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A28173 The sinners sanctuary, or, A discovery made of those glorious priviledges offered unto the penitent and faithful under the Gospel unfolding their freedom from death, condemnation, and the law, in fourty sermons upon Romans, Chap. 8 / by that eminent preacher of the Gospel, Mr. Hugh Binning ... Binning, Hugh, 1627-1653. 1670 (1670) Wing B2933; ESTC R6153 246,575 304

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the power is put in his hand and resigned to him for where he dwells he must rule as good reason is He is about the greatest work that is now to do in the world the repairing and renewing of the ruines and breaches of mans spirit which was the fi●st breach in the Creation and the cause of all the rest He is about the cleansing and washing this Temple and we may be perswaded that he who hath begun this good work will perform it untill the day of Christ till we be presented blameless and without spot to our husband Phil. 1.5 6. and this is the grand con●olation of believers that they have this presence assured to them by promise that the Spirit is fixed here by an irreovcable and unchangeable Covenant or donation and will not wholly depart from them though he may withdraw and leave you comfortless ●or a season Isa. 59.21 Therefore I would shut up all in a word of exhortation to you that since we have the promise of so noble and happy a guest you would apply your selves to seek him and then keep him to receive him and then retain him It is true that he must first prevent u● for as no man can say that Iesus is the Christ but by th● Spirit of God so no man can indeed p●ay for the Spirit but by the Spirits own intercession within him Where God hath bestowed any thing of this Spirit it is known by the kindly and fervent desires after more of it Now since we have such a la●ge and ample promise Ezek. 36.27 Ioel 2.28 of the pouring out of the Spirit and that in as absolute and free a manner as can be imagined and this renewed by Christ and confirmed by his Prayer to the Father for the performance of it Ioh. 14.16 17. and then we have a sweet and affectionat promise propounded in the most moving and loving manner that can be Luk. 11.13 where he encourageth us to pray for the Spirit and that from this ground that our Heavenly Father who placed that natural affection in other fathers towards their children whereby they cannot refuse them bread when they cry for it He who was the Author of all natural affection must certainly transcend them infinitly in his love to his child●en as the Psalmist argues Shall not he that planted the ear hear and he that formed the eye see So may a poor soul reason it self to some confidence Shall not He who is the ●ountain of all natural love in men and beasts have much more Himself and if my ●ather will not give me a stone when I seek bread certainly he will far lesse do it Therefore if we being evil know how to give good things to our chilren how much more shall our Heavenly Father give his Spirit to them that ask him Alas that we should want such a gift for not asking it my beloved let us enlarge our desires for this Spirit and seek more earnestly and no doubt affection and importunity will not be sent away empty Is it any wonder we receive not because we ask not or we ask so coldly that we teach him in a manner to deny us qui ti●ide rogat I may say frigide docet negare ask frequently and ask confidently and His heart cannot deny O that we could lay this ing●gement on our own hearts to be more in Prayer Let 〈◊〉 presse our selves to this and we need not presse Him albeit the first grace be wholly a surprisal yet certainly he keeps this suitable method in the enlargements of grace that when he gives more He enlargeth the heart more after it He openeth the mouth wider to ask and receive and according to that capacity so is His hand opened to fill the heart O why are our hearts shut when his hand is open Again I would exhort you in Jesus Christ to intertain the Spirit suitably and this shall keep Him To this purpose are these exhortations Grieve not the Spirit Eph. 4.30 and quench not the Spirit 1 Thes. 5.19 There is nothing can grieve Him but sin and if you intertain that you cannot retain Him He is a Spi●it of holinesse and He is about the making you holy then do not marr him in his work labour to advance this and you do him a pleasure If you make his holy Temple an unclean cage for hateful birds or a Temple for Idols how can it but grieve him and if you grieve the Spirit certainly the Spirit will grieve you will make you repent it at the heart Please him by hea●kning to his motions and following his direction and he shall comfort you His office is to be a spring of consolation to you but if you grieve him by walking in the imagination of your hearts and following the suggestions of the Flesh His enemy no doubt that spring will turn its channel another way and dry up for a season toward you It is not every sin or infirmity that grieves Him thus if so be that it grieve thee but the intertaining of any sin and m●king peace with any of his enemies that cannot but displease Him and O what losse you have by it You displease your greatest friend to please your greatest enemy you blot and bludder that seal of the Spirit that you shall not be able to read it till it be cleansed and washed again Now if any man have not this Spirit of Christ he is none of his he is not a Christian take this alongs with you who aim at nothing but the external and outward shew or visible standing in the Church if you have not this Spirit and the seal of this Spirit found on you Christ will not know you for his in that day of his appearing SERMON XXVI Rom. 8.10 And if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin c. GODS presence is his working his presence in a soul by his Spirit is his working in such a soul in some special manner not common to all men but peculiar to them whom he hath chosen Now his dwelling is nothing else but a continued familiar and endlesse working in a soul till he have conformed all within to the Image of His Son The soul is the office-house or work-house that the Spirit hath taken up to ●rame in it the most curious piece of the whole Creation even to restore and repair that Master-piece which came last from Gods hand ab ultima manu and so was the chiefest I mean the Image of God in righteousness and holinesse Now this is the bond of union between God and us Christ is the bond of union with God but the Spirit is the bond of union with Christ. Christ is the peace between God and us that makes of two one but the Spirit is the link between Christ and us whereby he hath immediat and actual interest in us and we in Him I find the union between Christ and a soul shadowed out in Scripture by the nearest relations among creatures for
the proper owner acknowledging his absolute dependence on him and claiming interest and propriety in nothing not in himself and then on the other hand the love and good-will of infinit God placed on man and from that fountain all the streams of happiness issuing forth towards man the fulness of God opening up it self to him and laying out it self towards him God so far descending as in a manner to become the creatures to expose and dispose Himself and all in him for poor mans use and comfort How joyful was that amity but the breaking of this bond of peace is as sad and grievous There was a woful interposal between God and us which hath separated these chief friends ever since the beginning and that is sin the seeds of all enmity and discord this hath rent asunder the bond of amity this hath made such a total aversion of the soul from God and imprinted such an irreconciliable e●mity in the heart against the holy will of God that there is no possibility to reunite again and restore the old friendship as long as the soul is not quite changed and transformed that first creation is so marred and defaced that there is no mending of it till a second creation come The carnal mind is not simply an enemy but enmity it self an enemy may reconcile again and accept terms of peace but enmity cannot reconcile to amity without the very destruction of it self the opposition of the heart is so perfect that as soon may enmity unite with amity and become one with it as a carnal natural-mind can submit to Gods holy will That which was at the beginning voluntary is become necessary and turned into the nature of an in-bred antipathy that no art can cure The fall was such a disjoynting of the soul from God that no skill but infinit wisdom no strength but Almighty power can set it right and put it in the first posture again It is true there are not many who will openly and expresly denounce war against Heaven it is not so incident that any man should have explicit plain thoughts of hatred against God there are some common principles engraven by God in all mens minds which serve as his witnesses against men that God should be loved served adored and worshipped that there is nothing so worthy of the desires of the soul. Now this general acknowledgment deludes the most part for they take it for granted that they do love God with their heart because their consciences bears witness that they ought to love him as if it were all one to know our duty and to do it Who is there but he intertains himself with this good opinion of himself that his heart is good and true to God for say you Wh●m should I love if I love not God I were not worthy to live if I love not Him It is true indeed that you say but if you did know your hearts you would find their faces turned backward and averted from God and ●ould no more please your selves in such a confession of the truth then the Devil hath reason to think himself a believer because he is convinced that Christ is the Son of God and confessed it too no more then the son that promised to go to the Garden to work and went not had ground to think himself an obedient son Mat. 21.30 Such a confession of duty may be extorted from damned spirits and therefore you would not draw this vail over the wretched wickedness of your natures to the end that you may conceive well of yourselves It is so far from extenuating or excusing that the very conviction of the great obligation to love and obey God is the greatest aggravation of the enmity it is this which makes it the purest malice and per●●ctest hatred that knowing the goodness of God convinced of our bound duty to love and serve him yet in the very light of such a shining truth to turn our hearts away from him and exercise all acts of hostility against him That you may know then wherein the enmity of your hearts consists I shall instance it in three branches or evidences There is an enmity in the understanding that it cannot stoop to believing of the truth there is an enmity in the will that it cannot subject to obedience of Gods holy cammands and this is extended also to a stubborn rebellion against the will of God manifested in the dispensations of his providence In a word the natural and carnal mind is incapable of faith of obedience and of submission There are many truths revealed in the Scripture that the natural man cannot receive or know for they are foolishness to him 1 Cor. 2.14 Some spirits there are lifted up above others either by nature or education in which this rebellion doth more evidently appear reason in them contends with Religion and they will believe no more then they can give a reason for There is a wisdom in some men that despiseth the simplicity or the inevidence of the Gospel and accounts it foolishness The carnal mind will needs start out ●rom implicit trusting of God when once it s possessed with some imagination of wisdom therefore how many are the insurrections of of mens spirits against Gods absolute power over the creatures against the mysteries of the holy Trinity and Incarnation against the resurrection of our bodies In these and such like the pretended wisdom of men hath taken liberty to act enmity and to dispute against God But truly the rebellion and insubjection against the truth of God is more generally practised even by the multitude of men though in an unfree hidden way How few do believe their own desperat wickedness though God hath testified it of man Doth not every one apprehend some good to remain in his nature and some power to good what an impossibility is it to perswade you that all mankind are under the sentence of eternal condemnatio● that children who have not done good or evil are involved in it also Your hearts riseth against such doctrines as if they were bloody and cruel inventions To tell you that many are called and few chosen that the most part of them who prosesse the truth are walking in the way to Hell and shall undoubtedly fall into it you may hear such things but you blesse your selves from them and cannot be perswaded to admit them into your mind● The hearts of men will be giving the very lie to the God of truth when he speaks these things in his word God forbid that all that be true If we should expound the Law unto you and shew you that the least idle word the lightest thought the smallest inward motion of the heart deserves eternal misery that anger is murder in Gods sight that lusting is fornication that covetousness and love of the world is idolatry these things you cannot know them or receive them ther● are so many high imaginations in your minds that exalts themselves against the knowledge
not deceive your selves the true quarrel is because they run not to the same excesse of riot with you if they will lie cozen defraud swear and blaspheme as other men you could indure to make them companions as you do others and the principle of that is the enmity that was placed in the beginning that mortal irreconciliable feud betwixt the two families are two seeds of Christ and Satan But as I told you this enmity acts in a more subtile and invisible way in some and is painted over with some fair colours to hide the deformity of it not only the grosser corruptions of men carry this stamp but take even the most refined piece or part in man take his mind take the excellency of his mind even the wisdom of it yet that hath enmity incorporated into it and mixed with it throughout all for the wisdom of the flesh is enmity with God as it may be read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very prudence and reason of a natural man which carries him to a distance from and opposition with the common defilements in the courses of men yet that hath in its bosome a more exquisite and refined enmity against God and so the more spiritual and purified it be from grosser corruptions it is the more active and powerful against God because it is as it were the very spirit and quintessence of enmity You see it 1 Cor. 1. how the wisdom of God is foolishness to the wisdom of the world and then again that the wisdom of the world is the greatest folly to the only wise God Men that have many natural advantages beyond others are at this great disadvantage They are more ready to despise godliness as too base and simple a thing to adorn their natures As Christ said of rich men it may be said of wise men of learned men of civil and blameless persons who have a smooth carriage before the world how hard is it for such to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven hard indeed for they must be stript naked of that ere they can enter through this narrow gate I mean the opinion and conceit of any worth or excellency and so diminished in their own eyes that they may go through this needles eye without crushing The stream of enmity runs under-ground often and so hides it self under some other notion till at length it burst forth openly I find it commonly run in the secret channel of amity or friendship to some other thing opposite to God So Iames 4.4 the amity of ●he world is enmity with God and 1 Joh. 2.15 He that loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him There are two dark and under-ground conduits to convey this enmity against God Amity to the world and Amity to our selves self-love and creature-love We cannot denounce war openly against Heaven but this is the next course To joyn to or associat with any party that is contrary to God and thus under the covert of friendship to our selves and love to the world we war against God and destroys our own souls I say first Amity to the world carries enmity to God in the bosome of it and if you believe not this hear the Apostles sharp and pungent question you adulterers and adulteresses know you not that the Amity of the world is Enmity with God He doth not speak only to persons guilty of that crime but to all natural men who are guilty of an adultery or whoredome of a more spiritual nature but as abominable and more dangerous There is a bond and special tye betwixt all men and God their Maker which oblidgeth them to consecrate and devout themselves their affections and endeavours to his honour especially when the Covenant of the Gospel is superadded unto that in which Jesus Christ our Lord reveals himself as having only right to us and our affections as willing to bestow himself upon us and notwithstanding of all the distance between him and wretched sinners yet filling it up with his infinit love and wonderful condescency dimitting himself to the form of a servant out of love that so he might take us up to be his chast Spouse and adorn us with his beauty This he challengeth of us whoever hear and profess the Gospel This is you● profession if you understood it That Iesus Christ shall be your well-beloved and ye his that you shall separate your self to him and admit no stranger in his place that the choice and marrow of your joy love and delight shall be bestowed on him Now this bond and tye of a professed relation to that glorious Husband is foully broken by the most part by espousing their affections to this base world Your hearts are turned off him unto strangers that is present perishing things whereas the intendment of the Gospel is To present you to Christ as pure Virgins 2 Cor. 11.2 Truly your hearts are gone a-whoring after other things the love of the world hath withdrawn you or kept you in chains these present things are as snares nets and bands as an harlots hands and heart Eccles. 7.26 they are powerful inchantments over you which bewitch you to a base love from an honourable and glorious love O that you would consider it my beloved what opposition there is betwixt the love of the world and the love of the Father betwixt amity to that which hath nothing in it but some present bait to your deceitful lusts and amity to God your only lawful Husband Affection is a transforming and conforming thing Si terram amas terra es the love of God would purify thy heart and lift it up to more similitude to him whom thou loves but the love of the world assimulats it unto the world makes it such a base and ignoble piece as the earth is Do you think marriage-affection can be parted My wel-beloved is mine therefore the Church is the Turtle the Dove to Christ of wonderful chastity it never joyns but to one and after the death of its marrow it sighs and mourns ever after and sits solitarily You must retire my beloved and disingage from the love of other things or you cannot love Christ and if you love not Christ you cannot have peace with the Father and if you have not that peace you cannot have life this is the chain of life the first link begins at the divorcement of all fo●mer loves and beloved idols once the soul must be loosed in desire and delight and that link must be fastned upon the most lovely and desireable object Christ the desire of the Nations and this draws alongs another link of peace and life with it Do not mistake it Religion would not hinder or prejudge your lawful business in this world O it were the most compendious way to advance it with more ease to your souls But certainly it will teach you to exchange the love of these things for a better and more heart-contenting love Then Amity to our selves is Enmity to
of Adoption I conceive to be threefold beside that of Intercession expressed in the vers The first work of the Spirit of Adoption that wherein a Fathers affection seems to break first from under ground is ●he revealing to the heart the love and mercy of God to sinners I do not say to such a soul in particular for that application is neither first nor universal But herein the Spirit of Adoption first appears from under the cloud of ●ear and this is the first opening o● the prison of bondage wherein a soul was shut when the plain way of reconciliation to God in Christ and delivery from the bondage of sin and wrath is holden out when such a word as this comes into the soul and is received with some gladnesse God so loved the world that he gave his Son c. This is a true and faithful saying c. Come ye that labour and weary and I will give rest to your souls When a soul is made to hear the g●ad tidings of liberty preached to captives of ligh● to the blind of joy to the heavy in spirit of life to the dead though he cannot come that length as to see his own p●●ticular interest yet the very receiving affectionatly and greedily such a general report as good and true gives some ease and relaxation to the heart To see delivery possible is some door of hope to a desperat sinner but to see it and espy more then a possibility even great probability though he cannot reach a certainty ●hat will be as the breaking open of a window of light in a dark dungeon it will be as the taking off o● some of the hardest fetters and the worst chains which makes a man almost to think himself at liberty Now this is the great office of the Spirit of the Father to beget in us good thoughts of Him to incline us to charitable and favourable construction of Him and make us ready to think well of Him to beget a good understanding between us and Him and correct our jealous misapprehensions of Him for certainly we are naturally suspitious of God that he deals not in sad earnest with us when ever we see the hight of our provocation and weight of deserved indignation we think him like our selves and can hardly receive without suspition the Gospel that layes open his love in Christ to the world Now this is the Spirits wo●k to make us entertain that ho●ourable thought of God that he is most inclinable to pardon sinners and that his mercy is infinitly above mans sin and that it is no prejudice to His Holiness or Justice and to apprehend seriously a constant reality and solid truth in the promises of the Gospel and so to convince a soul of righteousnesse Joh. 18. that there is a way of justifying a sinner and ungodly person without wrong to Gods righteousnesse and this being well pondered in the heart and received in love the great businesse is done after that particular application is more easie of which I shall not speak now because occasion will be given in the next vers about the Spirits witnessing with our spirits which is another of the Spirits workings only I say this that which makes this so difficult is a defect in the fi●st but the common principles of the Gospel are not really and so seriously apprehended because many souls do not put to their seal to witnesse to the promises and truth o● it therefore the Lord often denies this seal an● witnesse to our comfort It is certainly a preposterous way S●tan puts souls upon first to get such a testimony from the Spirit before they labour to get such a testimony to Christ and eccho or answer in their hearts to his word this way it seems shortest for it would leap into the greater liberty at the first hand but certainly its farthest about because its impossible for souls to leap immediatly out of bondage to assurance without some middle step they cannot passe thus from extreams to extreams without going through the middle st●te of receiving Christ and laying his word up in the heart and therefore it proves the way furthest about because when souls have long wearied themselves they must at length turn in hither But there is another working of the Spirit I wish you were acquaint with as the first work is to beget a suitable apprehension of Gods mind and heart towards sinners so the next is to beget a suitable disposition in our hearts towards God as a Father The first apprehends his love the next reflects it back again with the heart of a sinner to Him The Spirit first brings the report of the love and grace of God to us and then he carries the love and respect of the heart up to God You know how God complains in M●lachi If I be a Father where is my fear and honour ●or these are the only fitting qualifications of Children such a reverent respective observance of our Heavenly Father such affectionat and humble carriage towards him as becometh both His Majesty and His Love as these are tempered one with another in Him his Love not abasing his Majesty and his Majesty not diminishing his Love So we ought to carry as reverence and confidence fear and love may be contempered one with another so as we may neither forget his infinit greatnesse nor doubt of his unspeakable love and this inward disposition ingraven on the heart will be the principle of willing and ready obedience it will in some measure be our meat and drink to do our Fathers will for Christ gave us an example how we should carry towards him How humble and obedient was he though his only begotten Son SERMON XXXIX Rom. 8.15 Whereby we cry Abba Father AS there is a light of grace in bestowing such incomparably high dignities and excellent gifts on poor sinne●s such as to make them the sons of God who were the children of the Devil and heirs of a kingdom who were heirs of wrath so there is a depth of wisdom in the Lords allowance and manner of dispensing his love and grace in this life for though the love be wonderful that we should be called the sons of God yet as that Apostle speaks It doth not yet so clearly appear what we shall be by what we are 1 Joh. 3.1 Our present condition is so unlike such a state and dignity and our enjoyments so unsuitable to our rights and p●iviledges that it would not appear by the mean low and indigent state we are now into that we have so great and glorious a Father How many infi●mities are we compassed about with How many wants are we pressed withall our necessiti●s a●e infinit and our enjoyments no wayes proportioned to our necessities Notwithstanding even in this the love and wisdom o● our Heavenly Father shews it self and oftentimes more gloriously in the theatre of mens weaknesse infirmities and wants then they could appear in the absolute and total exemption
satisfied in our Cautioner and considers us as righteous in that account before God And this likewise I speak for your use that ye may loath and abhor your selves as much in your selves who are made clean by the blood of Jesus Christ as if ye were not washen Nay so much the more ye ought to remember your own sins which he doth not remember as debt any more and to be ashamed and confounded because they are pardoned It is ordinary for souls to look on themselves with an eye of more complacency in themselves when they apprehend that God lookes favourably on them I do not think that any soul can duely consider the gracious aspect of God in Jesus Christ to them but they will the more loath themselves but I find it ordinary that slight and inconsiderate thoughts of pardon begets jolly conceits in mens hearts of themselves and this is even the sin of Gods children something is abated of our self abhorring when we have peace and favour spoken in to us but I beseech every one that believes there is no condemnation for them to consider there is all things worthy of it in them yea nothing but what deserves it and therefore let that aspect of God beget self-loathing and self-detestation in you the more you apprehend he is pleased with you be ye the more displeased with your selves because it is not your selves he is pleased with but his own well-beloved Son The day of redemption is coming when there shall be no condemnation and nothing condemnable either In Heaven you shall be so but while ye are here this is the most important duty ye are called to to loath your selves because of all your abominations and because he is pacified towards you Ezek. 16. at the close and Chap. 36.31 and 20 43 44. There is a new and strange mortification now pleadde ●or by many whose highest advancement consisteth in not feeling or knowing or confessing sin but in being dead to the sense and convict●●n of the same Alace whither are these reforming time● gone Is not this the spirit of Antichrist I confess it is a mortification of Godliness a crucifying of Repentance and Holiness a crucifying of the new man but it is a quickning of the old man in the lusts thereof a living to sin this is a part of that new but ●a●sly so called Gospel that is preached by some which if an Angel would b●ing from Heaven we ought not to believe it Other foundation can no man lay then which is laid already upon which the Prophets and Apostles are builded even Christ Jesus Lord give the spirit to understand these mysteries already revealed but save us from these new discoveries and lights That which we have received is able to make us peref●ct to salvation Every one pretends a claim and right to this priviledge of Christians to be pardoned and absolved from condemnation who doth not put it out of question though in the mean time their iniquities testifie against them and their transgressions say in the heart of a godly man that there is no fear of God before their eyes Therefore the Apostle describes the man that is in Jesus Christ to be such an one That walks not after the flesh but after the Spirit Not only to guard against the presumptuous fancy of those that live in their sins that pretend to hope for Heaven but to stir up every justified soul to a new manner of conversation since they are in Jesus Christ. We would speak a word of two things from this First that the Scripture gives marks and characters of justified and reconciled persons that they may be known by both to themselves and others Next that the Christian escaped condemnation hath a new manner of walking and is a new creature in Christ. It might seem a strange thing that this fi●st were questioned in this generation if any the most clear and important truth could pass without scanning the very tenor of the whole Scripture holds out so much of it I wonder that any man that reads this Chapter or the Epistles of Iames and Iohn should have any more doubt of it Hereby we know that we know him if we keep his commands Is not this a conclusion of our state and condition from the conformity of our walking to the will of God What divine truth can we be sure of if this be uncertain When the beloved Disciple who knew how to preach Christ asserts it in express terms 1 Ioh. 5.13 These things have I written to you that believe that ye may know ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God this very thing was the great scope and purpose of that Evangelick and Divine Epistle I find that Antinomians confound this question that they may have the more advantage in their darkness The question is not concerning the grounds of a mans believing in Christ but concerning our assurance or knowledge of our believing There is a great mistake in Christians practice in confounding these two it makes Christians very unreasonable in their doubtings and exercises therefore let us have this before our eyes Faith in its first and pure acting is rather an adherence and cleaving of a lost soul to Christ than an evidence of its interest in him or of his everlasting love You know all that it is one thing to know a thing or love a thing and another thing to reflect upon it and know that I know and love Iohn did write to believers that they might know they did believe and believe yet more These things then are both separable and the one is posterior to the other After ye believed ye were sealed The perswasion of Gods love and our interest in Christ is the Spirits seal set upon the soul there is a mutual sealing here the soul by believing and trusting in Jesus Christ sets to its seal that God is true as Iohn speaks 3.33 When God speaks in his Law the soul receives that testimony of his Justice and Holiness subscribes to the equity and righteousness of the sentence by condemning it self And when Christ speaks in the Gospel the soul seals that doctrine of free Salvation by approving and consenting with all its heart to the offer subscribes to the way of Salvation in Christ and truth of his promises and thus is the truth of God and Christ sealed by the souls believing Then the Spirit of Jesus Christ afterward when he pleaseth irradiats and shines upon the soul and discovers these things that are freely given and witnesseth to the conscience of the believer that he is a son of God thus the Spirit seals the believer and gives his testimony to his truth Now if we speak of the ground of the first viz. Of believing in Christ to salvation I know none but that which is common to sinners and holden out in the Gospel generally to all Our sin and misery and absolute necessity and Christs invitation of all to
groundless opinions never to question the matter is to leave it alwise uncertain If ye would judge your selves according to the Scriptures many of you have the marks and characters of these who are kept without the City and are to have their part in the lake of fire Is there no condemnation for you who have never condemned your selves Certainly the more you are averse to condemn your selves this sticks the closser to you You are not all in Christ all are not Israel who are of Israel many nay the most part are but said Christians have no real union with Christ or principle of life from him your love you carry to your selves makes you easily believe well of your selves know that self-love can blind the eyes and make you apprehend that God loves you also Nay every one readily fancies that to be which he desires to be I beseech you consider if you have any ground for your hopes and confidences but such as these that will not bear out alwayes It would be no disadvantage to you to have your hope shaken that in stead of a vain presumption you may have the Anchor of hope which shall be fixed within the vail I think one thing keeps men far from the Kingdom of God because they know not that they believe not in him we had gained much ground on you by the Word if we could perswade you that ye believe not and have not believed from the Womb. We might then say to you as Christ to his Disciples ye believe in God believe also in me Ye have given credit to God the Judge and Law-giver pronouncing a curse on ●ou and a sentence that ye have hearts desperatly wicked now believe also in me the Redeemer Ye have believed God in the Law in as far as ye have judged your selves under sin and wrath now believe Me in the Gospel that brings a ransome from wrath and a remedy for sin It s this very unbelief that is the original of the wo●lds perishing unbelief of the Law ye do not consider ye are under the condemnation of it ye do not believe that ye have not yet ●ed to Jesus Christ to escape and these two keeps souls in a deep sleep till judgement awake them But unto every one of you I would give this Direction Let not examination of what you are hinder you from that which is your chief duty and his chief commandment to believe in him I know many Christians are puzled in the matter of their interest and alwise wavering because they are more taken up with that which is but a matter of comfort and joy then that which is His greatest honour and glory I say to consider the precious promises to believe the excell●●cy and vertue of Jesus Christ and love him in your souls and delight in him is the weightiest matter of the Gospel to go out of your selves daily into his fulness to endeavour new discoveries of your own naughtiness and his grace this is the new and great commandment of the Gospel the obedience of it is the most essential part of a Christian-walk Now again to know that ye do believe and to discern your interest in Christ this is but a matter of comfort and of second concernment Therefore I say when ever ye cannot be clear in this ye should be alwise exercised in the first For its that we are first called to and if Souls were more exercised that way in the consideration and belief of the very general truths and promises of the Gospel I doubt not but the light of these would clear up their particular interest in due time these things ye ought to have done and not to leave the other undone It is still safest to wave such a question of interest when its plunging because it puts you off your special duty and its Satans intent in it It were better if ye do question presently to believe and abide in him till it were put out of question SERMON IV. Vers. 1. That walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit CHrist is made to us of God both righteousness and sanctification And therefore these who are in Christ do not only escape condemnation but they walk according to the spirit and not according to the flesh These two are the sum of the Gospel there is not a greater argument to holy walking then this there is no condemnation for you ●●●ther is there a greater evidence of a Soul escaped condemnation then walking ●ccording to the Spirit We have spoken something in general of the evidence that may be had of a mans state from his walking and the Spirits work in him we would now speak of the conjunction of these two and the influence that that priviledge hath on this duty and something of the nature of this description who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit In the creation of man man was composed of soul and body there was a right order and subordination of these suitable to their nature in his soul he reached Angels above in his body he was like the beasts below and this part his flesh was a servant to the Soul that was acted and affected according to the desires and motives of the Soul Now sin entring as it hath defaced all the beauty of the creation as it hath misplaced man and driven him out from that due line of subordination to God his Maker for he would have been equal to God so it hath perverted this beautiful order in men and turned it just contrary hath made the servant to ride on horses and the prince to walk on foot This is the just punishment of our first sin Adams soul was placed by creation under the sole command of its Creator above all the creatures and his own senses but in one sin he proudly exalted himself above God and lamentably subjected himself below his senses by hearkening to their perswasion he saw it was good and tasted it and it was sweet and so he ate of it What a strange way was this to be like God he made himself unlike himself liker the miserable beasts Now I say this is the deserved punishment of man his soul that was a free Prince is made a bond slave to the lusts of his flesh flesh hath gotten the Throne and keeps it and lords over the whole man Now therefore it is that the whole man unregenerat is called flesh as if he had no immortal spirit Iohn 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh and this Chap. vers 8. here a description of natural men they that are in the flesh Because flesh is the predominant part that hath captivat a mans reason and will Nay not only the grosser corruptions in a man that have their use and seat in his flesh and body are under that name but take the whole nature of man that which is most excellent in him his Soul and Spirit his Light and Understanding the most refined principles of his
and all for life will a man give Death imports a destruction of being which every thing naturally seeks to preserve But O! what a dreadful life is it worse then death when men will chose death rather then life O! how terrible will it be to hear that word Hills and mountains fall on us and cover us Men newly risen their bodies and souls meet again after a long separation and this to be their mutual entertainment one to another the body to wish it were still in the dust and the soul to desire it might never be in the body Surely if we had so much grace as to believe this and tremble at it before we be forced to act it there were some hope if we could perswade our selves once of this that the wayes of sin all of them how pleasant how profitable soever whatsoever gain they bring in whatsoever satisfaction they give that they are nothing else but the wayes of death and goe down to the chambers of hell that they will delude and deceive us and so in end destroy us If we might once believe this with our heart there were some hope that we would break off from them and choose the untroden paths of Godlinesse which are pleasantnesse and peace However this is the condition of all men once to be under sin and under a sentence of death for sin It s the unbelief of this and a conceit of freedom that securely and certainly destroyes the world by keeping souls from Jesus Christ the prince of life But there is a delivery and that is the thing expressed in the words there is freedom from both attainable and I think the very hearing of such a thing that there is a redemption from sin and misery possible yea and that some are actually delivered from it This might stir up in our hearts some holy ambition and earnest desire after such a state how might it awake our hearts after it but this is the wofulnesse of a natural condition that a soul under the power of sin can neither help it self nor rightly desire help from another because the will is captive too this makes it a very desperat and remedilesse businesse to any humane expectation because such a soul is well pleased with its own setters and loves its own prison and so can neither long for freedom nor welcom the Son who is come to make free But yet there is a freedom and delivery and if ye ask who are partakers of it the text declares it to you even these who are in Iesus Christ and walk according to the Spirit of Christ. These all and these only who finding-themselves dead in sins and trespasses under the power and dominion of sin and likewise under the sentence of death and condemnation begin to lift up their heads upon the hope of a Saviour and to look unto their Redeemer as poor prisoners whose eyes and looks are strong intreaties and in stead of many requests such as give an intire renounce unto their former wayes and prevailing lusts and give up themselves in testimony of their sense of his unspeakable favour of redemption to be wholly his and not their own There are some souls who are free from the dominion of sin and from the danger of death some who were once led about with divers lusts as well as others who walked after the course of this world and fulfilled the desires of the flesh and were children of wrath as well as others but now they are quickned in Christ Iesus and have abandoned their former way they have another rule another way another principles their study is now to please God and grow in holinesse the wayes they delighted in in former times are now loathsome they think that a filthy puddle which they drank greedily of and now it s all or their chiefest grief and burden that so much of that old man must be carried about with them and so this expresseth many groans from them with Paul wa● is me miserable man who shall deliver me Such souls are in a manner to speak so half redeemed who being made sensible of their bondage groan and pan● for a Redeemer The day of their compleat redemption is at hand all of you are witnesses of this that there are some thus freed but they are signes and wonders indeed to the world their kinsmen their acquaintance their friends and neighbours wonder what is become of them they think it strange they walk not and run not into that same excess of riot with them But whosoever thou art that is escaped from under the slavery of sin wonder at the world that doth run so madly on their own destruction think is strange that thou ran so long with them and that all will not run in these pleasant wayes with thee think it strange that thou runs so slowly when so great a prize is to be obtained an immortal and never fading Crown If mortifying and crucifying the lusts of the flesh if dying to the world and to thy self seem very hard and unpleasant to thee if it be as the plucking out of thine eye and cutting off thine hand know then that corruption is much alive yet and hath much power in thee but remember that if thou can have but so much grace and resolution as to kill and crucifie these lusts without foolish and hurtful pity if thou canst attain that victory over thy self thou shall never be a loser thou cannot repent it afterward To die to our selves and the world to kill sin within O! that makes way to a life hid from the world one hour whereof is better than many ages in sinful pleasure Quicken thy self often with this thought that there is a true life after such a death and that thou canst not passe into it but by the valley of the death of thy lusts remember that thou dost but kill thine enemies which embrace that they may strangle thee and then stir up your self with this consideration the life of sin will be thy death better enter heaven without these lusts then go to hell with them SERMON IX Vers. 2. For the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Iesus hath made me free c. THat which makes the delivery of men from the tyranny of sin and death most di●●icult and utterly impossible unto nature is that sinners have given up themselves unto it as if it were true liberty that the will and affections of men are conquered and sin hath its impe●ial throne seated there Other conquerours invade men against their will and so they rule against their will they contain men in subjection by fear and not by love and so when ever any occasion offers they are glad to cast off the yoke of unwilling obedience But sin hath first conquered mens judgement by blinding it putting out the eye of the understanding and then invaded the affections of men drawn them over to its side and by these it keeps all in a most willing obedience Now
subordination to God and sowen a perpetual discord and enmity between them this hath conquered all mankind and among the rest even the elect and chosen of God these whom God had in his eternal Council predes●inated to life and salvation sin brings all in bondage and exerciseth the most perfect tyranny over them that can be imagined makes men to serve all its imperious lusts and then all the wages is death it binds them over to Judgment Now this sedition and rebellion being arisen in the world and one of the most noble creatures carried away in this revolt from allegiance to the Divine Majesty the most holy and wise Council of Heaven concludes to send the Kings Son to compesce this rebellion to reduce men again unto obedience and to destroy that arch traitor sin which his nature most abho●s And for this end the Son of the great King Jesus Christ came down into the world to deliver captive man and to condemn conquering sin There is no object that God hath so pure and perfect displeasure at as sin therefore he sent to condemn that which he hates most and perfectly he hates it to condemn sin and this is expressed as the errand of his coming 1 Ioh. 3.5 8. to destroy the works of the devil all his wicked and hellish plots and contrivances against man all that poyson of enmity and sin that out of envy and malice he spued out upon man and instilled into his nature all these works of that Prince of Darkness in enticing man from obedience to rebellion and tyrannizing over him since by the imperious laws of his own lusts in a word all that work that was contrived in hell to bring poor man down to that same misery with devils all that Christ the only begotten Son of the great King came for this noble businesse to destroy it That Tower which Satan was building up against Heaven and had laid the foundation of it as low as hell this was Christs business down among men to destroy that Babylon that Tower of darkness and confusion and to build up a Tower of light and life to which Tower sinners might come and be safe and by which they might really ascend into Heaven Some do by these words for sin understand the occasion and reason of Christs coming that it was because sin had conquered the world and subjected man to condemnation therefore Jesus Christ came into the world to conquer sin and condemn it that we might be free from condemnation by sin And this was the special cause of his taking on flesh if sin had not entered in the world Christ had not come into it and if sin had not erected a Throne in mans flesh Christ had not taken on flesh he had not come in the likenesse of sinful flesh So that this may administer unto us abundant consolation If this was the very cause of his coming that which drew him down from that delightful and blessed bosome of the Father then he will certainly do that which he came for he cannot fail of his purpose he cannot misse his end he must condemn sin and save sinners And truly this is wonderful love that he took sin only for his party and came only for sin or against sin and not against poor sinners He had no commission of the Father but this as himself declares Ioh. 3.17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved As one observes well Christ would never have hinted at such a jealousie or suggested such a thought to mens minds had it not been in them before but this we are naturally inclined unto to think hard of God and can hardly be perswaded of his love when once we are perswaded of our enmity Indeed the most part of the world fancy a perswasion of Gods love and have not many jealousies of it because they know not their own enmity against God but let a man see himself indeed Gods enemy and it is very hard to make him believe any other thing of God but that he carries a hostile mind against him and therefore Christ to take off this perswades and assures us that neither the Father nor he had any design upon poor sinners nor any ambushm●nt ag●inst them but mainly if not only this was his purpose in sending and Christs in coming not against man but against sin not to condemn sinners but to condemn sin and save sinners O blessed and unparallel'd love that made such a real distinction between sin and sinners who were so really one Shall not we be content to have that wofull and accursed union with sin dissolved Shall not we be willing to let sin be condemned in us and to have our own souls saved I beseech you beloved in the Lord do not think to maintain alwayes Christs enemy that great traitor against which he came from Heaven Wonder that he doth not prosecute both as enemies but i● he will destroy the one and save the other O let it be destroyed not you and so much the more for that it will destroy you Look to him so iniquity shall not be your ruine but he shall be the ruine of iniquity but if you will not admit of such a division between you and your sins take heed that you be not ete●nally undivided that you have not one common lot for ever that is condemnation Many would be saved but they would be saved with sin too Alace that will condemn thee as for sin he hath proclaimed irreconciliable enmity against it he hath no quarter to give it he will never come in terms of composition with it and all because it is his mortal enemy therefore let sin be condemned that thou may be saved It cannot be saved with thee but thou may be condemned with it The word for sin may be taken in another sense as fitly a sacrifice for sin so that the meaning is Jesus Christ came to condemn and overthrow sin in its plea against us by a sacrifice for sin that i● by offering up his own body or flesh And thu● you have the way and means how Christ conquered sin and accomplished the business he was sent for It was by offering a sac●●fice for sin to expiat wrath and to sati●fie justice The sting and strength of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law as the Apostle speaks it 1 Cor. 15.55 we had two great enemies against us two great tyrants over us sin and death Death had past upon all mankind not only the miseries of this life and temporal death had subjected ●ll men but the fear of an eternal death of an everlasting separation from the blessed face of God might have seized upon all and subjected them to bondage Heb. 2.15 But the strength and sting of that is sin it is sin that arms death and hell against us take away sin and you take away the sting the strength of death it
sin and so die for it yet by this means he hath condemned sin by being condemned for sin by this means he hath overcome death and the grave by coming under the power of death and so is now alive for ever to improve his victory for our salvation and by taking on our sin● he hath fully abolished the power and plea of them as the goat that was sent to the wilderness out of all mens sight was not to be seen again Truly this is the way how our sins are buried in the grave ●f oblivion and removed as a cloud and cast into the depths of the Sea and sent away as far as the East is from the West that they may never come in judgment against us to condemn us because Christ by appeasing wrath and satisfying Justice by the sacrifice of himself hath overthrown them in judgment and buried them in the grave with his own body You see then my beloved a solid ground of consolation against all our fears and sorrows an answer to all the accusations of our sins here is one for all one above all You would have particular answers to satisfie your particular doubts you are alwayes seeking some satisfaction to your consciences besides this but believe it all that can be said besides this atonement and propitiation is of no more vertue to purge your consciences or satisfie your perplexed souls then these repeated sacrifices of old were Whatsoever you can pitch upon besides this it is insufficient and therefore you find a necessity of seeking some other grace or qualification to appease your consciences even as they had need to multiply sacrifices but now since this perfect and full propitiation is offered up for our sins should not all these vain expiations of your own works cease Truly there is nothing can pacifie Heaven but this and nothing can appease thy Conscience on earth but this too If you find any accusation against you consider Christ hath by a sacrifice for sin condemned sin in his own flesh the marks of the spear of the nails of the buffettings of his flesh these are the tokens and pledges that he encountered with the wrath due to your sins and so hath cut off all the right that sin hath over you If thou can unseignedly in the Lords sight say that it is thy souls desire to be delivered from sin as well as wrath thou would gladly flee from condemnation th●n come to him who hath condemned sin by suffering the condemnation of sin that he might save these who desire to flee from it to him SERMON XIV Rom. 8.4 That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. GOD having a great design to declare unto the world both his justice and mercy towards men he found out this mean most suitable and proportioned unto it which is here spoken of in the 3. vers to send his own Son to bear the punishment of sin that the righteousness of the Law might be freely and graciously fulfilled in sinners And indeed it was not imaginable by us how he could declare both in the salvation of sinners we could not have found out a way to declare his righteousnesse and holinesse which would not have obscured his mercy and grace nor a way to manifest his grace and mercy which would not have reflected upon his Holiness and Justice according to the letter of the Law that was given out as the rule of life he that doth them shall live in them and cursed is every one that doth them not c. W●at could we expect if this be fulfilled as it would appear Gods truth and holinesse requires then we are gone no place for mercy if this be not fulfilled that mercy may be shewed in pardoning sin then the truth and faithfulnesse of God seems to be impaired This is the strait that all sinners would have been into if God had not found such an enlargement as this how to shew mercy without wronging Justice and how to save sinners without impairing his faithfulnesse Truly we may wonder what was it that could straiten his Majesty so that he must send his own Son so beloved of him and bruise him and hide his face from him yea and torment him and not let the cup pass from him for any intreaties might he not more easily have never added such a commination to the Law Thou shalt die or more easily relaxed and repealed that sentence and past by ●he sinner without any more then exacted so heavy a punishment from one that was innoncent Was it the satisfaction of his Justice that straitned him and put a necessity of this upon him But truly it seems it had been no more contrary to righteousnesse to have past over the sinner without satisfaction then to require and take it off one who was not really guilty The truth is it wa● not simply the indispensible necessity of satisfying Justice that put him upon such an hard and unpleasant work as the bruising of his own Son for no doubt he might have as well dispensed with all satisfaction as with the personal satisfaction of the sinner but here the strait lay and here was the urgency of the case he had a purpose to declare his justice and therefore a satisfaction must be had not simply to satisfie righteousnesse but rather to declare his righteousnesse Rom. 3.25 Now indeed to make these two shine together in one work of the salvation of sinners all the world could not have found out the like of this to dispense with personal satisfaction in the sinner which the rigour of the Law required and so to admit a sweet moderation and relaxation that the riches of his grace and mercy might be manifested and yet withall to exact that same punishment of another willingly coming in the sinners place to the end that all sinners may behold his righteousnesse and justice and so this work of the redemption of sinners hath these Names of God published by himself Exod. 34.6 7. to Moses engraven deeply upon it mercy and goodnesse spelled out at length in it for love was the rise of all and love did run alongs in all yet so as there is room to speak out his holiness and righteousness and justice not so much to afright sinners as to make his mercy the more amiable and wonderfull I know not a more pressing ground of strong consolation nor a firmer bulwark of our confidence and salvation then this conjunction of Mercy and Justice in the business there might have been alwayes a secret hink of jealousie and suspition in our minds when God publisheth mercy and foregiveness to us freely O! how shall the Law be satisfied and the importunity of justice and faithfulness that hath pronounced a sentence of death upon us answered Shall not the righteous Law be a loser this way if I be saved and it not satisfied by obedience or suffering how hard would it be to perswade a soul of free pardon that sees such
the very nature of God holiness and goodness As sin is the very nature and image of the Devil the great breach of the Creation was the breaking off of this Image of God that was the heaviest fall of man from that top of divine excellency into the bottom of devillish deformity Now it is this that is the great plot for which Christ came into the world to make up that breach to restore man to that dignity again so that redemption from wrath is but a step to ascend upon to that which is truly Gods design and mans dignity conformity with God in holinesse and righteousnesse O that you could be perswaded of this that Christs businesse in the world was not to bring a notion of an imaginary righteousnesse only by meer imputation but to bring forth a solid and real righteousnesse in our hearts by the operation of his Spirit I say imputation or accounting righteous is but a meer imagination if this lively operation do not follow He came not only to spread his garment over our nakedness and deformity but really and effectually to be a Physician to save our souls to cure all our inward distempers The Gospel is not only a Doctrine of a righteousnesse without us but of a righteousnesse both without for and within us too that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. Christ without happiness it self without cannot make us happy till they come in within us and take up a dwelling in our souls Therefore I declare unto the most part of you who pretend to expect salvation by Jesus Christ that you are yet in your sins and as yet you have no fellowship in this redemption Do you think to walk after the course of the world and the lusts of the flesh to wallow in these common pollutions and uncleannesses among men swearing lying contention railing wrath malice envy drunkenness uncleanness and such like and yet be in Christ Iesus Do not deceive your selves God is not mocked He that is in Christ is a new creature his endeavour and study his affection and desire is toward a new walk after the Spirit Are not most of you carnal all flesh the flesh gives Laws and you obey them Are not your immortal souls enslaved to base lusts to the base love of the world Are they not prone to prostitute themselves to the service of your fleshly and bruitish part Why do you then imagine that ye are in Christ Jesus partakers of his righteousnesse Consider it in time that so you may be indeed what you now are not but pretend to be It is the opinion that you are in Christ already that keeps you out of him But on the other hand again there is nothing here to discourage a poor soul that thinks subjection to sin the greatest slavery who would as gladly be redeemed from the power of it as from hell I say to such whose souls desire it is to be purged from all that filthiness of flesh and spirit and whose continued aim it is to walk in obedience Though you have many sailings and often fall and defile yourself again yet this comfort is holden out here unto you there is no condemnation to you Jesus Christ hath condemned sin to save you he hath fulfilled all righteousness for you and therefore lay you the weight of your acceptation and consolation upon what he hath done himself and not upon what is but yet a doing in you Do you not find I say that the grace of Jesus Christ revealed in the Gospel is that which melts your hearts most Is not the goodness of the Lord that which perswades you most and do not these make you loath your self and love holiness Encourage your selves therefore in him hold fast the righteousness that is without you by faith and certainly you shall find that righteousnesse and holinesse shall in due time be fulfilled within you I know no soul so wretched but it may lay hold on that perfect righteousnesse of Christs and go under the covering of it and take heart from it if so be the desire and affection of their soul be dire●ted to a further end to have his Spirit dwelling within them for the renewing of their heart in righteousness and true holiness I do not say that this is a condition which you must perform before you venture to lay lold on Christs righteousness without you no wayes but rather I would declare unto you the very nature of faith in Christ that it seeks delivery from wrath in him not simply and lastly but that a way may be made for redemption from sin and that there may be a participation of that Divine Nature which is most in its eye SERMON XVI Rom. 8.4 5. who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit For they that are after the flesh c. IF there were nothing else to engage our hearts to Religion I think this might do it that there is so much reason in it Truly it is the most rational thing in the world except some revealed mysteries of faith which are far above reason but not contrary to it there is nothing besides in it but that which is the purest reason Even that part of it which is most difficult to man that which concerns the moderating of his lusts and affections and the regulating his walk and carriage there is nothing that Christianity requires in these matters but that which may be perswaded by most convincing reasons to be most suitable and comely for men as man you may take it in the subject in hand there is nothing sounds harsher to men and seems harder in Religion then such a victory over the flesh such an abstractedness from sensual and earthly things and yet truly there is nothing in the world that more adorns and beautifies a man nothing so elevats him above beasts as this in so much that many natural spirits void of this saving light have notwithstanding been taken with somewhat of the beauty of it and so far enamoured with the love of it as to account all the world mad and bruitish that followed these lower things and inslaved themselves unto them I take the two fountains of all the pollutions disorders and defilements among men to be the inconsideration and ignorance of God that eternal Spirit and fountain-being and the ignorance of our own souls these immortal spirits within us which are derived from that fountain-spirit This is the misery of men that scarce do they once seriously reflect upon their own spirits or think what immortal souls is within them and what affinity these have to the fountain of all spirits therefore do men basely throw down themselves to the satisfaction of the lusts of the flesh Now indeed this is the very beginning of Christianity to reduce men from these baser thoughts and imployments to the consideration of their immortal souls within And O! how will a Christian blush to behold himself in that light to see the
draws the spirit of a man after them he hath found the savour and seen the beauty and this allures him to taste them and then he invites the welbeloved to come and taste also to eat of these fruits with him We might instance this in many things a Christian relishes more sweetnesse in temperance in beating down his body and bringing it into subjection in abstaining from fleshly lusts then a carnal man tastes in the most exq●isite pleasures that the world can afford A Christian he savours a sweetnesse in meeknesse and long-suffering he ●ath more delight in forgiving and forbearing and praying for them that wrong him then a natural man hath in the accomplishing of the most greedy desires of revenge O what beauty hath gentlenesse goodnesse and patience in his eye what sweetness is in the love of God to his taste How ravishing is the joy of the Holy Ghost How contenting is that peace that passeth understanding These are things of the Spirit that he minds and savours Know Christians that it is to this ye are called to mind these things most and to seek them most beware lest the deceitfulness of sin intise you through the treacherous and deceitful lusts that are yet living in your members If you indeed mind these things and out of the apprehension of the beauty and savour of the sweetnesse and smell of the fragrancy of them would be content to quite all your corrupt lusts for to be possessed with them then you are on that blessed and happy side of this great and fundamental division of men you have indeed the priviledge of all others who are not renewed what ever be your condition in the world you are of the Spirit and this is better then to be rich wise great and honourable God hath not given you such things as the world go mad after but envy them not he hath given you better things more real and substantial things that makes you far better and more excellent But then this difference as it is the widest so it is the durablest as it is substantial here so it is perpetual hereafter When all the other differences between men shall be abolished this alone shall remain and therefore you have it in the next vers to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace This division that is begun here shall g●ow wider fo● all ete●nity there shall be a greater difference after this life and a more sensible separation Death and life eternal death and ete●nal life are the two sides of this diffe●ence as it shall shortly be stated When all other degrees and distances of men sha●l be blotted out and buried in eternal oblivion there shall no ves●●ge or ma●k remain of either wisdom or riches or honour o● such like but al● mankind shall be as to these outward things levelled and equalized this one unseen and neglected difference in the world sha●l appear and shine in that day when the Lord maketh up his jewels then he will discern between the righteous and the wicked between him that feareth God and him that feareth him not Mal. 3.18 The carnal and spiritual man have opposite affections and motions the spirit of the one is on a journey or walk upward after the Spirit and the spirit of the other is on a walk downward towards the flesh and the further they go the further distant they are the one shall be taken up to the company of the spirits of just men made per●ect and to the fellowship of Angels the other shall be thrown down into the fellowship and society of Devils and truly it is no wonder it ●all so low for all its motions in the body was downward to the fulfilling of the lusts of the flesh Thus you see the difference will grow wider and more sensible then it is yet between the godly and ungodly in this world it doth not so evidently appear as it will do a●terward As two men that leave one another and have their faces on contrary ai●ts at the beginning the distance and difference is not so great and so sensible but wait a little and the further they go the further they are distant and the wider their separation is Even so when a Christian begins to break off his way from the common cour●e of the world it doth not appear to be so different from it as to convince himself and others but i● his face be towards Ierusalem above and his heart thitherward certainly he will be daily moving further from the world till the distance be sensible both to himself and others he will be more and more transformed and renewed till at length all be changed No wonder then that these two cannot meet together in the end of their course whose course was so opposite Though wicked men will desire to die the death of the righteous yet it is no more possible they can meet in the end then Hell and Heaven can reconcile together because they walk to two contra●y points SERMON XIX Rom. 8.6 For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace IT is true this time is short and so short that scarce can similitudes or comparisons be had to shadow it out unto us it s a dream a moment a vapour a flood a flower and whatsoever can be more fading or perishing and the●e●ore it is not in it self very considerable yet in another respect it is of all things the m●st precious and worthy of the deepest attention and most serious consideration and that is because it is linked unto eternity there is an indissolvable knot between them that no power or art can break or loose The beginning of eternity is continuedly united to the end of time and you know all the infinit extension o● eternity is uniform it admits of no change in it from better to worse or worse to better and therefore the beginning of our eternity whether it be happiness or misery is but one perpetuated and eternized moment so to speak Seing then we are into the body and sent unto the world for this end that we may passe through into an unchangeable eternal estate Truly of all things it is most concerning and weighty what way we choose to this journeys end seing the time is short in which we have to walk and it is uncertain too we ought as the Apostle Peter speaks give all diligence as long as the day remains we should drive the harder lest that eternal night overtake us The shortness and uncertainty of time should constrain us to take the present opportunity and not to let it slip over as we do seing it is not at all in our hand either what is past or what is to come the one cannot be recalled the other is not in our power to call and bring forward therefore the present moment that God hath given us should be catched hold on and redeemed as the Apostle speaks Eph. 5.16 We
indeed in the first word of this vers there is something of the excellent nature of Christianity holden out If Christ be in you which is the true description of a Christian one in whom Christ is which imports The divine principle and the spiritual subject of Chri●tianity The principle is Christ in a man Christ by His Spirit dwelling in him This great Apost●e knew thi● well in his own experience and therefore he can speak best in this style I live yet not I bu● Christ in me Gal. 2.20 Importing that Christ and His Spirit is to the soul what the soul is to the body that there is a living influence from Heaven that acts and moves the soul of a Christian as powerfully yet as sweetly and pleasantly as if it were the natural motion of the soul and truly it is the natural motion of the soul it s that primitive life which was most connatural to the soul of man which sin did deprive us of all the powerful constraint and violence that Christ uses in drawing the souls of men to him and after him is as kindly unto them and perfects them as much as that impulse by which the soul moves and turns the body a sweet compu●●ion and blessed violence Now this should make Christians often to reflect upon another principle of their life then themselves that by looking on Him who is the resurrection and the life who is the true Vine and abiding in Him by faith their life may be continued and inc●eased It is certainly much reflection on Him who is all in all and lesse upon our selv●s that maintains this life and therefore the most part of men being wholly strangers to this whether in their purposes or practices or judgings of both unacquainted with any higher look in Religion then they use in their natural and civil actings it doth give ground to assure us that they are strangers alienated from the life of God without God and without Christ in the world But then the spiritual subject of Christianity is here Christ in you not Christ without you in ordinances in profession in some civil ●arriage but Christ within the heart of a man th●t as a Christian It is the receiving of Ch●ist into the soul and putting Him on upon the inner man and renewing it that makes a Christian not being externally cloathed with him or compassed about with him in the administration of the Ordinances It fears me most part of us who bear that name of Christianity have no character of it within if we were looked and searched Many are like the sepulchres Christ speaks of without painted and fair within nothing but rottennesse and dead bones What have many of you more o● Christ then what a blind man hath of light it is round about him but not within him The light hath shined in darknesse but your darknesse cannot comprehend it You are environed with the outward appearances of Christ in his Word and Ordinances and that is all but neither within you nor upon many of you is there any thing either of his light or life not so much as any outward profession or behaviour suitable to the revelation of Christ about you as if you were ashamed to be Christians you maintain grosse ignorance and practise manifest ●ebellion against his known will in the very light of the Gospel How few have so much tincture of Christ so much as to colour the external man or to cloath it with any blamelessness of walking or form of Religion How few so much as Christians in the Letter for you are not acquainted either with Letter or Spirit either with knowledge or affection or practice But suppose that some have put on Christ on their outward man and colour over themselves with some performances of religious duties and smooth themselves with civility in carriage yet alas How few are they who are renewed in the spirit of ●heir mind and have put Christ on their inward man who have opened the secrets of their hearts and received him to ly all night between their breasts How ●ew are busied about their hearts to have any new impression and dye upon their affections to mould them after a new manner to kill the love of this world and the lusts of it and cast out the rottenness and superfluity of naughtiness which ●bides within But some there are who are pe●swaded thus to do to give up their spirits to Religion and all their business and care is To have Christ within as well as without Now if the ●est of you will not be perswaded to be of this number consider what you pre-judge your selves of of all the comfort of Religion and then Religion is no Religion and to no purpose if you have no benefit by it And certainly except Christ be in you as a King to rule you and a Prophet to teach you to subdue your lusts and to dispel your darknesse when he appears he cannot appear to your comfort and salvation You are deprived of this great cordial against death death must seise upon all that is within you soul and body since Christ the Spirit of life is not within you Happiness without you will not make you happy salvation round about you will not save you If you would be saved there must be a near and immediat union with happinesse Christ in the heart and salvation cometh with him A Christian is not only Christ without not imputing his sins to him clothing him with His righteousnesse but Christ within too cleansing the heart from the love of sin perfecting holinesse in the fear of God Do not think you have any share in Christ without you except you receive Christ within you because Christ is one within and without and His gifts are undivided Therefore true ●aith receives whole Christ as a compleat Saviour even as He is intirely offered so He is undividedly received as He is without saving us and within sanctifying us Christ without delivering from wrath and Christ within redeeming from all iniquity these cannot be parted more then His coat that had no seam It is a heavy and weighty word of this Apostles 2 Cor. 13.5 examine your selves whether ye be in the faith know ye not your selves that Christ is in you except you be reprobates I wish ye would lay it to heart who have never yet returned to your hearts If Christ be not formed in you as Gal. 4.19 You are as yet among the refuse dr●sse and that which must be burnt with fire you cannot but be cast away in the day when he makes up his jewels Where Christ is He is the hope of glory he is an immortal seed of glory How can you hope for Christ who have nothing of Him within you Now the other touch-stone of true Religion is the great comfort it furnishes to the soul And of all comforts the greatest is that which is a cordial to the heart against the greatest fears and evils Now certainly the matter of
comprehensive of all that can be imagined to be the perfective good of man It is no wonder then that the Apostle reckon this Doctrine of the Resurrection amongst the foundations of Christianity Heb. 6.1 2 for truly these t●o the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the mortal body are the two ground-stones or pillars of true Religion which if they be not well settled in the hearts of men all Religion is tottering and ruinous and unable to support it self That the soul cannot taste death or see corruption and that the body shall but taste it and as it were salute it and cannot alwayes abide under the power of it these are the prime foundations upon which all Christian perswasion is built for without these be laid down in the lowest and deepest part of the heart all exhortations to an holy and righteous life are weak and ineffectual all consolations are empty and vain in a word Religion is but an airy speculation that hath no consistence but in the imaginations of men it is an house upon sand that can abide no blast of temptation no wave of misery but must straight way fall to the ground From whence is it I pray you that the perswasions of the Gospel hath so little power upon men that the plain and plentiful publication of a Saviour is of so small vertue to stir up the hearts of men to take hold on him How comes it to passe that the preeepts and prohibitions of the most high God coming forth under his authority lays so little restraint on mens corruptions that so few will be perswaded to stop their course and come off the wayes they are accustomed that men pull away the shoulder and stop the ear and make their hearts as adamant incapable of being affected with either the authority or love of the Gospel that when He pipes unto us so few dance and when he mourns so few laments Is it not because these two foundations are not laid and mens hearts not digged deep by earnest consideration to receive these ground-stones of Christianity the belief of their souls eternal survivance after the dust and of the revivance and resurrection of the body after it hath slept a while in the dust I remember Heathens have had some noble and rare conceptions about vertue and some have laboured to enamour men with the native beauty of it and to perswade them that it was a sufficient reward to it self and truly it would far more become a Christian who knoweth the high and divine pattern of holinesse to be God himself and so must needs behold a far surpassing beauty and excellency in the Image of God than in all earthly things I say it would become him to accustome himself to a dutiful observance of Religion even without all respect to the reward of it he would train his heart to do homage to God out of a loyal affection and respect to His Majesty and from the love of the very intrinsick beauty of obedience without borrowing alwayes from such selfie considerations of our own happinesse or misery Notwithstanding such is the posture of mans spirit now that he cannot at all be engaged to the love of Religion except some Seen advantage concilat it and therefore the Lord makes use of such selfie principles in drawing men to Himself and keeping them still with Him and truly considering mans infirmity this is the spi●it and life of all Religion Immortality and Resurrection that which gives a lustre to all and quickens all that which mak●s all to sink deep and that which makes a Christian stedfast and immovable 2 Cor. 5.8 It is certainly Hope that is the key of the heart that opens and shuts it to any thing These the Apostle Peter 1 Epist. 1. blesseth God heartily for the new birth and in the expressing of it makes hope the very term of that generation and so it must be a substantial thing Blessed be God who hath begotten us again to a lively hope Hope hath a quickning power in it it makes all new where it comes and is full of spirit it is the Helmet and Anchor of a Christian that which bears the dint of temptation and makes him steady in Religion No man will put in his plough in this ground or sow unto the Spirit but in hope for he that soweth must sow in hope else his Plough will not go deep 1 Cor. 9.10 This then is the very spirit and life of Religion the resurrection of the dead without which our faith were in vain and men would continue still in their sins Certainly it is the deep inconsideration of this never-ending endurance of our souls and restitution of our bodies to the same immortality that makes the most part of men so slight and superficial in Religion else it were not possible if that were laid to heart but men would make Religion their business and chief business We have here the two genuine causes of the resurection of the bodies of Christians the resurrection of Christ and the inhabitation of his Spirit The influence that the resurrection of Christ hath on ours is lively and fully holden out by this Apostle 1 Cor. 15. against them who deny the resurrection from the dead If Christ be not raised your faith is in vain ye are yet in your sins and they that are asleep are perished Religion were nothing but a number of empty words of show Preaching were a vanity and imposture Faith were a meer ●ancy if this be not laid down as the ground-stone Christ raised not as a natural person but as a common politick person as the first fruits of them that sleep vers 17 18 19 20. where he alludes to the ceremony of offering the first fruits of their harvest Lev. 23.10 for under the Law they might not eat of the fruits of the land till they were sanctified all was counted prophane till they were someway con●ecrated to the Lord. Now for this end the Lord appointed them to bring one sheaf for all and that was the representative o● all the rest of the heap and this was waved before the Lord and lifted up from the earth now according to the Apostles argument Rom. 11 16. If the first fruits be h●ly so is the lump for it represents all the lump and therefore Iesus Christ the chief of all his brethren was made the first fruits from the dead and lifted up from the grave as the representer of all the lump of his elect and so it must needs follow That they shall not continue in the grave but must in due time partake of that benefite which he was first entred in possession of in their name and for them for if this fi●st fruits be holy so the whole lump must be holy and if the first fruits be risen so must the lump You see then the force of the present reason If the Spirit that raised Christ dwell in you He shall also raise you namely because he
refreshment of it and yet this may not be had they shall seek death and it shall flee from them Now my beloved I would desire this discourse might open way for the hearty and cordial intertainment of the Gospel and that you might be perswaded to awake unto righteousness and sin no more 1 Cor. 15.34 Be not deceived my brethren flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God Certainly if you have no other image then what you came in the world withall you cannot have this hope to be conformed one day to the glorious Body of Christ What will become of you in that day who declare now by the continued vent of your hearts that this holy Spirit dwells not in you and alas how many are such Oh pity your selves your souls and bodies both If for love to your bodies ye will follow its present lusts and care only for the things of the body you act the greatest enmity and hostility against your own bodies Consider I beseech you the eternal state of both and your care and study will run in another channel And for you who have any working of the Spirit in you whether convicing you of sin and misery and of righteousness in Christ or sometimes comforting you by the word applyed to your heart or teaching you another way then the world walks into I recommend unto you that of the Apostles 1 Cor. 15.58 Wherefore my brethren be stedfast c. alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord knowing your Labour is not in vain SERMON XXXII Rom. 8.12 Therefore brethren we are debters not to the flesh to live after the flesh c. ALL things in Christianity have a near and strait conjunction it is so intire and absolute a piece that if one link be loosed all the chain falls to the ground and if one be well fastned upon the heart it brings all alongs with it some speak of all truths even in nature that they are knit so together that any truth may be concluded out of every truth at least by a long circuit of deduction and reasoning but whatsoever be of that certainly Religion is a more intire thing and all the parts of it more nearly conjoyned together that they may mutually enforce one another Precepts and promises are thus linked together that if any soul lay hold indeed upon any promise of grace he draws alongs with it the obligation of some precept to walk suitable to such precious promises There is no encouragement you can indeed fasten upon but it will joyn you as nearly to the commandment and no consolation in the Gospel that doth not carry within its bosome an exhortation to holy walking Again on the other hand there is no precept but it should lead you straight way to a promise no exhortation but it is invironed before and behind with a strong consolation to make it pierce the deeper and go down the sweeter Therefore you see how easily the Apostle digresseth from the one to the other how sweetly and pertinently these are interwoven in his discourse The first word of the Chapter is a word of strong consolation there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ and this like a flood carries all down with it all precepts and exhortations and the soul of a believer with them and therefore he subjoyns an exhortation to holy and spiritual walking upon that very ground and because commandments of this nature will not float so to speak unlesse they have much water of that kind and cannot have such a swift course except the tide of such encouragements flow fast therefore he openeth that spring again in the preceeding words and letteth the rivers of consolation flow forth even the hope of immortality and eternal life and this certain●y will raise up a soul that was on ground and carry him above in motion of obedience and therefore he may well in the next place stir them up to their duty and mind them of their obligation Therefore brethren we are debters not to the fl●sh To make this the more effectual he drops it in with affection in a sweet compell●●ion of love and equality Brethren There is nothing so powerful in perswation as love it will sweeten a bitter and unpleasant reproof and make it go down more easily though it maketh lesse noise than threatnings and severity and authority yet it is more forcible for it insinuats it self and in a manner surpriseth the soul and so preventeth all resistance as when the Sun ma●e the traveller part with his cloak whereas the wind and rain made him hold it faster so affection will prevail where authority and terrour cannot it will melt that which a stronger power cannot break the story of Elijah 1 King 19. may give some representation of this the Lord was not in the strong wind nor in terrible earth-quake nor yet in the fire but in the calm still voice The Lord hath chosen this way of publishing his grace in the Gospel because the sum of it is love to sinners and good-will towards men he holds it forth in the calm voice of love and these who are his ambassadors should be cloathed with such an affection i● they intend to prevail with men to engage their affections O that we were possessed with that brotherly love one towards anot●er for the salvation one of another especially that the Preachers of the Gospel might be thus kindly affectioned towards others and that ye would take it thus the calling you off the wayes of sin as the act of the greatest love But then consider the equality o● this obligation for there is nothing pressed upon you but what lyeth as heavily upon them that presseth it this debt binds all O that the Ministers of the Gospel could carry the impression of this on their hearts that when they perswade others they may withall perswade themselves and when they speak to others they may sit down among the hearers If an Apostle of so eminent dignity levelleth himself in this consideration Therefore brethren we are debters how much more ought Pastors and Teachers come in the same rank and degree of debt and obligation with others Truly this is the great obstruction of the successe of the Gospel that these who bind on burdens on others do not themselves touch them with one of their fingers and while they seem serious in perswading others yet withall declare by their carriage that they do not believe themselves what they bear upon others so that preaching seemeth to be an imposture and affections in perswading ●f othe●● to be borrowed as it were in a scene to be laid down again out of it But then again there is a misconceit among people that this holy and spiritual walking is not of common obligation but peculiar to the preachers of the Gospel Many make their reckoning so as if they were not called to such high aims and great endeavours but truly my beloved this is a thing of common concernment
foolish senslesse draughts in the mind that it cannot rec●●●e the true image of wisdom This then when a soul finds that it hath misled it self being misguided by the wild-fire of its lusts and hath hardly escaped perishing and falling head-long in the Pit this disposes the soul to ● willing resignation of it self to one wiser and powerfuller the Spirit of God and so he giveth the Spirit the string of his affections and judgment to lead him by and he walketh willingly in that way to eternal life since his heart was enlarged with so much knowledge and love and now having given up your selves thus you would carefully eye your leader and attend all his motions that you may conform your self to them whensoever the Spirit pulleth you by the heart draweth at your conscience to drive you to prayer or any such duty do not resist that pull do not quench the Spirit le●t He let you alone and do not call you nor speak to you If you fall out thus with your leader then you must guide your selves and truly you will guide it into the pit if left to yourselves therefore make much of all the impulses of your conscience of all the touches and inward motions of light and affection to entertain these and draw them forth in meditation and action for these are nothing else but the Spirit your le●●●r plucking at you to follow Him and if you sit when he ●e●h ●o walk if you neglect such warnings then you may g●ieve him and this cannot but in the end be bitte●nesse to you Certainly many Christians are guilty in this and prejudge themselves of the present com●ort and benefite of this inward anointing that teacheth all thing● and of this bosomeguide that leade●h in all truth because they are so heavy and lumpish to be led a●ter Him they drive slowly and takes very much pressure and perswasion to any duty whereas we should accustom our selves to willing and ready obedience upon the least signification of his mind yea and which is worse we often ●esist the Holy Ghost he draweth and we hold beloved sins he pulleth and we pull back from the most spiritual duties there is so much perversnesse and frowardnesse yet in our natures that there needs the Almighty draught of his arm to make it straight as the●e is need of infinite grace to pardon it Now my beloved if you have in your desires and affections resigned your selves over to the guidance of this Spirit ●nd this be your real and sincere endeavour to follow it and in as far as you are carried back or contrary by temptation and corruption or retarded in your motion it is your lamentation before the Lord I say unto you cheat your hearts and lift them up in the belief of this priviledge confe●●ed upon you you are the sons of God for he giveth this Tutor and Pedagogue to none but to his own children as many as are led by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God Suppose you cannot exact●y follow his motion but are often driven out or turned back yet hath not the Spirit the hold of your hea●t are you not detained by the cord of your judgment and the law of your mind and is the●e not some chain fastened about your heart which maketh it out-strip the practice by desires and affections you are the Sons of God that is truly the greatest dignity and highest priviledge in respect of which all relation may ●lush and hide their faces what a●e all the splendid and glistering titles among men but empty s●owes and evanishing sound● in respect of this to be called the Son o● a Gentle-man of a Noble-●an of a K●ng how much do the son●●f ●●en pride th●mselves in it But truly th●t putteth no intrinsick dignity in the persons themselves it is a miserable poverty to borrow praise fro● another and truly he that boasts of his parentage aliena laudat non sua he praiseth that which is anothers not his own But this dignity is truly a dignity it puts intrinsick worth in the person and puts a more excellent spirit in them then that which is in the world as is said of ●aleb and besides it intitles to the greatest happinesse imaginable SERMON XXXVI Rom. 8.14 For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God Vers. 15. For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear c. CHildren do commonly resemble their parents not only in the outward proportion and feature of their countenances but also in the disposition and temper of their spirits and generally they are inclined to imitate the customs and carriage of their parents so that they sometimes may be accounted the very living images of such persons and in them men are thought to out-live themselves Now indeed they that are the sons of God are known by this Character that they are led by the Spirit of God and there is the more necessity and the more reason too of this resemblance of God and imitation of him in his children because that very divine birth that they have from Heaven consists in the renovation of their natures and assimilation to the divine nature and therefore they are possessed with an inward principle that carries them powerfully towards a conformity with their heavenly Fathe● and it becometh their great study and endeavour to observe all the dispositions and carriage of their Heavenly Father which are so honourable and high and suitable to Himself that they at least may breath and halt after the imitation of Him Therefore our Lord ●xhorts us and taketh a domestick example and familiar patern to perswade us the more by Be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect Matth. 5.48 And there is one perfection he especially recommends for our imitation mercifulnesse and compassion towards men opposed to the violence fury and implacablen●sse to the oppression and revenge and hatred that abounds among men Luk. 6.36 And generally in all his wayes of holinesse and purity of goodnesse and mercy we ought to be followers of Him as dear children who are not only oblidged by the common Law of Sympathy between Parents and Children but moreover engaged by the tender affection that he carrieth to us Eph. 5.1 Now because God is high as Heaven and his way and thoughts and dispositions are infinitly above us the pattern seems to be so far out of sight that it is given over as desperat by many to attempt any conformity to it therefore it hath pleased the Lord to put his own Spirit within his own Children to be a bosom-pattern and example and this is our duty to resign our selves to his leading and direction the Spirit brings the copy near hand us and though we cannot attain yet we should follow after though we cannot make out the lesson yet we should be scribling at it and the more we exercise our selves this way setting the Spirits direction before our eyes the more perfect
is the g●eatest fool in the world that would on that account venture on satisfaction to his lusts for though it be true that he be not in danger of eternal wrath yet he may find so much present w●ath in his conscience as may make him think it was a ●oolish bargain he may lose so much of the sweetnesse of the peace and joy of God as all the pleasures o● sin cannot compense The●efore to the end that y●u whose souls a●e once pacified by the blood of Christ and composed by his word of promise may enjoy that constant rest and tranquility as not to be enthralled ag●●n to your old fears and terrours I would advise and recommend to you these two things one is that ye would be much in the studie of that allowance which the promises of Christ affords be much in the serious apprehension of the Gospel and certainly your doubts and feares would evainish at one puff of such a rooted and established meditation Think what you are called to not to fear again but to love rather and honour him as a Father and then take heed to walk suitably and preserve your seal of adoption unb●otted unrusted you would study so to walk as you may not cast dirt upon it or open any gap in the conscience for the re-entry of these hellish-like fears and dread●ul apprehensions of God C●rtainly ●ts impossible to preserve the Spirit in freedom if a man be not watchfull against sin and corruption David prayes re-establish me with thy free Spirit as if his spirit had been abased embondaged and enthraled by the power of that corruption If you would have your spirits kept free from the ●ear of wrath study to keep them free from the power of sin for that is but a f●uit of this and it s most suitable that the soul that cares not to be in bondage to sinful lusts should by the righteousnesse of God tempered with love and wisdom be brought under the bondage he would not that is o●●ear and terrour ●or by this means the Lord makes him know how evil the first is by the bitternesse of the second It is usual on such a Scripture as this to propound many questions and debate many practical cases as whether a soul after believing can be under legal bondage and wherein these d●ffer the bondage o● a soul after believing and in it fi●st conversion And how far that bondage o● fear is preparatory to faith and many such like but I choose rather to hold forth the simple and naked truth for your edification then put you upon or intertain you in such needlesse janglings and contentions All I desire to say to a soul in bondage is to exhort him to come to the Redeemer and to consider that his case calls and cryes for a delivery Come I say and he shall find rest and liberty to his soul. All I would say to souls delivered from this bondage is to request and beseech them to live in a holy fear of sin and jealousie over themselves that so they may not be readily brought under the bondage of the fear of wrath again Perfect love casts out the fear of hell but perfect love b●ings in the fear of sin Ye that love the Lord hate ill and if ye hate it ye will fear it in this state of infirmity and weaknesse wherein we are And if at any time ye through negligence and carelessness of walking lose the comfortable evidence o● the Fathers love and be reduced again to your old prison o● legal terrour do not despair for that do not think that such a thing could not be●all a child of God and from that ground do not raze former foundations for the Scriptures saith not that whosoever believes once in Christ and receives the Spirit of Adoption cannot fear again ●or we see it otherwise in David in Heman in Iob c. all holy Saints but the Scripture saith ye have not received the spirit of bondage for that end to fear again it is not the allowance of your Father your allowance is better and larger if you knew it and did not sit below it Now the great gi●t and large allowance of our Father is expressed in the next words but ye have received the Spirit of Adoption c. Which Spirit of Adoption is a Spirit of Intercession to make us cry to God as our Father These are two gifts Adoption or the priviledge of Sons and the Spirit of Adoption revealing the love and mercy of God to the heart and framing it to a soul-like disposition compare the two states together and its a marvelous change a Rebel condemned and then pardoned and then adopted to be a Son of God a sinner under bondage a bound slave to sin and Sat●n not only freed from that intollerable bondage but advanced to this liberty to be made a Son of God this will be the continued wonder of eternity and that whereabout the song o● Angels and Saints will be accursed rebels expecting nothing but present death sinners arraigned and sentenced be●ore his Tribunal and already tasting Hell in their Consciences and in fear of eternal perishing not only to be delivered from all that but to be dignified with this priviledge to be the Sons of God to be taken from the Gibbit to be Crowned that is the great my●tery of wisdom and grace revealed in the Gospel the proclaiming whereof will be the joynt labour of all the innumerable companies above for all eternity Now if you ask how this est●te is attainable Himself tells us Iohn 1.12 As many as believed or received him to them he gave the priviledge to be the Sons of God The way is made plain and easie Christ the Son of God the natural and eternal Son of God became the son of man to facilitate this he hath taken on the burden of mans sin the chastisement of our peace and so of the glorious Son of God he became like the wretched and accursed sons of men and there●ore God hath proclaimed in the Gospel not only an immunity and freedom from wrath to all that in the sense of their own misery cordially receive him as he is offered but the unspeakable priviledge of Sonship and Adoption for his sake who became our elder brother Gal. 4.4 5. Men that want children use to supply their want by adopting some beloved friend in the place of a son and this is a kind of supply o● nature for the comfort of them that want But it is strange that God having a Son so glorious the very character of his Person and brightnesse of his glory in whom he delighted ●rom eternity strange I say that he should in a manner losse and give away his only begotten Son that he might by his means adopt others poor despicable creatures yea rebellious to be his sons and daughters Certainly this is an act infinitly transcending nature such an act that hath an unsearchable mystery in it into which Angels desire to look
up and down with every wind its double-minded Now one way then another now in one mind and shortly changed and indeed the soul is like the Sea capable of the least or greatest commotion Iam. 1.6 7 8. I know not any thing that will either fix your hearts from wandring in Prayer or establish your hearts from trouble and disquiet after it nothing that will so exonor and ease your spirits of care as this To lay hold on God as All-sufficient and lay that constraint on your hearts to wait on him and his pleasur● to cast your souls on his promises that are so full and so free and abide there as at your Anchor-hold in all the vicissi●udes and changes of outward or inward things In spiritual things that concerns your salvation that which is absolutely necessary you may take the boldnesses to be absolute in it and as Iob though he should slay me yet will I trust in thee and as Iacob I will not let thee go till thou blesse me But either in outward things that have some usefulness in them but are not alwayes fittest for our chiefest good or in the degrees of spiritual gifts and measures of graces the Lord calls us without anxiety to pour out our hearts in them unto him but withall we would do it with submission to his pleasure because he knows best what is best for us In these we are not bound to be confident to receive the particular we ask but rather our confidence should pitch upon his good-will and favour that he will certainly deny nothing that himself knows is good for us And so in these we should absolutely cast our self without ca●efulnesse upon his loving and fatherly providence and resign our selve● to him to be disposed 〈◊〉 in them as he sees convenient There is sometimes too much limitation of God and peremptoriness used with him in such things in which his wisdom craves a latitude both in publick and privat matters even as mens affections and interests are ingaged but ordinarily it s attended and followed with shame and disappointment in the end and there is on the other hand intollerable remisseness and slacknesse in many in pressing even the weightiest petitions of salvation mortification c. which certainly ariseth from the diffidence and unbelief of the heart and the want of that rooted perswasion both of the incomparable necessity and worth of the things themselves and of his willingnesse and engagement to bestow them The word is doubled here Abba Father the Syriack and Greek word signifying one thing expressing the tender affection and love of God towards them that come to him He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him deligently so he that cometh to God must believe that he hath the bowels and compassion of a Father and will be more easily inclined with our importunat cryes then the fathers of our flesh he may suffer his children to cry long but it is not because he will not hear but because he would hear them longer and delights to hear their cr● oftener If he delay it s his wisdom to appretiat and endear his mercies to us and to teach us to presse our petitions and sue for an answer Besides this is much for our comfort that from whomsoever and whatsoever corner in the world prayers come up to him they cannot want acceptance All Languages all Countreys all Places are sanctified by Jesus Christ that whosoever calls upon the Name of the Lord from the ends of the earth shall be saved And truly it is sweet meditation to think that from the ends of the earth the cryes of souls are heard and that the ends is as near Heaven as the middle and a Wildernesse as near as a Paradise that though we understand not one another yet we have one loving and living Father that understands all our meanings and so the different Languages and Dialects of the members of this body make no confusion in Heaven but meet together in his heart and affection and are one perfume one incense sent up from the whole Catholick Church which here is scattered on the earth O that the Lord would perswade us to cry this way to our Father in all our necessities FINIS