Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n holy_a lord_n spirit_n 6,929 5 4.9769 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A87554 An exposition of the Epistle of Jude, together with many large and useful deductions. Lately delivered in XL lectures in Christ-Church London, by William Jenkyn, Minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The first part. Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1652 (1652) Wing J639; Thomason E695_1; ESTC R37933 518,527 654

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

accept of the services of worms That he the beholding of whose face is the heaven of those blessed spirits and who hath their beuties constantly before him to look upon and the sweetnesse of the exactly skilfull and melodious musick of a consort a chore of angels to delight him that this God should accept of the chatterings of cranes the blacknesse of Ethiopians the stammerings the lispings of infants the jarrings of our poor broken instruments the bungling services of which even poor we our selves are ashamed What a word of condescension is that of Cant. 2.14 Let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely and Joh. 4.23 The father seeketh such to worship him Lord thou dost not seek thus because thou wantest servants but because we want work not because thou art defective in attendants but abundant in grace and rewards and delighted with that of thy selfe which thou seest whereever thou findest it 2. How highly advanced is he who is God and man Observat 2. The excellency of angels speaks the greater excellency of him who is above all principalities and power Eph. 1.21 Phil. 2.9 and might and dominion who hath a name above every name Heb. 1.4 6.1 Pet. 3.23 who is made better than the angels whom all the angels are to worship and unto whom angels and authorities Mat. 4.11 and powers are made subject When Christ was upon earth the angels were his ministers angels proclaimed his entrance into the world Yea not only at his incarnation but tentations resurrection ascension angels attend him serve him woship him Our King hath not a guard of men as the great princes of the earth but a guard of princes and not of princes only but even of principalities and powers Christ is the Lord of the holy angels Exod. 25.20 The eyes of the Cherubims are fix'd upon the Mercy-seat the angels look upon Christ as their Master expecting his commands The vail of the tabernacle which covered the most holy Exod. 26.31 expresly signifying the flesh of Christ which hiding his divinity made way for us to heaven was made of broydered work with Cherubims there being hereby noted unto us the service which the angels give to Christ as man They are called Mat. 16.27 the angels of the Son of man Christ tooke not upon him the nature of angels and yet they undertake the service of Christ Blush O man that angels should obey him and that thou shouldst rebell against him Oh since he is come to his own let them receive him Let not Christ suffer for his condescension If submission to Christ be the grace of angels contempt of Christ is the sin of divels Oh kiss the Son subject your selves to him and so stoop to your own blessednesse And take heed of disgraceing that nature by sin and of making it lower than divels which Christ hath advanced above Angels 3. Observat 3. Psal 8.3 How much below angels is poor mortall man When David saw the Moon and Stars he had selfe-debasing thoughts how much more should wee when we contemplate angelicall excellency Angelus si cum anima rationali comparetur dici potest anima perfecta quemadmodum a nima dici potest angelus imperfectus Angelus est integr a perfectáque substantia spiritualis anima human a dimidiata imperfecta quia est forma corporis ac pars hominis Angelus est totus spiritus homo partim spiritus partim caro vel partim Angelus partim bestia Bell. de ascensione grad nov Even the best part of man his soul is lower then angels An angell is a perfect soul and a soul but an imperfect angel for the angel is an intire perfect spirituall substance but the soul is a spirit but imperfectly and by halfs because it is the form of the earthly body and hereby a part of a man An angel is all spirit man part spirit and part flesh partly like an angel and partly like a beast an angel is all gold a man partly gold partly clay How childish yea brutish and dull is our understanding in comparison of that of angels What great pains doth man take for a little knowledge how is he beholding for it to his senses and discouse from the effects to their causes and after all industry how doubtfull superficial and staggering is he in his apprehensions but angels behold things with one view at once discern things both effects and causes and pierce into the substance as well as the accidents of things As much difference between the knowledg of men and of angels as there is between the sight of an Owl and an Eagle an illumin'd Doctor and a sucking child How weak and impotent are the operations of the soul of man in comparison of those of an angel the soul by the command of its will can only move its own body and that too how slowly how creepingly and with what a dull progressivenesse upon the dunghill of this earth nor can it bear up this upon the water in the aire and carry it whithersoever it will whereas these spirits with their alone force can carry vast and heavy bodies upward and whither they please One angel wants no weapons nay no hands to destroy a whole army How far below the angels are we in habitation The poorest pigeon-hole is not so much inferior to the ivory palaces of Solomon or the blackest under-ground dungeon to the most magnificent mansions of a king as is mans habitation to that of the angels How glorious is that court which is adorned with the presence of the King of glory and how blessed those attendants which ever behold his face therein Poor man hath no better lodging for his noble heaven-born soul than a cottage of clay and that too so frail and crazy as were it not once or twice every day daub'd over it would fall about his ears and whethersoever he goes he is forced to carry to drag this clog this clay this chaine with him whereas angels free from the shackels of flesh can move from heaven to earth from earth to heaven even as swiftly as can our very thoughs Poor man wilt thou yet be proud Oh that we were as low in heart as in condition How uncomely a garment is pride for those who imbrace the dunghill when the glorious angels are clothed with humility But alas as the height of heaven cannot make an angel proud so neither can the lownesse of earth no not of hell make sinners humble Oh that we might only have high thoughts of that condition Luk. 20.36 wherein we shall be equall to the angels Lord though I beg that I may be more thankfull for the metcies which I enjoy than dejected for the troubles which I endure in this life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet grant till I come to be like the angels in the full enjoyment of thy selfe that about the sweetest of
only in himselfe but as he is attended by others and so he will make the day great if we consider 1. by whom 2. by how many he shall thus be attended 1. By whom They shall be creatures of great glory and excellency The glorious Angels shall be Christs attendants at the great day in which respect Christ is said to come Luk. 9.26 in the glory of the holy Angels and Mat. 25.31 it 's said that the Son of man shall come and the holy Angels with him and Luk. 12.9 that Christ will deny some before the Angels of God and 2 Thes 1.7 the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels These angels that excell in strength are his heavenly hosts his Ministers to do the pleasure of Christ their great Lord and Commander If at the time of his Nativity Tentation Passion Resurrection Luk. 2.13 Ascension they readily gave Christ their attendance how much more shall they do it at the great day when all the glory of Christ shall be revealed Luk. 7.53 Gal. 3.19 Deut. 33.2 Illi in obsequio hic in gloriâ Illi in comitatu hic in suggestu illi stant hic sedet hic judicut illi ministrant Ambros lib. 3. de fid Mat. 24.31 Psal 103.20 2 Thes 1.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 3.4 1 Thes 4.17 If at the promulgation of the Law upon Mount Sinai Angels waited upon him how readily shall they serve him when he shall come to Judgment for the execution of that Law What glory shall be in that day when the very servants of the Judge who shall wait upon him run at every turne and upon every errand who shall blow the Trumpet summon to appear bring the prisoners before the Bar and take them away again when even these waiters I say shall be Angels of power the heavenly host every one being stronger then an earthly army holy Angels creatures of unspeakeable agility and swiftnesse glorious Angels who as much exceed in glory the greatest Emperour in the world as the Sun in the Firmament doth a clod of earth Nor can it be but the day must be very illustrious if we consider that the Saints shall appear also with Christ in glory that they shall meet the Lord in the air and be witnesses for nay assessors with Christ in judgement and partakers of that victory which in the last day he shall have over all his enemies That all the enemies of Christ and his Church shall stand before the Saints to be justly judged whom they in this world have judged unjustly and in a word that every one of these Saints shall in their spiritual bodies shine as the Sun Mat. 13.43 when it appears in its perfect lustre But 2 Christ as attended will make the day great if we consider by How many he shall bee attended At that great day there shall be a generall assembly a great number even all his servants waiting upon him both Saints and Angels hence 1 Thes 1.13 is mentioned the Coming of the Lord Jesus with all his Saints and Eph. 4.13 the meeting of all In this glorious concourse there shall not be one wanting If Christ will raise up every Saint from the grave then doubtlesse shall every Saint appear in glory at the last day Joh. 6.39 He will not lose his cost laid out upon them But if he bestowes new liveries upon his servants they shall all when adorned with them wait upon him Nor shall there be one Angel but shall glorifie him in that day Psal 148.2 Heb. 1.6 If all the angels of God are commanded to praise and worship him then undoubtedly will they performe this duty at that day wherein the glory of Christ shall be so eminently manifested all the holy angels Mat. 25.3 shall come with the son of man And if all the Angels and Saints must wait on Christ the number must needs be vast Heb. 12. and the multitude exceeding great of angels there must be an innumerable company Myriads ten thousands of Saints or holy ones Dan. 7.10 Jude 14. a definite number being put for an indefinite And about the throne Rev. 5.11 are said to be ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands ten thousands of Saints An innumerable company of Angels attended the solemn delivery of the Law at Mount Sinai Deut. 33.2 Vid. Rivet in loc in allusion to which the triumphant Ascension of Christ into heaven is described Psal 68. to be with twenty thousand Chariots even thousands of angels and of those who stood before the throne clothed with white robes and having palmes in their hands there was Rev 7.9 a great multitude which no man could number c. Now if the glory of one angel was so great Judg. 6.22.13.22 that those who of old time beheld it expected death thereby and if for fear of an Angel whose countenance was like lightning the keepers Mat. 28.4 did shake and became as dead men how great shall be the glory of all the millions of Angels and Saints at the great day when God shall let out his glory unto them and fill them as full of it as they can hold that he may be admired in them Who can imagine the greatnesse of that day wherein the Judge shall be attended with so many millions of servants every one of whom shall have a livery more bright and glorious then the Sun The splendor of this appearance at the great day will ten thousand times more surpass that of the attendance of the greatest Judges and Kings in the world than doth theirs excell the sporting and ridiculous acting of their more serious solemnities by children in their playes 2. This day of Judgement shall be great in respect as of the Judge so likewise of the Judged and the judged shall make the day great as they fall under a fourfold consideration or in four respects 1. In respect of the greatnesse of their company and number 2. The greatnesse of their ranks and degrees 3. The greatnesse of their faults and offences 4. The greatnesse of their rewards and recompences 1. In respect of the greatnesse of their numbers When many persons are tryed and judged many prisoners cast and condemned we ordinarily say that the Assizes or Sessions are great though the number of the persons judg'd be not so great by an hundred parts as the number of those who stand by to hear the Tryall How great then shall the day of Judgement be wherein all shall be tryed and judged It was of old prophesied by Enoch that the Lord would execute judgement upon all Before the Throne of the Son of man all nations shall be gathered Mat. 25.32 Rom. 14.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 5.10 Act. 17.31 And 2 Thes 2.1 the day of judgement is call'd the time of our gathering together unto Christ We must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done
a man we should observe the life of him that praiseth him Rarely will one praise him that takes contrary courses to himself But this should be the care of the best to keep himself from being spoken of reproachfully and truly at the same time by the worst Nor is it lesse the sin of people to blemish the name of him that deserves well then it is the sin of any one to deserve ill The Apostle is tender of receiving an accusation against an Elder certainly he who is so much against receiving would be much more against thieving 2. It s lawfull to use humane helps for the advantage of Truth Obs 2. This help the title of the brother of James was warrantably prefix'd Paul where the fruit of his ministry was hazarded by omitting titles mentions them at large 1 Cor. 9.1 Gal. 1. as to the Corinthians and Galatians and where concealment of his titles might do as well or better he omits them as in both the Epistles to the Thessalonians the like is requisite for us In these things Ministers should consider what tends most to the benefit of souls I have known Ministers of great learning and worth who have been despicable among Idiots because Birth or Vniversity degrees or Allyance have not commended them perhaps they had not a James to their brother 1 Cor. 15.33 Tit. 1.12 Act. 17.28 The Heathens testimonies are not refused by the Apostle to advantage Truth If the naming of a Father in a Sermon tends more to ostentation then edification it may better be forborn otherwise be lawfully used Scripturis non credidissem c Aug. Humane Authority was an Introduction to Austens faith afterward as the Samaritans he beleeved upon firmer grounds Certainly we never so well improve our humane advantages as when Christ is advanced by them How sweet to observe Ministers to set Christ upon their Names Titles Parts Readings 3 The beauty of Consent and Agreement between the Ministers of Christ either in Doctrine or Affection Obs 3. Both these the prefixing of James his name argued between him and Jude Readily and rashly to dissent from other the faithfull and approved Ministers of Christ is not like our Apostles carriage Indeed we must not admire men too much though of greatest learning and piety not so affect unity as to forsake verity or so follow men as to forget God The best men in the world are but rules regulated not regulating We must only so far set our Watch according to theirs as they set theirs according to the Sun Satan endures no mediocrity All Ministers hee represents as Dwarfs or Giants none of a middle stature either they must be worship'd or stoned Avoid we both extremes neither proudly dissenting from nor imprudently assenting to them either in practice or opinion Their gifts must neither be adored nor obscured their falls and slips neither aggravated nor imitated We must avoid both sequaciousnesse to follow them in any thing and singularity to dislike them in every thing The middle way of a holy Scripture-consent joyning in what we may and meekly forbearing in what we may not is a gracious temper Ministers must not so study to have multitudes of followers as to scorn to have any companions to vilifie others for the advancement of themselves to build up their own reputations upon the ruines of anothers Consent as much as may be is no more then should be If Ministers should endeavour a holy peace with all men much more with one another there 's not more be●ty then strength in their union How pleasant is it to read Peter mentioning his agreement with his beloved brother Paul 2 Pet. 3.15 that Paul that had withstood him to the face Gal. 2.11 There 's no repugnancy in Scripture why should there be betwixt them that handle it If the Paen-men of the Scripture be at peace in writing Ministers must not be at war in preaching they must not seek more their pr●ise for wit then the profit of souls When children fall out in interpreting their father's Will the Orphans patrimony becoms the Lawyers booty Hereticks are the gainers by the divisions of them that should explain the Word of Christ The dissention of Ministers is the issue of Pride If there must be strife let it be in this who shall be formost in giving honour if emulation in this who should win most souls to Christ not admirers to themselves It s good to use our own parts and not to contemn others The Apostles in the infancy of their calling were not without the itch of pride Christ laboured to allay it both by precept and example 4. Grace and Holinesse are not only an ornament to the person himself that is endowed with them Obs 4. but even to those that have relation to him The holinesse of the child is an ornament to the father that of the father to the child the grace of the husband to the wife the holinesse of one brother beautifies another It 's true Every vessell must stand on his own bottom and every one must live by his own faith It s a folly to boast of the holinesse of our Parents and neglect it our selves if thy father be holy for himself and thee too he shall go to heaven for himself and thee too The grace of thy friends doth not beget grace in thee but beutifie it The Saints have oyl of grace little enough for their own lamps and where holiness is abhorred by the child that of the parent is but an addition to the childs shame and punishment in being so unlike him spiritually whom he doth so resemble naturally 'T was but a poor priviledge for the Jews to have Abraham for their naturall and the Divel for their spirituall father but when a child a brother a wife love and labour for that grace which those of neer relation have attained it s their honour and ornament in that they who are neer them are neerer to God Indeed it s often seen that they who have most spirituall lovelinesse have least love from us The godly want not beuty but carnall friends want eyes A blind man is unmeet to judge of colours how possible is it to entertein Angels and not to know it The love of grace in another requires more then nature in ones self Blood is thicker we say then water and truly the blood of Christ beutifying any of our friends and children should make us prefer them before those between whom and us there 's only a watery relation of nature But how great a blemish often doth the gracelesnesse the unholinesse of a parent a husband a brother bring upon them that are of neer relation to them It s a frequent question that was propounded by Saul to Abner 1 Sam. 17.56 Whose son is this stripling How disgracefull is such an answer as this The son of a Drunkard a Murderer an Oppressor a Traytor a Whoremaster Love to our friends our posterity
looking toward heaven is alway gone out to weep no there 's nothing destroy'd by sanctification but that which would destroy us we may eat still but not be gluttons drink but not be drunken use recreation but not be voluptuous trade but not deceive In a word be men but holy men 3. The people of God even in this life are Saints Obs 3. perfectly indeed hereafter but inchoatively here A childe hath the nature though not the stature of a man A Christian hath here as truly grace though not so fully as in heaven Grace is glory in the bud this life is the infant-age of glory Aetas infantalis gloriae Ye are sanctified 1 Cor. 6. They who look upon sanctity as an accmplishment only for heaven are never like to get thither It s common to hear a reproved sinner give this answer I am no Saint Were this an accusation and not an excuse for his unholinesse it might be admitted but he is no Saint nor desires to be one holinesse and holy ones are his scorn These in this condition shall never see God heaven must be in us before we be in heaven Rev. 21.8 Rev. 22.15 Depart from me will be the doom of them that work iniquity Dogs shall be without Ye who here cannot be merry without scoffing at purity hereafter shall mourn for your want of purity ye who account purity and sanctification inconsistent with nobleness breeding generosity will see that these were nothing without purity That which is the beauty of heaven the glory of angels is it an ignominy upon earth the shame of worms You are not too good for holinesse but holiness for you I confess it s a great sin and shame and should be a sorrow that there are so many counterfeit unsanctified saints who have made sanctity so hatefull but yet for thee by these to be scandalized at sanctity is thine as well as their wo. Let the Popes Kalendar only saint the dead the Scripture requireth sanctity in the living 4. Obs 4. Holinesse cannot lie hid Holy life is holily active if a living man hold his breath long its death to him Saul was no sooner converted but he prayes he breathes A regenerated person speaks to God as soon as he is born If God be dishonoured he speaks for God he cannot learn the wisdom of our times to dissemble his Religion to be still when God is struck at he must shew whose image and superscription he bears wicked men proclaim their sin as Sodom and he proclaims his grace and yet not that he may be seen but that he may be serviceable The Spirit of God is fire winde a river it will bear away any opposition rather then be kept in the world thinks a saint is mad of suffering when he appears for God they are mistaken he is not desirous of it but fearless of it when God requires he is neither profuse when he should spare nor penurious when he should spend himself for God 5. I note The great change that is wrought upon a person when God comes with sanctifying grace Obs 5. There 's no difference in the world greater then between a man and his former self the world and men of it need not take it ill that a Saint differs so much from them he differs as much from himself a sanctified person is utterly opposite to all hee was and did before the stream is turn'd hee sees now he was blind before he loves that which formerly he loathed he loathes that which formerly he loved he unlives his former life he picks it out as it were stitch by stitch The wicked 1 Pet. 4.4 are said to think the course of sanctified persons strange 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is they are like men in a strange Country that see strange sights which before they were altogether unacquainted with Oh the power of grace a Lion is now a Lamb a Goat is now a Sheep a Raven is now a Dove and which is more a Sinner is now a Saint he that before rush'd into sin now trembles at it he that before persecuted holiness now preacheth it They in the Gospel hardly knew the man that had sight restored to him but said he was like the blinde man John 9. Did the alone recovery of sight make such a difference in him from what he was formerly what a difference is wrought then by grace which makes not onely a new eye but a new tongue ear hand heart life 6. Obs 6. The holinesse of a sanctified person is not purely negative It stands not altogether in labouring not to sin It s not enough for the tree that escapeth the ax not to bring forth bad unless it also bring forth good fruit nor is it sufficient for the sanctified soul to put off filthy unless it put on beautifull garments The old man must be put off and the new put on we are not content with half happinesse why should we be with half holinesse The holiness of the most is not to be as bad as the worst few labour to be as good as the best Men love to be compleat in every thing but that which deserves exactnesse We must not cut off the garment of holiness at the midst Our eternall happiness shall not onely stand in being out of hell but in being in the fruition of heaven we must not mete to God one measure and expect from him another 7. Obs 7. Sanctification admits no coalition agreement between the new and the old man This later is abolish'd as the former is introduced Col. 3.10 The new man is not put upon the old Eph. 4.24 as somtime new garments are put upon old but in the room of them In sanctification there 's no sewing of a new peece to an old garment which alway doth but make the rent the wider It s one thing for sin to be another thing to be allowed one thing for sin to be in us another thing for us to be in sin Sin is a Saints burden a thorn in his eye not a crown on his head it s his daily task to weaken and impair it if he cannot fully conquer yet he faithfully contends Sin and holiness are like a pair of balances when the one goeth up the other must needs go down Christ knows no co-partners in Government he will not drink of a fountain where Satan puts his feet Nescit de turbato fonte amicus bibere Bern. his Church is a Garden enclosed open only to heaven shut on every side The faithfull have a broken not a divided heart 8. Obs 8. As a sanctified person allows no mixtures with grace so he puts no limits to grace he desires that the grace he hath should be perfect as well as pure and as he loves that no part of him should be defiled so that none should be destitute he is sanctified throughout he perfects holinesse in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 A
God the Father Secondly the Observations follow 1. Even our holinesse administers matter of humility Obs 1. Our very graces should humble us as well as our sins as these later because they are ours so the former because they are none of ours Sanctity is adventitious to Nature Heretofore holinesse was naturall and sin was accidentall now sin is naturall and holinesse accidentall when God made any of us his garden he took us out of Satans waste ws are not born Saints the best before sanctification are bad and by nature not differing from the worst the members that God accepts to be weapons of righteousnesse were before blunted in Satans service when God sanctifieth us he melteth idols and makes of them vessels for his own use Before any becomes as an Israelites wife he is as a captive unpared unwash'd unshaven Sanctification is a great blessing but was this web woven out of thine own bowels the best thou didst bring to thine own sanctification was a passive receptivenesse of it which the very worst of heathens partake of in common with thee having a humane nature a rationall soul and was there not with that a corrupt principle of opposition to God and all the workings of God was not God long striving with a cross-grain'd heart how many denyals had God before he did win thee to himself How far was the iron gate of thy heart from opening of its own accord and if he had not wrought like a God omnipotently and with the same power wherewith Christ was raised Eph. 1.19 20. had thy resistence been ever subdued and when the being of grace was bestowed from whence had thy grace at any time its acting Didst thou ever write one letter without Gods guiding thy hand didst thou ever shed one penitentiall tear till God unstop'd thy spouts smote thy rock and melted thy heart didst thou hunger after Christ till God who gave the food gave the stomack also Was ever tentation resisted grace quickned corruption mortified holy resolution strengthened power either to do or will received from any but from God Doth not every grace the whole frame of sanctification depend upon God as the stream on the fountain the beam on the Sun when he withdraws his influence how dead is thy heart in every holy performance onely when he speaks the word effectually bidding thee go thou goest and do this or that thou dost it 2. Obs 2. The reason why all graces of a sanctified person are for God they are from him Gods bounty is their fountain and Gods glory must be their center He planted the Vineyard and therefore he must drink the wine We are his wormanship and therefore we must be his workmen All our pleasant fruits must be laid up and out for our well-beloved All things but particularly our graces are from him and for him we can never give him more or other then his own when we give all we can The streames will rise as high as the fountain head and so should our graces ascend as high in duty as he who gave them Where should God have service if a sanctified person denyes it 3. Obs 3. From this Author of Sanctification I note t s excellency and worth It s a rare work certainly that hath such a workman a beauteous structure that hath such a builder What is a man to be desired for but his sanctification if we see a beauty on that body which hath a soul how much more on that soul that hath the reflexion of God himself upon it Every Saint is a woodden casket fill'd with pearls The Kings daughter is all glorius within Love Jesus Christ in his worky-day clothes admire him in his Saints though they be black yet they are comely Did the people of God but contemplate one anothers graces could there be that reproaching scorn and contempt cast upon one another that there is Certainly their ignorance of their true excellency makes them enemies they strike one another in the dark 4. Obs 4. Great must be the love that God bears to Sanctification It s a work of his own framing a gift of his own bestowing God saw that the work of the first creation was very good much more that of the second Wonder no more that the faithfull are call'd his garden his Jewels his Treasure his Temple his Portion God hath two heavens and the sanctified soul is the lesser How doth he accept of Saints even in their imperfections delight in their performances pity them in their troubles take care of them in dangers He that hath given his Son for them promised heaven to them and sent his Spirit into them what can he deny them Jesus Christ never admired any thing but grace when he was upon the earth the buildings of the Temple he contemned in comparison of the faith of a poor trembling woman Certainly the people of God should not sleight those graces in themselves that God doth so value as they do when they acknowledge not the holinesse that God hath bestowed upon them Shall they make orts of those delicates that Jesus Christ accounts an excellent banquet 5. The love of God is expressive Obs 5. really and effectually in us and upon us even in sanctifying us Creatures when they love will not put off one another with bare words of bidding be clothed sed c. much lesse doth God If there be love in his heart there will be bounty in his hand Thou sayst that God is mercifull and loves thee why what did he ever do for thee work in thee hath he changed thy nature mortified thy lusts beautified thy heart with holinesse Where God loves be affords love-tokens and such are onely his soul-enriching graces No man knows love or hatred by what he sees before him but by what he findes in him If our heart moves toward God certainly his goeth out toward us the shadow upon the Dyall moves according to the motion of the Sun in the Heaven 6. Obs 6. We are to repair in our wants of Sanctification to God for supply He is the God of grace The Lord will give grace and glory He hath the key of the womb the grave the heavens but chiefly of the heart He that sitteth in heaven can onely teach and touch the heart How feeble a thing and unable is man whether thy self or the Minister to do this He hath the windes in his own keeping and till he send them out of his treasury how necessarily must thy soul lye wind-bound Whither shouldst thou goe but to him and how canst thou go but by him The means of grace are to be used in obedience to him Parum prodest Lectio quam non illuminat Oratio not in dependancy upon them A golden key cannot open without him and a woodden can open with him Man may with the Prophets servant lay the staff upon the fore-head but God must give life How many fat and rich Ordinances have been
salvation 4. 2 Pet. 3. Obs 4. Great is the hainousnesse of sin that can provoke a God of much mercy to expresse much severity That drop of gall must needs be bitter that can imbitter a sea of honey How offensive is sin that can provoke a God to whose ocean of pity the sea is but a drop Ephraim saith the Prophet provoked God to anger most bitterly Hos 12.14 or with bitternesses God afflicts not willingly he gives honey naturally but stings not til provoked Every sufferer coyns his own calamities There is no arrow of judgment which falls down upon us but was first in sinning shot upwards by us no showr of miseries that rains down but was caused by the ascent of the vapours of sin no print of calamity upon the earth but sin was the stamp that made it What a folly is it in our sufferings to be impatient against God and to be patient towards sin to be angry with the medicine and in love with the disease Let us justifie God in all our sufferings and condemn our selves God commands that if a man were found dead the City that by measure was found to be neerest to the place where he was found Deut. 21.2 should offer up a sacrifice In all our deaths and woes would we measure impartially we should finde sin neerest let us sacrifice it 5. Obs 5. It should be our care to obtain the best and choycest of mercies God hath mercies of all sorts wicked men are easily put off with the meanest their enquiry is Who will shew them any good But O Christian let nothing please thee but the light of Gods countenance so receive from God as that thou thy self mayst be received to God Desire not gifts but mercies from God not pibbles but pearls Labour for that which God alwayes gives in love There may be angry smiles in Gods face and wrathful gifts in his hand the best worldly gift may be given in anger Luther having a rich present sent him profess'd with a holy boldnesse to God That such things should not serve his turn A favourite of the King of heaven rather desires his favour than his preferment We use to say when we are buying for the body that the best is best cheap and is the worst good enough for the soul The body is a bold beggar and thou givest it much the soul is a modest beggar asketh but little and thou givest it less O desire from God that thy portion may not he in this life Psal 17.14 that what thou hast in the world may be a pledg of better hereafter that these things may not bewitch thee from but admonish thee what is in Christ The ground of Pauls thanks-giving was Ephes 1.3 that God had blessed the Ephesians with spirituall blessings in Christ. 6. Obs 6. How little should any that have this God of mercy for theirs be dismayd with any misery Blessed are those tears which so merciful a hand wipes off happy twigs that are guided by so indulgent a father Psal 25.10 All his severest wayes are mercy and truth to those in covenant if he smiles 't is in mercy if he smites 't is in mercy he wounds not to kill thee but sin in thee the wounds of mercy are betthan the embraces of anger if sicknesse poverty dishonour be in mercy why dost thou shrink at them Wrath in prosperity is dreadfull but Mercy makes adversity comfortable It s the anger of God which is the misery of every misery Peter at the first was not willing that Christ should wash his feet but when he saw Christs mercifull intent therein feet and hands and head are all offered to be wash'd A child of God when he sees the steps of a father should be willing to bear the stripes of a child God will not consume us but onely try us He afflicts not for his pleasure but for our profit Heb. 12.10 Psal 89. God visits with rods yet not with wrath He takes not away his loving-kindnesse Mercy makes the sufferings of Gods people but notions It would do one good to be in troubles and enjoy God in them to be sick and lye in his bosome God gives a thousand mercies to his people in every trouble and for every trouble He burdens us but it is according to our strength the strokes of his flail are proportioned to the hardnesse of the grain Is● 28.27 and merciful shall be the end of all our miseries There 's no wildernesse but shall end in Canaan no water but shall be turn'd into wine no lions carcass but shall be a hive of honey and produce a swarm of mercies The time we spend in labouring that miseries may not come would be spent more profitably in labouring to have them mixt with mercy nay turned into mercies when they come What a life-recalling cordial is the apprehension of this mercy of God to a fainting soul under the pressure of sin Mercy having provided a satisfaction and accepted it nay which is more it beseeching the sinner to beleeve and apply it That fountain of mercy which is in God having now found a conveyance for it self to the soul even Jesus Christ through whom such overflowing streams are derived unto us as are able to drown the mountains of our sins even as easily as the ocean can swallow up a pibble O fainting soul trust in this mercy Psal 33.18 and 147.11 If the Lord takes pleasure in those that hope in his mercy should not we take pleasure to hope in it Mercy is the onely thing in the world more large than sin It s easie to presume Exod. 34.7 Psal 77.7 but hard to lay hold upon mercy Oh beg that since there is an infinite fulnesse in the gift and a freenesse in the giver there be a forwardnesse in the receiver 7. Obs 7. It s our duty and dignity to imitate God in shewing mercy Obs 7. 1 Pet. 3.8 Matth. 5.45 Luke 6.36 Col. 3.12 Rom. 12.15 Plus est aliquando compati quàm dare nam qui exteriora largitur rem extra se positam tribuit qui compassionem aliquid sui-ipsius dat Gr. Mor. 20. A grace frequently commanded and encouraged in the Scripture Mercy we want and mercy we must impart As long as our fellow-members are pained we must never be at ease When we suffer not from the enemies of Christ by persecution we must suffer from the friends of Christ by compassion When two strings of an instrument are tuned one to the other if the one be struck upon and stirred the other will move and tremble also The people of God should be so harmonious that if one suffer and be struck the other should be moved and sympathize Jer. 9.1 Luke 19.41 2 Cor. 11.29 Holy men have every been tender-hearted Grace not drying up but diverting the streams of our affections Christ was mercy covered over with flesh and blood his words his works
written in heaven alone pacifie the heart This peace is upheld by the promises of God not of men by Scripture not Politick props The Father of Spirits is onely the Physician of Spirits Thus the Jewel of Peace is rare obtained but by a few the faithfull and regarded laid up in the Casket of the heart There 's the subject of it 3. The excellency of this peace appeares in it'● effects 1 It most disturbes sin when it quiets the soul most A pacified conscience is pure The soule at the same time time tasteth and feareth the goodness of God the Sun of mercy thawes the heart into teares for sin Hos 3.5 Peace with God increaseth feare of transgression as it diminisheth fear of damnation making us who formerly feared because we sinned now to fear lest we should sin If mercy be apprehended sin will be hated spirituall joy causeth godly grief As God is wont to speak peace to the soul that truly mourns for sin so the soul desires most to mourn for sin when God speaks peace unto it The pardoned traytor if he have any ingenuity most grieves for offending a gracious Prince Godly peace doth at the same time bannish slavish horror and cause filial fear Besides the more quietnesse we apprehend in enjoying God the more are we displeased with that trouble-heart sin 2. Another effect of this peace is activenesse and stirring in holy performances When the faithfull are most quiet they should be least idle When David had rest from his enemies he then was carefull how to build God an house when the soul seeth it is redeemed from the hands of his enemies Luke 1.74 75 its most engaged to serve the Redeemer in holinesse and righteousnesse This peace is as oyl to the wheels to make a Christian run the ways of Gods commandments The warmth of the Spring draws out the sap of trees into a sprouting greenness and the peace of God refresheth the soul into a flourishing obedience Jonathan having tasted hony his eys were inlightned and the soul which hath tasted the sweetnesse of inward peace is holily enlarged Some who professe they enjoy an ocean of peace expresse not a drop of obedience Suppose their profession true they defraud God but it being false they delude themselves The joy of Gods people is a joy in harvest as it is large so it is laborious they are joyfull in the house of prayer Isa 56.7 3. This inward peace from God inclines the heart to peaceablenesse toward man A quiet conscience never produced an unquiet conversation 1 Pet. 3.8 9 the nearer lines come to the center the nearer they are one to another the peaceable approaches of God to us will not consist with a proud distance between us and others Pax ista reddit offendentes ad sat is faciendum humiles offensos ad remittendum faciles Dau. in Col. 3.15 This peace of God maketh those who have offered wrong to others willing to make satisfaction and those who have suffered wrong from others ready to afford remission The equity of the former stands thus If the great God speaks peace to man when offended by him should not poor man speak peace to man when offending of him The equity of the later thus If God be pacified toward man upon his free-grace should not man be pacified toward man Mat. 18.24 it being a commanded duty and if God by his peace have sealed to man an acquittance from a debt of ten thousand talents should not man by his peace acquit man from the debt of an hundred pence In a word this peace from God makes us peaceable toward all it keeps us from envying the rich from oppressing the poor it renders us obedient to superiours gentle to equals humble to inferiours it preserves from Sedition in the Common-wealth from Schism in the Church it cools it calms it rules in heart and life 4. Peace from God makes us commiserate those who are under his wrath a pacified soul loves to impart its comforts and is most ready to give a Receit of what eased it it labours to comfort those that are in trouble by the comfort wherewith it is comforted 2 Cor. 1.4 The favourites of the King of heaven envie not his bestowing favour also upon others They pity both those who please themselves with an unsound peace and also those who are pained with the true wounds of conscience 5. This peace from God makes us contented and quiet in every affliction since the Lord hath spoken peace in the first we shall take it well whatsoever he speaketh in the next place what-ever God doth peaceably the soul beareth it patiently The great question of a godly heart when any trouble cometh is that of the Elders of Bethlehem to Samuel Comest thou peaceably and it answering peaceably is entertained with welcome Lord thou hast pardoned my sin saith a pacified soul and now do what thou pleasest with me Men destitute of this peace are like the leaves of a tree or a sea calm for the present moved and tossed with every winde of trouble their peace is nothing else but unpunish'd wickednesse And this for the Explication of the second blessing which the Apostle requesteth for these Christians viz. Peace The Observations to be drawn from it follow 1. Obs 1. They who are strangers to God in Christ are strangers to true peace True peace comes from enjoying the true God A quiet conscience and an angry God are inconsistent A truth deducible as from the preceding exposition of Peace so even from the Apostles very order in requesting peace First he prayeth for Mercy then for Peace 2 King 6.27 If the Lord do not help us how shall we be helped to this blessing out of the barn-floor or the wine-presse The garments that we wear must receive heat from the body before they can return any warmth again unto it and there must be matter of peace within ere any peace can accrue from any thing without If God be against us who can be for us if he disquiets us what can quiet us if He remain unpacified the conscience will do so notwithstanding all other by-endeavours A wicked mans peace is not peace but at the best onely a truce with God The forbearance of God to strike is like a mans who thereby fetcheth his blow with the greater force and advantage or like the intervals of a quartane the distemper whereof remaining the fits are indeed for two days intermitted but return with the greater violence A wicked mans conscience is not pacified but benummed and the wrath of God not a dead but a sleeping Lion Pro. 14.13 A sinners peace is unsound and seeming in the face not in the heart a superficiall sprinkling not a ground-showr he having in laughter his heart sad may truly in it say with Sarah I laughed not he being in his rejoycing Vides convivium laetitiam Interroga conscientiam Amb. Off. l. 1.
unto nay present with him by his universal care and providence he being not far from every one of us for in him we live c. Act. 17.27 28. 2 By assuming the nature of man into a personal conjunction with himself in the Mediator Christ 3 By conversing with man by signs of his presence extraordinary visions dreams oracles inspiration and ordinarily by his holy Ordinances wherewith his people as it were abide with him in his house 4 By sending his holy Spirit to dwell in man and bestowing upon man the divine nature 5 By taking man into an eternal habitation in heaven Psal 16. ult where he shall be ever in his glorious presence 2 There is a love of God to man considered as a love of benevolence or of good will or of willingness to do good to the thing beloved what else was his eternal purpose to have mercy upon his people and of saving them Rom. 9.13 but as it s exprest concerning Jacob this loving them And to whom can a will of doing good so properly agree as to him whose will is goodness it self 3 There is a lover of God to man considered as a love of beneficence bounty or actual doing good to the thing beloved Thus he bestoweth the effects of his love both for this life and that which is to come And the beneficence of God is called Love 1 Joh. 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God And Joh. 3.16 So God loved the world that he sent c. By this love of beneficence bestowes he the good things of nature grace glory God doth good to every creature hating though the iniquity of any one yet the nature of none Gen. 1.31 for the being of every creature is good and God hath adorn'd it with many excellent qualities According to these loves of benevolence and beneficence God loveth not his creatures equally but some more then others in as much as he willeth to bestow and also actually bestoweth greater blessings upon some than upon others he makes and preserves all creatures but his love is more especially afforded to mankinde he stileth himself from his love to man Tit. 3.4 and not from his love to Angels or any other creature He is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lover of man but never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a friend of Angels or creatures without man His love is yet more peculiarly extended to man in creating him after his own image Psal 8.5 Heb. 2.16 Rom. 5.8 and in giving him lordship over the creatures in giving his Son to take upon him mans nature and exalt it above heavens and Angels to dye for sinning dying man offering him to man in the dispensation of the Gospel with wooing and beseechings Mat. 28.18 and yet of men he loveth some more especially and peculiarly than others Omnia diligit Deus quae fecit etinter ea magis creaturas rationales et de illis eas amplius quae sunt membra Unigeniti et multo magis ipsum Unigenitum Aug. T. 9. in Joh. namely those whom he loveth with an electing calling redeeming justifying glorifying love God loves all creatures and among them the rational and among them the members of his Son and much more the Son himself 4. There is a love of God to man considered as a love of complacency and delight in the thing beloved he is pleased through his Son with his Servants and he is much delighted with his own image wheresoever he finds it He is pleased with the persons and performances of his people He hath made us accepted in the Son of his loves the Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him Psal 147.11 Zeph. 3.17 They reflecting his excellencies and shewing forth his vertues he rejoying over them with joy he resting in his love accounting a Beleever amiable his soul a lesser heaven his prayers melody his sighs incense his stammerings eloquence his desires performances 2 There is a love of Man to God which is when the Soul is moved Amor concupiscentiae non requiescit in quacunque extrinseca aut superficiali adeptione amati sed quaerit amatum perfectè habere quasi ad intima illius perveniens Aq. 1.2 ae q. 28. ar 2. drawn and called out to desire the participation of his presence yeelding up and conforming it self to his will as also quietly resting in the enjoying of him This love is considerable in its several kinds 1 It s a love of desire to enjoy him for ours as the source of all our happiness The Soul loves God under the apprehension of the greatest good and therefore puts forth it self in strongest desires toward him This love is as strong as death and can take no denyal It is the wing and weight of the Soul that carries all the desires into an intimate unity with the thing beloved stirreth up a zeal to remove all obstacles worketh an egress of the Spirits and as it were an haste of the Soul to entertain and meet it According to those expressions of the Saints in Scripture The desire of our soul is to thy name Es 26.8 Ps 119.10.81 119.20 Psal 42.2 Psal 84.2 With my whole heart have I sought thee My soul fainteth for thy salvation My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to thy judgements at all times My soul thirsteth for God I am sick of love c. Oh the vehement panting breathing and going forth of the soul of one toward God who is in love with him he contemns the most serious worldly employments when he is taken up with this and who so discourseth with him of earthly concernments speaks as with one not at home all the world not satisfying without the kisses of the lips of our beloved our desires being a thousand times more for one smile of his face than for all the wealth under the Sun No difficulty so great no danger so imminent nay no death so certain which this love carries not through for the obtaining of the thing beloved this love being a falling mountain that breaks down all that stands betwixt it and the place of its rest In a word no means shall be left unused that by God are appointed for the obtaining of our beloved enquiries of or from others how to find him letters of love sighs tears sobs groans unutterable are sent to win him desires to hear again from him in his promise of grace are expressed The soul is never gotten neer enough till it be in the arms the bosome of God in heaven It saith not as Peter of his Tabernacles Lord Let there be one for me and another for thee but let us both be together in one It s ever night with one who loves Christ till the Sun of his presence be arising He is like a certain kinde of Stone of which some report That if it be thrown into the water
he gave his body to be burn'd 1 Cor. 13.3 Nucleus donorum animus and had not love he should be nothing nothing in Esse gratiae in point of truth worth and grace Love is the beauty of our performances their Loveliness is Love to God in doing them Love is the Marrow of every duty Love is the salt which seasons every Sacrifice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the exquisitest service without it is but as a dead carcass embalmed God delights in nothing which we give him unless we give our selves first He more regards with what heart we give than what we give God accepts no duty when we do it because we dare not do otherwise but when we do it because we love to do it it is acceptable to God He who wants Love though he do the thing commanded yet he breaks the Law Commanding He who Loves keeps the Command Evangelically while he breaks it Legally 3. Observ 3. Love set upon other things beside God is wrong placed The world must often be left and loathed at the most but used never loved So to love it as thereby to lessen thy love to God so to love it as to be excessive either in grief for wanting it or joy for having it and to be over earnest in using it and injudicious in preferring it before thy God is to love it unduely and sinfully if at any time the creature be beloved innocently 't is beloved in and for God as a pledge of heaven as a spur to duty Among all the Creatures there cannot be found a helper fit for man Between the soul and them there can be no match with Gods consent He that is wedded in love to the Creature is married to one that 's poor base vexing false 1. Poor the whole world is but a Curt and unsatisfying good the sieve in the water hath something in it pull'd thence 't is empty the Creature apart from God is empty of all loveliness it 's a brest fill'd with nothing but wind Should the whole world be cast into our Treasury it would hardly be a Mite Hagar out of Abrahams house found nothing but scarcity and all plenty which is not God is but penury Earthly blessings like to numbers cannot be so great but still we may reckon and our desires reach some one beyond them Men in their contentions for the world prove it a scanty thing and that it cannot satisfie all A lover of the world can endure no rivals as knowing how scanty an object he contends for So large a good is God that he who loves him delights in company 2. Base ignoble Whatsoever is below a God is below our soul it s as unfit to rule our hearts as the bramble to rule the trees What we love subdues us it to it self and we are alway below it to love these earthly drossie comforts is to make thy soul a vassal to thy vassal a servant of servants Love leaves the impression of the thing beloved upon the soule if thou lovest the earth thou hast the impression of vilenesse upon a noble soule the impression gives denomination a piece of gold is call'd a Jacobus an Angel a Serpent a Lion according to the stamp it beareth If therefore earthly objects have by love set their impression upon thy soule what is that golden excellent heaven-born creature but a lump a clod of earth The earth should be under our feet not upon our heart 3. Vexing and unquiet Love set upon the world hath more of anguish than love it ever wrangles with us for not giving it enough Peace is the only product of the enjoyment of God If Christ be not in the ship the storms will never cease nor can any thing but his presence bring a calmnesse upon the sonle Rest is peculiar only to Gods Beloved Love never stings but when you disturb anger it and hinder it from resting in a God in him it's hive it is alway and only quiet and innocent 4. False and inconstant They are but lying and flying vanities A soul that loves the world is match'd to that which will soon break and run away none are so foolishly prodigall as the covetous who assures all to that which can assure nothing no not his own again to him The World is like to Absaloms mule that runs away when its lovers most want reliefe it s not able to love again those that love it most The love of that which is inconstant and weak is the strength of our misery The best of earthly blessings have their moth and their thiefe Mat. 6.20 Prov. 25.31 Observ 4. Plus bonitas quam benificientia Expiat infinita venustas omnem injuriam they make themselves wings they flee away as an Eagle towards Heaven 4. God is an Object very meet for our love to be set upon Much he deserves it even for whathe is His own lovely excellencies are so great that even for these our hearts should be set upon him although his hatred were set upon us Goodnesse is more than beneficience God is a bundle an heap of all worth and perfections all the scattered excellencies of the whole Creation Center and meet in him a flower he is in which meet the beauties of all flowers Suppose a creature composed of all the choycest endowments of all the men that were since the Creation of the World famous in any kind One in whom were a meek Moses a strong Samson all the valiant Worthies of David a faithfull Jonathan a beautifull Absalom a rich and wise Solomon all the holy men of God eminent for any grace Nay all the Angels of Heaven with their understandings strength agility splendor spiritualnesse holinesse and suppose this creature had never known us help'd us benefited us yet how would our hearts be drawn out towards it in desires and complacencies but this alas though ten thousand times more exquisitely accomplish'd would not amount to a shadow of divine perfection God had in himselfe assembled from Eternity all the excellencies which were in time and had not he made them they had never been If every leafe and spire of grasse nay all the stars sands atomes in the World were so many Souls and Seraphims whose love should double in them every moment to all eternity yet could not their love be enough for the lovelinesse of our God There is nothing in God but what is amiable Cant. 5.16 he is altogether lovely nothing to cause loathing fulsomness or aversation though we enjoy him to all Eternity And it should much draw out love from us to think what God doth for us Man doth but little and it 's counted much God doth much and it 's counted little and whence is this distemper'd estimate Must mercy therefore be under-valued because it comes from God Doth water lose it's nature because it is in the fountain or heat because 't is in the fire and not in some other subject Can we be thankfull to a thiefe
the more he be fitted for glory Col. 1.12 then the more grace he hath the more it is likely he shall be filled with glory The more the soul is widened with grace the more capacious will it be of glory the heaviest crowns are fittest for the strongest heads 4. Lastly The Apostle desired this multiplication of grace upon these Christians in respect of Himself The holinesse of the people is the crown of the Minister and the greater their holinesse the weightier and more glorious is his crown The Apostle John had no greater joy than to see his spirituall children walk in the truth The thriving of the child is the comfort and credit of the Nurse the fruitfulnesse of the field the praise and pleasure of the Husband-man the beauty of the building is the commendation of the Artificer the health fruitfulnesse and good plight of the flock is the joy of the Shepherd Ministers are Husband-men Nurses Artificers Shepherds in Scripture phrase Nothing more troubles a godly Minister than to see his multiplied pains answered with a scanty proficiency his double labour with scarce a single return of holinesse A gain-saying people is the grief of a Minister that all the day long stretcheth out his hands although it may be a sweet mitigation of that griefe to consider that God will not reward his Ministers according to their successe but their sincerity and industry This for the Explication of this second Particular in the Apostles prayer the measure in which he desireth these gifts and graces may be bestowed be multiplied The Observations follow 1. Observ 1. Great is thefolly of those whose whole contention is for worldly increase and multiplication of earthly blessings In worldly things their desires have an everlasting Et catera they will lay house to house field to field like the widow who when she had fill'd all her vessels with oil yet cals for another vessel Ahab to his Kingdom must adde Naboths vineyard the rich man Luke 12. had his barns full yet he must enlarge them Many live as if God had sent them a voyage into the world to gather cockles and pibbles whereas he imployed them to trade for pearls Where is the man that envies not him who hath more wealth and yet who is it that with an holy emulation looks upon him that hath more grace than himselfe Where doth the best sort of earth deserve to lie but at the Apostles feet What hath the man who goeth Christlesse What hath he laboured for all his dayes but that not only without which he might have gone to heaven but that with which he cannot get thither What folly to lose a Crown for a crumb a Kingdome a Soul a God for a trifle How vain is it to multiply that which in its greatest increase is but nothing The truth is earthly comforts are not capeable of multiplication Did men look upon the world with Scripture spectacles and not with Satans multiplying glasse it would appear in its greatnesse but a small thing The world hath two brests they who suck at the best of them draw nothing but winde and vanity they who suck at the other draw woe and vexation 2. Observ 2. Gre at is the impiety of those that hinder people from increasing in grace Who are the pul-backs damps and quench-coles of the companies where they converse The holiest men pray that grace may be multiplyed what then are they who labour to have it extinguished Elymas the sorcerer had one of the bitterest and severest expressions of detestation from the Apostle that we read was ever bestowed upon any by a good man the Apostle calls him One full of subtilty and all mischiefe Acts 13.10 a child of the divell an enemy of all righteousnesse and why but because he sought to turn away the Deputy from the faith They who take away the key of knowledge stop the mouthes of Ministers cause a dearth of spirituall food and cannot endure the preaching of sound doctrine and the spreading of holinesse would haply account such expressions as these of Paul to be bitter but I hardly see how they deserve milder 3. Obser 3. It 's the height of impiety to hate people because God hath multiplyed grace in them How hatefull is it to hate where and because God loves yet some there are who like Gardiners snip those most who are tallest sprouts in holinesse It 's observed by some that there 's most admiration and highest respect bestowed by the professors of all false religions in the world upon those that are most precise and exact in the observing of those religions What an amazement is it that professours of the true religion alone should most bitterly hate those that make the furthest progresse in it It 's a commendable thing among men for one to be excellent and exquisite in his trade and occupation which he professeth and must it alone be a disgracefull thing that men should excell in the best of mysteries and callings yet what more common than to see the most thriving Christian to become the obloquie nay prey of the times And those who are most illuminated to have that Aeolus of hell Heb. 10.32 sending out his winds of opposition most against them And who hath not observed the zealous and sincere Christian persecuted when the time-serving and luke-warm formalist is not only spared but preferr'd and what trees are so cudgel'd and battered as those who are most fruitfull If hatred be hellish because it is set against godlinesse then certainly that hatred is most hellish which is set against most godlinesse 4. Obser 4. They who are ashamed of being exact and forward in religion are ashamed of their greatest glory Men commonly love to excell in every thing more than in that which is true excellency they think that a little godlinesse is enough and that abundance of wealth is but a little In getting riches they love to lead in going toward heaven they will hardly follow So much religion as will preserve their estates and reputation so much as will not crosse their interest or hinder their preferment they will embrace but they love not to follow religion too close for fear of being dasht They herein resemble some Students of the Law that study that Science not to be exact in it but only so farre as they may be able another day to keep their estates Men commonly love that much which when they do so it 's hard not to love too much but they are but remisse in that in which 't is impossible to be excessive they making it their study to take heed of that of which there 's no danger viz. Too much precisenesse in the wayes of holinesse Christianity in our times is like our buildings much more slight than of old Till I hear of one man from the Creation of the World to this day that ever repented him when he came to die of being too holy while he lived
lesse beloved endeavouring to do people good though against their will As Job's record so such a Ministers recompence is on high This for the first reason of the Apostles sending the following Exhortation to these Christians they were beloved The second follows The carefull diligence of the Apostle to further their spiritual welfare When I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation And in that 1. First of the first particular With what mind and disposition he endeavoured their good or how he was affected in endeavouring to do them good I gave all diligence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Explication whereof Explicat 1. I shall give the force and meaning of the words Diligence and all diligence 2. Gather from thence what kind of diligence and how qualified this of the Apostle here was The Apostle expresseth the forwardnesse of his minde and disposition in furthering their good by two words by his giving 1. Diligence 2. All diligence Diligence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Studium Solicitudo Diligentia Festinatio in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar here translates it solicitudinem solicitude or carefulnesse Beza studium study or earnest intention of mind Our new Translation renders it diligence as it doth also the same word Rom. 12.8 2 Cor. 8.7 Heb. 6.11 2 Pet. 1.5 Sometimes again it renders it carefulnesse as 2 Cor. 7.11 and forwardnesse as 2 Cor. 8.8 and earnest care as 2 Cor. 8.16 and haste as Mark 6.25 Luke 1.39 The Greek word comprehends all these significations for it signifieth an earnest and serious bending application and intention of the mind about the things which we are doing and this is study It importeth also such a serious bending of the mind as is with a fear of the future event and this is care carefulnesse or solicitude It also signifieth a speedy and chearfull putting of a thing in execution and this is diligence and festination forwardnesse hast The other word all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle useth to expresse his forward disposition to do them good increaseth and enlargeth the former He gave not some part of but all or his whole diligence For the Apostle doth here as the Scripture often else where put all for whole 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Rom. 10.18 2 Tim. 3.16 his whole diligence was bent this way and other things in comparison of this he neglected In this channell did run as it were the whole stream of his diligence 2. From this force and meaning of the words it may plainly be collected what kind of diligence this of the Apostle here was 1. It was a solicitous carefull diligence He resented the danger of these Christians and feared their spirituall losse and hurt by Satan and his instruments The care of these faithfull ones was upon him as upon holy Paul was the care of the Churches Gal. 4.19 2 Cor. 8.16 2 Cor. 11.28 Paul was afraid of the Galatians of whom he travelled in birth till Christ was formed in them Love is ever solicitous doth its best and fears the worst Titus had an earnest care for the good of the Corinthians and among them none was offended but Paul burned 2. It was a studious and an intentive diligence It set his head and heart a working to do them good There was an earnest and vehement application of both to this imployment Faithfull Ministers are laborious they are peculiarly called labourers and they labour in the word and doctrine Paul laboured more abundantly than they all Timothy was to shew himselfe a workman All their titles as Fishers Souldiers Watchmen Labourers c. bestowed upon Ministers commend Jude's diligence 3. It was a chearfull willing diligence Studium est animi vehemens ad aliquam rem magna cum voluptate applicatio Bez. This he fully discovers both by the word diligence and giving diligence He was not forced to this imployment Paul 1 Cor. 9.17 tels us his reward came in a way of willing doing Jude had the constraint of love upon him his service was not like honey prest but of it selfe dropping His feeding the Church was his meat and drink This good worke was not done with an ill will 4. It was a speedy ready diligence it was with a holy haste The Seducers were already entred among these Christians There was now no room for delayes The beginnings of this mischiefe were to be crush'd While Ministers are lingring and doubting Satan is devouring They are souldiers and Victory loves to flie upon the wing of Expedition 5. It was his whole utmost entire diligence Such a diligence as Paul professeth he used when he said As much as in me is Rom. 1.15 I am ready to preach the Gospell This work he made his businesse and to it he gave himselfe in comparison of this his diligence for other things was but negligence For three years he warned every one night and day with tears Act. 20.31 Nay he was glad to spend and be spent 2 Cor. 12.15 He was fervent in spirit but in serving the Lord. 1. Observ 1. Greatest diligence is alway to be used about the best things about matters of greatest concernment The custom of the world is to use substantiall endeavours about circumstantiall and circumstantiall endeavours about substantiall imployments A holy remisnesse befits our care about the things of this life A Christian should keep his sweat and industry for the things of heaven when he useth the world it should be as if he used it not He should not pray or hear as if he heard or prayed not It 's madnesse to make as great a fire for the rosting of an egge as for the rosting of an oxe to follow the world with as much fervency as we do holinesse and about trifles to be imployed with vast endeavours It 's impossible to be too diligent for heaven and difficult not to be over diligent for the earth 2. Observ 2. All that Ministers even the best of them can do is but to be diligent to take pains and endeavour Paul can but plant Nostrum est dare operam Dei dare operationem Apollos waters God it is that gives the increase It is our part to be diligent it 's God that blesseth that diligence Aliud est docere aliud flectere One thing to preach another to perswade The organ-pipes make no musick without breath He that teacheth the heart sits in heaven God must have the praise in the successefulnesse of the Ministry Non scoundum profectum sed laborem non secundum quod valuimus sed quod voluimus his glory must not cleave to our fingers nor must Ministers be discouraged in the want of successe God never required that at their hands He accepts of their willing mind nor doth God reward them according to peoples proficiency but their own industry 3. Observ 3. Diligence in duty is the commendation of Ministers
teach to be done He who teacheth another should teach himselfe He who comforteth another should labour to do it with that comfort wherewith God hath comforted him 2 Cor. 1.4 5. The commonnesse of salvation to all believers Observ 5. should be a great inducement to every one to labour particularly for salvation and that they may not misse of it themselves It 's our trouble here upon earth when we see others obtain riches and preferments and we our selves go without them We urge our friends with this argument that they did such a kindnesse for such an one and such an one and therefore we hope they will not exclude us Hast thou said Esau to his father but one blessing blesse me even me also Oh go to God and say Lord thou hast salvation for such and such a friend have it also for me even for me also Oh my Father It may be thou hast a godly father or mother a brother or sister be not content that they should go to heaven without thee 6. There 's but one way to heaven Observ 6. There are many Nations more men only one faith The Jews shall not be saved by the Law of Moses Gentiles by the Law of Nature and Christians by the Gospel 'T is true The just shall live by his own faith but then 't is as true That the object of his faith is the object of every ones faith that is saved although the speciall application thereof be his alone The Apostle Peter calleth faith the like precious faith 2 Pet. 1.1 7. The partakers of this common salvation Observ 7. who here agree in one way to heaven and who expect to be hereafter in one heaven should be of one heart It 's the Apostles collection Ephes 4.3 4. What an amazing misery is it that they who agree in common faith should disagree like common foes That Christians should live as if faith had banished love This common faith should allay and temper our spirits in all our differences This should moderate our minds though there be in-equality in earthly relations What a powerfull motive was ●hat of Josep●'s brethren to him to forgive their sin Gen. 50.17 they being both his brethren and the servants of the God of his fathers Though our own breaths cannot blow out the taper of contention Oh yet let the bloud of Christ extinguish it This for the second reason why the A postle sends the following Exhortation drawn from his care and diligence to promote their happinesse 3. The third follows taken from their present need of having such an Exhortation in these words It was needfull for me to write 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Explicat necesse or necessitatem habui I had necessity word for word or I held it needfull Here we translate it more agreeably to the English expression It was needfull for me elsewhere as Luke 14.18 I must needs and spoken of a third person Luke 23.1 Of necessity he must and 1 Cor. 7.37 having necessity The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here translated needfull signifieth in Scripture a threefold necessity 1. A necessity of distresse and tribulation as Luke 21.23 1 Cor. 7.26 2 Cor. 12.10 2 Cor. 6.4 1 Thes 3.7 2. A necessity of coaction or constraint such a force as opposeth ones liberty and which makes one do a thing against his will as Philem 14. it is opposed to willingly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That thy benefit should not be as it were of necessity but willingly And 2 Pet. 5.2 Feed the flock of God c. not by constraint but willingly 1 Cor. 9.7 not grudgingly or of necessity 3. A necessity upon supposition of some cause ground or reason whereby it becomes necessary or needfull that such or such a thing should be or be done And thus Christ saith It must needs be that offences come namely Mat. 18.7 because of the power and malice of the divell the weaknesse and perversenesse of men Acts 13.46 Likewise Paul and Barnabas told the Jews It was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you namely because of the Covenant which God had made with them above others In this respect he saith Phil. 1.24 To abide in the flesh is more needfull for you namely upon supposition of the benefit you may receive from me and the want you will have of me And 1 Cor. 9.16 Necessity is laid upon me and wo unto me if I preach not the Gospel And this was the necessity which Jude intends namely that whereby it became needfull and necessary for some weighty causes to write to these Christians And so it was needfull in three respects 1. In respect of his great care towards them His diligence for their good and desire of writing being so great as that it would not suffer him to be silent and so Erasmus interprets this necessity 2. It was needfull for him to write in respect of his own duty principally as he had the office of an Apostle which he received to further their spirituall welfare so Others 3. But thirdly as Calvin Beza and the most interpret this necessity It was necessary for him to write in respect of their danger their faith being in such hazard by false teachers and seducers of himselfe he was forward and diligent to do them good but he was further put upon this service of writing by the very exigence and necessity of their present condition they being so much hazarded by false Teachers and Seducers And their danger by Seducers made it needfull for him to write in sundry regards 1. In regard of the destructivenesse of those doctrines and practices which the Seducers brought in among them They turned the grace of God into lasciviousness they denyed the only Lord God and our Lord Jesus Christ they despised dominions they walked after their own ungodly lusts These were not slight but pernicious evils Peter in 2 Pet. 2.1 2. calls them damnable heresies pernicious wayes not scratching the face but stabbing the very heart of Religion The eternal salvation of their precious souls was hazarded 2. Their danger by Seducers made it needful for him to write in regard of their subtilty and cunningness in propagating their impieties The Divel made not use of the Ass but the Serpent to tempt them The seducers had craftily crept in among them Eph. 4.14 2 Pet. 2.3 they did by sleight and cunning craftiness lie in wait to deceive they had feigned words to make merchandize of souls pretences of Gospel-liberty c. 3. In regard of the great readiness even of the best to give way to Seducers Our natures are like tinder ready to take with every spark There is in the best a corrupt principle that inclines to error in judgment and impiety in practice which were they not kept by the power of God to salvation would soon prevail One who is diseased may more easily infect twenty that are sound than
enough It 's very good manners in Christianity to stay and to knock again though we have knock'd more than three times at a sinners conscience 3. Observ 3. The best Christians often stand in need of quickning by holy incitements The strongest arms like Moses's want holding up the ablest Christian may now and then have a spirituall qualm He who is now as it were in the third heaven 2 Cor. 12. may anon be buffeted with the messenger of Satan Grace in the best is but a creature and defectible onely the power of God preserves it from a totall failing Corruption within is strong tentations without are frequent and all these make exhortation necessary A Christian more wants company as he is a Christian than as he is a man though much as both The hottest water will grow cold if the fire under it be withdrawn 4. Observ 4. Isa 23.16 Hos 6.1 Mal. 3.16 1 Sam. 23.16 Holy exhortation is an excellent help to Christian resolution It 's as the sharpening of iron with iron It 's a whetstone for the relief of dulnesse Jonathan in the wood strengthened David's hand in God They who fear the Lord must often speak one to another The want of communion is the bane of Christian resolution When an Army is scattered 't is easie to destroy it The Apostle Heb. 10.23 24. joyns these two together the holding fast the profession of our faith without wavering the provoking one another to love and good works as also the exhorting one another 5. Observ 5. Heb. 13.22 Christians must suffer the word of Exhortation They must be intreated If importunity overcame an unrighteous Judge to do good to another how much more should it prevaile with us for our own good Let not Ministers complain with Esay I have spread out my hands all the day to a rebellious people Isai 65.2 Heavenly Wisdome is easie to be intreated Men want no intreaty at all to do good to their bodies Whence is it that when we want no precept and therfore have none to love our selves all Precepts and Exhortations are too little to perswade us to the true self-love This for the way or manner of the Apostles writing it was by Exhortation The second followeth The Apostles expressing to what he exhorted these Christians viz. earnestly to contend for the faith once delivered to the Saints In which words I consider two things 1. What it is which the Apostle here commends to them carefully to maintain and defend The faith once delivered to the Saints 2. The means whereby or the manner how he exhorts these Christians to maintain and preserve that thing which was by earnest contention Earnestly contend 1. What thing it is which the Apostle here commends to these Christians to maintain and preserve viz. The faith once delivered to the Saints This thing the Apostle here first specifieth calling it the faith secondly amplifieth three wayes 1. It was faith given or delivered 2. To the Saints delivered 3. Once delivered 1. He specifieth the thing which these Christians were to maintain and defend Explicat faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word faith in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doceo and persuadeo to teach concerning the truth of a thing which we perswade men to believe it is in Scripture taken either properly or improperly 1. Properly and that either 1. In its generall notion for that assent which is given to the speech of another Or 2. In its different sorts and kinds and so it 's either humane or divine humane the assent which we give to the speech of a man or divine the assent which we give to divine Revelation This divine faith is comonly known to comprehend these four sorts 1. Historicall faith called also by some dogmaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is nudus assensus that bare assent which is given to divine truth revealed in the Scripture without any inward affection either to the revealer or to the thing revealed Thus the divels believe James 2.19 and ver 17. This is called dead faith 2. Temporary faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not so properly call'd a different kind of faith from the former as a further degree of the same which is an assent given to divine truths with some taste of and delight though not applicative and prevalent in the knowledge of those truths for a time Mat. 13.21 he endureth for a while Luke 8.13 for a while they believe Miraculosa 3. Miraculous faith is that speciall assent which is given to some speciall promise of working miracles and this is either active when we believe that miracles shall be wrought by us as 1 Cor. 13.2 Mat. 7.22 or passive when we believe they shal be wrought for and upon us Acts 14.9 4. † Justificans Justifying faith which is assent with trust and affiance to the promise of remission of sin and salvation by Christ's righteousnesse Rom. 3.26 Gal. 2.16 Luke 22.32 Acts 15.9 Rom. 4.5 c. 2. Faith is considered improperly and so it 's taken in Scripture four wayes especially 1. For * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De hac fide nunc loquimur quam adhibemus cum alicui credimus non ca quam damus cum alicui pollicemur nam ipsa dicitur fides sed aliter dicimus non mibi habuit fidem aliter non mihi servavit fidem Illud est non credidit quod dixi hoc non fecit quod dixit secundùm hanc fidem quâ credimus fideles sumus Deo secundùm illam verò quâ fit quod promititur etiam Deus est fidelis nobis Aug. lib. 6. de sp lit cap. 31. fidelity and faithfulnesse And so faith is attributed to God Rom. 3.3 Shall their unbeliefe make the faith of God without effect And to man Mat. 23.23 Yea have omitted the weightier matters of the Law judgment mercy and faith This is as Cicero saith Dictorum conventorúmque constantia the truth and constancy of our words and agreements So we say he breaks his faith Punica fides 2. For the profession of the faith Act. 13.8 Acts 14.22 Rom. 1.8 Your faith is spoken of throughout the world 3. For the things believed or the fulfilling of what God hath promised Gal. 3.23 Before faith came we were kept under the Law shut up unto the faith which should afterward be revealed and ver 25 But after that faith is come Here faith is taken for Christ the Object of faith 4. For the doctrine of faith or the truth to be believed to salvation and more peculiarly for the doctrine of faith in Christ Acts 6.7 A great company of the priests were obedient to the faith Rom. 3.31 Do we make void the law through faith Nomine fidei censetur illud quod creditur illud quo creditur Lomb. Rom. 12.6 Acts 24.24 He heard him concerning the faith in
Christ Gal. 1.23 He now preacheth the faith which before he persecuted So 1 Tim. 4.16 Gal. 3.2 So here in this place of Jude Faith once delivered is to be understood of the faith of heavenly doctrine the word of faith which the Apostle saith God had delivered to them and they were to maintain against the opposite errours of seducers This holy doctrine being called faith 1. Because it is the instrument used by God to work faith The Spirit by the word perswading us to assent to the whole doctrine of the Gospel and to rest upon Christ in the promise for life In which respect faith is said to come by hearing Rom. 10.15 And the Gospel the power of God Rom. 1.16 c. to every one that believes The faith to be believed begets a faith believing 2. Because it is a most sure infallible faithfull word and deserves to be the object of our faith and belief The Author of it was the holy and true Rev. 3.7.14 Tit. 1.2 2 Pet. 1.2 the faithful and true Witnesse God who cannot lie The Instruments were infallibly guided by the immediate derection and assistance of the holy Ghost The Matter of it an everlasting truth the Law being a constant rule of righteousnesse the Gospel conteining promises which shall have their stability when heaven and earth shall passe away and of such certainty that if an angel from heaven should teach another doctrine he must be accursed It abounds also with prophesies predictions most exactly accomplished though after hundreds yea thousands of years The form of it which is its conformity with God himself sheweth that if God be faithfull Heb. 4.12 Psal 19.7 9. needs must his word be so its powerfull it searcheth the heart its pure and perfect true and faithfull and all this in conformity with the power omniscience purity perfection truth of God himself The end of it is to supply us with assured comfort Rom. 15.4 Observ 1. 1. The word of life is most worthy of assent and approbation No word so much challengeth belief as Gods it 's so true and worthy of belief that it 's called faith it self When in Scripture the object is called by the name of the habit or affection it notes that the object is very proper for that habit or affection to be exercised about Heaven is in Scripture called joy to shew it 's much to be rejoyced in and the Doctrine of salvation is called faith to shew that its most worthy of our faith Infidelity is a most inexcusable and incongruous sin in us Tit. 1.2 Heb. 6.18 Isa 53.1 when the faithfull and true God speaks unto us It 's impossible for God to lie and yet Who hath beleeved our report may be a complaint as ordinary as it is old How just is God to give those over to beleeve a lie who will not beleeve the truh How miserable is their folly who beleeve a lie and distrust faith it self 2. Observ 2. Deplorable is their estate who want the doctrine of salvation They have no footing for faith they have they hear nothing that they can beleeve Uncertainty of happiness is ever the portion of a people who are destitute of the Word He who wants this light knows not whither he goeth The Fancy of the Enthusiast the Reason of the Socinian the Traditions of the Papist the Oracles of the Heathens are all Foundations of sand death shakes and overturns them all 3. Observ 3. The true reason of the firmnesse and stedfastnesse of the Saints in their profession they lean upon a sure word Spiritus sanctus non est Scepticus ne● opiniones in cordibus sed assertiones producit ipsâ vit â omni experientiâ certiores a more sure word than any revelation a word called even faith it self Greater is the certainty of Faith then that of Sense and Reason It 's not Opinion and Scepticism but Faith The holy Ghost is no Sceptick it works in us not opinions but assertions more sure than life it self and all experience The more weight and dependency we set upon the word so firm a foundation is it the stronger is the building None will distrust God but they who never tryed him 4. Our great end in attending upon the word should be the furthering of our faith The jewel of the Word should not hang in our ears but be lock'd up in a beleeving heart 'T is not meat on the table but in the stomack that nourisheth and not the Word preached but beleeved that saves us The Apostle having specified the thing which they were to maintain Faith he amplifieth it and that three wayes 1. Explicat 2. He saith it was delivered The word in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here translated delivered signifieth to be given or delivered from one to another severall wayes in Scripture according to the circumstances of the place where and the matter about which 't is used Sometime it importeth a delivering craftily deceitfully or traiterously in which respect the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is often rendred to betray as Matth. 2.4.10 and Chap. 26 15 16 21 23 24 25. and Chap. 16.45 46 48. In some places it signifieth a delivering in a way of punishment and suffering As Mat. 4.12 Jesus heard that John was delivered up So Mat. 5.25 and 10.17.19.21 and 17.22 and Acts 7.42 c. In other places it signifieth a delivering in a way of committing something to ones trust to be carefully regarded and preserved as Mat. 11.27 and 25.14 20. and John 19.20 and 1 Pet. 2.23 And thus it frequently signifieth a delivering by way of information or relation of doctrines and duties from one to another to be kept and observed And that both from God first by the speech and afterward by the writing of holy men for the use of his Church as 1 Cor. 11.2 2 Thes 2.15 and 3.6 2 Pet. 2.21 and also from men who often deliver doctrines to others not written in the word Mat. 15.2 Mark 7.9.13 but invented by men In this sense the delivering here mentioned is to be taken namely for such an information or relation of Gods will as they to whom it is delivered are bound to preserve and keep as their treasure In which respect the delivering of this faith or doctrine of salvation comprehends first Gods bestowing it secondly Mans holding and keeping it 1. Gods bestowing it and in that is considerable 1. In what wayes and after what manner God delivered it 2. What need there was of this delivery of the faith by God 1. In what wayes God delivered the faith the Scripture tels us he hath delivered it either extraordinarily Num. 12.6.8 Heb. 1.1 as immediately by himselfe by Angels by a voice by a sensible apparition to men sometime when they were awake at other times when they were sleeping by dreams sometime only by inward inspiration Or ordinarily and so he delivers the doctrine of faith 1. To his
divine worship did they prove The higher the building is which wants a foundation the greater will be its fall No water is so cold as that which after greatest heat growes cold A trades-man who breaks having traded much and been trusted much makes a great noise when he breaks The hypocrite who flies the highest pitch of religion is most bruised with fals into profanenesse Are there any who so much scorn the Ministry of the word and all holy duties nay who so much deny and professe they can live above ordinances as they who have heretofore been the most forward to run after them though alas unfruitfull under them when they did so Who can with tearlesse eyes or a sorrowlesse heart observe that sundry who have given golden hopes in their youth for godlinesse and whose holy education was followed for a while with most pious appearances should afterwards turn such loose libertines so atheisticall and irreligious as if now they studied only to make up their former restraint and forbearance with a greater profusenesse in all ungodlinesse c. How much better therefore is a drop of sincerity than a sea of appearing sanctity A Land-floud which rowls and swels to day will be down and gone when the fountain will have enough and to spare Study therefore O Christian to lay the foundation deep before thou raisest the building high And study first to get into Jesus Christ by an humble diffidence of thy self fiduciary recumbence upon him and to evidence it by the through work and practice of mortification and an hearty love to holinesse 4. Observ 4. Every one should tremble to be branded deservedly with this black mark of ungodliness by the Apostle here set upon the worst of men To this end consider 1. Ungodliness crosseth the end of our election Ephes 1.4 We are chosen before the foundation of the world that we should be holy Godliness is the eternall design which God had upon every one set a part for happiness 2. Ephes 5.26 Luke 1.75 Col. 1.22 It opposeth the end of Christ in redeeming us which was that we should be holy and without blemish and be presented holy and unblameable in his sight wherever Christ justifies he renewes the ungodly 3. It 's opposite to our profession The name atheist we all disclaime We have renounced ungodliness in our baptism wherein we took an oath of allegiance and fealty to God and which is not a sacrament of obsignation of the benefits unless of obligation to the godliness of a Christian We have taken God for our God who is a holy God and whom we profess to follow 4. It s opposite to the end of Gods discovering his Gospel 1 Pet. 1.15 Tit. 2.11 12. which hath appeared to teach us that we should deny ungodliness Let me goe said the Angell to Jacob for the day appeareth much more should Christians bid farewell to all ungodliness the day of the Gospel so gloriously appearing 5. It opposeth the acceptation of all our persons and services Psal 4.3 God sets a part only him that is godly for himself godly men alone are his treasure his portion his Jewels an ungodly man though never so rich and honourable is but a vile person Morality without piety is but glistering iniquity Mal. 1.10 Prov. 15.8 21.7 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord. God looketh to the person before to the gift Holy and acceptable Rom. 12.1 are put together Without godliness our performances are provocations 6. It opposeth our comfortable enjoyment of every benefit All the comforts of ungodly men are curses Godliness makes loss to be gain 1. Tim. 6.6 ungodliness makes gain to be loss It matters not what things we enjoy but what hearts we have in the enjoying of them Vnto the defiled nothing is pure Tit. 1.15 An ungodly man tainteth every thing which he toucheth 7. Ungodliness opposeth our eternall blessedness nothing but godliness stands in stead in the great day then shall we fully discern between him that serveth God Mal. 3. ult 2 Pet. 3.11 and him that serveth him not Seeing these things shall be disolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness An ungodly man is as unsutable to the work as he is unworthy of the wages of heaven 1 Tim. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you expect glory exercise train up your selves to godliness labour to be expert therein by beleeving that the promises of God in Christ shal be made good by observing his presence in all your actions by acknowledging his providence over all events by casting from you what-ever offends him by taking upon you the yoke of obedience active and passive doing and undergoing his pleasure cheerfully and lastly by fervent prayer for the blessings which you want and sincere thankfulness for those which you enjoy This for the first and more generall expression of the impiety of these Seducers the Apostle saith they were ungodly 2. The Apostle expresseth it more particularly by shewing wherein their ungodliness did appear and that 1. In their abusing the grace of God in these words Turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness In the words we may consider 1. What these Seducers did abuse or their enjoyment The grace of our God 2. how they did abuse it or their mis-improvement of that enjoyment they turned it into lasciviousness In their enjoyment we may take notice 1. Of the nature of their enjoyment Grace 2. Of the owner thereof God with the propriety that the faithfull have in him he being called our God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratia gratificari Judg. 21.22 Am. 5.15 Gen. 6.8 Gen. 39.21 Num. 6.25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 7.42 2 Cor. 2.10 2 Cor. 12.12 Eph. 4. ult Act. 15.40 Heb. 13.9 Rom. 5.15.17 Rom. 4.4.16 Rom. 11.6 1. Of the kind or nature of that enjoyment which these Seducers abused it was grace Two things I shall briefly here shew by way of explication 1. What thing it is which the Apostle here intends by the name of grace 2. Why that thing is so called 1. Not much to enlarge upon this first thing Grace in its proper notion signifies that free goodness favour or good will whereby one is moved to benefit another as both the Hebrew and Greek words manifest But it is not only taken in scripture in that primary and proper sense but among sundry other acceptations for the benefits and good things themselves which of free favour and good will are bestowed and in this sense as it often in scripture notes the benefits almes and beneficence which we receive from man 1 Cor. 16.3 2 Cor. 8.4.6 19 so in a multitude of places the gifts and benefits freely bestowed by God and among them as redemption life eternall the gifts of sanctification Rom. 6.14.15 1 Pet. 3.7 1 Joh. 16. c. so the very Gospel of salvation and the revelation of the
commanded back to the sandy and scorching wildernesse there to spend the residue of their few and evill dayes Oh sorrowfull stupendions disappointment II. And yet secondly even in this destruction of Israel the mercy of God was more remarkeable then his severity If Israels scourge be compared with Israels sin they had no cause to complain They might rather wonder at what did not than at what did befall them rather at the mercy which was left than at what was removed Ezra 9.13 Well might Israel say with Ezra The Lord hath punished us lesse then our iniquities and with the Church afterward It is the goodnesse of the Lord that we are not consumed Look upon Israels provocations in Egypt at the sea in the wildernesse their murmurings idolatry their unthankfulnesse for and sorgetfulnesse of Gods multiplyed mercies their rebellion against their godly Governours their hypocrisie Covenant-breaking lingrings after their old Egypt unreformednesse under all the dealings of God with them especially their distrust of Gods power and goodnesse after frequent and abundant experience of both Look I say upon all these and then wonder that this destruction should be 1. So slow and not more speedy 2. But in part and not totall and universall 1. It was a destruction mercifully mitigated in respect of the slownesse and deferring thereof How much longer was God about destroying a handfull of sinners than he was in creating the whole world Israel a people that could not be kept from sinning had a God that could hardly be brought to punish them Had the fire of Gods wrath been proportioned to the fuell of their sins he would have destroyed them in●al moment Forty yeers long was I greived saith God with this generation Psal 95.10 Act. 13.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so long endured he their manners in the wildernesse daily suffering that which he beheld abhorr'd and was able to have punish'd every moment in those forty years in stead whereof all that while he waited for their repentance and was at the expence of supplying them with mitaculous provision direction protection feeding them and attending them as carefully as doth the nurse her froward infant 2. The destruction of the Israelites was but in part not totall For besides the sparing of Caleb and Josuah who beleeved the promise of God all who beleeved not were not destroy'd for all under 20 years were exempted from the forenamed destruction and reserved Num. 14.19 that God might still have his Church among them and that there might be of them a people left to possesse the good land according to the promise Num. 14.13 And in this respect it was Non personis sed gencri data venia Calv. in loc that upon the prayer of Moses for the pardoning and sparing of the people God answers that be had pardoned them according to the word of Moses For although he spared not the persons of the elder and rebellious multitude yet he spared the stock of Israel remitting the punishment of present and universall death and not blotting out their memory lest the seed of Abraham being extinguish'd his Covenant should have fail'd and faln to the ground The distrustfull refusall of the parents to accept of the promised land made not God to be unfaithfull in regard that the blessing which they rejected was performed to their children God reserving a seed to propagate his Church and tempering his severity inflicted upon some with mercy afforded to others though deserved by none OBSERVATIONS 1. Observ 1. The most numerous company of sinners are unable to withstand an angry God He can easily destroy six hundred thousand persons in a few years and an hundred four score and five thousand Assyrians in one night Though hand joyn in hand yet shall not the wicked go unpunished 2 King 19.35 Prov. 11.21 He to whom it is all one to save by a few and by many can as easily destroy many as one Numbers are nothing with God The whole old world of sinners are no more in the hands of God than an handfull of worms The greatest combination of sinners are but stubble to the flame and but as snow-balls to the sun He can as easily cast down multitudes of sinning Angels as they nay he can crush an Ant upon a mole-●ill There 's no proportion between created strength and increated omnipotency The powers of all the world are but borrowed of him and as purely dependent upon him as the stream upon the fountain the beam upon the sun How can that power be too hard for him who gave it and can withdraw it at pleasure Never let multitudes dare to oppose him nor one poor weak Saint fear to trust him 2. Observ 2. The worst cause commonly hath the most abettors Had this been put to the question whether will God keep his promise in giving to Israel the land of Canaan Caleb and Josuah would have been over-voted by almost six hundred thousand Israelites who nevertheless would have as much fail'd in their cause as they exceeded in their numbers The multitude is but a weak argument to prove a strong cause The most have ever been the worst Righteous Noah stood in a manner by hmselfe against the whole world of ungodly The Prophet Elijah was not the worse for being opposed by four hundred Baalites nor they the better for having only one Elijah to withstand them Let us walk by rule not example Numbers commonly do no more please God than they can oppose him It s better to go to heaven with an handfull than to hell in a croud and to enter in at the strait gate with a few than at the broad with many to go into Canaan with Caleb and Josuah than to fall in the wildernesse with six hundred thousand 3. No priviledges abused Observ 3. Jer. 6.8 Isa 29.1 Jer. 7.12 Ps 78.60 61. Jer. 22.24 can exempt from punishment The soul of God may depart from Jerusalem and Ariel the city where David dwelt hath woe denounced against it God may forsake his tabernacle in Shiloh deliver his strength into captivity his glory into the enemies hand and pluck the signet from his right hand 1 Cor. 10.5 With many of the Israelites God was not well pleased for they were overthrown in the wildernesse To him that breaks the law Rom. 2.25 Matth. 11.23 circumcision is made uncircumcision Corazin Bethsaida Capernaum get nothing by the mighty works of Christ and their Elevation to heaven but greater woes and falls Job 4.23 God delights not in outward priviledges but in inward purity The new creature worship in spirit and truth a Jew inwardly Gal. 6.15 an Israelite indeed circumcision and brokennesse of the heart only please the eye of God and without these externall service is but painted Atheism As the pure in heart shall only see God Matt. 5.8 so God only sees the pure in heart with contentment God loaths sin where-ever he sees it but
as the Angels Shall we there cease to be true substances This for their Essence 2. The consideration of the Office of angels follows and this the word Angels properly denotes Angelus nomen officii spiritus naturae Aug. in Psal 104. Luk. 7.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuncii legati Mat. 11.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ex co quod est spiritus est ex eo quod agit angelus est Aug. ubi sup Mal. 3.1 Dan. 4.17 which is not a word expressing the nature but the office of angels and the words both in the Hebrew and Greek intend the same they importing messengers or such as are sent The word Angels or messengers is applyed in Scripture both to good and bad angels 1. To good angels most frequently who are those ministring spirits spoken of Heb. 1.14 and are in Scripture more commonly called by a name of office than of nature because God delights in their service and they themselves are more glad of obeying God than of their very being In regard of office that Christ himselfe accepted the name and is called the Angel of the Covenant They are by God sent forth for the good of his people Hence they are called watchers ministring spirits c. And for those who shall be the heirs of salvation they minister three wayes 1. In their life 1. By defending them from their enemies Their angels saith Christ always behold the face of my Father Matt. 18.10 Apoc. 12.7 2 Kin. 6.16 Psal 91.11 Dan. 10.20 Psal 34.7 Isai 37.36 Act. 12.23 Michael and his angels fought in defence of the Church and the prophet Elisha spake of the angels when he told his fearfull servant that there were more with them then against them The angels of the Lord pitch their tents about them that fear him An angel it was that slew the army of the Assyrians that delivered Peter out of prison as also preserved Lot 2. By comforting them Thus an angel encouraged Jacob Gen. 32.5 when he feared his brother Esau an angel it was who bid Mary not to fear Luk. 1.30 and who stood by Paul and bid him be of good chear Act. 27.24 when Daniel had fasted an prayed and angel it was who said O Daniel greatly beloved c. And afterward fear not Dan. 9.13 10.19 Luk. 22.43 Mat. 28.5 The women at the sepulchre meet with an angel who comforted them Yea an angel appeared unto Christ and strengthned him The servant comforted the master 3. By inciting and stirring them up to holinesse and in furthering their salvation they suggest nothing but what is agreeable to the will of God they can no more suggest a doctrine contrary to that which is revealed in the Scripture Gal. 1.8 Rev. 22.16 Act. 7.53 Gal. 3.19 Luk. 1.31 Act. 1.11 Rev. 19.10 Act. 8.26 Act. 10.5 Act. 12.7 than they can be accursed The law was revealed by the disposition of angels in respect of their service and attendance in the giving thereof by an angel was the incarnation of Christ foretold to the virgin and by a multitude of angels was it proclaimed afterward These instruct the Apostles concerning the coming of Christ to judgement and forbid the worshipping of themselves as idolatrous An Angel leads Philip to expound the Scripture to the Eunuch sets Peter at liberty to preach the Gospel bids Cornelius send for Peter to be instructed by him Act. 16.9 and prayes Paul to come over to Macedonia to help them namely by preaching the Gospel 2. In and after their death An angel strengthned Christ when he was in his great heavinesse of soul Angels conveyed the soul of Lazarus into Abrahams bosom Luk. 16.22 he who living was lick'd by dogs is now dead attended by angels The glorious angels are as forward to carry the souls of the faithfull to heaven as every one is to share in the bearing the body of a great prince to the grave The good angels in this work of conveying souls are thought to watch for prevention of the bad who alwayes seek to devour the Saints living and dying At the end of the world the angels shall be the glorious attendants of the great Judge shall cite all to appear and shall separate between the good and the bad gathering the elect from the four winds Mat. 24.31 from one end of the heaven to the other so that there shall not one be lost 2. The term Angels or Messengers is also in Scripture bestowed upon the wicked and unclean spirits Thus it s said Diodat Annot. Psal 78.49 1 Cor. 6.3 that God sent evill angels among the Egyptians and of this the Apostle speaks in that Scripture Know ye not that we shall judge the angels and 2 Pet. 2.4 He spared not the angels that sinn'd And these evil angels are imployed 1. In exercising the faithfull with tentations which God alwayes turns to their good Job 1. Luk. 22.31 these angels stir up terrors against the faithfull inwardly and troubles outwardly Satan sent his messenger to buffet Paul 2 Cor. 12.7 Apoc. 2.10 He casts the faithfull into prison He casts his fiery darts sometime tempting and alluring at other times affrighting and dismaying 2. In being the executioners of Gods displeasure against the wicked whom for their wickednesse 2 Cor. 4.4 Gal. 3.1 God delivers up to these wicked angels to blind harden and bewitch them with sin and then to drive them to despair for sin Satan imployes them as slaves in the basest of work and rewards them as slaves with the smartest of stripes often in this life as in the case of Saul and Judas and Abimilech alwayes after it both by dragging away those soules to punishment who have followed him in sin and by being a tormentor afterward of those of whom first he was the tempter OBSERVATIONS 1. Observ 1. How glorious a majesty is the God of Angels If the lowest of earthly creatures if a spire of grasse a worme an ant speak his wisdome and power how much more do those glorious spirits who excell in strength and understanding How pure and simple a being is that God who is the father of all these spirits How glorious he whom angels adore and before whom principalities fall down How strong is he who with one word of his mouth made so many thousands of those angels one of whom overthrew an hundred fourscore and five thousand men in one night How wise he who is the father of all that light which angels have and which is but one ray of his sun Infinitely greater is the disproportion between one God and all the angels than between all those glorious hosts and the least ant upon the molehill How can that king of glory want forces who hath such a militia so many thousands of such Chariots to ride upon Psal 68.7 such a heavenly host as all the millions of angels Wonder O man that this Majesty who is furnish'd with the attendance of angels should
ex justitia in peccatum Estius in 2. Sent. Dist 3. § 4. Wee must not think that angels were inferiour to men If man from the beginning was holy why not angels And as bodies cannot be said to fall but from a higher place than is that into which they fall so neither can there be a fall of spirits but from the height of some good which formerly they had which fall from good is not so much in regard of locall motion as of their defection from righteousnesse to sin whereof their change of place is afterwards a punishment And how can any but most impiously imagine that he who is perfectly and absolutely good and goodness it self should create evil And if God doth righteously punish the sin of Angels then God did not create them sinful for how can God punish for the being of that which he himselfe made to be And it is by all the Learned exploded for impious Manicheism to hold that any creature is evill by a necessity of nature It s plainly exprest God saw all that he had made and it was very good Singula bona sunt bonitate naturae suae sed omnia valde bona quia bonitati singulorum accedit pulcherrimus ordo quo cuncta sibi invicem aptissimè congruunt Est in 2 sent Dist 1. §. 7. Tantae excellentiae in comparatione pecoris est homo ut vitium hominis na tura sit pecoris Aug. de pec Orig. c. 40. The creatures were good with a goodnesse of nature and very good because to the goodnesse of every particular creature there was an accession of the goodnesse of that order whereby they did all harmoniou●●sute and agree with one another for the making up the beauty of the whole And whereas some object that the Wolfe is by nature ravenous and the Fox subtle and deceitfull Therefore that angels may possibly be subtle and cruell by nature its answered That this is the dignity and excellency of intellectuall nature either angelicall or humane that what is the nature of beasts is a sin in angels and man To which may be added that the forenamed qualities of cruelty and subtilty in angels and man would be against a law given to them but this cannot be said of those beasts which are not capable of a law Holinesse then it was which at first God bestowed upon the angels and from this first estate of holinesse they made a defection An heinous offence whither we consider what this holinesse was bestowed upon them and when it was bestowed 1. It was a conformity to the originall pattern of purity and excellency It was that by which they as much resembled the great and glorious God as creatures yea the best of creatures could do That whereby they who stood are still called the sons of God yea Gods To cast dirt upon Job 1.6 Gen 33.10 or to cut in pieces the picture of a King is an heinous offence but to trample upon and spoil the image of God is an infinitely more heinous indignity We are wont to burn or openly disgrace the pictures only of traitors or eminent offenders and we account that the dishonour of the picture is the dishonour of the person the image of God in man was very excellent but it was far more excellent in an angel who was a subject more capacious to receive it and wherein it might more gloriously appear But 2. When was this holinesse bestowed it was bestowed upon angels at their creation It was given to their nature it was their first estate These angels were as it were crowned in the cradle God was a benefactor to them betimes And what an impiety was ●o trample upon so early a mercy That land which comes to us by inheritance with Naboth we love to keep though bequeath'd by an earthly father yea a gift which is bestowed upon us as soon as we are born we love to keep all our days but these angels threw away a gift even born with them as old as their beings conveyed by God himself 2. The angels forsook also their own habitation y these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their own habitation some understand those heavenly places of happinesse and glory in this sense as if for their defection from their originall holinesse they were cast out and compell'd to depart from them but because the punishment of their fall is subjoyned in the second part of the verse I conceive with learned * Quidam illud accipiunt de domicilio coelesti sensu eo quod ob crimen laesae majestatis pristinum suum domicilium relinquere fuerint coacti sed quia de poena lapsus in verbis sequentib demum agitur rectius acci pitur hoc modo quòd cum primum fuerint in certa statione collocati transfugae facti illam deseruerint Gerhard in 2 Pet. 2.4 Gerhard and others that by their own habitation we are rather here to understand that proper station and set office in heaven wherein their great Lord and Master was pleased to fix them for serving him The Apostle comparing them to a company of fugitive souldiers who leave their colours and that station in the army where by their Commander they are placed And this interpretation seems to bee much favoured by these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their owne that place properly and peculiarly appointed allotted and set out for them by God viz. to serve and honour him in and this is the force of the word in other places of Scripture when used either concerning persons or places God in the beginning appointed severall places for his creatures wherein they were to perform their services unto him and like a Master of a family who hath sundry servants distinct offices to all sorts of creatures Heaven was the place of angels and the melodious praising of God in heaven the work of angels and possibly in heaven those glorious spirits might have their severall parts peculiarly appointed to each of them all of them together making up the celestiall harmony and because there are sundry titles of dignity given them in Scripture it seems to follow That there are sundry sorts of duties allotted to them from which severall duties for in respect of their nature angels are all alike some are simply called angels some archangels some powers some principalities though what the particular differences between these are and what the offices of these I confesse with * Quid inter se distant dicant qui possunt si tamen possunt probare quod dicunt ego me ista ignorare confiteor Tom. 3. in Euchr. c. 29 Austin I understand not I conceive its neither my duty to know nor my danger to be ignorant of these things The bold determinations of Aquinas and other Schoolmen herein are by the learnedst and godliest Writers rather noted than liked And this forsaking of their owne habitation seems in a due and proper sense to be subjoyned to the former expression of the
And custome without truth is at the best but the antiquity of error The old path and the good way are put for the same Jerem. 6.16 If the removall of the ancient bounds and landmarks which our fathers have set be a sin so frequently prohibited how heinous is the violation of the ancient boundary of holinesse which at the first was fixed by God himself 3. The depravation of nature Observ 3. introduceth all disorder in practice When these angels had left their originall purity they soon forsake their originall employment and Mat. 7.18 the divel abiding not in the truth becomes a murderer All the irregularities of life are but derivations from unholy principles The corrupt tree yeelds not good fruit Luk. 6.45 Out of the evill treasure of the heart are evill things brought forth The wheels of the Clock going wrong needs must the hand do so the Translation will be according to the Original We see at what door to lay all the prodigious impieties in the world which are but the deformed issues of corrupted nature How foolishly are men angry with themselves for outward and visible transgressions in their lives when they tamely and quietly endure an unchanged nature like men who dung and water the roots of their trees and yet are angry for their bearing of fruit How preposterous and how plainly begun at the wrong end are those endeavours of reformation which are accompanyed with the hatred of renovation If the tree be bitter and corrupt all the influences and showrs of heaven cannot make the fruit good When these angels had lost the integrity of nature even heaven it self did not help them to it How miserable lastly is he who hath no better fountain than corrupted nature for the issuing forth of all his services Even the best performances of an unrenewed person cannot be good coming not from a pure heart Phil. 1.11 Eph 2.10 a good conscience and faith unfained they are but dead carcasses embalmed and at the best but hedg-fruit sowre and unsavoury till they who bear them are ingrafted into Christ and partake of his life 4. Corrupt nature cares not for the joyes Observ 4. joyned with the holinesse of heaven As soon as these angels had left their first estate of integrity they forsook even that holy though most happy habitation Heaven it selfe was no heaven to them when they became unholy A sinner may not unfitly be compared to a common beggar who had rather live poorly and idly than plentifully in honest imployment How great is the antipathy of corrupt nature to heavenly performances when they will not down though never so sweetened The enmity of sin against God and holinesse is not to be reconcil'd How little are we to wonder that heaven is a place only for the pure in heart and that Christ at the last day will say to the workers of iniquity Mat. 7.23 Job 22.17 Depart from me since they not only in this life say to God Depart from us Job 21.14 but should they be admitted into that habitation of blisse with unholy hearts they would be unwilling there to continue with him Let it be our care to be made meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light if we expect to have nay to love the joyes thereof 5. Observ 5. How irrationall is every sinner There 's no person in love with any sin but is indeed out of love with his owne happinesse These angels for a meer supposed imaginary happinesse of their own contriving part with the reall blessednesse of enjoying the satisfying presence of the blessed God None can become a divell till first he become a beast A sinner can with no better plea of reason yeeld to any tentation of sin Jud. 16.6 then could Samson to that motion of Delilah Tel me where thy great strength lieth and wherewith thou mightest be bound to afflict thee Wicked men are rightly call'd unreasonable 2. Thes 3.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jud. 10. Psal 49. ult or absur'd such whom no reason will satisfie and brute beasts led with humour and sense against all reason Who that had not laid aside even reason would lose his soul for a trifle a shadow and die as Jonathan said for tasting of a little hony He who accounts it unreasonable to part with the poorest worldly commodity without a valuable consideration much more to exchange a conveyance of a thousand pound per annum for a painted paper is yet much more absur'd in sinning against any command of God which is back'd with the very height of reason both in respect of our duty to the Commander and benefit by the command 6. It s a sin for any even the highest Observat 6. to exempt himselfe from service Angels have their tasks set them by God which they must not leave There 's no creature but hath an allotment of duty Though we cannot be profitable yet must we not be idle God allowes the napkin to none upon whom he hath bestowed a talent nor hath he planted any to cumber the ground and only to be burdens to the earth If wee are all of him we must be all for him It s not consistent with the soveraignty of this great King to suffer any subject within his dominions who will be absolute and not yeeld him his homage nor to his wisdome to make any thing which he intends not to use The first who adventur'd to cease from working was a divel and they who follow him in that sin shall partake with him in the sutable punishments of chains and darknesse It s a singular mercy to have opportunities of service abilities for it and delight in it at the same time It s the priviledg of the glorious angels to be confirmed in their work as well as in their happinesse God never is so angry with any as those whom he turns out of his service 7. The glorifyed are in heaven as in an habitation Observ 7. Luk. 16.9 Joh. 14.2 2 Cor. 5.1 Heb. 11.10 16 Heb. 13.14 Heb. 4.9 Omnis homo est advena nascendo incola vivendo quia compellitur migrare moriendo Aug. in q. 91. sup Lev. Heaven is in Scripture often set out by expressions importing it to be a place of stability setlement and abode as Everlasting habitations a Fathers house Mansions a building of God an House not made with hands eternall in the heavens A city a city which hath foundations a continuing city a Rest How sutable are fixed and immovable affections to this permanent and stedfast happinesse everything on this side Heaven is transitory The fashion of this world passeth away here we have no continuing city Our bodies are tabernacles and cottages of clay which shortly shall bee blown down by the wind of death * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isid Pelus l. 1. ep 65. yea their falling begins with their very building and this whole world is an habitation which ere long will be
speaketh of his own according to his custome and disposition and when he speaks truth he borroweth that to the end he may deceive Satan cannot lay down his sinfull inclination he is totus in mendaciis delibutus saith Calvin stained and soak'd in sin In a word this chain of sin which he hath put on * Calv. in Joh. 8.44 he never can or will put off 2. These faln angels are in and under the chains of Gods power The strong man is bound by a stronger then himselfe The old Dragon was bound for a thousand years Rev. 20. and the chain which curbed him was the power of God this power hinders him both from escaping the evill which he undergoes and from effecting and causing that evill which he desires Satan shall for ever be miserable in sustainingwhat he would not and in not obtaining what he would The impossibility of his being happy Quòd aufertur nocendipotestas pro maximo tormento reputant Esti p. 60. in 2. Sent. necessarily followes his impotency to be holy purity being the path to blessednesse All the forces of hell cannot scale the walls of heaven There is a gulfe fixt between faln angels and happinesse which they can never passe over as they can never return to God so as to love him so never so as to enjoy him they are debarr'd from these joyes unavoidably which they forsook voluntarily nor is it a small matter of their punishment to be curbed against the bent and violent inclination of their own will from stirring an hairs bredth for the hurting any further then God lengthens out their chains How painfull a vexation is it to Satan that he cannot hurt the soul by affrighting alluring and seducing nor our bodies by diseases and pains nor our estates by losses nor * Luke 22.31 Tormentum diaboli erat exire ab homine nec posse ei diutius nocere Vid. Est in sent ibid. Quod abyssum deprecantur eo spectat quod ipsis volupe fit inter homines versari quò illos seducant ad se plures semper pertrahant id quod in abysso non possunt ubi sunt nulli quos seducant Luc. Brugens Dolet illis in abyssum demergi in qua ablata sit laedendi perdendi facultas our names by disgraces unless our God gives him chain Satan hath desired to have you c. saith Christ And when the divell besought Christ Luke 8.28 not to torment him it 's by many interpreted that the torment against which Satan prayed was that his ejection out of the possessed whereby he was to be hindered from doing that hurt which he desired it being immediately subjoyn'd by the Evangelist For he had commanded the unclean spirit to come out of the man And whereas ver 31. the divels further desired Christ that he would not command them to go out into the deep Calvin with others referre this petition to the great desire of the divels to continue among men to annoy and molest them They grieved saith Calvin to think of being cast into the deep wherein they could not have so much power and opportunity of doing harme to men the destruction of men being the delight of the divell And this seems further to be confirmed by the words of Mark Mark 5.10 who saith that the divels desired that Christ would not send them out of the Countrey whereby they should want opportunities of doing harme to the soules and bodies of men See Perkins on Jude Needs then must the chain of divine power which restrains the divell from hurting men be a considerable part of his torment whose work is to go about seeking whom he may devour 3. The faln Angels are in and under the chain of their own guilty consciences which by the tenour of God's justice bind them over to destruction they know they are adjudg'd to damnation for their sins Let them be where they will in the earth or air these chains of guilty consciences bind them over to judgement they can no more shake off these then leave themselves In these the divels are bound like mad-men and band-dogs they must endure what they cannot endure Jam. 2.19 The divels fear and tremble horrour is the effect of diabolicall assent Judicis sui prae sentiâ expavefacti de poenâ suâ cogitarunt Mala enim conscientia quid meriti essent ipsis tacente Christo dictabat quemadmodum enim scelerati ubi ad Tribunal ventum est c. Calv. in Mat. 8.29 How evidently did this guilty trembling appear when they ask Christ whether he was come to torment them before their time The sight of the Judge saith Calvin on the place made these guilty malefactours to tremble at the thoughts of their punishment their evill conscience told them Christ being silent what they deserved As malefactours when they are brought to the bar apprehend their punishment so did these divels at the sight of their Judge The faln angels shall ever contemplate what they have done and how they have finned as also what they shall undergo and how they shall suffer and hereby as God delivers the damned men into the hands of guilty angels so he delivers guilty angels over to themselves to be their own tormenters This fiery furnace of a tormenting conscience which of all others is the most scorching and scalding every divell shall carry in his bosome This inward and silent scourge shall torment him this arrow shall stick in his side Daemones quocunque abeant ubicunque degant suum secum circumferunt infernu● Beda in c. 3. Jacobi Aquin. 1. p. q. 64. Art 4. ad ob 3. Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sicut sempiternus à semper Though Lorinus upon the place mentions a conceit according to which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if the word should signifie not their own such chains as belonged not to them by nature but were put upon them after their sinning as a punishment Iren. l. 3. c. 33. Greg. l. 4. mor. cap. 10. Ansel l. 2. c. 21. Cur Deus homo Sicutceciderunt nullo alio nocente ut caderent itanullo alio ad juvante resurgere debent Aug. Enchir. c. 29. Quoniam non tota multitudo angelorum Deum deserendo perierat ea quae perierat perpetuâ perditione remaneret alia vero creatura rationalis quoniam tota perierat c. this vulture shall prey this worme shall gnaw and this hell shall he carry about him where ever he becomes though he may change his place yet he never changes his state As the happinesse of the good angels is not diminish'd when they come to us and are not actually in the heavenly place because they know themselves blessed as the honour of a King is not impaired though actually he sits not in his chair of State so neither is the misery of the wicked angels lessen'd
it cut them to remember that they have lost all things for nothing a massy crown a weight of glory for a bubble a butter-flie the inheritance of heaven for a song What proportion is between a notion a fancy and the satisfying fruition of a reall good how do men blame themselves for lodging in a dear Inne where they are compell'd to pay as much more as their entertainment is worth How heartily have I heard men beshrew themselves for parting with great summs of mony for which they say they never drunk A minute of pleasure a poor silly slight shallow nothing may the damned say was all I had for have he cannot say to shew for my self my blessednesse my God Oh mad exchange Oh amazing disproportion deservedly miserable wretch that I am I had but a dream of delight for heaven it self Did ever any fool buy so dear and sell so cheap 4. They consider who it is that excludes them from this blessedness even God himself who is not only a God of power and therefore able to hinder them from entring for if he shuts none can open but a God of tender compassions to some This God who made them will not have mercy on them Mercy it self is now made wrath He now thunders in his fury whose bowels once made a noise which though somtimes tender are now harder then flints What shal open the door when he who is goodness and love it self shuts it 5 They are therefore hopelesse Semper cogitur ut mortem sine morte defectum sine defectu finem fine fine patiatur quatenus ci mors immortalis fit defectusindeficiens finis infinitus Greg. Mat. 25.10 Luk. 13. and utterly despairing ever to be admitted to the presence of God the anchor of hope is now broken the bridg of mercy is now drawn the gulph of separation shall never be past The heaviest rock can as easily take wings and flie and kisse the body of the Sun as can a damned spirit get up into the gracious presence of God When the door is shut it s too late to think of entring Knocking weeping entreating are altogether fruitlesse How deeply did the departure of Paul pierce the heart of the Christians with sorrow when he had told them that they should see his face no more Oh dreadfull word never the bitterest word in comparison of it is sweet OBSERVATIONS 1 Separation from God is the evil indeed Observ 1. It separates from the greatest good Worldly evils hurt the skin not the soul It s possible they may be corrective but the losse of God is destructive God in depriving men of his gifts whips them but in the final removal of himself he executes them Scourging is oft the lot of sons but separation from God is the portion of divels God may take away every thing in love unlesse it be his love Separation from God is a distinguishing judgement How much are men mistaken in their estimations of misery The most know no other hell but poverty or some such worldly woe Whereas outward evils are but appearing and opinionative and all their deformity is in the eye of the beholder if they drive us as oft they do nearer to God they are good for us and nothing is truly bad which separates not from the chiefest good There is more bitternesse in a drop of sin than a sea of suffering 2. Observ 2. How grosse is the delusion of sinners Who for the tasting of the slight and superficiall pleasures of a tentation will lose the soul-satisfying presence of the ever-blessed God! If all the delights of the earth cannot countervail one moments losse of the light of Gods Countenance in this life what proportion is there between a moments tast of worldly pleasures and the everlasting losse of the fruition of God in glory Could Satan make his promise good in saying All these things wil I give thee truly it would be but a slight performance in the esteem of that soul who knowes that the gain of the world would be followed with an eternall losse of God The eternall weight of the losse of God infinitely more weighs down all momentany delights than doth a mountain of lead a feather Could sinners part with God upon some valuable consideration their folly were not so much to be pitied but nothing can be given them in exchange for God because God whom they lose is all things 3 The wisest care imaginable Observ 3. is that of enjoying the presence of God in glory Shew your care hereof 1 By observing Eph. 2.1 2 12 Ephes 4.18 and laying to heart your distance from God by nature We all came into the world with our faces toward Satan and our backs turned upon God let no worldly enjoyments bribe your consciences into a false and fained quietnesse while you so remain If the poor Jews would not be made to sing in a strange land let not siners please themselves in this condition of estrangement from God How have the Saints mourned under the apprehension of Gods departure Their lamentations shew what sinners must do either here or hereafter 2 By making him your friend who onely admits us into the presence of God Jesus Christ is that way whereby that gulf between God and the soul is onely pass'd over There 's no seeing his face without bringing Christ along with us nor can we more endure the presence of God without an interest in Christ then can the stubble endure the flames Every Christless soul is a Godless soul The blood of Christ is the onely cement which can joyn God and us together 3 By labouring to be made fit for his presence Holiness becomes all those who shall enjoy it Heaven is no place for dogs and without holiness no man shall see God Heaven must first be in us before we can ever get into heaven God forbids his people to have fellowship with the works of darkness and much less will he himself delight in such company Sin hinders from enjoying God here Isa 59.2 much more bereafter Nor will heaven ever be sweet to that soul which here accounts not sin bitter The light of glory would dazle those eyes which only have been used to the darkness of sin filthy garments may undiscern'd be worn in the dark but not in the light It 's the happiness of heaven that all its inhabitants are of one mind The company of sinners would spoil the harmonious consort of glorified spirits 4 By delighting in the presence of and acquaintance with God while we are here upon earth How shie are men of admitting strangers into their houses and how readily do they open their doors to those with whom they are acquainted No wonder if Christ bids those depart whom he never knew Account those duties conditions companies to be but empty in and by which thou enjoyest not something of God Content not thy self with that Prayer Sabbath Ministry wherein God hath not
decisive passing of sentence To the former sentence viz. that of their own consciences shall be added that of the Judg wherby they shall be adjudged to the punishment of loss pain for ever A sentence which shall be openly promulgated Quo maledicti acrius doleant videntes quid amiseri● justi videbunt et laetabuntur considerantes quid evascrint Bern. Ser. 8. in Psal Heretofore it was written down in the book now it shall be pronounced before all the world A sentence which shall be published soon after that of benediction hath been uttered to the godly that so the damned may grieve the more to consider what they have lost and the saved rejoyce to observe what they have escaped A sentence every syllable whereof is more dreadfull then ten thousand thunder-claps roaring in their ears to all eternity Wonder one may that so much woe can be couched in so few words In being sentenced to depart from God what pleasure are they not adjudged to lose In being sentenced to the flames what pain are they not adjudged to feel 3 In the judgment to which these angels shall be brought Mat. 5.22 Mar. 3.29 Joh. 5.24.29 Act. 8.33 2 Thes 1.5 Jam. 2.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ille judex nec gratiâ praevenitur nec misericordiâ flectitur nec pecuniâ corrumpitur nec poenitentiâ mitigatur Aug. l. 3. de fid symb 2 Thes 1.9 Expulsi à facie hac terribili ipsius vocē Sicut servi fugitivi post multum temporis dominum suum videntes nihil aliud nisi de verberibus deprecantur sic daemones videntes Dominum in terris ad judicandum se venisse credebant Hierom. in Mat. 8. there shall be an execution of the sentence denounced and frequently in Scripture is judgment taken for punishment to which men are adjudged The sentence shall not bee an empty sound as a report without a bullet a noise without a sting but it shall be executed without any exception delay reply appeal The sentence of malediction shall be a fiery stream proceeding from the throne of the Judg and sweeping the condemned into hell The wicked shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and the glory of his power which place Beza expounds of their expulsion from the presence of the Lord by that terrible voice Go ye cursed Others thus interpret it The glorious power and majesty of Christs presence shall suffice to destroy the wicked If the divels were unable to endure the presence of Christ upon earth when emptied of glory upon considering that hereafter Christ should be their Judg crying out and asking whether hee was come to torment them before their time how shall they abide his presence when fill'd with dreadfull majesty For the second 2 Branch of Explicat Justin in Apol 1. daemones igni sempiterno nondum traditi sunt sed in die judicii tradendi Hanc opini onem amplectitur Irenaeus l. 5. cont Haer. Diabolus non statim in primordiis transgressionis ad poenam detrusus est à Deo idque ut hominem malitiâ suâ exerceret ad virtutem Lactant. lib. 3. Divin Instit cap. 28. How the angels who are already punished and therefore judged can be reserved to judgement We must not conceive with some that because they are said to be reserved to judgment therefore for the present they are not punish'd For if the good angels are before the general judgment in a state of happinesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alway beholding the face of God then why should not the bad be in a state of misery Besides if the souls of wicked men are now tormented in hell which neverthelesse may be said to be reserved to judgment why may it not be asserted that the angels who seduced men have been ever since their fall tormented considering that the fall was that to the angels which death is to ungodly men And further if the faln angels be in hell a place of punishment with the damned souls then it is as certain they partake of the same punishment with them as it is absurd to imagine that the holy angels should be in heaven with the souls of the blessed and not be with them partakers of the fruition of Gods presence There is therefore a threefold judgement which the fallen angels incur That wherwith they were punished immediately upon their fall when by God they were thrown into misery Of this speaks Peter 2 Pet. 2.4 God spared not the Angels which sinned but cast them down into hell c. 2 That whereby they are cast out of their dominion Joh. 12.31 and their power over us destroyed by the death of Christ 3 Their full and finall judgement to which they are here by Jude said to be reserved in respect whereof though they are in part punished already yet by it there shall be a dreadfull addition and accession to their present torments in regard 1. of Ignominy 2 Restraint 1. Ignominy for they being most proud creatures cannot but deem it an unspeakable shame 1. To have all their malice and mischeifs that ever they committed since their fall manifested to all the world whereby all who have heretofore honour'd them as gods shall know their vilenesse and look upon them as abominable deceivers and never be brought as formerly to worship them 2 To have it publickly seen that poor man whose nature is so much inferiour to theirs hath done that which they were not able to do in imbracing of holiness and honouring his Creator and obtaining those mansions of glory which they have lost 3 To have it known to all the world how often they would have done evil when they could not and how frequently even women and children have overcome their fierce and fiery tentations 4. To have judgment pass'd upon them not onely by Christ himself but even by those somtimes poor Saints whom formerly they so vilified and persecuted even these shall judg the Angels 1 Cor. 6.3 And that not onely 1 By having their practices compared to those of the damned as the Ninivites and the Queen of the South are said to rise up in judgment Mat. 12.41.42 Luk. 11.31.32 Nor 2 Only by their consenting to and approving of the Sentence which Christ shall pass upon the wicked But also 3. In regard of that dignitas assessoria that dignity whereby they shall be advanced to an honourable assessorship with the Lord Christ in sitting as it were with him upon the Bench Dolet diabolus quòd ipsum angelos ejus Christi servus ille peccator judicaturus est Tert. lib. de poen c. 7 or about the Throne of Judicature As likewise 4. they in that judgment being to appear with Christ manifest victors over all their enemies By trampling upon all the pride malice and weakness of Divels before the whole world and holily insulting over them as vile vanquished and contemptible
nemo videbit in judicio quia filius hominis est ut possit ab impiis videri August lib. 1. de trin cap. 13. Talis apparebit judex qualis possit videri ab iis quos coronaturus ab iis quos damnaturus est Prosp The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Son he hath given him authority to execute judgment Joh. 5.22.27 And all power is given him in heaven and in earth 3. By his former estate of humiliation As he emptyed and humbled himself according to his humane nature so in that hee is to be exalted He humbled himselfe and became obedient to death c wherefore God hath highly exalted him Phil. 2.9 And as Christ in his humane nature was unjustly judged so in that nature shall he justly judge Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many and he shall appear the second time without sin Heb. 9.28 4. By reason of the necessity of the visibility of the Judge and judiciall proceedings at the last day He executes judgement because he is the Son of man Joh 5.27 and every eye shall see him The Judge is to be beheld and heard by the Judged God will judge the world by that man c. In respect of the judiciall process a man must be our Judge for God is invisible and the Judge shall so appear as to be seen both of those whom he shall crown and of those whom he shall condemn Nor can it be but that God will be the more justified and men without all excuse having one who is bone of their bone and flesh of their flesh to be judge between God and them Notwithstanding all which immediate audible visible administration of the last judgement by the second Person this judgement belongs to the other Persons in Trinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of Authority Dominion and judiciary power though to the Son only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of dispensation and office and externall exercise 2. For the second viz. Wherein the Judge makes the day of Judgement great 1. He makes it a great day 1. As he is considered in himselfe 2. As he is attended and accompanied by others 1. As we consider him in himselfe and that either 1. as God or 2. man 1. As God He who shall be the Judge is the mighty God It is Jehovah to whom every knee shall 〈◊〉 Isai 45. Hence the Apostle cals the appearance of this Judg who is God glorious in those words Tit. 2.13 The glorious appearing of the great God If the great God be Judge the day of Judgement must needs be a great day How great is the day of an earthly Judges appearance a man a worme dust and ashes one who though hee can give yet cannot avoid the sentence of death and one who hath scarce a faint reflection of that majesty with which this King of glory is adorned think then and yet thoughts can never reach it what it is for God before whom the whole world though full of Judges is as nothing and less then nothing and vanity to come to judge the word God is a judge Omnipotent and therefore one whose voice as the living who are distanced so many thousands of miles shall hear and obey so even the dead shall hear being quickned and shall at his beck come and stand before his judgment seat He shall come with great power 2 Thes 7.9 and the wicked shall be punish'd with everlasting destruction from the glory of his power Nor shall he use the ministry of Angels for necessity but Majesty God is an omniscient Judg infinitely onely wise his eyes are clearer then ten thousand suns one who will in the day wherein the brightnesse of his omniscience shall shine in its full lustre bring every hidden work to light and tell to all as the woman of Samaria said all that ever they did one who doth not as earthly Judges onely know what to ask but what every one will answer who wants no witnesses nor needs he that any should testifie of man for he knows what is in man God is a true and a just Judge The Apostle 2 Tim 4.8 cals him The Lord the righteous Judge hee will render to every one according to his works The Apostle proves the righteousnesse of God from his judging the world Rom. 3.6 and Abrahams question asserts it strongly Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right Other Judges may do righteously but God cannot do otherwise The wils of other Judges must be regulated by righteousnesse but so righteous is God that righteousnesse it selfe is regulated by his will which is the root and rule of all righteousnesse 2. This Judge shall make the day great as he is Man greatly amazing and dismaying must his appearance as Judge in mans nature needs be to sinners who have denyed him persecuted crucifyed and put him to an open shame all whose designes have been to crush and keep him under With what horror shall the Jews then see their delusion who would not heretofore beleive him to be the Messiah Needs must they and others who would not have this man to reign over them to whom he was a stumbling stone when low and small contemptible in his former discoveries upon earth now find and feel him a rock to fall upon them from heaven and crush them to powder Greatly comforting and refreshing must the appearance of this man be to beleevers who shall not onely behold him to be the great Judge of the whole world who hath taken upon him their nature but who hath also given to them his spirit whereby through faith they are mystically united unto him as their head their husband and upon whom they have fixed all their hopes and expectations of happinesse for and with whom they have so long suffered from the world whom they look upon as their treasure their portion and for whose coming they have so long'd and sigh'd and groan'd In a word How greatly glorious shall his appearance in our nature be both to good and bad when in it he shall be deck'd and adorn'd with Majesty and clothed with unspeakeable glory above all the Angels he being to come in the glory of his father Mat. 16.27 with power and great glory Mat. 24.30 The glory of a thousand Suns made into one will be but as sack cloth to that wherein Christ shall appear in mans nature that great day The glory of the Sun scatters the clouds but from the glory of Christs face the very earth and heaven shall flie away Rev. 20.11 The beames of his glory shall dazzel the eyes of sinners and delight the eyes of Saints The wicked shall be punish'd with everlasting destruction from his presence and the glory of his power 2 Thes 1.9 and when his glory shall he revealed the Saints shall be glad with exceeding joy 1 Pet. 4.13 2. The Judge shall make this day of judgement great considering him not