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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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fountaine continually The streames are clensing Beseech God to wash and make thee cleane The streames are healing Here 's a medicine made up of Christ's blood Apply this to thy sores It cures all diseases of body and soul Never leave this fountaine Take heed of going to Abana and Pharphar Preferre not them before the waters of this Fountaine If thou wilt bee a tasting of all waters thou must never look to bee cured If thou wilt goe from creature to creature and hew out their broken cisternes and depart from the fountaine to thy perill bee it If thou desirest to bee made whole sinne no more in trusting to Creature Cisternes lest a worse thing come upon thee Goe to Christ wash in the fountaine of his blood keep close to him never goe from him nor let him goe and thou shalt bee healed 6ly and lastly When thou art healed returne thankes for thy healing as the Samaritan did Bless God that hee hath loved thee given his Sonne for thee and washt thee And doe not speake only but act thankfullness by thy Obedience to God all thy dayes Then is thankfulness best performed when we praise God with an holy life ' I le conclude all with Psal 50. 23. Who so offereth praise glorifieth mee and to him that ordereth his Conversation aright will I shew the salvation of God The Pleasant and Peaceable ways of Wisdom Prov. 3. 17. Her ways are ways of pleasantness all her pathes are peace THe Proverbs of Solomon are Divine Aphorismes Serm. 9. At St. Mary's Oxon July ●5 1649. select pithy Sentences penn'd by Solomon but Indited by the Spirit of God 'T is rare to find any coherence or dependance on the precedent words they are so entire of themselves omnibus numeris absoluta Yet the Words read have some dependance upon the precedent Verses They are a Link of a goodly Chain of Pearls For if you review v. 13. that Man's happiness is admired who hath got this Jewel Happy is the man that findeth wisdom and the man that getteth understanding And to invite others and draw them on to this rich purchase the wise Man dedicates an ample Panegyrick to Wisdom Tully commends Pompey Pliny Trajan but they both come short of this Encomium Many Arguments are set down from the 14. to the 20. ver inclusivè to inhance the matchless unvaluable worth and dignity of Divine Wisdom My Text is placed in the middle and is a special encouragement to quicken our Spirits to wing our affections and make them soar Heaven-ward Her ways c. And here a tacit Objection is removed O say some if we take upon us the profession of Godliness then we must bid adieu to all pleasures Farewell all mirth and delight nothing now but mourning and lamentation breaking the heart pensiveness of spirit and going mourning all the day long 'T is no such matter you are mistaken when once you make choice of the ways of Godliness and have got a spiritual acquaintance and communion with God you shall not loose pleasures but change them you shall loose carnal and get spiritual pleasures you shall loose empty and unsatisfying and get full satisfying pleasures you shall loose transient and get permanent pleasures O but say some we meet with many troubles many oppositions in our way to Heaven We are to encounter with the grand Enemies of our salvation the Flesh the Devil and the World and much molestation we find from them But however thou maist want peace with men thou hast peace with God and Conscience Though thou wantest peace on Earth yet thou art no looser if thy peace be made in Heaven Her pathes c. The Argument of my Meditations is the singular commendation Text divided of the ways of Wisdom Wherein observe a Subject and a Predicate The Subject term'd ways and pathes of wisdom The Predicate ways of pleasantness and peace I 'le not injure them by any sub-division lest I divide the sense They contain in them two precious Points of Doctrine 1. All the ways of godliness are ways of pleasantness and full of delight Doct. 1 unto the children of God 2. The pathes of godlin●sse are peaceable pathes and full of Doct. 2 peace I resume the first Doctrine and shall inlarge it in this easie Method Method propounded 1. Clear the truth from some Doubts and Objections made against it 2. Prove it by particular instances 3. Confirm it by some evident Demonstrations Fourthly and lastly I shall set it home upon your affections by particular Application and hope so to conclude through the Grace of God as to make you in love with the ways of godliness 1. Then let 's remove the Objections as so many stumbling blocks 1. Head Objections removed Object 1. out of the way It 's Objected That Godlyness abridgeth men of pleasure● it bindes them to their good behaviours They must sanctifie the Sabbath they must set up God in their Families they may not swill swagger carrouse and game away their time Now what is so great an enemy unto the pleasures of Men and Women as Religion It cuts them short of those Delights and Pleasures which others enjoy For Answer hereunto 1. I say Godlyness cuts us off unlawful Answ but not lawful pleasures Whatever pleasures it forbids thee the reason is because there 's sinfulness in them And 't is a great mercy even the godly mans delight to want such pleasures Godlyness hinders thee of those delights which dishonor God And upon serious thoughts thou wilt profess with Austin Quam suave mihi subitò factom est carere suavitatibus istarum nugarum 2. Whatever pleasure Godlyness denys you it makes it up abundantly with the pleasures and ravishing consolations of Jesus Christ Psal 16. 11. Thou wilt shew me the path of life in thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore It takes away dross and gives thee Gold it takes away worldly and gives thee heavenly pleasures when thou hast less of the Creature and more of the Creator thou hast cause to be glad of the exchange Abraham left his Countrey at Gods command but the Promise made all up with interest Gen. 12. 2. The Lord said unto Abraham Get thee out of thy countrey and from thy kindred and from thy Fathers house unto a land that I will shew thee So did Moses Heb. 11. 24 25 26. By faith Moses when he was come to years refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Egypt for he had respect unto the recompense of reward As it was said to Amaziah The Lord is able to give thee much more then 2 Chron. 25. 9. this So it may be said of thy pleasures either they are lawful or unlawful if lawful God will make them up
1 Joh 3 3. Jam. 14 8 thy self to cleanse thy hands and purifie thy heart this is a needfull study its time well imployed in searching our hearts in washing and purifying of the inward man 3. Be much exercised in divine meditation Meditate frequently Rule 3. Be exercised the divine in art of meditation of the four last things Death Judgement Hell and Heaven Entertain frequent and serious thoughts of ●ternity It 's a poynt of understanding and wisdome to consider our latter end Meditate what a holy place heaven is what holy company and what holy employments aret here Nothing that defileth shall ever come there Get up into the Mount with Moses let thy affections soare aloft being carried aloft with the wings of heavenly meditation This was Isaacs practise Davids and Pauls Were you acquainted with the singular benefit of Meditation you would not lye groveling here below your words thoughts whole conversations would bee in heaven 4. Consider the omnipresence and omniscience of God whither Rule 4. Consider Gods omnipresence canst thou goe from his presence how canst thou escape his knowledge If I sinne saith Job he marketh me Job 10. 14 15. God seeth thy secret sinnes hee knoweth all thy reservations and cunning conveyances All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale and without holynesse thou shalt never see the face of God with comfort The serious consideration of the Omnipresence and Omniscience of God through the grace of God may prevaile with us to a circumspect and holy conversation 5. Set an high estimate upon and frequent diligently the holy Rule 5 Consider Gods Ordinances Ordinances of God They are called The beauties of Holynesse Psal 110. 3. There is a cleansing virtue in the Word of God Psal 119. 9. Gods face is beautifull his holynesse is his beauty Now by the face of God Calvin understands the Ordinances of God Psal 27. 8. Wait then O Christian at the posts of Wisdoms gate lye in the way where Christ comes by tarry at these Bethesdaes The Ordinances are the golden Pipes to conveigh the golden Oyle take heed of sitting loose from them Blesse God that your eyes behold your Teachers and that your Gospel is not driven into corners Improve these prices and spiritual advantages for the good of your precious souls 6. And lastly associate your selves with holy company Love Rule 6. Associa●e your selves with holy company where God loves now the Lord loveth his Saints It was Davids profession that his delight was in the Saints Psal 16. 2 3. Bee a companion to those that fear God If a dead coale be neare a live co●le it may be inkindled by it but if two live coales be together what abundance of heate will they give We read Mal. 3. 16. That they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Let not Christians be strange and shie of one anothers company But let 's unite as one man to conserre all our interests to give each other a lift to heaven Make them thy companions on earth whom thou hopest to enjoy in heaven to all eternity The last Use and so in a few words to conclude is a word of Use 5. For Consolation Consolation unto holy persons true beleevers the adopted sonnes and daughters of God when the day of Judgement comes and the whole world is in a flame they shall bee of good comfort That day which will be a day of terrour and revenge to the wicked shall be a day of refreshing and restitution unto them The Saints that sleep in the grave shall be awakned at the sound of the Trumpet and their bodies and soules shall bee reunited and they sh●ll receive the consummation of their happynesse The Saints that are alive shall be caught up together with those that are dead in Christ in the cloudes to meet the ●ord in the air and so shall be ever with the Lord. The inference the Apostle makes should be ours wherefore 1 Thes 4. 18. comfort one another with these words O but I cannot see this in me I would be holy yet I cannot find this growth of holynesse in me Is this thy case goe thy way to God challenge him with his promise put his bond in suit Hee commands make you a clean heart but doth he not promise to give it Ezek. 36. 25. Comfort thy self with Christs praier to the Father He prayes Father sanctifie them through thy truth And know there may be grace where feeling may be wanting It s an excellent Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 1. 13. saying of Mr. Greenham We hold Christ by faith and not by feeling Feeling is an after thing After ye beleeved ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise Is it the desire and endeavour of thy soule to be holy Notwithstanding infirmities yet is thy heart single and without guile be of good comfort thou shalt hold up thy head with comfort at that great day of accompt when the wicked shall wish that the mountains might fall upon them and the hills cover them from the face of the Lamb thou shalt behold Christ in the face with comfort when all these visible things shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat thou shalt be glad and rejoice at that day and enjoy eternall felloship with the blessed Trinity in whose presence there is fulness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore Did we but seriously consider of Psal 16. 11. these things wee should desire to bee dissolved and to be with Christ we should cry Come Lord Jesus come quickly we should have the Moon under our feet we should negotiate for the great things of eternity May all things that have been said make deep impression upon our spirits and prevaile with us to the love and practise of holynesse looking for and hasting unto the comming of God Though at that day the world be on fire we shall be safe though there shall be a general Assize wee shall be acquitted and that day of Judgement will be the Saints refreshing day Christ is their Redeemer and Intercessour VVho would not now be in love with holyness holyness will be holyness indeed at that day Only holy persons shall hold up their heads with comfort they only shall be able to stand in judgement God onely that made the heart can cleanse it Christ doth love and wash his people Le ts therefore pray for holynesse follow after holynesse Thus our fruit being unto holynesse our end will be happynesse The Necessity of the Knowledge of Regeneration Discovered from Joh. 3. v. 10. Jesus answered and said unto him Art thou a Master of Israel and knowest not these things THE report of Christs Miracles being famous every where Serm. 5. at St. Maries Oxon. Aug. 14. 1654. v. 1. insomuch that multitudes followed him at last one of an eminent Rank comes to visit and conferre with Christ v. 1. By degree he
and leave deep impression upon all your Consciences Serm. 10. At S. Mary's Oxon Nov. 1. 1657. HAveing lately made some entrance on this text in this place I proceed on in the same use of Exhortation to drive the naile to its full head pressing upon you all this great duty of the weightiest importance i. e. to give God your Male without blemish that is in all your services worship and duties that you performe to give the best of the best unto the Lord. To set this use home I le press somewhat closer the duty of the text in these seven ensuing considerations Consider the transcendent greatness and majesty of God In my Consid 1. Thetranscendent majesty of God text he is called a great King and Lord of Hosts which sets forth the majesty and soveraignty of God who is absolute Ruler Governour and Commander of all All the Creatures are made by God all are sustained and preserved by him Therefore it 's a cogent reason ro ingage all creatures to subjection and obedience to their Creatour and Governour Seneca was wont to say when we are about a business of great consequence we should imagine that Scipio Cato Laelius c. were our Overseers Much more ought we to remember the soveraignty Dominion and omnipresence of God Such serious considerations might prevaile with us to offer the best sacrifices and services unto the Lord. Gods greatness and power commands our fear and reverence It 's an excellent observation of Mr. Calvin on the place The greatness of God ought so to Magnitudo Dei debet nos humiliare ne eum colamus pro sensu carnis nostrae sed offeramus tantum quod ejus coelesti gloria dign●̄ est Calv. in loc humble us as not to worship God according to our carnal sense But to offer to him what beseemes his heavenly Glory Constantine the great Valentinian and Theodosius called themselves Christs vass●ls and well they might because he is absolute Monarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All other things are his servants All creatures are at his sole command According to our capacities there 's but a shaddowing forth and that very darkly of the glory of God Ezek. 1. Isai 6 Dan. 7. The Throne is there said to be stately costly and magnificent Hence Bernard infers a good note Omnino oporlet nos orationis tempore c. i. e. At prayer time when we enter into the Court of Heaven where the King of all Kings sits in state we should approach with reverence humility and fear considering that we are dust and ashes and we make our addresses unto the great God of Heaven and Earth A second consideration shall be drawn from the infinite Holines Consid 2. Drawn from the holyness of God of God This layeth a strong ingagement upon us in all our services to put forth our selves to the utmost to present unto the Lord an acceptable sacrifice The Lord is holy in his essence holy in all his wayes his name is holy his word holy his people holy his worship holy in Levitical ordinances all ought to be holy As for instance the flesh was holy Lev. 6. 27. Whatsoever shall touch the flesh thereof shall be holy and when there is sprinkled of the blood thereof upon any garment thou shalt wash that whereon it was sprinkled in the holy place The Instruments holy Numb 31. 6. And Moses sent them unto the War a thousand of every Tribe them and Phineas the Son of Eleazar the Priest to the Warre with the holy Instruments and the Trumpets to blow in his hand The Vessels holy 1 Chron. 22. 19. Now set your hearts and your soules to seek the Lord your God build the Sanctuary to bring the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord and the holy Vessels into the ho●se that is to be built The Offerings holy 2 Chron. 35. 13. They rosted the Passeover with fire but the other holy Offerings sod they in p●ts c. The ●ifts holy Exod. 22. 38. The Oyntment holy Exod. 30. 25. The Garments holy Exod. 35. 21. So likewise in Evangelical Ordinances all must be holy as we may read Zech. 14. 20 21. All this is to be understood of the spiritual service in the Christian Church The ingraving of the Priests Mitre was Holynesse unto the Lord. And this Motto must be upon our hearts and lives We serve a holy God who is infinite in holynesse of purer eyes than to behold the least iniquity Holynesse becomes his house his day is holy his service must be holy God will be sanctified in all that we approach unto him His Name ought to be sanctified by us let 's not then be so vile as to offer unholy services to a holy God let 's not offer the lame and the blind to the holy Lord God A third consideration shall be drawn from the equity of the Duty Is it not most equall to return by way of gratitude to God Consid 3. From the equity of the duty again that which he hath given unto us All the cattel on a thousand Mountains are at Gods disposing all the parts and abilities thou hast are Gods gifts all strength vigour marrow in thy bones are Gods bounty and largenesse to thee What hast thou which thou hast not received The Male in the flock is Gods great bounty to thee and wilt thou not give it back again unto God Wee read how David prepared with all his might for the house of God as Brasse Iron Silver and Gold and precious Stones Read his humble acknowledgement 1 Chron. 29. 14 16. Now shall not we render a Mi●e in returne for Millions received shall not we render a drop of Praises for an ocean of Mercies Quid retribuam saith David David thought no cost great enough for ●od Solomon spared for no cost in building the Temple no more ought Christians to love cheap services and lazy wayes of devotion We must think nothing good enough for God An onely sonne Abraham would offer Gen. 22. 12. Hast thou a good memory is that thy best treasure then employ it to remember thy Creator hast thou a great judgement and understanding labour more and more to know God thy self and communicate what thou knowest for the edification of thy brethren Hast thou strong Affections as Love Joy Desire c let them be placed on God as that onely centrum quietativum Hast thou great substance in the world Consider thou hast the worlds goods but lent and entrusted to thee as a Steward for a little time and therefore thou must honour God with thy substance by dealing out thy bread to the hungry and relieving of the distressed members of Jesus Christ In a word whatever thou art or hast all the members of thy body and faculties of thy soul must be employed as instruments in the service of God All come from God and must be employed for God what he gives to us must be given back again Wherefore we conclude this Motive
presence of God deale plainly and impartially in this Examination 1. Then do we give God the best in our duties doe we give God our hearts our affections and wills Do we doe all our duties as in the presence of God in obedience to God with a single eye and respect unto Gods glory Such questions as these put home will search to the quick Amongst others I shall fix only upon these three instances eminenter non exclusive For in all the best is to be given to God This Rule admits no exception The question is 1. Whether in hearing of Gods Word we give God the best Q. 1. Whether in hearing wee give God the best This is a very weighty duty And we are often enjoyned to hear Jer. 22. 29. Faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10. 17. It 's a mark of Christs Sheep to hear his voice Joh. 10. 27. But amongst hearers three sorts in four miscarry according to Christs own computation for there are stony high-way thorny hearers the Word of God is lost in all these Onely the good hearer profits by the Word and brings forth fruit with patience Wherefore we are not only exhorted to the duty of Hearing but to the right manner of performing this duty Take heed therefore how ye hear Luk. 8. 18. Now whether in our hearing we give God the best we are to examine three particulars 1. How we prepare our selves before hearing 2. How we demean our selves in hearing 3. How we behave our selves after hearing First before hearing there is required preparation Eccles 5. 1. Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God Publius Scipio first went unto the Capitol to pray before he went to consult amongst the Senators Before we come to a Sermon our duty is to sequester our selves from earthly entanglements Abraham when he went up to the Mount to Sacrifice he left his Asses at the foot of the hill Before the Jews offered Sacrifice they used many washings and purifyings Exod. 19. 14. Mephibosheth dressed his feet when hee went to David O how should we wash our hearts before we come into Gods presence Before we come into the place where the name of God is recorded we should consider of that soveraignty power purity and Majesty of God We should get our hearts sequestred from the world our pride passion and all inordinate affections should be mortified we should have our spirits meekned we should approach with trembling reverence and awfull fear of the great and glorious presence of God 2. In hearing there are two things required Atte●tion of the ear and Intention of the heart 1. There must be a serious attention we read Luke 4. 20. The eyes of all them that were in the synagogue were fastned on him When we go to duty we should consider of the presence of God and Angels and should behave our selves with all reverence in the publick Assemblies The Preacher should be serious grave reverend and avoyd all affected phrases uncouth unscriptural speeches He should hold fast the form of sound words And hearers should deport themselves with all reverence Laughing at one another idle gazing wanton glances roving eys O! how unfit and unsuitable are they as at other times so especially in places of Worship 2. In hearing there is required intention of the heart The heart must goe along with the eare and what we hear we must labour to let it sink into our hearts and there make its residence The heart must be affected in hearing the heart must act vigorously and be fully bent upon God His Word is precious and none ought to fall to the ground Wherefore we must ruminate ponder meditate apply and labour for retentive memories This caution is of great concernment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2. 1. VVe must remember that in hearing we deale for life and immortality we negotiate for Eternity and drive a trade for our immortall soules so we must hear to day as for ought we know we may never live to have another opportunity Wherefore the heart must be in good earnest with all the affections thereof set a worke The Love Joy Hope Desire all must bee seriously fixt and intent upon what wee hear Thirdly how we must demeane our selves after hearing To this purpose I shall mention onely two Duties which if put in practise it 's without all question that wee give God the Male. First it 's required that we meditate on what we have heard 1. We must meditate in the Word For Meditation is the spiritual digestion of a Sermon This Moses Isaac and David much practised It fareth with a good Sermon for the Soul as with a good meales meat for the Body By digesting what we receive we thrive the better Wherefore after we have heard a Sermon we must call our selves to a strict accompt rubbe up our memories and labour to make what we have heard our owne that this food may turne into our nourishment that we may eat and make a good meale and digest the food of our souls even to eat the roll as the Prophet did Jer. 15. 16. Secondly it 's required that wee yeeld ready obedience unto 2. Wee must yeeld obedience unto the Word the VVord of God For not the Hearers but the Doers of the Word shall be justified The life of a Preacher is the Application and the life of a Sermon in Preaching and hearing consists in the particular Application what wee heare wee must apply and practise in our lives Thus we give God the Male in our hearing A Second Duty wherein we are to examine our selves in is Q. 3. Whether we give God the Male in our prayers whether we give God the Males in our prayers and supplications Prayer is a great part of our religion a great part of worship wherein God is gloryfied wherefore I must take the best paines I can to examine this point whether in our prayers we give God the best whether we offer a Male and not a corrupt thing For tryall whereof I l'e lay down some distinguishing characters to differrence the pretious from the vile 1. Prayer must be humble so did Abraham pray Gen. 18. 27. so David prayed in a most humble manner 2 Sam. 7. 19. so Jacob 1 Prayer must be humble Gen. 32. 9. There 's required an humble reverentiall frame of spirit in our approaches and applications unto the throne of grace Consideration of Gods transcendent majesty and greatnesse and the apprehension of our own vilenesse should cause us in an humble manner to make our addresses and preferre our supplications unto the great God of Heaven and Earth Consider likewise thou art a Creature dust and ashes a worme and no man a sinner a Rebell an enemy to God by nature a child of wrath This Consideration should humble thee in the presence of the Lord. 2. Prayer must be in faith Mat. 21. 22. No prayer but that of faith can be accepted No service but of a Beleever
opinion of Religion and think any thing will serve as if any thing were good enough for God Such a slight service was done by Gehazi he went on before and layd his staffe upon the child and there was no appearance of life in the child but the Prophet Elisha layd his hand on the childs hand his mouth on the childs mouth c. and in good earnest set upon the work and the spirit of the child revived It 's the observation of a Reverend Mr. Jerem. Burroughs and precious Divine that of all spirits hee desired to be delivered from a frothy spirit it 's therefore a matter of lamentation and ought in good earnest to be bewailed to consider with what irreverence formalities and slightnesse of the spirit many set upon duty some will pray partly between sleeping and waking so drowsily that they can scarce pronounce their words aright Others will mumble over a few words of course in their beds Neither of these think of that reverence that belongs to the great God of heaven and earth and that he requires the Male the best we can offer unto him A third Impediment is a worldly spirit A heart swallowed up Imped 3. A wordly spirit with the love of the world will never give God the best such spirits wil grudge any thing for God because the world hath seized on their spirits and took up their affections Their breath words conversations even all favours of the world Now this love of the world is the root of all evill and enmity against God Demas forsook the Apostles society The young man preferred earthly treasures before heavenly where the world sits close and the heart is enamoured with the love of the world there Christs riches and his excellencies are undervalued A fourth Impediment is an unbeleeving heart Christ is not a Imped 4. An unbeleeving heart whit regarded amongst unbeleevers onely beleevers account him precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. He that knew the worth of the pearl of price and beleeved there was such vertue in it sold all to purchase it Mat. 13. 46 47. These Impediments being removed some speciall duties ought to be practised 1. Alwaies set before thine eyes the great God of heaven and Dut. 1. Set God before thine eyes earth as omnipresent pure and omnipotent who seeth knoweth and searcheth all hearts This consideration will make thee afraid to present any thing vile and refuse unto so great so holy a Lord God How thou prayest in thy closet what thy secret reserved thoughts are what thy intentions are in any duty all are naked unto that great and glorious Majesty with whom thou hast to deale 2. Labour for sincerity of heart That 's it which will carry thee Dut. 2. Labour for sincerity of heart through all brakes bryars difficulties and perplexities whatsoever It 's said Asa's heart was upright there 's a neverthelesse put in 2 Chron 15. 17. It 's this which comforted Hezekiah when the sentence of death was past against him 2 King 20. 3. It 's that which God requires even truth in the inward parts Ps 51. 6. It 's that which is the cause of rejoycing 2 Cor. 1. 12. Nathaniels character to be an Israelite indeed without guile Joh. 1. 47. The upright are they which love Christ Cant. 1. 4. And they are Gods delight Prov. 11. 20. Their Tabernacle shall flourish Prov. 14. 11. Their high way is to depart from evill Prov. 16. 17. They walk surely Prov. 10. 9. and no good thing will God withhold from them Ps 84. 11. Their end is peace Psal 37. 37. Upright walking with God will carry a man through all troubles whatsoever and in life and death will yeeld matter of abundance of consolation 3. Embrace the present season of Grace Seek ye the Lord whilst Dut. 3. Embrace the present season he may be found call ye upon him whilst he is near Isa 55. 6. Now give God your strength and marrow and lay aside all delayes Apologies and Procrastinations 4. Be much in Prayer and Supplication that what ever thou Dut. 4. Be much in Prayer dost what duty whatsoever service thou offerest unto God that he would accept thee through Jesus Christ As the Ancients held the Plough and prayed so hear and meditate on Gods Word keep the Lords Sabboth holy and pray for a blessing upon all from heaven Blesse Lord his substance Deut. 33. 11. 5. Make Religion thy work the grand design thou drivest Let Dut. 5. Make Religion thy work thy generall calling as a Christian have the preheminence of thy particular calling in the world Seek first the Kingdome of God Mat. 6. 33. The last Use is for Consolation unto those who to the utmost in Vse 5. For Consolation sincerity of heart endeavour to walk before the Lord. Thus Enoch walked with God Gen. 5. 24. Zachary and Elizabeth walked in Gods Commandments blameless Luk. 1. 6. David was a man after Gods own heart Yet the best of Gods children have their failings Jacob confest himself not worthy of the least of Gods mercyes c. David confest himself as foolish as a bruit Beast and wise Agur acknowledged that he had not the understanding of a man It 's a great cause of greif and a burthen to the spirits of Gods dearest children to consider how much they faile in duties Their dulnesse deadnesse disorder of spirit much afflicteth them What I shall further adde shall be comprised in these ensuing considerations Consid 1. Infirmities are incident to the best 1. Infirmities are incident unto the best of Christians I sleep saith the Spouse Paul complains of a body of sin and of flesh and of an antipathy between flesh and spirit 2. Gods children allow not themselves in sinne but mourn Consid 2. Gods childrē allow not themselves in sin Consid 3. Sincerity is accepted Consid 4. Where sincerity is there is an endeavour after more grace Consid 5. Others examples are not just standards Consid 6 Perseverance shall obtaine the Crown for sinne Sinne is their exceeding great grief and burthen 3. Where the heart is sincere it is accepted a willing mind is accepted 2 Cor. 8. 12. 4. Where the heart is sincere it is not contented with what it hath already attained but labours for more grace Phil. 3. 13 14. 5. Consider that others examples and attainments are not that standard for every one to measure himself by No examples but that of Jesus Christ is every way authentique Some will say on one hand Such and such goe no further and will not this serve my turne others say such goe so farre and if I cannot come near them I may justly suspect my self to be an Hypocrite Neither this nor that must determine us 6. And lastly consider that Perseverance shall obtain the Crown Rev. 2. 15. Many beginne well and fly back Of all Apostates are most hated by God But as for such who persevere in Grace and
thus imployed in striving to crucify sinne and in some good measure they have obtained victory this is an excellent imployment to be wrastling against corruption beating downe the body bringing it into subjection But it will be objected That sinne is in the best of Gods children Object and notwithstanding all their strivings and struglings they cannot get rid of sinne whilest they are in this world Ans 1. You must know that in this life there are imperfections Ans in the best and an absolute perfection cannot be attained till we come to heaven 2. Sinne though it is yet it Reignes not in the Regenerate Rom. 6. 12. vers 14. 3. The Regenerate make not a trade of sinne 1 Joh. 3. 9. They are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. Sinne is the griefe disease burthen of Regenerate men wherefore they grieve that they sinne and would faine be in that condition where they may sinne no more hereupon they crye out for a deliverer Rom. 7. 24. 5. It 's the endeavour of Regenerate persons to conquer every sinne they allow not themselves in sinne they strive to destroy bosome sinnes Ps 18. 23. 6. God accepts of Evangelicall Perfection i. e. sincere Intentions and endeavo●rs for action the will for the deed Wherefore then though flesh remaines as well as spirit yet the spirit at length will prevaile and returne conqueror and herein consists the great conquest of Christians to conquer the flesh to subdue all inordinate affections and insatiable desires and this is that which I have prest from my Text To crucify the flesh with its affections and lusts GODS LOVE IN CHRIST DISCOVERED From Rom 5. vers 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that whilest we were yet sinners Christ died for us THE Apostle having disputed at large the Doctrine Sermon 6. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. March 20. 1658. of Justification by faith concludes by way of inference that singular priviledges graces and benefits are the peculiar portion of a justified person Justification is the root and the following graces are the fruit Justification the mother grace they the issue or Daughters viz. Peace of conscience vers 1. Accesse to the Throne of Grace vers 2. Joy in tribulation vers 2. Patience vers 3. Experience vers 4. Hope vers 4. And the ground of this hope is the love of God vers 5. Not that love whereby we love him but whereby he loveth us It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We have a sensible feeling of this love and this is not a delusion of our owne fancy but it is the effectuall working of the Holy Ghost A singular Instance of this love appeares by the death of Christ wherein we have 1. The season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the due time and fittest 1. The season season this is the accepted time 2 Cor. 6. 2. Behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation The most conveninient time even now when the fulnesse of time was come Gal. 4. 4. But when the fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his son made of a woman made under the law c. 2. The condition of the persons for whom it 's expressed by two 2. The Condition of the Persons words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 infirme impotent persons unable altogeather to help and deliver themselves And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ungodly such as left Gods true worship and defil'd themselves with Idolatry Now the love of Christ is further amplified by a comparison vers 7. let 's compare Christ's love with the love of men vers 7. For scarcely for a righteous man will one dye yet per adventure for a good man some would even dare to dye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By a righteous man we understand an innocent godly inoffensive just dealing man By a good man here we understand an usefull serviceable man a publick spirited man a Patriot for his countrey one that hath shewed much goodnesse to us Justus reddens cuique quod suum est Bonus qui beneficus est ac bene à multis meritus as some of the Learned observe But what 's this in comparison of the love of Christ All the love of creatures in comparison of Christ's love is not so much as the drop to the Ocean Note the incomparable unparrelled love of Christ to sinners in my Text. But God commendeth his love unto us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us Wherein observe these Remarkable Particulars 1. The greatnesse of Gods love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commendat verbum Insignem summe commendabilem esse ostendit Beza Commendare significat aut confirmare as Aretius observes It signifieth testatum facere as Budaeus and Demosthenes use the word 2. The Proofe or Evidence of this love by Christ's death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. The condition of the persons sinners 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rebellious sinners such in whom sinne raigned who were wholy under the power of sinne in their blood in a loathsome filthy condition All are sinners they have no truth in them that deny it 1 Joh. 1. 8. But here by sinners saith * Qui toti vitiosi sunt ac peccato addicti Calv. in Loc. Calvin are understood such Who are wholly vitious and addicted unto sinne We read that God heareth not sinners Joh. 9. 31. For these sinners Christ died for enemies rebells polluted lyeing in their filth these Christ loved and washed No fore sight of their faith repentance moved him to pitty them only his love For these he died and this is an unparrellel'd demonstration of the love of God and of Jesus Christ I shall comprise the whole of my meditations in one fundamentall Doctrine That the death of Christ for sinners is an evident demonstration Doct. of the love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Christ This I shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfold by Explication Confirmation and particular Application 1. For Explication I propound these Queries Query 1. Wherein consists this love of God the Father Ans In sending of his Sonne his beloved Son his only Son the Son of his bosome God might have impowred an Angell and sent him but the mission of his Son sets forth love inexpressible There 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 3. 16. He so loved the world that he gave his only begotten sonne that whosoever believ●●● in him shall not perish but have everlasting life And further we read 1 Joh. 4. 9. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten sonne into the world that we might live through him God left the fallen Angells without a Saviour but took pitty on lost man God would never be reconciled to the fallen Angells but from eternity he contrived a way to reconcile man unto himselfe 2 Cor. 5. 19. To wit that God was in Christ reconciling the world unto
himselfe not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation This is love beyond compare The duty that belongs unto us is 1. To admire at this great infinite love to get our hearts raised up in the high contemplation of this love 2. Le ts be thankfull we can never be thankfull enough Eternity will be too little to praise God and blesse him for so great love 3. Let love beget love love must be reciprocall 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us 4. Let this love of God cause us to love one another 1 Joh. 4. 11. Beloved if God so loved us we ought also to love one another 5. Let this ingage us to obedience and holynesse in our conversations Joh. 14. 15. If yee love me keep my Commandments Query 2. Wherein consists this love of Christ Ans In dyeing for us The greatnesse of Christs love in dyeing for us may be inhanced in these singularities 1. In that he died voluntarily 2. If we consider the greatnesse of his sufferings 3. If we consider the persons for whom 1. Christ died voluntarily I gave my back to the smiter and 1. Christ died voluntarily my cheeks to those that pluckt of the haire I hid not my face from shame and spitting Isai 50. 6. And Joh. 10. 17 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay downe my life that I may take it againe No man taketh it from me but I ●ay it down of my selfe I have power to lay it downe and power to take it againe This commandment have I received of my Father Christ if he pleased could have defended himselfe from his enemies he could have had legions of Angells in his defence but in obedience to his Father to fulfill the scripture in love to his owne he freely and voluntarily resigned himselfe to his Fathers pleasure and drunk that cup which his Father gave him And question lesse this was great love for Christ freely and willingly to lay down his life 2. Consider the greatness of Christ's sufferings 2. Consider the greatnesse of Christ's sufferings He endured contempt reproach spitting buffetting reviling they called him Samaritan Impostor Devill they scourged him crowned him with thornes wagged their heads at him Insulted over him and at last they put him to suffer that most shamefull painfull cursed death of the Crosse This Crucifixion was a Roman punishment That 's evident from Joh. 18. 31 32. Then said Pilate unto them take ye him and judge him according to your law The Jewes therefore said unto him it is not lawfull for us to put any man to death that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which he spake signifying what death he should dye And to set forth the humiliation of Christ you may read Phil. 2. 8. And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Implying this was the greatest of Punishments Quid dicam in crucem tollere saith Cicero In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider these Aggravations 1. Shame 1. The Shame they were crucified usually stark naked Most writers say Christ was so crucified Believe not your painters who put a cloath before him they are teachers of lyes The common custome was that they who were cruci●ied were stript naked as they came into the world and so they suffered ignominy And a further shame and disgrace appeares in this that Christ was crucified without the walls as unworthy to be within the walls Barabbas a theife and murtherer was released and Christ was crucified between two theives as if he had been their Captaine this Circumstance sets forth the ignominy and disgrace put upon Jesus Christ 2. In this punishment of Crucifixion we are to consider a curse 2. A Curse Deut. 21. 23. His body shall not remaine all night upon the tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day for he that is hanged is accursed of God that thy land be not defiled which the Lord thy God gives thee for an inheritance There was a legall curse put upon this death Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now for the Son of God the fountaine of all blessings in whom all Nations of the earth should be blessed to stand upon the Crosse like an accursed man the Sun was ashamed and withdrew his light and the earth trembled 3. In this punishment consider paine extremity of paine a lingring 3. Paine death This was a terrible and dolorous paine His body was extended stretched out like stretching out upon a Rack Of the Passion of Christ we are to understand Psal 22. 14 16. I am poured out like water and all my bones are out of joynt my heart is like wax it s melted in the midst of my bowells For dogs have compassed me the assembly of the wicked have inclosed me they peirced my hands and my feet Where the sinewes met in the palmes of his hands and in the feet where the paine was most acute there they peirced him It was not with Christ as with many who are stupefied and in whom extremity of paine blunteth the sense thereof but Christ was in perfect sense all the while And six houres in extremity of paine he hung upon the Crosse and was sensible as much at the last as at the first Never was any sorrow like unto his sorrow He sweat drops of blood was in an agony was despised rejected reproached and at last was crucified All these Considerations inhance the greatnesse of Christs sufferings and his love towards us 3. Consider for whom Christ died not for friends but enemies 3. For whom Christ died Vers 10. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Not for righteous and good men but for sinners and bad men not for strong but weak not for faithfull subjects but rebells Christ died Now this love is beyond all compare Now the consideration of Gods love and our unworthynesse should ingage us to love and thankfulnesse as * Tantae dilectionis Dei indignitatis nostrae consideratione demittamus Cristas in Dei judicio ac toto corde eum redamemus ut non totos in ●ivam gratitudinis hostiam vicissim consecremus Pareus in Loc. Pareus observes on the place To lay downe his life for his friends had been great love Joh. 15. 13. greater love hath no man then this that a man lay downe his life for his friend But to lay downe his life for enemies for sinners unworthy persons this love is a none such Christ died for the ungodly He said live when they were in their blood Ezek. 16. 6. And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in
borne neither having done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said unto her the elder shall serve the younger as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated 4. This love is incomprehensible inexpressible Eph. 3. 18 19. 4. This love is incomprehensible That yee may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that yee might be filled with all the fulnesse of God 5. It is an eternall love Joh. 13. 1. Now before the feast of the 5. This love is eternall passeover when Jesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father having loved his owne which were in the world he loved them unto the end Jer. 31. 3. The Lord hath appeared of old unto me saying Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee The second Use is for Examination whether we are of that Vse 4. For Examination number which hath interest in this love We are to distinguish of severall sorts of love There 's Amor benevolentiae Complacentiae For that there is Amor benevolentiae hence appeares munificentia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God doth good to all makes the Sun to shine on the just and unjust That which we are to inquire of is that which is called Amor complacentiae appropriated only unto Gods children What evidences may be given that we have interest in this distinguishing love The 1. Signe is Sanctification it 's God's order and we may Signe 1. Sanctification not break it Rev. 1. 5. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood If thou canst prove that thy nature is changed by the sanctifying vertue of God's spirit thou maiest conclude that thou art one that hath interest in the speciall love of God 2. Those that have interest in this speciall love of God feele a Signe 2. Constraining love of Christ constraining power in this love to ingage them to obedience to Gods commands 2 Cor. 5. 14. For the love of Christ constraines us because we thus judge that if one died for all then we are all dead 3. By the sincerity of our love to God we may conclude his Signe 3. Sincerity of love to God love towards us 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us Gods love to us is the ground of our Assurance our love to him is the ground of our Evidence Let Gods children as Bradford that pretious man of God used to advise lay this down for a foundation That God loves them and where this love is it will shed abroad love in their hearts even love to God love to the brethren love to the Ordinances love and longing for the appearance of Christ 4. Christ manifests his love to his people Joh. 14. 21. He that Signe 4. Christ manifests his Love to his people hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my selfe to him Though he may hide himselfe for a time yet he will embrace them with everlasting kindnesse Isai 54 8. In a little wrath I hid my face from them for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer 5. Those whom God loves with a speciall distinguishing love Signe 5. Christ is Lord and King have Christ their redeemer their Lord King and Ruler their Prophet to instruct them their Priest to make satisfaction and intercession for them This is the greatest evidence of Gods love in giving thee his son as in the place forecited Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Which is plainly applyed to believers and takes not in all universally but a peculiar select company even such only as believe And Rom. 8. 32. He that spareth not his own son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things 6. Those who have interest in this great speciall love have Signe 6. Gods spirit dwells in them Gods spirit and this dwells in them Rom. 8. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be that the spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Christs spirit dwells as an Inhabitant and Ruler and this is a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God And this sealeth and giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the spirit in our hearts and where this dwells it may be knowne by the fruits which it bringeth forth Gal. 5. 22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance The third Use is for Exhortation and your duty I shall branch Vse 2. For Exhortat into these following particulars 1. Stand admiring contemplating this great love of God the 1. Admire Gods love Father to give thee Christ and that Christ should becomeman be made sin a curse whilst that greater and nobler richer learneder then thy selfe should be past by and God should give Christ for thee that he should love thee and wash thee and make thee a King and a Priest unto God thou can'st never admire enough this unparralleld love of God Eternity would even be too little to set forth this wonderfull love of God As there is a depth of wisdome so there is a depth of mercy in God which cannot be fathom'd 2. Let thy heart be filled with the praises of the Lord. Lift up 2. Be filled with the praises of God advance what in thee lyeth the honour of God the love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Christ God gives his Son Christ's merits are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a price meritorious and the Holy Spirit maketh application How then ought we for ever to abound in praises to the Lord The Samaritan returned back and gave God thanks for his cleansing So should we blesse God that he hath made a difference by his grace between us and the very vilest of men what ever Thus did Paul 1 Tim. 1. 12. And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who hath enabled me for that he counted me faithfull putting me into the Ministery Now unto the King Eternall immortall invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 3. Love should beget reciprocall love even Love unto God the 3. Love should
beget love to God Father and Christ If there be any spark of love it will inkindle into a flame of Serapicall affections David professeth Psal 18. 1. I will love thee O Lord my strength 4. This should beget love to the Brethren Joh. 13. 35. By 4. Gods love to us should cause us to love our brethren this shall all men know that yee are my disciples if yee love one another 1 Joh. 3. 14. We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren 1 Joh. 4. 21. And this commandment have we from him that he who loveth God loveth his brother also 5. We should place our love where God placeth his and our 5. love where God loveth hatred where he placeth his hatred God loveth holinesse holy people holy Ordinances so should we God hateth every sinne so should we Psalm 97. 10. Yee that love the Lord hate evill 6. We should be often inquiring whether we be of the number 6. Enquire whether thou hast interest in Christs speciall love Vse 4. For Consolation of those that have Interest in Christs speciall love for whom he died This we should frequently and seriously examine our hearts about as I gave some evidences before unto which I referre you The fourth and last Use is for comfort unto all those who have interest in this speciall love Their speciall Benefits are these 1. They are admitted to the Throne of Grace through Christ Benefit 1. They are admitted unto the throne of grace Eph. 2. 18. For through him we have both an accesse by one spirit unto the Father They are his favorites friends Jewells a Crown and Diadem of Glory and therefore they are exhorted to draw neare with full assurance of faith Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that we may obtaine mercy and find grace to help in time of need It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with freedome boldnesse or confidence 2. All things work together for their good Rom. 8. 28. And Benefit 2. All things worke together for their good we know that all things worke together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose They love God God loveth them and nothing shall be able to hinder God's love Their crosses hardships reproaches all shall conduce unto their good 3. They shall feele the benefit of this love unto all Eternity Heb. Benefit 3. They shall feele Christs love unto all Eternity 7. 25. Christ ever liveth to make Intercession for them Though Satan roare and men condemne yet the love of Christ will comfort thee against all Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that Justifieth Thy sinnes and corruption administer continuall matter of Humiliation and these will cost thee deare whilest thou art in the valley of Bacha but the time will come when there will be no more sighing for sinne Sorrow and sighing will flye away For there shall be no sorrow in heaven 4. This may Arme us with courage against feare of death Ben 4. Gods love armes us wth courage against fear of death Christ hath died and tooke away the sting Christ hath perfumed the grave He hath conquered sinne Satan lead captivity captive Therefore in doubts feares troubles inward and outward have recourse to this love of God in Christ and this will be a Cordiall a Salve for every sore The consideration of Gods love unto thy Soule will make thee undergoe hardships cheerefully kisse the Rod that beates thee Gods love manifested in Christ will make thee willing to live and willing to dye so that God may be glorified in thee and by thee For thou that hast Interest in this distinguishing love of God reconciled in Christ know to thy comfort that whether thou livest or whether thou dyest Jesus Christ will be unto thee in life and in death advantage THE REALL PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIANITY DISTINGUISED FROM THE NOMINALL 2 Tim 2. vers 19. And let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from Iniquity THE Apostle in the precedent words gives advertisement Sermon 7. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. July 24. 1659. concerning some notorious Hereticks such whose words eat as a canker or Gangren Their names are upon record to their eternall infamy V. 17. Their words will eat as doth a canker of whom is Hymeneus and Philetus And their Heresy likewise hath a brand upon it V. 18. Who concerning the truth have erred saying that the resurrection is past already and overthrow the faith of some * Allegoricam nescio quam resurrectionem fingendo Calv. in loc Calvin understands that they feigned an Allegoricall resurrection Estius and Gorr●n concurre in the same judgment and † Non suo tempore defuisse qu●●esurrectionem ●ortuorum manifeste ann●●tiatam in imag●●ariam resurrectionem distorquerent Tertull. de Resurrectione carnis cap. 19. Tertullian is cited in his Book de resurrectione carnis cap. 19. In whose time there were not wanting some who did openly say that the Resurrection of the dead was imaginary The names of the men are Hymeneus and Philetus a Anuptiarum ●eo Hymeneus from the God of marriage b Nomen quasi Optatum Desideratum Hugo Grot. Philetus that is a name as it were desirable as some of the Learned observe Their doctrine and their mischievous consequences follow First For their doctrine an erroneous and hereticall tenet is there laid downe viz. That the resurrection is past already i. e. as Gorran and Estius produce the opinions of those times that the resurrection was compleated by Regeneration And * Completam ex mente istorum interpretantur resurrectionem in quotidiana animarum renovatione Aug Ep. 119 ad Januarium Augustine himselfe in Epist 119. unto Januarius fastens the same opinion upon them Or else they might incline to the opinion of Marcion that Notorious Heretick That there was no resurrection of the body but of the soule only 2. Secondly Let 's consider the great mischiefe of this opinion The Apostle t●ll● us that their words eate as doth a Gangren The Gangren some assimilate to a Canker or a wolfe which spreadeth further and further to the consumption of the whole body The Originall as Hesichius observes is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depascor † Gangraenam medici de carnosa parte inflammationis emortuâ intelligunt Scultet Scultetus saith that by Gangren Phisitians understand a fleshy and dead part of inflammation What further I shall say is this that as a Gangren frets the flesh runs thorough the blood and creepeth further and further till it infect the whole body so Heresies infect the whole man speedily mortally and uncurably Wherefore let not any make a slight matter of Error and Heresy and plead that every one should have liberty of judgment and that a Toleration of all sorts of opinions
Conscience worketh by love and labour for more accession of it and God will accept the quality for the quantity pence for pounds the will for the deed We read Heb. 11. 17. By faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac The faithfull intentions of Abraham was accepted in the accompt of God as a reall performance Let 's all labour to be sincere and upright hearted and this perfection of parts i. e. sincerity will be accepted instead of perfection of degrees which is an absolute perfection without spot or wrinkle which cannot be attained on earth by Militant Saints who are Viatores but only by such who are Comprehensores glorified Saints in Heaven JOY IN THE LORD AS A STRONG GROUND OF COMFORT AGAINST ALL DISCOMFORTS Unfolded from Hab. 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation MY Text is an apposite close of a devout Prophets Sermon 9. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Jan 8. 1659 60. Prayer composed of two excellent ingredients faith and fervency for in the time of Jacobs troubles when sad tidings were renewed every moment and each relation like Jobs disconsolate messengers aggravated the miseries and made them exceeding miserable then my Prophet Habakkuk could discerne a Sun of righteousnesse with healing wings dissipating all Mal. 4. 2. the clouds of sorrowes and miseries I say amidst all these diastrous occurrences this spirituall man by the eye of faith could see a Believer and apprehend his Jesus the God of his salvation this is an evidence of the strength of faith and where faith is it sets the affections a working it 's never idle but alwaies operative as soone as faith gives thee an insight into the beauty and excellency of thy God how sweet and amiable will he be unto thy soule thy affections will be transported with my Prophet I will rejoyce I will joy his expressions were too short they cannot reach his heart and therefore he iterates his resolution hee 's a true lover indeed who delights to discourse of his beloved odject and make frequent repetitions of his love this is an argument of his fervency So then you see as I before intimated that faith and fervency are the essentiall parts of this accurate prayer The words read are promissory and by way of covenant or you may call them a comfortable conclusion drawne from sad and dolefull premissesse Upon perusall of the precedent words you will find matter of terrour and astonishment enough to make you quake and tremble Before him went the Pestilence and burning coles went forth at his feet vers 5. The earth is measured and the Nations are drove a sunder and the everlasting mountaines were scattered and the perpetuall hills did bow vers 6. Unheard of miracles earthquakes against the course of nature the mountaines tremble there 's a great inundation of waters the Sun and the Moon cease from their motion vers 10. 11. And as before there went out pestilence and burning coles or burning diseases so now to adde a complement to the judgment here are arrowes by day which wound as much as the other in the night the speares glitters and the Lord marcheth on in his indignation the heathen feele the sore brunt of it vers 12. Thou didst thresh the heathen in anger Yet out of all these bitter hearbs Gods people can suck sweetnesse For God is good to his Israel Thou wentest forth for the salvation of thy people vers 13. It 's worthy of your notice that amidst greatest extremities God extends his speciall eye of care and providence unto his owne people he never failes to be their Protector It followeth Thou woundest the head of the house of the wicked by discovering the foundation unto the neck i. e. God will pluck these up by the roots that they shall never grow againe By this Me●aphor of a foundation according to * Intelligit quicquid erat stabilitatis in ipsis hostibus hoc fuisse evulsumusque ad collum Calv. in loc Calvins interpretation I understand Whatsoever strength and stability they seem'd to have was quite overthrowne from the top to the bottome The weapons God useth are described vers 4. Thou didst strike through with his staves i. e. God gives them over to themselves and they proove their own executioners and every mans hand was against his fellow Their particular sinnes are mentioned They came out as a whirlewind to scatter me their rejoycing was to devoure ●he poore secretly Behold their insolent rage and precipitant fury Their motions are too violent to hold their rage was against God like unto Senacherib but their tumult came up unto his eares and they fare alike I will saith the Lord put a bridle in thy lipps and a hook in thy nostrills Isa 37. 29. And thus God abaseth the sons of pride but yet their malice ceaseth not their doggish nature discovers it selfe they rejoyce and devoure the poore and that secretly one way or other they are a working if not by open hostility yet by secret plots and underminings so as they may contrive their ruine But view further Gods power and method which he useth for the preservation of his people Thou didst walk through the sea with thine horses through the heapes of great waters this is an Allusion to that wonderfull passage over the red sea Hence learne that in the greatest dangers God makes away for his servants escape And now le ts see how all these wonders affect the Prophet you may guesse at his disease by these symptomes trembling in his belly quivering in his lipps rottennesse in his bones here 's a man of the right stamp you may discerne of what currant mettall he is by his sympathy and fellow feeling of the afflictions of others It 's the duty of a good man to be alike affected with others calamities and miseries as if they were his own To draw downe the Context unto the Text my Prophet is no idle Spectator but he with Mary keepes all these things and ponders them in his heart he makes a soveraingne Compound of bitter Ingredients and with the Laborious Bee he suckes sweetnesse out of the sowrest herbes and with Sampson findes a honey comb in a Lions mouth I meane he makes a dungeon a paradise an abounding misery a superabundant comfort by a wise and spirituall application for come what will come his resolution is inviolably fixt upon a principle of faith that although the figg tree shall not blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines the labour of the Olive shall faile and the fields shall yeeld no meate the flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalles yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation Here is an enumeration of the choysest comforts such as are of highest estimation amongst men The Fig-tree hath much sweetnesse and brings forth good fruit the fruit of the Vine makes
in me in the night season and my sinew's take no rest Job 30. 17. Ponder seriously with thy selfe how David was a man of warres and the sword never departed from his house so perhaps God hath not yet intended for thee a blessing of peace Hee 'l make a souldier of thee to fight his battles hee 'l put thee upon hard services in hard times to try what mettall thou art made of he intends thee for a valiant champion and combatant Take heed then of incurring that fearfull curse of M●roz Jud. 3. 23. who came not to the helpe of the Lord to the helpe of the Lord against the mighty Would'st thou faine sleep in a whole skin when thousands fall besides thee and ten thousands at thy right hand Thinkest thou to be at rest free from all enemies within and without May be God sees it fit in wisdome to exercise thee with some smarting crosse lest otherwise with Jeshurun thou should'st wax fat and kick against the Rock of thy salvation God know's what 's better for thee then thou dost for thy selfe May be its a speciall providence that thou shalt not receive good things in this life nor take thy rest in this world Non ad hoc noc de paradiso voluptatis Bern. ejecit saith Bernard God hath not cast a man out of paradise for him to find another paradise in this world All our rest and quietnesse is in God It 's an observation of the Rabbines that all the letters in the name Jehovah are quiescent And they say ther 's a mystery in it to shew that all our rest is in God alone Domine August fecisti nos pro te in quietum est cor nostrum donec veniat ad te Lord thou hast made us for thee and our heart● is never at rest untill it come unto thee so Augustine We cannot chuse but expect crosses in this world since we live in the valley of teares The Canaanites were thornes in the Israelites sides which the Lord left for their triall such a man is of a proud and haughty spirit God sends an affliction and bids it take downe his pride Another loves his ease and lives carelesly God sends some sharp crosse to scoure away his rust contracted by want of usage The emulation between Rome and Carthage was a foyle to set out each others renoune and valour The skilfullnesse of a Pilot is unknown but in a tempest a Captains valour appeares in the day of battle and a Christians Magnanimity in a fiery triall so then to summe up this particular Let me aske thee are peace and quietnesse an exemption from cares and troubles the great things which thou seekest after O how wilt thou be deceiv'd of thy expectation quaeris magna scilicet quietem tranquilitatem thou seekest great things i. e. rest ease and tranquility invenies misera scilicet motus proc●llas thou shalt find quite contrary hurley-burleyes stormes and tempests Another man seek's for promotion and high places these are A Second man seeks promotions the grandia his great things for the attainment whereof he becomes as very a Parasite as were those sordid flatterers of Dionysius who lick't up his spittle and preferr'd it before N●ctor this is indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unstable man as St James phraseth him who Jam. 1. 8. runs with the tide and varies with the practise of the times so that oft times the humour of his honourable Mecoenas becomes the compasse whereby hee 'l steere the course of his life and conversation But pause a while thou who runst in an eager pursuit after promotion let me aske thee art thou fit for it or if so art thou sure thou shalt not misse of it honor fugientem s●quitur sequentem fugit Honour like the shadow when a man looks towards it it avoids him but if a man turne his back from it it followes him And whence comes promotion It comes neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South But God is the Iudge he●utt●th down one and sett●th up another Psal 75. 6 7. How many verify the proverbe of the Ambitious who have a Pope in their belly How many are their aspiring projects and how unsatiable are their desires Me thinks the practise of David should curbe them who went into the Sanctuary of God and understood their end and that 's specified Psal 73. 18. surely thou did'st set them in slippery places then castest them down into destruction Agrippina temper'd her poysons in that meat which Claudius most delighted And so thy greatest honours may prove thy greatest torments It 's the observation Abulensis of Abulensis that those men of renoune who have been most glorious in the worlds accompt have come to most inglorious ends as Absaloms beauty Sampsons strength Achitophels policy Asahels swiftnesse proved their overthrowes and Alexand●r notwithstanding his great conquests was at the last poisoned Those quatuor summa imperia the Assyrian Persian Graecian and Roman Empires presently came to ruine You know the fatall end of Haman the greatest favourite in King Ahashuerosh Court who erst while was advanc't above all the princes and presently after was elevated higher upon a gallowes O then take heed lest any preferment choake the grace of God in thy soule C. A Lapide hath a story of C. A Lapide Pius quintus Cùm essem religiosus bene sperabam de salute animae meae Cardinalis factus extimui Pontifex creatus pene desper● Every degree of preferment made his condition more disconsolate But my charity hopes better things of you my brethren and such as accompany salvation When I see the failings of my elder Brethren as on ●●e side I abhorre daubing and flattery so on the other side I can in no wise brooke the practise of an undutifull Cham to discover their nakednesse where is probable hopes of amendment If it were possible we should have peace with all men and cover one anothers errors with the mantle of love A bad sense must not be entertain'd when words can admit of a better construction May it never be verifyed of any of us that our young yeares condemne our old and that we grow worse by those dignities which should make us more dutifull Let not O let not your talents be as so many prices put into the hands of fooles for want of hearts to make the best improvement of them What pitty 't is to see and I cannot see it without a bleeding heart that excellent gifts and abilities are so often buried in a napkin or else imployed the contrary way by such who are ingeniose nequam witty enough to their shame and infamy To dismisse this particular instance thou that art so ambitious of honours It 's a great hazard whether thou canst get honours or if got it 's a greater hazard whether thou canst keepe them miserrimum est fuisse faelicem Quaeris magna Honours promotions Invenies
ever did nor shall ever goe away a looser by Gods service God keeps the wages 'till afterwards Here we may have an earnest part of payment but the great summe is reserved for another world And they that honour God in bringing converts to the Gospell and making Proselytes to Jesus Christ they are highly honoured of God Them that honour me saith God I will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. And what honour God will one day put upon them you may read Dan. 12. 3. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse is the stars for ever and ever such honour hath all his Saints When Andrew shall come in with Achaia by him converted to the truth John with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jewes and Paul with the Gentiles and all the Ministers of the Gospell and others whom God hath made instrumentall in this great service when these shall be able to say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us then will the Lord say to them well done good and faithfull servants enter into your masters joy And thus I have dispatcht the first head propounded in the second 2. Head The Characters of him that win neth soules Charact. 1. He must abound in love place I am to give in the character of him who of all others is likeliest to win soules how such a one should be qualified I shall represent unto you in these ensuing Characters 1. He must abound in the grace of love his heart must be enflamed with seraphicall love unto Jesus Christ It 's a passage frequently used in Ignatius Epistles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my love is crucified It 's an excellent saying in Paul 2 Cor. 5. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of Christ constrains us A faithfull Minister acts altogether from a principle of love to Jesus Christ He prayeth preacheth giveth almes fasteth watcheth and hee 's indefatigable in his labours and what 's the reason or ground of all Because the love of Christ constrains him Then onely are we upon sure grounds when the love of Christ is that primum mobile that sets all the other orbes in their motion and where there 's a principle of love to Jesus Christ there will be shed abroad mutuall love towards our brethren such love was unparalleld in Moses who wish'd himselfe blotted out of the bo●ke of life Exod. 32. 3. And in Paul who wished himselfe an Anathema for the Jewes Rom. 9. 3. Here 's soule love indeed beyond compare O what an ardent affection and tender compassion ought Ministers to have to the soules of their people Love to their soules will make them runne through fire and water grapple with beasts of Ephesus sons of Anak even Herculean labours But where 's love to the fleece onely Mercenary hopes of promotions dignities carnal interest all such self-ends and sinister respects will be but as so many Ignes fatui to lead men away into dangerous and destructive ways It 's onely love to the soul that will set thee a working to good purpose And further he that is thus set on fire with love to Christ and to his Brethrens souls must be a man of such wisdom as to temper all his counsels in love In all his Meditations and Exhortations Love is one main Ingredient in the composition He abhors sin in any and reproves it but whilest he hates the sin he loves the person and whilest he endeavors to slay and utterly to destroy the sin he would gladly be instrumental to save the soul of the sinner This is the rule which the Apostle gives Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some render it speaking some following some doing the truth But if the English word may be admitted it 's rendred most suitable to the Original truthing of it in love 2. He must be a man of a willing minde God expects his offering Charact. 2. A man of a willing minde of the willing hearted Exod. 35. 5. And the people are commended for willingly offering themselves Judg. 5. 2. The question was asked 1 Chron. 29. 5. Who then is willing to consecrate his service to the Lord and it 's said v. 6. Then the chief of the Fathers and the Princes of the tribes of Israel c. offered willingly And Gods people are a willing people people of willingn●sse Psalm 110. 3. Every one set apart for the Ministry must have such a Spirit as Amasiah the Son of Zichri had who willingly offered himself unto the Lord And this was as eminent in Paul And I will very gladly spend 2 Chro. 17. 16. 2 Chro. 12. 15. and be spent for you Necessity and constraint may not put any upon a Ministerial Function Quasi ultimum refugium not an Advowson purchased by the Father and intended for the Son nor an Impropriator who intends his Son for his Substitute at a venture A strange Soloecism saith Mr. Bolt●n that holy man of God a Lay-Rector and not Preach nor a Collegiate Education by Statute enjoyning at such a standing to enter into Orders whereas alass many venter thus upon this calling who have neither heart nor hand to put forth to the work but onely that they might keep their places I say none of those can be a sufficient warrant in point of conscience to take upon them so high a Calling This Calling must be took upon choice and serious deliberation It must be willingly entred upon and willingly performed No thinking of putting thy hand to the Plough and looking back such are not fit for the service of the Lord This must be thy resolution come good report come evil report honor dis honor prosperity or adversity I will give my self up to God as Hannah gave Samuel for a loan all the days of my life 3. He must be a man of a meek spirit such a singular spirit was Charact. 3. A man of a meek spirit in Moses Numb 12. 3. And beyond all parallel in Christ He propounds himself the pattern of our imitation Matth. 11. 29. How must the servant of the Lord be qualified 2 Timothy 2. 24 25. And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all m●n apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves And how must an erring brother be dealt withal you may observe the rule Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage in the cause of God Every Charact. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage thing is beautiful in its season There 's a season for meekness and a season for zeal Moses who was meek in his own cause yet was highly transported with zeal in the cause of God Some are Boanergesses Sons of Thunder and others are Barnabasses sons of consolation It 's observed that notwithstanding many failings there 's some good spoken of all the
luxuriously and live with Dives deliciously every day Peradventure they give their flock a visit at Sheep-shearing time once a year as the High Priest entred into the Temple and then with blood and indeed a Non-Resident is a soul-murderer who maintains his bravery with the price of blood Fathers and Brethren I love not to lay out my Mothers nakedness but my heart burns in love to your souls and I hope and pray that a through Reformation may go on and prosper and that under no pretence whatsoever Non-residency may be dispensed withal for the future it being Materia pr●rsus indisp●nsabilis For this sin the Scarlet Gowns ought to come down in the dust and wear Sack-cloth Statute Tolerations Dispensations for such and such Dignities local Statutes in Colledges dispensing for such a Lecture and for a Living under such a value all these will prove but sorry fig-leaves to cover thy nakedness Will any of these ●leas serve thy turn at the Audit of the great Judge of Heaven and Earth Will they stop the cry of blood It was said in Suetonius Quintili Vareredde l●giones so will it be said Steward give an account of thy Stewardship Sheep-herd give an account of thy flock Isa 56. 10. where then will dumb dogs as the Holy Ghost stiles them and Idol Shepherds appear They will wish that th● hills might fall upon them and the mountains cover them from the face of the Lamb. In the second place suffer I beseech you my Brethren the Vse 2. For Exhortation word of Exhortation I beseech you by the mercies of God in the bowels of Jesus Christ above all your gettings get this wisdom to gain souls In general it concerns every one to do all the offices of Heb. 10. 24. love they can and to consider one another to prov●ke to love and to good works Let Parents do this for their Children Tutors for the in Scholars they are Pro-parents for the time Masters for their Servants one Friend one Neighbor for another Let any one indifferently learn this Art and put it into practice These Scriptures I commend to your serious considerations and continual practice one is Levit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbor and not suffer sin upon him Another is Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spoke often one to another and the Lord hearkned and heard it and a Book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his name A third is Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily whilest it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin And in a peculiar and special manner I address my Exhortation unto my Brethren of the Ministry in the Language of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I put you in remembrance 2 Tim. 1. 16. to stir up your gifts Let not good parts be blasted or lie rusty for want of using If such yet remain here unpurged would there were none who keep their Pastoral Livings and their Founders maintenance living here at ease let the Flock sink or swim I recommend those dreadful Imprecations unto their saddest thoughts Zech. 11. 17. Woe to the Idol Shepheard that leaveth the flock the sword shall be upon his arm and upon his right eye his arm shall be clean dryed up and his right eye utterly darkned And 1 Cor. 9. 16. Wo is unto me if I Preach not the Gospel And for such as are set apart for this Calling and as yet have not a Pastoral cure a particular determination ad hic nunc know that you are Ministers of Christ ordained into the universal Church that 's my Judgement for the benefit of the Church of God in general be not idle and lazy saying No man hath hired us Begin betimes and consecrate your strength and marrow to God And if the first-fruit be holy the whole lump will be sancti●ied Neighbor Villages stand in need of your charity many poor souls ready to starve cry as earnestly for spiritual bread as poor Prisoners for corporal bread And the want of a setled Ministry in several places is occasioned by a scandalous maintenance Give me leave to be importunate in my suit and press your duty farther from th●se moving considerations 1. Consider your high and weighty Calling what a great honour it is to be a Minister of Jesus Christ You are called Ambassadors Consid 1. The Ministers weighty calling 2 Cor. 5. 10. Matth. 5. 13. now Ambassadors must pursue the Instructions of their Commissions and your principal instruction is to beseech people to be reconciled to God You are the salt of the earth and if the salt loose its savour wherewith shall it be salted You are lights and lights must not be put under a bushel you are Stewards and Stewards must be faithful you are Laborers and Laborers may not eat the bread of idleness 2. There 's a price put into your hands you have abilities and opportunities Consid 2. A price put into the hands of Ministers health and strength and if God be pleased to give you hearts the business would be soon done and well done you have helps of Learning helps of an ingenuous Education helps of frequent Preachers dividing the Word faithfully amongst you these are as so many prizes put into your hands to get wisdom the Lord give you an heart to make a spiritual improvement of them Two places of Scripture drawing to a close I would gladly fasten upon your thoughts The one is Eccl. 9. 10. What soever thy hand find th to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor kn●wledge in the grave whither thou goest The other is John 9 4. I must work the works of him that sent me whilst it is day the night cometh when no man can work Thirdly and lastly Consider the strictness of your account at the Consid 3. From the day of accompt day of Judgement Then the Lord will say Give account of thy Stewardship Shepheard give account of thy Flock Watch-man hast thou looked to thy Watch Laborer hast thou wrought in my Vine-yard The consideration of the day of Judgement the day of visitation should awaken your spirits and put you upon a carefull provision against that day Vse 3. In the last place let me close up all with a word of direction Vse 3. ●or direction and I have done according to that little experience I have and the Lord forgive me that I have no more I 'le commend a few rules of direction to you 1. Give your selves to Divine Meditation This was Mose's practice Direct 1. To meditate 1 Tim. 4. 13. in the Mount Isaac's in the Field and a duty prescribed by Paul to Timothy Meditate upon these things Meditation is as it were the wing of the soul to carry it unto Heaven and herein a Ministers
Agag a ruling sinne thou canst not purchase the pearle For if the commodity be worth an hundred pounds he goes without it that bids but fifty pounds as well as hee that bids but twenty pounds There must be no hypocriticall defaulking from the price with Ananias and Saphira no halving of it with the strumpet or partial almost Christianity Act. 5. 2. with Agrippa A divided heart is afaulty heart We must Hos 10. 2. willingly part with all whatsoever is dearest or nearest though it be to the dismembring of our selves the parting with a right hand or a right eye our constitution our accustomed sins We may not be faint chapmen cheapning and hoping to bring the price down The Drunkard cannot have Christ and his cups The swearer cannot have Christ and his oathes The unclean person cannot have Christ and his strumpet The Hypocrite cannot have Christ and his painted glosses The cheating cradesman cannot have Christ and his false weights or sophisticated wares Christ will not bee thus coupled thus unequally yoaked Between light and darknesse Christ and Belial there can be no communion And thus farre having gone by way of Explication and Confirmation of the point give me leave to presse all home unto your consciences by particular Application uses 4. 4 Uses I would make of this doctrine for reproofe Examination exhortation and direction Vses 4. For reproofe For reproof of all such who will not sell all for the purchase of the pearle of price There are 4 sorts especially who will not goe to the price of this pearle Ignorant persons that know not the worth of it Covetous persons who preserre the world before it and open profane persons who scorne and doe what in them lyes to trample this Pearle underfoot These 4 come within the verge of this Reprehension 1. Ignorant persons through blindnesse of mind undervalue the Ignorant persons glorious excellencies of Jesus Christ Their grosse ignorance causeth them to undervalue Jesus Christ So that profane Duke of Burbon prefer'd his Part in Paris before his part in Paradise 1. Wee say Ignorantia excusat à tanto non à non à toto And we usually distinguish between an affected ignorance which is pravae disposit ionis from that which is crasse invincible purae negationis And so their punishments may be inflicted secundum mag●s minus yet neither being excusable These through ignorance resemble Aisop's Cock preferring a barly corne before a gemme And these are lyable to a dreadfull curse mentioned by the Prophet Poure cut thy Jer. 10. 25. fury upon the Heathen that know thee not upon the families that call not upon thy name 2. Idle lazy persons are to be reproved who are so supine and carelesse as will not stirre a foot to purchase Christ The wisemen came from the East to worship Christ and the Queen of Sh●ba from the uttermost parts of the earth to heare the wisedome of Solomon these shall rise in judgment against this lazy generation who will be at no paines and at no cost for the purchase of a Saviour Mannah falls round about your tents You have bread in the morning and bread in the evening will not you take paines to gather it You have a Mart and a market for your soules These places of concourse are open which is no small mercy and will you not come at them Men goe many miles for a gainful bargain and are ye so sick of the lazies as you will not step over the threshold to hear a Sermon Non nisi subla to reperitur gemmula saxo This pearle is not to be had by such as fold their hands in their bosomes nor such as lye at Tavernes and Alehouses nor such as in contempt of the Gospel willfully absent themselves from the publick ordinances for fear lest the plain dealing of the Minister should touch them to the quick 3. Covetous persons are to be reprooved who will not foregoe an Ox a farme not a penny profit in the trade for Jesus Christ Mammon is their god and therefore they 'le give no entertainment unto Jesus Christ Gold and silver corne and wine lands and sumptuous buildings are their God Take away these and they will reply with Mica ye have taken away my Gods and what have I more You may read the absurd Contents of the foolish Gadarens petition that Jesus Christ would depart out of their coasts They prefer'd their swine before a Jesus Judas betrayed Christ for 30 peeces of silver And the young man in the Gospel prefer'd treasures on earth before treasures in heaven Demas for the love of the world turn'd Apostate If a man will allow himselfe in covetousnesse hel 'e be any thing as opportunity offers Hel 'e sell his conscience for Mammon Hel 'e tack about for his best advantage A man that was never drunk with wine nor beare yet may be drunk with the cares of the world as our Saviour expresseth Luk. 21. 34. A Christian's conversation must be without covetousnesse 4. Profane persons are to be reproved such as are of Esau's humor Heb. 13. 5. Heb. 12. 16. who for one morsell of meat sold his birth-right A profane person will not foregoe a lust for Christ The drunkard will not leave his cups The uncleane person will not leave his strumpet nor the swearer his oaths for Christ And why I because they are enemies to Christ Christ and Belial Christ and profanenesse of spirit Christ and lusts cannot be reconciled Use 2. For Examination The second Use is for Examination whether we are willing to sell all for the purchase of Jesus Christ By way of character I l'e propound three queries 1. Doe we exalt and preferre Christ above all besides If so it will appeare by our judgments affections and conversation 1. Doe you exalt Christ in your judgments Have you a spirit 1 Query Doe you Exalt Christ 1. In your judgments 2. In your affections of discerning to discerne more beauty wisdome riches purity and vertue in Christ then in all the world besides observe what a high commendation the spouse gives of Christ upon experimentall knowledg Cant. 5. 10. My beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest amongst tenne thousand Christ was white for his innocency and ruddy for his sufferings 2. Doe you exalt Christ in your affections doe you love Christ with an entire love doth his love constraine you 2 Cor. 5. 14. Doe you set your joy upon Christ when Christ came in the power of his Ministery 't is said there was a great joy in that City Acts 8. 9. That Christian who hath a white stone and a new name O how is his heart ravisht with an exuberant joy And doe you place your desire upon Christ Psal 73. 25. whom have I in Heaven but thee there 's none whom I desire besides thee 3. Doe you exalt Christ in your life and conversation Then 3 Your life and Conversation doe we price
Pestilence after the manner of Egypt your young men have I slain with the 3. Amos 4. 10. sword and have token away your horses and I have made the stink of your camps to come up unto your n●strils yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord So that the Pestilence and the Sword accompany each other And wherefore are the Sword and Pestilence sent See Levit. 26. 25. I will bring a sword upon you that shall avenge the quarrel of my Covenant and when ye are gathered together in your cities I will send the Pestilence among you and ye shall be delivered into the hand of the enemy And the Sword is a punishment of their Pride Amos 6 7. Now therefore they shall go captive with the first that go captive and the banquet of them that stretched themselves shall be removed Likewise the Sword is sent for a punishment And for Phantastical Fashions Isa 3. 25. Thy men shall fall by the sword and thy mighty in the war A fifth Judgement is Famine and this is for contempt of the Word Behold the days come saith the Lord God that I will send a famine in 5. Amos 8. 11. the Land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of the hearing the word of the Lord. A sixth Judgement is the enseebling of their strength and weakning of their forces Behold I am pressed under you as a cart is pressed 6. Amos 2. 13 14. 15. that is full of sheaves therefore the flight shall perish from the swift and the strong shall not strengthen his force neither shall the mighty deliver himself neither shall he stand that handleth the b●w and he that is swift of foot shall not deliver himselfe neither shall hee that rideth the horse deliver himself When any abuse their strength and power God will enfeeble it This counsel is commended to our practice Jer. 9. 23. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome neither let the mighty man glory in his might let not the rich man glory in his riches You have by what hath been sayd a tast of bitter fruites some sinnes and judgments set forth in their proper colours In Israels glass England may see her face The same evils of sinne are rise among us and in part the same evils of punishment have already befallen us and the rest hang over our heads and will fall heavie upon us unless mercy speedily interpose Now amidst varieties of wounds and sores and heavy judgments the Prophet prescribes a soveraigne remedie hee addresseth himselfe to divine exhortations and counsels One is Amos 4. 12. Therefore thus will I doe unto thee O Israel and because I will doe this unto thee prepare to meet thy God O Israel Another which begins Si vobis animus est ad Deum reverti jam abjicite omnes vestras superstitiones Calv. in Loc. Amos. 5. 4 is continued vers 5. 6 14. Thus saith the Lord seek yee mee and ye shall live But seek not Bethel nor enter into Gilgal and pass not to Beersheba for Gilgal shall surely goe into captivity and Bethel shall come to nought Seek yee the Lord and yee shall live c. Now if the question be askt wherein doth seeking of God consist A. In the former verses wee read of injustice vers 7. They turne judgment to wormewood and leave off righteousness and of bribery and cruelty v. 12. They afflict the just they take a bribe Insomuch that the prudent man is amazed and stands admiring in a stupendious reverential silence He dares not revile instruments and murmur at the Providence of God v. 3. Therefore the prudent shall keep silence in that time for it is an evill time Q. Now what 's to be done what particular remedy is to bee prescribed sutable to the disease A. My text makes discovery hereof and informes you what 's the most effectual remedy to heale a wounded Kingdome in the words of the Text. Hate the evil and love the good c. The wordes represent unto you an excellent Medicine and the singular virtue thereof The medicine is made up of three particular Ingredients Text divided 1. Hate the evill There 's the affection of hatred 2. Love the good There 's the affection of love 3. Establish judgment in the gate There 's the exercise of distributive Justice 2. For the virtue it 's soveraign effectual to appease the wrath of God to smooth his brow So it follows It may be the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Joseph I shall briefly open the words and draw forth one doctrine which I shall lay down for the ground-worke of my ensuing meditations Here by evill wee are to understand the evill of sinne oppression violence Idolatry pride mentioned in this prophesie and in a large acceptation under this word all manner of sin is forbidden Sinne is the greatest evill and this ought to be the object of our indignation What God hates wee ought to hate Now as God hates sin so should wee with a perfect hatred abhor hate every evil way By good is meant the right way the way of holiness and virtue Mr Calvin takes notice of the order first to hate sinne then to love that which is good and he conceives the scope of the Prophet to bee this that the Israelites should become new men and by a Syne●doch● Repentance is described in the whole worke from these two parts in hating evill and loving that which is good And because there was abundance of corruption and injustice in their gates in an especiall manner hee inculcates the execution of justice And establish judgment in the gate you have turned judgment into gall and hemlock and by your neglect of justice have provoked God to high displeasure against you Now labour to pacifie him by the impartiall execution of Justice It was the custom of Judges to keep their courts of judicature near the gates of the City so v. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly Isai 29. 21 that make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turne aside the just for a thing of nought Hereupon followes a strong ground of Incouragement It may bee the Lord c hee could not determine absolutely hee knew not the decree whether an irreversible sentence had passed against them See a notwithstanding mentioned after a signal Reformation 2 King 23. 25 26. And like unto him was no King before him that turned unto the Lord with all his heart with all his soule and with all his might Notwithstanding the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath wherewith his anger was kindled against Judah because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withall But upon probable conjecturall hopes hee encourageth them God hath been very gracious to a penitent people formerly God was gracious to Manasseh
1. 3. Because of the savour of thy good oyntments thy name is as oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Cant. 4. 13 14. Thy plants are an orchard of pomgranates with pleasant fruits camphire with spikenard Spik●nard and saffron calamus and cynamon with all trees of frankincense myrrhe aloes with all the chief spices As for instance Faith is a sweet pleasant Grace it s our life nothing sweeter then life Hab. 2. 4. The just shall live by faith So Hope is sweet pleasant Pro. 10. 28. The hope of the righteous shall be gladness but the expectation of the wicked shall perish Then patience is sweet for it sweetens all hardships and bears all crosses It makes a vertue of necessity Heb. 10. 36. For ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise Likewise Love is pleasant for it by a Divine Alchimy turns the basest Metals into gold Cant. 8. 6 7. Set me as a seal upon thine heart and as a seal upon thine arm for love is strong as death Many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it Another delightful Grace is Meekness A meek spirit is chearful and reviv'd amidst storms of persecution And so is Humility Passionate and Proud men take no joy in any thing they are of Haman's humor But meek humble self-denying spirits are full of joy and tranquility when the minde is quieted and setled whatever makes against it there 's something to make for it something coming in to support the soul and carry it on chearfully There 's the exercise of no Grace but it 's joyous and delightsom to Gods children Faith Hope Patience Love Meekness Humility are the delight of Gods children 4. Lastly There 's much delight and joy in obedience to Gods 4. There 's much delight and joy in obedience to Gods commandments commandments O how love I thy law Thy law is my delight said David All the Duties of obedience are pleasant to Gods children When the Spouse is once drawn she will be a running Cant. 1. 4. Draw me and I will run after thee So David Psal 119. 32 77. I will run the ways of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart It was Pauls delight in the place above mention'd and it was Davids rejoycing Psal 119. 14 15 16. I have rejoyced in the ways of thy testimonies as much as in all riches I will delight my self in thy statutes and not forget thy word Obedience to the commandments is easie to Gods children They do it with as much delight as David danced before the Ark. But profane persons do duties as Phaltiel followed Mic●l 'T is said 1 John 5. 3. This is the love of God that we keep his commandments and his commandments are not grievous 'T is easie with Gods children to forbear Swearing they covenant with their tongues It 's easie to forbear Whoredom they covenant with their eyes It 's easie to keep the Sabbath for they call it a delight It 's easie to hear the word and tarry it out patiently for it is a joy unto them Matth. 11. 28 29 30. Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am lowly and meek For my yoke is easie and my burthen is light Do not therefore discourage any from the ways of Religion as the Spies did from entring into Canaan You can subscribe to this by experience you can do much more work when your spirits are chearful when you do your business willingly A chearful minde will facilitate the weightiest enterprize Many use Recreations to refresh their spirits And Recreation may not be us'd otherwise then as a File to Devotion Now the practice of holy Duties is the godly mans recreation It was Christs meat and drink to do his Fathers work and so it is of the godly Therefore they Pray Read Hear Meditate and live chearfully Their souls are delighted and quieted in the performance of duty Carry home this truth with you that there 's more real sollid joy in the ways of Religion then all the delightful ways in the Universe And Oh! that this might stir your affections to be in love with the ways of godliness I now come to the confirmation of the Point by some evident Demonstrations 1. Whatever pleasure men finde in the world is much more to Demonst 1. No pleasure in the world like to the pleasure of godliness be found in the ways of godliness Prov. 3. 14 15. For the merchandise of it is better then the merchandise of silver and the gain thereof then fine gold She is more precious then rubies and all the things thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her Prov. 8. 14 15. Counsel is mine and sound wisdom I am understanding I have strength By me Kings reign and Princes decree justice I shall instance in all the senses The eye takes delight in beautifull Objects It 's a pleasant thing to behold the Sun the Light is pleasant but no such beauty as in the ways of God Solomon speaks much of the Ruby and compares Wisdom to it for its resplendent Lustre Could the beauty of godliness be seen with these eyes they would be dazled Excellens sensibile corrumpit si sensū The eye of man hath seen stately Buildings rich Treasures precious Commodities but the eye of Faith in a Believer seeth the holy Trinity the Throne of God In comparison whereof the bravest sights in the World are nothing even less then nothing 2. The eare is delighted with melodious musicke Men love to heare a skillfull Musitian But in a transcendent manner the eares of the godly are delighted with hearing the word the strong cryes and prayers of God's people the singing of Psalmes Psal 89. 15. Blessed is the people that know the joyfull sound they shall walk O Lord in the light of thy countenance Some antient Philosophers phansied musick in the Orbes and Intelligences to wheel them about That opinion is much controverted amongst themselves But this is an undoubted truth that there 's no musick so delightfull to the eare as duties of religion They are pleasant to God's eare For hee loves to heare his people praying and should not they bee pleasant to ours And besides what wee heare of God now is but for a moment what wee shall heare heareafter shall bee to eternity When the damned are a roaring skriking howling blaspheming cursing weeping and heare nothing else Then the Saints shall heare Hallelujah's praising singing and joyne themselves in a Celestiall Consort 3. The tast shall bee delighted in the ways of godlinesse Gluttons and drunkards delight much in their tast Curious tasts will not bee pleased but with sweet and delightfull things Now O Christian get another tast a spirituall relish of heavenly thinges Psal 34. 4. O tast and see that the Lord is good
receive benefits by others and are beneficiall to others 4. To these I adde a fourth Bonum Honorabile Riches and honour are with wisdome None so honorable as God's servants Noe such honourable wayes as the wayes of Religion The pathes of wickedness are base and ignoble Antiochus is cal'd a vile person Dan. 11. 21. And in his estate shall stand up a vile person to whom they shall not give the honour of the Kingdome but hee shall come in peaceably and obtaine the Kingdome by slatteries But godliness is honourable Honor est in honorante What shall be done to the man whom the King of Heaven delights to honour And wee read Act. 17. 11. These were more noble than those in Th●ssalonica in that they received the word with all readiness of mind and searched the scriptures dayly whether those things were so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence Ignatius sayd Nobilitas antiquitas mea Jesus Christus Godlinesse is an honourable service The wayes of Wickednesse most ignoble and dishonourable 5. It 's bonum conveniens a good suteable and commensurate to the desires of the soule The soule is a heavenly borne being spirituall immateriall and nothing can bee suteable but that which beares a like proportion The soule is not nourished with huskes pleasures profits delights of the world No earthly thing can satisfie the vast and boundless desires of an immortall soule when the Depth says It 's not in mee the sea it 's not in mee the easterne and westerne treasures of gold spices say It 's not in us from God alone commeth satisfaction Hee alone can fill up the Angles of our heart Psal 90. 4. O satisfie us early with thy mercy that wee may rejoice and bee glad all our dayes Wee may eat and not bee satisfied that 's a curse threatned Micah 6. 14. Thou shalt eat but not bee satisfied and thy casting downe shall bee in the mid'st of thee c. Wee may see varieties of delightfull objects and yet not bee satisfied Eccles 1. 8. The eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare fild with hearing Wee may love silver and yet not bee satisfied Eccles 5. 10. Hee that loveth silver shall not bee satisfied with silver nor hee that loveth abundance with increase But Jer. 31. 14. And I will satiate the soules of the Priests with fatness and my soule shall be satisfied with goodness saith the Lord. Pleasures riches honours profits are not suteable goods But holyness is suteable and satisfactory to the soule 6. Bonum perman●ns Riches make themselves winges and fly away Friends are perfidious Creature comforts are like Job's deceitfull brook But godliness is durable Prov. 8. 18. Riches and honour are with thee yea durable riches and righteousness Holynesse lasts to eternity When all leaves thee a good Conscience keeps thee company in Heaven Doe you then desire an eternall permanent good get the feare of God principled in your hearts Demonstrat 6. Drawne from incouraging delight which God hath promised The 6th and last demonstration shall be drawne from the many incourageing delights that God hath provided for them They enjoy the garden of Eden a paradise of delights here upon earth their lives are sweet and delightfull for they have a God to goe to to call him Abba father They have Christ their Mediatour the spirit of truth their comforter They have thee the sweet springes and Rivers of Ordinances to refresh them and rich and precious promises They have in them a grand Charter full of immunities and glorious priviledges And they have a Christ the tree of life and what hee hath is put forth for their good Hee 's a counsellour to instruct them a fountaine to cleanse them a mighty God to defend them so that having all these helpes and Incouragements from the holy Trinity from the promises from the ordinances they must needs suck sweetness out of these breasts of consolation Review all these demonstrations and from them learne to set a high price of and delight your selves in the wayes of Godlynesse Therefore this doctrine serves 1. For an Use of conviction to convince Use 1. For conviction the world of their exceeding great folly in their prejudicate opinions against the wayes of godlyness They are unacquainted with the amiable beauty sweet refreshings of divine wisdom and therefore they speak evill of that which they know not prejudging and rashly censuring God's people for melancholy dumpish spirited persons These deale with the wayes of God as the Pagan Persecutors with the primitive Christians They put them in Beares and dogges skinnes so to render them odious to the multitude then they baited and worried them Just so prophane men now adayes put religion into ugly conceits they censure Professours of religion for dissemblers and hypocrites and the profession it selfe sowre unpleasant and burdensome and thus they revile the wayes of God But these peoples tongues are no slanders They even fight against their own shaddowes or else make a man of clouts and then fight against him This is their fancy their conceit and their groundlesse misprission Not that ther 's any such thing as they fancy in the wayes of godliness For all the wayes of Godliness are lovely and excellent sweet and delightfull unto the Saints of God only thou judgest ignorantly and rashly Thy eye is like one that hath the yellow Jaundice which seest all things yellow Thou hast a naturall eye and therefore canst not discerne aright of the wayes of God 1 Cor. 2. 14 15. But the naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can h●e know them for th●y are spiritually discerned But hee that is spirituall judgeth all things yet hee himselfe is judged of no man Thou hast a dull eare therefore wilt not hear the voice of a spiritual charmer charme hee never so wisely Thou hast a carnal tast and therefore canst not relish and tast sweetness in God's wayes Thou hast all thy affections disordered and out of frame thy love joy desire are upon the world Thou followest other lovers pleasures lusts profits These have bewitched thy heart and took up thy delight and therefore thou art a mere stranger unto the wayes of godliness I would gladly convince carnall men that ther 's no delight in carnall sinfull pleasures I have proved largely that the wayes of godliness are the only wayes of pleasantness I le propound some convictions that the wayes of sinne and wickednesse have no reall solid pleasure no true delight and contentment in them 1. The wayes of wickedness afford only sensuall fleshly pleasures Convict 1. The wayes of wickedness afford sensuall pleasures The drinking gameing epicurizing of ungodly men only reacheth to the sensuall part And what shall I pamper a carcass that which must bee wormes meat and shall I neglect my precious soule what shall Christ heaven eternity bee neglected for satisfaction of a base lust a few paltry
be such a bitter sorrow for sin as for the losse of a first-born like the mourning of Hadad-rimmon in the valley of Megiddo Peter denyed shamefully and wept bitterly David watered his Couch with his tears Mary Magdalen out of whom Christ cast seven Devils washt Christs feet with her tears and wip'd them with the hair of her head Let it be bitter to remember that thou hast been so undutiful to so gracious a God that thou hast provoked such a merciful God to wrath whose nature is to shew mercy O how this consideration should melt thy heart into a soul-reforming sorrow Sins may be compared to the waters of Marah so bitter as none could drink of them Sin is a very bitter thing it produceth bitter effects But God shewed Dir. 2. Look through all Humiliations unto Jesus Christ Moses a Tree which made the Waters of Marah sweet The bitter Tears of Repentance and the most bitter afflictions which sin produceth will end in joy to those that are truly penitent 2. Though thou must be humbled and he that was never humbled never truly believed yet thou must not rest in thy humiliation but look unto Jesus Christ for a cure Thou must be sensible of the stings and wounds of sin and look unto Jesus Christ by the eye of Faith for a cure He is our peace Eph. 2. 14. No reconciliation but by him 2 Cor. 5. 19. No way to get healing pardon salvation but by him sue then out a Pardon sealed by the Blood of Christ O pray that be would cancel the hand-writing against thee and that by his Blood he would Justifie Sanctifie and Save thee No name no Mediator no Blood can make an Atonement for thee but this Blood of Sprinkling which speaks better things then the Blood of Abel 3. Having got a pardon through the Blood of Christ walk Dir. 3. Walk circu●●spectly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui exacte vivunt nolunt vel in minimis deficere cedere solent enim vel minutissima observare Favorinus circums●ectly in thy whole conversation Eph. 15. 5. There is an Emphasis in the Adverb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bids be watchful and circumspect take heed of re-acting thy youthful sins ●ill be renewing thy repentance and pray for more manifestation of Gods love unto thy soul 4. And lastly To conclude here is one word of comfort unto those upon whom God hath poured the Spirit of Repentance Old people that have truly repented of their sins shall have them imputed unto Christ and Christs righteousness unto them for Justification and let them read their blessedness Psalm 32. 1 2. Happy are they whose souls are washt white in the blood of the Use 4. For Consolation Lamb You that mourn for sin you shall be comforted You that bewail your sins and hate them and endeavor to walk closely with God in a holy conformity to his will you shall have this hand-writing blotted out And whether your sorrow be right and genuine you must try it by those Apostolical Characters 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. Let no man apply comfort to himself but upon Gospel terms And to you that are young upon whose hearts God hath wrought saving Grace in your tender years I must pronounce comfort to you Happy is it with you that God hath begun with you betimes and hath planted his fear in your hearts betimes You have heard how dear youthful sins cost many in their elder years O now be advised take warning fly youthful sins labour to be grave and serious in your carriages God hath done much for you what will you do for him speak good of his name advance his glory incourage your fellows to come unto God Remember that counsel which Christ gives Peter When thou art converted streng then thy brethren I beseech you all in the fear of God in the close of my Sermon to beware of youthful levity There is Mr. Jeremy Burroughs a great deal of frothy with amongst young men A Reverend Divine now with God used to pray That of all spirits God would be pleased to deliver him from a frothy spirit Beware of foolish Jesting Though the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be allowed in Aristotle yet it is condemned by St. Paul Eph. 5. 4. Let young Timothy be a patern for your imitation of whom Paul had such confidence And always labor to cleanse your ways according to that rule which I shall leave with you for a close of all Psal 119. v. 9. By taking heed thereto according to the word Iudgement and Mercy Set forth upon Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said My spirit shall not always strive with man for that he also is flesh yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years IN the precedent Chapter you have the Genealogy of the long Serm. 2. At St. Mary's Oxon. Jan. 12. 1652. Gen. 5. 27. liv'd Patriarchs of the old World It 's observable that every ones particular age is exactly reckon'd and though they lived some more some fewer years yet every one agrees in the same conclusion And he dyed Methuselah who lived the longest of all lived nine hundred sixty and nine years and he dyed The longest livers saw death and could not deliver themselves from the hand of the Grave These ancient Fathers though dead may be said to live in their Posterities They left behinde them a numerous off-spring the Earth is full of people and mankinde is now multiplyed into multitudes v. 1. And as the People so their wickednesses are multiplyed The more people the more sinners O stupendious ingratitude God multiplies their off-spring and revives their memory in the fruit of their loyns For what are Parents of many Children but themselves so much the more multiplyed yet these wicked Wretches by how much the more God encreased and multiplyed them in their Posterity by so much the more they encreased and multiplyed their wickedness against him their Creator And now their abominations are come to the full and they are ripe for destruction The Lord exercised Mercies bowels of Mercies patience long-suffering towards them waiting upon them many years Preaching to them by the Patriarchs calling them to Repentance and notwithstanding all the loving kindnesses forbearances patient expectations of a gracious God ye● they remain obstinate refractory incorrigible whereupon the Lord will not suffer his patience to be abused any longer his Servants and Ministry to be contemned his Holy Spirit to be grieved v. 7 8. The Creatures were made for the service of Man both he and they should be took away together Man was the Lord over the Creatures and when he was took away what use would there be of them as Chrysostome observes Man had abused the Creatures over which he had dominion Master and Servants both fall together thus the whole Creation gro●neth by reason of mans Apostacy from God As the Beasts were made for Man so they became subject 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quod
4. 7. 2. Repent seriously and Evangelically make not a slight matter of so great a work neither rest satisfied in a legal repentance extorted from the fear of Hell and the wrath of an angry God but let it be done Evangelically from the love of God the consideration of the displeasure of so good a God and the sinfulness of sin let those considerations melt thee into tears and cause thee to mourn ingenuously 3. Be continually renewing thy repentance and when thou hast 3 Be renewing thy repentance frequently felt a pardon get it fairer transcribed and renewed through the Blood of Christ His blood cleanseth from all sins And there is redemption through his Blood the forgiveness of sins 4. Be thankful for the space that God gives thee thou canst never 4 Be thankfull for the space given thee 5. Improve every mercy to more saith full performance of duty acknowledge enough the patience and forbearance of God who gives thee time and allows thee space and wher 's his Sword and bends his Bow to give thee warning to escape the blow What shall I render unto the Lord for all his mercies and loving kindnesses Will Eternity be enough to praise the Lord 5. Improve every mercy to more faithful performance of duties The last Use is for comfort unto those who make much of the strivings of Gods Spirit and make the best improvement of the Use 6. For consolation time that God alots them for repentance This will yield them comfort in their lives on their death-beds 2 Kings 20. 3. Remember O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight And to all Eternity Happy are they that have hearkned to Gods call and made a good use of all the means of Grace and spent the allotted time to Gods glory Here they shall reap the first-fruits of Joy and Comfort and hereafter the full Harvest unto all Eternity An Ingagement unto Holyness from the consideration of the Day of Iudgement Unfolded from 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and Godliness THat Christ shall come to Judgement is an Article of our Ser. 4. at St. Maryes Oxon July 27 1651. Faith We profess we believe it yet how many deny it in their practices Some put far from them the evil day or think not of a day of account like desperate Bank-rupts adding more to the score not considering an after reckoning Hence multitudes live as they list without God in the world running into all excess of riot frolicking it in all manner of Epicurism and Voluptuousness thus denying the Day of Judgement by the wickedness of their lives Others are much offended because the day is so long a coming because Christ stays so long they are hot-spurs and will not wait If Gods clo●k strike not according to their Dyal If the Resurrection Day of Judgement Christs second coming be not assoon as they expect they call all in question and propose a question full of Blasphemy and Infidelity both ver 4. Where is the promise of his coming These blasphemous Scoffers ver 4. Arg. 1. Ver. 5. the Apostle consures by several Arguments The world was created by the word of God v. 5. It was not ab aeterno as Philosophers dreamed now the Argument is valid The same God who by his word made the world can by his word destroy it when he pleaseth A second Argument is drawn from experience v. 6. By the Deluge Arg. 2. Ver. 6. the old world was destroyed God bade the water over-flow and destroy man and beast and it did so And the time will come that he will bid the fire to destroy this visible World wherein we no● live and it shall be so v. 7. A third Argument is drawn from the Eternity of God We Ver. 7. Arg. 3. poor Creatures measure things by time we speak of days weeks moneths and years of times past present and to come thus we apprehend but time past present and to come are all one in God His Decree delays not He 's not measured by time Ver. 8. v. 8. If God seem to defer this day yet this is an argument of singular patience mercy and loving kindness not of any slackness Ver. 9. v. 9. Gods long-suffering should be our salvation Gods patience and waiting upon us roads us a Lecture of Repentance O infinite forbearance bowels of mercy opened when as the Lord might cut us asunder in the midst of our rebellions and send us to Hell immediately yet he wooes invites and beseecheth us to repent and he waits and trys us whetting of his Sword bending of his Bow that whil'st the Sword is a whetting and the Bow a bending we should prudently fore-see and take warning that so we might escape the blow The fourth and last Argument to confute those scoffers who Arg. 4 are over curiously inquisitive hasty unbelieving rashly expostulating Where is the promise of his coming This I say is drawn Ver. 10. from the manner of Christs coming v. 10. Hoc additum est saith Calvin ut semper sint in excubiis fideles nec crastinum sibi promittant This may be considered three manner of ways 1. It 's unexpected as Thieves come unlook'd for when men 1. are asleep and most secure then the Thief comes When the old World was secure in the midst of their jollity then came the Flood and swept them away 2. There will be a change of the whole frame of the Universe 2. Matth. 24. 38. 39. Beza Erasmus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. v. 10. The heavens c. Impetum veluti Sibillantis procella declarat So Beza In morem procellae in manner of a storm So Erasmus 3. There shall be an utter conslagration of all things even of those wherein worldlings place their happiness The Mannors Lands goodly Buildings the Wonders and Idols of the World shall be burnt up at that day Now it will be our wisdom neither to question the truth of these things for Truth it self the Lord Jesus Christ hath told us that these things shall come to pass neither ought we to be curiously inquisitive after the particular time when as some of the Jewish Rabbins have been too bold in this pa●ticular neither ought we to be impatient or querulous because it s not yet accomplished 4. Our duty to wait and believe And our main duty and wisdom will consist in this to make preparation to be in Procinctu 4. Hab. 2. 3 4. to have our Garments girt about us to have our Lamps burning and Oyl enough in them against that great day Far be it from me to raise a dust or rake into the Dung-hill of those ancient lately 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hereticks who deny the Resurrection the Day of
be such a day then 1. ●e counselled to break off your sins by repentance Be sensible of the evil of your doings 2. Kisse the Son hast and delay not to make your peace with Jesus Christ for he is our prayse Eph. 2. 14. 3. Make choice of other paths enter into the way of holyness Isa 35. 8. 2 Pet. 3. 14. Then to the godly Here lyeth your duty 1. To have your thoughts meditations and desires fixed on that day Be longing for the sight of Christ coming in the clouds and pray come Lord Jesus come quickly 2. Comfort your selves with the assurance of Gods love to you so was Paul comforted 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. 3. Let your conversation be in heaven Phil. 3. 20 21. 4. Bee not afraid of death for to the Saints death is a conquered enemy the sting is taken away the Serpents teeth are knockt out What need they be afraid of death who shall be acquitted before the Judges And their Judge is their Advocate their friend their Redeemer Jesus Christ which brings in the last Doctrine Doct. 3 That at the day of judgement Jesus Christ shall be the Judge In handling of this Doctrine I shall give clear proof from Scripture and Reason then answe● several Que●ies and Objections and conclude with particular Application 1. For Scripture proof That Christ shall be judge is plain from 1 The Doctrine proved by Scripture several Scriptures viz. Joh. 5. 22 27. Act. 10. 42. Act. 17. 31. Mat. 28. 18. John 5. 21. Christ for this purpose rose again that he might be Lord over quick and dead Rom. 14. 9 10. and part of his dominion is the last judgement The Reasons why Christ shall be Judge are drawn 1 From equity Reas 1. From equity and retaliation retaliation Christ shall judge those that judged him Christ shall judge Pontius Pilate the High Priest the Jewes c. And this will be for the confusion of Christs enemies that though Christ was reproached buffered crowned with thornes and crucified set at nought by the wicked of the world yet now he shall be in triumph and be the judge of quick and dead Joh. 19. 37. They shall looke upon him whom they have pierced Reas 2. For the comfort of the godly Reas 3. For the terror of the wicked 2. Christ shall be Judge for the comfort of the godly Heb. 2. 11. Eph. 5. 30. Christ is their head redeemer elder-brother intercessour Christ hath promised everlasting life Joh. 3. 36. Joh. 5. 24. 3. For the terrour of the wicked Rev. 1. 7. But in the next place here are many questions to be resolved Q. 1. Is the Father excluded from judgement I answer Neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost are excluded The Father is said to judge by the Son Act. 17. 31. Now judgement is peculiarly by a kind of appropriation ascribed to the Son Joh. 5. 22. Pater occultus Filius manifestus as Austine observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole Trinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Son this judgement appertains ●ut 2. It will be asked How shall Christ appear at that day Ans ●e shall 1. Appear visibly This judgement the Father hath committed to Christ God and man ●nd Chris● shall not onely judge according to his divine nature but also according to his humane nature So that Christ shall be seen vissibly and locally Act. 1. 11. Mat. 24. 30. 2. Christ shall come gloriously and this will be cleared in sour Particulars 1. Hee shall come in the glory of his Father Mat. 10. 27. 2. With an innumerable company of Angels Mat. 25. 31. 3. With the sound of the trumpet 1 Thes 4. 16. 4 With Power Mat. 24. 30. 3. Christ shall come suddenly as a theef Mat. 24. 4● As a snare Luk. 21. 34. Unexspectedly Luk. 12. 46. 1 Thes 5. 2 3. A 3. Question is whom Christ shall judge Ans The Scripture is evident Men and Angels 1 For Men universally all Men Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. both quick ●nd dead Act. 10. 42. 1 Pet. 4. 5. 2 Tim. 4. 1. 2. For Angels Jude v. 6. Rev. 20. 10. A 4. Question is What will be the manner of Christs judging To answer this Question we are to consider the preparation to this judgement the Proceeding of this Judge and the ●ule of judging 1. For preparation That will appear in these particulars 1 1 Consider the preparations to the day of judgement There will be a transmutation of heaven and earth Rev. 21. 4 5. 2 Pet. 3. 10. 2. Christ will appear in a throne of glory Mat. 19. 28. 3. There will be a summoning of all sorts of men quick and dead shall be summoned to appear before the judgement seat of Christ Joh. 5. 28 29. 1 Thes 4. 16 17. 4 There will be a separation and division a placing of the sheep on the right hand and the goats on the left hand Mat. 25. 32 33. 2 Consider the proceedings of the judge 2. Let us consider the proceedings of the Judge Wherein we are to note 1 The books shall be laid open Rev. 20. 12. The devil shall accuse Angels shall be witnesses And no need of their accusation or witness for each mans conscience shall be accuser and witness and judge Every book of conscience shall be opened and there shall be either excuseing or accuseing and Dan. 7. 10. There 's a book of Gods remembrance mentioned Mal. 3. 16. And there is a book of a mans owne conscience which shall be opened at that great day This is the book for rectifying whereof all other Ideoscribuntur omnes Labri ut unus emendetur conscientiae Bern. books were written Now there lyeth no appeal from these books no possibility of falsifying Gods book and the book of Conscience And if any one should plead not done not guilty conscience as good as a thousand witnesses would protest against it 2. In Christs proceeding we are to consider of a different sentence one of absolution the other of condemnation 1 For the sentence of absolution Mat. 25. 34. Come there is a gracious invitation ye blessed there is a comfortable appellation of my Father there is a glorious adoption inherit there is their title and donation the Kingdome there is the royalty of it prepared there is the predestination for you there is the propriety of the Saints from the foundation of the World there is the antiquity the antient tenure before the creation of Adam 2 There is a sentence of condemnation Mat. 25. 14 Depart there 's a barre of exclusion a dreadful dismission from mee there is the punishment of losse the heaviest of punishments Qui te non habet Domine Deus totum perdidit saith Bernard Ye cursed there 's their brand of infamy Into Bernard everlasting fire there 's poena Jensus exquisite unspeakable torments there 's fire to burn and torment and eternal fire no mitigation of pain unto all eternity prepared
from our bodies Yet a little while and grisly death the King of terrours will seize on us Here then must we be inquisitive what will become on our souls afterwards We see God writing vanity on all sublunary things and they are full of vexation The greatest riches are uncertain and perishing All the honours and riches in their greatest estate and confluence cannot helpe a man in the evil day nor satisfy an immortal soul nor bring a man to eternity Wherefore our great care and wisdome should be to get an endureing substance to get assurance of the love of God in Christ and his love isan eternal love We should be exhorted in the language of the Apostle Col. 3. 2 3. Set your affections on things above and not on things below For ye are dead c. Let me in a few words to press upon you the study of eternity adde these Moving considerations 1. This study of eternity is an honourable study It 's a most sublime noble study suitable to the soul The understanding of 1. Consid This is an honourable study man is a noble faculty of the soul and what more suitable for such a noble faculty to contemplate then the thoughts of eternity God and Christ and Glory the blessed vision communion with the Father and the Son these are objects fittest for the contemplations of an immortal soul What a degenerate sordid thing is it for Princes children to converse with base persons All Gods children are children of the great King of Heaven and Earth and for such to have their thoughts stuffed with trash and pelfe of the world O how unsuitable and unworthy is it The Lapwing is accounted an embleme of infelicity because she feeds on dung though she weares a Coronet upon her head Shall then our heavenly-born-being soules be prostituted to Mammon shall our thoughts be low and creeping Our thoughts and negotiations ought to be on life and immortality even the great things of eternity Our studyes and meditations should be on the things above heavenly treasures an inheritance that 's immortall undefiled that fadeth not away This is that noble that honourable study wherein we ought to be imployed 2. This study of Eternity is a most sweet delightsome soul-ravishing 2. Consid This study is sweet and delightsome study Job on the dunghill was comforted with the consideration of a better life and a glorious resurrection Job 19. 25 26 27. For I know that my redeemer liveth and this comforted Stephen when by the eye of faith he saw Christ even when the Acts 7. 55. stones were about his eares his temporall life was then a going away and he was hastening to a better That life was transient this permanent Oh! how sweet is the meditation of a God reconciled of a crowne of glory the price of our high calling This makes the Saints desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ The consideration of heavenly consolations sweeten the bitterest pills of afflictions For one moment in heaven will abundantly make amends for all our sufferings and sorrows on earth This serious consideration of Eternity will be a cordiall in all troubles I have read that Q. Eleanor suck'd the poyson out of the wound of the King her-husband I am sure the meditation of our everlasting estate will suck the poyson out of those wounds which affliction bring Oh! how delightfull is the thought of a haven to such as are tost up and down with stormes and tempests This world is a tempestuous sea rough and troublesome how delightfull is this meditation to a child of God to think I am passing through the rough sea of the world to an eternall Harbour 3. This is a most profitable study We read of treasures crowns 3. Consid This is a most profitable study high places inheritances layd up for the saints In this world riches fail in heaven is an induring substance In this world honours lie in the dust many are degraded in Heaven no degradation That honour is permanent Godliness hath the promise of this life and that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. Wherefore then should we carke and care and turmoile for the pelfe of this world and in the mean time neglect eternal riches What a doe What a hurry What sollicitous turmoyling is here to get estates in this world What projecting torturing of mens braines complying with men and times to get honours and riches in this world Whereas all these things are not bread they are not the true treasure nor abideing substance But in the mean time how few are there that labour for spiritual riches and lay up their treasures in heaven No treasure like this this onely inricheth the owners 4. And lastly this is a seasonable study What are our life 's but Consid 4. This is a most seasonable study a blast Our breaths soon depart and then all our thoughts vanish every affliction every disease puts us in minde that here is not our rest here we have not an abideing citty Revolutions of Providence read Lectures to us of the changeable condition of the world What then more proper and more seasonable then to have our hearts took off these transient things and fixed upon permanent things There is no certainty here but there is in another world The world with all it's bravery passeth away And there shall be a dissolution of this frame visible to our eyes How nearly doth it concerne us and how seasonable a duty is it to minde heavenly things to fix our thoughts meditations totum hominem totumque hominis upon those excellent things of eternity Let 's study this subject more then ever and let us make more diligent inquiry after our eternal condition THE MALE IN THE FLOCK OR The best must he offered to God Unfolded from Mal. 1. 14. But Cursed be the deceiver which hath in his Flock a Male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great King saith the Lord of Hosts and my Name is dreadfull among the Heathen THe first word But imports a Connexion on what went before Serm. 9. at S. Mary's Oxon Octob. 21. 1657 1 Gods love 2 The peoples ingratitude 1. Wherefore I hope it will be time well spent to premise a brief Analysis upon the whole chapter before I fall upon the words of the Text The whole chapter may be divided into two parts The former whereof containes a Protestation of Gods abundant love unto the people of the Jewes The latter containes a sad complaint and charge against them for their stupendious ingratitude Then here 's abundantly declared Gods singular love unto them and to their father Jacob v. 2. I have loved you saith the Lord yet ye say Wherein hast thou loved us was not Esau Jacobs brother saith the Lord Yet I loved Jacob and I hated Esau Jacob was elected and Esau was reprobated Neither the election of the one nor the reprobation of the other
silence and give him not rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a prayse in the earth The Text divided and expounded p. 69 70 71. Doct. That its the obliged duty of all the Children of God to be earnest and assiduous suitors at the Throne of Grace in the behalfe of the Church of God p. 72. Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By propounding parallell Examples p. 72 73 74. 2. By Scripture Precepts p. 74. 3. By 3 Reasons R. 1. In respect of God p. 75. R. 2. In respect of prayer p. 76 77 78 79. R. 3. In respect of the Church p. 79 80. Vse for Reprehension p. 80. 81. Vse 2. for Exhortation p. 83. 4. Things especially to be prayed for p. 83 84 85. 2. Motives p. 86 87. Vse 3. for Direction 1. We must pray in faith p. 87. 2. With fervency ib. 3. With perseverance p. 88. Vse 4. for Consolation ib. SERM. V. GAl. 5. 24. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts p. 89. Doct. 1. That there are a peculiar people that are Christs and have speciall Interest in him p. 89. Doctrine prooved from Scripture Testimony p. 90. What it is to have Interest in Christ ib. 4. Reasons drawne 1. From the Promises 2. From the Fathers Donation 3. Christs Redemption And 4. From the sanctification of the spirit p. 91. What are the Benefits of those that are in Christ Ans In five particulars p. 91 92. Vse 1. for Consolation p. 92. Vse 2. for Exhortation ib. Vse 3. of Examination five Notes of Triall ib. Doct. 2. Those that have Interest in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts p. 93. Method propounded 1. What 's meant by flesh p. 93. 2. What 's meant by affections and lusts ib. 3. What 's meant by crucifying the flesh p. 94. 4. The Doctrine prooved by three Reasons p. 95. Vse 1. for Information p. 96. Vse 2. for Reproofe of three sorts p. 96 97. Vse 3. for Exhortation pressed by three Motives p. 97. Vse 4. for Examination foure Properties of a Crucified person p. 98 99. Vse 5. for Direction 1. What we are to Crucify p. 99. 2. What duties are to be put in practise Ans in 7 Duties p. 100 101. Vse 6. for Consolation An Objection ● answered in six particulars p. 101 102. SERM. VI. ROm. 5. 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that whil'st we were yet sinners Christ died for us p. 103. The Context opened p. 103 104. Doct. That the death o● Christ for s●nners is an Evident Demonstration of the Love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Chri●t p. 104. Method propounded 1. By ●xplication Q. 1. Wherein consists the love of God the Father Ans p. 105. Q. 2. Wherein consists this love of Chri●t ib. and p. 116. Q. 3. Did not Heathens dye where lyeth the difference Ans p. 109. six Prop●sitions p. 109 110 111 112 113. Three Objections answered p. 113 114 115. Vse 1. for Information in five Particulars p. 115 116. Vse 2. for Examination six fignes given o● those that have Interest in this distinguishing love 116 117 118. Vse 3. for Exhortation branched into six particular Duties p. 118 119. Vse 4. for Comfort foure Benefits of this speciall l●ve p. 119 120. SERM. VII 2 TIm 2. 19. And let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from Iniquity p. 120. The Context opened p. 121 122. The Text divided and expounded p. 123 124. Doct. That wheresoever there is the Profession of Christianity there ought to be a Godly life and Conversation every way sutable and correspondent therewith p. 124. The Doctrine handled 1. By Scripture Testimony p. 125. 2. Confirmed by foure Reasons 125 126. 3. Applied in foure Vses 1. for Information p. 127 128. Vse 2. for Examination foure Characters p. 129 130 131. Vse 3. for Exhortation in three Motives p. 131 132. Vse 4. for Direction 1. How we must depart from Iniquity Ans foure waies p. 132. 2. What meanes must be used Ans 6 Meanes directed p. 133. 134. SERM. VIII JOh. 8. 24. For if yee believe not that I am he yee shall dye in your sinnes p. 135. Context opened p. 135 136. Doct. That of all sinnes Insidelity especially is a grand-damning sinne again●t the Gospell Method propounded 1. What Infidelity is Ans in five particulars p. 137 138 139 140 2. The Aggravations of unbeleefe in 6 particulars p. 141 142. 3. By 5. Arguments the Doctrine is confirmed p. 142 143. 4. The Doctrine is applied in 6 Vses 1. For Reproofe p. 145. 2. For Caution in 4 particulars p. 146 147. 3. For Exhortation in 2 Motives 1. Drawne from the Benefit of faith p. 147. 2. From the mischiefe of unbeleefe p. 147 148. 4. For Examination 5 signes of faith p. 148 149. Three signes of unbeleefe p. 149. 5. For Direction 4 directions p. 150. 6. For Consolation in 5 particulars p. 150. Objections of unbelievers answered p. 151 152 153. Objections of Misbelievers answered p. 153 154. Objections of Weak-believers answered p. 154 155 156. SERM. IX HAb 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation The Context opened p. 157 158. The Text divided p. 160. Doct. Amidst all sorrowes lossesse and crossesse joyes supplies and comforts are to be found in the Lord our God p. 161. 4. Arguments in the Text explained p. 163 164 165. 5. Demonstrations added for Confirmation p. 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175. Three Vses 1. For Consolation p. 176 177. 2. For Exhortation 1. To make God our joy p. 178. 2. To make God our Treasure p. 179. 3. To make God our Refuge p. 179 180. Vse 3. For Direction 4. Impediments to be remooved p. 181 182. 3. Duties to be practiced p. 182 183. SERM. X. ROm. 12. 2. But be yee transformed by the renewing of the mind Doct. Every Person who is really Converted is transformed and changed in the renovation of his mind p. 184 Method propounded 1. What 's understood by transformation Ans p. 185 186. 2. What 's meant by the renewing of the mind p. 187. 3. The Doctrine by Scripture prooved p. 188 189. 3. Cautions premised p. 189 190. 4. The Doctrine applied in 4 Vses 1. For Information p. 190. 2. For Examination wherein are 6 False glasses discovered p. 191 192 193 194 195. Three signes of Reall Conversion viz. Vniversality Sincerity and Perpetuity p. 196 197. Vse 3. For Exhortation 3 Motives pressed p. 197. Vse 4. For Consolation 3 Priviledges of such as are really converted p. 198. ERRATA Pag. 4. Marg. r Calvin In the same margent r delect i. p. 124. Marg. r. nominet credens verum discedat p. 125. l. 14. r. implied p. 127. l. 20. r. Angell p. 185. l. 7. r. then p. 186. l. 10. r. soever p. 186. l. 16. r. which is Other Errataes the Reader is entreated to amend DECAD III. OF
as a correction of the Premises saying It 's the safest way to relye only on the mercies of God in Christ Wherefore let Papists discard their own merits however they distinguish de congruo condigno to elude their consciences and let Socinians abhorre their blasphemy who conceit that their obedience without Christ merits can justify them Yet notwithstanding let us wholly betake our selves to Christs righteousnesse His robes are broad enough to cloath us His merits are of Infinite dignity and estimation The great Apostle desired not † Phil. 3. 9. Deo homines examinante probante inveniar insitus Christo ut p●lmes viti qui non meos ex lege Mosaica sed ex virtute Christi me efficientis fructus proferam deo gratos Arias Mont. in loc to be found in his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith And Job that holy man propounds the Question * Job 9. 2 3. Quasi dicat frustra se defendere apud ipsum prae ipso conetur Nulla comparatio Dei hominis justitiae Mercer in loc How should man be just with God if he will contend with him he cannot answer him one of a thousand Should the holiest of men such as were Enoch Noah Moses Abraham David c. Stand upon their own righteousnesse and joyn issue with Gods Justice not one of them could be able to stand in judgment Wherefore we lay this down for a foundation and a certaine truth That all reconciled Persons account Christ their only Peace-maker their rock and refuge their Counsellour saviour their only Intercessour and * 1 Cor. 1. 30 him who of God is made unto them Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption This then is the first note of triall whether we come off clear whether we throw away our own reason merits righteousnesse and venture all upon the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ He is a † Isa 27. 16. stone a tryed stone a pretious corner stone a sure foundation Wherefore we must as the Persians when the King was offended brought his Son in their Armes offer Christ unto the Father in the Armes of faith and venture all upon his meritorious satisfaction There 's no danger of miscarrying if with a lively faith we cast our selves upon Jesus Christ Secondly This foundation being necessarily laid a superstructure Charact. 2. The heart is new framed and fashioned may the better be raised on it Therefore another note of triall I shall assigne to be the new framing new moulding and fashioning of the heart For the heart of an unreconciled Person is rebellious against God As it 's recorded of Julian the Apostate that he shot up arrowes into the skie with a malicious intention to hit Christ So every naturall man that lives without God in the World would dethrone God if he could he hates God his wayes his people But as soon as the conquering power of the Spirit of God subdues the heart there is a marvelous change and alteration for the better There 's a * Rev. 3. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to anoint the eyes So that the understanding is inlightned and those that are Gods Children are † Eph. 4. 23. renewed in the Spirit of their minde They are all men and women of a pretious anointing which is that * 1 Joh. 2. 20. unction from the holy one whereby they know all things And as for the wills of these regenerate reconciled Persons they are now yielding obedient and pliable to the will of God For instance Saul before his conversion raved in a distemper'd zeal against the Disciples breathed threatnings slaughter against the Church and through his distemper'd zeal thought he did God good service by persecuting of the Church of God but as soon as ever Christ met him in the way and threw down Horse and Man and told him that † I am Jesus whom thou * Act. 9. 5. persecutest it is hard for thee to kick against the prickes then his will was changed and he wholly devolved himselfe upon Christs will as appears by his humble answer Vers 6. Lord what wilt Vers 6. thou have me to do Further all the affections are changed These a reverend † Mr. Dyke in his book called the Deceit fulnesse of mans heart Divine in an excellent and Singularly usefull book calls the feet of the soul By these the soul is carryed along And indeed the affections are the wings of the soul to help it to soar aloft in Divine raptures and contemplations Now in a reconciled Person all his a fections are alterd for the better His love was formerly upon sin now it is placed upon God and all the wayes of holynesse So that now what God hates a true believer hates and what God love's a true believer loves It 's that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Psalmist gives * Psal 97. 10. Psal 97. 10. Ye that fear the Lord hate evill And the best of Orators tells us That to will and nill Idem velle ac idem nolle est summa pars amicitiae Cic. the same is the chiefest part of Friendship And as for the joy hope desire they are all changed in a regenerate man Whereas formerly they were placed upon worldly vanities now they are placed upon God and the great things of eternity In a word where a Person is reconciled unto Christ there 's a new heart and clean water is sprinkled upon it the proud heart is become humble the hard become soft so that a new vergency and bent of the heart evidenceth it selfe throughout the continuall practice of the life and conversation And this put 's me in mind of the third Character which I Charact. 3. drawn from the fruits of a Reconciled estate intended drawn from the fruits of a reconciled estate which put forth themselves in the whole carriage of the life Now we must know that the selfe same fruits which belong to a justified estate because none are justified but those who are reconciled appertain to a reconciled estate The Apostle set's them forth † Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4. His ostendit competere quaecunque plenissime justificatis in gratiam Dei reposit is tribui possunt eoque probat hac fide Evangelii Domini nostri Jesu Christi justificationem haberi consummatissime Bucer in loc Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4. Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in hope of the glory of God And not only so but we glory in Tribulation also knowing that Tribulation worketh patience and patience experience and experience hope Likewise the fruits of the Spirit belong to every reconciled Person and by them as a touchstone he ought to examine himselfe The Apostle names one Catalogue
consult the eternall benefit of your immortall souls Now the voice of the Turtle is heard in the Land Manna falls round about your Tents The spirituall Manna of the word is plentifully rained downe amongst you You never had more frequent never more profitable preaching Now the Spirit moves by the Ministery of the word And the Lord expostulates the case * Ezek. 18. 31. Why will you die O house of Israel The Lord delights not in your blood so he professeth † Vers 32. For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth saith the Lord God Wherefore turn your selves and live ye Now the Lord Jesus knocks at the dores of your hearts ●● and waits for admission He waits to be gracious and even waits till his locks be wet with dew He invites himself to be thy guest and he invites thee to come unto him he will entertain thee with a banquet of love Now herein appears the great and wonderfull condescension of our gracious God who to shew his willingnesse to be reconciled is himself first in the motion We sought not to him though we were the offenders but he sought unto us Hence appears how abundant in loving-kindness mercy the Lord is towards us even alwaies before hand with us in mercy notwithstanding we unthankfull wretches are behind hand with him in duty The Lord convinceth all the World and stops the mouths of Cavillers that he is not so austere as some men mis-understand him but he seeks to us first and is * 2. Pet. 3. 9. not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance A greater gift the Father could not give then his beloved Son yet he sent him out of his bosome the Son in whom he was well pleased not to reign according to the state of earthly Kings but to be as † Mat. 3. 17. one that serveth and not to save his life but to lay downe his life as a ransome for all those that were given him of the Father And to this very end and purpose Christ came ‖ Mat. 18. 11. That he might seek and save that which was lost We were all lost in the old Adam and there was no way of recovering our selves but by seeking after our Interest in the new Adam yet we would not seek him we ran away from him and when he invited we made excuses and would not come when he knockt we bolted the dore when he called we would not answer But Jesus Christ in the day of his power makes us a * Ps 110. 3. willing people or a people of willingnesses as the originall expresseth it Now Christ's great errand was to seek us when we were altogether lost and when he found us he beseeched us by the Ministery of his Ambassadours that we would be reconciled unto God Fourthly consider Reconciliation once made for us by Jesus Motive 4. Reconciliation once made is made for ever Christ with the Father is abiding and permanent There will be no breakings out again The Reconciliation once made is made for ever and the Foundation of it is the Faithfulnesse of God He is a God † Psal 89. 28. 34. keeping covenant ‖ 2 Chr. 13. 5 faithfull that hath promised his * Heb. 10. 23. promises are yea and Amen The covenant of God is † 2 Sam. 23. 5 an everlasting covenant it 's a covenant of ‖ salt and the love of God is * Jer. 31. 3. everlasting And Christs love is † Joh. 13. 1. to the end Christs prayers and intercession are everlasting as in the place forecited Heb. 7. 25. So that hence we may conclude that once justified and for ever justified once reconciled and for ever reconciled Let us on our part labour to get assurance of our reconciled estate and get more evidences and manifestations thereof unto our own souls and so we shall reap the greater comfort As for Gods part there 's no possibility of failing he never was nor will be worse then his word He is truth it selfe and he glories in that attribute of truth that he is faithfull in all his promises Balaam though a mercenary Prophet gives a true attestation * Numb 23. 19. Numb 23. 19. God is not a man that he should lye neither the Son of man that he should repent hath he said and shall he not do it or hath he spoken and shall he not make it good Such then as hold the Saints Apostasie as Petrus Bertius doth the Frontispice of whose book viz. Apostasia sanctorum seems to me to be contradictio in adjecto and others both of the Popish and Arminian faction now adaies do highly derogate from the faithfulnesse of God and are the greatest adversaries unto the consolation of Gods Children by making them sad whom God would not have made sad Among many there 's one speciall Scripture which overthrowes all the Arminian Cavils in this particular Here let us fix and through Gods grace resolve never to start a jot from that truth delivered by our Saviour † Joh. 10. 28. Joh. 10. 28. And I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand Here 's our strong hold that our perseverance is not in our own but in Christs keeping And the perpetuity of a Saints condition depends not upon his free will which is an Aegyptian reed and is deceitfull but upon free grace upon Christs Intercession And there is ‖ Heb. 13. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 help laid upon him that is mighty and Christ is the rock of Ages here is security enough here we may safely venture all He hath said it and there 's enough in that promise He will never leave thee nor forsake thee Fifthly and lastly and with this particular I shall conclude Motive 5. This may be the ●last time of tendring termes of Reconciliation consider seriously for ought either you or I or any other can discern this may be the last offer and tender of Gospel-reconciliation that ever may be vouchsafed unto you If you stop your ears and refuse to give audience unto Christs Ambassadours this day for ought any of us knows their commission may be expired and quite out of date to morrow In a short time the most holy industrious and faithfull Ambassadour may have his Quietus est Christ may say to him † Mat. 25. 21. Well done good and faithfull servant enter into the joy of thy Lord. As then you desire that the Ministers of Jesus Christ may give up their account ‖ Heb. 13. 17. with joy and not with griefe let it be your wisdome and care in this very day which may be a criticall day to entertain those things which concern your everlasting peace Now you enjoy Sabbaths the desire of dayes the Ordinances the * Is 25. 6. feast of fat things yet your eyes behold your teachers
Perkins of three things 1. The nature of Man 2. The faculties of Nature 3. And corruption of both Now this distinction must be without seperation of nature from faculties or of corruption from either so as we may say truly that the nature and powers of the soule are corrupted Now this corruption consists 1. In the depravation of Gods image man was created after Gods image but by reason of sin he hath defaced the same 2. In a pronenesse to all wickednesse so that the nature of man is evill continually and the seeds of all rebellion are sowne in the corrupt nature of mankind wherefore the Lord threatens That Gen. 6. 3. his spirit should no longer strive with man for that he is but flesh i. e. he is become corrupted he hath fallen from his Creator and become fleshly and sinfull what this flesh is the Apostle tells Rom. 7. 18. Gal. 6. 8. Eph. 2. 3. 2. In the next place we are to inquire what 's meant by affections Q 2. What 's meant by Affections and lusts and lust's Ans By affections we are to understand inordinate affections which beare sway in carnall men their affections are out of order irregular immoderate and they are set upon the wrong object they love where they should hate and hate where they should love Anger is sometimes an inordinate affection and it bared sway in Cain against Abell Envy is sometime an inordinate affection and it prevailed in Saul against David Sorrow is sometimes immoderate and inordinate in Ahab when he could not get Naboths Vineyard he was heavy and displeased 1 King 21. 4. Love was an inordinate affection in the men of the last times Lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God 2 Tim. 3. 4. 2. By Lusts we are to understand inordinate and insatiable desires after the things of the world as Riches Honours Pleasures of this sort of inordinate affections are coveteousnesse pride gluttony c. 3. In the third place what 's meant by crucifying the flesh with Q. 3. What 's meant by crucifying the flesh c. its affections and lusts Ans For answer hereunto we are to distinguish of crucifying either as the action of Christ or as the action of a Christian 1. Le ts consider Crucifixion as the action of Christ and this 1. Crucifixion as the Action of Christ consists in three particulars 1. Upon the Crosse Christ stood in our Roome and bared the burthen of our sinnes and made an expiation for them in this respect we are said to be crucified with him Gal. 2. 20. 2. The second is in us when Christ conveyes the vertue of his death in us to cause the death of sinne when Christ gives us his spirit to mortify the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. 3. The third is in Baptisme whereby Christ sealed the two former to them that believe Rom. 6. 3 6. 2. Le ts consider crucifixon as the Action of a Christian and 2. Crucifixion as the Action of a Christian this consists in the imitation of Christ crucified after this manner Christ was attached apprehended and brought into the presence of Pilate so must we bring our selves into the presence of God Christ was arraigned at the Tribunall of Pilate so must we arraigne our selves at the barre of Christs judgment seate Christ was indited and accused so must we indite and accuse our selves Christ was condemned so must we condemne and judge our selves after sentence past there followed execution Christ was crucified so must we proceed to the execution of our sinnes and corruptions We must labour to be the death of every sinne to give every lust a mortifying blow we must not spare any Ruling sinne that was Sauls sinne in sparing Agag but we must destroy all both great and small we must not only mourne for sin but hate it not only hate it but endeavour the destruction of it But the further Inlargement of these things I shall leave to the use of Examination 4. In the fourth place it remaines that I prove the assertion 4. The Doctrine proved that those that are Christs are such crucified persons St Paul thus professeth of himselfe That he was crucified with Christ But I will prove the point by reason 1. Because the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 R. 1. The fleshly mind is enmity against God and naturall men are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 10. Now flesh and blood corrupt nature unregeneracy the old man cannot enter into the Kingdome of God To be carnally minded is death Rom. 8. 6. and such cann●t please God Rom. 8. 8. now we may not spare Gods enemies The Children of Babylon were to be dasht in peices Amaleck was to be utterly overthrowne these were Gods enemies Likewise the affections and lusts of the flesh are Gods enemies these must be slaine these must be crucified 2. Because Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs R. 2. Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs death death Phil. 2. 10. Rom. 6. 5 6. As Christ died for our sinnes so we must be a mortifying of sinne sinne must not be suffered to live we are in this world in a dying condition we must never give over fighting till we returne away conquerors though we sinne as long as we be in this world and have flesh as well as spirit yet we must never give over striving for mastery over the flesh 3. God will have us exercised in a continuall warfare and R. 3. God will have us exercised in continuall warfare combat against the flesh it 's an inbred enemy and it hath many lurking holes many Apologies many pretences we must be continually resisting the flesh even unto blood striving against sinne Heb. 12. 4. Here only a deadly Feud is lawfull This must be transmitted from Generation to Generation sinne must be crucified Rom. 6. 6. Sinne must be subdued Mich. 7. 18 19. And above all sinnes we had need fight most violently against fleshly lusts they being grand enemies unto the soule 1 Pet. 2. 11. 'T is true the Canaanite will be in the Land sinne will be in our mortall bodies whilst we be in this world but we must never let it reigne never suffer it to have any peace never give it quarter but be continually resisting of and fighting against it Now to apply what hath been said particularly to every ones Applicat Conscience here are six Uses to be made 1. Information 2. Reprehension 3. Exhortation 4. Examination 5. Direction And 6. Consolation 1. For Information and that in two particulars Vse 1. For Information First Hereby we are informed what a carnall man is namely one that is carried away with some inordinate affections or some inordinate lust Herod did many good things as the Text saith he heard John Baptist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sweetly yet he was but a carnall man Joh. 6. 20. for he was possest with
an inordinate love of his Brother Philips wife Saul slew many of the Amalekites but he was but a carnall man he obeyed the commandment of God too halves He was partiall in his obedience Judas was a disciple of Christ yet but a carnall man he was carried away with an inordinate lust of covetousnesse he was a Theefe and carried the bagge Joh. 12. 6. 2. Hereby we are informed what a spirituall man is he is one that crucifieth his lusts hee 's a man crucified unto the world and the world unto him hee 's a wrastler and a warrior against flesh and blood even against corruptions he makes it his businesse to give a deadly blow to them all 2. The second Use is for Reproofe of severall sorts of persons Vse 2. For Reproofe 1. It Reproves those common sort of Protestants who would be accounted Christians and Protestants but there 's no change at all wrought in their hearts nor in their lives they professe themselves Christians but they live without Christ they know not what Regeneration Adoption the new Creature meanes The old sent still remaines in them they are covetous worldly minded Sabbath-breakers swearers c. And yet these would go under the name of Christians but where 's the crucifying of the flesh where 's the mortifying of their lusts the want whereof evidently proves them to be only nominall not reall Christians 2. This Doctrine reproves such in whom there is some beginning of a change but it 's but partiall it 's not a thorough change some sinnes they leave which are most crosse to their profit and reputation but others they hugge and foster some sweet sinne some antient pleasant customary sin they will not forgoe a beloved bosome sinne they will not crucify they would have a dispensation in this with Naaman and would be faine pardoned in that but these fosterings of a darling sinne shew the heart to be rotten David profest his uprightnesse by keeping himselfe from his own iniquity Psal 18. 23. Right eyes ought to be pluckt out and right hands cut off 3. This reproves those that love not to heare their sinnes reproved if a preacher touch them to the quick and tell them of co●senage in the trade double dealing equivocation c. and shew them the evill of their worldly mindednesse pride and vaine glory c. They cannot abide such plaine dealing but account of such a plain dealing Preacher as Ahab accounted of Michaiah a great enemy and as the Apostle Paul himselfe was accounted an enemy because he told them the truth 3. The third Use is for Exhortation to presse home the duties Vse 3. For Exhortation of the Text to set upon this great work of crucifying the flesh let the proud man labour to crucify his pride the voluptuous man his pleasures the worldly man his covetousnesse the cholerick man his anger here 's a great work indeed it cannot be done easily There 's required sweat and blood there 's much diligence A Christian must be in fastings and watchings often often tugging hard at the oare often in prayer and wrastling with God It 's a greater victory for a man to conquer his pride anger earthly mindednesse c Then to take a City by storme Prov. 16. 32. I will cast in further two or three Considerations to move us to this duty impartially 1. Consider execution of justice upon Gods enemies is acceptable Consid 1. Execution of justice is acceptable unto God unto him after Achan was stoned the vally of Achor was a dore of hope Hos 2. 14. The workes of the flesh are enemies to God and must be destroyed impartially 2. If we be not the death of sinne it will be the death of us Consid 2. If we kill not sin it will kill us it will bring eternall death shall not we rather kill then be killed rather slay sinne and destroy it then let it slay and destroy us Every sinne is destructive to the soule there 's a pit of destruction whereinto sinners fall Psal 55. 23. 3. Of all sinnes those that are most pleasing to flesh and blood Consid 3. c. delightfull sinnes those are most pernicious and destructive to the soule Immoderate mirth and jollity at Ammons Feast were the harbingers of his ruine when his heart was merry with wine then was he slaine Le ts then every one beware of the Syren songs of the flesh let us not hearken to them least we be inchanted therewith to our utter destruction But I proceed to a fourth Use for Examination Here 's the Vse 4. For Examinat grand Question to be put home unto us all whether we are such persons that have Crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts Ans For Answer hereunto by way of Character I le set down the Properties of a crucified person 1. A crucified person hath his affections crucified to the deeds 1. Crucifixion of the affections of the flesh hee 's none of those of whom the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 5. who mind the things of the flesh The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now a crucified person doth not rellish nor savour fleshly things his love desires hopes Joyes are not fixt upon carnall sensuall pleasures what a wonderfull change is here wrought when as in the state of unregeneracy carnall lusts sensuall pleasures took up a mans joy desire and delight his discourses heart pleasure and all These were carried downe with this stream but after God had broke in upon the heart and renewed the mind and sanctified the affections the man becomes another manner of man what he formerly lov'd now he hates what he formerly most rejoyced in are now his greatest burthens and causes of sorrow and what 's the reason Because he is a mortified person he hath mortified his members as the Apostle speaks Col. 3. 5. and not only particular members but the whole body likewise even the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. 2. A crucified person hath a quickning vertue from Christ 2. There 's quickning vertue from Christ to bring forth the fruits of the spirit as love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse c. Gal. 5. 22. A crucified person is dead and alive i. e. dead to the workes of the flesh and alive to the fruits of the spirit By vertue of Christs death sinne is mortified and by vertue of his resurrection we are raised up to newnesse of life 3. A crucified person is weary of the world The world is a 3. A crucified man is weary of the world burthen to him and what 's the Reason but because the love of the world is enmity against God A man upon the crosse O what paines doth he endure his heart hankers not after honours pleasures pompe and vanities hereupon the Apostle glorieth upon the crosse of Christ By whom saith he the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world Gal. 6. 14. But with a caution you must
understand this A man may not be so weary of the world as to be impatient of life and unwilling to live against the will of God with Job we must wait our appointed time till our change come Job 13. 14. Much lesse may any hasten their owne death and be their own executioner this is selfe murther It was said of Cleombrotus that when he had read over Plato's book of the Immortality of the Soule he threw himselfe down a steep Rock to be made partaker of immortality this was a desperate act of wickednesse But my meaning is this we being crucified unto the world dare not set up our rest our hearts our affections upon the world we cannot be satisfied with worldly accommodations and pleasures the soule can take no acquiescency in earthly things O how many are there that are acquainted with God of the Apostles mind Phil. 1. 23. Who have a desire to depart and to be with Christ 4. All crucified person live another life then the men of the Charact. 4. A crucified person lives another life then the men of the world doe world do they live a life that the world is not acquainted with all and that is a life of faith Gal. 2. 20. This life gives them a sacred acquaintance with God a sight of him that is invisible as was said of the Patriarchs Heb. 11. 21. Hereupon it comes to passe that they mind heavenly things have their conversation in heaven and set their affections on things above and not on things below This life of faith is a heavenly life it causeth a Christian to find a heaven upon earth it 's the sweetest of all lives none like thereunto 5. I proceed to a fifth Use for Direction and this use I shall cast Vse 5. For Direction into two heads 1. What we are to crucify 2. What duties are especially requisite for the crucifixion of them Q. 1. What we are to crucify 1. All inordinate affections 1. What we are to crucify For Answer it s said in the Text affections and lusts more particularly 1. All inordinate affections ought to be crucified as immoderate love of any earthly thing Rachel was so importunate for children as she said in a great passion Give me children or else I dye and so for joy the Rich man in the Gospell did sing a Requiem unto himselfe and said to his soule eate drinke and be merry Thus voluptuous men desire pleasures and Ambitious men desire honours and rich men hope in their riches and say to the wedge of Gold thou art our confidence 2. All Ruling lusts are to be crucified Pride Passion Envy 2. Ruling corr●ptions must be crucified these are to be crucified those three are to be crucified especially viz. the Lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye and the pride of life And there 's great reason why Ruling lusts should be crucified 1. Because Ruling lusts are the fountaine of all mischiefe Jam. 4. 1. 2. They are the soules enemies 1 Pet. 2. 11. 3. They allure and entice the soule to evill 2 Pet. 2. 18. Now these impediments being thus removed the duties that are to be put in practice are these 1. To inquire after and get a knowledge of the evill and great Dut. 1. Inquire into the evill of sinne mischiefe which the waies of sinne and the pursuits of carnall Lusts bring unto the soule they are deceitfull Eph. 4. 22. We expect this and the other satisfaction from them and they beguile and deceive our expectations they are called foolish and hurtfull lusts 1 Tim. 6. 9. Destructive worldly lusts Tit. 2. 12. Dut. 2. Be acquainted with the pleasures of Godliness Dut. 3. Study the beauty riches of Christ 2. Be well acquainted with the pleasure and profit in the waies of Godlinesse for pleasure Prov. 3. 17. for profit 1 Tim. 4. 8. 3. Study the Beauty Riches and all the excellencies that are in Christ Christ is beauty it selfe he is the fairest of ten thousands for riches he hath all treasures for wisdome he is the wisdome of the Father Had men their senses exercised and their understandings inlightend they would not be such fooles as to pursue brutish pleasures and vaine delights and in the meane time neglect their pretious soules Had men their eyes in their heads they would not make merchandise of trifles and neglect the pearle of price but multitudes there are now a daies who bestow more paines to satisfy a lust then to get Jesus Christ and with lesse paines they might get Christ then get a lust satisfied 4. Give not the least liberty to the flesh to sinne Christians Dut. 4. Give not liberty to the flesh to sinne have great liberty by Christ but no liberty to sinne no allowance in any lust not for a Cloake of Malitiousnesse 1 Pet. 2. 16. Saints are not the Servants of Corruption 2 Pet. 2. 19. 5. Labour to keep thy body undefiled Know yee not that your Dut. 5. Keep thy body undefiled body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6. 19. Shall I prostitu●e my body to Mammon c. Shall a lust be entertained in Gods Temple shall a base lust be where Gods Temple should be Christ will not dwell in a polluted body in a cage of uncleane birds Dut. 6. Be a fighting against every corruption 6. Be a fighting wrastling and strugling against every corruption never lay down thy armes but hold up thy weapons fighting against every corruption Labour to destroy the flesh by the sword of the spirit take the whole armour of God as you are exhorted Eph. 6. 13. 7. And lastly apply Christ crucified home unto your owne Dut. 7. Apply Christ crucified unto the soule soules and believe that Christ is not only crucified for us but that we are crucified with him Where this faith is sinne shall have no dominion over you Believe that Christ is able to subdue thy lusts and mortify thy corruptions and therefore go to him for strength to conquer thy lusts and begge that he would beate downe Satan under thy feet believe that help is laid on Christ who is mighty and that he is able to save to the uttermost Heb. 7. 25. Do thou thy duty in striving against sinne and apply Christ by faith and believe that there 's vertue in his blood to cure thee of all diseases His blood is the blood of sprinkling which speaks better things then the blood of Abel His blood is mortifying blood cleansing healing meritorious blood Go then to Christ for victory against sinne Christ is the great Phisitian only able to heale thee He is a Counsellour for wisdome a Rock for strength a Treasure for riches a Fountaine opened There 's fulnesse in him Col. 1. 19. compare this with Joh. 1. 16. And of his fulnesse we have received grace for grace 6. The sixth Use is for Consolation unto Gods Children who Vse 6. For Consolation have been
shall declare his generation for he was cut off out of the land of the living for the transgression of my people was he striken He hath a peculiar seed Isai 53. 10. Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to griefe when thou shalt make his soule an offering for sinne he shall see his seed he shall prolong his daies and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands He is the Saviour of his body Eph. 5. 28. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the Church and he is the Saviour of the body He layeth downe his life only for his sheepe Joh. 10. 15. As the Father knoweth me even so I know the Father and I lay down my life for the sheepe Now hence those false doctrines of Generall redemption are discarded altogether Christ doth not pray for all Joh. 17. 9 10. I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me for they are thine And all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them And we read Joh. 13. 11. He knew who should betray him therefore said he yee are not all cleane He doth not call all justify all nor elect all for only few are chosen and therefore all are not partakers of this distinguishing love Yet notwithstanding these fundamentall truths there are many Objections which I would Answer before I make particular application of this doctrine It s objected that it is unjust for the innocent to be punished Object 1 for the nocent for Christ holy and just to be punished for man that was unjust unholy We are to distinguish of sinne and guilt inherent and sinne and Ans guilt imputed In Christ was no inherent sinne and guilt but there was sinne and guilt imputed For Christ was made sinne for us and took our nature upon him and was our surety And it is no injustice to make a surety pay the debt whereunto he voluntarily ingaged Christ freely voluntarily undertook the great work of reconciliation for lost man and he willingly laid downe his life for his sheepe No man took away his life from him But 2. It s Objected how can Christs blood which was shed above Object 2 1600 yeares agoe be effectuall now This we are to believe that though Christ suffered once yet Ans the vertue of the suffering remaines to all eternity For it was the blood of God This being understood by communication of Idioms of him that was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and man his blood was precious blood cleansing mortifying healing blood The blood of sprinkling which speaks better things then the blood of Abel The Church is the purchase of his blood Act. 20. 28. Take heed therefore unto your selves and to all the flockes which the Holy Ghost hath made you Overseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne blood This is redeeming blood Eph. 1. 7. In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgivenesse of sins according to the riches of his grace It is peace-making blood Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven We are made white in the blood of the Lambe Rev. 7. 14. And I said unto him Sir thou knowest And he said to me these are they which come out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambe We are washed from our sinnes in his blood Rev. 1. 5. And from Jesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood So then Christs blood is a fountaine that can never be drained dry it witnesseth our regeneration 1 Joh. 5. 8. And there are three that bear witnesse in earth the spirit the water and the blood and these three agree in one But 3. It will be Objected if Christ died for sinners then all Object 3 shall be saved otherwise the remedy would not be proportionable to the disease the plaister would not be as broad as the sore 1. There 's a sufficiency of Merit in Christ the Medicine is of infinite Ans value 2. But 2. this medicine is only applied effectually unto some peculiar persons Neither doth this derogate a whit from Christs merits in that his redemption is not equally extended unto all But the riches of his mercy are the more inhanced in that they are effectuall to some 3. It was not the intention of God the Father nor of Christ that all should be redeemed Christs Redemption only is appropriated to believers Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life 4. Only those have redemption by Christs blood who are redeemed from their vaine conversation and those are Gods children 1 Pet. 1. 18. Forasmuch as yee know that yee were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vaine conversations received by tradition of your Fathers But these are not the whole world for the whole world lyes in wickednesse I shall now come unto Application And I shall make foure Applicat Uses of the Doctrine 1. For Information 2. For Examination 3. For Exhortation Vse 1. For Information 4. For Consolation The first Use is for Information and that in severall particulars 1. Be informed of the greatnesse of the love of God Eph. 2. 4. 1. This is great love But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he hath loved us 1 Joh. 3. 1. Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sonnes of God 2. Be informed that this love is unparrelleld let there be made 2. This love is unparralleld locus à comparatis The love between Jonathan and David is not to be compared to the love of Christ unto his Church Eph. 5. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himselfe for it The love of a tender Mother is not to be compared to the love of God Isai 49. 15. Can a woman forget her sucking child that shee should have compassion on the son of her womb yea they may forget yet will not I forget thee 3. This love is free undeserved by any Creature Ezek. 16. 6. 3. This love is undeserved And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live There is no fides praevisa to move God The Apostle determines Rom. 9. 11 12 13. For the Children being not yet