Selected quad for the lemma: life_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
life_n adam_n death_n review_v 25 3 15.9337 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

There are 22 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

our salvation there is such a temperament of both that they shine with an equal glory 3. We are justified by faith Acts 13.39 And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses certainly none are justified in a state of impenitency and unbelief 't is not enough to look to the first moving cause the grace of God or the impetration of it by the blood of Christ but how it is applied to our selves and what right we have For the righteousness of Christ is none of ours till we do repent and believe let us see how our title doth arise when we thankfully seriously and broken-heartedly accept Christ as our Lord and Saviour then we are found in him not having our own righteousness 4. We are justified by works and not by faith only by which are meant the fruits of sanctification for true faith and true holiness will shew its self by good works faith giveth us the first right but works continue it for otherwise a course of sin would put us into a state of damnation again therefore at the last judgment these are considered Revel 20.12 And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Matth. 25.35 36. For I was an hungry and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in naked and ye cloathed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me Faith is our consent but obedience verifieth it or is our performance of what we consented unto the one as covenant making the other as covenant-keeping we are admitted by covenant-making but continued in our priviledges by covenant-keeping Psal. 25.10 All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant But yet a little more must be said to reconcile the two Apostles Paul saith A man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law Rom. 3.28 and James saith Chapt. 2.24 Ye see then how by works a man is justified and not by faith only There is a two-fold charge commenced against us as sinners and breakers of the law as hypocrites and unsound believers To the first we have nothing but the merits of Christ to plead to the second a fruitful obedience or else Paul in the opposition between works and faith meaneth by works legal observances by faith true Christianity The Jews boasted of their legal observances to the rejection of the faith of Christ and James by faith a dead faith and by works Christian duties or acts of obedience to God not external observances of the law of man 4. Why no charge or accusation can lie against them whom God justifieth 1. Because God is the supream law-giver to appoint the terms and conditions upon which we shall be justified and when he hath stated them and declared his will who shall reverse it or revoke it Heb. 6.17 18. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation No cause of revocation can be imagined in God or out of God within God not want of wisdom for nothing can fall out but what he foresaw at first Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Not inconstancy of will for he is not as man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 Nor can his will be frustrated through any defect of power for he is Almighty Nothing without God neither Devils nor Angels nor Men have power to null and frustrate the force of his constitutions The New Covenant is his resolved will and purpose not to be altered surely in making it God determineth of his own and not another's right 't is in his power to absolve or condemn upon what terms he pleaseth therefore if out of his Soveraign will he hath put our justification in such a course who can reverse it 2. Because the promise of justification is built upon Christs everlasting merit and satisfaction and therefore it will hold good for ever Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Christ procured these promises for us and that by his death therefore everlastingly they hold good 2 Cor 1.20 For all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen and called the everlasting Covenant 'T is even become the interest of God to justifie us that he may not lose the glory of his grace and the merit and oblation of Christ Isa. 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities He that hath born our sins all this cost would be in vain if he should not pardon and justifie There is such a value in the death and obedience of Christ that the Scripture puts a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon it compare it with the influence of Adam as a common root Rom. 5.17 18. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life And with the legal sacrifices Heb. 9.13 For if the blood of Bulls and Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ c. There is the same reason in both besides institution and appointment there is an intrinsick value 3. Because 't is conveyed by the solemnity of a Covenant now God by his Covenant hath made it our right his justice is ingaged 1 John 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the righteous Judge shall give me at that day By solemn promise you convey a right to another in the thing promised so doth God 4. When we believe God as the supream Judge actually determineth our right so that a believer is rectus incuria hath his quietus est Rom. 4.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. And then who can lay any thing to our charge to reverse Gods grant 5. The Lord as the soveraign disposer of mans felicity doth many times uncontroulably give us the comfort of it in our own consciences Job 34.29 When he giveth quietness who can trouble and when he hideth his face who then can behold him whether it be done against a nation or against a man only None can obstruct the peace which he giveth Gods dispensations whether for good or evil are effectual
Sermon 29 is the last Sermon and what follows with Sermon 30 is the first Sermon on this verse FRom these words we have the 2d fruit of Christ's Death and Purchase he died that we might die in conformity unto his Death and he died that we might live with a respect to his Resurrection and therefore as I have spoken of our dying by the Death of Christ so must I speak now of our living in the Life and in the Resurrection of Christ. His Death is the Merit of it but his Resurrection is the Pattern and Fountain of it His Death is the merit of it for it is repeated here again He did not only die that we might die but he died that we might live He died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves c. But then his Resurrection is the Pattern and the Fountain of it for therefore is the clause inserted that they might live to him that died for them and rose again Now in this verse there are two things 1. The fruit itself The new life with respect to the Resurrection of Christ And he died for all that they might live 2. The aim tendency ordination of that life which is to refer all our Actions to Gods Glory to guide them by Gods will That they should from henceforth live not to themselves c. Now this end aim and tendency of the new life 't is propounded Negatively Not unto themselves This is mentioned because a man cannot live to God till he hath denied himself Spiritual life is but a recovery out of self-love Before the Fall there was no such thing as Self contrary to or distinct from God set up either in an opposite or divided sense from God But when Man fell from God self interposed as the next Heir as an Idol not God therefore the great work and care of Religion is to draw us from self to God Not to themselves that is not to their own wills ends and interests But it is positively exprest too that they should live according to the will and for the glory of God For the first of these the fruit itself I shall speak of the life itself that we have by vertue of Christs Resurrection that they which live that is Spiritually some indeed expound it Judicially they that live in a Law sense they are freed from death to which they were obliged by Adam and which they deserved by the merit of their own sins But though that be included it is not the full and formal meaning of the clause For as the Death mentioned in the former verse is to be interpreted of the Mystical Death so by consequence this Living is to be interpreted of the Spiritual Life by bestowing of the Holy Ghost upon us Of this I shall speak under this point namely Doct. That by vertue of Christs Death and Resurrection Christians obtain the grace of a new life In opening of this I shall 1. Shew that there is a Spiritual Life and what it is 2. The respect that it hath to the Resurrection of Christ as the Spiritual Death hath to his Death First That there is a Spiritual Life There is a Natural and Human Life and there is a Spiritual and Heavenly Life The Natural and Human Life is nothing but the civil and orderly use of Sense and Reason and there is a Spiritual and Heavenly Life which is nothing but supernatural Grace framing and disposing the whole Man to live unto God It is supernatural Grace because we have it by vertue of our union with Christ John 6.57 As I live by the Father so he that eateth me shall live by me Mark when we have eaten Christ when we are united to Christ that is take it out of the Metaphor as our Food becomes one with our substance so when we are united to Christ so as to become one Spirit then we live by the influence and vertue of his Spirit In the Life of Nature we live by the influence of his general Providence but in the Life of Grace by the power of the Holy Ghost therefore it is called The Life of God Eph. 4.18 Being alienated from the Life of God that is to say that Life which God worketh in us by the communication of his Spirit Now by this supernatural Grace this gift of the Spirit we are framed to live unto God For this life as it hath another principle distinct from that of the Natural Life so it hath another end The operations of the Creature are sublimated and raised to a higher end Here in the Text the Apostle shews the ordination and tendency of this Life that it is not to our selves but it is to him that died for us and rose again And Gal. 2.19 I am dead to the Law that I might live unto God It is a Life whereby a man is enabled to act and move towards God and for God as his utmost end and his chief good The Natural Life is to itself as water riseth not beyond its Fountain and that which is born of the flesh can go no h●gher then as fleshly Inclinations carry it But the Spiritual Life is a power enabling us to live unto God Rom. 14.8 Whether we live we live unto God c. when we only mind self-interest and act for the conveniencies and interests and supports of the outward Life then we do but walk as men 1 Cor. 3.3 This is but according to the motions and to the bent of a Natural Principle But if we would live as Christians or as new Men then we must live at a higher rate God must be at the end of every action Thus you see what it is Now because of the Term Life I shall shew 1. The Correspondence 2. The difference between it and the common Life First The Correspondence and likeness that is between the common Life that other men live and this life of Grace that Christ died for us that we might live and is wrought in us in conformity to his Resurrection for therefore they go under the same name They are alike in many things 1. The Natural Life supposes Generation so does the Spiritual which is therefore exprest by Regeneration or by being born again John 3.3 1 John 2 27. Now look as in Natural Generation we are first begotten and then born so here there 's an Act qua Regeneramur by which we are begotten again and qua Renascimur by which we are born again There is an Act of God by which we are begotten again viz. by the powerful influence of Grace upon our Hearts accompanying in the Word James 1.18 and there 's an Act of God by which we are born again viz. when the New-creature is formed in us and begins to discover it self Being born again not of Corruptible Seed but of Incorruptible Effectual calling and Sanctification are these two Acts by the one we are begotten by the other born the one may be called
there Salvation in any other for there is no other Name under Heaven given among Men whereby we must be saved it only excludeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that are called Gods 1 Cor. 8.5 There is no God but one Many are called Gods but to us there is but one God the Father As also it is the scope of Christ he would lay down the Summary of Christian Doctrine the one Member being opposed to the vanity of the Gentiles the other to the blindness of the Jews 2. To note the Order and Oeconomy of Salvation in which the Father is represented as Supream in whom the Sovereign Majesty of the Deity resideth and the Son sustaineth the Office of Mediator and Servant Joh. 14.28 My Father is greater then I not in respect of Nature or essential Glory for therein they are both equal Phil. 2.6 Who being in the Form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God but in order of Redemption in which the Father is the principal Party representing the whole Deity because he is the Original and Fountain of it So 1 Cor. 8.6 But to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him God the Father is to be conceived as the Supream Person or ultimate Object of Worship and the Son as Lord and Mediator And Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent That is Jesus Christ not as the Second Person in the Trinity but as Mediator Sent implieth 1. Christ's Divine Original he came forth from God he is Legatus à latere John 16.30 By this we know that thou camest forth from God He was a Person truly existing before he was sent into the World and a distinct Person from the Father for he that sendeth and he that is sent are distinguished 2. His Incarnation Gal. 4.4 When the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman 3. It implieth his whole Office of Mediator and Redeemer wherefore he is called the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Heb. 3.1 Apostle implieth one that was sent Christ was the chief Apostle and Messenger of Heaven the High Priest and Apostle The High Priesthood was the highest Calling in the Jewish Church and the Apostleship the highest Calling in the Christian Church to note that the whole Office of saving all the Church the Elect of all Ages is originally in Christ. He is the great Ambassador to treat with us from God and the High Priest to treat with God and appease his Wrath for us The Names of Christ also are of some use Such Scriptures are like Gold that may be beaten into thin Leaves In Summaries and Breviats every Mark and Letter is of use Jesus signifieth a Saviour at it is explained Mat. 1.21 Thou shalt call his Name Jesus for he shall save his People from their Sins This is a part of our Belief to acknowledg Christ a Saviour Then Christ signifieth anointed We shall draw out the sum of all in a few Points 1. Observe The Beginning Increase and Perfection of Eternal Life lieth in Knowledge 1. The Beginning of it is in Knowledg Knowledg is the first step to Eternal Life In Paradise Adam's two Symbols were the Tree of Knowledg and the Tree of Life As Light was the first Creature that God made so it is in the New Creation Col. 3.10 Put on the New Man who is renewed in Knowledg after the Image of him that created him By the inlightning of the Holy Ghost the Work of Grace is begun and the Seed of Glory is laid in the Heart The Holy Ghost representeth the Patern and then conformeth us to 〈◊〉 Regeneration is nothing but a transforming Light or such an Illumination as ch●●ges the Heart 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open Face beholding as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of our God Ephes. 4.23 Be renewed in the Spirit of your Minds It maketh our Notions of God and Christ to be active and effectual The Force of the new Nature is first upon the Mind it taketh Sin out of the Throne God in the order of Grace followeth the Order which he hath established in Nature Reason and Judgment is to go before the Will 2. The Increase of it is by Knowledg 2 Pet. 3.18 But grow in Grace and in the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. The more thou growest in Knowledg the more thou growest in Life All the gradual Progress and Increase of the Spiritual Life is by the increase of Light 2 Pet. 1.2 Grace be multiplied unto you by the knowledg of God and Jesus Christ our Lord. Heat doth increase by Light as a Room is warmer at high Noon than in a chill Morning I confess through corruption and literal airy Knowledg Men grow more carnal and careless as new Light quencheth old Heat but by the Light of the Spirit the Heart is more quickned and enlivened and as the Judgment is made solid so the Heart is more gracious 3. The Perfection of it is by Knowledg Psal. 17.15 When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy Likeness The Heaven of Heavens is to satisfy the Understanding with the knowledg of God One great end of our going to Heaven is to better our Notions and Apprehensions While the Soul is Prisoner in the Body we have but low and dark Thoughts but there we are illuminated on a sudden One glympse of God in Glory will inform us more than the study of a thousand Years Vse 1. Is to shew us the sad estate 1. Of Men without knowledge Prov. 19.2 Also that the Soul be without Knowledg it is not good Fruit that hath but little Sun can never be ripe Men will say we are ignorant but we hope we have a good Heart You can as well be without the Sun in the World as without Knowledg and Light in the Heart In all the Communications of Grace God beginneth with the Understanding as strength to bear Afflictions Jer. 31.19 After I was instructed I smote on my Thigh and was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my Youth James 1.5 If any of you lack Wisdom let him ask it of God It is the Perfection of the present Life and the Foundation of the next It is the Perfection of the present Life the excellency of a Man above the Beasts The more Knowledg the more a Man and the more Ignorant the more Brutish Psal. 49.20 Man that is in Honour and understandeth not is like the Beasts that perish Job 35.11 Who teacheth us more than the Beasts of the Earth and maketh us wiser than the Fowls of Heaven If a Man would glory in any thing it should be in the Knowledg of God Jer. 9.24 Let him that glorieth glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me 2. Of
some live by Manual Labours others by more Noble Employments as Magistrates Ministers who study for Publick Good Manual Labour is not required of all because it is a thing that is not required propter se as simply good and necessary but propter aliud as for Maintenance and Support of Life to ease others and to supply the Uses of Charity Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands the thing that is good that he may have to give to him that needeth When the Ends of Labour cannot otherwise be obtained then Handy-Labour is required All others are to serve their Generation according to the Will of God Acts 13.26 As Instruments of Providence to serve the Common Good to promote the Welfare of their Family Neighbourhood Country Those that spend their whole Life in Eating Drinking Sporting and Sleeping are guilty of brutish Idleness one of Sodom's Sins Ezek. 16.49 Behold this was the Iniquity of thy Sister Sodom Pride Fulness of Bread and abundance of Idleness was in her and in her Daughters And therefore those that are freed from Service and Handy-Labour are not freed from Work and Business If any Man must be allowed to be Idle then one Member must be lost in the Body Politick A Man is born a Member of some Society Family or City and is to seek the good of it he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We see in the Body Natural there is no Member but hath its Function and Use whereby it becometh serviceable to the whole All have not the same Office that would make a confusion but all have their Use either as an Eye or as a Hand or as a Tooth So in the Body Politick no Member may be useless they must have one Function or another wherein to imploy themselves otherwise they are unprofitable Burdens of the Earth Again every Man is more or less intrusted with a Gift which he is to exercise and improve for the good of others and at the day of Judgment he is to give up his Accounts as you may learn from the Parable of the Talents Mat. 25. If he hath but one Talent it must not be hidden in a Napkin Well then if every Man hath a Gift for which he is accountable to God he must have a Calling 1 Cor. 7.17 But as God hath distributed to every Man as the Lord hath called every Man so let him walk and chuse his state of Life Besides a Calling is necessary to prevent the Mischiefs of Idleness and those Inconveniences that follow Men not employed Standing Pools are apt to putrify but running Waters are sweetest an idle Man is a Burden to Himself a Prey to Satan a Grief to the Spirit of God a Mischief to others He is a Burden to himself for he knoweth not what to do with his Time in the Morning he says Would God it were Evening and in the Evening would God it were Morning The Mind is like a Mill when it wanteth Corn it grindeth upon it self He is a Prey to Satan the House is emptied swept and garnished And then he goeth and taketh with himself seven other Spirits more wicked than himself and they enter in and dwell there Mat. 12.44 45. The Devil findeth them at leisure When David was idle on the Tarras he was tempted to Adultery Birds are seldom taken in their Flight but when they pitch and rest on the Ground He is a Grief to God's Spirit Ephes. 4.28 Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his Hands that he may have to give to him that needeth with Vers. 30. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Idle Men quench the vigor of their Natural Gifts and lose those Abilities that are bestowed on them He is a Mischief to Others 2 Thess. 3.11 For we hear there are some that walk among you disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all but are busy-bodies They that do nothing will do too much no Work maketh way for ill Work or for Censure and busy inquisition into other Mens Actions and so they prove the Fire-brands of Contention and unneighbourly Quarrels There must be a Calling and a Work to do 3. This Work is given them by God He appointeth to every one his Task and will be glorified by no Works but what are by himself assigned to them in their Station 1. By his Word 2. By his Providence 1. By his Word There is no calling and course of Service good but what is agreeable to the Word of God Psal. 119.105 Thy Word is a Light unto my Feet and a Lamp unto my Paths We must not settle in a sinful course of Life Men may tolerate Evil Callings but God never appointed them As for instance if any Calling and Course of Life be against Piety Temperance Justice it is against the Word Titus 2.12 Teaching us that denying Vngodliness and Worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Against Piety as to be an Idolatrous Priest or to make Shrines for Idols which was Demetrius his Calling in Ephesus and Tertullian in his Book de Idolatria sheweth this was the practice of many Christians to get their Livings by making Statues and Images and other Ornaments to sell to Heathen Idolaters Against Justice as Pi●●cy Usury and other oppressive Courses Against Sobriety as such Callings as meerly tend to feed the Luxury Pride and Vanity of Men so Mountebanks Comedians Stage-Players It were endless to instance in all In general the Calling must be good and lawful 2. By his Providence which ruleth in every thing that falleth out even to the least Matters especially hath the Lord a great Hand in Callings and appointing to every one his Estate and Condition of Life In Paradise God set Adam his Work to dress and prune the Trees of the Garden Gen. 2.15 And still he doth not only give Abilities and special Inclinations but also disposeth of the Education of the Parent and the Passages of Mens Lives to bring them to such a Calling Isa. 54.16 Behold I have created the Smith that bloweth the Coals in the Fire and that bringeth forth an Instrument for his Work Common Trades and Crafts are from the Lord. The Heathens had a several God for every several Trade as the Papists now have a tutelar Saint but they rob God of his Honour he giveth the Faculty and the Blessing Isa. 28.24 to the end His God doth instruct him to discretion and doth teach him c. He giveth the State and appointeth the Work Your particular Estate and Condition of Life doth not come by Chance or by the Care Will and Pleasure of Man but the Ordination of God without whom a Sparrow cannot fall to the Ground In the higher Callings of Ministry and Magistracy there is a greater solemnity But how should a Man glorify God in his Place and Station wherein God hath set him Answ. 1. Be
they received from Adam and therefore should live an Heavenly Life They have an higher Life which over-ruleth the other the Spirit that governeth the Motions of the Soul Look as the Planets have a Motion of their own by which they walk in their own Path and Course and besides there is a rapid Motion by which they are carried about in twenty four hours So Christians have an old Nature and an over-ruling Nature that carrieth them on contrary to their own Motion and tendency The Soul we received from Adam looketh after the conveniency of the outward Life the decent state of the Body Naturally Men use their Souls only as a Purveyor for the Body for outward Comforts and outward Supports but when there is a new Nature from Christ the regenerate part must have its Operation In the New Birth Principles of more raised and elevated Nature are brought into the Soul 3. Because of their great and glorious Hopes They are chosen out of this World 2 Pet. 1.4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious Promises that by these ye might be made partakers of a Divine Nature having escaped the Corruptions that are in the World through Lust. There is an Estate that dependeth upon the New Birth God's Children cannot complain for want of a Child's Portion they have Promises as so many Leases a Right to the Inheritance in Light Now a Christian that hopeth for another World should not live according to the Fashions of this World Rom. 12.2 And be not conformed to this World but be ye transformed in the renewing of your Mind This is an unworthy base World you are acquainted with a better If a Man were in a strange Country where he saw none but rude Savages that had not shame enough to cover their Nakedness would he conform himself to the guise of this Country We that have other Hopes should have other Lives 1 Thess. 2.12 That ye would walk worthy of God who hath called you unto his Kingdom and Glory There is a Description of a Christian's Life it beseemeth worldly Men to look after worldly Things Leave Things that perish to Men that perish Incolae Coeli eftis non hujus seculi If you must not die as they die do not live as they live left you are in their case at the point of death who have their portion in this Life Psal. 17.14 Wicked Men have their whole Portion in this Life because they look for no more no wrong is done to them it is but their own choice But a Believer will not give God an Acquittance nor Discharge having such great Promises Vse 1. To shew us what to judg of Persons that live so as if they were of the World You may know it by these three Notes when they do nothing worthy of their New Nature their Glorious Hopes and the Example of Jesus Christ. 1. Nothing worthy of the New Nature What difference is there between you and others The Christian should be like Saul so much higher by the Head than other Men. Wherein do you differ 1 Cor. 3.3 Are ye not carnal and walk as Men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men of an ordinary Nature destitute of the Spirit would do the same Christ maketh it to be the ground of Hatred because they are not of the World the World will soon sent out him that is Regenerate he walketh so as to convince the World they declare plainly that they seek a Country Heb. 11.14 their Hopes are discovered in their Conversation They reprove the World Heb. 11.7 By Faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an Ark to the saving of his House by which he condemned the World A Carnal Man justifieth the World as as Israel justified Sodom Carnal Men are called the Children of this World the Spirit of the Mother is in them the Spirit of the World inclineth them they are all for Lusts of the Flesh Lusts of the Eye and Pride of Life to go fine to feed high to shine in worldly Pomp affect Honour and great Places Too many Christians are baptized into this kind of Spirit they live as if they were born and bred here and then they justify the Carnal Practices of Men. Therefore what difference should there be between a Christian and the World 1 Pet. 4.4 They think it strange that you run not with them to all excess of Riot speaking evil of you Mortifying Pleasures denying Interests upon Religious Reasons this maketh the World wonder what kind of Nature have these Men. This sheweth that there is something Divine in you 2. Nothing worthy of their Hopes and of that Eternity which they expect When Men waste their strength and time in worldly Projects and Pursuits they live as if their Portion were only in this World A Traveller that is to stay but half an hour in a Room or for a Night in an Inn would he adorn it with Hangings They that are so much in this World they shew they do not look for a better Prov. 15.24 The way of the Wise is above their Heart is fixed on Heaven and the Face of their Conversation is turned that way Your Lives do not bear proportion with your Hopes Well then what do you make the scope of your Lives A Christian is satisfied with nothing but Eternity 2 Cor. 4.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 While we look not at the things that are seen but at the things that are not seen for the things that are seen are Temporal but the things that are not seen are Eternal A Christian useth the World and followeth his Business but he doth not make it his Scope his Heart is within the Vail There is an eternal Principle in the Heart of every Godly Man and therefore they cannot be satisfied with the Things of the World he mindeth other things in a subordination of Eternity Mercies and Duties of his Calling with respect to his Usefulness and Service and therefore spendeth his Time and Estate so that his main Work is to provide for Eternity 1 Tim. 6.19 Laying up in store for themselves a good Foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold of Eternal Life But now Men think they can never have enough in the World and make but slight Provision for the Life to come they make all things sure in the World and any slight Assurance serveth the turn for Eternity They live as if their hopes were altogether in the World they do not make Eternity their Scope 3. Nothing worthy of Christ's Example In Christ's Example we may take notice of two things the Heavenliness of it and the Courage of it 1. The Heavenliness Christ despised the World the great Encouragement of his Humane Soul was the Glory set before him Heb. 12.3 He came from Heaven on purpose to set us this Example But now when a Christian followeth the World when he is of this temper that he could wish to live always that
in their place but by their Faith and the Godly are elsewhere called of the H●●shold of Faith Where ever our Implantation into Christ or Participation of the Privileges of his Death or our Spiritual Communion in the Church is spoken of the Condition is Faith It is a Grace that sendeth us out of our selves to look for all in another It is the Mother of Obedience as all Disobedience is by Unbelief so all Obedience is by Faith First he said Ye shall not die and then Ye shall be as Gods First he seeketh to weaken their Faith in the Word they could not be proud and ambitious till they did disbelieve Therefore above all Things let us labour after Faith Our Hearts are taken up with the World the Honours and Pleasures of it these cannot make us happy but Christian Privileges will all which are conveyed to us by Faith But let us come to the second Point Doct. 2. That in the reckoning and sense of the Gospel they are Believers that are wrought upon to believe in Christ through the Word Here is the Object Christ the Ground Warrant and Instrumental Cause and that is the Word The Warrant must be distinguished from the Object the Warrant is the Word and the proper object of Faith is Christ as considered in his Mediatory Office Sometimes the Act of Faith is terminated on the Person of Christ and sometimes on the Promise to shew there is no closing with Christ without the Promise and no closing with the Promise without Christ. As in a Contract there is not only a receiving of the Lea●e or Conveyance but a receiving of Lands by virtue of such a Deed and Conveyance So there is a receiving of the Word and a receiving of Christ through the Word the one maketh way for the other the Promise for our Affiance in Christ. Faith that assents to the Promise doth also accept of Christ there is an Act terminated on his Person Faith is not assensus axiomati a naked Assent to the Propositions of the Word but a Consent to take Christ that we may rely upon him and obey him as an Alsufficient Saviour But now let us speak of these distinctly First Of the Object that is to believe in Christ. There is believing of Christ and believing in Christ. He doth not say those that believe me but those that believe in me through their Word Believing Christ implieth a Credulity and Assent to the Word and believing in Christ Confidence and Reliance Once more Believing in Christ is a Notion distinct from Believing in God Joh. 14.1 Ye believe in God believe also in me Since the Incarnation and since Christ came to exercise the Office of a Mediator there is a distinct Faith required in him because there are distinct grounds of Confidence because in him we see God in our Nature we have a claim by Justice as well as Mercy we have a Mediator who partaketh of God's Nature and Ours and so is fit to go between God and us Briefly to open this believing in Christ it may be opened by the Implicit or Explicit Acts of it 1. There is something Implicite in this Confidence and Reliance upon Christ and that is a lively sense of our own Misery and the Wrath of God due for Sin All God's Acts take date from the Nothingness and Necessity of the Creature and from thence also do begin our own Addresses to God God's Acts begin thence that he may be All in All from the Creation to the Resurrection God keepeth this Course and then the Dispensation ceaseth for then there is no more want but fulness Creation is out of Nothing Providence interposeth when we are as good as Nothing at the Resurrection we are nothing but Dust God worketh on the few Relicts of Death and Time So in all Moral Matters as well as Natural it is one of his Names He comforteth those that are cast down When he came to convert Adam he first terrified him They heard the Voice of God in the Garden and were afraid Gen. 3.10 He delivered Israel out of Egypt when their Souls were full of Anguish We are first exercised with the Ministry of the Condemnation before Light and Immortality are brought to Life in the Gospel and still God keeps his old Course Men are first burdened and sensible of their Load before he giveth them ease and refreshment in Christ. At the first Gospel-Sermon preached after the pouring forth of the Spirit Acts 2.37 They were pricked in their Hearts Christ's Commission was to preach the Gospel to the poor and broken-hearted and bruised Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord was upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the Poor he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted to preach Deliverance to the Captives the recovering of Sight to the Blind to set at liberty them that are bruised This is the Road-way to Christ. And all our Addresses to God begin too thence Man is careless Mat. 22.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they made light of it and proud Rom. 10.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have not submitted themselves to the Righteousness of God The Israelites were not weary of Egypt till they were filled with Anguish Adonijah when he found himself guilty of Death he laid hold on the Horns of the Altar The Prodigal never thought of returning till he began to be in want and to be soundly pinched Therefore till there be a due sense and conviction of Conscience it is not Faith but carnal Security In short we can never be truly desirous of Grace we cannot prize it we do not run for refuge Heb. 6.18 We are not earnest for a Deliverance till there be some such Work There are two Things keep the Conscience quiet without Christ Peace and Self Carnal-security and Self-sufficiency 1. It is hard to wean Men from the Pleasures of Sense and to make them serious in the Matters of their Peace before Christ and they be brought together they and themselves must be brought together This God seeketh to do by outward Afflictions that he may take them in their Month as the Ram was caught in the Briars In Afflictions Men bethink themselves 1 Kings 8.47 If they shall bethink themselves in the Land whither they are carried Captives c. It makes them to return upon themselves how it is between God and them If Affliction worketh not he joineth the Word it is a Glass wherein we see our natural Face James 1.21 God sheweth them what loathsome Creatures they are how liable to Wrath. Or if not by the Power of his Spirit upon their Consciences their Reins may chasten them they cannot wake in the Night or be solitary in the Day but their Hearts are upon them so great a Matter is it to bring Men to be serious 2. Self When the Prodigal began to be in want he joined himself to a Man of that Country Luke 15.15 We have slight Promises and Resolutions and
not only came into our Natures but he must come into our Hearts This Union is common to all tho I confess it is only reckoned and imputed to the sanctified Heb. 2.11 For both he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them Brethren And to the Children of God Heb. 2.14 Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of Flesh and Blood he also himself took part of the same 9. It is not a mixture as if Christ and we were confounded and mingled our Substances together That is a gross Thought and suiteth with the Carnal Fancies of a Corporal eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood We are not mixed his Substance with ours and ours with his he remaining still a distinct Person and we distinct Persons 10. It is not a Personal Union as of the two Natures in the Person of Christ. We are not united to Christ so as to make one Person but one Mystical Body 1 Cor. 12.12 For as the Body is one and hath many Members and all the Members of that one Body being many are one Body so also is Christ. The whole is Christ Mystical but every Believer is not Christ. Thus I have endeavoured to remove all gross and unworthy Thoughts But now Secondly Positively What it is I Answer We cannot fully tell till we come to Heaven then we shall have perfect knowledg of it then Christ is all in all John 14.20 At that day ye shall know that I am in the Father and you in me and I in you Then our Union is at the height But for the present we may call it an Union of Concretion and Coalition for we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 planted into him Rom. 6.5 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joined to the Lord 1 Cor. 6.17 It is immediatly with Christ we are united to Father and Spirit but by Christ as the Foot is united to the Head but by the intervention of other Members So we are united to the Father and the Spirit but by Christ as an Arm or Foot of the Son belongeth to the Father but as the Son belongeth to the Father The Love of the Father is the Moving Cause of it the Spirit is the Efficient Cause of it but it is with Christ. And it is by way of Coalition as things are united So as they may grow and live in another as the Branches grow in the Vine and the Members being animated and quickned by the Soul grow in the Body so are we united with Christ as our Vital Principle that we may live and grow in him that we might live in him Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and grow in him Ephes. 4.15 16. But speaking the Truth in Love may grow up into him in all things which is the Head even Christ. From whom the whole Body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every Joint supplieth according to the effectual working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the Body unto the edifying of it self in Love So that this is enough in general to call it an Union of Concretion and Coalition such an Union whereby Christ remaineth and liveth and dwelleth in us as a Vital Principle As the Soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Cause and Principle of Life to the Body so is Christ to us Before God breathed the Soul into Adam his Body tho otherwise organized and formed lay but as a dead Lump without Breath and Life but no sooner was the Soul put into him but he began to live So Christ being mystically united inableth us to live to act to grow and increase more and more More particularly to open it to you is hard because it is a great Mystery Life Natural is a Mystery not sufficiently explained much more Life Spiritual But now First I shall shew how it is wrought and brought about and in what Order For there is a difficulty there to be cleared For since Union is said to be by Faith Ephes. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your Hearts by Faith And Faith is an Act of Spiritual Life it seemeth there is Life before our Union with Christ So that this Union seemeth to be the Effect rather than the Cause of the Spiritual Life and some say it is the Effect of the Beginning and the Cause of the Continuance and Increase of it and conceive the Order thus That Christ is offered in the Gospel and by receiving Christ we come to be united to him and then to be possessed of his Righteousness and receive further influences of Grace and that the first beginning of Spiritual Life is not from Union but Regeneration by virtue of which Faith is given to us that we may be united to Christ. But I suppose this Method is not right Briefly then for the manner and order how it is wrought take it thus Union it is by the Spirit on Christ's part and Faith on ours he beginneth with us as the most worthy as having a quickning and life-making Power in himself 1 Cor. 15.45 The last Adam was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickning Spirit By the Spirit he infuseth Spiritual Life the first Act of which is Faith that is the first Grace that acteth upon Christ and maketh the Union reciprocal that so in him we may have Righteousness and Grace Phil. 3.9 And be found in him not having mine own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by Faith All Graces flow from Union with Christ so doth Faith Believing is an Act of the Spiritual Life but it is at the same instant of time and not before The first Band of Union is the Spirit for the Gift of the Spirit is the Cause of Faith and every Cause is before the Effect in Nature tho not in Time for Positâ causâ in actu ponitur effectus But the Spirit is not given us in the least moment of Time before the being of Faith for the Spirit being infused immediatly excites Faith to take hold of Christ. Secondly What is that Act of Faith by which we close with Christ I Answer The apprehending embracing taking hold of Christ To as many as received him c. John 1.12 trusting him with our Souls that is the Faith that gives us an Interest in Gospel-Privileges But what is this receiving Christ I Answer Receiving presupposeth Offering it is a Consent to what is offered an Accepting of what is given Receiving is a word used in Contracts and noteth the Consent of one Part to the Terms which the other offereth The Scripture chiefly delighteth in the Similitude of the Matrimonial Contract as a Woman accepteth a Man for her Husband so do we receive Christ. When a Man's Affections are set upon a Woman he sendeth Spokesmen to tell her of his Love and that he is ready to give her an Interest in himself
to reap nothing but the wind but they reap the whirlwind a man that feeleth the gripes of a Surfeit buyeth the pleasant meat at a dear rate and what a sorry Purchace doth he make that is at so much cost and expence of time to please the flesh and getteth nothing but trouble of mind and horrors of Conscience for his recompence 3. If there be any fruit of sin singly yet comparatively it is as none that is if compared with what we might get by Gods Service The carnal World lives by Sense as Gods Children do by Faith now they that judge of their Happiness by their Senses expect and promise themselves more good by the Pleasures Honours and Profits of the World than all Gods Promises but a little Experience confuteth them On the other side they that measure their Happiness by the Rule of Faith Gods Promises are Heritage enough to them Psal. 119.111 Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever they are the rejoycing of my heart God promises things truly good to them out of love Psal. 84.11 He will give grace and glory and no good thing will be withhold from them that walk uprightly They are all Yea and Amen of unvariable Truth and of certain Accomplishment Therefore happy are they that trust in him when others go a whoring from him Psal. 73.28 Now though by sin men should get increase of Riches injoy variety of Pleasures indear themselves to the favour of great Men yet is this Fruit to be compared to that we may have by serving and trusting in God Alas the Nature of these things is such that they cannot make us good much less happy and their value is much lessened when we cannot have them without so spightful a condition as sin without committing or doing something against Conscience or omitting what God requireth of us Well then if it seem fruit singly and apart yet it is none comparatively in respect of what we might have by pleasing God Vse 1. To rouse us out of a state of Sin Men would not lie so long in it if they would recollect themselves and consider what have I gotten since I was the Devils bond-slave but a blind Mind a troubled Conscience and a hard Heart and it may be shame and disgrace in the World Now what a folly is it for any one to pursue that which will bring him no fruit One beginneth to be awakened when he beginneth to say Job 33.27 I have sinned and perverted that which is right and it profited me not Whatsoever sin promiseth or sinners fancy it will be found at last an unprofitable course what do men get by drinking gameing chambering and wantonness what by all the lusts of youth and the bold attempts of riper years but an ill Name and a worse Conscience a diseased Body and many times an encumbred Estate They turn their back upon God to their great disadvantage God is willing to stand to this tryal that his Service doth us no hurt Jer. 2.5 What iniquity have your fathers found in me that they are gone far from me and have walked after vanity and are become vain Yea that it will do us much good Mic. 2.7 Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly But sin cannot stand the tryal it doth us much hurt now and will do us more hereafter Prov. 5.11 12. And thou mourn at last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed and say How have I hated instruction and my heart hath despised reproof Vse 2. To prevent acts of Sin for the time to come It is good often to put this Question Cui bono What doth it Eccles. 2.2 What shall I gain by these vain delights and sinful practices To take pains to no purpose is folly to an ill purpose is unnatural and self-destruction Ask what doth it To my Body a modest temperance will keep it in better plight and freer from diseases than a gluttonous pampering of it To my Estate a little with the Fear of God is better than great Revenues with sin To my Soul shall I be more chearful to serve God or my mind in a better posture for the high uses of Religion To my eternal Estate am I in the way to Hell or to Heaven If men would but commune with themselves oftner what am I now a doing What will come of it it may be I shall get a little worldly pelf but what is this to the loss of Gods Favour or to the loss of my Soul We are often quarrelling with God what profit is it that I serve the Almighty and pray unto him Mal. 3.14 Ye have said It is vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinances and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of Hosts So Job 21.15 What is the Almighty that we should serve him and what profit should we have if we pray unto him Surely we should do as much on the other side what will sin come to What profit by this sensual careless life this hunting after the World and neglecting God and my precious immortal Soul Secondly The second Disswasion or Argument which the Apostle useth is à turpi it is a base thing implied in that Clause Whereof ye are now ashamed You had no solid benefit then and you cannot review your past sinful life without shame The words may be considered under a twofold Reference I. As it is an Act of Repentance in the Godly II. As it sets forth the evil and odiousness of Sin 1. As it is an Act of Repentance in the Godly after ye came to better knowledge ye were ashamed of those things ye took pleasure in before therefore now meddle no more with them Doctrine That Gods People are and ought to be ashamed of their past Sins There are two things in Sin 1. The Guilt of it 2. The Folly and Filthiness of it The Guilt causeth Fears and Terrors with respect to the Wrath of God which is to ensue But the Folly and Filthiness of Sin causeth shame Man is a rational Creature and therefore is ashamed of what is foolish and was at first made an holy Creature and to injoy Communion with an holy God and therefore Turpitude and Filthiness is a cause of shame Now it requireth a quick and more tender sense to be sensible of the Folly and Filthiness of Sin than to be sensible of the Wrath due to Sin but all those who are brought home to God are sensible of both A man covered with noisom Boils and Sores is not only affected with the pain but abhorreth the sight and smell of them but first he feeleth the pain so the first work is Terror men are pricked at heart Acts 2.37 before they have a sight of their Folly and Filthiness the Soul beginneth to come on finely when it is brought to that it is gradus in re to be sensible of this Folly is the first degree of spiritual Wisdom 1 Cor. 3.18 If
of my hand 2 Thess. 1.9 Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known We cannot conceive what God is able to do in punishing Sinners but the event declares it Vse 1. Information 1. That Believers need to consider the Fruit of Sin that thereby they may be moved to fears of God and more careful avoiding of sin They are not to think of it in a slavish tormenting way as if God desired the Creatures misery no they are warned of it that they may escape it though Love must be the chief Spring and Principle of our Obedience yet Fear hath its use the Threatnings declare the Holiness of God as well as his Promises and we need to know his hatred to Sin as well as his love to Righteousness to breed an awe in us 2. It sheweth the folly of them that betwitch themselves into a groundless hope of impunity in their sinful courses Deut. 29.19 And it come to pass when he heareth the words of this Curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart to add drunkenness to thirst They take from God the honour of his Holiness Justice and Truth Gods glory is advanced in the World by Acts of Justice as well as Acts of Mercy and besides they open a gap to all impiety 3. That all sins are in their own nature mortal for the wages of sin is death In comparison some sins are greater than others and so more deserving punishment but simply and considered by themselves all are mortal if not in the issue and event yet in their own nature God pardoneth the Penitent their sins are not deadly in the event but they deserve damnation in their own nature There are sins of infirmity and wilful sins but nothing should be light and small to us that is committed against the great God Some are lighter some are heavier but all are in their nature damnable they are a breach of the Law of the eternal God Though the Gospel reacheth out mercy to penitents offering to them pardon of sins and eternal Life yet all deserve damnation and were it not for Christ and the new Covenant we should not be a moment out of Hell Vse 2. Direction 1. To the Impenitent that yet go on in their sins O repent of it speedily and cast out sin as we do fire out of our bosoms and sleep not in the bonds of iniquity Your damnation sleepeth not 1 Pet. 2.3 You are invited earnestly Ezek. 18.30 Why will ye dye O house of Israel O then pass from death to life if you ref●●e this Call you do in effect love death Prov. 8.36 He that sinneth against me wrongeth his own soul all they that hate me love death By refusing Christ and nourishing sin you nourish a Serpent in your bosoms and embrace the flames of Hell-fire therefore betimes seek a Pardon 2. To the penitent Believers three things I have to press upon them First Consider what cause we have to admire and magnifie the riches of Gods Mercy in our Redemption by Christ by whom sin is taken away and the consequent of it eternal death and who also hath taken the punishment of it upon himself Isa. 53.4 5. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows yet we did esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our sins the chastisement of our peace was upon him and by his stripes are we healed Secondly Never return to this slavery again for you see what a dangerous thing sin is when you indulge sin you lay hold on death it self therefore fly from it as from the gates of Hell and from all means instruments occasions and opportunities that lead to it and when Satan sheweth you the bait remember the hook and counterbalance the pleasures of sin to which we are vehemently addicted with eternal pains which are the fruit of it Now shall we run so great an hazard for poor vain and momentany delights It is sweet to a carnal heart to please the flesh but it will cost dear Now shall we sell the birthright for one morsel of meat Heb. 12.15 and hazard the loss of the Love of God for trifles Thirdly Take heed of small sins they are breaches of the eternal Law of God They that do not make great account of small sins will make but small account of the greatest for he that is not faithful in a little will be unfaithful in much There are many forcible Arguments to deter us from small sins partly because it is more difficult to avoid them they do not come with such frightning awakening assaults as the greater do partly because being neglected they taint the heart insensibly and men look not after their cure partly because they do prepare and dispose to greater offences as the little sticks set the great ones on fire partly because with their multitude and power they do as much hurt the Soul as great sins with their weight minuta sunt sed multa sunt lastly because they are in their own nature mortal Therefore dash Babylons Brats against the stones In short small sins are the Mother of great sins and the Grandmother of great punishments Lots Wife was turned into a Pillar of Salt the Angels were cast out of Heaven Adam thrust out of Paradise Second Branch But the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Doctrine That eternal Life is Gods free and gracious Gift to the Sanctified What eternal Life is we shewed before it is the full fruition of eternal Joys without any possibility of losing them Here is 1. The Donor God 2. The meritorious and procuring Cause Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. The Parties qualified Those that have their fruit to Holiness 1. On Gods part a Gift not a Debt as Wages is to the Servant or Souldier but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gracious Gift Though we should serve God a thousand years we cannot merit to be one half day in Heaven there it is a Gift to those who do most exactly persevere in Holiness the best have no other Claim but the Mercy of the Donor 1. It is the freest Gift 2. It is the richest Gift 1. It is the freest Gift God payeth more than is our due To punish men beyond their desert is injustice but to reward men beyond their deserts is not contrary to Justice for it is an Act of Mercy First It is greater than any merit of ours because it is the eternal injoyment of the ever blessed God and so far beyond any thing that we can do Finite things carry no proportion to an infinite reward Secondly Our works are many ways imperfect and so we may expect punishment rather than reward Mercy is our best Plea when we
of God that they that commit such things are worthy of death In your Consciences you will find an inward conviction that God is your Judg and will call you to an account for the breach of his Law We feel this living and dying Heb. 2.15 Who were all their life-time subject to bondage through fear of death And 1 Cor. 15.56 the sting of death is sin Only 't is more piercing and sharp when we die Secondly Let us enquire how or upon what reasons we come to have this exemption from condemnation This is 1. Vpon the account of Christs satisfaction to Gods Justice We all in our natural estate lie under the curse and wrath of God but Christ was made a curse for us to redeem us from the curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 And the Apostle telleth us 2 Cor. 5.21 That he was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Christ became a Sacrifice for sin to appease God towards us he was made a publick instance of Gods poenal Justice that we might be made an instance of Gods Merciful Justice or that God might deal with us in a way of grace upon the account of the Righteousness of Christ. 2. Vpon the account of the New-Covenant-grant John 5.24 Verily verily I say unto you He that heareth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation Christ would have us mark this as a a certain and important truth for escaping Eternal death and obtaining Eternal life are not trifles and Gods Faithful Word is interposed that such an one shall not come into condemnation Verily verily Well then the Gospel or New Covenant offereth pardon and exemption from condemnation to that death which the Law hath made our due to all those who will come under the bond of it 3. The certainty is considerable which resulteth or ariseth from these two grounds 'T is just with God to pardon them and to exempt them from Condemnation who take sanctuary at his Grace and devote themselves to him 1 John 1.9 If we confess and forsake our sins he is just and faithful to forgive them 2 Tim. 4.8 We read of a crown of righteousness which the righteous judge shall give at that day Justum est quod fieri potest God may do it or not do it he is not unjust if he doth it and justum est quod fieri debet This latter is understood here because of the fulness of the merits and satisfaction of Christ and his truth in his Promises he must judg men according to the Law of Grace and give them that which his Promise hath made their due 4. There must be an Appeal to the Gospel Where this Grace is humbly sued out by the penitent Believer for God is Sovereign and must be sought unto Appeals from Court to Court and from one Tribunal to another are often set down in Scripture as Psal. 130.3 4. If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand but there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared No man could escape condemnation and the Curse if the Lord should deal with us in strict justice but from the Tribunal of his strict justice we appeal to the Throne of Grace where favour and pardon is allowed to us upon certain equitable and gracious Terms According to the old Terms who is able to appear in the judgment before God A Sinner must either despair or die or run for refuge to this new and blessed hope so Psal. 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy Servant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man living be justified An innocent creature must beg his mercy and devote himself to his fear I proceed to the second Proposition 2. Doct. That this priviledg is the portion of those that are in Christ. 1. I shall here shew you What it is to be in Christ. 2. How we come to be in Christ. First What it is to be in Christ. The Phrase noteth Vnion with him There is certainly a real but spiritual Union between Christ and his Members which I have often described to you But late Cavils make it necessary to speak a little more to that Arguments All that I will say now is this 1. That it is more than a relation to Christ as a political head 2. That the Vnion of every Believer with Christ is Immediate 1. That it is more than a relation to Christ as a political head I prove it because it is represented by Similitudes taken from Vnion real as well as relative Not only from Marriage where Man and Wife are relatively united but from Head and Members who make one body not a political but a natural body 1 Cor. 12.12 For as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so also is Christ also by the similitude of root and branches John 15.1 2 3. Yea 't is compared with the mystery of the Trinity and the Vnity that is between the Divine Persons John 17.21 22 23. that they all may be one as thou father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us and the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one which tho it must not be understood in the utmost strictness yet at least there is more than a relation as also by reason 't is not only a notion of Scripture but a thing effected and wrought by the Spirit on Gods part 1 Cor. 12.13 We are by one spirit baptized into one body and by confederation one with another Cant. 2.16 I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine Christ is ours and we are his and he is also in us and we in him 'T is such a real Conjunction with Christ as giveth us a new being that Christ becometh to us the principle and fountain of a spiritual life 1 John 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life Christ is the stock we the graft he is the vine we the branches therefore we are said to be planted together in him Rom. 6.5 So that we may grow and live in him We are united to him as the body is to the soul all the members of the body are quickned by the soul the second Adam becometh to all his Members 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickning spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 as giving them life not only by his merit and promise but the influence of his spirit which life is begun here and perfected in Heaven it is begun in the soul Phil. 3.20 and Rom. 8.10 but 't is perfected both in body and soul in Heaven for the spirit is life to the body because of righteousness and if the spirit of him that raised Christ from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also
them and if others do injuries to us to forgive them as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us The second Operation which the Holy Ghost produceth in us is righteousness or justice in all our dealings giving every one his due honour whom tribute and praise to whom praise belongeth not borrowing without a mind or ability to pay which is but a specious robbery and 't is a shame so many Christians are guilty of it I am sure 't is contrary to the Spirit of God for when God hath done so much to manifest his justice to the world all that have the Spirit of God should be very righteous far from Oppression Fraud or Detention of what is another mans The Third Thing is Truth or Fidelity whereby we carry our selves sincerely and free from Hypocrisie and Dissimulation or lying cozenage and deceit God is a God of Truth and the Holiness be worketh in us is true holiness the Apostle groundeth his Exhortation upon that Wherefore put away lying Eph. 4.24 25. and speak truth every man to his neighbour 'T is a sin inconsistent with sincerity more than any other Well then this is the Gospel-spirit now the Holy Ghost doth not only plant these graces in us at first but doth continually increase them and assist us in the exercise of them he doth plant them in us at first Faith is his gift and 't is he doth change our hearts and kindle an holy love in us to God and raiseth the heart to the hope of Salvation 1 Pet. 1.9 begotten to a lively hope This is his first work for men must be good before their actions can be good then he doth increase Grace making all outward means effectual to this end and purpose this is called the supply of the spirit of Christ Jesus Phil. 1.19 meaning thereby a further addition of grace wrought in us by the spirit whereby we grow and advance in the way to Heaven These Impressions are weak in us at first but they are increased by the same Author or Agent in the use of the same means Lastly he doth assist us in the exercise of the same grace still working in us what is pleasing in the sight of God Heb. 13.21 he concurreth to every action and we do not only live in the spirit but walk in the spirit Gal. 5.25 all along we are quickned by his influence Let us in the next place consider from whom we receive it 't is said here the spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus it belongeth to Christ to give the spirit 1. He is the head ef the renewed state Christ was filled with the spirit to this end to be the head or quickning spirit to his Mystical Body 1 Cor. 15.45 The first Adam was made a living soul the second a quickening spirit not only as he giveth us the life of glory but the life of Grace also so Eph. 1.22 23. he is head over all things to the church which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all He is an Head not only to govern and defend the Church but to give them spiritual life and motion as the Head doth to the members for he filleth all with grace all believers are supplied from this fountain and continually supplied till they be filled with all the fulness of God Eph. 3.17 18 19. That is with all the Grace he meaneth to impart to us Well then the spirit is given by Christ John 4.14 Whoso drinketh of the water that I shall give shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up to everlasting life 'T is a living Conduit John 7.38 39. 2. 'T is his law that is written upon our hearts by the spirit The new Covenant is made with sinners in Christ Heb. 8.8 9 10. Behold the days come saith the Lord I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel not according to the covenant I made with their fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt because they continued not in my covenant for this is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel I will put my laws into their minds and write them in their hearts Now he that taught us the Christian Faith and Religion doth impress it upon us by his spirit we find a power more than can be from the words alone in the effects on our selves This cometh from Christ whose Law it is but it is immediately wrought by the spirit 3. Christ promised it therefore Christ giveth it John 15.26 The comforter shall come whom I will send you from the father by vertue of his Merit and Intercession Christ from the Father sendeth forth the all-conquering spirit to subdue the world to himself he promised aforehand to send down this sanctifying spirit into mens souls to do this work upon them 4. He giveth it on his own conditions that is to say of Faith John 7.37 38. if any man thirst let him come to me and drink he that believeth in me out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water but this he spake of the spirit which they that believe in him should receive And repentance Acts 2.38 Then Peter said unto them repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost Now these are the conditions of the new covenant which Christ brought out of the Bosom of God 3. By what law By the Gospel this is the law of the spirit of Christ there is some little of the spirit given by the light of nature to help men to read the book of the creatures Rom. 1.19 God shewed it them they might see somewhat of God in the creatures his Wisdom Power and Goodness and God excited their minds to behold it and did dart in some light into their consciences There was more of the spirit given by the legal Covenant they might see much more of the Power Wisdom and Goodness of God in his Statutes and Laws than Heathens could in the book of Nature but generally it wrought unto bondage the free spirit was but sparingly dispensed and to some few choice servants of God but these were but as a few drops of grace the great Flood of grace was poured out by the Gospel The Apostle puts the Galatians to the Question by what Doctrine they received the spirit Gal. 3.2 This only would I learn of you received you the spirit by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith He appealeth to their conscience and experience what kind of Doctrine conveyed the spirit to them the preaching of the Law or the preaching of the Gospel and this is meant not only of the Spirit that wrought Miracles but the sanctifying spirit he speaketh of both ver 5. He therefore that ministreth to you the spirit and worketh miracles among
body is dead because of sin That is the relicks of sin are not abolished but by death there is a twofold end and use of death to them that are in Christ. 1. To finish transgression and make an end of Sin We groan under the burden of it while we are in our Mortal bodies Rom. 7.24 But when the Believer dyeth death is the destruction of sin rather than of the penitent Sinner the vail of the sinful flesh is rent and by the sight of God we are purified all in an instant and then sin shall gasp its last and our Physitian will perfect the cure which he hath begun in us and we shall be presented faultless before the presence of God 2. To free us from the natural infirmities which render us uncapable of that happy life in Heaven which is intended to us The state of Adam in innocency was blessed but Terrene and Earthly a state that needed Meat Drink and Sleep If Christ would have restored us to this life it may be death had not been necessary and the present state of our bodies needed not to be destroyed but only purified but our Lord Jesus had an higher aim Eph. 1.3 Who hath blessed us with spiritual blessings in Christ Adam injoyed God among the beasts in paradise we injoy God among the Angels in Heaven it 's a divine and Heavenly Life that he promiseth a life like that of the blessed Angels where meat and drink and sleep hath no use Now this nature that we now have is not fitted for this life therefore Paul telleth us 1 Cor. 15.50 That flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God That is that Animal life which we derived from Adam cannot inherit the Kingdom of God Therefore we need to bear the image of the Heavenly which cannot be till this terrene and animal life be abolished To this end God useth death So that which was in its self a punishment becometh a means of entrance into glory the Corn is not quickened unless it die 1 Cor. 15.36 37 38. The believers that are alive at Christs coming must be change v. 52 53. Christ himself by death entred into Glory therefore what ever is animal vile and earthly and weak must be put off before we are capable of this blessed estate 3. The cause of this mortality is Because of sin Had it not been for sin we had never had cause to fear dissolution there had been no use for coffins and winding-sheets nor had we been beholding to a Grave to hide our carkass from the sight and smell of the living there was a posse mori in innocency else death could not be threatned as a penalty but there was a posse non mori or else Immortality could not be propounded as the reward of Obedience therefore Man is Mortal conditione corporis but Immortal beneficio conditoris God could have supported him Well then death must make sin odious or else sin allowed will make death terrible Thirdly We come to the assertoin or correction The spirit is life because of Righteousness In which observe 1. That Believers have a life notwithstanding death Though death be appointed by God and inflicted upon believers as well as others yet they live notwithstanding this death John 11.25 He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live The Fountain of Life can raise him when he will no bands of Death can hinder his quickening Vertue Tho the union between Body and Soul be dissolved yet not their union with God 2. This life is to be understood of body and soul. 'T is only indeed here said life but he explaineth himself in the 11. vers If the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you Man is compounded of a Body and a Soul death deprived him of his body for a time only the Body shall at last be reunited to partake of the happiness of the soul. 1. The soul being the noblest part is presently and most happily provided for being sanctified and purified from all her imperfections and is brought into the sight and presence of God Luke 20.38 They all live to God And they are gathered to the great counsel and assembly of Souls Heb. 12.23 There they serve God day and night and are under an happy necessity of never wandring from their Duty and no longer busied to maintain a war against sin but are always Imployed in Lauding Praising and Blessing God and delighting in him Well then this is the happiness of the faithful That though they put off the Body for a time yet the Soul hath an Eternal house to which it retireth and remains not only in the hand of God but injoyeth the sight and love of God 2. Cor. 5 1. For we know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the Heavens 2. For the body At the Resurrection the soul shall reassume its body again We cannot easily believe that part shall be placed in Heaven which we see commited to the Grave to rot there but there is no impediment to Gods Almighty Power Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself This place doth prove that God hath provided for the happy estate of the Body as well as the Soul The dead are Gods subjects put into the hands of Christ he must give an account of them John 6.40 And this is the will of him that sent me that every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day They are likewise members of Christ. 1 Cor. 6.15 Now his Mystical body will not be maimed they are Temples of the Holy ghost 1 Cor. 6.15 Temples wherein we offer up to God reasonable service Now since the Spirit possesseth both Body and Soul he will repair his own dwelling-place which he hath once honoured with his presence and not let corruption always abide on it And we have the pattern of Christ he is the first Fruits of them that slept 1 Cor. 15.20 the Soul hath an inclination to the Body still Therefore that our happiness may be compleat a glorified Soul shall inanimate immortal Body 3. The grounds are first the Spirit renewing Secondly Christ purchase 1. The Spirit is life he doth not draw his Argument from the immortality of the Soul for that is common to good and bad the wicked have a soul that will survive the body but little to their comfort their immortality is not an happy immortality but he taketh his argument from the new life wrought in us by the spirit which is the beginning pledg and earnest of a blessed immortality
earth And 't is our act or else we can have no comfort in it Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof and 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit Under the Law the Leper was first to be cleansed by the Priest and afterwards to wash himself in running-water and shave his hair Levit. 14.8 After being sprinkled with the Priest the necessary ceremony he himself was to wash The Ceremonies which the Priest used are considerable therefore I shall explain them a little Two Sparrows were to be taken and one of them killed in an earthen vessel over running water and the other after he was dipped in the blood of the sparrow that was to be killed let loose in the open field to fly up in the air as it were in the sight of God there was a notable Mystery couched under this Type for the bird killed over the running water signified the death of Christ accompanied with the Sanctification of the Spirit typed by the running water the only means to cleanse us from our Leprosie and the bird that was let go alive having his wings sprinkled with blood signifieth the Intercession of Christ who is gone with blood to the Mercy-Seat and we are told that Christ came not by Water only but by Water and Blood No other Bath for spiritual Leprosie but Water and Blood the Merit of Christs Sacrifice and Intercession and the Spirit of Grace to heal our natures but after all this the man was to wash himself which figured the endeavours that Gods people should use to cleanse themselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit 4. It being our duty we must use the means which tend to mortification for to dream of a Mortification which shall be wrought in us without our consent or endeavours as well whilst we are sleeping as whilst we are waking is to delude our selves with a vain fancy no we must set a careful watch over our Thoughts Affections and Works the Spirits Operation doth license no man to be idle we must join with him and obey him in his strivings against the flesh for the Spirit worketh not on a man as a dead thing which hath no principle of activity in himself therefore those that upon the Spirits doing all will lie idle abuse the spirit who both urgeth us to the duty and quickneth us to the use of means or stirreth us up to use our endeavours that the end may be obtained otherwise we neither obey the Spirit nor desire the benefit We do not obey the Spirit for he doth first sanctifie us then quicken us to use the means and blesseth the means so used and we do not desire the benefit 't is but a wish not a desire a ve●leity not a volition as Prov. 13.4 The soul of the s●uggard desireth and hath nothing because his hands refuse to labour Many a man hath wishes that he could leave his sins especially when he thinketh of the shame and punishment as many an incontinent Person Adulterer Glutton or Drunkard hath a wish to part with his sin but not a will for he doth not seriously strive against it his love to it remaineth unconquered and unbroken Well then let us see how far we have gained the point in hand First Every Christian must determine that the flesh must be mortified secondly mortified it must be by us every man must mortifie his own flesh thirdly that mortified it cannot be by us without the Spirit the Spirit will not without us and we cannot without the Spirit neither when we are first to begin this work nor can we carry it on without his assistance 5. The Spirit mortifieth sin in us as a spirit of Light Life and Love 1. As a Spirie of Light affecting the soul with a sight and sense of sin so as we groan under the burden of it nothing cometh to the heart but by the understanding conviction maketh way for compunction and compunction for a detestation and hatred of sin and detestation and hatred for the destruction and expulsion of it Sin is alwayes loathsom but we have not alwayes eyes to see it When we look upon it through Satans spectacles or the cloud of our own passions and corrupt affections we make nothing of it it seemeth lovely rather than loathsom to us But when the spirit anointeth our eyes with his eye-salve it is the most hateful thing to the soul that can be imagined Jer. 31.18 After I was instructed I smote upon the thigh yea I was ashamed and confounded We see sin to be another manner of thing than ever we thought it before Psal. 119.108 Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way When the heart is thoroughly possessed of the evil of sin and we dare not dandle and indulge or pass it over as a thing of nought fear of punishment may suspend the act of sin but the sight of the evil of it doth help to mortify the root 2. As a spirit of life for Jesus Christ to all his seed is a quickening spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 We have life Natural from Adam but life spiritual and eternal from Christ and that by the spirit for we are said to be born again of the spirit John 3.5 The spirit reneweth us and maketh us partakers of the life and likeness of God Titus 3.5 Now when this life is infused there is an opposite principle set up in us to subdue the lusts of the flesh and also to prevent the power of the objects of sense which serve and feed them for the flesh doth obstruct the operations of this new life and cross the tendency of it The operations of this new life are obstructed by the flesh for Gal. 5.17 For the flesh lusteth against the spirit And life is sensible of what annoyeth it the operations of it are the serving and pleasing of God Gal. 5.25 If we live in the spirit let us also walk in the spirit And we see a weight hanging upon us and sin doth easily beset us that we cannot serve God with that liberty purity and delight that we desire And therefore this is an heavy grievance and burden to the new nature that we desire to get rid of it by all means and labour and strive in it and that with good effect a new life also hath a new tendency as soon as 't is infused it discovereth its self by its tendency to its end and rest which is God and Heaven so the objects of sense have the less force and power upon us Well then the flesh is an enemy to this new life and this new life an enemy to it as having contrary operations and tendencies Now how doth this new life discover its enmity Partly by complaining of it as a sore burden and annoyance Rom. 7.24 Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Paul was whipped scourged imprisoned
often quench the vigour and obscure the Glory of that life which they have whilest they shew forth too much of Adam and too little of Jesus And so the spiritual life is carried on darkly and in a riddle Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all Certainly if our priviledges be hidden yet our graces should appear in their fruits and effects Little of our happiness will be seen in this world yet our holiness should be apparent and visible 2 Thes. 1.11 12. Wherefore also we pray always for you that our God would count you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of faith with power That the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you and ye in him according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ. If your condition be obscured and darkned by afflictions it should not be obscured and darkned by sins a perpetual tenor of happiness we cannot expect in a changeable world yet by a constant course of holiness we should plainly distinguish our selves from those that will perish in the common apostacy and defection of mankind But alas Gods children are not so cautious but that they border too near the world and tho there should be such a broad difference that the children of God may be manifestly distinguished from the children of the Devil 1 John 3.10 Yet too much of the influence of the evil spirit remaineth with us and is bewrayed by us upon all occasions yet there is a generation of men that row against the stream of flesh and blood 1 Pet. 4.4 Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them into the same excess of riot 3. Hidden as to their priviledges and the glory of their estate Many of Gods children being mean and low and indigent oppressed by the world harrassed with sundry calamities and afflictions it doth not appear that we have such a great and glorious Father Now we are stained with sin blackned with sufferings there is no visible appearance of our great dignity and prerogative There must be a distinction between Earth and Heaven our filiation in the world to come is another thing to what it is in this world for then their glory shall be manifest Col. 3.4 When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in glory For the present our glory is spiritual and future 1. 'T is spiritual and maketh no fair shew in the flesh as the Image of God is an internal thing as the Kings Daughter is glorious within Psal. 45.13 It lyeth not in great Revenues and pomp of living but a plentiful participation of gifts and Graces their comforts are spiritual known by feeling rather than by report Phil. 4.7 The peace of God which passeth all understanding Rev. 2.17 To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it Gods children are not utterly abandoned and left to the will of men The protection of Gods Providence is a Mystery and Riddle to the world that must have all things under the view of sense Psal. 31.20 Thou shalt hide them in the se●ret of thy presence from the pride of man thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion from the strife of tongues and Psal. 91.1 He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty Job 29.4 As I was in the days of my youth when the secret of God was upon my tabernacle God keepeth them and maintaineth them no body knoweth how there is a secret and invisible blessing goes along with them as others are blasted by an invisible ●urse And 2. 'T is future The time of our perfection and blessedness is not yet come and we cannot for the present judg of it nor the world imagine what it shall be they do not consider the end of things but look all to the present for the present they find the Saints miserable and those that are dead the world taketh them for lost 1 Cor. 15 19. If in this life only we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable They that are worse used by other men have little advantage by Christ now their Sonship entitleth them to a miserable portion in the worlds estimation who know not consider not things to come 2. From whom they are hidden Not from God who knoweth those that are his 2 Tim. 2.19 Not from Christ who died for them and hath their Names graven upon his Breasts and Shoulders and is mindful of them upon every turn John 10.14 I am the good shepherd who know my sheep and am known of mine Christ hath a particular and exact knowledg of all the Elect their individual Persons who they are where they are and what they are that shall be saved He taketh special notice of them that he may suitably apply himself to them they are not altogether unknown to the good Angels for they are their charge Heb. 1.14 Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation And they shall gather them from the four winds at the last day Matth. 24.31 From whom then are they hidden 1. From the world The world knoweth us not as they knew him not they are hid from the world as colours from a blind man they have no eyes to see they are blinded by the delusions of the flesh and cannot judg of spiritual things because they are to be spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2.14 As a beast cannot judg of the affairs of a man 't is a life above them these things are out of their sphear for they value all things according to the interest of the flesh and being blinded with malice and prejudice they censure this estate perversly and so malign and oppose it 1 Pet. 4.4 5. They think it strange you do not run with them into the same excess of riot speaking evil of you who shall give an account to him who is ready to judg the quick and the dead They are unwilling any should put a disgrace upon their fleshly course of life therefore if they cannot draw others into a fellowship of their sins they labour to blacken them with censures or root them out with furious oppositions and persecutions But their perverse judgment should be no discouragement to us let us rather pity their ignorance than be troubled at their malice it is enough for us that we have the favour of God and our hopes lye elsewhere 2. In a great measure from our selves What with corruptions within and temptations without we have much ado to be perswaded that God is our Father and we his children our condition being so unsuitable and our conversations so much beneath our rights and priviledges so that it needeth to be cleared by the spirit
now little Children abide in him that when he shall appear we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming And 1 Joh. 4.17 Herein is our love made perfect that we may have boldness in the day of Judgment because as he is so are we in this World Secondly What is the comfort that they have 1. The Judge is their Friend their Kinsman their Brother their High Priest to make atonement for them The Propitiation for their sins their Advocate and Intercessour one that dyed for them 2dly He cometh to lead them to their everlasting Mansions Christ is a pattern of what shall be done to them He rose from the dead and is become the First Fruits of them that Slept He now sitteth at the Right Hand of God making intercession for them And he will come again and receive them to himself That they may be where he is and behold his Glory SERMON XV. 2 Cor. 5.10 For we must all appear before the Iudgment seat of Christ. WE have handled 1. The necessity 2. The universality 3. The Judge 4. The manner of judging This we are now upon The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth both to appear and to be made manifest we may conjoin the senses we must so appear as to be made manifest 1. To appear that we must all appear every individual Person Four things evince that 1. The Wisdom and the Justice of the Judge 2. The Power Impartiality and Faithfulness of his Ministers 3. The Nature of the business requireth an appearance 4. The ends of the Judgment 1. The Wisdom and Justice of the Judge Such is his wisdom and perspicuity that not one sinner or sin can escape him Heb. 4 13. There is not any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do This Scripture informeth us of the perfect knowledge of God as he is a Judge without which his Judgment cannot be just and perfect he knoweth all the persons and causes of men that are brought before him All things in general and every thing in particular is manifest to him fully clearly and evidently discovered to him Psa. 69.5 O God thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee He is neither ignorant of man nor any thing in man who must have to do with him that is to be judged by him So Jer. 17.10 I the Lord search the heart and try the reins even to give every man according to his ways and the fruit of his own doing The force of the reason is this That seeing we must be judged by a most exact impartial and alknowing Judge there can be no hope of lying hid in the throng or escaping and avoiding the Judgment It concerneth the Judge of the World to do right which he cannot do unless all sins and persons be manifest to him that he may render to every one according to his deeds 2. The Power Impartiality and Faithfulness of his Ministers Who are the Holy Angels Much of the work of that day is dispatched by the Ministry of Angels Matth. 24.31 They shall gather the elect from the four winds In the particular Judgment they have a Ministry they convey the Souls of men to Christ Luke 16.22 Carryed by the Angels into Abrahams Bosom They that carryed their Souls to Heaven shall be imployed in bringing their Bodies out of their graves Now this Ministry is not confined to the Elect only they do not only carry the corn into the barn but the tares into the furnace Matth. 13.39 40 41. And the reapers are the Angels As therefore the tares are gathered together and burnt in the fire so shall it be in the end of this World The Son of man shall send forth his Angels and they shall gather out of his Kingdom all things that do offend and them that do iniquity and shall cast them into a furnace of fire there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth 'T is the Angels work to separate the wicked from the Godly to bind up the tares in bundles that they may be burnt in the fire They force and present wicked men before the Judge be they never so unwilling and obstinate So in the parable of the drag-net Matth. 13.49 50. So shall it be at the end of the World The Angels shall come forth and sever the wicked from among the just and shall cast them into a furnace of fire where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth There is a mixture unavoidable of good and bad in the Church but then a perfect separation by the Ministry of Angels 3. The nature of the business requireth our appearance Partly because in a regular Judgment no man can be Judged in his absence Therefore in this great and solemn Judgment we must stand as persons Impleaded to hear what is alledged and what we can say in our defence David saith Psal. 130.3 If thou shouldest mark our iniquities O Lord who shall stand that is appear in the Judgment so as to be able to make a defence So Psa. 1.5 The ungodly shall not stand in the Judgment That is the wicked shall not be able to abide the tryal have nothing to plead for themselves in the day of their final doom And yet 't is said Rom. 14.10 We must all stand before the Judgment seat of Christ. We shall stand and not stand stand that is make an appearance and not stand not able to make any just defence Festus saith Acts 25.16 It is not the manner of the Romans to deliver any man to dye before that he which is accused have the accusers face to face and have licence to Answer for himself concerning the crime laid against him This was Jus Gentium not to give Sentence of capital punishment against any man till he were fully heard Their rule was They condemned no man unheard Surely there is all right in this solemn Judgment he that is to be judged is to be brought into the Judgment When God arraigned our first Parents which is a Type of the General Judgment He called Adam coram Gen. 3.9 10. Adam where art thou He brought him out of his lurking hole where he had hid himself he must come into his presence and answer And partly because we cannot appear by a Proctor The Sentence is a Sentence of life and death and there is no reason or cause of absence Rom. 14.12 Every one must give an account of himself to God Now in the day of Gods patience we have an Advocate who appeareth for us Heb. 9.24 He doth prevent wrath represent our wants and recommend our affairs But now the Judge cometh to deal with every one in person 4. The ends of the Judgment require our appearance They are two 1. The Conviction of the Parties Judged God will go upon clear evidence and they shall have a fair hearing When there was but one that came without
a man may talk well from his convictions or a meer disciplinary knowledge but to do well there needeth a living principle of grace The Scriptures still set forth graces by their operations works or fruits For a dead sleepy habit is worth nothing The working Faith carryeth away the prize of justification Gal. 5.6 Honoureth Christ 2 Thes. 1.11 12. The labouring love is that which God will regard and reward Heb. 6.10 The lively hope is the fruit of regeneration 1 Pet. 1.5 That which sets a doing Acts 24.15 16. And Acts 26.7 8. Grace otherwise cannot appear in the view of Conscience The apples appear when the sap is not seen 't is the operative and lively graces that will discover themselves A man may think well or speak well but that grace which governeth his conversation sheweth its self God knoweth what is in man whether faith be sound in the first planting before any fruit appear But this Judgment is to proceed not only by the knowledge of the Judge but the evidence of our own Consciences the observation of others and what openly appeareth in our lives 2. How these works are considered with respect to our sentence and doom 1. Our actions are considered here with respect to the principle from whence they flow a renewed heart God doth not look to the bare work but to the spring and motives and ends Pro. 16.2 He weigheth the Spirits quo animo not only the matter and bulk of the action but with what Spirit and from what principle it is done Eph. 5.9 For the fruit of the Spirit is all goodness Righteousness and truth Whether we act from a principle of grace in the Heart A violent motion differeth from that which floweth from an inward principle Christ first giveth a disposition to obey before there is an actual sincere obedience And living in the Spirit goeth before walking in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 The principles are infused and then the action follows 'T is said John 3.21 He that doth truth cometh to the light That his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God A Godly man cannot satisfy himself in some external conformity to the Law but he must know that the actions come from God from his Grace and Spirit in us and tend to him that is to his Glory and Honour and are directed according to his will a little outside holiness will not content Christ. 2. With respect to the state in which they are done A justified estate and a state of reconciliation to God for the Sacrifices of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord. Gal. 2.19 I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God And Rom. 7.4 Marryed to Christ that I may bring forth fruit unto God The Children born before marriage are not legitimate 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness We ought to look to the Qualification of our persons that we be reconciled with God through Christ daily renewing our friendship with him by sorrow for sin by suing out our pardon and acceptance in the Mediatour The apostle doth not say how holy ought our conversation to be but what manner of persons ought we to be 3. They are considered with respect to their correspondency No man is judged by one Single act we cannot pass judgment upon our estate before God whether good or evil by a few particulars but by our way or the ordinary strain of our life and conversation and our course Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit A man may occasionally set his foot in a Path which he meaneth not to walk in God in reviewing his work considered every days work apart it was good and considered altogether Gen. 1.31 The whole frame and all very good all the work together was correspondent and all suitable to the rest in a due proportion so should we endeavour to imitate God that all our works every one of them and our whole course considered together may all appear to be good answerable to one another in order and proportion that our whole conversations may be a perfect frame of unblameable holiness There are some amongst men which do some things well to which their order and carriage is not suitable The difference between a godly mans work and an hypocrites lyeth in this an Hypocrites work is best considered apart a good mans works are best and most approved when they are laid together 4. These works are considered with respect to their Aim and Scope Phil. 1.11 12. That we may be sincere and without offence unto the day of Christ being filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Jesus Christ unto the praise and glory of God As it is not the doing one good work or some few which will Qualify a man for the day of Judgment but being filled with the fruits of righteousness So 't is necessary also that our aim be every way as good as our action and Gods glory be propounded as our great scope An action in its self good and Lawful may be reckoned unto the worker as sin or duty as the end is and the scope which he propoundeth unto himself 5. That none of our actions are lost but stand upon record that we may hear of them another day and tend to increase the General sum whether good or evil An Impeni●ent man his account riseth Rom. 2.5 He treasureth up wrath against the day of wrath like Jehojadas chest the longer it stood the more Treasure was in it Sins that seem inconsiderable in themselves yet are the acts of one that hath sinned greatly before A cipher put to a Sum that is fixed increaseth it every drop helpeth to fill the Cup. So in the sincere Phil. 4.17 Fruit abounding to your account Every sincere action makes it abound more some actions are more inconsiderable than others yet if done for Christs sake shall be taken notice of though small in themselves Math. 10.42 And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold Water only in the name of a disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his reward 3. What room and place these works have with respect to punishment and reward There is a plain difference as appeareth Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life The works of the wicked have a proper meritorious influence upon their ruine and destruction wicked men stand upon their own bottom and are lest to themselves we do evil of our own accord and by our own strength but the good we do is neither our own nor is it purely good Besides there is this difference between sin and obedience that the heinousness of sin is always aggravated and heightned by the proportion of its object but the merit and value of obedience is still lessened thereby sin and an offence is aggravated as
of our conversations for such is the excellency and honour of religion and godliness that when it shineth in its strength it dazleth the eyes of beholders even of wicked men and maketh them wonder at it and stand in awe of it And where 't is evident and eminent it will do so indeed where Christians are Christians in a riddle shew forth more of the flesh than of the Spirit there is no such thing but where religion is in life and vigour it will discover its self As Johns sanctity extorted reverence and regard from Herod Mark 6.20 Herod feared John knowing that he was a just and strict man Holiness is the Image of God and so far commendeth its reverence and esteem as the Image of God in Adam was a terrour to the beasts and when nothing but the natural Image was left Gen. 9.2 The fear and dread of you shall be upon every beast of the field So much more the Spiritual Image of God Ahab stood in fear of Elijah Certainly a godly life is convincing and darts awe into the conscience 'T is convinceing either potentially or actually Potentially such as is apt to convince and of its own nature tendeth thereunto as Christ saith John 7.7 The World hateth me because I testify of it That is that their works were evil Not only by reproofs but conversation the World would not acknowledge it but they felt it so those that bear witness against the evil courses of the World either by the holiness of their Doctrine or innocency of life do convince others they have a testimony in their Consciences though they will not acknowledge it Or actually which doth so convince that it draweth out an acknowledgement The former may be without the latter as the Sun is apt to inlighten but it cannot make a blind man or one that winketh hard see But however Christians should live convincing lives as pure streams run though none drink of them they may convert others for conversion is facilitated by good conversation yet religion is honoured by the testimony in their consciences though they will not acknowledge it at least it will be a testimony at the day of Judgment against Impenitent sinners 3. All these we should look after The Approbation of God the Testimony of Conscience a Testimony in the consciences of others In a Moral consideration there are three beings God neighbour self and therefore we should approve our selves to God and look after this threefold approbation 1. The Approbation of God must be chiefly sought after first We cannot be sincere without it For sincerity is a streight and right purpose to please God in all things and this should be our aim to approve our selves to God in all that we do and therefore should do all things as in his eye and presence Gen. 17.1 Walk before me and be thou upright And Luke 1.75 In Holiness and Righteousness before him all the days of our lives This is it which maketh men conscientious in all their actions when they remember that they are now acting a part before the great God who looketh on either to reward or punish it checketh sin though never so secret and though it might be carryed on with security enough from men yea when we may sin not only securely but with advantage and profit Gen. 39.9 How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God So Job 31.4 Doth he not see my ways and count all my steps Therefore he durst not give way to any sin So Psalm 44.21 Shall not God search this out for he knoweth the secrets of the heart Secondly It maketh us faithful in all our Duties and Services When we s●rive to approve our selves to God and do all as in his presence to the praise and glory of his name and can appeal for our fidelity to no other judge but the great searcher of hearts from whom we cannot be concealed The Apostle Instanceth in two callings one of the highest and one of the meanest One of the highest and of most Importance to the other World that of a Minister 2 Cor. 4.2 Commending our selves to every mans conscience as in the sight of God And 1 Thes. 2.4 So we preach the Gospel not as pleasing men but God which tryeth our hearts A Minister will never be Faithful unless he first study to approve himself to God and behaveth himself as in Gods eye and presence and one that is to give an account to God So in the lowest a christian servant Eph. 6.6 7. Not with eye Service as men pleasers but as the Servants of Christ doing the will of God from the heart With good will doing service as to the Lord not to men So Col. 3.22 Not with eye Service as men-pleasers but in singleness of heart fearing God So Titus 2.10 Not purloining but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things A Christian Servant useth all diligence in his masters business whether he be absent or present and fidelity in all things committed to his trust though he might be false with secresy enough because he fears God and would approve himself to him Well then we must study to approve our selves to God and be alike in all places and companies for all things are manifest to him 2. The Testimony of conscience must be regarded First Because it is matter of true joy and comfort to a Christian 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our Rejoycing the Testimony of our conscience I prove it from the Office of conscience 't is both Judge Witness and Executioner Conscience is the judgment that every man maketh upon his actions morally considered As a man acteth or doth any thing so he is a party as he loveth to view or censure it so he is a Judge the morality considered as to their good or evil rectitude or obliquity in them with respect to praise or dispraise reward or punishment Now joy is one part of execucuting the sentence of conscience as fear is the other Conscience is usually more felt after the act is over than before or in it For during the action the judgment of reason is not so clear and strong the affections raising mists and clouds to darken the mind in the act we feel the difficulties or the pleasure of sin but after the act the violence of the affection ceaseth and then reason taketh the throne and doth affect the mind with joy or grief according as a man hath done good or evil with grief and terrour if the sensual appetite have been obeyed before its self with delight if he hath denyed himself and been faithful with God Rewards and punishments are not altogether kept for the life to come Hell is begun in an ill conscience and a good conscience is Heaven upon Earth Secondly this joy that cometh from the Testimony of conscience is very strong it will fortify us against false Imputations When Christians can say we are not the men you
our Passive the other our Active Regeneration And as in Generation that which begets produces the same Life that is in himself a Beast communicates the Life of a Beast and a Man of a Man so 't is the Life of God that we receive when we are formed for his use by the power of his Grace It is called the Life of God and the Divine Nature Spiritual qualities being infused whereby we resemble God And Herein again it agrees with common Life Life consists in the union of the matter with the Principle of Life as when there is union between the Body and Soul then there 's Life without which the Body is but a dead and an unactive lump As Adams Body when it was organized and framed until God infused the breath of Life in it lay as a dead lump so this Life is begun by a Union between us and Christ he lives in us by his Spirit and we live in him by Faith Gal. 2.20 The Spirit is the Principle of Life and Faith is the means to receive it and therefore we are said Rom. 6.5 To be planted into the likeness of Christs Resurrection Planting notes a Union as a Bud that 's put into a Stock it becomes one with the Stock and bears Fruit by vertue of the Life of the Stock We no sooner are planted into Christ but we feel the power of his Life and vertue of his Resurrection he begins to live in us and we in him as the Graft in the Stock and as the Stock in the Graft 2. Where there is Life there is Sense and Feeling especially if wrong and violence be offered to it A living Member is sensible of the smallest prick and Pain and so is the Spiritual Life bewrayed by the tenderness of the Heart and the sense that we have of the interest of God Stupid and insensible Spirits shew they have no Life and therefore those that are alienated from the Life of God they are said to be past feeling Eph. 4 18 19. As long as there is Life there is feeling We may lose other senses yet there may be Life the Eye may be closed up and sight lost and the Ear may be deaf and lose its use but yet Life may remain still but feeling is dispers'd throughout the whole Body and we do not lose our feeling till we are quite dead therefore this is the Character of them that are alienated from the life of God that they have no feeling Now the Children of God the Regenerate are sensible of the injuries done and Spiritual Life by Sin and of the decays of that Life they have and of the comforts of it What Consciences have they that can live in carnal pleasures and sin freely in Thought and foully in Act and yet never groan under it never be sensible of it Paul was sensible of the first stirrings and risings of Sin Rom. 7.24 Oh wre●ched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of Death Now where there is no sense of this it shews such have no Life who are neither sensible of the injuries done to the Life they have nor of the decays of it by God's absence When the Bridegroom is gone sensible Hearts will mourn Mat. 9 15. when they have lost Christ when they feel any abatements of the influences of his Grace Carnal men that sleep in their filthiness they have no sense of God's favours or frowns of his absence or presence because they are quite dead they do not take notice of God's dealings with them either in Mercy or Judgment therefore are touched with no remorse for the one or thankfulness for the other but are careless and stupid and past feeling And can a man be alive and not feel it And can you have the Life of Grace and not feel the decays and interruptions of it and neither be sensible of comforts or injuries 3. Where there is life there 's an Appetite joyned with it an earnest desire after that which may feed maintain and support this Life What makes the Brute-creatures to run to the Teats of the Dam as soon as they are born but instinct of Nature Appetite is the immediate effect of Life Where there is life it must have some supports it hath its Tasts and Rellishes as 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-born Babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby I say where there is a new birth there will be an Appetite after Spiritual unmixed milk the new-nature hath its proper supports and there will be something relish't and favor'd besides meats drinks and bodily pleasures and such things as gratify the Animal Life As Jesus Christ said John 4.32 I have meat to eat that ye know not of So Spiritual Life hath inward consolations it hath hidden Manna whereby it is supported and maintained Meat that perisheth not John 6.27 painted fire needs no fuel those that do not live they have no Appetite there 's no need of nourishment But where there is life there will be a desire an Appetite that carrieth us to that which is Food to the Soul to Christ Jesus especially and to the Ordinances in which he is exhibited to us And therefore where there is no desire to meet with God in these Ordinances where Christ may be food to our Souls it is to be feared there is no Life Wicked men they may desire Ordinances sometimes but not to strengthen the Spiritual Life but out of carnal ends and reasons they are loth to be left out of the Worship that is in esteem in the place where they live as the Pharisees submitted to Johns Baptism though they hated the Lord Christ it was then in esteem therefore he calls them a Generation of Vipers Mat. 3.7 and partly because they trust in the work wrought there is somewhat to pacify Natural Conscience by the bare external performance of a duty and carnal men rest in the Sacraments or visible Ordinances It is Natural to us to be led by sensible things and the external action being easy they choak their Consciences with these things How usual is it in this sense to see many that tear the Bond yet prize the Seal that is to say they contemn the Bond of the Covenant and the duty of the Covenant yet dote upon the Lords Supper which is a Seal of it But a true Appetite desires these Ordinances that we may meet with God in them This is a sign of Life 4. Where there is Life there will be growth especially in Vegetables there Life is always growing and encreasing till they come to their full stature so do the Children of God grow in Grace Our Lord himself though he had the Spirit without measure yet he grew in Wisdom and favour with God Luke 2.40 not in shew but in reality he grew in Wisdom as he grew in Stature Though his Human Nature in his Infancy was taken into the Unity of his Divine Person yet the capacity of his Human Nature
was inlarged by degrees for his Human Nature was still to carry a proportion with ours and therefore he grew in Wisdom and in favour with God And so all that are Christs they grow The Trees planted in the Courts of God flourish there Psal. 92.13 There 's more room made for the new Nature by degrees to exert and put forth itself Corruption is still a dying and they grow more humble more holy more solid more rational more wise in the Spiritual Life more resolved for God more Heavenly minded that they may be at more liberty for God They may lose somewhat in liveliness of gifts and vigour of Affections for these things come and go but they are more spiritual and more stedfast and more solid and seriously set to seek after God As an old Tree that puts forth fewer leaves and blossoms but is more deeply rooted But now Hypocrites do not grow beyond their first blaze yea they wither every day lose their zeal and their forwardness out of carnal ease or affection to pleasures honours or greatness of the world they lose the seeming Grace that they had before 5. Where there 's Life there are vital Operations for Life is active and stirring so Spiritual Life hath its Operations it cannot well be hid it will bewray itself in a zealous and in a constant and uniform practice of Godliness They are Idols that have feet and walk not Rev. 3.1 Some only have a name to live and are dead They that make a naked profession but are not excited to live and bring forth fruit to God They have a form of Godliness but deny the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 That is the power that should change their hearts and direct and order all their Actions They that are governed by the Spirit they feel this power they are enabled to bring forth the fruits of Righteousness to the praise and glory of God Look as a Worldly Man by vertue of the Worldly Spirit that is in him is dexterous in all his Affairs his Worldly Principle puts a Life into him Luke 16.9 Their employment is suitable to their Life so a Spiritual Man that hath not the Spirit of the World or a disposition that makes him eager upon Worldly things but the Spirit of God dwelling and working in him here is not the Sphear of his Activity his Cares Thoughts and Endeavours are turned into another Channel he is quickned and raised to newness of Life Rom. 6.4 The Man is more earnest more throughly set for Heaven and the Worldly Life is more over-ruled and mastered in him and the Heavenly and Divine Life prevails in him and sets him awork more and more Thus I have by comparing these two lives a little shew'd you what is that Life that we have by Christ 't is a Life that flows from Regeneration that is begun by Union with Christ that begets a sense so that a Christian he feels the Annoyances of those things that are inconvenient and contrary to this Life and begets an Appetite after the supports that should maintain it and discovers itself by growth this Life is encreased in them more and more and also it discovers itself by its Activity by making them fruitful towards God Thus you see wherein they agree Secondly Let us a little see wherein they differ 1. They differ in the state of them both for this Spiritual Life is a Life that is consistent with some degree of Death Even then when we live we are troubled with a Body of Death Paul complains of it Tho Grace hath the upper hand in the Soul yet Corruption cleaves to us still Outwardly a man cannot be said to be dead and alive altogether but a Christian yet hath sin dwelling in him and is dying to sin every day that he may live unto God And as sin decays so the Spiritual Life takes place for mortification makes way for vivification and according to the degrees of the one so are the degrees of the other The more we die to sin the more we are alive to righteousness 1 Pet. 2.24 2. There 's a difference in the dignity of this Life Natural Life what is it A benefit vouchsafed to us by God that we may have time for Repentance but yet it is but a wind that is soon blown over and passeth away Job 7.7 and a suitable expression you have James 4.14 For this Life is but as a vapour This Life is a little warm breath turned in and out by the Nostrils soon gone it is indeed a continued sickness and our Food is as it were constant Medicine to repair and remedy the decays of the Natural Life O but this is a Life that flows from God himself and is a more worthy thing it is the Life of God and as Christ liveth in the Father so we in him by the Spirit This was a Life bought at a dearer rate then the Life of Nature John 6.51 My flesh which I give for the Life of the World Nothing less then the death of the Son of God would serve the turn and therefore 't is more noble then the other Life which is called The Life of our hands Isa. 57.10 because it costs us hard labour to maintain it 3. As it differs in the dignity and value so in the Original The Natural Life is traduc'd and brought down unto us by many successions of Generations from the first Adam he was a living Soul but the last Adam was a quickning Spirit 1. Cor. 15.45 We have a living Soul by vertue of our descending from the first Adam all that our Parents could do was to make way for the Union of Soul and Body together But by this Life we and Christ are united together and he becomes a Live-making Spirit unto us 4. There 's a difference in the duration Grace is an immortal flame a spark that cannot be quenched All our labour and toil here in the world is to maintain a dying Life a Lamp that soon goes out or to prop up a Tabernacle that is always falling when we have made the best provision for it 't is taken away Thou fool this night c. This Life is in the power of every Ruffian and Assassinate that values not his own O but the Spiritual Life is a Life that begins in Grace and ends in Glory the foundation of it was laid in Justification that took off the sentence of Death Sanctification is the beginning of it the which by degrees is carried on till it end in glory where we shall be never weary of living it The outward Life tho short yet we soon grow weary of it the shortest Life is long enough to be numbred with a thousand miseries if we live to Old-age Age is a burthen to itself Eccl. 12.1 Life itself may become a burthen for some have wished and requested for themselves that they might die But no Man ever wisht for the end of this Spiritual Life Who ever cursed the day of his new
calumnies the people of God are represented as strange sort of people unto the World 2 Cor. 6.8 As deceivers and yet true They are reputed as a company of hypocrites and dissemblers all their experiences questioned and scoffed at prophane and wanton wits will be spitting out their venom in every age and Gods people will be Judged according to men in the flesh though they live to God in the Spirit 1 Pet. 4.6 God permitteth it reproach is the soil and dung whereby he maketh his heritage fruitful but yet this is an hiding and disguising the Spiritual life Lastly 'T is hidden under manifold weaknesses and infirmities the best have their blemishes and the most of Christians shew forth too much of Adam and too little of Jesus and so the Spiritual life is carryed on darkly and in a riddle Though the old man of corruption doth not bear sway in their hearts to command direct and order all their actions as formerly it did yet sin is not wholly gone they feel a Law warring in their members Rom. 7.33 And 't is not only warring but sometimes prevailing that they themselves can feel little of the holy life There are some question and life of grace others scorn and scoff at it yet believe it for 't is the great truth revealed in the Scriptures and 't is in some measure felt by sense yea the rays of this hidden and rejected life are often discovered to the World For there are some who by their practices condemn the World live in counter-motion to the corrupt sort of men walk as those that have another Spirit than the Spirit of the World 1 Cor. 2.12 and as those that look for an happiness else where Therefore believe that there is such a life 2. Value and esteem it according to its worth and excellency I mean with a practical esteem as Paul doth counting all things but dung and dross in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Christ. What would he know in him Phil. 3.10 That I may know him and the power of his Resurrection Or the vertue of raising him out of sin to the life of grace Oh that is an excellent thing indeed 'T is more to be advanced to this life than to the highest honour in the World This is to live in God to God to have miracles of grace wrought in us every day 'T is the divine power that giveth us all things that pertain to life and godliness 2 Pet. 1.3 Not begun nor carryed on without a daily miracle or a work exceeding the power of nature or the force of the creature life ennobleth all things a living dog is better then a dead Lion to be alive to God when others are dead in sin what a great priviledge is that 3. Deal with Christ about it Come to him he purchased it by his death John 6.51 This is my flesh which I have given for the life of the World To God in sacrifice to us for food Look upon him as one that is possessed of the fulness of the Spirit to work it in all those that come to God by him Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all those that come to God by him for he liveth for ever to make intercession for them That is penitent believers for by faith and repentance we come to God by Christ. He is angry that we will not come to him for this benefit John 5.40 Ye will not come to me that ye may have life If you have a pressing need why should you keep away from him That 's his Quarrel against us that we will not make use of him for this benefit He is best pleased when we have most of it John 10.10 I am come that they might have life and have it more abundantly He would have us not only living Christians but lively He hath appointed Ordinances to convey it to us The word Isa. 55.3 Hear and your Souls shall shall live The Sacraments Psa. 22.26 The meek shall eat and be satisfied they shall praise the Lord that seek him your heart shall live for ever Prayer that we cry earnestly and express our desires of this benefit Psa. 36.9 For with thee is the fountain of life in thy light shall we see light David often calleth upon God as the God of his life Well when we go to God he remitteth us to Christ Christ to the Spirit and the Spirit to the Ordinances there we should observe his drawings and obey his sanctifying motions when he saith Arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Eph. 5.14 When more awakned than at another time 4 When we have this life let us Improve it and act grace in all holy obedience unto God Eph. 5.25 If we live in the Spirit let us walk in the Spirit If partakers of the new life of grace we must shew it in our conversations for newness of heart is seen in newness of life USE 3. is to put us upon self reflection and self examination Have we a new life communicated to us 1. If it be so then there is a great change wrought in us 'T is said of Christ he was dead and is alive Rev. 1.18 To him we are conformed Luke 15.24 This my Son was dead and is alive again he was lost and is found So Eph. 2.1 You that were sometimes dead in trespasses and sins yet now hath he quickned Surely when a man is translated from death to life that should be a sensible change as if another Soul dwelt in the same body he is another man to God hath holy breathings after him delights frequently to converse with him in prayer Acts 9.11 Arise and go into the street called straight and enquire in the house of Judas for one Saul of Tarsus for behold he prayeth And Zach. 12.10 I will pour upon the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication He hath a child-like love to God as a Father Gal. 4 6. And because ye are Sons he hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your heart crying Abba Father Have a Child-like reverence to him Eph. 5.1 Be ye followers of God as dear Children Illustrate it by that Jer. 35.6 When they set pots of Wine before them to drink we dare not Jonadab our Father commanded us saying ye shall drink no Wine And a Child-like dependance upon him Matth. 6.32 Your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things A Child-like hope from him 1 Pet. 1.3 Who hath begotten us to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Zeal for him 2 Cor. 5.10 Knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men He is another man to his neighbour he carrieth it justly and righteously to all both as to person name and estate and this not by compulsion of conscience but inclination of heart which the Scripture expresseth by loving our neighbour as our selves seeking their good as our own
united to Christ partake of his Divine Spirit who doth sanctify the Souls of his people and doth mortify and master the strongest corruptions and raise them to those inclinations and affections to which nature is an utter stranger Th Impressions left upon the Soul by the Spirit may be seen in the three Theological graces which constitute the new Creature mentioned 1 Cor. 13.13 But now abideth Faith Hope and Charity And 1 Thes. 5.8 Putting on the brest-plate of Faith and love and for an helmet the Hope of Salvation And elsewhere Faith Love and Hope Now the operations of all these graces imply a new and strange nature put into us 1. Faith which convinceth us of things unseen and to live in the delightful fore-thought of a World to come 2 Cor. 4.16.17 18. For this cause we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day For our light afflictions which are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory While we look not to the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Now will there not be a manifest difference between a man that is governed by sense and one guided and influenced by Faith Certainly more than there is in a man that delighteth in ordering the affairs of Common-Wealths and a child that delighteth in moulding clay-pies So for Love A Child of God is so affected with the goodness that is in God and the goodness that floweth from God in the wonders of his Love by Christ and the goodness we hope for when all the promises are fulfilled that all their delights desires and endeavours are after God Not to be great in the World but to injoy God Psal. 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee And there is none upon earth I desire besides thee And therefore can easily overcome fleshly and Worldly Lusts and such inclinations as the rest of the World are mastered with Well then a Christian ingrafted into Christ loseth all property in himself and is freed from self-love and that carnal vanity to which it is addicted Then for hope the strong and constant hope of a glorious estate in the other World will make us deny the flesh go through all sufferings and difficulties to attain it Acts 26.6 7. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our Fathers unto which promise our twelve tribes instantly serving God day and night hope to come And so by consequence a man acteth like another kind of Creature then the rest of men are or than he himself was before 2. The state of the Gospel calleth for it For it is a change of every thing from what it was before all things are new in the Kingdom of Christ and therefore we should be new Creatures also In the Gospel there is a new Adam which is Jesus Christ a New Covenant a new Paradise not that where Adam injoyed God among the Beasts but where the Blessed injoy God among the Angels a new Ministry new Ordinances and therefore we also should be new creatures and serve God not in the oldness of the letter but the newness of the Spirit Rom. 7.6 We are both obliged and fitted by this new state since we have a new Lord a new Law all is new there must be also a new creation for as the general state of the Church is renewed by Christ so every particular believer ought to participate of this new estate 3. The third Argument shall be taken from the necessity of the new creation 1. In order to our present Communion with God the new creature is necessary to converse with an holy and invisible God earnestly frequently reverently and delightfully For the effects of the new creature are life and likeness Those that do not live the life of God are estranged from him Eph. 4.18 Adam was alone though compassed about with multitude of Creatures Beasts and Plants there was none to converse with him because they did not live his life Trees cannot converse with Beasts nor Beasts with Men nor Men with God till they have some what of the same nature and life sense fits the Plants reason the Beasts so grace fits Men. So for likeness conformity is the ground of Communion Amos 3.3 How can two walk together except they are agreed Our old course made the breach between God and us Isa. 59.2 But your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you that he will not hear And our new life and likeness qualifieth for Communion with him 1 John 1.6 7. If we say we have fellowship with him and walk in darkness we lye and do not the truth but if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another An holy creature may sweetly come and converse with an holy God 2. In order to our service and obedience to God Man is unfit for Gods use till he be new moulded and framed again Observe two places Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship in Christ Jesus created unto good works Every creature hath faculties sutable to those operations which belong to that creature So man must be new created and new formed that he may be prepared fitted and made ready for the Lord. You cannot expect new operations till there be a new life The other place is 2 Tim. 2.21 If a man purge himself from these he shall be a Vessel of honour sanctified and meet for the Masters use and prepared unto every good work There is a mass of corruption which remaineth as a clog upon us which maketh us averse and indisposed for the work of God and the Soul must be purged from these lusts and inclinations to the vanities of the World before 't is meet prepared and made ready for the acts of holiness Here must be our first care to get the heart renewed many are troubled about this or that duty or particular branches of the Spiritual life First get life its self for there must be principles before there can be operations and in vain do we expect strengthning grace before we have received renewing grace This is like little Children who attempt to run before they can go Many complain of this and that corruption but they do not groan under the burden of a corrupt nature as suppose wandring thoughts in prayer when at the same time the heart is habitually averse and estranged from God as if a man should complain of an aking tooth when a mortal disease hath seized upon his vitals of a cut finger when at the same time he is wounded at the heart of deadness in duty and want of quickening grace when they want converting grace as if we would have the Spirit blow to a dead coal complain of infirmities and incident
we repent and believe in Christ. Page 218 224 Directions to those that are Reconciled Page 24 250 They that are Reconciled had need beg pardon of sin v. Pardon Page 225 Redeemer The necessity of a Redeemer Page 163 Religion must be our Business and Recreation Page 74 Renovation the Nature of it Page 207 The Object of it Page ib. That it is the work of God's Spirit Page ib. The Effects of it Page 208 Its Connexion with Reconciliation Page ib. v. New Creature Repentance what it includes Page 243 v. Faith and Repentance Respect to Christs Person in the days of his flesh was not all he looked for Page 196 Religiously to respect men for external carnal advantages condemned Page 194 Respect Civil due to carnal men Page ib. Respect of persons not with God Page 110 199 Resurrection of the Body Reasons of it Page 36 Resurrection of Christ the Example Pledge and Cause of the Spiritual Life Page 189 The likeness between Christ's rising from the dead and Christians rising from the death of Sin Page ib. Rewards Sinful respect to the Rewards of Religion how it bewrayeth it self Page 151 Right God hath a Right to us Page 186 Righteousness Why men are prone to establish a Righteousness of their own Page 257 Gospel-Righteousness what it is Page 72 Gospel-Righteousness a Garment to cover our nakedness Page 28 Righteousness as it respects the precept or the sanction of the Law opened Page 252 Why the Righteousness by which we are justified is called the Righteousness of God Page 253 What is that Righteousness by which we are justified Page 253 254 257 Christ is made sin for us and we are made the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 In what this exchange doth agree in what it differs Page ib. The Love of God herein Page 256 This Righteousness of Christ is made ours when we believe in him Page 254 The Priviledges depending on our being made the Righteousness of God in Christ. Page 257 S. SAcrifices were offered by Adam Page 28 Satisfaction of Christ the truth of it Page 170 The Sufficiency of it Page 171 Scope of a Christians Life Page 71 72 v. End Self-Love only cured by the Love of God Page 230 Sight what Sights we shall have in Heaven Page 60 In what manner shall we Behold Christ. Page ib. v. Faith and Sight Sin a wrong to God how to be understood Page 86 Sin and shame always go together Page 28 The greatness of the Burden of Sin Page 257 Why Sin is a Burden Page 33 In what manner Sin is to be checked Page 205 The aggravations of Secret Sins Page 95 Secret Sins to be avoided because of future Iudgment Page 95 In what sense Christ was said to be made Sin Page 252 Sin taken for a Sacrifice for sin and for Punishment of sin Page ib. Christ was made sin but not a Sinner Page ib. Christ was made sin for us and we the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 Christ being made Sin is the cause of our being made the Righteousness of God in him Page 255 Sincerity how evidenced Page 102 Paul's Testimony of his Sincerity Page 118 Soul that it is distinct from the Body proved Page 66 It can live apart from the Body Page 67 The Souls of the Saints at Death immediately go to God Page 67 Spirit How he dwells in us Page 42 Strangers how to carry our selves as Strangers in this World Page 52 Sufferings of Christ what they were Page 256 They show the heinousness of sin Page 174 How we are to be affected when we read the story of Christ's sufferings Page 198 Suitableness between Christ and Believers Page 190 Surety Christ the Surety of Believers Page 171 Christ dyed as a Surety Page 179 T. TAbernacle our frail Condition set forth by a Tent or Tabernacle Page 2 Terror of the Lord is ground of Fear Page 110 How it is so to the godly Page 113 The Terror of the Lord should have an influence on us while in the flesh Page 113 V. VEracity and Faithfulness of God manifested at the Day of Iudgment Page 98 Union to Christ Internal and External explained Page 203 How the New Nature flows from our Union with Christ. Page 203 W. WAlking by Faith those who have Faith must walk by it Page 61 Reasons of it Page ib. Will God will not do any man good against his will Page 235 Nor doth he force man's will but deal by Persuasion Page 236 Wisdom wherein Wisdom lyes Page 128 Wherein the Wisdom of a godly man appears Page 128 Evidences of Spiritual Wisdom Page 129 How Wisdom is to be justified by her Children Page 128 Wisdom of Christ. Page 83 Word of God is an Instrument fitted to gain the consent of man's will Page 236 Work the Work of a Christian. Page 72 74 Why Works are produced at the Day of Iudgment Page 97 What room and place Works have with respect to our final sentence and the Rewards and Punishments that follow it Page 100 101 Works good the Principle of them Page 101 Good Works cannot be performed by men in a state of Nature Page ib. The aim and scope of them Page ib. Good Works Imperfect Page 99 They merit nothing Page ib. What respect Good Works have to our future Reward Page 102 Worship External Pomp in the Worship of God is not that he looks after Page 198 A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on 2 CORINTHIANS 5.   Chap. Verse Page GEnesis 1 31 216 3 11 28 4 7 252   13 252 Exodus 32 25 28 Deuteronomy 6 5 163 30 6 167 1 Kings 5 26 95 Psalms 1 5 92 27 4 64 31 1 233 33 15 93 51 4 92 115 1 133 130 3 92 Proverbs 16 14 112 29 27 246 Ecclesiastes 3 21 129 5 6 93 12 7 66 Canticles 8 6 146 Isaiah 56 4 76 65 17 200 66 22 200 Jeremiah 23 6 253 Hosea 2 3 28 4 8 252 6 7 96 10 1 183   11 152 Amos 6 3 112 Habakkuk 2 11 96 Malachy 2 15 168 Matthew 3 11 112 Matthew 11 19 128 20 23 40 22 37 163 250 24 12 160 25 31 78 Mark 6 11 94 9 44 105 Luke 2 40 191 10 27 250 12 20 4 16 9 68   22 68 20 37 38 68 23 43 67 John 2 24 25 84 5 45 93 7 ●4 63 14 2 4 15 2 203 20 27 197 Acts 16 14 175 20 21 224 Romans 5 14 171   25 223 6 3 4 5 180   6 177 179   13 180 6 19 131 8 2 164 9 3 141 11 36 134 14 7 8 183 15 3 187 1 Corinthians 3 8 40 1 Corinthians 4 4 5 82 11 22 195 15 21 179   45 179 16 32 169 2 Corinthians 1 12 117 4 7 238   16 60 5 21 171 6 11 12 13 145 Galatians 2 20 178 3 1 59   20 80 4 14 ●41 5 17 180 Ephesians 1 3 51 4 18 190 Philippians 1 23 67 2 13 209 Colossians 1 20 68   21 217 3 3 5 179 180 191 1 Thessalonians 1 10 112 1 Thessalonians 2 12 39   13 241 1 Timothy 6 12 19 6 2 Timothy 2 21 204 Hebrews 3 1 235 4 13 84 7 22 179 9 28 252 10 31 111 13 4 95 James 4 1 195 1 Peter 1 17 110 2 9 129 157 4 1 178 2 Peter 1 3 39 3 14 29 1 John 2 5 145 3 19 45 Revelations 2 5 162   3 4 38   5 9 76   12 12 93 FINIS Secondly Fourthly Thirdly Secondly Secondly ☞ That which follows being Printed Sermon XXX is the Conclusion of this 29 th Sermon