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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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It 's Arg. 5. D●awn from the generall Resurrection of the Saints derived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 caput 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 videri it signifieth the looking for something with the lifting up of the head or strerching out of the neck with earnest intention and observation Thus doe the Saints long for the appearance of Christ Heb 9. 28. it 's not an ordinary looking for it 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Saints cry Rev. 22. 20. Come Lord Jesus The Saints looke for a better life 2 Cor. 15. 10. a howse not made with hands Their desire is to be dissolved and to be with Christ and when their bodies are in the grave their souls are in heaven They wait for a glorious resurrection and at the day of judgement it will be known who are Saints who are not Many that the world accounts hypocrites will prove reall Saints then Many that the world accoun●e●h Saints will then appear to be painted hypocrites Those whom the world hath falsly condemned shal then be acquitted and those whom the world hath unjustly acquitted shal then be condemned That Tribunal is impartial and just no false judgement can be given there no unjust sentence no wrong Verdict shall be given by that Judge wherefore the Saints long for that day they earnestly desire the appearance of Jesus Christ And these breathings and longings are not invain for the elects sake Christ hath promised to shorten these dayes of sin and misery The 6 and last argument shall be drawn from Gods glory To Arg. 6. Drawn from Gods glory this purpose was man created to glorify his maker unto all eternity Now God will be glorified either in our salvation or damnation God hath ordained mankind to an eternal condition either of happyness or misery Now God will glorify himself in the fight of men and Angels in an eminent manner at the day of judgement when Christ shall passe a sentence of eternal absolution and say Come ye blessed of my Father c. Then will be glorified the mercy of God when he shall say go yee cursed then will be glorified Gods justice Thus you have heard the Doctrinal part of the Text proved by Scripture and reason It now remains that I should improve all unto our consciences by some useful Application A 3 fold Use I shall now make of this Doctrine for reproof Instruction and consolation 1 Use For Reproof 1. For Reproof This brings heavy tidings to all ungodly persons who live as if there were neither death nor judgement heaven nor hell Because this great day is not yet come they put it far from them How soon a particular judgement may befal them as it did Korah Dathan and Abiram Sennacherib Herod and others none can tell And how soon the general judgement may come is a secret locked up in Gods Cabinet As for Prognosticators and Wizards who determine the time when we are not to put the least confidence in such presumptuous persons who are no better then the Devils Chaplains But here 's the great wickedness that people consider not how soon they may be surprized They have not this day in their thoughts drunkards swearers adulterers oppressours voluptuous persons they run on in their mad careere and think not of this day Flagitious profligate sinners adde iniquity unto iniquity and treasure unto themselves wrath against the day of wrath and the declaration of the righteous judgement of God against them What shall we say of hereticks and blasphemers who like that horne which was Antiochus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dan. 8. 12. which cast the truth to the ground Desperate hereticks are broke loose Socinians Familists Enthusiasts swarm like those flyes of Egypt and make the whole land to stinke But there will be a day of visitation a day of recompence all their varnishes pretexts and dissimulations will●ly open to the sight of men and Angels Manes Arrius and others met with dreadful particular judgements in this life However at the general judgement Macedonians that deny the Diviny of the Holy Ghost Arrians that deny the Divinity of Christ Circumcellians whose apes the Quakers are now adays and tread their steps all these shall appear before that judgement seat which they now dread not that God whom they now vilify shall judge them What shall we say of loose Libertines Jovialists Epicures dissolute livers who are mighty to powre in strong drink game and carouse away many pretious hours what shall we say of hypocrites who dawb juggle dissemble whose words are smoother then butter but within are sharp swords What shall we say of Apostates that desert their profession and relinquish their Principles and fly from Christs colours and fight under the banners of Arrius Macedonius Donatus or some of the same bran What shall we say of abominable livers Antinomians Athists and who overthrow Laws Rule Government and live as they list who run into all sorts of lasciviousness and follow sin with greediness Let me tell all such that they are already dead dead to God and goodness they are dead in sins and follow Satan their chief commander they dance after his pipe go when he bids go come when he bids come But a day of judgement will come then thou wilt be called to account for those cups which thou hast been mighty to poure down thy own throat and for those which thou hast forced on thy brother Then thou wilt be called to an account for thy secret whoredomes and abominations committed in the darke Then thou wilt be called to an account for those Sermons which thou hast scoffed at and gave no heed unto for those Sabboths which thou hast profaned and for all thy mispent time for all those precious seasons which thou hast squandred away All the creatures will bring in their Indictments against thee Imprimis For gluttony and drunkennesse thou hast eaten not for health but gluttony drunken not for strength but drunkenness The cloaths thou wearest will come against thee Thou spendest more for superfluities then would cloath many poor servants of Jesus Christ Thou followest thy fansy the Garbe and fashion of the time these thou art curious to observe and thou harkenest after all the new fashions but in the mean time considerest not how many of Gods children want cloaths for their nakedness All thy books in thy study shall come and witness against thee such great helps thou hadst such prices were put into thy hands but they were prices put into the hands of a fool for want of a heart to improve them All thy parts and gifts shall witness against thee thou hast hidden all thy talents in a napkin thou hast let thy gifts lye rusty for want of using All the Sermons Sabboths exhortations admonitions waytings treaties and striveings of the Holy Spirit will come and preferre a black bill of Indictment against thee who notwithstanding these pretious means yet didst not regard thy
as God and Christ are world without end Oh that God would work this consideration and set it home upon your serious thoughts that considering your life daily hastens to an end you might timely and seriously prepare for that life which shall never end The Lord give you grace to make the best use of this moment to beautify your soules to trim up your lampes to walke every day as if it were your last day that so when the Lord summons you by death you may have nothing to do but to die and with comfort and confidence you may breath out your soules into the armes of Jesus Christ Cons 6. There will ●e a day of Judgment 6. Consider there will be a day of judgment for soule and body There 's a day of visitation a day of accompt a generall Assize held for all the world 2 Cor. 5. 10. And Christ's coming is like a theefe in the night There 's a different sentence Matth. 25. viz. Come ye Blessed Go ye cursed A different place heaven and hell no medium no tertium Purgatory is a Popish dream If thou beest not purged here thou shalt never be purged hereafter Body and soule shall be reunited and either be companions in woe or blisse unto all eternity 7. Consider as death leaves thee so judgment will find thee As Cons 7. As Death leaves us so Judgment will find us the tree falls so it lies If thy soule be filthy and guilty and unwasht by the blood of Christ when separated from thy body it will ever so remain in that condition If thou diest unreconciled to Iesus Christ judgment will find thee so and so thou shalt remain even unto all eternity If sanctification be not begun yea and in some measure wrought in this world it will not be wrought in another If here thou hast not the first fruits of the spirit the hansell part of payment thou wilt never reape the whole harvest in another world If thou art not justifi'd by grace nor sanctified by the spirit nor acquitted by the bloud of Christ before thou departest this world death will give a returne unjustif'd unsanctify'd unacquitted and judgment will so find the returne and passe upon thee an irrevocable sentence O then be perswaded so to live as ye may have hope in your deaths and so to die as you would have judgment to find you judgment will neither find you better nor worse then death hath left you 8. Consider the riches of Gods mercy free love and grace abounds exceedingly That thou art yet alive on this side the grave Cons 8. The riches of free grace and mercy hell and judgment and God gives thee this gracious warning God might justly cut thee off in thy wickednesse and send thee to hell speedily But Oh! infinite patience and long suffering Now God expostulates why will ye die oh house of Israel God delights not in your blood see Acts 17. 30. Isai 55. 7. Isai 55. 1. God gives you warning sends his messengers to premonish you to bid you look to your sou●es It 's the whole drift and scope of Gods messengers to perswade you to have a speciall care of your soules Now you have food for your soules now you have sabbaths the desire of daies and many pretious Gospel opportunities It 's free grace you enjoy them For you have forfeited them all Oh! wonderfull mercy that God doth not take the forfeiture Consid 9. This may be the last warning 9. And lastly Consider this for ought any of us know may be the last warning that God will give any of us You may not live to hear another Sermon you may not live to enjoy another sabbath God may say to you because you loath this spirituall Mannah I 'le take it from you Because you misuse my messengers I 'le take them away from you Because you s●eight all the admoniti●ns and counsels for the good of your soule I 'le not have these pearles cast any more before you I will suffer my messengers no more to be abused my pearles no more to be trampled un●er foot this is the last warning I will give y●u my spirit shall no longer strive with you I 'le no longer stand and wait knocking at your dores Brethren we cannot promise to our selves a moment of time we have none of us a lease of our lives VVe are Tenants at will whether many or any shall live to heare any further warnings none of us can determine Let 's therefore be perswaded to look upon these counsels I have given you as for ought you know may be the last warning we may have And Oh! that God would give us grace to take warning VVeigh seriously in your most retired sad thoughts those 9 forementioned considerations and the Lord go along with them The 4th Use shall be for a strict triall and examination whether Use 4. For Examination we take care for our souls yea or no Ask the vilest of people what do ye not take care for your soules They will tell you t' were pitty else they should live But to undeceive the world I le propound some searching queries 1. Dost thou set a higher price of thy soule then all things under Qu. 1. the sun Dost thou foregoe pleasures profits father mother wife children the dearest and nearest relations when they come in competition with or opposition to thy soule Dost thou foregoe thy beloved sins thy constitution sins sins of profit antiquity delight Dost thou take up weapons against thy soules enemies and resolvest never to give over till thou returnest with the trophies of victorie If so it 's apparent that thou lovest thy soule 2ly Dost thou survey the windings diverticles and turnings Qu. 2. of thy soule Dost thou study to know thy soule it's angles and lurking places Dost thou reveiw the breaches in thy soule and endeavourest the reparation of them Dost thou take a twofold Candle the Candle of the word and the Candle of thy conscience and searchest into the meanders recesses and most inward corners of thy soule This is a signe that thou hast a care of thy soule 3ly Dost thou keep strict watch and sentinell over thy soule Qu. 3. Dost thou watch over thy thoughts words and actions As watchmen examine passengers so dost thou examine thy heart call thy selfe to account for vain thoughts misplaced words evill actions and when thou findest them dost thou labour to exterminate them and to execute justice on them Dost thou watch against vagrant lusts not willing to give entertainment to straglers but as thou findest them thou casheerest them if so this is a signe that thou takest care of thy soule 4. Dost thou endeavour to wash and cleanse thy soule A pure Qu. 4. fountain is stil a purging Dost thou purge out thy corruptions Dost thou lament over thy soule for sin water thy couch with thy teares and as sin comes and corruption surprizeth thee art
lives and keep strict Luk. 16. 2. sentinell over both That saying give an account of thy stewardship should be still ringing in the ears of Ministers Governours and Tutors We shall one day be called to an account let 's labour to be faithfull Stewards that so we may give up our account with joy and not sorrow It 's a known story that the young man committed by Euseb Hist the Apostle to the Elders care was dissolute and a companion of Theives and is there termed a dead man i. e. dead to God and goodness O let it not be our default our negligence that any under our charge are dead souls As the Captain beseeched that his life and the life of his fifty might be pretious in the Prophets eyes 2 Kings 1. 13 Whe her we have more or fewer let their souls be pretious and let us put forth our selves in all our places and capacityes to give one another a lift toward heaven A day of judgment is coming let that be a Frontlet before our eyes upon this consideration let Christians doe brotherly offices and manifest their love to the souls of their brethren Hereupon we are exhorted to avoid rash judgment Rom. 14. 10. 1 Cor. 4. 5. There 's wisdome understanding consideration all joyned together Deut. 32. 22. It s a patheticall speech and he 's a wiseman in the esteem of the Holy Ghost who considers his of latter end We should all of us fix this meditation upon our hearts entertain serious thoughts what will become of our our precious souls to all Eternity Will not a day of Judgement come May not thou or I be summon'd forthwith at that impartial Tribunal This being so What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness In the second place to confirm the Point by evidence of Reason why the consideration of the Day of Judgement should engage us unto holiness 1. Because onely holy persons shall be able to stand in Judgement Reas 1. Because only holy persons shall stand in Judgement When the wicked the Goats that stand on the left hand and shall wish that the Hills might ●all on them and that the mountains might cover them from the face of the Lamb Then shall the godly lift up their heads and behold Christ who is their Judge their Redeemer This comforted Job on the Dung-hill Rev. 20. 6. Job 19. 25. Matth. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. I Know that my Redeemer liveth They that are holy here shall be happy to all eternity They onely shall be partakers of the blessed Vis●on Now it s much controverted whether the Saints shall have their sins mentioned at all at the day of Judgement some conceive that their sins shall be brought in onely as a cancell'd ●ond others are of opinion that they shall be mentioned that Gods mercy may the more be glorified in the greatness of the Pardon And others say they shall not be mentioned at all because in several Scriptures the Lord saith He will remember their sins no more and that he will c●st all our sins into the depth of the Sea and that he casteth Isa 43. 25. Mich. 7. 19. Isa 38. 17. our sins behinde his back without all controversie that shall be done that conduceth most to ●ods glory and their happiness There 's no condemnation to the Saints the day of Judgement will be a day of refreshing to them an addition to their happiness soul and body being re-united and made companions in bliss unto all ●ternity Seeing then holy persons shall be able to look the Judge in the face since they onely shall stand in judgement the consideration of this great day should sink deep into our hearts and make deep impression upon our spirits exciting alluring and prevailing with us to a sanctified life and conversation 2. ●ecause the time of this life is the onely Season appointed 2 Reas This is the present time by God to labor after holyness The Exhortation runs in the present ●ense 1 Pet. 1. 15. 1 John 3. 3. Q. 3. But can we be perfectly holy A. We must have perfection of parts i. e. Sincerity In Heaven there will be perfection of degrees we must have truth of holyness we must begin here and strive after more In Heaven we shall attain the complement thereof we may not content our selves with what we have attained unto but we must labor after perfection pressing forward toward the mark for the price of the high calling that is in Jesus Christ as Id qui faciunt fructum colligent satione sua dignum coacervabunt enim quod male dispereat Calv in loc Gal. 6. 8. the Apostle did Phil. 3. 14. Now then consider the time of this life is the Seed-time the Harvest is reserved in Heaven As you sow so you shall reap If you sow to the flesh you shall of the flesh reap corruption if you sow to the spirit you shall of the spirit reap life everlasting Therefore in your most serious thoughts consider that you deal for life and immortallity your negotiations are for the great things of Eternity In this World in this present time of life you must labor to be holy Purgatory is a Blasphemous Popish dream No purgation left for another World No Prayer no Sermon will work upon thee after this life Here then holyness is wrought lay these things to heart 3. Because Judgement returns us just as death leaves us As the 3. Reas Because judgment returns us as death lest us Tree falls so it lies and as death leaves us so judgement will finde us He that is filthy let him be filthy still He that dies unreconciled to Jesus shall be so returned The day of Judgement is most impartially just in all proceedings And Judgement returns none neither better nor worse but as death leaves them Now then if thou livest and diest in an unregenerate estate so thou wilt remain unto all Eternity After death no tears no crys will prevail There 's no door of hope the damned are without hope and this heightens their misery Time is past time is past The Judge hath vail'd his face having past a Sentence irrevo cable No● whilest you are alive on this side Hell and Eternity there 's hope left you are under the sound of the Gospel and the Ambassado● are sent offering unto you terms of reconciliation We pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O follow after holyness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pursue it hard give not over This day is a working 2 Cor. 5. 20. Heb. 12. 14. day and it 's but short a day of Judgement which is a day of restitution and recompense is approaching So live as you desire to die Do you desire to be happy in your deaths Labor to live holy in your lives Thus much for the Doctrinal part Now to set all home by particular Application I have five Uses to make of this Doctrine
win soules The fruite of the righteous c. Now the text presents you with the most choice and excellent fruite of a righteous man the winning of soules The text is an entire categoricall proposition consisting of a subject praedicat copula Division 1. The Person Or rather 1. Here 's a person set down definitely It may be applied to the Ministers of God eminenter for it 's their peculiar office and maine designe to gaine soules to God yet not exclusivè It 's every ones dutie to doe all the offices of love they can and especially to consult and endeavour the mutuall good of each other soules 2. Here 's the worke set downe to win or take in or gaine soules 2. The Worke. The Metaphor may be drawn from a souldier who hath fought valiantly and won the field so must he that wins soules take up armes against the flesh the Devill and the world against principalities and powers and spirituall wickedn●sse in high places And this spirituall souldier must never give over 'till he returne away with the trophies of victory Or else the Metaphor may be tooke from a fowler who takes fowles in a net So he that will winne soules must spread the net of the Gospell And if the government of soules as Gregory saith Artium Ars est Regimen Animarum Greg. de Pastor curâ 3. The Object soules be of all other arts the excellent'st certainly the winning of soules must be a superexcellent Art all other arts the excellent'st 3. Here 's the object soules immortall heavenly-borne-being-soules the image of God the very breath of God inspired in our creation of more value then all the world the purchase and ransome of Jesus Christ The excellency of this noble object makes the victory more glorious and the conquerour more renowned To winne a strong castle a towne a kingdome is the glory of the conquerour but to winne a soule to God is a farre greater glory It 's the gallantest piece of service in all the world to winne soules to Jesus Christ 4. And lastly Here 's the commendation high Elogium or a sacred 4. The Commendation Panegyrick which is given to him that doth this great worke He is wise It 's a great question where wisdome is to be found Job 28. 12 13. the determination of all is vers 28 The feare of the Job 28. 12 13. 1 Cor. 1. 20. Lord is wisdome c. and it s a great question with Paul 1 Cor. 1. 20. where is the wise where is the scribe Now both these questions may be resolved from the text it s a point of wisdome to gaine soules and hee s a wise man that 's a practitioner in this soule saving art This is the wise man a man of a pretious anointing an interpreter one of a thousand whose eyes are in his head whose wisdome is taught of God And the declaration of this wisdome is that Argument whereon I fix as a word spok●nin due season which can never be enough taught never enough learn'd The Lord make it as profitable as it is seasonable The words of the text in terminis are a doctrine But in relation to what went before thus I shall propound it to you Doctrine That it 's a choice fruit of wisdome to win soules unto God For my more methodicall progres in unfolding this point I shall propose these familiar heads of discouse Method 1. To assert this positive truth and give in the proofe thereof 2. Describe the Character of him who is likeliest to win soules And 3ly Draw forth some inferences of practise as may best conduce to the better ordering of your lives and conversations Those shall constitute the doctrinall part of my text this last the use and application and these shall be the bounds and limits of my ensuing meditations I resume the enlargement of the first head propounded And for proofe of the point I shall consider it under a double demonstration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it is so The Apostle James distinguisheth 1. Head 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That it is so Jam. 1. 15 17. of a twofold wisdome Earthly and Heavenly and by their fruits you may know them James 1. 15 17. Now humane earthly wisdome hath no part nor portion in this worke It 's above the sphere and cognizance of secular learning to reveale the knowledge of Jesus Christ A man may attaine unto as great knowledge as ever Aristotle or Plato had and yet be an Ignoramus in the mystery of Christs reconciliation such a mans naturall parts are too good to goe to hell with him he shall be degraded of them before and so shall miscarry to all eternity The wisdome that we speake of is divine wisdome such alone as can make us wise unto salvation This is not taught in Aristotles Lycaeum nor Zenoe's Stoa or Plato's Academy but only in the schoole of Jesus Christ He then must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man taught of God who is a good proficient in this soule winning art To drive this spirituall trade to negotiate for soules to be instrumentall in the conversion of soules It 's the greatest worke in all the world Now that this is such an excellent peece of wisdome I shall prove it by an induction of particulars such as have put it in practise themselves are fittest to give testimony to this truth First and above all I shall instance in him who is the wisdome of his Father the Lord Jesus Christ stiled a Counsellor for his wisdome He was employed about his Fathers businesse Luke 2 40. And what was his businesse but to save that which was lost Matth. 18. 11. He professeth that he was sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel Matth. 10. 6. He came to call sinners to repentance Luk. 5. 32. You may read the great employment of Christ in his Ministery Luk. 4. 18. Christ went about doing good speaking of the things of the Kingdome Christ is our peace Ephes 2. 4. And the great mystery of the Gospell is declared in this work of reconciliation Next to instance in the Apostles however in the Judgment of the Councell Acts 4. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet these the Lord made instrumentall to confound the wisdome of the wife By their Ministry the Lord converted multitudes of soules 3000 at one Sermon Act. 2. 41. Further I 'le instance in Paul whose desire was transcendent for their salvation Rom. 10. 1. See his protestation 1 Cor. 2. 2. See his judgment 1 Cor. 1. 20 21 23. Compare this with the first of Cor. 2. 6 7 8. Paul that great Doctor of the Gentiles bred up at the feet of Gamaliel a man of great learning gives Christ the preheminence undervalues every thing for Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3. 8. Be they the most exquisite Arts and Sciences riches honours pleasures
Churches of Asia onely Laodicea Rev. 3. 16 19. excepted because they wanted zeal they were luke-warm neither cold nor hot and therefore God will spew them out of his mouth Wherefore God commands the Angel or Minister of the Church v. 19. Be zealous and repent He that will gain souls must have his heart boyling in zeal to Gods glory Paul when he came to Athens and observing their Superstition was not afraid of the Philosophers encounter neither was he mealy-mouthed for all their reproaches but tells them plainly to their faces Ye men of Athens I Acts 17. 22. perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious Sin must not be connived at though in Athens nay rather the more to be reproved because in such a place eminent for Learning more is given and more is to be required and he that knoweth his masters will and doth it not shall be beat●n with more stripes Who can refrain speaking in the cause of God unless he be spiritually stupified and have a dumb Devil within him It was Luthers brave resolution to go to Melch. Ad. in vira Lutheri Wormes and preach the Gospel though every tile was a Devil to oppose him However zeal may be censured for phrenzy it s but the same Livery that Festus bestowed on Paul And thou mayest urge Pauls Apology I am not mad but speak forth the words of truth and soberness Act. 27. 24 25. And resolve with David if to be zealous for God be accounted vileness resolve to be more vile 5. He that would win souls must be a man of knowledge Charact. 5. He must be a man of kn●wledge Where God gives a calling he furnisheth men with a competent measure of gifts for the discharge thereof Blinde guides Ignoramusses are none of Gods sending They run before they are sent Prophets were called Seers and the Priestslips should preserve knowledge As the Mal. 2. 7. Priest under the Law so the Minister under the Gospel must be a man of knowledge How should the Minister be able to grapple with the Hydra of Heresies to contend for the Faith to convince gain-sayers unless he be a man of knowledge There 's much use of secular Learning Arts and Sciences are Hand-maids to Divinity As long as they keep their distance they contract a good esteem but if the Hand-maid will have the preheminence of her Mistress 't is high time she should be casheered And there 's exceeding great use of Nurseries of Learning and Schools of the Prophets But here 's the knowledge which above all others you must get even the knowledge of Jesus Christ All the Fathers and Schoolmen and philosophers though in their due place they must be reverenced yet all their Learning put together cannot make you gainers of Souls It s Christ alone that can do it He can infuse Divine knowledge and give you eye-Salve as he promiseth Rev. 3. 18. He can give you that Vnction whereby you shall know all things This is a rare 1 Iohn 2. 20. knowledge to know how to gain a soul This onely is to be learnt in the School of Jesus Christ 6. He must be a man Orthodox in judgement one that hath the Charact. 6. He must be a man Orthodox in judgement Spirit of discerning to understand the ways of God able to distinguish truth from falshood otherwise being blinde and ignorant the blinde leading the blinde both must fall into the ditch God goeth not forth with the Ministry of false Teachers They may deceive souls but cannot gain them unless in that sense which is said that the Scribes and Pharisees did which compassed sea and land to gain a Proselyte and when he is made he becomes seven Matth. 23. 15. times worse the childe of the devil then before Such a gain is a dreadful loss not a winning but a destroying of souls It should therefore be our principal business to study the Scriptures and to be well grounded in the truth to be stedfast and setled in the faith not being carried about with every winde of Doctrine by the slight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive Eph. 4. 14. There are three emphatical words in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Dye counterfeit Teachers imitate counterfeit Gamesters they can cog a Dye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every work any trick any shift 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a wiley art of legerdemane To be fenced against these what need have we to pray for a spirit of discerning to know the truth and to have our hearts stablisht with grace as the Apostle exhorts Heb. 13. 9. 7. He must be a man of an holy life and exemplary conversation 7. He must be a man of a boly life Concionatoris vita Concionis anima Gregory de Pastorali curâ tells us Necesse est ut esse munda studeat manus quae diluere aliorum sordes curat That hand must be clean that 's imployed in wiping of others filthiness The Exhortation is urgent Isa 52. 11. Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord. A good life is a good Commentary upon a good Sermon The Apostle is earnest in his Exhortations Rom. 2. 21. Thou that teachest others teachest thou not thy self c. Ministers lives should be standing Sermons their whole conversation a pattern of Piety They are Beacons set upon an Hill the eye of the whole Countrey is upon them As the godly observe So the eye of the wicked watch for their halting ready to make them an offender for a word It 's a common observation that the contention of Abrahams and Lots Herdsmen hath a greater aggravation because the Canaanite was then in the Land The observation of the wicked Gen. 13. 7. is not a small motive to engage us unto circumspect walking The very breathings of a Minister should be spiritual full of grace in his lips ministring grace to the hearers his words savory tending to edification his carriage serious grave exemplary adorning his Profestion as becometh the Gospel What an efficacy hath a good Phil. 1. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sermon when it s backt with an holy life and conversation We should therefore pray for a serious heavenly frame of spirit 8. He that would win souls must be a man of industry This is Charact. 8. He must be a man of industry that Apostolical Character To be a work-man that needeth not to be ashamed 2 Tim. 2. 15. Christ admits no Truants in his School no Droans in his Hive no Loyterers in his Vineyard It 's said The lab●r●r not the loyterer is worthy of his hire Ministers are in Scripture called Pastors Seers Watch-men Work-men It s a palpable contradiction for to be a Pastor and not to feed a Seer and to be blinde a Watchman and to sleep and a Work-man to be idle Pharaoh bids Joseph set any of his Brethren that were men
similitudes there lay a mysterious meaning Christ spake with authority not as the Scrib●s each word had weight Whereupon people hearing things which they never heard before were eager and restless in their desires until they understood the Parable and the interpretation thereof The fourth and last Reason I shall mention why Christ preacht R. 4. in Parables was because this was a more prevalent convincing way of Preaching when Reproofs or Exhortations are delivered in Parables under the name of a third person they gain more well-come and acceptable entertainment Thus Nathan reproved David by a Parable of the Ewe-Lamb and set his reproof home by a Prosopopeia David hearing of the rich mans cruelty in taking the poor mans Lamb passeth sentence of death upon him and a fourfold restitution because he had no pitty Now David was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemned 2 Sam. 12. 5. 6. out of his own mouth Whereupon Nathan strikes whilst the Iron is hot by making particular Application of the Parable unto David Thou art the man This was a convincing way of Preaching And thus ought the Ministers of Christ to put in practice the most convincing way of Preaching whether in a way of Mercy or Judgement whether to come with a rod or the spirit of meekness whether to be Boanergesses or Barnabasses The most taking winning way we must use Provided always that we make the word of God our just Standard and rule to go by so that we may win souls unto Jesus Christ Now to draw nearer to the words In this Chapter there are delivered sundry choice and excellent Parables as of the sower and the seed a grain of mustard-seed leaven hid in three measures of meal a casting-net I pass from these unto that which hath immediate reference unto my Text v. 44. The Gospel of Christ is a Treasure and the Scripture is that pretious seed where that Treasure is to be found Neither can every one finde it or know the worth of it It 's a hidden Treasure The worth of the Gospel is unknown by and hidden from unbelievers But the true Believer who sindes it 2 Cor. 4. 3. Luk 2. 19. and knoweth the worth of it hides it i. e. he keeps it safe in the secretest recesses of his heart he hides it as Mary did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that hath discovered the incomparable Treasure of the Gospel doth not conceal or suppresse the knowledge thereof from others But first he 'll inrich himself therewith upon the finding of the Treasure he 's so ravisht with joy and so transported with a desire after the purchase as without delay demurs dodgings or abatements he sells all he hath to purchase the field and get possestion of it Now my Text is a further prosecution and confirmation of this Parable The first word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 again specifies a dependance upon what went before Expect no curiosity in dividing the words You have here propounded a Parable and its Interpretation 1. For the Parable and therein are to be considered these six Divis A Parable and its interpretation particulars 1. The Subject compared or ground-work of the comparison The kingdom of Heaven 2. The subject of this comparison or Person spoken of and he is decyphered by his external profession and occupation A Merchant man 3. You have set down what he trafficks for his particular Merchandize He 's not a petty Merchant of small wares and mean Commodities but a Merchant of Pearls And because there 's a difference in Pearls Aliae nobiles aliae minus generosae some are of a greater some of a cheaper estimation he trades for the best not ordinary common but goodly Pearls 4. The success he findes His labor is not lost but answered with good successe a particular instance or specification of his successe is that he findes goodly Pearls 5. What doth he finde of greatest value He findes a Pearl of superlative invaluable price A Pearl beyond compare of more worth then all other Pearls whatsoever and that is The Pearl of price 6. and lastly Here 's set down what the purchase cost him and that 's all that he had Thus far of the bare letter of the Parable according to the dark part of it But there 's a mystical meaning to be considered let 's take off the veil and give in the interpretation I shall open the terms in that order they lie in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By Kingdom of Heaven in this place is plainly set forth the administration of the Gospel It 's call'd the Kingdom of Heavens in the plural alluding to the other Heaven the habitation of glorified Scopus est commendare Evangel●ū piis à singulari praestanuâ eâdemque opera dicere qu●nti Evangelium a piis fiat Pis●at Saints and Angels The Gospel of Christ is that Heaven on Earth which will bring us to that Heaven above Piscator observes on the place The scope of all is this to inhance the incomparable worth and estimation of the Gospel in the hearts of the godly It followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Merchant man This Merchant is every true believer who drives a continual trade for Heaven who is industrious and indefatigable in his labors He seeks after faith repentance holyness of life the kingdom of God and his righteousness the reconciled countenance of God in the face of Jesus Christ These are the Jewels for which he searcheth This is his sole imployment to negotiate Instar negociatorum debent conquirere pretiosas Margaritas fidel pietatis Pareus in loc for Heaven He trades not for trifles but weighty precious Commodities His merchandize is particularized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goodly Pearls the Pearls of faith and holyness as Pareus on the place The Gospel holds forth goodly Pearls goodly Promises goodly Ordinances goodly Graces a goodly recompense of reward the beauty thereof will enamor the soul and the Treasure therein contained will more enrich it then all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them And what success he had you may see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Pearl of great price is Jesus Christ The Gospel is the Cabinet Margarites as Pliny and other Historians observe are produced out of the dew of Heaven and Shell-fishes draw in that dew They are called Vniones because usually they are found two by two unsevered in the same shell And that which is last to be opened is the price paid to purchase this invaluable Pearl Quis magno emit Margaritam nisi cui notum est pretium Mucul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 None will buy this Pearl who knows not the price saith Musculus T is evident that this Spiritual Merchant was a man of knowledge The knowledge of the worth of Christ made him so willing to sell all for him He stands not dodging and cheapning hoping to bring down the price he knoweth Christ to be
again Faith meets with many delays yet it is not querulous it waits it stays at the Fathers door it will not be driven away A faithfull soul believes God upon his word God saith The Vision shall come the Believer saith I have enough I 'le here cast anchor it 's good being here The Promise is my strong hold like Sampsons Locks here my great strength lies because it will surely come it will not tarry The Decree and Counsel of God never delays God knows every minute of time and gives a quick dispatch unto his work Faith believes it though sense cannot apprehend it though as I intimated before the execution of the Decree according to particular effects and operations may seem to delay Here then is the tryal of our Faith and patience and here 's a word most seasonable to Preach and practice in these days of Jacob's troubles when the Vision or the word seems to be dark and to tarry I shall winde up all into one bottom and from the scope and substance of them lay this one intire Doctrine for the foundation of my Discourse That in troublesome times when the vision is dark and seems to tarry Doct. then in a peculiar manner we should wait upon God for the accomplishment thereof For proof hereof we have copious testimonies of Scripture I Isa 8. 17. Isa 26. 8. 18. will wait upon the Lord that hideth his face from the house of Jacob and will look for him In the way of thy Judgements O Lord have we waited on thee the desire of our soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee We have been with childe we have been in pain we have as it were brought forth wind we have not wrought any deliverance in the M●cah 7. 7. earth Therefore I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation my God will hear me For the Methodical inlargement of this precious truth I shall Method propounded propound these Heads of Discourse which shall constitute my ensuing Meditations 1. To explicate the nature of waiting what it is to wait upon God 2. To illustrate the duty from the practices of the Saints in the like case 3. To demonstrate the truth of the Point from convincing rational arguments And fourthly To reduce all to point of practice by way of useful application I resume the first Head propounded to open the nature of Faith 1. What it is to wait upon God and waiting on God The inquiry is What it is to wait upon God The Answer which I shall give to this particular Inquiry shall be comprised in this description Waiting is a chearful submission of our wills to the will of God whereby the soul rests in hope exerciseth faith expects with patience and improves a diligent use of means for the obtaining of a good end This description is made of these five following Ingredients 1. It 's the Christians duty to wait chearfully Swine roar when they 1. We must wait chearfully have rings put into their noses Bulls and Bears cry out and roar when they are baited and Slaves howl when they are beaten with rods But Christians are of another temper Good children kiss the rod that beats them Not onely so saith Paul but we glory in tribulations knowing that tribulation worketh patience And saith Rom. 5. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 James the trying of your faith worketh patience Likewise the Apostle mentions For ye had compassion of me in my b●nds and took joyfully James 1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 10. 34. the● spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that ye have in heaven a better and an induring substance Murmuring repining and reviling Language must not be heard amongst Christians God loves a chearful giver and a chearful waiter too Hannah felt some spiritual illapse something coming in as an answer to her Prayers and her countenance was cheared up she was no more sad And she said Let thine hand-maid finde grace in thy sight soe the woman went her way 1 Sam. 1. 18. and did eat and her countenance was no more sad You read of the singular chearfulness of the Martyrs how they kissed the stake wellcom'd Fire and Faggot embraced the Flames What a sweet chearful frame of spirit did they discover amidst their greatest sufferings and were no whit daunted by the utmost cruelty of their Adversaries It would ravish a Christians heart to peruse the Letters of Mr. Bradford that holy Martyr then whom as I apprehend never man wrote more sweetly and manifested more chearfulness under the Rod. To rush upon trouble to be forced to sufferings and to say I will bear it because I cannot otherwise choose and to murmur and rail against such and such Instruments this is not thank-worthy But to make a vertue of necessity and to bear thy Cross chearfully to abound in inward consolations amidst outward troubles to have thine heart inlarged though thy body be Imprisoned to smile in affliction because God smiles upon thee even when he beats thee this is the glory of thy suffering And whensoever God hides his face from us and clouds his gracious countenance let us with all alacrity wait upon him and learn to bear chearfully his dealings with us A second ingredient is That it is the duty of Believers to wait submissively 2. We must wait submissively upon God It 's not enough to say I must submit I must be content but to say I will submit I will be content that argueth a submissive spirit and not the other Shall a Zeno say after he Jam didici philosophari Zeno. had suffered Ship-wrack Now I have learn'd to be a Philosopher Shall an Anaxagoras say after the news of the death of his Son Now I Scio me genuisse mortalem Anaxag 1 Sam. 3. 18. 2 Kings 20. 19. know I begat a mortal Son And shall Christians presume to contest with God and grudge against their Maker We should say with Eli It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good with Hezekiah Then said Hezekiah unto Isaiah Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken and with Job The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away Blessed Job 1. 21. Levit. 10. 3. be the name of the Lord. Imitate Aaron Moses said unto Aaron this is it that the Lord spake saying I will be sanctified in them that come nigh me and before all the people I will be glorified and Aaron held his peace David profest I was dumb and opened not my mouth because Psal 39. 9. Amos 5. 13. thou didst it And remember the counsel of the Prophet Therefore the prudent shall keep silence in that time for it is an evil time It 's not meant that we should be tongue-tyed in the cause of God for if we speak not when Gods glory suffers it 's a sign that we have a dumb Devil within us But true Believers which judge
and pray Isa 26. 16 20. wrestling of tugging hard at the Ore This God looks for and his people have practiced Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a Prayer when thy chastning was upon them Come my people enter thou into thy ●hambers and shut thy doors about thee hide thy self as it were for a little moment until the indignation be over-past We are in an afflicted condition and the counsel of the Apostle is Is any among you afflicted let him pray We are sick and wounded The same James 5. 13. Apostle prescribes Confess your faults one unto another and pray one James 5. 16. for another that ye may be healed the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much There 's a dreadful tempest the ship is a sinking we had need be awakened and cry unto God we had need pray Lord save us or else we perish This God expects Thus saith Ezek. 36. 37. the Lord God I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them I will increase them with men like a flock This duty of Prayer hath a commanding vertue The expression is very high Thus Isa 45. 11. saith the Lord the holy One of Israel and his Maker ask me of things to come concerning my sons and concerning the works of my hands command ye me This is Solomons Pharmachum Catholicum even a Medicine for all diseases O pray pray rowl your selves in the dust you deal for a Kingdom you deal for the Church the Gospel and its Ordinances for the lives of millions pray then in good earnest and joyn fasting with waiting Antichrist is a strong Devil this kinde goeth not out but by fasting and prayer 2. Wait and study the Scriptures Affliction saith Luther makes us Means 2. Wait and study the Scriptures understand Scripture we understand now what is meant by confusion and desolation Compare the times of Habakkuk with our times and they come very near they answer one another as face answereth to face Such a dark vision is now as was then Let us study and search whether the Witnesses be slain or no If they be slain then we may expect glorious times if not worse are to be looked for As far as I can apprehend by comparing Scripture with Scripture though it 's difficult to determine by the Witnesses are meant the Magistracy and Ministry Compare Rev. 11. 4. with Zech. 4. 3. and 14. These are the two olive trees and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth So in the Revelations And in Zechary we read And two olive trees by it one upon the right side of the bowl and the other upon the left side thereof Then said he these are the two anointed ones that stand by the Lord of the whole earth I determine nothing in this doubtful case but the great contempt cast upon both Magistracy and Ministry and greater yet is to be feared even throughout all Kingdoms makes it probable that the time of their slaughter draweth nigh We may not be over-curious in fixing particular times lest we incur the same check for our curiosity as they did It is not for you to know the times or the seasons which the Father hath put Acts 1. 7. in his own power 3. Wait upon God in his Ordinances Yet you have them and Means 3. Wait upon God in his Ordinances Isa 30. 20. blessed be God vve yet have a nail left us in the publick Assembly That Prophecy is made good That though the Lord give you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction yet shall not thy teachers be removed into a corner any more but thine eyes shall see thy Teachers Yet we have a publick Vision The voice of the Turtle is yet heard in our Land Let 's wait at these Bethesdah's at the Posts of Wisdoms Gate we should mourn for the great contempt that is cast upon Ordinances and because others slight them we our selves should learn to esteem them highly frequent them diligently and pray that God would teach us to profit by them The Word Sacraments Sabbaths Meditations Conference are advantagious Ordinances even the food of our souls Take away meat and drink and you starve the Body Take away Ordinances and you slarve the Soul Wait and treasure up your experiences Review and call to Means 4. Wait and treasure up your experiences minde the mercies of old what God hath done for you in former times Thou hast known a Famine God hath provided for thee then Thou hast been in great straits and dangers and God hath delivered thee at that time Thou hast been at the Graves mouth and a sentence of death seemed to pass against thee God hath restored thee to tell his Praises and to bless his Name Thou hast known Troubles Tumults and Commotions in the Kingdom and God hath quieted and composed them Thus then argue God is the same God he is in Heaven still and doth whatsoever he pleaseth he is as willing as able as merciful as ever He sets bounds to the Seas and stills the raging of the people He is not changed with the change of time Christ is the same yesterday to day and the same for ever Though we are out of order yet his Covenant Heb. 13. 8. 2 Sam. 2● 5. is ordered Though we are transient yet his Covenant is everlasting Wait in the right season Now is the season perilous and a time Means 5. Wait in the right season of waiting Times of afflictions are waiting times When all seem against thee and thou canst not tell how to conclude from such premises as were unheard of before Now wait and be silent Be silent O all flesh before the Lord for he is raised out of his holy Zech. 2. 13. habitation Be far from murmurings and responsations against God Thou must wait upon God in the way of his Judgements yea in Isa 26. 8. the way of thy Judgements O Lord have we waited for thee The desire of our soul is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee Sixthly and lastly Joyn reformation with waiting I press not Means 6. Joyn reformat●on with watching all this while a lazy idle waiting a folding thy hands in thy bosom but a working waiting Wait and purge thy conscience Trim up thy soul for the entertainment of Jesus Christ God will not come into a Cage of unclean Birds The soul must be purified Mercy follows Reformation at the heels Deliverance followeth Reformation Many days of Humiliation we have had and when one is done we had need have another to bewail the failings of the former So that many harvests are past and many Summers ended and we are not saved But if there was one day of through Reformation the business would be done God would be intreated for the Land We may justly fear that the Commission given to the Sword is not yet called back
Fountaine is opened and men apprehend their thirst they will hasten to the waters 4. The fountaine is opened because God sends messengers to 4. God sends Messengers to invite invite and guides to direct to it The ministers Embass●e is to invite men and women to come unto this Fountaine to perswade them to reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead to bee reconciled unto God It 's our maine business to beseech and intreat men to take Christ and to come unto this fountaine 5. Now is the day of grace the opportunity season offered from 5. Now is the day of grace God a price put into our hands Now Christ tenders himselfe and his benefits Now the counsel is a word in due season Isai 55. 6 7. Seek yee the Lord while hee may bee found and call upon him while hee is near Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and hee will have mercy 6. The Lord opens to us upon him and to our God for hee will abundantly pardon 6. The Lord himselfe now opens to us and this is evident because hee knocks for us to open to him Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand 6. The Lord opens to us at the dore and knock if any man heare my voice and open the dore I will come in unto him and I will sup with him and he with mee And the Lord affords us severall Hammers to knock at his dore withall viz. especially 4. Hammers God useth to knock withall 1. The Hammer of his word Every sermon you heare is a 1. Hammer of the word knocking at the do●res of your hearts God makes use of his Messengers as his mouth Jer. 15. 19. Thou shalt stand before mee and if thou take forth the precious from the vile thou shalt bee as my mouth However the Ministers of God be despised and evill intreated Christ accounts the affronts offered to them equall to those hee met withall immediately offered unto himselfe Luk 10. 10. But into whatsoever City you enter and they receive you not goe out into the streets of the same and say even the very dust of your City that cleaveth on us wee shak off against you By the sermons you heare God knocks at your hearts Ezek. 25. and Ezek. 33. 30 31 32 33. They speak each one to another saying Come and heare what is the word that commeth forth from the Lord they sit before thee as my people and heare thy wordes but will not doe them 2. The hammer of his spirit The spirit breatheth upon the waters 2. Hammer of the spirit How many strivinges waitings whispers of the spirit are there to draw us unto God Wee are exhorted not to quench the spirit nor grieve the spirit The Lord will once say as Gen. 6. 3. My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man 3. The Hammer of mercies God knocks at our hearts by mercies peace prosperity Ther 's a prevalent exhortation Rom. 12. 1. 3. Hammer of mercies I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service To us he speakes by mercies Wee are brands pluckt out of the burning and have our lives for a prey 'T is mercy wee enjoy peace in our Borders wee are free as yet from the Plague Famine and the sword wee enjoy the peace of the Gospell and the Gospel of peace 4. God knockes sometimes by the Hammers of judgment sometimes 4. The Hammer of Judgments by the Sword Plague and other Calamities though at present we are free our duty is Jer. 6. 8. Bee thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soule depart from thee lest I make thee desolate and a land not inhabited Wee should learne righteousness at all times especially when judgments are amongst us Isai 26. 9. With my soule have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within mee will I se●k thee earely for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learne righteousness Micah 6. 9. Heare yee th● rod who hath appointed it It appeares farther that the fountaine is opened because God God affords the right key One false key is Free-will hath afforded us the right keys to open it There are three false keyes and foure true keyes The first false Key is free-will O saith the sinner I le repent hereafter I shall have time enough But is repentance in thy power Velle naturae malè velle corruptae naturae b●ne velle gratiae Phil. 2. 13. For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that wee should bee a kind of first fruites of his Creatures Free-will is an Aegyptian reed it will deceive us Jer. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walk●th to direct his steps Sams●ns case is very observable Judg. 16. 20. And shee said the Philistines be upon thee Samson and hee awoke out of sleep and said I will goe out as at other times before and shake my selfe and he wist not that the Lord was departed from him Man can undoe himselfe and marre himselfe but cannot save himselfe Hos 13. 9. O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in me is thy help 2. A second false key is universal grace and redemption Christ died A 2d false key is universal Redemption for all say some tasted death for every man for Cain and Judas as well as David and Paul many plead and think by this key to open the Fountaine but it 's a false key and will not unlock the fountain Dore. The latter part of the Text which they urge expounds the former they urge Joh. 316. God so loved the world that hee gave his only begotten-Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have life everlasting And that in 2 Cor. 5. 15. And that hee died for all But what followeth that they which live should not h●nceforth live unto themselves but unto him who died for them and rose againe They urge likewise Heb. 2. 9. But wee see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the grace of God should tast death for every man The grace and free love of God moved him to bestow this transcendent benefit on his people only not for the whole world Rom. 5. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life Here is hended the universality of Christ's body Adam was a common
Root and brought death unto all his Posterity And Christ was a common Root and brought life unto all his Posterity They urge likewise Joh. 1. 29. Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world A. Those in the world whom he loveth washeth and justifieth it 's not universall not singula gen●rum but genera singulorum Compare this with Mat. 1. 21. And shee shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for hee shall save his people from their sinnes The third false key is presumption of long life and mercy Neither A third false key Presumption of long life space nor grace are in thine own power God gave Jezabel space but denyed her grace Rev. 2. 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication and shee repented not This presumption hath ruined many a soule Many neglect their opportunities run their swinge and career in sinne and presume of mercy but the dore of mercy is shut against them and this key cannot unlock it Now God affords foure true keyes 1. Knowledge The eyes are opened to see the fountaine to 1. True key knowledge look up to the brasen serpent The knowledge of the worth of Christ provokes us to come to him God's people have inlightned judgements they are renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. 2. Faith to believe that ther 's virtue enough in Christ to cure all 2. True key Faith our diseases both of body and soule Matth 9. 21. For shee said within her selfe if I may but touch his garment I shall be whole 3. Love And this will make us take many journies long and dangerous through fowle weather and it will sweeten all The 3. True key Love beloved object when enjoyed will make amends for all the waiting for it 4. Repentance mourning for sinne Repentance in us causeth 4. True key Repentance God to repent and make his bowels like the sounding of an Harp Jer. 31. 18 19 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himselfe thus Thou hast chastised mee and I was chastised as a Bullock unaccustomed to the yoake turne thou mee and I shall be turned for thou art the Lord my God Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded I did b●are the reproach of my youth Is Ephraim my deare son Is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I doe earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. You must understand these clave non errante not as if the fountaine was merited for any of these duties for when wee have done all wee can we must acknowledge that wee are unprofitable servants But God hath afforded these meanes keyes and helpes we must make use of them but may not make them our Christs and our Saviours 5. I will adde a 5th Praier This is a key to open and shut 5th True key prayer Heaven James 5. 17 18. Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are and hee prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not upon the earth by the space of three yeares and six months And he prayed againe and the h●aven gave raine and the earth brought forth her fruit Pray that God would wash thee and cleanse thee Psal 51. 10. Create in mee O Lord a cleane heart and ren●w a right spirit within mee 3. I proceed to the third head propounded For whom is this 3. For whom is this Fountaine opened fountaine opened To give in my answer ' I le lay down this truth by way of corollary inferred from the premises That the fountaine of free grace is only opened to the adopted children of God This I shall open and apply briefly for opening whereof I shall propound these ensuing considerations 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe Consid 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe according to his owngood pleasure and purpose of his will Now election is of here and there one It 's an act of choice taking some and passing by others Jer. 3. 14. Turne O backsliding children saith the Lord for I am married unto you and I will take you one of a City and two of a familie and I will bring you unto Zion Like gleaning grapes Isai 17. 6. Yet gleaning grapes shall be left in it as the shak●ing of an olive tree two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough foure or five in the utmost fruitfull branches thereof saith the Lord God of Israel This election hath no other motive but free love and grace Wee were in our blood Ezek. 16. 5 When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thy own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live No provision of faith or Repentance mooved God to set his heart upon us as appeares Rom. 9. 11. For the children being not yet borne neither haveing done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of work●s but of him that calleth c. This Postulatum being laid down for undeniable God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people Hence I frame this syllogisme only the elect have interest in the fountaine of free grace and mercy But only God's adopted children are elect ergo they only have interest in it 2. There are a peculiar people who alone are justified by the free grace of God in Christ Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith wee have Consid 2. There are a peculiar poople justified by free grace p●ace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 24. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Now thus I argue Only justified persons have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood But the sons of God by grace and adoption are only justified persons Ergo they alone have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is hee whose trangression is forgiven whose sinne is covered Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity and in whose spirit there is no guil● Iustification is a forensicall terme took from an earthly Tribunal where a person arraign'd and condemned is afterward by virtue of a pardon acquitted 3ly Consider there are a peculiar people effectually called Many Consid 3. There are a peculiar people effectually called have an outward calling and take upon them an outward profession few are inwardly and effectually called This the Apostle presseth 2 Pet. 1. 10. Wherefore the rather brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if you doe these things you shall never fall There are a few and but a very few called out of the world partakers
sensible of their thirst and therefore they will not come God affords food for our body and food for our soule in abundance now an hungry man will goe apace for corporall food and had we a spirituall appetite a soule hunger we should quicken our pace and run as fast for the sood of our soules see Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation God puts a prize into our hands if we neglect to use it our condemnation will be the greater A sluggard will tell of this Lyon that mountaine and that shrubbe in the way so your lazy negligent people will tell and reckon up all the difficulties they can to flatter themselves in their idlenesse whereas indeed when we consider the battell we are to fight the race to runne the strait gate to passe through and the great difficulty to attaine salvation this should excite and provoke us to beg strength from God and act in his strength tugge hard at the Oare wrestle harder mend our pace that we may enter in at the strait gate fight the good fight of faith and so runne that we may obtaine A third sort of persons to be reproved are unbelievers They believe 3. Vnbelievers not such worth and excellency in the soule as we speak of This is the grand capitall damning sin of the Gospel Unbeliefe is a complication of many sins made up of a fraternity of iniquity See John 8 24. Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse caused the yong man to preferre treasures on earth before treasures in heaven Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse made the foolish Gadarens to preferre their swine before a Saviour Did people in good earnest believe that the soule is more worth then a world that the soule is of a heavenly-borne beeing and runnes parralell with eternity they durst not graspe the world make an Idol of Mammon Volupia c. and put their pretious soules in jeopardy What hindred Christ's miracles see Matth. 13. 28. What 's the portion of unbeleevers see Luk 12. 46. Rev. 21. 8. The Jewes had a saying that every sinne that they committed had a spice of the golden calfe Every sinne without question hath a spice of infidelity Unbeliefe and misbeliefe are destructive to the soule 4ly Impatient sinners are to be reproved these are worst of all 4. Impenitent sinners they throw away the remedy spurne away the plaister that God ordaineth for their cure Wee say falling into the water drownes not but lying there for a man may fall into a water and may be plucked out alive so falling into sinne damnes not but lying in it without repentance 'T is true that every sinne deserves damnation but all sinnes doe not actually damne otherwise who could be saved There are two sorts of sinners penitent and impenitent sinners Penitent broken hearted sinners are received into mercy through Christ their sinnes are wash't away in his bloud their sinnes are imputed to his score and his righteousness imputed to them for justification But impenitent sinners such as sweare and will sweare are drunke and will be so breake sabbaths and will doe so without remorse or regret of conscience these shut the dore of mercy against themselves An impenitent person is Felo de se his own executioner see Rev. 16. 11. Rom. 2. 5. Impenitent persons take not the dignity of their soules into consideration little doe they think what will become of their soules unto all eternity The law requires exact obedience will not abate a tittle not the least transgression God hath given us a Court of mercy the Gospel and in it a surety Christ and the instrumentall meanes faith and repentance Now impenitent Persons despise the Gospel the suerty the remedy they reject the great salvation tendred in the Gospel and so they are left unexcusable Their bloud be upon their own heads God would heale them they will not be healed they are filthy and impure the Lord proclaimes a fountaine to wash in it but they will not come unto it and so their damnation is just and they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 selfe condemned and their destruction is from themselves Of all judgments deprecate this of impenitency The Lord never give you over to impenitency 2. The next Use shall be for expostulation and here I would expostulate Vse 2. For expostulation the case as Isai 55. 2. Rom. 6. 21. Who of any understanding would serve so unprofitable a master as sinne is who would bee so mad as to be penny wise and pound foolish as to get riches lands revenues by cozenage fraud oppression and hazzard their pretious soules What if you could get never so much gold purchase never so much land honestly and justly and yet with the care and turmoyle of getting and keeping all you neglect your soule what advantage would all this be unto you Call your selves to an account and reckon what you get by purchaseing the world and loseing your soules cast up your accounts and you will find you have made a miserable bad bargain ' I le draw this Use unto particular instances 1. Let me expostulate the case with the voluptuous persons who eate and drinke and rise up to play Hawkes hounds cardes dice whores cups are the voluptuous man's companions Hee 's lul'd a sleep on the lap of pleasures and followes his own swinge and careere against the counter-blasts of a reclaiming conscience Let me aske the voluptuous liver what doe all his pleasures conduce to the advantage of his soul what comfort can a man take at night when he goeth to bed when all the day he hath past away in gameing drinking and carrowsing How many spend more upon their houndes then they doe towards the maintainance of a faithful Ministry How many preferre a pack of cards a pack of houndes a cast of hawkes before the word of God How many preferre a drunken merry meeting before a Sermon They can sit whole days and nights at cards and dice and at their cups upon ale-benches and yet how weary at a Sermon Double duties are tedious to them sabbaths fasts are heavy burdens unto them This sin of voluptuousness is the crying sin of the nation for which God lets us bloud by his heavy judgments at this very time O that all voluptuous Epicures would seriously lay to heart the sacred Irony of the wise man Eccles 11 9. O! that God would perswade you to have special regard of your pretious soules O that God would open your eyes to see your vanities and wicked pleasures and turne the streame into the right channel as Prov. 3. 17. To account the wayes of wisdome the only wayes of pleasantness 2. Let me expostulate the case with the covetous Mammonist He riseth early c hee 's a scrapeing and carking for the world the trash and pelfe here below filling his barnes with corne his coffers with gold still labouring for corne and oyle never satisfied never thinking he hath enough But what 's
meditatur Sanctius in Loc. quia eum recentium peccatorum non morderet cruciaretque conscientia c. As if Job had not been conscious to himself of late sins therefore he conceives that he now suffers for former sins thus some con●ecture as Sanctius observes on the place But this savors not of Jobs spirit though he was exemplary for holiness yet he was sensible of daily sins he knew himself to be a daily sinner he knew what a sinful nature he had full of pollution yet his youthful sins carryed the greatest filth and guilt in them which in his apprehension made the greatest gashes and wounds upon his conscience he knew that his youthful sins had most aggravating circumstances in them that a Bill of Indictment drawn up against them would be blackest and charge him homest Where upon Judicious Mr. Calvin gives two reasons why he speaks of the sins of his youth one is Because in that age lusts are most predominant the Calvin in l●cum nature of a man which is sinful doth then cast up his greatest froth the passions are most violent and therefore that age hath need of the strongest Bridle Another reason is Because Job meant to declare that God brought all his sins to remembrance as if he should frame an Indictment against him of all that he had done ever since he was a childe And herein he seems to complain of rigor seeing thou hast pardoned them wherefore dost thou lay them before me But we may not finde fault with God he punisheth less then we deserve The Lord is righteous we have sinned against him A fourth Query is what is meant by possessing the sins of Q. 4. Hieronymi translatio Chald. Parap Jun. in Loc. youth Jerome reads it consumere vis youthful sins may bring Consumptions upon old Age. The Chalde Paraphrase reads it Me haereditare facis Thus Junius interprets Efficis ut possideam haereditario jure As if elder years did inherit youthful sins Gray Hairs even old persons gray headed in sins receive the punishment of their youthful green headed sins for their inheritance It 's an observable note of Pineda on the place * Punishment is the Poena est quasi culpe prognata filia atque adeo ipse homo grandevus senex succedit sibi ipsi puero Adol●s●●nti Pineda in Loc. Daughter of sin An old man is successor to himself a young man There is as it were a natural succession and derivation of sins committed in youth to become the inheritance of old age So that a sinner becomes his own Heir the old sinner the young mans Heir The meaning is A man that runs on in a riotous ungodly course following his swinge and full career in wickedness in the days of his youth shall feel the smart and bitterness of his sins in his old crasie bones We render the word in the Text ordinarily to possess and that is Emphatical A man that hath present possession of his Inheritance hath most points in the Law The right next Heir hath a legal Title Now when the Heir hath possession of his Inheritance this adds to the strengthning of his right Now an old sinner doth inherit and take possession of his youthful sins and this is a sad possession to possess the inheritance of sin It was charged upon Ahab for killing and taking possession there is the killing of the soul when there is possession took of sin He then may be said to possess the sins of his youth who feels the smart and pain of them who suffers bitter sorrows for them when the sins committed in his youth even breaks his bones when he comes to be old I have one Query more to propound How is it since Job an holy Q. man whose sins were pardoned yet complains of such an hand-writing against him charging upon himself youthful sins For answer you must know 1. That sins repented of and pardoned A. may yet prove gall and wormwood to the soul They that have repented must renew their repentance The remembrance of the wormwood and the gall the bitterness of sin will cost Gods people many a salt tear 2. Though sins may be pardoned yet the soul may not be able to read that pardon it may want the manifestation of the pardon though there may be a pardon sealed an acquittance a white stone in the Court of the Judge yet it may not appear so in the Court of a mans own Conscience 3. We are to know that Fatherly chastisements are the lot and Heb. 12. 5 6. Rev. 3. 19. portion of Gods dearest Children as the Scripture plainly sheweth There is a Judgement of Revenge and a Judgement of Chastisement Judgements of Revenge are the portion of the wicked Judgements of Chastisement are incident to the generation of the righteous As a Judge God will not pass an eternal Judgement against his people They are the beloved of his Soul and he loves them to the end but as a Father he may and doth pronounce many temporal Judgements as Chastisements against them The fruit whereof is to take away their Dross and Tin and to make them partakers of his holyness 4. It is wisdom in a godly man when present sufferings are upon him to call former sins to remembrance Afflictions brings sins to remembrance Job lookt back upon his former failings he was not unmindeful of his present failings but his former in an especial manner might call for a rod of correction to whip out his folly When afflictions befall us we should inquire into the cause and search out our sins and be humbled for them So Josephs Brethren when distress befell them in Aegypt called to minde their Gen. 42. 21. cruelty against Joseph many years before committed Thus you have heard the Explication of the words from which I 'le draw one Point of Doctrine which I take to be the fundamental Doctrine of the Text That sins committed in our youth will cause much smart and bitterness Doct. in our elder years This Point lies plainly in the Text I shall make it the ground-work of my ensuing Meditations In the prosecution whereof I shall pursue my plain and accustomed method by proving the Point from Method of handling the Doctrine Scripture confirming it by evidenc● of Reason and reducing all to point of practice by way of Use and particular Application For Scripture proof Job speaking of the momentary joy of wicked men cap. 20. v. 5. sets forth his judgement v. 11. His bones are full of the sins of his youth Hos 12. 14. He shall leave his blood upon him as Diodate and others observe God will not pardon him his sin nor cleanse him from it but will keep it still in remembrance to punish him for it at his appointed time God makes a grievous complaint against Samaria and Jerusalem under the names of Aholah and Aholibah Aholahs youthful Whoredoms are charged upon her Ezek. 23. v. 8. And likewise the same charge
and the Lord in judgement left them to their choice and in their extremities bade them goe to their gods and see whether they would deliver them The Lord punished contrariety with contrariety If ye will not be reformed by these things Lev. 26. 23. 24. but will walk contrary unto me then will I also walk contrary to you and punish you yet seven times for your sinns And when we refuse to hearken to him when he calls he will refuse to hearken to us in our greatest extremities when we call upon him It 's a broken but a very pathetical speech of Christ to Jerusalem O that thou hadst Luke 19. 4● known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes There is a Critical day set down there is a dreadfull judgement upon those that brought not the Lords offering in its season The man that is clean and is Numb 9. 13. not in a journey and forbeareth to keep the Passeover even the same soul shall be cut off from his people because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appointed season that man shall bear his sinne The old world gave no heed to Noahs Preaching they neglected the time that God allowed them for repentance No mo●e time was Matth. 25. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 allowed when that was once expired a deluge overwhelmed them The five foolish Virgins sl●mbred and slept when they should have been preparing of their lamps they went to buy oyle and in their absence Christ came and perpetually shut them out Esau sought Heb. 12. 17. ●enedictionem illam exquisiss●t Beza the Blessing carefully with rears yet hee was rejected hee came when it was too late How many mischiefs befall men for neglecting their opportunities All these considerations should be as so many warning-pieces unto us and as so many prevalent incentives to cherish the whispers of the Spirit to take the benefit of the season Now whilst the Lord bids us seek his face our hearts must eccho back Thy face Lord we will seek Let us hearken to the motions of the Spirit and the checks of our conscience let us make much of the Spirit let us take heed of quenching and grieving of the holy Spirit whereby we are sealed unto the day of redemption An Angel swears in the Revelations There shal be no more time How soon Revel 10. 6. ● time may cease the Spirit cease working we cannot tel and time may be swallowed up in Eternity And therefore take this Caution as a word spoken in due season Beware of sadding the Spirit drive him not away from you for once having a repulse for ought you know he may come no more And th●●● have dispatch'd three Heads propounded of my Method I have asserted the truth of the point from Scripture ●e●timonies plainly evidencing the greatnesse of the Judgement when the Spirit of God departs from and will strive no longer with a people I have shewed how many wayes the Spirit usually strives with a people I have given in the reasons for the confirmation of the point In the next place it remains that I should reduce al home unto point of Practise by way of Use and particular Application This Doctrine affords six special Uses For Information Exhortation Reprehension Examination Direction and Consolation In the first place this serves for Information what a dreadfull Vse 1. For Information judgement lyes heavy upon any person whatsoever with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer Was it not an heavy judgement when Gods Spirit left Saul and an evil spirit was sent to torment him Was it not an heavy case and dreadfull when the Philistines made war upon him and the Lord was departed from him And Samuel said to Saul why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up 1 Sam. 28 15 And Saul answered I am sore distressed for the Philistines make war against me and God is departed from me and answereth me no more neither by Prophets nor by dreames therefore I have called thee c. When Gods Spirit quite leaves a soul then the evil spirit takes possession of it Satan entred into Judas his heart and set him on work to betray Christ and when conscience gave him a bang and made him throw down the mony he felt Hell-fire flashing in him and betook himself to a desperate remedy to be his own executioner So I have read of Julian after he had departed from God and turn'd Apostate he had in his conscience more blows and butcherings Plures ictus laniatus At last when a dart hit him and gave him his fatal wound no man knowing from whence that dart came for it was a signal blow from heaven and was indeed the immediate hand of God at last he confest Thou hast overcome O Galilean thou hast overcome Vicisti Galilaee vicisti Now a little to set forth the greatnesse of the judgement upon those with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer I le represent it you in these ensuing aggravations When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances Whilst the Palladium remain'd with the Trojans they Aggrav 1. When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances thought themselves secure The Jews put great confidence in the Ark they fet the Ark and went to battle with it against the Philistines and afterwards cryed up the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord Herein they were superstitious they f●iled in putting too much confidence in the Temple They were Idolaters and followed Baal and Ashtaroth and thought the Ark would secure them The Ark would no more shelter prophane idolatrous people than the horns of the Altar would secure and shelter a Murtherer Yet questionlesse the Ark of Gods presence was a very great mercy and priviledge The Ark was kept away twenty yeares and they thought it long and the Text saith all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord. The sad report of the losse of the Ark brake Elies heart first and he fell down backward and his neck brake He heard 1 Sam. 7. 2. of the death of his sonnes their death went near but the losse of the Ark went nearer and Phinehas his wife named the child I●habod saying the glory is departed from Israel because the Ark of God was taken She fell in travel upon that sad news and dyed presently 1 Sam. 4. 18 21 22. The taking away Ministers Ordinances Sabbaths are dreadfull judgements upon a people This the Prophet Amos foretels of Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will send a famine in the Amos 8. 11. land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the word of the Lord. And Christ himself threarens The kingdom of Matth. 21. 43. God shall be taken from you and given to a Nation bringing forth the
fruits thereof And these judgements God oftentimes inflicts upon those that contemne his Ordinances and often ●imes causeth a people to know the worth of them by the want of them Aggrav 2. God will not suffer his Spirit to wo●ke in the Ordinances Or secondly if God continue his Ordinances and a people still resist the strivings of his Spirit this is another aggravation that the Lord wil not suffer his Spirit to work in the Ordinances What 's the Word without the Spirit but a dead letter The Word is the seed it is the Spirit that quickens it Now when God denieth his Spirit in an Ordinance and people hear onely a bare sound which goeth in at one ear and out of another and reap no profit and are never a whit wrought upon by an Ordinance this is a lamentable condition Enthusiasts cry up the Spirit and cry down the Word Formalists cry up the Word they keep their Church well that 's their own phrase but they regard not the workings of the Spirit This is Argumentum à bene conjunctis ad male divisa We have no warrant to leave the bright shining light of the Word and to follow a wild rambling light of our own The Spirit works by the Word and tyes us to the rule New devised lights may Levit. 10. 2 meet with the same judgement as Nadab and Abihu met withall for offering strange fire unto the Lord. Neither may we as Formalists doe rest in our comming to and hearing of Ordinances we must examine the working of Gods Spirit upon our soules When God gives quickning Ordinances let us pray for the energetical effectual working of Gods Spirit Deadnesse of Spirit saith Mr. Greenham is the grave of spiritual graces Between a lazy and a fervent performer of duties you may see the difference Greenham 2 Kings 4. 31 32 33 34. Gehazi went on in a carelesse formall manner and layd his staffe upon the child but there was neither voice nor hearing But when Elisha put his eyes upon the childs eyes and his mouth on the childs mouth the flesh of the child waxed warm O beware of slighting or resis●ing the ●pirit in an Ordinance lest in judgement God may give thee a bare Ordinance or resting contented with a bare outside formall service without any lively workings of the Spirit upon thine heart and that will be but as a carkasse when the soul is gone When people drive away Gods Spirit and will not regard its strivings Aggrav 3. God gives over those that resist his Spirit unto a spirit of delusion then God gives them over in judgement to a spirit of delusion 2 Thes 2. 11. For this cause God shall send them strong delusions that they shall believe a lye VVhen Ministery the Lords-day and other Sabbath-Ordinances are trampled under feet when the plain infallible rule of the Scriptures is laid aside when some flatter themselves with high swelling conceits of their own gifts upon pretence of a Light within them Dreams and Revelations then God in judgement gives them over to a spirit of delusion The Devil works upon their fancies and puffs them up with pride and their pride swels them and bursts them Beware of Pride and above all Pride of spiritual Pride Beware of itching eares after novel Doctrines Upon pretence of new truths many suck in antiquated long since explo●ed ●rrours And if it be an errour though I take it not so yet account it an errour of love I advise especially young beginners to beware of Scepticism high-slown curiosities in the study of divinity It 's a ground of experience Scepticism Rom. 14. 1. Quod si observassent Scholastici non tot● spinosas salebrosas ne dicā impi●s sacrilegas quaestiones in eorn̄ libris habere mus P. Mart. Aggrav 4. God gives those over to a hard heart who resist the motions of the Spirit frequently produceth Heresie ●ere●e terminatesin Atheisme and my counsel is grounded upon the known rule Him that is weak in the faith receive you but not in doubtfull disputat●ons Would Schoolmen saith Pet. Martyr had observed this Scripture Study Fundamentals get a Body of Divinity in your heads and hearts before you venture upon Polemicals Be well provided and furnished with weapons from the Principles of Divinity before you grapple with gain-sayers A fourth and last aggravation I shall mention is this when Gods Spirit hath stroven long knockt and waited and is abused and resisted then God gives over such persons to an hard heart and a reprobate mind And an hard heart and a reprobate mind is an hell upon earth Isa 6. 9 10. Go and tell this people Hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed It 's cited by all the four Evangelists and in the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistle to the Romans by such frequent repetition of the self-same thing aggravating the greatnesse of the judgement It 's accounted the grand curse of the Gospel Joh. 9. 39. For judgement am I come into this John 9. 39. world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blind When men have been a long time under the sound of the Gospel and the Spirit hath moved and woed beseeching us to amend our lives and walk in an holy obedience and conformity to the will of God and yet we stand out and bid defiance to the Spirit of Grace then it is just for God to say hard heart seize upon such a one reprobate sense take hold of another let them be Sermon-proof and Judgement-proof let them remain insensible let their consciences be cauterized O wha● a fearfull judgement is this as the Apostle mentions But after thy hardnesse Ro● 2. 5. and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God May these aggravations make deep impressions upon all our spirits and make us fear and tremble any more to withstand the sweet motions and whispers of the Spirit of God A second use is for Exhortation I entreat beseech exhort conjure Vse 2. For Exhortation you by all the motions of the Spirit by all the tenders of mercies patience and long-suffering of God that you would take heed of quenching resisting sadding the holy Spirit of God but cherish embrace make much of all the strivings of the Spirit of God with your soules To day the Spirit calls hear his voice to day the Spirit woes and would make a contract with your soules O now accept of him to day the Spirit invites lay aside all excuses and come It 's the Embassie that Gods Ministers are sent upon Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though
God and Selah shall be put to the end of each prayse Their spirits shall be raised and fitted for that great imployment Their work will be their delight for ever to sing Hallelujahs unto him that sitteth upon the throne and to the Lamb for ever more Thankfulness runneth parallel with the longest line of eternity It 's the language of militant saints on earth and of triumphant in heaven to celebrate the praises of God and blesse his name Praise is comely It 's both good and pleasant to express the praises of God Eternity it selfe will be too little to speak forth the pralses of God 4. This imployment shall be in our Fathers house When once 4. This employment shall be in our Fathers house we come to Heaven we have fixed mansions never to be removed There we shal not sing the songs of Zion in a strange land but in our fathers house Oh! how sad a reproach was it when the men of Babylon tauntingly called upon the children of Israel sing one of the songs of Zion v. Psa 138. 1 2 3 4. 5. And lastly Glorified Saints shall keep an eternal Sabboth in Heaven They shall have but one Sabboth in eternity but that 5. Glorified Saints shall keep an Eternal Sabboth in Heaven shall be continued and never cease And in that Sabboth there shall be no tediousness Their spirits shall be suited for the greatness of that imployment There shall be no intermission nor interruption But there shall be one continued strain one constant act of glorifying God to all eternity There will be no complaining of double duties of wearysomeness of the flesh there shall be no tireing of the spirits In this Paradise all the spirits of the Saints shall for ever be fresh and green There shall be no decay of strength abilities and fitness for such high imployments Now put all these things together consider what we are freed from and what we get by this future condition of glory who of understanding would not be in love with these things who is there that hath but once tasted that would not desire to drink deeper of these rivers of pleasure Who is there that knoweth what an excellent life that is which is to come that would not study enquire and labour to get assurance of it And yet this is the madness and folly of the men of the world that preferre dross before gold the transient base things of the world before the pretious treasures of eternity What now remains but that I should set all home in an Usefull Use Of Exhort Application and so at present dismisse you Men Fathers and Brethren suffer the word of Exhortation to make it your business inquiry and care to make sure of your eternal condition O eternity eternity This word eternity should ly upon our hearts it should be in our frequent serious thoughts and in our retired meditations In our conversings with men in the world the consideration of eternity should abide upon us In our studies let us study for eternity It was a boasting speech of a Painter that said Aeternitati pingo I am sure we ought to study and drive our designes for eternity We should so improve our time husband our talents and so lay out the gifts and graces which God gives us as we may take comfort therein to all eternity O! that men addicted to pleasure would consider that all the pleasures of sin are bitter sweets And for all these things God will bring them to judgement Eccles 11. 9. And what Will yee be such fooles as for a few paultry vaine pleasures to hazard your immortal pretious soules unto all eternity O! that covetous Mammonists would take the consideration of eternity into their thoughts Wherefore doe you spend your mony for that which is not bread Isai 55. 2. How greedily doe men graspe riches how doe they make hast to be rich and put both their hands and both their shoulders to purchasse great estates and never think they have enough like the horse leaches daughter crying still give give And all this while they set their hearts upon perishing things upon that which is not v. Prov. 23. 4 5. But eternity cometh not into their thoughts Transient riches take up their thoughts heart all but eternal riches a durable substance is no whit regarded There is a sad example of that miserable rich fool of whom you may read Luk. 12. 19 20 21. O! that all dissemblers and hypocrites would lay the thoughts of eternity to heart How many dissemble and bely their consciences and pretend one thing openly when as they intend another secretly Their hearts give their lips the ly Did these consider of another world of an everlasting estate either in happiness or misery surely they durst not baffle their consciences and turne any way for temporary advantage and in the mean time wound their consciences Questionless if eternity was more in our thoughts we should be better in secret we should pray with more faith and fervency and be more watchful over our hearts more conscientious in all our carriages Did we entertain in our hearts the frequent thoughts of eternity we should be better in our capacities and relations better masters and servants better parents and children better husbands and wives It was the Motto of Meursius a learned man Aeternitate● cogita Did we think of eternity we should not be so loath to lay out our selves for God did we consider often how fraile our life is as a vapour a bubble swifter then a weavers shutle swifter then an arrow out of a bow swifter then a post then a thought Certainly we should not then be so hardly entreated to labour in Gods vineyard Did such who are intrusted with the inspection of others consider of the account they must give in another life they durst not neglect those Depositums the parents choycest jewels committed to their trust and excuse themselves with a distinction per se per alium which in eternity will prove an unsound rotten distinction and will not in the least helpe them out who eat the bread of idleness If this consideration of eternity were in the tradesmans thoughts hee durst not vend sophisticated wa●es and couzen in his trade as if in his trade a mystery of over-reaching were tolerable O miserable gaine to be penny wise ●nd pound foolish to get a little petty profit in the trade and in the mean time adventure the losse of an immortal soul for ever Behold Brethren we all stand at the dore of eternity Thousands of diseases casualties molestations may dispatch us and send us to our long home Here lieth our great wisdome and understanding in making timely provision for our eternal condition This should be o●● study this should be our inquiry to aske what means must we use to inherit eternal life What must we doe to be saved How must we make our peace with God Yet a little while and our soules shall be separated
beget love to God Father and Christ If there be any spark of love it will inkindle into a flame of Serapicall affections David professeth Psal 18. 1. I will love thee O Lord my strength 4. This should beget love to the Brethren Joh. 13. 35. By 4. Gods love to us should cause us to love our brethren this shall all men know that yee are my disciples if yee love one another 1 Joh. 3. 14. We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren 1 Joh. 4. 21. And this commandment have we from him that he who loveth God loveth his brother also 5. We should place our love where God placeth his and our 5. love where God loveth hatred where he placeth his hatred God loveth holinesse holy people holy Ordinances so should we God hateth every sinne so should we Psalm 97. 10. Yee that love the Lord hate evill 6. We should be often inquiring whether we be of the number 6. Enquire whether thou hast interest in Christs speciall love Vse 4. For Consolation of those that have Interest in Christs speciall love for whom he died This we should frequently and seriously examine our hearts about as I gave some evidences before unto which I referre you The fourth and last Use is for comfort unto all those who have interest in this speciall love Their speciall Benefits are these 1. They are admitted to the Throne of Grace through Christ Benefit 1. They are admitted unto the throne of grace Eph. 2. 18. For through him we have both an accesse by one spirit unto the Father They are his favorites friends Jewells a Crown and Diadem of Glory and therefore they are exhorted to draw neare with full assurance of faith Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that we may obtaine mercy and find grace to help in time of need It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with freedome boldnesse or confidence 2. All things work together for their good Rom. 8. 28. And Benefit 2. All things worke together for their good we know that all things worke together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose They love God God loveth them and nothing shall be able to hinder God's love Their crosses hardships reproaches all shall conduce unto their good 3. They shall feele the benefit of this love unto all Eternity Heb. Benefit 3. They shall feele Christs love unto all Eternity 7. 25. Christ ever liveth to make Intercession for them Though Satan roare and men condemne yet the love of Christ will comfort thee against all Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that Justifieth Thy sinnes and corruption administer continuall matter of Humiliation and these will cost thee deare whilest thou art in the valley of Bacha but the time will come when there will be no more sighing for sinne Sorrow and sighing will flye away For there shall be no sorrow in heaven 4. This may Arme us with courage against feare of death Ben 4. Gods love armes us wth courage against fear of death Christ hath died and tooke away the sting Christ hath perfumed the grave He hath conquered sinne Satan lead captivity captive Therefore in doubts feares troubles inward and outward have recourse to this love of God in Christ and this will be a Cordiall a Salve for every sore The consideration of Gods love unto thy Soule will make thee undergoe hardships cheerefully kisse the Rod that beates thee Gods love manifested in Christ will make thee willing to live and willing to dye so that God may be glorified in thee and by thee For thou that hast Interest in this distinguishing love of God reconciled in Christ know to thy comfort that whether thou livest or whether thou dyest Jesus Christ will be unto thee in life and in death advantage THE REALL PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIANITY DISTINGUISED FROM THE NOMINALL 2 Tim 2. vers 19. And let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from Iniquity THE Apostle in the precedent words gives advertisement Sermon 7. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. July 24. 1659. concerning some notorious Hereticks such whose words eat as a canker or Gangren Their names are upon record to their eternall infamy V. 17. Their words will eat as doth a canker of whom is Hymeneus and Philetus And their Heresy likewise hath a brand upon it V. 18. Who concerning the truth have erred saying that the resurrection is past already and overthrow the faith of some * Allegoricam nescio quam resurrectionem fingendo Calv. in loc Calvin understands that they feigned an Allegoricall resurrection Estius and Gorr●n concurre in the same judgment and † Non suo tempore defuisse qu●●esurrectionem ●ortuorum manifeste ann●●tiatam in imag●●ariam resurrectionem distorquerent Tertull. de Resurrectione carnis cap. 19. Tertullian is cited in his Book de resurrectione carnis cap. 19. In whose time there were not wanting some who did openly say that the Resurrection of the dead was imaginary The names of the men are Hymeneus and Philetus a Anuptiarum ●eo Hymeneus from the God of marriage b Nomen quasi Optatum Desideratum Hugo Grot. Philetus that is a name as it were desirable as some of the Learned observe Their doctrine and their mischievous consequences follow First For their doctrine an erroneous and hereticall tenet is there laid downe viz. That the resurrection is past already i. e. as Gorran and Estius produce the opinions of those times that the resurrection was compleated by Regeneration And * Completam ex mente istorum interpretantur resurrectionem in quotidiana animarum renovatione Aug Ep. 119 ad Januarium Augustine himselfe in Epist 119. unto Januarius fastens the same opinion upon them Or else they might incline to the opinion of Marcion that Notorious Heretick That there was no resurrection of the body but of the soule only 2. Secondly Let 's consider the great mischiefe of this opinion The Apostle t●ll● us that their words eate as doth a Gangren The Gangren some assimilate to a Canker or a wolfe which spreadeth further and further to the consumption of the whole body The Originall as Hesichius observes is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depascor † Gangraenam medici de carnosa parte inflammationis emortuâ intelligunt Scultet Scultetus saith that by Gangren Phisitians understand a fleshy and dead part of inflammation What further I shall say is this that as a Gangren frets the flesh runs thorough the blood and creepeth further and further till it infect the whole body so Heresies infect the whole man speedily mortally and uncurably Wherefore let not any make a slight matter of Error and Heresy and plead that every one should have liberty of judgment and that a Toleration of all sorts of opinions
all this to the soule His Mammon is his God the wedge of gold is his confidence Hee 's earth'd before his time his heart is rivetted upon the world Surely he dreames of an eternity upon earth and of heaven upon earth Hee heeds not nor regards any hereafter His breath smels of earth his discourse is earthly his whole life and conversation is an earthly worldly conversation But what will all his riches availe him when death arrests him See Zeph. 1. 18. Luk. 12. 17 18 19 20 and the 21. v makes the Application Thou canst not carry thy riches to another world they cannot bribe the flames of hell nor corrupt the Tormentor wherefore then shouldst thou labour thus greedily for that wich is not bread for those things which are not wherefore shouldst thou take such care for trash and pelfe the base transitory trash of the of the world which lasts but for a short season and in the interim neglect thy pretious soule which abides unto all eternity O! that God would alter thine affections as Col. 3. 2. O! that God would work in thee a serious beliefe of this truth that thy soul is more worth than all the world 3ly Let me expostulate the case with the ambitious man who aspires unto great places dignities honours and promotions in the world What are all these in comparison of his soule Many have great Titles honourable names in this world who shall be degraded of all in the world to come What 's honour It 's but momentany Honor est in honorante it 's that which a wicked man may have Haman Nimrod H●red had it What would rich Coates of armes great dignitis popular observance advantage thy pretious soule The Apostle tels us not many 1 Cor. 1. 26. c. Hee doth not say not any some are ennobled by a spiritual as well as by a natural birth But oft times great dignities preferments honours promotions are clogges and hinderances to the soule Marcus Gal●acius Caracciolus knew it well and renounced all for Christ so did Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11. 24. So must thou What high places preferments dignities thou fearest will insnare thy soule and withdraw thee from Christ thou must foregoe them all so farre forth as they stand in competition with or opposition unto Christ What will it profit thee to have a great name written on earth but no name at all written in the book of life Wherfore then doest thou pursue high preferments see Jer. 45. 5. Art thou fit and preferred for those great high places thou lookest after Hast thou taken an Antidote before hand to prevent the poysonous inflations of pride Or art thou sure thou shalt speed and obtaine thy desire Honor fugientem sequitur s●quentem fugit see Psal 75. 6. Prov. 3. 35. Remember Haman's period Wolseyes fall c. Thou that art higher by the head than thy brethren as Saul was elevated to great dignities must come the same way to heaven as the poorest Christian Wherefore then should any man labour more for greatness than goodness preferring favour of men before the favour of God high places on earth before the high places in heaven The reason is because they prefer the world before their soules Consider seriously of all these The voluptuous Epicure never ceaseth swallowing the covetous Mammonist never ceaseth scraping the ambitious Parasite never ceaseth climbing But what will it profit the voluptuous man to have his fill of pleasures the covetous man to have his coffer crammed with gold the Ambitious man to have honours promotions and great titles enough to clogge his memory and yet in the interim to lose their pretious soules Let your serious thoughts be exercised herein and then return an answer whether your soules be not of more value than the whole world I proceed to a third Use for exhortation Suffer I beseech you the Use 3. For Exhortation word of exhortation above all other things to take speciall regard and care what will become of your soules to all eternity above all your gettings get this understanding to know the incomparable worth of your immortall soules Above all trades which you drive for the world learne this soule trade this soule thrist I perswade you to take the most thriving most gainfull way in the world whereas others labour for corne and oyle wealth dignities which are failing perishing things which are not bread and cannot satisfie let me perswade you to labour for that which endureth to eternity Be therefore good husbands for your soules learne this spirituall husbandry to improve your time talents and opportunities for the everlasting benefit of your pretious soules Tell men of a wise rich honourable thriving way for the world they will readily embrace it I represent before you this day the most wise rich honourable thriving way for your pretious soules This course is wise Deut. 32. 29. It 's rich and honourable Prov. 3. 16. The godly are most honourable It 's thriving and gainfull 1 Tim. 6. 6. Up and set about the worke Above all workes work out your salvation with fear and trembling Methinks I might spare Motives what will ye not doe good to your own soules Will you neglect your choicest Jewell will you leave your soule at randome neglected unregarded Do ye not know the singular worth of your soule To quicken your affections I shall recommend to your serious thoughts these 9 moving considerations 1. One soule is more pretious then all the kingdomes of the Consid 1. One soule is more worth than the world world and the glory of them Seest thou a poor man picking off a dunghill old cast rags another picking sticks or coles out of the kennel almost ready to famish by reason of hunger or to starve for want of fire seest thou others working for a penny a day going many a mile to earn a penny and scarce able to go through weaknesse however these poore people may seem vile and contemptible in the eyes of the world yet their soules are more worth and highlier to be valued then all the pomp and bravery of the world My Reasons are 1 Because the world is transitory fading perishing the soule permanent abiding to eternity The forme of the world passeth away this goodly structure of this visible globe shall be dissolved and burnt up with fire but the soule is incorruptible capable of no consumption now that which is permanent is of more worth then that which is transient therefore the soule is more worth then the world Secondly all the riches honours bravery c. in the world cannot redeem one soule If a man would give all his lands gold and silver c. to save his soule it could not be obtained the Mannors Lands and richest treasures of the whole world put altogether cannot purchase one soule the soule cannot be bought nor purchased by such a price when death arrests a sinner to appeare before the judgement seat the sinner would give
ten thousand pounds for a good conscience nay all his estate riches c. but all these cannot bribe death to stay one minute longer nor can they all make any atonement for the soule Riches honours c. are not a suitable proportionable price sor these are materiall and corruptible the soule immateriall and incorruptible and between these there 's no proportion Thirdly The price paid to redeem our soules is infinitely superlatively more worth then millions of worlds what 's that see 1 Pet. 1. 18. The soul was redeemed with the price of bloud even of him who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one soule saved any other way not the richest in the world nor the poorest can come any other way to heaven but by Jesus Christ The soule of the poorest saint though his person be trampled on by the world is bought by so great a price as the effusion of the bloud of Jesus Christ Hence it evidently appeares that the soul is more worth then the world Christ died not for the world he prayed not for them John 17. 9. but he died for his own whom his father had given him out of the world O Consid 2. Jesus Christ alone and the graces of his spirit can adorne the soule pretious heavenly-born-being soule 2ly It 's Jesus Christ alone the graces of his spirit that can beautifie enrich and adorne the soule Aske a covetous Mammonist where lies his riches he 'll tell you in such a stock of cattell such lands revennues gold silver c. Aske a child of God where are his riches he 'll tell you his riches are in Christ his treasures are in heaven his high place and preferment is in his fathers house Aske your stately Gallants wh●re their ornaments are They will shew you their necklaces and bracelets of pearles their Diamond-Rings Gorgeous apparrell But what 's all these to the soule The soule is not beautified with golden chains costly raiment pretious jewels I le tell you of a chaine of pearls which will adorne your soules and enrich you more then all the pretious gemmes the Universe can afford read 2 Pet. 1. 5. Ps 45. 13 14. Ezek. 16. 9 10 11 c. Thou mayest be rich in the world yet poor in grace thou mayest have a beautifull face and a polluted soule goodly brave stately apparrell and a foule rotten conscience outward beauty inward deformity fair without foule within Now Christ his graces can alone make thy soule beautifull His graces are the best ornament and therefore beseech him to beautifie thy soule and to adorne thee with faith love and the rest of the Graces of his spirit Thirdly Consider God out of the riches of his free grace and mercy Consid 3 God puts a price into our hands to improve for our souls puts a price into your hands by the Gospell dispensations which he expects you should improve for the best advantage of your soules Force not the Lord to complaine as Prov. 17. 6. you have sermon upon sermon Manna falls frequently round about your tents will you not stir out of your doores to gather it you have the ordinances frequently dispensed amongst you you have bread in the morning and bread in the evening many occasionall sermons All these helpes and meanes are afforded by God for the good of your soules you have publick assemblies continued your eyes behold your teachers you enjoy Sabbaths dayes of humiliation dayes of thankesgiving wherein Gods keeps open market for the good of your soules and it s your duty to husband them all for the eternall welfare of your soules The Spirit knocks at your hearts by the sermons you hear by all the mercies you enjoy to take care of your pretious soules The salvation of your soules is the intention and end of all our preaching It 's the only designe we have upon you to win you to Jesus Christ all the Ordinances are the food of your soules to keep your soules in heart the sabbaths are the market of your souls you have soule-fatting Ordinances Oh take heed lest a leanenesse enter into your soules The markets will not alwaies last the shops will not alwayes be open now come and buy wine c. Improve the Sabbaths Sermons all your Gospel-opportunities for the eternal benefit of your soules Fourthly Consider This present time of life whilst you are in this Consid 4. This is the present time to regard our soules world is the only season and opportunity offered to make provision for your pretious soules see John 9. 4. This is the time to worke out your salvation in as Phil. 2. 12. The time of seeking God Isa 55. 6. This is the time of working the worke of faith the labour of love and patience of hope 2 Thes 1. 3. This is the time of making our peace and reconciliation with God Now we presse upon you the Doctrine of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. If thou livest and diest in an unregenerate and unreconciled estate to God thou wilt remaine so even to all eternity Now thou must run otherwise thou shalt never obtaine now thou must fight the good fight of faith otherwise thou shalt never obtain the end of thy faith the salvation of thy soule Now thou must wrestle otherwise thou wilt never obtein the blessing Now thy peace must be made whilst thou art on this side hell otherwise it will never be made hereafter There 's no time for purgation in another world for perfecting thy faith and hope this time of life is the seed time and according as a man soweth so shal he reape This time of life is a time of working in heaven there will be a resting from our labours As therefore thou tendrest the eternall welfare of thy soule whilst thou hast life breath space opportunity whilst thou art on this side the grave on this side of eternity set seriously upon the businesse of greatest weight and consequence to make thy peace with God to make thy calling and election sure that so when death separates thy soule from thy body nothing may be able to separate it from the love of Jesus Christ Consid 5. This present life is but for a moment Fifthly Consider This present life is but for a moment and upon this moment depends eternity The longest life is but a mo●ent if compared with eternity and this moment is a short moment compared in Scripture to bubbles vapours spans weavers shuttles flowers things of shortest continuance And this moment is a shortning moment each day each hour each minute shortneth thy life and makes thee nearer eternity each step thou treadest is a step nearer thy Grave each moment thou breathest is a drawing on to thy home And further this moment when once past is irrecoverable all the world cannot call back one minute of time and when this little inch and moment of time is past thou shalt be in eternity in that condition which is unalterable as long
is very convenient and not hurtfull Let us observe the Apostles censure They are Gangrens destructive to many pretious soules and therefore may not be tolerated and connived at Observe how the Apostle brands them for erring from the truth The Originall is more emphaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In ‖ Significat Apostolus eos à scopo Christianae veritatis ad quam collimare debebant aberrasse Estius Estius his commentaries on the place I find he followeth both Ambrose and Austine and renders his own sence accordingly The Apostle doth signify that they erred from that mark of Christian truth at which they ought to aime And * Qui à veritatis scopo aberrarunt Gerrh Gerrhard concurres in his judgment i. e. they have swerved or missed the mark It 's † Non quodvis Erratum significatur sed quod est ejusmodi ut fundamentum non retineatur Reza Beza's observation on the place that the Apostle used this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thrice in this Epistle which is mentioned to shew That not every errour in Religion is signified but an errour of that Kind that destroyeth the foundation 3. Thirdly The Apostle declares the issue and mischievous successe of these Seducers that they gaine Proselites and followers in the verse preceding my Text They overthrew the faith of some Some hereby conceive that they destroyed not the grace but the profession of their faith For by this heresy in denying of the resurrection making it imaginary or spirituall they subvert the Orthodox faith However here 's our strong hold that Gods foundation is firme Mens wickednesse cannot shake that firme foundation which God hath laid Here 's a neverthelesse to support us against the Apostacies of men of corrupt minds Although they relinquish their old Principles and turne Hereticks yet we have a firme Ground of Incouragement for the foundation of God standeth sure against all the underminings of Apostates and Heretickes The decree of Gods election stands sure notwithstanding the malice of the vilest men who have a spirit of contradiction In this Proposition of eternall truth That Gods foundation stands sure Here are five things remarkable and they carry a great deale of weight in them requiring our most deliberate consideration 1. Here is a foundation 2. A firme and sure foundation 3. It is the foundation of the great God unchangeable 4. It hath a seale put to it Things sealed are more sure and authentique 5. Here is the omniscience of God ingaged He knowes who are his All true believers have their names wrote in the book of life They are all known unto God But as in sealing there useth to be a Counterpart when both parties seale so God sealeth and man sealeth Gods eternall decree is his seale sure and unalterable Man's seale is his holy life and conversation Because God knoweth who are his and his foundation is sure and certaine therefore a stronger ingagement lyeth upon us all to look to our lives and conversations From the doctrine of the unchangeable decree of God my Text inferres this practicall Use And which hath a connexion with what went before Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity Wherein you have considerable Divis the Name and the Thing or the Profession and Practice of Christianity 1. You have the name or Profession specified in these words 1. The name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one that nameth i. e. whoever would be reputed a Christian who takes upon him the name of Christ and calls Qui invocat Christi n●men in eo sese Christianum ●ppellat Beza Isa● 4. 1. Gen. 48. 18. himself after the name of Christ Christian So we read In that day seven women shall take hold of one man saying we will eate our owne bread and weare our own apparell only let us be called by thy name to take away our reproach And Jacob gave in chargeth this name should be named upon Ephraim and Manasseth i. e. that they should be called the Children of Israel Such then as take upon them the Profession of Christianity are said to name the name of Christ 2. Here 's the thing it selfe or practice required for an evidence 2. Here is the thing it selfe Jewells Apology of the truth of the profession 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him depart from iniquity This is a well-grounded Apostacy to be an Apostate from ●inne and Satan Learned Jewell tells us in his Apology that Papists accuse the Protestants of Apo●tacy and saith he It 's true we are Apostates but such Apostates who are godly Apostates even from Rome from Errours Heresies and Idolatries And this Apostacy and Secession from them is our glory and honour And although this is mentioned Negatively only yet the Positive acts are necessarily included We must abhorre that which is evill and cleave to that which is good We must cast off the workes of darknesse and put on the armour of light So * Non solum nomine crederet quoque ab iniquitate de clinat à malo faciat bonum Arias Montanus Arias Montanus expounds the place And judicious † Quisquis ergo Deum invocat hoc est se ex populo Dei esse profitetur ac censeri vult ab omni impietate procul absit Calv. Doct. Mr Calvin thus interprets the place Whosoever therefore calls upon God i. e. professeth himselfe to be of the people of God and would be so thought to be let him depart from all Iniquity The summe and substance of the Words amount to this issue It is not sufficient to be Christians in name unlesse we be so in deed and in truth Notwithstanding the foundation is firme Gods eternall decree like himselfe is ununchangeable yet upon presumption of our interest in the Decree of God we may not let loose the reynes to licentiousnesse but we must walke in all holy Conversation and Godlinesse we must as we are exhorted depart from iniquity The Words thus explained containe this obvious and fundamentall Doctrine That wheresoever there is the profession of Christianity there ought to be a Godly life and Conversation every way sutable and correspondent therewith Or Whoever professeth thename of Christ ought by a thorough practice to answer his profession and prove the sincerity thereof by an answerable walking thereunto For the unfolding of this needfull and great Point I shall select Method propounded some choice Testimonies of Scripture and then confirme the Assertion by strength of reason and hope so to conclude in a practicall Application as through the grace of God I may leave such deepe impressions upon your hearts as to ingage you to reduce the Doctrine of the Text into practice throughout your whole lives and conversations To resume the Inlargement of these 1 Scripture Testimonies Phil. 1. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 2. 11 12. 1 Joh. 3. 3. Gal. 5. 24. Jam. 3. 13. Col. 2. 6. Heads of discourse according