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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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face and with twain his feet and with twain did he flee and one cryed to another Holy holy holy Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory The Angels are pure and innocent Creatures they fear not his angry justice but they adore his excellencies and perfections his is a dread when a most Serene Majesty Penal fear is inconsistent with the joys of heaven but the fear of admiration is perfected there and in this sense the fear of God continues for ever Psal 19.9 In all our addresses to him we should compose our spirits by the awful apprehension of that infinite distance which is between God and us Eccles 5.2 Let not thine heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in heaven and thou upon earth the greatest distance in nature is but an imperfect discovery how much we are beneath God 't is the effect of grace to represent the Divine being and glory so to the soul that in the most social duties it may have impressions of fear Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with trembling We should fear his greatnesse and power in whose hands our life and breath and all our wayes are the fear of God having its actual force upon the soul is operative and instrumental to holy walking from whence the fear of God is taken in Scripture for the whole duty of man it being an introduction to it The fear of God and keeping his Commandments are joined together Eccles 12.13 This is the Prepositus which governs our actions according to Gods will this is a watchful Centinel against the most pleasant temptations it kills delight in sin by which the integrity of most men is lost for delight cannot dwell with fear this is the guard and security of the soul in the days of trouble the fear of God countermines the fear of men this cuts off base and unworthy complyings therefore the Lord brings this as an antidote against the base fear of men Isa 51.12 13. Who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and of the son of man that shall be made as grass And forgettest the Lord thy Maker that stretcheth forth the Heavens and laid the foundations of the Earth This exalts a Christian above humane frailty and makes him despise the threatnings of the world whereby many are terrified from their constancy It is the most unreasonable thing to be Cowards to men and fearless of God Men have but a finite power and so they cannot do that hurt they would and they are under the Divine Providence and therefore are disabled from doing that hurt which otherwise they could do but the power of God is absolute and unconfined therefore our Saviour presses with vehemency upon his Disciples Matth. 10.28 Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather fear him who is able to destroy both body and soul in hell He lives for ever and can punish for ever therefore when duty and life cannot stand together he that flies the danger by delivering up his soul exchanges the pain of a moment for the torments of Eternity Timent Carcerem non timent Gehennam timent Cruciatum Temporalem non poenas ignis aeterni timent modicum mori non aeternum mori Austin upbraids the folly of such They fear the Prison but they fear not Hell they fear temporal torment but they fear not the pains of unquenchable fire they fear the first but not the second death 3. Dependance in respect of his al-sufficiency to supply our wants and Omnipotency to secure us from dangers First his al-sufficiency can supply our wants he is the Sun Fountain and Mine of all that is good from hence the Prophet glories in God Habbakkuk 3.17 18. Although the fig-tree shall not blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines the labour of the Olives shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yet I will r●joyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation He expresses not only things for delight as the fruit of the Vine and fig-tree but things for necessity as the meat of the field and the flocks of the stall and the utter failing of these together for otherwise the want of one might be supplied by the enjoyment of another Now in the absolute losse of these supports and comforts of life the Prophet saw all things in God want of all outward things is infinitely recompenc't in the presence of God The Sun needs not the glimmering light of the Stars to make day God without the assistance of the Creatures can make us really happy in the enjoying of him we have all things and that to the greatest advantage The things of this world deceive our expectations and draw forth our corruptions but in God we enjoy them more refinedly and more satisfyingly the dregs of sin and sorrow being removed by possessing God there is no burden which we are not able to bear but he takes it a●ay our wants weaknesse and sufferings and there is no excellency of his which we are able to enjoy but he conveys to us his grace his glory There is true riches in his favour true honour in his approbation true pleasure in his peace He is the treasure and triumph of the soul Lam. 3.24 The Lord is my portion saith my soul therefore will I hope in him He is such a portion that all temporal crosses cannot hinder its influence on us and his influxive presence makes heaven he is a portion that cannot be lost he inseparably abides with the soul The real belief and application of this will keep a Saint in an holy independency on earthly things Cum mundus exarserit cogitat se nihil habere de tanta mole perdendum the flames which shall burn the World cannot touch his portion he may stand upon its ruines and say I have lost nothing Moreover this will keep the soul upright in the course of obedience for all the exorbitancies and swervings from the Rule proceeds from the apprehensions of some particular good in the Creature which draws men aside Those who want the light of faith which discovers Gods al-sufficiency only admire present and sensible things and to obtain these they depart from God but the more eagerly they seek after these temporal good things the further they run from the Fountain of goodnesse which alone can sweeten the best things we enjoy and counterbalance their absence the Creatures are but of a limited benignity the necessity of their number proves the meanness of their value but one God answers all he is an infinite and indefective good he is for all the powers of soul and body to hold them in their pleasant exercise and to give them rest he is alone able to impart happinesse and to preserve that happinesse he imparts
giving of the Law on Mount Sinai and yet there he speaks in the singular number Exod. 20.2 Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage 3. 'T is likely the Princes did at first speak in the plural number not to note their power and greatnesse but their modesty and warinesse that it was not their design to rule according to will but according to counsel that they were willing to advise with others and to be guided by others The wisest Kings on earth will have their counsel and it is no more than needs plus vident oculi quam oculus many eyes see more than one eye Eph. 1.11 but Gods Counsel is his Will Who worketh all things after the counsel of his own Will Nor indeed is it safe or fit for any to govern arbitrarily or purely by will but he whose Will is his counsel it is so far from needing a rule that it is the only Rule Isa 63.7 8 9 10. 2. As a plurality of persons so a Trinity of persons may be proved out of the old Testament I shall mention and only mention for brievity sake one place in the Prophecy of Isaiah in the seventh verse you have mention made of Jehovah or the Lord in the ninth verse of Jesus Christ called the Angel of his presence in the tenth verse of the holy Spirit but they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit 2. You have this doctrine more clearly delivered in the new Testament as will appear by several instances Mat. 3.16 17. 1. At the Baptisme of Christ the Trinity of persons were clearly discovered you may read the history And Jesus when he was baptized went up strait way out of the water and lo the heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting upon him and lo a voyce from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Consider here 1. We have three names given severally and particularly to three persons 1. He who spake with a voice from heaven was the Father 2. He who was Baptized in Jordan is called the Son 3. He who descended in the shape of a Dove is called the Spirit of God 2. There were three outward signes or symboles by which those three persons did manifest themselves 1. The Father by an audible voice the Word in heaven is borne witnesse to by a word from heaven 2. The Son in the humane nature 3. The holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove 3. They are described by three distinct actions 1. The one cries by a voice from heaven This is my well-beloved Sonne heare him this could not be the voice of the Sonne for then he would be Sonne to himself nor can this be attributed unto the Spirit for then Jesus would have been the son of the Spirit 2. The second after his Baptisme prayes Luke 3.21 It came to pass that Jesus being baptized and praying the heaven was opened 3. The third descended in the shape of a dove and rested upon Jesus Christ Now to close this particular why might it not be said that the Father was baptized in Jordan as well as the Sonne or that the Father descended in the shape of a dove as well as the Spirit or that the Sonne did all this speak with a voice from heaven and was baptized in Jordan and descended in the shape of a dove if this were not a truth that there are three persons in the divine essence hence the primitive Christians used to say unto any one that doubted of the Trinity abi ad Jordanem videbis go to Jordan and you will see a Trinity 2. This doctrine may be proved from the institution of the Ordinance of Baptisme Go ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne Mat. 28.19 and of the Holy Ghost and indeed no wonder if God discovered himself to be three persons and one God at Christs Baptisme when the name of the blessed Trinity is as it were in faire and legible Characters writ upon the forehead of the Ordinance of Baptisme its self Baptisme its self is as it were baptized in the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost now these I call the words of institution for although you have not here the first institution of Baptisme John the Baptist who was called so from this very Ordinance administring this Sacrament and the Disciples questionlesse from the Command of Christ himself the Evangelist John tells us that Jesus himself baptized not Joh. 4.2 but his Disciples yet here you have a solemn command for baptisme and the forme of the administration thereof unto all generations And here consider 1. Christ commands them to baptize not in the names but in the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost if you consider them personally so they have three names Father Son and holy Ghost if essentially then but one name unum nomen una deitas one God one deity and I observe farther that which way soever we expound this phrase in the name either calling upon the name of the Father Son and holy Ghost as some or in the name by the authority or at the appointment of God the Father Son and holy Ghost as others or in the name viz. for the service honour and glory of God the Father Son and holy Ghost as a third sort you must either make these to be three Gods or else three persons in the Godhead for who is the object of our prayers but God who hath authority to appoint Ordinances for his Church but God whom are we to serve and worship but God alone Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God Mat. 4.10 and him only shalt thou serve 2. They were to baptize not in the name of the Father by the Son or by the Spirit but in the name of the Father Sonne and Spirit which notes the equality of the three persons 3. Father Son and holy Ghost are so joyned together that we are no lesse baptized in the name of the Sonne and of the Spirit than of the Father and therefore their deity is the same their power and authority the same 4. An Article is thrice prefixed and added to every one baptizate in nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Father that Son that holy Ghost that Father whose voice you have heard from heaven that Sonne whom as yet you see in the humane nature that holy Ghost whom you have seen descending upon me in the shape of a Dove Surely the repetition of this Article doth not want its singular Emphasis that Father that Sonne and that holy Ghost 3. This doctrine may yet further be cleared from that saying of our Saviour John 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter hence is plainly proved the personality of the Holy Ghost he is
any receive not him this wrath tarries still and will cleave to and abide upon him for ever John 3.36 He speaks with authority Luke 19.27 Those mine enemies bring them and slay them before me and it shall be done 3. That the Psalmist makes it as it is a point of wisdome in the greatest to kisse the Son with a kisse of homage and subjection Psal 2 11 12. least he be angry what is the danger of that and ye perish in the war of your hopes and purposes and never compasse grace nor glory If his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all those which put their trust in him 4. That then ye may plead with the Lord with humble boldnesse Psal 74.1 Why doth thine anger smoak against the Sheep of thy Pasture remember thy Congregation which thou hast purchased of old the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed c. 5. And assure your hearts of welcome Prov. 21.14 A gift in secret pacifieth wrath and a reward in the bosome strong wrath Mark their policy Acts 12.10 and be assured the relations of Christ are beloved of the Father Job 33.24 Then he is gracious to him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome 2. To those which the Lord hath translated out of their natural condition 1. Bring the work often to the touchstone that you may not boast in a false gift gold will endure the test and be more fully manifested to be gold indeed and finding the work to be right live with an enlarged heart to the praise of that grace which hath made this change 2. Deal seriously in the mortification of sin which God only strikes at and in order thereto count sin the worst of evils if this were done and throughly and fixedly done in our spirits there is nothing of any other directions would be left undone To set up this judgement there needs 1. Ploughing carefully with the Lords heifer viz. search into the Oracles of God there and there only are lively portraitures of sin and the genuine products and traine of sin 2. The eye-salve of the Spirit We are blinder than Batts in this matter and are indisposed very much or rather wholly to let this truth sink down into our hearts 3. Applications to the Throne of grace None but those which deal in good earnest in heaven will see the hell and mystery of sin in themselves He gives the Holy Ghost to them which ask him 4. Excussions and communings with your selves Prov. 20.27 The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly and duly made use of will tell many stories correspondent to the Word of truth use conscience and use therewith another and bigger candle to rummage the dark room of thy heart with Superadde to conscience the succours of the Word and Spirit and thou shalt do something in the search and finde out convictively the swarms of evil in thine own heart 5. The work of grace There will be else a beam in the eye and plaine things will not be plaine to us Gods work holds intelligence and is of amicable affinity with his Word grace hath the only excellent faculty in looking through sin 6. Attendance to the Lords administrations against sin God writes in great letters in the world what he had first written in the Scriptures every breach by sin should lead down into more hatred brokennesse of spirit and shame before the Lord for sinne This is the engaging evil this engages God and the holy Angels and Devils and the very man against himself Nothing can be his friend to whom sin hath made God an enemy Wo to the man that is in this sense alone and hath heaven and earth and hell and all within the Continent of them against him it is impossible for that mans heart and hands to stand strong This is the mighty prevailing evil Never was man so stout as to stand before the face of sin but he shivered and was like a garment eaten up of moths This hath fretted the joynts of Kingdomes in pieces Psal 39.11 and made the goodliest houses in the world a heap of rubbish Zech. 5.4 will make Bab lon that sits as a Queen an habitation of Divels Rev. 18.2 and the hold of every foule spirit and a Cage of every unclean and hateful birds made the Angels Divels and heaven it self too hot for them Never were the like changes made as by sinne grace makes not changes of richer comfort than sin doth of dismal consequence it is made by the Holy Ghost an argument of the infinity of the power of God to pardon and subdue sinne Micah 7.18 3. Bear all afflictions incident to an holy course chearfully The Martyrs went joyfully into the fire because the flames of hell were quenched to them bore their Crosse easily because no curse and damnation to them in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.13 4. Reduce your anger to the similitude of Gods which is very slowly kindled and is an intense holy displicence only against sin Psal 103.8 and is cleans'd from all dregs of rashnesse injustice and discomposure such zeal should eat us up John 2.17 MANS IMPOTENCY TO Help himself out of that misery ROM 5.6 For when we were yet without strength in due time Christ dyed for the ungodly IN this Chapter there are two parts in the first the Apostle layes down the comfortable fruits and priviledges of a justified estate in the second he argues the firmnesse of these comforts because they are so rich that they are scarce credible and hardly received The firmnesse and soundnesse of these comforts the Apostle representeth by a double comparison 1. By comparing Chr st with Christ and 2. Christ with Adam Christ with Christ or one benefit that we have by him with another from the Text to ver 12. then Christ with Adam the second Adam with the first to the end of the Chapter In comparing Christ with Christ three considerations do occur 1. The efficacy of his love towards us before justification with the efficacy of his love towards us after justification the argument standeth thus if Christ had a love to us when sinners and his love prevailed with him to die for us much more may we expect his love when made friends if when we were in sin and misery shiftless and helpless Christ had the heart to die for us and to take us with all our faults will he cast us off after we are justified and accepted with God in him this love of Christ is asserted in the 6. verse amplified in the 7. and 8. verses and the conclusion is inferred verse 9. much more then being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him The second Comparison is of the efficacy of the death of Christ and the efficacy of the life of Christ 't is absurd to think that Christ rising from the dead
understand here by bowing the knee Answ 1. Some take this literally as the Papists who in their worship bow the knee as often as they heare the Name of Jesus mentioned The Learned Zanchy is of an opinion that some of the Ceremonies in use amongst the Papists might have an innocent Original as their signing with the Cross to show that they were not ashamed of the Cross of Christ with which the Heathens did reproach them and so the standing up at the Creed to note their resolution to strive together for the Faith that was once delivered to the Saints So genuflection to the Name of Jesus was say some in opposition to the Arrians who denyed the Divinity of Christ but whether these things were so innocent at the first seeing they are all of humane institution and have been abused to superstition we have justly laid the use of them aside And this Text cannot be so understood for if by Name we understand the power of Christ then by bowing the knee must be meant our submission and subjection to this power By bowing therefore to the Name of Jesus is understood that obedience and subjection which is due to the Soveraign power and Auhority of Christ Thus when Joseph was exalted to that Dignity and Authority in Egypt Gen. 41.43 Joh. 5.22 23. Mat. 28.18 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2.8 that there was none greater than he but Pharaoh himself They cryed in the streets where Joseph went Bow the knee Thus God the Father gave Jurisdiction and Authority to the Son that they which honour the Father might also honour the Sonne All power saith Christ is given me both in Heaven and in Earth He is the Prince of Life and the Lord of Glory to whom all obedience service and subjection is most due Quest 2. Who are they must bow the knee to Christ and be in subjection unto him Answ All Creatures for the Enumeration is full which Chrysostome thus Expounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc Things in Heaven on Earth and under the Earth i. e. Angels Men and Devils which Theodoret doth more clearly Explain 1. Things in Heaven i. e. good Angels and glorified Saints spirits of just men made perfect 2. Things on Earth all men living both good and bad 3. Under the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 infernalia i. e. Devils and damned spirits All these must bow the knee and must yield subjection unto Jesus Christ I. All knees in heaven shall bow to Christ voluntarily 1. The good Angels they did alwayes honour and obey the Lord Jesus It was the joy of the Angels of Heaven to be Subject and Serviceable unto Jesus Christ 1. Before the Incarnation of Christ an Angel instructed Daniel concerning the Messiah Dan. 9.24 and how long it should be before his coming 2. When the fulness of time was come an Angel comes to the blessed Virgin and said Feare not Mary for thou hast found favour with God Luke 1.30 31. and behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Sonne and call his Name Jesus 3. As soon as ever he was born an Angel brings the glad-tydings of it and a whole Hoste of them who sang together Job 38.7 Luke 2.13 and shouted for joy at the Creation of the world do with a song Celebrate Christs Nativity Glory be to God on High c. 4. When Jesus Christ was in danger to be kill'd by Herod an Angel warnes of the danger Mat. 2.13 and directs his Mother to flee with him into Egypt 5. When he was tempted by Satan forty dayes together a little before he entered upon the work of his Ministry Mat. 4.11 behold Angels came and Ministred unto him 6. When he was in his Agony in the Garden ready to take the cup of trembling out of his Fathers hand there appeared an Angel from heaven strengthening him Luke 22.43 This blessed Creature out of love and duty seeing his Lord and Master in such distress came in to succour him 7. And as the Angels gave the first notice of his Birth so also of his Resurrection an Angel told the woman He is not here Mat. 28.6 he is risen 8. The Angels attended Christs Ascension into Heaven for they told the Disciples Acts 1.11 That as they saw him ascending into heaven so he should come again from Heaven in like manner 9. And with infinite delight did they welcome Christ to heaven where Heb. 1.6 upon his first coming all the Angels did worship him Mat 25.31 2 Thes 1.7 Mat. 24.31 10. And Lastly When Christ shall come at the last day to judge both quick and dead he will come with all his holy Angels with him and shall be Revealed from Heaven with his mighty Angels who then most willingly will be employed to gather together all his Elect from the foure Windes of Heaven Col. 1.16 All this service the good Angels performe unto Christ not only as he is their Creator for by him were created even the things that are in heaven But they yield him this Subjection as he is their Head and Governour Col. 2.10 Eph. 1.21 22. and so he is called the Head of all Principality and Power i. e. Of Angels And this voluntary subjection to Jesus Christ is because they have benefit by Christ though not in a way of Redemption yet they owe their Confirmation unto Christ The good Angels though they were created good and excellent creatures Hoc ipsum quod sancti Angeli ab illo statu beatitudinis in quo sunt mutari in deterius nullo modo possunt non est iis naturaliter insitum sed postquam creati sunt gratiae divinae largitate collatum Aug. de fide ad Pet. Diac. cap. 23. Qui erexit hominem lapsum dedit Angelo stanti ne laberetur Bern. yet as creatures their state is mutable and they had in them a potentiality and a possibility to sin and fall as well as those Angels which left their first station But this possibility is removed by Christ who by his grace did lift up fallen man and by his Powen preserves the Angels that they shall not fall And therefore it is that in a way of thankfulness the Angels in Heaven do bow their knee in Subjection and Service unto Christ 2. As the glorious Angels bow the knee to Christ in heaven so the spirits of just men made perfect the souls departed do in Heaven praise adore and worship the Lord Jesus Christ and do yield voluntary subjection and obedience to him unto which duty they are more carried by a principle of thankfulness that Christ hath Redeemed them this is shadowed out unto us by the Vision of Saint John who having seen the Lord Jesus taking the Book with seven Seales and opening it he heard the Saints in Heaven singing a new Song and saying Thou art worthy to take the Book and to open the Seales thereof for thou wast slain
been said in order to this morning Exercise As you have heard so you have seen Application to the morning exercise this Moneth now elapsed hath brought to your view an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Model of sound words you have had as it were the Summe and Substance of the Gospel preached over in your hearing I know it falls far short both in respect of Matter and Method of a perfect body of Divinity an exact and full delineation of all the chief Heads and Principles of Religion But considering the smallness of the Circle of this monethly course in which this Model was drawn I dare take the boldness to say there hath as much of the Marrow and Spirits of Divinity been drawn forth in these few Morning Lectures as can be rationally expected from men of such various Studies and assidnous labours in the Ministerial work Former ages have rarely heard so much Divinity preacht over in many years as hath been read in your ears in twenty six dayes These few Sermons have digested more of the Doctrine of faith than some large volumes not of a mean consideration now extant in the Church of God Truely every single Sermon hath been a little 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within itself Each Subject in this morning Exercise hath been handled in so ample a manner and with so much judgement acuteness and perspicuity that it may well passe for a little Treatise of Divinity wherein many profound Mysteries have been discust and stated not with more judgment in the Doctrine than with life and vigor in the Vse and Application The Preachers have sought to find out acceptable words Eccles 12. and that which was spoken was upright even words of truth Insomuch that a man that had never heard of a Gospel before this moneths conduct had been sufficient not only to have left him without excuse but with the wise mens STAR to have led him to Christ The more I dread to think what a tremendous account you have to make who after twenty twirty fourty years Revelation of the Gospel have the addition of this moneth of Sabbaths also to reckon for in that day when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire c. if while in this Mirror 2 Thes 1.8 beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord you are not changed into the same image from glory to glory by the Spirit of the Lord. I shall not undertake as * Morning Exercise May 1654. formerly to extract the Summe and Substance of what you have heard I have some hope to be saved that labour upon a better account I shall recount to you the Heads only and Points of Christian Doctrine which have been handled in this Monethly Exercise that now in the close of all you may behold as in a Map or Table the Method and Connexion which they hold amongst themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or a Summary repetition of the Heads of Divinity preacht upon in this Course The first Divine after the preparatory Sermon that preached to you began with that which is the first and chief object of Knowledge and Faith that α and ω in Divinity Subject 1 THERE IS A GOD Heb. 11.6 He that cometh to God must believe that GOD is c. Hereupon because if there be a God then he is to be worshipped and if to be worshipped then there must be a Rule of that worship and if a Rule it must be of Gods own appointment therefore Subject 2 The Second dayes work was against all other Books and Writings in the world to Evince this Truth the SCRIPTVRES CONTAINED IN THE BOOKS OF THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT are THE WORD OF GOD 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God By these Scriptures that great Mysterious Doctrine of the Trinity which the light of nature can no more discover than deny was asserted and opened as far as so profound a Mystery can well admit and so The third mornings work was to shew Subject 3 THAT IN THE GODHEAD THERE IS A TRINITY OF PERSONS IN VN●TY OF ESSENCE GOD THE FATHER GOD THE SON AND GOD THE HOLY GHOST God blessed for ever 1 Joh. 5.7 There are three that bear Record in Heaven the FAHER the WORD and the HOLY GHOST and these three are ONE Subject 4 The Creation of Man in a perfect but mutable Estate by the joynt Power and Wisdom of these three glorious Persons was the Fourth Subject opened from that Text Eccles 7.29 God made man upright but they have sought out many inventions Man thus Created God entred into a Covenant with him and so the COVENANT OF WORKS which God made with Adam and all his posterity succeeded in order to be the Subject matter of the Subject 5 Fifth morning Lecture the Text was Gen. 12.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die This Covenant no sooner made almost then broken the work of him that preacht the Subject 6 Sixth Sermon was THE FALL OF ADAM and therein more specially of PECCATVM ORIGINALE ORIGINANS or ORIGINAL SIN IN THE FIRST SPRING and fountain of it the Scripture Rom. 5.12 By one man sin entred into the world c. The Fruit and sad effect whereof being the losse of Gods image and the total depravation and corruption of mans nature Subject 7 The seventh thing that fell naturally to be handled was Peccatum originale originatum or Original corruption in the STREAM and DERIVATION OF IT TO POSTERITY from Psal 1.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in Sin did my Mother conceive me This is the Source of all that evil that hath invaded all Mankind that therefore which naturally succeeded in the Subject 8 Eighth course of this morning Exercise was MANS LIABLENESS TO THE CURSE or the MISERY OF MANS ESTATE BY NATVRE Deut. 27.1 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all the things of the Law to do them or Ephes 2.3 By nature the children of wrath Subject 9 Ninthly Mans impotency to help himself out of this miserable estate was the next sad Prospect presented to your view by that Reverend Brother that preached the ninth course and he took his rise from Rom. 5.6 When we were without strength Christ died for the ungodly That the doctrine of mans impotency when it had laid him in the dust might not leave him there the Subject 10 Tenth Preacher discoursed to you of the COVENANT OF REDEMPTION consisting of the transaction between God and Christ from all Eternity from that Text Isa 53.10 He shall see the travel of his soule and be satisfied In the eleventh place THE COVENANT OF GRACE REVEALED IN THE GOSPEL came next to be unfolded as being if I may so say the Counterpart of the Covenant of Redemption which the Preacher to whom the Subject 11 Eleventh course fell opened to you out of Heb. 8.6 Jesus Christ hath obtained a more excellent Ministry by how much also he is the Mediatour
there is an unchangeable agreement between the will of the Creator and the creature so according to the same measure and degree wherein we conform our wills to Gods we proportionably enjoy the holinesse and blessednesse of that state THE TRINITY Proved by Scripture 1 JOHN 5.7 For there are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one IN the fifth verse of this Chapter the Apostle had laid this down as an Article of faith that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God Who is he that ovcrcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Sonne of God 1 John 5.5 Now for the proof of so glorious a truth the Apostle produces six witnesses and ranks them into two orders some bear record in heaven and some bear witnesse on earth some bear witnesse on earth as ver 8. Ver. 8. of this Chapter There are three that bear witnesse on earth the Spirit and the water and the blood and these three agree in one and some bear record in heaven in the words of my Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one In the words you may take notice of these particulars 1. The number of the heavenly witnesses or the number of those witnesses that bear record in heaven viz. three 2. Their dignity or excellency they are in heaven 3. Their act they bear record 4. The names of the witnesses the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost 5. Their unity and these three are one I would observe from the context Observ That it is not an easie matter to believe that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God Whence is it else that the Apostle so often urges this point in this Epistle whence is it else that whereas it is sufficient for any truth to be confirmed by the mouth of two or three witnesses here are no lesse than six witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus is the Sonne of God three heavenly and three earthly and indeed who can declare the great mystery of the eternal generation of the Son of God I will give five wonders in five words 1. God the Father communicates the whole divine essence unto the Sonne and yet hath the whole divine essence in himself If God communicates his essence it must be his whole essence for that which is infinite cannot admit of any division partition or diminution yet methinks we have a faint resemblance of this here below 'T is not with things of a spiritual nature as with things of a corporeal spiritual things may be communicated without being lessened or divided viz. when I make a man know that which I know my knowledge is still the same and nothing diminished and upon his account whether that Argument against the traduction of the soul that if the soul of the Father be traduced the Father is left soul-lesse be cogent I leave to the judgment of the learned 'T is to be granted that to communicate the notion is one thing and the faculty is another but both are things of a spiritual nature 2. God the Father and God the Sonne are one essence and yet though the Father begets the Sonne the Sonne doth not beget himself The Father and the Sonne are one God yet the Lord Jesus is the Sonne of God under that notion as God is a Father and not the Sonne of God under the notion as God is a Sonne and so not the Sonne of himself 3. God the Father begetteth God the Sonne and yet the Father is not elder than the Sonne nor the Sonne younger than the Father he that begetteth is not in time before him that is begotten if God was a Father from everlasting then Christ was a Sonne from everlasting for relata sunt simul natura an eternal Father must have an eternal Sonne 4. The Father begets the Sonne yet the Sonne is not inferiour to the Father nor the Father superiour to the Sonne The Lord Jesus Christ being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God it was his right and therefore it was no robbery as he is coeternal so he is coequal with the Father 5. The Father begets the Sonne yet the Sonne hath the same numerical nature with the Father and the Father the same numerical nature with the Sonne an earthly sonne hath the same specifical nature with his Father but then though it be the same in regard of kinde yet it differs in regard of number but God the Father and God the Sonne have the same individual numerical nature Use Let me entreat you that you would attend unto the record and testimony that is given by those witnesses and for your encouragement consider the difference between these heavenly witnesses in the Text and earthly wi nesses and so I shall proceed to that which I mainly intend 1. On earth there may be some single or one witnesse but here are no lesse than three 2. Earthly witnesses are such as are lyable to exception but these are in heaven beyond all exception 3. As for earthly witnesses it may come to passe that their names may not be known these here are named the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost 4. Earthly witnesses when they are produced either may be silent or it may be bear false witnesse but these bear record and their record is true 5. Earthly witnesses may not agree in their witnesse as the witnesses brought against Christ but there is a sweet consent and agreement amongst these witnesses for these three are one 6. Whereas Earthly witnesses although they may be one in regard of consent yet they are not one in regard of essence every man hath one particular individual essence of his own but these are one in regard of essence Now pray mark this for if it be so then the Father is God the Son God and the Holy Ghost God And therefore the Socinian who denies the Deity of the Word and of the Holy Ghost will perswade you to believe that these words are to be expounded thus these three are one that is sayes he these three agree in one but that this is not the meaning of the phrase appears by the variation of it in the next verse the words are Ver. 8. There are three that bear witnesse on earth the Spirit the water and the blood and these three agree in one Now if both phrases note unity in consent here is an occasion of offence and falling administred by the variation of them in these two verses why is it not said the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost agree in one as well as the Spirit water and blood And suppose we should grant that the onenesse spoken of in the Text is to be expounded of consent in will and agreement yet it would prove the Godhead both of the Father and Spirit for in free Agents
and hast Redeemed us unto God out of every kindred and tongue and people and Nation Rev. 5.9 10. and hast made us unto our God Kings and Priests c. This is the daily work of glorified Saints in Heaven to cast down their Crownes before that Throne where Christ sitteth The Saints departed Rev. 4.10 are discharged from those weights and clogs of corruption which did hinder them from this duty while they were in the body Heb. 12.1 Rom. 7.24 Rev. 4.6 and cumbred and pestred with the body of death They are never weary though they never rest day nor night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come And thus I have shewed you how things in Heaven do bow the knee and are subject to the Name and Authority of the Lord Jesus II. Things on earth i. e. Good men and Bad men 1. Good men Psa 110.3 the Children of God who by the grace of Christ are made a willing people in the day of his Power for such is the heart-turning power of Gods Grace that of unwilling Isal 48.4 he makes us willing God by degrees removes out of our necks the Iron sinew that hinders us from stooping and bowing to Christ Grace by degrees doth take away that enmity in our mindes Col. 1.21 Rom. 8.7 and that carnal-mindedness which neither is nor can be subject to the Law of God By nature we are Children of disobedience as well as others Rom. 7.23 Eph. 2.3 and are willingly subject to no Law but the Law of our Members nor to no will but the wills of the flesh but the Grace of God removes that stoutness of heart contumacy and Rebellion which is in us naturally against Christ and so sweetly and powerfully inclines their wills Psal 119.6 1 Joh. 5.3 Veniat veniat verbum Dei si sexcenta nobis essent colla submittemus omnia that they follow the Lamb wherever he goes and have Respect unto all the Commandments of Christ and not one of them is grievous A Child of God willingly submits his Neck to the Yoke of Christ 2. Evil men they also must bow the knee to Jesus Christ and though their subjection be not voluntary and ingenuous yet bow they must and bow they do and partly through the awakening of a natural conscience partly by a spirit of bondage and fear of wrath they are as it were compelled to render many unwilling services and subjections unto Christ Non peccare metuit sed ardere Aug. Which compulsory subjection ariseth not from a fear of sinne but from a fear of Hell All these because they do not willingly bear the yoke of Christ they shall unwillingly become his foot-stool Mat. 11.29 Psal 110.1 And they do not so much honour Christ as Christ may be said to honour himself upon them The wicked do give honour to Christ as unwillingly as ever Haman cloathed Mordecai and proclaimed before him Hester 6.11 Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King will honour III. And Lastly The Devils in Hell are forced to yield subjection unto Jesus Christ and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things under the earth infernalia things in hell do bow their knee unto him For if in the dayes of Christs Humiliation he hath exercised power over the damned spirits and they have acknowledged him and his Soveraign power over them much more are they subject to him now in the dayes of his Exaltation I shall not need to show you how often the Devils crouched to Christ whilst he was here on earth The Devils were not only subject to his Person but to those that commanded them in his Name for so the seventy Disciples returning gave Christ an account Luke 10.17 Lord say they even the Devils are subject unto us through thy Name In one story we finde that the Devils did three times prostrate themselves at the feet of Christ Saint Luke relates the Story of the man possessed with a Legion of Devils 1. First one of the Devils in the name of all the rest thus supplicates Christ Luke 8.28 What have I to do with thee Jesus thou Sonne of God Most High I beseech thee Torment me not 2. When Christ commanded the uncleane spirits to come out of the man Ver. 31. they besought him that he would not command them to go out into the deep that is into Hell Ver. 32. 3. The Devils a third time besought Christ that they might go into the Herd of Swine Thus those proud and rebellious spirits were forced to bow even in the dayes of Christs fl●sh James 2.19 And therefore much more now Chr●st is exalted do the devils tremble We read that Christ spoiled principalities and powers Col. 2.15 and made a shew of them openly Triumphing over them In which Scripture we may observe that Christ hath disarm'd and triumph't over Satan The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alludes to the manner of the Conquerour who disarm'd the Captives and afterwards they led their Captives in chaines when they made their Triumphant entrance so the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do signifie alluding to the Romane Conquests and Triumphs Thus the Lord Jesus Christ by his death overcame the Devil Heb. 2.14 Eph. 4.8 Duo in cruce affixi intelliguntùr Christus visibiliter sponte sua ad tempus Diabolus invisibiler invitus in perpetuum Orig Missilia Triumphalia and by his Ascension he led Captivity Captive and gave gifts alluding still to the manner of the Romane Triumphs when the Victor in a Chariot of State ascended up to the Capitol the Prisoners following his Chariot or else drawing it with their hands bound behind them and there were pieces of gold and silver thrown amongst the people and other gifts and largesses bestowed upon the friends of the Conquerour The Devil ever since the death Resurrection and Ascension of Christ hath been overcome and spoiled For by the death of Christ the Devil was unarmed and shackled but presently after he was gag'd and silenc'd and all his Oracles struck dumb and speechless and so the Devils divested of their long-enjoyed power and they forced to bow though unwillingly to Jesus Christ Hence it is said that the Devils tremble Jam. 2.19 because they know Christ as their Judge but not as their Saviour They must bow because they cannot help it But it may be objected Object If all the Devils in Hell and all the wicked men here on earth do bow the knee to Christ how comes it then to pass that the Devil and his instruments do continue their Rebellion and mischief against Christ and his Church 1. To this is answered that even the Devils of Hell are bound to bow the knee unto Jesus Christ though like wicked Rebels they have refused to do it And so much we gather from that Answer of Christ to the Devil who when he had the impudence and
can they but rejoyce in them and sing of the mercies of the Lord for ever Why are you not more careful to walk worthy of this Grace There is a Decorum Ephes 4.1 a seemlinesse that appertains to every Calling This made Scipio that he would not accept the offer of an Harlot because he was General of the Army And when Antigonus was invited to a place where there was none of the best Company he was well advised by one to remember he was a Kings Sonne When you suffer your selves to be drawn away by your lusts to be ensnared by the World to be captivated by the Divel you forget the Decorum that should attend your Christian Calling Remember I beseech you First That it is a Holy Calling and therefore be ye also Holy in all Manner of Conversation Methinks it should sound as harshly in our ears to hear of a dark Sun as a wicked Christian Secondly It is an High Calling Do you live High Scorne Basenesse Blush to appear in your Old Raggs To be seen Catering for your Lusts as you use to do Crown your selves with the Starres Cloath your selves with the Sunne Tread the Moon under your Feet Let the Gospel be your Crown Let Christ be your Cloathing Let the World be your Foot-stool Let Hidden Manna be your constant Dyet Keep Open House to all Comers Set your Spiritual Dainties before them Bid them feed Heartily and Welcome And for Discourse Tell them what great things God hath done for your Souls Thirdly It is an Heavenly Call Let your Conversations be in Heaven you have a good Correspondent there Maintain a constant Trade and Traffick thither Expect Returns thence Lay up your Treasure there where neither Moth nor Rust doth corrupt nor can Thieves break through and steal Be alwayes preparing for your passage thither Fourthly It is an Immutable Call Do not droop and hang your Heads for the Changes and Mutations there are in the World The Foundation of God standeth sure though the Foundation of States be Overturned Overturned Overturned the Lord knoweth who are his and will cause all things to Work together for their good But what if now there be many amongst you that are not Effectually Called In the third and last place I addresse my self to them Men and Brethren if you have any sense of the excellency of your Immortal Souls any Love to them sutable to that excellency any care and solicitousnesse sutable to that love Do not resist the Holy Ghost Make the best Use you can of the Means of Grace To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your hearts If he now Knock at the Door of your hearts and you will not Open you know not how soon you may come to Knock at the Door of his house and he will not Open. Diog. Laertius Thal. It is Reported that Thales one of the Grecian Sages being urged by his Mother to marry told her at first it was too soon and afterward when she urged him again he told her it was too late Effectual Vo●ation is our Espousal unto Christ all the time of our life God is urging this Match upon our Souls his Ministers are still wooing for Christ if now we say it is too soon for ought we know the very next Moment our Sunne may set and then God will say it is too late They that are not Contracted to Christ on Earth shall never be Married to him in Heaven THE TRUE BELIEVERS Union with CHRIST JESUS 1 COR. 6.17 But he that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit YOU have lately seen the Portraicture of our Lord Jesus drawn as it were at length Introduction both as to his Person and Offices together with the Means and Mann●r how he hath dearly purcha'st Redemption for us Method now requires that we lay before you how that Redemption and the benefits thereof come to be effectually applied unto us There we had the balme of Gilead and the plaister spread what remains but that it be now applied There we had a Bethesda an healing Fountain open'd but the Pool of life heals not unlesse the Patient be put in and the Angel of the Covenant Stir the waters Salvation for sinners cannot be obtain'd without a pu●chase this purchase is not significant without possession this possession not to be procured without application this application made only by union this union clearly held forth in the Text viz. He that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit Coherence In the close of this Chapter our Apostle seriously dehorts his Corinthians from that grosse that soul-polluting sinne of Fornication His Arguments which he lets flie as so many Barbed Arrows at the fifth Rib of Uncleanness are drawn 1. Partly from the end to which the body is appointed The body is for the Lord Ver. 13. The body was made for the God of holinesse therefore not to be prostituted to Lust and uncleannesse Ver. 19. The Holy Ghosts Temple ought not to be converted into a Stye for Satan That 's the first 2. Partly from that honour which by the Lord to our bodies is vouchsafed Know ye not that our bodies are the members of Christ Ver. 15. Believers bodies are the members of Christ therefore not to be debauch't so far as to be made the members of an Harlot This second Argument is back't and amplified by the words of the Text He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit q. d. There is a near and dear union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true believers much what resembling that which is betwixt the head and members Only here 's the difference that union is carnal this spiritual He that is joyn'd to the Lord is one Spirit i. e. he is spiritually one or one with the Lord in Spirit therefore ought not to be one with a strange woman in the flesh Having thus beaten up and l●vel'd our way to the Text I shall not stand to shred the words into any unnecessary parts but shall extract out of them such an Observation as I conceive strikes a full eighth to the minde of the Spirit of God in them And 't is plainly this Observation True Believers are closely united unto Christ Iesus The word which we render a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Agglutinatus joyned imports the nearest strictest closest union This truth I shall endeavour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cleanly to explain solidly to confirme practically to appy 1. For the Explication of this truth Explication It will be of consequence to lay before you Query 1 1. Whom we understand by true believers Sol. 1. Not such as are united unto Christ by a meer external prosession Sacramental admission or presumptuous perswasion Such as these are said to believe in Christ John 3.23 and yet they are such so hollow so false that Christ dares not trust them Ver. 24. These are dead Branches John 15.2 Saplesse stakes in the Churches hedge Reformad●'s and Hangby's only
thy safety and thou art s●cure because hood-wink't Thy security is not from want of danger but discerning Alas how dreadful is thy condition that liest every minute exposed to the cruel courtesie of every Divel Lust Temptation Judgment The sentence is past against thee in the next Scene expect the Executioner He that believeth not is condemned already Joh. 3.18 19. Poor soul a deluge of wrath is pouring down in full streams upon thee and thou art as yet shut out of the Ark. The Avenger of blood is at thy heels and thou not yet got into a City of Refuge A shower of brimstone falling on thee and thou hast no Zoar to flie unto The destroying Angel with his drawn Sword at the threshold and the lintel posts of thy door not sprinkled with blood But 2. If the winde do not le ts see whether the Sun cannot prevaile Poor self-destroying Caitiff Look yonder on that amiable Jesus Christ for a marriage between whom and thy precious soul I am now woing Do but observe his condescending willingnesse to be united to thee That great Ahashuerus courts his own captive Hester The Potter makes suit to his own clay Wooes thee though he wants thee not is infinitely happy without thee yet is not cannot be satisfied but with thee Heark how he commands intreats begs thee to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.20 Swears and pawns his life upon it that he desires not thy death Ezek. 33.11 Seals this his oath with his blood and if after all this thou art fond of thine own damnation and hadst rather be at an agreement with hell than with him see how the brinish tears trickle down his cheeks Luke 19.41 42. He weeps for thee that dost not wilt not weep for thy self Nay after all this obdurate obstinacy is resolved still to wait that he may be gracious Isa 30.18 Stands yet and knocks though his head be wet with rain and h●s locks with the dew of the night fain he would have thee open the door that he may come in and sup with thee and thou with him Rev. 3.20 Thus much for a whet to sinners my next address is 2. To Saints that are indeed united unto Christ Jesus Four words of advice I have for you Oh that they might stick as Goads as Nails fastened by the Masters of the Assemblies 1. Be very fearful of that which may in any sort weaken your union with Christ Beware of committing of approving thy self in the least compliance with any the least sin Say not as Lot of Zoar is it not a little one Sin approved is that very Dalilah that cuts off the locks and makes a Believer a prey to every Philistine Sin is that that separates between us and our God the great make-bate between heaven and earth Isa 59.2 'T is true a Saint shall never be left so to himself or sin as that sin shall bereave him of his Jewel his Grac● or God but may and doth often steal away the key of his Cabinet his evidence his assurance I opened to my Beloved but my Beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone Cant. 5.6 Sin is that that will soon grieve away that holy Spirit by which we are seal'd to the day of Redemption Ephes 4.30 2. Wis●ly improve this your union with Christ f Frustra est potentia c. 'T is not enough to have unlesse we use Christ Not enough to have a Well of salvation but we must draw water and drink it too Isa 12.3 if we intend a benefit by it 'T was the looking on the Brazen Serpent that cured those that were stung Not enough for Saints to have faith by which to live but they must live by the faith that they have Gal. 2.20 i. e. they must by faith draw continual supply of grace comfort strength from Christ as the branch does sap from the root as the members do influence from the head as the pipe does water from the fountain This your union then must be improved 1. Under the fear and sense of wrath When God begins to thunder and to write bitter things against thee Now now let faith recollect it self and say Why I am united unto Christ in whose wounds is room enough to hold and in whose heart readinesse enough to receive all that flie unto him Matth. 11.28 True indeed there is a terrible storme of justice gathering over my head ready to fall upon me but my Christ to whom I am united is my g Isa 32.1 2. shelter a flood of vengeance but I am got into the Ark. Destruction near but Christ is my Passeover my little Sanctuary Able willing to save to the uttermost with all kinds and degrees of salvation Hebr. 7.25 2. In solicitations unto sin when sin comes like a Potiphars wife and offers deadly poyson in a golden Cup. Now now let faith answer I would consent but that I am united unto Christ How can I do this great wickednesse and sin against my Christ Gen. 39.9 I could easily do this and this if I were not Alexander But now I cannot gratifie this lust but I must needs be disloyal to my Christ my Husband to whom I am married If I take the cold in my feet 't will immediately flye up into my head every sin is an affront to my Christ 3. In the use of all Ordinances let faith use them frequently reverently but not in the least rest on them or be satisfied with them any farther than they advance our union and communion with Christ Look on prayer without a Christ as meer words and sounds Sacraments without a Christ as empty Vials without a cordial Hearing without Christ as a Cabinet without a Jewel Be only so far satisfied with the Ordinances as thou findest them to be * Zech. 4.12 golden pipes conveying golden oyle into thy soul 3. Labour more and more for a frame of Spirit sutable to this union 1. An humble self-abasing frame Say Alas Lord what am I what my Fathers house that so great a Christ should so far stoop beneath himself as to be united to so poor a worme a clod of earth a masse of sin a nothing a lesse a worse than nothing Isa 40.15 17. That strength should be united unto weakness light unto darknesse life unto death heaven unto earth unto hell That incorruption should marry it self unto corruption Immortality to mortality The King of Kings the Lord of Lords to such a captive unpared unwash't unshaven captive as I Ezek. 16.4 5 6. 2. A trusting relying depending frame o● spirit for supply of all temporals h Qui misit filium immisit Spiritum promisit vultum quid tandem denegabit He that hath given thee his Sonne what can he deny Rom. 8.32 He that hath given thee an Ocean will not deny thee a Drop If thou hast the Kernel thou shalt not want the Shell if thy Father vouchsafe thee bread Manna the Ring a Kisse he cannot well deny thee husks If thou
evil is ever present but to do good he hath no minde so that he must needs cry out I have sinned and must return or else I perish now reproof finds ready acceptance from him the Ministers of God shall meet with no murmuring if they cry unto him Thou art the man for he is apt and ready to draw up a Bill of Inditement and read a large accusation against his own soul his iniquities now finds him out and followeth him every where that it becomes alive and appears against him with vigour not admitting the least of Apology but leading him to Condemnation and laying him open to the Curse due unto them that break the Law and therefore he now 3. Sentenceth himself as accursed of God and bound over to Divine fury the conscience of his guilt concludes him under the condemnation of the Law that he seeth cause to wonder at his very being concludeth himself unworthy the least of mercy and God to be just in the greatest of judgments which lie upon him and so proceedeth to judge himself and seal up his own soul under the curse standing under the continual expectation of Gods fiery indignation to be revealed from heaven determining it self a debtor to the Law and as such liable to justice and in it self unable to make the least satisfaction so that now the soul doth not only assent unto the Law as true in all its threats but app yeth them unto himself confessing unto him belongs shame and confusion hell and horrour wo and eternal misery that he knoweth not how to escape but if God proceed against him he is most miserable and undone forever and so is constrained with anguish of soul to cry out What shall I do to be saved This is then the first part of humiliation when the soul in this due order and judicial method of conviction is brought to a sight of sin to see God offended the Law violated the soul damned and destinated to everlast●ng woe if not Redeemed by the mercy of a God who hath established Jesus Christ his Son to be a Lord and Saviour to g ve Remissi●n and Repentance and so it proceeds to the sorrow for his sin as committed against God Second part of humiliation The second part then of penitential humiliation is contrition or sorrow for sin as committed against God Herein the soul is not only acquainted with but afflicted for its guilt seeeth not only that it is a sinner but sorroweth under and is ashamed of so sad and sinful an estate the stony heart is broken the Adamantine soul dissolved he rends not his garment but his heart and goeth out and weepeth bitterly He seeth with shame his many abominations and rendeth with soul-distressing sorrow and anguish the Curse of the Law that is due unto him and considereth with almost soul-distracting despaire the doleful estate into which his sin hath resolved him for he seeth God with whom he is not able to plead to be highly offended and therefore must with Job confesse that he is n t able to answer when God reproveth Job 40.4 5. he is vile and must lay his hand on his mouth though in his pride he hath once spoke yet now he hath no answer yea twice but he dare proceed no further Well seeing that all contending with God is but a da kening counsel by words wi hout knowledge and so he becomes submisse and silent under the saddest of affliction inflicted by God Psal 51.4 Lam 3.39 Crying out Against thee thee only have I sinned And why should a living man complaine for the punishment of his sin the soul is in it self confounded on the sense that God claps his hands against him for his sin therefore his hea●t cannot endure or his hands be strong Ezek. 22.13 14. Compunction of spir●t is the only condition of the convinced Penitent he seeth he is liable to the curse of the Law and his only outcry is What shall we do to be saved He being convinced that he hath crucified the Lord of life is pricked at the heart and in all approaches unto God he is ashamed and amazed bec●use a man o● polluted lips nay Isa 6.6 sadly seeing that sin overspreads him Isa 64 6. his very righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloth he like the poor Publican stands afar off and dares not so much as lift up his eyes to heaven and his only note and eccho is Lord be merciful to me a sinner Luke 18.13 he humbleth himself under the hand of God as having deserved the most heavy of plagues his haughty spirit is now laid low within him he is wholly resolved into sorrow even godly sorrow it is his grief that guilt is on his spirit but his greater grief that his sin is gone out against God a gracious and an holy God a just and an holy Law his sorrow is a sorrow of candor and ingenu ty not so much that he is liable to the lash and obnoxious to the curse as that a Father is offended the image of his God defaced his grand complaint is I have sinned against God his soul-affliction and heart-trembling is God is offended the frownes of God sink deeper and seize more sadly on his spirit than the sharpest of his sufferings his earnest cry is for the joy of Gods salvation he is not only afflicted with the terrours of the Law Psal 51 12. which he confesseth belongeth to him but is melted with merciful Ministrations of the Gospel of which he is so unworthy he cannot look unto Christ but with a spirit of mourning moved by the strength of the remedy to see the heighth of his malady and by the dolor of a Saviour Zech. 12.10 made sensible of the depth of his miserie by the mercy and love manifested to so great a sinner he is led to mourn over a gracious Saviour like Mary Magdalene he loveth much and manifesteth it by lamenting much Luke 7.47 because much is forgiven Thus then the believing sinner comes home by weeping-crosse findes conviction and contrition antecedaneous acts unto his conversion a sense of and sorrow for his sin precursive parts of his Repentance and God holds this method in g ving Repentance for sundry wife and gracious ends which he hath propounded to be effected As 1. To suit them for and engage them to set an esteem on Christ Jesus and the Remission of sin in him The whole need not the Physician but the sick and Christ came not to call the righteous to repentance but the sinner Mat. 9.12 The hunted beast fl es to his Den and the pursued Malefactor to the hornes of the Altar the chased man-killer to his City of Refuge so the humbled sinner unto Jesus Christ like Paul slaine with the sense of sin and constrained to cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin Rom 7.24 25. it soon seeth and saluteth Christ for
sin is forgotten and forgiven but the righteousnesse of the greatest Saints repenting and leaving his righteousness is forgotten but never forgiven Ezekiel 18.24 Use 5 Use 5. The last Use is an Exhortation and the whole Text is an Exhortation to follow holiness to pursue press after it and proceed in it with growth and perseverance He that is holy let him be holy still For motives and Arguments Rev. 22. let that of the Text never be forgotten without holinesse no man sh●ll see the Lord. When God comes to judge the world it will not be asked of what Church or Congregation thou wast how great a Professor but how holy thou hast been The way of holiness is the Kings high way to Heaven Read that notable place Isa 35.8 And a way there shall be a high way and it shall be called the way of holinesse the unclean shall not passe ever it the way-faring men though fools shall not erre therein There is much ado now about the way many say Which is the way some say this some that would you not mistake enquire for the old way the way of holiness and follow it and thou shalt not perish Some would go a new way some a shorter some an easier way The simplest Saint in the worlds sense a fool shall not erre therein The least dram of holiness is above a Talent of parts a drop of grace above a Sea of knowledge In knowledge we are said to be as Angels of God in holiness like God himself 2 Sam. 14.20 1 Pet. 1.15 so much as God is above an Angel so much is holiness above knowledge Look if thou canst make out the first change then thou needest not fear any other change if thou art partaker of the first Resurrection thou art secure against the Second Death thou hast crossed the Line another Stile and thou art at home I shall only name two properties of holinesse three Companions and four Opposites to holinesse and so conclude 1. It must be Conversation-holinesse 1 Pet. 1.15 2 Pet. 3.11 The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latine Conversatio come of a Verb that signifies to Turn q. d. which way soever you shall turn your self you shall find them holy at every turn holy in the Church and follow them home observe them alone or in company merry angry in Shops Closets Counsels Commerse they are holy still he is not Publicanus but Privatanus as one saith and true Holinesse is like that Famous Queen Elizabeth Semper eadem 2. Which is yet more it must be God-like-holinesse 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as G d is holy God is infinitely and essentially holy so we cannot be but God is imitable in his holiness As he is 1. Universal●y holy holy in all his wayes works commands precepts threats promises his love anger hatred all his Attributes all his Actions holy 2. He is Communicatively holy communicating holinesse to all his Angels and men 3. App obativ ly holy this he likes commends promotes in all discountenancing all unholinesse in persons actions things 4. Remuneratively holy rewarding and exalting holinesse punishing want of it so be you Universally holy in all your actions speeches writings Letters Counsels Designes in all Companies let your anger love zeal pity c. be all for holinesse seek to communicate and spread holinesse in your famil●es charge Societies let this be that which attracts the hearts draws your eyes to any person c. And to your power suppresse curb all unholinesse and promote exalt commend holinesse 2. There are three Companions of holinesse 1. In the Text Peace and holinesse he is most for holinesse who is most for peace in a right way seek the peace of the Land Isa 8.12 13. make no Conspiracies say no confederacy b●t sanctifie God in your hearts seek the peace of the Church by preserving the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace take heed of Schismes Rents Divisions Separations Pray that the Church may have rest Act. 9.31 that walking in the feare of the Lord and comforts of the holy Ghost Believers may be multiplied and edified 2. Holinesse and righteousnesse are oft matched together Luk. 1 75. 1 Thes 3.10 Prov. 11.1 Righteousnesse in Pactions Words Promises Oaths Bonds Righteousnesse in dealings Weights Measures a just Ballance Ephah Righteousnesse may possibly be without holinesse but holinesse without righteousnesse never 3. Holinesse and unblameablenesse 1 Thes 3.10 Ye are Witnesses and God also how holily justly and unblameably we have had our Conversation in the world 1 Thes 3.13 The Christian must be tryed by God and the world Unblameableness in speech behaviour dealings yea in habit gestures that w● may be without all offence towards God and towards man The Kings Daughters Garment must be of divers colours holily justly unblameably 3. The foure Opposites and enemies to holiness which we must avoid are 1. Filthinesse of the flesh sensual and bruitish lusts 2 Cor. 7.1 Fornication uncleanness drunkenness which defile the body do utterly destroy holiness and cannot consist with it therefore oft opposed 1 Thess 4.3 This is the Will of G●d even your sanctification that ye abstain from fornication c. God hath not called us to ancleannesse but holinesse ver 7. 2. Filthinesse of spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 which is as destructive to holiness as bruitish lusts Idolatry false Religions wantonness in Opinion errour corrupt Doctrine are as dangerous as Fornication By these we go a whoring from God and Truth The minde is to be kept chast and pure as well as the body errour is not so harmless a thing as many dream 3. Over-reaching men by craft fraud power policy and making use of such meanes Arguments devices stratagems as corrupt reason and carnal Counsel not Gods providence or approbation doth furnish us withal and put us upon 1 Thess 4.6 7. That no man go beyond or over-reach his Brother in any matter for God hath not call'd us to uncleannesse but holinesse and God is an avenger of all such The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that no man over-top over-reach go beyond his Brother not in hol●ness would we did seek herein to go beyond each other but in craft and policy to undermine or over-reach them as Simeon and Levi over-reached the over credulous Shechemites pretending conscience and harbouring bloody intentions in their hearts God is an Avenger of such There is a direful threat added of Divine Vengeance this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is but once more used in the New Testament Rom. 13.4 then applyed to the Magistrate he is a revenger of wrath to him that doth evil he must see execution done So in this case God is the revenger himself and he will be this mans Executioner 4. The fourth opposite to holiness is an ill kind of holiness a supercilious censorious disdainful and distance-keeping holiness which like the Pharisee Luke 18. exalts it self and Canonizeth himself and his own party
and unsainteth all others Isa 65.5 Which say Stand by thy self come not near me for I am holier than thou these are a smoak in my nose and a fire that burneth all the day saith the Lord. This is the worst spot in the beauty of holiness a spice of that pride that was in Lucifer and his fellow-aspiring Angels that made the first Schisme and separation in the purest Church even in heaven it self among the Angels that were wholly perfect Take heed of this as of the very pest of the Church and the bane of all Religion which is best preserved in unity and humility I shall shut up all with a wish and that an hearty Prayer alluding to what I said at first Oh that all our garments our Profession might be adorned with these Bells and Pomgranates peace and holinesse That as we call on God who is called holy holy holy Rev. 4.6 and on Christ who is called King of Saints Rev. 15.6 and as we profess the Gospel which is a Rule of holiness and are members of the Church which is called a Kingdom of Saints an holy Nation 1 Pet. 2.9 and as we look to be partakers of that Kingdom wherein dwells righteousness and holiness that according to that promise Thy people shall be all righteous Isa 60.21 that holiness to the Lord may be engraven upon all our hearts as with the engraving of a Signet the Spirit of God and holiness to the Lord upon all our fore-heads as to our conversation that as we have had a year which we call Annum Restitutae Libertatis we might have a year Restitutae Sanctitatis this we might safely call Annum Salutis or Annum Domini the year of our Lord. That our Officers might be all peace our Governors holiness Isa 60.17 that our Ministers might be cloathed with righteousness and our Church-Members with holiness that all of different perswasions might not contend but labour for peace and holiness Herein let us agree and all is agreed that the bells of our Horses and Bridles of our Horsemen Commanders and common Souldiers might be holiness to the Lord Zach. 14.20 21. that there might not be a Canaanite or hypocrite in the house of the Lord then might our Land Church Parliament Army City Min●stry be called Jehovah Shammah the Lord is there Ezek. 48.35 yea then would this holiness settle us in peace here and bring us to see the Lord where peace and holiness shall never be separated Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly Amen OF THE Resurrection ACTS 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing unreasonable with you that God should raise the dead THese words are part of St. Pauls Apologie for himself before King Agrippa against the unjust accusations of his implacable enemies wherein 1. He demonstrates the innocency of his life 2. The truth of his Doctrine and sheweth That there was nothing either in his life or doctrine for which he could justly be accused The Doctrine he taught did consist of divers particulars enumerated in this Chapter one of which and that not the least was That there should a day come in which there would be a Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Now that this Doctrine was not liable to any just exception he proves three manner of ways 1. Because it was no other Doctrine but such which God himself had taught It had a Divine stamp upon it as it is Verse 6. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers 2. Because it was that which all the godly Israelites instantly serving God day and night did hope for and wait and expect in due time to be fulfilled as it is Verse 7. Unto which promise our twelve tribes hope to come for which hope sake King Agrippa I am accused of the Jews and therefore it is called The hope of Israel Acts 28.20 for the hope of Israel I am bound with this chain 3. Because it was a Doctrine which God was able to bring to pass This is set down in the words of the Text Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead The emphasis lieth in the words with you Why should you O King Agrippa who art a Jew and believest in the God of Israel and that he made the world out of nothing think it incredible for this God to raise the dead indeed it may seem incredible and impossible to the Heathen Philosophers who are guided onely by Natures Light but as for you who believe all things which are written in the Law and Prophets why should you think it either impossible or incredible that God should raise the dead This interrogation is an Emphatical Negation and it is put down by way of Question Vt oratio sit penetrantior that so the Argument might take the deeper impression and the meaning is that it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a doctrine exceeding the bounds of faith or contrary to right reason that God should raise the dead The Observation which ariseth naturally out of the words is Doctrine That the Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust is neither incredible nor impossible neither against right reason nor true faith Though it be above reason yet it is not against reason nor against the Jewish or the Christian Faith For the explication of this Doctrine I will briefly speak to six particulars 1. What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead 2. Who are the dead that shall be raised 3. The absolute necessity of believing this Doctrine and believing it firmly and undoubtedly 4. The possibility and credibility of it 5. The certainty and infallibility of it 6. The manner how the dead shall rise What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead The first Particular Answ For answer to this you must first know what there is of man that dyes when any man dyeth Man consisteth of soul and body and when he dyeth his soul doth not dye it is the body onely that dyeth Death is not an utter extinction and annihilation of the man as some wickedly teach but onely a separation of the Soul from the Body It is called a departure Luk. 2.25 2 Tim. 4.6 And an uncloathing 2 Cor. 5.4 and a Departure of the Soul out of the body either to Heaven or Hell When Stephen was stoned his soul was not stoned for while he was stoning he prayed Lord Jesus receive my spirit When Christ was crucified his soul was not crucified for while he was crucifying he said Fa●her into thy hands I commend my Spirit The Wiseman saith expresly That when a man dyeth His body returns to the earth from whence it came Eccles 12.7 but his spirit returns to God who gave it And our Lord Christ commands us Not to fear them that kill the body 1 Luk. 2.4 and after
Gospel-knowledge into the dark world and an heart full of love to that truth which he holds forth to others that what he publisheth with his lips he may be ready to witnesse with his life and to seale up the testimony of Jesus with his dearest blood Both these our Apostle in this Chapter after a passionate salutation in the five first verses commendeth to Timothy scil 1. To look to his light by stirring up the gift of God that was in him Timothy must not suffer his gifts to lie sleeping under the ashes but must blow them up as the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ignem sopitum suscitare word signifieth into a fire by study prayer and execrise 2. He calls upon Timothy to look to his zeal that that may not be extinguished but that his heat may be equal with his light And this he doth two ways 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively Ver. 8. 1. Negatively Be not ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor of me his Prisoner Ministers of the Gospel must neither be a shame to the Gospel nor ashamed of the Gospel no although attended with disgrace and persecution from the reprobate world And what herein he commends to Timothy he first practised in his own person ver 11. Though he was a prisoner for the Gospel yet he was not ashamed of the Gospel I suffer c. neverthelesse I am not ashamed Rom. 1.16 2. Affirmatively The Apostle exhorteth Timothy to prepare for persecution Ver. 8. Be thou partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel The Ministers of the Gospel should be so farre from being scandalized at the sufferings of their leaders that they should be always disciplining themselves for the same warfare to preach the Cross of Christ and to be ready also to bear the Crosse makes a compleat Minister of the Gospel This the Apostle urgeth upon a three-fold account 1. A good Cause 2. Good Company 3. A good Captain Timothy and other Evangelists they have no reason to be afraid or asham'd of their sufferings for 1. They have a good Cause ver 12. For the which cause I suffer what Cause is that why the Gospel ver 10. And this he presents under a twofold commendation 1. The glory of the Gospel 2. The manifestation of that glory Ephes 3.8 1. The glory of the Gospel As having wrapt up in it the unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ grace and glory holinesse and happinesse He hath saved us and called us with an holy calling Believers have begun their everlasting salvation on this side heaven 2. The manifestation of that glory It was given from eternity but it is revealed by the appearance of our Lord and Saviour in the flesh it lay hid in Gods purpose but it is brought to light in the Gospel ver 9.10 Such a glorious gift and so gloriously unveiled is worth not only our sweat but our blood not pains only but persecution yea to suffer in such a cause is not more our duty than it is our dignity 2. They have good company Saint Paul himself is in the Van of them who though an Apostle by extraordinary missi n and commission ver 11. yet was not only a Preacher of the Gospel but a Sufferer for the Gospel ver 12. For which cause I suffer these things what things scil Imprisonment and affliction ver 8. A sufferer and yet not ashamed of his sufferings Neverthelesse I am not ashamed They may be ashamed of their sufferings Causa facit Martyrem non poena 1 Pet. 4.15 that suffer for sinne but sufferings for Christ and his Gospel are matter of triumph and rejoycing 1 Pet. 4.13 16. Here is encouragement for Gospel-sufferers And Thirdly They have a good Captain Iesus Christ the Captain of our salvation Who that he might intender his own heart towards his suffering-followers by his own experience was made perfect through sufferings and accordingly he is very tender of and faithful to all that endure persecution for his sake Heb. 2.10 this was a ground of the Apostle his confidence I am not ashamed for I know whom I have believed I know him by report and I know him by experience I know his faithfulnesse and I know his All-sufficiency I have deposited my liberty my life my body my soul my all in his custody and I am perswaded as he is able so he is willing to keep all safe to his glorious appearance I may be a loser for Christ I shall be no loser by him whatever I lay down now I shall take up again one day with the advantage of immortality he will keep the trust I have committed to him it is but equity that I should keep the trust which he hath committed to me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 14. 1 Tim. 1.11 even the glorious Gospel of the blessed God committed to my trust committed to me upon those very termes that I should not only publish it with my lips but attest it with my blood Thus in his own person the Apostle sets Timothy and his Successors a Copy and an Encouragement which he windeth up in the words of my Text the sum of the Precahers duty Hold fast the forme of sound words c. q. d. The premises considered let neither pleasures nor persecution the love of life nor the fear of death take thee off from a faithful and vigorous discharge of thy Ministerial office but whatsoever it may cost thee Hold fast the form of sound doctrine c. Briefly for the opening of the words The form 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek it signifies a Module or Platforme a Frame of words or things methodically disposed as Printers set and compose their Characters or Letters in a Table Types Words By words we are to understand doctrine evangelical truths the principles of Christian Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sound And they are called Sound words either from the intrinsecal nature when they are purely taught and delivered Evangelical truths without mixture the principles of Religion in their native purity and simplicity Truth and nothing else but truth Or else sound words from their effect and operation because they be of an healing vertue and influence like the waters in Ezekiels vision that issued out from under the * Ezek. 47.1 threshold of the Sanctuary which * Ver. 9. healed wherever they came Which thou hast heard of me It may be understood of the whole Platforme of Gospel-doctrine in general Or Else very probably of a Collection of some principal points of Religion which the Apostle had methodically digested and either preached in Timothy his hearing or drawn up in writing and committed to Timothy as a trust and treasure not only for his own help and direction in preaching but to transmit over to others for the use and benefit of succeeding generations in the Church of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 6.20 so called
beauty thus by the Sun-beams we may clearly see a Divine providence Besides when it retires from us and a Curtain of darknesse is drawn over the world that proves the wisdome and goodnesse of God the Psalmist attributes the disposition of day and night to God the day is thine Psal 64.16 and with an Emphasis the night also is thine notwithstanding its sad appearance yet it is very beneficial its darknesse enlightens us its obscurity makes v sible the Ornaments of heaven the stars their aspects their dispositions their motions which were hid in the day it unbends the world and gives a short and necessary truce to its labours it recreates the wasted spirits 't is the Nurse of nature which poures into its bosome those sweet and cooling dews which beget new life and vigour the divine providence is also eminent in the manner of this dispensation for the Sun finishing its course about the world in the space of twenty four houres I speak of that part of the world which is inhabited causes that succession of day and night which doth most f●tly temper our labour and repose whereas if the day and night should each of them continue six entire months this division would be very inconvenient for us We may farther observe a wise providence in the diversity it hath used to lengthen and shorten the dayes and nights for the advantages of several Countryes for that part of the earth which is under the line being scorcht with immoderate heat wants a continual supply of moysture therefore the longest and coolest nights are there but it is otherwise in the Northern parts for the beams of the Sun being very feeble there providence hath so disposed that the dayes are extream long that so by the continuance of the heat the fruits may come to maturity and perfection And as the difference of day and night so the diversity of seasons proceeds from the motion of the Sun which is a work of providence no lesse admirable than the former as the motion of the Sun from East to West Psal 74.17 Thou hast made the Summer and Winter makes the day and night so from North to South causes Summer and Winter by these the world is preserved Summer crownes the earth with flowers and fruits and produces an abundant variety for the support of living creatures the Winter which seems to be the death of nature robbing the earth of its heat and life contributes also to the Universal good it prepares the earth by its cold and moysture for the returning Sun in the succession of these seasons the Divine Providence is very conspicuous for since the world cannot passe from one extream to another without a dangerous alteration to prevent this inconvenience the Sun makes its approaches gradually to us the Spring is interposed between the Winter and Summer that by its gentle and temperate heat it may dispose our bodyes for the excesse of Summer and in the same manner the Sun retires by degrees from us that so in the Autumne we may be prepared for the asperities of the Winter And to close this part of the Argument the invariable succession of times and seasons is a token of the same providence the Sun which runs ten or twelve millions of Leagues every day never failes one minute of its appointed time nor turns an inch out of its constant course but inviolably observes the same order so that there is nothing more regular equal and constant than the succession of day and night to ascribe this to hazzard is the most absurd extravagance for in the effects of chance there is neither order nor constancy as we may see in the casting of a Dy which hardly falls twice together upon the same square it is necessary therefore to conclude that an intelligent principle guides the revolutions of the Sun thus uniformly for the advantage of the world Psalme 19.1 2 3. The heavens declare the glory of God the firmament shews his handy work Day unto day utters speech and night unto night addes knowledge There is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard what is that language and voice but a Universal Sermon to the world of Gods being and excellency Let us now consider that vast extent of aire which fills the space between heaven and earth this is of so pure a nature that in a moment it transmits the influences of heaven to the lower world this serves as an arsenal for thunders and lightenings whereby God summons the world to dread and reverence this is a treasury for the clouds which dissolving in gentle showers refresh the earth and call forth its seeds into flourishing and fruitfulnesse this fannes the earth with the wings of the winde allaying those intemperate heats which would be injurious to its inhabitants this is the Region for the Birds wherein they passe as so many self-moving Engines praising the Creatour this serves for the breath and life of man from hence we may conclude the wisdome of a God who so governes the several Regions of the aire as by them to convey blessings for the necessities of man and to send judgements for the awakening the secure to seek after God Let us now descend to the Sea and see how that informes us there is a God 't is a Truth evident to reason that the proper place of the waters is next to the aire above the earth for as it is of a middle nature between these two Elements being purer and lighter than the earth but more grosse and heavy than the aire so it challenges a situation between them that as the aire on all parts encompasses the Sea in like manner the Sea should overspread the earth and cover the whole surface of it that its natural inclination is such appears by its continual flowings who then hath arrested its course and stopt its violence who hath confined it to such a place and compass that it may not be destructive to the world certainly no other but the great God who first gave it being and motion besides that which renders the power of God more conspicuous is that by so weak a bridle as the sand its rage is bounded when it threatens the shore with its insulting waves you would fear lest it should swallow up all but it no sooner touches the sand but its fury is turned into froth it retires and by a kind of submission respects those bounds which are fixt by the Creatour Now that the fiercest Element should be represt by the feeblest thing in the world and that which breaks the Rocks be limited by the sand is a wonder of providence therefore the Lord alledges this as an effect only proceeding from his power and challenges an incommunicable glory upon this account Job 38.8 9 10 11 verses Who shut up the Sea with doores when it brake forth as if it had issued out of the womb when I made the cloud the garment thereof and thick darknesse a
swadling band for it and brake up for it my decreed place and set barres and doores and said Hitherto shalt thou come and no farther and here shall thy proud waves be stayed Besides its extent is no lesse worthy of admiration it washes the four parts of the world and so it is the bond of the Universe by which the most distant Nations are united the medium of commerce and Trade which brings great delight and advantage to men by it the commodities which are peculiar to several Countryes are made common to all thus may we trace the evident prints of a Deity in the very waters if we change the scene and view the earth we may perceive clear signes of a Divine providence If we consider its position it hangs in the midst of the ayre that it may be a convenient habitation for us or its stability the ayre its self is not able to beare up a feather yet the earth remains in it fixt and unshaken notwithstanding the stormes and tempests which continually beat upon it from hence we must conclude an invisible but powerful hand supports it 't is reckoned amongst the Magnalia Dei Job 38.4 6. Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth whereupon a e the foundations thereof fastened or who hath laid the Corner-stone thereof Moreover the various disposition of its parts the Mountaines the Valleys I might instance in its productions in plants their roots whereby they draw their nourishment the firmness of their stalk by which they are defended against the violence of winds the expansion of their leaves by which they receive the dew of heaven or in fruits which are produc'd answerable to the difference of seasons those which are cold and moyst to allay our heat in summer and those which are of a firmer consistency in Autumn that they may serve the delight and use of man in winter from whence the notice of a Deity is afforded to us the Rivers which are as the veins which convey nourishment to this great body all intimate there is a God Thus if we behold the excellent order of the parts of the World their mutual correspondence for their several ends the heavens give light the aire breath the earth habitation the sea commerce The World is stiled by Sa in Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the School of rational spirits wherein they are instructed in the knowledge of God we must break forth There is a God and this is his work but how few are there who read the Name of God which is indelibly printed on the frame of nature who see the excellency of the cause in the effect who contemplate all things in God and God in all things from our first infancy we are accustomed to these objects and the edge of our apprehensions is rebated the commonnesse of things takes away our esteem we rather admire things new than great the effects of Art than the marvails of nature as the continual view of a glittering object dazles the eye that it cannot see so by the daily presence of these wonders our minds are blunted we lose the quicknesse and freshnesse of our spirits I shall finish this Argument by reflecting upon man who is a short abridgement of the world the composure of his body the powers of his soul convince us of a wise Providence who but a God could unite such different substances an immaterial spirit with an earthly body who could distinguish so many parts assigne to them their forme scituation temperature with an absolute fitnesse for those uses to which they serve we must joyne with the Apostle Acts 17.27 28. The meer consideration of the least part of mans body opened the eyes of one of the most learned Atheists in the World Galen l. 3. de usu partium describing the use of our parts saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is not farre from every one of us we may finde him in the activity of our hands in the beauty of our eyes in the vivacity of all our senses in him we live move and have our being And to look inward who hath endued the soul with such distinct and admirable faculties The understanding which exercises an Empire on all things which compounds the most disagreeing and divides the most intimate which by the lowest effects ascends to the highest cause the Will which with such vigor pursues that which we esteem amiable and good and recoiles with aversation from that we judge pernicious and evil the Memory which preserves fresh and lively the pictures of those things which are committed to its charge Certainly after this consideration we must naturally assent there is a God who made us and not we our selves 3. We may argue there is a God from the operations of natural Agents for those ends which are not perceived by them Although in men there is a rational principle which discovers the goodnesse of the end and selects such means as are proper for the accomplishing of it and so their actions are the product of their judgement yet 't is impossible to conceive that the inferiour rank of creatures whose motions flow from meer instinct can guide themselves by any Counsel of their own Now all their operations are directed to their proper ends without any variation Si quid est quod efficiat ea quae homo licet ratione sit praeditus facere non posset id profecto est majus sortius sapientus homine Chrysippus in that order as exceeds the invention of man It is admirable to consider how brute creatures act for their preservation they are no sooner in the world but they presently flie from their enemies and make use either of that force or craft which they have to defend themselves they know that nourishment which is convenient to preserve them and those remedies which may restore them By what Counsel doth the Swallow observe the season of its passage in the beginning of Autumn it takes its flight to a warmer Climate and returns with the Sun again in the Spring By what fore-sight doth the Ant prepare its store in Summer to prevent that ensuing want which otherwise it would suffer in Winter Doth the Sun deliberate whether it shall rise and by diffusing its beams become the publick light of the World or doth a Fountain advise whether it shall stream forth in a fluent and liberal manner even the actions of men which are purely natural are done without their direction Nay natural bodies will part with their own property and crosse their own inclination for an universal good the aire a light and nimble body that does naturally ascend yet for a general good to prevent a breach in nature it will descend And those things which have a natural opposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristotel l. de mundo yet constantly accord and joyne together to preserve the whole certainly then a Divine Spirit guides and directs them If we see an Army
Magistrates themselves under terrors for their vitious actions and those who are not subject to any humane Tribunal why do they with such fury reflect upon themselves for their crimes certainly it proceeds from hence that natural conscience dreads the supreme Judge seeing nothing is able to shelter them from his Tribunal nor restrain his power when he will take vengeance on them In vain doth the Atheist reply that these fears are the product of a common false opinion which is conveyed by education to wit that there is a God who is provoked by sin and that ignorance increases these terrors as little children fear bug-bears in the dark for 't is certain First That no Art or endeavour can totally free a sinner from these terrors whereas groundlesse fears are presently scattered by reason and this argues there is an inviolable principle in nature which respects a God We know there is nothing more disturbs the spirit than fear and every person is an enemy to what torments him hence the sinner labours to conquer conscience that he may freely indulge himself in sin but this is impossible for conscience is so essential that a soul cannot be a soul without it and so inseparable that death it self cannot divorce a man from it perire nec sine te nec tecum potest it can neither dye with the sinner nor without him 't is true the workings of it are unequal as the pulse doth not always beat alike but sometimes more violent and sometimes more remisse so this spiritual pulse is not always in equal motion sometimes it beats sometimes it intermits but returns again those scorners who run a course of sin without controule and seem to despise hell as a meer notion yet they are not free from inward gripes conscience arrests them in the Name of that God whom they deny although they are without faith they are not without fear desperate sinners ruffle it for a time and drench themselves in sensual pleasures to quench that scintilla animae that vital spark which shines and scorches at once but all in vain for it happens to them as to Malefactors who for a time drown the apprehension of their danger in a Sea of drink but when the fumes are evaporated and they seriously ponder their offences they tremble in the fearful expectation of the Axe or Gallows A sinner may conceal his fears from others and appear jolly and brave when conscience stings him with secret remorse as a Clock seems to be calme and still to the eye but 't is full of secret motions within under a merry countenance there may be a bleeding heart To conclude so far is a sinner from being able to quench these terrors that many times the more they are opposed the more powerful they grow thus many who for a time breathed nothing but defiances to conscience and committed sin with greedinesse yet conscience hath with such fury returned upon them that they have run from profanesse to superstition as fugitive slaves are forc't back to their Masters and serve in the vilest Drudgery fearing severe punishments 2. The best men who enjoy a sweet calmness and are not disquieted with the terrors of conscience they abhor that Doctrine which discards the fear of a Deity so that those who are most freed from these terrors believe them to be radicated in nature and grounded upon truth and those who esteem them vain are most furiously tormented with them in which respect the Divine goodnesse shines forth in the greatest lustre towards those who love and fear him and his justice against those who contemn it thus Caligula who was the boldest Atheist in the world yet when it thundred ran with trembling under his bed as if God from heaven had summoned him to judgement whereas Socrates who was the Heathens Martyr died with the same tranquility of spirit wherein he lived 3. 'T is worthy of our serious thoughts that these terrors of conscience are most dreadful when the sinner approaches death the sense of guilt which before was smothered is then revived conscience like a sleeping Lyon awakes and destroys at once experience t●lls us many sinners who have lived in a sencelesse dye in a desperate manner and from whence doth this proceed but from the presages of a future judgement conscience anticipates the vengeance of God then the Alarums are encreast and the storme is more violent for the soul being sensible of its immortal nature extends its fears to Eternity and trembles at him who lives for ever and can punish for ever Argument 3. The consent of Nations agrees in the belief of a God although the Gentiles did grossely mistake the life and essence of the infinite Deity imagining him to be of some humane forme and weaknesse and in this respect were without God in the world yet they conspired in the acknowledgement of a Divinity the multiplicity of their false gods strengthens the Argument it being clear they would rather have any God then none and this belief cannot be an imposture because 't is First Universal What Nation so barbarous as not to worship a God certainly that which is common to all men hath a foundation in nature Secondly 't is perpetual falshoods are not long lived but the Character and Impression of God is indelibly sealed upon the spirits of men Thus we see the Universal Reason of the World to Determine there is a God 2. The Scripture proves there is a God to faith Psal 19. David speaking of the double manifestation of God by his Works and his Word appropriates a converting power to the Word this exceeds the discovery of God in the Creation in respect of its clearnesse and efficacy Psalme 138.2 Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name There are more apparent Characters of Gods Attributes and Perfections in the Scripture than in the Book of Nature in the Creation there is Vestigium the foot-print of God but in the Word there is Imago his Image and lively Representation As the Angels when they assumed visible bodies and appeared unto men yet by the brightnesse and Majesty of their appearance discovered themselves to be above an humane Original so the Scriptures although conveyed to us in ordinary language and words yet by their authority and sanctity evidence their Divine descent and that there is a holy and righteous God from whom they proceed There is a vehement Objection urged by Atheists in all Ages against a Divine Providence and consequently against Gods Being We may hear the Tragedian thus resenting it Sed cur idem Qui tanta regis sub quo vasti Pondera mundi librata suos Ducunt orbes hominum nimium Securus ades non sollicitus Prodesse bonis nocuisse malis Senec. Hippol. The afflicted state of innocency and goodnesse and the prosperous state of oppression and wickednesse Honest men suffer whilest the unrighteous and profane swim in the Streames of Prosperity hence they concluded fortuna certa aut incerta
called another Comforter now he who is distinguished from the Father and the Sonne in the manner as to be called another comforter is either distinguished in regard of his essence or in regard of his personal subsistence not in regard of his essence for then he would be another God and therefore he is another in regard of his personal subsistence 4. You have a clear proof for this doctrine in the words of the Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one and to that purpose consider 1. You have mention here of three witnesses now three witnesses are three persons 2. The Word and holy Ghost are conjoyned in their Testimony with the Father which is not competible to any creature and lest we should doubt of this it is expresly said even by Saint John himself to be the witnesse of God Verse 9. If we receive the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater for this is the witnesse of God which he hath testified of his Son and concerning Christ it is said that he is the true God ver 20. This is the true God and eternal life let the Socinian shew me where any creature is called the true God Concerning the Spirit also in this Chapter it is said ver 6. that he is truth it self It is the Spirit that beareth Witnesse because the Spirit is Truth 3. If there be three witnesses whereof every one of them is God the one not the other and yet not many Gods but one true God the point is clear there are three distinct persons subsisting in one divine essence or which is all one there are three persons and one God 3. I am to speak something to the distinction of these three persons though they cannot be divided yet they may be they are distinguished many things in nature may be distinguished which cannot be divided for instance the cold and the moisture which is in the water may be distinguished but they cannot be divided Now that those three persons are distinguished appears 1. By what hath been already said the Father is not the Son nor the Son the Father nor the holy Ghost the Father or the Son 2. By the words of the Text here are three heavenly witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Son of God namely the Father the Word and the holy Ghost now one and the same person although he hath a thousand names cannot passe for three witnesses upon any faire or reasonable account whatever you may be sure that God reckons right and he sayes John 8.13 Father Sonne and holy Ghost to be three witnesses there are three that bear record in heaven so in Saint Johns Gospel the Pharisees charge our Saviour that he bare record of himself say they thou bearest record of thy self thy record is not true now mark what Christ replies ver 17 18. It is written in your Law Ver. 17 18. that the Testimony of two men is true I am one that bear witnesse of my self and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me where you have our Saviour citing the Law concerning the validity of a Testimony given by two witnesses and then he reckons his Father for one witnesse and himself for another 4. I shall speak a few words to the order of these divine persons in order of subsistence the Father is before the Son and the Son before the holy Ghost The Father the first person in the Trinity hath foundation of personal subsistence in himself the Sonne the second person the foundation of personal subsistence from the Father the holy Ghost the third person hath foundation of personal subsistence from the Father and the Sonne Now although one person be before the other in regard of order yet they are all equal in regard of time Majesty glory essence this I conceive to be the reason why in the Scripture sometimes you have the Sonne placed before the Father as 2 Cor. 13.14 2 Cor. 13.14 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Gal. 1.1 So Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by men but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead Sometimes the holy Ghost is placed before the Father as Eph. 2.18 Through him we have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father Eph. 2.18 Rev. 1.4 5. Sometimes before Jesus Christ Rev. 1.4 5. John to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before the Throne by the seven Spirits there is meant the holy Ghost and from Jesus Christ who is the faithful witnesse c. The consideration of this caused that rule amongst our Divines ab ordine verborum nulla est argumentatio there is no argument to be urged from the order of words Now this shews that although one person be before another in regard of relation and order of subsistence yet all are equal one with another in regard of essence And therefore beware lest you derogate the least jota or tittle of glory or Majesty from any of the three persons As in nature a small matter as to the body may be a great matter as to the beauty of the body cut but the haire from the eye brow how disfigured will all the face look If you take away never so little of that honour and glory which is due to any of the divine Persons you do what in you lies to blot to stain to disfigure the faire and beautiful face of the blessed Trinity 5. I am to enquire whether the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature Resol There are two things in the general that I would say in answer to this question 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it 2. That the light of nature after divine Revelation cannot oppose it 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it and for that purpose take into your thoughts these following considerations 1. If that which concerns the worship of God cannot be found out by the light of nature much lesse that which concerns Gods nature essence or subsistence but the Antecedent is certainly true For 1. As for the part of the worship and service of God which is instituted and ceremonial it is impossible that it should be found out by the light of nature for instance what man could divine that the Tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise How comes the Church to understand what creatures were clean what were unclean that the Priesthood was setled in the Tribe of Levi and not in the Tribe of Simeon or the Trible of Judah certainly these lessons were not learned by the candle-light of nature 2.
may not believe a doctrine thus holy a doctrine thus practised by him that published it and confirmed by miracles then a man is under an impossibility of ever being satisfied from any thing from God for what shall satisfie If God speak to us from heaven we should as much suspect that as if an Angel come from heaven we should suspect him but since we believe and know there 's a God and he is just and merciful it 's impossible the divine goodnesse should consent to such Impostors But you will say what are these miracles to us I say therefore thirdly they are a sufficient reason to engage us to believe the divinity of this holy doctrine though we never saw them You do not see Christ your selves nor did you see him dye nor work miracles but would you have had Christ live alwayes among you If you would he must then never dye and the great comfort of our life depended upon his death he dyed is risen and gone to heaven would you have him come down from heaven and dye that you might see it and would you have him dye quite thorow the world at the same time which must be if you would imagine we must see every thing our selves it 's a great piece of madnesse to believe nothing but what we see our selves Austin was troubled himself in this case Lib. 6. Con●es cap. 4. he had been cheated before and now he was resolved he would believe nothing but what should be plain to him at length says he O my God thou shewed'st me how many things I believed which I saw not I considered I believed I had a father and mother and such persons were my Parents how can I tell that a man may say it may be he was drop't from heaven and God made him in an extraordinary way so if I never were out of this Town it 's madnesse for a man to say there 's never another Town in England or to say there is no Sea because I saw it not Nay if a man come and tell me there 's this doctrine that teaches me all self-denial mortification weanednesse from the world and say this is of God and when he hath done ventures life children family have we not reason to believe it If you will not believe 't is either because the first persons were deceived themselves or else because you think they would deceive you now deceiv'd themselves they could not be when they saw so many miracles done and deceive you that they would not neither for would any good man to deceive an other undo himself they dyed for it and writ this book and sealed it with their blood and therefore there can be no reason to doubt of it they were witnesses and delivered what they saw Luke 1.2 7. Prop. As we have rational evidence the Scripture is the Word of God so we have evidence also from inward sensation born we are with principles of conscience and the truths in this book are so homogeneal to man that he shall finde something within himself to give testimony for it 2 Cor. 4.2 By manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God Joh. 5.44 Men believe not because they receive honour one of another and in Scripture they that would not believe are they that would not repent Mat. 21.28 to the 33. men that practice drunkennesse whoredome sensuality covetousnesse pride and know that these things are sinnes they are the great unbelievers because they are loth to leave their sins offer the greatest reason in the world for a thing if it be against a mans interest how hard and almost next to impossible is it to convince him A man would believe that the Romans were in England that reads the Roman History but if he shall finde the coyne of the Roman Emperour he will much more believe it Do a bad action O the secret terrours that a man finds within him as if he felt something of hell already Do a good action and the secret sweetnesse joy and peace that attends it that he cannot but say I believe it for I feel some degrees of it already 1 Cor. 14.24 25 c. he speaks to the inward principles of his conscience The reason men believe not the Scriptures is not because 't is unreasonable to believe them but because they have a desperate love to sinne and they are loth to entertain that that should check their interest There is in every life that certain sagacity by which a man apprehends what is natural to that life what nourishes that life a man that lives according to the Law written in his heart finds there 's that in this Revelation that feeds nourishes and encourages it so that this man finds experimental satisfaction in it Doth the Word of God tell me the wayes of God are pleasant I thought they were hard and difficult now I finde the yoke of Christ is easie and that no happinesse like this and no blessednesse like that I thought if I did not comply with such things I could never be blessed now I finde I need nothing to make me happy but my God he finds and feels these things are certan true and real Thus I have done with the demonstration You will easily observe I have neither taken notice of what the Papists tell us we must believe the Scripture because the Church saith it we cannot tell what the Church is till the Scripture had told us And though I have not mentioned the testimony of the Spirit yet I suppose I have spoke to the thing for I cannot understand what should be meant by the testimony of the Spirit except we either mean miracles wrought which in Scripture is called the testimony of the Spirit of Christ Acts 15.8 9. the giving of the Holy Ghost it 's the giving of those extraordinary miracles that fell down among them so Heb. 2.4 Acts 5.32 I say if by the testimony of the Spirit you mean this then you can mean nothing else but the Spirit assisting enabling helping our faculties to see the strength of that Argument God hath given us and by experience to feel what may be felt which comes under the head of sensation APPLICATION First then study the Scripture If a famous man do but write an excellent book O how do we long to see it or suppose I could tell you that there 's in France or Germany a book that God himself writ I am confident men may draw all the money out of your purses to get that book you have it by you O that you would study it Wnen the Eunuch was riding in his Chariot he was studying the Prophet Isaiah he was not angry when Philip came and as one would have thought asked him a bold question Vnderstandest thou what thou readest he was glad of it Acts 8 27 28. one great end of the year of release was that the Law might be read Deut 31.9 it 's the wisdome of
Parents be leprous or infected with some other disease not to be named they entail their malady as well as their nature upon their unhappy off-spring Nothing can exceed the vertue of its cause which is the ground of our Saviours assertion John 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh It is very remarkable that the like phrase is not used when Scripture speaks of Adams begetting Cain or Abel though both these were begotten in Adams likenesse too because Abel being to dye without issue and all Cains progeny to be drowned by the flood it is noted the rather of Seth by whom all mankind hath hitherto been continued in the world that he from whom as well as from Adam we all came was begat in Adams own image that into which by sin he had transformed himself and not in that likenesse which was Gods in which God at first made him Nay though the Parents be regenerated yet their children by nature are altogether defiled because they beget children as they are men not as they are holy men though the Parent be circumcised the childe brings into the world an uncircumcised foreskin with it as the purest wheat that is cast into the Field comes up with husks and stalks I might adde that the holiest men upon earth are but holy in part they have a dark side as well as a light side and proles as conclusio sequitur deteriorem partem their children are like to what they were by nature and cannot without the same Almighty mercy be like what they are through grace witnesse Josiah's and Hezekiah's children but there are too many sad Evidences of this amongst us daily Arg. 2. From the Redemption of man by Christ Our second Argument for to prove our corruption by nature the Apostle furnishes us with 2 Cor. 5.14 If Christ dyed for all then were all dead And the stresse we lay upon it it will very well bear for what need all that are saved to be saved by Christ if in themselves they are not ruined Destruction is first asserted to be from our selves and then it follows but from me is your health is not Christ made to all those that shall come to heaven and happinesse wisdome 1 Cor. 1.30 righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Does not his death satisfie for their debts his Spirit sanctifie their hearts Thus none go unto the Father but by him and whos●ever would but see the Kingdome of God must be borne again John 3.3 This very reason St. Austin urges concerning children I shall give this Arg. de verbis Domini serm 8. and some larger passages in English that I might not overmuch entangle the thred of my discourse Whosoever sayes that infancy hath nothing from which Jesus should save us he denies Christ to be a Jesus to infants baptized in his Name for what is a Jesus Jesus is by int●rpretation a Saviour a Saviour is a Jesus those which he does not save be ause they have nothing that he should save them from or cure in them he is not to them a Jesus Now if your hearts can endure that Christ should not be a Jesus to such I know not whither your faith can be sound c. Thirdly Scripture Ordinances prove this corruption to be in us for else what need their institution to take it from us Third argument is taken from Ordinances Sacraments c. If there be no pollution in the foreskin why was Circumcision appointed to do it away if we have no filth what needs baptismal washing and if we may borrow light from any shadows of the Ceremonial Law why should women be so long unclean and need solemne purification after their child-birth if the fruit of their womb had been so immaculate and pure as some would make us believe 'T is true the Virgin Mary offer'd though she brought forth a holy Childe Isa 53.11 but he was by imputation sinne for we know he bare in Gods account our iniquities Saint Austin upon the bringing of Children unto Christ August serm 36. In Evangel secund Lucam observes this also Children sayes he are brought to be touched to whom are they brought to be touched but to the Physitian if they come to a Saviour they come to be cured and presently after he addes video reatum I see there is guilt in them Another passage of his I shall the willinglier quote because many that oppose this truth pretend much to reverence antiquity De verbis Apostoli serm 8. Wherefore dost thou say this childe or this person is sound and hath no disease why then dost thou runne to the Physitian with him art not afraid lest he should say unto thee Take him away that is sound The Sonne of man came not but to seek and to save that which was lost why didst thou bring him unto me if he were not lost Lib. 1. And in his tract against Julian the Pelagian the same father quotes several that were his predecessors in the maintaining of this very truth as Irenaeus Cyprian Hilary Ambrose c. but I proceed because we have heard a greater than all these God himself so abundantly attesting of it This corruption shews it self by its effects if we be so spiritually foolish Fourth argument The sad effects prove it as not to believe there is such impurity in us from any other Arguments produc'd for the proof of it experience may be our Mistresse to teach it 1. The miserable effects 1. Experiences of multitude of miseries that flow from it This is that Pandora's box which the Heathens so much talk of out of which all manner of mischiefs flow abroad in the world Why do we come into the world crying rather than laughing but as a sad Omen of the world of evils we are ever after here to meet with De Civitate Dei lib. 21. cap. 14. But if there were no sin there would be no suffering in those tender yeares And what have these sheep done When I see a childe lying bound hand and foot in its swadling clouts skreaming and crying out I cann't believe but God and nature would never have dealt so hardly with it so noble a creature especially if guilt had not procur'd these bonds and miseries nay methinks they speak its desert to be bound hand and foot for ever to be speechlesse for ever and to be cast too unlesse infinite mercy prevent where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever And all these things Scripture makes only the products of sin that only is the fruitful Parent of all evils Wherefore does a living man so much as complaine 't is for the punishment of his sinne Lam. 3.39 Death which raigned over all Rom. 5.14 is the wages of sinne Rom. 6.23 Nay of that sin too which is communicated to man-kinde by Adams fall 1 Cor. 15.21 22. By man came death death is not of Gods making but of mans of our sinnes
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
when sin hath been committed and the raging of the affections are a little appeased then the minde returns unto its self and the Spirit that was resisted brings to remembrance those grievous and unavoidabl● threanings which the Law denounceth whereupon there follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Legal repentance that is a wishing that the Fact were undone and that he had not committed the sin that causeth that trouble but not that he is any better than before for shew him a new temptation and he presently runs after it though under trouble of minde and though expectation of wrath incredibly full of anguish doth sting and vex him intolerably But now Beloved where this ends well there the Spirit insinuates something to put him upon panting after a Redeemer and to get power against sin and this brings unspeakable joy and begets peace past all understanding thus you see the best effects of the Law is the bringing men to the Gospel which shews the fifth excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 6. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of its objects or persons taken into Covenant and that under a double consideration their multiplicity and their quality 1. In respect of the number The Old Covenant belonged only to one people the New to Jews and Gentiles Abraham and his posterity were taken into Covenant and all the world beside were excluded those few others that were admitted it was by extraordinary grace and they were as it were planted into Abrahams family but now the partition Wall is broken down which as it were shut up the mercy of God in the confines of Israel Now peace is proclaimed to those that are far off as well as to those that are near that they might become one people this is a great mystery Colos 1.26 Certainly all may well say so as we are poor Gentiles and we are made nigh by the blood of his Crosse Col. 1.20 21. 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better in respect of the quality of the persons taken into it the Law is proposed to wicked secure and hardened sinners 1 Tim. 1.9 The Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for ungodly and for sinners for unholy and profane for murderers of fathers and murd●rers of mothers for men-slayers for whoremongers c. to restrain and bridle them but the Gospel lifts up broken-hearted sinners Luk. 4.18 He hath sent me to heale the broken-hearted to preach deliverance to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised to preach the acceptable year of the Lord The Law is to terrifie the conscience the Gospel is to comfort it * Gerhard l. c. 7. The last excellency I shall name is this the Gospel-Covenant is every way faultlesse it is the last and best Dispensation of Divine grace Hebr. 8.7 If the first Covenant had been faultlesse then should no place have been sought for the second as if he should say the Covenant from Mount Sinai was not such Quo non alterum posset esse perfectius * Grotius that man could not desire a better Hebr. 7.18 19. There is verily a disanulling of the Commandment going before for the weaknesse and unprofitableness thereof for the Law made nothing perfect but the bringing in of a better hope did by the which we draw nigh unto God plainly this is so excellent we cannot desire a better The Old Covenant is abrogated 1. As to the circumstance de futuro it all related to the future Messiah Christ is come and that consideration therefore ceaseth 2. 'T is abrogated as to the impossible condition of perfect obedience the Gospel sincerity of the meanest believer is better than the exactest obedience of the highest Legalist 3. 'T is abrogated as to the burden of Legal Ceremonies Priesthood and shadows God gave these things to them and the Gospel to us as we give nuces parvulo codicem grandi * Beda things of smaller value to a little childe but a good book to him when he is grown up They have lost their Temple their Priesthood their Unction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Chrysost c. We have Heaven for our Temple and Christ for our Priest and the Spirit for our Unction 4. The Old Covenant is abrogated as to the yoke of Mosaical policy we have nothing to do with the Judicial Laws of the Jews any farther than they are Moral or of a Moral equity Luk. 16.16 The Law and the Prophets were untill John Hebr. 7.12 The Priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a change of the Law And thus I have doctrinally shewed you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant APPLICATION 1. This retorts wicked mens Reproaches into their own faces They cry out against the Ministers of the Gospel for preaching terrour to them Be it known to you the Gospel is properly employed in celebrating the mercy of God in the pardon of sin and comforting drooping sinners but in your doing what you can to put out this comfortable light you force us to fetch fire from Mount Sinai to take hold of you 'T is true the Law was given with Thunder and Lightning and terrible Miracles the Gospel was attested with a comfortable voice from heaven and healing Miracles but as sinners broken by the Law needed some Gospel-balm to heal their wounds so secure Gospel sinners need Legal threatnings to fright them out of their sluggishnesse and sleepy security If whispers of peace will not awaken them we must cry aloud to stir them up if it be possible to break off sinning and to minde salvation Sirs 't is no pleasure to us to speak words unpleasing to you you hinder us from work more purely Evangelical and which 't is a thousand fold more pleasure to us to be conversant about 'Pray take notice that were it not in love and faithfulnesse to your souls we would never be so poorly employed as to be pelting at your base lusts Do but try us Break off your soul-undoing wickednesse and you shall never hear us rate you any more you your selves being Judges ex gr Ask a sober man whether the lashing of drunkennesse makes him smart or not Ask a chaste person whether the naming of such Texts as Prov. 22.14 The mouth of strange women is a deep pit he that is abhorred of the Lord shall fall therein Prov. 23.27 An whore is a deep ditch and a strange woman is a narrow pit reproach him in short Ask one that 's conscientious whether he thinks the Minister hath a spite at him in his Sermon because he names 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Idolaters nor Adulterers nor Effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with mankinds nor Thieves nor Covetous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the Kingdome of God Alas all these will tell
holinesse as the Quakers and our sinful age suggest is the formality of repentance but you may find and make it specially useful to conviction and discovery of false repentance with which men are apt to take up and content themselves and if this which you have heard be the nature of true Repentance then these are false Repentances with which take heed you be not deceived 1. Popish pennance 1. False repentance which is indeed scrued very high by the Church of Rome unto a detracting from the satisfaction of Jesus Christ and making mans own sufferings Partners and Peers to Christ his satisfaction wherein it is not only Heretical but blasphemous but indeed in it self is very low and weak not able to afford us the least of comfort because a false and fained repentance consisting in auricular confession to the Priest never instituted by God and self-castigation in a most cruel and violent manner or Pilgrimages interdicted by the very light of nature and never enjoyned by the Lord and is different from true Repentance in that it is meerly external on the body not at all seizing on the soul chastisements of the outward without any serious conviction or contrition of the inward man tearing the flesh without renting the heart nay and that in a way of superstition and will-worship like the self-cuttings and torments of the Priests of Baal 1 King 18.27 28. and like to finde the same acceptance and a transient action without any inward principle habit and disposition and too often under the p●rpose of continuing in sinne nay many times making way to sin as the Popish Conspirators in the Gun-powder Treason confessed and did pennance for the wickednesse they intended so that it is every way inconsistent to the nature of true repentance for it hath man not God for its object nature nay lust for its principle action not frame and disposition for its forme is external in its property and intention of sinne for its end and so must needes be sinful and soul-damning Repentance in its quality 2. False repentance Pagans Repentance which is effected in men as men without any the least respect unto Religion all men have a natural conscience and some remainders of the Law of God discovering a Deity and directing duties of preservation to themselves and humane Society by this they are checked on all miscarriages and grosse exorbitancies and not only grieved and offended at the present but also curbed and restrained for the future Thus Alexander when sober repents the slaughter of his friend Clitus in a drunken humour and consults the Philosophers as so many Ministers for the pacification of his conscience and so Polemo though in his drunken fit he came to the Schoole of Xen●crates and heard him read of sobriety yet went home and repenting his drunkennesse became sober ever after yet this is no other than a false repentance effected by the only power of nature whose best things are but splendida peccata shining sins and is meerly a restraint of action no renewing of disposition it wants both principle and power to make it saving this light within them without supernatural grace doth but lead them a smoother way to hell for at the best vertue contrary to their natural vice not God and his Will is the object of their conversion 3. False repentance The prophane mans repentance Pharaoh-like repenting of good and returning to evil having let Israel go pursueth them to bring them againe to bondage and like the children of Israel Jer. 34.12 13 14 c. who let every man his servant go free and then fetch them back againe Like the repentance of Ananias and Saphira who run as farre as others in selling their estates for the common good of the Church Acts 5.5 but soon repent to the retaining some part and lying to the holy Ghost How many amongst us do now repent their sighing and sad thoughts that their sin hath cost them and the serious discharges of holy duties fasting praying reading hearing and the like which they have done bewailing themselves that ever they looked towards heaven or left the way of hell this is a most sad and sinful repentance in every respect opposite to the nature of repentance being an inversion of the very termes instead of turning from sin to God a turning from God to sin these mens latter end must needs be worse than their beginning because having begun in the spirit they end in the flesh and it is hapned unto them according to Proverb The dog is returned to his vomit and the sow to her wallowing in the mire The formalist and legal repen●ance these men are eminent 4. False repentance and exact in the external and precursive acts of repentance they humble themselves before God and confesse iniquity and seek for pardon of sin rent their garments and ●ie in sack-cloth Ahab-like they are alarum'd by the Prophet Elijah for their sin 1 Kings 21.27 and therefore humble themselves before the Lord they are full of conviction and seeming contrition but never reach unto conversion they lament sin but lie in sin like Herod heare John gladly but retain their Herodias and like Foelix tremble to heare of righteousnesse temperance Act. 24.25 26 27. and judgement to come but yet look for a bribe and dismisse Paul till some other time that so they may quiet conscience and grant a truce to the Devil those like the young man in the Gospel are not far from the Kingdom of God but yet fall short they never come at repentance The Slaves repentance which is extorted and extenuated 5. False repentance neither free nor full like the repentance of Saul or Pharaoh so long as they are constrained they confesse their guilt when they can no longer hide their villany they own it though with an endeavour to extenuate it thus Saul by the dint of Argument is at length driven to confesse to Samuel I have sinned yet he that staved off the Prophets reproof as long as he could at last stifleth his conscience by pleading the feare of the people whom he pretended to fear and obey and seeks no more than to avoid the present blow Hon●ur me saith he to Samu l in the sight of the people So Pharaoh when under the cudgel will confesse he hath sinned and will let Israel go but Gods hand is no sooner staid but his obduracy returns it were well for many penitents if they could go from a sick bed a prison an anxious conscience to heaven for so long as they are in this condition they are in a good mood but no longer these men like flint stones flie in sunder by the hammer but still retain their hardnesse there is in them no principle that may make them candid in confession or free in the forsaking of sin 6. False repentance A sullen and self-destructive repentance these men in an angry humour and by the anxiety of
conscience are constrained to repent of their miscarriage like Shimei his repentance for cursing David occasioned only by the change of Davids condition 2 Sam. 19.20 1 King 2.39 40. and crosse of his own expectation which yet at length leads him to sin against his soul and break his bounds unto his own ruine and like Judas in a dogged humour deploring his sin unto self-destruction many men turn out of sin because it turns Wife and children out of doors deprives them of expected preferment disposeth them into distresse and anguish of soul or body or both these men have no natural enmity to sinne but are like a Bowle turned out of its Biasse by some more than ordinary rub to their desires Give me leave to adde one more and that is the Quakers Repentance 7. False Repentance not fit to be mentioned nor worthy the least refutation it is so notoriously prophane and ridiculous were it not too much successeful in these sad times in which God hath given us up to a spirit of delusion so as that the most palpable of errours finde entertainment this is the Repentance whereby men following the pretended light within them are suddenly converted from extreame loosenesse to extreame strictnesse of behaviour it is to be wondred at to see what a sudden leap the lewdest men make by this rude spirit from the most horrid lewdnesse to the most strange solitary and self-affected way of behaviour these men we must not deny to be changed unlesse we will deny our senses nor own to be Gospel-penitents unlesse we deny our Religion and very reason for themselves professe it to be from no other principle than the light within th●m which they say also is common to all men and so is at the best but natural though in them plainly visible to be diaboli al whilst it carrieth not so far as the light of nature but is contrary to the dictates thereof in natural and civil society darkening nay declaiming against those very notes of distinction which God and nature hath in all Nations made between man and man being violent sudden and precipitate by some absession or enthusiastique impulse as from the Devil not by any moral swasion or intellectual conviction which is proper to a reasonable soule and therefore acts wilfully with rage and rabid expressions not able and so refusing to render a reason of their actions or perswasions but with obduracy persisting in their own self-affected profession without the least possibility of conviction or capacity of discourse reducing them into a direct Bedlam temper fit for nothing but Bedlam Discipline so that in the very forme thereof men of reason and the least measure of Religion must needs conclude their conversion Devilish not Divine yet in the effect of it their repentance must needs appear not to be true Gospel and saving repentance as being dissonant to the nature in the very formality thereof for however it turns them from sin yet not with due contrition and confession or on due conviction not from sin as sin they retain pride railing disrespect to men are void of natural affection despise dominion speak evil of dignities whilst they damne drunkennesse swearing and other the like abominations but it never turnes them unto God nay it keeps them at an equal nay a greater distance from God than from the Devil from heaven than hell whilst they deny civility and the common reverence children owe to Parents Servants to Masters and all Inferiours to Superiours decline God disown and declaime against holinesse praying hearing Sabbath and Sacraments are to them as the vices they do detest Gospel-Ministers and Ministrations are to them an abomination whilst they refuse to sweare they refuse to pray drunkennesse and devotion are equal in their account if with Jehu they drive furiously against Baal and Ahab yet they mind not to walk with God but follow the way of Jeroboam both for Rebellion towards men and confusion in the Church so that they appeare farre from Gospel-penitents I have done with the first general part considerable viz. the nature of repentance and shall now proceed to the second and that is The NECESSITY of Repentance Repentance in the very nature of it which hath been explained doth appeare useful and necessary It is not a thing base and vile to be despised neglected and contemned but admirably excellent and to be prized and pursued by every soul that is studious of true excellency for however proud men prophanely deem and damne it as a puling property and pusillanimous temper of spirit below a man on every ordinary action to sit drooping and pensive and not dare to do as nature dictates and good company requires yet the children of wisdome well pondering what hath already been spoken of it cannot but see it sparkle with such splendid notes as engage them to esteem it and employ themselves in it night and day making it their work and businesse saying as Tertullian Nulli rei natus nisi poenitentiae I am born for nothing but to repentance For from what hath already been spoken it is apparantly excellent in its First Nature being a remorse for guilt and return from sin which who even among the Heathen did not esteem remorse for guilt is the rejoycing of heaven returns are the delights of God in Luke 15.7 10. rhe teares of sinners is the wine of Angels saith Bernard Secondly Authour and Original a grace supernatural grows not in natures Garden cannot be acquired by the most accurate industry or endowments of nature it is from heaven by the immediate operation of the holy Spirit Christ himself is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance Shall divine works celestial influences lose their esteem Thirdly Ground and principle ●t flowes from faith and is the result of hope it is not the lamentation of despaire but complaint of candor and confidence affording comfort streami g with pleasure from the soule the priviledge of the Gospel and Covenant of grace it flowes from the fountaine of Divine favour 4. Concomitants Confession and Supplication accesse to God with assurance of acceptance Confession is the souls physick saith Nazianzen and Supplication is the Childs portion And indeed what is there in the Nature of Repentance which rendreth it not desirable by every gracious heart or good nature so that to men that seek excellent endowments and are for high and honourable atchievements I must say Repent Repen● This is Alexanders honour this is the only ornament of nature the way to highest preferment is to be humbled under the hand of God But not only is it in it self excellent and to be esteemed by such as can and do obtain it but also necessary not of indifferency but of absolute and indispensable necessity men may not choose whether or no they will repent but must do it with all care and diligence with all speed and alacrity and amongst the many Demonstrations which might be urged I
grace which produceth some particular and partial change but not a total and universal 4. A real change to distinguish it from hypocrisie which makes shew of a great and goodly change but is only outward and seeming not inward and real which three are often taken but as often mistaken for holinesse 5. Wrought it is neither natural nor acquired or taken up by the power of our own free will or force of others perswasion strength of reason convictions resolutions from within or without Hence we are said to be Gods workmanship Eph. 2.10 To be wrought to the same thing 2 Cor. 5.5 6. In the whole man 1 Thes 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole soul and body and spirit be k●pt blamelesse c. So that if you ask where is the seat of this holinesse is it in the head or heart or conscience or outward man I answer in no one but all of them it is as leaven that leaveneth the whole lump it is as the soul tota in toto tota in qualibet ●arte The understanding in a new sanctified person is enlightned to discern spiritual things which before he understood not his memory sanctified to retain what is good and shut out what is hurtful conscience awakened to check for sin and exc te to duty will subdued to embrace good resist evil affections orderly placed to love fear desire delight it and to hate and what is sutable to holinesse and the whole outward man for speech actions behaviour yea habit and dresse is composed as becometh holinesse 7. Of a formerly vile sinner grace makes a mighty change when it works effectually none so bad so far gone but it can br ng home Ezek. 16.6 Esay 55.13 it findes one in his blood and leaves him clean it findes a thorn and leaves a mirtl● it meets with a Publican and Harlot and leaves a Sa●nt it meets with a bloody Persecutor and hellish Blaspheme● and turns him into a Preacher or Martyr as Paul it findes men as bad as bad can be and leaves them in as good a state as the best 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. 8. By the Spirit of God we may not ascribe it to the vertue of Ordinances or worth of Instruments 1 Cor. 9.11 But ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctifi●d by the Spirit of our God Art n●ture education can do nothing here it is not by might or power but by the Spirit of God Zach. 4.6 9. Whereby the heart is purged c. here the parts of holinesse which are two mortification and vivification Esay 1.16 17 Cease to do evil learn to do well The first is privative The second positive Grace works right when there is first a leaving of old sin it is not putting a new piece on an old garment or clapping a new Creed to an old life or new duties to wonted courses Deut. 22.9 10 11. this were to sowe with divers seeds or wear a garment of woollen and linnen which God hates but there must be as to the privative part 1. A heart purged from the love of every sin there may be sin left in the heart no sin loved and liked the evil that I do I ha●e sin and grace may stand together Rom. 7.15 not love of sin and grace 2. A life from the practice and dominion of sin sin remains still but raigns no more he was a servant of sin Rom. 6.17 18. and had members enough to be instruments of sin a mouth to speak it a tongue to speak for it a wit to invent for it reason to argue for it hands and feet to work and walk fot it purse to spend upon it there is none of these now Secondly and the other part is yet much better he is in heart and life carried out after every good it is not a bare breaking off of sin that makes a Christian it is one half of a Christian but there must be a turning from sinne and bringing forth fruites meet for Repentance You have both these parts 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse c. To come to the Reasons of the point which are foure Reas 1. This is Gods great designe therefore should be ours It is the greatest design God hath upon his people in all he doth to and for them All the immediate acts of God and all his mediate tend to this 1. All Gods immediate acts Pitch where you will carry it to the first of Gods acts towards man in Election God hath chosen us before the foundation of the world Ephes 1.4 2 Thes 2.13 that we should be holy So that I may not say If I am Elected I shall be saved though I live in sinne but if Elected I must be Sanctified and dye to sinne 2. Take all the acts of the three persons apart 1 Pet. 1.14 15. 1 Thes 4.7 First The Father if he adopt if he regenerate if he call it is that we should be holy Secondly It is the end designed by all that Christ did his Incarnation Hebr. 2.11 Hebr. 13 12 Eph. 4.26 27. Life Death Doctrine Example Humiliation Exaltation Prayers Promises Threats Miracles Mercies yea of his Intercession in heaven that we might be sanctified Thirdly It is the end of all that the Holy Ghost doth All the works of the Holy Ghost may be referred to three heads 1. His gifts 2. Graces 3. Comforts and all these tend to holinesse 1. All the gifts of the Holy Ghost if a gift of prayer of conviction terror c. it is to sanctifie thee if of knowledge utterance c. it is to make others holy 2. A l his graces What is Knowledge Faith Repentance Love Hope Zeal Patience given for but to make thee holy yea they are the several parts of thy holinesse it self which is made up of nothing but the graces of the holy Spirit 3. All the comforts of the Spirit are given to strengthen our hands in holinesse What is the peace of God love of God pardon of sin assurance of salvation joy in the Holy Ghost Spirit of Adoption given for but to make us more watchful humble lively in holinesse The Privy Seals of Justification must be attested in Letters Patents under the broad Seal of Sanctification or it may be well suspected Jeremy had two Evidences of his purchase Jerem. 32.10 one sealed the other open so must we 2. The mediate acts of God whatsoever they be in Providences or Ordinances First All ways of Gods Providence to his people tend to their sanctifying 1. If God afflict he saith to sicknesse Go and pull me down that proud sinner that he may be sanctified Go saith the Lord to the winds and storms of the Sea blow and beat the Ship to awaken me that sleepy Jonah Jonah 1.17 2.10 swallow him up saith he to the Whale the Lord spake to
the fish it is said that he may learn to pray there and preach after Go Temptation winnow me that man well that he may not be full of self-confidence that he being converted may strengthen his brethren Go death saith he smite such a womans husband that she may be destitute of worldly comforts then will she trust in me 1 Tim. 5.5 and fall to prayer and supplication Go ye Caldeans and Sabeans and work your will on my servant Job yea Go Satan and do thy worst make ye him poor I 'le make him honest and pious and more than a Conqueror and bring him forth as gold I will leave a poore people saith the Lord and they shall trust in me In a word the Lord saith Zeph. 3.12 the end of all chastisement is That we should be made partakers of his holinesse Hebr. 12.10 2. If God deliver it is that we should serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse Go saith the Lord to Moses Luke 1.74 75. deliver me that people that they may be to me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation Let Naaman be healed Exod. 19.5 6. that he may become a Convert to that God that hath healed him Sanctifie me that first-borne sonne 2 Kings 5. Exod 13.2 whom I have given thee again Secondly In all Ordinances whose sole and proper end is Sanctification The Word is to sanctifie John 17.17 The commands 1 Thes 4.3 The promises to sanctifie 2 Cor. 7.1 The Sabbath is a signe between God and us that he is the Lord that doth sanctifie us Exod. 31.13 The Sacraments Baptisme is to sanctifie Ephes 5.26 The Lords Supper so Discipline Censures Absolution c. Church-communion private Conference All Ordinances agree in this some of them are for Conversion some for Confirmation all for Sanctification Reas 2. This is that which constitutes a Christian and from which he is denominated All the Christians and Church-members of old were called Saints the Saints at Rome Corinth Ephesus c. That is the Christians of those places and Churches not Saints departed and Canon zed but such Saints as we are or should be visible Saints followers of holinesse And therefore as one is called a Scholar because he followes learning another a Merchant because he follows Merchandize so is the Christian to follow holiness To imagine a Christian without holinesse is to call one rich that hath neither goods nor lands a Scholar without learning to imagine a Sun without light and fire without heat which is a pure contradiction It is holinesse which constitutes the Christian as it is the soul which constitutes the man who without it is a dead carcasse hand foot heart move not neither can the eye see eare hear or tongue speak without the enlivening soul so is the Professor a carcasse or shadow without holinesse all his works dead works his prayers dead praises dead yea his faith hope repentance without holinesse mortua mortifera all dead and deadly Reas 3. Without this no man shall see the Lord. This is the Menacing reason of the Text where there are two things to be explained First One implyed Secondly The other expressed 1. That implied is That in seeing the Lord is the compleat beatitude of the soul Blessed are the pure in heart they shall see God Mat. 5.8 i. e. see the Lord Jesus for the Godhead is inv●sible No man hath seen God at any time nor can we see him 1 Tim. 6.16 But the holy person shall see Christ and the glory of the Divine Essence as much as finite can comprehend of infinite yea see God and live see Christ and be like him 1 John 3.1 2. Jesus Christ seen in heaven is the glass of the Trinity in him we shall see the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily And he is a transforming glasse to those that see him who shall be changed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 And the sight of Christ will be to us a transfiguration sight when I look into another glasse I see the image and representative of my self and as it were another self but when I shall look into this glasse I shall see another image and representation as a Parelius by the reflexion of the Sun and as I may say another Christ Hence we commonly call the vision of God the beatifical vision as one saith elegantly Fides justificat Charitas aedificat Spes laetificat Visio beatificat Faith justifies Charity edifies Hope pacifies but it is Vision which glorifies And I may adde Sanctitas qualificat holinesse qualifies that Vision may glorifie And this leads me to the second thing which is expressed 2. Without this no man shall see the Lord. Mark the word no man Be he rich or poor Prince or Peasant yea be he a Prophet Apostle Minister Martyr yea we may carry this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 higher no Angell shall see the Lord what parts soever the man hath whatsoever duties he performeth let him be this or that or any other the best profession way Church let him do let him suffer let him be let him give let him hold what he will ●f he be not holy he comes not into Gods beatifical presence he enters not into the holy hill of God But were he as the Signet o● the right hand he must off were he an anointed Cherub he must out down came the Angels when they had laid down the r holinesse and Adam was driven out of Gods presence when he had driven out holinesse Reas 4. The fourth and last Reason is that thundering one of Saint Peter 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12 13. When the last Trumpet shall sound and sound louder and louder when the day of the Lord shall come as a Thief in the night in the which the Heavens shall pass away with a noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the Earth also and all the works therein shall be burnt up Seeing then all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy Conversation and godliness looking for and hastening unto the coming of the day of God wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat Neverthelesse we according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Here is nothing but terror in the Text Lamentation and mourning and woe A Thief in the night a great noise fire melting burning dissolving yet is holinesse and righteousnesse secure The new Creature looks for a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein there will be room for holinesse if there be none here as for Lot in S●dome This holinesse is like the blood of the Passeover on the door posts when the destroyer was abroad and a dreadful cry all Egypt over then were the Israelites ready with their loyns girt and staves in their hands expecting the good houre of their last Redemption We have seen it may be
some of us sad days already but there are too sadder to be expected they are called the day of the Lord and not days because as death leaves us judgment finds us Death being the morning and Judgement the evening and eternity the night of the same day They are both dayes of dissolution the one is of the body a sad dissolution when the soul shall pass away with a sad noise of many a doleful groan and this elementary body shall melt with fervent heat of burning diseases c. The other is of the Universe when the whole world shall be in a conflagration and hell shall come up to heaven as once hell came out of heaven to consume Sodome when the body of the Universe shall groan with the groanings of a deadly wounded dying man as was said of Egypt Ezekiel 30.24 Cum mare cum Tellus Correptaque Regia Caeli Ardeat mundi moles operosa laboret When the starres of heaven shall fall and the powers of heaven be shaken the Sun turned into darkness Moon into blood and all the kindreds of the earth mourn and the hypocrites cry out Who among us shall abide with devouring fire and dwell with eternal burnings Isa 33.14 Then shall the godly soul lift up his head at death and destruction he shall laugh he shall walk loose in the midst of the flames as did the three Children without so much as the smell or least dread of the fire and they may touch these live coals as the Angel did Isaiah 6.6 without any dismay Oh holiness holiness what a munition of Rocks wilt thou give thy followers in that day of the Lord oh let me press you to get a holiness that is Scripture-proof and you your selves and your state and comforts will be death-proof hell-proof judgement-proof you need not fear any fear of man any day of the Lord any furnace-fire elementary fire conflagration-fire hell-fire when the Kings and the Captains and the Mighty shall cry out to the Rocks to fall on them and the worshippers of the Beast and the rich Merchants of Rome shall cry out for the smoak of the burning then shall the Sons of Sion sing out their redoubled Hallelujahs at the coming of the Bridegroom and the day of the Lord their day of Marriage and Coronation Use 1. Lament the loss of holiness We may complain Holinesse is lost and faln in the streets Some complain of losse of Trade in these sad times Trade is dead there is no Trade we may say this Trade is lost or dead there is little holinesse stirring Many complain of the losse of peace p●ace is gone but we have cau●e to say Holiness was gone first In midst of many Professions many contentions many op nions changings turns returns little holiness to be seen In midst of great parts high expressions much light powerful Ordinances many years attempted Reformation a little holiness goes a great way Our shadows are long our contentions sharp our holiness low our Corn runs out into straw and stalk not ear and kernel Our nourishment turns to Rickets the head swelled and extended the child feeble and infirm we have left our company and our work and are scattered all the Land over to pick up strawes and gather stubble Some observe that our buildings now adayes are not so solid and substantial as of old our spiritual buildings are not I am sure And as some say our English cloth is not of so good a name and esteem as heretofore abroad not so pure and well wrought our name and Crown for holiness is lost it not being so pure and well wrought Use 2 Use 2. It informs how little some have to evidence their Christianity and their Title to heaven that can speak of no Holinesse make no proof of any real change or work of the Spitit of dying to sin living to God what are all these hopes but lying hopes Without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. Visible Saintship may justly gain admittance into Church-fellowship But it is real holiness that makes meet to partake of the inheritance of the Saints in light Seeming holiness in profession sets thee in the outward Court but into the inner Temple and the Holy of Holies only true holiness qualifies to an admission It is noted though the outward Court was laid with stone yet the Inner Temple 1 King 6 30. and the Holy of Holies had the very floore of gold True Holinesse makes a Member of the Church Militant and Tryumphant Use 3 3. Use Reproof or terrour to such as hate deride or scoff at holinesse Many if reproved will say I cry you mercy you must be so holy I am none of your Saints nor of the holy Brethren c. Oh unclean swine or unclean spirit shall I say knowest thou not whose language is that in thy mouth What have I to do with thee thou holy one of God Thy speech bewrayeth thee as one saith to be a Hellilean no Galilean no Disciple dost thou call thy self a Christian and deny the Saint then blot out Saint in Pauls Epistles and teach him to call Christians by some other name of Drunkards Swearers and Scoffers at holinesse Blot out Saints out of thy Creed Dost thou say thou art none of the holy Brethren then tear thy name out of Gods Book and the Church Register The Apostle calls all the Christians to whom he writes Holy Brethren partakers of the heavenly calling Heb. 3.1 Dost thou glory that thou art none of the holy ones then glory in this threat of the Text that thou shalt never see God glory in this that thou hast no part nor lot in this matter no part in Election Redemption in the gifts graces comforts of the Spirit in the promises and priviledges of the Gospel go and glory that God is not thy Father Christ thy Saviour that thou shalt never be troubled with the Communion of the Saints in Heaven and the spirits of just men made perfect Use 4 Use 4. A worse Reproof and Use of terrour follows to such who instead of following holiness and perfecting holiness in the fear of God are faln from it declined and turned aside after vain opinions and employ speculations Caepisti melius quam desinis ultima primis oedunt dissimilis hic puer ille Senex Ovid. A young Saint and an old Apostate leads to a sad end Look to it you young Professors that had the Dew of Grace and seeming holiness in youth and are now dryed up by the roots Look to it you old Professors that you hold out watch and keep your Garments white and seek to bring forth more fruit in your age The Tree that bears evil fruit is cut down That which leaves only cursed but that which is twice dead worst of all this is the desperate case and of all sins this is only the unpardonable sin Heb. 6.4 5 and 10. All the unrighteousnesse of the greatest sinner repenting and leaving his
my eyes have seen thy Salvation What unspeakable joy will it be to see your Christian Friends and Relations to whom you have been instrumental in their New Birth and Regeneration all Crowned in one day with an everlasting Diadem of Bliss which never shall decay There shall be no hypocrite then for you to lose your love upon which is now the great cooler of your charity and keeps your affections in a greater reserve but there none but true Eagles and heaven-born souls will be able to look upon that Sun in glory you shall then rejoyce that there are so many pure spirits able to praise and love that God whom you could never yet nor will then be able to love and praise enough or as you desire When the glorious Angels begin their Hallelujahs the Saints shall also joyn in one common Quire * Psal 149 5. they shall be joyful in glory and sing aloud upon their everlasting beds of rest Oh how the Arches of heaven will eccho when the high praises of God shall be in the mouths of such a Congregation for as when one eye moves the other roles and when one string in concord with another is struck the other sounds such a blend and sympathy of praises shall there be in that heavenly Chorus with these * Psal 150.6 high sounding Cymbals in most flourishing expressions and anthems upon the divine glory If the Sun Moon and Stars did as Ignatius sayes make all * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Epist ad Eph. Luke 15.7 a Quire as 't were about the Star that appeared at Christs Incarnation * and there be joy in heaven at the conversion of a sinner no wonder then * Job 38.7 the morning starres shall sing together and the Sons of God shou●● for joy when there shall be * Heb. 12.23 a general Assembly and Church of the first-borne and the spirits of all the just shall be made perfect And though there may be one Starre differ from another in glory yet there will be no * Videbit civitas illa quod inferior non invidebit Aug. de civ 22. 29. envying one anothers happiness but every one bear his part whatever it be in the lower or higher praises of the God of glory with a most harmonious variety in perfect symphony for there we shall love one another as our selves love God and our blessed Saviour better than our selves and he will love us better than we can love our selves or one another * Oh quot quanta gaudia obtiniebit qui de tot tantis beatitudinibus sanctorum jubilabit Ans alicu ni fallor de beatitu Oh how many and how great joyes shall he possess who shall keep an eternal Jubilee in the enjoyment of so many and so great beatitudes and felicities of others as truly as of his own I have done with the possession and its qualification it is a Kingdom I now come to its preparation prepared for you from the foundation of the c. But how is this Kingdom of so long preparation when Christ tells his Disciples I go to prepare a place for you when he departed hence John 14.1 1. Therefore this Kingdom was prepared even when the foundations of the world were laid * Job 38.7 for there the morning starres did sing together God Created the Heavens and then the earth and the spiritual world of Angels above before the foundation of the earth below though as some judge Moses mention'd it not being to teach a dull people by sensible objects concealed the notion of spirits lest they should Idolatrously worship and attribute the Creation of the world to them And so the Empyrean Heaven and seat of glory some venture to say God then made and determinately too in the Aequinoctial East of Judea call'd therefore the Navel of the whole earth to confirm it they tell us Adam was made with his face towards the East and so they worshipped Eastward three thousand and odd years And thence Christ call'd the * Luke 1.79 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 East or day-spring from on high and * Zac. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lev. 16.14 the blood was to be sprinkled on the mercy-seat Eastward seven times But we may answer the curiosity of this enquiry about the Ubi and determinate place as he of old was answered that asked what God was doing before he created the world he was making Hell for such unbelieving Querists and Heaven for the reward of an humble Believer 2. It was prepared from the foundation of the world in regard of divine predestination for that which is last in obtaining is first in the intention of rational agents so God from eternity designing his own glory in the salvation of the Elect and their blisseful fruition of himself may be said to have set the Crown upon them while they were in the womb of his Decree and to have prepared them a Kingdome before they were born And though God made all the world for man yet it was to be kept under his feet he reserved himself to be the Crown of his hopes and Portion of his heart He chose us in Christ before the Foundation of the World therefore * Ephes 1.4 all was ready But 3. In regard of Divine D●spensation the carrying on the whole oeconomy hath been from the Foundation of the World and so being the Kingdome is not yet given up all unto the Father it may be still said to be preparing for though God being our heaven it was always ready yet by our fall we lost our title to this Paradise Christ intervenes to divert the flaming Sword of vengeance enters a Covenant with his Father sends the glad tydings of it into the World * Gal. 3.8 before he came * Levit. 16.6 Hebr 9.7 typifies in the * Gal. 4.4 fuln●sse of time makes * Rom. 5.11 1 John 2.2 atonement proclaims reconciliation and pardon to penitent sinners sends his Word and Spirit to wait to be gracious to sollicit the World till all that are the truly called guests are invited and brought in then he shuts up the door of mercy opens the grave summons all to judgme●t by the last Trumpet makes the separation and then pronounceth this Benediction so that though the Kingdome was from the Foundations of the World prepared yet in regard every Kingdome includes Subjects as well as Soveraign Christ when he was going that so he might send his Spirit to comfort his Disciples and to gather in more Subjects may be said to prepare a place for them though most significantly he went to prepare them for that Kingdome But Parabolical and Metonymical Expressions must not have too rigid an Interpretation exacted from them but our Saviour having bid his Disciples to go before and prepare a place for him to eat the Passeover with them in he tells them that he is going to prepare the Supper of the Lamb and
then his * Cant. 2.14 v ice will be sweet when he shall call to them to come up to * Isa 25.6 this Mountain to a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the Lees of fat things full of ma●row of wines on the Lees well refined Laetissimè excipientis 3. 'T is the speech of one that bids us welcome to the feast too Come my friends I it is Come and welcome now Come poor heart thou hast been coming a long time I went my self to call thee I * 2 Chron. 36.15 sent my Messengers rising up early and sending them continually to invite thee to come in I sent my holy Spirit also like a Dove from heaven and it did light upon thee and gave thee an Olive branch of peace in the Wildernesse of thy fears when it allured thee and call'd thee from all thy wandrings then I sent my black rod for thee by that grim Serjeant death to strip thee of thy soul body of sin not to be touched but by the Angel of death then I sent my Angels to bring thy soul to the Courts of thy God and now by the sounding of the last Trumpet I have call'd for thy sleepy body to arise out of the * Psal 22.15 dust of death And now after all these Messengers thou art come I will not upbraid thee for thy delays but come come blessed soul with as many welcomes as there are Saints and Angels in glory I have * John 14.2 prepared a place for thee * Cant. 5.1 thou at come into my Garden Eat oh friends Drink yea drink abundantly oh beloved And so I have done with the explication of the several branches of the Text now let us see what fruit they bear that may be * Cant. 2.3 sweet to oru taste First 1. Infer Then if there be a Kingdome prepared before the foundation of the World for the blessed Saints and holy ones then what manner of persons are * 2 Pet. 3.11 we in all unholy Conversation and godlessnesse in this generation Men are as dead to Religion as if heaven was but a dream and as hot upon sin as if hell had no fire or was all vanished into smoak as atheistical and wretched as if neither heaven hell nor earth neither did feel a God or any memorandum's of his Providence Therefore a little to fortifie this notion which artificial wickednesse hath endeavoured to expel and expunge out of natural consciences I shall endeavour to confirme your faith by Scripture and reason The Socinians deny the revelation of eternal life and a state to come to have been propounded under the Old Testament and the reward being only earth their Law and obedience to be but carnal and low which is to level the Jews to the order of brutes that so the Gentiles under the Gospel might be advanced to the state of men and so by vertue of rhe new prize of immortal life proposed they should have a new command as their care to run which is all as true as that all the Tribes of Israel were converted into Isacar's * Gen. 49.4 strong asses couching down between two burdens but * Luke 7.35 wisdome is justified of her children and the Chaldee paraphrase renders those words * Gen. 4.7 Remittetur tibi in saeculo futuro if thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted by this glosse Amend thy works in this world and thou shalt be forgiven in the world to come and the ●argum says the very dispute betwixt Cain and Abel was concerning a world to come and those carnal Hereticks that * Jude ver 10.11 19. are sensual not having the spirit in what they know naturally as brute beasts corrupt themselves they are gone into the way of Cain But when God tells Abraham * Gen 15.1 I am thy exceeding great reward and Jacob cries out * Gen. 49.18 I have waited for thy salvation O Lord even when about to dye God stiling himse●f their God is not by our Saviours authority * Mat. 22.32 the God of the dead but of the living therefore God held out eternal life in the promises yea and in the very command too * Levit. 18.3 Gen. 3.12 do this and live the reward of that obeeience there enjoyned was no lesse than this everlasting life as appeareth by our Saviours interpretation when the Lawyer came to him * Luke 10.25.28 saying Master What shall I do to inherit eternal life and he said What is written in the Law how readest thou and he answered thou shalt love the Lord c. and Jesus said Thou hast answered right this do and thou shalt live that is thou shalt have that thou desiredst viz. inherit eternal life and the very reproach of the Sadduces and the distinction of their Sect from Pharisees and others argueth sufficiently the world to come was a very common notion among all the Jews and indeed the whole land of Canaan was but a comprehensive type and shadow of heaven and all their Religion but a * Hebr. 10.1 shadow of good things to come in the Kingdome of heaven as well as in the Kingdome of the Messiah * John 8.56 whose day they then saw and were glad and if the Gospel contain the promise of eternal life then they had it in Abrahams days * Gal. 3.8 for the Gospel was preached before to him yea and before to Adam * Gen 3.15 that the seed of the woman should break the S rpents head and the skins of the Sacrifices wherewith he was cloathed might suggest the putting on of that promised seed and his obedience who was * Isa 53.5 to be bruised for the iniquities of his people But now to awaken Atheistical souls that deny not only the revelation of this Kingdome of God under the old Testament but its reality and existence under old and new consider these foure things very briefly as the limits of this Exercise command 1. The whole Creation is a Book which always lyeth open wherein we may read that there is a God who made the goodly Structure and Fabrick of Heaven and Earth Who else could be able to * Job 26.7 hang the vast body of the Earth upon nothing or to * Ver. 10. girdle the Sea and all its mountainous Waves with a Rope of Sand * Psal 104.2 to spread the heavens as a Curtain and hang up those vast Vessels of light in the Skies there must be a being existent from and of himself and so being improduced is infinitely perfect and comprehendeth all those perfections dispersed through the whole Creation and infinitely more yet what he makes is like himself every creature bears his footsteps but * Psal 8 3. Gen. 1.27 the heavens are the works of his fingers and man bears the very image of God We see in the several stories and degrees of the Creation love and
communicativenesse to their off-spring groweth more and more the higher you go it grows more in brutes than plants in men than in brutes in God therefore love and goodnesse which are most communicative are most transcendent Now God himself is the heaven we plead for he is the Region of souls and spirits and for the resurrection of the body his infinite power can surely * 1 Cor. 15.38 give to every seed it s own body though one part of our flesh was sublimated into the fire another precipitated into ashes and cast into the midst of the Sea devoured by a fish taken and eaten again by men and another part dissipated into the Aire and sucked into some other body Borel Med. Pari. ita refert yet if a Chymick can out of the ashes of a flower reproduce the flower in its former beauty nay out of the dung of beasts reproduce the very herbs they have eaten notwithstanding what is passed into nourishment by the architectonical parts and spirits yet abiding in those Reliques much more can God recover our bodies from all possible dispersions and conversions into other bodies when all the World shall be his Furnace and every thing resolved into its first seminal parts by the reverberation of the flames and give to every body * Florem Resurrectionis Tert. de Resur the flowre of resurrection and a reflorescence into glory 2. As there is a God and so that Kingdome so there are heirs and they are immortal souls and therefore fitted to be * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 uti Platonici in Divine conjunction for that which is contiguous to an Eternal Omne contiguum aeterno spirituali est aeternum spirituale Spiritual Being is Eternal and Spiritual but man is here only himself when in communion with God and spiritual things And God when he infused the reasonable soul he breathed into man the * Gen. 2.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breath of lives And Tertullian who had too grosse a conception of the nature of the soul yet calls it * Vaginam afflatus Divini liberalitatis suae haeredem Religionis suae sacerdotem Christi sui sororem the sheath and scabbard of Divine breath heir of his bounty c. in the exercise of those acts of apprehension judgement and argumentation it is impossible such steddy and orderly consequential actions should be performed by a fortuitous concurse of atomes or its reflexive acts much lesse by the purest flame no body being able to penetrate it self nor to dive into it self without a disorder of its parts But Religion rather then Reason being the great * Religio penè sola quae hominem discernat à mutis Lactan. de divi praemio l. 7. difference of a man from brutes 't is a sign he is made for communion with a better being and therefore as Augustine sayes Thou hast made our heart O Lord for thee and it will never * Quum tibi inhaesero ex toto me viva erit vita mea plena te tota nunc autem quia plenus tui non sum oneri mihi sum lib. de confes rest till it come to thee and when I shall wholly inhere and cleave to thee then my life will be lively but now being not full of the enjoyments of thee I am a burden to my self The World was made for brutes to live in but for man to * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lact. ibid. contemplate the Wisdome and Power of God he made many brutes but one man that he might be chieflly for the * Dei socius Aug. de Civ l. 12.20 ut cohaereat autori lib. 22.1 society of God and keep coherence to his Maker And alas the World is but a dry Morsel to an immortal soul whose vast Chaos of desires cannot be satisfied by it though every drop of comfort in it was swelled into an Ocean There is upon the soul such a drought without God as * Cant. 8.7 all the waters in the world cannot quench it such an endlesse thirst after truth and goodnesse in the general notion as it can never be satisfied till it find out the * Psal 36.9 fountain of this water of life 3. This Eternal state is the common sense of the World and the voice of natural conscience hath in all Ages proclaimed it Every Nation hath some Diety or other and so a Religion Heathens sacrifice though it may be it be to the Divel who cruelly sucks their very blood Turks and Saracens must have the black drop cut out of their breast and their circumcision every Religion puts some restraints upon mens lusts and lives Now though I believe though there were no reward or a future state Religion would be as good for our bodies as prunings are to Trees * Prov. 3.8 health to our navels marrow to our bones yet its severities would in no degree down with men were it not for the urgings and prickings on of natural conscience But Christians above * 1 Cor. 15.19 all men were most miserable if in this life only they had hope whose principles enjoin the highest degree of self-denial patience and bearing of the Crosse But every good man let the mad World prate as it will and vomit all its gall and bitternesse in reproaches and persecutions yet if he suffer for righteousnesse sake in innocent patience his own conscience gives him an acquittance and a secret absolution so as he can * Rom. 5.3 glory even in tribulation yea every devout soul more or lesse tasteth of those first fruits of heavenly delight in being conscious * 2 Cor. 1.12 of his duty discharged in simplicity and godly sincerity whatever calamities may attend him in this life which if they were not pledges of a fuller crop in that future harvest of joys the best men were most unhappy by that great frustration and disappointment of their expectations And so wicked men though the World may applaud their actions as highly vertuous by a sordid spirit of flattery yet * Mens habet attonitos surdo verbere coedit Per. their own consciences affr ght them and smite them with many a deadly and deaf blow which no body else doth hear or observe Cain may build his Cities and his Walls as high as the Clouds yet there is that within as he said to the Emperour that will ruine all * Gen. 4.5 his countenance falls and the guilt of his Brothers blood maketh his soul to blush and pulleth down his high looks The highest-formed sinners that have sinned themselves into despaire have nothing left them * Heb. 10.27 but a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which sh●ll devoure such Adversaries Others that have sinn'd themselves into the highest presumptions never come to any senseless ease till they attaine to * Isa 28.15 make a Covenant with Hell and can be content to * Heb. 11.25 suffer
torments to eternity with the enemies of God rather than to part with the pleasures of sinne which a●e bu● for a season and seem to have that wrote on the tables of their hearts which that Wretch subscribed under the Image of God and the Devil * Domine si tu non vis iste me rogitat Lord if thou wilt not here is one that begs of me to be his and his I will be Now if there be a Law a Judge punishments and rewards in some degree here then every man is a Prophet in this case of this Future state 4. The promiscuous dispensations and providences of God in this world * Eccles 9.2 Psal 17.14 Lam. 3.16 all things coming alike to all nay the wicked it may be have their belly full of a large portion in this life when the godly have their teeth broken with gravel stones and covered with ashes these argue 1. There is a day to come when the scales shall be turned Abel is slaine for his piety when Cain lives and builds Cities Herod reigns Herodias danceth when John Baptists head is serv'd in in a Charger And though God sometimes by extempore and sudden justice hangs up some wicked wretches in chaines yet many times the most wretched oppressors are too strong and high for justice in this world and they that live like Lyons die like Lambs they have liberty in their lives and * Psal 73.4 no bands in their deaths Dionysius a bloody Tyrant dies quietly in his bed when David lies * Psal 32.3 roaring all night and a good Josiah falls in Battle which made the Prophet cry out * Hab. 1.8 Wherefore doth the wicked devour one more righteous than himself the just must therefore live by his Faith in the world to come or else all Piety will die therefore there shall be a judgement hereafter for * Heb. 6.10 Psal 58.11 God is not unrighteou● to forget their labour of love and patience doubtless there is a reward for the righteous verily there is a God that judgeth in the earth 2. Is the life to come such a Kingdome then here is field-room for all our ambition avarice and contention to shew it self be ambitious for something if we must be ambitious let us all King it here What scuffling and scrambling is there for Crowns and Scepters in the world out of that impetuous lust of dominering whereas a prophane Esau sold his Birth-right which had a Kingdome and a Blessing too in it * Gen. 25.34 for a mess of pottage Lysimachus when inflamed with thirst profered his Kingdome for a draught of cold water and how much gold or how many Kingdomes would Dives give if he had them * Luke 16.24 for a drop of cold water or to be delivered from that one Kingdome of the Devil and shall Christians contend about these things Alas Christian Religion was never made for a secular Engine we may as soon turn Axiomes of Truth into Swords and Speares the Rules of holy living into Canons and Musquets and prayers and teares into powder and shot as to make Religion a troubler of the order and peace of the world that is of a Dove-like * Mat. 10.16 innocent temper full of * Jam. 3.17 meeknesse humility gentlenesse easinesse to be entreated without partiality without hypocrisie can suffer any evil but do none can live and secure it self better by suffering than the crafty world by acting to use sinful means to avoid suffering or preserve worldly greatness is like him that when one hoped to see him at his Diocess ere long Replyed He feared he should be in heaven before that time should come It is not Christian Religion but that Anti-Christian spirit which diffuseth it self all over Christendome in its Doctrines and Agitations its Philtres and Poysons that inflames it more with contentions and Warres than any part of the world besides For Religion truly Christian * Mat. 12.25 takes only the Kingdome of Heaven by violence Let one Romane Emperour busie himself in catching flies another gather Cockle-shells with his Army on the Sands after great preparations for an Expedition silly emblemes of the most valiant attempts of many highly-famed Mortals but let Christians March with all Zeale only for the holy Land of Promise All those tittles of Honour for we pronounce them too long which the world playes with as children with Farthing Candles blowing them in with one breath puffing them out with another if they had never so good a * Membrana dignitatis Sen. Pattent yet what will they come to * Isa 34.4 Rev. 6.14 when the Heavens shall role up as a Scrole much more shall these shrivel up as a piece of Parchment before the Flames when all the Armes and Ensignes of Honour shall be blazoned alike in a Field ardent at the judgement day Beauty that blossome of flesh and blood which now carries so many Captives at her Wheeles tyrannizing over fond mortals affections when we come to those beauties of Glory will be no more comely than a dry skull in comparison of the Ravishing Lustre that will be in the most deformed body of the Poorest Lazarillo whose Brightness will transcend the loveliest face more than the rarest Jewel doth a vile piece of Jett And though perhaps difference of Sexes may remaine for all Scotus his Glosse That in Christ Jesus there is neither male nor female yet * Delectent intuitum non inflectent ad vitium they will only delight the eye not incline to any vicious thought all lust being fired out and no spark of concupiscence left in the Saints but Grace triumphing in those objects that conquered it here when * Mat. 11.12 they shall be as the Angels of God only pure flames of Divine Love and joy When all the pure gold in the World shall be melted out of the veins of the Earth and mens Coffers into one common streame and all Pearles and precious Stones should lie as the gravel on the side of that River yet they would scarcely be thought fit then to make a Metaphor of for the very Pavement of the new Jerusalem one sight whereof will dimm and deface all the glory of the World 3. Must the Title be Inheritance then look to your evidences Regeneration and Adoption as ever you look for this Kingdome prove your Fathers Will and your selves Sonnes it is no matter how your names are wrote on earth in dust or Marble in reproach or renown if they be written in Heaven Some say this world is but a shadow of that above and it was so before sin had blotted and defaced all therefore look for the lineaments of that Kingdome above to be pourtrayed on you all are for an Heaven but as Eusebius says there were many * Ebionitarum Encratitarum Nazaraeorum c. spurious Gospels so Basilis asserted one hundred sixty five Heavens as many Heavens as dayes in a yeare The Turks
delivered unto you so you may be delivered into it Rom. 6.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Form of doctrine into which ye were delivered Efficacius vitae quam lnguae testimonium Ber. Confession Bernard What a sore judgement will abide such as suffer all these morning influences to passe away as water over a swans back that come the same from these morning visions they came to them How shall we escapt if we neglect so great salvation Hold it forth I say Christians in your lives the Conversation is a better testimony to the truth then the confession I have met with a general vote in the Auditory that attended this morning Ordinance that these Sermons might be Printed that so what hath once past upon your ears might be exposed to your eye whereby you might stay and fix upon it with the more deliberation Whether I may prevail with the Brethren or no for their second travel in this Service I know not There is one way left you wherein you may gratifie your own desires and Print these Sermons without their leave though I am confident not without their consent and that is PRINT THEM IN YOVR LIVES AND CONVERSATIONS Live this morning Exercise in the sight of the world that men may take notice you have been with Jesus You have been called up with Moses into the Mount to talk with God Now you come down oh that your faces might shine that you would commend this morning Exercise by an holy life that you may be manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ ministred by VS 2 Cor. 3.3 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven Matth. 5.16 To that end Take along with you these two great helps in the Text FAITH LOVE Hold fast the form of sound words in FAITH and LOVE I know some Expositors interpret these as the two great COMPREHENSIVE HEADS of sound words or Gospel-Doctrine in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith and Love Faith towards God and Love towards men Faith the summe of the first Table and Love of the second or Faith in Christ and Love to Christ or Faith as comprehending the Credenda things to be believed Love as comprehending the Facienda things to be done But I am sure it is not against the Analoge of Faith or the Context to improve these two as Mediums to serve this command of holding fast sound Doctrine And so in the entrance it was propounded as the fourth Doctrine scil Faith and Love are as it were the two hands whereby we hold-fast the Form of sound words 1. Faith First then Christians look to your Faith that is an hold-fast grace which will secure your standing in Christ As unbelief is the root of Apostacy and falling back from the Doctrine of the Gospel Heb. 3.12 So Faith is the spring of Perseverance 1 Pet. 1.5 Kept by the power of God through faith to salvation Faith keeps the Believer and God keeps his faith Now faith keeps the believer close to his Principles upon a two-fold accompt Faith realizeth Gospel-truth 1. Because faith is the grace which doth REALIZE all the Truths of the Gospel unto the soul Evangelical Truths to a man that hath not faith are but so many prettie Notions which are pleasing to the fancy but have no influence upon the Conscience they may serve a man for discourse but he cannot live upon them suffering Truths in particular are pleasing in the Speculation in times of prosperity but when the hour of temptation cometh they afford the soul no strength to carry it through sufferings and to make a man go forth unto Christ without the Camp bearing his reproach Heb. 13.13 But of Faith saith the Aposte it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen faith makes all Divine Objects although very Spiritual and subtile in their own nature faith makes them I say so many realities so many solid and substantial verities it gives them a being not in themselves but unto the believer and of invisible it makes them visible as it is said of Moses he saw him that was invisible How by faith verse 23.24 that which was invisible to the eye of nature was visible to the eye of faith Faith brings the object and the faculty together Heb. 11.27 Hence now men yet in their unregeneracy though haply illuminated to a high degree of Gospel-Notion in time of tribulation will fall away and walk no more with Jesus because through the want of Faith Divine Truth had no rooting in their hearts all their knowledge is but a powerlesse notion floating in the brain and can give no reality or subsistence to Gospel-verities Knowledge gives lustre but Faith gives being knowledg doth irradiate but Faith doth realize knowledge holds ou● light but faith adds life and power It is Faith my Brethren whereby you stand 2 Tim. 1.12 Faith is that whereby a man can live upon the truth and die for the truth I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Look to your Faith Christians For again Faith fetcheth strength from Christ Secondly Faith will help you to fetch strength from Jesus Christ to do to suffer to live to die for Jesus Christ and the truths which he hath purchased and ratified by his own blood Phil. 4 13. I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me Faith invests the soul into a kind of Omnipotency I can do all things Other mens impossibilities are faiths triumph Faith is an omnipotent grace because it sets a work an Omnipotent God In the Lord I have righteousness and strength is the boast of faith Isa 45.24 Righteousnesse for Justification and strength for Sanctification and for carrying on all the duties of the holy life this is insinuated in my Text Hold fast c. in FAITH which is in CHRIST JESVS So that if it were demanded How shall we hold fast the answ is by Faith how doth faith hold fast in Christ Jesus scil as it is acted by and as it acts upon Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is a Fountain of strength Psal 71.16 and that strength is drawn out by faith hence Davids Resolve I will go in the strength of the Lord God I will make mention of thy Righteousnesse even of thine onely 2. Love The second grace which you must look to is LOVE Love is another hold-fast grace I held him and would not let him go said the Spouse of her Beloved Cant. 4.3 I tell you sirs Love will hold fast the truth when Learning will let it go the reason is because Learning lieth but in the head but Love resteth in the heart and causeth the heart to rest in the thing or person beloved I cannot dispute for
raised 480. to be believed 581. reasons of it 586 587 588 589. Resurrection the effect of the New Covenant and union with Christ 388. Resurrection after what manner and with what difference 591. how effected p. 593. it is to be believed 595. a ground of comfort ib. 596 597 598 599. a ground of terror 560. how made happy to our selves 603 604. Revenge accompanieth repentance 545. S Sacraments in the Old Testament were various and many 122. Tree of life a Sacrament in Paradise ibid. Sacraments prove corruption of nature 153. Saints are good company 3. Salvation by Christ an Argument of original pravity 153. Salvation the end of Faith 473. Salvation difficult 482. Sanctification Covenant priviledge 14. Satisfaction of Christ explained 337 339 340 341. its Matter 408 Form 412. Terms 417. Satisfaction not made by man himself 407. but by Christ 408 409 410. and how done 402. Satisfaction of Christ the only plea to procure justification at Gods bar ib. Scripture the Word explained 86. Scripture proves a God 48. Scripture similitudes shew the union between Christ and Believers 384. Scripture only discovers mans natural pravity 151. Sea its course and confinement proved a God 35 36. Secret sins discovered by natural conscience 44. Sense of Scriptures power on the soul prove them Divine 98. Sense of sin and sorrow for it are precursive parts of true Repentance 492. Sense of a short life helps to Repentance 349. Self sinful to be studied 168. Self examination an help to Repentance 548. Severity of Gods justice 295. Sense its pain in hell 626. Constituted by Real presence of all evil Impression of justice Personal Feeling 627 628. Sentence of last day 614. Sight of things invisible an effect of Faith 471. Sin to be feared and fled from 643 644. Sin a defect nothing positive 112 113. it is most unreasonable p. 114. subjects man to an impotency of saving himself 115. justifieth God in punishing man 116 117. should rather be gotten out than inquired how it came into the world 113. Sins evil seen in Christ his death 294. Sin better discovered by the New than Old Covenant 250. Sin abolished by Christ his death 302 303. Sin is imputed inherent extensive diffusive 165. Sin may exist and prevaile in a true Saint 505. Sin mortified by the Spirit 389. Sinner elect and called the subjects of Faith 460. Shame was in Christs death 206. Sensible sinner subject of true repentance 489. Society in heaven what 658 659. Sons of God partakers of the whole essence of the Father is the same numerical nature 66. 67. Sonship to God is by Creation 435. Generation 435. Marriage 435. Adoption 435. Sonship by Adoption Honourable 437 440. Free 437 440. Permanent 437 440. Sonship to God marks of it p. 453 454. Sorrow and humility usher faith 476. Soul of Christ suffered 410. Souls in heaven subject to Jesus Christ 324 325. Spirit of God in man a signe of union with Christ 389. Spirit of God justifieth how 422. Spirits evil shall be chained when Saints go to heaven 652. Speed facilitates repentance 452. Sting of conscience a note of Deity 45. Sting in Christ his death 286 287. Study of Scriptures a duty 99 100. Suns scituation and motion proveth a God 33 34. Sullen repentance what 518. Systems of Religion profitable for Ministers and people 5. they instruct in the faith antidote error 7 12. Adorn the truth 16. help the understanding 17. the memory 18. affections 19. such are found in Scripture 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. to be studied by young Divines 21. T Temptation of Satan did not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Things in heaven subject to Christ what 323 324. Things on earth subject to Christ what they are 325. Things under the earth 326. Every Tongue what it means 329. Terms of Covenant between God the Father and his Son 225. Torments of Hell Exquisite Intolerable Easelesse Remediless Universal and various 629 630 631. Tryal of last day shall be 1. Universal 2. Formal 3. Impartial 4. Exact 5. Perspicuous 6. Supreme 610 611 612. its consequence 613. Trinity proved by Old Testament text 72. New Testament 74 75. Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance 50. U Union of two natures in Christ without confusion or transmutation 270. Union of believers and Christ necessary p. 377. what kind it is not 379. what kind it is 381 382. its causes 383. grounds 385. its marks 389 390 391 392. it is to be sought by sinners and improved by Saints 396 397 398 399 400. Unbelievers miserable 48. not Gods sons 447. Vocation its twofold estate 437. Vocation a Resurrection a new Creation 361. W Will of God signified in a rule of rectitude 107. Witness from heaven differs in six particulars from witnesse on earth 67 68. we have both to prove Christ the Son of God 66. Word of God declareth his wrath 181 182 183. World visible its being and parts 31 32. World an enemy to faith 481. to be slighted by ●aints 549. Works their use in point of Covenant 126 127. how they justifie 422. Wrath of God what and how aggravated 177 178 179 180. falleth on man here 184. fully at the day of judgement ibid. sheweth his justice and wisdome p. 193 194 195 196. it is to be avoided 197 198. Y Yoak of the Law borne by Jesus Christ 280 281. Z Zeal Negative p. 2. Affirmative p. 2. Zeal accompanieth true Repentance 544. FINIS