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A57736 Heavenly-mindedness, and earthly-mindedness in two parts : with an appendix concerning laying hold on eternal life / by John Rowe. Rowe, John, 1626-1677. 1672 (1672) Wing R2064; ESTC R17610 104,542 266

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live always If I am sure to live why do I fear death If we lay hold on eternal life and finde the beginnings of that life in our souls we have that life set up in us which cannot expire Joh. 6.44 He that eats my flesh and drinks my bloud hath eternal life How can that be lost which is eternal that which is eternal cannot be lost It is a great skill to be able to distinguish between this natural life which we live in common with other men and that spiritual life which we live as Christians The natural life of a Saint is subject to death as other mens is although the curse of it be taken away but there is a life in a Saint and that is the life which he lives in and by the Spirit of God and this is such a life as cannot be extinguished We should labour for that spiritual skill as to be able to distinguish between these two kindes of life and not be without hope as other men when this natural life ceaseth we should remember there is a life in us that cannot dye If we have begun to know God to love God to live upon him and to live to him here on earth we shall not cease to know him to love him to live upon him to live to him in eternity and to eternity Vse 1 1. We come now to the Uses of this Doctrine and there are onely two that we shall make of it The first Use shall be of Reprehension If we ought to lay hold on eternal life two things are hence to be reprehended 1. That we are so much taken up in following this world and in the pursuit of temporal things 2. That we are so much addicted to the love of this life I. We are to be reprehended that we are so much taken up in following this world and in the pursuit of temporal things Lay hold on eternal life If we ought to lay hold on eternal life then we ought to live above the world and contemn it The eager pursuit of this world is most contrary to our laying hold on eternal life We cannot pursue two things at once while we are pursuing hard after the world we must needs let Heaven and Salvation go The greatest part of men think not on eternal things they live as if they were always to live here on earth they never think of a future state nor do they provide for it But if we ought to lay hold of eternal life if that ought to be the mark and scope in our eye that shews that we are far wide of that which ought to be our true mark and scope when we are wholly taken up with temporal things and neglect eternal II. We are to be reprehended that we are so much addicted to the love of this life We are commanded to love eternal life and to lay hold on that but we are found of this life and loth to part with it He is a rare soul that is satisfied with life here on earth and hath such an apprehension of the reality and excellencie of eternal life that this life groweth out of esteem with him I grant that this natural life is a blessing as other temporal blessings are but as it is possible for us to love other things too much so it is possible yea too common to love this life too much and it is the wisdom of God to imbitter this life to us by many afflictions because we are so fond of it and that he may weary us out of it and cause us to long for that which is the true life Vita longa long a infirmitas a long life is a long infirmity and we may adde Longa tentatio a long temptation What is our whole life but a life of tryals and temptations It is true we may value and prize life for these two ends 1. To work out our Salvation to make ready for the coming of the Bridegroom 2. That we may do some work and service for God that we may glorifie him upon the earth and finish the work that he hath given us to do But to be over-fond of this life meerly for lifes sake is a certain signe of unbelief It is a signe we have little knowledge of another life little acquaintance with eternal life Had we a prospect by faith of a better and more excellent life we should not be so over fond of this life Vse 2 2. By way of Exhortation to exhort us all to put the duty of the Text in practice Let us labour to lay hold on eternal life Oh! let us labour to call up our hearts from visible things to invisible from present things to future from momentary things to eternal the things of the other world are never the less real because they are out of sight Atheists think that eternal life and all future things are but a fiction but we may use to them that Speech of Cyprian In aeternam poenam serò tandem credent qui in aeternam vitam credere noluerunt Cyprian They shall believe too late to their eternal torment who would not believe to eternal life But let Atheists and Scoffers say what they please we do know or ought to know that eternal life is the greatest reality God that cannot lye hath promised us eternal life Titus 1.2 The great promise of the Gospel is eternal life 1 Joh. 2.25 This is the promise that he hath given to us eternal life Unless we make God to be a lyar we must take eternal life for the greatest reality In the prosecution of this Use I shall onely propound some Directions for the better putting in practice of this duty to shew us how we ought to lay hold of eternal life 1. Let us have great and admiring thoughts of eternal life We should labour to have our hearts raised up with the consideration of the excellencie of this life Quanta erit illa faelicitas ubi nullum erit malum nullum latebit bonum Aug. Civit. Dei. How great shall that happiness be where there shall be no evil present and no good shall be wanting where we shall be wholly taken up in the praises of God and God shall be all in all we shall see and love love and praise as Austin expresseth it This natural life which now we live is not worth the name of life in comparison of eternal life nay it deserves to be called a death rather then a life for we always carry about sin with us which is the matter cause of death But in eternal life we shall not onely be free from sorrow but from sin the cause of sorrow yea we shall be free from the possibility of sinning Mans first happiness in the state of Innocencie was posse non peccare a power not to have sinned His last happiness in Heaven is non posse peccare not to be able to sin at all Though man in his first estate was endowed with such a power
earth as should bear proportion to that frame and temper we hope to be of in Heaven We labour that whether present or absent we may be accepted of him we would be such to the Lord in the frame and disposition of our spirit whilst we are on earth as we hope to be to him hereafter whether present or absent we would be acceptable to him But here the great Inquiry will be Quest How may we get more up into the spirit and life of Heaven since a great part of our seeking the things above consists in a conformity to the Heavenly life how may we do to get more up into the spirit and frame of the Saints in Heaven This is a noble Inquiry and deserves to be the matter of our study and contemplation all our days What is the great concernment of a Christian but after he hath gotten into Christ and hath gotten some assurance he is in the state of Salvation to be working up his heart into the spirit of the future life A Christian hath two great Works to intend in this world first to make sure his title to Salvation to pray for a more clear and distinct understanding of his union with Christ that he may see he hath a sound title to eternal life and glory Secondly to pray for Grace that God would work up his heart into the Spirit of the future life that so he may be adapted and suited to that life and brought to as great a conformity to it as may be here on earth Now what Directions may be given us as to this to bring us more up to the spirit and life of heaven here on earth before we come to be taken thither in person This being the main thing intended in the whole Discourse I shall take liberty to be a little large here and there are many particulars that must be spoken unto Answ 1. If we would get up into he life and spirit of Heaven let us begin by degrees to withdraw our hearts and affections from present sensible things What is the life of Heaven but this God shall be all in all hereafter we shall live upon God purely and immediately without all creatures therefore by degrees we should labour to have our hearts more taken out of the creature and gathered into God Mistake me not whilst we are here on earth we must use the creatures and it is the will of God we should use them and not to use them to those ends God hath appointed them were to tempt God and make our selves wiser then God But here lyes the skill of a Christian while we do use the creature converse with sensible things still to labour to see God in every creature and to pass from every creature to God not to stick in the creature but to pass from the creature to God and then to think of such a time when we shall live upon God without these things Non te pr●hibet Deus amare ista sed diligere ad beatit●dinem It is a good speech of Austin God doth not forbid thee to love these things speaking of created things but he forbids thee to love them as thy happiness We ought to keep our hearts free and reserved for God in the use and presence of all creature injoyments we ought to love nothing as our happiness but God I should be all one with us as to this whether we have the creature or have not the creature whether we are full or empty whether we want or abound we should still be at the same point of rest in God as in the centre we should cleave to him as our chief good and imbrace him as our onely portion If God gives us creature● comforts and injoyments we should labour to see God in them and finde out God in them and when we taste any sweetness any delight in the creature when we finde any suitableness or conveniencie in the creature we should say Here is God This sweetness this suitableness this convenience is but a drop of the Occan all this is to elevate me to the Fountain There is nothing more in any creature-comfort or injoyment then what God hath put into it therefore must my soul say I look at God in all these things I stick not in the creature but I look at God the creatures are made to shew me God This should be our frame in the presence and injoyment of the creatures and then we should think much of that time when God will communicate himself to us immediately There is a time when I shall drink no more from the Cistern but shall take in all from the well-head There is a time when I shall have no more need or use of these things which are now as so many organs or pipes to convey comfort to me by God shall be all himself and shall supply all by himself God shall be instead of Sun and Moon to me instead of meat and drink to me instead of all relations God himself shall be all things We should think much of that time and state when God shall be thus to us This is one way to get up into the spirit of the future life by degrees to begin to withdraw our hearts and affections from present sensible things 2. If we would get up into the life and spirit of Heaven let us minde a spiritual happiness seek after a spiritual happiness and be taken up in the thoughts and desire of a spiritual happiness The happiness of Heaven is mainly and principally a spiritual and an intellectual happiness the happiness of God himself is a spiritual an intellectual happiness The Being of God is a spiritual being and the happiness of God is a spiritual happiness suitable to his Being God hath no other happiness then to know himself and understand himself The happiness of the Saints and Angels is a spiritual intellectual happiness The Angels and Souls of glorified Saints are spiritual substances and therefore their happiness must needs be a spiritual happiness The Angels and glorified Saints have no gross material objects to live upon they have no other happiness then what they take in by their understandings and wills O consider it true happiness consists mainly and principally in what the soul injoys not but that the body shall at last participate of happiness with the soul when the body shall be raised the body shall participate in its kinde with the happiness of the soul but the Essence of true happiness lyes mainly and principally in what the soul enjoys and that appears from those words of our Saviour John 17. This is life eternal to know thee the onely true God It is the soul that is capable of knowing and enjoying God and therefore true happiness and eternal life consists properly in what the soul injoys Sensual minded men are apt to think there is no happiness but what the body enjoys and is taken in by the senses but true happiness is an inward thing
expression Lay hold on eternal life contemn this world and raise thy thoughts to something higher Let this world seem a little thing in thy eye and let eternal life be the mark and white in thy eye let thy desires and longings be carried out after life We ought to lay hold on eternal life that is we ought to set eternal things as the fairest things in our eye the main of our desires inclinations and affections should be carryed out that way Our hearts should be carried above this world and our affections should be soaring up aloft to the injoyment of God in the next world It is an emphatical expression of the Apostle Paul Phil. 3.14 I press towards the mark for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words in the Original are very emphatical as much as if he had said I press towards eternal glory as making that my uttermost end and scope Eternal life should be our scope the great thing that we should breath and aspire after whatsoever is short of the injoyment of God in heaven should seem but a little thing to us It is a speech of Luther We ought with a great soul to contemn this world and with a full gale of affection breath after the glory of the future life 3. To lay hold on eternal life is to have our thoughts fixt and intent upon eternal life 2 Pet. 3.12 Looking for and hastening unto the coming of the day of God 2 Cor. 4.18 We look not to the things which are seen but to the things which are not seen We ought to have our hearts taken up much with the contemplation of the things of the invisible world Though it be but a little of the glory of heaven and the blessedness of eternal life that we can apprehend yet something we may understand of it as the Word hath revealed it The Word gives us some glimpses of the heavenly state the Word tells us that we shall be present with the Lord. 2 Cor. 5. Absent from the body and present with the Lord. The Word tells us that we shall be ever with the Lord 1 Thess 4.17 The Word tells us we shall see God Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God The Word tells us we shall be like him 1 Joh. 3.2 The Word tells us that our vile bodies shall be made like unto his glorious body Phil. 3.21 The Word tells us that all tears shall be wiped away from our eyes Rev. 21.4 and that everlasting joy shall be upon our heads Isai 35.10 These things and much more doth the Scripture speak of the glory of the future life Now our thoughts and meditations should work on these things He that hath a fair inheritance left him will be willing some time or other to go to see it we have the heavenly inheritance given to us an inheritance incorruptible undefiled 1 Pet. 1.4 and that fadeth not away reserved in the heavens for us Now since there is so great an inheritance reserved for us we should not slight it but be willing as often as may be to take a prospect of it by faith Nothing is so sweet as the contemplation of eternal things the contemplation of eternal things is much more sweet then the highest enjoyment of present sensible things Eternal things satisfie and quiet the minde no temporal thing can do it let us then lay hold on eternal life in this sence let us keep our thoughts fixt and intent upon it 4. To lay hold on eternal life it is to pursue after it in our endeavours As the bent and tendencie of our affections should lie towards eternal life so we should pursue after it in our endeavours Lay hold on eternal life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Greek word signifies to pursue after a thing and in pursuing after it to apprehend and take hold of it The main scope of our endeavours should be to attain eternal life all our endeavours should run out that way that we may attain eternal life We should never think that we can pray too much that we can believe in Christ too much that we can love God too much that we can be too much in obedience and holy walking so we may but attain eternal life in the end Rom. 2.7 To them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life The meaning is God will certainly give and bestow eternal life on them who by a patient continuance in well doing seek for it But we may not mistake here we ought not to think that God gives us eternal life upon the account of the merit of any thing that we do it is the righteousness and obedience of Christ onely that gives us a right and a title to eternal life But thus we are to conceive of it This is the race and course that God hath appointed us to run God hath appointed us to run this course and race of faith and obedience here on earth that so we may come to eternal life in the end Hence is that of Paul 2 Tim. 4.7 8. I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith What then Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day and not to me onely but unto all them also that love his appearing Certainly Paul did not expect eternal life upon the merit of his obedience or of his services but Paul knew that God had appointed him such a course of obedience to run here on earth and his course being finished he knew that God would be faithful to give him the Crown God hath propounded and set before us the Crown of eternal life it becomes us to pursue after this Crown with our uttermost endeavours that we may attain it Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful to the death and I will give thee the crown of life O how sweet how unexpressibly sweet will it be to be sure of eternal life when this natural life fails If we b● faithful to the death we shall then have the crown of life that is If we persevere in a way of faith and obedience to the end we shall have the crown of eternal life and immortality set upon our heads when this short life doth expire Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee the crown of life it is as much as if Christ had said I will give thee eternal life when this natural life is at end 5. To lay hold on eternal life it is to live much in the hope and expectation of eternal life Titus 1.2 In hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the world began Rom. 5.2 We rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God The main of our hopes should not lie in this world we should not fancie to our selves and expect
an happiness here on earth but our great hope should be above we should cast anchor within the veil Heb. 6.19 expect happiness in what is to be enjoyed on the other side of time If the main of our hopes and expectation be in this life we and our hopes are like to perish together for we our selves must die and the things we hope for and make account of as our happiness they must die and perish it is good therefore to have such an hope as will not fail us nor deceive us If we look for the main of our happiness yea our onely true happiness in the next world not in this world this is such a hope as will never deceive us A man that hath fixt his hopes in eternal things when he hath lost any temporal thing the main of his happiness is still where it was his hopes and expectations were carried above this world and therefore whatsoever his losses and disappointments were here on earth this doth not shake his happiness his happiness was placed elsewhere before and he is at the same point still 6. To lay hold on eternal life it is not to suffer the comfort of eternal life to be wrested from us As we ought to live much in the hope and expectation of eternal life so we ought to take comfort in the hope and expectation of eternal life Rom. 12.12 Rejoycing in hope As we ought to hope for eternal life so we ought to rejoyce in the hope of eternal life I conceive that much of the force of the Text lies here Lay hold on eternal life unto which thou art called and hast made a good profession before many witnesses It is as much as if the Apostle had said Thou hast a true and an undoubted title to eternal life thou hast a firm sure title to eternal life thy vocation and calling as a Christian ●ntitles thee to eternal life Lay hold on eternal life unto which thou art called that eminent profession of faith which thou hast made as a Christian and as a Minister both in thy life and doctrine this gives an evidence and proof of thy right and title to eternal life Now this is the force of the Apostles argument Since thou hast so firm a title to eternal life lay claim to it as thy own live in the hope and comfort of it and do not suffer the comfort of eternal life to be wrested from thee Much of the meaning of the Text seems to be contained in this The Greek word as it signifies to pursue after a thing so also to hold it fast and retain it when once we have gotten it So that the designe of the Apostle is to perswade Timothy to hold firm and fast the hope of eternal life not to part with the hope of salvation upon any terms Lay hold on eternal life it is as much as if it had been said Do not part with thy hopes of salvation and eternal life upon any terms The stedfast assured hope of salvation is the great thing that must carry us thorow the difficulties sufferings and afflictions of our pilgrimage here on earth Therefore doth the Apostle exhort the Thessalonians that they would take for an helmet the hope of salvation 1 Thess 5.8 Putting on the brestplate of faith and love and for an helmet the hope of salvation Intimating thus much that if they had a well-grounded hope of salvation this would fortifie them against all the afflictions they were to meet with here by the way Whatever afflictions sufferings and troubles we meet with here in this world if we can cast an eye to the heavenly country and see that we have a part there all is well above there is none of those troubles fears sorrows where the main of our hope happiness and expectation lies Therefore let us not part with or let go the comfort of eternal life if we part with the comfort of eternal life we lose that which must be the standing comfort of our life nothing can bear us up under the afflictions of this life but the solid well-grounded assurance of eternal life Lastly To lay holy of eternal life it is to look after the first fruits of the spirit and to labour after an inchoate possession of eternal life in our souls here on earth Our Saviour teacheth us He that eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud hath eternal life Joh. 6.54 He hath it that is he hath it in the beginning of it And concerning his Sheep he saith I give them eternal life Joh. 10. He speaks in the present tense what he doth do for the present I give unto them eternal life Christ hath already made over eternal life to his people he hath given them a right and a title to it and he hath given them the beginning of it in their souls here on earth it is a great Text Joh. 4.14 The water that I shall give shall be a well of water springing up into everlasting life The plain meaning seems to be that Grace and that of the Spirit of God which Christ hath given to his people here on earth shall never leave them till it hath brought them to eternal life The Spirit of God that is in the hearts of the Saints and the Grace of Godwhich is wrought in them shall nover leave them till it hath brought them to eternal life Hence it is that the Spirit of God is called the earnest of our inheritance Eph. 1.14 an earnest is part of the bargain the Spirit of God that dwells in the hearts of Believers is an earnost of eternal glory for what is heaven but a fuller manifestation of the Spirit of God in us which manifests and puts it self forth in part in us here on earth So that so far as we are sensible of the indwelling of the Spirit of God and the operation of it in our souls so far we have an carnest of eternal glory This is that water which shall be a well of water springing up into everlasting life We should labour therefore to be sensible of the indwelling of the Spirit and of the operation of the Spirit of God in us in a way of grace and of comfort In this sense we should lay hold of eternal life that is we should be earnestly pressing and making after it in our own souls we should pray carnestly that God would let down more of eternal life into our souls here on earth As he once said Lord come down to me or take me up to thee We should pray that eternal life may come down more into our souls here on earth This should be the highest ambition of a Christian to perceive and feel more of the dawnings puttings forth of eternal life in his soul here on earth It is not impossible for us to perceive and feel the dawnings and puttings forth of eternal life in our souls here on earth and this is that we should earnestly pray for Someof the last words
that he might not have sinned yet it was possible for him to sin and he did sin but in eternal life the will shall be so confirmed as that there shall not be a possibility of sinning Oh! how great will that happiness be when the soul shall enjoy the sweetness of eternal joys without intermission when the soul shall forget all its sins and sorrows as to any sense or experience of them yet not so as to be unthankful to him who hath been its Saviour and Deliverer 2. We should breathe long and suspire after eternal life We should elevate and lift up our hearts abovetime and this lower world breathe after the sweetness and delights of the Heavenly Country Those breathings that are in the hearts of the Saints after eternal things Cum sitimus res coelestes tum sentimus perpetuò aliquid gaudii voluptatis Roloc. in Joh. give them some taste of those things When we thirst after heavenly things saith a judicious Divine we do always perceive and experiment something of joy and sweetness Those breathings that are in the hearts of the Saints after eternal life are some of the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8.22 We our selves which have the first fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption the redemption of our bodies Other men feel no such longings and breathings as these are for although there be a natural instinct in all men which carries them out to desire happiness yet none but the Saints long and breathe after the enjoyment of God as their happiness Therefore so far as we finde a thirst kindled in our souls after the sight and enjoyment of God in eternal life so far we have an earnest of eternal life in our souls How great a thing should it be to us to be admitted to the sight of the Divine Majesty to be taken up from the light of the Sun and Moon to the light of him who made the Sun and the Moon as Austin expresseth it It is a good observation of Luther How much joy is there when God doth exhibit by the Word one drop of consolation to such as are tempted and afflicted in conscience but far greater and unexpressible will that joy be when the God of all consolation shall reveal himself and shall wholly pour himself forth unto us in eternal life How should we breathe after this life Thirdly let us place our happiness and expect it no where but in eternal life We should carry our hope and expectation above this world and never expect to finde happiness Ipse finis erit desideriorum nostorum qui sins fine videhitur sine fastidio amabitur sine fatigatione landabitur Aug. until we come to live with God in eternal life He shall be the end of our desires who shall be seen without end loved without nauseousness praised without wearisomness This is life eternal c. It is a vain thing to expect happiness until we come to see God and to live with him in his eternity If the Lord make our passage in any measure tolerable thorow this world this is a mercy if he give us any comfort in outward things in this world these are mercies so far as he is seen and loved in them otherwise the best comforts here on earth are pitiful things for what can be truely good from which the chief good is absent Deus est omnis boni bonum God is the good of every good and nothing is good but as he appears in it But we ought to remember that our true and great happiness is to live in the Divine presence above and to have the sight of God to eternity And it is not possible that any soul that hath had one glimpse or one true taste of him should think any thing to be happiness short of that sight This therefore is to lay hold of eternal life to keep our spirits aloof off from the world as much as may be and to keep our spirits reserved for the enjoyment of God in eternal life The enjoyment of God in eternal life is the point and centre that we should be moving and tending unto When the Lord gives us any of the comforts and blessings of this life when he gives us estates friends the comfort of relations we should say These are the gifts of God and so far they are good but these are not my happiness my happiness is God himself my happiness is to see him and to live with him in his eternity Here should our desires rest and terminate and though we defire and use many things for necessity in the present state yet our desire and expectation should be still carried above these things and end no where but in the enjoyment of God Quis alius noster est finis nisi pervenire ad regnum cujus nullus est finis Aug. What other end have we but to come to that kingdom of which there is no end Fourthly we should labour to be in a readiness and preparedness of spirit to enter upon eternal life 2 Pet. 3.14 Be diligent that ye may be found of him in peace without spot and blame Our ambition should be to be found in such a posture and to keep our souls in such an holy evenness as that nothing may impede or hinder our free passage out of Time into Eternity We should labour to keep our Consciences pure We should see that the guilt of no sin remain upon our Conscience unpardoned unrepented of We should see that our affections be not intangled with the inordinate love of lawful things much less with the love of any sin We should labour to have our hearts fortified with a stedfast belief of the things God hath promised us in the other world the weakness of our faith in believing the things promised makes us very unfit for the enjoyment of eternal life We should often contemplate eternal life we should be thinking of it night day all the comforts that we enjoy all the necessary employments we are engaged in should not take us off from the frequent meditation of eternal life What so necessary to be thought of as that state which when once it is begun shall never have an end This whole life is but like one long dream in comparison of eternal life Oh! let us not forget eternal life but be still preparing and making ready for it Fifthly we should not take up or rest satisfied with what we have already attained in grace but press forward toward that which lies before us and is yet wanting to us This is the direction the Apostle gives us from his own example Phil. 3.13 Brethren I count not my self to have apprehended but one thing I do forgetting those things which are behinde and reaching forth unto those things which are before I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus Paul's aim and scope was to obtain
abundantly all the creatures are too narrow and too short to exhibit and represent to us the immensity and infiniteness of the Divine perfection God is not onely all that perfection that is in the creature but he is infinitely more and the reason is because if all the perfections of th● creature were summed up into on● it is but finite perfection it is 〈◊〉 contradiction to suppose an infini● creature but God's perfection is i●finite perfection what happine●● then must it be to be admitted t● see him who hath all this perfectio● in him This should make us 1. To think much of the beatifical vision ou● thoughts should be much upon it 2. We should have great and admiring thoughts of it O let us not thin● it is a light thing to be admitted into the Divine presence the more you think of it the more will you finde your hearts swallowed up in the thoughts of it I say let us not think that it is a light thing to be admitted into the Divine presence and to stand before him who made heaven and earth We ought to think this is the highest dignity and honour that can be cast upon us if the Queen of Sheba was so much taken with the admiration of Solomon's wisdom as that she said Happy are thy men happy are these thy servants which stand continually before thee and that hear thy wisdom well may we say to our Maker Happy Lord are they that may be admitted into thy presence and may stand continually before thee to behold the glory and beauty of thy Majesty let us have great and admiring thoughts of the beatifical vision Do not think it a light thing to be admitted to the fight of God 3. We should pray much that we may be accounted worthy to be admitted to this sight It is that which deserves to be made the great request of our souls all our days that we may be accounted worthy to be admitted into the Divine presence and live in the sight and presence of God to eternity And as ever we hope to come to the sight of God to the beatifical vision be sure to remember this that Christ must be our way I am the way the truth and the life no man cometh to the Father but by me Joh. 14.6 It is Christ that must bring us to the Father whilst we are here on earth and it is he that must make way for our admission to the sight of God in heaven It is Christ as Mediator must bring us to this sight and let us into th● sight his humanity opens the 〈◊〉 to the Divinity Christ as man by ●●tue of the Hypostatical or personal ●●nion hath a right to the sight of God and Divines commonly say Th● Christ as man from the moment 〈◊〉 his conception had the sight of Go● Our nature was alienated from Go● and deprived of communion wi● God by our sin in Adam But th● Son of God the second person i● the Trinity by assuming our nature and taking of it into Unity of perso● with himself hath brought our nature near to God and our nature 〈◊〉 it stands in Union with Christ the Head of the Church hath recovered 〈◊〉 right to communion with God and Christ by the merit of his obedience hath purchased a right for us to the sight of God so that when we have thoughts of the beatifical vision and have breathings in our souls after it we must keep our eye upon Christ and remember it is by him we must be admitted into the presence of God ●ever think of seeing God without Christ never think of being admitted into the Divine presence without Christ's being your way and door 4. If we would get up into the spirit and life of heaven We must labour to adhere to God and to cleave to him as the chief good In heaven as there will be the clear sight of God so there will be the most perfect adherence of the soul to him The glorified soul must needs see God to be its life its strength its happiness and all good to it and therefore it must needs cleave perfectly to him Now if we would come up into the spirit of heaven we should labour to have our souls cleaving to God here on earth we should rest in God as in our Centre we should labour to cleave to God more then to any created thing in a strict and proper sence our selves should cleave to nothing but God though we may and ought to love the creature in its place yet we may not love it as we love God Our souls must cleave and adhere to nothing as our chief good as the matter and object of our happiness but God of God onely it is that we must say He is my life my strength my salvation my happiness this was the Church's Song The Lord Jehovah is my strength and my salvation Isa● 12. We ought to cleave intimately and inseparably unto God God ought to be the stay and rest of our souls so much as our souls come to stay and rest themselves upon God as our chief good and onely happiness so near do we come to the life of Heaven It is a proper and an apposite expression to help us to understand this that which we have in Isa 26.3 Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose minde is stayed on thee This expression shews us what the carriage of the soul ought to be towards God the chief good the soul ought to cleave to God most intimately and to stay it self upon him The Saints in heaven do thus stay themselves upon God God is the great basis they lean upon they have no sensible comforts to live upon as we have but they see all in God and therefore he is their stay it is upon him they lean for happiness the more we can adhere to God and eleave to him and stay our souls upon him as our chief good the more do we come up to the life spirit of heaven 5. If we would get up into the life and spirit of heaven Let us labour to take complacencie in the glory and blessedness of God Here ly●s the quintessence and perfection of the heavenly life so far as we are able to conceive of it here on earth The glorified Saints look off themselves and out of themselves and take complacencie in the glory and happiness of God who is the first and most perfect Being It is matter of delight and joy to them to see God so holy and so happy as he is The Schoolmen rightly observe that to love God for himself V●lle Deum esse Deum it is to will that God should be God Then do we love God for himself when we take complacencie in the glory and blessedness of God when we are well pleased to see God to be what he is that is to see him to be the most excellent and most perfect being Our happiness as it is in us it is but a
Neither is there any thing we can conceive to be truely excellent and good but it is in him yea whatsoever perfection is possible to be it is in God Deus est bonum infinitissime infinitum Bradwardin God is such a good as is most insinitely infinite O! what folly is it then to have our hearts taken off from the infinitely-blessed God and to have them set upon little narrow things It is an expression that one of the Ancients hath to this purpose The Angels are so inflamed with divine love that all other things yea they themselves seem vile to themselves in respect of God whom they love Did we know God more we should not be so fond of other things Oh! let us turn our souls upon God the chief good there may we love freely and cannot exceed in loving him Fourthly consider the world and earthly things cannot give happiness unto men That is wise love when a man loves that which will make him happie Earthly things cannot do this You may say How doth that appear That is easily made out in few words Earthly things cannot give a man satisfaction while he hath them they cannot keep him from death they cannot comfort him in death and least of all can they be a happiness to him after death Now who would love that which will not answer the end for which he loves it The reason why men love earthly things although they will not confess it it is because they think to finde happiness in them but now that happiness that men think to finde is far from them No temporal thing will afford that to a man which he desires and expects from it Men expect satisfaction from what they do pursue but satisfaction is far from them Why should a man be fond of that which when he hath it his happiness must be in something above it and when he wants it it is possible for him to be happie without it If we had all the things in this world we could desire if we are the children of God and have indeed tasted that the Lord is gracious there is something above those things that we shall still desire Now if when we have the greatest abundance and confluence of earthly things there is something else that we desire and something else that must make us happie in the midst of these things viz. the presence of God and the enjoyment of him and that it is possible for us to be happie in those things without earthly things then there is no reason why our hearts should be so inordinately set upon these earthly things Fifthly consider the inordinate love of earthly things is a perverting of the End for which God gives us these things God never gave us the creatures that we might make them our happiness or pursue them as our last end but God gives us the creatures that we might see himself in them admire him in them and pass from them to him It is a speech of Austin The creature is to be praised for the sake of God the author and original of it not to be worshipped and adored as if it self were God All things are of him and by him and to him Rom. 11.36 All things are from God and they ought to lead to him therefore when we love the creatures as our chief good and stick in them as our last happiness we pervert the end for which they were given to us the creatures were never given for such an end but they were given for this end that we might ascend to God by them We ought to use the creatures not to enjoy them Now then do we use a thing when we use it to a farther end we ought to use the creatures in order to our enjoyment of God as our last end but we ought not to take up with them as if we had no higher end then to enjoy them Sixthly consider the inordinate love of earthly things is an argument of great ignorance and unbelief Every man would desire and love the best thing did he certainly know and believe that there are better things then these that are present to Sence he would love those things We look not to the things that are seen 2 Cor. 4. Paul knew that there were better things then those things that are seen and that these things were real and substantial and therefore his heart was carried out after these things Now because the generality of men do not see these things nor are acquainted with them therefore they desire them not The world lies before men as a fair and pleasant garden and there is many a goodly flower to be seen in it here is pleasure there is profit there is honour these captivate the eyes of men and because things invisible to the outward sences are not seen or perceived by them therefore they minde not these things But O ye sons of men how long will ye turn the glory of God into shame how long will ye love vanity and seek after leasing Psal 4.2 What folly and ignorance is it to think that there are no higher things then those which the Brutes are capable of conversing with as well as you The Brutes may have their outward senses delighted as well as you they may be taken and affected with present visible things as well as you but where are your souls in the mean time where is your intellectual part Can Reason discover nothing to you but what is present and obvious to Sence why then is the candle of the Lord set up within you What sottishness and stupidity is it to believe that there is no happiness to be found but what is to be found in this world As if the life which God lives were no happiness as i● so be the life which the Saints and Angels live in above were no happiness While men onely seek earthly things it is a certain signe that they are ignorant of these things Seventhly consider the inordinate love of the world and of earthly things doth greatly unfit a man for death Die we must that is certain and the time of our life here is mos● uncertain Now what folly is it to be found in such a frame as will certainly unfit us for death Pythagoras saith of Philosophy That it is a meditation of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Certainly the life of a Christian should be a continued meditation of death and if a Christian should always be meditating of death that he may die well die happily and die comfortably then certainly it will be his greatest folly to be taken up with those things that must greatly unfit him for death Now there is nothing that will more unfit a man for death then the inordinate love of earthly things If a mans heart lie in the world how ●oth will he be to part with the world No man is willing to part with that which he loves much When a man that is a lover of the world comes to