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A00975 Ioy in tribulation. Or, Consolations for the afflicted spirits. By Phinees Fletcher, B.D. and minister of Gods Word at Hilgay in Norfolke Fletcher, Phineas, 1582-1650. 1632 (1632) STC 11080; ESTC S115109 82,914 348

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wholly freed from al incombrance of the disease Now as when our children through bodily distemper and sickly weakenesse cannot doe what they desire and endevour to doe and doe some things which they hate themselves and are to us offeusive we impute to them neither their omissions or commissions so dealeth God with his children Secondly as the Lord by Jesus the Sonne of Nun brought in his people into the land of Canaan and trod all their enemies under their feet● yet left some of the Ca●anites among them for divers ends So is i● with us For all that story of Israels passage from Egypt to the land of rest is but as a type or picture of Gods dealing with all his Saints The Lord our God hath given us the true Jesus to lead us into possession of that heavenly Canaan our eternall life and kingdom of glory Now hee hath already entred us into that eternall life for hee that beleeveth hath eternall life and taken and holds possession of glory for us For in him wee alreadie sit in heavenly places He hath conquered our enemies and led them in shew triumph yet for some ends hath left some of these enemies and hath not yet fully destroyed them And as among that people some of those Ganaanits were reserved as enemies some as servants the former to prove Israel whether they would hearken to the Commandements of the Lord and to teach them warre the other to helpe them in some workes as the G●beonites Iosh. 9.21.27 so hath the Lord in the faithfull left some of these inhabitants of our corrupt nature as well to teach us spirituall warfare as to prove us whether wee will cleave to him and hence is it that hee frameth for us and giveth us spirituall armour and commandeth us to exercise our selves in it And such are all our ●infull corruptions and rebellions as some also to serve us to doe some good office for us and such is death which is to us as those servants to the Prodigall appointed by our Lord and Father to pull off our ragges that wee may be clothed upon and as those who tooke from Iehoshuah his filthie garments and set a faire Diadem upon him As Haman to Mordecai who against his will clothed him with royall appa●ell set the Crowne-royall on his head and brought him into the presence of the great King Now then looke as it was with those Israelites and the fierie Serpents when God had by the sight of the Brazen Serpent cured them of their wounds and bitings especially if withall hee had pulled out their stings they might be truly said to bee perfectly saved from those Serpents although they were yet among them and did many wayes annoy and encumber them● So when the Lord hath not onely cancelled our sinne and healed those poysonous bitings of it but taken out the sting also of it that it shall not be able to kill we are said truly to bee saved and delivered already from sinne and death which still are enemies but not able to effect their malice or doe any evill to us which Christ hath not or will not tnrne to our eternall good and happinesse Surely then this truth that the Sonne of God blessed for ever is our Saviour is a privilege wonderfull especially if wee consider the manner how he wrought salvation for us Looke then first to his Incarnation wherein he fitted himselfe for our redemption then to his passions and exaltation whereby he hath p●rfected our happinesse and we shall finde unspeakeable consolations in every one of them First there is no Creature can boast of so glorious a prerogative as a fai●hfull man that God refusing the nature of Angels hath taken our nature into him and become man l●ke us in all things covered and troubled with the same infirmities that from the sense of them in himselfe hee might more compassionately intercede for us more effectually and speedily helpe us The Word was made flesh Ioh. 1.14 of the seede of Abraham Heb. 2. 16. and of David Rom. 1. 3. conceived in the wombe of a Virgine and borne by her Thus hee became one with us Flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone so nearely was this our nature united to him that as body and soule make up one man so God and man make one Christ that as the Word is sayed to bee flesh so the blood of that flesh is called The Bloud of God Secondly in this our flesh hee gave full satisfaction to the Justice of God by suffering in that nature in which God was offended This Prince of our salvation was consecrate through afflictions Hee gave his backe to the smiters his cheekes to the nippers he held not his face from shame and spitting Hee was attached bound accursed and condemned as an offender in whose mouth there was no guile by the same Iudg who knew and confessed himselfe innocent he was rejected by the heathen by his owne people abused mocked and scorned by all sorts nayled to the Crosse there dyed and after buried and not onely swamme through his owne bloud but waded through the fiery streame of Gods wrath for us Oh then if he hath loved us to his death how much more will hee love us to our life Will the Lord after all his sufferings lose the soule for which he suffered Or can he who thus loved us being then enemies that hee chose to beare off the wrath of God for us by drawing it on himselfe suffer any part of that wrath to fall upon us now that hee hath redeemed us to himselfe killed the enmitie and drawne our hearts to thirst longue and pine for him and his righteousnesse Thirdly that he might perfect us as hee dyed for our sinnes so he rose againe for our justification ascended into heaven and having received all power and authority sitteth at the right hand of God a continual Intercessour for us and shall thence descend with the shout of an Angell and the trumpet of God to raise quicken a●d receive us to glorie I cannot but here therefore insert that sweet meditation of holy Augustine in Psal. 148. From his heavenly Countrey hee brought all good things unto us and in our Countrey endured all our evils yet promised us that wee should be there from whence he came and said I will that where I am they may be also with me So wonderfull was his love that because hee was with u● in our habitations wee should be with him in his Mansions Oh mortall man what hath he promised thee that thou shalt live for ever And dost thou not beleeve him Beleeve beleeve It is more that hee hath alreadie done then that which hee hath promised What hath hee done hee died for thee What hath hee promised that thou should'st live with him It is more incredible that the Eternall should once dye then that a mortall should live for ever Now
these Sacraments and nature of these seales what rivers of comfort must needs flow into the heart of him who rightly partaketh them Look as Princes grave their owne portraitures in their seales sitting in state upon their Thrones invested with their royall apparell adorned with their Crownes and Scepters So the Lord Jesus Christ in these his Signets hath lively represented himselfe in his death conquering triumphing and leading captive all our enemies and even trampling them under our feete But Princes can grave nothing on their seales but their dead Images Not so here For in these the very person of the Lord Jesus is given us as being not onely represented but presented and exhibited to the faithfull The body of Christ feeding and strengthning the blood of Christ washing and more than wine cheering up our fainting spirits is there offred and given us who reach out the hand of faith to receive him Now how hee should be unhappy who hath Christ or misse of comfort whose soule is filled with the Lord Jesus it is not possible to conceive But let us consider them a little severally Baptisme is that Sacrament wherein God applyes the bloud of Christ to wash us from all the pollution of our sin and to communi●●te unto us his own glorious purenes Let us therefore take some notice first as well of the filthinesse of sinne as our filthinesse by it and then of this excellent purenesse Certaine is it that our created understanding cannot find power in it selfe to conceive much lesse words to expresse the infinite loathsomnesse of sinne Hence is it that in Scripture the wisedome of God resembleth it to all those things which are to our senses most abhorred sinne to stinking mudde a sinner to aswine wallowing in that mire sinne to a loathsome vomit a sinner to a dogge licking up his vomit in a word sinne to death a sinner to a rotten carkasse and his throat to an open Sepulchre exhaling and belching out stench and putrefaction so infectious that one sinne entring into the world tainted and slue the whole world with sinne turning Saints into swine Angels into Divels so loathsome that even both the materials of man in the very touch defile and the most pure and holy duties passing through a sinfull heart are altogether abhorred and abominable It staineth the very righteousnesse of the Saints who are not on earth yet absolutely clensed from it so that in it selfe it is no better than a filthy clout This is our estate from which by Christ applied unto us in Baptisme wee are delivered Secondly ponder well what is this image of Christ which Baptisme imprinteth upon us It is even the Divine nature that glorious beauty of holinesse which in God the blessed Angels above all other attributes admire and prayse Esa. 6.3 Surely if any thing can be in God more excellent than other then holinesse is it As the face is in the body so is holinesse in the Lord the very beauty of the Divine Nature And as a passionate Lover is even ravished with the presence and sight of his beloved so is it the compleate happinesse of the creature to behold that face of God shining with that ravishing bewty of holinesse Men sweare by the greater but because none is greater than God therefore God sweareth by himselfe but in himselfe by nothing that I remember but his holinesse Oh then how unspeakeable is the comfort of this holy Ordinance which clensing us from such a filthinesse washeth us into such a beauty Againe the Lords Supper is that holy Mysterie wherein the Spirit perfecteth this worke which hee hath begun in us and throughly assures us Christ. Looke as when the wax is hard the first impression changeth the forme and mak●th some though no perfect print of the Image ingraved in the seale so that Image of God which by Baptisme is stamped upon us but by reason of our sinfull hard hearts as yet in part onely is by often applying the Lord in that other Seale more perfectly expressed and more lively pourtrayed in us So being entred into life by Baptisme wee are nourished by the Lords Supper and more strengthned till wee attaine unto full growth and ripenesse CHAP. XII Meditation in these comforts given in the Sacraments NOw here againe let us commune with our owne hearts and say Why oh my soule art thou so distracted and rent with doubts and distrustfull feares Hast thou not the seales of Gods Covenant for thee yea in thee If hee will doe thee good shall any creature bee able to hurt thee If he will knit my heart to him in his feare what shall separate it from his love Oh be perswaded for which thou hast so strong evidence and assurance That no tribulation nor anguish nor life nor death nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come shall be able to seperate thee from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Now therefore cast thy burthen upon his truth leane and stablish all thy hopes upon these his sealed Promises Oh let perfect love cast out all distrust and feare Assure thy selfe hee will not nay in his truth cannot faile thee in such assurances How should not he pitty his owne though never so weake life in thee who pittied thy death in sinne How should hee hate thee now his childe who loved thee once an enemy Oh my God as thou hast given me an eye in some measure to see my sinfull filthinesse so hast thou given me an heart in the same measure to loath my selfe so polluted and filthy Lord thou hast made mee to know and I desire with more feeling to acknowledge that I am beyond measure beyond mine owne apprehension in nature horrible and lothsome my roote rottennesse my stalke corruption my fruit contagion more vile than the earth I tread on more polluted than the dung I scorne to tread on But oh incomprehensible heigth depth bredth and length of thy grace those thine infinitely pure eies could even then with compassion behold this unmeasurably impure and infectious mire when no eye pittied me when I had no pitty on my selfe even then hadst thou compassion on me When I was cast out as the execrable and loathsome dunghill of the world even then d●ddest thou not despise me I was dead in sinne stinking in the grave of my lusts yet even then didst thou say unto me Live Thou washedst mee with the water of life the Blood of the Lord Jesus annoyntedst me with the oyle of thy gracious Spirit and diddest set thine owne beauty upon me Thou hast nourished me with the true Manna That bread of heaven which giveth life unto the world And daily dost thou vouchsafe to renew mee after thine image and to strengthen thy life and nature in me And now my God is there any thing like this to be like to thee Oh what an honour what a Crowne is this unto me In all other
faith to an infallible assurance of Gods gracious purpose to justifie and glorifie them so will it as plainely appeare that it is their duty to labour for this growth and to give their soules no rest till they finde this blessed estate sealed up and throughly setled upon them which will be manifested unto us first by many testimonies secondly by some reason taken from the Word Thus our Saviour chargeth us Feare not little Flocke for it is your Fathers good pleasure to give you the kingdome Where our gracious Lord laying downe that ground namely the certaine purpose and promise of God fully decreeing nay delighting to give us the crowne of glory thence raiseth up this command and teacheth how to expect it even without feare The like is that in the Heb. 10. 19.23 where the Apostle premising that boldnesse of faith whereby wee may enter into the holiest by the bloud of Christ builds up this confidence of faith by this exhortation Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering and giveth a strong reason For he is faithfull that hath promised Who will also doe it Very obvious and frequent are such places condemning this wavering and distrust of Gods gracious purpose toward us and commanding us with assurance of faith to lay hold of these promises Adde to these that vehement and evident exhortation of the Apostle Examine your selves whether you be in the faith● Prove your owne selves Know you not your owne selves how that Iesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates Where ●irst hee taketh it as granted that Christians may by examination know themselves whether Christ dwel in them secondly he earnestly exciteth them to make triall proofe of this their estate Beyond all exception and cavill is that charge of the Spirit Wherefore the rather Brethren give all diligence to make your calling and ele●tion sure But here also some difficulty is objected For although wee now finde our selves in a good estate and have firme assurance of our present happinesse yet how should wee bee certaine so to continue unto the end without which perseverance there can bee no salvation True is it that the sense and feeling of this our blessed estate in the sense of Gods favour may bee withdrawne for a time but where faith is it faileth not where the life of grace is planted it dyeth not You have not chosen mee but I have chosen you and ordained that you should goe and bring forth fruit and your fruit should remaine Upon which words heare Saint Augustine determining not as if his testimonie could adde any thing unto Christ but that we may know what was the common beleefe of the Church at that time and may bee armed against Popish errour When Christ saith he hath affirmed I have ordained that you bring forth fruit and that your fruit remaine who dares say Perhaps it shall not remaine How unanswerable is that testimony of David The righteous shall flourish like a Palme now the Palme never loseth his leafe or fruit Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of the house of our God They shall still bring forth more fruit in their age they shall be fat and flourishing As full is that of his Son Salomon The path of the just is as the shining light which shineth more and more unto the perfect day And this floweth not from any thing in man either of nature or grace but from that covenant and faithfulnes of God who seeing the first Adam could not stand in the covenant of workes Doe this and live hath renued with the faithfull in the second Adam a covenant of grace in which he hath undertaken to worke all our workes for us First that he will never depart from us but delight in us to doe us good Secondly that he will put such a feare of himselfe into our hearts that wee shall never depart from him And what else is this saith Augustine but such and so great shall be my feare which I shal put into their hearts that they shal with perseverance keepe close unto me And fully to confirme and setle thy soule in assurance of thy perseverance and infallible attaining that purchased possession 1. Remember that not onely God hath wrought that eternall mansion for thee but also wrought thee for it 2 Cor. 5.1.5 2. Build on that promise that he that hath begotten thee to that incorruptible inheritance not onely reserves it in heaven for thee but preserves and keeps thee by his power unto this salvation But further Papists reply This is a doctrine that opens a wide gate to all sinful liberty utterly loosneth the bond of feare and care to please God For Answer First how doth or can this estate in Gods covenant loosen or slacke that bond of gracious feare when it is apparent that this everlasting covenant bindes our hearts fast unto God in this feare Secondly is there nothing to be feared in God but his condemning Justice Oh how fearf●ll to his children are his rods and scourges how very fearefull Nay his very frowne his threatning word so ful of terrour that it shakes the heart of the faithfull they tremble they melt at it When I heard saith Habakkuk my bellie trembled my lips quivered at the voice Rottennesse entred into my bones and I trembled in my selfe that I might rest in the day of trouble Sure I am and no●e so impudent who dare deny it that when our blessed Saviour and his faithfull members Paul Peter c. had this heavenly assurance fully acquieting their soules it was so far from cooling their zeale and slackning their fervent diligence to please God and ply his worke that nothing more furthered their holy ambition to be serviceable acceptable unto him In the next place let us confirme this truth by a reason or two 1. It will be confessed that a Christian ought to labour for such an estate wherein he should continually rejoyce in the Lord bee ever praising and blessing his name and have strong consolation For it is the command of God to delight our selves in the Lord to rejoyce evermore alwaies to rejoice in the Lord doubled upon us to stirre up our soules to blesse the Lord even in the sense of pardon and forgivenesse in everie thing to be thankefull he hath given with his promise his oath also that wee might have strong consolation but without this certainty of faith assurance of our happinesse the eternall favor of God we cannot attaine such an estate in which we can from the heart rejoyce in him ever praise him and enjoy solid cōfort from him For what sound joy can that soule find in Christ who thus hangs between heaven hell and hath no assurance whether the Lord will come to him as a Judge to condemne or as a Savior to free
losse of life and therefore will not faile to strive wrastle for the truth of God the faith given to the Saints but spēd al his strength in such contention live and dye in defence of it In other things hee must not strive for Gods Church hath no such custome 1 Cor. 11.16 In the last place as in zeale so in earnest desires an hypocrite will seeme to run as fast to Christ to thirst long for him as the most faithfull For when the hard skin of his seared cons●ience is flayed off by those knives of circumcision the sharp law of God and the terrours of hell gate upon his galled soule in the sense of these agonies he will value Christ as highly desire him as heartily as wel to the sight of others as to his owne sense as any true member of Christ What in the world would hee not give nay a whole world to purchase one drop of that precious bloud This goes very farre will some say can any Christian goe further Yes verily For the faithfull soule in the day peace continues still as highly and dearely to esteeme the Lord Jesus even after reconciliation when he heares the blessed Spirit speaking peace to him then hee esteemes all things dung and losse in comparison of the knowledge of Christ. Here the hypocrite leaveth him In the storme hee will runne as fast to Christ the rocke and refuge from the tempest of Gods wrath as any in faire weather hee makes no hast hee goes backe or stands still The one esteemes Christ as medicine onely and therefore in extremity of paine when he is sicke at heart whither wil he not send for him and though the pocion and prescription be grievous yet then it is forced down though hee send it up againe but as soone as he is a little cheered he loathes his Physicke The other knowes him to bee as well his meate as medicine and therefore in health when he findes his heart assured of salvation longues and hungers for him and his righteousnesse The one desires him for justification in the day of wrath to wipe off his reckoning and enter him into glory The other also for sanctification to clense him from sinne and beautifie his soule in the glorious image of God If the Lord would give the hypocrite free leave to take his pleasure in sinne without feare of judgement how would he rejoyce as in a great and speciall privilege hee would account himselfe as happy in his liberty to sinne as in his exemption from the reward of sinne But oh how wofull a captivity how lothsome a grave how base a drudgery miserable thraldome would a faithfull soule account of such a licence as much ha●ing the filthinesse of sinne as the punishment the spirituall death as the eternall CHAP. XXXI Applying these things for removing tentations rising from conceit of hypocrisie NOw then seeing we know how farre an hypocrite may seeme to goe in the good way let us proceed to remove that wavering which beares downe many a weake Christian in a very painfull discomfortable estate I find two especiall temptations applied by Satan to shake the faith of a weake soule and to hold it in suspence that it cannot rise up to any strong consolation in the sense and feeling of Gods grace favor The first and chiefe is that whatsoever ●hey do is done in hypocrisie True it is they can heare the Word they can frequent the assemblies reverence the sincere Teachers of it invite others to the fellowship of the same grace rejoyce in the Word but all this saith the Tempter and truly may bee in an hypocrite and in themselves they thinke it is all no better than dissembling They have some zeale they confesse to the truth but an hypocriticall zeale some desire and longing after Christ but hypocriticall all is meere hypocrisie Thus they say thus they thinke Now let such a Christian 1. seriously consider that the subtle Serpent doth not onely tempt men to presumption but also to distrust as is apparent in those assaults by which he set upon our blessed Saviour As hee allures him to a presumptuous casting himselfe downe from the pinacle of the Temple because the Angels waited on him to lift and beare him up so also he laboureth to draw him to a distrust of Gods providence and therefore as the sonne of God to command the stones to be made bread See Matth. 4. 3. 6. And as the ignorant and carelesse worldling is the most ordinary object upon whom hee workes grosse presumptuous dreams of salvation those hee perswades God is mercifull Christ came to save all men and therefore when he heares the word of the curse he causeth him from these grounds to blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walke after the stubbornnesse of mine owne heart adding drunkennesse to thirst thus he rocks him in a dead sleep of sinne As thus he workes grosse presumptions upon the carelesse and blinde professour so hee never pursues any with those weapons of distrustfull and unbeleeving feares but those who are either quite gone or now going or at least setting their faces to goe out of his AEgypt in travell toward the heavenly Canaan So then when hee assaults thee with this weapon know assuredly that Satan plainely discerns that God hath wakened and raised thy soule from that drowsie cradle of sinne in which hee so long had lulled thee in deep security Againe remember thy corrupt heart is very deceitfull not onely to hide up sinne in it and to flatter thee with faire but false hopes and so to breede pride and presumption but as cunning also to conceale any grace which is in it and so to affright thee with likely but false feares It will bee then a necessary point of wisedome not to give full and rash credite to either hope or feare but diligently to weigh thy estate in that ballance of the Word which is the truth and cannot deceive thee First then humbling thy soule by prayer● and intreating the assistance of that holy Spirit who is purposely sent that thou maist know these things which are given thee of God take a perfect examin●tion and triall of thy estate Thou hearest and frequentest the Word so doe dissemblers But doth an hypocrite or can he follow it with an heart hungring after perfect obedience Doth he desire to finde every thought subdued to the yoake of Christ Nay even then in his hearing his hart not steals away but with good leave and full permission goes after his covetousnesse or some other corrupt lust and resolves to keepe himselfe reserved in some things making and setting up in his heart a law against the law of God namely that he will not so be tyed to it but that in some things he will use his owne liberty Againe both a sound and rotten heart rejoyce in the Word But thou findest love to the word not in thy
thou Eternall Truth which thou hast spoken I even I am hee that comfort you who art thou that thou shouldst feare a mortall man the son of man which shal be made as grasse Sure is it God cannot but be the greatest comfort to them whom enjoy him because he is the greatest good For even those heathens as truly observed that most judicious Divine and learned Father who consider him by the eye of the understanding and not by sense preferre him above all visible and corporall above all intelligible and spiritual natures Nor can saith he● any man be found who thinketh God to be that than which any thing can be better In this all men consent that they advance him above all things Let us therefore from this incomprehensible Sea of consolation draw out some especiall and particular comforts CHAP. XVII The more speciall comforts which are in God And first in the Father NOw as that glorious one God is distinguished into three persons so may we discerne in Scripture a threefold relation betweene us and every person full of unspeakable joy and sweetnesse God the Father vouchsafeth to bee our father God the Sonne hath undertaken to be our Saviour The blessed Spirit giveth himselfe unto us to be peculiarly and in more specialty our Comforter First then God the Father maybe considered in this relation either to God or the creature In the first kinde he is a Father onely to the Sonne by an essential communication of his substance In the second he is a Father either generally to all reasonable creatures by creation to Angels Iob 1.6 who are there called the children of God to men Thou art our Father and wee the worke of thy hands and hence Adam stiled the Sonne of God or else more particularly he is a Father to the faithfull by grace and that as well by adoption as by regeneration For the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ culleth out from amōg the families of worldly men those whom before hee hath predestinated and bringeth them into his owne family setteth out for them and instateth them into a portion of grace and inheritance of glory Read Gal. 4. 4,5,6 and Ephes. 1.4,5 and then by that immortall seed of his Word begetteth them to that divine nature Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us Of his own will the Father of lights hath begotten us It is altogether impossible in this land of darknesse to behold the infinite light of heavenly comfort which floweth from this relation For what comparison betweene any earthly estate and our adoption into heaven The children of Nobles and of the greatest Princes in revolution of no long time fall backe into as meane a condition as the lowest Ioseph and Marie lineally descended from David a great and potent Monarch how soone could they slide downe in the current of this world into a very low estate Hee a poore Carpenter Shee his Spouse Thus is it in all earthly creatures Looke as in plants many little threeds grow up into a bigge roote and that shoots forth into a strong and mighty body which yet being divided into many armes and branches at length endeth in small twigs So is it with all the glory of this world gloriously it seemeth to glister for a short time in a fleshly eye and to flame and glitter to the admiration of silly men but as it is blowne up from a poore sparke so it quickly sinketh into a little dust and ashes But in this spirituall estate there is no measure in the glory or time but as their Father and elder Brother so are they Kings for glory unspeakeable for durance eternall For when the Almighty All-wise God accepteth and adopteth us for children unto himselfe he entreth into an everlasting Covenant with us of grace and love and bindeth up our unstable starting and warping soules in the bundle of life with a double tye first of his love to us secondly of our love to him I will never turne away from them to doe them good yea I wil delight in them to doe them good and I will put my feare into their hearts that they shall never depart from me Doe but consider what Spring-tides of infinite consolations flow into our empty soules from this Sea of comfort Certainly children recejve some comfort from bad parents much more from good But what earthly comfort can that child wāt which is in the power of mā to give whose Parent aboundeth in love wisedome and riches Were a Father onely loving or onely rich or wise onely yet even from any of these ●ingle in a parent some benefit would be reaped by the children but when they all meet sed with much evill in this world nay are any men so full of wants and griefes Surely they neither want any true good or are oppressed with any thing which indeed is evill whose wants on earth are richly supplied with excellent treasures of grace and glory and evils of sense made fruitfull in all spirituall bles●ings For this is an especiall privilege of Gods children that as the wicked are ever cursed even in their blessings Mal. 2.2 so the faithfull are ever blessed even in earthly curses all things working together for their good and that they know Phil. 1.19 Doe but observe what a strong foundation is here laid for every faithfull Christian to build up his soule in unspeakeable comfort and to solace himselfe even in his worst estate Can any reasonable man deny but that such a condition is good comfortable nay best and most happy for a man which commeth to him from infinite love assisted with infinite power and wisedome Now then thus will a faithful Christian conclude in his most grievous aff●ictions crosses Have not I a sure word and infallible that all these things come unto me not only from Gods power aud wisedome but from his love He maketh the heavens by his wisedome In wisedome hath hee done all his workes Come not all his chastisements from love from his fatherly love So againe an afflicted soule will hence cheere up it selfe in the midst of all troubles Howsoever these grievances are bitter in the mouth and seeme when they are tasted by sense and carnall reason very unpleasant and evill yet indeede if I better consider them their nature looking on them with a spirituall eye I shall discerne nothing but an outside and shew of evill but full within of much sweetnesse and precious treasure As that Heathens staffe which hee dedicated to his Idoll made of horne without but within filled with gold or as some fruites bitter in the rine but pleasant in the pulpe of them So is there here an appearance of evill covering a world of good when I have taken away the paring I shall taste the fruit very delightfull and wholesome they seeme messengers of death but they bring life they
seeme full of sorrow yet cause much rejoycing they threaten poverty but fill with riches The evill is in seeming onely but the good and profit reall It was a prerogative not proper to the Apostle but common to all the members of Christ that they are as dying but certainly nay eternally living as sorrowfull yet alwaies rejoicing as having nothing but indeede possessing all things Read 2 Cor. 6. 9,10● CHAP. XVIII Applying these comforts by Meditation NOW when wee have throughly beheld considered and by faith applyed this truth to our hearts let us by some short meditation stir up our fainting spirits and quicken them in remembrāce of this great priviledge given us by God Let us take words with us turne into our owne soules and say Why art thou cast downe my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Hath not the Lord commanded thee doubled and often repeated that command Rejoyce in the Lord againe I say reioice Reioice evermore none in earth with thee And hath not he said unto thee as to them I will not faile nor forsake thee And wilt not thou then conclude If Father and Mother and all the world forsake me yet the Lord will gather me up Hath not thy gracious Lord and glorious creatour adopted thee unto himselfe brought thee home into his house setled thee in his Family Hath he not cast into thy heart that immortall seed of his Word and so begotten thee unto himselfe Hast thou not found his almighty power put forth in this quickning word to raise thee up from that grave of lusts in which thou layest dead in sinnes and trespasses rotting and even crawling with the wormes of hell Is the Lord then of heaven and earth the Father of Christ the Father of lights become thy Father and canst thou want any thing that is good were there not much more good in this conflicting and afflicted state then evill nay were not this by his over-ruling hand cōverted wholly to thy good how should it come from him who is infinite goodnesse to thee whom he hath infinitely loved True oh most true his love is better then life and nothing ca● proceed from that love but good but I cannot see that love through these teares through this thicke cloud of earthly sorrowes But oh his love is not more sweet then evident see oh see it in his gifts He hath not spared his onely Sonne but given him to the death even to the cursed death of the crosse How then shall hee not with him give thee all things also He hath given thee his holy Spirit the life of thy life and his owne glorious selfe and can he with himselfe the infinite incomprehensible good give any thing which is not good Assure thy selfe whatsoever is given by and with him cannot but be through him good exceeding good beyond that which thou dost or canst conceive Now therefore remember It is his covenāt to do thee good Know then know it of a truth and throughly perswade and settle thy selfe in it that as now thou art under the rod because it is good for thee to be afflicted so when it shall be good for thee thou shalt rest from al thy tro●ble and sh●lt b● satisfied with abundance of peace Oh then my soule bee not thou of an hasty spirit For he that beleeveth w●ll not make hast H●d Ioseph appointed the time of his deliverance Had the oppressed Israelites set out the limits of their AEgyptian bondage or those three young captive Champions prescribed their fiery triall how would they all have hindred their owne happinesse and Gods glory If my righteous Brethren smite me it is a kindnesse their reproofe is an excellent oyle What then is the rod of my heavenly Father but his fatherly love What his rebuke but a rich perfume and precious balme clensing my defiled nature preserving it from all fleshly pollution Rolle then thy way upon the Lord and hee shall bring it to passe wait upon his hand and remember hee is not alwaies chiding For a smal moment hee may forsake but with great mercies he will gather me In a little wrath hee may hide his face for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will hee have mercie upon me Oh then my heavenly father who vouchsafest to wait that thou maist be gracious to me give me power with patience to waite upon thy grace Thou who makest it thy exaltation and glory to shew me mercy oh give me an hart to attend thy mercy till thou receivest mee to thy glory CHAP. XIX Comforts taken from the second person of Trinity AS God the Father hath vouchsafed us that unspeakeable comfort and honour to be our Father so the Sonne yeeldeth us no lesse in that hee undertakes to bee the Saviour of all the faithfull and not in part but an entire and perfect Saviour from all evill For evill may be considered either in the roote or fruit of it and our Saviour hath utterly abolished both for us The greatest evill and the very root of all other is sinne and the fruit of sinne is principally as including al the rest the wrath of God and death Now our Lord saves his people first from sinne in being a perfect sacrifice Heb. 10. 14 and consequently a propitiation for all their sinnes I Ioh. 2.2 Secondly he delivers his people from wrath and the curse by bearing the curse and wrath for them In a word he hath redeemed the faithful from all enemies of body soule See Luke 1. 71. 74. Death Sinne and the curse of the Law hee hath swallowed up into victorie 1 Cor. 15. 55 56,57 But some weake Christian perhaps will here sigh out an objection How hath Christ delivered mee from sinne when I still finde this cursed law of my members rebelling against the law of my mind and leading me captive to the law of sinne How am I delivered from death when nothing is more sure to me than death I dye daily Ans. First observe that the Apostle who in the person of the faithful uttereth those words was even then devered frō sin by Christ and gives thanks in the words instantly following for his deliverance Hence it is apparent that even thē whē sin rebelleth in us nay by strong hand carrieth us captive wee are delivered from it delivered first from the usurping power and dominion of it whereby we were enslaved and served it with greediness● and againe from the guilt of it It shall not bee imputed or accounted to us but wee reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5.19 Insomuch that where the Apostle confesseth plainly his sins both of omission and commission yet in this regard hee dares confidently and doth truly affirme It is no more I that doe it but sinne that dwelleth in me Sinne in the faithfull is as sicknesse in the body getting up now againe and having overcome yet not