Consciences purged from dead works Heb. 9.14 Dead works in our Consciences are unsutable to God an eternal living Spirit The more mortified the heart the more quickned the service Nothing can please an infinite Purity but that which is pure Since God is in his Glory in his Ordinances we must not be in our Filthiness The Holiness of his Spirit doth sparkle in his Ordinances The holiness of our Spirits ought also to sparkle in our observance of them The Holiness of God is most celebrated in the worship of Angels * Isa 6.3 Revel 4.8 Spiritual worship ought to be like Angelical That cannot be with Souls totally impure As there must be perfect holiness to make a worship perfectly spiritual so there must be some degree of holiness to make it in any measure spiritual God would
was so as that he never began Is to come so as that he never shall end By whom all things are what they are who hath both eternal knowledge to remember our service and eternal goodness to reward It. A DISCOURSE UPON THE IMMUTABILITY OF GOD. Psalm 102.26 27. They shall perish but thou shalt endure yea all of them shall wax old as a Garment as a Vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed But thou art the same and thy years shall have no end THIS Psalm contains a Complaint of a People pressed with a great Calamity some think of the Jewish Church in Babylon others think the Psalmist doth here personate Mankind lying under a state of corruption because he wishes for the coming of the Messiah to accomplish that Redemption promised by God and needed by them Indeed the title of the Psalm is a Prayer of the Afflicted when he is overwhelmed and pours out his complaint before the Lord Whether afflicted with the sense of corruption or with the sense of oppression And the Redemption by the Messiah which the ancient Church looked upon as the fountain of their Deliverance from a sinful or a servile Bondage is in this Psalm spoken of A set time appointed for the discovery of his mercy to Sion v. 13. An appearance in glory to build up Sion v. 16. The loosing of the Prisoner by Redemption and them that are appointed to Death v. 20. The calling of the Gentiles v. 22. And the latter part of the Psalm wherein are the verse I have read are applied to Christ Heb. 1. Whatsoever the design of the Psalm might be many things are intermingled that concern the Kingdom of the Messiah and Redemption by Christ Some make three parts of the Psalm 1. A Petition plainly delivered v. 1.2 Hear my Prayer oh Lord and let my cry come unto thee c. 2. The Petition strongly and argumentatively enforced and pleaded v. 3. from the misery of the Petitioner in himself and his reproach from his Enemies 3. An acting of Faith in the expectation of an Answer in the general Redemption promised v. 12 13. But thou oh Lord shalt endure for ever thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion The Heathen shall fear thy Name The first part is the Petition pleaded the second part is the Petition answered in an assurance that there should in time be a full deliverance * Pareus The design of the Pen-man is to confirm the Church in the truth of the Divine Promises that though the foundations of the World should be ript up and the Heavens clatter together and the whole Fabrick of them be unpinn'd and fall to pieces the firmest parts of it dissolved yet the Church should continue in its stability because it stands not upon the changeableness of Creatures but is built upon the immutable Rock of the truth God which is as little subject to change as his Essence They shall perish thou shalt change them As he had before ascribed to God the foundation of Heaven and Earth * verse 25. so he ascribes to God here the destruction of them Both the beginning and end of the World are here ascertained There is nothing indeed from the present appearance of things that can demonstrate the cessation of the world The Heaven and Earth stand firm the motions of the heavenly Bodies are the same their beautie is not decayed Individuals corrupt but the Species and Kinds remain The Successions of the Year observe their due order but the Sin of Man renders the change of the present appearance of the world necessary to accomplish the design of God for the glory of his Elect. The Heavens do not naturally perish as some fancied an old age of the world wherein it must necessarily decay as the Bodies of Animals do or that the parts of the Heavens are broken off by their rubbing one against another in their motion and falling to the Earth are the Seeds of those things that grow among us * Plin. Hist lib. 2. cap. 3. The Earth and Heavens He names here the most stable parts of the world and the most beautiful parts of the Creation those that are freest from corruptibility and change to illustrate thereby the Immutability of God that though the Heavens and Earth have a Prerogative of fixedness above other parts of the world and the Creatures that reside below the Heavens remain the same as they were created and the Center of the Earth retains its fixedness and are as beautiful and fresh in their age as they were in their youth many years ago notwithstanding the change of the Elements Fire and Water being often turned into Air so that there may remain but little of that Air which was first created by reason of the continual transmutation yet this firmness of the Earth and Heavens is not to be regarded in comparison of the unmoveableness and fixedness of the Being of God As their beauty comes short of the glory of his Being so doth their firmness come short of his stability Some by Heavens and Earth understand the Creatures which reside in the Earth and those which are in the Air which is called Heaven often in Scripture but the ruin and fall of these being seen every day had been no fit illustration of the unchangeableness of God They shall perish they shall be changed 1. They may perish say some they have it not from themselves that they do not perish but from thee who didst endue them with an incorruptible nature They shall perish if thou speakest the word Thou canst with as much ease destroy them as thou didst create them But the Psalmist speaks not of their possibility but the certainty of their perishing 2. They shall perish in their qualities and motion not in their substance say others They shall cease from that motion which is designed properly for the generation and corruption of things in the Earth but in regard of their substance and beauty they shall remain As when the strings or Wheels of a Clock or Watch are taken off the material parts remain though the motion of it and the use for discovering the time of the day ceaseth * Coccei in loc To perish doth not signify alway a falling into nothing an annihilation by which both the matter and the form are destroyed but a ceasing of the present apearance of them a ceasing to be what they now are as a man is said to perish when he dies whereas the better part of man doth not cease to be The figure of the Body moulders away and the matter of it returns to Dust but the Soul being immortal ceaseth not to act when the Body by reason of the absence of the Soul is uncapable of acting So the Heavens shall perish the appearance they now have shall vanish and a more glorious and incorruptible frame be erected by the power and goodness of God The dissolution of Heaven and Earth is meant by the
they would be a lost people A period will quickly be set to their lives no Created strength can restrain its power from crushing such a stiff-neck'd people Flesh and Blood cannot bear them nor any Created Spirit of a greater might 1. Consider the greatness of the provocations No light matter but actions of a great defiance What is the practical Language of most in the World but that of Pharaoh Who is the Lord that I should obey him How many question his being and more his Authority What blasphemies of him what reproaches of his Majesty Men drinking up iniquity like water and with a hast and ardency rushing into sin as the horse into the battle What is there in the reasonable creature that hath the quickest capacity and the deepest obligation to serve him but opposition and enmity a slight of him in every thing yea the services most seriously performed unsuited to the royalty and purity of so great a Being Such provocations as dare him to his face that are a burden to so righteous a Judge and so great a lover of the Authority and Majesty of his Laws That were there but a spark of anger in him 't is a wonder it doth not shew it self When he is invaded in all his attributes 't is astonishing that this single one of Patience and Meekness should with-stand the assault of all the rest of his perfections His being which is attack'd by sin speakes for vengeance his Justice cannot be imagin'd to stand silent without charging the sinner His Holiness cannot but encourage his Justice to urge its pleas and be an Advocate for it His Omniscience proves the truth of all the charge and his abused mercy hath little encouragement to make opposition to the Indictment Nothing but Patience stands in the gap to keep off the arrest of judgment from the sinner 2. His Patience is manifest if you consider the multitudes of these provocations Every man hath sin enough in a day to make him stand amazed at Divine Patience and to call it as well as the Apostle did all long suffering 1 Tim. 1.16 How few duties of a perfectly right stamp are performed What unworthy considerations mix themselves like dross with our purest and sincerest Gold How more numerous are the respects of the Worshippers of him to themselves than unto him How many services are paid him not out of love to him but because he should do us no hurt and some service When we do not so much design to please him as to please our selves by expectations of a reward from him What Master would endure a servant that endeavoured to please him only because he should not kill him Is that former charge of God upon the Old World yet out of date That the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of man was only evil and that continually Gen. 6.5 Was not the New World as chargeable with it as the Old Certainly it was Gen. 8.21 And is of as much force this very minute as it was then How many are the sins against knowledge as well as those of ignorance Presumptuous sins as well as those of infirmity How numerous those of Omission and Commission * Lessius pag. 152. 'T is above the reach of any man's understanding to conceive all the Blasphemies Oaths Thefts Adulteries Murders Oppressions contempt of Religion the open Idolatries of Turks and Heathens the more spiritual and refin'd Idolatries of others Add to those the ingratitude of those that profess his name their pride earthlyness carelesness sluggishness to divine duties and in every one of those a multitude of provocations The whole man being engag'd in every sin the understanding contriving it the will embracing it the affections complying with it and all the members of the body instruments in the acting the unrighteousness of it Every one of these faculties bestowed upon men by him are armed against him in every act and in every employment of them there is a distinct provocation though center'd in one sinful end and object What are the offences all the men of the World receive from their fellow creatures to the injuries God receives from men but as a small dust of earth to the whole mass of Earth and Heaven too What multitudes of sins is one prophane wretch guilty of in the space of 20 40 50 years Who can compute the vast number of his transgressions from the first use of reason to the time of the separation of his Soul from his Body from his entrance into the World to his exit What are those to those of a whole Village of the like Inhabitants What are those to those of a great City Who can number up all the foul mouth'd Oaths the beastly excess the goatish uncleanness committed in the space of a day year twenty years in this City much less in the whole Nation least of all in the whole World Were it no more than the common Idolatry of former ages when the whole World turn'd their backs upon their Creator and passed him by to sue to a Creature a stock or stone or a degraded spirit How provoking would it be to a Prince to see a whole City under his Dominion deny him a respect and pay it to his scullion or the common Executioner he employs Add to this the unjust invasions of Kings the oppressions exercised upon men all the private and publick sins that have been in the World ever since it began The Gentiles were describ'd by the Apostle Rom. 1.29 30 31. in a black character They were haters of God yet how did the Riches of his patience preserve multitudes of such disingenuous persons and how many millions of such haters of him breath every day in his Air and are maintained by his bounty have their tables spr●●d and their cups fill'd to the brim and that too in the midst of reiterated belchings of their enmity against him All are under sufficient provocations of him to the highest indignation The presiding Angels over Nations could not forbear in Love and Honour to their Governour to arm themselves to the destruction of their several charges if Divine patience did not set them a pattern and their obedience incline them to expect his Orders before they act what their zeal would prompt them to The Devils would be glad of Commission to destroy the World but that his patience puts a stop to their fury 〈◊〉 well as his own Justice 3. Consider the long time of this patience He spread out his hand● all the day to a rebellious World Isaiah 65.2 All mens day all Gods day which is a thousand years he hath born with the gross of mankind with all the Nations of the World in a long succession of ages for five thousand years and upwards already and will bear with them till the time comes for the World dissolution He hath suffered the monstrous acts of men and endur'd the contradictions of a sinful World against himself from the first sin of Adam