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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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Obj. 1. But it is in vain to serve the Lord and what profit is there in his ways Word cutteth off temptations to presumption the worse the man is the better is his estate and the more godly the more crossed in the world Ans It is written It shall be well with them that fear the Lord not so to the wicked and again that the light of the ungodly shall be put out when the light of the godly shall rise brighter until perfect day and the end of the just is peace Obj. 2. What need so much fear of Condemnation seeing there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Ans It is written that such must walk after the Spirit and not after the flesh and that such must work out their Salvation in fear and trembling Obj. 3. But if thou beest predestinate what needest thou care and if thou beest not all thy care will not avail thee Ans It is written that I must study to make my election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 and that I must beleeve in the Lord Jesus Christ and bring forth fruits worthy amendment of life Obj. 4. But what needest thou be so strict shall none come to Heaven but such strict persons thinkest thou why God requires no such strictness Ans It is written that the Master is a hard man who will stand strictly for justice and that we must walk precisely Ephes 5.15 Obj. 5. But why shouldest thou respect these Preachers so much doest thou not see how they take upon them to disgrace thee for such and such courses and they are men as well as others no better many of them worse Ans It is written 1 Thess 5.12 Have them in singular love for their works sake and that our Saviour said He that heareth you heareth me and that the least Minister in the New Testament is greater than John Baptist who yet was greater than any Prophet Matth. 11.11 and that God did send two Bears and destroyed forty two of those wanton children that mocked and reviled the Prophet Elisha 2 King 2.23 Obj. 6. But thou art young thou mayest swear and game and swagger and be wanton these are but tricks of youth and sowing the wilde oats c. Ans It is written As a man sowes so shall he reap and remember that for all this thou must come to judgement Obj. 7. Oh but thinkest thou that God sees or takes notice of every thing or if he should hee is merciful and easily entreated and thou hast time enough to repent Ans It is written that all the ways of a man are before the eyes of the Lord and to him day and darkness are alike and that to abuse the patience of God is to treasure up wrath against the day of wrath Obj. 8. Oh but thou hast now a fit opportunity and occasion to take thy delight the Husband is gone a farr journey Bathsheba is at hand and now it is twilight why shouldst thou deprive thy self of thy pleasure take thy time thou canst not have it every day Ans It is written Prov. 5.3 8. The end of a strange woman is more bitter than worm-wood and keep thy way farr from her and come not neer the door of her house and that neither fornicators nor adulterers shall enter into heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 and Ephe. 5.3 but fornication and all uncleanenesse and covetousnesse let it not once be named among you as becometh Saints III. The third rank of instances is in motions to pride and self-conceit The word cutteth off temptations to pride wherein sin hath great strength Obj. 1. You are a man rich and high well friended well monied why should you stoop to such a one this were a base thing indeed let him seek to you or doe you crush him Ans It is written God resists the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and in giving honour goe one before another and pride goes before the fall and that the haughty eye is one of the six things which the Lord abhorrs Prov. 6.17 Obj. 2. But you are a man of knowledge wise and learned what need you be so diligent in hearing Sermons especially of such as are farr your inferiours you can teach them not they you Ans It is written Isa 5.21 Woe be to them that are wise in their own conceits and Christ hath said Hee that despiseth you despiseth me Luke 10.16 and that Job despised not the counsel of his maid much less must I of the least Minister and that we know but in part and are to consider not who but what is spoken and that the same Spirit is mighty in one and in another Obj. 3. But you are a man of gifts and authority and these will carry you through all and you may rise and tread such and such under your feet who dare say any thing to you Ans It is written Matth. 18.6 Whosoever offendeth any of these little ones that beleeve in me it were better for him that a Milstone were tied about his neck and he cast into the midst of the Sea and He that doth wrong shall receive according to the wrong that hee hath done and there is no respect of persons Coloss 3.25 Obj. 4. But you may follow the fashions of the world in strange apparel ruffian behaviour monstrous tyres who may else how else should you be known to be a gentleman or a gentlewoman Ans It is written 1 Pet. 3.3 That even womens apparrelling must not bee outward as with broydered hair and gold c. but the hid man of the heart must be uncorrupt for Sarah and other holy women trusting in God did so attire themselves and again Fashion not your selves according to this world but bee renewed in the spirit of your mind Bee ever of the newest fashion there Obj. 5. But it is a small matter and of great credit to swear and curse and speak bigge words it is away to get reputation and bee respected as a man of spirit Ans It is written Levit. 24.16 Hee that blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall be put to death all the Congregation shall stone him and Jam. 5.12 Above all things my brethren swear not neither by heaven nor earth nor any other oath but let your Yea be Yea and your Nay Nay IV. The fourth instance is in motions to wrong and injustice The word cutteth off motions to injustice Obj. 1. Thou art a great man thou hast Tenants thou mayest and must live by them they are thy Servants and thou must enrich thy self by them rack their rents bind them to sute and service they cannot resist thee Or thou art a Master keep thy Servants wages from him make thy use of it weary him poor Sneak what can he doe pay him at thy pleasure hee will endure any thing rather than lose thy work Ans It is written Jam. 2.13 Judgement mercilesse belongs to them that shew no mercy and those that grinde the faces of the poor shall one day bee
made far more glorious natures than our selves our keepers To keep thee This custody of the Angels standeth 1 In observing and watching their persons souls bodies and estates and therefore are called watchmen Dan. 4.10 And I saw a watchman and an holy one come down from Heaven 2 In propulsing and averting evil so here There shall no evill come near thee for hee will give his Angels charge over thee 3 In defending them in good as Elizeus and his servant being compassed with enemies 4 In comforting them in trouble as Hagar Gen. 21.17 and Jacob Gen. 32.1 2. and Christ in this place In all thy waies Namely in such courses as God hath appointed and in all these in all times and in all places in all estates and conditions In the way into the world in birth and infancy the good Angels keep Gods little children Matth. 18.10 In the way thorow the world they keep us as the Israelites in the Wilderness Exod. 33.2 In the way out of the World their charge is to keep us as wee may see in Lazarus who when hee dyed the Angels carried his soul into Abrahams bosome In all our waies by day and by night they keep us so long as wee are in our callings They shall bear thee in their hands This is a borrowed speech for Angels have no hands nor bodies sometimes they assume bodies in their ministery to others but these bodies are not theirs neither were they naturally and hypostatically united unto them but for the time created and assumed but from what beginning they were taken or into what end after the ministery they were resolved it is idle to inquire Here hands are ascribed to them as elsewhere wings both improperly one shews the speediness of their motion the other their fitness and tenderness in our keeping For their charge is not onely to foresee danger and admonish us but they must bee actual helpers to bear us up from ground when wee are ready to fall and get knocks as a tender mother or nurse if they see the little child falling will haste and catch it before the head comes to the ground That thou dash not thy foot against a stone That is that thou hurt not thy foot against any rub or occasion Angels are nurses wee are as infants in spiritual matters on every occasion ready to fall into sin and by it into all dangers spiritual and temporal Now the Angels keep us not onely from hurt by others but from bringing hurt on our selves even the least they keep us from hurting our Head yea our Foot Object But how do the Angels perform their charge when some of Gods children not onely stumble but fall spiritually and bodily and take great harm Answ The reason is because no man keeps his way so diligently and uprightly as hee ought If wee did never fail God would never fail us no more would his holy Angels nay such is their love as they would not have us to take the least hurt in the world while wee walk faithfully in the waies and commandements of God Doct. The Angels of God are the tender keepers of Gods children in Gods waies that no hurt can beside them Gen. 32.5 When Jacob was in great fear of his brother Esau the Angel of God met him to comfort and defend him When Sodome was to bee destroyed the Angels came to Lot to forewarn and haste him out of that wicked City Psal 34.7 The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tents round about them that fear the Lord and delivereth them 1 Because of Jesus Christ our Head Reasons to whom they are subject as to their Lord and Head who hath reconciled things in Heaven and Earth Angels and Men Col. 1.20 In our selves and our own vileness wee could not bee indured by these blessed spirits but now Christ becomes our head and for him they tend us as his members 2 Their love to us is another ground of their custody of us manifested in that they are compared to Nurses neither can they but love those whom they see God loveth now they see God loving us so dearly that hee spares not his own Son but gives him to the death for us and therefore they dearly love us and our good they desire our salvation and promote it they rejoyce that our salvation is wrought and are glad of our repentance by which wee lay hold on it 3 And specially this charge and commandement of God is the cause hereof so as now it is not out of curtesy or the goodness of their nature only that they do us good but by vertue of this charge and commandement of God whom they love as their chief good and to whom they are bound in absolute obedience by the eternal law of their nature so as although they are charged by God yet are they not forced or co-acted but out of their perfect love of God they watch over us for our good Vse 1. This doctrin affords a use of great consolation for when we consider our own weakness and impotency on one hand and the multitude power and policy of our enemies on the other when wee see a whole Army of sins besiedging us and a whole legion of dangers behinde them to oppresse and swallow us now this Doctrin touching Gods providence in the ministery of Angels will be able to support us when wee shall consider not only that Gods protection is as a wall of fire round about us but that he hath set and pirched his Angels round about us as a guard of whom we may say with Elisha for their multitude They are more that are with us Ordo gratiae praeponderat ordini naturae Th. Aqu. than they that are against us and for their power they are called the Angels of Gods power farre stronger than the wicked Angels and Powers that are against us And when wee shall consider that God hath given a charge and that not to one or two Angels but to the whole blessed company of them over every godly man how can wee but assure our selves that wee shall be defended and protected If a man were to pass by ship over a dangerous sea full of gulfs sands rocks and robbers if the King should give him letters of safe conduct it would much comfort him and help him through his voyage but if this King should send a great Navy to conduct him over yea and should not onely go in his own person but call out all his men of war to see him safely arrived this were so comfortable as hee could not wish more But thus doth the Lord with his children not onely himself going with them through the world but guarding them with his holy Angels who willingly afford their ministery because of their love to man but in respect of Gods word and charge much more willingly that of Gods Angels they become our Angels Matth. 18.10 What an unspeakeable comfort is it that when wee lose the watch over our selves many waies
the dead 1 Pet. 1.3 and for this cause our Saviour was careful after his departure hence to send out his Spirit in more plentiful and abundant manner than before that hee might continually inspire his people with ardent desires after the beginnings of that life eternal unto which Christ himself is risen who then manifest themselves members of such an advanced head when this new life manifesteth it self in them Thirdly our perfect salvation is also hence fully assured us for if our Lord Jesus hath soyled all the powers of Hell Death and Darkness in himself when hee was yet dead how much more doth hee it for us his members being now alive if hee could drive back and disperse all spiritual enmitles even when hee was in Hell it self after a sort how much more now being ascended far above all moveable and aspectible Heavens Eph. 4.10 for wee must not behold the victory and triumph of Christ What or who sh●ll separate us from the love of God seeing it is Christ that is dead or rather risen from the dead as performed onely in and for himself but as the ground and pledge of the victory and conquest of all the Beleevers in the World Look upon this Son of David prostrating the great Goliah of Hell for all the Israel of God casting out the strong man not only out of his but of our possessions that he might take us up for his own use spoyling him of his kingdome and weapons for us yea and in us And hence as out of a well of consolation wee shall draw this comfort to our selves that look as the gates of Hell could not prevail against him our head no more shall they ever be able to prevail against us his members although they never so fiercely and forcibly assayl us And it spiritual enmities shall not be able to cut us short of our Salvation much less shall temporal dangers for by vertue of this resurrection also even in the most troublesome deeps when the waves of sorrows overtake one another and go over our souls when with Jonas we are ready to say We are cast from the face of the Lord Jonah 2.4 even then we have hope to rise out of such evils and because out head is above in short time comfortably to swim out Adde hereunto that death itself nor the grave shall stand between us and home for this rising of Christ is both the cause and confirmation that we shall rise again If the head bee risen so shall also the members if Christ the first fruits of them that sleep be raised so shall also the whole bulk and body of beleevers if we beleeve that Christ is risen from the dead even so them which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him 1 Thess 4.14 and if the same spirit which raised Jesus from the dead dwell in us then he that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken our mortal bodies Rom. 8.11 for Christ hath not redeemed the soul alone from death but the body also else had this second Adam been interiour to the first if not able to save by his rising all that which was lost by the fall of the former Oh how would this meditation well digested sweeten the remembrance of death and the grave when a Christian shall consider that look how it was with Christ when his soul and body were separated yet both of them were united to the Deity which brought them together again even so I am taught by the Scriptures that when my soul and body shall bee separated yet shall neither of them be sundred from Christ my head but he will reunite them like loving friends that they may participate in his own glory How would this meditation bring the soul not only to be content but to desire to bee dissolved and bee with Christ accounting that the best of all Phil. 1.23 III. The third benefit befalling us by the resurrection of Christ i● that because Christ is risen we know it shall not only goe well with us but with all the Church of God the prosperity of which so many as would prosper must rejoyce in for hence it is that Christ calleth a Church out of the world which after a sort riseth even out ot his own grave hence is it that being ascended on high he gave gifts to men for the gathering and preserving of his Church hence is it that the Church shall alwaies have the light of the Gospel Pastors Teachers and the Ministry till we all meet to a perfect man hence is it that this Church shall bee defended from Wolves and Tyrants seeing ●one is stronger than he nor able to pluck any ot his sheep out of his hands Let the Church be pressed it shall never be suppressed Let the Kings of the earth band themselves and forces against it the Lord hath set his Son upon his holy Mountain and he shall crush them like a Potters vessel Let Hereticks and Antich●ist send armies of Locusts Jesuites and seducing vagrants to waste the Church and bereave it of the truth and light leading to life they shall only seduce such as whose names are not written in the Book of life and of the Lamb for seeing Christ is risen so long as hee who can dye no more liveth he will preserve his darling he will send out the Stars that are in his right hand for her relief who like Davids Worhies shall break through the Hosts of the enemie and bring the pure waters of the Well of Life as we are for ever thankfully to acknowledge in those worthy restorers of our religion Lastly let flouds of persecution rise and swell so as this Dove of Christ cannot find rest fo the sole of her foot one means or other Christ will use for her help for he will either send her into the Wildernesse or the earth shall help the Woman and drink in the waters that they shall not hunt her or he will provide for her one of the chambers of his providence as he did for Joash against the rage of Athaliah wherein she shall be safe till the Storm bee blown over These are the principal benefits procured us by Christs resurrection which belong not unto all but only to such as are risen with him Quest How shall we know that we are risen with Christ How to know that we are risen with Christ that they mat assuredly belong unto us Ans The Apostle setteth himself to resolve this question Col. 3.1 where he maketh the seeking of things above where Christ is and infallible mark of our rising with him for as when Christ was risen he minded not things below any more but all his course was a preparation to his ascension to which all things tended so now if thou be risen with him Heaven will be in thine eye and thine affections are ascended thither where Christ is if Christ were on earth thou mightest fix thy soul and senses here on earth and yet be a Christian
daunt the wicked and ungodly They shall see him whom they have peirced hee is their Judge against whom all their villanies have been committed whose servants they have villanously intreated whose kindness and peaceable conditions they have despised and refused What a fearful sentence awaiteth them when they shall come before him no marvail if they call for the mountains to cover them and the hills to hide them rather than they should appear before the presence of his glory whose wrath is as a consuming fire and no stubble can stand before it Oh consider this yee that put far from you this great day of the Lord speaking peace to your selves whilest every thing wageth war against you in that you still by living in your sins proclaim open war against the Son of God Why should you any longer abuse his patience why will you treasure up wrath for your selves against this day of wrath why will you fit your selves as fewel for the fire of that day when the Lord Jesus shall come from Heaven in flaming fire to render vengeance against all them which know not God nor obey the Gospel of our Lord Jesus 2 Thess 1.8 Well if you will not bee warned but you will go on in such impenitent courses know it that the party wronged by your sins is hee who is appointed of God to bee your Judge you will think it will go hard with Pilate seeing hee is to bee his judge who was judged by him to death and with Judas that betrayed him and with the Souldiers that put him to death but change the persons the case is your own Secondly In the execution of this Office two things must bee considered 1 The persons upon whom here said to bee the quick and the dead 2 The manner of it First By the phrase of quick and dead is meant all mankind without exception of what age condition sex or quality soever they bee even all that ever have received life from God from the first man that ever lived upon earth to the last that shall bee found living at the comming of Christ even all these shall bee juged And the dead are mentioned as well as the living because the carnal and unbeleeving heart of man maketh more question how those who have been resolved into dust many thousand years ago can bee quickened and raised to judgement than those that shall bee found alive at that day therefore is the Scripture very express in this particular Rev. 20.12 I saw the dead both great and small stand before God 2 Cor. 5.10 Wee shall all appear before the Judgement Seat of Christ In like manner those speeches admit no exception which we every where meet withall as Every eye shall see him every man shall bear his own burden every man shall give account of himself unto God Rom. 14.12 And that wee should not doubt of the certainty hereof the Scripture condescendeth so farre to our weaknesse The means whereby both quick and dead shall be g●thered to judgement as to shew us the means how this great work shall be brought about As 1 By the mighty and powerful voyce of Christ which whilest he was in his abasement could call dead Lazarus out of his grave Joh. 5.28 Those that are in the graves shall hear his voyce 2 By the ministery of the Angels who shall all not one excepted come with him and they shall gather the elect from all winds and present and force the wicked to the barre before the Judge of all the earth even then when they shall fly to the hills to cover them if it were possible from his presence 3 By the diligence of all the brute creatures who in their kinds shall hear the voyce of the Son of God The Sea shall give up her dead so shall Death and the Grave give up their dead the very fire shall give up again the bodies it hath wasted In a word all the Creatures shall help forward this work of the great day which although it transcend the shallow reach of man yet is it not above the power of God Object But how can the quick and dead be then presented to Judgement s●eing the godly shall not enter into judgement and for the wicked they are judged already for he that beleeveth not is condemned already Ans First for the godly they shall not enter into the judgement of condemnation 2 They are by their particular judgement acquitted already but they must also by the general Judgement receive in their bodies which till that day are not absolved according as they have done in the flesh 3 They must be solemnly and publikely inaugurated and invested into the glory of their head and their blessed estate manifested to all the world both men and Angels and even in the eyes of the wicked themselves therefore although they enjoy God already in part and the beginnings of the life to come and such as are dead in the grave rest with the Lord and enjoy his glory in their soul yet are they not fully happy nor can be till this day breath on them and this their morning awake them to their perfect glory As for the wicked although they are already condemned 1 In Gods Counsel before all worlds 2 By the word wherein their sentence is read Wicked already judged five waies declared and published 3 In their own consciences the judgemen● of which fore-runneth the final Judgement 4 By certain degrees of insensible plagues that are upon them as hardnesse of heart blindnesse of mind wilfulnesse in their wickednesse malice against God and good men hatred of the light and means of salvation 5 By the horrible torment of the souls of such as are in Hell with the Devil and damned ones yet doth the full vial of Gods wrath remain to be poured upon them and the final execution and manifestation of their endlesse misery is reserved till this Day of Judgement when the body shall be re-united to the soul and both delivered to the Devil as their head by him to be tormented together as they have been inseparable friends in sinning together Vse Let every man make account of this judgement high and low rich and poor learned and unlearned No man can avoyd this judgement unless his power be above the power of the judge the mightiest Monarch shall not bee able to with-draw or absent himself unlesse his power bee above the power of Christ the judge the poorest soul that ever saw the Sun shall not bee neglected the most rebellions of all Creatures men or Angels must of force appear and that not by a Proctor or Advocate but in his own person for every man must give accounts of himself unto God None can be forgotten no not through the passing of thousands of years Cain dyed many thousand years since Judas many hundreths yet both must appear the one for killing his innocent brother the other for betraying his innocent Master No excuse will serve the turn the
Friers plea we are exempted Lord will doe no good here no not that which all mens Courts must needs excuse absence by that the party is dead for this Judgement Seat is set up for the quick and the dead God must for his glory truth and justice bring every man to this tribunal that if he have been good and faithful hee may have his time of refreshing and be put into the perfe●t state of happiness in soul and body And contrarily if hee have been hard-hearted and impenitent hee may know the weight of Gods justice and power and bee in full state of endlesse and easelesse misery both in soul and body Oh then what great cause hath every man to fore-cast this day and expecting it to prepare for it rather than to betake themselves to that Epicurean and profane practice of mocker● who put farre from them this evil day saying Where is the promise of his comming we see all things alike since the beginning he makes but small haste And thus because judgement is not speedily executed they resolve themselves on a most wicked course not knowing that as a snare it shall come upon them when they least look for it and that though slowly yet he will come surely and make them know what it is to abuse his patience which should lead them to repentance Now followeth the manner of this Judgement and that is comprehended in three things 1 It shall bee glorious and powerful 2 Just and righteous The glory of the last judgement described 3 Strict and accurate For the first it is said that the Son of man shall come with power and great glory yea in the glory of the Father that is such as belongeth to his Father with himself but to no creature else The clouds and the air shall be as a fiery Chariot to carry him with admirable swiftnesse his train and attendants shall be the Arch-angel making his way by the sound of a trumpet which the very dust and ashes shall hear and follow and all the other Angels of Heaven from whose multitude power and glory this coming shall be wonderfully glorious and yet the Judge himself shall surpasse them all in glory and brightnesse and as the Sun doth darken all the lesser Starres so shall his most admirable glory obscure them all This a●pearance may be shadowed by the coming in of earthly Judges to hold Assizes through their Circuit attended with the Honourable Nobles Justic●s and Gentlemen of the Country yea with the High Sheriffs power besides all their own followers by which great state and attendance they are both honoured and aided as becometh such publick Ministers of Justice as also are made formidable to daunt and quell malefactors Or rather look as Princes going to their Parliament to make Laws put on their royal robes and shew themselves in their greatest glory even so shall this great King of glory coming to require the obedience of his Laws cloath himself with such a robe of glory as the brightest Sun shall not endure to behold neither the Heavens nor the Earth shall be able to see this glory but shall shrink at it and melt away with a noyse Revel 20.11 John saw a great white Throne and one that sate upon it from whose face fled away both the earth and heaven and their pla e was found no more Thus may we in some dark resemblance something conceive of this glory of the Judge of all the world unto which the consideration of the persons that shall bee judged by him addeth not a little moment for not only small but great must stand before him It is indeed a great honour among men to bee deputed the Lord high Steward under a King whose office is to sit in Judgement upon a noble man what an height of glory then is it for the Son of God to sit in Judgement and call personally before him not nobles only but all the Kings and Monarchs that ever the earth bare If there be such preparation and state amongst men for the trial but of some one noble man what glory may wee conceive must attend the mighty God whilest he bringeth to their trial not only meaner persons but all the most powerful Monarches and Potentates that ever were or shall be to the end of the world This consideration ministreth comfort to the godly seeing hee cometh to Judgement who is able perfectly to free them from all misery able to strike oft their bolts of sin to acquit them from terrours of conscience fears of death the Grave the Devil and Hell it self the cometh from Heaven for their release who hath trodden down all his enemies under his feet and all this glory is for their safety and happinesse who wish and wait for the appearing of this mighty God Tit. 2.13 And on the contrary it serveth to strike the wicked and ungodly with terror and dread seeing the Lord Jesus shall come from Heaven in such power and majesty and all to judge and condemn them whom when they shall see arrayed with vengeance against them no marvail if they be driven to their wits ends yea as it is with guilty Malefactors when they see the Judge coming in so honourably attended so shall it bee here this very glory of Christ shall strike them with fear horror and an azednesse and force them to all miserable and unavaylable shifts and to wish if it were possible that the rocks would fall upon them and crush them to peeces so as they might never come before his presence for the great day of the Lord which is to all the wicked of the world a black day a cloudy day a dismal day this day is come and they cannot abide it Secondly this Judgement shall bee righteous and according to the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 2.2 We know that the judgement of God is according to truth Heb. 1.8 Thy throne O God is for ever the scepter of thy Kingdom is a righteous scepter The righteousness of the Judge and judgement Thou lovest righteousnesse and hatest iniquity Hitherto is to bee referred that of Daniel 7.9 who saith that this Judge shall sit upon a great white throne alluding to the white Ivory throne of Salomon but infinitely more glorious the whitenesse betokenning the purity and righteousness both of the Judge and the judgement for every man shall receive according to his works Here shall be no concealment of things for he will bring every secret into judgement Eccles 12. He will lighten all things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the hearts manifest 1 Cor. 4.5 Here shall bee no daubing or salving up of bad matters in corners no pleading of Lawyers who craftily cloud the truth of Causes for gain no respect of persons no favouring for the sake of any friends nor fear of foes or any displeasure Here shall be no inducement by gifts which blind mens eyes to pervert judgement the purest gold of Ophir
Church For if they do their duty in one place or other they shall hear on both sides both of Satan and his instruments Now because the Devil useth two special weapons against those in higher place to make them unprofitable or hurtful one open the other secret it behoveth Magistrates and Ministers to watch against them both and fully resolve against both Magistrates and Ministers must watch against two things especially 1 Satan will stir up his instruments openly against them Let either or both rebuke the world of sin and force men to walk in the narrow path of life wicked men grow mad against them and rage with all open rebukes and hellish and horrible slanders and so far as they dare blaspheme the Ordinance it self in their hands Hence Jeremy was a contentious man with the whole earth both Moses and Aaron take too much upon them What must men now because they must bee counted peaceable suffer every man to do what hee list as though there were no God nor King in Israel till iniquity so abound as it know no bounds bankes nor bottome No but wee must look both to the Commandement and to the Promise Jer. 1.18 19 If sinners bee obdurate as iron and of brasen and impudent fore-heads wee must bee as brasen walls to make their wickednesse recoyl and bound upon them and with the Palm-tree rise against the burden that lyeth upon us 2 If this will not weary them but they hold on with courage then hee works more secretly more dangerously If hee see them inclined to gain hee will offer them Commodities and profits If ambitious he will choak them with preferments If given to ease or pleasure hee can easily perswade them to a course of favouring themselves And experience shews how commonly Satan prevailes with men some of these waies and who would think him now an enemy or in the field and yet he hath won a fort which open force could not attain And as being in great danger they must adde to this watch Three means for their comfort and safety the means of their comfort and safety as I Let them look to their entrance and drift undertaking these functions not headily or hastily but as Christ did with fasting and prayer How few do it who have much more need than Christ had and are in greater danger than hee was When ambition or covetousness or idleness or any thing but earnest desire of Gods glory leads men into these places besides that they never do good no marvail if they fall fearfully as being not fenced they cannot say God set them there or will help them against temptations 2 Let them look that they have good warrant for that which they do and for every action of their calling that they may see themselves to bee in Gods work for so long they have promise of protection hee will keep and help thee in thy waies 3 Let them pray to God for power and successe notwithstanding their tryals which they shall do if they see the need of Gods strength as the Apostle did Eph. 6.19 Pray for mee and besought the Saints for Christs sake and the love of the Spirit to strive with him in prayer to God Vse 3 Seeing high estates are so dangerous Mean estate the safest and best for Reason why should not men content themselves with a mean condition but insatiably gape after promotion 1 High callings are like high trees upon the tops of hills which are subject to every winde 2 If height could bring content or a sweet life it were more worthily desired but wee see it consumes a man with envy and fear desiring still some thing beyond his present estate 3 There is as great sorrow in the fall as labour in rising and to come down in the height is greater grief And all this comes upon a man besides Satans malice Vse 4 Lastly this serves to comfort Christians Four grou●● of comfort weak Christans in ●●●ption who are acquainted with temptations in the beginning of their conversion and are ready to give up all as seeing nothing but discomfort For 1 It was the lot of Christ the head 2 It is a cursed peace to bee at peace with the Devil and a blessed war to fight for God and Christ Jesus 3 A Theef breaks not into an empty house and a dog barks at strangers it is a good sign that thou art gotten out of Satans power because hee pursues thee hee needs not pursue those whom hee possesseth they bee good men whom Satan is an enemy to 4 The Lord first strengthened Christ with his voice from heaven and then brought him into the field and so hee will deal with thee his member The second circumstance is the person opposed Jesus This will seem strange if wee consider in our Lord Jesus 1 The perfection of his nature hee was free from all Original Corruption by his most holy conception by the over-shadowing of the Holy Ghost as also from actual sin 1 Pet. 2.22 hee did no sin neither was any guile found in his mouth And though hee had our substance and our infirmities yet with one exception without sin Heb. 4.15 a The perfection of grace for hee was now full of the Holy Ghost indued with infinite knowledge wisdom holiness and grace and it might seem that there was no place or room for Temptation 3 The perfection of his power being the Creator and preserver of all things the Lord of Hosts by whose very word or beck all creatures as they bee sustained so might bee brought to nothing who being at the weakest was able by one word to cast down to the earth all that came to apprehend him and compel the very Devils to begge favour of him 4 The perfection of his Fathers Love having immediately before testified that hee was his beloved Son in whom hee was well pleased who as in his private estate he encreased in favour with God Luke 2.52 So now much more hath hee gained his fathers love as wee have heard Doct 〈◊〉 excelle●●● 〈◊〉 exemp●●● man f●●● S●tans temptations And yet Jesus must not escape the Tempter It is not any excellency or high respect that can exempt any man from Satans temptations If a man had all the perfections which Christ had of nature grace power and the love of God yet in this life hee must bee exposed unto them If wee look at all the worthies of the World of greatest grace in greatest favour with God as Job Lot Aaron Moses David Peter none of them could escape his onset Satan desires to winnow the Disciples as wheat even at the side of Christ Luke 22.31 Nay our first Parents Adam and Eve created in absolute perfection concerning present righteousness and holiness met with a Serpent even in innocency in Paradise If neither holiness of person or place can priviledge a man from temptation but Prophets Apostles yea the first Adam and the second Adam also must be tempted who
can expect immunity from the Tempter Reason 1 This life is the time of warfare and the world is the great field of God in which Michael and his Angels fight against the Dragon and his Angels and can the Captains and Leaders of the rest that go before them in grace in strength in knowledge in holiness escape the onset seeing the sharpest and most keen assaults of every battel is upon the fore-ward and forelorn hopes 2 Satans malice being the greatest sin in the world and the sin against the Holy Ghost is directly and professedly against God and consequently against those that appertain to God 〈…〉 ven●● self 〈…〉 od in 〈◊〉 ●nts 〈◊〉 22. because they do so That hee hateth the Godly it is because hee hateth God and in us would bee revenged on him in the servants hee persecutes the Master in the members the head whereas his chief quarrel lyeth against the Master and Head This cannot bee new to him that considereth either Christs prophecy Yee shall bee hated of all men for my sake that is of all wicked men that carry Satans image and properties or else the Saints experience of the accomplishment of it For thy sake are wee killed all the day long Psalm 44.22 Whence it must follow that the nearer any man is to God more graced or more like him the more is Satans malice kindled against him and hee is lesse exempted from temptation the nearer Christ the more desirous is hee to winnow him 〈…〉 grea● 〈◊〉 ●se 3 Gods Providence so ordereth the matter that where hee gives greater strength and grace there should bee greater exercise to prevent pride to keep grace on work and to make his gifts known to the world Vse 1 If Satans malice and impudency set upon the green tree what will hee do to the dry If hee dare make tryal of Christs strength will hee fear our weaknesse If bee dare encounter with perfection can wee impotent and infirm Creatures look for exemption No wee had more need arm our selves and expect our adversary and the rather because the Prince of the World comes upon Christ and findeth nothing to help his temptations by but to us hee needs bring no weapons hee findes in our selves a whole armory of weapons by which hee may fight against us bee findes a rebel within us an old Adam of our corrupt nature that giveth him strength and help against us and therefore his boldnesse will bee so much the more against us when hee sees our own wicked inclinations yielding strength to his wicked temptations Many men say they are of so strong a faith and of such grace that they defie Satan they were never troubled with him 〈◊〉 ●ce ●ouble hee hath nothing to do with them Alas poor soules the more grace the more trouble If strength of faith and grace had given priviledge from temptation our Lord Jesus had not been tempted hast thou more than hee or hast thou more than Adam in innocency yet Adam in innocency was tempted Oh take heed lest the strong man have carried all away and so thou hast peace thinkest thou that hee durst assault Christ and dares not come neer thee dares hee encounter with a Lyon and will hee stand in fear of a fearful Hare 〈…〉 ●on 〈…〉 de●●d not 〈◊〉 Vse 2. Temptation is no sign of Gods hatred but of the Devils It is the weaknesse of flesh to think that a mans own or other mens temptations proceed from an angry God and thence to give false witnesse against himself or others being assailed by Satan See wee not here Christ proclaimed the Son of God and in whom his Father is well pleased yet subject to temptations by the Devil wilt thou now conclude that Christ is suddenly cast out of favour Nay our Duty is if wee see any buffered by Satan rather to pray for them and pitty them than pass sentence as Judges upon them considering that our selves also may bee tempted And if our selves bee not molested and troubled let us take heed wee have not given Satan peaceable possession which makes him now fawn upon us Many will spit at the mention of the Devil who are linked to him sure enough and lulled asleep with the pleasures and profits of this world and are never diseased or disquieted because they go on pleasantly with full sail and gale to destruction Vse 3 This Doctrin confutes that Romish delusion of driving away the Devil and exorcising him with holy water of Baptism The holiest water that ever was did not drive away the devil For the holiest water that ever was was that which washed the holiest Son of God and yet the Devil was never a whit afraid of that but immediately Christ must go forth to bee tempted Papists use the name of Jesus uttered in so many letters and syllables to bee powerful to hinder the entrance of Devils and to drive them out being entered For say they when it is uttered the authority of Christ is present which they cannot resist But I answer 1 Never did the Apostles acknowledge any great miracle or work to bee done by the name Jesus but as Peter saith Act. 3.6 13. By Faith in his name which goes beyond the bare repeating of it 2 Satan delights to see silly people being deluded to abuse both this name and all the names of God to sorcery which is the cause that when hee is raised by the Sorcerer bee is content to bee adjured by all the holy names of God in the Scripture as though they bound him whereas hee deludes them the more and exerciseth his malice against God in an high measure and his holy titles If Satan fear not the person of Jesus he less fears the name of Jesus 3 If Satan fears not the person of Jesus but dares set upon him certainly hee fears not the name and word Christ might easily according to Papists have shaken off the Devil and said What knowest thou not that my name given mee in my circumcision is Jesus how darest thou bee so bold with mee And surely if that Name in the mouth of a wretched man would by any vertue in it make him fly then much more in the mouth of Christ himself But all this is but diabolical and Antichristian delusion Object But must not every knee bow at the name of Jesus Phil. 2.10 even of things under the earth by which are meant the Devils Ans They wickedly abuse that place for the name Jesus is not only a title of Christ but of his Power Majesty and Authority sitting now at the right hand of his Father which if they had to command they might command all creatures in heaven earth or hell Whence wee see that the literal understanding of that place is the ground of Magick The like they speak of the reliques of Saints bones apparel c. which the Devil cannot abide I answer 1 They have few or no true reliques of Saints but false collusions
shalt not make to thy self any graven image of any thing in heaven or earth for Thou sawest no image only thou heardest a voice Deut. 4.12 And what will ye liken mee to saith the Lord Yet this was a rude people and needed all the books that might bee Consequently God is not to bee worshipped in any Image 2 Hee is dishon●ured when any corruptible thing is conceived to bee like him Rom. 1.23 3 God is uncircumscriptible and infinite therefore an Image of him is a lye 4 God is every where present therefore every Image is vain 5 Gods curse is on him that makes a carved image and puts it in a secret place Deut. 27.15 6 God will not bee worshipped in any Image but of his Son Joh. 5.23 All men must honour the Son as they honour the Father Let Image-mungers shew us what Images God will bee worshipped in besides Jesus Christ the engraven form of his person and wee will worship as many Images as they can 7 It is vain and very inconsiderate to make an Image and worship it the makers thereof want common sense and are blockish as the Images themselves as appears by the Prophets Ironical narration Isa 42.19 and 44.19 No Man saith in his heart Half have I burnt or eaten or warmed my self withall and shall I worship the other half as a God Are not as good blocks as this every where and as good stones in the pavement Is not one as worthy to bee worshipped as the other How hath one deserved to bee burnt and the other to bee reserved for Adoration The same folly is in the Church of Rome one piece of the Hoast they eat another they set up to bee worshipped and want consideration to say Was not the piece that is eaten as worthy to bee Worshipped as this Is this better than that So that that of the Prophet is verified of these Idolaters They that make them are like unto them even as blockish as the very blocks which if they could reason would surely say Am not I as worthy to be worshipped as my fellow am I baser than my equal Obj. 1 But they have gotten a late distinction by which they put on a cloak to hide the filthinesse of their Idolatry Worship say they is either that high and great worship proper to God which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or less and inferiour Worship called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or service the former they cannot without Idolatry give to Angels and Saints the latter they may Ans 1. But 1 God cannot bee deluded by a distinction of words seeing the thing it self is Idolatry let them call it what they will to delude the World and themselves withall the thing is as gross Idolatry as ever was among the Heathens let them lessen it as they can and call it a less worship consisting in external reverence and inferiour to that which is given to the sampler For so long as they bow to Saints which they cannot for shame say is for civil reverence unless they had eyes to see them they go directly against the Commandement which saith Thou shalt not bow down to them And the Lord hereby distinguisheth his true worshippers from Idolaters I have reserved seven thousand which never bowed the knee to Baal And so long as they invocate them vow unto them swear by them knock their breasts before them creep unto them c. do they think they have ears and hear not nay do they not ascribe the seeing of their hearts and wants omnipotence and power to help them Are they not in the midst of that woe of them that say to the wood Arise and to the dumb stone Come and help us And so long as they imitate the Heathen in erecting Temples Altars statues in appointing them religious daies Feasts Falls several worships c. can they by an idle word put out all mens eyes so as wee can see nothing beyond civil worship in all this because they call it douleia what is there now in all Gods worship which they cannot do to them They say wee may not sacrifize to them that is due to God only but invocate them we may Answ 1 A silly shift as though all Gods proper worship were in sacrifices 2 What are Prayers but sacrifices of the New Testament 3 What is it but to offer sacrifice to them to offer them Candles Incense and the like 2 The new-found distinction argueth their gross ignorance both in the Scriptures and in other secular learning if not wilful blindness the words both of them in both being used for the same and promiseuously ascribed both to God and men I. For the Scriptures They may say they give douleia to men and Angels but then may wee give all the service due to the Lord Jesus to them for under this word is it all comprehended Rom. 16.18 They serve not the Lord Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Apostle condemns the giving of douleia to things which by nature are no gods Gal. 4.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 20.18 serving the Lord with all modesty and many tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here is douleia proper to God which their distinction makes peculiar to man 1 Thess 1.9 having turned from Idols 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to serve the living and true God Col. 3.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for yee serve the Lord Christ And might they not in the Scripture observe how the Angel refused douleia Rev. 22.7 because hee was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fellow Servant Yet they say it is due to Angels and Saints And that latreia is not onely taken in Scripture for Worship due to God but for works belonging to men is plain by Lev. 23.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou shalt do no servile work II. For s●●●lar learning Ludovicus Vives a learned man of their religion in his commentaries upon August●ne de civit Dei hath proved out of Suidas Xenophon and Valla that these two words are usually taken one for another And yet upon this confused distinction stands all the frame of their confused Idolatry at this day 3 This distinction fighteth not only against antiquity but against themselves Jerome against Vigilantius saith Nos non Angelos non Archangelos non Cherubim non Seraphim colimus adoramus And Augustine epist 44. Scias à Christianis Catholicis nullum coli morinorum No Christian Catholike worshippeth any of the dead And some of themselves as Holcot and Durand write that no worship at all is to bee given to an image neither is it lawful to worship it And yet Aquinas and others say plainly that the Crucifix and Image of Christ must bee adored with the same honour as himself is yea that honour stayeth in the very image which I hope is more than doule●a that is given to the image of Christ But enough of this idle distinction They must as the Midianites fight against themselves and one another that fight against God and
in the deep nor at the mountain not so destitute but we find some supports But were the case with us as it was here with our Lord if we were in the world as in a wilderness our food nothing but stones our company wild beasts ready to devour us no friend near us but the Devil tossing and tumbling us with his temptations wee should assuredly see the Lord extraordinarily providing for us and working out for us unexpected comfort our extremity would be Gods opportunity God sent not Moses to deliver Israel from under Pharaoh till their burdens were at the heaviest and their oppressions intollerable God might have sent his Angel to preserve the three Children from being cast into the fire but he did not till they were in the flames this was Gods time wherein he was more glorified his children more gloriously delivered and his enemies more mightily confounded than if the Angels had come before Even so when this Land was like that fiery Furnace made seven times hotter than ever before to consume the bodies of Gods Saints in Queen Maries days in the midst of those flames God sent that happy Queen now a blessed Saint to quench those fires and deliver our whole Church from that tyrannical and Papal oppression Thus the Lord himself waits and stays for the fittest time of our deliverance and so must we Never shall the faithful soul fail of a day of refreshing And ministred unto him We have spoken of the Angels coming Now the last thing considerable in this History is their ministery unto Christ wherein are two things 1 How they minister to him 2 Why they minister I. 1 They ministred in adoring the Son of God the only conquerour of the Devil and honouring him as the victorious destroyer of the Prince and Commander of all hellish powers For the Angels rejoyced in Christs victory in the Devils overthrow and the salvation of the Church of God The goodness of their nature carries them wholly to the glory of God in all their actions and motions and the good of the Church as at the birth of Christ they sung Glory to God on high on earth peace and good will to men And there is no doubt but now upon this victory they did much more honour him and congratulate his glorious triumph 2 They ministred to him in comforting him being in his soul extreamly afflicted and molested with Satans temptations for how could the Son of God but utterly abhorr and with fiery zeal detest such blasphemous temptations as that hee should not only distrust his Fathers providence but even fall down and worship the Devil himself with which temptations a sinful man yet in his corrupt nature would be exceedingly distracted and disturbed It is no doubt therefore but as in his Agony before his Passion the Angels came to comfort him so likewise in this conflict and perturbation so soon as they might they came in to the same purpose 3 They ministred to him in releeving his body which was now broken with hunger and watchings having already fasted forty days and forty nights and brought him food to allay his hunger spreading as it were a table for him in the wilderness For if they neglected not the servant of God Elias in the wilderness being ready to starve for food but provided him a meal in strength whereof he went forty days and forty nights 1 King 19.5 much less would they neglect the Son of God who was now in the same necessity 4 They ministred to him standing about him and giving attendance waiting as it were at his table and ready to be employed in any further service hee had to command them Psal 103.20 Yee Angels ready to execute his will Whence in Ezek. 1.11 the Angels are described with wings stretched upward noting their propensity and readiness to the Commandements of Christ II. Why the Angels do thus minister to Christ Ans Not for any necessity of his for 1 He was able to have sustained himself and held out for ever against the Devil 2 He was able to have confounded the Devil 3 He was able to have created food in the wilderness without them which they could not do for although they could fetch food elsewhere provided yet could they not create any but 1 It was their duty to attend him as their Lord called the Lord of the holy Angels 2 Christ would now use their ministery and did not help himself by Miracle as he might if he had pleased But we read not that he used his power for himself or his Disciples Himself being hungry and weary at Jacobs Well he created not food but sent his Disciples into the City to buy bread And when his Disciples were faint and hungry they were fain to pluck ears of Corn and eat it But yet he used not his miraculous power For Miracles were wrought for the edification of others and commonly done in the presence of many whose faith was to be strengthned as the Disciples was in part already 3 This was so for our instruction and consolation that we also in our wants standing in the Lords battels may expect the presence and comfort of the Angels Doct. The priviledge of Christ whereby hee is exalted above all creatures hence appeareth in that the Angels minister unto him Heb. 1.6 the Apostle proves Christs divinity and eminency above all things out of that testimony of the Psalm And let all the Angels of God worship him For he must needs be greater than all who must bee honoured of all Job 1.51 Christ himself proves himself the Son of God because notwithstanding he is the Son of man which plainly notes him to be 1 A true man and 2 A weak man yet they should see the Heavens opened and the Angels ascending and descending upon him as was figured in Jacobs Ladder Gen. 28.12 For Christ is the Ladder and only way by which we ascend into Heaven It reached from earth to heaven signifying his two Natures God of his Father in Heaven man of Jacobs loyns in earth Angels ascending and descending are the ministring spirits attending him for in that phrase is meant their sending out their emission and commission to their office descending to their work and ascending to give account of it Now according to this Prophecie of Christ two of his Disciples saw the heavens open upon him in his transfiguration Matth. 17.1 2. In his resurrection those keepers of the Sepulcher saw the Angel of the Lord that descended from heaven and had rolled away the stone from the door and sate upon it so as they were afraid and as dead men Matth. 28.4 The women also saw the Angel and talked with him that had attended him in his Resurrection vers 5. And in his Ascension all his Disciples saw the Heavens opened unto him and two Angels standing by them who attended him Acts 1. Reasons 1 The more honourable the attendants and ministers the greater is the Personage so attended But our Lord hath
not a guard of men about him as the great Princes of the earth but a guard of Princes and not of Princes only but of principalities and powers rules thrones and dominations and therefore hee must deeds bee a mighty God advanced above all Creatures 2 The Angels are in Scripture every where spoken of as the excellency of the Creatures so as when the highest praise of any thing is to be given it is taken from the excellency of Angels Manna is called Angels food Psal 78.25 that is if Angels should need food they could not wish more excellent 1 Cor. 13.1 If I should speak with the tongues of Angels c. that is excellently Yea the most happy and glorious estate that our selves look for after the resurrection is hence extolled that we shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like Angels Now all this advancement of them is not so much in respect of themselves with whom we have no commerce but for the advancement of Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and that in their glory we may behold the glory of Christ to whom they are servants 3 The truth hereof was shadowed in the Ceremonial Law Exod. 25.20 The Cherubims signifying the Angels must lift their wings on high as attending upon God and their faces must be to the Mercy-seat which lively resembled Christ on whom their eyes must bee still cast as the eye of the hand-maid to the hand of her Mistris And chap. 26.31 the vail of the Tabernacle which covered the most holy expresly signifying the flesh of Christ which hiding his Divinity made way for us to Heaven must bee made of broydered work with Cherubims not without Cherubims for these noted the multitude of Angels serving Christ even as man for being in his lowest estate and apprehended to the death he gives this as a reason to Peter to put up his sword because if he would he might pray to his Father and have twelve legions of Angels to rescue him Obj. But this seems not Christs priviledge to have the Angels his ministers seeing all the godly have them ministring spirits for their good Heb 1.14 as Abraham Lot Elias Daniel Ans True they had but this impeacheth not Christs honour because they serve not us after the same manner they serve him for 1 Their service is due to Christ as their Creator and Lord of duty to us as Creatures of charge 2 Their service to him is immediate as the Head of the Church to us mediate only as members of the Head 3 Their service is proper to him and invested in him as his own right to us given by vertue of our communion with him 4 To him as the author and preserver of all the gifts and graces they have and equal it is that whatsoever is excellent in any kind be wholly ascribed to the author and giver of it to us only so farre as the owner hath put them in trust to employ those gifts for our good Faith in Christ interests us in this Ministery of the Angels who love the members because of the head They are his Angels and so called by special propriety Matth. 16.27 when the Son of man shall come in the clouds and all his holy Angels with him because by special prerogative they doe him homage and service And our Angels by special commission and direction from him 5 They never ministred to man but for the honour of Christ Rev. 22.9 Worship God Vse 1. Let us imitate the Angels Doe they honour Christ by their ministery and shall we refuse his service especially seeing hee took our Nature and bound us straighter to him than the Angels They are most expedite and ready having wings to fly withall Let their wings speed us in his service They are unweariable in performing obedience and shall wee bee so heavie and shrinking as to account every thing too much that we do for him They are in all things ruled and moved by his Spirit Ezek. 1.20 Whither the Spirit led them they went Let us also give up our selves to the leading of his Spirit not running of our own heads in any business unsent without our warrant They rejoyce in all good things and in Christs victory the benefit of which redounds to us more than to them and that men by the same are set out of the Devils power And why do not we more rejoyce in this victory of Christ why do we rejoyce in evil which is the Devils sin in sinful courses and company Why do we hate and scorn those who most partake in this victory How unlike is this to the Angels Vse 2. If the Angels be servants unto Christ then we see herein both his love to us and our own honour who hath vouchsafed us his own special servants to attend us For he hath not only charged them with the safety of Abraham Jacob Lot Elias Daniel and other extraordinary holy men but their commission is general Psal 91.11 they shall keep thee in all thy ways that is not only Christ himself but every member of Christ for this honour have all the Saints And what a comfort is it that we so weak Creatures and so beset with spiritual and invisible enemies have appointed to us by the Lord so many spiritual invisible and more powerful ayders and assisters What a comfort is it that no temporal enemy can so soon wrong us in our persons estates or names but the Angels of God are ready to turn it off and keep off the peril and then return to God to complain of the wrong-doers What a care should we have not to forfeit our priviledge to keep us in our ways and walk warily because of the Angels not grieving them by sin nor driving them from about us whose protection under Gods is more safe than if we lay under shield and spear Psal 91.4 with 11. And if our Lord himself received comfort from them how great may be our comfort from them Vse 3. Hence we are to ascribe the glory of Power Majesty and Kingdome unto our Lord Jesus who if he be able to command all the Angels in Heaven much more all the Devils in Hell who are farre weaker than they All power is his in heaven and earth And now we are no longer to esteem of him according to his base estate in the Wilderness in the World but according to his surpassing power manifested through all this History in vanquishing the Devil and in receiving the Divine honour from the most glorious Angels To this great Michael who even without his Angels hath in pitcht battel overcome the great red Dragon and all his Angels be ascribed all power might victory and triumph of all men Saints and Angels in earth and in the highest Heavens for all eternity Amen Amen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 AN Alphabetical Index OR TABLE Pointing To the Principal Points in this Exposition A IN Christs lowest Abasement sparkles of Divinity fly out sundry instances page 233 Actions brought forward
wickedness with tears pray for pardon promise amendment beg prayers of others as Pharaoh one would think them very penitent themselves think they are so also but the Moon changeth not so often as these spiritual lunaticks who hence may know that the evil spirit hath taken possession of them because they are never long in a good minde These few notes instead of many I thought good to set down to help men that are desirous to see how secretly Satan worketh in their souls and how hee can cunningly most forceably keep possession when hee seemeth most to disclaim it that thus they comming to perceive the disease may run out of themselves to seek for remedy Which what it is wee are now in the next point to declare The third point in the words to bee considered is The mighty power of Jesus Christ who onely could heal those that were thus oppressed and enthralled by the Devil and here consider 1 The ground 2 The proof or manifestation of it The ground was because God was with him How God was with his Son and how with his Servants It will bee objected that God is said to have been with many of his servants who yet had not this power as with Joseph Joshuah Moses and others Answ God was indeed with them onely by manifesting his presence in some powerful or loving effect which hee wrought in by or for them But never was God present with any of his Saints as hee was with his Son who had not the vertue onely and power of the God-head effectually and energetically working with him which was all they had but the god-head it self was after a sort bodily with him yea the fulnesse of the God-head was not only with him but in him bodily Col. 2.9 as elsewhere God is said not onely to bee with Christ but in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 So as hee of himself performed the works which proceeded from him which they did not and his actions as from himself were divine Quest Why then doth not the Apostle more shortly and plainly say that Christ was God as that God was with him Answ Hee might indeed have so said as truely but for the time spareth the weakness of his hearers contenting himself to deliver Doctrin as they were able to receive it in great wisdome by little and little instilling into their minds the knowledge of Christ and by degrees laying such grounds and foundations as whereby themselves might more easily rise to that high point of Divinity which the Apostle calleth a great mystery namely God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.26 Secondly For the proof or manifestation of this Divine power of Christ Christ powerfully treadeth Satan under his feet ●n overthrowing the power of Satan and treading him under his feet is evident in the Scripture The first promise that ever was made to man fallen is That this seed of the woman should bruise the Serpents head According to which prophecy hee not onely put Satan to flight in his own person Mat. 4. but took also his strongest holds where hee had strongly fortified himself in the persons of others as every where the History of the Gospel recordeth Hee rebuked the unclean spirits and made them cry for grief and anger Mark 9.25 Hee forced them to silence and would not suffer them to confess him Mar. 1.25 By his very word hee chained and bound them whom no bolts could hold nor any other means subdue such was his power and glory though men saw little of it that the Devils could neither fly from him nor yet abide his presence A whole legion of them ran to meet him a far off and worshipped him Mar. 5.6 most submisly intreated him that hee would not torment them and earnestly sued unto him that seeing they could no longer inhabit the man they might have power over the swine By all which examples and many more that might bee added appeareth what command Jesus Christ hath over the Devils and that by his onely word hee healed all those that were oppressed by them Quest It is true that Christ hath this power and glory in himself How the power of Christ foyleth Satan for us because God is with him but how commeth this power to bee so saving and soveraign unto miserable creatures who are held under the power of the Devil and that most justly Ans In healing all our diseases Mat. 8.16.17 among which this cute is numbred wee must knit and combine those two things which in Christ were inseparable namely his glory and his grace the latter of which makeeth the former soveraign unto us and appeareth in two actions in removing from us the next causes of all our diseases namely our sins For as the Physician in working a cure first removeth the distempered humours of his patient which are the matter of the disease so doth our heavenly Physician imply that this is the beginning of his cure and therefore often his first word is Thy sins are forgiven thee and his last word is goe and sin no more lest a worse thing befall thee 2 By taking our diseases upon himself which 〈◊〉 Physician doth or can do but this Lamb of God taketh away the sins of the world by taking them upon himself for he bare our infirmities Col. 2.22 and carried our sorrows and sins in the body of his flesh even to the cross where they were fastned with him buried them in his grave yea cast them into Hell and there left them by which most glorious triumph of his the snares and letters wherewith wee were chained to death and the Devil are broken and our souls as a bird are escaped Christ onely by his P●opes power casteth out Devils Hence note 1 That no man can cast a Devil out of a possessed party or ever did as a principal efficient cause but as an instrument and that onely by this power of the Lord Jesus to whom all power in heaven and earth is given and to whom all the honour of this power must bee ascribed for what power can countermand Satans but onely Gods I grant Satan may give place to beelzabub and depart his habitation for his greater advantage and forsake a body to get faster hold upon the soul or to delude many beholders but such hostile conquest over Satan argueth a mighty power of God which all the Devils in hell cannot resist Secondly That whosoever finde themselves any way molested of Satan must hasten themselves to Jesus Christ who onely can batter down the holds of the Devil In all thy spiritual captivity repair unto Christ and work their deliverance Feelest thou thy self held under any spiritual captivity or bondage doth the Law of evil present with thee toyl thee with heaviness and unchearfulness to any thing that is good seest thou in any measure Satans secret trains working against thy salvation Oh come unto Christ not faintly as the Father of the possessed child Mark
that are in it through lust whether dost thou contemn and avoid vile and graceless persons dost thou rejoyce in the fellowship with God and communion of his Saints spendest thou thy daies in the constant praise and worship of God framest thou thy life according to the Word of God the rule of all Righteousness enjoyest thou all things in God and God in all things prizest thou thy present estate above all the World and yet longest thou for the perfecting of thy happiness saying Come Lord Jesus Come quickly this is to converse in Heaven while thou art on earth and to seek the things above where Jesus Christ sitteth Which if it bee then how few have their conversation there or are risen with Christ How few are set free from the power of sin witnesseth the general reign of it every where How many mind onely earthly things how many minde them principally How do most men swim with the stream drinking in the corruptions of the World most insatiably as the fish doth water How do sinners combine themselves against God to run to all excess of riot How unpleasant and unwelcome a voice is it to call men to delight in God and his Children How heavy are they to the parts of his Worship comming unto them as if they went to some punishment How are mens Lusts become their Laws instead of the perfect Rule and Law of God every man almost living as Israel when there was no King among them How do men rest in the means of their warfare with-drawing their hearts from the author of it How few prize the life of Christianity how many scorn it in themselves and others How many wish in their hearts there were no other life to come and that they rather had good assurance of this which is present and instead of wishing and waiting tremble at the mention of Christ his comming again Yet most of these men professors of Christ all of them baptized into his name and all of them will bee reputed as good Christians as the best But all this forenamed course hath no savour or rellish of Heaven all that take it up minde nothing but earthly things and the end of it without timely repentance will be damnation Phil. 2.19 IV. The fourth general point is the time of Christs resurrection set down in the Text to bee the third day To understand which wee must know that Christ lay not in the grave three whole natural days each of them standing of twenty four hours for then hee should have lain seventy two hours and have risen also on the fourth day whereas hee lay not in the Grave above thirty nine hours and rize on the third But the Scripture useth a grace or form of speech Synechdoche whereby two parts of daies are called by the whole and three daies put for the time which passed in three several daies every day having his night belonging unto him The first day of the three saith Augustine is to bee reckoned by his latter part in which Christ was dead and buried not passing three hours of the four and twenty yet so as both the night before when the Jews day begun and the most of that day was spent in taking examining whipping misusing condemning and executing him The second day is to bee accounted wholly and perfect from the evening of the day before the Passeover to the evening of the Sabbath following standing of full four and twenty hours The third day is to bee accounted from the former part of it beginning at the evening of the Jewish Sabbath for Christ lay all night neer twelve hours in the grave and rose in the morning betime about the midst of that natural day standing of four and twenty hours And thus is Christ truely said to have risen the third day Now that Christ should rise the third day and no sooner nor later these reasons shew Why Christ would rise no sooner than the third day 1 Hee must rise the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.4 For they had foretold this to bee the particular time Hos 6.2 After two daies he will revive us and in the third day hee will raise us up namely in his own person for wee also were raised with him as wee have seen The Scriptures had also further figured this distinct time in the type of Jonas who having lain three daies and three nights in the belly of the Whale was the third day cast on the dry land as our Saviour himself while hee was yet alive expounded of himself Matth. 12.40 As Jonas was in the belly of the Whale three daies and three nights so shall the Son of Man bee three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth 2 It pleased him not to rise sooner hee would not presently come down from the Cross nor revive himself before hee was buried nor rise presently after hee was laid down as hee easily could because hee would manifest that hee was truely dead as also because hee would lead his Church into some suspence therefore hee rose not till the case seemed desperate Luke 24.21 Wee trusted that it had been hee that should have delivered Israel and as touching all these things this is the third day that they were done Again hee would no longer defer his rising Why he would no longer defer his rising 1 Lest hee should utterly have endangered the faith of the Disciples which in that short time was sore shaken as not onely the former example but the heavinesse of the Disciples themselves to beleeve the news of it and wilfulness of Thomas plainly bewraveth 2 Because upon this event and keeping touch in this very circumstance of time hee had laid all the credit of his Person Ministry Doctrin Miracles Life and Death For when they come to ask him a sign to prove himself the Messiah hee referreth them to this event after his death that when they had destroyed the Temple of his body if hee did raise it either after or before the third day or did not on that day raise it they should never take him for the Messiah And of this very circumstance Angels and men had taken notice from his own mouth Luke 24.7 when the women came to the Sepulchre to seek Christ after he was newly risen the Angels told them he was risen he was not there and further wisheth them to remember what he had said to them while he was with them that the third day he must rise again nay not only his friends but his very enemies had got this by the end and therefore came to Pilate saying Sir we remember that this Deceiver said that he would rise the third day let us take such order that the last error become not worse than the first 3 The blessed body of Christ was not to enter into the least or lowest degree of corruption and therefore he would lye no longer in the house of corruption Quest But how could his body
it for this being as Queen among the vertues goeth not alone but with all the train of vertues as hand-maids attending upon her The chief of them are these four 1 A true knowledge of the Word of God acknowledging it in part and in wh●le to bee the truth of God and that himself is straightly bound to believe and embrace the same and that hee hath a special part in the promise of grace and life by Christ in which grace he resteth himself daily growing up in the certainty and assurance of his salvation 2 A sound ●oy of the heart which the Apostle Peter calleth unspeakable and glorious breaking out into thankful praises in that the Lord hath begun 〈◊〉 ●iness by making Christ his Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and 〈◊〉 ●tion The Poor Blind and Lame persons of whom wee read in the 〈◊〉 never leaped more joyfully when they had met with Christ and had 〈◊〉 ●s opened and their limbs restored by him than hee that hath met with him and received him into his heart to enlighten him to quicken him and to heal him of all his infirmities How gladly did Zacheus receive Christ with what joy of heart findeth any man the hidden pearl Mat. 13.44 how did the Eunuch converted go away rejoycing Act. 8. And all this is because they can value such a commodity as this is which they see God hath made their own for if they either knew it not or not to bee theirs they could not thus joy in it 3 Christian Hope is another hand-maid of Faith for so the Apostle teacheth Rom 5.2 Being justified by Faith wee have peace c. wee rejoyce under the hope of the glory of God For this is the special work of hope to wait for and rejoyce in the expectation of the glorious appearing of the Lord Jesu And hence is it that whereas unbeleevers are glewed to the earth and cannot think of Heaven but either with sorrow of a formal and false joy and what marveil is it that those who have no better should set their hearts upon the worse beleevers have preserved in them a willingness to leave this World and to bee with Christ which is best of all yea so sweet is their present tast of Christ through Faith and Hope that they are unquiet till they bee filled with the fruition of his fulness being often in his absence sick of love and pine away till they bee with him whom their soul loveth 4 An assured trust relying upon God beleeving hi● word of promise to raise and feed the heart of threatning to shake it and cast it down and submitting it se●f to the counsel and good pleasure of God because his faith hath let him see the truth the wisdome the equity and righteousnesse of all these Such a mans heart setteth nothing above God in prosperity it distrusteth not but hath God for his God in adversity it indeavoureth in all things to walk with God it is a sweet usher and disposer of the whole life so as it is most obedient to the word and most full of comfort and sweetness to it self The fourth mark or note or true Faith is taken from the infallible fruits IV. The infallible fruits of it four and effects of it which are many I will onely note four of the principal First it frameth and fitteth the own habitation it purifieth the heart Act. 15. it suffereth not unclean thoughts unlawful lusts or wandring motions to harbour there it guideth the affections of Love Hatred Joy Sorrow and the rest that a man love nothing more or so much as God and his Image hee hateth not mens persons but their sins and no mans sin so much as his own hee rejoyceth in nothing so much as in doing the will of God this is as his meat and drink hee sorroweth for nothing in the world so much as for offending so good and patient a God This pure heart also guideth the words with wisdome and maketh it his chief study how to preserve with faith good conscience in every thing Act. 24.16 Secondly Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 bo●h towards God and towards man towards him that begat and him that is begotten yea and him that is ye● not begotten This love of God expresseth it self 1 In much thankfulness unto him who hath loved us first Our love of God express●d in three things who hath given so much even his Son and all things with him pertaining to life and godliness who hath forgiven us so much and to whom many sins are forgiven they must love much who hath done so great things for us by becomming our portion our treasure and our chief good 2 In shame for our unkindness unto him both before and even since we knew this his love in Christ and have been acquainted with his waies taking up with shame in our faces sorrow into our hearts for the sins of our youth and of our age against the law the rule of righteousness but especially against the glorious Gospel which of all other are least of served 3 In desire of that blessed fellowship of his when and where wee may never sin against him any more accounting one day within his holy of holies better than a thousand besides and much more to bee ever with the Lord and to injoy the p●easures at his right hand for evermore to bee at home with him and sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob yea with Jesus Christ himself should make us groan in our souls and say with David Oh when shall I appear in this thy presence The Spirit saith Come and the Spouse saith Come Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly The love of men by which Faith worketh discovereth it self not onely in just dealing with them as wee would bee dealt by which many civil men indued onely with civil righteousnesse have excelled in nor onely in merciful distribution of outward comforts for the releeving of the bodies of our brethren yea and of our enemies which hardlier goeth down with the unconverted than the former but also in shewing most love unto their souls in helping forward their conversion and salvation For so soon as any man is converted hee will strengthen the brethren Faith wheresoever it liveth it loveth and love being an hand giving out moveth men converted to counsel exhort rebuke admonish comfort pray and wait when God will give unto others the grace of Repentance As soon as Andrew was called hee bringeth his brother Simon to Christ No sooner had Christ found Philip but Philip finding Nathaniel hee bringeth him to ●hrist The woman at the well no sooner heareth that Christ was the Messiah but shee bringeth all the City In finding this treasure the Christian cannot hide his joy neither can any mans joy bee so full unlesse hee with others rejoyce together For it is not here as in earthly things which the more they are communicated the more are they diminished and every mans share is the less but heavenly
G 1 Grow up daily in the practice of every commandement and in the faith of every promise of God seeing God would have the planted in his house thrive Ps 92.13.14 well liking and more fruitful in their age he that is not best at last may fear whether ever he were good 1 Cor. 10.32 Rom. 14.13 2 Give no offence justly unto any man whether within or without for woe to them by whom offences come 3 Grieve for nothing in the world so much as for your own sins Rom. 7.18 19 24 and in them for nothing so much as for offending so loving a God and that not only in committing of evil but also in omitting of good H 1 Cor. 11.31 1 Humble your self for your sins that the Lord may raise you up for he that judgeth himself aright shall never be judged of the Lord 2 Honour all men in their places 1 Pet. 2.17 but no man so much for his greatness as for his goodness Act. 10.35 and thus shall you imitate the Lord himself who accepteth not persons but in every Nation accepteth him that feareth him 3 Have special care to avoid the sins which you have found your self most inclined unto and which have in times past most prevailed for sin is loath to be said nay and Satan seeketh re-entry I 1 Justifye Gods wisdome in all his proceedings concerning your self and others his Power in sustaining his Providence in maintaining his Justice in punishing his Love in correcting his Bounty in promising his Faithfulness in performing his Grace in giving his Mercy in taking away and in every thing say from the heart Job 1.21 Blessed be the Name of the Lord. 2 In every company receive some good and do some also to your power leave no ill savour behind you neither do hurt by speech silence countenance or example in your praises be discreet in saluting courteous in admonishing brotherly and wise in moving and entertaining speech or conference 3 It is fearful to sin Psal 51.3 Ephes 4.26 but much more to lye in it and therefore registerall your sins daily bewail them at fit times pray for pardon of them and strength against them contemn none as counting it little because Gods law hath condemned it and Christ hath dyed for it or else must you eternally K 1 Know God in Christ Job 17.3 which is life everlasting kiss the Son of God lest he be angry Psa 2.12 and know your self to be a beleever and that Christ is in you and you in him 2 Keep as your vows with God Psa 15.4 so your lawful promises with men for faith and truth must kiss each other in Christian conversation 3 Keep out wandring and worldly thoughts as much as possible may bee prov 4.23 narrowly watching your heart for such as you suffer that to bee such will be your words deeds and whole conversation L 1 Love all things for Gods sake and God onely for his own and look you make him your friend whosoever be your enemy for it this you shall do if as an obedient child you live in the eye of your heavenly father 2 Look upon the lives and behaviours of the wicked to avoid them of the godly to imitate them upon the Life and Death of them both as also your own not far off to make you loathe this world long after the life to come Luk 21.34 Rom 13 13. Deut. 28.58 Mat. 7.12 3 Let your meat apparel recreation be lawful needful and moderate M 1 Make not mention of God or any word or work of his but with fear and reverence nor of any man but with love and carefulness using his name as you would have him to use yours 2 Mark other mens profiting in religion to provoke your self their slips to make your self more wary their risings to be thankful to God for them 3 Meditate often upon the four last things 1 Death 2 Judgement 3 Heaven 4 Hell N 1 Never make shew of more holiness outwardly than inwardly you have in your heart which God seeth in which hee desireth truth Rom. 12 nor please your self with your unprofitableness unfitness or unwillingness to good 2 No man is owner but steward of that he hath you must therefore impart of the blessings you have to those that stand in need wisely heartily and in due season 1 Cor. 11.28 Rom. 12.12 3 Note your own special corruptions whether they grow stronger or weaker and how your self can resist them and if any assault you more strongly pray and make the matter known to God The best way for a woman solicited to folly to bee rid of the Tempter is to tell her Husband O Prov. 27.2 10.19 1 Often speak to the praise of God never of your self For other things because many words want not iniquity speak as few as you can or rather none than unprofitable ●am 1.19 2 Open not your mouth to speak of other mens infirmities Psal 15 especially behind them nor before them without grief and sorrow 3 Of every idle word account must be given Mat. 12 36 and much more of every wicked word and therefore let your speech be gracious poudred with salt Col. 4. ● and tending to edification P 1 Praise the Lord for every new benefit bestowed 1 Thes ● 18 and then by it promote his glory the Churches good and your own salvation esteeming of graces given as spurres to godliness and pledges of eternal life 2 Prevent anger before it kindle Eccl. 7. ● Prov. 14 17 it is wisdome to quench the least sparkle of fire before it begin to flame Consider 1 the original of anger being pride or self-love 2 The cursed fruits by giving place to the Devil 3 Gods patience 4 Gods image in your brother 5 Your own weakness in the same kind 6 The wrong is not remedied by revenge but inlarged nor the wrong-door amended but imitated 3 Prepare your self for death 1 Cor. 1 56 and pull out his ●●ing by 1 Bewailing sins past 2 Turning to God in time to come 3 Purposing a new life None can dye ill that hath had a care to live well Perswade your self if you live well you shall dye well but if you dye well doubt not but you shall do better Q 1 Quiet your heart Psal 39 ● and be still under the correcting hand of God because 1 He doth it 2 For your best 3 Hee will moderate it 4 Supply strength 5 Seasonably deliver out of it 2 Question not whether others should do you good or you them first Mat. 5. ● Rom. 1.20 it is praise-worthy to bee first in well-doing and if you do good to your enemies your reward is with God 3 Quench not the Spirit 1 Thes 19 not suffer any good motion arising in your heart to pass away but feed it by reading meditation prayer and practice R 1 Read daily something of
this Miracle and the Gospel it self 4 That hereby he might bid battel offer opportunity and provoke his adversary to the combate for this was the end both of his fasting and going into the Wilderness and of his hunger Wherein also this fast of Christ may not be imitated for we are not to offer any opportunities or advantages to Satan who is ready enough to seek and take enough as we may not tempt God so we may not tempt the tempter but pray that we may not be lead into temptation by him and watch lest we fall into temptation Mark 14.38 yea we must cut off and prevent his advantages and shun all occasions wherein hee might assault us as knowing our own weakness The third thing in Christs fast is the continuance of time III. Christ fasted no longer nor shorter time than forty days for five reasons Moses in mon●e ante legem Elias in itinere sub lege Christus in deserto sub gratia forty days and forty nights Quest Why did he fast so long why no more nor no less Ans For these reasons 1 To bee answerable to the types As Moses fasted forty days at the institution of the Law and Elias at the restitution of it so would Christ here at the manifestation of the Gospel 2 He exceeded not his number lest he should seem too inhuman and cruel against himself for he did no more than Moses and Elias had done men subject to infirmity In our time he is no man that cannot strain one trick above others but Christ being in the shape of a Servant takes not upon him above his fellow-servants 3 He would not fast less because he would not seem less than the Prophets nor unlike them 4 He would not fast more because he would not have his Deity now acknowledged by the Devil 5 He would not give occasion to Hereticks to doubt of the truth of his body and human nature If he had fasted longer than Moses and Elias he might have been thought no true man but only in shew incarnate Quest Why is it added that he fasted forty nights Ans For these reasons Forty nights added for two reasons 1 To shew that it was not such a fast as the Jews used to keep who fasted many days together but ate at nights as Daniel fasted for three weeks of days chap. 3. vers 10. Nor like the Turkish fasts who so soon as they see a starre eat any thing on their fasting days but that which is strangled or Hogges flesh Nor yet like the Papists fast who though they say they fast forty days both to imitate Christ and to give God the tithe of the year yet can feed well and fare deliciously every night 2 To shew that Christ had a care to spend his nights well as well as his days not spending them out in sleep but in watching and prayer as well as in fasting for by the same power his body was preserved without sleep as it was without meat Farre unlike the Papists who in their fasting-days spend the night in gluttony luxury and all uncleaneness Doct. Fasting a most necessary duty This example of Christ teacheth us of what great necessity this exercise of fasting is both for the entrance and comfortable continuance of the duties of our calling both general and special This Nehemiah knew well when hearing of the calamity of Jerusalem and his brethren the Jews hee fasted certain daies and prayed before the God of heaven chap. 1. v. 4. And Ezra proclaimed a fast to seek the right way homeward and safe from their enemies chap. 8. v. 21. see also Act. 13.3 Reasons 1 Fasting in an holy and religious manner helpeth forward graces that are necessary for our calling as 1 the grace of conversion and therefore is made an adjunct of it Joel 2.12 Turn you with all your heart with fasting and weeping 2 The grace of prayer for as Prayer sanctifieth fasting so fasting strengtheneth prayer Otherwise to place Gods worship in fasting is to make the belly the God 3 It helps forward the knowledge of the mysteries of God and godlinesse Dan. 9.3 conferred with 20.21 as Daniel was praying and fasting Gabriel was sent to instruct him and revealed to him the mystery of the seventy weeks 4 It addes strength and courage in the Christian combate between the flesh and the spirit it is as a third that comes in to take the spirits part and so helpeth to the victory by subduing the flesh 2 The necessity and profit of this exercise appeareth in respect of our selves for 1 If wee want publike or private benefits fasting joyned with prayer is the means wherein God will have them sought and obtained The Benjamites after two sore overthrows by this means got the victory Jud. 20.28 Annah by the same obtained her Samuel and David fasted for his childes life 2 If wee bee in danger of publike or personal judgements by the same means they are to bee diverted religious fasting is a chief part of the defensive armour of the Church as wee may see in the examples of Hester saving her people from Hamans devise and of the Ninivites turning away the destruction threatned by Jonah by fasting and humbling themselves 3 If wee bee to attempt publike or private duties hereby wee must fit our selves and obtain success and blessing So did Nehemiah and Ezra as wee saw before and when Paul and Barnabas were separated to the work of the ministery they fasted and prayed Act. 13.3 Yea Christ himself spent a whole night in fasting and prayer before he chose his Disciples Luk. 6.12 13. 3 Daily experience shews the necessity of religious fasting for 1 How many men observe in themselves that for want of this duty they grow dull in their profession and heavy in holy practices yea empty of grace so as they may think the Spirit is departed from them yet when they have renewed this exercise they finde themselves more ripe and ready more quick and able to good duties as if they had new soules given them 2 Do wee not see that the more conscionably a man carrieth himself the more busily Satan doth bestir himself against him and had hee not need so much the more fence himself with coat-armour and flye to God for strength and protection If a good Magistrate or Minister bee to bee brought into any place how doth Satan storm and bend his forces against him because hee thinks that then his Kingdome must down Therefore if a man mean to be serviceable to God in any place it is meet hee should first sanctify it by fasting and prayer as Christ did Vse 1. This serves to rebuke the great want of this so needful a duty What Magistrate or Minister against whom Satan most shooteth entreth thus into his calling as Christ by fasting and prayer but by gifts favour or otherwise get livings and offices but to God they go not and this is the cause that so little good is done
and thou art good no longer But thou that art so impatient and thus betrayest thy meekness towards thy brother what wouldest thou do if thou hadst the Devil in hand as Christ had here Also this makes against railers and scoffers of others for Christ railed not on the Devil himself nor would overcome him otherwise than by humility Christs answer most modest Thirdly This Answer of Christ was a most modest answer Satan would have him confess himself the Son of God this hee denyeth not nor yet affirmeth but modestly acknowledgeth himself a man Man liveth not by bread onely The like wee may note elsewhere being called to his confession before the Governours If hee were the King of the Jews Matth. 27.11 If hee were the Christ Luke 22.67 If hee were the Son of God hee did not directly affirm it but either Thou sayest it or yee say that I am not denying but modestly assenting and ordinarily hee called himself the son of man not the Son of God teaching us by his example when wee speak of our selves Note to speak modestly Paul being to speak of great things of himself speaketh all in anothers person 2 Cor. 12.2 I know a man in Christ above fourteen years ago c. taken into Paradise c. and John speaking of himself saith And when Jesus saw his mother and the Disciple whom hee loved and who leaned on Jesus at supper chap. 19.26 Alas how far are wee degenerate from this our pattern who if wee bee but the sons of mean men we will stand upon it much more than Christ did upon being the Son of God we will pride it out and ruffle and brag and bear our selves upon our ancestors if they bee stept but one step above the lowest Christ when hee had good occasion would not scarce profess himself the Son of God being of another manner of spirit than that which breathed out that brag in the temptation afterward All these will I give thee II. Now to come to the second point in the answer namely the affection But Jesus answered and said The conjunction discretive sheweth our Saviours disagreement from Satan and that his Answer is negative to the temptation for although Christ both might by that miracle of turning stones into bread have shewed himself the Son of God and now needed bread being hungry yet hee would not yeeld to Satan Quest But seeing Christ who as God could have turned stones into sons of Abraham could much more turn stones into bread so easily by his word for if hee had spoken to the stones as Satan desired certainly they would have had ears to hear him why would hee not do it what hurt had it been Why Christ who could turn stones into bread would not five reasons Answ 1 Miracles must confirm faith in Beleevers unto salvation John 2.11 but Christ knew the Devil could not beleeve if hee had all the miracles in the World Besides hee had even now heard the Fathers voice testifying Jesus his beloved Son and Christ knew if hee would not beleeve the Fathers voice he would not beleeve for the Sons miracles 2 Christ would not by this miracle give the least suspition that either he distrusted his fathers seasonable providence or that he would depend for his preservation upon the means but upon his Fathers word hee was in his fathers work and lead by the Spirit into the wilderness and therefore knew he should not want necessaries 3 It was an unseasonable motion it was now a time of humiliation of temptation of affliction wherein it was fit to avoid all shew of ostentation which was the scope of the temptation for Satan would onely have him to shew what hee could do for a need for a vaunt of his power Now in a time of serious humiliation to advance himself by a miracle had been as seasonable as Snow in harvest 4 Christ would not give the least credit to Satan nor do any thing at his desire were it good and profitable which hee suggesteth for his end and issue is ever wicked and devillish yea hee would shew how he contemned the will of the Tempter for hee is not overcome unlesse hee bee contemned 5 Christ Jesus being the wisdome of his Father well knew that Satan grossy dissembled with him for hee spake as if hee wished well unto him and would have his hunger satisfied but could hee indeed respect the releef of Christ did hee desire Christs preservation and welfare knew hee not that hee was the promised seed that must break his head and destroy his works and therefore seeing Christ knew that Satan must needs seek his destruction in all his attempts hee had just cause to yeeld to none of them all though they seemed never so beneficial In that Christ here would not make his Divinity known to Satan neither by word nor miracle wee may note that Doct. Christ will not purposely make himself known to such as hee knows will make no right use of him Luke 23.8 When Herod saw Jesus Christ revealeth himself only to such as make right use of him hee was exceeding glad for hee had heard many things of him and hoped to have seen some miracle But Christ would not work any sign in his presence because hee had wrought workes enough already to prove him the Son of God neither was it fit to prostitute the power of God to the pleasure of a vain man who would have made no right use of it Matth. 12.39 This evil and wicked Generation seeketh a sign and none shall bee given them save the sign of the Prophet Jonah Why had they not infinite signes and miracles both then and afterwards Yes but they had none such as they would have for they would have some extraordinary sign as Mat. 16.1 Master shew us a sign from heaven as if they had said Either cause the Sun to stand still or go back as in Joshuahs and Hezekiahs daies or the Moon to stand as in Ajelon or call for an extraordinary tempest of thunder and rain as Samuel did which made all the people to fear the Lord and Samuel exceedingly 1 Sam. 12.18 or call for fire from heaven as Elijah did These and the like they thought beseeming men of God as for turning water into wine restoring of sight and legs c. those they saw little power in But why would not our Saviour give them such a sign as they desired Surely hee had just reason the same in this our doctrin for they did not desire it for a good end but as Luke saith expresly to tempt him not to help their infirmity but to feed their curiosity neither to increase and strengthen faith but to nourish their infidelity For had that been their end had they not beside the doctrin of the Prophets and the fulfilling of the promises the blessed Doctrin of the son of God of whom some of themselves said Never man spake like him and for the confirmation of that
Spirit of God is present to pour out his treasures of wisdome and grace by means of the word and Sacraments which are his chariot and which not accompanied with the Spirit are but dead and ineffectual to regeneration where the Holy Angels are present to assist the ministery to repel hinderances to behold our order but especially desirous to look into the mysteries of our salvation where the Holy Saints upon earth are met together to seek and see the face of the Lord joyning together in all the parts of his pure and holy worship in hearing his holy word receiving his holy Sacraments preferring publikely their holy prayers greatly by this means glorifying God and inriching their own selves Surely this is Bethel the house of God and the gate of heaven Vse 1. This teacheth us not to despise our Assemblies nor to think out Churches unholy for some corruptions Look upon Jerusalem Matth. 23.37 you shall see the eleven Tribes were Apostates there were in it dumb dogs Isa 56.10 there were Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites nay at this time the Doctrin of the Law was corrupted by the false glosses of the Pharisees and the Temple almost a den of Theeves full of buyers and sellers Yet for all this the Evangelist calls it the holy City even when it had more corruptions in it than the Church of England hath at this day Why 1 Because there was the service of the true God set up in the Temple the word preached and sacrifices offered and the meetings of the Church of God 2 Because as yet they had not received a bill of divorcement Have not wee the Word truely Preached and the Sacraments for substance truely administred And for discipline I will say I wish wee had the execution of so much as the Church alloweth Or when did the Lord give us a bill of Divorce Or what Church hath convinced us that wee cannot bee acknowledged for a true Church If they say they of the Separation have I answer 1 They have laboured to discover some errors but none fundamental in us nor without as many in themselves 2 Wee may well doubt whether they bee a Church or no seeing by the profession of some of their Teachers they will not joyn themselves to any Church at this day upon the face of the earth and so renounce all Communion with all the parts of the Catholike Church in the world But wee must not think much if some unstable persons forsake our Communion seeing in the golden and flourishing age of the Apostles themselves some such there were Heb. 10.25 As for our selves wee may strengthen our selves against them by these conclusions 1 Wee know that the word of Truth is truly preached amongst us which appeareth by the daily conversion of thousands whereas never was man converted by a word of error Jam. 1.18 2 Wee know that our Ministers are of God because by them so many are begotten to God Our Saviour thought this a good reason when hee said Beleeve mee that I came out from the Father for the works sake The blinde man had good insight into this matter Joh. 9.30 saying If this man were not of God he could do nothing and a wonderful thing it is that yee know not whence hee is and yet hee hath opened mine eyes So may I say to the separatist Doest thou not know whence that Minister is who hath opened thine eyes 3 We know that our meetings are holy meetings 1 Our people is outwardly called by an holy calling and to an holy end 2 They profess faith in Christ which is an holy profession and in charity if wee see no open raigning sin are to bee judged Saints 3 Congregations are called holy in the Scripture from the better part not from the greater as an heap of wheat mingled and covered with chaffe yet it is called wheat 1 Cor. 6.11 Now yee are sanctified washed and justified but in Epist ● chap. 12. I fear that when I come among you my God will humble mee and I shall bewail many of them that have sinned and have not repented of their uncleanness and fornication and wantonness which they have committed Diverse other abuses there were yet among Saints and beloved ones 4 Mixt Congregations are holy in Gods acceptation esteeming them not as they are in themselves but as members of Christ When Israel was at the best it was a rebellious and stifte-necked people yet Balaam said Hee saw no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel not that there was none but that none was imputed 4 Wee know that wee have no warrant to separate from holy things neither for some defects cleaving to them nor for ill men either handling them or communicating in them The Prophets never made any separation in times of greatest corruption even when they cried out of their wickednesse 1 Sam. 2.24 Do so no more my sons said Eli yee make the people trespass how By making them loath the service and sacrifice for your wickedness verse 17. And when many abuses were among the Corinths in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet a man that did carefully examine himself might communicate of it with comfort yea our Saviour Christ was often in the Temple teaching and praying and so were his Disciples though it was a most corrupt place Object 1 How may I pray with an evil man seeing God heareth not sinners Nay his prayer is abominable Ans 1 The speech in John 9.31 is not universally true for God heard the poor Publican confessing himself a sinner 2 Though God hear him not for himself yet hee hears him for the people as Balaam blessing Israel being both a wicked man and speaking against his heart God heard him for the people Numb 23. Object 2 But how may I communicate with a wicked Minister or with what comfort Answ The wickedness of the Minister may somewhat lessen the comfort but neither diminish the perfection of the Sacrament in it self nor hinder the efficacy thereof to us seeing the efficacy depends onely upon the promise of God and the faith of the receiver and is no more to bee refused than the gift of a King though the conveyance bee drawn by a wicked Lawyer Object But how can hee bee a means of conveying grace to mee that is a graceless man Answ Grace is compared to water now may not water that passeth through a wooden or stony channel which it self is so undisposed that it cannot receive or have any benefit of it make a whole garden fruitful It is Augustines simile Besides I would ask whether any could with comfort refuse Judas his Baptisme John 4.2 even when hee was a Devil incarnate If it bee said They knew him not so to bee then belike a man may receive the Sacrament fruitfully of a secret prophane man or infidel and the wickedness of a Minister if it bee secret pollutes not the Sacrament and then it must follow necessarily that no comfort and truth of the Sacrament
down Here bee in these words three things further to bee considered 1 The action which the Devil would effect the casting down of Christ 2 The agent not the Devil but Christ himself must do it Cast thy self 3 Luke addes from hence where means of safety were Doct. 1 All the travel of the Devil is to cast down Christ and in him all mankinde The estate of the Church is militant while it is here below and the battle is maintained between Michael and his Angels and the Dragon and his Angels Rev. 12.7 and therefore as in a battel the contrary part by all the power and policy it can seeks to cast down and overthrow not the Captain onely but all the adversary power and discomfit the whole Host so is it here To clear this point wee must know there be three estates from whence Saan hath ever sought to cast men down 1 From the estate of innocency and grace created Adam was no sooner set up in this happy and glorious estate but Satan cast him down And from this pinacle wee are all cast down in him The second Adam himself was sundry waies assayld in these temptations and sundry others to bee cast down also from the same most innocent estate which had been the casting of us all not out of the earthly Paradise with Adam but a casting down from heaven unto hell 2 From the estate of regeneration and grace renewed Satans continual labour is either to keep men under condemnation from the state of grace or to cast them down if it were possible from that estate to which they are by Christ restored Hee worketh effectually in the sons of disobedience by hardning their hearts blinding their mindes and leading them hood-winkt at his pleasure to damnation 2 Cor. 4.3 If our Gospel bee now hid it is hid to them that perish in whom the God of the world hath blinded their mindes that the light of the glorious Gospel which is the image of God should not shine unto them And for the elect hee sets upon them false Prophets and seducers hee is incessant in most malicious tentations by which hee soileth them often in foul manner and if hee cannot cast them down from their estate in Christ yet hee often casteth them down from the comfort of it both by inward and outward sorrows and persecutions Rev. 12. the Dragon when hee cannot kill the woman and her seed hee will cast out of his mouth waters like a floud to drown them and if that prevail not hee will stir up war with the remnant of the seed which keep the Commandements of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ 3 From the Pinacle of their outward estate or office which they hold in the Church or Common-wealth for so hee did here with Christ when hee had gotten him to the Pinacle hee thought to get him down easily At least hee will do his best to cast him down for hee should fall with witnesse First If hee see a man on the Pinacle of the Temple a teacher in the Church listed up above others in gifts or place hee will leave no stone unturn'd to cast him down for hee knows that as if hee had here cast down Christ hee had cast down with him all his members so if he can cast down an eminent Teacher hee casts down with him as many as depend upon him And here no Teacher can secure himself if hee were in place above all the ministry of the New Testament nay the higher the pinacle the more slippery and dangerous to fall Judas his place was an higher place than any ordinary minister of the New Testament stands upon but yet how fearfully was hee cast down by the Devil who put it in his heart and prevailed first for the betraying of his Master and then the hanging of himself how did the Devill seek to winnow as wheat the rest of the Disciples that stood on the same battlements who had as certainly been cast down but for the power and prayer of their Master Luk. 22.31 How strongly may wee clear this truth if wee observe one experience which all the ages of the world have confirmed namely that the Devil hath ever striven to set men on the Pinacle of the Temple to cast them down and the Church in them How hath hee by wicked means as flattery mony and corruption advanced them into the highest places and pinacles of the Church whom hee might use as his chief Agents to ruinate and bane the Church as the false Prophets in the Old Testament that would ever with the Squirril build and have their holes open to the sun-side ever keep in with Princes and sing sweetly to the present times As also the false Apostles that would suffer nothing for Christ but under a colour of preaching Christ abolish Christ and his doctrin taught and maintained by the true Apostles How doth the Church complain that shee was never so wounded as by the watch-men who also robbed her and took away her veil from her Look into the Records of fifteen hundred years and wee shall not read almost of any persecutions of the Church but raised and with all heat pursued by proud persecuting and Antichristian Bishops who kept the chief places in the Church And ever since the Bishop of Rome hath been by the Devil lifted up into the highest Pinacle of the Temple his casting down and fall into so many monsters of doctrin and manners hath been in this Christian World the ruine and downfal of so many as whose names are not written in the book of life All this comes to pass by the malice of the Devil whose tayl draws the third part of the stars of Heaven and casteth them to the earth Rev. 12.4 Against these stars and lights of the World hee bendeth his forces If hee can cast them down to earthliness or service of any lust he hath his desire Secondly If hee see a man upon the Pinacle of his own house hee will if he can cast him down thence and for this purpose will lay his plots and objects David walking on his battlements was soon cast down thence by the sight of Bathsheba Especially if a man be a Magistrate or Governour standing on the pinacle of authority the Devil will cast him down if by any means hee can His example will cast down a great many with him hee stands high many eyes are upon him and so many see him If Rhehoboam commit Idolatry all Judah will sacrifice under every green hill If the Magistrate bee fearful negligent or any way noted for vice those under him will take it for a Licence Reasons The Reasons why Satan seeks thus restlesly to cast men down from every good estate are these 1 Because himself is cast down from Heaven to Hell Rev. 12.13 When the Dragon saw that hee was cast out into the earth hee persecuted the woman Hee would have and hold every man under his own condemnation 2 Because of
reprove and convert sinners yet by ordinary office hee was no Prophet neither did he prophecy But what is this to those mental reservations Are you a Priest Garnet No saith hee meaning not a Priest of Apollo or Jupiter Were not you in England at such a time No not as the Sun in the firmament or as a King in a Kingdome A strange madness that men professing knowledge and zeal should so dally with lies and oaths which tricks of theirs were they justifiable and sound wee should have little use of Magistracy or tribunals especiall where matters are determined by mens oathes hee were a very block that would suffer any thing to bee fastened upon him The murderer might swear hee never slew man namely with the jaw-bone of an Ass as Sampson did The Drunkard might swear hee drunk never a drop if hee can inwardly conceive of water or aqua coelestis or the Poets nectar or what hee can feign The Adultress might swear shee was never toucht if shee can inwardly conceive of any creature as of a Bull or a Swan as the Poets feign of Pas●ph●● and Lada And were it lawful to dally with God and mens Consciences after this manner wee could pay them home in their own kinde for suppose a man were in their Inquision and were asked if the Pope were Supream over all Kings if a man were disposed to equivocate hee might say and swear yea reserving his secret meaning not by right but onely in his own proud and ambitious desire and thus delude them II. In matters of practice you shall have no sinner but he hath a Scripture reached to him to lye safe under in the holding of his sin but robbed and turned out of the right sense The Atheist that cares for no Scripture yet hath one text for himself Eccl. 7.18 Bee not just overmuch nor overwise and so hee hath enough to cast off all care of knowledge and conscience The Image-munget hath a Text to let nothing bee lost hee hath a good use for his Images if they cannot serve to worship they may serve for ornament The Swearer hath a Text in Jeremy Thou shalt swear in truth righteousnesse and judgement therefore hee will swear so long as hee sweareth nothing but that which is true The Sabbath-breaker hath his Text The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath The Murderer and Adulterer think themselves safe seeing they finde David in both these sins and yet commended of God The Drunkard hath his lesson Drink no longer water but a little wine for thy stomack and often infirmities sake The Covetous person knows that hee that provides not for his family is worse than an Infidel which through many mens wickednesse is a ground of much covetousnesse The lazy Protestant hath his Text Wee are saved by grace and justified by the blood of Christ freely what can his works do what need they The idle person hath his Text Care not for to morrow let to morrow care for it self The Usurer hath his plain place Matth. 25.27 That I might have received mine own with Usury The Theef hath the Theef on the Cross repenting at the last The carnal Gospeller cares not what sin he venture on because where sin hath abounded there grace hath abounded much more The careless Libertine is predestinated to life or death do what hee can and do what hee list hee cannot change Gods Decree and so he will do what hee list The obdurate and hardned sinner saith At what time soever a sinner repents God will put all his sins out of his remembrance and therefore hee will not repent till hee bee dying Lastly the unjust person hee hath his rule in the unjust Steward who was commended by Christ who was indeed commended for his providence not for his injustice In all these thou mayest hold this for a good rule It is the Devils divinity to confirm thy self in any sin by whatsoever thou hearest or readest in Gods book all which in Gods meaning is direct and the only preservative against all sin NOw wee are to consider this comfortable Scripture in the holy use of it not as wee have it wrested and mangled by Satan but as wee find it set down by the Holy Ghost Psalm 91.11 For hee shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy waies They shall bear thee in their hands that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone In which words the godly are secured and assured of safety in danger not onely because the Lord himself is become their refuge and protection as in the words going before but in that to his own fatherly care and providence hee hath added a guard of Angels to whose care also hee hath committed the Godly Wherein for explication wee will note these particulars 1 What is the ministery of the Angels namely to bee the godly mans keepers 2 Who sealeth their Commission He hath given them charge 3 The limitation of it In all thy waies 4 The manner They shall bear thee up in their hands 5 The end lest thou dash thy foot against a stone Which is a borrowed speech taken from Mothers or Nurses who lead or carry their tender children in their hands that they stumble and fall not to hurt or endanger themselves The word Angel is a name not of nature for so they bee spirits but of office ministring spirits to God to Jesus Christ and to Gods Elect His Angels that is the good and Elect Angels called his 1 By Creation for they had not being of themselves 2 By more immediate ministery they assist him and stand before his face whereas the wicked Angels are cast down from Heaven from enjoying his presence 3 By grace of perseverance for they fell not from their estate as the wicked Angels did and are now confirmed by Christ that they cannot fall and hence is Christ called the Head of men and Angels in whom all things in heaven and earth consist Coloss 1. v. 17. that is are preserved sustained and governed whether visible or invisible and consequently a mediator of the Angels in respect of special grace of confirmation by which they inseparably adhere to God although in respect of that mediation which is restrained to redemption the Angels have no need of it Charge This charge is not a general Commandement over the Church in general but a special charge over every godly man over thee And the charge is directed to many Angels to keep one man for the word affords us more comfort than that Popish and ungrounded conceit of every mans having his particular Angel Quest Why doth God give this charge to the Angels or why doth he use their Ministery Answ Not for any necessity for hee by his word and beck doth sustain Heaven and Earth and without them can keep his own but out of his good will to us hee declares his love and care of us who hath so abundantly provided for our safety and
through sleep of soul or body the Angels watch over our safety Matth. 2.13 Joseph was a sleep and thought not of that danger which was even upon him by means of Herods cruelty but even in that sleep the Angel watched and admonished him by a dream both of the danger and the means to escape How great a comfort is it that when wee see such difficulties between us and our desires as wee can never overcome then wee have Gods Angels present to do it to our hands Mark 16.3 when the good women that came to imbalme Christs body were very much troubled how to come to his body and asked who shall roul away the stone for it was a very great one when they looked they saw the stone rowlled away and it was done by the Angel as Matthew hath it Gods Angels rowl away all stones and impediments and make our way smooth to all good duties No less comfort is it that when Satan begins to insult and makes as if hee would trample upon us wee have a stronger guard about us any one of the Angels being as able to shut the mouth of this roaring Lyon as they were to shut the mouths of those hungry Lyons into whose den Daniel was cast And for the further strength of our faith and comfort in this Doctrin the Scripture notes three things further concerning Angels worth observing 1 Their wisdome and providence in pitching about us so as wee lye open no where Exod. 14.19 when Israel was gone out of Egypt the Angel of the Lord who went before them to lead them out now removed and went behind them because now Pharaoh and his people pursued them The power of the Angel was no lesse if hee had stayed before them as hee was being Christ himself but for the comfort of Israel and our instruction the Angel changeth his place and stoppeth between them and the danger 2 Their uniting of themselves and strength for our safety one of them readily will help another in helping us Dan. 10.13 one Angel being resisted by the Prince of the Kingdome of Persia Michael one of the chief Princes came to help him who whether hee were an Angel or as it is more likely the Prince and Lord of the Angels even the Angel of the great Covenant Christ himself it is every way full of comfort 3 Their patience towards us who if they should bee gone from us as often as wee by sin provoke them wee should perish every moment But as God is long-suffering so hath hee charged his Angels to bee and therefore they wait still for our return and rejoyce in the repentance of sinners Luke 15.10 and abide in their charge and ministery still Vse 2. Again this doctrin is a ground of manifold instruction 1 Hath God afforded us the Ministery of Angels then note the priviledge and preheminence of Gods children whose nature being assumed by the Son of God gives it dignity above the Angels who are the ministers of our humane nature in the head and members Angels are indeed called the Sons of God but that is by creation Christ never gave them this honour to call them brethren Nay there is a nearer conjunction between Christ and us than between Christ and the Angels which conjunction doth priviledge us with their attendance 1 By reason of his conception and incarnation taking on him the seed of Abraham and not of the Angels by which hee becomes flesh of our flesh 2 By reason of his Spiritual contract taking us to be one with himself by which we become flesh of his flesh and so nearly set into him as the Angels cannot be who are not members of this Head as the elect be Christ indeed may bee called their Head but as a Lord and Commander nor by such Spiritual union as is between Christ and the Christian Herein we may see the love of God in setting his Angels to be our keepers The more noble potent numerous and diligent the custody is the more is the care and love of the thing kept How great thanks therefore owe wee unto our God who notwithstanding he is daily offended with our sins yet affords us the ministry of his Angels Who and what am I that God is so mindful of me that he should give so many glorious Creatures charge over me that he should give me such a priviledge that even the holy Angels whose dwelling is in Heaven and see the face of God who are all spirit and no flesh who are free from all sin and misery should so narrowly attend me a lump of earth a peece of flesh compassed with so many sins and miseries as I can look no way either before or behind them David in the eighth Psalm burst out into the praise of God when he considered that God had afforded man the use of Birds Beasts and Fishes O Lord saith he what is man that thou art so mindful of him and hast preferred him over the works of thy hands How much more should we when we see our happiness by the ministery of the glorious Angels 2 Let us learn hence to look to our conversation because of the Angels 2 Cor. 11.10 for they are our keepers and observers they see all the good and bad we doe and we doe not speak any thing without many witnesses Sin makes God take away our hedge Isa 5.5 it grieves the Angels of God and lays a man naked to all his Judgements Shall we willingly offend them from whom under God we receive so great and daily comforts If we did beleeve or weigh this doctrine we would not but because wee see not God nor his Angels we love neither nor fear to offend either 3 Let us beware of wronging the Children of God even because they have the protection of the Angels To rise up against any of them is to rise up against the Angels their keepers Offend none of these little ones for their Angels behold the face of their heavenly Father and thou provokest the Angels against thee It the Sodomites rise up against Lot the Angels will save him and destroy them It Balaam will goe to Curse Gods people he shall have an Angel against him with a sword drawn ready to kill him 4 Learn wee to give God the honour of our salvation and safety when wee have avoyded any danger publick or private It is not by chance nor by our providence and policy but Gods charging his Angels to save and keep us Daniel did rightly ascribe his deliverance to God by the ministery of the Angel chap. 6.22 My God saith he sent his Angel and shut the Lions mouth 5 To be partaker of all this comfort these means are to bee used 1 Become a godly man Psal 34.9 The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tent round about them that fear the Lord. Heb. 1.14 They are ministring Spirits to the heirs of salvation 2 Hold on in a godly course keep thee in thy ways in the duties of thy Calling general and
had seen some which the Papists stand unto And we also seeing the gross errours of Councils as that ancient Council of Carthage under Cyprian appointing rebaptization to such as were baptized by Hereticks the second Ephesin Council in which were more than three hundred Bishops is called by Leo himself living in Theodosius his time Conciliabulum latrouuns a den of Theeves the second Nicene Council appointed Images made by mans hand to be worshipped a most gross error and Idolatry The Romane Council under Pope Stephanus condemned Pope Formosus and all his Decrees and the Council of Ravenua condemned Stephanus and restored Formosus One of them must needs erre The Council of Constance appointed a number of gross errors as that the Cup should bee taken from Laickes that faith given to Protestants under the Emperours promise and seal is not to be kept c. and it condemned a number of John Hus his Articles which were orthodox and consonant to Scripture The Council of Trent was a sink of all Antichristian errours now we I say seeing such gross errors of Councils may not or ought not we with the ancient Fathers appeal from Councils to the holy Scripture Jerome on Galath 2. saith The doctrine of the Holy Ghost is that which is delivered in Scripture contra quam si quid statnant concilia nefas duco If Councels determine any thing contrary thereunto I account it abhominable Aug. l. 2. de bapt cont Don. c. 3. And Augustine being pressed by the authority of the African Council at which Cyprian was present appealed from it to the Scripture with this reason We may not saith he doubt of the Scripture of all other we may doubt Nay Panormitan the great Popish Canonist and Lawyer saith plainly Plus credendum est simplici la●co Scripturam proferenti quam toti simul Concilio We must more beleeve one poor simple Lay-man that bringeth Scripture than a whole Council I will adde nothing of the Romish trick of falsifying the Books of Councils and corrupting changing adding and detracting from the Canons which makes them yet more uncertain and insufficient to rule the Scriptures by this might be instanced in the Nicene and Milevitan Council and others but the further dispute hereof belongs to the Schools IV. The fourth Judge to decide all Controversies is the POPE himself for they have but fumbled all this while and now they deal plainly for when they pretend the Catholick Church Doctors Councils they mean all Romish for with the Rhemists the Catholick and Roman faith is all one Rhem in Rom. cap. 1. vers 8 Gregory de Valentla saith By the Church wee mean her head the Roman Bishop Bellarmine hath these words The Pope himself without any Council De Christo lib. 2. cap. 2● may decree matters of faith And the Canon Law saith that all his rescripts and decrees are Canonical Scripture and that he may dispense 1 Against Gods Law 2 Against the Law of Nature 3 Against an Apostle 4 Against the New Testament Now that the Pope cannot have authority at his pleasure to judge the Scripture is plain 1 Because a Council is above the Pope Gerson A●neas Sylv. as the most and ancientest of Papists beleeve and two general Councils of Constance and Basil decree and that the Council hath power to restrain yea and depose him and so hath done And yet a Council as wee have seen wanteth this authority over the Scriptures Bellarmine would not beleeve or approve it but for the observation of the Church and common opinion Now the Sorbonists of Paris deny it 2 Because we know the Pope can erre in his Chair in matters of faith and interpretation of Scripture As for example Rom. 8.8 They that are in the flesh cannot please God Pope Sirycius thus interpreted it To bee in the flesh is to be married therefore the Priests must not marry John 6.53 Except yee eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood ye have no life in you Pope Innocent 1. thence determined the absolute necessity of the Eucharist to salvation and therefore it must bee given to Infants Luke 22.38 Behold two swords here Pope Boniface 8. interprets it of the temporal and spiritual sword delivered to the Pope Nay they have not onely erred many of them but been gross and wicked Hereticks Liberius Pope about the year 350. was an Arrian and subscribed to the unjust condemnation of Athanasius and afterwards as a obstinate Heretick was deposed Honorius the first Anno 626. was an Monothelite held that Christ had but one will and so but one nature and for this Heresy was condemned in three general Councils In the year one thousand four hundred and eight at a Council held at Pisa consisting of a thousand Divines and Lawyers two Popes were deposed at once to wit Gregory the twelfth and Benet the thirteenth the tenor of whose deprivation calls them notorious Schismaticks Hereticks departed from the Faith scandalizing the whole Church unworthy the Papacy cut off from the Church What must wee obey in error scandal and Heresy or can the Pope alter the nature of that which is false and make it true 3 When there were two or three Popes at once and none knew which was the right Pope or the chief Pastor whither should men go for their determination of controversies in Religion or when themselves disagree in interpreting Scripture how can wee know which of them to lean unto See an example Matth. 16.18 Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church Some Popes understand it of Peters person some of Peters Chair which they say is at Rome some of Peters Confession Wee have all unerring Popes maintaining these several interpretations how shall wee chuse the best what upon a Popes word every one of them hath that Therefore there must bee a superiour Interpreter and more infallible namely the Spirit of God in the Scriptures 4 How know we he hath any authority over any other Bishop seeing the Scripture gives him none How may wee know hee is not carried by affection seeing hee is a party in the Churches controversies and by Canon cast our from being a Judge How know wee no appeals lye from him seeing the Fathers have appealed from Councils which are above him How can wee know that hee sits in Peters Chair upon earth Cathedram in coelo habet qui intu● docet corda Aug. seeing the Father hath taught us That hee sitteth in Heaven who inwardly teacheth mens hearts Therefore wee renounce all such corrupt Judges and lean to the uncorrupt Scripture Vse 2. Secondly seeing the Scriptures are the best Commentaries of themselves and the Judge and decider of all Doctrines and Controversies Ministers that would stablish truth of Doctrin must bee careful to prove and justify all their collections of Doctrin out of Scripture for thereby they settle the faith of their people upon a sure ground of faith and manners all other
the manifesting of Christs glory for which Christ checked her for it was a private and light respect to which miracles must not bee commanded Joh. 2.4 4 For confirming of that Doctrin and Authority which is sufficiently confirmed already Joh. 2.18 Shew us a sign why thou doest these things why thou whippest out buyers and sellers out of the Temple Hee shews them none they tempt God herein was not the whipping of them out and the Authority hee had shewn sign enough of his divine authority did not hee solely and alone overthrow and turn out a number of them without resistance did not he by his word challenge the Temple to bee his Fathers house and himself the Son of God Having thus confirmed his authority by this sign hee would shew them no other Thus the Papists as a Pharisaical seed tempt God looking for more miracles to confirm the same Doctrin which Christ and his Apostles have sufficiently confirmed by many and powerful Miracles When they prove that wee teach another D●ctrin wee will shew them other miracles III. To tempt God in action is thus 1 To enter upon any thing without a Calling for that is to step out of our way when wee do that which wee have neither Word nor Promise for this is in the Text. 2 To walk in a course of sin and live in our wickednesse especially when the Lord by blessings moveth us to repentance Mal. 3.15 They that work wickedness bee set up who bee they in the next words the Prophet sheweth saying They that tempt God are delivered So as all wicked persons are Tempters of God 3 To presume upon extraordinary means when ordinary means may bee had Thus the three worthies of David tempted God that went for water in danger of their lives whereas they might have had it nearer in safety 2 Sam. 23.15 but when they brought it to him hee considered how they had sinned to satisfy his sinful desire and would not drink it And this is the tempting of God intended in this place to flye down refusing the stairs 4 To run into places or occasi●● of danger in soul or body is to tempt God as to run into wicked company or exercises Peter notwithstanding Christ foretold him of his w●akness yet trusted on his own strength and went into Gaiaphas his Hall and seeking the Tempter found him and himself too weak for him Our Saviour would here teach us what a dangerous sin it is to tempt the Lord it being so absolutely forbidden the people of God not only in the Old Testament but in the New 1 Cor. 10.9 Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted him Reasons For 1 It is a plain contempt of the Lord in his providence and constitutions when a man either neglecteth the means which God hath appointed to bring forward his purposes or betaketh himself to such means as God hath not appointed 2 It is a manifest argument of infidelity and hardness of heart When a friend promiseth me to doe me good at my need or to stand by me in time of danger I will feign a need or danger to try whether he will be as good as his word or no what doth this but imply a suspicion in me that my friend will not be as good as his word therefore I will try him before I need him And thus he deals that will needlesly tempt God 3 No relation between God and us may encourage us to tempt him He is our Lord a strong God doe we provoke the Lord are wee stronger than hee 1 Cor. 10.12 Let not the Princes of the Philistims dally with Sampson for he is strong and will revenge himself by pulling the house over their heads the Lord is strong and mighty Sampsons strength was but weakness to him therefore let us not tempt him lest we goe away with the worse as the Philistims did He is our God even a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 it is no safe dallying with fire He is our Father therefore we must fear him as Iacob knows Isaac is his father yet is afraid to goe to him disguised lest said he I seem to my father to dally or mock 4 The greatness of this sin will appear in the greatness of his punishment It cost good Josiah his life 2 King 23.29 He would try what he could doe against Pharaoh Necho when he was admonished of the Lord not to goe against him For this sin the Lord sware that not one of the Israelites above twenty years old should enter into Canaan It cost the lives of six hundred thousand men besides women who for tempting God were destroyed of the destroyer 1 Cor. 10.9 Good Zachary for not beleeving the Angel which came with tidings of a son was struck dumb for requiring a sign Even the best if they tempt God shall not carry it clear away Obj. Psal 34.8 Taste and see how good the Lord is and Rom. 12.2 prove what that good and acceptable will of God is Ans There is a two-fold knowledge of Gods goodness 1 Speculative by which we know God to be good in himself and to us 2 Experimental in some thing not revealed The places alleadged speak of the former only this later is a tempting of God Use 1. This serves to discover unto us our fayling against this doctrine and that every of us cannot so easily put off this sin as we think for 1 Is it not ordinary amongst us that read the Word and of Gods power therein we hear his promises we taste by experience how good and bountiful God is and yet in any straight in every danger we can be ready to tempt him as in Massah saying in our hearts Is God with me Doth God regard me Am I not clean cast out of sight Can I ever be holpen and swim out of this distress Thus the unbelief of our hearts is ready to make God a Lyar. When there was a marvellous great famine in Samaria and Elisha said To morrow at this time two measures of barly shall bee at a shekel and a measure of fine flower at a shekel a Prince answered If the Lord would make windowes in Heaven could it be so he answered Thine eyes shall see it but thou shalt not eat of it And hee was trodden in peeces in the gate for his unbelief 2 King 7. vers 19. 2 How generally are we in love with our sins which out of Malachi we have shewed to be a tempting of God God hath poured abundant mercies upon us the people of England yet we goe on to provoke and tempt him the more his mercies the more our sins how can this abusing of goodness but heap up wrath against our selves Can there bee a greater tempting of God in his justice than to goe on and trade in sin without repentance presuming that God will not punish us What a number of notorious wicked persons are resolved to adde drunkenness to thirst and sin to sin and yet at last mean to
be saved 3 How hardly can we bee kept from wicked companies and occasions Though we be warned by Christs voyce speaking in the Word as Peter was yet we thrust into Caiaphas his hall and the Players Hall which is the Devils School and will not avoyd occasions till the end of sin bring sorrow and bitterness incurable How easily doe men lose the watch over themselves against their own resolutions and the motions of Gods Word and Spirit when they might redeem their precious time gained from their special calling to the general in reading meditating prayer c. presently the Devil thrusts them out of both callings to gaming drinking or bowling or such unprofitable exercises O when God layes you on your Death-bed this one sorrow if God ever give you sense of your estate will be ready to sink you that you have loosely and unfruitfully parted with your time and now you cannot buy an after-noon to bewail the loss of many in with all your substance 4 How prone are we to venture and rush upon any thing without a calling or without a warrant as when men cast themselves into unnecessary dangers hoping that God will deliver them Many run on an head into unlawful contracts without care of any word to guide them Others strike the hand and undoe themselves by Suretiship Others cast off profitable callings and betake themselves to unprofitable and hurtful as Usurers and their Bawds and keepers of Smoke-shops And some will run upon ropes for praise or profit In all this men are out of their way and in a course of tempting God Would a man cast himself into the Sea in hope he should never be drowned or on a perswasion he should never be burnt cast himself into the fire Wee having stayrs are prone to leap down Christ our Lord would not doe so 5 How common a thing is it both in matters of soul and body to sever the means from the end which is a plain tempting of God as our Saviour here calleth it Every man hopes to goe to Heaven but never seeks the way I. What a number will be saved by Miracle for means they will use none faith repentance knowledge mortification sanctification they are strangers yea enemies unto God fed the Jewes miraculously in the Wilderness not in Canaan not in Aegypt where means were Christ fed many people by Miracle in the Wilderness but being near the City he bought bread Joh. 4.8 God will never feed thee with the heavenly Mannah by Miracle where the means are to be had but are neglected How many will either be saved as the Thief was on the Cross or they will never be saved they make their salvation but an hours work and make as short a matter of it as Balaam who would but dye the death of the righteous What a tempting of God is this as if a man would adde his Oath unto Gods that he shall never enter into his rest Christ hath sufficiently set forth his Divine power by that example of him on the Cross he need not nor will not doe it again in saving thee by miracle It is a better argument Christ saved the Thief at the last hour on the Cross therefore he will not so save me than otherwise VVhat a common sin is it to neglect the means and despise the word as a weak and silly means as the Preachers be silly men Oh if wee had greater means some man from the dead or some Angel from Heaven or some miracles we could bee better perswaded A great tempting of God as though his wisdome had failed in appointing sufficient means for the faith of his people Christ reproved this infidelity Joh. 4.48 Except yee see signs and wonders yee will not beleeve Notably Luther If God should offer me a vision I would refuse it I am so confirmed in the truth of the word How commonly doe men stand out the threats of the Word plainly denounced against their sin even in their own consciences which is nothing but to tempt God and try whether he will be so just and strict II. In the things of this life men tempt God many ways 1 Idle persons are tempters of God that for working might releeve themselves and theirs but they will not and yet hope to live whose presumptuous tempting of him God revengeth either by giving them over to stealing and so they fall into the Magistrates hand or he hardens mens hearts against them that they finde not that good in an idle and wandring life which they expected These must have water out of a rock and be extraordinarily fed thrusting themselves out of the ordinary course which God hath put all flesh under viz. By the sweat of thy brows thou shalt get thy bread 2 The omitting of any ordinary means of our good or over-prizing of any means is a tempting of God to take them from us and a revenging of the abuse Hezekiah though the Lord say he shall live fifteen years must not omit means but take dry figgs and lay to the apostem Asa must not trust to Physick for then he shall never come off his bed 3 In our trials when wee murmure grudge make haste or use unlawful means we tempt God and incur this great sin So as none of us can wash our hands of it but it will stick with us and we had need daily to repent of it because it daily thrusts us under the displeasure of God Vse 1. Labour we to nourish our confidence of Gods power and mercy which is an opposite unto this sin and strive against it Quest By what means Ans By observing these rules 1 See that in every thing thou hast Gods word and warrant for what thou doest say not I hope I may doe this or that but I know I may doe it If thou hast a word thou mayest be bold without tempting God that is the ground of faith and tempting of God is from infidelity Acts 27.34 when Paul was in extream peril he tells the Mariners they should come safe to land Why what was his ground even a special word the Angel of God told him that night that none should perish 2 Walk with God as Enoch provoke him not by sin then mayest thou pray unto God and secure thy self under his wing in danger without tempting him So long as a man hath a good conscience with Paul and an upright heart with Hezekiah he may bee bold with God and rejoyce in himself and assure himself that Gods power and justice is his he will not sink in trouble not say Is God with me 3 Vse the means conscionably which God hath appointed for the attaining of good ends Paul had a word that they should all come safe to land yet they must not cast themselves into the sea nor goe out of the ship Never did any promise of God make the godly careless in the means Daniel had a promise of return out of Babylon after seventy years and knew they should return
shadow so as if he had offered and could have performed the things themselves it had been no great matter he never offers and makes good any sound grace or the things of Gods Kingdom which are things only worth harkning after 4 Will he give all the Kingdoms and all the glory of them to Christ alone why what righteousness or justice could be herein Will he rob and spoyl all other Kings and Rulers in the world of their right and soveraignty which God had invested them in and this all at once and in a moment 5 Whereas he pretends a gilt he intends a dear bargain and offering nothing but pure and unmixed glory he would rob Christ our Head and all his members at once of all joy and happiness both external and eternal Of this kind are all his promises he promised to Eve Deity but it proved mortality and misery he promised Cain respect and love if he could make Abel out of the way but it proved the casting of himself out from the face of God and his Fathers family Reasons 1 He that means not in true dealing to perform any thing may promise as much as he will Satan meant not to give Christ one Kingdom and he may as well promise all as one 2 H●s enmity and hatred of God and mans salvation makes him large in his promises he knows how slily temptations on the right hand steal into the heart and that no enemy is so dangerous as he that comes in pretence of kindness When he seeks to draw man to Hell with him he takes on him to teach him how to become a God When Christ was to suffer hee would have him to spare himself to hinder mans salvation he will offer Kingdoms all Kingdoms with all the wealth and pleasure of them Satan herein deals as Jacobs sons with the Sichemites they made very fair promises that if they would be circumcised they would give their Daughters and take their Daughters and dwell together as one people Gen. 34.16 But they talked deceitfully vers 13. intending only revenge upon them as they did when the Males were sore by means of their circumcising Satan can promise a Victory to Ahab but it is to chase him before his enemy to confusion 3 He knows mans credulity and folly who is easily taken with fair words which make fools fain their eyes being wholly upon things before them Besides howsoever our blessed Lord here was fenced that the least inordinate affection could not fasten upon him although he had all the objects in the world to move him yet he commonly findes men and women fitted for his turn doating upon the world and needs no such large offers as here are made to Christ but for less commodity and glory than that in one Kingdom will fall down and worship him 4 Satan is so much the larger in his promises to imitate God whom hee sees encouraging his servants by making covenant with them and promising them all the good things of this life and that to come as to Abraham All that thou seest I will give thee Now to draw men from Gods Covenant if it were possible and to disgrace the same Satan seeks to get men in league with him by larger promises of the world than ever God made to one man because that carrieth their whole desires and as God for the ratifying of his Covenant hath appointed Sacraments and Seals so the Devil hath certain words figures characters ceremonies and charms for the confirmation of his league with them and their faith in that league Vse 1. Hence observe a difference between Gods promises and the Devils 1 They differ in the matter Satan profers earthly shadows earthly Kingdoms things that glance through the sense worldly things which may bee perceived and thrust into the eye and senses all at once the best of which is but a phantasie as Paul calls the great pomp of Agrippa and Bernice Acts 25.23 things of a moment for continuance that last as long as the fulness of the Moon scarce seen but vanishing But the matter of Gods promises is the Kingdom not of Earth but of Heaven and the glory thereof to which all earthly things are but appendices things which cannot be shadowed for the eye cannot see nor the ear hear neither can it enter into the heart of an earthly man to conceive what God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 The great promises of God are matters of faith not of sense and for continuance he promiseth a Kingdom unshaken eternal reserved in the heavens a glory not withering or fading unlike the glory of flesh of all which the Prophet saith it is like the flower of the field Isa 40.6 2 They differ in the scope and aime of them Gods promises all serve to provoke and encourage men to lay hold upon the Covenant of life to draw men nearer God in faith and obedience 2 Cor. 7.1 Seeing wee have these precious promises let us clense our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holiness in the fear of God But Satans promises tend to fix men in the world as here hee would make Christ the greatest worldling in it to with-draw men from God and their Covenant with him to pull them from the service of the God of Heaven to worship himself or serve their lusts or embrace the world or bow to any thing but the true God 3 They differ in the accomplishment God is ever as good or better than his word Tit. 1.2 God who cannot lye hath promised To David as Nathan witnesseth in his reproof 2 Sam. 12.8 he gave his Lords house his Lords Wives his Lords Kingdom and if that had been little he would have given him more To Salomon he promised long life or wealth or wisdome and in the accomplishment he gives him both life and wealth and wisdom But Satan is never so good as his word but a Lier in all his promises For 1 Hee wants power to perform when he promiseth that which is none of his as the Kingdoms of the world Or 2 He wants purpose and will to perform his promise For had he a purpose and mind to have given Christ the Kingdoms of the world if he had had power Doth not he envie to every man the fruition of any creature of God Can hee willingly afford a good man a good moment And did not he more malign Christs good and comfort than all other because he exceeded all other in grace and Gods Image Or 3 Wherein he hath power and purpose to be an honest Devil of his word it is with a farre more mischievous purpose as here if hee could have given the whole world he would for Christs overthrow for what cares he for the world or what use can he make of it but to make it a bait and train to catch man by it into his own destruction The ground hereof is this As every promise of God is a testimony
the time of his infirmity needing a breathing time and a refreshing by which hee knows what wee weaklings have need of and is become a merciful High Priest to give us some rest in the midst of our conflicts which else would bruise and break us 2 Hee goeth but for a season because of his invincible malice who cannot afford us a good hours rest if hee may have leave to disturb us because hee maliceth our Lord and Saviour with an inveterate and deadly malice so that although hee bee in himself out of his reach yet hee still continues to tempt him being in heaven in his members upon earth This deadly malice in his nature our Saviour noteth in Matth. 12.44 The unclean spirit when hee is cast out seeks to re-enter and return again and where hee findes a fit house hee brings in seven Devils worse than himself Hee is diligent to watch our mischief and if hee cannot prevail at one time hee will assay another 3 God sees it good to stir us out of our security who are ready to expose our selves to temptation especially after we have out-stood a temptation and never are wee easier made a prey for Satan than when the pride of heart tickles us and so wee grow secure because wee have out-grown some temptation If our estate of corruption did not necessarily require changes and a●mies of sorrows wee should find the Lord not delighted in afflicting the sons of men but hee sees how prone wee are to surfeit of fulness and as a field of Corn the rancker it is the easier it is laid down with every storm and violent wind of temptation and therefore hee changeth hurtful prosperity with wholsome though bitter potions of afflictions and like a good Physician prescribes us a thin dyet and abstinence after our surfeit and excess 2 God sees these changes good for us to season and stir up our prayers In affliction wee can seek the Lord diligently Isa 26.16 Oh Lord in trouble they have visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastening was upon them Hee knows his Church is never so fitly disposed to fervency and efficacy in prayer as when the cross is on her shoulders whereas in her peace shee is sleepy cold negligent roving and remiss in her seeking after Christ Psal 55.19 3 God sees these changes good for us to lift us up from this evil world for were our prosperity not interrupted wee would dote too much upon the World and would wish no other Heaven than this upon earth for if wee bee so hardly and heavily gotten out of so miserable a World as is full of sorrows and heart-griefs how hardly or rather impossibly should wee get out of an unchangeable earthly happiness though to injoy our heavenly inheritance 4 God sees it good for us to bring these changes into our estate and to entermixe with afflictions comforts and breathings to help our patience and perseverance for else all our sorrows would exceed our strength if they were without intermission The Lord will not have us swallowed up of sorrow and therefore doth so temper and blend our estate as wee bee not quite tyred out with the instance of our skirmishes and conflicts but after our skirmishes retires us for a while where we may breath and refresh our selves and recover our strength and fitness for further service whensoever our great commander shall imploy us 5 God sees these changes good for us that by them wee might prize his mercies to praise the giver doth not the night make the day more delightful would wee so prize and praise God for health if it were not sweetned with sicknesse plenty is endeared by want and an honey-comb hath no sweetness to a full stomack whereas hee that hath been pinched with penury and need knows what a benefit abundance is 4 God for his own great glory brings these changes into our estate thereby manifesting 1 His Wisdome in upholding his Church by contrari●s which fight one against another as the frame of the World standing on four contrary Elements 2 His power that bringeth to the grave and back again 1 Sam. 2.6 that supporteth his Children to stand under so great burdens without fainting thereby magnifying his omnipotent power in such weakness 3 His goodness in suffering his children to bee afflicted on every side but not drowned in the waves of them to bee persecuted but not forsaken to bee cast down but not to perish yea to bee killed but not overcome 2 Cor. 12.9 and 4.7 Nay his goodness is such as turneth all these changes to good bringing good out of evil sweet out of four life out of death and his own order out of earthly confusions 4 His glory in the strange and miraculous deliverance of his Church in its most desperate estate and in the powerful overthrow of his enemies And of all the persecutions of his Church it may be said as of Lazarus his sickness It is not to death but that God may bee glorified Vse 1. Then let us not dream of so stable a peace in our Church and Land as mens security every where hath seemed to lay hold of looking at the peaceable disposition of our gracious King at his hopeful Successor at our union among our selves at our league with all other Nations at the continuance and undisturbed estate and liberty of the Gospel for these sixty years For 1. God seeth not good to give any Church on earth an unchangeable estate that is the Churches expectation in Heaven 2 Our peace hath brought in a general security prophaneness intolerable pride of all fashions and colours beside modest and white a deluge of drunkenness daily drowning the brains and souls of thousands a weariness of this Mannah a dangerous Apostasie from the first beginnings of the Gospel and a falling back of many great ones into the professed Idolatry of Antichrist and in the most a contempt of religion yea and of a formal profession that denies the power and life of godliness Adde to these execrable swearing unpunished soul adulteries unrevenged or slightly punished the Sabbaths of God horribly and generally violated and prophaned by games and practices unlawful upon any day And now will God continue a peace to so unthankful a people that doe put it to no other use than to arm themselves against God and fight against his grace and glory 3 Consider how God dealt with his own people they had as long peace under David and Salomon as wise and excellent a King as ever was being an eminent type of Christ yet we see what long ease and peace brought him to which was the overthrow of his Kingdom and the renting of ten parts of twelve from him to his servant he was a King of peace as his name imported had posterity had made a league with all neighbour-nations yet God being provoked brings a woeful change on him and his Land So may it be to us 4 Consider how God hath threatned us of
may be said to bee anointed two ways Christus totus vel Christus mysticus either properly in his own person as considered in himself or figuratively by the use of Scripture as he is the head of his Church which joyned unto him maketh up whole Christ as the Fathers call him or mystical Christ Thus Paul calleth Christ united with the Church by the name of Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 we must therefore help on the perfection of this latter seeing he is already perfect in the former Every Christian must be a King To this purpose every man must become a King for so he is if hee partake of Christs anointing in being ever in the field in combate against sin in taking up arms against Satans hellish power in getting daily dominion over his own rebellious flesh and wicked lusts For if thou beest a Christian thou hast ten thousand rebels to encounter and as many strong temptations and lusts which thou must stand out to victory and here faith must be thy victory which grace is attained by this anointing But oh the misery of infinite numbers every where meer Bond-men and captive Caytiffs to Satans suggestions and held down under the power and tyranny of their own lusts in whom there is no resistance no fight never a stroak they strike against their own sins the strong man is gone away with all very cowards against the Devil nay couragious Champions for him and yet will be called Christians no no there is never a drop of Christian bloud in such this anointing as yet never came near them here is no spirit no power but such as ruleth in the world And a Priest Rom. 6 13 Again thou that wilt be a Christian must be a Priest to offer up thy self soul and body an acceptable sacrifice of sweet smell unto the Lord to offer up thy prayers and praises the calves of thy lips these are the odours of the Saints Revel 5.8 to offer up thy sins to bee sacrificed and slain by the knife and sword of the Spirit in the Ministery of the word to offer the sacrifices of almes and mercy with which sacrifices God is well pleased to offer the sacrifice of a broken and contrite heart which the Lord despiseth not and lastly to offer if need require thy life and deerest bloud for Christ and his profession But how many titular Christians be there who indeed are no better than Belzebubs Priests who offer their souls their bodies their sences themselves wholly to the service of the Devil in sin and unrighteousnesse for prayer and praise they curse swear and blaspheme most remorselesly fierce and hard-hearted in themselves and unto others and so farre from this anoynting as many of the Heathens who never heard of Christ would be ashamed of them and wonder what kind of God that Christ should bee by whom they will bee called And a Prophet Lastly thou must be a Prophet thou must have the knowledge of God in thy self thou must hold it out and impart it unto others within thy family and without for to this thou art anoynted as also to hold out Christ in a constant profession which tyeth every man to know and acknowledge the truth of God that he may be able to propagate it to others but especially Ministers Magistrates Parents and Masters whose special calling besides the general fastneth this duty upon them These are the chief things to which others might be added wherein every Christian ought to testifie himself anoynted by Christs anoynting that he communicateth as well in his graces as in his name and that he hath received some good measure of that oyl of grace which was poured out upon him without measure for as in the head the God-head dwelleth bodily so in every member 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though not the God-head it self yet a Divine nature is apparent 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this godly nature is nothing else but those excellent renewed qualities and precious gifts which the Holy Ghost bestoweth upon the regenerate by means of this anoynting and is opposed to natural lust and corruption in the same verse Who went about doing good Now we come to Christs execution of his Office according to his former calling and furnishing For no sooner receiveth he gifts and calling from his Father but he manifesteth and putteth forth the same in most painful preaching and most powerful working of Miracles which hee did not for a brunt or by starts and fits but he went aboue doing good By which words is noted his diligence in absolving and finishing his course within his vocation and calling not seeking herein himself nor the praise or applause of men nor the Kingdoms of this world but denying himself and glory spent his whole life in doing good unto others suffering himself to bee subdued under a most shameful and cursed death that hee might bring others to life who were as yet his enemies and lying in the shadow of death Wherein he propounded himself a worthy pattern and example of imitation unto all such as have received gifts Note and calling unto any office in Church or Common-wealth who are not to hide in a Napkin those talents but bring them forth and traffick with them and that not for their private as seeking themselves but for the common good and not for a start or brunt but thus to finish their course holding out in well-doing unto the end Thus if we shall doe we shall be conformable unto Jesus Christ acceptable to God our Father profitable to our brethren here on earth and shall treasure to our selves an excellent weight of glory in heaven But how many bee there who having received many talents and charge to traffick with them bury their gifts and forget their charge against whom the fearful sentence is not only passed but half executed already his talent is taken from the sloathful servant there now remaineth nothing but the binding of him and casting him into hell And would this were not too true not in many Ministers only but even in numbers of private Christians who have had both gifts and calling to teach and pray in their families but have wilfully lost them for want of the careful use of them Now more specially this going about of Christ doing good standeth in two things The former in curing the deadly diseases of mens souls by most holy and saving doctrin revealing his Fathers whole will and teaching the things of the Kingdom not coldly as the Scribes but in most powerful manner so as his very enemies were forced to say Never man spake as this man doth The latter in curing the bodies of men also by most powerful Miracles one kind whereof which was most eminent namely the healing of Demoniaks is put for all the rest in the words following by both which means he shewed himself a merciful Saviour and the chief Physician both of soul and body and in one word the very healing God Of both which
of God which is the curse of the Law and not onely Ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for us his reason is because hee dyed on a tree and therefore are wee admonished Phil. 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient unto the death but to the death of the Cross for any other death had not so much concerned us Fourthly This death which so much concerned all the Church of the Jews and Gentiles must not bee obscure and therefore the Lord would not have Christ to dye in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparently at Jerusalem the great City of the Jews but tributary to the Romans as it were upon the Theatre of the World at a solemn feast when all the Males out of all quarters must appear before the Lord upon a Cross high erected that all might see him and on the Cross himself proclaimed King of the Jewes in three several Langages the Latine Greek and Hebrew that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life hee must bee thus lifted up that all men might see him certainly dead and that he dyed not in shew and appearance only but in deed and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessary ground of Faith and Religion Satan hath mightily by many Hereticks sought to overthrow the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that Diabolical suggestion that not Christ himself but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it self assureth us more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is careful so pregnantly to confirm it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the Crosse but by his three days burial by the peircing of his side out of which came water and bloud by which was manifest that the very Call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his very enemies who would beleeve nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the Souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the Theeves by breaking their leggs they broke not his because the text saith they saw that he was dead already The fourth point is the use of Christs Crucifying First in Christ on the Crosse take a full view of the cursednesse and execration of sin and consequently of thine own wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practices every sin being so loathsome and odious in the eyes of God as the least could never be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Son of God himself If thou lookest at sin in thy self or in thy sufferings yea or in the sufferings of the damned in Hell it will seem but a slight thing but behold God comming down from Heaven and him that thought it no robbery to bee equal to his Father in glory taking flesh in that flesh abasing himself to the death of the Crosse on that Crosse sustaining the whole wrath of his Father and so becoming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the native face of it And indeed this one consideration setteth a more ugly face upon sin than the Law possibly can for that sheweth our sins to bee a knife to stab our selves withall The most ugly visage of sin that can be but this to be the very spear that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sin that ever was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sin of the elect brought the Son of God seeing he that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glory of Heaven into the very sorrows of Hell whosoever thou art then that makest light account of sin and pleadest that God is merciful look a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods Justice and sins desert in the Fathers just indignation against his wel-beloved Son whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Son in whom he professed himself well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to salvation is of Christ crucified let us desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1 The vertue and power of this death in it self 2 The application of it unto our selves 3 The fruits which must appear in us by such application For the first Look upon this death of the Son of God not as of another dead man neither think or speak of it as of the death of another ordinary felon executed but as of a death which slew all the sins of all the beleevers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power than in all the lives of all Angels and Men that ever were or shall bee More power in Christs death than in the lives of all men and Angels yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that have benefit by it Here we have a mighty Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath overcoming it by entring into the Grave opening it for all beleevers by his Bloud shedding upon the Crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 never was there such an active suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Devils themselves when the Devils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerlesse and unmatchable no Martyr ever thus suffered though Popish doctrin would match as Corrivals some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithful Martyrs suffered but dissolution of soul and body but Christ besides suffered the whole Wrath of God due to mans sin they suffered in way of Christian duty and service but he to make a sacrifice of expiation of sin they having their sins removed and taken off from them but he bare all theirs and all beleevers sins in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Howsoever therefore Humane wisdom stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espy glory in ignominy esteem of the Crosse as an honourable Chariot and rejoyce in a triumph made as the Jews scoff by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishness of God wiser than man and the weakness of God stronger than man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking back to the Cross of Christ could
but seeing he who is thy head is in Heaven thou that art a member of him must be there also And as Christ while hee continued upon earth after his resurrection lived a kind of supernatural and heavenly life so if thou be risen with him thou livest not the life of nature but hast begun the life of grace and an heavenly conversation Quest But how shall I know whether I live by this heavenly life or no Heavenly life disce●n●d by two notes Ans There be two special notes to discern this truth by the former is the dissimilitude and opposition which it hath with the life of sinful natural men upon earth the latter is the similitude and agreement it hath with the life of Saints and glorified men in heaven Concerning the former ● In the matters of this life the Natural man will follow and pursue things which tend to a sensual and natural life he will beat his brains for gold and silver meat and cloth goods and lands for himself and his as for Heaven he will have nothing to doe there till he be dead and for the way thither hee cateth not to know it till he be dying at the soonest But the Spiritual man hee coveteth after Spiritual things the power of Christs Spirit where it is present will lift up his heart be it never so heavie to seek the Kingdom and the righteousnesse or it and hee seeketh after the wisdome of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith love hope humility and the fear of the Lord above all pearls and precious things he provideth for himself and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh h●mself warmly and comely arrayed when he hath put on the Lord Jesus Christ as knowing that only the garment of his righteousnesse can fence him from all the injury of wind and weather The Natural man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of Lands and Fields as he doth cast with himself to purchase the pearl hid in the field for which he will sell himself as we say into his shirt nay and further how own self liberty life and if he had any thing dearer than that The Spiritual man as for the things of this life if he have them not hee wanteth not his portion If he have them his care is that they have not him or become his portion If riches increase he setteth not his heart upon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance he carrieth himself warily and weanedly In want cheerfully and contentedly The things hee hath he useth as not using them the things hee hath not hee knoweth he hath no good use of them or else he should have them And thus as the Natural man bestirreth himself and all his motion tendeth to the bettering of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heavenly-minded man accounting himself from home while he is here in the body bend his chief care to settle his estate at home in heaven and all his trading and converse in this strange Country tendeth to the enriching of him in his own Country Further if we look to the Natural mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference between them For it is clear 2 In the matters of religion that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the joy of the other The one as heavie to pray to hear to read and meditate on the Word and of his own estate as a Bear to the stake if Law of shame or some such by-respect moved him not if were all one to him to bee on his Horse-back as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring back from thence The one if he pray sometimes in publick hee maketh little conscience of private prayer in his family and so of other private duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as straight as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserveth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sins as either in comparison of other or in his own corrupt conceit are smaller sins such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sins of omission idle words of hurtful unclean or wandring thoughts words he thinketh to be but wind if he mean no hurt and if he mean hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sins of the time he will not be so undiscreet as to swim against the stream hee is here violently carried without resistance into a gulf of known evils and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if hee did not The other maketh conscience of all sin lesser sins and secret sins hee can hate all even those which he cannot avoyd hee hateth the evil that himself doth and willingly will not displease God though all men bee therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to appprove himself unto man the other to approve his heart to God because he knoweth he made it and knoweth what is in it And this shall serve for a tast of the opposite disposition between Natural and Spiritual life Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in Heaven in two things II. The second note to discern this heavenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heaven For the life of the Saints in Heaven must be a counterpane of the beleevers upon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1 In respect of the things they are called from 2 In respect of the things they are called unto 1 The Saints in Heaven are called from three things 1 The world it self 2 The corruptions that are in the world through lust 3 The company of the wicked of the world Even so must beleevers in the world in their degree and measure carry themselves as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth Rev. 14.3 medling no more wich earthly things than needs must enjoying them so as they joy no more in them than in things which are not their own but borrowed only for a time using them so as they abuse them not because they are to be countable for them abiding in them earthly businesse and callings What the Saints are called from in three things so as they be never earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing having holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things than any below yea and esteeming of their present life it self so indifferently as that they can account the day of their
death better than the day wherein they were born 2 As the Saints in Heaven being delivered out of the prison of the body have all the bolts and chains of their corruption struck off so the godly who have their parts in the first resurrection have after a sort changed their lives and put on a Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 they have bid farewell to the follies of their former times yea renounce and as farre as frailty will permit loathe their sins saying unto them as Ephraim to his rejected Idols get you hence what have I to doe with you they that were of the Synagogue of Satan are now in the Temple with true beleevers Thus is it said of the hundred forty four thousand that were bought from the earth that were not defiled with women but were virgins that is sanctified in part and washed from their filthiness and will have no more fellowship in the unfruitful works of darkness wherein sometimes they were chief actors 3 The Saints in heaven never joyn with the wicked of the world any more that being verified which Moses spake to the Israelites concerning the Egyptians The enemies whom your eyes have seen this day you shall never see more even to the faithful hate the company of the wicked with whom they can neither do good nor take any whereas before their calling they were mixt with them and ran with them to the same excess of riot Now their fellowship is dissolved they are no more Companions with them the light of the one admitteth no communion with the others darkness and that they are often forced to dwell in Mesech with them it is the woe and grief of their hearts Another part of this agreement What the Saints are called unto in five things standeth in the things to which the Saints are called which are sundry As 1 Look as their chief happiness standeth in the beholding of the face of God and seeing him as he is together with their rejoycing in his blessed communion and that most sweet fellowship they have one with another even so the chief blessednesse of the Saints in earth is their fellowship with God and Christ though it bee not so immediate as the former They see his back parts indeed rather than his face and rejoyce after a sort in his face but afar off and as in a glass of the Word and Sacraments not face to face nor in that brightness wherein they shall behold him when they are at home with him at his right hand but yet what they want in the thing they want not in desire to be where hee is that they may see his glory so as they may be satisfied with the fulnesse of it that they may so see him as they may bee like him that they may drink not of the streams but of the well of life and see light in his light And because loving him that begat they cannot but love him that is begotten the next happiness to the former do the godly justly esteem the communion of Saints placing under God their chief delight in such as excel in vertue Secondly as the heavenly life of the Saints is spent in the perfect praise of God wherein they imploy their eternity keeping in the presence of the Throne of God a perpetual Sabbath and serving him day and night Rev. 11.17 7.15 even so beleevers indeavour in their measure that the same mind bee in them which was in Jesus Christ who thought it as his meat and drink to do the will of his heavenly Father they bring free-will-offerings they esteem one day better in his Courts than a thousand besides and account these persons blessed that may dwell in his house because they ever praise him Not that much rebellion and corruption of nature doth not often dead and dul even the most sanctified but yet something they get forward and delight in the progress they make to the chearful praise and worship of God And this they do not by fits and starts but imitate that heavenly life in the continual indeavour to make the pleasing of God their principal delight and the chief thing that most soliciteth them Thirdly as the Saints in Heaven live according to the Law of perfect righteousness which is the Law and charter of Heaven and have obtained perfect sanctification so Beleevers on earth set the same Law before them to rule and direct every particular action by and begin the self same obedience they begin to weigh all they give out or take in by the weights of the sanctuary which God hath sealed as just they follow the Lamb whither-soever he goeth before them whether by voice or example Fourthly as the Saints in heaven enjoy God for the means of all their lives Rev. 22.3 5. for hee is their Temple their light their Tree of Life their Crystal river c. evenso the Saints in the World though they live by means and must not look to reap without sowing as once it was 2 Kin. 19.29 yet injoy they God above all means and acknowledge that hee is their life and the length of their daies that they live not by bread alone but by every word proceeding out of the mouth of God that it is hee that giveth them power to get substance and blesseth their children with increase that hee which cloatheth the Lillies and feedeth the Sparrows will cloathe and feed them yea and more that before they shall want that which is good for them it all means should fail hee would sustain them without means by Miracle that his Promise cannot fail them when the Indian Mines shall come to nought that his word is means enough which commandeth the Rock and it giveth water and the Winds and they blow Quails before his Host shall perish Fiftly as the Saints in Heaven would not for all the world forgo their Happiness for one day and yet are they not now so fully happy but that they still wait and long for further perfection of their glory saying Lord how long Holy and Just Rev. 6.10 so the godly would not for all the world be separated from their estate in Christ A cloud of Martyrs in all ages manifes●ed that all the World the sweet of it nor the sour the flattery of it nor the tyranny could draw the godly from the fruition of their priviledges in Christ And yet dwell they not in these first fruits but wait still for the perfecting of this their redemption Hence the Apostle describeth them by their inseparable property 2 Cor. 5.2 Rom. 8.23 which is to love the appearing of Jesus Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 These notes laid together Examination of a mans self by the former notes will give witness with or against a man whether his conversation bee heavenly and consequently whether hee partake of all the former benefits of Christs resurrection Examine thy self by them Whether art thou called out of the World in thy affection whether art thou actually separated from the corruptions
have end with the world yet can it be called no new doctrin because the summe and substance of it was though more obscurely delivered to Adam and the Fathers of the Old Testament But if we consider the vertue and efficacy of it it is an eternal Gospel Rev. 14.6 during from the beginning of the world to all eternity Now therefore will it not follow that because it was before his Incarnation it was not his but rather therefore it was his who was before Abraham was the chief Prophet of his Church that raised according to the several ages of his Church such men as were fit either more obscurely as before his coming when rather some Evangelical promises of things to come were preached than the Gospel it self or else more manifestly to preach and open the mysteries of the Kingdom of God And this latter kind of preaching was not before his incarnation neither was it fully setled before he ascended into Heaven and from thence gave gifts to men that thereby hee might shew himself a careful Head and Governour of his Church even then when hee was set down at the right hand of his Father It is true indeed that before Christs suffering he called his Apostles instructed and furnished them with many gifts of the Spirit yea and these gifts were increased very much after his resurrection whereby they were more confirmed in their Apostleship and although they did before Christs death exercise the office of Apostleship in Judea amongst the lost sheep of the house of Israel yet had they not received that fulnesse of the Spirit and power from above which was necessary to Apostles before they had received in the visible form of fiery Tongues the Spirit in abundant measure whereby they were before all the people of the world after a sort solemnly inaugurated and confirmed to bee the Apostles of Jesus Christ neither had they till after Christs resurrection received this Commandement of which our Apostle speaketh To preach to all Nations and to every creature under heaven the practice of which Commadement they took up after that they having stayed at Jerusalem for the promise the Spirit came upon them and they were endued with power from on high Luke 24.49 As for the second branch of the objection that because ordinary Pastors and Teachers are not immediately called by Christ being now in Heaven therefore they are not ordained by him it is false for of the Pastors and Elders of Ephesus it is said that the Holy Ghost made them over-seers and Paul accounteth Apollos ordained by Christ as well as himself 1 Cor. 3.5 What is Paul and who is Apollos but the Ministers by whom yee beleeve and as the Lord gave to every man only the difference must be observed in their calling both are called of Christ but the Apostle by himself immediately not by men the ordinary Pastor called of him by the Ministery of man I call it a Ministry because the whole power and authority of the Church in calling Ministers is but a service unto Christ approving declaring and testifying to the Church those whom Christ hath called And therefore both before his incarnation a long time and after his ascension also the exhortation which was enforced upon beleevers run in this tenor to day if yee hear his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.7 Whence we conclude that his voyce hath ever sounded in the Church and so shall doe in the ministry of his servants until his coming again to Judgement Luke 10.16 hee that heareth them heareth him he that receiveth them receiveth him hee that refuseth them refuseth him he by his servants entreateth men to be reconciled by them hee bindeth and looseth saveth and destroyeth Necessity of p●eaching ●vinced by four reasons Secondly for the necessity of this ordinance can any deny it who seeth the Son of God so careful before his death after his resurrection and ascension also into Heaven to furnish and fit with an extraordinary measure of the Spirit Apostles and Apostolick men for the founding of the Church of the New Testament and not only so but now sitting in his glory at the right hand of his Father is mindful of his promise and is with his Church to raise up successively faithful Pastors and Teachers gracing them with variety of excellent gifts and blessing those gifts for the building up and repairing of his body and the gathering of the Saints of whom as of living stones is reared a spiritual house or temple fit for his own use But because most men are willingly ignorant of this necessity of preaching I will a little inlarge it by some reasons 1 Consider the condition of those that are unconverted In regard of the unconverted and it will appear necessary for them No man was ever saved while hee was in his natural blindnesse no unbeleever could ever get within the gates of the holy City no hard-hearted or impenitent person could ever so remaining see the life of God Neither was ever any man ordinarily drawn out of this fearful estate of Damnation but by the Word of God preached which is the light to the blind eyes the ground of faith for how can they beleeve except they hear and the hammer of the Lord to break asunder the hardest stones in mens hearts Jer. 23.29 Who were ever begotten to God without this immortal see● 〈◊〉 ●here spiritual Fathers Who ever became living stones in the building wit● 〈◊〉 ●e hewing and polishing of Gods builders What harvest was ever ●●ought in to God without these labourers What soul was ever pulled out of the kingdome of darknesse and brought to bee a member of Gods Kingdome but by this means The word in this ordinance is called the Gospel of the Kingdome of God Mark 1.14 that is whereby men attain both the parts of Gods Kingdome both that of grace here in this life and that of glory in the life to come from which effect it is called 1 The word of grace Acts 20.32 2 The Gospel of glory 1 Tim. 1.11 also the word of reconciliation because hereby sinners are reconciled to God Ephes 1.13 the word of life because it quickneth the dead in sin the Gospel of peace chap. 6.15 because it alone pacifieth the conscience and setleth it in the peace of God to conclude The good word Heb. 6.5 because it only revealeth Christ who procureth all good unto beleevers Who seeth not then the necessity of preaching seeing none are added to the Church without it Act. 2.41 no spiritual life can bee preserved without this feeding Act. 20. No Saints are gathered nor no body of Christ built up without Pastors and Teachers Ephes 4.11 12. And it pleased not God by any other means but by the foolishness of Preaching to save such as beleeve S●condly If wee consider those that are called to knowledge and faith In regard of the converted it will appear also a most necessary ordinance in regard of them For
savour Christ needed not to have ascended to send men without gifts hee sendeth no Messenger without a message no Steward without his provision no Captain without weapons no Watchmen without eyes this were a folly which the wisdome and weakness of man cannot brook but hee sendeth an interpreter the Learned tongue the prompt Scribe in the Law of the Lord such as are mighty in the Scriptures and are stored with things new and old Let us not implead the wisdome of the Son of God and say where shall wee have such store of Preachers for our several Parishes If wee want them the fault is our own and not Gods who hath given means men and maintenance enough if all these were wisely and thankfully disposed to his glory and the service of the Church 3 This Doctrin must bee applyed also to the more ignorant sort of men who never as yet came to see the absolute necessity of this Ordinance of Preaching as witn●ss 1 Their formal comming hereunto as forced by Law ●ow men see this necessity of preaching or constrained by custome and thence departing again without any fruit of Faith or increase either of knowledge of obedience or of comfort 2 The inbred corruption yea and malice of their hearts against it which bewrayeth it self in a number of frivolous Objections which they shame not to bolt out among their mates As that this preaching of the Gospel is but foolishness they see other have lived honestly and well without it before them and so have themselves done for many years and yet they live as well as those that are the forwardest to run after Sermons Alas poor souls how hath Satan over-reached them in a matter of such moment as is their whole estate and freehold of Heaven who if ever they come to see their lost estate and what a woful condition they stand in for the present they will tell us another tale with shame in their faces for that they have said they will profess the Ministry of Reconciliation to bee as necessary as their attonement and friendship with God which is better and sweeter than life it self Others conceive and complain as the Israelites Many pl●●● against it that there is too much Preaching and too much of this Mannah and some of better place but no better hearts avouch that it is so common that it grows into contempt Now would I ask of these was it the abundance of Mannah the Angels food that was the fault or their wicked loathing of it even so is it the commonness of the word that maketh the wicked contemn it for the hungry soul of the godly would never dispise it if it were ten times more common or rather because they see not the worth nor taste the sweetness of it des●●s● wee the Sun because it riseth daily and shineth all the day long upo● 〈◊〉 or the air which wee breath in every moment or doth the ordinary and common use of the bread upon our Tables bring bread out of request with us No wee see the necessity that without the Sun and without our daily bread and without the air wee cannot live And did wee see also as clearly that where vision faileth people perish wee should change with our minds our note and highly bless God for the commonness of it as we do in the other and sure I am that either the Apostle Paul did not fear this inconvenience or else hee oversaw it when he enjoyned the Ministers to Preach instantly both in season and out of season Others say the world was better when there was lesse Preaching and thence conclude that it is far worse now because there is more which though it bee a rude fallacy scarce worthy answer as putting that to bee a cause of mens wickedness which is not yet something must bee said unto it and fools must bee answered in their folly lest they bee wise in their own conceit Let these men bethink themselves and then tell us whether the Holy Gospel being the power and arm of God to save every beleever the glad tydings of salvation and word of life can make the World worse than it is For if that bee the use of it our blessed Saviour was far overseen to leave his glory of Heaven to take our flesh and in it to submit himself to the obedience of the whole Law and to the suffering of the whole curse of it for our disobedience if by all this hee leave the World or make the World worse than he found it How shall it bee true that is written of him that the Son of Man came not to destroy but to seek and save that which was lost if the Preaching of him make the World worse than it was wee will easily grant that the Gospel being a great sight it daily discovereth that corruption and darkness which before lay hid as the Sun rising manifesteth all those things which were wrapped up in the darkness of the night But to say that sin is the more because it is more seen by the light of the Gospel is a fancy or if sin it self in these daies of the Gospel by the multiplication of people bee multiplyed shall wee say the Gospel is the cause or rather the malice of men who pervert it to their own destruction taking occasion by it to turn the grace of God into wantonness Let not ●s therefore bee as the old Idolaters in Jeremies time who told him plainly that they would not hear the Word that hee spake in the name of the Lord for while they served the Queen of Heaven they had plenty of victuals and were well and felt none evil but since they left to burn incense unto her it was never well with them they had scarceness of all things and were consumed by the Sword and by Famine Jer. 44.17 18. and therefore they were resolved to do as their Fathers did But let us with thankfulness cast our eies upon the Grace of God that hath appeared and learn as it teacheth to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Many other allegations of simple people against this ordinance I might alleadge but they are well met withall by some others and my self have elsewhere answered many of them Beauties of Bethel and therefore referring the Reader thither I content my self with these few for the present and conclude this point with this exhortation to these poor seduced people that considering the straight charge and Commandement that lyeth upon us to Preach in season and out of season they would bee willing to pick out their duty therein implyed which is to bee diligent yea swift to hear to attend as earnest suters at the gates of Wisdome for their own good to lay up instruction as they would treasure gold and to call after the wisdome of God revealed in this ordinance without which never was any made wise to salvation And let them further know that
is framing a bill of inditement against this day of general assize 2 This consideration must move us to carefulness both of our receits and expences whether they bee gifts of mind or of body Be careful of thy receipts and expenses bec●use thou fittest in another mans to whom thou must be countable or of our outward estate Hee that spendeth and walleth his own need care the less because none can call him to reckoning why hee doth so but hee that sitteth in another mans or hath a matter of trust in his hands and cannot mis-spend but out of another mans stock had need look about him b●cause hee is to bee countable and must make good whatsoever his reckoning commeth short in Ask thy self What have I which I have not received of my Master How came I to bee so rich Is all the Wealth I have of my Masters gift or have I gotten goods into my hands by wronging or injuring some other men Again I remember I received at such and such a time a great summe of my Ma●ters mony hee betrusted mee with a great p●rtion how have I laid it out that I may give him up a just and comfortable reckoning to which I am sure to bee called Thus much I have spent upon sutes in Law Thus much upon my pleasures and sports my dogs have ravend up a part of my revenue my Hawks have flown away with another end Cards and Dice have cost mee no little and a great deal is wasted by compassing my sin uncleanness pride revenge gluttony and the like But O thou unfaithful Servant that hast thus wasted thy Masters goods how much hast thou given to the poor how much to good uses to works of mercy to a settled Ministry to help Joseph out of his affliction oh no here hee can set down little or nothing the Dogs are preferred before Lazarus by many a Dives who if they timely look not better to their reckonings must make the foot of their account to bee this no sooner to bee dead than to be buried in Hell according to the sentence Take that unprofitable servant bind him hand and foot and cast him into utter darkness there shall bee wayling and gnashing of teeth 3 This stri●t account sheweth that a man cannot bee too strict No man can bee too precise because the judgement shall be thus precise too precise or too careful of his waies Men generally cast the reproach of purity upon men that desire to approve their hearts and lives unto God and count them more nice than wise and say it were hard if every one that were not so pre●ise and curious should bee damned But what doth not the Scripture ●ay plainly that he Master is an hard man that is a most just God that will straightly stand for justice shall not every idle word every ungodly thought and motion though not attended nor assented unto come unto judgement and if it must is it more than needeth for men to look to the door of their lips yea to keep out if it were possible every vain and wandring thought out of their mindes shall not hee that breaketh the least commandement bee the least in the Kingdome of Heaven that is have no place at all there shall not all omissions and failings in duty bee set upon the heads of sinners seeing the sentence shall run In that yee did not these things depart from mee yee ●●●sed or shall wee thi●● that the least carelesnesse of men shall be justified in this judgem●nt or the ungodly be taken by the hand far bee it from the Judge of all the world not to judge with righteous judgement howsoever loose persons wrap themselves in the woe of those that call good evil and evil good Now for the general use of this Doctrine of the last judgement To what other end hath the word so expresly discovered this holy Doctrin and enjoyned us to teach it in the Church 1 Cor. 15. but that every man should lay it to heart and benefit himself by it and therefore First The godly are to comfort themselves with these words The godly may l●f● up their heads in expectation of this day of redemption seeing they hear of this day wherein they shall bee gainers receiving their sentence of absolution and therefore 1 Perfect redemption from all the danger of all spiritual enmities the first fruits whereof they have already attained hence is it called the day of their redemption 2 Perfect security and safety against a●● the mol●stations of sin death the grave the gates of Hell temptation and tribulation for all these shall be cast into the Lake 3 Perfect glory with the Saints for they shall be from henceforth ever with the Lord and enjoy the sweet ●●uit of that prayer which the Son of God in the daies of his flesh r●quested and was heard in Father I will that where I am they may be also that they may behold my glory Joh. 17.24 Why should not wee then lift up our heads in the exp●ctation and ardent desire of this day which the very dumb creature 〈◊〉 for Rom 8.19 Godly must address them selves to thi● judgement two waies Secondly Let every man labour to fit and addresse himself unto this judgem●nt that h●● may ●ee able to stand before the Son of Man And that by two thing● 1 By making full account and reckoning of it 2 By using the best 〈◊〉 af●re-hand to pass through it happily The 〈◊〉 i●●harged upon us by that precept which commandeth us to bee like the Servant that waiteth for his Masters comming and hath every thing i● a ●●adin●ss and that at all watches and by that of Peter 2 Pet 3.11 Seeing a●● these terrors of the Lord what manner of men ought wee to bee in all holy con●er●at●on Two thing● hinder this c●re An● for the furthering of this care two things must carefully be 〈…〉 which shut it quite out of the hearts of the most The fi●st i● 〈◊〉 ●●●ry and deadnesse of heart which is a slumber of spirit and sl●●p●●●ss of the s●ul which hath bound up all faculties and powers of the 〈…〉 as ●●ttle move o● stir in the actions and affairs of heavenly 〈◊〉 s●i●●tual ●se as a man when he is in a dead sleep can move or bestir himself to 〈…〉 natural a tion The minde till God awaken it never ser●ously thi●ke●h of God or of his own estate The conscience never or seldome accuseth for 〈◊〉 committed The will inclineth not to any thing tru●ly good The affe●ti●ns remain unmoved at Gods word o● works The whol● man i● s●nselesse and careless of Gods judgements either present or to come and whence is all this but from a profane delusion of the heart that the Master will not yet come they shall not yet bee called to their reckoning there is time enough behind to repent in they crave but an hour on then Death-beds and that they hope they shall have In the mean time they
are eaten up with dissolutenesse and profaneness casting away sobriety and watchfulness so as their Master cometh unexpected and in an hour they know not How doth it the●●fore stand every man in hand to awake from his sleep and stand up from the dead with wis● Virgins to prepare and trim the●● Lamps with oyl before hand and so wait for the coming of the Bride groom to take heed of every ●i● thought word and deed to watch narrowly their own lives to provo ●●hemselves to the best duties What is not sin a fearful thing which made the Son of God cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Is not the greatness of them like the mountai●● and the number of them ●ike the sand of the Sea-shoar which is numb●●l●s● Is it not a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God whose wra●h and justice against the least sin all Creatures in Heaven and earth 〈◊〉 stand und●● ●●t be oppressed and shaken in peeces Is not the night past and the day ●●me the Sun of righteousnesse risen so as if ever wee mean to 〈…〉 of this deadly sleep and walk as the children of light it is more than t me Wouldst thou be taken lying or swearing or gaming or drinking or rayling or breaking the Sabbath or stealing or whoring wouldst 〈◊〉 have thy Master finde thee in any of these practices and distemp●● o● no I m●an to repent But he cometh suddenly as a Thief in the n ght and this s●d●a●●●oming at least to thee in particular may cut off all thy purposes f ● it is just with God that they who take not his time of rep●ntance shall never attain to their own What will now be the issue of thy delays surely thou ●adst better been a Dogge or a Toad or the vilest Creature of all the Creation than a secure sinner overtaken in thy wickednesse The second thing that hindereth this expectation of the last Judgement as carefully to be avoyded as the former are the cares of this present life and the greedy desire and thirst after the world which by this consideration also may be abated For if this day of Judgement whether general or particular to thy self were to morrow what were thy Gold Silver Plate Jewels worth to thee they were all one with the stones in the street Tell me now whether thou wouldst not then esteem Christ and his merit thy chiefest commodity or if thou couldst but conceive with thy self the truth and say to thy soul I shall certainly shortly come to answer the Judge of all the world c●uldst thou goe on to lade thy Conscience with iniquity for so short a possession of vanishing profits No thou wouldst begin to husband thy time which worldlinesse hath hitherto ingrossed thou wouldst not suffer thy soul to bee so surcharged with earthlinesse as to forget treasuring in Heaven making ready thy account and the finishing of thy reckoning thou wouldst not suffer the thorny cares of this life to choak all the seed of thy salvation neither could it be that the Oxe or Fa●m should so still fill up thine eyes as that the supper of the King should be despised Bu● in truth men live generally as though there were no Judgement to come or as though they had stricken a covenant with it to passe over them for when we preach and men hear or read of the Judgement to come who trembleth at it as Felix an Heathen did to hear Paul dispute of it When we teach that the Judge is at the door who seeth all the facts of men and draw●th them into bills of remembrance and of them all is drawing a bill of inditement who feareth more who sinneth lesse who is it that smiteth his thigh or saith what have I done Who forsaketh his wilful ignorance his contempt of the Word his abuse of Gods Servants his Blasphemies his pride uncleannesse unlawful games or lawful unlawfully used his Sabbath-breaking his swearing his oppression his usury or the like Wee like Lot fore-warn men of the evil to come but men like Lots cousins and kinsmen entertain our words as a jest we are as though we mocked and so they sit out the summons to their further danger yea more than this when the Lord thrusteth his fearful judgements into the eyes and sences of men as fore-runners of this general men shut their eyes and will not see the brightnesse of them nor the danger of sin by them nor the special anger of God bewraying it self and broken out in them but still live as they did in the days of Noah and will lay none of these things to heart till it bee too late The second thing whereby every man must addresse himself to this judgement is to use the best means that he may happily passe through it And the only means is set down by the Apostle 1 Cor. 11.31 If wee would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord. Judging of our selves afore-hand standeth in four things Now this judging of our selves before hand standeth in four things First in arraigning our selves before Gods Judgement Seat that is when by serious consideration we summon our selves before this Judge to whom we are to be countable This is the memento that Salomon giveth the young man who is set upon his pleasure Remember that for all this thou must come to judgement And if the young man must sawce his pleasures with this remembrance much more the older had need as being in the ordinary course of nature nearer it than they some of the ancients have so acquainted and accustomed their hearts to this meditation that one of them professeth of himself that wheresoever he was or whatsoever he was doing he thought he heard always this voyce in his ears Arise yee dead and come unto judgement Secondly in examining of our selves and this is when we search and fanne our selves when wee sift the secret corners of our hearts and enqu●re narrowly and without partiality What have I done that look as the Kings Attorny sifteth out and exaggerateth every circumstance of the Crime ag●inst a Traytor at the Bar to make his offence as foul as can be so should wee become the King of Heaven his Attorney against our selves not ●●ssening or min●ing and much lesse excusing hiding or defending any 〈◊〉 labour to see our sin in every circumstance and make it as vile as wee can at our hearts may be convinced and beaten down in the sence of our misery For this purpose lay thy life and every particular action of it t● the L●w of God that as a straight line will shew thee all thy crookednesse and 〈◊〉 ●hee in by such circumstances as whereby thou shalt not content thy s●● w●th a c●nfession in grosse that thou art a sinner but shalt confesse thy sin t● 〈◊〉 ●●t of measure sinful But many a Christian is like a desperate Bankcrupt who being afraid to look into his reckonings goeth on till he be clapt up
bee that challenge as sound a faith as any but never prise such a pearl as it is can a man have such a commodity but hee shall value it according to the worth but these think themselves never the richer for it they have more sence and joy in the smallest and most trifling earthly profit then that Christ is become their gain which although they profess yet this undervaluing of him in their hearts giveth their tongues the lye Besides it they did esteem of faith indeed they would profess it boldly and confess it to all the World whereas they are ashamed of Christ before men and cast themselves into the night with Nicodemus as fearing lest if they should come to Christ by day men would see them whose praise they love above the praise of God and whose reproach they fear above the rebuke of the Almighty But how unlike is this to the faith of the Saints whereby they could esteem the rebukes of Christ above the treasures of Egypt And further were it so they made reckoning of their faith they would much more care for the end of it for sound faith carrieth the heart even in the constant waiting and wishing for Christs appearance but these rather fear it than hope it Now what a faith is that which never careth to come to the end of it that fain would still bee pitching upon earth saying with Peter when hee wist not what hee said It is good being here Is this Faith an evidence of things not seen or doth it look at things within the veil 5 Another sort would be loath to be otherwise accounted but true beleevers and yet their faith worketh no change in them how their hearts are purified witnesse the uncleannesse envie drunkennesse oathes injustice covetousnesse contempt of the Ministery prophanations of the Sabbaths of God in themselves and theirs these and the like proceed from within and by the Waies in the shop any man may know how the Warehouse is stored And as this faith purgeth not the nasty corners of the heart no more doth it the mouth but that venteth according to the abundant foulnesse of the heart and is filled with unclean unsavoury or unfruitful speeches Further as they were at first enemies to God and goodnesse so they abide still and are no changelings Here is no faith working by love neither to God for they will doe nothing for him will be at no costs or pains for him and as little will they suffer for his sake not a reproachful word much lesse will they rejoyce in suffering neither to Gods children these can they pinch and disgrace where as l●ved they him that begat they would love those that are begotten of him As for helping others to Heaven they are so farre from it as that if any will cast an eye that way they can tell what he is presently and they would be loath to be such an hypocrite or precise tool as he is To conclude although true faith is most industrious in the means of preserving and increasing it self these men hold their wont enemies to the Word were they and so are they still they neglect the means and absent themselves from the Ministry and can no more beleeve than Thomas who was absent when Christ came and sh●wed himself to the rest of the Disciples Joh. 20.24 and that which they doe hear they mingle not with faith and so it becom●th unprofitable The Lion roareth they fear not in their hearts because they apply not the threats of the Law against their own sins The Gospel propoundeth promis s of life and salvation but they trust God no further than they see him they rejoyce no more in them than they can in another mans mony or evidences they pray not to be taught of God nor hear to bee increased in faith nor meditate nor conferre 〈◊〉 things they hear further to edifie themselves and others in their most holy ●aith Now will these fruits stand with faith or if they will not is faith so common as men pretend but I hope I have a little helped many a man to see by this application how that his Gold is turned into Copper and his faith but into a dream and fancy Labour for the truth of faith ● earnestly as for salvation Vse 2. This doctrin teacheth every man to labour for the truth of this grace as earnestly as for salvation it self for this is the scope of all the Prophets to bring men not so much to faith as to the end of faith through the Messiah which is salvation And hence is it that faith is said to save beleeve and thou shalt be saved and in many places and phrases besides the Lord ascribeth that to the instrument which belongeth to himself the principal efficient Necessity of this grace to him that expecteth salvati●n 1 Both to shew the excellency of the grace in it self in that it comprehendeth such an excellent object as Christ Heaven and happinesse which are infinite and holdeth such great things being absent as present in the hand of it 2 As also the n●cessity of it to the party that looketh for salvation for hee that beleeveth not must needs be damned yea is damned already Rom. 4.11 For 1. He hath not set his seal that God is true but so far as he can hath made him a lyer 1 Joh 5.10 2 He hath defiled all his actions and lost all his labour 3 He hath disabled God from doing him good who cannot save him that lieth in the state of infidelity 4 Hee hath shut Heaven against himself for without shall be unbeleevers and if infirmity of faith in Moses the Servant of God shut him out of Canaan what shall the want of it in the wicked doe but shut them out of the heavenly Canaan which is a r●st prepared only for the people of God 3 To teach in what an high reckoning it is with God who is the Author of it the finisher of it the accepter and approver of it yea of a grain of it and not of it only but of our persons and imperf ct works because of it and c●nsequently that every beleever should make as high account of it as of salvation it self it leading to the very g●te of Heaven nay being the threshold over which every one m●st step that meaneth to enter into the holy City Vse 3. This teacheth us that seeing the Ministry of the Prophets Apostles Pastors and Teachers was instituted to this purpose to beget and confirm men in the faith all such as frequent the Ministery must be careful to grow up in the strength of faith For otherwise they frustrate to themselves this holy ordinance for the sum of our commission is this Goe teach all Nations hee that beleeveth hall be sav●d Mar. 16.16 And what is Paul Apollos or any other ordinary Minister but the Ministers of your faith both for the begetting and confirming of the same Grow up in the strength of faith So as
〈◊〉 elder 〈…〉 wee can carry away the blessing and 〈◊〉 text teacheth ●s 〈…〉 of ●●ns standeth n t in the doing of any thing but in the rec●●●●ng of 〈◊〉 the hands of Christ by so many as be●eeve in his name All diligence must be given to 〈…〉 p●●d 〈◊〉 sin 〈◊〉 to our selves Vse 2. I● this so wort●y a grace of so excellent use and sw●etnesse thr●ugh the wh●le life then it standeth every man in hand 〈◊〉 lab●u● and ●ive all d●ligence to make sure unto himself the pardon of his 〈…〉 But lam●●table it is to 〈◊〉 the general care● sn●sse of men in a matt●● 〈…〉 and consequ●n●● as this is An● surely it will prov● t●● 〈…〉 the world that whereas the whole lives of men are th●ug●t too 〈◊〉 and all their ●ime t●o li●●● to be eaten up in worldly cares which br●ak their sleep their strength and often their brains yea and th●ir v●ry 〈◊〉 ●nly the last day of all and their dying-day is scarcely devoted to this 〈◊〉 of seeking remissi n of sin and the way to life everlasting See wee 〈…〉 h●w busy and ● rnest m st men are in the infin●te incumbrances of the world whilest this one thing is the only thing neglected May wee not observe how sure m●n devis● by learned counsel at their great charge to make to themselves their Deed● Leases Bonds and other instruments and assurances of the things of this life who in all their lives scarce ever dreamed of this assurance Oh how wilfully herein doe men forsake their own mercy how carelesly doe they cast out of their hands the only comfort of their life and death Whosoever therefore thou art that hast hitherto despised so great salvation that hast set light by Gods gracious invitings to repentance and that hast frowardly rejected his kindest offers of mercy now at length begin to take up shame in thy face and sorrow into thy heart in earnest accuse the security of thy soul the deadnesse of thy spirit the hardnesse of thy heart the unthankfulnesse of thy whole life say with thy self Ah my folly that have neglected my mercy so long alas how have I hated instruction how unkindly have I dealt with so loving and patient a God I see now that it is high time to look to the main businesse of my life to make up my peace with God to get my pardon sealed I will live me to the Throne of Grace I will henceforth lay hold of eternal life I see now that there is one thing necessary and that is the good part which I will chuse and which shall never bee taken from me Now we come to the second point propounded which is the last of this worthy Sermon namely what is the condition of every one that hath attained this excellent grace of remission of sins Whosoever hath attained remission of his sins is an happy man and that is to bee a blessed and happy man for such a one hath part in Christ and with him of forgivenesse of sins in which David Psal 32.1 placeth blessednesse Quest But how can this man be a blessed man seeing hee is compassed with a body of sin and death and subject unto infinite afflictions than whom no man is in this life more miserable no sort of men more perplexed inwardly with sence of sin none more outwardly disgraced for well-doing Answ There be three degrees of blessednesse 1 In this life Degrees of blessednesse when God bringeth his children into the kingdom of grace and giveth them his Son and with him their whole justification and sanctification in part 2 The second degree is in the end of this life when God brings the souls of the faithful to Heaven and their bodies to the earth safely to be kept until the last day 3 The third in and after the Day of Judgement when he bringeth both soul and body into the glory prepared for the elect Of this last which is happinesse by way of eminency the two former are certain fore-runners and hee that hath attained the first hath also assurance of the last and must needs bee a blessed man not only in time to come but even for the present whether wee respect his outward estate or inward For his outward estate Gods blessing never faileth him but affordeth him all good things and that in due season and in due measure his riches are often not great but ever precious and his little shall nourish him and make him as well liking as the water and pulse did the Jewish children in Chaldea The same providence which watcheth to supply all his good keepeth him from all evil it pitcheth the Angels round about him to guard his life let him be persecuted he is not forsaken his losses become his gain his sickness is his phisick his heart is cheared even in trouble which maketh that part of his life comfortable his soul is bound up in the bundle of life with God death shall not come before hee can bid it heartily welcome yea let violent death come it shall not be to him deadly slain he may be but not overcome victory attendeth him and blessednesse every where abideth him But all this is the least part of his blessednesse for if we look yet a little more inwardly into him we shall see the boundlesse extent of his happinesse farre more large whether we respect the spiritual misery hee hath escaped or else the spiritual good which with the pardon of his sins hee hath attained for on the one hand he hath escaped the heavie wrath of God due to sin and so is discharged of an infinite debt healed of a most deadly poyson and pardoned from a fearful sentence of eternal death and perdition ready to bee executed upon him and on the other hee hath obtained a plentiful redemption hee hath purchased the pearl received Christ with his merits and graces such as are Wisdome Faith Hope whence issue our peace and joy of heart which is Heaven before heaven for in these stand the Kingdome of God and the comfort of a good conscience which is a continual feast By all which it appeareth that hee is no small gainer that hath got his part in Gods mercy reaching to the remission of his sins Open thine eyes and see the happiness of the Saints Vse 1 Wee are here admonished to open our eyes that wee may more clearly see and grow in love with the felicity of the Saints which the most see not because 1 It is inward the glory of the Spouse is like her Head and Husbands glory shee is all glorious within 2 Because of their infirmities and frailties which wicked eyes altogether gaze upon 3 Because of their Afflictions wherewith they are continually exercised If the Tower of Siloam fall on any of them they are thenceforth greater sinners than all other men holy Job because hee was afflicted cannot avoid the note of an Hypocrite even among his own Friends and Visiters And no
within 2 Examine them whence they come and whither they go 2 Examine thy thoughts whence they come and whither they go and what they do in thee By which means thou shalt banish a number of idle and wandring thoughts which like roaving vagrants being worth nothing come ●ver to steal something either time or grace and so shalt thou make and keep room for better And do this betime because the first motions of sinful thoughts defile a man This rule is in 2 Cor. 10.5 to draw weapons against every strong imagination that is exalted against the knowledge of Christ 3 If thy thoughts concern the world pull them back keep them from the world 3 Pull them from the world save as much as needs must for the moderate maintaining of thy self and thine lest heavenly thoughts be drowned and hindred 1 Tim. 6.9 The reason is because our hearts being earthly do presently conceive a sweetness in earthly things and are presently distracted from the love of the Creator to the love of the creature Now spiritual wisdome requireth that wee diminish the love of the creature that wee may increase our love of the Creator But if they will run upon the world then turn the course of them a little to consider the vanity and misery of this evil world the painted vizor of the pleasures of it the uncertainty of life the deceitfulness of riches how they bee not ours what evils and incumbrances wee have received from the world what fools they have made us in treasuring on earth whose home and expectation is in heaven 4 If thy thoughts concern thy self or others thy brethren If they concern thy self or others see they be humble labour to think better of others than thy self for thou seest no such thing in them as in thy self Phil. 2.3 Let every one esteem better of another than of himself Yea the more thou seemest to excel others in gifts the more humble labour to bee An hard rule and difficult to bee practised and therefore it is often commended to us as Rom. 12.16 Make your selves equal to them of the lower sort and elsewhere For this purpose conceive not onely what thou hast received but what thou wantest and what good things thou art without and then with Paul say thou hast not yet attained to perfection Phil. 3.12 5 If they concern sin be sure it be to ha●e it 5 If thy thoughts concern any sin bee sure it bee to hate and renounce to bewail and mourn for it in thy self or others For there is a sliness and subtilty in sin which while wee think of it easily gaineth some tickling and consent which at least hindreth that thorow-hatred that wee ought to maintain against it The third rule for the inner man concerneth the Will namely Rules for the will that our care must bee there bee but one will between God and us for so hath the Lord taught us to pray Thy Will bee done Concurrence of our wil with Gods will 1 Revealing 2 Determining 3 Prescribing 1 Wherein soever God hath revealed his will to us in that wee must rest 2 Whatsoever his will determineth of us that wee must account holie and just whether with us or against us 3 Whatsoever his will prescribeth to us whether obedience to the Law or faith of the Gospel wee must hold our selves fast bound in conscience unto it let it seem never so cross to us or contrary to his Law as Abraha● ●●id in offering his son 4 Whatsoever his will disposeth to us 4 Disposing prosperity or adversity sickness or health life or death or whatsoever else all is from a most wise hand disposing every thing for the good and salvation of his Elect and so should bee entertained Thus Eli said 1 Sam. 3.18 Isa 39.8 It is the Lord let him do what is good in his eyes And Hezekiah The word of the Lord is good even when it threatned the overthrow of his house and Kingdome So David Psal 39.9 I held my tongue and said nothing because thou Lord didst it And Job The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh Chap. 1. v. 11. blessed be the name of the Lord. CHAP. IX Rules for the Conscience THe fourth sort of rules for the inner man concerns the conscience Rules for the conscience 1 Beware of a blinde conscience Joh. 16.2 1 Beware of doing any thing with a blinde Conscience A blinde man swallowes many a gnat and a blinde conscience swalloweth any sin This is a wicked conscience to which no sin so great shall come but a man shall think hee doth God good service in it as Christ speaks of them that would slay his Disciples Why do Heathens persecute Christians and Papists pursue Protestants even to death but out of blinde zeal and conscience that they root out a false Religion And whatsoever a man doth by an erroneous and seduced conscience is sin The rule of conscience to Heathens being the Law of nature and to the Church the Law written even the whole word of God as a pillar of cloud and fire to direct it in all the way to Heaven Therefore let the Word of God dwell plentiously in you in all Wisdom● Col. 3.16 2 Do nothing with a doubting conscience Conscientia nobis anima Tertul. 2 Do nothing with a doubtful conscience for whatsoever is done with a scrupulous conscience is sin and is not onely an offence of God but of the conscience too which is as a little God within us for it is not of faith nor obedience to the known will of God Rom. 14. ult Hee that doubteth is condemned because his action is not of faith Therefore verse 5. hee saith Let every man bee fully perswaded in his minde 3 Get a good conscience above all things 3 Labour to get a good conscience above all things Act. 23.1 I have endeavoured in all good Conscience till this day A pure conscience by nature hath no man but made pure by the blood of Christ sprinkled upon it by faith in that hee hath obtained full remission of sin and by his blood also merited the Spirit of Sanctification by which the conscience of the beleever is daily cleansed 4 Aim 〈◊〉 a pure conscience 4 Labour to get a pure conscience in all things A man by observing many things may get himself good credit but a good conscience must bee in all the things of God Joh. 1● 28 The Pharisies might not go into Pilates Judgement Hall lest they should bee polluted and yet at the same time they could dispence with their conscience to crucifie the Son of God a sin defiling Heaven and earth whiles the Sun was ashamed and the earth trembled at it The Papists may not eat flesh in Lent their consciences will not suffer them but to kill Kings and blow up Parliament-Houses their consciences give them good leave Many Protestants will not steal kill commit the act of adultery but
their conscience can dispense with covetousness unbridled anger wantonness filthy speeches c. But if Gods word bee the same so must the conscience and hee that serves God as Paul did in Pure Conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 will do so at all times in all places and things and will avoid sin in his Closet as much as in most publike meetings yea small sins as well as great 5 Keep diligently the goodness and purity of conscience by two things 5 It is great wisdome to keep things well as to purchase th●●● therefore wee must if wee would walk wisely bee as careful to keep good consciences as to obtain them and thereunto observe two things 1 Daily take away matter of accusation which is sin by repentance 2 Rather displease all men than thine own conscience thy friends thy family thy rulers nay thy own self before thy conscience So did Daniel and his fellowes So did Cyprian as Augustine relates it when the Emperor in the way to his execution said Now I give thee space to consider whether thou wilt obey mee in casting a grain into the fire or bee thus miserably slain Nay saith hee In retam sancta deliberatio non habet locum there needs no deliberation in this case The like wee read in the History of France in the year 1572. presently after that tragical and perfidious slaughter massacre of so many thousands of Gods Saints by treacherous Papists Charls the ninth King of France called the Prince of Condo and proposed to him this choice Either to go to Mass or to die presently or to suffer perpetual imprisonment His noble answer was that by Gods help hee would never chuse the first and for either of the two latter her left to the Kings pleasure and Gods providence Thus a good conscience makes a good choice for it self chusing any thing rather than to offend God CHAP. X. Rules of Wisdome concerning the Affections THe fifth sort of rules for the inner man concerneth the Affections Rules concerning the affections 1 Give God the chief affections and hath these particulars 1 Delight thy self in the Lord and make him thy chief joy Psalm 37.4 For the object of our joy must not bee carnal but the Lord himself apprehending him as Gen. 17.1 El shaddi All-mighty to save All-sufficient to supply and a large portion our Sun our Shield Grace and Glory Psalm 84. Solomon having tried his heart with all other delights came at last to a recantation and so do all Gods children and say Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Psalm 4. 2 Labour to affect all other things in God and for God nothing like him 2 Affect all other things in God and for God much less above him or against him Psalm 34.8 Taste and see how good God is that is in all things labour to finde the sweetness of God in all his creatures and all his actions A wise man will not insist in the gift but look to the giver whose love hee prizeth more than the token of it If any affection make us unfit to pray or any way thrust us from God it is carnal 3 Let us labour to get our affections more to Heaven than earth 3 Fix them more upon Heavenly things than earthly Matth. 6.24 Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things which are above and not on things which are on earth where wee see plainly that these two cannot both have the affections set on them no more than two Masters served at once as also that it is not enough to affect heavenly things but also with chief affection and care in the first place Hence is that ordinary rule Verse 33. That spiritual things must bee affected and asked simply being simply good but temporal with limitation as being but conditionally good 4 Fear the evil of sin more than the evil of punishment 4 Fear evil of sin more than of suffering because the evil of sin is more evil Sin is simply evil and so is nothing else no not the punishment of it A wise man should rather chuse Hell than Gods offence for there is nothing but sin which God hateth and wee ought to hate nothing so much sin directly resisteth Gods glory but punishment makes for it in the manifestation of his justice 5 Bee affectionate one in the case and condition of another 5 Commiserate the afflicted estate of our brethren In case of spiritual misery sin weakness humane frailty Bee tender hearted one to another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Eph. 4.32 So Col. 3.12 Now Beloved as the Elect of God put on tender mercy kindness c one to another And in the temporal miseries of our brethren put on bowels of compassion bee not without natural affection forget not Josephs affliction Amos 6.6 but lend give cloath feed protect from violence and turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh The phrase Bowels of mercy shews that all our mercy must bee from within even from the tender compassions of the estate of our brother And the same in Isa 58.10 That wee pour out our souls to the needy that is our souls must first bee merciful and then our mercies will bee plentiful which is noted in the word Pouring CHAP. XI Rules of Wisdome for the outward man and first concerning his Calling NOw wee come to such rules of Wisdome as whereby the outward man is to bee ordered that wee may walk both toward our selves and others not as unwise but as wise and that by the Wisdome which is from above And these rules concern 1 His Calling 2 His Estate 3 His words 4 His actions Rules for the special calling 1 Live in a lawfull Calling Directions to walk wisely in his course and calling are these 1 Seeing the Calling is a part of Christian obedience and duty to God a Christian may neither live out a Calling nor in any Calling not warranted by Gods word For if God set us in our Callings hee promiseth both to bee with us in them and to give us good success and to help us against the tediousness of them Jos 1.8 Therefore sanctifie thy Calling and every part thereof 1 Tim. 4.5 1 Shew all good faithfulness in it by the Word and Prayer 2 In the whole exercise of our Calling wee must shew all good faithfulness 1 To God Hab. 1.16 Deut. 8.18 2 To our selves 1 To God by depending on him who hath made our Calling a chief means of our maintenance and not sacrificing to our own Nets For it is the Lord that gives power to get substance 2 To our selves by walking diligently and abiding in our Calling that wee may eat our own bread and provide for our selves and ours and give to him that needeth Eph. 4.28 For by idle and inordinate living through the neglect of the Vocation by Gods just judgement men fall into the depth of sin Drunkenness Gaming Whoredome Theeving and nothing
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which