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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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at first by Christ and after by his Apostles Luke 1.2 There are three Graces especialy whereby Gods Word is said to continue in us for it is not enough for a Christian to have it rest in his judgement and assent the Devil himself knows and beleeves that Antichristian Doctrin is a lye and he knows the truth yet because he continues not in the truth he hath neither fellowship with the Father nor the Son nor any hope of Salvation therefore there are some more speciall Graces whereby the Word is said to continue in us as David saith I have hid thy word in my heart Psal 119.11 1 By faith 1 Thess 2.13 when ye received the Word ye received it not as the word of man but of God c. men then receive the Word aright when they beleeve it and when they think it effectuall to Salvation able to save their souls Jam. 1.21 when we receive it as the word of life when we receive it as our stock and portion then it dwels in our hearts by faith let a man receive the Word as true only and not as good it will not continue in him the Devils receive it as true but do not receive it as good but think it mischievous to them and therefore they get no good by it 2 It dwels in our Consciences by an holy awe and fear of this Word unless the Word awe us and rule in our hearts we have no fellowship with it Psal 119.161 the heart is taken for the Conscience in the Old Testament we read not of the word Conscience although his heart stood in awe of Princes as when he cut off Sauls skirt yet it was the Word that over-awed him that he would not hurt him this awe of the Word over-awes that authority we might use to evill so Job when he had it in his hand to do wrong yet the fear of God kept him from doing any wrong Job 31.13 14 15. even to the least servant or maid he had Jer. 32.40 3 Obedience keeps the Word in our lives and our lives in the Word Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it to the end Psal 119.32 if a man take liberty to live sometimes by the Word sometimes beside it he will break off from fellowship Herod for a while kept an awe of John but in his life he would not exercise it therefore he shaketh off John and his word and cleaves to his lust so that the Word abides in us by faith fear and obedience Q. What is meant by continuing in the Son and in the Father A. 1. It implies communion with them a man cannot continue in them without communion with them 2 It implies perseverance in them for ever so that he that hath the Word abiding in him hath fellowship with the Son he hath Christ for his Saviour his Brother his King Priest and Prophet and he hath God for his Father an All-sufficient God blessing him with all blessings He shall persevere in this estate for ever What are the Reasons why such continue in the Son and in the Father Reas 1 From the intercession of Christ Joh. 17.20 21 22. without which we neither could have fellowship with them nor eternal life Christ himselfe hath prayed for this and doth and he was heard alwayes Joh. 11.42 therefore when he prays that all they that believe in his Word may be one with him and with the Father they shall have union with them and glory everlasting and so vers 24. Obj. You will say Christs intercession for himself was not sometime heard did not he pray that the Cup of his Passion might passe from him A. He prayed against it and yet did drink it but he prayed conditionally if it might stand with his Fathers Will therefore he had his desire because he fulfilled Gods will Hebr. 5. Secondly He prayed not so much that he might not taste of it as that he might not be over-whelmed by it and so he was supported by his eternall God-head so that he was saved in death and from death therefore Christ having prayed for our union with him and eternall glory we shall attaine it Reas 2 From the effectuall power of found heavenly Doctrin it is the power of God to Salvation it is called the arm of the Lord Joh. 12.38 it is called the glorious ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 2 Corinth 10.4 5. Jam. 1.21 so that this Doctrin is the Ministration the mighty power of God to conveigh to us the Spirit of God which gives us fellowship with the Father and the Son and eternal life the breath of the Word breathes the Spirit of God into us and makes us live spiritually here and gloriously hereafter Vse 1 May shew us what an hard thing it is to persevere and abide in the Doctrin of the Apostles which appears from this strong exhortation one would think that the honesty and purity of the Word should prevail with us to cleave and abide in their Doctrin but yet we see that is not enough but the Holy Ghost useth as strong motives here as any can be he knows the World might over-reach us some come and tell us if we continue in the Word we shall lose our Friends and Goods and may be our Life and why then will you be singular now seeing that the World offers so largely to with-draw us therefore he gives a farre larger offer such an offer as all the World cannot give he out-bids the World and even promises Fellowship with the Father and the Son or Eternall life therefore that we might be established against all the subtilties of the World he offers us such Promises as may eternally establish us in the truth Vse 2 Exhorts us to take hold of this Doctrin while we may have it if we preach no other Doctrin but what hath been delivered from the beginning why then if you would have fellowship with the Father and the Son and eternall glory cleave to this Word abide in it receive it with Faith and fear and expresse it in obedience Lord thou hast the words of eternall life therefore whither should we go from it Prov. 19.16 he that keeps the Commandement keeps his own soul but he that regards not his wayes whether he walk according to this rule or no he shall dye What encouragement would it be to keep a Pill if the Physician should say keep this and you keep your life cast it up and you dye why truly such is the Word of Christ keep it and you keep your life but if you despise the Commandement care not how you live you shall certainly dye this is the promise that if we receive and keep this word we shall not only keep a long life but even a life for ever and ever that is a promise God hath given you even eternall life why this is more than all the World can give this is an argument that countervails all other Arguments Vse 3 Of
people so they cast the imputation of ignorance upon God as if God had been mistaken when he sent his Word that believers might believe and they think that reading the Word would make them hereticks Vse 3. For you that do believe be frequent in reading the Word for to you it was written that you might believe Meditate there on day and night The blessed will finde a time to meditate on Gods Word every day and every night and this you shall ●●●le very effectuall to the increase of your faith The King himselfe whose employments were greatest the Lord ●aid a charge on him to read in the Book of the Law all the dayes of his life Deut. 17.14 And much more is every private man bound to it If these God hath sanctified to help us in our belief then as ever you would believe ●e diligent in hearing reading conferring examining and meditating on the Word all these are notable means to increase and inlarge our saith therefore if thou ●e wanting in faith consider whether thou hast not been wanting in this practise take away the Word and take away the fuel of your faith And for you that believe not though this Scripture was not so much written for you yet because hearing is the only way of faith 〈◊〉 10.17 be diligent in hearing the Word preached Prov. 8 3●●5 Blessed it be that heareth ●● for whose findeth me findeth life And when you have heard be careful to search and ●●amine whether the things preached be agreeable to Gods Word By this means many that believed not before have been taught to believe and be careful to conferre on the Word The Lord hath sanctified the Word preached and the Word examined and the Word confer●ed aboue to the begetting of faith and the Word read to the increasing of faith ●herefore be ste●u●● in these and withall joyn hearty prayer to God 1 Tim. 4.4 ● that he would open thine eyes and cause thee to understand and bow thine heart to imbrace every truth that so every ordinance may be effectual to thee to the 〈…〉 and increasing of faith in thee 1 JOHN 5.14 15. And this is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us And if we know that he hear us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him VErs 18. he had shewed a double soone of his writing th● atte● 〈◊〉 that they might believe on the Name of the Son of God This he exhorts Christians to vers 14 15 16. by three arguments 1 From the confidence such may have of the hearing of their petitions verse 1●4 2 From the certain knowledge such may have that their prayers are granted 3 From the prevalency of our prayers with God that as we shall be assured of the granting of our petitions so we shall thereby obtain life for our Brother that both not sinned a sin unto death Doct. A prayer that is made well never speeds ill Or thus A prayer made according to Gods will God will grant according to our will Notable is that incouragement Christ gave to the Woman Matth. 15. ●6 O 〈◊〉 I great is thy faith Be it unto thee even as thou wilt As if God would let such into his privy treasury and grant them what they would For explication Q What is it to pray according to Gods will These two things it holds forth at the first view 1. When we pray for such things as are agreeable to Gods will viz. his revealed will we should ask nothing but what he commands us In the Lords prayer Christ tels us what he would have us pray for for those things we have warrant to pray 2. What ever we ask we ought to ask with submission of our wills to Gods will So did Christ himselfe Matth. 26.39 Not as I will but as thou wilt But for further inlargement 1. A man is said to pray according to Gods will partly as his will is exprest in his word and partly as his will is revealed in our hearts For the will of God exprest in his Word 1. God requires that we should ask for nothing but what he commands us to doe and therefore had need to pray for whatever duty God requires of us that we are to pray for So did David Psal 119.4 5. 2. Whatsoever we pray for God commands us to ask it in the Name of Jesus Christ Joh. 16.22 23 24. To ask in the Name of Christ requires two graces of us Humility and Faith Humility of spirit in prayer is exprest in four acts 1. We acknowledge our selves lesse then the least of Gods mercies Gen. 32.10 So that if God should grant him nothing he would justifie God 2. Another act of Humility is to pray in sense of our insufficiency to think a good thought much more to pray according to Gods will 2 Cor. 3.8 Rom. 8.26 3. A man prayes in Humility when he doth not desire God to satisfie any of his sinfull lusts but that Gods will may be done Matth. 26. vers 39. 4. To pray in Humility is to make mention of no mediation in our prayers but onely of Christ Col. 2.18 They made a shew of Humility as not being so bold as to have immediate accesse to God therefore put up their prayers through the mediation of some Angell but to goe lower then God allows is but pride of heart 2. To pray in the Name of Christ is to pray in Faith Which is exprest in four acts 1. Faith directs us to put up our prayers onely to him on whom we believe Rom. 10.14 But we believe only in God therefore neither Saints nor Angels nor the Mother of Christ the Virgin Mary are to be prayed to but we are to pray to our Father onely Gal. 4.5 6. Rom. 8.15 2. Faith makes us come with some child like confidence to God as our Father 1. By Faith we come to God as our heavenly Father in Christ and well affected to Christ as loving us himselfe Joh. 16.36 2. We come to him as a Father Almighty full of goodnesse readyer to give then we to ask 3. A third act of faith is for a man to come truly cleaving unto Christ not standing in demurre whether we had best leave our lusts or no whether we had best become altogether Christians or no. This wavering cannot stand with faith for it 's such a wavering as whereby he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double-hearted man an heart for God and an heart for the world sometimes for God sometimes for his own lusts Let not this man think he shall receive any thing Jam. 1.6 7 8. 4. A fourth act of faith is to believe that what we have asked according to Gods will he will certainly grant Matth. 11.24 So far as you have asked with submission to his will so far will he grant according to your wills and though he deferre yet make account your prayers are heard
our Estate with God that so our joy may be full In the Text he instructeth us in the knowledge of the Truth of this point of Doctrine what we are to think and believe concerning the Doctrine of the Apostles whether preached or written Concerning which Doctrine two things are here delivered First The Subject of it Christ Jesus First In himself and that first as God as from the beginning eternall secondly as man as being heard seen and sensible Secondly As in himselfe to us the word of life verse 1. Secondly The end and scope of it First Subordinate Fellowship with the Apostles and Saints and with God verse 3. Secondly Supream our fullnesse of joy verse 4. That which was from the beginning Here are two questions First Why rather is it said here that was from the beginng then he which was from the beginning Secondly What is it here to be from the beginning First It is here said that which was from the beginning to signifie and set forth unto us a double nature in one and the same word of life in one and the same person of Christ If he had said he who was from the beginning whom we have seen c. It might have been thought that the same word of life was in one and the same nature both from the beginning and seen and heard or else that one person was from the beginning another person seen and heard but when he saith that word of life which was from the beginning and that which we have heard and seen c. he plainly insinuateth that there is as they say aliud aliud in the word of life There was something of the word of life that was from the beginning as namely his Godhead And againe something in the same word of life that was heard and seen c. as his Manhood and withall that this was not another person but another thing another nature in the same person This serves to confute those two Antient Heresies of Eutiches and Nestorius he confounding the Natures this dividing the persons of Christ Eutiches confuted because something there is of the word of life that was from the beginning something of the same word of life that was heard and seen c. that which was from the beginning was not the same thing which was heard and seen c. and that which was heard and seen c. was not the same thing which was from the beginning Nestorius is confuted because both that which was of the word from the beginning and that of the word which was seen and heard were both of the same word of life both the natures of one and the same person Secondly Againe if something there be of the same word Eternall and again something of same the word Sensible then there is no confusion of properties in the person of Christ The Apostles preach such a Christ as of whom something is from the beginning something againe heard and seen that of the word which was from the beginning that of the word was not sensible and that of the word which was sensible was not that of the word which was Eternall And therefore such as teach the flesh of Christ to be every where as the Germans doe or every where in the Sacraments as the Papists doe they doe not observe the distinction here observed by the Apostle This Phrase of speech from the beginning is ambiguous and must be interpreted according to the nature of the thing to which it is attributed First Sometimes it signifieth from the beginning of the story of Christ Luke 1.2 Secondly The time of the delivery of the Law 1 John 2.7 Thirdly Institution of a thing Mat. 19.8 Fourthly Of the Fall John 8.44 Fifthly Of the Creation Joel 2.2 But none of these meant here not the First nor Second for before Abraham was he was John 8.58 not the Third Fourth nor Fifth for he himselfe created all things John 1.3 There is another from the beginning which is higher than all these namely from the beginning of eternity which wanting beginning implyeth he was before all beginnings Prov. 8.23 Doct. And because there cannot be two Eternals but one Eternall and that is God therefore he also is Eternall God with the Father and Holy Ghost This is not to be omitted because it is plain but to be preached because it is certaine especially since some of late have been so far bewitched by Satan as to seal the contrary with their blood First This is proved first by the Names and Titles given to him 1. Very God 1 John 5.20 Rom. 9.5 2. Jehovah Exodus 3.2 4 6. 3. Saviour Mat. 1.21 which none is but God Isa 43.11 Hos 13.4 And who was able to save us from sin by satisfying Gods wrath but God Secondly By the Essentiall Properties of the God-head agreeing to him 1. Knowing the heart and reines Rev. 21.23 yea all things John 21.17 2. Omnipotency John 5.19 3. Omnipresence Mat. 18.20 John 3.13 4. Eternity John 8.58 17.5 5. And here equality with his Father without Sacrilege Phil. 2.6 Thirdly By his works of First Power 1 Creation Heb. 1.2 Col. 3.16 and that for his glory 2. Providence Heb. 1.3 3. Miracles John 14.11 Secondly Grace 1 Election John 13.8 2 Redemption Gal. 3.13 Thirdly Giving of the Spirit John 4.10 John 7.39 Fourthly Giving of eternall life John 10.28 Rom. 6. ult Fourthly By the Worship ascribed to him 1. Prayer Acts 7. ult 2. Faith in him for else how could we call on him Rom. 10.14 John 1.12 Jer. 17.5 Taketh no place in him but contrary Psal 2.12 Vse 1. To confute all those Blaspemous heresies whereby Satan hath laboured to overthrow the Truth of the God-head of Christ as that of the Cerinthians Ebonites Arians which taught him onely to be pure man to have no being before the Virgin Mary or at most before the Creation Secondly To Terrifie all such as are Enemies to his Kingdome Psal 2.12 Luke 19.14 27. Thirdly To Comfort all such as are Christs John 10.28 Ps 23.1 Isa 43.1 2. because they were elected in Christ Eph. 1.4 and our life is hid with him Col. 3.3 Therefore it is both sure and unchangeable for he is so Fourthly To exhort us to worship him Mat. 28.9 as an Eternall God God from the beginning Moses reproved the Israelites for worshipping new Gods Deut. 32.17 Gods whom their Fathers did not know but him they knew and worshiped Moses himselfe Deut. 33.16 Jacob Hos 12.4 Gen. 48.15 16. Abraham Gen. 22.11 12. Now his Worship consisteth in the duties of Faith and Repentance for those are the parts of Gods Worship which he hath revealed to us and requireth of us First In the Duties of Faith John 14.1 and here First Dost thou receive any thing from God receive it in the sight of thine own unworthinesse in thy selfe and so thou worshipest him through whom God doth accept thee and powreth his blessings upon thee Eph. 1.3 for none but God
could receive them for us from all eternity Secondly Dost thou give any thing to God offer up any obedience do it in the sight of thine own weaknesse and imperfection and so thou worshipest him through whom our lame sacrifices are acceptable Col. 3.17 for none but God could doe this for us Thirdly Dost thou want any thing seek unto God in the name of Jesus Christ and believe thou shalt receive it and so thou dost honour him John 16.23 24. for none but God can procure this for us Fourthly Doth Satan at any time tempt thee to doubt of thy reconciliation with God believe that Christ Jesus is God and therefore hath made full satisfaction and propitiation for thy sins 1 John 2.1 2. for God can fully do this for us Fifthly Dost thou doubt of the truth of any of the promises of God through unbeliefe believe they are Yea and Amen in him and so thou worshipest him 2 Cor. 1.20 for God can call things that are not as though they were Secondly In Dutyes of Repentance as First Dost thou at any time as thou oughtest continually remember thine old sin O! remember withall him whom thou crucifiedst by them was the Eternall God the Lord of glory and that will work a godly sorrow Zech. 12.10 to see him to abase himselfe for my sake Secondly Doth Satan tempt thee at any time to commit any sin O! remember thereby thou shouldest trample under foot the blood of the Son of God who hath saved thee from thy sins Heb. 10.29 1 John 1.1 That which we have heard c. As something of the word of life was eternall from the beginning so something was sensible which was 1 Heard 2 Seen and looked upon 3 Handled First For the meaning of this what is that of the word which first he saith we have heard They heard of him not a word of rumor but 1. His Doctrine John 6.68 2. The Testimony which his Father gave of him Mat. 17.5 6. 2 Pet. 1.17 Secondly What is that of the word which he saith we have seen 1. His Flesh John 1.14 2. His works especially his Miracles John 2.11 3. His Estate of First Humiliation 1. His poor and despicable life Mat. 8.20 2. His Agony Mat. 26.37 3 His Accusation and Arraignment Mat. 26.28 John 20.12 4. His Death John 19.26 5. His Buriall Mark 14. ult John 19. ult Secondly We have seen the Estate of his Exaltation 1. A glimps of it or preamble to it Mat. 17.2 3. 2 Pet. 1.16 2. His Resurrection John 20.8.20 3. His Ascension Acts 1.9 10. 4. His Sitting at the right hand of God Acts 7.55 Divers of these things seen St. John saw in a more familiar manner than the most of his Apostles Christ taking onely with him Peter and James and John to behold 1. His raising to life Jairus Daughter Mark 5.37 2. His Glory in the Mount Mat. 17.1 3. His Agony in the Garden Mat. 26.37 Thirdly What is that of the Word which he saith we have handled and that with our hands which addeth an Emphasis of Certainty as before 1. Before his Resurrection as familiarly conversing with him as when he taught Peter by the hand Mat. 14.31 When he washed their feet Joh. 13.5 When John leaned on his breast John 13.15 2. After his Resurrection John 20.25 27. Many observations might here be gathered concerning the certainty of the Apostles Doctrine who taught nothing but what they had so sensible knowledge and experience of but these I refer to the third verse Doct. He that was from the beginning truly God was in the fullnesse of time true man A plaine Doctrine you will say and well known to the meanest in this Congregation be it so yet it is fit to put you in remembrance of it 2 Pet. 1.12 13. Rom. 15.14 15. 2 Tim. 2.8 But you will say unto me Were it not much better to omit to speak of the person of Christ and rather to speak of the benefits we receive by him Justification Adoption Sanctification by the Spirit of God Faith Hope Love Repentance c. Take heed this be not one kind of spirituall Harlotry and adultery If you should see a Virgin affianced to a man to desire still to hear and speak of the gifts and presents he hath and will bestow upon her as Rings Bracelets Jewells c. and to have no minde at all to hear or speak of his person would you not say she loved his gifts and his tokens more than himselfe so here if we find our souls affected to Christ I would to God yea it were the joy of my heart if I could draw you to be in love with the Gifts and Graces of Christ our hearts are dead and dull even at the mention of them how much more at the mention of his person or nature yet thou that hast tasted of his bountifull Gifts and Graces be led on further willingly to hear and speak of his person Cant. 5.9 When the Daughters of Jerusalem had asked of the Spouse of Christ what her beloved was more than anothers beloved she in 8 verses following enters into a long and large and lovely description not of what he had given her but of his person especially seeing this part of his person his human nature is an excellent gift of God to us and the foundation of all the rest Yea what Doctrine soever John teacheth us in this whole Epistle tendeth to this end that our joy may be full which is a speciall benefit arising from all Chap. 1.4 Now the manhood of Christ is proved by two reasons First By the Titles given to him Secondly By the properties of a man agreeing to him First By the Titles given to him he being called 1 Flesh John 1.14 Rom. 1.3 Heb. 2.14 and this Flesh is not phantasticall but palpable John 20.27 2 Man Acts 17.31 3 Son of Man Luke 19.10 Acts 7.56 4 Seed of David 2 Tim. 2.8 Abraham Gal. 3.16 The Woman Gen. 3.15 5 Emanuel Isa 7.14 Mat. 1.23 Secondly By the Properties of a Man agreeing to him 1 Born of a Woman Mat. 1. ult 2 Hunger Mat. 21.18 and with it thirst John 19.28 3. Wearinesse John 4.6 4 Griefe and Sorrow Isa 53.3 4 10. Mat. 26.38 and from it weeping John 11.35 Sighing and groaning John 11.33 5 Bleeding and sweating Luke 22.44 6 Dying John 19.30 Now for the Reasons why Christ became man they are First That he might be a middle person or of a middle nature between the persons offending and the persons offended if he had still remained God he had been the person offended with us or if onely man then he had been the party offending and therefore that he might be of a middle condition it was needfull he should take upon him our nature Secondly That that nature of ours which had offended might make satisfaction if he had not taken on him our nature he could not have satisfied for our sins Heb. 2.16 Thirdly That he might be able to
make known your estate unto him or else you fall in your duty 3 From the duty he tenders unto them he writes unto them all I write unto you Fathers I write unto you young men I write unto you Babes from hence observe this poynt of Doctrin Doct. It is the duty of all sorts and ages of Christians to be conversant in reading of the Scripture To what end doth he write to old men if old men do not read what he writes and so young men and Babes it was the charge put upon the very Kings of Israel Deut. 17.19 that they should read the book of the Law all the dayes of their lives and when they have not opportunity to read then let them meditate on the word Psal 1.2 Reas There is great use of reading of the Scriptures 1 It helps Knowledge much 1 Tim. 3.15 2 It helps to make a right use of what we hear yea it sets such an edge on the Word heard that though the preaching did not so throughly affect yet by reading they come to quicken Faith Act. 17.11 12. though the Word prepared their hearts and made them attentive yet till againe they read and revised and meditated on what they had heard their Faith was in suspence but after they saw the agreement of his publick Doctrin with the word then many of them beleeved not that God doth ordinarily beget Faith by reading without hearing but when we have heard reading exceedingly quickens our spirits and Faith 3 There is a further benefit from reading the Word Deut. 17.19.20 a man shall find himselfe thereby framed to the fear of God to humility c. that day a man neglects reading of the Word of God he shall find his spirit more loose and unbridled lesse conscionable he doth not stand in awe so much 4 It is a means to confirm us and establish and help our memories and stir us up to holy dutyes 5 It makes the Word more ready in times of temptation what a marvellous use our Saviour made of the Word when Satan tempted him Ephes 5.17 a man in temptation will find need of many passages of Scripture 6 Lastly another use of reading the Scriptures is that our joy may be full 1 John 1.4 reading doth fill our hearts with comfort and consolation not that reading is sufficient to salvation no ordinance roots out another Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing but though that especially begets faith yet for sundry other Graces reading is of speciall use at least to quicken and stir up grace we do not read that God ever blessed reading alone to beget Faith for God doth not usually blesse it alone but when it is joyned with hearing the Word preached in any congregation where there is only reading of the Word what one soul is begot to God comes on to Faith to Gods fear to humility to patience c. not but that in such places be found good Christians but it is because they goe abroad otherwise it fares with reading as with the Eunuch that knew not what he read Act. 8.30 31. till Philip declared the interpretation But yet I say you old men read and you young men read and you Children read and it is a great fault to neglect it and put it over wholly to little Children as a petty childish exercise but what doth St. John write only to Babes no but he writes to young men and therefore they are to read what he writes and to old men and therefore they are to read what he writes when God laid the charge upon the Kings of Israel Deu. 17.19 he did not impose it only upon Babes but whatsoever their imployment be whether they be in war or sitting in the seat of Judgment they must let no day passe without reading the Law no person but let him read we shall understand the Word better and the better remember it we shall be more stirred up to fear God to keep his Law we shall be the better furnished against many temptations which otherwise will prevail against us In a word seeing he wrote to them that they might learn to walke as Christ walked hence you may comfortably expect by reading the Word by laying it up by praying for a blessing you may be helped to walke even as Christ walked I write unto you Fathers because you have known him that was from the beginning Who are these Fathers they are such as are opposed to young men and Babes therefore he speaks of old men 1 Tim. 5.2 3. why doth he call them Fathers not that they were his Fathers to beget him to God for before he had called them Brethren neither is it meant of his natural Father but he calls them so even out of very reverence to their age Doct. It is the duty of all Christians yea even of Ministers to carry themselves to old men as their Fathers For this duty belongs to all christians as well as Ministers God hath speciall care to the reverence of old age for he would have ministers to rebuke with all authority and yet he would not have them easily rebuke an Elder Tit. 2 15. much lesse is a private person that hath lesse authority and commission to deale roundly with elder years Levit. 19.32 he gives speciall Commandement to all men to rise up before the hoary head and reverence the person of the old-man and dread thy God implying that the fear of God requires this duty as who should say there is no fear of God in such men as doe not reverence the persons of old men Reas God hath stampt on old men the image of his Eternity as on Magistrates the image of his Soveraingty God himselfe is called the ancient of dayes so that an old man bears a blush of the image of God rich men carry the image of Gods Allsufficiency Magistrates of his Soveraignty old men of his Eternity Vse 1. To teach us to honour old men as our Fathers 2 It proves the rudenesse of some young men that look at old men as base and contemptible he speaks of it as a sign of confusion Isa 3.5 to those persons when they see the hoary head passe by rise not up nor reverence him 3 It may stirre up all young men to reverence old age and that by a threefold respect 1 In rising up before them Levit. 19.32 2 You must shew them reverence in speech as St. John here calls them Fathers 3 In silence in their presence not to put forth your selves Job 32.6 7. but to be silent till at least they have spoken Vse 4. This should teach old men seeing God hath put such honour and respect upon them how much the more should they think themselves bound to God Shall he be so respective to thy honour and wilt not thou honour the ancient of dayes would you have all to rise up and expresse reverence in speech and carriage to you and ought not you then to come before God with reverence and speake
gives a reason of this above all there is no surer argument then this A Christian may reason thus If I that have but a little sparke of grace can forgive injuries how shall not the Ocean of love much more forgive me Mat. 18. ult God will never have us to think that if we cannot forgive one injury he will forgive us a thousand Yet a man is not alwayes bound to expresse his forgivenesse unlesse a man come and say it repents him yet from his heart he must doe it Vse 1. Shewes the dangerous and fearfull estate of a man that dares live in envy and malice against his brethren A man thinks he hath cause he will not receive the Sacrament nor suffer them What a poor thing is this Thou hast not thy sins forgiven thou lovest not God nor any Christian soul in obedience to God A Christian dares not allow himselfe in hatred of any Brother but looks at it as an enemy to his soul 2. It exhorts every Christian to enlarge the bowels of his affection to every Brother Psal 119.63 I am a companion to all them that fear thee He doth not pick and choose Psal 66.16 Gal. 6.10 If to all men then especially to the houshold of faith 3. It is a ground of thankfullnesse to God that hath taken care for weakest Christians for want of love to such God will either discharge a man for an hypocrite or else his own corruption shall take him by the throat and make him beleeve that many sins are not forgiven and that he shall hardly get pardon of sins 1 JOHN 3.15 Whosoever hateth his Brother is a murtherer and ye know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him THe Apostle having said in the former verse that he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death he proves it by a Syllogisme taken from a Murtherer Doct. He that hates his Brother is a Murtherer As he that looks upon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery so he that hates his brother is a murtherer Reas 1 From the wrapping up and infolding this in the heart as the seed of a tree in the root though it breake not forth So sin hah its seed in the heart Mat. 15.19 No murther could spring from the heart if it were not there A fountaine could not flow over unlesse water were in it Prov. 4.23 2 From the foul murther hatred commits to give offence is a destroying of our Brother now who hates his Brother makes no scruple of giving offence Rom. 14.15 1 Cor. 8.11 3 It is a foul murther in regard of withdrawing many good offices A man shall be unwilling to doe any good office either for soul or body Ill will never speakes nor doth well Vse 1 Teacheth us the spiritualnesse of the Word of God It doth transcend the words of men they never reach farther then speeches and actions they make no Lawes for the hearts of men But the Word of God hath special regard to the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 As it is with wise parents they look not only to the guidance of their childrens speeches but that their countenance and carriage be well framed Gen. 4.6 So soon as God saw hatred in Cains heart and expressing it selfe in his countenance he reproves him for it he will not have so much as a wrinkle in the face 2 Hence we may see a just ground of Divines referring all sins and virtues to the ten Commandements Mat. 5.21 22. Before God unadvised anger is killing so of adultery verse 28. 3 See the wisdome of God in putting such foule names upon the beginnings of sin to make us afraid He that hateth his Brother is a Murtherer As if a Father should say Doe not hate your Brother you will be a murtherer He puts bad words upon the seeds of sin 4 This should be a means to cleanse us from all hatred of our Brother look at it as an ugly and loathsome vice If there be a spirit of envy in thy heart what though thou lift not up thy hand against thy Brother this is murther Doct. That it is a known truth amongst Gods children every murtherer is devoyd of eternall life Rev. 21.8 Reas 1 Because of the injury done to Gods image If a man deface the image of a Prince it deserves death then the defacing of Gods image much more eternall death Gen. 9.6 2 From the seed of all murtherers vers 12. he makes every murtherer to be of the posterity of Cain John 8.44 Now because a man kills his brother out of the seed of the Serpent a devillish and malignant spirit therefore he hath not eternal life abiding in him Vse 1 See the danger of such who in their drinkings quarrell even to murther Obj. If there be no possibility that a murtherer should be saved what say you to David and others in their carnall estate Answ David did indeed kill and God follows him with judgments and afflictions 2 Sam. 12.8 9 10. but yet upon repentance God forgave him his sin And as for such as have murthered in their carnal estate if God give them hearts to be humbled then the blood of Christ is of a lowder cry then the blood of Abel Heb. 12.24 Saint John speaks not of every murtherer for some doe it against their judgments and hearts but others if they repent not have not eternal life 1 Cor. 6.8 9. 2. To stir up every christian man that hath his hands in blood to have recourse to the blood of the covenant for the pardon of their sins and healing of them The sin on Levi held him longest under to bring him to repentance Gen. 49.7.28 Jacob blessed him in a curse God preserves us with curses that may put us in minde of our sins and makes us walk sensibly of them therefore renew we our mournings for our hatred 3 In respect of challenges let us take heed we take them not and that we stop them in the beginning It is not fit that fire should burn out of its place 4 Such as love their Brethren are not only not abiding in death but have everlasting life already abiding in them If you see any hatred spring in thee thou art taken with a dead Palsie You cannot bring out a good word or good countenance so much hatred so much death so much want of love so much want of life 1 JOHN 3.16 Hereby perceive we the Love of God because he laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the Brethren THese words are part of the exhortation St. John useth to all christians to love one another He useth many arguments vers 14. He tells us It is a sign we are translated from death to life 2. From the danger of the hatred of our Brother 3 From the exemplary and strong love of Christ 4 From the emptinesse of such hearts of grace when there is no love of their Brethren These words are a notable motive to christians
in the throne of a mans heart Conscience is our companion God much more Psal 139. Reas 2. God is our witnesse therefore when we speak soberly we call God to witnesse He is a Judge Heb. 10.3 an Executioner and therefore if Conscience sees cause to condemn us God much more if Conscience see cause to acquit us God much more Psal 139.2 3. Vse 1. A signe of our present estate and what God will doe concerning us if we live and die thus What saith thy Conscience if thy heart assure thee thou lovest thy Brother 2 Cor. 1.12 That thou savourest not sin that thete is no good duty but thou wouldst doe thou hast been humbled for thy sins Conscience hath been an Executioner and yet hath come with pardon sealed to thee with the broad seal of Heaven If thou seest one spark of sincerity in thee God sees more Obj. May not a mans conscience be deceived Rom. 3.17 Luke 18.9 to 14 May not a man say I have no guilty conscience Answ Conscience sometimes bears false witnesse Tit. 1.15 16. If a man have a defiled conscience it will deal falsly A mans conscience through ignorance and partiality doth bring a false verdict As it is many times with a Jury ignorance of law and false evidence makes them bring a false verdict but then send them back again and shew them better evidence and the law c. So Conscience doth oft-times bring a false verdict but its thorough ignorance of the Law of God or partiality Doth thy conscience speak bitter things Consider what the grounds are If such as doe argue thee dead in trespasses and sins then know that God doth call thee from heaven to repentance If it tell thee thou art an hypocrite consider what grounds it hath Conscience may be muzled by ignorance and partiality the Devill puts false glasses before our eyes 2. A ground of serious humiliation to every mans heart whose conscience upon due examination doth accuse him 3. To teach every Christian which hath found that he hath passed from death to life to be afraid to commit any sin And comfort thy soul if Conscience do acquit thee then will God much more 4. Labour we always to be doing some good for we have a companion that hears and sees all and a register that notes every good word or work The Apostle in stead of telling us If our hearts condemn us God will condemn us much more He gives a reason of it describing God 1 From his greatnesse 2 Knowledge Doct. God is better acquainted with our hearts and wayes then our selves Psal 19.12 He means sins not onely secret and hidden from others but from our selves Psal 139.12 Thou Lord knowest my thoughts afar off they are ever before thee 2 Kings 8.11 12 13. Reas 1. From Gods omnisciency his all-sufficient knowledge Heb. 4.13 They are anatomized before him as if every vein and sinew were laid open he divides between the marrow and the bone John 21.12 Rom. 15.11 Job 26.6 Though hell and destruction be both covered yet before the Lord they be both open Whether Hell be in the waters or on the earth they cover not from God Hell and destruction are before the Lord how much more the hearts of the children of men 2. From the creation God made our hearts gave us power to affect think purpose He knoweth what is in us Job 38.36 If God give understanding to the heart he knows much more what is in the heart Psal 33.13 God hath fashioned our hearts therefore he knows them Psal 99 10. 3. From the providence of God We have our motion in God A Mill moves from the Miller because he hath caused it so to doe but the motion of the Mill is not in the Miller it can move without him We move in God as a supportant conservant cause as a Mill moved by the breath of the winde so we by the breath of the Lord as there is not a turning in the Mill but from the winde so not a turning of our hearts without him Our hearts are in the hands of the Lord Prov. 21.1 4. From the unsearchable depth of the deceitfulnesse of mans heart Jer. 17.9 10. Prov. 3.17 Our hearts make us believe we are rich and have need of nothing when indeed we are wretched and miserable poor blinde and naked Prov. 30.2 3. Sometimes that we are more foolish than any man and have not the understanding of a man while we walk in a sinfull way they make us believe we are in Gods favour Luke 18.9 When we are in a good estate and God would have us walk chearfully in him our hearts will cast a thousand discouragements upon us we cannot pray or profit by the Word of God or doe any good duty our hearts will few pillows under our elbowes that so we may sleep quietly but when we go to try our hearts by the Word of God then they will fall out with us indeed 2 Sam. 15. the beginning Vse 1. Take heed of all secret sins Not onely such as may be hid from men but of such roots of sin as are hid from thy selfe yet cannot be hid from God Take heed of such sins as are so subtle that thou knowest not whether they be sins or no sins which our own soules know not of If a man would be kept from presumptuous sins he must cleanse the inward and hidden frame of his heart Q. How shall we cleanse our hearts A. 1. Pray to God with David Psal 19. to cleanse us from such sins which we know not We have confessed such sins as we know by our selves and those which the world knows by us but we must make a new reckoning for such sins as we know not 2. Not to trust our own hearts but the Word of God Psal 119.9 The Word of God saith there are such sins in every age therefore we must pray to God to help us against them 3. Keep our hearts with all diligence observe every winding and turning and take heed of occasions that provoke our hearts any way to sin Prov. 4.23 2. This shews the impossibility of their good estates that look to be justified by habits and works It is the happinesse of Gods servants in that they look not to be justified by the perfection of their hearts 3. Ground of tryall If we finde that our hearts doe not condemn us let us trust our hearts no farther then we prove them by the rule of Gods Word If God hath helped you to look up to Christ for the pardon of your sins and you now sit loose from sin it is an argument that your sins are pardoned because we could not else hate sin Psal 119.6 But on the contrary if we finde our hearts condemning us our hearts are full of selfe-love Parents are full of partiality as that they can scarce see any evill in their children If they see cause of death in them much more God the righteous Judge If they see cause of
see in us either to pride on covetousnesse or wrath if we would lye smooth and sure in the building we must pare off all these out-running and swellings of our hearts and so bring 〈◊〉 smooth and even we shall lye sure upon the foundation 1 JOHN 5.11 And this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life c. VErs 7 8. having declared the three witnesses in heaven and three on earth that bear witnesse of the divinity of Christ vers 9.10 he exhorts us to receive their testimony in these 10 11. vers he tels us what this divine record is which he presseth us to believe and this record is threefold 1 Of an heavenly gift eternal life 2 That this life is given us by Christ 3 That this life is given only to believers Doct. Eternal life is the gift of God Here two things are to be opened 1 That the life given us by God in Christ is eternal life 2 That this eternal life is the gift of God 1 It 's eternal life 1 John 3.16 Eternal ab ante because it was given us before the foundation of the world it 's more ancient then the world or mans fall and this was not only purposed in Gods Councel but this was manifestly promised before the world began Tit. 1.2 And The Trinity then concluded that the Lord Christ should be made head of all 2 That all that did believe on him should have eternal life therefore it 's said He chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world Ephes 1.4 and therefore God choosing us as members of Christ he promised to Christ that he would give them all eternal life 2 Tim. 1.9 There was not only a purpose of God but a declaration of the same to Christ of this gift our Saviour speaks John 17 6. Revel 13.8 and this gift is more ancient then our actual vocation for a man is said to be given to Christ when he gives up his heart and service to him but this is given in fulnesse of time but we were given to Christ before we were called to the fellowship of his Spirit and adoption of sons John 6.39 2 It 's called eternal life because the fountain and principles of this life are eternal the Word of God was revealed from eternity and of this Word were we begotten 1 Pet. 1.23 And as in seed there is something more material something more spiritual so in the Word there is both the matter of the word and there is the Spirit of the Word John 3.5 Now we are born of the Spirit and this Spirit in us is a fountain of living water springing up to everlasting life John 4.14 3 The continuance of this life is to everlasting He that believes on Christ shall never dye but have everlasting life John 3.36 John 5.24 and this eternal life is a record which God hath given us of his Son because the gift was given to Christ and througst him as by our Head is the life conveyed to all the members 2 This life is a gift of God Rom. ● 23 All the life we have is Gods gift There is a fourfold life and all given us by God First The life as justification is a free gift Rom. 5.15 we lay all dead in sin now the pardon of all these is the very life of our souls Col. 2.13 Secondly There is a life of holinesse whereby we live to God are for his ●nds and walk by this rule and this life is the free gift of God Ephes 2.4 ● Thirdly There is a life of consolation which is called a mans life 1 Thes 3.7 8. We live if you stand fast he means a life of comfort and this life is given by free grace 2 Cor. 1.4 5. When God so comforts a poor soul he is to be looked at as the Father of mercies and God of all consolation Fourthly There is a life of glory which God hath given us by Christ Rom. 6.23 Reas 1. A minori If our naturall life be Gods gift how much more this spirituall and eternall life Job 10.12 Thou hast granted me life and favour and he speaks of naturall life that is thou in thy favour hast granted me life and preservest it Now if that be a gift of God as it is for it was neither Father nor Mother that could give us life how much more is eternall life the gift of God It was Mephibosheths speech to David 2 Sam. 19.28 What was all my Fathers house but dead men before my Lord the King so take us without Gods gift we were but all dead men before him Now if this naturall life be a gift of God and that of his favour too how much more is this spirituall and eternall life a free gift from God 2. All our life must needs be Gods free gift by removing all that might concur to the making up of our merit of this life Four things must concur to merit which are all wanting in this gift 1. If you would merit you must prevent the other in giving but who hath given to God first Rom. 11.35 and if we give God but his own how then doe we merit 1 Chron. 29.13 14 15. 2. In the nature of merit is required that what we give we should give ●eely not of due debt nor due recompence Luke 17.9 10. If we doe but ou● duties what doe we merit When we have done what we can we have done but our duty and how then doe we merit 3. What merits at Gods hands should be perfect and par● without spot else it deserves nothing Now our best righteousnesse is defiled Isa 46.6 Exod. 28.38 Our best offerings if God did not accept of them in Christs holinesse he might justly reject them 4. In all merit it is requisite that there should be something proportionable betwixt the work and the reward now what proportion is there between naturall life and spirituall and betwixt our life of grace and the life of glory Our sufferings which are the highest part of our obedience they are not worthy to be compared to the eternall weight of glory indeed they work for 〈◊〉 a plentifull recompence of reward 2 Cor. 4.17 But this is through the free gift of God Vse 1. For reproof of Popish merit if eternall life be the free gift of God then the life of grace is not given us of merit ex congru● not this life of glory ex condigno if it be gift then sure we pay no answerable price for it there is no purchase on our part but a gift on Gods part I would know whither this naturall life was given us of merit who d●re say ●e hath merited to be a man rather then a Beast of a Serpent or a Toad and how then can we say our eternall life is of merit Doth not every Christian freely confesse at his first conversion that if God should utterly cast him off and never shew him mercy just and righteous should his proceedings be
after another pitch one sin upon another till he be burthened with our sins and what parts and gifts and liberties God gives them they abuse to Gods dishonour And is not this monstrous rebellion for poor creatures to make God serve a wearisome service Wonder not therefore if he say Rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft 1 Sam. 15.26 As a Witch gives her soul to the devil to have her own liberty for a while so rebellious sinners are at league with the devil and hel to serve their lusts whilst they live 2 As a witch makes the devil serve her all her life but at death she serves the devill So God shall serve them all their life time but at death they would serve God and then they will do him the best service they can Why do you think God will accept our service when we dye when we have made him serve us all our life time 2 To have Christ for our Prince is not onely to serve him but we must give him Princely service such service as becomes so royall a Prince Mal. 1.8 Serve not him with blinde and lame sacrifices but with the best and fattest crucifie your fattest and dearest lusts to him let him have your best parts and best affections righteous Abel brought to God the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof Gen. 4.4 So let God have our first years and the strength of your affections give not him your old decrepit age 2 Sam. 24.24 I will not offer to God saith David that which cost me nothing Araunah indeed gave them all freely to the King like a King If a man give to a King he must give as to a King he must give as a King Nay saith David if you as a King give those things to me must not I then who am a King give as a King to that King of Kings Let God have all you have give up your selves and all your families to him For application Would you know then whether you have life Why if you have Christ you have life and if you would know whether you have Christ or no you must consider God hath exalted him to be both Saviour and Prince Dost thou finde thy heart looking up to him for help in all thy miseries Then thou hast him as a Saviour If in cases when thou knowest not what to doe yet thy eyes are towards him Why this very looking towards him is of an healing nature as was the looking towards the brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 The Conies are but a feeble folk and yet they make their nests in a rock so it 's good for us in our distresses to have recourse to the rock that is higher then we Again consider are there any lusts in us that we desire to be spared in and would not be saved from Why then we have not Christ for our Saviour So consider Have we Christ for our Prince Do we subject every thought unto him Dost thou not entertain an evill thought if they rush in upon thee dost thou strive to thrust them out Then thou hast Christ for thy Prince But if thou findest evil thoughts in thy heart and sufferest them to rest in thee Dost thou make God to serve a wearisome service from moneth to moneth and year to year and over burthen his patience and mercy Then Christi not thine If thou lookest at him as thy Prince he should have the best service thou couldst afford him A third head of signes whereby we may know whether we have Christ or no is exprest in the text He that hath the Son hath life For we may as well argue from having of life that we have the Son as from the having of the Son that we have use they are reciprocall he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath life hath the Son This Life is fourfold Of Justification Of Sanctification Of Consolation and Of Glorification If we have good evidences of the three former we may have assurance of the latter The signes of life are of three sorts our spirituall life may be discerned three wayes By the causes By the effects By the properties For the causes the holy Ghost gives us three causes of our spirituall life which if we finde we may assure our selves that we have life and so consequently we have the Son 1 Cause of our spirituall life is Gods own good pleasure Of his owne will hath he begot us Jam. 1.18 This St. John proves by denying all other causes of our begetting to life John 13 Not of bloud that is not of parentage for godly parents may have wicked children though Gods commandement do much yet it is not from their good parentag● but from Gods pleasure in the covenant Nor of flesh that is not of corrupt nature nor of the will of men that is not of the will of our best friends that desire it and pray for it unlesse God set in with all those of his good pleasure he shall not have life Ezek. 16.6 It was od that said to us when we were in our bloud Live This is an eviden● signe of the life of grace Such a mans heart acknowledgeth all the grace he hath to be of Gods good pleasure Take a naturall man he thinks well of him elf that he hath alwayes had a good nature and towardly and hopefull and all his friends could say no lesse But now a regenerate Christian acknowl●dg●th that he had no heart to goodnesse by nature onely some outward correspondency towards his friends to please them but he acknowledgeth what Paul doth Gal. 1.15 16. When it pleased God to call me by his grace and to reveale Christ in me then I lived but not before A living soul never attributes any thing to his good nature or towardlinesse but when it pleaseth God to call him to his grace A second cause of life is a word of promise for all that are of Abraham are not the Children of Abraham onely the seed of promise such as are begot of a word of promise as Isaac was and least you should think it belongeth to Isaac onely he makes it common to all the elect that they are all children of promise Gal. 4.28 But yet Isaac had the peculiar in that even his birth was by promise to Abraham and Sarah But the Apostle would thereby inferre that all our spirituall birth is by a word of promise Here therefore try thy life thou sayst thou livest but what word of promise wert thou begot of Faith comes by hearing Rom 10 17. Gal. 3.5 There is some word of promise dispears●d in the word preached which the soul layes hold of and is thereby knit to Christ by faith Indeed many a good soul cannot tell what word of promise he was first begot of yet sure it was by a word of promise and though thou dost not know this promise yet there is no Christian but he sustains himself by some promise which shews plainly that he was bred
their heat as when a man means to put out the fire he layes one brand from another a signe he means to goe to bed and sleep so when Satan would put out the life and heat of grace in a Family or Town he disjoynts Christians and so they fall into security and grow dead in sins and trespasses all their heat is quite extinguished Therefore the Apostle exhorts us not to forsake the assembling of our selves together as the manner of some is Heb. 10.25 2 Pet. 1.21 See that ye love one another with pure hearts fervently Obj. If this heat be alwayes found where life is how comes it to passe that the hearts of Christians are so cold and dead How comes a Christian to be so unprofitable if he digest the Word Doe not Christians meet and afford little warmth and help one to another Luke 24.32 The two disciples hearts burned when Christ talked with them a signe before he came and chafed them up they were cold and dead-hearted Answ True Christians oft-times finde a marvellous coldnesse and benummednesse of heart that they finde little warmth in their breathing in their prayers or conferences and this comes partly from want of supply of new fuell when they walk in their own strength without looking up to Christ for new supply and partly by pouring cold water upon it that is some noysome lusts that put out the grace of God or else the use of outward comforts with wordly hearts these cast cold water on the fire as the fire is put out either by withdrawing the fuell or by casting water on it But yet though this be their fault yet even then when they want chafing and heat there is some striving in them which argues life so much life as in them so much heat As for those two Disciples that went to Emaus though their hearts burned whilest Christ spake yet before Christ came they were talking of Christ and of his sufferings which made them sad then Christ comes and puts life O fools and slow of heart to believe This blew up the sparks in them So much as a Christian hath lost of his heat so much of his life if his warmth be smothered his life is smothered Now this warmth is sometimes exprest in sad looks and pantings and deep sighs and groanings and mourning for his forlorn estate and surely there is life in that for in griefe the heat runs to the heart But worse then this a Christian sometimes vanisheth away in much frothy emptynesse outwardly rejoycing in worldly comforts when there is no life within Peter when he denyed his Master his heart was fill'd with griefe and sorrow and he went out and wept bitterly But what say you to David when he had committed adultery how did he go on from one sin to another He can make Vriah drunk and then kill him and then make no matter of it he is carelesse in all this as if he had quite lost all life and affection to God there was not the least beating of the pulse of a Christian such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that a man that knew him not before might have written in his forehead a man forsaken of God without any life of grace in him Where now was Davids life None so far gone as he 't is a question whether he prayed or no all this while as some Christians have so lost themselves as for three years together they have not prayed at all as doubting of any acceptance because they were so sinfull yet there is some habit of grace but hardly one act of life yet still this holds true so much warmth so much life as by the Almighty power of God there may be fire and yet no heat as the fiery furnace though made seven times hotter then ordinary yet God so restrained the act that it did not so much as singe the garments of the three children that were cast into it Dan. 3. So è contra there is a marvellous hellish power in sin so as it will suspend all the acts of grace so as a Christian may expresse no acts of grace but lye as a man in a deep swound without life and motion that can be discerned and yet this you shall finde in a Christian at such times a listlesnesse of his heart to sin that he cannot break out into sin with all his strength and power as he did in his naturall condition and the ground is this because there is still flesh and spirit in him so that as the spirit cannot doe what good it would so the flesh cannot doe that evill it would Gal. 5.17 And when a Christian is most lively yet there is still some faintnesse and weaknesse in him so è contra when grace is most weak and corruption most strong yet he cannot commit sin with all his strength as formerly he hath done but he goes about sin unwillingly not with the full sway that he was wont to doe he goes listlesly about it Try your selves therefore by these signes if thou hast Christ thou hast life if life thou hast warmth and heat look to thy knowledge doth it puffe thee up and not edifie Dost thou magnifie thy selfe by it If it be lively knowledge it is joyned with zeal as Christ revealed himselfe to the Church of Thyatira Rev. 2.18 Thus saith the Son of God whose eyes are like flames of fire writing to the Church of Thyatira that was warm in love and growing up therein he revealed himselfe according to the state of the Church as having eyes like flames of fire as that Church had zeal with her light so that if thou hast a true knowledge thy eyes are like flames of fire what thou knowest thou dost with zeal and fervency of spirit as Peter and John said We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard that is which we have certain knowledge of Acts 4.20 See Jer. 20.9 1. Consider therefore whether thy knowledge be joyned with zeal How dost thou breath dost thou smell a sweet savour in the Word Then there is breath in thy nostrills 2. Dost thou breath warmth in prayer pant and sigh after God In thy conference dost thou expresse life and heat Then thou art a living Christian 3. How dost thou finde thy stomach to the Word dost thou relish it or else art thou ashamed of thy unprofitablenesse Then there is life 4. Dost thou love to be disjoynted from thy Brethren like brands cast one from another Then there is no life Life loves to preserve it selfe if you sit loose one from another all heat and life goes out religion ceaseth there is a bidding farewell to all Christian duties but if you see bone joyn to bone one gather to another then you shall see flesh and sinews will cover them and life will come in Ezek. 37.7 Put brands together and there will be some fire and heat propagated 2. A second property of life Where life is there is some plyablenesse and
your faith live dayly by faith and you shall not want life Vse 7. Of consolation to every soul that hath Christ If thou hast Christ thou hast life and shalt have it more abundantly he that findeth him findeth life and they that seek not Christ seek death 1 JOHN 5.13 These things have I written unto you that believe on the Name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life and that you may believe on the Name of the Son of God WE are now come to the beginning of the conclusion of this whole Epistle wherein he sets down the persons to whom he writes These things have I written to you to you that believe 2 The end wherefore he writes these things to these the end is twofold 1 That ye may know that ye have eternal life 2 That ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God which he amplifies in the verses following These words afford three Notes Doct. 1. This Epistle of John was written and delivered to believers only This is evident not onely in the Text but sundry other places of the Epistle cap. 1.4 He wrote it to such as by reading this Epistle might attain to full joy This is evident likewise by recounting the several sorts of persons to whom he wrote cap. 1.12 13 14. Which were of three sorts Babes Young men and Fathers yet all believers so cap. 4.4 Ye are of God little children His second Epistle was written to the elect Lady and the third Epistle to his beloved Gaius vers 1 2. All his writings were directed to believers so were all the Epistles of the rest of the Apostles directed to believers to Saints to the chosen of God to their brethren as will appear in all their first greetings when our Saviour himself wrote he wrote to such in whom he acknowledged many special graces yea even in the worst of them in the Church of Sardis he acknowledged that she had a few names Now this gives us just occasion to enquire Why they were written to believers 2 Why to them only To Believers 1. In regard of the special help and benefit their writings afford the Church the benefits of their writing to the Church were 1 Teaching 2 Thess 2.2 2 Putting them in remembrance 2 Pet. 1.22 23. 3 Stirring them up to practice what they knew 2 Pet. 1.2 3. 4 To humble the spirits of them that were puft up 2 Cor. 7 8. 5 That they might be strengthned in their faith 1 John 5.13 6 That their hearts might be filled with joy 1 John 1.4 which was effected Acts 15.31 7 These writings have bin the foundation of the faith of all Christians to the end of the world because they have afforded matter of all the preaching of the Ministers for by them the men of God are fully furnished and made perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 4.16 17. 2 He writes to believers only the reason is taken from the little use or profit that unbelievers will make of these writings till they be brought on to believe which is so little that not one of the Apostles directs any of their writings to them but only for the believers sake amongst them it 's with the Apostles writings as with prophesies and not miracles Prophesies are not for them that believe not but for them that believe Miracles are not for them that believe but for them that believe not not but that Miracles may confirm believers but believers should chiefly attend to Prophesies Take a company of unbelievers it 's little good they get by reading their writings for no good is done without faith now faith comes not by reading but by hearing had God ordained that reading should be effectual to the conversion of men he would have confirmed it by Miracles as he did the preaching of the Apostles Again had their writings been sanctified for the conversion of men they would have sent them abroad to the most remo●e places of the world where they were never likely to come but we see they did not but rather took pains themselves to goe about the world Rom. 10.15 16 17 18. Object Sometimes God hath blessed the reading of the law to the conversion of men Deut. 31 10 11 12 13. He blessed it not only to them that knew the law before but to their little ones that knew nothing and why then should not the reading of the Gospel be as effectual now seeing of the two it 's fuller of power Answ You shall not read that God blessed the ordinary reading of the law to this end but the reading there spoken of Deut. 31. was a solemn reading of the law at the years of solemn release which was but once in seaven years and the reason of it was because that year of release was an acceptable year and typed out our redemption by Christ for in one of those years of release Christ was put to death therefore to denote that God could give an extraordinary blessing to the reading of the law even to little children and shew that those that are released by Christ they shall read with understanding and profit this solemne reading every seaventh year was instituted and blessed 2 He doth not speak of bare reading but of expounding and applying it likewise which ordinarily accompanyed their reading● of the law for so we read expressely that they did at that very feast Neh. 7. ult cap. 8.4 to 9. Ezra stood up and read and then gave the sense whereat they were so much affected that they all wept abundantly Vse 1. May shew us the reason why so many good books written by learned godly men have so little prevailed to bring on any of the Papists few or none converted by any of our writings and no wonder for the writings of the Apostles themselves were not sanctified to this end it 's true writings have ever been useful to the convincing of some to the establishment of others to the satisfaction of others but none have prevailed to the conversion of any Vse 2. The like may be said of our reading Ministers look at all the good that hath been done in such Congregations where they have only readings you shall find them as ignorant of Christ and empty of grace as if they had never heard of such things You will say this is an uncharitable saying But I would know whether is more uncharitablenesse to flatter you in your woeful condition to your destruction or to tell you of your danger 2 Chron. 15.2 3. Now for a long time Israel had been without the true God and without a teaching Priest it cannot be conceived but that they had the law read in their Synagogues for the very Judicial law of Moses was the form of the Government which they could not be ignorant in but yet they are said to be without God because they had not a Priest to teach Object Acts 15.21 For Moses of old time hath in every City them that
both sensible and experimentall knowledge of Gods favour and breeds certain knowledge of the hearing and having our petitions granted hearing that is of Gods accepting them Verba sensus cum affectu effectu sunt intelligenda and having that is of the performing and fulfilling of our desires chiefly of the ends and aims of our prayers Vse 1. Serves to take off our hearts from confidence in any worldly thing and incourages them to believe on the name of Jesus Christ why because hence you shall not only be assured of salvation which yet is more then all the travails and p lgrimages and devotions of our Fore-fathers could reach unto but by believing on the Name of Christ you shall have confidence that all your prayers are heard Vse 2. For them that doe believe in Christ here is a method whereby they may be assured of the granting their petitions 1. Make sure your adoption for that breeds much assurance in prayer 2. Meditate much on Christ that Christ is your Advocate and atonement for your sins 3. Labour for a Spirit of faith and hope and fear and obedience and so you shall grow up to confidence and knowledge that your prayers are granted Many a Christian falls short of this confidence because he considers not who helps him to make his prayers who makes intercession for him or else he is wanting in some of those graces and so his prayers are full of doubtings Vse 3. Of consolation to all that believe on Christ why This is our confidence that whatsoever we ask according to Gods will he heareth us How comfortable then is the condition of a beleever Be his estate never so miserable his wants never so great if he can but pray well he may goe on comfortably 1 JOHN 5.16 16. If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is not unto death he shall ask and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it All unrighteousnesse is sin and there is a sin not unto death THese words contain a third motive to stir us up to believe on Christ and that is from another benefit we shall thereby be enabled to bestow on our Brethren and that is our prayer for him shall give him life Observe in them 1. A promise to such as shall pray for their Brother that sins a sin not unto death he shall give him life 2. An exception or restraining a mans prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it 3. The prevention of an objection vers 17. All unrighteousnesse is sin and the wages of all sin is death Kom 6. ult And therefore this promise is of none efect for every sin is unto death Unto this St. John answers vers 17. 1. By granting all unrighteousnesse is sin yet there is a sin not unto death not but that every sin deserves death but every sin doth not cut off all hope of recovery but as Christ said of Lazarus his sicknesse Joh. 11.4 it was not unto death yet he dyed but he means it was not irrecoverable because he was raised to life again so every sin is unto death but every sin is not irrecoverable but that a man may be raised up out of it into life Doct. A beleeving Christian is not to hide his eyes from beholding and observing the sins of his Brethren If any man see his Brother sin he may see it and ought to see it Gal. 2.14 St. Paul did not turn away his eyes from seeing Peters dissembling but took notice of it and reproved him Heb. 3.12 13. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe He speaks not only of a mans selfe but of his Brother that ye have not an evill heart and therefore he propounds a means to help them and that is exhorting one another This the Apostle exhorts us to Heb. 10.24 Reas 1. From the love we owe to our Brethren God requires larger love towards our Brethren then towards our Oxe or Asse and yet God requires that if we see them lying under their burthen we should help them up Deut. 22.4 Now if God require so much help to their beast much more to our Brethrens souls that if we see them going astray or sinking under the burden of sin we should raise them up again 2. From the love we owe to our selves this benefit we shall reap by it we shall learn to keep better watch our selves when we see our Brethren fall Rom. 11.20 We must not by their falls grow high-minded and pride our selves that we are not so bad as they but their falls must be our fears Q. With what eyes should we look at the falls of our Brethren Answ 1. Look not at them wirh a partial or hypocriticall eye Mat. 7.3 4 5. But we must so look at the mote in their eye as to see a beam in our own we should see as great sins in our selves or greater if God did not restrain us for we all have the same root of evill and should break out into as bad distempers as any if God did not hold us back 2. We must not observe them with a curious and censorious eye for that is an imbred curiosity in us that we love to be prying into other mens sins not to heal them but to censure them This St. James reproves ch 3.1 2 3. Be not many M sters that is be not of a Master-like spirit be not busie in every mans matters and censorious of them 3 Look not at them with an envious malicious eye This Jeremiah complains of ch 20.10 All my familiars watched for my haltings That 's an envious eye when a man watches for an advantage to undermine his Brother 4. There is a wanton eye 1. When a man is not humbled at the sight of his Brothers sins but puft up by it like the proud Pharisee Luk. 18.9 10. he built his comfort on the falls of others This the Apostle reprehends in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 5.2 That there was fornication among them and yet they were not humbled but puft up they magnified themselves that they were honester men 2. A man sees his Brothers sin with a wanton eye when he thereby grows to imitate him if such a man venture into such a course I hope I need not stick at it This God gtievously complains of in the Church of Judah that though she saw what her treacherous Sister Israel had done and that God had therefore cast her off yet she feared not but went and played the Harlot also Jer. 3.7 8. Now all those heads of seeing our Brothers sins ought to be far from us Vse 1. Hence learn not to neglect the falls of our Brethren as if they belonged not to us and we would neither meddle nor make with them This was Cains spirit Am I my Brothers keeper Gen. 4.9 We should look at
It is many times an exercise to Faith to be commanded to believe what we see not but to see what we belive not is a great strengthning to a weak Faith Again a greater measure of knowledge is a notable means of a greater measure of Faith And if you object against this Heb. 11.2 I answer That the meaning of the place is this that though things be not seen yet Faith maketh them evident not that whatsoever we believe by Faith is not seen Stephan saw and believed the same Acts 7.55 There is a threefold light of Sense of Reason of Faith when a thing is obscure to both the former Faith will make it evident Thirdly Their Peace of Conscience also hereby was more setled and established Luke 2.29 30. for he saw now Christ was come to accomplish that work of reconciliation which before was promised and to make up our Peace with God In these regards the glory of the second Temple was greater than that of the former Hag. 2.10 the second Temple wanted five things of the former Aarons Rod the Pot of Manna Vrim and Thummim fire from Heaven and yet it was greater than the former because these three Knowledge Faith and Peace of Conscience were so much increased not to a few as it was before but generally even to the simple Vse 1. Hence we have just occasion to meditate of our blessednesse also above that of the old Church for all those grounds of the Apostles blessednesse by seeing and hearing Christ remaine to us as 1 Means of Knowledge clearer to us than to the old Church by the Apostles preachings and writings we even see Christ crucified Gal. 3. 2 Means of stronger Faith 1. Because of greater means of Knowledge 2. Because that is already accomplished to us which they hoped for 3. Means of setling greater Peace seeing Christ is not onely come to make our Peace as he was to Simeon but hath already done it And therefore a shame it were for us to be more Ignorant Faithlesse perplexed in conscience than they were and therefore for 1. Knowledge let us be no longer babes 1 Cor 14.20 the times require it Heb. 5.12 Isa 11.9 2 Faith let us strengthen it First For Promises past we have not now received them Secondly For Promises to come of the resurrection he so long foretold was at last seen and then belongs to us that 1. Blessings John 20.29 2 Joy 1 Pet. 1.8 3 Peace let that possesse and rule us Col. 3.15 in life and death as it did Simeon Vse 2. To Stir us up to pity the Estates of such poor people as sit still in darknesse and in the shadow of death having no means of Knowledge of Faith of Peace John 7.49 Vse 3. How great then is that blessednesse prepared for us in Heaven where we shall see Christ as he is and then 1. Our Knowledge shall be perfect 1 Cor. 13.12 2. Our Faith shall be joyned with Fruition yea we shall see what we believe 1 Cor. 12.12 3. Our Peace shall be passing understanding Phil. 4.7 unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 á fortiori It is good to feed on these spirituall joyes and then these carnall delights will soon grow out of tast and relish Doct. Christ in himselfe and to us is the word of life Here is to be shewed in what respects he is called 1 A word 2 A word of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here is a metaphor and every metaphor is a short similitude and it must not be expected that any similitude should agree in all poynts But Christ is called the word of God in four respects as he is the wisdome image interpreter and promise of the Father First The wisedome of the Father as reason floweth from the soul or minde of man and is not any accident to it but of the same nature with it though there is an accidentall wisdome in us which is habituall yet there is also an essentiall wisdome in us namely our Reason which is naturall so Christ who is the reason and wisdome of the Father flowed from the Father was begotten of him and is of the same nature with him hence he is called the wisdome that dwelleth with God Prov. 8.1 22 24 25. 1 Cor. 1.24 and the Holy Ghost may seem to have reference to this place John 1.1 2 3 4 5. because the description which he maketh of the world it seemeth he took from that description of wisdome if you compare these places Prov. 8.1 with John 1.1 Prov. 8.3 with John 1.2 Prov. 24. to 30. with John 1.3 Pro. 8.34 with John 1.4 Prov. 8.35 with John 1.5 and chap. 1.22 24 c. Secondly As the words or speech of the man is a character of his minde for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh a rotten heart begetteth and streameth forth unsavoury speeches an holy heart breatheth out gracious words so is Christ the character or engraven forme of the Fathers person Heb. 1.3 Thirdly As the speech or word of a man doth declare the will and meaning and Counsell of the speaker so doth Christ of the Father John 1.18 Mat. 11.27 Fourthly Christ may very well be called the word of God or the speech of God because he it was of whom the Lord spake from the beginning that is the word of promise which he made to Adam to Abraham to Isaac to Jacob to David c. hence Christ is called the Promise Heb. 11. hence he who is called a Servant 1 Chron. 17.19 is called the word 2 Sam. 7.21 that is a servant spoken of or promised Secondly Christ is called a word of life 1. Because he hath especiall life in himselfe John 1.4 John 5.6 2. Because he communicateth life and he communicates 1 Naturall life which to us men is the light of Reason Joh. 1.4 this former we have from him as an author these following as an head or root 2 He communicates spirituall life and that he doth 1. By dying for us for his death is our life as by his wounds we are healed Isa 53.5 so by his life we live now the life we live by Christs death is 1 Justification that is forgivenesse of sins Col. 1.14 Ephes 1.7 therefore he is called the justification of life Rom. 5.18 we without his death were dead meer Children of death as condemned persons and Christs death procuring us pardon procured us life 2 Mortification it is the first part of spirituall life inherent in us to die to sin and that was procured by Christs death Rom. 6.6 Gal. 2.19 2. He communicates spirituall life to us by rising for us for as we have been like him in dying to sin by his death so doe we live to God by his life Rom. 6.5 10 11. now the life we live by his Resurrection is 1 Vivification or newnesse of life Christ now living in us by his Spirit Gal. 2.20 1 Cor. 6.17 Hence as living trees of Righteousnesse we bring forth fruit unto God
John 15.5 2 Resurrection to glory Rom. 8.11 hence he is called a quickning Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 Vse 1. If Christ be a word of life then men out of Christ have no life in them they have neither the life of justification nor mortification nor vivification nor resurrection to glory but are stark dead men to grace and glory 2. If Christ be a word of life then we who professe our selves to be Christians to be Members of Christ are to live no life but this now for the better conceiving of this know that we live a threefold life 1. Naturall 2. Spirituall 3. Carnall whereby we live the life 1 Of Reason 2 Grace 3 Sin The two former we may live and are so to doe because we receive both these lives from Christ the word of life the last we are not to live for the Members can live no life but the life of their head the branches live no life but the life of the root Hence Paul lived not but Christ in him Gal. 2.20 Now that we may doe this we must esteem and carry our selves as dead men to all things else that we may wholly live and move and have our being to him and from hence arise three duties First We are not to live to our old sins at all but to be as dead men to them Rom. 6.11 and therefore to have no Member to stir at their command Rom. 6.13 old lusts when they now call upon us we are to lend the deaf Ear to them when we were dead to Righteousnesse we did not one living action but sinfull so now being dead to sin let us doe no li●ing action but righteous Secondly We are no longer to live unto friends to riches honours or pleasures but to the Lord we once were wedded to such things but now being dead we are free from them Rom. 7.1 2. if these call for any motion or action of a living man at our hands not agreeable to the Will of Christ we are dead hence Wives are to obey their Husbands in the Lord Col. 3.18 and Children their Parents Ephes 6.1 and Servants their Masters Ephes 6. so Psal 45.10 11. 3. We are to be as dead men to our own reason and will and all the affections of our hearts and to yeeld to them onely in the Lord Luke 9.23 He that would live to God when he is dead must die to himselfe while he is alive Vse 3. If Christ be a Word of Life a living and a quickning word then when we finde our hearts dead and dull and indisposed to good duties run we and seek unto him for life and quickning Psal 119.37 40. If we be afflicted in Conscience and esteem our selves as dead men in regard of the apprehension of Gods Wrath and the want of the life of Justification then let us seek to him Psal 119.107 28. If we fear that though we finde some life of grace yet we shall be unfruitfull and dead unto God except we be strengthened and quickned more then ordinary here againe let us seek unto this Word of Life Luke 17.5 Mark 9.24 In the midst of our entertainment of many of our acquaintance as Hezekiah did 2 Kings 20.13 who might have taken an excellent opportunity of sanctifying Gods name considering the occasion of their coming 2 Chron. 32.31 he might have wrought on them to have embraced the true worship of such a God Deut. 32.31 And so indeed did Moses upon Jethro Exod. 18.8 9 10 11 12. and in the liberall use of Gods Creatures an easie matter it is to forget God and to be dead and unfruitfull unto him here then seek to this Word of Life but alwayes seek we in humility and consciousnesse of our own weaknesse and then God will delight to quicken us 1 JOHN 1.2 For the life appeared and we have seen it and bear witnesse and shew unto you that eternall life which was with the Father and was manifested unto us THis Verse containeth nothing in a manner in it but what you have mentioned either in the verse before or else in the next after it In it consider 1. The dependance of it with the former the words come in by way of answer to an objection Obj. If Christ was from the beginning eternal God how then could he be seen and heard John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time Answ Yes for that eternall Word of Life was in fulnesse of time made manifest in the flesh c. 2. The order of the words in themselves and in plain placing they stand thus For that Life that Eternall Life which was with the Father and which we have seen and thereof we bear witnesse and which we shew or declare unto you appeared appeared I say unto us 3. The meaning of the words which is best opened by handling distinctly five Propositions which are expresse in the Text Three concerning Christ Two concerning the Apostles First Three concerning Christ 1. Christ is Life Life eternall 2. This Eternall Life Christ was with the Father 3. This Eternall Life which was with the Father appeared to the Apostles Secondly Two concerning the Apostles 1. The Apostles and Disciples saw this eternall life 2. Th●●postles and Disciples bare witnesse unto and declared this eternall life to the Church of God Proposit 1. Christ is life eternall Life Therefore called the word of Life v. 1. hence also John 14.6 though life there is not taken so largely as here There the meaning is I am the true and right way to eternall life as appeareth by that which goeth before from verse 2. to 6. and the reason following verse 6. Here it is taken for him who liveth in himselfe and is the Fountain and Author of all life to us whether of Nature or Grace or Glory Eternall life 1 John 5.20 and he is so called because 1. Himselfe liveth for ever Rev. 1.17 18. Prov. 8.23 2. To us he is the Author of eternall life Heb. 5.9 John 18.28 Vse 1. From hence the God head of Christ is argued and that 1. From his Simplicity comparing this place with John 5.26 see the like 1 Joh. 1.5 7. He is therefore free from all composition not onely of matter and form universall and particular but even of subject and adjunct Ergo He is God for these speeches are are no Hyperbolies 2. F●om his Eternity for no Creature is eternal but all had their beginning in time Vse 2. Hence we see a reason 1. Of that speech in Prov. 8. ult All that hate me love death such are all they that will not be governed by him Luke 19.14 2. Of that speech Eph. 2.1 5. men out of Christ are dead 3. Why ungodly and wicked men die eternally they are out of Christ John 15.6 where is to be translated not Men but Angels Mat. 13.49 50. the Angels whomsoever they finde out of Christ they cast into Eternall death not so much because they have deserved it for so have the godly but
because they are out of Christ 4. Why some for a time make a faire Profession yet hold not out their life of grace is some Land-floud a torrent for a time but not fed by any living spring John 4.14 5. Why the Children of God forsake all for him Matthew 19.27 Job 2.4 6. Why the Children of God live for ever John 14.19 why hath he that believeth Everlasting life Because to believe is to lay hold he that believeth on the Son then layeth hold on Everlasting life Vse 3. This teacheth every one to labour to finde Christ for in finding him we finde Eternal life Prov. 8.34 Proposit 2. The Eternall Life Christ was with the Father 1. He was with the Father as a nourisher to the Creature 1 Sustaining all Heb. 1.3 2 His Church especially preserving unto us that Spirituall life which he conveyed unto us Hence Ephes 1.3 all Blessings as Election verse 4. Adoption verse 5. but when were these before the World was made 2 Tim. 1.9 hence Isa 9.6 he is called The everlasting Father 2. He was with the Father as a delight 1 To the Father hence Joh. 17.24 For thou hast loved c. Mat. 3. ult 2 To the Creature Prov. 8.31 rightly translated Vid. Jun. 〈◊〉 If the Creature can fill and ravish us with servile delights how much more can the Persons of the blessed Trinity one another yea and us also seeing the severall delights which are scattered in the Creatures as in Meats Drinks Company Recreation c. are not so delightfull as Christ Psal 4.6 7. Psal 16. ult Vse 1. Hence we learn 1. Our Saviour Christs Conjunction with the Father 2. His Distinction from him If this life was with the Father then they were together from all Eternity and because there cannot be two Eternals but one Eternal therefore they must needs be conjoyned and united in the same Essence And yet because the one was with the other there must needs be some distinction between them which because it cannot be essentiall for their Essence is one neither can it be accidentall for no Accidents are in God it must needs be Personall Vse 2. If Christ was with the Father in the manner before declared as a Nourisher and Delight then here is an answer to that vain cavelling question of Atheists Obj. If the World be but five thousand and odde years old what did God so many years before Ans 1. They nourished delighted and solaced each other 2. God ordained Christ to be a nourisher and solacer of his Church 1 Pet. 1.20 compared with places above mentioned Vse 3. If Christ was with the Father in whose presence is fulnesse of joy and pleasure for evermore as Psal 16. ult then how unspeakable was the love of Christ to such wretches as we are who for our sakes would leave his Father to take part of our miseries that we might be partakers of his pleasures Would a man think that he whose delight was so unspeakable and glorious with his Father would say that which he doth Psal 16.3 for that whole Psalm is meant of him or of the whole Church but principally of him O where are our hearts that they can delight no more in him our fool sh hearts can delight in any thing more than him Vse 4. If Christ was with the Father then the Children of God may comfort themselves in assurance of this point that we shall also be with God too to behold the glory which Christ hath with the Father Christ is now where from Eternity he was John 16.28 and where he now is he hath prayed that we also may be John 17.24 and doth so pray to this day Rom. 8.34 35. now him the Father heareth always John 11.42 Proposit 3. This eternall life which was with the Father appeared unto the Apostles and Disciples What is meant by appeared 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was made manifest how was he made manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3. ult True it is that Christ was made manifest before the Apostles time unto the Patriarchs and that three ways 1. By Apparition in the similitude and shape of flesh Gen. 18.17 and there he is called Jehovah and he afterwards prayed unto him Gen. 27.25 to Hagar Gen. 16.7.13 to Jacob to Moses Exod. 3.2.4.6 to whom Moses prayed Deut. 33.16 2. By Preaching Gen. 3.15 3. By Faith which maketh things appear which appear not which maketh things evident which are not seen Heb. 11.1 John 8.16 Gen. 17.17 But not in the flesh not by Incarnation till the fulnesse of time was come which was the Apostles times Gal. 4.4 Gen. 17.17 Doct. 1. He who was from the beginning with the Father eternall living God became in the fulnesse of time truly man But of this we have spoken at large before v. 1. and that upon the Feast of the Nativity now at this time onely such things are to be spoken of as appertain to his Incarnation so far forth as it was a manifestation of him Doct. 2. The Incarnation of Christ and his conversation in the World was the manifestation of him to the Apostles and Church of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here called his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 2 Tim. 1.10 it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a Metaphor as if it were the breaking forth of the Sun from under a Cloud hence also John 12.46 For the Reason of the Point this incarnation of Christ c. was the manifestation of him to the Apostles and Church of God First To the outward man 1. Because his Divine Person before that time invisible and sensible by his incarnation became sensible and palpable John 1.18 2. Because that person though before he was known to the Church of God yet but obscurely Secondly It was the manifestation of him to the inward man for though they knew him to be God Psal 110.1 mark our Saviours urging that place Mat. 22 44 45. and Man Gen. 3.15 to be of his Church the King Psal 2.8 9. the Priest Psal 110.4 Dan. 9.17 the Prophet Deut. 18.18 John 4.25 yet how these things should be they knew not Luke 1.24 hence Luke 10.22 23 24. though they knew his benefits before yet but obscurely and darkly as wrapped up in a shadow 2 Cor. 3.13 as things seen afar off Heb. 11.13 but now are brought to light by his incarnation and coming into the World 2 Tim. 1.10 Vse 1. For Knowledge and 2 for Practice 1. For Knowledge and hence we learn 1 The meaning of that difficult place Heb. 9.7 8. why was that way into the most Holy place shut up from the sight of Gods people because the way into Heaven was not manifested that being a type of this but what was that way into Heaven Christ incarnate living and dying amongst us Heb. 10.19 20. hence at Christs death the veile of the Temple was rent in twain and so the way into the most Holy place was opened M●t. 27.51 2. The reason why the
Objection to encourage men to sin thus it ariseth If Confession of sins be a means to have them pardoned and if the bloud of Christ cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse then it is but going to God and confessing our sins after we have sinned and we shall be pardoned 2. Whereas he saith If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and there is no truth in us it might be Objected To what end then should we strive against sin seeing doe we what we can we shall still sin Against both these Objections he shews them in the Text that he writes not these things to embolden them in sin but to discourage them from sin These things I write unto you that ye sin not The Parts of these words are Three 1. A loving compellation My little Children 2. A declariton of the end of his writing viz. their innocency that they sin not 3. A consolation to them who notwithstanding fall into sin for this he tells them Christ was both an Advocate and an Attonement 1. For the Compellation My little children he speaks not of Natural but Spiritual Children such as are justified and sanctified justified as appears v. 12. sanctified as appears v. 13. when he calls them My little Children it implies therein such as his Ministry helped to beget to God Doct. Such as are the Instruments under God of our Conversion Justification and Sanctification they are to us as Spiritual Fathers and we to them as little Children It is a speech often used by the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.15 where he prefers himselfe before all other Teachers they had he begat them so he calls Timothy 1 Tim. 2.2 Tit. 1.4 so he calls Onesimus in Philemon Phil. 2.22 Reas From the resemblance betwixt them and Natural Parents as they beget Children of that seed they infuse so Ministers beget Children of the Immortal Seed of the Word 1 Pet. 1.23 24 25. as in Natural Seed so in Spiritual there is a more Material and a more Spiritual part the Material part is the Letter of the Word the more Spiritual part is the Spirit conveyed in it now because Ministers together with the Word convey the Spirit therefore they begetting Children of such a Word they are called Fathers and those so begotten Children Obj. Mat. 23.9 Call no man Father c. Ans He doth not forbid to call such Ministers Spiritual Fathers but he forbids the affectation of such Titles many affect to be called Fathers of the Church that never begat any to God as the Pharises did Non appellatio sed affectatio prohibetur 2. Non appellatio sed denominatio prohibetur If any one will be the Father of such a Sect or Faction to draw Disciples after them 1 Cor. 1.12 as if any affected to be called Calvinists or Lutherans because they affected their Doctrin the domination of Factions and Sects is forbid but we should look at all as Members of one Christ and Ministers are but all Servants of the same Christ 1 Cor. 3.5 to 9. if men will be divided and some will be of Paul and some of Apollo c. this is forbidden 3. Non appellatio sed fiducia interdicitur not the call of such but the confidence on them as when we trust more to their sayings because they are ancient then to the Scripture or to others of equall Grace and Gifts 2. Ministers are not to affect such Titles to be called Rabbi or Master c. this is forbidden so then we see Christ did not simply forbid such Titles Vse 1. Of direction to Ministers or such as intend the Ministery what is it about which they are most to bend their endeavours to be fruitfull to beget Children to God it is meet for a Minister to look at the good respect of the people and living and maintenance but he is chiefly to desire and bend his endeavours to beget Children to God to beget such to God whom he may respect as Children with like care and diligence for a man to look at preferment or credit or wealth these are but husks of his imployment the true end of his Calling is to beget Children How may that be done 1. He is to look that he grow strong himselfe for weak men in nature are not prolifici therefore Ministers must labour to grow strong in grace a man without grace seldome begets any to God therefore they must first mortifie sin and then increase in grace Prov. 11.13 2. There may be strength in Ministers yet there may be a disproportion betwixt them and their people therefore Ministers and people must strive to keep a proportion and correspondence he must see how he may accommodate himself to the temper of his people they must with Paul become all to all that they may beget some in any thing that is lawfull he must acommodate but he must by no means comply to the evill humours of his people Jer. 15.19 for then he brings contempt upon his Life and Doctrine 3. Look that your Seed be Spirituall that is the pure Word dispensed in the Spirit and Power mingle no Traditions or Tricks of your wit with it if you doe your Seed is corrupt and wants vigour a velvet scabbard dulls the edge of the Sword so the Word deckt over with Human eloquence is like a Sword in a velvet scabbard it hinders the power of it what hath the Chaffe to doe with the Wheat Jer. 23.28 29. you must not mingle the Word with the dreams and fancies of men but dispence the Word in the power and evidence of the Spirit and labour to have the Word sealed in your hearts that you may speak out of the heart and inward affection that Word which comes from the heart sooner goes to the heart Vse 2. It may teach Hearers how to hear the Word of God aright if Ministers are so to dispense the Seed of the Word that they may beget Children to God then Hearers must learn how to apply themselves towards their Ministers not to content themselves in having gotten good Ministers and their respect to them though these be very good till you be Children to him whom he hath begot if you were not so before or if you were yet Children to be nursed by him suck nourishment from him grow in grace under him labour to receive stronger meat from him that you may become Fathers to others Heb. 5.12 it yeelds much comfort to the spirit of a man when he can say the seed of such and such a Sermon converted him it often fills a man with many doubts because he hath not discerned the power of the Word Vse 3. It may teach both Ministers and people so to carry themselves one towards another as Fathers and Children as many times a Marriner carries a King over Sea but though he be a Prince yet in that case he must be ruled by the Marriner so a Minister may teach Princes and great men and they in this case must be as Children to
Spirit dwelling in you and that argues acquaintance with him Psal 19 11. in keeping of them there is great reward greater than any gold or silver a man may keep that and yet want a quiet Conscience but a man that keeps Gods Commandments shall not want peace of Conscience Psal 119.72 thousands of gold and silver will not keep a mans heart warm and comfortable but the keeping of Gods Commandments will and be it that you be about your calling no businesse of your calling will hinder your peace no Commandment of God hinders your Peace indeed if you go about things without warrant from a Commandment be it in the World in your callings if you look at your profit and pleasure c. and not at Gods Commandment to set you a work you lose your Peace and you will want your Peace in that dayes conversation but if you go about things in vertue of a Commandment never fear your calling will never hinder your Peace keep the Commandment and keep your Peace we hinder our Peace often because we go about businesses without an eye to the Commandment and so it is not acceptable to God he finds no savour of rest in it and therefore no wonder if we lose our Peace but if any work though never so mean be done in obedience to Gods Commandments we shall keep and maintain our Peace 1 JOHN 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him IT is St. Johns usual course to propound the Truth Affirmatively and Negatively Vers 3. Affirmatively Vers 4. Negatively Vers 5. he amplifies the keeping of Christs Commandment by a double benefit 1 In him that doth so is the Love of God perfect 2 Hereby we know that we are in him From whence Verse 6. he passes this conclusion of conforming our lives to the life of Christ Verse 4 He that saith he knows him c. To say is either in Heart in Word or in outward Carriage He that saith I know him he speaks not of an active understanding of him but of an affectionate hearty knowledge Knowledge is either speculative or operative infused or acquired Historical or Experimental all come to one but this Knowledge here meant is acquaintance so then he that saith he hath acquaintance with God and keeps not his Commandments that is as his Way his Treasure his Ornaments his Eye his Life 1 He is a Lyer that is he not only speaks false but he knows he speaks falsly for that is the difference between an untruth and a lye 2 There is no truth in him not one true grace not one true act of Repentance Faith c. Doct. Opinion or profession of the Knowledge of Christ without keeping of his Commandments is an undoubted signe that he is a lyar and the best Grace on him is counterfeit he hath no true Grace in him To say in the heart is opinion to say in the tongue or carriage is profession and if he do thus he is a lyar the truth is not in him Tit. 1.15 16. they professe they know God but in their works they deny him ssch a one is abominable disobedient and to every good work reprobate that is he goes about it untowardly is unskilful in it hath no sincerity and his work is rejected of God as reprobate counterfeit silver Q How is such a man a lyar and no truth in him A man may be a lyar sometimes and yet have some truth in him but this man hath no truth in him but 1 He speaks falsly 2 Against Conscience 3 No truth is in him A. 1 He speaks falsly which appeareth from the Efficacy of all true knowledge of Christ which brings forth obedience if a man knows Christ he loves him and affects him and obeyes him Mat. 7.22 23. all saving Knowledge stirs us up to obedience to God to righteousnesse to man if a man be a Son of Beliac such a man knows not God those that obey him not never knew him 1 Chron. 29.9 Know thou the God of thy Father and serve him they that never served God never knew him Joh. 14.21 if any man love me he will keep my Commandments and further no man knows God but he hath known the depth and danger of sin he hath known his enstrangement and absence from God if a man know not himself he knows not God 2 After that he hath known sin he comes to know Christ and his mediation such a man is sensible of his former misery and knows the excellencie of Christ he hath been so bitten with sin that he looks at it as the most hainous fight and the keeping of Gods Commandments he looks at it as the sweetest thing in the World 2 Cor. 6.14 Gods Commandments are not grievous to him such Knowledge springs from experience of our former misery therefore they that never come to this never knew Christ 2 Why is such a man a lyar that saith he knows God and keeps not his Commandments 1 From the conviction of the Testimony of that light which shines in his heart Joh. 16 9. there is a Spirit of conviction in all those that live in the Church for others do not contend that they know Christ but those that thus professe are convinced of their sins of their unbelief and disobedience and of the wickednesse of their hearts and lives Obj. Are there not many that live carnally and wickedly and yet are not convinced of their sins It is true there are such but then living in such a course they do not trespass against their Consciences they think they keep the Law and so think well of themselves and they are at peace and secure He that walks thus civilly and conformably yet such a mans Conscience is at uncertainty about his Estate he is convinced that he wants something but he cannot tell what it is till he be throughly convinced by Gods Spirit thus it was Mark 10.19 Matth. 19.18 19 20. the young man told Christ all these have I kept from my youth what lack I yet his Conscience guided him to feel that he wanted something though he had kept the Law in the outward letter yet he saw he wanted something and his Conscience was not at rest so that such a man as saith he knows Christ and keeps not his Commandments speaks against the conviction of his Conscience and therefore is a lyar I speak not of such Christians who want Peace because they do not keep Gods Commandments but of such who when they have Peace think they keep his Commandments 3 Why is there no truth of grace in such a man as saith thus Reas From the necessary conjunction of all graces with obedience no true grace of God but is either the cause of obedience it breeds it or else is a companion of obedience or else an effect of obedience it sprang from obedience Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 and love is the fullfilling of the Law Rom.
13.10 1 Tim. 1.5 and so hope 1 Joh. 3.3 patience is joyned with obedience and meeknesse springs from obedience and from the spiritual experience of a mans weaknesse and experience of Christs power in him springs humility so that all graces either spring from obedience or serve to it or accompany it so that even these very graces that are more in the understanding and speculation they either spring from obedience or help to obedience the Knowledge of a Christian is not unfruitful 2 Pet. 1.8 which shews that a Christians Knowledge brings forth fruits of obedience no gift a Christian hath but he considers what good he may do with it and if he see it not serviceable he regards it not so that if every grace do breed or nurse or accompany obedience then whosoever professes he knows God and doth not keep his Commandments there is no truth in such a man no true grace Vse 1 For tryal of the truth of our profession would you know the truth of your Grace of your Repentance of your Faith of your Humility You shall know it by your fruitfullnesse what use do you make of your Graces would you know whether your Repentance bee sound or your Love c. sound would you know this Why consider do they make you obedient and carefull to keep Gods Commandments as your Way your Treasure your Ornaments your Eye your Life if any grace bee fruitfull make you conscionable in the keeping of Gods Commandments that is a witnesse of the truth of that Grace a painted Tree bee it never so fair yet it bears no fruit but a living Tree brings forth fruit you have cause to suspect your Grace if it make you not fruitfull and carefull to please God if Grace make you obedient it is sincere but if a man hath never so many Gifts and Graces if they lead him not to obedience truly they are but counterfeit and there is no true Grace in him Isa 47.10 if they caused them to rebell there is no truth in them if any Grace leave you more corrupt or lesse fruitfull there is no truth in you Vse 2 It exhorts us to a conscionable diligent keeping of Gods Commandments hereby we shall keep our profession true our Consciences void of offence and shall have an evidence that we know Christ if a man say he knows God and yet keep not his Commandments his profession is not true but he that both saith so and doth so his profession is sincere 2 It will keep your Consciences in Peace when your Conscience checks you not but bears you witnesse that you desire to do Gods will in truth this brings great Peace 3 It keeps your Grace sound the more fruitfull and the more obedient the more doth Grace increase a Christian that lets his Grace lye at rest it grows rusty and hee may doubt of the truth of his Grace if any mettal lye up and rust we may suspect whether it be right or no but if it be kept with continual use we suspect it not take a Christian that doth not exercise himself in Grace he grows so rusty that he suspects the truth of his Grace but put thy grace to employment let it be in continual use and thou shalt easily see it is good metal and currant the employment of Graces proves the truth of them therefore as we desire to keep our profession true or our conscience clean or our graces sound keep in a daily course of obedience always be doing good and that from Gods Commandment Vse 3 Of Consolation to all such as take a good course and labour to keep Gods Commandments who may sometimes suspect all their grace is counterfeit and there is no sincerity in them why if there be no sincerity in you you do not keep Gods Commandments as your way but you cannot say but you would gladly finde your hearts keeping them as your way and you endeavour it and it is the grief of your souls when you go out of the way do you keep them as your treasure and ornament and apple of your eye and life Why then there is truth of grace in you truth of sincerity though not of Perfection you must not look to keep them without sin but if you desire to keep them as the most precious thing as your treasure your ornament your life the apple of your eye though a man may sometimes have a moat fall into his eye but in this case do not say your Graces are counterfeit for if they were counterfeit you would not keep Gods Commandments Psalm 36.1 Wickednesse saith to the wicked there is no fear of God before his eyes how doth that appear to David vers 4. he sets himself in no good way he is in a bad way and goes on therein and such a one it is plain he hath no fear of God before his eyes by their fruits he knows them if you set your selves in no good way your profession cannot be true but if the way you take be good and if not thou dost not take it up why if it be thus your profession is true and your grace sound it is a question whether Solomon fell finally or his graces were true or no you may know his repentance was true because he found his lust to women as bitter as death Eccles 7.6 7. well then if an Adulterous or Idolatrous Wife were as bitter as death to him then it is an evident sign if he looked at his transgression as death he looked at the Commandment as life and therefore his repentance was sincere so then if a man finde his sin as as bitter as death it is a sign his repentance is true But yet we must here distinguish between the horror of sin and sin it self the horror of sin may be as bitter to us as death but not the sin it self as Judas the horror of sin was so bitter to him that for it he hanged himself but had Judas been troubled with the sin of his conscience as he was with the horror of his conscience he would not have gone about to help one sin by another had he hated sin for it self he would have hated Murther as sin So would you know whether it be horror of sin or sin that troubles you If it be horror you will seek to drive it away by sin as some do by merry company and merry Books this is a plain signe that sin troubles them not for then they would not seek to help one sin by another but if a man look at the breach of the Law as the losse of his way it troubles him as much as the losing of his Treasure it is as a moat in his eye he had as lieve part with his life if it bee thus with thee thou mayest have comfort thy profession is true thy conscience clear thy profession sound and sincere 1 JOHN 2.5 6. But he that keepeth his Word in him is the love of God perfect indeed c. THe words
they are in darknesse when they are in darknesse much more may we know we are in light when we are in light of the two it is the easier now he that is in the state of darknesse knows it Ephes 5.13 Gal. 5.19 the works of the flesh are manifest 4 He saith those things which are in a man essentially he knows they are in him now Graces are essential in a regenerate man that is the essence of them is there therefore he may know that Repentance and Faith c. is there if they be there what is in a man is known to be in him if he have a judgment he knows he hath it if he hath a will he knows he wills so if a man hath Graces in him he may know that he hath them as a Woman with child doth know that she is with child Gal. 4.1 and takes it not upon others report but upon her own sure Knowledge so if Christ be conceived in us the stirring motions of Gods Graces be in us we may know it thus Aquinas confutes himself Vse 2 Refutation of an unjust complaint they do make against us they say that we discourage men from good works this complaint is unjust for though we do not say they justifie us yet thereby we know that we are justified and that is no small encouragement my good works do not justifie me but yet they justifie my justification nay further we say to them that they discourage men from good works who say when a man hath done what he can and fullfilled the whole law yet he cannot certainly know that he is in Christ and so what profit will it be for a man to take pains and do much and suffer much and yet knows not whether God loves him or not but we on the contrary say if a man walk in a constant course of obedience to Gods Commandments he may thereby know that he is in Christ and this must needs be an encouragement to good works Vse 3 For tryal 1 Whether we keep Gods Commandments 2 Whether we be in Christ or no. 1 Wouldest thou know whether thou keepest Gods Commandments as thou shouldest dost thou keep them as thy Way as thy Treasure c. if thou dost I declare to thee thou art in Christ and thou either dost or shalt know Christ And if thou wouldest know whether thou be in Christ why thou maist know it if thou keep Gods Commandments Vse 4 Of Consolation to every such soul as keeps Gods Commandments there is a double benefit to such 1 Thou art in Christ 2 Thou knowest thou art in Christ and this is fullnesse of joy for if thou be in Christ thou hast no condemnation belonging to thee Rom 8.1 and thou maist also know it how ill then do they deal with their own souls who know they are in Christ and yet every discouragement puts them off from comfort it is a shame that Christians that have such a priviledge as to be in Christ and know it should be so discouraged therefore those that would keep a continual festival unto Christ let them get into Christ and learn to know that they are in Christ and this may be a comfort unto them against all discouragements Doct. It is the duty of all such as professe Fellowship with Christ to walk as Christ walked or the profession of Fellowship with Christ ought to be joyned with imitation of Christ Q. What is it to walk as Christ walked A. Christ hath walked in some wayes as God in some wayes as Meadiator God and man and in some wayes as man 1 Then he wrought some works as God he fasted forty dayes and forty nights he fed five thousand with five loaves and two fishes he walked on the water c. God never calls us to imitate him in these works but he calls learn of me for I am meek and lowly Q. 2. Doth he call us to walk in those ways which he walked in as Mediator A. He doth not call us to walk in the same kind but in resemblance to them as hee dyed for us and rose again so in resemblance hee calls us to dye unto sin and to rise again to the life of Grace so to dye to the World as he dyed to nature and to rise to newnesse of life as he arose from the dead Rom. 6.16 2 As he was a King Priest and Prophet unto God so he would have us Kings to over-rule our temptations to rule over our families to rule over our Tongues to rule over our Hearts he hath called us likewise to be Priests to offer up sacrifices of prayer and praise and alms and to offer up our bodies and souls an acceptable sacrifice unto him Hos 14.3 Heb. 13.16 17. Rom. 12.1 2. and to be as Prophets to teach our Children and Servants and Families and instruct them Act. 2.17 3 Some works he wrought as man and so he was either a Minister of Circumcision or as a Servant of God a good man and in these we are to imitate him 1 As a Minister so Ministers should follow him 1 In undertaking his Calling from him as he did his from God he saw Gods call he was sent by his Father so we should see his call otherwise to undertake it without a call from him is the way to bring a curse upon our selves 2 In his Calling he performed his Ministry with all Faithfulnesse he did bring in the stray heal the sick instruct the Ignorant c. Ezek. 34.16 and his inward care was that they might have life and have it more abundantly Joh. 10.10 11. so should Ministers dispence the word of life strive to beget the life of Grace in the hearts of their people to help the weak comfort the distressed inform the Ignorant c. 2 As a private Christian a good man we must imitate him in his doing and suffering 1 For the matter of his doing it was alwayes Gods command Joh. 14. ult 2 The manner of his doing 1 It was in obedience to Gods command Joh. 5.30 2 He did it with chearfullnesse it was his meat and drink to do Gods will 3 The end of his work was Gods Glory Joh. 17.4 1 So for his suffcrings 1 They were all in Innocency 1 Pet. 2.21 2 With much patience 2 Pet. 2.23 3 He suffered with much profit he learned obedience by his temptations and sufferings Heb. 5.8 he profited by his Agony by his despising by his buffettings by his crucifying and in these things we should labour to imitate and follow him Q. Why should we be like him A. 1 From Gods predestination Rom. 8.29 he hath decreed that we should be like him 2 From the near Fellowship we have with him it is meet the Members should be conformable to the Head the Branch to the Root Vse 1 An evident conviction of that Popish Doctrin of the merit of works and satisfaction and super-errogation if so bee when we have done all that we can and walked as Christ
vanity of the Popish allegation of Antiquity they will bring you a thousand years alas many errors concerning circumcision and the denyall of the Resurrection have been of six thousand years standing yet that is nothing it was not from the beginning that is true Doctrin which was from the beginning or else from God immediately all other Antiquity is but vain therefore when the Papists pretend Antiquity truly if it be not as ancient as the Ancient of dayes if it come not from him it is not true Antiquity they will tell you that these Feasts that we celebrate in memory of Christs Nativity have great Antiquity some four hundred years after Christs time but it is but as yesterday if it come not from Christ or the Apostles for he hath revealed his whole minde in Christ Heb. 1 2. so that what comes not from Christ is vain Ignatius saith my Antiquity is Christ Vse 2 To shew the ungrounded confidence of Schollars in the Fathers if it come from the Fathers it sinks deeply truly if it have no higher rise than the Fathers it is too young a device no other writings besides the Scripture can plead true Antiquity what ever it be if it come not from Christ or the first Institution it is too late because it is not the same we have had from the beginning and indeed there is just cause to suspect them 1 Many of them had no skill in the original and therefore must see by other mens eyes by translations for few knew the meaning of the Scripture in the original none knew the Hebrew but Jerom and Origen 2 Most of them were converted from heathenisme and so brought in many errors as purgatory and festivals c. which the Papists take from them 3 They lived in such times wherein many said they had their Doctrin from the Apostles mouth as one said Antichrist should be a Jew and live at Jerusalem and saith he was Johns Disciple a grosse error and from him came Peters supremacy 4 They lived in those days when Popery came in when the bottomlesse Pit was opened and Froggs arose but later Writers lived when these were dispelled therefore take heed of them not but that many spake very well yet there is a great difference 5 Observe generally God did not give them the Spirit of Interpretation but weakly and if they wanted such a spirit how could they open the Scriptures whereas later Writers had a clearer discerning therefore it will bee of more use to read wholsome later Writers Vse 3 To teach Christians what kinde of life and manners to take up you will say you love not new-fanglednesse why then Vive moribus antiquis utere verbis presentibus live antient lives your obedience must be swayed by an old rule walk in the old way walk not in ways of Superstition of Covetousnesse of vanity of uncleannesse every sin is a novelty though it be never so old a custom This Old Commandment is the Word that they had from the beginning Doct. The Commandment to walk after Christs example is the old Doctrin that was taught to the Church in all Ages from the beginning of the World He tells them this was no new Doctrin but such as they had from the beginning for in the time of innocencie Adam was made after the Image of God and Christ is the Image of God Col. 1.15 After he fell the first Sermon that he had was That the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 and this Promise was renewed to Abraham Gen. 22.18 In after times when the Lord led Israel out of Egypt he sent the Angel of the Covenant to go before them Exod. 23.20 21. Deut. 18.18 from the beginning it was thus dispenced to walk after the Lord and whatever Pattern they had from God it was from Christ the second Person in the Trinity so Joh. 1.18 Levit. 19.17 and he charged them to be holy as he was that is the same with this of St. John here to walk as Christ hath walked Heb. 13.8 the same before and under the Law to day in the time of the Gospel and the same for ever 1 Corinth 10.1 to 5. Acts 15.10 11. they held to be saved by faith and by faith lived all the Saints of old Hebr. 11. Hebr. 12.1 2 3. Vse 1 To justifie the antiquity of Christian Religion there is nothing in Christian Religion but we have it either from Commandment or Promise or Pattern of Christ the death of Christ that was shadowed in the Sacrifices in the Old Law and promised in Paradice and when Christ would convince them he doth it from hence Luke 24.26 27. all our fore-fathers believed and dyed in the same Religion that we do Vse 2 If the imitation of Christ be of so great antiquity then it convinces them that blame Christian Religion of new-fanglednesse why there is no Christian that walks as Christ did but he walks as Abel and Noah and Abraham did therefore it is not a novelty but from the Ancient of days even from the beginning Vse 3 It may encourage every Christian to walk as Christ did when they consider all the Patriarks and Prophets and Apostles since the world began have gone before them in the same steps and in the same faith if we cannot shew an higher ground and longer antiquity for our Doctrin than the Papists for any Popish tradition we will renounce it but we take up no other Religion but that which came from the Ancient of days and was from the first institution The care that any Christian takes to prepare himself for the receiving of the Sacrament hath been of old the Apostle reproved the want thereof in his time 1 Cor. 11. and they set the Lamb aside three days before the Passeover to prepare themselves Exod. 12.3.14 so that this kinde of preparation hath been of old 2 Chron. 35.5 therefore let every one of us examine our failings humble our selves entreat for pa●don and cleansing for strength of grace to walk as Christ walked 1 JOHN 2.8 Again a new Commandment I write unto you that which is true in him and also in you for the darknesse is past and the true light now shineth IN this Verse he amplifies his Doctrin by a contrary Argument of newnesse 1 He describes the Old Commandment by another adjunct of newnesse 2 He sets down in what respect it is new and in a double respect the Old Commandment may be called new 1 In respect of Christ 2 In respect of them 3 He propounds the reason of it because Christ hath scattered Light among them and Darknesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abigitur is a driving away Doct. The Commandment and Doctrine of the imitation of Christ is a new Commandment both in regard of Christ and Believers the Members of Christ 1 It is new in respect of Christ 2 Christ hath expresly commanded it Whenever Christ converted any to Grace this was his common speech Follow me Matth.
4.19 which if it were not a word of Conversion yet at least of new Conversion Mat. 9.9 and it is a general rule Luke 9.23 where by following of Christ in the last place is meant imitating Christ thus it is new in respect of Christs Commandment 2 In respect of Christs efficacy and power working in our hearts vers 9. it is wrought and stampt in us by a new work of Christ in the spirits of his followers that they do indeed set their hearts to follow Christ 2 It is new in respect of us Believers 1 In regard of the outward hearing of the ear it is new never so plainly spoken before Follow me in all the Old Testament there is not such an expresse letter as follow Christ imitate Christ walk as Christ hath walked 2 In regard of that new work wrought in the hearts of Christians Ephes 4.24 that is but on such a frame of holinesse and righteousnesse wherein you may lively resemble the new Adam the new man Christ Vse 1 As we ought not to affect new-fanglednesse so we ought not to loathe and reject newnesse before St. John carefully avoided new fanglednesse now he commends newnesse The ground of this difference is 1 Look whatever comes from God the Ancient of days is always new and never waxeth old and as it is new so it is always old yea old enough if it come from God Eccles 1.9 2 If it come from God the newer it is the better it is because our old Natures and Corruptions and Courses should alwayes be abhorred of us but grace and that new man and new wayes of holinesse should be acceptable to us 3 If it be new and come from God it is a greater manifestation of God we may see a greater light in it than ever before Vse 2 Never look to fullfill this Commandment of imitating Christ untill you become new men for it is a new Commandment and a new Commandment requires new obedience and new obedience requires new spirits and a new man do not therefore think to follow Christ with old spirits thus much of the quality now follows the reason For the darknesse is past c. Doct. The state of the Children of God in this Life is as darknesse passing and true light now shining It is an excellent description of a godly mans Estate from his first Conversion forward the word in the Original signifies passing or a driving away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not so well translated past For the opening of the point consider there is a threefold darknesse and a threefold light 1 Darknesse of 1 Ignorance Mat. 4.16 2 Uncleannesse 2 Cor. 6.16 3 Affliction or discomfort Psal 112.4 2 Light of 1 Knowledge Mat. 4.16 2 Holinesse 2 Cor. 6.16 Ephes 5 8. 3 Comfort Psal 92.11 It may be spoken of all here but chiefly of the two former darknesse of ignorance and uncleannesse is passing away in a Christian and light of Knowledge and Holinesse is shining forth daily more and more in his heart Rom. 13.12 the day is at hand i. e. not yet come yet near at hand and the night far spent i. e. almost gone and spent yet not so spent as wholly gone the shadows of the night still remain but the day begins to dawn 2 Pet. 1.19 the dawning of the day is when the shaddows of darknesse are not yet clearly vanished and he doth not say the Sun but the day star which riseth ●efore the Sun a good while he there describes the State of the Church till the day of resurrection the light of the Gospel doth not yet clearly and fully shine but is only dawning Christ is in his Children as a day Star gives them comfortable light but the Sun is not yet in his strength Prov. 4.18 it is not yet perfect day with us no not with the best Christians under Heaven but it grows by degrees till it be perfect day with them which is at the day of their dissolution like to the earthen Pitchers of Gideons men Judg. 7.16.20 when they brake their Pitchers the Lamps gloriously shone forth and dazled their eyes thus it is with a Christian when these earthen Pitchers and carkasses are broken his light will shine forth gloriously in the mean time we have light we have lamps but they are in Pitchers shining very dimly Q. If we had been perfected the first day and the light had shined gloriously forth at the first had it not been better A. Yes if God had been pleased so to have done but God would not have it so and therefore it were not better God rather sees it fit that we should carry our light in earthen Vessels wherein there is partly darknesse and partly light 2 Cor. 4.7 and that for these reasons Reas 1 That God might shew his power in our weaknesse 2 Cor. 12 9 10. we should never have known Christs vetrue the power of Grace or the depth of our corruptions if wee had been perfected the first day of our conversion as God made the world by degrees and described it so because he would have us discern his power so God doth display the power of his grace by perfecting us by degrees and not all at once Reas 2 That God might teach us to war with spirituall enemies as God left Canaanites among those Isralites that had not known and were untaught in the wars of Canaan to prove them and to know if they would hearken to Gods Commandements Judg. 3.3 so God leaves his Children some imbred enemies still in their soules to humble us and to prove us and try if wee will cleave to him besides Jesus Christ loves and takes delight in ruling especially at home in the midst of his enemies Psal 110.2 in the midst of our corruptions in the midst of unbelief Faith rules in the midst of pride Humility rules in the midst of anger Meeknesse rules c. Grace gets ground in the midst of corruptions which is to the glory of Jesus Christ Reas 3 To prevent the multiplication of the Beasts of the Field amongst us as God left Canaanites among the Israelites to that end Exod. 23.29.30 if there were not weaknesses in us it were impossible for Gods people to live in the World 1 The World would not bear with us you know it would not bear with Christ who walked as meekly as might bee Joh. 14.30 i. e. Satan found no weaknesse in him no corruption in Christ for him to work upon if christians had a full and cleare light of grace breaking forth at once all would cry away with them they are not worthy to live Vse 1. See here a ground of the great difference between christians and christians differing in Faith differing in manners some are comfortably perswaded of their own Estates but others full of fears and doubts how comes this about truly it is with christians as it is with mornings of the day some mornings are a great deale more bright than others and some
over-masters that temptation what made David fall but the lust of the flesh what made Peter deny his Master was it not fear of death what made D●mas forsake Paul was it not love of the World so that there is no temptation but it is headed with the World if it be not pointed with the World it can doe little so that if the Prince of the World come and find nothing of the world in us or love to profit or pleasure or credit he can doe nothing as Christ when he saw he had no love to these things he had nothing to doe with him Vse 3 Of consolation to every soul who though he be busie in the World yet loves not the World it is not the having of the World nor the having of the lusts of the World that makes you enemies to God but the love of them so that you may have the World and the lusts thereof and yet have God too so that you love them not but desire to mortifie them and crucifie them let God see that your heart and strength and the vigour of your spirits be towards God not for your own lusts but for Gods service and then though a man have the World and many lusts in him against his will these doe not seperate him from the love of the Father 1 JOHN 2.16 For all that is in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the World IN the former ver the Apostle diswaded both old and young from the love of the World and the things of the World that is the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life And he diswades them from this from a threefold reason 1 Love not the World for it evacuates the love of God in us verse 13. latter end 2 The lusts of the World are not of God but of the World verse 16. 3 The third reason why we should not love the World and the lusts thereof is from their nature and original they are not permanent but passe away Doct. All the sinfull dispositions and courses of the World are of these three sorts either the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye or the pride of life This Text is a sufficient warrant though there be no other such division in Scripture for every Word of God is perfect therefore all the sinfull dispositions and wayes of the World are either the lusts of the flesh of the eye or pride of life Lusts of the flesh are such as are stirred up by the flesh which being obtained our bodies find comfort such pleasure as we find in meat and drink or women in intemperancy or incontinency Lusts of the eye are such as satisfie the sences and that is called covetousnesse and they are called lusts of the eye because the eye is only satisfied with them Pride of life is the affecting of a mans own carnall excellency when he looks only at himself and hath an high conceit of himself Reas 1 From the observation of what the heart is set upon when it is drawn aside to any concupiscence either credit leads a man or profit and pleasure leads him Jam. 1.14 every man is drawn aside of his own concupiscence if to credit that is pride of life if to Profits that is lust of the eye if to Pleasure that is lust of the flesh Reas 2 From the answer of such objections as might be made against this Obj. 1 You may say there are many sins which fall not under this division as when a man grows contentious it may be neither for profit nor pleasure nor pride Ans No contention but springs from pride Prov. 13.10 a carnal affecting of his own excellency makes him contend Object 2 Atheisme or superstition no profit or pleasure or credit in it so prophanesse what profit or pleasure or credit in swearing Ans All the sins against the first table fall either under Atheisme or Superstition or Prophanesse and all these proceed from disobedience which is want of feare and reverence of God which is nothing else but pride doe you see any Creature neglect Religion surely it is from pride of heart Psal 10.3 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seeke after God so superstition comes from pride though it seems to be done in humility and devotion Col. 2. ult Micah 6.6 7 8. doe not come before him with your own inventions and think to please him for it is nothing but pride so for prophanenesse as swearing or Sabbath-breaking it comes from pride so when Pharaoh said who is God I know him not it proceeded from pride Exod. 9.17 so whensoever men breake off the bonds of Gods service and will not be held in this springs from pride of heart that they will not be subject to the Lord. Obj. Indulgence to Children as in David and Eli when they cannot find in their hearts to give them a bad speech doth this spring from pride or profit or pleasure is it not rather meeknesse and mildnesse Ans Such indulgence alwayes proceeds from pride thou hast honoured thy children above me 1 Sam. 2.29 when a man should ra●her see God dishonoured than his Children or his Children honoured than God this is a great measure of pride Object 4. What say you to timerousnesse when out of very fear a man neglects Religion as Peter denyed his Master for fear it was neither for pleasure or profit or pride or whence comes Cains or Judas his despaire comes this from pride Ans This springs from pride of heart when a man grows so timerous for was it not for his self confidence that God left Peter to such basenesse of spirit and when he preferred his own pleasure and safety was not this a lust of the eye so Pilate what made him afraid of Caesar was it not love of his own safety did he not honour himselfe before God and was not that pride and from whence came Cains despair was it not from his pride against his Brother he envied his Brother and what was that but pride and for Judas his despair it is from pride of heart in that God is not in a mans heart if he find not comfort in himselfe he will not seek it in God but seek it rather in an halter this is pride this is pride that he cannot brook such horrours of conscience as God inflicts had he had an humble soul he would have contented himself and looked up to Christ for pardon as well as many that crucified him all basenesse of spirit and timerousnesse proceeds from pride that makes a man afraid to offend such great men it is because they would not loose their credit and honour and is not this pride aut servit humiliter aut superbe dominatur ejusdem spiritus est basely to serve or proudly to domineer Let us survey the whole Law of God and all sins will fall
have neglected to keep their Conscience clean their judgment is unsound a corrupt Conscience a corrupt Judgement 3 From the disposition of men and aptnesse then to catch the greatest cold when their spirits have been most warmed and heated no man so apt to take cold as they who are very warm and hot so in the days of the Apostles they did not only fill them with Knowledge but warmed the Church with Zeal and Heat zeal towards their Ministers zeal in their liberality they loved not their own lives in respect of Christ now their spirits being so warm they are more subjesh to get cold and distemper every Christian in particular finds it so when he hath been most enlarged at the Word or Prayer ere long he will be more straitned there being a secret pride in the experience of Gods favour and to rest in our selves thinking that we have sufficient grace in our selves when we see our need of Christ we depend only on him but when we are full we depend on our selves and so by sitting loose from Christ we get a great cold we are cold in Prayer Word Sacrament thus it is with the Church when God sheds his Spirit abundantly in the Church they grow secure and depend upon themselves thus we see Josh 1.9 10 11. so that one would have thought that that generation would have been more zealous yet none so Idolatrous till God quickned them by their enemies so in the Apostles times the Church was very forward and zealous a few Generations after their spirits were carried away with errors 4 From the disposition of Satan he hath great rage because the time is short Rev. 12.8 and we shall always finde that the Devil hath imitated God if God have Sacrifices from his people so the Devil from the Pagans so if God set up a Christ Sathan will have an Antichrist set up that may be not only a substitute but an enemy to Christ that as God had won the world by Christ so he would delude the world by Antichrist 5 From the wise and just dealing of God if God reveal more means of knowledge he will use many means of trial he will have them winnowed that so the good may remain as Wheat the Chaffe may be blown away if God give more Tallents he will put them upon more employment and exexercise Vse 1 To teach Christians not to be offended if they finde variety of seducing spirits in these days a man would wonder in such peaceable days when Religion is maintained there should be so many opinions and agitations how comes this about you must know that God never dispenced generally more knowledge since the revelation of Antichrist than now now where there is most knowledge Sathan will be seducing and corrupting their wisdom where there is more wisdome there is more curiosity and pride so much knowledge so much want of truth many times and so putting off the truth men run into several errors and it is just with God seeing they put away a good Conscience and would not give heed to sound Doctrine therefore God gave them up to follow lyes 2 Thes 2. and their longing desire and zeal in former times will end in such a cold that there will be a defect of all warmth and heat and wheresoever you see the truth not held in a good Conscience they run their faith on Rocks some split on a rock of Arminianism some on a rock of Popery so that it must needs be that in these last times many Antichrists must be Vse 2 Since many Antichrists are and will be in these last times let us labour to be so established in the truth that however the times be we may keep our faith and religion Q. How shall we be thus established A. 1. Get contrary spirits to the former give not up your selves to curiosity and vain speculations if the Lord find you humble he will teach you in his ways if when you are warm and hot you have a care that you get not cold 1 Chron. 29.18 Pray to God to keep your hearts always in that frame or at least in such a frame as may befit every days businesse and then whatsoever the times be our hearts and judgements shall be established in the truth but unless God give you a good Conscience with your knowledge you will be soon perverted and therefore I say as Paul to the Ephesians Ephes 2.12 continue in a firm love of the truth as well as in the knowledge of it 1 JOHN 2.19 They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us no doubt they would have continued with us c. THe Apostle Vers 18. had instructed Babes of the coming of Antichrist now in this Verse he first discribes them 1 By their Apostacy they went out from us 2 Their condition before They were not of us he amplifies both the latter he proves by an Argument They were not of us for if they had been of us they would have continued with us The former he amplifies by the reason why God gave them up to Apostacie which was that these Seducers might be made manifest that they were not of us Q. 1. What is meant by this They went out from us A. 1. They departed from their Doctrin in Judgment and from their Fellowship in Practise Acts 2.42 Now these men departed from both they forsook the truth which before they profest 2 Joh. 9. and not in circumstantial points but in such whereby they denyed both the Father and the Son as verse 22. 1 Tim. 1.19 2 In their fellowship they declined from them in communion of Ordinances and mutual help Heb. 10.25 They went out from us from whom who are they from us Apostles and Ministers from us that is from Old men Young men and Children they went out from all the true Members of the Church They were not of us That is they were never true members of our Body they were with us and amongst us but they were never of us 1 Joh. 4.4 5. as the Children of God are in the world yet not of the world their mindes are not on this world their inheritance is not in this world so on the contrary the Children of the Church are in the Church but not of the Church Doct. 1. Some may be in the Church which after do depart from the Church Doct. 2. Such as do depart were never Members of the Church Doct. 3. Such as are Members continue always in the Church Doct. 4. Those that depart manifest themselves not to be of the Church Doct. 5. This departing from the Church is a note of Antichrist Doct. 1. There are some in the Church which may depart from the Church That may leave the Doctrin Fellowship and Practise of the Church Heb. 10.25 2 Thes 2.3 1 Tim. 2.4 Q. How comes it to pass that men in the Church and in some measure affecting the ways of Religion depart from the Church
of Antichrist so then the question is Where is this Spirituall Unction alas it is an hard thing for blinde natural men to know but yet as the Ambassador of Persia said Quot Senatores tot reges so where you see a company of Christians Quot Christiani tot reges so many Kings Priests and Prophets Psal 45.16 the children of the New Testament shall be answerable to the Fathers of the Old and shall be endued with suitable graces they are Princes in what part of the World soever they are Princes judging of things in difference indued with a Princely spirit to overcome the World and Sathan and their own Corruptions they have a Priestly Office to pray and instruct to sacrifice themselves and their Families to God c. therefore if you find such a company verily there is the Church of God and let not the Separatists say you have prophane persons among you We say though they be amongst us yet they are not of us and therefore that hinders us not from being the Church therefore whither should we go to seek the Church but where this Unction is Vse 3 For all you that have received this Unction it is not for Kings and Princes to be digging in the earth it is not for Priests and Prophets to be ignorant and blinde and dumbe 1 Cor. 6.1 to 7. Paul is confident that the meanest Christian is a Judge What a shame is it for a Christian at every temptation to be carried Captive What a shame is it for Kings to soyl and besmut themselves for Saul to cast away his shield was a vile dishonour so for Christians to be soyled and carried away with every temptation for you to cast away your shield as if you had not been annoynted is a great dishonour It becomes Christians to fight like Princes and to be victorious and to judge like Kings so walk as Priests of the high God know how to pray how to instruct your Families how to offer all your wayes to God all your Families you are not to be only holy day Priests but daily Priests Vse 4 It may teach every Christian that stands in need of healing or suppleing your stiff spirits you need balme and oyle for healing the wounds of your souls and suppleing and softning your stiff spirits why here is an unction that will heal thy wounds and soften thy heart intreat God that he would shed abroad his spirit into thy heart that he would heale thy spirit soften thy heart and chear thy soule look up to the holy one he is able to powre floods of consolation on thee and establish thy soul in peace do wee find our spirits hard and stiff and bound our spirits very straight and stand in need of a great deal of alacrity why yet this spirituall unction will so inlarge thee and supple thee that thou shalt find thy selfe helped and quickned that thou mayest do things not weakly but with power and life so if we find corruptions so strong that we know not how to overmaster them there is an unction from this holy one able to strengthen us against them intreat God therefore to power it down upon thy soul so doe you want power and life in Gods ordinances why in any need look up to him Vse 5 Here is a ground of much consolation that God is pleased to bestow such a mercy such a blessing as this upon us how are we bound to Christ that is pleased to annoynt us with the same oyntment wherewith himselfe was anoynted it is a ground of much consolation Christians are often called to great imployments which if they look on themselves they see themselves altogether unfit for such as Moses said send by whom thou wilt send but is not this unction able to make us Kings and Priests we know where to find supply and if God call us to more imployments that is our comfort that we have an unction which is able to fit us for every work and imployment God shall call us to Vse 6 Of exhortation to every Christian not to rest contented in an empty name of Christianity ●●ll you get this spirituall unction rest not in any known strength but what you receive by this spirit otherwise you shall find much want of help Matth. 25.1 to 10. the wife Virgins had their oyle continually ready and prepared whensoever Christ came but the foolish Virgins some oyle they had some common gifts and graces but they were spent and it was too late to seek for oyle when the Bridegroome came so do not only hear the Word but labour to find some oyle dropt into your souls that so in stormes you may find the life and comfort of the spirit 1 JOHN 2.20 But ye have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things IN these words the Apostle prescribes a means to preserve them against seducements and the first means is the unction they had received from the holy one which is a comparison from the legall oyntment this spirit of Grace should be as an Antidote against all Antichrists Now we come to speak of the vertue of this unction Doct. The little Children of God by vertue of the oyntment of the spirit of Grace they know all things So Verse 27. so that there is an abiding oyntment and so sufficient that they need not be taught more or better things than it will teach them For Explication 1 Consider the subject yee know all things This universality of Christian knowledge is amplified by the subject yee know all things 1 For the desire of their hearts they desire to know all things necessary to salvation Acts 10.33 this is the frame and disposition of a converted heart to know all things and so great is the desire of Gods Children to know this that they desire to know those things that are most against them 1 Sam. 3.17 Eli knowing by Samuels lingring that he had some terrible message yet he would know it and urged him by a curse to declare it and when he had told him yet saith he Good is the Word of the Lord so that a godly heart desires to know all the Will of God especially if it belongs to him though it be never so bitter it is contrary with a carnall heart few are willing to know all things especially if they be against them and crosse their lusts they would not know it so Mark 6.12 in Herod so Isa 13.10 they were men of that frame that would have the Prophet speak pleasing things Mal. 2.11 2 As in their desire so in the preparation of their hearts they know it so that if God reveal his Will at any time they have hearts ready to hear it and apprehend it better Joh. 10.4 5. there is a vertue in them whereby they discern betwixt the truth of Christ and false Doctrin so the noble Bereans were more noble because they received the truth with all readinesse and fear Acts 17.11 12. they searched the Scriptures so
he is not to be excluded but he is not principally meant here Jhon 15.6 and it is true that they know Christ that have received this Unction John 6.69 But here by the truth is meant the Doctrin of the Gospel Ephes 4.21 which is called the truth in Jesus that truth which teacheth us to finde Christ to prize Christ and you know it in a special manner as it is in Jesus in a Crucified manner you know it as it is in Jesus which raiseth you from death to life it is sometimes called the word of truth Col. 1.5 Gal. 2.4 5. so then you that know the truth you know the worth of Christ the means to finde him yea you know him in a Crucified manner in his Death and Resurrection Q. 2. What is the knowledge of the truth A. Three things make up the knowledge of the truth 1 The understanding of it 2 Approving of it and consenting to it 3 Because a man may consent to it either as probable or as certain and evident knowledge therefore it is not only an understanding of the truth but a consenting to it and that not as a probable thing but as an undoubted certain truth Judicium contingentis axiomatis est opinio necessarii scientia if it be from the causes then it is scientia if by the effects cognitio And thus these Babes know the truth you understand it you consent to it you yeeld to it as a certain and undoubted truth and that all those concur to knowledge we may see by Scripture 1 For understanding see Luke 24.45 2 They approve and consent to it and follow it John 10.4 5 27. 3 They do not only understand it clearly and approve of it but receive it as a certain undoubted truth so John 6.69 We know and are assured that thou art the Christ There is as much difference between knowledge and faith as betwixt hearing and seeing if I hear a thing from an undoubted testimony I beleeve it but when I see it my self I know it more evidently Stephen beleeved that Christ sate at Gods right hand but when he saw it he knew it certainly so that these Babes by some sight and experience know those things that they beleeve Heb. 11.2 this knowledge is one of the chiefest things that perfects the mind of a man Isa 11.2 what spirit is a spirit of wisdome and understanding understanding apprehends it Wisdom judgeth of it and discerns of the truth hereof Knowledge sees that they are most certainly true and then he beleeves it John 6.69 we know and are sure for none can know a thing but those that are sure of it Q. What is the reason that by virtue of this Vnction babes come to know the truth Reas 1. Because this Spirit is an eye-salve to make them understand by nature we are flow and dull of understanding but as soon as God hath dropt in some of this Spiritual eye-salve we strongly see the deep things of God yea even those which were dull to understand before 2 He vouchsafes to them Wisdome whereby they imbrace and approve the truth as the very truth of Christ and they have a spirit of faith to believe it therefore have knowledge of it 3 He gives them experience that their hearts do as plainly feel as their understandings know nay these Babes they fetch their understanding from the feeling of their hearts they know the danger of sin and the worth of Christ and this puts them to reach after Christ and look at him as the most excellent of a thousand and so they come to finde true fellowship with Christ by puting into them a spirit of peace 1 Pet. 3.8 so that they know it not only by faith but by experience and so they know the truth as it is in Christ you may have men by hearing and study come to know very largely of the wayes of Grace the Doctrins and points of Divinity nay they may come to approve of them and may convince an adversary but yet this is not properly a knowledge of these things but an understanding of them a man that wants this Unction may say he understands these and beleeves them but he cannot say he knowes them by any sensible worke of God on his own soul Vse 1 May exhort all in the name of the Lord that intend to receive the Sacrament to a conscionable care and endeavour to get knowledge it is not a priviledge of Scholars but even of very Babes if they have received this Unction therefore let none excuse themselves for if the Apostle acknowledge it in Babes it may shame elder people if they be ignorant of the rudiments of Religion therefore labour to grow up to a knowledge of the truth there is no hope that you should either finde comfort in Gods Ordinances here or in the life to come if you be ignorant of the truth Isa 27.11 it is a fearfull judgement These people have no understanding therefore their Maker will shew them no favour that is no gnace in Christ they shall neither finde mercy nor favour and mark how he prevents an Objection He that made us will surely save us no if you be ignorant he that made you will not save you therefote if you would ever get any good to your souls above all gettings get understanding for without it look for no mercy and above all understanding get this wisdome which is infused by the Unction of the Spirit And so Parents and Masters as you desire to get favour of God for your Children and Servants be careful to instruct them in the ways of truth and for such as have got knowledge labour to grow up in this Spiritual knowledge Col. 2.2 3. Three things did Paul conflict for 1 That their hearts might be comforted nothing more useful for a Christian than comfort but when Christians have got comfort it is easie for Christians to fit loose one from another and not to regard one another therefore 2 His conflict was that they might be knit together in the bond of love 3 That they might grow up to fulness of knowledge c. so that we see it is matter of great Conflict to the Apostles with God that they might be brought to the riches of full assurance and shall Ministers thus Conflict for their people and shall not people themselves labour to grow up to fulnesse of knowledge and not be remiss and know some pieces and parts of the truth but to come to the riches and fulnesse of understanding It would be a great conflict to a faithful Minister to see people poor in knowledge to have only a few remnants and shreds of knowledge some superficial kinde of knowledge therefore let people labour for the riches of the full assurance of understanding which is properly true knowledge we see therefore how much Parents and Masters are to blame that are so far from having conflicts for the knowledge of their Children and Servants that they have no care
this is to deny Christ 2 Some deny him openly in word 2 Pet. 2.1 3 Some in carriage 1 Pet. 5.8 Tit. 1.10 they professe they know Christ but in their works they deny him 1 Tim. 3.5 one that doth thus denyes Christ and so the Father Suitable to this there is a confession 1 In heart Prov. 3.5.6 In all thy wayes acknowledge him trust not in thy own wisdome so that in a mans heart to trust on him and depend on him is to confesse him 2 In words Joh. 1.20.29 and this kind of confession is mixt with holy boldnesse and holy humility he is so humble that he denies all his own credit and life and so bold that he dares confesse Christ before Kings and Princes we read of some that professed Christ but it was secretly for fear of the Jewes here was want of humility and boldnesse such want of humility was in Peter for want of christian courage and leaning to his own strength he denies Christ in word though in heart he did confesse him 3 There is a confession of Christ in our lives and practise Prov. 3.6 in all thy wayes acknowledge him not only in word but in thy outward course that so in thy whole walking thou mayest acknowledge him and depend on some word of command or promise Tit. 2.11 12 13. the grace of God hath appeared to all men teaching us to deny all ungodlinesse and worldly lusts c. A man confesses Christ that denies ungodlinesse and walks soberly righteously and holily as one that looks for the hope of his appearing so that in his very practise and life he acknowledgeth Christ Q. 2 What is it to have the Father or to want the Father A. To have the Father is to have him for my Father and to deny him is to renounce him for thy Father to have him is to have fellowship with him as with a Father to continue with him when God commands us to have him for our God and saith thou shalt have no other God but me he would have us to trust in him and depend upon him and to set him up as the God of all our Peace and comfort and help when we thinke we have enough if we have God though nothing else so then he is said to have God that hath fellowship with him that hath God for his portion to have the wisdome and righteousnesse of God and not to have God is to live without God in the World without fellowship with him what is the reason that according to our confession or denying of the Son we have or not have the Father a Testimony of this we have in those poor Gentiles Ephes 2.12 that heard of God yet not having him through Christ they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but why doth such a man want the Father Reas 1 From the dreadfulnesse of Gods wrath against all such as are out of Christ Joh. 3. ult if we doe not confesse Christ and shew forth the vertue of Christ in our lives the wrath of God is gone out against us for sin makes God our enemy therefore if we have not a Mediatour woe be unto us 2 From the neer relation that is between them I and my Father are one Joh. 10.30 Joh. 14.11 they are wrapt and folded up one within another deny one you deny both 3 From the great ordinance of God in setting up Christ that we might have accesse through him to God Christ is the only way to come to the Father Joh. 14.6 so that if we would get God for our Father we must get Christ for our elder Brother Obj. Some of Gods own Servants have denyed Christ with their lips and had not they the Father as Peter A. Even at that time that Peter denyed Christ with his lips his Faith did not faile him Luk. 22.31 32. and if his Faith remained then Christ dwells in our hearts by Faith and if he had Christ he had the Father as a Tree in Winter though you see neither leafe nor sap yet there is life in the root so there was faith in Peters heart even then when he denied Christ with his lips so that this is not meant of a vocall denying of Christ for a man may in mouth deny Christ in some suddain temptation yet in his heart confesse him and in his mouth will confesse him againe and in his life as Peter did and so contra so that his was not a totall but a partiall denying in lips only neither in heart nor life 2 That denyall of him was but for a time which afterwards he repented of and profest him constantly and according to his threefold denyall he profest him three times so that this was but for a time afterwacds Peter and John when they were charged and threatned to speake no more in his name they would not smother him any more but confest him to the death otherwise if it be a constant denyall in word that is a fearfull thing Matth. 3. ult Vse 1. Shews the desperate danger not only of all such Heretiques that have doctrinally denyed Christ but also of the Heathen that never knew Christ there is none of them have God for their Father it is a woefull conceit of some that hold a man may be saved in any Religion but if we have not Christ we have not the Father and so saith the Apostle Ephes 2. Remember ye were Gentiles and lived without Christ and so without God in the World See then the danger of the Turks that deny Christ to be their Prophet and of the Jewes who though they hold one God yet in their Liturgy they pray pereat nomen ejus memoria speaking of Christ what a woefull case are they in denying Christ they deny the Father take God out of Christ out of the Trinity he is a meer Idoll and it might move us to pity their Estate who have lived without Christ many Generations 2 Hence you may see how much the Church of Rome is without the Father they charge us for holding Christ to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God of himselfe they say he is Deus de Deo but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they deliver him to be such a Christ as whose body is in an hundred places at once and so they deny the Son and so they intrench upon all his offices and so in denying the Son they deny the Father Vse 2. It may teach us what to think or believe of all the Saints of God before Christ doth God say I am the Father of Abraham Isaac and Jacob then you may certainly conclude they had the Christ John 8. your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day he saw Christ to come of his Son and therefore he rejoyced so Moses wrote of Christ so David knew Christ Psal 110. quoted Matth. 22. the Lord said to my Lord c. so that David knew Christ the Lord God the Father said to my Lord that is Christ so Christ expounds it so Dan. 9.17
consolation to all such as lose any thing by keeping the Apostles Doctrin whether they lose goods or friends or life or liberty here is a comfort that over-ballances all discomforts Two things chiefly discourage a Christian he may either loose fellowship with the Church and be excommunicate or else he may lose his naturall life here is comfort against both these what though you be excommunicated from society with the Church you shall yet notwithstanding keep fellowship with the Father and the Son Joh. 9.34 the blind man gave such a strong Testimony to Christ that the Pharisees cast him out that is excommunicated him well when Christ heard that he was cast out he found him out and so though this poor man was cast out of the Church by a clavis errans wrong excommunication yet he had fellowship with Christ what if a Christian be cast out why here his comfort a man is no sooner shut out from Fellowship with the Church but he is sent to Christ this poor man Christ came and instructed him though he were cut short from instruction in the publick ordinances yet Christ instructed him and he never spake more powerfully and effectually so that he gave him Faith to beleeve and Grace to worship him so that though a man in a good cause should be cast out from the society of the Church yet he shall find more near communion with Christ 2 A man by professing Christ may be delivered up to the powers and so may lose his life why this is the promise even eternall life he may lose a temporary life but he shall gain an eternall life Doct. Primary Antiquity is a certain note of divine and Apostolique verity Prime Antiquity because he saith here it was from the beginning and he appeals to the Doctrin that was delivered from the beginning of his time that is from the first promulgation of the Gospel If that which you have heard from the beginning abide in you c. So that Prime Antiquity that which the Apostles first taught is a note of the truth Jerm 6.16 enquire for the old way that is the good way Jerm 18.15 he complains that they strayed from the ancient wayes and were run into by-wayes and he complains of it as if thereby they had forgot God therefore when St. John would describe the Gospel he calls it an everlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 and contrarily when God would confute the people for leaving him he convinces them of novelty Deut. 13.7 they followed other new Gods But why is Prime Antiquity the note of divine and Apostolique verity 1 Because Antiquity is the image of God and every truth is an image of God whilst Satan stood in the truth he had the image of God when a Doctrin reacheth the truth it comes to the image of the ancient of dayes it is the same truth now that was from the beginning of the world 2 From the speciall care God takes to plant and water the Church with pure Doctrin Satan is up early to do mischiefe but God is up before him to do good as soon as God made a World he made a Church and gave them truth though Satan was a Lyar from the beginning yet God taught him truth before he was a Lyar the good seed is first sown and then comes the envious man and sows tares 3 From the nature of all errors they are abberrations from the way of truth What are errors but deviations from the first way therefore there was some way of truth before when our Saviour would tax the error about divorce he saith from the beginning it was not so Vse 1 May serve to be a signe of tryall between the Popish and Protestant Religions they boast much of Antiquity that they can fetch it from the Apostles times why but yet if they fetch it from the prime Antiquity from the times of the Apostles we will not yield it them for John himselfe would not fetch his Antiquity from the latter part of his dayes but from the first promulgation of the Gospel Matth. 5. our Saviour saith it hath been said of old and yet was not truth that is prime Antiquity that comes from the ancient of dayes from the first Institution vetustas consuetudinis est vetustas erroris Ignatius said my Antiquity is Christ Error may come as soon as the truth is sown but yet it hath not prime Antiquity for Satan was a Lyar from the bginning and yet that will not serve to prove that a lye is the truth it is a false Antiquity that comes not from the ancient of dayes for our Religion if we cannot fetch it from the Apostles first Doctrin and from the Prophets and Apostles of old we will renounce it but when we can bring for all our Doctrin the seal of the Prophets and Apostles we have a sure note of the truth we preach no truth but what Christ and his Apostles taught our Antiquity stands not on Monuments or writings though all records were burnt our faith depends not on them but on the prime Institution Vse 2 It confutes the Common cavill against Professors they accuse them of new fanglednesse they say none of your Fathers or Ancestors walkt in this way why it is the way of Christ and his Apostles sin is a new way a new strange thing 1 JOHN 2.25 And this is the Promise he hath promised us even eternall life THis eternall life is said to be promised Doct. Eternall life is given by promise Gal. 3.18 Heirs of eternall life are called Heirs of Promise Heb. 6.17 because they are Heirs of that Promise was made to Abraham Rom. 4.13 14. Reas 1 From the grant of eternall life to Christ and through him to us Gal. 3.16 that therefore eternall life might be by Christ it is needful it should be by promise 2 Cor. 1.20 Reas 2. That it might procure those two great benefits first Honour to God secondly peace to his Children had we pleaded it by the Law we had pleaded it of debt but God provided that what grace should come should be free and therefore by Promise 2 From hence follows peace of Conscience had we been under the Law every failing would make us doubt and therefore that our hearts might be setled he hath given it us of Promise Rom. 6 16. Vse 1 A strong refutation of Popish merits by the works of the Law and that in their own persons why then it is not of grace nor promise that is the true reason why they deny certainty of Salvation because they hold it from the works of the Law therefore there is no peace of conscience in their Relion if it be of the works of the Law then not of grace if not of grace then not of promise if not of Promise then not of Christ for if they be bound to obey the whole Law they are in doubt to break it if they keep it yet they know not whether they shall persevere to the end and so
but the spirit of the old Adam the spirit of pride and malice and covetousnesse truly this is not the Spirit of Christ that makes us like him this is not that Spirit that Christ purchased for us by his Death and Ascension but suppose we had some of the Spirit of God the spirit of Wisdom as Achitophel the spirit of joy as Herod the spirit of Zeal as Jehu the spirit of fear as Felix had yet we have not this Unction of the Spirit unlesse it dwell in us What is it to be wrapt with a spirit of a Balaam or a Saul it was only for a fit and what comfort was it to them it was a shuttle spirit by starts and did not abide in them therefore let us try whether we have received the Spirit if we have received a dwelling spirit it is a true spirit Obj. But some may say Alas what then will become of me it may be now I pray but ere night wholly unabld now inlarged then straightned I have now a spirit of zeal and courage soon after all cold and weak and dead wonderfull was the zeal and courage of Elias in slaying four hundred of Baals Prophets openly 1 Kings 18.40 he went through it with such zeal and speed as if he had been sent from Heaven yet Cap. 19.1 2. when Jezabel sent to him he fled for his life and was so weary of his life that he wished death now his Spirit was cold and discontent aad weary of his life So David Psal 119.24 David said he had made the word his delight yet ver 25. he saith his soul cleaves to the dust and prays to God for quicking A. This Spirit that is so to abide doth not always abide in the same measure nor in the same measure of expression but we must know though there be several garments yet the Soul is never naked a man hath not always his Holy-day garments sweetly perfumed but sometimes homely mean garments so Elias when he slew Baals Prophets was cloathed with zeal and Holy-day garments afterwards he remitted of it and yet had he the Spirit of God on him he was not naked though he was not cloathed with the Spirit in such a measure even so sometimes we have even poor ragged homely garments and much of our nakednesse appears and sometimes again may be when God hath greater businesse for us to do cloathes us with better richer garments a greater measure of the Spirit but yet consider though we have not the same measure yet always some garment of the Spirit rests on us be it but the spirit of love to our Brethren or grief for the want of it yet we are not left naked Vse 2 May exhort su if we have this Spirit dwelling in us then let us use him honourably and courteously as an in-dweller he is come from farre even from Heaven sent from our Father and he brings joy and comfort with him therefore let us give him honourable entertainment he is sent to guide us in all our ways to be a pledge of our eternall inheritance therefore let us not entertain him like some guest that we are weary of in two or three days you must know this guest came not for a day but to dwell with us for ever John 14.16 therefore take heed of grieving him Eph. 4.13 he comes for your good and benefit for your redemption When a man keeps a Ward and for keeping him keeps a great estate a Kingdome he would be very carefull so the Spirit is such a Guest that if you keep him you keep Life and Salvation you keep an eternall Kingdom by him therefore take part with Gods Spirit joyne with the Spirit of God quench it not what an heavie complaint made Stephen Acts 7.51 Isa 63.10 the Spirit may be so grieved and vexed by men that he will depart from them Q. How shall we keep our selves from grieving the Spirit A. As God hath given him to guide you so look that you be guided by him if you entertain him kindly he will comfort you if you grieve him he will grieve your spirits 2 Be carefull to nourish him do not strave this Guest neglect not the Word and Ordinances which are the food of the Spirit Quench not the Spirit despise not Prophecie 1 Thes 5. as if the despising of Prophecy were the quenching of the Spirit therefore feed the Spirit of God with-draw not food from it prefer not outward things before it it is a wonder how leane our souls will grow if we do not nourish the Spirit 3 Take heed especially of living in any known Sin for that damps and deads the Spirit therefore David wofully camplains Psal 51.8 to 12. Restore c. as if it were quite gone his very bones were broaken that is not of his body but his soul i. e. the strength and staff of his spirit the Spirit is like fire every grosse sin is like water cast on it it quencheth it Vse 3 A ground of much consolation to Gods servants you can never say you dwell alone and want company you cannot want good company if the holy Spirit dwell in you I am not alone saith Christ but the Father is with me so may a Christian say I am never alone the Spirit of God dwells in me he is an in-dwelling and abiding Spirit Doct. 3 The annoynting of the Spirit teacheth us all things of which you heard verse 20. It teacheth all things needfull to salvation needfull to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.3 and not only so but needfull to our places and callings and ages Doct. 4. The anonytment of the Spirit is so plentifull and sufficient that we need not be taught better things nor in a better manner than the Spirit teacheth Jerem. 31.32 not that we need not Magistracy or Ministry but he speaks comparatively you shall not be so helped by any Instuctions without the Spirit as with the Spirit the Spirit shall declare the Truth in Jesus For Explication 1 The Holy Ghost teacheth fully 1 Cor. 3.9 10 11. the spirit of a Christian is inquisitive concerning all things now the Spirit helps him to search even into the deep things of God so that the Spirit is a full teacher 2 The instruction of the Spirit is plain and clear 1 Tim. 4.1 Joh. 16.25 Christ spake in parables but after his ascension the Spirit revealed things clearly Three things go to clear discerning the object must be clear the medium clear and the eye clear and then we may clearly discern now the Holy Ghost plainly reveals the Counsells of God and then opens our judgements to discern it and then cleares all the mediums so that a Christian may plainly discern so that the Tpirit is a clear Instructor no men need be taught more clearly 1 Cor. 2.4 5. 3 The Instruction of the Spirit is a certain Instruction scarce any truth but a Christian can tell it by experience as a woman that is breeding a Child feels such qualmes and
of them they will sway him So men think that learned men and wise God must needs accept and they cannot go wrong John 7.48 3. It is the conceit of men that God blesseth the good with prosperity and the wicked have want and adversity So did Job's friends 4. They measure Gods righteousnesse to reach no farther then the second Table 5. It any be so enlightned that they know God requires service to himselfe they content themselues with performance of duties without engaging of their hearts and lives Psal 51.6 6. Some that are of the best discerning they finde some desires after the Word some affections in prayer and fasting Rom. 10.3.4 They performe duties not onely to men but God and they doe God service zealously where is the defect They being ignorant of the righteousnesse of Christ go about to establish their own righteousnesse they know God requires righteousnesse with zeal and yet they know not the righteousnesse of Christ they think that the doing of good duties and that zelously will serve them at the day of judgement they never knew what need they had of Christ to cover their imperfections and to help them to perform good duties hence those did persecute Paul who knew the righteousnesse of Christ better then they Acts 21. c. Obj. But doth it not fall out oftentimes that evill men know good men Herod knew John Answ Sometimes a hypocrite may discern a righteous man but then they are more then meer worldly men 1 Cor. 12.1 2 3. There must be some works of the Holy Ghost 2. There is a defect in all such mens knowledge they cannot discern them of weak grace and many corruptions but eminent men they may Herod reverenced John and despised Christ Vse 1. Of refutation of two Popish opinions 1. They say that the Church of God is a visible Church alwayes to the world If we say that the Church is not visible to the world we say no more then St. Iohn speaks 2. They say none can know himself to be born of God St. John makes it the property of a worldling not to know the children of God much more not to know himself to be a child of God Gal. 6.10 If a man could not know one from another how should he make this difference Gods owne servants many times have but little discerning as an old man naturally hath a very bad discerning can hardly see his friends unlesse he be nigh them and look upon them Many times a man is able to give a fuller testimony of another then of himself Vse 1. It reproves all the uncertain walks of Gods servants or such as professe themselves so to be You shall have them many times to walk so unevenly between God and their own souls between themselves and men either you are worldly or your brethren else they would know you to be the children of God or of the world 1 Thes 1.4 Vse 3. It is a ground of tryall of a mans estate If thou knowest not that they which fear God are born of him thou art yet of the world and dost not know Christ if thou love them not nor affect them nor lend an helping hand unto them Vse 4. To teach us that Gods children are hidden and unknown to the world A man that is wealthy and carries things meanly we say such a man is an hidden man he is worth thousands Gods people are worth millions but they are hidden men the world knows them not If a pearl fall into the dirt you cannot discern it but wash away the dirt and you shall see it sparkle Vse 5. It should teach Gods children to moderate the affections of carnall excellency and acceptance in the world It is a leven of hypocrisie and pride that infects many times the hearts of Gods people they would be somewhat The world knows you not Be willing to go as unknown men in the world John 5.44 A Prince that comes among his subjects disguised he cares not though they justle him and take place of him and speak hardly of him a Prince would smile within himself he knows how they would respect him if they knew him Shal the hand or foot take it ill that it is not known when as the head was not known Vse 6. It should work in Gods children an inclination to forgive wrongs and injuries if they knew you better they would use you better Luke 23.34 Acts 3.17 Obj. They speak most unjustly and undeservedly Answ Pity their malice and envy them not Vse 7. It may teach the world not to flatter themselves in doing ill to Gods servants you think it is out of wisdome it is indeed out of ignorance and because they know not Christ and his righteousnesse 1 JOHN 3.2 Beloved now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is IN the former verse the Apostle exhorts Christians to a serious consideration of the love of God which he hath shewed them in calling them his children Against which dignity he answers an objection The Objection is taken from the misprising of the world The world knows no such excellency in them To this he answers that this ignorance of theirs ariseth from the ignorance of Christ In this verse he answers a second Objection from the doubts that themselves have of their estates by reason of those sundry temptations and afflictions they meet withal in the world To this he answers Even now they are the Sons of God 2 Though now their estate be hid yet it shall appear 3. He confirmes this that they shall appear when Christ appears And that he confirmes from their own knowledge For they shall see him as he is 1. Consider we their estates Sons of God 2. The hiddennesse of their present and future estates 3. What they shall be like viz. Christ which is set out by the testimony of their own knowledge and he insinuates all by a sweet compellation Beloved Doct. That the Sons ef God ought to be the men of our love and delight 3 Epist Joh. 1.2 5. 1 Pet. 2.11 Phil. 4.1 Where we see his deep affection towards them he looks at them as born of God and therefore he stiles them Beloved and Dearly beloved In those things we love there is first an affection of desire to be united to them Secondly a communication of good unto them For the first Pfal 119.63 79 If he be to choose company he will make choyce of such as fear God And this is called amor concupiscentiae Secondly there is a love with desires to communicate good to the thing beloved And this is Amor amicitiae Psal 60.1 2 Pet. 1.7 Do good to all but specially to the houshold of faith Such as are born of God So that whether we desire union or communion of good company to any we should chiefly desire it to the company
Brethren is a known and undoubted evidence that we are passed from death to life What is it to love our Brethren Love is an affection whereby we desire communion one with another and communication of good one to another A man in nature prizeth his Brethren and will do more for them then any other So it is in grace Acts 4. ult 2.42 44. Phil 1.2 We must affect to be of one heart Eph. 3.3 4. There must be brotherly equality if we be Brethren You are of the same Father Gal. 6.26 one Mother one Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 one Inheritance 1 Pet. 1.4 We will desire to communicate brotherly offices to the inward man Rom. 2.11 12. and to the outward man if need be Acts 2 44. Reas 1. From the naturall pronenesse which is in our nature to strangenesse envy c. We doe not naturally seek any mans good but our own or so far forth as reacheth our own ends 2 From the affection of every mans heart to liberty Now a man delights onely in such company as are like himselfe because otherwise he is restrained If Gods people be the men of your delight and counsell you were never so well as wirh them Psal 115.115 16.3 This is a sign we are passed from death to life 3. From a mans backwardnesse of communication of brotherly offices Gal. 6.10 4 From the great distance that is between us and the love of our Brethren and how many steps there are before we come to it Matth. 5 3. to 9. Vse 1 Of tryall of our own estates whether we are in a state of death or life It is one of the plainest notes in Scripture and most evident Gal. 6.10 If our love run in an equall channell to all men if we know not Gods people we know not Christ 1 John 3.1 2. If you know them how doe you affect them Do you think it were good if the Town were cleansed of them Gen. 49.4 5 Psal 101 we are not as yet born of God Obj. Doe not many love Gods children and honour them and yet are not the children of God Gen. 27.29 Acts 5.13 That they did not joyn with them was a signe that they were not born of God Gen. 39.1 2 3. 2 To convince the doctrine of doubting Papists who say a man cannot know himselfe to be in a state of grace Eccl. 9.1 2. No man can know it by outward things They say here by knowledge is meant conjecturall knowledg not certain knowledge Answ This is a contradiction A man lyes if he saith he knowes a thing and is not certain of it There is no peace of conscience in this Religion 3 To exhort such as know not yet that they are passed from life to death to labour to love the Brethren Prov. 13.20 4 Of consolation to every soul that hath nothing in this world but this they love the Brethren This is such a thing as upon which thou mayest build a certain knowledge that thou art passed from death to life and therefore thou mayst take comfort He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death The Apostle in the former words did imply the world was in death for want of love And left any should think that he did but imply it and not directly expresse it he sets it down expresly Here is a description of a man that loves not his Brother 1 He is in death 2 Abides in death By death is meant the same that was meant in the former part of the verse Abiding implyes not only a being in that estate but continuance and residence in it Doct. The want of love to any of our Brethren is a sign of abidance in the state of damnation or in an unregenerate and carnall estate And he saith not he that hates but he that loves not and he saith not brethren but brother any or every brother Mat. 18.6 Offend not one of these little ones Christs little ones are such as have but little grace and great corruption Reas From the want of love that is found in such a one towards God and that is an argument of being in a state of death If a man love God in obedience to his commandements he should love his brother by the same commandement That commandement which requires me to love one Brother requires me to love all Jam. 2.10 11. Breake one commandement break all for who gave one gave all whoso neglects offices of love to one performes none to any nor to God It is a note of sincerity that a man hates all sin as well as one Psal 119.101 104 For it is an argument of love when there is no Brother or Sister but we enlarge our affections towards them Gal. 3.28 So much want of love so much hypocrisie 2. From the bitter or deadly root of want of love to this or that Brother It springs from two occasions 1. Either from his infirmities in himselfe Or 2. From spirituall injuries to our selves True a man will say such Christians I would away with but they have such unsavoury corruptions The first root of this is the condemnation of the generation of Gods people If a man may condemn this or that man for this or that corruption he may come to condemn the best of Gods servants because the best of Gods servants may be in the same failings for which thou hatest such a Brother Prov. 30.12 The greatest of Gods servants have shamefully faln David Peter Lot Noah The second root is from the enmity against Gods free justification of sinners Take away this and you take away all Christian religion If you love not a Brother because of some infirmities you doe overthrow the free justification of Gods grace of a sinner For God that hath justified the greatest hath justified as well the least as freely and as fully and wilt thou justifie some and condemn others God condemns none Rom. 8.1.33 34. If Christians doe beleeve the free justification of sinners then let us imitate our Father which is in heaven justifie whom he justifies The third bitter and deadly root If there be the least sparke of grace in his heart all his corruptions are his enemies and he but a shrimp in grace and hath many enemies What good nature is this when a man would love a man if he had no enemies but when he hath enemies and such as are ready ever and anon to beat him down he cannot love him The fourth want of a member like spirit for the more naked unseemly or deformed any member is the body is the more carefull of it if it may be it shall be healed if not it shall be covered 1 Cor. 12.23 24. If we want this it flowes from want of a member like spirit 2 Somtimes neglect of our Brother springs from some personall injury done to our selves We cannot love them This springs from this root want of forgivenesse of our own sins for we pray for forgivenesse upon this ground Mat. 6.12 15. Our Saviour
condemnation in them the Judge much more 1 JOHN 3.21 Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Doct. SVch as have peace with their own consciences have boldnesse with God If we have peace with our hearts we have not onely peace with God but boldnesse Eph. 3.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is liberty of speech hence comes liberty of carriage When God hath been pleased to give us fellowship with him in Christ that we have the Ministry of the Gospel revealed to us then we have boldnesse Phil. 1.20 He that hath this hope shall never be ashamed before God or men Rom. 5.1 2. This rejoycing is a companion of boldnesse Wherein stands this boldnesse Answ In three things 1 In liberty of spirit to ask those things at Gods hands that are meet for us This we may doe with some boldnesse and liberty Heb. 4.16 Let us go boldly to the throne of grace he means in prayer A Christian that hath the Lord Jesus Christ for his High Priest who hath reconciled him to God to him Gods throne is not a Judgement-seat but a Mercy-seat and he begs mercy to help him in time of need we may safely expect God will not deny what we ask Phil. 1.6 The Apostle tells us by his own example he never prays for them but his heart is warmed with joy and he was confident God would grant what he prayed for We come to a throne of grace that is we may speak as favourites to God 2 Boldnesse in dangers that may befall in this world or another He walks fearlesse and securely against the fear of danger Psal 23.4 ult Doubtlesse loving kindnesse and mercy shall follow me all my days Surely or doubtlesse This is a bold speech to assure himselfe that goodnesse and mercy shall follow him whithersoever he goes 3 In expectation of all good things whether we pray for them or not God many times will have more care of us then we of our selves Paul was in a straight he knew it would be better for him to be dissolved and to be with Christ yet better for the Church if he should in the flesh and he is confident he shall stay with them to their joyes Phil. 1.24 25. Acts 20.23 24. There was a readinesse of heart in him so to carry all things as that he might rejoyce in all 1 Cor. 1.12 Reas 1 From the justification by faith Rom. 5.1 to 5. We rejoyce in tribulation hope never makes ashamed The soul is never at peace till such time as by faith it doth receive and apply Christs righteousnesse Acts 14.5 A man that owes another man money and knows not how to pay him he is ashamed to come into his sight He that knows he hath injured his Prince and that he doth watch an occasion to be revenged of him he will be afraid and ashamed 2. The sincerity of his sanctification Though a man hath assurance that his sins are pardoned and that he is a childe of God yet if he walk crookedly and loosly in his own wayes his conscience will be so perplexed and distracted as that he will think every hand of God comes as a judgement 2 Cor. 1.12 Here is his boldnesse he hath walked in simplicity and purenesse A man is fearfull and ashamed when he hath dealt doubly either with God or man or walked in some way of impurity of heart Psal 51.8 Davids bones were broken he could not stand upright he could not look God in the face When God gives a man to walk in simplicity without guile and purenesse without uncleannesse then a man may walk boldly and with joy otherwise he walks like a criple and creeps up and down Vse 1 It reproves an old cavill that hath been in the world that Religion makes men Dastards and Cowards No rather want of Religion If men had but purity of heart and good conscience towards men they would fear no dangers 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Refutation of all Popery They cannot be bold because they cannot know God to be their Father they keep not a good conscience Where there is no good conscience there is no boldnesse Wicked men indeed may be bold through ignorance or through abundance of natural spirits mettle courage c. This may be in Papists and was found in Heathens 3 A ground of tryall of a mans peace Luke 11.21 Thou art at peace D●st thou pray boldly dost thou look that God should answer thee How dost thou look danger in the face Prov. 28.1 2. In danger thou knowest Christ hath born all many things befall thee thou art confident all shall be for thy good 4 This teacheth us the true way of boldnesse St. Austin praiseth God that he can think of his former evills without fear If thou wouldst doe thus strive with God that he would sprinkle thy soule with the blood of Christ If thou hast found peace of justification with God labour for peace of sanctification Let no rebellious lusts be in thy soule but complain of it to the Lord and fight against them 5 Much consolation to a childe of God that walks in simplicity of a good conscience If God hath given thee an heart to loath all wickednesse and abandon all occasions of sin there is a boldnesse springing in thy heart A childe of God hath boldnesse but he sees it overclouded he knows not wi●h what sin but God doth sometimes pour out himselfe more largely sometimes more straightly therefore a childe of God fears something amisse in him and he is discouraged but he needs not there is a cause of boldnesse it is our portion If our heart condemn us not we have boldnesse towards God 1 JOHN 3.22 And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight THere is a double benefit of our assuring our selves that we are of the truth First If our hearts condemn us not God will much lesse condemn us but we have boldnesse towards God Secondly Acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God Which he proves from an argument taken from the practise of such as have inward peace they keep his commandements 1 Here is a priviledge of such as are at peace with God they may assure themselves that their prayers are heard 2 A reason of this because they keep his commandements Doct. According to our hearing of Gods commandements so he hears our prayers As we regard Gods Word so he ours John 9.33 The question was What he thought of him that opened his eyes He thought he was a Prophet because God heard not sinners John 15.7 If my word abide in you c. Let us keep Gods Word and he will keep our prayers to fulfill them Gods Word abides in us when in our judgements we approve of it and in our hearts we cleave to it in our lives we practise it The Word of God abides not in us except it rules as becomes the
rich 3 He denyed his own honour He being in the form of God yet made himself of no reputation to save us from reproach 4 As if all this had been too little he denyed his own life and laid it downe for us John 3.16 Reas What is the reason of this difference that our love to our neighbour must be so great above the love to our selves 1 Because there was no cause of denying our selves in innocency but now man is fallen he cannot raise up another but he must stoop If two men go together if they go both upright they may go hand in hand but if one be faln and not able to rise the other if he will raise him must stoop down and toyl to get him up God hath raised up some sooner then others therefore we must take up our faln Brethren 2 God requires love in a more exact manner and measure because he hath now given an higher and more exact pattern We have the pattern of Christ that forgave us ten thousand talents therefore we ought to forgive our Brethren an hundred pence Mat. 18. Vse 1. This should stir up all Christians to walk now in an higher frame of love then formerly they were wont in times past We walked then in a lower way to love our Brother as our selves But we must now say I will do so for my Brother as I may not prejudice my self my estate credit or life But now we that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weaker Rom. 15.1 2. Now we must have the same minde in us which was in Christ Jesus Heb. 2.4 to 16. 2 Cor. 11.7 8. Paul abased himself that they might be exalted and denyed himself of many comforts that he might help them As Christ laid down his life for us so must we for our Brethren in sundry cases 1 John 3.16 For more particular direction 1 A man ought to deny his own expediences for his Brothers necessity Neh. 5.18 2 He ought to deny himself in outward things to supply his Brethren in spiritual things Thus Paul 3 If a man be of a private condition and his Brother of publique use to the Church he ought to deny himself to maintain and succour him as they said to David Thou art worth ten thousand of us Rom. 16.4 5. Aquila and Priscilla 2 This should teach you that are of higher estate to help your poor neighbours that are fallen into straights not through prodigality or ryot but through Gods hand or charge of children You must not say I must look to my self and to my children that they be maintained This was the old rule now we must deny our selves and our own experiences and be continually doing good in obedience to this commandement It was a royal speech of David 2 Sam. 24. Shall I offer a sacrifice of that that cost me nothing Heb. 13 15 16. When God blesseth thee with many a pound wilt thou offer a sacrifice to God that cost a penny or a thing that cost thee nothing It 's for you to blesse God that hath enriched you with such abundance and say with David What shall I render to the Lord for all these goods Your goods reach not to God but to the Saints that are on the earth and if you begin to straighten your hands and hearts you will finde God straightning himselfe to you What a blessed thing were it to be laying aside something for good uses Our Saviour that lived in so mean a condition yet had care to provide for the poor John 13.28 Doct. There is not a more effectual means to the obtaining our petitions then by growing up in practice of these two commandements in believing on the Name of Christ and love to our Brethren Mark 11.22 to 26. There you have both joyned together Jam. 1.8 Let a man pray in faith and waver not When a Christian is tossed with doubtings and distractions he shall rather drown his prayers then bring them to the bosome of Christ Jesus Job's friends were godly men but because they dealt not in love with Job God professeth he would not hear them Want of love to our Brethren it damps our prayers before God So that though our persons be accepted yet our prayers shall not Why is faith so necessary 1. Faith makes our persons acceptable to God God heares the young ravens and lyons when they call upon him he rather hears their misery then their prayer but faith makes the person acceptable Thus By faith Abel c. Heb. 11. 2. Faith purifies the heart Acts 15.9 If I regard wickednesse in my heart God will not hear my prayers Psal 66.18 3 Faith furnisheth the heart with graces that make our prayers amiable There are four graces requisite in prayer and all are wrought by faith 1 Reverence to God A man without faith considers not before whose presence he stands he considers not that God is near to hear his petitions but faith is the evidence of things not seen it makes us come before God with reverence and godly fear Heb. 11.27 2 Faith breeds in us humility whereby we come before God with a sense of our unworthinesse and of the least of Gods mercies and an unablenesse to ask any thing according to his will 3 Faith works fervency and earnestnesse of spirit that we will give God no rest 2 Sam. 15.16 Effectual fervent prayer is called a prayer of faith For 1 Faith puts life into every duty Gal. 3. 2 Faith layes hold of the promises of God in Christ and we urge and presse God upon his word 3 Faith makes us very sensible of our wants and therefore we cry very hard for help 4 Faith works in us an holy canfidence that what we ask God will undoubtedly grant and it 's meant of faith in the Name of the Lord Jesus There are three things in the Name of the Lord Jesus which Faith layes hold on 1 Faith lays hold on the offices of his mediation There had been no hope of acceptance unlesse there had been a Mediator to reconcile God and us 1 John 2.1 2. Heb. 4.14 15 16. Though we should finde many weaknesses in our selves yet with confidence may we draw neer to God seeing we have such an High Priest which is touched with our infirmities he is that great Master of requests that is in such favour with God that he never presents up a prayer to God but he returns such an answer that we need not go away with sad hearts John 16. ●3 24. 2 Faith lookes at Christ as him in whom all the promises are yea and amen 2 Cor. 5.20 3 Faith layes hold on all the attributes of God set on work by Christ for our good So that if we look for wisdome grace or power they are all set on work for the good of his Church The name of the Lord is a strong tower that is the attributes of God the righteous flye to it .. How By faith Q. How is the love of
The Sun is the life of many Vermine take away the Sun and they dye as flyes but when the Sun shines in its season they live let God take away the Sun-shine of his favour from us we can neither pray nor preach we live a life of grace of holinesse Prov. 16.14 15. Rom. 8.2 Ephes 2.4 5. there is life enougst in Christ to procure us life 2 There is a life of glory of which it is said John 10.27 28. That Christ gives to his sheep eternall life 1 Cor. 15.4 5. John 5.24 28 29. so many whose souls receive life by the Word of the Gospel their bodies shall rise to eternall life How did Christ procure us this life He procured this by his death Rom. 5.9 10. while we were yet enemies we were yet reconciled by the death of Christ We received life of grace and holinesse by his means I will pour out my Spirit of grace upon all flesh Reas 1. It was unpossible our corrupt nature should fulfill any law of God Rom. 8.4 Gal. 3.21 2 The glory of Christ requires that as the Father quickneth so he also John 5.21 Vse 1. This shewes us what our condition is without Christ if God send Christ that we might live through him then in Gods fight without Christ we are dead as dead flyes dead wormes in a cold frost we are utterly dead without true peace we are like thorns that give a blaze but we lye down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Christ is our life without him we can doe nothing we are not able to put forth any spirituall action 2 Let us try our estates Whether can we say that God sent his Son into the world and hereby manifested his love to us Doe you live in Gods sight without him we are but dry bones untill we can say we live in Christ we cannot say we have any sense of Gods favour 3 It teacheth such as have any evidence of life in Christ Joh. 10.10 to come into Gods presence as dry bones intreat God that he would so speake the word as that those dry bones may live 4 To teach all such as have received this manifest token of Gods love to acknowledge the Lord Christ to be their life Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain now Paul is crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and now for him to live is Christ now every day he lives he doth the more expresse Christ 1 JOHN 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Doct. THe love of God to us was not procured by our love to him but his own good pleasure he therefore loved us because it pleased him So that in these words we have the freenesse of Christs love he loved us freely because he loved us when we loved not him we did not begin in love to him but he to us and this is set out by the effect and end of it the pardon of our sins What is that love God bare to us before we loved him Answ There is a threefold principle of love which God magnifies and manifests to his people before they love him 1 That love whereby he chose us to life and to redeem us by Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 and the choyce to life was not according to workes but free grace 2 Gods love in redeeming us by Christ was before any love of ours to God Joh. 3.16 3 His love prevented us by effectually calling us drawing implies unwillingnesse therefore it prevented all good affections in us he must draw us out of presumption then out of despair Reas From the difference between the care of Gods love and of our love self love is so ●iveted in our hearts that we cannot love any unlesse it be for some cause concerning us a natural man loves none any further then tends to profit or pleasure but a Christian is inlarged to all Gods children he loves them all and the ground of this is because we know such to be incorporated into the same body with us and so as we see them in some kind our own and so we should never have loved God unlesse we had found his love to us Object A christian comes off freely to many ●ffices of love to them that love not him Answ True but it is because he knows God can abundantly recompence it they sometimes may lay down their lives for their brethren and for the Truth but they know that Christ hath done it for them before 2 From the eternity of Gods love now Jer. 31.3 an everlasting love can have no cause the cause is alwayes before the effect no temporall thing can be the cause of an eternall love 3 From the end of Gods love that he might bring us to walke in love Ephes 1.4 Tit. 2.14 The love of God to his people of old is a fir president to all his children Deut. 7.8 9. compared with Deut. 9.4 5 6. Vse 1. Refutes a popish and Arminian conceit that God chooseth none to life but out of foreseen faith and good works else he had chosen none to life but this is a mercenary love let a servant labour never so hard yet he knows he shall be well paid at the years end and therefore it is servile love this is that love which they would put upon God 2 It exhorts all to begin betimes to love God begin never so soon God hath prevented us Rom. 11.35 it was an early love of Josiah at twelve years of age when he sought after God but Gods love was up before him you cannot be in your love before him though you begin as soon as you are warm in the womb John Baptist was very early when he leaped for joy in the womb yet Gods love was before him an Angel had appeared to his Father and had promised a blessing before John was begotten 3 To teach old people if God have prevented them with love long before how should this stir them up to love God and to be humbled for the want of love to God that hath loved them so long Shall we be to seek in our love to God and cleave to worldlinesse in our old times and let God stay till our children be provided for What an unworthy dealing is this with God This should exhort all Gods servants that have had experience of Gods love to acknowledge the freedome of Gods love Job by Gods testimony was a man that feared God and eschewed evill What saith the Devill Doth Job serve God for naught No but though God had stript him of all as he did yet he had shewed such marvellous love to his soul as that he had just cause to love God for ever if God should not have bestowed on him one dram of wealth 4 This should teach Gods children to be as observant in love to Gods children as God is to them to love them freely to doe kindnesse to them freely Psal 16.2 3.
Obj. If a man be thus free to others he shall empty himself Answ Doe you think that ever any man served God for naught Did Jobs care over the poor draw him dry No he multiplied it abundantly 5 Comfort to all Gods servants that have tasted of this love he that loves you freely loves you for ever because his love stands not upon condition he that loved us when we were enemies will he hate us when we are acquainted with him and reconciled We shall not be worse then we were before and if he loved us because he would love us his love will for ever remain Doct. That the sending of Christ for our sakes was a fruit not only of his love but of his free love Rom. 5.8 4. Herein is love John 3.16 God so loved the world implying there was a love of God that moved him to send Christ before we did believe that believing on him we might have mercy and salvation Love is said to be free in two respects 1 When love is granted without nny desert on their parts to whom it is granted and then it is so much the greater when there is no fitnesse of the persons that receive it but rather the contrary if men shall deserve our love our love is not free Gods love is so free as that he sent his Son into the world to redeem us when we did not deserve it but rather wrath Col. 1.21 2 Love is said to be free when it is without condition so that nothing on our parts shall take away his love Jer. 31.34 He will not remember their sins any more Object But why then is faith required Joh. 3.16 verse 36. He that believes in the Son shall have everlasting life Answ True indeed there is a condition required but in what sort It is this That the same God that requires the condition doth promise likewise that he will work the condition and therefore the love of God is free Object But we did bring something to God that did make him deale thus graciously with us Answ Ezek. 36.32 33. the Lord doth shew mercy freely without any condition on our parts Be ashamed and confounded O house of Israel Object God requires faith on my part but faith is a supernaturall gift nature cannot reach to it he that believes shall be saved but he that believes not shall be damned The condemnation is unjust because it is not in my power to believe Answ He is condemned because light is come into the world and men love darknesse more then light Reas 1. Is taken from the estate in which we lay before Christ was sent into the world we were then strangers and enemies Col. 1.21 we were not fit to receive mercy much lesse to deserve any 2 This God did that the glory of his great name might appear Ephes 1.5 6 7. Deut. 7.8 God did not love us because we were many but because it pleased him to love us there is a great difference in the death of Christ in respect of his own and the wicked the benefit they have by Christs death is this that they partake of Gods patience and bounty for the same day that Adam sinned he and his posterity should have dyed Gen. 3.15 But the benefit that the godly have is that we might live and that we might all come to the knowledge of his grace 2 Pet. 3.9 Rom. 2.4 5. so that if they ask why God is patient to the world it is for Christs sake Exod. 33.1 to 5. 3 God sent Christ into the world that so he suffering his Elect might suffer he growing they might grow and he dying they might dye Col. 2.29 There is a difference between Christs dying for the world and for the elect He so dyed for the Elect as that he prayed that his death might be effectuall to them John 17.9.20 21. he prayes for all them that shall believe in him he prayes not for the world Vse 1. This refutes an errour of the Papists that Christ was equall in his love to all the world and that without difference God sent his Son for the one as well as for the other they say God doth not bestow his love without condition this we deny 2 This teacheth us that have pardon of sins to acknowledge Gods love in that he sent his Son freely Rom. 5.8 3 A ground of comfort if God so loved us when we loved not him then how much more being reconciled Rom. 5.8 9 10. 4 To teach those that have not found reconciliation with God what course to take to be reconciled 1 John 2.2 get the Lord Jesus Christ to be a Propitiatory Sacrifice Doct. That Christ 〈…〉 to be a 〈…〉 for●●● s●●● What is meant by P●●pip●●● This word signi●●● four thi●●● 1 It signifies a pledge satisfaction or ●●●emption 〈…〉 some 〈◊〉 35.31 32. Heb. 12.24 the blood of Christ being spilt for our sins spe●●● better things then the blood of Abel his blood cryed for vengeance Christs that I might receive a ransome 2 It signifies a gift to appease wrath Gen. 32.20 3 It signifies 〈◊〉 surety to undergoe wrath for another 〈◊〉 Pr●●● 21.18 Rev. 12.11 4 It signifies a covering not such a covering a● the g●●● to the 〈…〉 a covering is a playster for the word signifies of the 〈…〉 pitch G●●● ●4 this keeps the Ar● from the in jury of the water and to signifies s●●●nes to pitch as a man doth a wound this blood of Christ will 〈◊〉 are and purge away all our sins as a playster doth a sore God sent Christ in to playster us as to keep us from the wayes of his wrath and to purge away the filth of our souls Reas 1. Taken from the insufficiency of other thi● 〈◊〉 make away sin Heb. 10.1 to 10. Psal 40.11 the bl●●d of ●●ls and Beasts could 〈◊〉 ●●tisfie Gods wrath 1 Because they are but finite creatures and these things it cannot b●o● reason that such base creatures worse then men should be a propitiation for 〈◊〉 sins 2 Buls and Goats never dye willingly but by force and 〈…〉 most patient yet did they but know what evill 〈…〉 would 〈◊〉 they would be readyer to run away then come to the place of 〈◊〉 Reas 2. Because of the disproportion of all other things and the pi●●● of atonement we by our sins have provoked God to infinite displeasures Now that gift which must appeale Gods wrath most be infinite and that is only Christ Jesus Vse 1. This holds forth unto us the wonderfull wisdome justice land grace of God that are met together it was Gods wisdome that he took suc● a course as would reconcile us to himselfe neither men nor Angels could have done it wherefore when no creature would serve the ●u●n God sends his Son to suffer for us Then see the grace of God that he would send his Son to be a Propitiation for us and to be a surety for us to drink up all the dreggs of his Fathers wrath for
fear in love then if there be no fear there is no fear of falling away Vse 2. Of direction to poor souls against those 〈…〉 and fears of their hearts if we would be quit● of all those cares and grie● 〈…〉 g●●p in love to God to your brethren for there is no fear in love 〈…〉 therefore from all hatred of God learn to take all Gods d●g● in good part as proceeding from his love to your souls Look at all th●se fears and anguishes he puts you to as wholsome for your spirits and the very apprehension of Gods love to you in these will quiet your consciences and scatter those fears Grow up likewise in love to your brethren lay aside all wrath and revenge be tender-hearted and merciful unto them and thus growing in love you shall grow in fearlesnesse Vse 3. Shews the fearful estate of a hateful heart as there is no fear in love so there is nothing but fear in hatred he that findes his heart estranged from God and 〈…〉 love to his brethren why when troubles comes fears increase What is 〈◊〉 reason natural men are so afraid of death and judgement Why because they have hateful spirits whereas a loving soule prays for the hastning of the day of judgement Come Lord Jesus come quickly But an hateful spirit knows the Lord Jesus comes to take vengeance on all his hateful carriages and hard speeches and therefore he trembles at judgement Yea this hatefull disposition is more dangerous to the soule then any sinne besides Let a godly man be defiled with many sins fall into divers weaknesses and frailties yet because he maintains a loving heart to God and his people they do not eclipse his boldnesse David confesseth That the iniquities of his heels compassed him about yet because he kept his heart sincere and upright to God he dares be confident wherefore should I be afraid whereas on the contrary let a man walk never so justly and honestly and do many good things yet if the heart be estranged from God have no fellowship with him nor his Saints let death and judgement come because his heart is not possest of Gods love therefore he is opprest with many fears and anguishes Vse 4. Of consolation to every loving heart if thou findest thy heart possest with love to God and his Saints that there is none in heaven or earth that thou desirest in comparison of him and for the Saints they are the ●ly men of thy delight if thou beest afraid thou art much too blame If thou discernest ●ods love in thy heart bid farewel to groundlesse fears Object But will a loving heart say Have not I just cause to fear do you not see how loosely I walke how often I trip and fall in my Christian course Answ There is no causes of fear Wherefore should I feare in the day of evill when the iniquities of my heels compasse me about These are causes to make me love love God the more that pardons these fallings and to hate sin the more but they ought to weaken thy confidence for there is no fear in love 1 JOHN 4.19 We love him because he first loved us THese words depend on the former words vers 17. he delivered this truth that those that are sound-hearted in love may have boldnesse against the day of judgement this he proves from the resemblance that is between God and a loving heart 2 from the contrariety betwixt fear and love there is no fear in love which he proves 1 From the eff●●● of love perfect love casts out fear 2 From the ●nct of fear Fear hath torment therefore love that is a quiet peaceable gr● cannot stand with it 3 From the ●oundnesse of fear he that fears is not perfect in love The fourth argument is taken from the cause of love which is Gods love to us if we love God because God loved us first then perfect love casts out fear but we do so Ergo. For this is the nature of love it makes us look at God as good and merciful to us and therefore love casts out all fear of evil from the hand of God In this 19 verse observe two parts 1 The freedom of Gods love to us he loved us not because we loved him but he first loved us 2 The root and spring of our love to God is Gods love first to us preventing us For the first part observe Doct. 1. The love of God to us is altogether free un-prevented and un-deserved on our part If the question be why God loved us it was not because we had done him any service of love but he loved us before we loved him 2 Tim. 1.9 He called us not according to our works but according to his free purpose and grace Deut. 7.7 8. The Lord did not set his love upon you because you were more in number then any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the Lord loved you So Deut. 9.4 5. he loved them because he loved them and therefore surely without prevention or desert on our parts Reas 1. From the removal of such causes of love as might prevent God on our parts if there be any cause on our parts he loved us either out of foreseen faith or good works but from neither of these not from foreseen faith for it 's the love of God to us that produceth faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed so that our faith springeth from Gods love choosing us to life nor for our good works for we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works so that good works did not cause Gods ordaining us to life but Gods ordaining us to life causeth good works so that faith and good works are not causes but fruits of Gods love to us Reas 2. From the eternity of Gods love to us Je. 31.3 I have loved you with an everlasting love Now if Gods love be eternal before the world was then it was not for our sakes who were made after Ephes 4.5 Nothing temporal can be the cause of that which is eternal our love and faith began in time his love was eternal Obj. Though our love and faith began but now yet he fore-saw it from eternity and therefore it might move him to set his love on us Answ It 's all one with God whether you have respect to that which is now or what he knows will be hereafter so a wise man serves a Prince not out of meer affection to the Prince but because he loved himselfe first for he fore-saw if he served him carefully he should have abundant recompence Now to the wise man it 's all one whether he have respect to the future foreseen recompence or to the present and therefore still his service is mercenary therefore when God loved us it was not for any thing we did or was foreseen to be done by us for then we had not loved him because he first loved us but he
question is a sacrilegious violation of his Testament 6 That he might keep in us everlasting nourishment to feed on in our hearts John 6.56 So that his blood may be his wine to chear us that by the comfort of his blood and mediation applyed to our souls we might have wherewith to sustain our selves in the worst times This is meat indeed and drink indeed no nourishment our souls can feed on but this our souls cannot feed on pleasures and profits spirits must feed upon spiritual things Those are beggerly naked souls that have nothing but lands and riches to feed on the souls food is holy spirituall things and if the ordinances yeeld you any good or comfort whence comes this but only from the blood of Christ that hath besprinkled all these ordinances and made them effectuall Heb. 9.19 It 's the blood of sprinkling that makes every ordinance effectuall to us 7 He came by blood to us that so he might open a way to us into the most holy place Vse 1. Teacheth us that a poor Christian that believes in Christ may thereby overcome the world because he believes on such a one as came both by water and blood by the water of sanctification to purifie and cleanse us and by the blood of his redemption whereby he hath procured for us pardon and happinesse therefore whosoever believes on Christ is so sprinkled with the blood of Christ that he is redeemed from the world to become the servant of God he hath all the promises of God which make him overcome all the promises of the world and encourageth him against all difficulties and so assureth him of heavenly glory so that he looks at the world as a thing little to be regarded Vse 2. To stir up all those that desire to get victory over the world to labour to get faith in Christ Jesus who is so abundantly furnished with helps and means for our redemption fit to sanctifie us by the water of sanctification fit to sprinkle us with the blood of redemption whereas if we do not believe on Christ we shall be continually slaves to the world Hence it is that worldlings take such content and comfort in the things of this life and are so discouraged at the losse of them a plain signe they want faith to overcome the world Vse 3. Of tryall what portion we have in Christ Why what feedest thou on If thou hast a part in Christ thou hast a Spirit of God within thee to comfort thee thou findest the ordinances sprinkled with the bloud of Christ to feed on thou canst say to the flattering world I have better meat and better comforts to feed on then the world can yeeld Psal 4.6 It 's poor nourishment for spirits to feed on the husks of this world but a Christian findes the blood of Christ the only food of his soul and the world to be his Servant and not his Master But if we have no higher matters to feed on then the profits and contents of the world the Spirit of God and grace we relish not why then truly Christians we are not 4 If thou wouldst use the priviledges which come by Christ why this is the way Believe on the Lord Jesus and then he is come for thee by water and blood Distrust therefore thy owne righteousnesse rest upon Christ live in such places where Christ is dispensed in his ordinances that so being brought on to believe thou mayst finde Christ to thy salvation 5 Of consolation to such as renounce the world and esteem Christ to be better worth then all the world why thy hope is not frustrate thou believest on such a one as came by water and blood so that though thou be unclean and thy works defiled yet he came by water to purge and cleanse thee Exod. 28.37 38. And what though thy heart be full of many sinful lusts yet thou trustest on one that can by blood make attonement for thee to procure his Spirit and when thou dyest to give thee an open entrance into the most holy place 1 JOHN 5.6 This is he that came by water and bloud even Jesus Christ not by water onely but by water and bloud and it is the Spirit that beareth witnesse because the Spirit is truth IN these verses as we heard Christ is set out 1. By the manner of his coming he came by water and bloud 2. By the witnesse born to him which are First in generall the Spirit v. 6. Secondly more particularly the witnesses are distinguished into two parts three in heaven and three on earth v. 7 8. It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse here Christs coming is confirmed by the witnesse of the Spirit and that Spirit amplyfied by the certainty that Spirit is truth By the Spirit is meant the Spirit of God breathing in the Word and in the conscience of Gods people both are here included For 1. the Spirit breathing in the Scripture is one of the chiefest testimonies that is born to Christ John 5.39 and therefore this witnesse may not be omitted 2. By the Spirit is meant the Spirit as it breaths in the consciences of Gods people for though the Spirit be strong in the Scripture yet how shall I be ascertained of that truth of the Scripture but by the consent of the same Spirit in my heart It s the Spirit in our hearts that witnesseth to the truth in the Scripture John 3.33 and therefore it s called a Seal 2 Cor. 1.20 All the promises in Christ are yea and amen how appears that by the Spirit breathing in our hearts Quest What is that the Spirit witnesseth Some understand it thus The Spirit bears witnesse that the Spirit is truth if there were no other testimony of the Spirit but the Spirit it selfe it would shew it selfe as the Sun shews its selfe But first the Apostle hath not occasion to speak of the witnesse it bears to its own truth but the scope of his speech is to speak of the witnesse that is born to this truth that Jesus Christ came by water and bloud and therefore the witnesse here spoken of is of the Sonship of Christ and of his powerfull coming and to this the Spirit bears witnesse and that Spirit is truth Doct. The Spirit of God breathing in the Scripture and in the conscience of Gods people bears witnesse to our souls that Jesus Christ came to save us by the water of Sanctification and the bloud of Redemption The Spirit breathing in the Scripture John 5.39 It s not the saying of the Prophets nor Apostles that bears such authentick testimony we look at the testimony of them as of Isaiah and Paul Christ speaks of them I receive not the testimony of men John 1.33 Therefore some that have read them have lookd at them as fables 1 Cor. 2.6 7. What is it then that captivates the world to the beliefe of this testimony but the testimony of the Spirit breathing in them What is that Spirit that breaths
and believes shall be saved but I repent and believe this say they the Scripture no where saith But say we besides the testimony of the Scripture there is a threefold witnesse in heaven and three on earth all witnessing this truth now their testimony is divine and therefore my faith is divine and they all witnesse to this truth that Jesus is the Son of God and that I believing on him shall be saved Obj. All these are but suavis quidam motus cannot produce a divine faith Answ Can the testimony of men produce an humane certainty and cannot three divine witnesses in heaven and three on earth produce more then an humane probabilty If not how doth the text say their testimony is greater then the testimony of men Object How comes it to passe then that this witnesse is so low sometimes that we can hardly discern it Answ We so grieve the Spirit of God sometimes that he delights not to reveal himselfe to us but this is our own fault that we so black this evidence that we cannot read it but if we maintain and cherish it it will be a strong testimony to our souls Vse 2. For tryal of our faith wouldst thou know whether thy faith be true or not If it be it will convey a double trinity of witnesses into thy heart witnessing that Jesus is the Son of God and that he came by water and bloud If you should resolve most mens faith into its principle you should find most mens faith built upon antiquity and authority and universall consent of all men Why if these be the best grounds of thy saith the Divel hath better grounds of faith then so but if thou find this truth confirmed to thee by the testimony of Gods Spirit within thee this faith will hold tryall Vse 3. Of consolation to all them that find this witnesse in themselves Why they have grounds of full assurance of their good estates seeing they have such divine and certain witnesse of it both in heaven and earth 1 JOHN 5.10 11 12. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witnesse in himself he that believeth not God hath made him a lyar because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son c. HAving shewed vers 6 7 8. three witnesses in heaven and three on earth that bear witnesse to the Sonship of Christ vers 9 10. he stirs us up to believe this witnesse 1 A minori If we believe the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater 2 From the Divinity of all those witnesses in our hearts and consciences 3 From the nearnesse of this testimony 4 From the danger that follows the not believing this testimony we thereby make God a lyar and he gives a reason of it because he believes not the record that God hath of his Son and he shews what that record is this is the record that God hath given us of his Son even eternal life From the change of the phrase in this 10 vers believing on the Son of God and believing God observe Doct. True faith that believeth God believeth also on the Son of God There is a double phrase used 1 Credere Deo 2 Credere in filium Dei Credere Deo is to believe that there is a God 2 That every testimony God gives us is true Act. 27.25 I believe God that it shall be so as he hath said but to believe on God or on the Son of God is a phrase peculiar only to Scripture not found in any humane Writers Now to believe that there is a God and that his Word is true are acts of the understanding but to believe on God is not only an act of my understanding but of my will whereby I trust on him and rowl my selfe upon him it 's exprest by laying a stone upon a foundation 1 Pet. 2.5 6. Christ lyes as the corner stone of his Church every living stone lyes upon him depends upon him and that is to believe on God to lift up our souls and lye on the foundation John 14.1 Let not your hearts be troubled ye believe on God believe also on me so much belief so much lesse fear and so much fear so much lesse faith Jam. 2.19 The Devils believe and tremble but he that believes on the Son of God feare not this believing on him is a resting on him for many may have faith and not rest on Christ Isa 30.15 In quietnesse and confidence shall be your rest there is no such rowling our selves upon Christ so that as living stones we lye still and quiet upon Christ the corner stone so that you cannot lift off a Christian from his foundation except you overthrow the building and this is when a Chrstian is so established in faith that all mists of doubtings are removed and Gods favour clearely seen and then the soul sits down in calmnesse and quiet Psal 3.5 6. and this hand of faith the children of God are wont to put forth in dangerous times Psal 91.12 He that abideth in the secret place of the most High c. Two things are in God which are the secret place of the Almighty and both exprest in the Name of the Lord. Which implyes 1 his attributes of mercy goodnesse and patience and the like 2 His truth Psal 138.4 Thou hast exalted thy word about thy Name the Word of God doth more comfort and command then any attribute without the Word so that the Name of God is the secret place of God in danger A Christian runs to the attributes and promises of God 2. But if this were all it would exclude from faith all those whose faith is not grown to this quietnesse and rest for many a day is it before we come to such quietnesse and rest but full of doubts and agitations are we as if you commit such a sum of money to be paid at London into a faithfull able mans hand I never doubt of his care or faithfulnesse if I doubt of either my heart is never at rest till I hear how matters goe no Christian ord●narily doubts of Gods power and ability but he doubts whether God be willing to put forth his power for my salvation or no hence a poor soule hath many thoughts and cares what will become of his soul yet there is some kinde of saving faith in him that believes his ability and this faith makes him in some measure to lean on Christ as Mark 1.40 the poor Leper came to Jesus and said If thou wilt thou canst make me clean he believed his power yet something doubts of his will yet he comes to him that he might be willing 3. There is a weaker faith then this that is a Christian comes sometimes to doubt even of the power of God that he is not able to shew him mercy and so doubts of it as thus because God hath said That they that have sinned against the holy Ghost shall never be forgiven and they are afraid they
have committed this sin and they know God is not able to break his word Mark 9.22 There comes a poor man to Christ for help for his son and said If thou canst doe any thing have compassion on us What saith Christ If thou canst believe all things are possible to him that believeth viz that I am able why saith he Lord I believe help my unbeliefe he believed God was able to help him and yet was not certain of it neither and yet this faith procured this blessing from God Quest How can this be called believing on Christ when the heart is not grounded on Christ nor rests on him Answ As to believe on Christ is to rest on him as a stone on the foundation so there is a believing on Christ when the heart yet rests not one Christ but rowls it selfe on Christ and that may be done while the heart is yet in motion Resting is a setlednesse of condition but rowling is an unsetled tumbling about sometimes rowls one way sometimes another yet such a Christian believes on Christ because he is rowling towards him that so he may lie on him Psal 37.5 Commit thy ways to the Lord in the original rowl thy ways upon God lean thy soul that way that is done by rowling thy selfe towards him that thou mightst rest on him Prov. 3.6 Trust on the Lord with all thy heart lean not on thy own wisdome a man may be said to lean that way whereon he is not yet setled Quest When is a man said to lean on Christ Answ 1. When a man is perswaded that God is able to help him yet doubts of his willingnesse and yet comes to him leans towards him craves his help as Mark 5.25 there comes a woman to Christ with a bloudy issue she came neither doubting of his ability nor will If I may but touch the hemme of his garment I shall be made whole this was a resting on Christ But the poor Leper was not come so far as to assure himselfe that Christ would doe it but he believes his power and useth the means to make him willing Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean 2 A man may be said to lean on Christ when he believes not his willingnesse nor yet confidently his power and yet desires God to help his unbelief this is a rowling upon Christ If thou ca●●● doe any thing help us in Scripture phrase this kind of rowling upon Christ is called a coming to Christ it 's one thing to be coming to Christ and another thing to rest on him but yet he is a believer if he doe but come to Christ Math. 11.28 this coming to Christ is believing on him for to such he promiseth that he will refresh them and he refresheth none but believers Joh. 6.35 37 67. By coming to Christ we believe on him and he that cometh to him he will in no wise cast out if a man be but coming onwards humbled for his sins and perswaded that God is able to help him if not yet if he be grieved for his unbelief and prayes to God to help his unbelief this is coming to Christ that is making towards him and this is faith Suppose a man tell you in such a field of yours is a rich treasure if you believe the man will you not goe about to dig it up but if you doubt of the truth then you let it alone so God tels you all the treasures of life and grace are laid up in Christ this record God gives of his Son now if we believe this record we will use all good means to attain this eternal life otherwise if we doe not use the means to get this treasure we make God a lyar as if his record were not true Vse 1. It reproves the dangerous sin of such as neither relye on Christ nor rowl towards him St. John tels us we make God a lyar a fearfull thing for mortal men to make the God of truth a God of lyes now if we make God a lyar we make him no God at all if we live in unbelief we live in Atheism all such as find not their hearts resting on God or rowling towards him they make God a lyar and there is no truth in them for if we did but believe that eternal life were to be found in Christ we would not rest till we were assured of it if we know of any Inheritance left us we will ●ow from one end of the land to the other to obtain it so if we believed that the treasure of salvation were laid up in Christ we should never rest rowling towards him till we had got possession thereof Vse 2. May stir us up never to rest till we have brought our hearts to relye upon Christ to lean on him to rowl towards him if we doe not this we are Atheists therefore as we desire to make God a God of truth let ●s never rest till we have found our hearts relying on him Psal 132. ● to 6. It was a notable resolution of David in the midst of all his ●●bles that he would not give himselfe rest till he had prepared as habitation for God so let us never cease rowling towards Christ till at length we find our selves resting on him Quest What would you have us to doe to ●●ing our hearts to relye and 〈◊〉 on God Answ 1. Rowl your selves to such places where you may have means of grace Faith comes by bearing Rom 10.17 2 Rowl off your hearts from all your sins come out of your sinful corruptions rowl your selves out of your bod● of security 2 Cor 6. two last verses 3 Rowl your selves so far from all worldly comforts as that you set not your hearts on them Psal 62.10 nor on great friends Psal 146.3 4 Cast your meditation on the mighty power of God which is able to heal such untoward hearts as yours 5 Use all the means you may and endeavour with all the strength you may that God may heal you 6 If you doubt of his will and are not confident of his ability pray that God would give you a believing heart Lord help my unbelief Vse 3. For them that have rowled themselves on Christ rest not in rowling there is no rest to be had in rowling therefore from rowling 〈…〉 come to establishment in Christ and th●re rest sit down in quietnesse and confidence now if thou wouldst have a stone lye on the foundation thou most cut off all the roughnesse and unsquarenesse or else it cannot lye 〈◊〉 there is none but either he hath some doubts that make him under or else pride that is a great swelling therefore we must lay down all our high thoughts and 〈◊〉 levell with Christ for he is meek and lo●ly besides all hatred and 〈◊〉 is an uneven swelling in our hearts and how 〈◊〉 can they lye smooth in the building bowles and swelling bodies will not touch but in 〈◊〉 point smoo●● things lye flat what swelling of heart we
the claim of eternall life is wholly in him for though God hath promised all those kindes of life its onely in Christ Secondly As he reserves the claim of it in his own hands so he reserves the security of it in his own hand even as a Father doubting how his son will spend his estate he puts not into his hands the writings or evidences but he keeps them in his own hands so God saw the life he communicated to our first parents they prodigally wasted it away and therefore never since would he put it into our own hands but reserved it in the hands of Christ Rom. 4.16 Therefore it is faith that the promise might be sure If our salvation had stood upon our own works the promise had been sure onely so long as we kept our obedience but we are unsetled sometimes inlarged and sometimes straightned so that we should have been at a stand oftentimes not knowing whether we had life or no therefore he hath laid it up in Christ that it might be sure Thirdly The possession of this life is reserved for us in Christ our justification is complete in Christ here never increased though the sence of it may the first day we are regenerate we are fully justified the justification of all Christians is equall though their sanctification be not alike our life of justification is compleat but yet our life of holinesse is but imperfect We know but in part and believe but in part but it s fully laid up in Christ so for the life of consolation we have some beginnings of it here Phil. 4.7 1 Pet. 1.8 But sometimes all our comforts are lost and where then lies it but in Christ as the sap doth in the root in winter time so that in him we rejoyce alwayes Phil. 4.4 and so our eternall life is reserved in him John 14.2 3. Eph. 2.5 Fourthly In regard of the glorious manifestation of this life at the last day 2 Thes 1.10 when he shall come to be admired of all his Saints this life is now laid up for his Saints which at that day he will dispense to his servants to the admiration of all men Quest Why hath God laid up this life in his Son Reas From the impossibility of laying up life for us in the law or in the first Adam Gal. 3.21 If the Law could have given us life verily righteousnesse had been given us by the law No the law that Adam had given him in Paradise could not have secured our life but that we might forfeit it by our own fall nor could Adam himselfe give us this life for in Adam all dyed 1 Cor. 15.22 and therefore its Christ alone that hath restored as to life and glory Vse 1. Hence learn the order of all that life and grace and salvation that is derived to us God did not first give us life and then provide Christ to maintain it in us but he first appointed Christ that in him we might have life Eph. 1.3 4. He hath chosen us in Christ Christ is the first fruites of all that life that we enjoy he loved Christ and in him loved us he first gave him eternall life that he might give it to whom he would John 5.26 he poured this life first on his head and from him this life runs down to the lowest skirt of his garment to the meanest member that belongs to him he poured on him the oyl of grace and from him it drops down upon us he first crowned him with glory that he might glorifie us Vse 2. It teacheth us the dead estate of all men by nature if all our life be laid up in Christ then such as want this life they want pardon of sins and want holinesse and want comfort and want eternall life Eph. 2.11 12. Eph. 4.19 We by nature are aliens from the life of God strangers from the Covenant that as strangers neither meddle nor make with that which is none of theirs so we have nothing to doe with the promises of life till we be in Christ let naturall men goe look at themselves as dead men all their best comforts are but as the crackling of thorns they may warm themselves a while with the sparkles of their own fire but this they shall have at length They shall lie down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Nay by nature we have no hopes of eternall life we must be regenerate to this hope 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Vse 3. May teach all such as live in a dead estate to look out where they may have life look into your own hearts there you shall not find life look into the world that is not able to give you life but get Christ and then you get life as Jacob said to his sons Why stand ye gazing one upon another have ye not heard there is corn in Egypt why go up go and buy it that we may live Gen. 42.2 3. So the Spirit saith to us when we find our hearts ready to starve for want of this life for want of pardon of sin of grace of comfort why stand ye gazing upon the profits and pleasures and contents of this world none whereof can give you life doe you not hear that there is life laid up in Christ goe and buy of him it s the speech of Wisdome even of Christ the wisdome of his Father Prov. 3.85 Who so findeth me findeth life and all that hate me love death Vse 4. Of consolation to all those that have found their parts in the Lord Christ if you have found him you have found life pardon of sin peace of conscience and life eternall Rom. 5.1 If you have found him your sins are done away and no Saint under heaven is justified more then you 2. Having found him thou hast a life of holinesse said up in him so that though we want zeal wisdome patience we may fetch it from him and though we find our hearts sometimes drooping under heavy discouragements and afflictions yet in him thou mayst rejoyce alwayes and what though our life here be poor and base yet there is an eternall life said up for us in him and when he appears we shall appear with him in glory Col. 3.3 4. And the more we may comfort our selves in that our life is not laid up in Satans hands for then we should never finger any of it nor in our own hands for we should lose it at every hand but this is our comfort that our life is laid up in Christ and reserved safely for us in him and therefore it may teach Gods people that if our life be laid up in Christ we must be dayly spinning out life from him what ever we doe let us doe all in the Name and power of Christ 1 Thes 5.9 10. all the peace and comfort we find in our selves or families let us derive it from him live not upon the stock of your own graces but fetch your dayly supply from him Gal. 1.20 I live yet not I but
Christ but not Christ himself and such gifts as might tend to profit but Peter tell him Thy money perish with thee Act. 8.18 19. So Balaam wished O that I might dye the death of the righteous Numb 23.10 but he desired not Christ but own happinesse and freedom from hell and misery and therefore what ever gift he had besides as indeed he had a goodly gift of prophesie he never sought Christ in any of them Nay further a true christian that affects Christ himself seeks him not only without respect to profit or gain or happinesse hereafter but even here in this life in the Ordinances of God wherein he seeks for help against his lusts for increase of grace for supply of comfort he doth not so affect them as to find Christ in them When David fled from Absalon and the Priests carryed the Ark after him as knowing they should never meet with a Prince that more favoured and upheld Gods worship then he David bad the Priests carry back the Ark again If I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me back again and shew me both it and his habitation but if he say I have no delight in thee here I am let him doe what seemeth him good as if he had said the Church shall not be so much prejudiced as to be deprived of the Ark of God for my sake without which they cannot offer their solemn Sacrifices nor find the presence of God therefore he considers that thereby Gods Name should be dishonoured and the Church wronged and rather then he would doe that he would part with the very Ark the presence of God and his Ordinances which yet was his greatest care and desire Psal 27.4 Now this is an argument of grace in sincerity to be willing to part with the Ordinances rather then have God dishonoured and the Church prejudiced This was Moses care rather then God should be dishonoured by the Heathen he would have God blot his name out of the book of life Exod. 32.32 33. A true christian perfers Gods honour above the pardon of sin above the best graces yea above salvation it self if a christian desire the Ordinances it is that he may find the beauty and loving kindnesse of the Lord in them Psal 63.1 2 3. if he desire the subduing of his lusts it 's not so much for his own comfort as that the power of Christ might he magnified in him he desired salvation if he desires gifts and graces it is not that he might be made excellent but that the grace of Christ might be magnified in him if he desire salvation it not so much for his own joy and happinesse as that he may be with Christ Phil. 1.28 having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Cant. 5.10 My beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand not only of persons but the chiefest of ten thousand benefits and priviledges which God gives pardon of sin and grace and comfort and salvation it self Christ is better then all these and he that thus affects Christ hath the Son and so hath life Grounds of this 1 Christ must be so received as God gives him but God gives us Christ first in every Ordinance when Philip preached to the Eunuch it 's said he preached Jesus to him Act. 8.35 So in the Sacrament you must first take and eat his flesh and drink his blood and then you have remission of sins Mat. 26.26 No gift of grace but is given through Christ if it be lively and true Herod received joy Jehu zeal Ahab humiliation but none of these received life because they received the shell and not the kernel the casket and not the Pearl the gift but not Christ and therefore their graces were not lively Simon Magus believed yet had no lively faith because Christ wanting except we find Christ we find no true grace Hos 4.8 in me is thy fruit found without me you can doe nothing Joh. 15.5 Hence let us gather an estimate of our selves whether we have life or not If you have the Son you have life try therefore whether you labour not more for the loaves for the benefits of Christ then for Christ himself if thou findest thou comest to the Ordinances rather to find Christ then the pardon of sin and comfort and happinesse and salvation if with the Church in the Canticles thou seekest Christ and not the loaves if thou with her inquirest of the watchmen where thou mayst find him whom thy soul loveth if we thus affect Christ we have the Son we could never have sought him thus if he had not first sought us but è contra if we have longing desires after pardon of sin and after grace and salvation those desires indeed are ordinarily sincere but there may be an Harlots affection in them as an Harlot seeks her an husband not for his persons sake but for his goods sake that her debts may be paid and that she may be a sharer in his wealth now she seeks him not for his ends but for her own so if a man shall desire Christ that he may have his sins pardoned and his conscience pacified and seek not Christ himself why this is but an whorish affection whereas one that loves her husband she will have him though she have but the bare man though she begge with him so one that truly loves Christ he would be glad and think himselfe happy to have him though he should never see good day after never find peace or quiet after Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is nothing on earth that I desire in comparison of thee This will exclude from having of Christ 1. All such as are so far from seeking Christ himselfe that they doe not seek the benefits of Christ they look at grace and christian duties as melancholly wearisome things for pardon of sins they never look after it and for heaven they hope they shall doe as well as others why these men they will neither have Christ nor any thing of his 2. This excludes such from having Christ as have more desire of his benefits then Christ himself pardon of sin and grace and peace of conscience and comfort that they look after but Christ they forget why as yet our seeking is not sincere if a woman perceive that her love seeks more for wealth and dowry then her person no wonder if she hold off so if Christ find we come to him and seek for pardon of sin and grace and peace more then for himself no wonder if he keep off and hide himselfe from us because this may come from self-love from respect to our own good and yet nature teacheth us not to seek such things and those desires are ordinarily good beginnings for indeed christians at first are full of self-love but yet Christ will never fully reveale himselfe till we seek his person rather then his gifts therefore first labour to get Christ
of a promise which is fed by a promise Many times a word of grace and wise admonition sinks so deep into the heart as that it makes many a one amend his wicked wayes and take better courses and reform his life but this is no evident signe of spirituall life So an hypocrite may be so far convinced as to turn the stream of his life and yet without all power of godlinesse and the ground is we cannot receive life from the words or works of the Law it 's altogether impossible Gal. 3.21 All true spirituall life is from some word of promise that hath been dispen●ed to us in the Word The word of the Law may reclaim us from giving outward offence but yet without all respect or obedience to God But when we are quickened by a word of promise then the love of God constraineth us Obj. Is it not ordinary for the word of the Law to cast down and humble us before we can lay hold on a promise Answ True Yet this is not that which makes a man a new man this may reach to the reformation of many outward sins but yet it gives not spirituall life till we begin to think of and long after Christ and meditate and talk of him till at length the sight of Christ doth so work on us that we do not only long after him but we so receive him and imbrace him that we are inlightned by him A third cause of life is the Spirit of God John 3.6 There is a shedding abroad of the Spirit into the heart of every regenerate man that he hath not the same spirit he had before Now a mans spirit is the bent and inclination of the soul Eph. 4.23 Be ye renewed in the spirits of your minds The soul and the body is the same But there is another spirit they see other things they never saw before judge otherwise then they did before now they have new thoughts and judgements and affections so that their heart is far off from earthly things and let on spirituall things All things are become new A new heart new conference new imployment new company the whole man hath another frame of spirit in him He that finds it thus hath life For application Consider therefore how you finde your hearts speaking concerning your estates Do you finde indeed that sometimes you have had good motions cast in but before God was pleased to call you to his grace nothing did you good Doe you finde your life wrought by a spirit of promise Do you finde that you are renewed to a new inclination and frame of spirit then you have life Your life springs from true causes if not you have not life A second sort of signes of life is from the effects of spirituall life And 1 Justification or pardon of sins is a principall part of our spirituall life Psal 32.2 3. And this is called justification to life Rom. 5.18 Even as a condemned mans pardon is the life of the man so is the pardon of our sins the life of our souls Now the first effect flowing from the pardon of our sin is 1 Some inward peace of conscience some inward satisfaction that he never found before My sin is not pardoned at least not manifested so to be till I finde some measure of inward peace Rom. 5.1 What was it that burthened thy conscience but guilt of sin If therefore God say to my soul Son thy sins be forgiven thee upon this follows the tranquility of the mind and sometimes in that unspeakable manner that passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Though this be not so ordinary yet they alwayes finde a secret peace and ease as if you had cast off milstones from the heart Isa 32.17 The effect of righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever if sin be pardoned peace and everlasting assurance follows A 2. effect of this life of Justification is that look as you see in a morall life no man hath received life but he strives to maintain it so that all that he hath will he give for his life So if thou hast received the life of the pardon of thy sins thou shalt finde a serious and constant care of preserving that life and peace so that you will let all go rather then the peace of your conscience Thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal 63.4 And therefore if I finde a tender care in me to maintain my peace it 's a signe I have received life seeing I am so carefull to maintain it A man that hath been in a great debt and lately paid it he is carefull to run on the score no more so when God hath blotted out the score of our sins a Christian is very sollioitous to sin no more but that he may live an holy and spotlesse life all his dayes Notable is the example of Joseph Gen. 39. How shall I commit this great wickednesse and sin against God How shall I break my peace of conscience and run on a new score Sometimes indeed Gods children have received pardon of sins and yet afterwards turned Gods grace into wantonnesse but withall observe if they have been overtaken with some grievous lusts the losse of their peace and favour of God hath been more bitter to them then death it self and if the Lord give us hearts follicitous to maintain our peace it is a sign that he hath given us peace those sins are pardoned which we abhor it 's the nature of life to preserve it self and to expell what may be an enemy to life And this is a signe our peace is not counterfeit but sound if we be carefull to preserve it A 3. effect of our life of Justification is that which our Saviour gives Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her because she loves much He that loves much hath much forgiven him The love of God in some measure proportionable to the sin pardoned is a good evidence of the pardon of our sins Gods pardons are lively pardons they leave not a man as he was but whom he pardons them he heals This woman was a notorious Harlot her loving much shewed that her many sins were forgiven her according to the multitude and measure of sins pardoned such is the measure of our love to God and his Saints And indeed there is none hath so little forgiven him but he thinks it a great deal as indeed well he may and thinks himselfe bound to love God abundantly For application Consider therefore what peace thou hast Perhaps thou wilt say I have had peace all my life long but such peace is ill rooted it springs not from a word of God And 2 It 's fruitlesse Thou sayst thou hast peace but what care hast thou to maintain it and to expell thy sins which hinder thy peace And again if thou hast such peace where is thy love If that be wanting pardon of sin is wanting If thou wouldst have good ground of the pardon of thy sins try thy self
a dead heartednesse to the world For a man to rise early and sit up late follow his work hard take much pains is not a thing to be discommended Prov. 10.14 Prov. 31.27 It 's commended in the good Housewife even the greatest Princesse may not eat the bread of idlenesse then we see diligence in worldly businesse may well stand with grace but yet the same person must be dead to the world his heart must be set on things above these are not his life that is laid up in Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. His heart is crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 Though his employment be in the world yet his conversation is in heaven Phil. 1.20 Prov. 6.5 6. It 's made a part of wisdome to be as busie Ants gathering and laying up but all the while his hands are there his heart is in heaven he doth things in obedience to God by the rule of his Word and for his freedome in Gods service another may do the same work with the same care and successe and yet the heart far unlike 3 The love of our enemies is a particular virtue of Gods Saints Matth. 5.45 to 47. Now this very grace hath in it contrary works in our heart it 's like fire and water both naturally our hearts are very cold and hard and frozen like ice towards our enemies but Christ comes and thawes these frostlings and warms us with compassion towards them that his heart oftentimes mourns for them to see them take such unjust courses against them who have not wronged them and on the other side whereas a naturall man if he see his enemy he boyls in wrath and passion against him love comes like a cool water and cools the heat of passion in our heart For application Wouldst thou know whether thou hast life or no Why hast thou found thy heart affected with joy for Gods goodnesse to thee and yet withall grieved and sorrowfull for thy unkinde dealing with him These are certain evidences of the life of grace in thee You may find many affected and comforted with the Word as Herod was but if this joy were of God it would not vanish away like smoak but would administer so much the more sorrow and mourning for sin though a Christians joy may suddenly vanish yet it alwayes leaves behinde an inward grieving for sin to keep possession for it 2 How do you finde your hearts affected to Gods worship Do you finde your hearts generally unwilling to pray or hear This is an ill signe But if you finde your hearts willing and the more willing the more carefull withall In this case there is life But if a man have fear without joy or joy without fear the heart is not in a good temper 3. How dost thou finde thy heart in tribulation Dost thou finde no consolation supporting thee This is an ill signe But if thou findest with David in the multitude of thy troubled thoughts Gods comforts sustain thy soul Psal 94.18 in this case thou hast life 4. Observe your carriages Doe you bear patiently with bad men and yet not so patiently as to bear with evill Patience and zeal must goe together 5. Are you of a meek gentle and flexible temper It s well But how are you in Gods cause Are you there inflexible and immovable so that you will not abate an hoose in Gods cause Why both these are a life of grace 6. Thou sayst thou art modest and thinkest meanly of thy selfe I but how is this grace coupled for God sends them two and two together as he did his Disciples to ballance one another Hast thou withall a lofty spirit in the wayes of God an heart lift up to heavenly things Why such a spirit hath life The most modest should be most magnanimous 7. Look at worldly businesse Canst thou be diligent in thy calling Why this God requires But how stands thy heart Art thou busie in the world and yet thy heart dead to the world This is a signe of true spirituall life 8. If we finde our hearts so abounding in love that like fire it thawes our cold frozen affections and again like water can cool our hot passionate spirits why this love is a fruit of faith and a signe of life it s a signe our sins are forgiven us if we have hearts forgiving others Now we come to the effects of Sanctification as they are exprest in the life of a Christian and they are answerable to the effects of naturall life The effects of naturall life are principally five 1. Motion When a creature is able to move it selfe in its place to those duties of this or that life it s said to live If a thing move not but by others it s not alive or if it move out of its place it s not alive as a stone thrown up moves downward and fire moves upward but this is not properly life but rather a desire of rest and for things that move they move according to the life they have as a tree a vegetative life a beast a sensitive life a man a rationall life but if a man have a spirituall motion in his proper place it s a signe of spirituall life sometimes a man reacheth out of his place reaching to higher matters and more ambitious thoughts then his calling leads to those move not from an inward principle of grace but from levity of heart so the Pharisees they moved to holy duties but it was for credit others for profit for loaves John 6.26 It s one thing to move to spirituall duties out of an inward inclination and affection to them another thing to move out of levity or desire of eminency it is one thing to move to them out of love another thing to move to them out of respect or credit or profit Why this is but as the moving of a stone out of its naturall gravity Absolom had a marvellous affection to reign and oh that he were King every one should have justice 2 Sam. 15.13 But he was now out of his place and therefore the thing he did was but to attempt the cutting off his Fathers life but that is life properly that moves in its place Again a man may move in his place and yet by an outward principle as a clock moves by the weight that hangs on it so a man may move to some duties of Religion by the weight of the Law or authority hanging on him Again Jehu may move in his calling very busily and yet have no spirituall life so it must be inquired whether the duty a man doth be spirituall or no. And a duty is spirituall 1. When we are sensible of our insufficiency and therefore depend upon Christ that thorough him we may doe all things 2. When we have respect to the Word of God as our rule 3. When we doe all for the glory of God Gal. 2.20 The life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God So far a man lives as he denies
keeps nothing but what it converts to its own nourishment so a Christian cuts away every superfluity if it be a thing of no purpose or no use to his calling though it may to others this he abandons James 1.21 But that knowledge which may be either necessary or expedient for him that a Christian retains a Christian casts out that chiefly which is contrary to grace 1. Doubtings for that is contrary to the life of grace 2. It casts away all presumption and selfe-dependance perfect love casts out fear and patience strives against frowardnesse and every grace against its contrary so that he may grow up to full holinesse the life of grace casts out the life of the world so much of the world as is cumbersome to his spirit so much a Christian lays down A fifth act of life is the begetting of his kind nature grows up to this ability though at first it be but weak so grace no sooner moves or grows or feeds in any measure but it hath a minde to beget others as soon as ever the woman of Samaria began to be acquainted with Christ she ran to all her neighbors and tells them she had met with one that told her all that ever she had done Is not this the Christ John 4.29 This is the nature of spirituall life as soon as they are well begot themselves they are ready to beget others Indeed a Christian may hide himselfe a while but as soon as he is assured of life himselfe he propagates the same to others John 1.41 to 46. When one Disciple was called he goes and calls another to come and see Psal 51.10 11 12 13. David professeth that if God will but assure him of mercy and establish him therein then he will teach others Gods ways and sinners shall be converted unto him he that is once converted himselfe his care is to convert others to God Try your selves by these signes Doe you finde your selves moving a life of grace growing up therein feeding upon Christ expelling the enemies of life and drawing on others to the same life these are evident signes of life if you finde it not thus there is no true signe of the life of grace in you 3. This life may be discerned by the properties of it by finding of which we may discern of our spirituall life And there are three principall properties of life 1. Where ever life is there is some warmth When Elisha had stretched himselfe over the dead childe the flesh of the dead childe began to wax warm a signe of life 2 Kings 4.34 So the presence of the Spirit united to the soul of man is the cause of all spiritual heat Rom. 12.11 Fervent in spirit Therefore the Spirit is compared to fire Mat. 3.11 1 Thes 5.19 Quench not the Spirit A signe that the Spirit is of a fervent nature So 2 Tim. 1.6 I put thee in remembrance to blow up the graces of Gods Spirit A Metaphor taken from blowing up the fire with bellows all which imply that the Spirit of Christ communicated to Christians is a fervent spirit Where there is no warmth there is no life If our spirit begin to wax warm it s a signe of spirituall life as the two Disciples that went to Emaus said Luke 22.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whilest he spake those things Implying the Word hath a power to quicken and warm and heat the spirit of a Christian This same warmth and heat is exprest divers wayes 1. The very knowledge of a Christian is warm whereas in all others the knowledge is cold and meerly speculative without any life or power There is a zeal according to knowledge and there is a knowledge according to zeal The zeal that is not according to knowledge is a rash vaine zeal Rom. 10.2 So it is a cold empty knowledge that hath not zeal with it John was a burning and a shining light shewing every severall condition what they should doe but he burnt up the hypocrisie and lusts of the body and inflamed their affections with zeal and warmth as Herod heard him gladly Where there is truth of light and knowledge there is burning The knowledge of a Christian makes him fruitfull in a Christian course 2 Pet. 1.8 So that whatever he knows either necessary or expedient for him to doe he will doe it and he will cause others to doe their duties that belong unto him such is the heat of his spirit that he will not suffer his Brother to lie in sin Lev. 19.17 Now another man knows many things but doth them not nor thinks he is bound to doe them but a Christians knowledge is of that nature that it will not suffer him or his Brother to lie in any sin True Christians are thought oft-times to be more busie then needs 2. There is warmth in our breath as long as there is life in us there is breath and that breath is warm so if there be any spirituall life there is alwayes some warm breathing some warmth in his breathing towards God there is alwayes some warmth in his prayers the prayers of hypocrites are but cold and empty and vanish away but there is alwayes some breath of life in a good mans prayers even then when we know not what to pray for or how to pray yet then there is alwayes something in him that expresseth warmth his very sighings and groans come from some kinde of heat and life Rom. 8.16 2. As their breathing towards God is warm so they breath warmth one towards another so that in their conference if they speak of the things of the Word they doe not speak slightly and overly without any affection but they speak of them with reverence and fear and love and affection 3. There is that kinde of warmth in him as that thereby he doth not onely affect the Word but he is able to digest it in some measure there is no life but there is some power to digest something if not strong meat Psal 119.20 My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to thy judgements So Psal 42. My soul panteth after thee This very panting and breathing of the soul after God so unites the soul unto God that thereby he digests something that inables him to walk before God in the land of the living whereas an hypocrite is hopelesse to any good 4. If things be warm the more they lye together the more warmth and heat cold logs laid together heat not one another but two or three brands put together are enough to kindle an heap of wood so take a Christian that is very cold and almost benummed yet put him to two or three more and one word kindles another and their spirits are more and more inflamed more fit to pray and fitter to admonish and comfort and help forward one another 1 Pet. 4.8 Fervent love among Brethren so kindles one another that they are inflamed to any good offices but when Christians are disjoynted they lose all
Preach being read in their Synagogues every Sabbath Doth not that imply that reading is preaching Answ No it implyes that when he is read he is also preached for they used with the reading to expound and lay open the law to them Amos 8.11 12 13. God threatneth a famine of hearing his Word never was there a famine of reading since the Church was in any measure established but it 's threatned as a grievous curse to want the word preached Hos 4.6 My people perish for want of knowledge because thou hast rejected knowledge I will also reject thee Now wherein they did refuse knowledge did they refuse to read That cannot be conceived but because they refused knowledge to instruct and comfort the souls of the people Vse 3. May teach all that are believers diligently to be conversant in the reading of the writings of Saint John and the other Apostles Shall the holy Ghost have an hand to write and shall not we have an hand to receive or an eye to read To us were those Epistles written even to all that believe to the end of the world Rom. 15.4 How much then is the Church of Rome to blame that lock up those writings from the people that they may not hear them but in an unknown tongue which they understand not nay sometimes the Priests understand not the Latine they read much lesse are they able to expound it Vse 4. Of direction to carnal men what will you say they have no benefit or profit by reading the Word Yea surely 1 By hearing the Word expounded they may be brought on to faith 2 The very reading it self is useful to beget knowledge to stir up their memory to quicken their desires 3 They serve to discover to the people what sin is what moral works be so that they have a power to keep men in civil conformity so that there is good use of them to morall men but they were chiefly directed to believers But yet for unbelievers how should this stir them up to be diligent in hearing the Word preached for may I read much two or three times a day and yet little the nearer salvation How should it provoke them then to give diligent heed to hearing that so wherein reading prevails not hearing may Vse 5. To teach all those that are believers not only to read but to expect and look for in reading those benefits before mentioned if you do not find those benefits by reading you read unprofitably and take Gods Ordinance in vain Now for the ends of his writings which were two 1 That they might know that they had eternal life 2 That they might believe on the Name of the Son of God Doct. 2. Such as doe believe on the Name of Jesus Christ by reading the Epistles of John may come to know they have eternal life 1 Because he sets before them where eternal life is to be found and that is in Jesus Christ as vers 12. 2 He directs them to certain means whereby they may attain eternal life As 1 Confession of sins 1 John 1.9 2. By looking up to Christ as our Propitiation and Advocate cap. 2.1 2. 3. By walking in the light cap. 1.8 9. 3 He gives certain signs whereby we may know whether we be in an estate of eternal life As 1 Walking in the light cap. 1.7 2 Keeping his Commandements cap. 2.3 3 Purifying our selves from sin cap. 3.3 4 Love of our brethren cap. 3.14 5 Boldnesse towards God cap. 3.21 Vse 1. This may be a just refutation of the Popish Doctrine that saith we cannot know that we have eternal life but if that be true then St. Johns end in writing these Epistles is disappointed and not onely St. John but the holy Ghost himself is deceived Whereas they tell us we cannot have a certain but conjectural knowledge only there is a contradiction for if a man saith he knows such a thing it implyes he is certain of it or else he speaks safely and were it for nothing else this doctrine of doubtings were a sufficient discouragement against their Religion that Church that trains up her selfe and children to be ignorant of their Father is not the true Spouse of Christ but an Harlot a sign the Church of Rome hath mixt her selfe with so many false gods that she knows not of whom her children are begot Vse 2. It condemns their excluding the vulgar sort from reading the Scriptures for if by them we may come to know Christ and that we have eternal life then take away them and you take away a principal means of salvation Vse 3. For such Christians as are doubtful of their estate above all the writings of the Apostle read this Epstile it was the main scope of St. John in this Epistle that their joy might be full and that they might know they had eternal life here you shall finde a good ground-work of your good estate Vse 4. To teach all believers to know what they have profited by reading it 's an usual thing to content our selves if we do but read a chapter and pray every morning and our conscience is not satisfied if we omit it but a man may read and pray and yet get no good but if you would read profitably so read that you may know that you have eternal life when you have so read then you have read to purpose therefore in reading learn to search out diligently the knowledge of your estates This verse declares a double end of St. Johns writing this Epistle one was that believers might know they have eternal life of which before the second end was That they might believe on the Name of the Son of God Doct. 3. It 's one of the holy ends and scope of the holy Scripture that believers might belive St. John when he wrote his Gospel it was for this end That they might believe John 20.31 For though believing be already wrought yet they that do believe had need to believe more the Word is the mighty power of God to lead believers from faith to faith Rom. 1.17 that is from one degree of faith to another Phil 1.25 as that is not only faith but increase of faith so 1 Thess 3.10 there is not any of Gods servants even the most exemplary Christians but there is some defect in their faith which had need to be supplyed and this may be the first reason Reas 1. Taken from the defects that are found in believers the supply whereof they had need to increase and grow up to 1 They had need to grow up to the belief of some principles which they believed not before and this is a defect in the objects of faith many of the Apostles believed not the Resurrection of Christ nay Thomas said he should not believe except he should see the print of his nayles John 20.25 So many of the Corinths believed not the Resurrection from the dead a main Article of Faith the Thessalonians lacked this in their Faith they