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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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greatest part of thy Salvation already done to thy hand nay I 'le tell thee more poor soul then thus even Christ himself from all Eternity hath engaged for thee that thou shalt believe O then put not Christ to be challenged of his engagement by refusing the Gospel surely when thou believest thou makest Christs word good he that believeth not makes God a liar though in another sense and for ought he knoweth even in this that he frustrates Christs undertakings in the Covenant And therefore believe yea and cry Lord I believe help thou my unbelief increase my Faith till I come to full assurance of Faith Faith in this sense is the very Eye of the Soul reading is Name Written in the Book of Life it is an apprehension of our particular Election O believe till thou comest up to this fullness of perswasion of Gods Love in Christ SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. WE must love Jesus as carrying on that great work of our Salvation in that Eternity And this is the fruit or effect of Faith if once we believe that all those designs and transactions were for us even for us O then how should we but love that God and love that Christ who thus firstly and freely loved us God loved us before we loved him for he loved us in that Eternity before all Worlds surely then we are bound to love him First and above all things As the Diamond formeth and fashioneth the Diamond so love formeth and fashioneth Love or as fire converteth Fewel into Fire so this antient love of God and Christ may well cause our love again O Christ didst not thou love us who doubts it that but reads over the project councel foreknowledge purpose decree and covenant of God and Christ who doubts it that but reads the eternal designe of God that Christ should go out of himself and suffer an extasie through the vehemency of his love that Christ should so far abase his Majesty as to dye for us that we might not dye but live with him O then how should this but kindle in our hearts a most ardent love towards God and Christ what more effectuall motive to work mans love then to be prevented by the love bounty of another That this fruit doth spring from the sense of our Election Bernard observes who is righteous but he that requiteth the love of God with love again Bern. Epi. 107. which is never done except the holy Ghost reveale unto a man by faith Gods eternal purpose concerning his future salvation And hence it is that the heart is most in frame when it is a considering the eternal love of God in Christ 2 ●am 1.26 As David said of Jonathan thou hast been very pleasant to me thy love to me was wonderful so a poor soul gathering up all the goodness of God in that Eternity and feeding upon it and the variety of it it breaths out in that expression thou hast been very pleasant to me O God thy love to me hath been wonderfull O my soul that thou couldest so live by faith on these eternal passages as that thou mightest attain to the highest fruits of faith not onely to love God and Christ but to love them with a burning love with a mighty love such a love as lyes in the most vigorous prosecution after Jesus Christ and in the most faithful resignation of thy self to God such a love as works the most delightful aspect of God and Christ as makes a man to behold God and Christ with all cheerfulness such a love as works a man to extoll the praises of God O in these things lyes the strength of love But alas this is or at least this should be thy grief that thou canst not love so well and so warmly as thou art beloved Christ comes towards thee Skipping like the Hart or Roe on the Mountaines of spices Cant 8 14. but thy love towards Christ is creeping like the worme in the unwholsome valley Indeed the best affections have their fits of swooning it may be for the present thy love is cold O but come up to this fire consider how God and Christ loved thee in every of these 1. His project to save they soul sprung out of his love love was the first wheele that set all the eternall works of God a going what was that great designe of God but onely an expression of his love it was his pleasure to communicate himself and the rise of that communication was his love 2. The Counsels of God were all in love had not love been as President of the Counsel where hadst thou been when all the attributes of God were at a stand it was the love of God in Christ that resolved the question for thy salvation 3. The foreknowledge of God was a foreknowledge of love and approbation in his eternal love he embraced thee as his own he foreknew thee i. of his free love he set thee apart to life and to salvation God hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the World Ephes 1.4 he chose us in Christ but not for Christ nothing at all moved him to Elect thee but his own good pleasure and free love 4. The purpose of God was a resolution of love it speaks his love to be a constant setled abiding love John 13.1 no unkindness shall alter it for having loved his own he loves them unto the end nay he loves them without end from everlasting to everlasting 5. The decree of God was an order as I may call it or an act of love to give in time that grace unto his elect which before all time he decreed should be an effectual means to bring them unto glory 6. The covenant betwixt God and Christ was an agreement of love God and Christ struck hands to save our souls 2 Tim. 1 9. grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the World began Grace was given us that is the gracious love and favour of God in Christ was given us before all secular times This was Gods meaning from everlasting this was the designe yea the greatest designe that ever God had to set out the infinite glory and the riches of his love in Jesus Christ No question but he had other great designes in doing such great things as he hath done but above all the designes that ever God had in all his works this is the chiefe to honour his mercy to glorify the riches of his love and grace had it not been for this he would never have made the World and therefore in that World to come it will be the delight of God to shew his Saints and Angels what he is able to do for a creature yea he will to all Eternity declare to them to what an height of excellency and glory his love and mercy is able to raise poor souls so that the very Saints and Angels shall admire adore and magnifie the name of God
where-ever Christ is clusters of divine promises grow out of him as the motes rayes and beames are from the Sun I shall instance in some few As 1. God in the Covenant gives the world All is yours whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the World Mat. 6 33. 1 Cor. 3.22 First seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you These temporary blessings are a part of the Covenant which God hath made to his People It is he that giveth thee Power to get wealth that he may establish his Covenant which he sware unto thy Fathers Others Deut. 8.18 I know may have the World but they have it not by a Covenant-right it may be thou hast but a little a very little of the world well but thou hast it by a Covenant-right and so it is an earnest of all the rest 2. As God in the Covenant gives thee the world so in comparison of thee and his other Saints he cares not what becomes of all the world I loved thee saith God Isa 43.4 therefore will I give men for thee and people for thy Life If the case be so that it cannot be well with thee but great evils must come upon others kindred people and nations I do not so much care for them saith God my heart is on thee so as in Comparison of thee I care not what becomes of all the world O the love of God to his Saints 3. God in the Covenant pardons thy sins this is another fruit of Gods love Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins by his own blood Rev. 1.5 it cost him dear to pardon our sins even the heart-blood of Christ such were the transactions betwixt God and Christ if thou wilt take upon thee to deliver souls from sin saith God to his Son thou must come thy self and be made a Curse for their Sin Well saith Christ thy will be done in it though I lose my Life though it cost me the best blood in my heart yet let me deliver them from sin This exceedingly heightens Christs Love that he should foresee thy sin and that yet he should Love Many times we set our Love on some outward unthankful Creatures and we say could I but have foreseen this untowardness they should never have had my Love but now the Lord did foresee all thy sins and all thy ill requitals for love and yet it did not once hinder his love towards thee but he puts this in the Covenant I will forgive their Iniquities and remember their sins no more Ezek. 36.25 4. God in the Covenant gives thee Holiness and Sanctification I will sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you this Holiness is our excellency in the eyes of Men and Angels this is the Crown and Diadem upon the heads of Saints whence David calls them by the name of excellent ones Holiness is a Spirit of Glory 1 Pet. 4.14 it is the delight of God Psal 16.3 1 Pet. 4.14 as a Father delights himself in seeing his own Image in his Children so God delights himself in the Holiness of his Saints God loved them before with a love of benevolence and good-will but now he loves them with a love of complacency Psal 47.11 Psal 149.4 The Lord takes pleasure in those that fear him the Lord takes pleasure in his People Holiness is the very Essence of God the Divine Nature of God O what is this that God should put his own nature into thee You are partakers of the Divine Nature O what a love is this that God should put his own Life into thee that he should enable thee to live the very same life that he himself lives remember that piece of the Covenant I will put my Law into their inward parts and write it in their hearts 5. God in the Covenant gives thee the knowledg of himself it may be thou knewest him before but 't is another kind of knowledg that God now gives thee than thou hadst before When God teaches the Soul to know him it looks on God with another eye it sees now another beauty in God than ever it saw before for all that knowledg that it had before bred not love only Covenant-knowledg of God works in the Soul a true Love of God But how doth this Covenant-knowledg work this Love I shall tell you my own experiences I go through all the Virtues Graces and Excellencies that are most amiable and I look in the Scriptures and there I find them in God alone if ever I saw any excellency in any man or in any Creature I think with my self there is more in God that made that Creature He that made the Eye shall not he see And so he that made that Loveliness is not he Lovely Now when by these Mediums I have presented God thus lovely to my Soul then I begin to feel my heart to warm As when I conceive such an Idea of a man that he is of such a carriage behaviour disposition that he hath a mind thus and thus framed qualified and beautified why then I love him so when I apprehend the Lord aright when I observe him as he is described in his Word when I observe his doings and consider his workings and learn from all these together a right Idaea opinion or apprehension of him then my will follows my understanding and my affections follow them both and I come to love God and to delight in God O here 's a sweet knowledg surely it was God's Love in Christ to put this blessed Article into the Covenant of grace They shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord. 6. God in the Covenant of grace gives thee his Son John 13.6 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Nay more as God hath given thee his Son so he hath given thee himself O my Soul wouldest thou not think it a marvellous love if God should say to thee Come Soul I Will give thee all the World for thy Portion or that I may give thee a testimony that I love thee I will make another world for thy sake and I will make thee Emperour of that world also Surely thou wouldst say God loves me dearly ay but in that God hath given thee his Son and given thee himself this is a greater degree of Love Christi●ns stand amazed Oh what love is this to the Children of men Oh that we should live to have our ears filled with this sound from Heaven I will be a God to thee and to thy Seed after thee I am the Lord thy God I will be their God and they shall be my People O my Soul where hast thou been rouze up and recollect and set before thee
into Faith I cannot tell but one would think that unbelief should be strangled quite slain upon this consideration all this O my soul thou hearest in the Gospel there is Christ incarnate set forth to the life there is Christ suing thy Loves and offering himself as thy beloved in thy own naure there it is written that God is come down in flesh with an Olive-branch of eternal peace in his hand and bids you all be witness he is not come to destroy but to save Oh that this encouragement might be of force to improve Christs glorious design to the supplying of all thy wants and to the making up of all thy losses believe Oh believe thy part in Christ incarnate SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation at his first Coming or Incarnation Now what is Love but an expansion or egress of the heart and spirits to the Object loved or to the Object whereby it is drawn or attracted Mark O my soul whatsoever hath an attractive power it is in that respect an Object or general cause of Love and canst thou possibly light on any Object more attractive than the Incarnation of Jesus Christ If Love be the Load-stone of Love what an attractive is this before thee methinks the very sight of Christ incarnate is enough to ravish thee with the apprehension of his infinite goodness see how he calls out or as it were draws out the soul to Union Vision and Participation of his Glory O come and yield up thy self unto him give him thy self and conform all thy Affections and Actions to his Will O love him not with a divided but with all thy heart But to excite this Love I shall only propound the Object which will be Argument enough Love causeth Love now as Gods first Love to man was in making man like himself so his second great Love was in making himself like to man stay then a while upon this Love for I take it this is the greater Love of the two Nay if I must speak freely I believe this was the fullest visible demonstration of Gods Love that ever was The Evangelist expresseth it thus God so loved the World John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son he gave him to be incarnate to be made flesh and to suffer Death but the extention of his Love lies in that expression he so loved So how Why so fully so fatherly so freely as no Tongue can tell no heart can think In this Love God did not only let out a mercy give out a bare grace in self but he took our nature upon him It is usually said that it is a greater love of God to save a soul than to make a World and I think it was a greater Love of God to take our nature than simply to save our souls for a King to dispense with the Law and by his own prerogative to save a Murderer from the Gallows is not such an Act of Love and Mercy as to take the Murderers Cloaths and to wear them as their Richest Livery Why God in taking our nature hath done thus and more than thus he would not save us by his meer Prerogative but he takes our Cloaths our Flesh and in that Flesh he personates us and in that Flesh he will die for us that we might not die but live through him for evermore Surely this was Love that God will be no more God as it were simply but he will take up another nature rather than the brightness of his Glory shall undo our souls It will not be amiss whil'st I am endeavouring to draw a Line of Gods love in Christ from first to last in saving Souls that here we look back a little and summarily contract the passages of Love from that eternity before all Worlds unto this present 1. God had an eternal design to discover his infinite love to some besides himself O the wonder of this was there any need or necessity of such a discovery Though God was one Deus unus licet solus non solitarius and in that respect alone as we may imagine yet God was not solitary in that eternity within his own proper essence or substance there were three Divine Persons and betwixt them there was a blessed Communication of Love Christ on Earth could say I am not alone because the Father is with me and then before the Earth was might the Father say I am not alone for the Son is with me and the Son might say I am not alone John 16.32 for the Father is with me and the Holy Ghost might say I am not alone for both the Father and the Son are with me though in that eternity there was no Creature to whom these three Persons should communicate their Love yet was there a glorious communication and breaking out of Love from one to another before there was a World the Father John 17.15 Son and Holy Ghost did infinitely glorifie themselves Joh. 17.5 Surely they loved one another and they rejoyced in the fruition of one another Prov. 8.30 Prov. 8.30 What need then was there of the discovery of Gods love to any one besides himself O my soul I know no necessity for it only thus was the pleasure of God Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight such was the love of God that it would not contain it self within that infinite Ocean of himself but it would needs have Rivers and Channels into which it might run and overflow 2. God in prosecution of his design creates a World of Creatures some rational and only capable of Love others irrational and serviceable to that one Creature which he makes the top of the whole Creation then it was that he set up one man Adam as a common person to represent the rest to him he gives abundance of glorious qualifications and him he sets over all the work of his hands as if he were the very Darling of Love if we should view the excellency of this Creature either in the outward or the inner man who would not wonder his body had its excellency which made the Psalmist say I will praise thee for I am fearfully and wonderfully made and curiously wrought in the lowest part of the Earth Psal 139.14 15. It is a speech borrowed from those who work Arras-work the body of man is a piece of curious Tapestry or Arras-work consisting of Skin Bones Muscles Sinews and the like what a goodly thing the body of man was before the Fall may be guessed by the excellent gifts found in the bodies of some men since the Fall as the Complection of David 1 Sam. 16.12 the swiftness of Hazael 2 Sam. 2.18 the beauty of Absolom 2 Sam. 14.25 If all these were but joyned in one as certainly they were in Adam what a rare Body would such a one be but what was this body in comparison of that soul
saw thee in danger of death through thy own unbelief for except thou sawest in his hands the print of the nails and put thy finger into the print of the nails except thou hadst clear manifestations of Christ even to thine own sense thou wouldest not believe he condescends so far to succour thy weakness as to manifest himself by several witnesses three in heaven and three on earth yea he multiplies his three on earth to thousands of thousands so many were the signes witnessing Christ that the Disciple which testified of them John 21.25 could say If they should be written every one the world could not contain the Books that should be written 4. When he saw the buying and selling in the Temple yea making Merchandize of the Temple it self I mean of thy Soul which is the Temple of the holy Ghost he steps in to whip out those Buyers and Sellers those Lusts and Corruptions O cries he will you sell away your souls for Trash O what is a man profitted though he gain the whole world and lose his own Soul Prov. 30.2 3. 5. When he saw thee like the horse and mule more brutish than any man not having the understanding of a man thou neither learnedst wisdom nor hadst the knowledge of the most holy he came with his instructions adding line unto line and precept on precept teaching and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and sealing his truths with many Miracles Mat. 4.23 that thou maist believe and in believing thou mightest have life through his Name and Oh! what is this but to make thee wise unto salvation 6. When he saw thee a sinner of the Gentiles a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and without God in the world he sent his Apostles and Messengers abroad and bad them preach the Gospel to thee q. d. Go to such a one in the dark corner of the world an Isle at such a distance from the Nation of the Jews and set up my Throne amongst that people open the most precious Cabinet of my Love there and amongst that People tell such a Soul that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom he is one O admirable Love 7. When he saw thee cast down in thy self and refusing thy own Mercy crying and saying what is it possible that Jesus Christ should send a Message to such a dead Dog as I am why the Apostles Commission seems otherwise Go not into the way of the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 6. or into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not but go rather to the lost sheep of the House of Israel O I am a lost sheep but not being of the House of Israel what hope is there that ever I should be found He then appeared and even then he spred his arms wide to receive thy soul he satisfied thee then of another Commission given to his Apostles Go teach all Nations And he cried even then Come unto me thou that art weary and heavy laden with sin and I will receive thee into my bosom Mat. 28.19 and give thee rest there 8. When he saw thee in suspence and heard thy complaint But if I come shall I find sweet welcome I have heard that his ways are narrow and straight Oh it is an hard passage and an high ascent up to heaven Many seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.24 Oh! what shall become of my poor Soul why then he told thee otherwise Prov. 3.17 that all his ways were ways of pleasantness and all his paths peace he would give thee his Spirit that should bear the weight and make all light he would sweeten the ways of Christianity to thee that thou shouldest find by experience that his yoke was easie Mat. 11.29 and his burden was light 9. When he saw the wretchedness of thy Nature and original pollution he took upon him thy Nature and by this means took away thy original sin O here is the lovely Object What is it but the absolute holiness and perfect purity of the Nature of Christ This is the fairest Beauty that ever eye beheld this is that compendium of all Glories now if Love be a motion and union of the Appetite to what is lovely how shouldst thou flame forth in loves upon the Lord Jesus Christ this is rendered as the reason of those sparklings Thou art fairer than the children of men Psal 45.2 10. When he saw thee actually unclean a transgressor of the Law in thought word Heb. 10.9 and deed then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God and wherefore would he do Gods will but meerly on thy behalf O my Soul canst thou read over all these passages of Love and dost thou not yet cry out O stay me comfort me for I am sick of Love Can a man stand by an hot and fiery furnace and never be warmed Oh for an heart in some measure answerable to these Loves Surely even good natures hate to be in debt for love and is therein thee O my soul neither grace nor yet good nature O God forbid awake awake thy ardent love towards the Lord Jesus Christ why thou art rock and not flesh if thou beest not wounded with these heavenly darts Christ loves thee is not that enough fervent affection is apt to draw love where is little or no beauty and excellent beauty is apt to draw the heart where there is no answer of affection at all but when these two meet together what breast can hold against them See O my soul here is the sum of all the particulars thou hast heard Christ loves thee and Christ is lovely his heart is set upon thee who is a thousand times fairer than all the children of men doth not this double consideration like a mighty loadstone snatch thy heart unto it and almost draw it forth of thy very breast O sweet Saviour thou couldst say even of thy poor Church though labouring under many imperfections Thou hast ravished my Heart Cant. 4.9 10. my Sister my Spouse thou hast ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck how fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse how much better is thy love than wine and the smell of thy oyntments than all Spices Couldst thou O blessed Saviour be so taken with the incurious and homely features of the Church and shall not I much more be enamoured with thy absolute and divine Beauty It pleased thee my Lord out of thy sweet ravishments of thy heavenly love to say to thy poor Church Turn away thine Eyes from me for they have overcome me but Oh let me say to thee Turn thine eyes to me that they may overcome me my Lord Cant. 6.5 I would be thus ravished I would be overcome I would be thus out of my self that I might be all in thee Thus is the Language of true love to Christ but alas how dully and flatly do I speak
have preached his resurrection oh no he himself would stay in person he himself would make it out by many infallible proofs that he was risen again he himself would by his own example learn us a lesson of love of meekness of patience in waiting after sufferings for the reward Methinks a few of these passages should set all our hearts on a flame of love we love earth and earthly things we dig into the veins of the earth for thick clay but if Christ be risen set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth Oh if the love of Christ were but in us Colos 3.1 2 as the love of the world is in base worldlings it would make us wholly to despise this world it would make us to forget it as worldly love makes a man to forget his God Nay it would be so strong and ardent and rooted in our souls that we should not be able voluntary and freely to think on any thing else but Jesus Christ we should not then fear contempt or care for disgrace or the reproaches of men we should not then fear death 1 Cor. 15.55 57. or the grave or hell or devils but we should sing in triumph O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which giveth us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord. SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection This is the great Gospel-duty we should rejoyce in the Lord and again rejoyce Phil. 4.4 yea rejoyce evermore A Christian estate should be a joyful and comfortable estate none have such cause of joy as the Children of Zion sing O daughter of Zion 1 Thes 5.16 shout O Jerusalem be glad and rejoyce with all thy heart O daughter of Jerusalem Zach. 3.14 And why so a thousand reasons might be rendred but here is one a prime one Christ is risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep A commemoration of Christ's resurrection hath ever been a means of rejoycing in God 1 Cor. 15.20 Some may object what is Christ's resurrection to me indeed if thou hast no part in Christ the resurrection of Christ is nothing at all to thee but if Christ be thine then art thou risen with him and in him then all he did was in thy name and for thy sake Others may object supposing Christ's resurrection mine what am I better how do not all the priviledges of Christ flow from the power and vertue of his resurrection as well as death tell me what is thy state what possibly can be the condition of thy soul wherein thou mayst not draw sweet from Christ's resurrection As 1 Pet. 3.21 1. Is thy conscience in trouble for sin the Apostle tells thee the answer of a good conscience towards God is by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Rom. 4.25 2. Art thou afraid of condemnation the Apostle tells thee he was delivered for our offences and he was raised again for our justification 1 Pet. 1.3 3. Dost thou question thy regeneration the Apostle tells thee he hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 4. Art thou distressed persecuted troubled on every side the Apostle tells thee wherein now consists thy confidence comfort courage to wit in the life of Christ in the resurrection of Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 11. We alwayes bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life of Jesus might also be made manifest in our body for we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh And thus Beza interprets those following words knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise us up also by Jesus 14. i.e. unto a civil resurrection from our troubles Paul was imprisoned and in part martyred but by the vertue of Christ's resurrection he foresaw his enlargement And this interpretation Beza grounds on the word following and foregoing wherein Paul compares his persecutions to a death and his preservation from them to a life as he had done before also chap. 1. v. 9 10. 5. Art thou afraid of falling off or of falling away why remember that the immutable force and perpetuity of the new covenant is secured by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Isa 55.3 I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of David this the Apostle applies to the resurrection of Christ as the bottoming of that sure covenant and as concerning that he raised him up from the dead he said on this wise I will give you the sure mercies of David Act. 13.34 6. Art thou afraid of death hell and the power of the grave why now remember that Christ is risen from the dead and by his resurrection death is swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15.55 57. so that now thou mayst sing O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ It is the voyce of Christ thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise Isa 26.19 awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust for thy dew is as the dew of herbs and the earth shall cast out the dead David was so lifted up with this resurrection Psal 16.9 10. that he crys it out therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Job 19.23 24 25 26 27. But especially Job was so exceedingly transported with this that he breaks out into these extasies O that my words were now written O that they were printed in a book that they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever for I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms shall destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me No man ever since Christ did speak more clearly of Christ's resurrection and his own than Job did here before Christ Observe in it O my soul Job's wish and the matter wished his wish was that certain words which had been cordial to him might remain to memory and this wish hath three wishes in one 1. That they might be written 2. That they might be registred in a book enrolled upon record as publick instruments judicial proceedings or whatsoever is most authentical 3. That they might be engraven in stone and in the hardest stone the rock records might last long
peace so long as thy lusts are so strong within thee and thy estrangements from the Prince of peace so great the soul that is without Jesus Christ is an enemy to the God of peace a stranger to the Covenant of peace uncapable of the Word of peace an Alien to the way of peace there is no peace to the wicked Isa 57.21 saith my God 6. Such a one is without acceptation with God the Father Christ onely is Gods beloved and therefore as Josephs brethren might not look him in the face unless they brought their brother Benjamin so cannot we look God in the face with any confidence or acceptance unless we bring Christ with us in the armes of our faith without Christ man is stubble and God is a consuming fire to destroy him man is a guilty malefactor and God a severe Judge to condemn him the whole of man without Jesus Christ is a very abomination in Gods presence 7. Such a one is without life he that hath not the Son hath not life saith John 1 John 5.12 Ephes 2.1 Christ lives not in that soul it is a dead soul dead in sins and trespasses As the dead see nothing of all that sweet and glorious light which the Sun casts forth upon them so the dead in sin have no comfortable apprehension of Christ though he shine in the Gospel more gloriously than the Sun at noon And as the dead know not any thing Eccles 9 5 so the dead in sin know nothing at all of the wisdom of Christ guiding them or of the holiness of Christ sanctifying them or of the fulness of Christ satisfying them or of the death of Christ mortifying their lusts or of the resurrection of Christ quickning their souls or of the dominion of Christ reigning in their hearts O what a misery is this All this you may say is true to a Christless soul but what evil to him that may have a title to Christ and yet minds not Christ makes not use of Christ doth not look unto Jesus Such a case I confess may be yea as many Duties are neglected by some godly so this main Duty is I may tremble to think it exceedingly neglected But O the sin and sadness of those souls O the wants attending such poor creatures Consider them in these particulars 1. They have not that wisdom knowledge discerning of Christ as otherwise they might have By looking and serious observing of Christ we gain more and more knowledge of Christ but if we will not look how should we understand those great mysteries of grace nor speak I only of speculative knowledge but more especially of practical and experimental without looking on Christ we cannot expect that vertue should go out of Christ there is but a poor character or cognizance of Christ upon them that are such they have not so clear and comfortable and inward and experimental a knowledge of Jesus Christ 2. They do not so taste the goodness of Christ as otherwise they might Christ is no other unto them whilst neglected by them but as an eclipsed Star with whose light they are not at all affected Christ is not sweet to them in his Ordinances they find not in them that delight and refreshment that comfort and contentment which they usually minister they cannot say of Christ as the Spouse did I sate down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste Cant. 2.3 they are in the case of Barzillai who could not taste what he did eat or what he did drink nor could hear any more the voice of singing-men or of singing-women so they cannot taste the things of God nor hear the spiritual melody which Christ makes to the souls of them that look up to him 3. They have not that love to Christ which Christs beholders have they meditate not upon Christ as lovers on their love they delight not themselves in Christ as the rich man in his treasure and the bride in the bridegroom which they love their thoughts are rather on the world than Christ their palates are so distempered that they have no pleasure in the choycest wine they cannot say that their souls long after him and no wonder for how should they love Christ who turn their eyes from him who is the fairest of ten thousands to other objects Surely they have no flaming burning love to Christ that will give every base thing a kind of preheminence above Christ 4. They have not that sense of Christs love which those that exercise this Duty have whilest the soul neglects Christ it cannot possibly discern the love of Christ it perceives not Christ applying the Doctrines of his love to the conscience Christ appears not in his banquetting house he enables not the soul to pray with confidence he makes it not joyful in the house of prayer And hence it is that such souls move so slowly in Gods service they are just like Pharaohs charrets without wheels O they perceive not the Love of Christ either in the clear revelation of his secrets or in the free communication of his graces or in the sanctifying and sweetning of their tryals or in sealing up the pardon of their sins O they feel not those ravishing comforts which usually Christ speaks to the heart when he speaks from his heart in love O the want O the misery of this want 5. They have not that experience of the power of Christ which they have that are in the exercise of this Duty Would you know wherein lies the power of Christ I answer in casting down the strong holds of sin in overthrowing Satan in humbling mens hearts in sanctifying their souls in purifying their consciences in bringing their thoughts to the obedience of Christ in making them able to endure afflictions in causing them to grow and encrease in all Heavenly graces and this power they partake of who rightly and experimentally look up to Christ But if this Duty be neglected there is no such thing hence we call this the Duty of Duties the chief Duty the especial Duty and for all other Duties Means Ordinances if Christ be not in them they are nothing worth In every Duty this is the essential part that we look through all unto Jesus it is only from Christ that Vertue and Efficacy is communicate in spiritual Ordinances there were many people in a throng about Christ but the infirm woman that touched him was she alone that felt efficacy come from him we see many attend the Ordinances frequent the Assemblies but some few only find the inward power of Christ derived unto their souls They that neglect or are grosly ignorant of this great mistery of looking unto Jesus are no beter then strangers to the power of Christ 6. They have not that sense of the worth and excellency of Christ that are unacquainted with this Duty they are not so ravished with his Beauty they are not so taken with the Sweetness and Pleasantness of
for the Lord God will help me Heb. 2.13 Isa 50.7 8 9 Isa 59.5 therefore shall I not be confounded And behold the Lord will help me who is he that shall condemn me whereto agrees that other passage and my God shall be my strength 3. There was a promise of submission to his Fathers will in bearing the reproaches and injuries that should be done to him and to lay down his life for those that were given to him by the Father the Lord God opened my ear and I was not rebellious Isa 50.5 6 neither turned away back I gave my back to the smiters and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair I hid not my Face from shame and spitting John 10.17 and therefore my Father loves me because I lay down my life Christ first thus Covenanted with his Father and then he was careful to discharge the same and at last he tells God John 17.4 I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do 4. There was an earnest expectation of that glory which the Father promised Christ and his members And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self John 17.5 John 17.24 with the glory which I had with thee before the World was And Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the Foundation of the World These were the Articles of the Covenant on Christs part and hence it is that God is called the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ viz. by reason of the Covenant Ephes 1.3 O my soul with what delight mayest thou consider muse and ponder on these Articles what that God should make a Covenant and enter into these and these Articles with his own Son for thy good and for thy Eternal good what that God should bring in the second person in the Trinity to be the head of the Covenant as on thy part what a mercy is this O run over and over this meditation a thousand and a thousand times O consider thy hope of Eternal life which God that cannot lye Tit. 1.2 promised before the world began If thy soul question what promise was there made before the World began to whom was the promise made who was there before the World began for God to make any promise to why now thou hast learned it was only to the Son of God the second person in the Trinity There was a most blessed transaction between God the Father and God the Son before the world began for thy everlasting good and upon that transaction depends all thy hope and all thy salvation O this is worthy of thy deep and sad and serious and inmost meditation I have been particular and large in this passage of Looking unto or considering Jesus but I shall be brief in the rest SECT III. Of desiring after Jesus in that respect 3. VVE must desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in that Eternity It is not enough to know consider but we must desire Now desire is a passion looking after the attainment of some good which we enjoy not and which we imagine to be fitting for us In this respect we cannot desire after Jesus as now to carry on that work of our salvation before the World began for that work is already perfectly done But these things we may desire after as 1. After the manifestation of that work in us 2. After God and Christ the complotters and actors of that great work for us 3. After the full and utmost execution whereby God effectually works in time according to all his workings or decrees before time 1. We must desire after the manifestation of this work in us We have heard of marvellous excellent glorious things done by Jesus Christ for his Saints from all Eternity oh what desires now should be in us to know that we are of that number when I hear and consider that there was such a project and such counsels and such love and such a purpose and such decrees and such a Covenant betwixt God and Christ for salvation of souls and withal that they are but few in comparison concerning whom God and Christ hath all this care will not this whet on my desires and make me cry and cry again Oh that these loves were mine how happy were I if I had a share in these eternal thoughts of God Methinks we should not hear of such transactions but it should stir up our hearts in infinite desires methinks we should pant after assurance and still be wishing Oh what is truth and what is Christ and what did Christ for me before I was or before the World was I would I knew him I would I could enjoy him I would I were assured that he had one good thought of me in that Eternity Christians if you have any share in those transactions sooner or later you will feel these desires nay if my sinful heart deceive me not upon the very consideration of these things I feel my self another creature in my desires then I was before Tell me you that have took a full view of God Christ and of all these wonders of Eternity do you not sensibly differ from your selves in your affections Is not the world worldly pleasures worldly profits and worldly honours fallen too yea ten in an hundred with you have they not lost their price would you not rather be assured that your names are written in the Book of Life then to have all the world yours yea and all the Devils in Hell subject to your commands Certainly if these revelations work nothing in your hearts if your affections be so strong and hearty to the world and the vanities of it if your desires be so impure and strongly working downwards that Gods ancient loves and everlasting workings have no power on your hearts it is a very sad condition If David may have his wish it runs thus Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us he would have the manifestation of Gods Eternal love Psa 4.6 one smile of his countenance as an image of that countenance which God had towards him before the world began was more gladness to his heart then all that which the men of the world had in the time that their corn and their wine increased 2. We may and must desire after God and Christ the complotters and actors of that great work for us what hath the Gospel revealed this truth that before the Creation God and Christ were busied about our good yea and hath Christ especially that came out of the bosom of his Father brought the treasures of his Fathers counsel to the world discovered such love to men how then should our desires be after God in Christ Whom have I in heaven but thee Psa 73.35 there is none upon earth that I
a Covenant of grace which runs in this tenor I will be your God a●d you shall be my people my peculiar treasure a Kingdom of Priests an holy Nation if you will but hear and obey my Commandments Surely these priviledges could never have been obtained by a Covenant of works what to be a Kingdom of Priests an holy Nation a peculiar treasure to the Lord what to be beloved of God as a desirable treasure for so it is in the original which a King delivers not into the hands of any of his Officers but keepeth it to himself this cannot be of works No no these are priviledges vouchsafed of meer grace in Jesus Christ and therefore Peter applyes this very promise to the people of God under the Gospel 1 Pet. 2.9 1 Pet. 2.9 2. It appears by that contract betwixt God and Israel in the promulgation of the Law then it was that God proclaimed himself to be the God of Israel saying I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the House of bondage Some hold this to be the affirmative part of the first Commandment in which the Gospel is preached and the promises therein contained are offered We say it is a preface to the whole Law prefixed as a reason to perswade obedience to every Commandment But all universally acknowledge that it is a free Covenant which promiseth pardon of sin and requireth faith in the Messiah when God saith to Israel I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt doth he not propound himself as their King Judg Saviour and Redeemer Yea and spiritual Redeemer from their bondage of sin and Satan whereof that temporal deliverance from Egypt was truly a type the Lord begins his commandments with an evangelical promise and it is very observable that as these words I am the Lord thy God are prefixed immediatly to the first Commandment so in sundry places of Scripture they are annexed to all the rest ye shall fear every man his Mother and his Father and keep my Sabbaths Lev. 19.3.11 12.16 18. I am the Lord your God ye shall not steal neither deal falsely neither lie one to another and ye shall not swear by my Name falsely neither shalt thou profane the Name of thy God I am the Lord. Neither shalt thou stand against the blood of thy neigbour I am the Lord. In a word thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self I am the Lord or if that contain only the second Table therefore shall ye observe all my statutes and all my judgments and do them I am the Lord. Add we to this 37. that in the second Commandment God is described to be one shewing mercy unto thousands all which must needs argue the Law to be a Covenant of grace 3. It appears by the Contract betwixt God and Israel after the promulgation of the Law is it not plainly expressed by Moses Thou hast avouched the Lord this day to be thy God and to walk in his wayes and to keep his statutes and Commandments And the Lord hath avouched thee this day to be his peculiar people as he hath promised thee and that thou shouldst keep his commandments Yea and after this in the Land of Moah Deut. 26.17 18. Moses was commanded by the Lord to make a Covenant with the children of Israel besides the Covenant which he made with them in Horeb now this was the very same that God made with them on Sinai only it must be renewed and it is expresly said ye stand this day to enter into a Covenant with the Lord your God Deut. 29.12 13. That he may establish you to be a people unto himself and that he may be a God unto you as he had sworn to Abraham Isaac and Jacob. Surely this must needs be a Covenant of grace how should it be but of grace that God promised to be the God of Israel here are many sweet precious promises and they are all free and gracious and therefore we conclude the Law in the sense aforesaid to be a Covenant of grace 4. Why should God in the Law deal with us in a Covenant-way rather than a meer absolute supream way I answer 1. In respect of God it was his pleasure in giving the Law not only to manifest his Wisdom and Power and Soveraignty but his faithfulness and truth and love and the glory of his grace Rom. 9. 1 Joh. 4.8 that he might make known as the Apostle speaks the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory Gods love is apart of his name for God is love and Gods faithfulness is a part of his name I saw Heaven opened said John in a vision and behold a white horse Rev. 19.11 he that sate upon him was called faithful and true now how should we ever have known Gods love at least in such a measure or how should we ever have known Gods faithfulness truth at all if he had not entered into a Covenant with us it is true if he had given the Law in a meer absolute supreme way if he had given the precept without any promise he might fully have discovered his illimited supream power but his so dear love and faithfulness could not have been known now therefore let the world take notice of his singular love and of his faithfulness as Moses said to Israel Because the Lord loved you and because he would keep the oath which he had sworn unto your fathers hath the Lord brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you out of the hands of bondmen from the hand of Pharaoh ●t 7.8 9. King of Egypt Know therefore that the Lord thy God he is God the faithful God which keepeth Covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his Commandments to a thousand generations 2. In respect of us God would rather deal with us in a covenant-way than in a meer absolute supream way upon these grounds 1. That he might bind us the faster to himself a covenant binds on both parts the Lord doth not bind himself to us and leave us free No I will bring you saith God into the bond of the Covenant ● 20.37 The Lord sees how slippery and unstable our hearts are how apt we are to start aside from our duty towards him we love to wander and therefore to prevent this inconstancy and unsetledness in us 〈◊〉 14.10 and to keep our hearts more stable in our obedient walking before him it pleased the Lord to bind us in the bond of Covenant that as we look for a blessing from God so we look to it to keep Covenant with God you may say a command binds as well as a Covenant it is true but a Covenant doth as it were twist the cords of the Law and double the precept upon the soul when it is only a precept then God alone
them again to this Land and I will build them and not pull them down and I will plant them and not bluck them up and I will give them a Heart to know Me that I am the Lord and they shall be My People and I will be their God for they shall return unto Me with their whole Heart Hag. 2.7 8 9. Again I will shake all Nations and the Desire of the Nations shall come and I will fill this House with Glory saith the Lord of Hosts The Silver is mine and the Gold is mine saith the Lord of Hosts the Glory of this latter House shall be greater than of the former saith the Lord of Hosts And I will put my Law in their inward parts Jer. 31.33 34. and write it in their Hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquities and I will remember their Sins no more 3. It excels in the discovery and revelation of the Mediator in and through whom this Covenant was made In the former expression we discovered much yet in none of them was so plainly revealed the time of his coming the place of his birth his name the passages of his nativity his humiliation and kingdom as we find them in this 1. Concerning the time of his Coming Dan. 9.24 Seventy weeks shall be determined upon thy people and upon thy holy City to finish the Transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the vision and prophesie and to anoint the most holy 2. Concerning the place of his Birth But thou Bethlehem Ephrata Mica 5.2 though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from of old from everlasting 3. Concerning his Name Vnto us a Child is born unto us a Son is given Isa 9.6 and the Government shall be upon his Shoulders and his Name shall be called Wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the Everlasting Father the Prince of Peace Jer. 23.6 In his dayes Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely and this his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son Isa 7.14 and thou O Virgin shalt call his Name Immanuel 4. Concerning the passages of his Nativity that he should be born of a Virgin Isa 7.14 That at his Birth all the Infants round about Bethlehem should be slain Jer 31.15 That John the Baptist should be his Prodromus or forerunner to prepare his way Mal. 3.1 That he should flee into Egypt and be recalled thence again Hos 11.1 I might add many Particulars of this kind 5. Concerning his Humiliation Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows Isa 53.4 yet we did not esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him 5. and with his stripes were we healed He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his Mouth He was taken from Prison and from Judgment 7. and who shall declare his Generation he was cut off out of from the Land of the Living 8. for the transgression of my people was he stricken It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief Therefore I will divide him a portion with the great and he shalt divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his Soul unto Death and he was numbred with the transgressors and he bare the Sin of many and made intercession for t●e transgressors One would think this were rather a History than a Prophesie of Christs sufferings you may if you will take the pains see the circumstances of his sufferings as that he was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zech. 11.12 and that with those thirty pieces of silver there was bought afterwards a Potters field Zech. 11.13 That he must ride into Jerusalem before his Passion on an Ass Zech. 9.9 I might seem tedious if I should proceed 6. Conc●rning his Kingdom Rejoyce greatly O Daughter of Zion Zech. 9.9 Isa 62.11 Mat. 21.5 shout O Daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee he is Just and having Salvation lowly and riding upon an Ass and upon a Colt the Foal of an Ass Behold a King behold thy King behold thy King cometh and he comes unto thee 1. He is a King and therefore able 2. He is thy King and therefore willing wonderful Love that he would come but more wonderful was the manner of his coming He that before made man a Soul after the Image of God then made himself a Body after the Image of Man And thus we see how this Covenant excels the former in every of these respects 3. How doth God put the Law into our inward parts I answer God puts the Law into our inward parts by enlivening or qualifying of a Man with the Graces of Gods Spirit suitable to his Commandment first there is the Law of God without us as we see it or read it in Scriptures but when it is put within us then God hath wrought an inward disposition in our minds that answers to that Law without us for example this is the Law without Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all thy Soul and with all thy Strength Deut. 6.5 Deut. 30.6 To Answer which there is a promise I will circumcise thy Heart and the Heart of thy Seed to Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all my soul now when this promise is fulfilled when God hath put the affections and grace of Love within our hearts when the habit of Love is within answerable in all things to the command without then is the Law put into our inward parts Deut. 13.4 Jer. 32.40 Again this is the Law without Thou shalt fear the Lord and keep his Ordinances and his Statutes and his Commandments to do them to answer which there is a promise I will make a Covenant with you and I will not turn away from you to do you good but I will put my fear into your hearts and you shall not depart from Me now when this promise is accomplished when God hath put the affection and grace of fear within our hearts when the habit of fear is within answerable to that Command without then is the Law put into our hearts Surely this is Mercy that God saith in his Covenant I will put my Law in their inward parts many a time a poor Soul cries out
marrying of Christ Oh happy if I could but Joyn Christ and thy Soul together this day Oh happy thou if thou wouldst this day be perswaded by a poor Ambassadour of Christ Blame me not if I am an importunate Messenger if ever I hear from thee let me hear some good News that I may return it to Heaven and give God the Glory Come say on art thou willing to have Christ wouldst thou have thy name enrolled in the Covenant of Grace shall God be thy God and Christ thy Christ wilt thou have the Person of Christ and all those priviledges flowing from the Blood of Christ sure thou art willing art thou not stay then thou must take Christ on these terms thou must believe on him i e. Thou must take him as thy Saviour and Lord thou must take him and forsake all others for him This is the true Faith the condition of the Covenant O believe in Jesus and the Match is made the hands are struck the Covenant established and all doubts removed SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6 WE must love Jesus as carrying on this great work of our Salvation in a way of Covenant I know Love is reckoned as the first and fundamental Passion of all the rest some call it the first springing and out-going affection of the Soul and therefore I might have put it in the first place before Hope or Desire but I chuse rather to place it in this Method as me thinks most agreeing if not to the order of Nature yet to the Spiritual workings as they appear in my Soul When a Good is propounded ' first I desire and then I hope and then I believe and then I love And some describing this spiritual love they tell me it is an holy disposition of the heart Dr. Preston of Love arising from Faith But to let these niceties pass for a Spiders web curious but thin certain it is that I cannot believe all these transactions of God by Christ in a Covenant-way for me but I must needs love that God love that Christ who hath thus firstly freely loved my soul go on then O my Soul put fire to the harth blow on thy little spark set before thee God's Love and thou canst not but love and therein Consider 1. The Time 2. The Properties 3. The Effects of Gods love 1. For The Time He Loved thee before the World was made hast thou not heard and wilt thou ever forget it were not those ancient Loves from all eternity admirable astonishing ravishing Loves 2 He Loved thee in the very beginning of the world was not the promise expressed to Adam intended for thee as thou sinnedst in his loins so didst thou in his loins receive the Promise It shall bruise thy head And not long after when God established his Covenant with Abraham and his Seed wast not thou one of that Seed of Abraham If ye are Christs Gal. 3.29 then are ye Abrahams Seed and heirs according to the Promise 3. He loves thee now more especially not only with a Love of benevolence as before but with a love of complacency not only hath he struck Covenant with Christ with Adam with Abraham in thy behalf but particularly and personally with thy self and O what Love is this If a woman lately conceiving love her future fruit how much more doth she love it when it is born and embraced in her Arms So if God loved thee before thou hadst a being yea before the world or any Creature in it had a being how much more now O the height and depth and length and breadth of this immeasurable Love O my Soul I cannot express the Loves of God in Christ to thee I do but draw the Picture of the Son with a coal when I endeavour to express Gods love in Christ 2. For the properties of this Love 1. Gods Love to thee is an eternal Love He was thinking in his eternity of thee in this manner At such a time there shall be such Man and such a Woman living on the earth in the last times such a one I mean thou that readest if thou believest and to that Soul I will reveal my self and communicate my loves to that soul I will offer Christ and give it the hand of Christ to lay hold on Christ and to that purpose now I write down the Name in the Book of Life and none shall be able to blot it out again Oh eternal Love Oh the blessed transactions between the Father and the Son from all eternity to manifest his Love to thy very Soul 2. Gods love to thee is a choice Love it is an elective separating Love when he passed by and left many thousands Mal. 1.2 3. then even then he sets his heart on thee Was not Esau Jacobs brother saith God yet I loved Jacob and hated Esau So wert not thou such an ones Brother or such an ones Sister that remained wicked and ungodly wert not thou of such a Family whereas many or some are passed by yet God hath loved thee and pitched his Love on thee Surely this is choice Love Hos 14.4 Deut. 7.7 8. 3. Gods Love to thee is a free Love I will love them freely saith God And the Lord did not set his Love upon you and chuse you because ye were more in number than any people but because the Lord loved you there can be no other reason why the Lord loved thee but because he loved thee We use to say this is a womans reason I will do it because I will do it but here we find it is Gods reason though it may seem strange arguing yet Moses can go no higher he loved thee why because he loved thee Gods love to thee is the Love of all relations look what a friends Love is to a friend or what a Fathers Love is towards a Child or what an Husbands Love is towards a Wife such is Gods Love to thee thou art his Friend his Son his Daughter his Spouse and God is thy All in All. 3. For the Effects of his Love 1. God so Loves thee as that he hath entered into a Covenant with thee O what a Love is this tell me O my soul is there not an infinite disparity betwixt God and thee He is God above and thou art a Worm below He is the High and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity whose Name is Holy and thou art less than the least of all the Mercies of God O wonder at such a condescention that such a Potter and such a Former of things should come on terms of bargaining with such clay as is guilty before him Had we the tongues of Men and Angels we could never express it God so loves thee as that in the Covenant he gives thee all his Promises Indeed what is the Covenant but an accumulation or heap of Promises As a cluster of stars makes a Constellation so as a mass of promises concurreth in the Covenant of Grace
not Christ come down sinners could not have gone up into Heaven and therefore that they might ascend he descends 2. I come down from Heaven not to do mine own will Heb. 3.1 2. but the will of him that sent me his Father had sent him on purpose to receive and to save sinners and to this purpose he is called the Apostle of our profession who was faithful to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithful in all his house His Father could not send him on any errand but he was sure to do it his Fathers mission was a strong demonstration that Christ was willing to receive those sinners that would but come to him Again Jesus stood and cryed saying if any man thirst John 7.37 let him come unto me and drink the very pith heart and marrow of the Gospel is contained in these words the occasion of them was thus on that last day of the Feast of Tabernacles the Jews were wont with great solemnity to draw water out of the fountain of Siloam at the foot of Mount Sion and to bring it to the Altar singing out of Isaiah Isa 12.3 With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of Salvation now Christ takes them at this Custom and recalls them from earthly to heavenly waters alluding to that of Isaiah Isa 55.1 3. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters Incline your ears and come unto me and your souls shall live The Father saith come the Son saith come the Spirit saith come yea Rev. 22.17 the Spirit and the Bride say come and let him that heareth say come and let him that is a thirst come and whosoever will let him drink of the water of life freely All the time of Christs Ministry we see him tyring himself in going about from place to place upon no other errand than this to cry at the markets Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters if any sinners love life if any will go to heaven let them come to me and I will shew them the way to my Fathers bosom and endear them to my Fathers heart Again hither tend all those Arguments of God and Christ to draw souls to themselves Thus God draws 1. From his equity Hear now O house of Israel Ezek. 18.25 is not my way equal or are not your wayes unequal q. d. I appeal to your very consciences is this equal that sinners should go on in sin and Trespass against him that is so willing to receive and save poor sinners 2. From our ruine in case we go on in sin Ezek. 18.31 Cast away from you all your Transgressions whereby ye have Transgressed and make you a new heart and a new Spirit for why will ye dye O house of Israel 3. From his own dislike and displeasure at our ruine I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth Ver. 32. saith the Lord God wherefore turn your souls and live ye 4. From his mercy and readiness to pardon sinners Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Hos 14.4 John 3.16 5. From the freeness of his love I will love them freely and God so loved the world so fully so fatherly so freely that he gave his only begotten Son c. and I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely 6. From the sweetness of his Name Rev. 21.6 Exod. 34.6 7. Isa 48.18 19. The Lord the Lord merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity Transgression and sin 7. From the benefits that would follow O that thou hadst hearkened to my commandments then had thy peace been as a River and thy righteousness as the waves of the Sea thy seed also had been as the Sand and the off-spring of thy bowels like the gravel thereof 8. From his Oath As I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live O happy creatures saith Tertullian for whom God swears O unbelieving wretches if we will not trust God swearing Ezek. 33.61 Ezek. 33.11 Mich. 6.3 Isa 5.4 Isa 5.3 9. From his expostulations Turn ye turn ye from your evil wayes for why will ye dye O house of Israel O my people what have I done to thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me what could I have done more for my vineyard than I have done wherefore when I looked that it should bring forth grapes brought it forth wild grapes Mich. 6.2 10. From his appeals Judge now O ye inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem and hear O ye mountains the Lords controversie and ye strong foundations of the earth Deut. 5.29 for the Lord hath a controversie with his people and he will plead with Israel 11. From his groans Oh that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep my commandments alwayes Deut. 32.29 that it might be well with them and their children for ever And oh that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their latter end 12. Hos 11.8 From his loathness to give men up How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee O Israel how shall I make thee as Admah how shall I set thee as Zeboim my heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together O the goodness of God! And as God the Father so God the Son draws Arguments to win souls to himself 1. From his coming it was the very purpose and design of his coming down from Heaven to receive sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithful saying sayes Paul and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners 2. From his fair demeanour and behaviour towards sinners this was so open and notorious that it was turned to his disgrace and opprobry Mat. 11.19 Behold a friend of Publicans and sinners And the Scribes and Pharisees murmured at him Luke 5.30 and his Disciples saying Why do ye eat and drink with Publicans and Sinners 3. From his owning of sinners and answering for them in this respect Luke 5.31 32. And Jesus answering said unto them they that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick I came not to call the righteous but Sinners to repentance 4. From his rejoycing at sinners conversion indeed we never read of Christs Laughter and we seldom read of Christs joy but when it is at any time recorded it is at the Conversion of a poor soul he had little else to comfort himself in being a man of sorrows but in this he rejoyced exceedingly Luke 10.21 In that hour Jesus rejoyced in Spirit
in his graces sufferings death 1. In the graces that most eminently shined in his bitter passion his life indeed was a gracious life John 1.16 he was full of grace And of his fulness have all we received and grace for grace but his graces shined most clearly and brightly at his death as a Lilly amongst the Thorns seems most beautiful so his graces in his sufferings shew most excellent I shall instance in some of them As 1. His humility was profound what that the most high God that the only begotten and eternal Son of God should vouchsafe so far as to be contemned and less esteemed than Barabbas a murtherer that Christ should be crucified upon a cross betwixt two thieves as if he had been the ring-leader of all malefactors O what humility was this 2. His patience was wonderful in respect of this the Apostle Peter sets Christ as a blessed example before our eyes If when ye do well and suffer for it ye take it patiently 1 Pet. 2.20 21 23. this is acceptable with God for even hereunto were ye called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps Who when he was reviled he reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously O the patience of Christ 1 John 4.10 3. His love was fervent Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins This love is an examplar of all love it is the fire that should kindle all our sparks Be ye followers of God saith the Apostle as dear children Eph. 5.1 2. and walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himself for us an offering and sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Some observe that in the Temple there were two Altars the brazen and the golden the brazen Altar was for bloody Sacrifices the golden Altar was for the offering of Incense now the former was a type of Christ's bloody offering upon the cross the latter of Christ's sweet intercession for us in his glory in regard of both the Apostle tells that Christ gave himself both for an offering and sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour unto God O what love was this 4. His mercy was abundant he took upon him all the miseries and debts of the world and he made satisfaction for them all he acted our redemption immediately in his own person he would not intrust it to Angels but he would come himself and suffer nor would he give a low and base price for our souls he saw the misery was great and his mercy should be more great he would buy us with so great a ransome as that he might over-buy us and none might out-bid him in the market of our souls O we under-bid and under-value the mercy of God who over-valued us we will not sell all to buy him but he sold all he had and himself too to buy us indeed if he had not done it we had been damned and to save our souls he cared not what he did or suffered O the mercy of Christ 5. His meekness was passing great in all the process of his passion he shewed not the least passion of wrath or anger he suffered himself gently and quietly to be carried like a sheep to the Butchery and as a Lamb before shearer is dumb so opened he not his mouth a Lamb is a most meek and innocent creature John 1.29 and therefore is Christ called the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world And he was a brought as a Lamb to the slaughter why a Lamb goes as quietly to the shambles Isa 53.7 as if it were going to the fold or to the pasture-field where its Dam seedeth and so went Christ to his Cross O the meekness of Christ 6. His contempt of the world was to admiration he tells them John 18.36 John 6.15 his Kingdom was not of this world When a Crown was offered him and forced upon him he refused it but above all behold the Bed where the Bridegroom lieth and sleepeth at noon-day here 's but an hard flock and narrow room O blessed head of a dear Redeemer how is it that thou hast not a pillow where to rest thy self He hangs on the Cross all naked few Kings do so he hath no Crown for his head but one of thorns he hath no delicates but Gall and Vinegar he is leaving the world and he hath no other Legacies to give his friends but spiritual things Peace I leave with you John 14.27 my peace I give unto you not as the world giveth give I unto you He had so contemned the world that he had not a Legacy in all the world to give Not as the world giveth give I unto you 7. His obedience was constant He became obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 John 5.30 even the death of the Cross He sought not his own will but the will of him that sent him There was a command that the Father laid on Christ from all eternity O my Son my only begotten Son thou must go down and leave Heaven and empty thy self and die the death even the death of the Cross and go and bring up the fallen sons of Adam out of Hell Mankind like a precious Ring Glory fell off the Finger of Almighty God and was broken all in pieces and thereupon was the command of God that his Son must stoop down though it pain his back he must lift up again the broken Jewel he must restore it and mend it and set it as a Seal on the heart of God all which the Lord Jesus did in time he was obedient till death and obedient to death even to the death of the Cross Son thou must die said God why Father I will do it said Christ and accordingly he freely made his Soul an Offering for sin Now in all these Graces we must conform to Christ Learn of me Mat. 11.29 Eph. 5.2 for I am meek and lowly And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us It is as if Christ had said mark the steps where I have trode and follow me in humility in patience in love in mercy in meekness in contempt of the world in obedience unto death in these and the like Graces you must conform unto Christ 2. We must conform to Christ in his sufferings if he call us to them Phil. 3.10 this was the Apostle's Prayer that I may know him and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings it was his desire that he might experimentally know what exceeding joy and comfort it was to suffer for Christ and with Christ Concerning this the other Apostle speaks also Christ suffered for us 1 Pet. 2.21 leaving us an example that we should follow his steps But the Text that seems so pertinent and yet so difficult
and God be Omnipotent that he can do and can have whatsoever he pleases then Christ being one God with his Father he must needs prevail it is but ask and have let him ask what he will 5. That Christ is God's darling upon this very account because he intercedes for his People Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life John 10.17 that I might take it again I lay it down by suffering and I take it again by rising ascending up into heaven and interceding there and therefore doth my Father love me O the love of God to Christ and of God in Christ to all his Saints God so loved the world that he gave his Son and Christ so loved the world that he gave himself and now again because Christ gave himself and his gift is as a sweet smelling savour unto God therefore God loves Christ O what a round of love is here God loves Christ and Christ loves us and the Father loves Christ again for loving of us there is not an act of Christ in his work of our redemption but the Father looks on it with love and liking Mat. 3.17 Isa 53.11 at his baptism lo a voice came from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased at his death He seeth of the travel of his soul and he is satisfied at his ascension he heareth of the intercessions of his soul and he is delighted Christ's intercessions are God's musick and therefore as sometimes Christ spoke to his Spouse Cant. 2.14 so God speaks to Christ Let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Now Christ's intercessions must needs prevail when God love's Christ for his intercessions sake if before the world was made Prov. 8.29 30. the Son was his Fathers darling for it is said When he appointed the foundations of the earth then I was by him and as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight In the Original delights intimating that the eternal Son was variety of delights to his Father O then what delights what variety what infinite of delights hath God in Christ now interceding for us what a dear darling is Christ to God when not only he stands by him but he represents to him all the Elect from the beginning to the end of the World q. d See Father look on my breast read hear all the names of those thou hast given me as Adam and Abraham and Isaac and Jacob of the Twelve Tribes and of the Twelve Apostles of all the Martyrs Professors and Confessors of the Law and Gospel I pray for them I Pray not for the World but only for them for they are mine methinks I hear God answer What my Son and what the Son of my womb and what the Son of my vows hast thou begotten me thus many Sons and are all these mine why then ask what thou wilt and have what thou pleasest I am as strongly inclined and disposed to give thee grant as thou wouldst have it it is my joy my delight my pleasure to save these souls and surely the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in thy hands 6. That Christ is God's Commander I speak it with reverence as well as petitioner it is a phraze given to the servants of God command ye me and may we not give it to the Son of God Christians God is as ready to do us service as if we had him at command Isa 45.11 1 John 5.14 This is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and in this sense we may boldly say that God the Father is as ready to hear Jesus Christ as if he had him at command not that in deed and reality he commands God but that in deed and truth he commands all below God and he commands all in the stead of God And to this purpose is that voice of God I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion Psalm 2.6 and why my King I dare not say he is God's King as if God were Christ's inferior or Christs subject God forbid why then my King I answer he is God's King because appointed by God or he is God's King John 5.22 because he rules in the stead of God The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Judgment unto the Son God hath given away all his prerogatives unto Jesus Christ so that now the King of Saints can do what he will with God and with all the world only it follows Ask of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance as if the Father should have said I cannot deny thee and yet O my Son I would have thee ask do what thou wilt in Heaven Earth and Hell I have not the heart indeed I have not the power to deny thee any thing onely acknowledg this power to be originally in my self that all that honour the Son may honour the Father and all that honour the Father may honour the Son These are the terms betwixt God the Father and God the Son Oh then how powerfull and prevailing are Christs intercessions with his Father if he ask who hath power to command there is little question of prevailing in his suit We have heard in our days of a suit managed with a petition in one hand and a sword in the other and what the effect is all now can tell As a King who sues for peace backt with a potent Army able to win what he intreats for must needs treat more effectually so Christ sueing to his Father for his Saints with a power sufficient to obtain what he sues for he must needs effect what his desires may be it is well observed that Christ is first said to sit at God's right hand and then to intercede he treats the salvation of sinners as a mighty Prince treats the giving up of some Town which lyes seated under a Castle of his that commands the Town or he treats the salvation of sinners as a Commander treats the surrendring of a person already in his hands it is beyond God's power I speak i● with submission to deny his Son in any thing he asks Exod. 32.10 if the Lord sometimes cryed out to Moses like a man whose hands are held Let me alone how much more doth Christ's intercession bind God's hands and command all in Heaven Earth and Hell hence we say that God the Father hath divested himself of all his power and given the keys into Christ's own hands I am he that liveth and was dead Rev. 1.18 and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the keys of hell and death there is no man goes to Hell but he is lockt in by Jesus Christ and there is no man goes to Heaven but he is lockt in there by Jesus Christ he hath the keys of all men's eternities hanging
alledge that this priviledge was granted to Peter as an Apostle but we say that if it was granted to Peter as an Apostle then it was common to Peter and Judas in that both were Apostles They alledge further that Christ prayes not for the absolute perseverance of Believers but after a sort and upon condition But we say the Prayer of Christ is certain and not suspended in this Prayer his desire is not for Peter that would presevere but his desire is for Peter that he should persevere the object of the thing for which Christ prayes is distinct from the thing it self prayed for 9. That we might have the salvation of our souls in the day of Jesus John 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they might behold my glory Why this is the main end in respect of us our glory and indeed herein is the main piece of our glory to behold this glory Oh to see the Lord Jesus Christ glorified as he shall be glorified must be a glorious thing What is it to see his glory but to behold the lustre of his Divinity through his humanity In this respect our very eyes shall come to see God as much as is possible for any creature to see him we may be sure God shall appear through the humanity of Christ as much as is possible for the Divinity to appear in a creature and therefore Men and Angels will be continually viewing of Christ I know there is another glory of Christ which the Father will put upon him Because he humbled himself therefore God will exalt him Rev. 14.4 and give him a name above every name and we shall see him in this glory O the ravishing sight of Saints Christ is so lovely that the Saints cannot leave but they must and will follow the Lamb wheresoever he goes there shall be no moment to all eternity wherein Christ shall be out of sight to so many thousand thousands of Saints now this is the glory of the Saints above as a Queen that sees the Prince in his glory she delights in it because it is her glory so the Church when she shall see Christ her Husband in his glory she shall rejoyce in it because she looks upon it as her own Is not this a blessed end of Christ's intercession why hither tend all the rest all the other ends end in this and for this above all Christ intercedes to his Father Father Cant. 3.11 I would have my Saints with me O that all the daughters of Zion may behold King Solomon with the Crown wherewith thou hast crowned him in the day of his Espousals and in the day of the gladness of his heart Only one Question and I have done how should I set my faith on work to act on Christ's intercession for these ends I answer 1. Faith must perswade it self that here is a vertue in Christ's intercession Certainly every passage and acting of Christ hath its efficacy and therefore there is vertue in this it is full of juyce it hath a strong influence in it 2. Faith must consider that it is the design of God and the intendment of Christ that this intercession should be for the good of those that are given to Christ O there 's enough in Christ enough in Christ's intercession to convey communion the Spirit protection free access to the Throne of Grace a Spirit of prayer pardon of sins continuance in grace salvation of souls to the Saints and people of God through all the world and this is the design of God that Christ's intercession should be as the fountain whence all these streams must run and be conveyed unto us 3. Faith must act dependantly upon the intercession of Christ for these very ends this is the very nature of Faith it relyes upon God in Christ and upon all the actings of Christ and upon all the promises of Christ so then Is there a desirable end in Christ's intercession which we aim at O let us act our Faith dependantly let us rely stay or lean upon Christ to that same end let us roul our selves or cast our selves upon the very intercession of Jesus Christ Saying O my Christ there is enough in thee and in this glorious intercession of thine and therefore there will I stick and abide for ever 4. Faith must ever and anon be trying improving wrestling with God that vertue may go out of Christ's intercession into our hearts I have heard Lord that there is an Office erected in heaven that Christ as Priest should be ever praying and interceding for his people O that I may feel the efficacy of Christ's intercession am I now in prayer O that I could feel in this prayer the warmth and heat and spiritual fire which usually falls down from Christ's intercession into the hearts of his Lord warm my spirit in this duty give me the kisses of thy mouth O that I may now have communion with thee thy Spirit upon me thy protection over me O that my pardon may be sealed my grace confirmed my soul saved in the day of Jesus In this method O my soul follow on and who knows but God may appear e're thou art aware howsoever be thou in the use of the means and leave the issue with God SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that Respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on this great work of our salvation in his intercession Now two things more especially will excite our love 1. Christ's love to us 2. Our propriety in Christ For the first many acts of Christ's love have appeared before and every one is sufficient to draw our loves to him again As 1. He had an eternal love to man he feasted himself on the thoughts of love delight and free-grace to man from all eternity since God was God O boundless duration the Lord Jesus in a manner was loving and longing for the dawning of the day of the Creation he was as it were with child of infinite love to man before he made the world Some observe that the first words which ever Christ wrote were Love to Believers and these were written with glory for it was before gold was and they were written upon his bosom for then other books were not 2. In the beginning of time he loved man above all creatures for after he had made them all he then speaks as he never did before Let us make man in our image after our likeness Gen. 1.26 and let him have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowl of the air and over the cattel and over all the earth and though man at that very instant unmade himself by sins Christ's love yet was not broken off but held forth in a promise till the day of performance The seed of the woman shall bruise the Serpents head and in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed 3. In the fulness of time his
of his loves as if he were not his own he putteth on such relations and assumes such offices of engagement as if he were all for us and nothing for himself thus he is called a Saviour a Redeemer a King a Priest a Prophet a Friend a Guide an Head an Husband a Leader Ransomer Intercessor and what not of this nature O my soul come hither and put thy little candle to this mighty flame if thou hadst ten hearts or as many hearts in one as there are elected Men and Angels in Heaven and Earth all these would be too little for Jesus Christ only go as far as thou canst and love him with that heart thou hast yea love him with all thy heart and all thy soul and all thy might and as Christ in loving thee is not his own so let thy soul in loving Christ be not her own Come love thy Christ and not thy self possess thy Christ and not thy self enjoy thy Christ and not thy self live in thy Christ not in thy self solace thy self in Jesus Christ not in thy self say with the Apostle Gal. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Certainly if ever thou comest to love Christ truly thou canst not but deny thy self and all created lovers This love will screw up thy soul so high above the world and above thy flesh and above thy self and above all other lovers that nothing on this side Christ whether in heaven or on earth will come in competition with him Suppose a man in the top of a Castle higher than the third Region of the Air or near the Sphere of the Moon should look down to the fairest and sweetest Meadows or to a Garden rich with Roses and Flowers of all sweet colours and delicious smells certainly he should not see or feel any sweetness pleasantness colour smell because he is so far above them so the soul filled with the love of Christ is so high above all created lovers that their loveliness cannot reach or ascend to the high and large capacity of a spiritual soul O for a soul filled up with all the fulness of God! O for a soul stretched out to its widest capacity and circumference for the entertainment of God! Eph. 3.18 19. O my soul that thou wert but able to comprehend with all the Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ that passeth knowledge Surely if Christ be mine if his death be mine his resurrection mine his ascension mine his session mine his intercession mine How should I but love him with a singular love farewel world and worldly glory if Christ come in room it is time for you to vanish I shall little care for a Candle when the Sun shines fair and bright upon my head What is my name written on the heart of Christ doth he wear me as a Favour and Love-token about his arms and neck is he at every turn presenting me and my duties to his heavenly Father Cant. 4.9 O thou hast ravished my heart my King my Jesus thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes and with one chain of thy neck Suppose O my soul thou hadst been with Christ when he washed his Disciples feet and that he should have come and have washed thy feet Would not thy heart have glowed with love to Jesus Christ why Christ is now in glory and now he takes thy filthy soul and dirty duties and washes as it were the feet of all that he may present them to his Father thou canst not shed a tear but he washes it over again in his precious blood and perfumes it with his glorious intercessions Oh what cause hast thou to love Jesus Christ Oh you that never loved Christ come love him now and you that have loved Christ a little O love him more Above all let me O my soul charge upon thee this duty of love O go away warmed with the love of Christ and with a love to Christ SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on this work of our salvation in his intercession Surely this is glad tydings of great joy when wicked Haman procured letters from King Ahasuerus for the destruction of all Jews then Esther the Queen makes request to the King that her people might be saved and Haman's letters revoked Esther 5.3 8.15 16 17. And the King said to her What wilt thou Queen Esther and what is thy request and it shall be given thee O the joy of Jews at this happy tidings Then the City of Shushan rejoyced and was glad then the Jews had light and gladness and joy and honour in every province and in every City whithersoever the Kings Commandment and his Decree came the Jews had joy and gladness a feast and a good day Is not this our very case was there not a Law against us an hand-writing of Ordinances a sentence of a double death of body and soul had not Satan as wicked Haman accused us and sought by all means our condemnation but yet behold not only an earthly Esther but Jesus the Son of God was willing for our sakes to come down from Heaven and he it was that took away the hand-writing of Ordinances and cancelled it upon the Cross that ascended into Heaven and there makes requests for us and he it is in whom his Father is well pleased never comes he to his Father but he obtains the grace of the golden Scepter no sooner he cryes I will that these poor souls may be eternally saved but his Father answers Amen Be it so be it O my Son even as thou pleasest O that we could joy at this O that we could imitate the Jews O that light and gladness and joy and honour would possess our souls if at Christ's birth was such and so much joy because a Saviour was proclaimed Is not our joy to be heightened when salvation is effected if the first act of Christ's mediation was so joyous shall not the last act of his mediation be much more joyous But I hear many objections which keep back joy they are as bars and hindrances at the doors of many heavy hearts that joy cannot enter in I shall instance in some O I am much opposed here in this world sayes one men are as wolves and devils Psal 22.16 Dogs have compassed me the assembly of the wicked have enclosed me they have no bowels they persecute reproach revile so that I am killed all the day long And what then what matters oppositions of men so long as Christ doth intercede for thee in Heaven O remember Christ's bowels it may be he suffers men to be merciless on earth that thou mayst look up and behold how merciful he is who sits above and tell me hast thou no experience of this truth doth not relief strangely come in now and than why write upon
the sprrits of all just men made perfect with God if there be enough in God for Angels whose capacities are greater than the Saints if there be enough in God for Jesus Christ whose capacity is yet far wider than the Angels if there be enough in God for God himself whose capacity is infinitely greater than them all then there must needs be satisfaction enough in God to any one poor soul Here is another thing wherein God is our all in all we shall enjoy him fully 3. It consists in our enjoying God solely Not as if there were nothing else in Heaven but onely God but that God in Heaven shall be all in all and instead of all it is God in Heaven that makes Heaven to be Heaven the Saints blessedness and Gods own blessedness doth consist in the enjoyment of God himself the Schoole-men tells us that we shall not properly enjoy any thing else but only God we may have some use of the Creatures but no fruition and therefore is God said to be all or as good as all And indeed what can we imagine to be in Heaven which is not eminently in God himself if it be greatness power and glory and victory and majesty all these are his if it be joy or love or peace or beauty or any thing amiable or desirable all these are in him Hence some take it to be David's meaning when he said he had none in Heaven but God Psal 73.25 that the sole enjoyment of God of God and of nothing else but God is the souls true happiness when it is at highest whom have I in heaven but thee whom why there are Angels there are Saints there are the spirits of just and perfect men are these nothing with David O yes all these are good but they are not able to satisfie a soul without God himself Whether God will make use of any Creatures for our service then or if any of what Creatures and what use is more than I yet know but to make up a full enjoyment there is required a gracious-glorious presence a sweet effusion or communication of that presence a just comprehension of the excellency of that communication a perfect love and a perfect rest in the love of whatsoever it is we comprehend now this is proper only to God it is he only that fills the whole capacity of the Soul it is he that so fills it that it can hold no more it is he only that is the object of love intended to the utmost and therefore he only is properly enjoyed he only is possessed with a full contentment as portion enough and as reward enough for the soul for ever But shall not the Saints have to do with something else in Heaven but only with God O yes I believe there shall be in Heaven a communion of the blessed Spirits in God an association of the Saints and Angels of God yet this shall not take away the sole enjoyment of God that he should not be their all in all For they shall not mind themselves or their own good as created things but altogether God they shall not love them or one another as for themselves but only for God here we love God for himself and it is a gracious love but there we shall love our selves for God and 't is a glorious love why this is to enjoy God solely in this respect he is all and in all whom have I in Heaven but thee Here 's a point enough to wean us to the World Alas the time is coming on a pace Vse that all this World shall be dissolved and then God shall be all in all here lies the Saints happiness to have God immediately God fully and God solely and will not Saints prepare themselves for such a condition as this you that have the World use it as if not 1 Cor. 7.31 for the fashion of this World passeth away and you that have but a little to do with the World improve that condition surely 't is your own fault if you have not more to do with God for you have little else to take up your hearts God may dwell and walk in your hearts without disturbance give me neither poverty nor riches saith the wise man upon that account a mean condition is more capable of happyness than that which over-loads us with outward things whilst others are casting up their accounts you may say with David how precious are thy thoughts unto me O God Psal 139.17 how great is the sum of them whil'st others are following their suits at courts of Justice you may follow all you have at a Throne of grace whil'st others are numbring their Flocks and Heards all your Arithmetick may be imployed to number your days whilst others cannot get out of the clutches of the world you may get into the embraces of your God why this is to prepare your selves for fuller and fuller enjoyments of God it is God will be all in all and this is the very top of Heavens happyness surely the less you have of the World now if you can but improve it the more you may have of Heavens happiness even upon earth for what is the happiness of Heaven but the sole enjoyment of God Christians if you feel any inclinations pantings breathings after this world give me leave to tell you that you will never be happy till you have lost all till you have no friends nor estates no enjoyment but God alone when all his done when this world is nothing when means shall cease both for bodies and souls and when Christ shall cease his Mediators office and the Son of man be Subject to his Father then God shall be all in all SECT X. Of Christs notwithstanding this being all in all to his blessed saved redeemed Saints to all Eternity 10. FOR Christ's being all in all to his blessed saved redeemed Saints to all Eternity we shall dilate in this Section Some may object if God be all in all what then becomes of Christ is not this derogatory to Jesus Christ I answer no in no wise for 1. It is not the Father personally and only but the Deity essentially and wholly that is our all in all when we say God is all in all we do not exclude the Son and holy Ghost for the whole God-head is all in all to all the Saints as well as the first person in the Trinity the Father is all and the Son is all and the holy Ghost is all and in that Christ is God and the Son of God we may say of Christ that he is all in all only the truth of this position is not from the humane nature but from the divine nature of Jesus Christ 2. It is not derogatory to Christ but rather it doth exceedingly advance Christ in the thoughts of all his Saints while it was necessary Christ veyled his Deity and when his work of Mediation is fully finished Christ then shall reveal his Deity
Jesus Christ is to be named the same day we must not give a look or squint at any thing that may hinder this faire and lovely sight of Jesus Gen. 10.7 Thus was the Lords charge to Lot look not behind thee he was so far to renounce and detest the lewdness of Sodom as that he must not vouchsafe a look towards it Isai 17.7 8. At that day shall a man look towards his maker and his eyes shall have respect to the holy one of Israel and he shall not look to the Altars the work of his hands This was the fruit of Gods chastisement on the Elect Israel that he should not give a look to the Altars lest they diverted or drew his eyes from off his Maker 2 Cor. 4.18 We look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen saith Paul A Christians aim is beyond visible things O when a soul comes to know what an eternal God is and what an eternal Jesus is and what an eternal Crown is when it knows that great design of Christ to save poor souls and to communicate himself eternally to such poor creatures this takes off the edge of its desires as to visible temporal things what are they in comparison But what things are they we must look off in this respect I answer 1. Good things 2. Evil things Question 1 1. Good things The Apostle tells us of a cloud of witnesses in the former verse which no question in their season we are to Look unto But when this second object comes in sight he scatters the cloud quite and sets up Jesus himself now the Apostle willeth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to turn our eyes from them and to turn them hither to Jesus Christ q. d. If you will indeed see a sight once for all look to him the Saints though they be guides to us yet are they but followers to him he is the arch guide the leader of them of us all look on him There is a time when James may say James 5 10. ●ohn 13.15 Zach. 2 13. take my brethren the Prophets who have spoken in the Name of the Lord for an example but when Jesus comes forth that said I have given you an example an example above all examples then be silent O all flesh before the Lord. Let all Saints and Seraphims then cover their faces with their wings that we may look on Jesus and let all other sights go 2. Evil things 1. In general 2. In special 1. In general we must look off all things that are on this side Jesus Christ and so so much the rather if they be evil things in a word we must look off all self whether it be sinfull self or natural self or religious self in this case we must draw our eyes off all these things 2. In special we must look off all that is in the world 1 John 2.16 and that the Apostle comprizeth under three heads the lusts of the eyes the lusts of the flesh the pride of life 1. Pleasures Profits and Honours 1. we must look off this world in respect of its sinfull pleasures Jude tells us such as are sensual have not the spirit we cannot fixedly look on pleasures Jude 18.19 Job 21.12 13 14 15. and look on Jesus at once Job tells us that they that take up the Timbril and Harp and rejoyce at the sound of the Organ that spend their dayes in mirth are the same that say unto God depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes what is the Almighty that we should serve him and what profit should we have if we pray unto him We have a lively example of this in Augustines conversion he would indeed have had Christ and his pleasures too but when he saw it would not be Oh what conflicts were within him In his Orchard as he stories it in his book of confessions all his pleasures past represented themselves before his eyes saying What wilt thou depart from us for ever Dimittesne nos a momento isto non crimus tecum ultra in aeternum Aug. in lib confess Et tu Domine usque quo quam diu quam diu cras cras quare non modo quare non hoc hora sinis est turpitudinis meae Aug. ibid Tolle lege ● tolle lege Idem ibid. Rom. 13.13 14. and shall we be no more with thee for ever O Lord saith Augustin writing this confession turn away my minde from thinking that which they objected to my soul What filth What shameful pleasures did they lay before my eyes At length after this combate a showr of tears came from him and casting himself on the ground under a Fig-tree he cries it out O Lord how long how long shall I say to morrow to morrow Why not to day Lord why not to day why should there not be an end of my filthy life even at this hour Immediately after this he heard a voice as if it had been a boy or a girle singing by take up and read take up and read and thereupon opening his Bible that lay by him at hand he read in silence the first Chapter that offered it self wherein was written Let us walk honestly as in the day not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering or wantonness not in strife and envying but put ye on the Lord Jesus and make not provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof Further then this sentence I would not read saith Augustine neither indeed was it needful for presently as if light had been poured into my heart all the darkness of my doubtfulness fled away His eye was now taken off his pleasures and for ever after it was set on Jesus 2. We must look off this world in respect of its sinful profits a look on this keeps off our looking unto Jesus Whosoever loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him just so much as the world prevails in us so much is Gods love abated both in us 1 John 2 15. Jam. 4.4 and towards us ye adulterers and adulteresses saith James know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God Covetousness in Christians is spiritual adultery when we have enough in God and Christ and yet we desire to make up our happiness in the creature this is plain whoreing Now there are degrees in this spiritual whoredome as 1. The minding of this world ye know there may be adultery in affection when the body is not defiled unclean glances are a degree of lust so the children of God may have some worldly glances stragling thoughts when the temptation is strong the world may be greatned in their esteem and imagination 2. The setting of the heart upon the world this is an higher degree of this spiritual adultery our hearts are due and proper to Christ now to set them on the world which should be chaste
and loyal to Jesus Christ what adultery is this Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Matth. 6.24 that woman that is not contented with one husband must needs be an harlot 3. The preferring of the world before Christ himself This is the height of covetousness and the height of this adultery what to make the members of Christ the members of an harlot Why worldlings those admiring thoughts are Christs those pains are Christs that love is Christs that time that care that earnestness is Christs they are all Christs and will you give that which is Christs unto the world and prefer the world before Christ with his own What live as professed prostitutes that prefer every one before their husbands how will this expose you to the scorn of men and Angels at the last day thy will come pointing and say This is the man that made not God his strength but trusted in the abundance of his riches Psal 52.7 this is the Gadaren that loved his swine more than Christ Jesus Love not the world said John 1 John 2.15 Christ is never precious in mans apprehension so long as the world seems glorious to him As we begin to relish sweetness in Christ so the world begins to be bitter to us Cui Christus incipit dulc●ss●●e necess esto marescere mundum Bern. the more sweetness we taste in the one the more bitterness we taste in the other 3. We must look off the world in respect of its sinful honours what is this honour but a certain inordinate desire to be well thought of or well spoken of to be praised or glorified of men as if a man should run up and down streets after a feather flying in the aire and tossed hither and thither with the gusts and blasts of infinite mens mouths it is a question whether ever he get it but if he do it is but a feather such is this pride of life honour vain-glory it is hard to obtaine it but if obtained it is but the breath of a few mens mouths that alter upon every light occasion but that which is worst of all it hinders our sight of Jesus Christ not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called 1 Cor. 1.26 Heb 11.24 26. wordly honour keeps many back from Christ and therefore Moses when he was come to years refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter esteeming the reproaches of Christ greater riches than all the Treasures of Egypt If the blind Man in the way to Jerico had depended on the breath or liking or approbation of the multitude he had never received the benefit of his sight Luke 18.39 for they saith the text which went before rebuked him that he should hold his peace they disswaded him from running crying so vehemently after Christ experience tells us how these things pull and draw us off from Jesus Christ the lusts of the eyes the lusts of the flesh and pride of life Question 2 But why must we look off every thing that diverts our looking unto Jesus 1. Because we cannot look fixedly on Christ and such things together and at once the eye cannot look upwards downwards at once in a direct line we cannot seriously mind heaven earth in one thought no man can serve two masters saith Christ especially such as jar Mat. 6.24 and who have contrary imployments as Christ and Mammon have 2. Because whiles we look on these things we cannot see the beauty that is in Christ suppose a squint look on Christ whilst we have a direct look on other things alas Christ will be of no esteem that while this was the voice of sinners concerning Christ he hath no form Isa 53.2 nor comeliness and when we see him there is no beauty that we should desire him Indeed beauty is the attractive of the soul the soul must see a beauty in that which it lets out it self to in desiring but our wishing looks on other things makes Christ but mean and contemptible in our eyes 3. Because all other things in comparison of Christ are not worthy a look they are but as vile things as under-things as poor low and mean and base things in comparison of Christ I count all things but loss saith Paul for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord. Phil 3.8 I count them but dung that I may win Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some translate it chaffe others dogs-meat others excrements dung all agree it is such a thing as men usually cast away from them with some indignation 4. Because it is according to the very law of marriage therefore shall a man forsake father Gen. 2.24 and mother and cleave to his wife the Lord Christ marries himself to the souls of his Saints Hos 2.19 I will betroth thee unto me for ever I will betroth thee unto me in righteousness and in judgement and in loving kindness and in mercies and for this cause the soul must forsake all and cleave unto Christ as married wives use to do we must leave all for our husband the Lord Jesus Harken O daughter and consider and encline thine ear forget also thy own people P●al 45.10 and thy fathers House 5. Because Christ is a jealous Christ now jealousie is a passion in the soul that will not endure any sharing in the object beloved the woman that hath a jealous husband must leave all her old companions if she cast any amorous looks or glances after them the husband will be jealous and Jealousie is cruel as the Grave Christians Cant. 8.6 Exod. 20.5 our God is a jealous God our Christ is a jealous Christ He cannot endure that we should look on any other things so as to lust after them 6. Because all other things can never satisfie the eye Eccles 1.8 all things are full of labour saith Solomon man cannot utter it the eye is not satisfied with seeing it is but wearied with looking on divers objects yet still desires new ones but once admit it to behold that glorious sight of Christ and then it rests fully satisfied Hence it is that the Daughters of Zion are called to come forth Go forth O ye daughters of Zion Cant. 3.11 and behold King Solomon with the Crown wherewith his Mother hath crowned him in the day of his espousals and in the day of the gladness of his heart Go forth O ye daughters of Zion lay aside all private and earthly affections and look upon this glory of Christ As the daughters of Jerusalem sitting or remaining in their chambers closets houses could not behold the glory of King Solomon passing by therefore they were willed to come forth of their doors even so if we will behold the great King Jesus Christ in his most excellent glory a sight able to satisfie the Eye to ravish the Heart we must come out of our Doors we must come
Experiences when you look up to Jesus and lean on Jesus are you not best at rest O then why do you not always rest and lean upon him sometime you say his Bread is sweet and his Cup is pleasant how amiable is his Presence At such a time you have never done wondering at him O the sweet impression that are even then on your spirits why do you not then always look unto him or at least why are you not frequent in his disciples posture who looked stedfastly towards Heaven as Christ went up Act. 1.10 How richly might your idle hours and spare time be laid out here to the supply of all necessities bodily or spiritual 3. Consider that an eye an heart on Christ is one of your most unquestionable Evidences of sincerity Where your Treasure is there will your hearts be also Matth. 6.21 If Christ be your Treasure your hearts will be on Christ and surely an heart set upon God in Christ is a true evidence of saving Grace External actions are easiest discovered but those of the heart are surest Evidences when thy learning will be no good proof of thy Grace when thy arguments from thy tongue and hand may be confuted yet then will this Argument from the bent of thy heart prove thee sincere Take a poor Christian that hath a weak judgment a failing memory a stammering tongue yet if his heart be set on Christ I had rather die in this mans condition and have my soul in his souls case than in the case of him without such an heart though he had the most eminent gifts and parts and abilities of any in the world Christians as you would have a sure testimony of the love of God and a sure proof of your title to glory labour to get your hearts on Christ O look on Jesus You may be sure Christ will acknowledg that you really love him when he sees your hearts are set upon him 4. Consider that your looking on Jesus will strengthen patience under the Cross of Christ This is the very particular Motive of the Text Heb. 11.1 2 3. Let us run with patience the Race that is set before us looking unto Jesus the Author and finisher of our Faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right Hand of the Throne of God for consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself lest ye be wearied and faint in your mind It is storied of a Martyr that having offered him a Cup of spirits to sustain him when he seemed to faint under his greatest Trial he returned this answer My Lord and Master had Gall and Vinegar given him to drink as if he had been astonished to see himself fare better than Jesus Christ How may it strengthen your patience in sufferings to think of Christs patience What are you served ill Ay but Jesus Christ was not served so well can you suffer so much as he hath done I tell you nay O then do you stay your murmurings and repinings bear with patience the little you endure and to this end Consider him that hath endured the contradictions of sinners 5. Consider that a through-sight of Christ will encrease your inward joy in Christ Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Joh 8.56 A right sight of Christ will make a right-sighted Christian glad at heart I wonder not that you walk uncomfortably if you never tried this Art of Christ-contemplation can you have comfort from Christ and never think of Christ doth any thing in the world glad you when you do not remember it If you were possessed of all the Treasure in the Earth if you had title to the highest Dignities and never thought of them sure they would never rejoyce you Come look up unto Jesus fix your eyes thoughts and hearts on that blessed objects and then you may expect Davids experience Psa 63.5 my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips when I remember thee upon my bed and meditate of thee in the night watches A frequent access to Christ in a way of meditation cannot but warm the soul in spiritual comforts When the Sun in the spring draws near our part of the earth how do all things congratulate its approach the earth looks green the trees shoot forth the plants revive the birds sing sweetly the face of all things smiles upon us and all the creatures below rejoyce Christians if you would but draw near and look on this Son of Righteousness Jesus Christ what a spring of joy would be within you how would your Graces be fresh and green how would you forget your winter sorrows how early would you rise as those Birds in the spring to sing the Praise of our great Creatour and dear Redeemer 6. Consider that your Eye on Jesus will preserve the vigour of all your Graces As the body is apt to be changed into the temper of the air it breaths in and the food it lives on so will your spirits receive an alteration according to the Objects which they are exercised about You that complain of deadness and dulness that you cannot love Christ nor rejoyce in his loves that you have no life in Prayer nor any other Duty and yet you never tried this quickning course or at least you were careless and unconstant in it what are not you the cause of your own complaints say is not your life hid with Christ in God O whether must you go but to Christ for it If you would have light and heat why then are you not more in the Sun-shine if you would have more of that grace which flowes from Christ why are you no more with Christ for it for want of this recourse to Jesus Christ your Souls are as candles that are not lighted and your duties are as Sacrifices which have no fire fetch one coal daily from this Altar and see if your Offerings will not burn keep close to this reviving Fire and see if your affections will not warm Surely if there be any comfort of hope if any flames of love if any life of faith if any vigor of dispositions if any motions towards God if any meltings of a softned Heart they flow from hence men are apt to bewail their want of desire and hope and joy and faith and love to Jesus Christ whilest this very duty would nourish all these 7. Consider it 's but equal that your hearts should be on Christ when the heart of Christ is so much on you Christ is our Friend and in that respect he loves us and bears us in his heart and shall not he be ours Surely this is ill requital this is a great contradiction to the law of Friendship But Christ is our Lord as well as Friend and if the Lord of glory can stoop so low as to set his heart on sinful dust one would think we should easily
that you may better understand the manner of this generation of the Son of God together with the mutual kindness lovingness joy and delight betwixt the Father and the Son even from Everlasting SECT II. Of our Election in Christ before all Worlds NOw let us look on Christ in his Relation to us before all Worlds God being thus alone himself from everlasting and besides himself there being nothing at all the first thing he did besides what ye have heard or the first thing he possibly and conceivably could do it was this a determination with himself to manifest his Glory Or a purpose in himself to communicate his glory out of his aloneness everlasting unto somewhat else I say unto somewhat else for what is communication but an efflux an emanation an issuing from or a motion betwixt two Terms I have now brought you to the acts or actions of God in reference to his Creatures follow me a little and I shall anon bring you to Christ in relation to your selves These acts or actions of God were and are 1. The Decree 2. The Execution of the Decree of God I must open these Terms 1. The Decree is an action of God out of the Councel and purpose of his own Will determining all things and all the Circumstances and order of all things from all Eternity in himself certainly and unchangably and yet freely Who worketh all things saith the Apostle after the Counsel of his own will Ephes 1.11 and this work or action of God is internal and for ever abiding within his own Essence it self 2. The execution of the Decree is an act of God whereby God doth effectually work in time all things as they were fore-known and Decreed And this action of God is external and by a temporal act passing from God to the Creatures Now for the Decree that is of diverse kinds As first There is a Decree common and general which looks to all the creatures and it is either the Decree of creation or the Decree of Providence and preservation 2. There is a Decree special which belongs to reasonable creatures Angels and Men it is called the Decree of Predestination and it consistss of the Decree of Election and Reprobation Concerning the common and general Decrees we have but little laid down in Scriptures and it is little or nothing at all to our purpose And concerning the special Decree of Angels there is not much in Scriptures and that is as little also to our purpose we have only to deal with Men and with Gods Decree in relation to Mans Salvation before all Worlds And this we call Predestination or the Decree of Election which is either of Christ or of the Members of Christ Christ Himself was first Predestinated This appears by that Saying of God Behold My Servant whom I uphold Isa 41.2 Mine Elect in whom My Soul delighteth I have put My Spirit upon him he shall bring forth Judgment to the Gentiles These very words the Evangelist interprets of Christ Himself Matth. 12.18 Mat. 12.18 And Christ being Predestinate the Members of Christ were Predestinated in Him So the Apostle According as He hath chosen us in Him before the Foundation of the World Ephes 1.4 We are chosen in Christ as in a common Person He was the first Person Elected in order and we in Him Suppose a New Kingdom to be set up a New King is chosen all his Successors are chosen in him Why God hath Erected a Kingdom of Glory He hath chosen Jesus Christ for the King of this Kingdom and in Him He hath chosen us whom He hath made Kings and Priests unto the most High God But observe we this of the Apostle He hath chosen us in Him before the Foundation of the World 1. He hath chosen i.e. God the Father hath chosen not that the Son and Spirit chose not also for if Three of us had but one Will common to us all One could not will any thing which the Will of the other Two should not also will But because the Son sustains the Person of one Elected and the Spirit is the Witness sealing this Grace unto our Hearts therefore the Father only is expressed as the Father alone is often named in Prayer not that the other Persons are not to be prayed unto but because the Son is considered as the Mediatour and the Spirit as the Instructor teaching us to Pray as we ought therefore the Father only is expressed 2. He hath chosen us in Him This Him denotes Christ God-man and this in Him notes the same Christ God-man as the Head and first Elect in whom and after whom in order of Nature all His Body are Elected Mark here the Order but not the Cause of our Election Though Christ be the Cause of our Salvation yet Christ is not the Cause of our Election It is only the Fore-knowledge of God and His free Love that is the Cause thereof 3. He hath chosen us in Him before the Foundation of the World i.e. From all Eternity but because within Eternity God doth fore-see the Things which are done in time therefore this Phrase say some may be extended not only to respect the Actual Creation but the Decree it self of the World 's Being q. d. He hath chosen us in order of Nature before His Decree did lay the Foundation of the World My meaning is not to enter into Controversies this all grant that the antient Love which the Lord hath born to us in Christ is not of Yesterday but before all Worlds Paul mentions Grace given us before all Worlds 1 Tim. 1.9 But that which is the most observable in the Text as to our purpose is that we are chosen in Him We read of Three Phrases in Scripture speaking of Christ Sometimes we are said to have Blessings in Him and sometimes for Him sometimes through Him Sometimes in Him as here He hath chosen us in Him sometimes for Him as elsewhere To you it is given for Christ His sake not only to Believe but to Suffer sometimes through Him as in that of Paul Thanks be to God which giveth us the Victory through our Lord Jesus Christ Phil. 1.29 1 Cor. 15.57 Now Blessings come through Christ in respect that Christ is a Mediatour not only of Impetration but Execution not only obtaining and receiving from Grace all Good for us but in executing and applying Efficaciously the same unto us And Blessings come for Christ in respect that Christ doth by His Obedience obtain every good Thing which in time is communicated to us And we have Blessings in Christ because that in Christ as a Common Store-house every thing is first placed which is to be imparted afterwards to any of us And thus we are chosen in Christ as in a common Person This Grace of Election began first at Christ our Head and so descends downwards on us His Members Christ is the First Begotten amongst all His Brethren having
should be offered and administred unto all Men without Exception 4. That certain singular Persons should be saved whom God fore-saw would Repent and Believe and Persevere This way is justly opposed by Others who deny God's Acts in Intention to be in the same order as we see them in Production In order of Material Existing it is granted that Christ is Revealed Promised and Exhibited after Sin and that we Repent Believe Persevere before we are Saved But in order of God's Intention Christ is before Sin and Salvation before Repentance Faith Perseverance The Apostle reckoned the Order in which Things exist thus 1. The World 2. You The Elect. 3. Christ 1 Cor. 3.22 23. 4. God 1 Cor. 3.22 23. But he gives us to understand the Order of Intention thus As First God intends His own Glory then Christ then the Elect then the World Certainly it is an hard thing to marshal the Eternal Immanent Acts of the Divine Understanding or Will into First Second Third Fourth All God's Projects are like Himself Tota simul perfecta possessio sui who is a whole and perfect Possession of Himself together and at once so as in Him considered there is no Prius nor Posterius in any of His acts but considered in Effects or in respect of us one thing may be said to be First Second or Third in Nature Time Being before or after another And thus in respect of us we say the End must be in Nature before the Means to the End Now the Permission of the Fall Repentance Faith Perseverance are used by God as Means to bring some to Salvation God therefore doth first project our Salvation and then the Means and both the End and the Means are the Product of God's Election or Predestination Here then is the Project That God will glorify His Grace to this end He will predestinate Christ in Christ He will choose some of the Sons of Men to Salvation whom Eccles 1.4 notwithstanding Sin He will make holy and without blame before Him in love This Project or Plot or Design of God will be further enlarged in the next Passage viz. His Counsels SECT V. The Counsel OF the Counsels of God concerning Man before all Worlds we read in several Texts Christ was delivered by the determinate Counsel of God For of a truth Acts 2.23 against thy Holy Child Jesus whom Thou hast anointed both Herod Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles Acts 4.27 28. the People of Israel were gathered together for to do whatsoever thy Hand thy Counsel determined before to be done Ephes 1.11 And thus the Members of Christ are said to Obtain an Inheritance being Predestinated according to the Purpose of Him who worketh all Things after the Counsel of His own Will Of this Counsel of God's Will we know but little now yet this will be made known when we come to Glory yea it will be a great Part of the Glory of Heaven for the Lord to make known the Counsel of His Will we now know his Will but we shall then know the Counsel of His Will praise Him to all Eternity for it This shall be the Glory of the Saints that they shall see into the Counsel of God's Will in chusing them and calling them and passing by others and letting others go In the mean-while thus far we may know for thus far He hath revealed Himself concerning His Counsels about Man from Everlasting 1. That Man should be a Reasonable Creature and because that very Creature is unavoidably subject to the Creator for He made all things for Himself Prov. 16.4 and all is to return that Glory to Him for which He made them therefore Man should serve Him as all other Creatures must only his Service should be after a reasonable manner out of Judgment Psal 119.30 Heb. 11.25 26. Discretion and Election Hence David is said to have chosen the Way of Truth Moses to have Chosen the Afflictions of God's People the Reproaches of Christ before the Pleasures of Sin or the Treasures of Egypt And hence it is that Holiness in the Phrase of Scripture is called Judgment He shall convince the world of Judgment John 16.11 Mat. 12.20 he shall bring forth Judgment unto Victory and hence it is that our Service is called a Reasonable Service God would not set any such determinating Law over the Operations of Man as over other Creatures that so he might truly work out of Judgment and stand or fall by his own Election 2. That if Man should deviate from this Reasonable Service and break the Law which God would give and which he himself should have an Original Power to perform that then he should incur the Displeasure of God and such a Curse and such a Penalty should be inflicted And here comes in the Fall of Man into God's Consideration He looks upon it as a wilful transgression of his Law and by how much the Law was more just and the obedience more easie by so much he judges the transgression more unreasonable and the punishment more certain and intolerable 3. That Sin should not pass Unrevenged and that for these reasons 1. Because of Gods infinite hatred thereof Hab. 1.13 He is of purer Eyes than to behold Evil He cannot look on Iniquity it provokes a Nauseousness and Abhorrency in him For all these are things which I hate Zach. 8.17 saith in the Lord They are a trouble unto me I am weary to bear them 2. Because of his truth Gen. 2.17 he hath said In the day thou eatest thereof thou s●al● surely die or thou shalt dying die die Temporally and die Eternally and surely God will in no wise abolish this Law Matth. 5.8 One jot or tittle shall in no wise pass from the ●aw till all be fulfilled 3. Because of his terrour and fearful Majesty for God will have Men alwayes tremble before him and by his terrour to be perswaded from sinning 2 Cor. 5.11 Matth. 10.28 Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men and Fear him who is able to destroy bo●h Body and Soul in Hell I say unto you Heb. 12.28 29. f●ar him Let us have Grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with Reverence and Godly Fear for God is a Consuming Fire Upon these Reasons God is resolved Sin shall not pass unrevenged lest thereby His Justice should be securely abused his Hatred against Sin the less declared His Truth questioned and His dreadful Majesty by Men neglected 4. That every Man notwithstanding Sin should not be utterly destroyed and that for the●e Reasons 1. Because of that infinite Delight which the Lord hath in Mercy Why this Delight is it that so disposeth Him to pardon abundantly to exercise Loving-kindness on the Sons of Men Psal 103.8 Who is a God like unto Thee that pardonest Iniquity and passest by the Transgression of the Remnant of
At one act he foreknew whom he would choose and set apart of his own free love to life and salvation And here you have the cause of Gods predestinating his Saints to glory it was only the foreknowledge and free love of God the Lord from everlasting and before the foundation of the world fore-ordained or fore-appointed some to salvation nothing moving him thereunto but his own good pleasure and his own free love This is it that in order of nature and strictly goes before and is the cause of our Predestination Rom. 8.27 for whom he did foreknow he also did Predestinate first he foreknew and then he did Predestinate first he loved and then he Elected first he embraced them as his own in the Arms of his eternal love and then of his free love he set them apart to life and to salvation hence the Apostle calls it the Election of Grace Rom. 11.5 signifying that our Election springs out of the womb of love free love free grace is the cause of our Election Some Object that we are Predestinated and Elected according to fore-knowledge i.e. say they according to the fore-knowledge of our Faith and Repentance and Perseverance Rom. 8.29 but if that were Pauls fore-knowledge why then would he say that those whom he did fore-know he also did Predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son if God did fore-know them first conformed why did he then Predestinate them to be conformed And if that were Peters foreknowledg why then would he say that they were Elect according to the fore-knowledg of God the Father unto Obedience 2 Pet. 1 2 if God did fore-know them first Obedient how then did he fore-know them unto Obedience I know it is a question whether God in fore-sight of belief and perseverance in Faith and Holiness do choose us to Salvation For my part I am for the Negative upon these well-known grounds 1. Because Election on Faith foreseen makes God to go but of himself looking to this or that in the Creature upon which his will may be determined to Elect now this is against the all-sufficiency of Gods knowledge as if he should get knowledge from the things we know and against the all-sufficiency of Gods Will as if he must be beholding to something in us before the business of our Election can be determined 2. Because Election on Faith or Love fore-seen it makes God to choose us when we have chosen him and to love us when we have loved him first but this is contrary to Scripture 1 John 4.19 Verse 10. We love him because he loved us first and herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins 3. Because Election on faith fore-seen stands not with the freedom of Gods Will within himself Rom. 9.15 but God tells us plainly I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion * John Goodwins exposition on Rom. 9.15 16. I know some would not have this Text understood of Election from Eternity but of Justification Adoption Salvation and yet they grant the truth of it to be alike whether in reference to Election or Justification the words I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy are one and the same with those words spoken by God to Moses Exod. 33.19 I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious Now to be gracious as is confessed properly imports a propenseness of mind and will to do some signal good without any motive or engagement thereunto from without especially from the person or persons to whom this good is done or intended which is a plain Argument that I will have mercy is not of that kind of mercy the exercise whereof is drawn out or procured by any thing whatsoever in those to whom it is shewed but because it pleaseth it self or him in whom it resideth so to do and in this respect mercy differs very litle or nothing at all from grace the Apostle exchanging Moses his words was but his Interpreter 4. Because Election on Faith fore-seen is all one as to say we are ordained to Eternal Life because we believe Acts 13.48 but the Scripture speaks contrary as many as were ordained to Eternal Life believed and not as many as believed were Ordained to Eternal Life 5. Because a prime and Eternal cause cannot depend upon the self-same temporal effects which are thereby caused Now Election is the prime and eternal Cause whence our Faith Repentance and Perseverance were derived and therefore our Faith Repentance and Perseverance cannot be imagined antecedent Causes Conditions or Motives unto the Divine Election 6. Because Election on Faith fore-seen or Election of men believing and persevering in Faith and Holiness unto the last gasp brings with it many absurdities As 1. This is to Elect men not considered as in the State of Innocency nor of Misery but as in state of Grace contrary to their own Tenets 2. This is not to bring Faith Holiness Perseverance out of the gracious benefit of Election but to bring Election out of the foreseen Acts of believing E●cles 1.4 obeying persevering quite contrary to Scriptures he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him in Love 3. This were to say that Election or Predestination affords no man any help at all in the way unto Eternal Salvation for how can that be the cause leading infallibly in the way unto Eternal Life which comes not so much as into consideration until a man have run out his Race at least in Gods fore-knowledge in Faith and Godliness and be arrived at Heavens Gates Such a falsely named Predestination might more truly and properly have been called a Post-destination But I have too long stood on this Controversie 1 Tim. 1.4 and indeed it is against my design which is not to minister questions but rather edifying which is in Faith I remember what I have Read and indeed I begin already to feel that these Controversal Points will but discompose our spirits and wast our zeal our love our delight in Jesus this lovely subject and object we are a viewing even by the interruption and diversion of our contemplations not a word more in that Kind SECT VII The Purpose OF the Purpose of God concerning mans salvation before all worlds we read in Scriptures we know that all things work together for good to them that love God Rom. 8.28 to them who are called according to his purpose And it is said of Jacob and Esau that being not yet born neither having done any good or evil that the purpose of God according to Election might stand And in Christ we are said to obtain an inheritance Rom. 9 11 being predestinate according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the
under the Power of the promise we begin then to know that we are in that same Covenant But this is rather say they to feel our selves in that Covenant which God hath made with Christ than to enter into Covenant with God our selves 2. Others argue hence that there is no Covenant or promise made with Christ personal but only with Christ mystical such who are members of Christ and so united to Christ for mark the Text say they the promise is made first to Abraham and then to his seed this seed is such a seed as comes to have right to the promise in order from Abraham now this cannot be Christ personal but Christ mystical And whereas the Text sayes the promise is not made to seeds but to one seed which is Christ John 8 37 Gal. 37.29 they distinguish of a double seed of Abraham First there is a carnal natural seed according to the flesh and in this sense Christ speaks to those wicked unbelieving Jewes which went about to kill him I know ye are Abrahams seed but ye seek to kill me Secondly there is a spiritual seed that walk in the faith steps of Abraham know ye therefore that they which are of faith the same are the children of Abraham And if ye be Christs then are ye Abrahams seed and heirs according to the promise now the promise is made to Abraham and his seed not seeds i.e. not to both seeds both carnal and spiritual but only to the one which is the spiritual and this seed is Christ i.e. Christ mystical the body of Christ the faithful that are knit to Christ by a true and lively faith 3. Others argue hence that this Covenant is made both betwixt God and Christ and betwixt God and us First betwixt God and Christ all the work of redemption and salvation was transacted betwixt God and Christ before the foundation of the world but this doth not hinder but that the same promise is afterwards in time made to us also Look as it is in Covenants amongst men while the child is yet unborn the father takes conveyance of an inheritance for his child which he keeps in his own hand till the child be born and come to years and then he puts it into his own possession so it is here we are for a time hid in the womb of Gods Election till we are brought forth by the grace of regeneration now during this time we are not in our selves capable of receiving any promise of life made to us but it is made to Christ in our behalf and he receives the promise from the Father in our stead but yet so that when we come to be born anew the promises are made unto our selves and then we are put into possession of them Here then is the meaning of the Text the Covenant is made with Christ i.e. with Christ and his heirs principally with Christ and with Abrahams nature in Christ and yet personally with believers who are also the seed of Abraham All the difference is in that terme Christ what thereby is meant whether Christ personal or Christ mystical or Christ representative And we say 1. Not Christ personal I mean not Christs person singly considered for that 1. Would fight with the scope of Paul whose bent it is to prove the promise of eternal life to be made to all believers and that 2. ver 17. ve● 8. ver 14. ver 13. Would conclude the promise of eternal life to be given onely to Christ and not at all to those that are believers in Christ 2. Not Christ Mystical for 1. The promise is made to Christ In whom the Covenant was confirmed 2. In whom the nations were blessed 3. In whom we receive the promise of the Spirit through faith 4. Who was made a curse for us Now not any of these can agree to Christ mystical Christ mystical did not confirme the Covenant nor bless the Nations nor give the Spirit nor was made a curse 3. It is Christ representative Christ-Mediatour Christ a publick person to whom the promises were made for Christ and his heirs are but all of them one confederate family and as the Covenant of works was made with Adam and all his and there were not two Covenants so here the Covenant is made with the second Adam and his children But every man in his own order Christ the first-fruits 1 Cor. 15.23 and afterwards they that are Christs I have now propounded the Object we are to look unto it is Jesus in that eternity before all time untill the Creation Our next business is to direct us in the Art or Mystery of Grace how we are to look unto him in this respect CHAP. II. SECT I. Of knowing Jesus carrying on the Great work of our Salvation in that Eternity LOoking comprehends knowing considering desiring hoping believing loving joying calling upon Jesus and conforming to Jesus If then we will have an inward experimental Look upon Jesus we must act and exercise all these particulars 1. We must know Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in that eternity before all time Come learn what this Jesus is 1. In his relation to God and so he is Gods Son eternally begotten before all worlds See above and learn it throughly who it is that was begotten for the person when it was for the time how it was for the manner and what was the mutual kindness and love of him that begot and of him that was begotten O the height and depth of this knowledge 2. Come learn what this Jesus is in his relation to us before all worlds and to that purpose study close that great transaction betwixt God and Christ for our salvation 1. Study that project of God that he would glorifie his grace and to this end that he would predestinate Christ and in Christ he would choose some of the souls of men and amongst the rest that he would choose thee whom notwithstanding sin he would make holy and without blame before him in love 2. Study the counsels of God concerning man before all worlds O 't was an hard question how sin should be pardoned the sinner reconciled and yet God glorifie his justice none but the wisdome of God could ever find out a way to have had mercy on the man and yet to take vengeance on the sin but herein appeared the depth of the riches both of the wisdome and knowledge of God he devised the way to translate this mans sin suppose thine own sins on anothers person who was able to bear them to interest this mans person suppose thine own self in anothers righteousness who was able to cover him 3. Study the foreknowledge of God how the Lord knew his from everlasting with a knowledge of love and approbation after the project was laid and the counsels of God were agreed upon it then God fore-knew or fore-saw whom to imbrace in his eternal love And O my soul if thou art one of
and God will not spare him that is the very word in the Scripture Rom. 8.32 he spared not his own Son this surely this declares Gods love to righteousness more than if all the World should be Damned 2. Suppose the sinner that is reconciled had been Damned then the justice of God had been but in satisfying and never had been fully satisfyed but in that way that God hath found out to save a sinner his justice is not onely satisfying but it comes fully to be satisfied to have enough As for instance suppose a man to be a creditor to one who owes him 100000 l. this man is poor and the utmost he can pay is but a penny a day suppose the creditor should lay him in the Goale until he had paid the utmost farthing it is true he would be receiving day after day but he would never be paid so long as the debtor lives now if another rich man should come and lay down an 100000 l. at once the creditor is presently satisfied Why here is the difference betwixt Gods satisfying his Justice upon sinners and upon Jesus Christ God comes upon the sinner and requires the debt of punishment because he did not pay the debt of obedience God casts him into Prison and the utmost he can pay is but as it were a penny a day and hence the poor sinner must still be paying and paying and paying to Eternity this is the ground of their Eternal punishment in Hell because in any finite time they can never pay enough But now comes Jesus Christ and he fully payes the debt at once so that justice saith I have enough I am satisfied Surely this is the greater Glory to the very justice of God These were the counsels of God from all Eternity how he should make way for his love and goodness and yet satisfie his Truth and Justice O my soul consider and wonder Jesus Christ was the Expedient and in Christ not only Gods mercy but his justice is Exalted yea more Exalted and more Glorified in thy salvation then ever it could have been in thy Damnation 3 Consider the fore-knowledge of God he knew from everlasting whom he would set apart for life and salvation All the Saints of God from first to last they were then present to him and before him and he did look on them in his Beloved Christ Before there was a World or a man or any creature in it he fore-knew Adam and Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Patriarchs and all the Prophets and all the Apostles all the Disciples of Christ and Believers in Christ And O my soul if thou art one of Gods Elect he foreknew thee with a knowledge of love and approbation he had thee in his Eye Rom. 9.11 and Heart he had thoughts on Jacob when he was yet unborn and had done neither good nor evil Assure thy self the Lord works not without prevision or fore-knowledge of the things effected that cannot be in God which is not to be found in a wise and prudent man he that builds an house hath the frame of it first in himself and the Psalmist tells thee that the eyes of God did see thy substance yet being unperfect Psal 139.16 Rom. 9.13 in this Book of knowledge were all thy members written when as yet there was none of them yea he knew thee with a knowledge of singular love he embraced thee in his Eternal love as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated ● will not say that this love was actually bestowed on thee till due time yet it was prepared for thee from all Eternity and hence it is called an everlasting love The Lord hath appeared of old unto me Jer. 31.3 saying I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindness have I drawn thee O muse and meditate and ponder on this love it contains in it these particulars as 1. The eternal good will of God what else is the love of God towards the Elect but his everlasting good will to shew them mercy to do them good and to save their souls hence the Angels sung that Antheam at Christs birth Glory to God in the highest Luk. 2.14 and on earth peace good will towards men 2. The Eternal pleasure and delight of God in the sons of men the greatest delight that God hath or ever had it is in communicating himself to his Son firstly and next unto his Saints nay such delight he takes in letting out his mercy to his Saints as that he was well-pleased with the death of his own Son as a means conducing thereunto O wonderfull one would think that the death of Christ should be the most abhorring to the heart of God of any thing in the world and yet saith the Scripture It pleased the Lord to bruise him Isa 53.10 he took a pleasure and delight in the very bruising of Jesus Christ the Lord saw this was the way for him to communicate himself in the fulness of his grace unto his Saints and therefore though it cost him so dear as the death of his own Son yet he was well-pleased with it 3. This love of God contains in it a fore-knowledg and approbation of all those effects of his love whether they be temporal concerning this life or Eternal concerning the life to come Concerning these effects of his love saith John 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God q. d. Behold it stand amazed at it that children of wrath should become the sons of the most high God for a beggar on the dunghil a vagabond a runnagate from God a prodigal a stranger to God whom the Lord had no cause to think on to be made a Son of God Almighty O divine love Pause a while and muse on this O my soul that God should fore-know thee from all Eternity with a knowledg of love and approbation it is admirable to consider I say it is admirable to consider 4. Consider the purpose of God concerning thy salvation 1 Thes 5 9 God hath not appointed or purposed us wrath but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ As when we have a will to do any thing there follows upon this in the mind a setled purpose to effect it so when God hath loved some to life there is in God a setled purpose of bringing them to it that the purpose of God according to Election might stand or be sure Rom. 9.11 it imports Gods stability and steadiness and constancy and firmness in saving souls There is much inconstancy and fickleness in the love of man or in the love of a woman but the love of God to his people is a steady love as the Bridegroom rejoyceth over the Bride Isa 62.5 so shall thy God rejoyce over thee not only so doth thy God but so shall thy God rejoyce over thee
desire besides thee A right beholding of Christ in his eternal workings will cause a desire of Christ above all desires the heart now thirsts for nothing but him that is all all power all love all holiness all happiness tell such a soul of the world and gold and glory O what are these the soul will quickly tell you Phil. 3.8 the world is dung and gold is dung glory is dung all is but loss dung for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord. Give me God Christ saith the soul or I die Oh my desires are to him who hath done all this for me Is not this the period still of thy expression at the end of every discourse would Christ were mine thou hearest it may be some worldings talk such a one and such a one hath got so much in these times he that was yesterday as poor as Lazarus he is this day like that nameless rich man cloathed in purple Luk. 16.19 and fine linnen and faring sumptuously every day ay but dost not thou reply either in word or heart would Christ were mine and then I had got more then he Poor soul dost thou not gasp only after Christ when thou fetchest as I may say the very deepest breath canst thou read over the generation of Jesus the Son of God the time when he was begotten the manner of his begetting the mutual kindness and love of him that begets and of him that is begotten and dost not thou pant and breath and gasp after Jesus at every period canst thou read over Jesus his acts and decrees in reference to thy self canst thou turn over those many leaves in every of which is discovered those everlasting loves of God in his projects counsels foreknowledg purpose decree covenant for thy souls happiness and art thou not ready at every discovery to sing Davids Psalm Psa 42.1 2 as the hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God my soul thirsteth for God for the living God O when shall I come and appear before God O my soul hadst thou but these pantings thirstings breathings after God and Christ thou mightest comfortably conclude these are the fruits of Gods Spirit it is the Spirit of the Lord Jesus which makes those sighs and groanes in thee Rom. 8.26 which cannot be expressed He and thee sigh together one in another and one after another O therefore look Look unto Jesus and sigh and desire after him 3. We may and must desire after the full and utmost execution whereby God effectually Workes in time according to all his workings or decrees before time God that purposed and decreed from all Eternity he will not have done the full execution of that purpose or decree till that after-Eternity in that world without end Indeed some part is a fulfilling now but the main the great part is yet to come why then as we see the Plot Phil. 1.23 let us desire after the full accomplishment let us desire after the glory without end to which we were predestinated before the beginning It was Pauls desire to be dissolved to be with Christ As men burthened so should we desire and groan after the enjoyments of God in the world to come O my soul that thou were but cast in the Apostles mould that they affections were but on the wing that they might take flight and steer their course towards heaven and thereupon that thou mightest say yond is the glorious house the goodly building made without hands which God from all Eternity decreed to be my home my rest my dwelling place to all Eternity and in yond stately Fabrick is many an heavenly Inhabitant before I come there are Angels and there are all the souls of Sain●s that from Adam to this day have had their pass out of this sinful world yea there is Jesus the Son of God and there is God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost and if I am predestinated to this fellowship Lord when shall I have run through the means that I may come to this end O my end where is my end where is my Lord my God my Comforter where is my rest where is my end I cannot be at rest without my end and therefore come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a Roe Cant. 8.14 or a young Hart upon the Mountains of Spices Christians why are not your Spirits alwayes breathing thus after the glory to which you are predestinated why do not you long after full enjoyment the utmost execution of Gods decree why are not your hearts your souls your spirits already in heaven Surely there be your relations your Father is there your elder brother is there and there are many I dare say most of your other younger brethren again there is your interest your estate is there if you believe and therefore Where should your hearts be but where your treasure is come then come set in tune those desires of your souls set your affections on things above especially on that one thing Jesus Christ Looking unto Jesus SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that respect 4. WE must hope in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in that Eternity It is not enough to know and consider and desire but we must hope and maintain our hope as to our own interest Now hope is a passion whereby we expect probably or certainly some future good All the question is whether that salvation concerning which the great transaction was betwixt God and Christ belongs now to me and what are the grounds and foundations on which my hope is built I know some exceedingly abuse this Doctrine If God had before all worlds appointed me to salvation why then I may live as I list I need not hear or pray or confer or perform any holy Duty for I am sure I shall be saved And thus at once they take away all grounds of hope It is true Gods decrees are unchangeable but they do not afford any such inferences or deductions as these you might as well say the Lord hath appointed me to live to such a time and before that time I shall not cannot die and therefore I need no meat nor drink nor cloathes nor any other thing Ah silly foolish devilish arguing Gods decree is for the means as well as for the end whom God hath decreed to save them also hath he decreed to call to justifie to sanctifie before he save O my Soul look to the grounds whereon they hope is built if those be weak thy hope is weak but if those be strong thy hope will prove most strong and certain and prudent In the disquisition of these grounds say not in thine heart who shall ascend into Heaven Rom. 10.16 or who shall descend into the deep seek not above or below it is not possible for thee to go bodily into Heaven to see the Records of Eternity and to
roots did not that immortal seed preserve them Of this sign we are sure if any of the former belongs to us but to this we cannot actually seal till the end of our life Come now are these O my soul the grounds of thy hopes hath Gods word come with power on thy heart hath the Lord so effectually called thee that thou hast left all to follow Christ dost thou believe on the Lord Jesus for life and for salvation art thou holy is thy life holy dost thou walk exactly as the grace of God which bringeth to salvation teacheth Canst thou with inlarged thankfulness amplifie the love and grace of God in thy election surely these effects are the very fuel of hope they are the blessed and clear evidences so thy souls election and therefore hope well take strong consolation it is clear as the Sun that God hath predestinated thee to life and that thy name is written in the Book of Life and that none in Heaven or on Earth or in Hell shall be able to blot it out again Away with all sad dumpish dejected thoughts Look unto Jesus hope in Christ that that very salvation concerning which that great transaction was betwixt God and Christ belongs even to thee and that one day thou shalt see it and enjoy the happiness of it to all Eternity SECT V. Of believing in Jesus in that respect 5. WE must believe in Jesus as carrying on that great work of salvation for us in that Eternity It is not enough to know and consider and desire and hope but we must believe Now this is the nature and property of faith to apply all these ancient and future doings and dealings of God to our selves as if they were now present Some difference there is betwixt hope and faith as hope hath respect to that which the Word pomiseth rem verbi but faith respects the word it self verbum rei hope eyes chiefly the mercy and goodness of the promise but faith eyes mainly the authority and truth of the promiser hope looks upon its object as future but faith only looks upon the object as present both make a particular application to themselves but hope in a waiting for it and faith in a way of now enjoying it Hence faith is called the substance of things hoped for it is the substance or confidence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 as if we had them already in hand faith gives the soul a present interest in God in Christ in all those glorious things in the Gospel of Christ even in the things of eternal life Faith is an appropriating an applying an uniting grace it is a blessed thing to have the sight of God there is much power in it but to see God in his Glory as my God to see all the Majesty greatness and goodness of God as those things that my soul hath an interest in to see how the eternal counsels of God wrought for me to make me happy why this is of the nature of Faith And herein lies the sweetness of faith in that we believe not Christ only to be a Saviour and righteousness but my Saviour and my righteousness And therefore Luther affirmed that the sweetness of Christianity lay in pronounes when a man can say my Lord and my God and my Jesus I live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 who loved me and gave himself for me O my soul believe for thy self believe and be confident of it that those Eternal projects counsels love purpose decree and covenant betwixt God and Christ were all for thee hast not thou a promise Nay was there not a promise before the world began and that very promise the promise of eternal life Mark the words Titus 1.2 in hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the World began Here 's a promise and a promise of Eternal life and a promise of Eternal life made by God by God that cannot lie and that before there was a World or any man in the World If thou enquirest to whom then was this promise made Sweet soul it was made to Christ for thee many promises thou hast in Scripture made more immediatly to thy self but this was the grand promise and all the other promises they are but a draught of that grand promise that God the Father made to his Son before the World began O cries the Soul I cannot believe what is it possible that God in his Eternity should have any thought of me What of me being not yet born Rom. 9.11 neither having done any good or evil What of me born in these last times of the world the least of Saints the greatest of Sinners less then the least of all Gods mercies that of such a one the great God the Majesty of Heaven and Earth should have a thought a project a counsel a knowledge of approbation a purpose a decree Nay enter into a Covenant with his Son for my salvation I cannot believe it Alas What am I to God or what need hath God of me If all the Nations of the Earth are to him but as a drop of a bucket Isa 40.15 and as the small dust of the Ballance O what a minime am I of that drop or what a little little atome am I of that small dust and is it probable that the greatness of God the goodness of God the power of God the wisdom of God the Eternal Counsels of God should work for me to make me glorious blessed happy to make me one with himself and one with his Son and one with his Spirit what care take I of every dust of the Earth or of every sand one the Sea-shore and yet these are my fellow-creatures there 's a thousand times more disproportion betwixt God and me and would God take care of me before I was or before the World was what would he busie himself and his Son about such a worthless wretched worm would he decree Christ to come from the Father for me to be my Redeemer my Jesus my Saviour I cannot I dare not I will not believe O stay my soul and be not faithless but believing I 'le take thy argument in pieces As Jer. 29 11 1. Thou sayst hath God any thoughts of me Yes saith God I know the thoughts that I think towards you thoughts of peace and not of evil and before the World was my thoughts Prov. 8.3 and my delights were with the Sons of men 2. Thou sayst I have no thoughts no care of my fellow-creatures Isa 55.8 as of the dust or sand or atoms and what then my thoughts are not as your thoughts neither are your ways my ways saith the Lord for as the Heavens are higher than the Earth so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts What if thou hast no thoughts or care of the smaller creatures yet God extends his thoughts and care and providence not only to thee but
everlastingly for it O my soul canst thou ponder on this and not love him dearly who has thus loved thee Come stir up the gift that is in thee if thou art a Christian thou hast some sparks though now it may be under the ashes come rub chase and warm thy affections at this fire love like a watch must be wound up or else it will fall downwards what dost thou why stand'st thou idle in the heat of the Day Christ hath fire in his hand 't is but looking up and reaching out thy hand to take it from him O take it with both thy hands and be thankful for it Prayer ejaculation contemplation judicious observation of the Spirits season are thy best instruments to kindle this fire of love in thee And methinks thy heart should begin now to melt methinks it should receive more easie impressions from the object before it methinks these eternal works and acts of God and Christ towards thy poor soul should begin to overcome thee Cant. 6.5 Cant 8.6 and to burne thy heart as with coales of Juniper Why Lord is it thus was I Elected from all Eternity in Christ was I ordained to a glorious inheritance before there was a World was this business to make me happy one of the cheef deep counsels of God was this one of the works of his wisdome that he was exercised about before the World began was this the great designe of God in making the World and in making Heaven the place of glory to glorifie himselfe and to glorifie such a poor wretch as I am O then how should this but mightily inflame my heart with the love God and love of Christ how should I choose but say as the Martyr did Oh that I had as many lives as I have haires on my head to lay them down for Christ Ah what flames of Divine affection what raptures of zeal what ravishments of delight what extasies of obedience can be enough for my blessed God and dearest Redeemer SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. WE must joy in Jesus as carrying on that great work of our salvation in that Eternity This joy is a passion arising from the sweetness of the Object that we enjoy O my soul dost thou believe and art thou now cast into a pang of love how then should thy joy but come on As Christ said to the 70. In this rejoyce not Luk. 10.20 that the spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven so rejoyce not thou in this that the world is thine that riches are thine that thou hast subdued men and devils but herein rejoyce that thy name is written in the Book of life O what a comfortable point is this that the Father and Christ should transact a bargaine from Eternity concerning thee by name that the Father and the Son should commune together concerning thy heaven as if their language had been thus Father what shall be given to thy justice to ransome such a one Abraham Isaac Jacob Matthew Mark Luke John Mary Martha Hannah c. why no more but this thou shalt dye my Son and whosoever believeth in thee shall live for ever Why then saith Christ I will engage for such and such a one I will enter into Bond for such and such a person Abraham shall believe in time See I have writ down his name in the Book of life And who art thou that readest art thou a believer dost thou believe in the Lord Jesus Christ Christ said the same of thee and entered into a bond for thee and entered they name in the Book of life See the certainty of this in Phil. 4.3 Phil. 4 3. Thou Thomas Andrew Peter Christ knows thee by name and thy name is written in the Book of life O go thy way and rejoyce and take strong consolation is there not cause why I tell thee thy name is in the Book of Heaven and if this may adde to thy joy know there is none in Heaven or Earth shall ever be able to blot it out again No no poor soul Rom. 8.1 there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus God hath decreed thy salvation and Gods decree shall stand let Men and Devils say what they will to the contrary Psal 33.11 The counsel of the Lord standeth for ever the thoughts of his heart to all generations it is as possible for God to deny himself as it is possible for thee a believer to perish 1 Pet. 1.5 We are kept saith the Apostle by the power of God through faith to salvation and therefore rejoyce and againe rejoyce yea raise up thy joy to that pitch of triumph which is joy elevated and elevated so high that it comes to victoriousness and magnanimous conquest of heart over all things say with the Apostle what my name written in the Book of life Rom. 8 3● 35 38 39. who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect who then shall separate me from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword nay I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate me from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus my Lord. SECT VIII Of calling on Jesus in that respect 8. VVE must call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus This also is included in looking as David while Praying unto thee do I lift up mine Eyes Psa 123.1 O thou that dwellest in the Heavens Now this calling on God or looking to God contains Prayer and Praise 1. We must pray that all these transactions betwixt God and Christ may be assuredly ours and that God would clear up our Titles more and more yea and seeing all good things tending to Salvation were from all Eternity prepared for us we are therefore to pray that by prayer we may draw them down from Heaven for what though our Evidences be clear Yet this must not cast out means God doth not use to bestow his saving Graces on lazy sluggards those therefore who from the certainty of Predestination do pretend that the duty of Prayer is superfluous do plainly shew that they have no certainty at all Aquinas Aquinas part c q. art 8. was Orthodox in this the Predestinate must Pray because by these effects of Predestination the Salvation of Souls is best ascertained The same Spirit which Witnesseth to our Spirit that we are his Chosen is also the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication and therefore he that believes that he is one of Gods Elect he cannot but pray for those things which he believeth that God hath prepared for him before the foundation of the World 2. We must praise God what that God should look on us and Predestinate us to Life
make you able Ministers not of the Letter but of the Spirit He is such a Prophet as teacheth inwardly clearly experimentally and sweetly no man in the world can say this or do this but Jesus Christ the great Prophet of the Church whom God hath raised up like unto Moses or far above Moses Oh my Soul consider if thou art thus taught of God 4. I will forgive their Iniquity and I will remember their Sins no more Rom. 4.7 Consider of this Blessed are they whose Iniquities are forgiven and whose Sins are covered Consider O my soul suppose thy case and thy condition thus As thou livest under Laws of men so for the transgression of those Laws thou art called to account the Judge weighs and gives an impartial and just judgment he Dooms thee to the Axe or Rack or Wheel and because of the aggravation of thy Crime he commands thee to be tortured leisurely that Bones Sinews Lights Joints might be pained for twenty thirty forty fifty years that so much of thy flesh should be cut off every day that such and such a Bone should be broken such and such a day and that by art the flesh should be restored and the Bone cured again that for so many years as is said thou mightest be kept every day dying and yet never die that all this while thou must have no Sleep nor Ease nor Food nor Cloathing convenient for thee that Whips of Iron Lashes and Scourges of Scorpions that Racks Wheels Cauldrons full of melted Lead should be prepared instruments of thy continual horrible terrible Torments in this case suppose a mighty Prince by an Act of free and special Grace should deliver thee from this Pain and Torture and not only so but should give thee a Life in perfect health should put thee into a Paradise of Pleasures where all the honour acclamations love and service of a world of Men and Angels should await thee and where thou shouldst be elivated to the top of all imaginable Happiness above Solomon in the highest Royalty or Adam in his first Innocency where not this mercy wouldest thou not thing it the highest Act of Grace and Love that any creature could extend to his fellow-creature and yet O my Soul all this is nothing but a shadow of grace in comparison of the love and rich grace of God in Christ in the justification of a sinner If thou hast a right to this promise I well forgive thy Iniquity and I will remember thy sin no more Thou art delivered from eternal Death and thou art entitled to an eternal Kingdom O know thy blessedness aright Consider how infinitly thou art engaged to God and Christ and mercy and free-grace This promise sounds forth nothing but grace and blessing grace from God and blessing on us it is grace because nothing but grace and mercy can forgive it is grace because God if he will hath power in his hand to Revenge he doth not pass by sin as men do offences when they dissemble forgiveness they may forgive because they have not power to avenge Dut 32.35 Exod. 36. ●4 it is otherwise with God To me belonges Vengeance and Recompence saith God He is able to destroy and yet he chuseth to forgive this is his Name strong and gracious O my Soul thou art apt to complain what will the Lord forgive my Sins What reason hath God to look on me to Pardon me to pluck me as a firebrand out of the Fire of Hell why should God forgive me But now consider if thy heart be humbled the Lord will do it 1. Because he delighteth in Mercy it is a pleasure to God to forgive Sins Micah 7.18 never did we take more pleasure nor so much pleasure in acting and committing of sin as he doth in the pardoning of sin he is the Father of Mercies 2 Co. 1.3 he delights in mercy as a Father in his Children it doth him good to see the Fruits of his own mercy in taking away the sins of his own people 2. Because it is his purpose which he hath purposed within himself from all Eternity this was the great design of God as you have heard to make his grace glorious in those whom he intends to save he will have the praise of the glory of his Grace Eph. 1.6 2 Thes 1.10 he will not lose his glory he will be admired in his Saints he will make the World to wonder when it shall be known what sin hath been committed by them Rom 9. ●● and pardoned by him And hence it is that Gods people are called Vessels of Mercy that he might make known the Riches of his Glory on the Vessels of Mercy for as Vessels are or may be filled up to the brims so the Vessels of Mercy shall be filled with Mercy up to the Brim that the Riches of his Glory in the pardon of Sin may be seen and known to the wonder of all the world 3. Because it is his Nature and Inclination to pardon Sin this appears 1. In the Proclaiming of his Name the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering Ex●d 34.6 abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity and Transgression and Sin Mat. 11.28 2. In his gracious Invitations Come unto me saith Christ if sin burden you I will ease you 3. In his patience and waiting for Repentance he waits to this very end that he might be gracious Isa 30.18 and that he may have mercy for the Lord is a God of judgment Isa 43.25 4. Because it is his promise to pardon sin I even I am he that blots out thy transgressions for my own sake and will not remember thy sins This promise of Pardon is one of the great blessings of the Covenant of Grace you hear the words in this very expressure of it Jet 31.34 I will forgive their Iniquity and I will remember their sins no more Now come consider O my soul of every particular in this gracious Covenant and O be serious in thy Consideration surely there is too much expence of thy spirit upon vain and transitory and worldly things alas alas thou hast but a short time to live and the strength of thy mind that I call for it is the most precious thing thou hast O then let the business and activeness of thy mind let thy inmost thoughts and deep affections be acted and exercised on this Subject be careful that none of these waters run besides the Mill. If God and Jesus and all thy good be included here why should not thy whole soul be intent on this Why shouldst thou spend it on the Creature why shouldst thou be so subject to carnal griefs and fears surely all these are fitter to be fixed on God in Christ on Jesus in a Covenant of Grace SECT III. Of Desiring Jesus in that respect 3. WE must desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in a way of
face so the conformity of thy heart and inwards to the Law of God thou obeyest God's Will and delightest in that obedience Thou sayest with David I delight to do thy Will O God yea psal 40.8 thy Law is within my Heart 2. Thou hast a covenant-relation to God and a covenant-interest in God and thou art by covenant as one of the people of God Christ hath thy soul thy body thy affections thy love to the very uttermost God hath a propriety and a peculiarity in thee thou art Christs by Marriage thou hast past over thy self unto him to be his Jewel his Spouse his Diadem his Crown his Servant his Child for ever 3. Then art thou clearly taught to know the Lord thou knowest him in another manner than thou didst before I will establish my Covenant with thee Ezek. 16.60 61. and thou shalt know that I am the Lord. There is a double knowledge 1. A speculative knowledge and thus men may know much but they are not affected according to the things they know 2. A practical knowledge and thus if we know the Lord we shall see in him that excellency and beauty that our Hearts will be affectioned towards him and we shall be able to say that we love him with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Strength 4. Then hath God pardoned thy sins and He will remember thy sins no more But how should I be assured of that Why thus 1. If thou hast sincerely confessed bewailed and forsaken thy sins Wash ye make ye clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine Eyes cease to do evil And presently it follows come now and let us reason together saith the Lord Isa 1.16 18. though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wooll Isa 55.7 To the same purpose Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and He will have Mercy upon him and to our God for He will abundantly Pardon 2. If thy heart after many storms and troubles be calmed and quieted through saith in Christ Being justified by faith we have peace with God Rom. 5.1 What hast thou peace with God and hath God still'd thy soul with peace this is an argument of thy sins pardon 3. If thine Heart be singularly inflamed with the love of Christ the Woman that Had many sins forgiven her by Christ Luke 7.47 she loved him much Upon that account she wept and washed his feet with her tears and so wiped them with the hairs of her head she kissed his feet and anointed them with Ointment nothing was too good for Christ who had forgiven her all her sins 4. If thy heart and soul and all that is within be singularly enlarged to praise God for his pardons Ps 103.1 2 3. Bless the Lord O my soul and forget not all his benefits who forgiveth all thine iniquities If thine heart feel his pardons thy mouth will sing his praises and hereby thou may'st be assured that God hath pardoned all thy sins Come now are these O my soul the grounds of thy hopes a lively faith in Jesus an accomplishment in some measure of the promises of the Covenant why these are the fewel of hope if this be thy case act thy hope strongly on Christ and on the covenant of grace say not hope is onely of things future and therefore if I be already in covenant What need I hope For whether thou art in covenant or no it is the main question here nay though it be granted that thou art in covenant and that hope is swallowed up in the compleat presence of its object yet it is not at all diminished but rather encreased by a partial presence As in massie bodies though violent motion be weakest in the end yet natural motions are ever swiftest towards the center so in the hopes of men though such as are violent and groundless prove weaker and weaker yet those that are stayed and natural or rather gracious are evermore stronger and stronger till they procure the utmost presence and union of their object The nearer we come to a fruition of a good the more impatient we are to want it O then hope in Jesus draw on thy hope yet more and more in this Covenant of grace be not content onely with an hope of expectation but bring it on to an hope of confidence or assurance thou canst not fail if thou hangest thy hope on Jesus Christ is not fastened as a loose nail or as a broken rotten hedge in the covenant of grace he is there As a nail in a sure place Isa 22.23 24. and they shall hang on him all the glory of his Fathers house the off-spring and the issue all vessels of small quantity from the vessels of cups even to all the vessels of flaggons Come soul thou art a vessel of small quantity hang all thy weight on Christ he is a nail that cannot break SECT V. Of Believing in Jesus in that Respect 5. WE must believe on Jesus carrying on this great work of our salvation in a way of covenant Many a time Satan comes and hurles in a temptation What Is it likely that God should enter into a covenant with thee yea sometimes he so rivets in this temptation that he darkens all within and there 's no sight of comfort in the soul O but now believe now if ever is the season for faith to act little evidence and much adherence speaks saith to purpose We read of some who could stay themselves upon the Lord whiles they walked in darkness upon the margin and borders of a hundred deaths Psal 23.4 Ps 88.7 David fears no evil though he walked through the valley of the shadow of death for his faith told him that God was with him Heman could say thy wrath lieth hard upon me thou hast afflicted me with all thy waves sure he thought God could do no more to drown him not only a wave or two but all Gods waves were on him and over him and yet he believes Lord I have called daily upon thee Hezekiahs comforts were at an hard pinch ver 9. Mine eyes fail with looking upwards O Lord I am oppressed Isa 39.14 yet praying argues believing Lord undertake for me Christs sense of comforts was ebbe and low when he wept and cryed that he was forsaken of God yet then his faith is doubled as the cable of an Anchor is doubled when the storm is more than ordinary Mat. 27.46 my God my God Poor soul thou standest wondering at this great condescention of God What That God should enter into covenant with me What that God should make such great and precious promises with me Surely these comforts and these priviledges are too high for me or for any soul breathing It may be so and yet be not discouraged
person should be effected I must answer you with the Apostle Who is sufficient for these things Certainly these are the things which the Angels desire to stoop and look into It is an Inquisition fitter for an Angelical intelligence than for our shallow capacity 1 Pet. 1.12 and yet as Moses could not chuse but wonder though he must not draw nigh to the Bush burning with fire and not consumed so though we dare not draw too nigh to see this great sight How poor dust and ashes should be assumed into the unity of God's own person and that in the midst of those everlasting burnings the Bush should remain unconsumed Isa 33.14 and continue fresh and green for evermore yet what doth hinder but we may stand aloof off and wonder at it this is one piece of our duty to recite all the long-fore-passed acts and benefits of God as well as we may Scripture still going along that thereby we may admire and adore and express our Love and Thankfulness unto God For the untying of this Knot I cannot but wonder what a world of questions have been tossed in Schools As 1. Whether the union of the Word incarnate was in the Nature 2. Whether the union of the Word incarnate was in the Person 3. Whether the humane Nature was united to the Word by way of accident 4. Whether the union of the divine Nature be something cremated 5. Whether the union of the Word incarnate be the same with assumption 6. Whether the union of the two Natures of Christ be the chief of all unions 7. Whether the union of the two Natures of Christ was made by Grace 8. Whether it was convenient for the divine person to assume a created Nature 9. Whether a divine Person could assume the Nature humane 10. Whether more persons divine could assume one Nature humane 11. Whether it was more convenient that the person of the Son should assume humane nature than any other of the persons in the Godhead 12. Whether the humane nature was more assumptible by the Son of God than any other nature 13. Whether the Son of God did not assume the person of man 14. Whether the Son of God assumed the humane nature in all its Individuals or as abstracted from all Individuals 15. Whether the Son of God assumed a true Body Soul and all its Intellects 16. Whether the Son of God in respect of nature though not of time did first assume the Soul and then the Body of man 17. Whether the Son of God in humane nature assumed all the defects of the Body 18. Whether the Son of God assumed all the defects of the Soul of man 19. Whether by Virtue of this union those things which are agreeable to the Son of man may be predicated of the Son of God and e converso 20. Whether Christ be one or two and whether in Christ be one or two Wills one or more Operations These and many other like Questions are raised that in their discussions make up large Volums but I shall leave them all to the Schools In the explication of this union that which I shall insist on as the most necessary for our understanding is 1. The Union it self 2. The Effects or Benefits of it 1. For the Union it self we shall discuss 1. Of the sorts of Union and of what sort this is 2. Of the very thing it self wherein this union consists 3. Of the Scriptural Texts that confirm this union 4. Of the similitudes that hold sorth this union 5. Of the person assuming and of the nature assumed and of the reason of this way And of these as briefly as I may I would rather say much in a little than a little in much 1. Union is of divers sorts as natural and mystical accidental and substantial essential and integral But I shall pass these by and speak only of these sorts 1. When one of the things united is turned into the other as when a drop of water is poured into a vessel of Wine 2. When both the things united are changed in nature and essence as when the Elements are united to make mixt or compounded bodies 3. When there is no change of things united but the constitution of a third nature out of them both as is the union of the soul and body 4. When there is neither a change of natures united nor constitution of a third out of them both but only the founding setling and staying of the one of the things united in the other and the drawing of it into the unity of the personal being or subsistence of the other so the Branch of a Tree being put upon the stock of another Tree it is drawn into the unity of the subsistence of that Tree into which it is put and whereas if it had been set in the Ground it would have grown as a separate Tree in it self now it groweth in the Tree into which it is graffed and pertaineth to the unity of it and this kind of union doth of all others most perfectly resemble the personal union of the two Natures of God and man in Christ wherein the nature of man that would have been a person in it self if it had been left to it self is drawn into the unity of the divine person and subsisteth in it being prevented from subsisting in it self by this personal union and assumption 2. For the thing wherein this union of two natures consists we say that this union consists in that dependance of the humane nature on the person of the Word and in that communicating of the person or substance of the Word with the humane nature that is assumed so that it is an hypostatical or personal union that is such an union as that both natures do make but one person of Christ for the better understanding of this we must consider what the difference is betwixt Nature and Person and what makes an individual Nature to be a Person briefly thus To be this or that we say is an individual nature to be this or that in or for it self is a person or subsistence to be this or that in or for another is to pertain to the person or subsistence of another Now amongst those created things which are naturally apt to make a personal being or to subsist in and for themselves there is a very great difference for 1. Some things of this kind may become parts of another more entire thing of the same kind as we see in all those things wherein every part hath the same nature that the whole hath as every drop of water is water and being lest to it self it is a subsistence in it self and hath its quality nature and being in and for it self but if it be joyned to a greater quantity of water it hath now no being quantity nor operation but in and for that greater quantity of water into which it is poured 2. Other things of this kind cannot naturally put themselves into the
11.26 Moses reason of esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasure of Egypt was for that he had respect unto the recompence of reward he had respect in the original he had a fixed intent Eye there was in him a Love of the reward and yet withal a Love of God and therefore his Love of the reward was not mercinary but this I say though there were no reward at all a Child of God hath such a principle of Love within him that for Loves sake he would Obey his God he is led by the Spirit and therefore he Obeys now the Spirit that leads him is a Spirit of Love and as many as are led by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God Rom. 8.14 3. The Sons of God imitate God in his Love and Goodness to all Men. Our Saviour amplifies this excellent property of God He causeth his Sun to shine upon good and bad and thence he concludeth Be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect Mat. 5.48 Goodness to bad men is the highest degree of Grace and as it were the perfection of all O my Soul Canst thou imitate God in this Consider how thy Father bears it though the wicked provoke him day by day yet for all that he doth not quickly revenge vengeance indeed is only his and he may in justice do what he will that way and 't is the opinion of some that if the most patient man in the world should but sit in Gods Throne one day and see and observe the doings and miscarriges of the Sons of Men he would quickly set all the World on Fire yet God seeth all and for all that He doth not make the Earth presently to gape and devour us He puts not out the glorious Light of the Sun He doth not dissolve the Work of Creation He doth not for Mans Sin presently blast every thing into Dust What an excellent pattern is this for thee to Write after Canst thou but forgive thy Enemies Do well to them that do evil to thee O this is a sure sign of Grace and Sonship It is storyed of some Heathens who beating a Christian almost to Death asked him What great matter Christ did ever do for him Even this said the Christian That I can forgive you though you use me thus cruelly here was a Child of God indeed It is a sweet resemblance of our Father and of our Saviour Jesus Christ to Love our Enemies to Bless them that Curse us to do Good unto them that Hate us to Pray for them that Despitefully use us and Persecute us O my Soul look to this 5.44 consult this ground of Hope if this Law be written in thy Heart write it down amongst thy Evidences that thou art Gods Son yea that even unto thee a Son is given To Review the Grounds What is a Child born to me and a Son given to me What am I indeed new born am I indeed Gods Son or Daughter do I upon the search find in my Soul new desires new comforts new contentments What are my words my works and affections and conversation new is there in me a new nature a new principle hath the Spirit by way of infusing or shedding given me a new Power a new Ability a Seed of Spiritual Life which I had not before do I upon the search find that I fear God and love God and imitate God in some good measure in his love and goodness towards all Men can I indeed and really forgive an Enemy and according to opportunity and my ability do good unto them that do evil unto me Why should I not then confidently and comfortably hope that I have my share and interest in the birth of Christ in the blessed incarnation and conception of Jesus Christ Away away all despair and dejections and despondencies of Spirit If these be my grounds of Hope it is time to hold up head and heart and hands and all with cheerfulness and confidence and to say with the Spouse I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine SECT V. Of Believing in Jesus in that Respect 5. LEt us Believe on Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation at his first coming or incarnation I know many staggerings are oft in Christians What is it likely that Christ should be incarnate for me That such a God should do such a thing for such a sinful woful abominable wretch as I am Ah my Soul put thy propriety in Christs incarnation out of dispute that thou mayst be able to say As God was manifest in the flesh and I may not doubt it so God is manifest in me and I dare not deny it But to help the Soul in this choice Duty I shall first propose the hinderances of Faith 2. The helps of Faith in this Respect 3. The manner how to act our Faith 4. The encouragements to bring on the soul to believe its part in this blessed incarnation of Jesus Christ For the first there are but three things that can hinder Faith As 1. The exceeding unworthiness of the soul and to this purpose are those complaints What Christ incarnate for me for such a dead Dog as I am What King would dethrone himself and become a Toad to save Toades and am not I at a greater distance from God than a Toad is from me hath not sin made my soul more ugly in Gods Eye than any loathsome Toad can be in my Eye O I am less than the least of all Gods Mercies I am fitter for Hell and Devils than for Vnion and Communion with God and Christ I dare not I cannot Believe 2. The infinite exactness of divine justice which must be satisfied a soul deeply and seriously considering of this it startles thereat and cries O what will become of my soul one of the least sins that I stand Guilty of deserves Death and eternal Wrath The wages of sin is death and I cannot satisfie though I have trespassed to many millions of talents I have not one mite of mine own to pay O then how should I believe What thoughts can I entertain of Gods Mercy and Love to me-ward God's Law condemns me my own Conscience accuseth me and Justice will have its due 3. The want of a Mediator or some suitable Person which may stand between the Sinner and God If on my part there be unworthiness and on Gods part exact and strict and severe Justice and withall I see no Mediator which I may go unto and first close withall before I deal with the infinite glory of God himself how should I but despair and cry out O wretched man that I am O that I had never been or if I must needs have a being Oh that I had been a toad or serpent or any venomous creature rather than a man for when they dye they perish and there 's an end of them but the end of a reprobate sinner is torments without end O wo and alas I cannot believe
the soul was it that was especially made after the Image of God the soul was it that was tempered in the same Mortar with the Heavenly Spirits the soul was Gods sparkle a beam of his divine Glory a ray or emanation of God himself as man was the principal part of the Creation so the Soul was the principal part of man here was it that Gods Love and Glory were centred for the time here was it that Gods love set and fixt it self in a special man whence flowed that Communion of God with Adam and that familiarity of Adam with God 3. Within a while this man the object of Gods Love fell away from God and as he fell so all that were in him even the whole World fell together with him and hereupon Gods Face was hid not a sight of him but in flaming fire ready to seize on the Sons of Men. And yet Gods Love would not thus leave the Object he had yet a further reach of Love and out of this dark Cloud he le ts fall some glimpses of another discovery These glimpses were sweet but alas they were so dark that very few could spell them or make any sense or comfortable application of them but by degrees God hints it out more he points it out with the Finger by Types and Shadows he makes some models of it in outward Ceremonies and yet so hid and dark that in four thousand years men were but guessing and hoping through promises for a manifestation of Gods Love this is the meaning of the Apostle who tells us of the Mystery that was hid from Ages and from Generations but now is made manifest to his Saints Col. 1.26 This Love of God was hid in the breast of God from the Sons of Men for an Age so that they knew not what to make of this great Design I speak of the generality of men for in respect of some Particulars as to Adam and Abraham and Moses and David and the Patriarchs you have heard the Lord made his Loves clear to them in a Covenant-Way and still the nearer to Christ the clearer and clearer was the Covenant of Grace 4. At last God fully opens himself in the fulness of time God takes the flesh of those poor sinners which he had so loved and joins it to himself and calls it Christ a Saviour O! now was it that God descended and lay in the Womb of a Virgin now was it that he is born as we are born now was it that he joined our Flesh so nigh to himself as that there is a Communication of properties betwixt them both that being attributed to God which is proper to Flesh as to be born to suffer and that being attributed to flesh which is proper to God as to create to redeem who can chuse but wonder when he thinks of this phrase that a piece of Flesh should be called God and that God should be made flesh and dwell amongst us that flesh should infinitely provoke God and yet God in the same flesh should be infinitely pleased that God should veile himself and darken his Glory with our flesh and yet unveile at the same time the deepest and darkest of his designs in a comfortable way to our souls O my soul how shouldst thou contain thy self within thy self how shouldst thou but leap out of thy self if I may so speak as one that is lost in the admiration of this Love Surely God never manifested himself in such a strain of Love as this before herein was love manifested and commended indeed that God would come down in our nature to us One observes sweetly that God did so love the very Nature of his Elect that though for the present he had them not all with him in Heaven yet he must have their Picture in his Son to see them in and love them in in this respect I may call Christ incarnate a Statue and Monument of Gods own infinite Love unto his Elect for ever Well hitherto we have followed the passages of his Love and now we see it in the Spring or at full Sea If any thing will beget our love to God surely Christ incarnate will do it Come then O my Soul I cannot but call on thee to love thy Jesus and to provoke thy Love O fix thy eye on this lovely Object come put thy Candle to this Flame what doth not thy heart yet burn within thee dost thou not at least begin to warm why draw yet a little nearer consider what an heart of Love is in this Design God is in thy own nature to take upon him all the miseries of thy Nature mark it well this is none other than Gods heart leaping out of it self into our bosoms q. d. Poor souls I cannot keep from you I love your very Nature I will be nothing so you may be something my Glory shall not hinder me but I will vail it rather than it shall hurt you so I may but shew my self kind and tender unto you and so I may but have Communion with you and you with me I care not if I become one with you and live with you in your very flesh Oh my heart art thou yet cold in thy Loves to Jesus Christ canst thou love him but a little who hath loved thee so much how should I then but complain of thee to Christ and for thy sake beg hard of God Oh thou sweet Jesus that cloathest thy self with the Clouds as with a garment and as now thou cloathest thy self with the Nature of a man O thou that wouldest inflame my Spirit with a Love of thee that nothing but thy self might be dear unto me because it so pleased thee to vilifie thy self thine own self for my sake SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation for us at his Coming or Incarnation If it be so that by our Desire and Hope and Faith and Love we have indeed and truth reached the Object which our souls pant after how then should we but joy and delight therein the end of our motion is to attain quiet and rest now what is joy but a sweet and delightfull Tranquility of mind resting in the fruition and possession of some good what hast thou in some measure attained the presence and fruition of Christ as God incarnate in thy Soul it is then time to joy in Jesus it is then time to keep a Sabbath of thy thoughts and to be quiet and calm in thy Spirit But you will say how should this be before we come to Heaven I answer there is not indeed any perfection of joy whilest we are here because there is no perfection of Union on this side Heaven but so far as Union is our joy must be examine the grounds of thy Hope and the actings of thy Faith and if thou art but satisfied in them why then lead up thy joy and bring it up to this
glorious but to shew that he will by that make thee glorious also Christ is the great Epitome of all the designs of God so that in him thou mayest see what thou art designed unto and how high and rich thou shalt be in the other world Beloved now are we the Sons of God 1 John 3.2 and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know when he shall appear we shall be like him he is now like us but then saith the Apostle we shall be like unto him Phil. 3.21 he will change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his Glorious body Oh consider what a frame of eternal comfort may we raise up from this ground of Christ incarnate God in the flesh 5. God in the flesh is the first opening of his eternal plot to do us good the Seed of the woman was the first word of comfort that ever was heard in the world after man was fallen the Plot was of old but the execution was not till after the Creation and then was a dim discovery of it even in the beginning of time though no clear manifestation till the fulness of time Well take it as we please whether in the beginning of time or in the fulness of time whether in the promise or in performance this discovering of Christ incarnate is the first opening of all Gods heart and Glory unto the Sons of men and from this we may raise a world of comfort for if God in the execution of his Decrees begins so gloriously how will he end if God be so full of love as to come down in flesh now in this world Oh what matter of hope is laid up before us of what God will be to us in that world to come if the Glory of God be let out to our souls so fully at first what Glorious openings of all the Glory of God will be let out to our souls at last Christians what do you think will God do with us or bring us unto when we shall be with him in heaven you see now he is manifested in flesh and he hath laid out a world of Glory in that but the Apostle tells us of another manifestation for we shall see him as he is he shall at last be manifest in himself 1 John 3.2 now we see through a glass darkly but then face to face now we know in part but then we shall know even as also we are known To what an height of knowledg or manifestation this doth arise I am now to seek and so I must be whilst I am on this side Heaven but this I believe the manifestation of God and Christ is more in Heaven than is or ever hath been or ever shall be upon earth thine eyes shall see the King in his Beauty Isa 33.17 or in his Glory saith Esay there is a great deal of difference betwixt seeing the King in his ordinary and seeing him in his Robes and upon his Throne with his Crown on his head and his Scepter in his hand and his Nobles about him in all his Glory the first openings of Christ are glorious but O what will it be to see him in his greatest Glory that ever he will manifest himself in we usually say that workmen do their meanest work at first and if the Glorious incarnation of Christ be but the beginning of Gods works in reference to our souls salvation what are those last works O my soul weigh all these passages and make an application of them to thy self and then tell me if yet thou hast not matter enough to raise up thy heart and to fill it with joy unspeakable and full of Glory Mat. 2.10 when the wise men saw but the Star of Christ they rejoyced with an exceeding great joy how much more when they saw Christ himself Your Father Abraham said Christ to the Jews rejoyced to see my day John 8 5● and he saw it and was glad he saw it indeed but afar of with the eyes of Faith they afore Christ had the promise but we see the performance how then should we rejoyce how glad shouldst thou be O my Soul at the sight and effect of Christs Incarnation if John the Baptist could leap for joy in his Mothers belly when Christ was but yet in the womb how should thy heart leap for joy who canst say with the Prophet Luke 2.28 unto me a Child is born and unto me a Son is given if Simeon waiting for the consolation of Israel took him up in his arms for joy and blessed God how shouldst thou with joy embrace him with both arms who knowest his coming in the flesh and who hast heard him come in the Gospel in the richest and most alluring expressions of his Love If the Angels of God yea if multitudes of Angels could sing for joy at his Birth Luke 2.14 Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace and good will towards men how much more shouldest thou whom it concerns more than the Angels join with them in consort and sing for joy this joyful song of good will towards men Awake awake O my Soul awake awake uttter a Song tell over these passages that God is come down into the world that God is come down in flesh that God is come down in flesh in order to thy reconciliation that God is come down in the likeness of man that he may bring thee up into the likeness of God and that all these are but the first openings of the Grace and goodness and Glory of God in Christ unto thy Soul and Oh what work will these make in thy Soul if the Spirit come in who is the comforter SECT VIII Of Calling on Jesus in that Respect 8. LEt us call on Jesus or on God the Father in and through Jesus Now this calling on Jesus contains Prayer and Praise 1. We must pray that all these transactions of Jesus at his first coming or incarnation may be ours and is not here encouragement for our Prayers If we observe it this very point of Christs Incarnation opens a door of rich entrance into the presence of God we may call it a blessed Portal into Heaven b. 10. 20. not of Iron or Brass but of our own flesh this is that new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the Vail that is to say his flesh with what boldness and freeness may we now enter into the Holiest and draw near unto the Throne of Grace why Christ is incarnate God is come down in the flesh though his Deity may confound us if we should immediately and solely apply our selves unto it yet his humanity comforts our faint and feeble souls God in his humility animates our souls to come unto him and to seek of him whatsoever is needful for us Go then to Christ away away O my soul to Jesus or to God the Father in and through Jesus and O desire that the
our hearts are as it were Seas of corruptions yet we must daily cleanse our selves of them by little and little Christ could not have been a fit Saviour for us unless first he had been sanctified neither can we be fit Members unto him unless we be in some measure purged from our sins and sanctified by his Spirit To this purpose is that of the Apostle I beseech you Brethren by the Mercies of God that ye present your Bodyes a living Sacrifice Holy acceptable unto God Rom. 12.1 In the Old Testament they did after a corporal manner slay and kill Beasts presenting them and offering them unto the Lord but now we are in a spiritual manner to crucify and mortifie the flesh with the affections and lusts all our inordinate passions all our evil affections of anger love joy hatred are to be crucified and all that is ours must be given up to God there must be no love in us but of God and in reference to God no Joy in us but in God and in reference to God no fear in us but of God and in reference to God and thus of all other the like passions O that we would look to Jesus and be like unto Jesus in this thing if there be any Honour any Happiness any Excellency it is in this even in this we are not fit for any holy duty or any religious approach unto God without sanctification 1 Thes 4.5 this is the Will of God saith the Apostle even your Sanctification All the commands of God tend to this and for the comfort of us Christians we have under the Gospel promises of sanctification to be in a larger measure made out unto us Zech. 14.20 21. In that day there shall be upon the Bells of the Horses Holiness unto the Lord yea every pot in Jerusalem and Judah shall be Holiness unto the Lord every Vessel under Christ and the Gospel must have written upon it Holiness to the Lord thus our spiritual services figured by the Ancient Ceremonial services are set out by a larger measure of holiness than was in old time it is a sweet resemblance of Christ to be holy Acts 4.27 for so he is stiled the holy Child Jesus he was sanctified from the womb and sanctified in the womb for our imitation for their sakes I sanctifie my self saith Christ that they also might be sanctified John 17.19 3. Christ the son of man is by nature the son of God so we poor sons of men must by Grace become the sons of God even of the same God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Gal. 4.4 5 7. for this very end God sent his own Son made of a woman that we might receive the Adoption of Sons wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a Son then an heir of God through Christ This intimates that what relation Christ hath unto the Father by nature we should have the same by Grace by nature he is the only begotten Son of the Father and as many as received him saith John John 1.14 V. 12. to them he gave power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name It is true Christ reserves to himself the preheminence Rom. 8.29 he is in a peculiar manner the first born among many Brethren yet in him and for him all the rest of the brethren are accounted as first borns Exod. 4.22 23. So God bids Moses say unto Pharoah Israel is my son even my first born And I say unto thee let my Son go that he may serve me and if thou refuse to let him go behold I will slay thy Son even thy first-born And the whole Church of God consisting of Jew and Gentile is in the same sort described by the Apostle to be the General Assembly and Church of the first-born enrolled in Heaven Heb. 12.23 Rom. 8.17 by the same reason that we are sons we are first-borns if we are Children then are we heirs heirs of God and joynt-heirs with Christ O who would not endeavour after this priviledg who would not conform to Christ in this respect 4. Christ the Son of God was yet the Son of Man there was yet in him a duplicity of Natures really distinguished and in this respect the greatest Majesty and the greatest humility that ever was are found in Christ so we though sons of God must remember our selves to be but sons of men our priviledges are not so high but our poor conditions frailties infirmities sins may make us low who was higher than the Son of God and who was lower than the son of man as he is God he is in the bosom of his Father as he is man he is in the Womb of his Mother as he is God his Throne is in Heaven and he fills all things by his emmensity as he is man he is circumscribed in a cradle I mean a Manger a most uneasy Cradle sure as he is God he is cloathed in a robe of Glory as he is man he is wrapped in a few course swadling bands as he is God he is encircled with millions of bright Angels as he man he is in company of Joseph and Mary and the Beasts as he is God he is the eternal Word of the Father all-sufficient and without need as he is man he submits himself to a condition imperfect inglorious indigent and necessitous well let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus Phil. 2.5 6 7 8. who being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with God but he made himself of no Reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant and was made in the likeness of men and being founded in fashion as a man he humble himself he that thought it no robbery to be equal with God humbled himself to become man we should have found it no robbery to be equal with Devils and are we too proud to learn of God what an intolerable disproportion is this to behold an humble God and a proud man who can endure to see a Prince on foot and his Vassal mounted shall the Son of God be thus humble for us and shall not we be humble for our selves I say for our selves that deserve to be cast down amongst the lowest Worms the damnedst Creatures What are we in our best condition here on earth had we the best natures purest conversations happiest indowments that accompany the Saints pride overthrows all it thrust proud Nebuchadnezzer out of Babel proud Haman out of the Court proud Saul out of his Kingdom proud Lucifer out of Heaven poor man how ill it becomes thee to be proud when God himself is become thus humble O learn of me saith Christ for I am meek and humble and lowly in spirit Math. 11.29 and you shall find rest unto your souls 5. The two natures of Christ though really distinguished yet were they inseparably joyned and made not
be one with him in a spiritual holy and a mystical union if God be not in our persons as truely though not as fully as in our nature we have no particular comfort from this design of his personal hypostatical and wonderful union 6. Christ was born so must we be new-born to this I have spoken when I laid it down as an evidence that unto us a Child is born and unto us a son is given only one word more we must be new born as once born by nature so new born by Grace there must be some resemblances in us of Christ born amongst us As 1. Christ born had a Father in Heaven and a Mother on Earth so in our new Birth we must look on God as our Father in Heaven and on the Church as our Mother on Earth it was usually said out of the Church no salvation and to this the Apostle alludes Jerusalem which is above is free Gal. 4.26 which is the Mother of us all indeed out of the Church there is no means of Salvation no Word to teach no Sacraments to confirm nothing at all to hold forth Christ to a soul and without Christ how should there be the Salvation of souls ●o that we must look on the Church as our Mother and on God as our Father not that we deny some to be as spiritual Fathers unto others Paul tells the Corinthians 1 Cor. 4.15 that he was their Father though yea have ten thousand instructers in Christ yet have ye not many Fathers for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospel but al●s such Fathers are but ministerial Fathers and therefore Paul seems to correct himself 1 Cor. 3.7 who is ●aul and who is Apollo but Ministers by whom yea believed even as the Lord gave to every man it is God only is our Father principally originally supreamly God only puts Grace and vertue into the womb of the Soul it is not possible that any creature should be a Creator of the new Creature O then let us look up to Heaven and say O Lord n●w make me n●w Create me O be thou my Father 2. When Christ was born all Jerusalem was troubled so when this new birth is we must look for it that much commotion and much division of heart will be the Devi● could not be cast out of the professed person but he would exc●edingly fear and ●orment and vex the poss●ssed person the truth is we cannot expect that Christ should expel Satan from those holds and dominions he hath over us but he will be sure to put us to great fear and terror in heart Besides not only the evil Spirit but Gods Spirit is for a while a Spirit of Bondage to make every thing as a mighty burden unto us there are many pr●tenders to the grace of God in Christ but they cannot abide to hear of any pains or pangs in this new Birth O this is legal but I pray thee tell me dost thou ever know any woman bring forth in her sleep or in a dream without feeling any pain and how then should the heart of man be thus new changed and moulded without several pangs look as it is in the natural birth there are many pangs and troubles in in sorrow shalt thou bring forth Children so it is and must be in our spiritual birth there is usually I will not say alwayes to such or such a degree many pangs and troubles there 's many a throb and many an heart-ach ere Christ can be formed in us 3. When Christ was born there was a discovery of many of the Glorious attributes of God then Mercy and Truth met together and righteousness and peace kissed each other then especially was a discovery of the Goodness and Power and Wisdom and Holiness of God So when this New Birth is we must look upon it as a glorious discovery of those lovely Attributes As 1. Of his Mercy Goodness Love how often is this called his Grace and the riches of his Grace Christians you that know what the New Birth means do you not say The Goodness of God appears in this surely it was Gods Goodness to make a World but this is the riches of his Goodness to create a New Heart in you when Man by his sin was fallen he might have been thrown away as refuse fit fuel only for everlasting flames it might have been with mankind as it was with Devils in their deluge God did not provide an Ark to save so many as eight persons not one Angel that fell was the Object of Gods Grace And that God should pass by all those Angels and many thousands of the Sons Men and yet that he should look upon you in your Blood and bid you Live O the goodness of God! 2. As of the Goodness so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of Gods power and hence it is called a New Creature The very same Power that framed the World Gal. 6.15 is the framer of this New Creature the work of Conversion is set forth by the Work of Creation God only creates Man and God only converts Man in the Creation God said Let there be Light and there was Light in our conversion God saith Let there be Light and presently the same God shines in our hearts Nay this Power of conversion in some sense far passeth the Creation To whom is the Arm of the Lo●d revealed Isa 53.1 the Lord puts to his Arm his Power his Strength indeed in Conversion of Souls when he made the World he met with nothing to resist him he only spake the word and it was do●e but in the conversion of a sinner God meets with the whole frame of all creatures opposing and resisting him the Devil and the World without and sin and corruption within here then must needs be a Power against all Power 3. As of the Goodness and Power of God so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of the Wisdom of God I might instance in many particulars As 1. In that the regenerate are most-what of the meanest and contemptiblest persons not many wise 1 Cor. 1.27 not many noble c. 2. In that many times God takes the worst Weeds and makes them the sweetest Flowers thus Paul Zacheus the Publicans and Harlots 3. In that the regenerate are of the fewest and least number many are called but few are chosen 4. In that God chooseth such a time to be his time of love wherein he usually discovers many concurrences of strange love meeting together read Ezek. 16.4 5 6 8 9. in all these particulars is his Wisdom wonderful 4. As of the Goodness Power and Wisdom of God so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of the holiness of God If a clod of Earth or a piece of Muck should be made a glorious Star in Heaven it is not more wonderful than for a sinner to be made like an Angel doing the Will of God it argues the
enough that there were ordinary descents by stairs from the top of the Temple and therefore he would not so tempt God to throw him himself headlong What To make trial of God's Power and Justice and Mercy and extraordinary preservation where there was no need all the Devils in Hell could not so tempt Christ as to make him tempt his God The third temptation is yet more horrid the Temple was not high enough so that now Satan takes him up to the top of an exceeding high mountain Ver. 8 9. and he shews him all the Kingdoms of the World and the Glory of them saying all these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me Not to insist on those many Queries how should all the Kingdoms of the World be presented to Christ's eye Or if they were only presented to his imagination why could not the Valley have served the Devil's turn as well as an hill or whether was not Rome the object that the Devil presented because at that time Rome was the top of all the Kingdoms of the world and the Glory of them For my part I think in this Temptation the Devil united all his Power of stratagems and by an angelical Power he drew into one center the several Species and Idea's from all the Kingdoms and Glories of the world and he made an admirable Map of Beauties and represented them to the eyes of Jesus he thought Ambition more likely to ruin him because he knew it was that which prevailed upon himself and all those fallen stars the Angels of darkness and therefore come saith Satan all these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me How God worship the Devil was ever the like Blasphemy since the first Creation indeed now we have many fearful execrable cursed Blasphemies belched out and Idolatry I believe is the spreading'st sin in the World but was ever the like Blasphemy or Idolatry to this that not only a Creature but the Creator himself must fall down before the Devil and give worship unto him The Lamb of God that heard all the former Temptations with patience he could by no means indure this our own injuries are opportunities of patience but when the Glory of God and his immediate Honour is the question then our Zeal should be all on a flame now Christ bids him avoid assoon as he observes his demands so impudent and Blasphemous he commands him away and tells him it is written Ver. 10. thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve Now was the Devil put to flight and in his stead the Angels came and ministred unto Jesus i.e. after his Fast they ministred such things as his necessities required of them Vse O Christians what shall we say to this if Christ was thus tempted by Satan what may we look for Sometimes it chears my heart to think that Christ was tempted because thereby he knows how to succour those that are tempted and sometimes it affrights my Soul to think that Satan durst be so bold with Jesus Christ Oh what may he do with me how easily may he prevail against my Soul when he came to tempt Christ he found nothing in him to join with him in the temptation but in my heart is a world of Corruptions and unless the Lord prevent I am quickly gone I may not here fall on the Doctrine of Temptations only a few words 1. Of Satans Stratagems 7. Of some general means to withstand his Stratagems and I have done 1. His Stratagems are very many and very dangerous As 1. He observes and fits his temptations to our dispositions for example if he find a man ambitiously affected then he covers his hook with the Bait of Honours and thus he tempted Abimelech to murder his Brethren that he might obtain the Soveraignty or if he find a man Voluptuously given then he tempts him with the bait of Pleasures and thus he allured Noah to Drunkenness David to Adultery Solomon to Idolatry or if he find a man Covetously given then he lets in the Golden hook and thus he enticed Balaam by offering him money to curse the people whom God had Blessed and thus he allured Judas for thirty pieces of Silver to betray his Master but what need we Instances when we see this day so many thousands intangled in this golden Net 2. He observes and fits his Temptations to our Complections and thus he tempts the cholerick to quarrels and brawls the flegmatick to idleness and sloath the melancholy to malice and revenge the sanguine to pleasure and fleshly lusts and hence it is that the Apostles tells us James 1.14 that whosoever is tempted he is drawn away by his own Concupiscence Satan never assaults us but he is sure there is something within us that will further him in his temptations 3. He observes and fits his temptations to our outward conditions thus if we are in prosperity then he tempts us to pride and forgetfulness of God to contempt of our Brethren to the love of the world to coldness in Religion carnal security and the like or if we are in adversity then he tempts us to the use of unlawful means to the distrusting of God's all-ruling providence and never deceiving-promises or it may be to despair murmur and repining against God by this temptation he confidently presumed to have moved Christ to distrust God's providence and to shift for himself by turning stones into Bread 4. He observes and fits his temptations to our spiritual estate thus if we are notoriously wicked then he tempts us to Atheism contempt of God's worship swearing blaspheming prophaining of the Lords dayes to disobedience murders adulteries drunkenness theft covetuousness and all devilish practises or if we are civilized and run not with others into such an excess of riot and sin why then he tempts us to a good opinion of such a condition I thank thee O Father that I am not as other men c. I deal justly and uprightly with all my Neighbours I have a good meaning towards God though I am ignorant of Scripture and of the Principles of Religion or if we are professors of God's Truth and can tip our tongues with Glorious words of Religion Holiness Christ why then he tempts us with resting on this What needs more If I can but outwardly perform the Duties of Piety as the hearing of God's word receiving of the Sacraments publick and private calling on God in this I am a true Protestant that Charity Love good Works and all the duties of the second Table can never Justifie me or save me but only Faith I believe and I make a profession of Religion and I hope this will suffice Or if we are sincere professors and but weak in the Faith why then he tempts us with sad thoughts of our sins he sets before us their number and nature and odiousness in every aggravation and if therewith he cannot overwhelm us he
witness on earth and there 's no disagreement in their witness but all bring in this testimony of Jesus that he is the Messiah that is being interpreted John 1.41 the Christ But what are those manifestations to us Vse or to that great design of Christ in carrying on our souls salvation Much every way For either must Christ be manifested to us even by these witnesses in the preaching of the Gospel and manifested in us by that one witness his holy spirit or we are undone for ever 1. Christ must be manifested to us in the preaching of the Gospel This mercy we have this day nay you see every Sabbath day all the witnesses speak in us What do we but in God's stead in the Baptist's stead in the Disciples stead manifest Christ to you in every Sermon It is the Commission which Christ hath given us of the Ministry Go preach the Gospel to every Creature Mark 16.15 Observe but how open Christ's heart is towards you he cannot contain his Love and Grace within himself he cannot keep his own councels that are for the good of your souls but all must be manifest and that in the openest way by Preaching and Proclaiming them to the world Christ must be laid out to open view Christ will have nothing of his Love kept back he wills and commands us of the Ministry instead of all those former witnesses to make all known what he is and what he hath done and suffered for you Oh Christians how cheap are the mysteries of the Gospel to you ward you may know them if you will but lend an ear and listen to them the word is nigh you even in your mouths Christ is proclaimed in your very streets you may have him if you will without mony or mony-worth Come buy Wine Isa 55.1 and Milk without Money and without Price Do you not hear Christ is laid open for every man's good and profit Christ deals not under-hand with you he must be manifested that you may see what you buy if I should tell you the meaning of the Commission which Christ hath put into our hands he bids me say thus to your souls Come poor Creatures you that stand in need of Jesus Christ here is Christ for you take him and do with him in an holy manner what you will he is of infinite use for wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption What is our preaching but a manifesting of Christ in this manner what is the sum of all our Sermons but a discovery of this that life and light is in Christ for you that eternal Love waits and attends on you that whatever may do you good is provided and made ready for you Oh will souls now refuse Christ when thus and thus manifested God forbid 2. Christ must be manifested in us by his holy Spirit Christians look to your hearts what manifestations of Christ are there When Paul speaks of the Gospel in general Gal. 1.16 2 Pet. 1.10 Rev. 22.16 he adds in particular that it pleased God to reveal Christ in me And when Peter speaks of the Word of God he adds that we take heed thereunto until the day dawn and the day-star that is Christ Rev. 22.16 arise in our hearts till then though we be circled with Gospel discoveries our hearts will be full of darkness but when Christ Mal. 4.2 whom the Prophet calls the Son of Righteousness and Peter the day-star shall arise within us we shall be full of light Sometimes I confess I wonder that in these dayes there should be such glorious discoveries of the beauties and sweetness and excellencies of Jesus Christ and yet that mens hearts are generally so full of darkness but this takes off the wonder John 1.5 hearts are carnal Light shines in darkness but darkness comprehendeth it not Lead a blind man through a glorious City and though there be such and such things in it yet he tells you he cannot prize them he sees them not though Jerusalem should come down from God out of Heaven as John saw it in his Vision prepared as a Bride adorned for her Husband Rev. 21.2 yet the natural man sees neither Walls nor Gates nor Streets you may tell him all is Gold and Jasper and Precious Stones but for all this he cannot prize them alas he sees them not how many glorious Objects do the unregenerate slight they see no beauty in Jesus Christ they feel no sweet in Ordinances the Sabbath is a trouble and no delight to them and whence all this it is because there is no light no manifestation of Christ within them the Spirit of Christ hath not witnessed Christ hath not manifested Christ within their souls and therefore they remain in darkness SECT VI. Of Christ's Whipping the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple 5. COncerning Christ's whipping the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple we read in the Gospel That the Jews Passover being at hand Jesus went up to Jerusalem Thither John 2.13 if we follow him the first place that we find him in is the Temple where by the occasion of the National Assembly was an opportune Scene for Christ's transactions of his Fathers business In that Temple Christ first espies a Mart there were divers Merchants and Exchangers of Money that brought Beasts thither to be sold for sacrifice against that great Solemnity at the sight of which Jesus being moved with Zeal and Indignation he makes a Whip of Cords and according to the custom of the Zealots of the Nation he takes upon him the Office of a private inflictor of punishment he drives them all out of the Temple he overthrows the accounting Tables and commands them that sold the Doves to take them from thence and being required to give a sign of this fact he only foretels the Resurrection of his Body after three dayes death expressing it in the Metaphor of the Temple which was never rightly understood till it was accomplished In this heroical act we may see how Christ is carried on with a Zeal for God insomuch that it brings to mind that saying of the Psalmist Psal 69.9 The Zeal of thine House hath eaten me up a Metaphor taken from Men that receive nourishment which after its several concoctions is assimilated into the nature of them that receive it Zeal doth totally surprize us in what concernes God in our Zeal we do so mind the things of God as if we minded no nothing else To what dangers hazards and censures did Christ here in the exercise of the Zeal expose himself His eminent Zeal appears 1. In the weakness of his means whereby he did both attempt and effect the work we find him not armed with any weapons that might carry dread and terrour with them at most but with a Whip made of a few small Cords which probably were scattered by the Drovers which came thither to sell their Cattel 2. In the strength that the opposite power did hold out
call we this that the Father will not go but run If he would needs meet his Son might he not have walked towards him in a soft slow pace O no if a sinner will but come or creep towards Christ mercy will not go a foot-pace but run to meet him bowels full of mercy out-pace bowels pinched with hunger Gods mercy is over all his works and so it is over all our needs and over all our sins 5. He ran and fell on his neck i.e. he hugged and embraced him O wonder who would not have been loth to have touched him was he not in his loathsome stinking rags smelt he not of the hogs and swine he lately kept would not some dainty stomacks have been ready to have cast all up upon such embracements Ezek. 16.6 we see mercy is not nice When I passed by saith God I saw thee polluted in thy own blood and I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live that very time of her blood was the time of love then the Lord spread his Spirit over her and covered her nakedness and swore unto her Ver. 8. and entred into a Covenant with her and she became his 6. He ran and fell on his neck and kissed him who would have brooked a person in so filthy a pickle what kiss those lips that have been so lately lapping in the hogs trough those lips that had so often kissed those base and beggarly and abominable Harlots one would think he should rather have kicked than kissed him there is a passage somewhat like this and Esau ran to meet Jacob Gen. 33.4 and he embraced him and fell on his neck and kissed him before he had thought to have killed him but now he kissed him it s not to tell how dear the Father was to his Prodigal Son when he ran and fell on his neck and embraced and kissed him The scope of the Parable is this that Christ is willing and glad to receive sinners Ezek. 33.11 Turn ye turn ye from your evil wayes for why will ye dye O house of Israel 2. Christ manifests this willingness in his practice really amongst many instances I shall insist only on one a notable instance of this year One of the Pharisees named Simon invited Christ to eat with him Luke 36.37 into whose house when he had entred a certain woman that was a sinner abiding there in the City heard of it a widow she was and prompted by her wealth and youth to an intemperate life she came to Jesus in the Pharisees house and no sooner come but she layes her burthen at Jesus's feet and presents him with a broken heart Ver. 38. and weeping eye and an Alabaster Box of Oyntment She stood at his feet behind him weeping and began to wash his feet with her tears and to wipe them with the hairs of her head and she kissed his feet and Anointed them with Oyntment 1. She stands at his feet a sign of her humility O what a change She that was before married to a Noble personage a Native of the Town Castle of Magdal from whence she had her name of Magdalen and she that now was a widow and therefore took her liberty of pride and lust who so proud and vile as Mary Magdalen at this time she comes in remorse and regret for her sins and throwing away her former pride she stoops and waits and humbly stands at Jesus feet 2. She stood at his feet behind him a blushing sign of faith it comprehends in it a Tacite confession of her Sins she knew her self unworthy of Christs presence she durst not look him in the face but believingly she waits behind him her shame speaks her repentance and her waiting on him and not flying from him bespeaks her faith 3. She stood at his feet behind him weeping her grief burst out in tears she heeds not the feast or feaster though usually they are accompanied with joy and mirth and musick and such feasts attended with such vanities she many a time had probably observed yet now she comes in trembling to this feast and falling down before Christ she weeps and weeps bitterly for her sins 4. She began to wash his feet with tears her tears were not feigned but fruitful she wept a shower of tears one considering her tears cries it out Terra rigat coelum the very earth bedews heaven her eyes that before were abused to lust are now fountains of tears she poures out a flood great enough to wash the feet of her blessed Jesus this was the manner of the Jews to eat their meat lying down John 13.23 and Leaning on their Elbows or if many eat together leaning in the bosoms of one another thus at the Passover it is said that there was leaning on Jesus bosom one of his disciples whom Jesus loved And in this posture Jesus sitting or lying at meat Mary had the convenience to weep on his feet which he had cast behind his fellow and O how she weeps a main the Tears so Trickle that she begins to wash Christs feet she not only waters them Jer. 6.1 but washes them that which Jeremy wished Oh that my head were waters and mine eyes a Fountain of Tears Mary fulfills for her head is waters and her eyes are fountains Rivers of Tears run down her eyes O she had pierced Christ with her sins and now she weeps over him whom she had pierced crying out as we may imagine O my sins and O my Christ O foul sins and O sweet Jesus 5. She wipes his feet with the Hairs of her Head her hair added to her beauty sometimes in curling rings or in seemly sheds she made it a snare for men but now she consecrates it to her Lord and makes it a Towel to wipe Christs feet withall O here 's a worthy fruit of serious repentance the Apostle calls it an holy revenge 6. She kissed his feet 2 Cor. 7.11 in token of her new chioce and new love and new affection her kisses had formerly been to wantons but now she bestows them on the feet of Christ 7. She anointed them with ointment which expression was so great an extasie of love and sorrow and adoration that to anoint the feet of the greatest Monarch was long unknown and in all the pomps of Roman prodigality it was never used till Otho taught it Nero. When Simon observed this sinner so busie in the expresses of her Religion he thought within himself that Christ was no Prophet that he did not know her to be a sinner for although the Jews Religion did permit harlots to live and to enjoy the priviledges of the Nation save that their oblations were refused yet the Pharisees who pretended to a greater degree of sanctity than others would not admit them to civil usages or to the benefits of ordinary society and hence Simon made an objection within
great reward he saith not for keeping them but in keeping them there is great reward there is a grace a beauty an excellency in every gracious acting 2. The reward according to the duty to this exercise of Religion Christ hath annexed many sweet and gracious Promises both for this life and that to come and these Promises may be used as helps He had respect unto the recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 To this purpose are the glorious things of Heaven set open before us that we may have an eye to them and be encouraged by them So run that ye may obtain 1 Cor. 9.24 6. The openings and discoveries of the pains of Hell are as helps to restrain us from sin and to keep us in the way to Christ This some call legal but Christ in the Gospel tells us of this in the Gospel we find a description of hell-pains set out by weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth by a worm never dying Matth. 8.12 Mark 9.44 and a fire never going out Oh when I think of those unquenchable flames those remediless torments without hope of recovery remission or mitigation when I think of that privation and loss of the sight of Gods face prepared only for those that serve him in holiness how should I but look about me and prepare for my reckoning Nay how easie should I think any pains in comparison Some persons in affrightment have been seen to carry burthens and to leap ditches and climb walls which their natural power could never have done and if we understood the sadness of a cursed eternity from which we are commanded to fly and yet knew how near we are to it and how likely to fall into it if we continue in sin it would be able to create feares greater than a sudden fire or a mid-night alarm 7. A principle of love wheresoever it is planted is our help be the Yoak never so uneasie yet love will make it light Can. 3.10 Solomon compares the estate of the Church to a chariot and it is described to have Pillars of Silver and a Bottom of Gold and a Covering of Purple the midst thereof being paved with Love a strange expression that the midst of a Chariot should be paved with love but 't is plain the Chariots wherein Christ carries his people up and down in the World and brings them to himself is such a Chariot as the midst thereof is paved with love in this case if there were neither Heaven nor Hell yet a soul would be in the duties of Christianity I remember how Ivo Bishop of Chartres meeting a grave Matron on the way with fire in one hand and water in the other he asked her what those symboles meant and what she meant to do with her fire and water she answered My purpose is with the fire to burn Paradise and with the water to quench the flames of Hell that men may serve God said she without the incentives of hope and fear and purely for the love of God and Jesus Christ Surely it was an high expression for my part I dare not separate those things which God hath joyned together only this I say that where true love is there is an excellent help in our way Heaven-wards 8. The Angels be our helps They are ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of Salvation Heb. 1.14 and the kind of their ministration is excellently set forth by the Psalmist They shall keep thee in all thy wayes they shall bear thee up in their hands least thou dash thy foot against a stone Psal 91.11 12. in this place the Angels are compared to Nurses that have a charge over weak Children to keep them and guard them so the Angels do all the offices of a Nurse or Mother they keep us guard us instruct us admonish us correct us comfort us preserve us from evil and provoke us to good 9. The Motions Inspirations blessed Influences of the Spirit of Christ be our helps many a time the Spirit cries Isa 30.21 and calls on our hearts saying This is the way walk therein as the evil Spirit or Devil in wicked men is continually moving and inclining them to all evil thoughts affections and desires so the good Spirit of God in good men doth incline and move them to good thoughts good affections good actions and hence they are said to be led by the Spirit Rom. 8.14 there are indeed several acts of the Spirit as sometimes there is a breathing or stirring sometimes a quickening or enlivening sometimes a powerful effectual inclining or bending of our hearts unto good things now in some of these works the Spirit is most-what for in the progress of sanctification we need a continual help and influence from Gods holy Spirit and when we obey these conducts Gal. 5.24 we are said to walk in the Spirit and as all these are helps in the wayes of Christianity so by these helps and assistance of Christ's Holy Spirit Christianity is made very easie unto us 10. The Grace of God is our help many feeling the strength of corruption cry out with Paul Rom. 7.24 Ver. 23. 2 Cor. 12.9 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death O I find a law in my members warring against the law of my mind but they consider not the comfortable saying of Christ to Paul My grace is sufficient for thee by the assistance of grace Paul could do any thing I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me Phil. 4.13 Rom. 8.37 Psal 119.32 yea In all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us the Psalmist hath a notable expression to this purpose I will run the way of thy Commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart this enlargement of heart was by the grace of God grace is compared to oyl as a dry purse is softned and enlarged by anointing it with Oyl so the heart drawn together by sin is opened and enlarged by the pouring of grace into it and if grace be present then saith David I will run the way of thy Commandments not walk but run it is an allusion to a Cart-Wheel which crieth and complaineth under a small burthen being dry but when a little Oyl is put into it it runs merrily and without noise and if David could say thus in his time how much more should we that live in these Gospel-times when grace in greater measure is effused and poured out by the grace of Christ should we say we will walk and run and fly in the way of his Commandments Vse Well then is Christian Religion and the practice of it full of sweetness easiness and pleasantness in the first place for conviction this may take away the cavils of some men what is said in way of objection I shall reduce to these particulars 1. They object that Christ himself confesseth it to be a
Yoak and a burthen but no that we answer with Christ his Yoak is easie and his Burthen is light Certainly there are burthens which grieve not the bearers at all as the burthen of feathers upon a Birds back it is nothing grievous to her but rather bears her up and a burthen of Gold and Jewels upon a mans back supposing it the reward of his portage and the hire of his labour it is nothing grievous to him but rather cheers him up Men Brethren and Fathers if we will but come and close with Christ the Spirit is given to enable us and Heaven is promised to encourage us the one gives power and the other stirs up our affections and how then should we complain of pressure O it is a sweet burthen sweetned by his Grace and sweetned by his Spirit and sweetned by a principle of love O how I love thy Law Psal 119.97 174. Psal 19.11 and sweetned by a principle of delight Thy Law is my delight and sweetned with a promise of reward In the keeping of thy Commandments there is great reward 2. They object we feel no such thing you tell us of sweetness easiness pleasantness Mal. 1.13 Amos 8.5 but if we must speak out our own experiences O what a weariness is it when will the New-moon be gone that we may sell Corn and the Sabbath that we may set forth wheat We feel a sweetness in these present enjoyments of the World but as for Holiness Grace Religion the Discipline of Christ we wonder where the sweetness is we can find no such secret golden Mines in these spiritual diggings I answer 1. This indeed is the speech of carnal and prophane men they feel no sweetness easiness pleasantness in Gods wayes The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.14 15. for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth or discerneth all things Poor souls till God speak to your hearts you cannot understand this hidden Manna It is observed that God never sent the pleasant Manna unto Israel so long as their Flower and Bread of Aegypt lasted so never will you tast how good the Lord is so long as you doat on sin and vanity 2. Though you feel not these things for the present yet in time you may do yea certainly if you belong to God in time you will do O but when you will say when I answer the first tast of this sweetness is usually at the first taking of Christs yoak upon us as Merchants desire us to sell their waters are content in the first place to let you see and handle and tast thereby to induce you to buy so Jesus Christ willing as it were to part with Heaven he is content in the first place to impart a certain tast before hand and to sweeten the wayes of goliness unto us B●hold Hos 2.14 I will allure her saith God and bring her into the Wilderness and speak comfortably unto her What is it that God means by alluring of his people I answer it contains these things As 1. A discovery of the beauty of holiness when God first effectually calls the soul home to himself he sets open the beauty of his service naturally the heart is possessed with much prejudice against the wayes of Religion Oh what a strict rule is this to carnal men to pull out their right eyes to cut off their right hands to hate Father and Mother and Wife and Lands and Life for the Name of Christ to cross their own desires to deny their own selves to mortifie their earthly members to follow the Lamb through evil report and good report through afflictions and persecutions and manifold temptations whithersoever he goeth to war with principalities and powers and spiritual wickednesses in high places and hence it is that the Lord is forc'd to set forth the wayes of Christ as beautiful even under crosses and afflictions thus when the watchman smote the Church and wounded her and took away her vail yet she still acknowledged Christ for whose sake she suffered to be white and ruddy Cant. 5.7 10. the fairest of ten thousands Christ sets forth himself and his wayes in all the grace and goodness and beauty and sweetness and loveliness that possibly may be q. d. by these I will allure them that belong unto me 2. An out-bidding of all the temptations of other Lovers before Christ come souls go a whoring from Christ their hearts are allured by other lovers the world the flesh and the Devil come in and they proffer Souls such and such contentments but when Christ comes he deals with souls in a more Powerful way and he out-bids all their former lovers q. d. Did their lovers proffer them comfort I will bid more comfort Did their lovers proffer gain I will bid more gain Did their lovers proffer honour and respect I will out-bid them in that also And indeed then hath the Gospel a true and full and gracious work upon the heart when it yields to the proffers of the Gospel as finding that all that the World can bid is now out-bidden you know when one comes to offer so much for a commodity and another out-bids him he carries it away so when the World and lust and sin proffer to the soul such and such contents then comes Christ and out-bids all and so the bargain is made up and Christ carries the heart away sinners it may be as yet you feel none of these things but in time you may do and in the mean time you see here is a word for it Behold I will allure her c. 3. They object the Saints themselves feel no such things for ought appears to the World whose spirits are more heavy and sad as it is said of Christ himself that he never laughed and as David said of himself Why art thou cast down O my soul Psal 42.5 and why art thou disquieted within me So it may be said of some Christians if they are strict that they are seldom merry or pleasant But I answer 1. Christians that keep indeed close to the rule are for the most part serious and the word may suppose them as sad 2. It may be they are not in their element in the acts of Religion and therefore they cannot express their spiritual cheerfulness a fish cannot delight it self on the Earth but when it is in the water a Bird doth not sing on the ground but when it is got up into the air Gods people cannot rejoyce in sin as drunkards and revellers do but when their hearts are in Religious exercises and in communion with God they are merry and pleasant 3. It may be they are in such company as may make them sad the men of the World object against Saints that they are heavy and sowr and melancholy men but in the mean time they consider not that their swearing
the injury we have done unto God as our Judge and the other is a performance of a service which we owe unto God as our Maker O then how large and full and comprehensive is this life of Christ 2. Consider the excellency the glory of this Object Christ's life is glorious and hence it is that the righteousness of Christ is the most glorious garment that ever the Saints of God did wear It is Marlorat's saying Marlorat Rev. 12.1 that the Church which puts on Christ and his righteousness is more illustrious than the Ayr is by the Sun John thus sets her out in his Vision And there appeared a great wonder in heaven a woman cloathed with the Sun and the Moon under her feet I take this to be a lofty Poetical description of Christ's imputed righteousness imagine a garment were cut out of the Sun and put upon us how glorious should we be O but the righteousness of Christ is much more glorious No wonder if the Church cloathed with the Sun tread the Moon under her feet i.e. if she trample on all sublunary things which are uncertain and changeable as the Moon I count all things but dung saith Paul that I may win Christ Phil. 3.8 9. and be found in him not having my own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by Faith When Paul compares Christ's righteousness with the glory of the world then is the world but dung O the glory O the excellency of the righteousness of Christ 3. Consider the suitableness of this object Christ's life and the virtue of it is most suitable to our condition Thus I might apply Christ to every condition if thou art sick he is a Physitian if thou fearest death he is the way the truth and the life if thou art hungry he is the bread of Life if thou art thirsty he is the water of Life But not to insist on these words It is the daily complaint of the best of Saints O my sins I had thought these sins had been wholly subdued but now I feel they return upon me again now I feel the springs in the bottom fill up my soul again Oh I am weary of my self and weary of my life Oh what will become of me In this case now Christ's life is most sutable his righteousness is a continual righteousness it is not a Cistern Zech. 13.1 but Fountain open for thee to wash in as sin abounds so grace in this gift of righteousness abounds much more Christ's life in this respect is compared to changes of Garments Thou criest O what shall become of me Oh I feel new sins and old sins committed afresh why but these changes of garments will hide all thy sins Zech. 3.4 if thou art but cloathed with the robes of Christ's righteousness there shall never enter into the Lords heart one hard thought towards thee of casting thee off or of taking revenge upon any new occasion or fall into sin Why here is the blessedness of all those that believe Oh then believe Say not would Christ be incarnate for me would he lead such a life on earth for my soul Why yes for thy soul never speak of thy sins as if they should be any hinderance of thy Faith If the wicked that apply this righteousness presumptiously can say Let us sin that grace may abound and so they make no other use of Grace but to run in debt and to sin with a licence how much rather mayest thou say on good ground Oh let me believe Oh let me own my portion in this righteousness of Christ that as my sins have abounded so my love may abound that as my sins have been exceeding great so the Lord may be exceeding sweet that as my sins continue and encrease so my thankfulness to Christ and glory in God and triumph over sin death and the grave may also encrease Why thus be encouraged to believe thy part in the Lord Jesus Christ SECT VI. Of Loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us during his Life Now what is Love but a motion of the Appetite by which the Soul unites it self to what seems fair unto it And if so O what a lovely Object is the Life of Christ who can read over his Life who can think over his worthiness both in his person relations actions and several administrations and not love him with a singular love That which set the Daughters of Jerusalem in a posture of seeking after Christ was that Description of Christ which the Spouse made of him My Beloved is white and ruddy Cant. 5.10 11.12 13 14 15. the chiefest of ten thousands his head is as the most fine Gold his Locks are bushy and black as a Raven his eyes are as the eyes of Dov●s by the Rivers of water washed with milk and finely set his cheeks are as a bed of Spices and sweet flowers his lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling myrrhe c. By these are intimated unto us the government of Christ the unsearchable counsels of Christ the pure nature of Christ without any impurity or uncleanness the gracious promises of Christ the soul saving instructions of Christ the holy actions and just administrations of Christ the tender affections and amiable smilings of Christ the gracious inward and wonderful workings of Christ so that he is altogether lovely or he is composed of loves from top to toe there is nothing in Christ but 't is most fair and beautiful lovely and desirable Now as this Description enflamed the Daughters of Jerusalem so to act our loves towards the Lord Jesus Christ take we a copy of the Record of the Spirit in Scriptures see what they say of Christ John 5.39 this was his own advice Search the Scriptures for they are they which testifie of me O my soul much hath been said to perswade thee to Faith and if now thou believest thy part in those several actings of Christ why let thy Faith take thee by the hand and lead thee from one step to another from his Baptism to his Temptations from his Temptations to his Manifestations and so on Is not here fewel enough for Love to feed upon Canst thou read the history of Love for such is the history of Christ's Life and not be all on a flame Come read again there is nothing in Christ but 't is lovely winning and drawing as 1. When he saw thee full of filth he goes down into the waters of Baptism that he might prepare a way for the cleansing of thy defiled and polluted soul 2. When he saw the Devil ready to swallow thee up or by his baits to draw and drag thy soul down to hell he himself enters into the List with the Devil and he overcomes him that thou mightest overcome and triumph with Christ in his Glory 3. When he
great inconformity and dissimilitude to the life of Christ how should I but lie in the dust O woe is me what a vast disproportion is betwixt Christ's life and mine why thus O my soul shouldst thou humble thy self each morning each prayer each meditation each self examination shouldst thou fetch new fresh clear particular causes occasions matters of humiliation as thus loe there the evenness gravity graciousness uniformity holiness spiritualities divineness heavenliness of Jesus Christ loe there the fragrant zeal dear love tender pity constant industry unwearied pains patience admirable self-denial contempt of the world in Jesus Christ loe there those many yea continual devout divine breathings of soul after God his Fathers glory after the spiritual and immortal good of the precious souls of his redeemed ones Oh all the admirable meekness mercifulness clemency charity with all other excellent temperance rare composure wonderful order of his blessed soul O the sweet expressions gracious conversation O the glorious shine blessed lustre of his divine Soul Oh the sweet countenance sacred discourse ravishing demeanour winning deportment of Jesus Christ and now I reflect upon my self on alas Oh the total wide vast utter difference distance disproportion of mine there from I should punctually answer perfectly resemble accurately imitate exactly conform to this life of Christ but ah my unevenness lightness vanity Ah my rudeness grossness deformity odiousness sleightness contemptibleness execrableness Ah my sensuality brutishness devilishness how clearly are these and all other my enormities discovered discerned made evident and plain by the blessed and holy life of Jesus so true is that rule Contraria juxta se posita magis elucescunt Psal 103.1 3. Let us quicken provoke and incense our sluggish drousie souls to conform to Christ If we will but strictly observe our hearts we shall find them very backward to this duty and therefore let us call upon our souls as David did Bless the Lord O my soul Rom. 8.29 and let all that is within me bless his holy Name let us work upon our souls by reasoning with our own hearts as if we discoursed with them thus O my heart or O my soul if in the deep counsels of eternity this was Gods great design to make his Son like thee that thou also mightest be like his Son how then shouldest thou but endeavour to conform and what sayes the Apostle For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son this was one of his great purposes from eternity this law God set down before he made the world that I should conform to his Son and what O my soul would'st thou break the eternal bands of predestination O God forbid Again if this was one of the ends of Christ's coming to destroy the works of the devil to deface all Sathan's works especially his work in me his Image in me and to set his own stamp on my soul how then should I but endeavour to conform I read but of two ends of Christ's coming into the world in relation to us whereof the first was to redeem his people and the other was to purifie his people He gave himself for us Tit. 2.14 that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works the one is the work of his merit which goeth upward to the satisfaction of his Father the other is the work of his Spirit and grace which goeth downwards to the sanctification of his Church in the one he bestoweth his righteousness on us by imputation on the other he fashioneth his Image in as by renovation and what O my soul would'st thou destroy the end of Christ's coming in the flesh or would'st thou miss of that end for which Christ came in relation to thy good O God forbid Again consider the example of the Saints before thee if this was their holy ambition to be like their Jesus emulate them in this for this is a blessed emulation it is observable how the heathens themselves had learnt a rule very near to this Seneca Senec. Ep. 11. advised that every man should propound to himself the example of some wise and vertuous personage as Cato or Socrates or the like and really to take his life as the direction of all their actions but is not the life of Jesus far more precious and infinitely more worthy of imitation we read in history of one Cecilia a Virgin who accustomed her self to the beholding of Christ for imitation and to that purpose she ever carried in her breast some pieces of the Gospel which she had gathered out of all the Evangelists and thereon night and day she was either reading or meditating this work she carrried on in such a circulation that at last she grew perfect in it and so enjoyed Christ and the Gospel not only in her breast but also in the secrets of her heart as appeared by her love of Christ and confidence in Christ and familiarity with Christ Cant. 1.13 as also by her contempt of the world and all its glory for Christ his sake There is some resemblance of this in the Spouse when she resolved of Christ He shall lye all night betwixt my breast q. d. he shall be as near me as near may be my meditation of him and by consequence my imitation of him shall be constant and continual not only in the day but He shall lye all night betwixt my breasts What O my soul was this the practise of the Saints and wilt thou not be of that communion O God forbid thus let us quicken and provoke our souls to this conformity let us excite rouze incense awake and sharpen up our wretched sluggish drouzy lazy souls our faint feeble sl●gging faultering drooping languishing affections desires endeavours let us with enlarged industry engage and encourage our backward and remiss spirits to fall upon this duty of conformity again and again let us come up higher towards it or if possibly we may compleatly to it that the same mind and mouth and life may be in us that was in Jesus Christ that we may be found to walk after Christ that we may tread in the very prints of the feet of Christ that we may climb up after him into the same h●●ven Kingdom that we may aspire continually towards him and grow up to him even to the measure of the statu●e of the fulness of Christ 4. Let us regulate our selves by the life of Christ whatsoever action we go about let us do it by this rule what Would Christ have done this or at least Would Christ have allowed this It is true some things are expedient and lawful with us which were not sutable to the Person of Christ Marriage is honourable with all men and the bed undefiled but it did not befit his Person who came into the world only to spiritual purposes to beget sons and daughters writing of books is commendable with
as it were of the only begotten Son of the Father and their words seemed to them as it were idle Tales and they believed them not The words in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the same here is the first step of this Clymax his sweat was a wonderful sweat not a sweat of water but of red gore-blood 2. Great drops of blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is sudor diaphoreticus a thin faint sweat and sudor grumosus a thick concrete and clotted sweat in this bloody sweat of Christ it came not from him in small dews but in great drops they were drops and great drops of Blood crassie and thick drops and hence it is concluded as preternatural for though much may be said for sweating blood in a course of nature Aristotle Arist l. 3. de hist anim c. 29. Aug. l. 14. de Civ Dei c. 24. affirms it and Augustine grants that he knew a man that could sweat blood even when he pleased in faint bodies a subtile thin blood like sweat may pass through the pores of the Skin but that through the same pores crass thick and great drops of blood should issue out it was not it could not be without a Miracle Some call them grumes others globes of blood certainly the drops are great so great as if they had started through his skin to outrun the streams and rivers of his Cross 3. Here is yet another clymax in that these great drops of blood did not only distillare drop out but decurrere run a stream down so fast as if they had issued out of most deadly wounds they were great drops of blood falling down to the ground here 's magnitude and multitude great drops and those so many so plenteous as that they went through his apparel and all streaming down to the ground now was it that his garments were died with crimson red that of the Prophet though spoken in another sense yet in some respect may be applyed to this Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel and thy garments like him that treadeth the Wine-fat Oh what a sight was here Isa 63.2 His Head and Members are all on a bloody sweat his sweat trickles down and bedecks his garments which stood like a new firmament studded with stars portending an approaching storm nor stayes it there but it falls down to the ground Oh happy Garden watered with such treas of blood how much better are these rivers than Abana and Pharphar rivers of Damascus yea than all the waters of Israel yea than all those Rivers that water the Garden of Eden 1. This may inform us of the weight and burden of sin Vse that thus presseth Christ under it till he sweat and bleed when the first Adam had committed the first sin this was the penalty in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread Gen. 3.19 but now the second Adam takes upon him all the Sins of all Believers in the world he sweats not only in his face but in all his Body O then how was that face disfigured when it stood all on drops and those drops not of a watry sweat but of a gore blood We see in other men that when they are disquieted with fear or grief the blood usually runs to the heart indeed that is the principal member and therefore leaving the other parts it goes thither as of choice to comfort that but our sweet Saviour contrariwise because he would suffer without any manner of comfort he denies to himself this common relief of nature all the Powers of our souls and parts of our bodies were stained with sin and therefore he sweats blood from every part we sin and our eyes will scarce drop a tear for sin but his eyes and ears and head and hands and feet and heart and all run rivers of tears of blood for us even for our sins Let Jesuites and Friers in meditating of Christ's sufferings cry out against the Jews in this bloody sweat of Christ I see another use alas here 's no Jew no Judas no Herod no Pilate no Scribe no Pharisees here 's no tormentors to whip him no souldiers to crown his Head with thrones here 's neither nailes nor spear to fetch his blood out of his Body how comes it then to pass Is there any natural cause ah no the night is cold which naturally draws blood inwards in the open air he lies grovelling on the ground and there he sweats and bleeds O my heart who hath done this deed As the Lord liveth 2 Sam. 12.5 the man that hath done this thing shall surely die So said David when Nathan replied upon him thou art the man O my heart my sinful heart O my sinful V. 7. deceitful abominable heart thou art the Murderer thy sins sate upon the heart of Christ as heavy as a Mountain of Lead or Iron when none was near but a few dull heavy sleepy Disciples then all the sins of Believers and amongst them thy sins fell upon the soul of Christ as so many murtherers and squeezed blood and made him cry out My soul is heavy heavy unto death Go thy wayes now and weep with Peter and say with David I have sinned against thee Lord. O how should these eyes of mine look upon Christ thus sweating bleeding streaming out blood clods of blood V. 13. great drops of blood from all the parts and members of his Body but I must mourn over him Zech. 12.10 as one that mourneth for his only son but I must be in bitterness as one that is in bitterness for his first-born 2. This may inform us of the extraordinary love of Christ It is said of the pelican that when her young ones are struck with the tail of some poysonous Serpent she presently strikes her breast with her Beak or Bill and so lets out her own blood as a Medicine for them that they may suck and live even so Christ seeing us struck with the poyson of sin he is impatient of delay he would not stay till the Jews let him blood with their whips Luke 12.50 and thorns and nayls I have a Baptism to be baptized with saith Christ and how am I straightned till it be accomplished He is big with love and therefore he opens all his pores of his own accord he lets blood gush out from every part and thereof he makes a precious Balsom to cure our wounds O the Love of Christ As Elihu could sometimes say Job 32.19 Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent it is ready to burst like new Bottles so the heart of Christ was full even full of love so full that it could not hold but it burst out through every part and member of his body in a bloody sweat I will not say but that every drop of Christ's blood was very precious and of sufficient value to save a world but certainly that blood which was not forc'd by whips or thorns
or spear is to be had in singular honour as the myrrhe that by incision of the Tree flows out is very precious yet that which drops out of its own accord is accounted as the first and choyce and as the Balsome which way soever it come is sweet yet that which falls of its own accord is held the most pure and odoriferous to this alludes that Apocryphal-saying in Ecclesiasticus I gave a sweet smell like Cinamon and I yielded a pleasant odour Ecclus. 24.15 like the best myrrhe the vulgar translates it thus Quasi Libanus non incisus vaporavi as the myrrhe-tree that is not cut I evaporated as if Christ should have said without any lanching cutting pruning out of meer love I poured out my blood upon the earth this is certain at this time no manner of violence was offered him in body no man touched him or came near him in a cold night for they were fain to have a fire within doors lying abroad in the air and upon cold earth he casts himself into a sweat of blood surely love is hot he had a fire in his brea● that melts him into this bloody sweat O wonderful Love 3. This may inform us of the Design of Christ in these very sufferings Christ weeps saith Bernard Bern. Serm. in Dom. palm not only in his eyes but in all his members that with the tears of his body he might wash and purifie his body which is the Church or Christ weeps blood that he might give us a sign of the enemies ruine sweat in sickness is as a Crisis or promising sign that Nature with all her force hath strove against the peccant humour and hath now overcome it so this bloody sweat is a blessed Crisis or argument of sin decaying and that the Lamb hath overthrown the Lion As Christ sometimes said Now is the Judgment of this World Joh. 12.31 32. now shall the Prince of this World be cast out and I if I be lifted up from the Earth will draw all men unto me Thus far of Christ's passion before his apprehension And now we may suppose it about midnight the very time which Christ called the hour and power of darkness what followed from twelve till three at night Luke 22.53 we shall discover in the next Section SECT VI. Of Judas's Treason Christ's Apprehension binding and leading unto Annas BY this time the Traitor Judas was arrived at Gethsemani and being near the Garden-door Jesus goes to his Disciples and calls them from their sleep by an Irony as some think he bids them sleep on now and take their rest meaning if they could for danger Mat. 26.45 46. that now was near but withal he adds Behold the hour is at hand and the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners rise let us be going behold he is at hand that doth betray me That it might appear he undertook his sufferings with choice and free election he not only refused to fly but he calls his Apostles to rise that they might meet his Murderers And now they come with Swords and Staves or as John adds Mat. 26.47 John 18.3 Ioh. 18.12 13. with Lanthorns and Torches and Judas going before them and drawing near unto Jesus to kiss him they took him and bound him and led him away to Annas first In this Period I shall observe 1. Judas's Treason 2. Christ's Apprehension 3. Christ's binding 4. Christ's leading to Annas one of the Chief Priests as to his first station 1. Judas's treason And while he yet spake behold a multitude and he that was called Judas one of the twelve went before them and drew near unto Jesus to kiss him Luke 22.47 This Traitor is not a Disciple only but an Apostle not one of the seventy but one of the twelve Augustine speaks of many offices of Love that Christ had done to Judas in especial manner he had called him to be an Apostle made him his Friend his Familiar caused him to eat of his Bread sit at his Table and to dip his hand in the Dish with him yea if his Tradition be true Jesus had delivered Judas often from death Aug. Serm 28. ad fratres and for his sake healed his Father of a Palsie and cured his Mother of a Leprosie and next to Peter honoured him above all other his Apostles Of this we are sure that he kissed him and washed his feet and made him his treasurer and his Almoner and that now Judas should betray Christ O how doth this add to the sufferings of Christ and to the Sin of Judas Behold a multitude and Judas in the front he went before them tam pedibus quam moribus in his presence and in his malice The Evangelist gives the reason of this that he might have the better opportunity to kiss him this was the sign he gave the rout whomsoever I shall kiss that is he lay hold on him he begins war with a Kiss and breaks the peace of his Lord by a Symbole of kindness Jesus takes this ill What Judas betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss q. d. What Luke 22.48 dost thou make the seal of Love the sign of treachery What! must a Kiss of thy mouth be the Key of treason O what a friendly reproof is here By way of use It were well for the world saith Chrysostome especially for the Children of God that Judas were alone in this transgression that there were no more perfidious treacherous Persons in it besides himself But Oh! how fu l is the world of such miscreants Vse Vtinam Judas solus sic peccasset Chrys there was never yet an Abel but he had a Cain to murder him never yet a Moses but he had a Jannes and Jambres to resist him never yet a Joseph but he had unkind Brothers to envy him never yet a Samson but he had a Dalilah to betray him never yet a David but he had an Ahitophel to hurt him never yet a Paul but there was an Alexander to do him much evil nay it is well if in every assembly we meet not with a Judas in civill affairs how many are there that live and make gain by lying swearing cheating coz●ning selling away Christ and their own souls for a lesser matter than thirty pieces of Silver and in religious affairs how many secure and drowsie professors have we amongst us that salute Christ both by hearing the Word and receiving the Seals and yet in their lives and conversations they deny Christ They honour God with their lips Mat. 26.50 but their hearts are far away from him 2. For Christ's apprehension then came they and laid hands on Jesus and took him They apprehended him whom the world cannot comprehend and yet before they took him he himself begins the inquiry and leads them into their errand he tells them that he was Jesus of Nazareth whom they sought this was but a Breath a meek and gentle word
lowest pit in darkness and in the deeps and I sink in the deep mire where there it no standing Behold the Bed which is Solomon's or rather which is Christ's for a grater than Solomon is here Behold the flourishing Bed wherein the King of Saints doth lie surely a place most fordid full of stench his other senses had their pain and his smell felt a loathsom savour in this noysom puddle But we need not borrow light from Candles or lesser stars the Scripture it self is plain Observe we these Particulars 1. They spit in his face this was accounted among the Jews a matter of great infamy and reproach Numb 12.14 And the Lord said to Moses if her Father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven dayes We our selves account this a great affront and so did Job Job 30.9 10. I am their song and their by-word they abhor me they fly far from me and spare not to spit in my face Oh that the sweet face of Christ so much honoured and adored in Heaven should be defiled and deformed by their spitting Oh that no place should be thought so fit for them to void their Excrements and Drivel in as the blessed face of Jesus Christ Isa 50.6 I hid not my face saith Christ from shame and spitting I used no Mask to keep me fair though I was fairer than the Sons of Men I preserved not my Beauty from their nasty Flegm but I opened my face and I set it as a Butt for them to dart their frothy Spittle at 2. They buffet him we heard before that one of the Officers strook Jesus with the palm of his hand but now they buffet him some observe this difference betwixt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the one is given with the open hand but the other with the fist shut up and thus they used him at this time Colaphis illi tuber totum caput facies livida forto excusse dentes they struck him with their fists and so the stroke was greater and more offensive By this means they made his face to swell and to become full of Bunches all over One gives it in thus By these blows of their fists his whole head was swollen his face became black and blew and his teeth ready to fall out of his Jaws Very probable it is that with the violence of their strokes they made him reel and stagger they made his Mouth and Nose and Face to bleed and his Eyes to startle in his Head 3. They covered his face Mark 14.65 Mark 14.65 Several Reasons are rendered for it As 1. That they might smite him more boldly and without shame 2. That they might not have that object of pity in their view it is supposed that the very sight of his admirable form so lamentably abused would have mollified the hardest heart under heaven and therefore they veiled and hoodwink'd that alluring drawing countenance 3. That they might not see their own filth in his face however his Beauty was winning yet they had so bedawbed it with their beastly spitting that they began to loath to look upon him It was a nauseous sight saith one and enough to make one spew to look upon it Nauseam ipsis spectatoribus saeditas illa provocabat But whether his splendor or his horror occasioned this veile over his face this is most certain that it veiled not their cruelty but rather revealed it and made it manifest to all the World 4. They smote him with the palms of their hands saying Prophesie unto us thou Christ who is he that smote thee To pass away that doleful tedious night they interchangeably sport at him first one and then another gives him a stroke we usually call it a Box on the ear and being hoodwink'd they bid him a-read who it is that smote him Some reckon these Taunts amongst the bitterest passages of his Passion nothing is more miserable even to the greatest misery than to see it self scorned of Enemies It was our Saviour's case they used this despight for their desport with a wanton and merry malice they aggravate their injury with scorn q. d. Come on thou sayest thou art Christ the Son of the living God and therefore it is likely thou art Omniscient thou knowest all things tell now who is it that strikes thee We have blind-folded thee that thou canst not see us with thy bodily eyes let thy Divinity aread guess tell prophesie who is it now that smote thee last Who gave thee that blow O Impiety without example Surely if his patience had been less than infinite these very injuries would have been greater than his patience In way of Application Vse 1. Consider Christians whether we had not a hand in these abuses for 1. They spit in the face of Christ who defile his Image in their souls who reject his holy and heavenly motions in their hearts 2. They buffet him with their fists who persecute Christ in his Members Saul Saul why persecutest thou me It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks 3. They cover his face Luke 10.16 that do not readily and willingly confess their sins that extenuate their frailties and imperfections with counterfeit pretexts 4. They mock and scoff at Christ that scorn and contemn his Messengers and Ministers He that despiseth you despiseth me saith Christ O that we would lay these things to our hearts and see and observe wherein we stand guilty of these sins that we may repent 2. Consider Christians and read Christ's Love in all these sufferings O un-heard of kindness and truly paternal bowels of pity and compassion who ever heard before of any that would be content to be spit upon to wipe their filths who spit uppn him that would be content to be beat and buffetted to save them from buffets who were the buffetters that would be content to be blind-folded that he might neither take notice of nor see the offences of them that blind-folded him that would be content to be made a scorn to save them from scorn that shall scorn him Christians you that take your name from Christ how should you admire at the infiniteness and immensity of this love of Christ was it a small thing that the wisdom of God should become the foolishness of men and scorn of men and ignominy of men and contempt of the World for your sins sake O think of this And now the dismal night is done what remains but that we follow Christ and observe him in his Sufferings the next day the Psalmist tells us Psal 30.5 Sorrow may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning only Christ can find none of this joy neither morning nor evening for after a dismal night he meets with as dark a day what the passages of the day were we shall observe in their several hours CHAP. II. SECT I. Of Christ's Indictment and Judas's fearful end ABout six in the morning Jesus was
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world Paul was a mortified man dead to the world and dead to sin But how came he so to be why this he attributes to the Cross of Christ to the death of Christ the death of Jesus was the cause of this death in Paul How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our Consciences from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.14 There is in the death of Christ first a value and secondly a vertue the former is available to our justification the latter to our sanctification now sanctification hath two parts mortification and vivification Christ's death or passive obedience is more properly conducible to the one his life or active obedience to the other Rom. 6.5 Hence Believers are said to be engraffed with Christ in the likeness of his death there is a kind of likeness betwixt Christ and Christians Christ died and the Christian dies Christ died a natural death and a Christian dies a spiritual death Christ died for sin and the Christian dies for sin this was another end of the death of Christ there issues from his death a mortifying vertue causing the death of sin in a Believer's soul one main part of our sanctification O my soul look to this herein lies the pith and marrow of the death of Christ and if now thou wilt but act and exercise thy faith in this respect how mightest thou draw the vertue and efficacy of his death into thy soul But here is the question how should I manage my Faith or how should I act my faith to draw down the vertue of Christ's death and so to feel the vertue of Christ's death in my soul mortifying crucifying and killing sin I answer 1. In prayer meditation self-examination receiving of the Lord's Supper c. I must propound to my self and soul the Lord Jesus Christ as having undertaken and performed that bitter and painful work of suffering even unto death yea that of the Cross as it is held out in the History and Narrative of the Gospel 2. I must really and steadfastly believe and firmly assent that those sufferings of Christ so revealed and discovered were real and true undoubted and every way unquestionable as in themselves 3. I must look upon those grievous bitter cruel painful and with all opprobrious execrable shameful sufferings of Christ as very strange and wonderful but especially considering the spiritual part of his sufferings viz. the sense and apprehension of God's forsaking and afflicting him in the day of his fierce anger I should even be astonished and amazed thereat what that the Son of God should lay his head on the block under the blow of divine Justice that he should put himself under the wrath of his heavenly Father that he should enter into the combat of Gods heavy displeasure and be deprived of the sense and feeling of his love and mercy and wonted comfort how should I but stand agast at these so wonderful sufferings of Jesus Christ 4. I must weigh and consider what it was that occasioned and caused all this viz. Sin yea my Sin yea this and that Sin particularly This comes nearer home and from this I must now gather in these several Conclusions As 1. It was the Design of Christ by his sufferings to give satisfaction to the infinite Justice of God for sin 2. It was intended and meant at least in a second place to give out to the world a most notable and eminent instance and demonstration of the horridness odiousness and execrableness of sin sith no less than all this yea nothing else but this would serve the turn to expiate it and atone for it 3. It holds forth again as sin is horrid in its self so it cannot but be exceeding grievous and offensive to Christ Oh it cost him dear it put him to all this pain and Torture it made him cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me how then should it but offend him above all above any thing in the world 4. If therefore there be in me any spark of love towards Christ or any likeness to Christ or if I would have Christ to bear any affection love regard or respect unto me it will absolutely behoove me by all means to loath sin and cast it away from me to root it up to quit my hands and to rid my heart of it The truth is I cannot possibly give forth a more pregnant proof of my sincere love entire affection respect conformity resemblance sympathy to and with Christ than by offering all violence usually all holy severity against sin for his very sake Now when the heart is thus exercised God by his Spirit will not fail to meet us our desire and endeavour of our soul to weaken and kill sin in the soul is not without its reward but especially when sin hath in this way and by this means lost the affection of the soul and is brought in hatred and disesteem it decayes and dyes of it self for it only liveth and flourisheth by the warm affections good thoughts and opinion that the soul hath of it So that matters going thus in the heart the influence that should nourish and maintain sin is cut off and it withers by degrees till it be finally and fully destroyed Thus for directions now for the encouragements of our faith to believe in Christ's death consider 1. The fulness of this object Christ crucified there is a transcendent all-sufficiency in the death of Christ in a safe sense it contains in it universal redemption it is sufficient for the redemption of every man in the world yea and effectual for all that have been are or shall be called into the state of grace whether Jews or Gentiles bound or free I know some hold that Christ dyed for all and every man with a purpose to save only thus they explicate 1. That Christ dyed for all men considered in the common lapse or fall but not as obstinate impenitent or unbelievers he dyed not for such as such 2. That Christ dyed for all men in respect of the request or impetration of salvation but the application thereof is proper to believers 3. That Christ dyed not to bring all or any man actually to salvation but to purchase salvability and reconciliation so far as that God might and would salva justitia deal with them on terms of a better covenant 4. That Christ hath purchased salvability for all men but faith and regeneration he hath merited for none because God is bound to give that which Christ hath merited of him although it be not desired or craved I cannot assent to these positions but thus far I grant that Christ's death in it self is a sufficient price and satisfaction to God for all the world and that also it is effectual in many particulars to all men respectively in all the world every man in one way or other hath
Mat. 26.65 as making himself equal with God yea see how the high Priest rends his clothes saying he hath spoken blasphemy Surely all this he endured that very blasphemers may find mercy if they will but come in and believe in Jesus I might instance in other sins art thou a Traytor a glutton a drunkard a wine-bibber a thief a seducer a companion of sinners why see now how Jesus Christ was for thy sake thus called reputed accounted whatever the sin is there 's something in Christ that answers that very sinfulness thou art a sinner and he is made sin to satisfie the wrath of God even for thy sin thou art such and such a sinner and he is accounted such and such a sinner for thy sake that thou mightest find in him something suitable to thy condition and so the rather be encouraged to believe that in him and through him all thy sins shall be done away Away away unbelief distrust despair you see now the brazen serpent lifted up you see what a blessed object is before you O believe O look up unto Jesus O believe in him thus carrying on the work of thy salvation in his death SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation for us during his sufferings and death What! did he suffer and dye Rom. 5.8 Greater love than this hath no man that a man should give his life for his friends but God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us Why here 's an argument of love indeed how should we but love him who hath thus loved us in prosecution of this I have no more to do but first to shew Christ's love to us and then to exercise our love to him again 1. For his love to us had not God said it and the Scriptures recorded it who would have believed our reports yet Christ hath done it and it is worth our while to weigh it and consider it in an holy meditation Indeed with what less than ravishment of Spirit can I behold the Lord Jesus who from everlasting was cloathed with Glory and Majesty now wrapped in rags cradled in a manger exposed to hunger thirst weariness danger contempt poverty revilings scourgings persecution but to let them pass into what extasies may I be cast to see the Judg of all the world accused judged condemned to see the Lord of life dying upon the tree of shame and curse to see the eternal Son of God strugling with his Fathers wrath to see him who had said I and my Father are one sweating drops of blood in his agony and crying out on his cross my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Oh whither hath his love to mankind carried him had he only sent his creatures to serve us had he only sent his Prophets to advise us in the way to Heaven had he only sent his Angels from his chamber of presence to attend upon us and to minister to us it had been a great deal of mercy or if it must be so had Christ come down from Heaven hnmself but only to visit us or had he come only and wept over us saying Oh that you had known even you in this your day the things belonging to your peace Oh that you had more considered of my goodness Oh that you had never sinned this would have been such a mercy as that all the world would have wondered at it but that Christ himself should come and lay down his blood and life and all for his people and yet I am not at the lowest that he should not only part with life but part with the sense and sweetness of God's love which is a thousand times better than life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindness is better than life that he should be content to be accursed that we might be blessed that he should be content to be forsaken that we might not be forsaken that he should be content to be condemned that we might be acquitted O what raptures of Spirit can be sufficient for the admiration of this so infinite mercy be thou swallowed up O my soul in this depth of Divine love and hate to spend thy thoughts any more upon the base objects of this wretched world when thou hast such a Saviour to take them up Come look on thy Jesus who dyed temporally that thou mightest live eternally who out of his singular tenderness would not suffer thee to burn in hell for ten twenty thirty forty an hundred years and then recover thee by which notwithstanding he might better and deeper have imprinted in thee the blessed memory of a dear Redeemer no no this was the Article betwixt him and his Father That thou shouldst never come there see but observe but Christ's love in that mutual agreement betwixt God and Christ Oh I am pressed saith God with the sins of the world as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves come my Son either thou must suffer or I must damn the world Accordingly I may imagine the Attributes of God to speak to God Mercy cryes I am abused and Patience cryes I am despised and goodness cryes I am wronged and Holyness cryes I am contradicted and all these come to the Father for Justice crying to him that all the world were opposers of his Grace and Spirit and if any be saved Christ must be punished In this case we must imagine Christ stepped in nay rather than so saith Christ I will bear all and undertake the satisfying of all And now look upon him he hangs on the cross all naked all torn all bloody betwixt Heaven and Earth as if he were cast out of Heaven and also rejected by Earth he hath a Crown indeed but such a one as few men will touch none will take from him and if any rash man will have it he must tear hair skin and all or it will not come his hair is all clodded with blood his face all clouded with black and blew he is all over so pittifully rent outwards inwards body and soul I will think the rest alas when I have spoken all I can I shall speak under it had I the tongues of men and Angels I could not express it Oh love more deep than hell Oh love more high than heaven the brightest Seraphims that burn in love are but as sparkles to that mighty flame of love in the heart of Jesus 2. If this be Christ's love to us what is that love we owe to Christ Oh now for an heart that might be some wayes answerable to these mercies Oh for a soul sick of love yea sick unto death how should I be otherwise or any less affected this only sickness is our health this death our life and not to be thus sick is to be dead in sins and trespasses why surely I have heard enough for which to love Christ for ever The depths of God's grace are
Heb. 11.19 2. For Jonah from the time that Jonah was cast into the sea and swallowed up of the Fish Jonah was in account as a dead man but the third day the Lord spake unto the Fish and it vomited up Jonah upon the dry land Jonah 2.10 Jonah 2.10 And that this was a figure of Christ Christ himself discovers for as Jonah was three days and three nights in the whales belly so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth Mat. 12.40 3. For Hezekiah from the time that Isaiah said unto him set thine house in order for thou shalt die and not live 2 King 20.1 Hezekiah was in account as a dead man his bed was to him as a grave but on the third day he was miraculously raised up again and as the Prophet said on the third day thou shalt go up to the house of the Lord. Ver. 5. Surely this was a figure of Christ And th●se Types prefiguring Christ are as one Reason 2. Because the Prophets and himself had so foretold for the Prophets we have cited Psal 16.10 Hosea 6.2 And for himself he told them very expresly that he must suffer many things of the Elders Mat. 16.21 and chief Priests and Scribes and be raised again the third day Mat 17.22 23. Mat 20.18.19 yea said he the Son of man shall be betrayed into the hands of men and they shall kill him and the third day he shall be raised again and after this he tells them again that the Son of man should be betrayed and crucified and the third day he should rise again so often had he prophesied thus that the chief Priests and Pharisees came to Pilate after his death Mat. 27.62 63.64 saying Sir we remember that this deceiver said while he was yet alive after three dayes I will rise again command therefore that the Sepulchre be made sure until the third day And no question his Disciples remembred these sayings for so the two Disciples travelling towards Emmaus after they had said many things concerning him and that they trusted it had been he which should have redeemed Israel they added this as a most special observation above all the rest Luke 24.21 that to day is the third day since these things were done Why all these signifie that his rising on the third day was the accomplishment of Prophesies and a certain evidence that he was the Messiah indeed 3. Because that time was most suable for comforting his friends for confounding his enemies for clearing the truth both of his Humanity and Divinity he would stay no longer lest his Disciples might have been swallowed up with grief and he would come no sooner lest his enemies should have urged that he had not died the watchmen kept the Sepulchre till this very time but then the Angels appearing and the earth trembling they became as dead men and assoon as they could they run away and with their tidings confounded all Christ's enemies And withall as Christ consisted both of a divine and humane nature so in respect of his humanity he must die and to shew his death it was requisite that he should rise no sooner than the third day and in respect of his divinity it was impossible that he should be held of death any longer than three days for as he must not see corruption so God raised him up having loosed the pains of death Acts 2.24 because it was not possible that he should be holden of it SECT II. Of the Reasons of Christ's Resurrection 2. WHy he rose we have these Reasons 1. That he might powerfully convince or confound his adversaries they that crucified him were mightily afraid of his Resurrection they could tell Pilate Sir we remember this deceiver said while he was yet alive after three days I will rise again Mat. 27.63 64. and therefore they desire him of all loves to command the Sepulchre to be made sure until the third day if ever he rise again whom they have killed then they knew they were all shamed then the last errour as they said would be worse than the first All the world would look on them as a cursed generation to kill the Messiah to crucifie such a one as after his death and burial should rise again now then that he might either convince them or confound them notwithstanding their care their watch their Seal their making all sure as possibly they could at the very same time he told them before he broke open the gates of death and made the gates of Brass to flie asunder 2. That he might confirm the faith of all his followers If Christ be not risen 1 Cor. 15.14 your Faith is vain saith the Apostle Christs resurrection both confirms our faith as to his person and to his office for his person Rom. 1.4 this speaks him to be the eternal Son of God by the resurrection from the dead and for his office this speaks him to be the promised Messiah the great Prophet the chief high Priest the King and Saviour of his Church When the Jews saw Christ purging the Temple and Messiah-like reforming what he saw amiss in the House of God What sign say they shewest thou unto us Joh. 2.18 19 22. seeing thou dost these things And he said unto them destroy this Temple and in three days I will raise it up When therefore he was risen from the dead his Disciples remembred that he had said this unto them and they believed the Scripture and the Word which Jesus had said As the resurrection of Christ argues his Mediatorship so it confirms their faith as it is said They believed the Scriptures and they believed Jesus Christ And thus John writing of his resurrection tells us John 20.31 These things are written that ye might believe and that believing c. 3. That it might clearly appear that he had fully satisfied the justice of God for sin So it was that God laid the forfeiture of the bond on Christ he arrested him brought him to the Goal the Grave and there he was till the Debt was paid to the utmost farthing and then that it might clearly appear that the bond was cancelled the Prisoner discharged God's justice satisfied he rose again from the dead Some make a question when his Bond was cancelled and they say as the debt was paid so the Bond was cancelled ere he stirred off the Cross only by the Cross I suppose they mean the utmost degree of Christs humiliation viz. his being held in captivity and bondage under death and so the hand-writing of the Law that was against us was there delivered him and there he blotted it out cancelled it took it out of the way Col. 2.14 nailing it to his Cross Others think that as to the full discharge of a debt and freeing the debtor two things are requisite first the payment of the debt secondly the tearing or
himself with those fruits of righteousness and new obedience which they are able to bring forth to him O there let us seek him and we shall find him 3. Eor the Person to whom he appeared it was Mary Magdalen she that sometimes lived a sinful life that was no better than a common Curtizan now is first up to seek her Saviour Let never any despair of mercy that but hears of the conversion of Mary Magdalen Dionisius tells us that she that was loose and dissolute in her youth betook her self in old age to a most solitary life that she sequestred her self from all worldly pleasures in the mountains of B●lma full thirty years in all which time she gave her self to meditation fasting and prayer The texts tells us That much was forgiven her and she loved much Luke 7.47 John 20.11 Her love to Christ appears at this time But Mary stood without at the Sepulchre weeping and as she wept she stooped down and looked into the Sepulchre this Scripture we may call a song of loves or if you will a song of degrees every word is a step or degree of love more than other As 1. Mary stood at the Sepulchre she stood by the grave of Christ it signifies her great love to Jesus Christ many would stand by him while he was alive but to stand by him dead none would do it those we love most we will wait on them living or if they dye we will bring them to the grave and lay them in the grave but there we leave them only Mary chuseth Christ's Tomb for her best home and his dead corps for her chief comfort she praiseth the dead more than the living and having lost that light of the Sun of righteousness she desired to dwell in darkness in the shadow of death 2. But Mary stood q. d. others did not but she did Peter and John were there even now and when they could not find Jesus away they went but Mary went not she stood still their going away commends her staying behind how many circumstances may we observe in Mary setting out her love to Christ above them all to the grave she came before them from the grave she went to tell them to the grave she returns with them and at the grave she stayes behind them Certainly there was in Mary a stronger affection than either in Peter or John and this affection fixed her there that she could not stir go who would she would not go but stay still But Mary stood without 3. But Mary stood without at the Sepulchre weeping This was love indeed see how every word is a degree of love But Mary stood there weeping when Christ stood at Lazarus's grave-side weeping the Jews said then Behold how he loved him and may not we say the very same of Mary Behold how she loved him her very love runs down her cheeks she cannot think of Jesus as lost but she weeps she weeps for having lost him whom she loved at first she mourned for the departing of his soul out of his body and now she laments the taking his body out of the grave at first she mourned because she could not keep him alive yet that sorrow had some solace in that she hoped to have enjoyed him dead but when she considers that his life was lost and not so much as his body could be found Oh she weeps and weeps The last office she could do was to anoint his body and to bewail his death and to that purpose she comes now unto his grave as sometimes she had washed his feet with her tears now she would shed them afresh upon his feet and head and hands and heart and all but when she saw the grave open and the body gone and nothing of Christ now left her to mourn over she weeps the more she weeps most bitterly But Mary stood there weeping 4. And as she wept she stooped down and looked into the Sepulchre She did so weep as she did seek withall her weeping hindred not her seeking she sought and sought to what purpose that Christ is not in the tomb her own eyes have seen the Disciples hands have felt the empty winding sheet doth plainly avouch Peter and John had looked in before nay They went into the Sepulchre and saw the linnen cloaths lying John 20.6 7. and the napkin that was about his head wrapt by it self and yet for all this she will be stooping down and looking in she would rather condemn her own eyes of error and both their eyes and hands of deceit she would rather suspect all testimonies for untrue than not to look after him whom she had lost even there where by no diligence he could be found It is not enough for love to look in once You know this is the manner of our seeking when we seek something seriously where we have sought already there we will seek again we are apt to think we sought not well but if we seek again we might find it were we sought And thus Mary sought and when she could think of no other place so likely to find Christ in as this she sought again in this she will not believe her own senses she would rather think that she looked not well before than she will leave off looking When things that are dearly affected are gone and lost loves nature is never to be weary of searching even the oftenest searched corners they must still be an haunt for hope O love thinks it hath never looked enough in the first verse she looked And saw the stone taken away from the Sepulchre and now again she stooped down and looked into the Sepulchre 4. For the manner how he appeared it was first by his Angels and secondly by himself 1. There was an apparition of Angels she seeth two Angels in white sitting Iohn 20.12 13. the one at the head and the other at the feet where the body of Jesus had layen I will not stay here only for the opening of the words I shall answer these questions As 1. What means the apparition of Angels I answer it is not only a preparation to Christ's apparition Maries loss must be restored by degrees though she saw not Christ at first yet she saw his Angels it often pleaseth Christ in the desertions of his people to come to them by degrees and not at once he comes first by his Angels so it was at his birth and so it is at his resurrection But 2. What do Angels in a Sepulchre it is a place fitter for worms than Angels we never read of Angels being in a grave before this time they are blessed creatures and is the grave a fit place for them O yes since Christ lay in the grave that very place is a blessed place Blessed are the dead Rev. 14.13 Psal 116.15 which dye in the Lord from henceforth Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints But 3. Why are the Angels in white
life In some sence then and in a Mystery Christ was a Gardiner but Maries mistake was in supposing him the Gardiner of that only place and not the Gardiner of our souls Souls in desertion are full of mistakes though in their mistakes are sometimes many mysteries 2. Her speech upon her mistake If thou hast born him hence c. we may observe 1. That her words to Christ are not much unlike the answer she gave the Angels only she seems to speak more harsh to Christ than she did to the Angels to them she complains of others They have taken away my Lord but to Christ she speaks as if she would charge him with the fact as if he looked like one that had been a breaker up of graves a carrier away of Corpses out of their place of rest Sir if thou hast born him hence But pardon love as it fears where it needs not so it suspects very often where it hath no cause When love is at a loss he or any that comes but in our way hath done it hath taken him away 2. That something she spoke now to Christ which she had not mentioned to the Angels She said not unto them tell me where he is but reserved that question for himself to answer Come tell me where thou hast laid him q. d. thou art privy to the place and with the action of removing Christ my Lord Oh how she errs and yet how she hits the truth Jesus must tell her what he had done with himself sure it was fittest for his own speech to utter what was only possible for his own power to do 3. That the conclusion of her speech was a meer vant or flourish And I will take him away Alas poor woman she was not able to lift him up there are more than one or two allowed to the carrying of a corps and as for his it had more than an hundred pound weight of myrrhe and other odours upon it sure she had forgotten that women are weak and that she her self was but a woman how was it possible that she should take him away she could not do it well but she would do it though there is no essay too hard for love she exempts no place she esteems no person she speaks without fear she promises without condition she makes no exception as if nothing were impossible that love suggesteth the darkness could not fright her from setting out before day the watch could not fear her from coming to the Tomb where Christ was laid she resolved to break open the seals and to remove the stone far above her strength and now her love being more incensed with the fresh wound of her loss she speaks resolutely I will take him away never considering whether she could or no love is not ruled with reason but with love it neither regards what can be nor what should be but only what it self desireth to do 4. That through all this speech she omits the principal verb she enquires for Jesus but she never names him whom she enquires after She could say to the Angels they have taken away my Lord but now she talks of one under the term of him if thou hast born him hence tell me where thou hast layd him and I will take him away him him him but she never names him or tells who he is this is solaecismus amoris an irregular speech but loves one dialect q.d. who knows not him why all the world is bound to take notice of him he is worthy to be the owner of all thoughts no thought in my conceit can be well bestowed upon any other than him And therefore Sir Gardiner whosoever thou art if thou hast born him hence thou knowest who I mean thou canst not be ignorant of whom I love there is not such another among the sons of men as the psalmist Psal 45.2 he is the fairest among the Children of men or as the Spouse he is the chiefest of ten thousands and therefore tell me some news of him of none but him of him and only of him O tell me where thou hast laid him and I will take him away A soul sick of love thinks all the world knows her beloved and is therefore bound to tell her where he is the daughters of Jerusalem were very ignorant of Christ Can. 5.9 and yet I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem said the Spouse if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love Can. 5.8 Iohn 20.16 2. Christ appears as unknown Jesus saith unto her Mary she turned her self and saith unto him Rabboni which is to say Master Sorrow may endure for a night but joy comes in the morning she that hitherto had sought without finding and wept without comfort and called without answer even to her Christ now appears and at his apparition these passages are betwixt them first he speaks unto her Mary and then she replies unto him Rabboni which is to say Master 1. He speaks unto her Mary it was but a word but O what life what Spirit what quickening and reviving was in the word the voice of Christ is powerful if the Spirit of Christ come alone with the Word it will rouse hearts raise spirits work wonders Ah poor Mary what a case was she in before Christ speak unto her she ran up and down the Garden with O my Lord where have they layd my Lord but no sooner Christ comes and speaks to her by his Spirit and with power but her mind is enlightened her heart is quickened and her soul is revived Observe here the difference betwixt the Word of the Lord and the Lord speaking that word with power and Spirit we find sometimes the hearts of Saints are quickened fed cherished healed comforted in the use of the means and sometimes again they are dead sensless heavy and hardened nay which is more the very same truth which they hear at one time it may be affects them and at another time it doth not the reason is they hear but the Word of the Lord at one time and they hear the Lord himself speaking that word at another time Mary heard the Word of the Lord by an Angel woman why weepest thou but her tears dropped still she heard again the word of the Lord by Christ himself woman why weepest thou and yet she weeps and will not be comforted but now Christ speaks and he speaks with power Mary and at this word her tears are dried up no more tears now unless they be tears for joy and yet again observe the way how you may know and discern the effectual voice of Jesus Christ if it be effectual it usually singles a man out yea though it be generally spoken by a Minister yet the voice of Christ will speak particularly to the very heart of a man with a marvelous kind of Majesty and Glory stampt upon it and shining in it take an humble broken drooping Spirit he hears of the free offer of
respects as Angels and men are called gods but simply absolutely essentially and without any restriction Sometimes we read in Scripture that Men or Angels Exod. 7.1 good and bad are called Gods And the Lord said to Moses see I have made thee a God to Pharoah And thou shalt be instead of God to Aaron Thus Nebuchadnezzer is called the mighty one Exod. 4.16 Ezek. 31.11 2 Cor. 4.4 Exod. 22.28 Psal 82.6 Psal 138.1 or the God of the Heathens and Satan is called the god of this world Thus Magistrates are called gods thou shalt not revile the gods I have said yee are gods Angels are called gods before the gods will I sing praises unto thee but in all these there is some restriction or improper speech Moses is called Pharoah's God and Aaron's God not absolutely but with restriction to Pharoah and Aaron Nebuchadnezzer is called the god of the heathen and Satan the god of this world not absolutely but with restriction to the heathen and this world Magistrates are called gods and good Angels are called gods Heb. 1.5 not absolutely but in respect of some offices or excellency which they partake of from God Only Jesus Christ is called God without any restriction Ver. 8 Rom. 8.32 and not only in respect of some office or similitude but absolutely essentially properly as being from all eternity God of God as being God of the substance of the Father before all worlds What is Christ only God as an Angel is God Joh. 2.16 1 John 5.20 I challenge here all blasphemers in the world Vnto which of the Angels said he at any time thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Or unto which of the Angels said he at any time Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever or to which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Son my own Son my only begotten Son unto which of the Angels said he at any time this is the true God the great God who is over all God blessed for ever Amen Tit. 2.13 Rom. 9.5 unto which of the Angels are those divine Attributes given as of eternity immutability omnipotency omniscience omnipresence and yet are all these given to Christ for eternity I was set up from everlasting from the beginning or ever the earth was for immutability Prov. 8.23 Heb. 1.15 Mat. 11.27 John 2.25 Mat. 28.20 thou art the same and thy years shall not fail For omnipotency all things are delivered unto me of my Father For omniscience he needed not that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man For omnipresence lo I am with you alway unto the end of the world Men Brethren and Fathers I am forced to make this defence of the divinity of Christ because of the blasphemy of those Arians Photinians Eunomians now again raked out of hell O who would think that such a generation of men should be amongst us in this Island where the Gospel hath shined so brightly for so many years we maintain Christ is God and Christ is Lord we say with Thomas my Lord and my God Ah say blasphemers Christ is God and Christ is Lord as Magistrates and Angels are called Gods and Lords I hope I have said enough to difference betwixt Christ and them howsoever I conclude with the Apostle Though there be that are called Gods whether in heaven or in earth as there be Gods many and Lords many yet to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him 1 Cor. 8.5 6. 3. He acknowledgeth Christ to be his Lord and his God And Thomas answered and said unto him my Lord and my God Now his saith broke out from the things seen and felt he is raised up to believe things neither seen nor felt he sees the prints and skars in the manhood of Chrst and now he believes that Christ is God yea that Christ is his God my Lord and my God Observe here that faith gives the soul a propriety in God and Christ As God loves some with a special and peculiar love so faith answers God and Christ's particular love by a particular application my Lord and my God and my Christ Faith is an apropiating an applying an uniting grace in the actings of faith on God or on Christ as God we may observe these steps 1. It sees God in his Glory and Majesty in his Greatness and Goodness and all other his attributes it sees God as the infinite fountain of all good and it considers what an infinite dreadful thing it were to be separated from this God it sees God and the sight makes a deep impression on that very soul the love of that God is more to the soul than all the world and the least displeasure of that God is more trouble to that soul than all the miseries that all creatures under heaven are able to bring upon it 2. It discovers the reality of this Glory and Majesty of this greatness and goodness of God Before any faith is planted in a soul the very use of reason may come to understand much of God and Christ but in comparison it looks upon God and Christ as notions conceits and imaginary things only faith convinces the soul throughly of the certainty and truth of such things where true faith is the things we believe are more certain to us than things we see or feel or handle faith is so sure in its apprehensions of God and Christ that it will venture soul and body the loss of all upon that account it will bear any hardship yea it will venture the infinite loss of eternity upon them 3. It enables the soul to cast it self upon God in Christ for all the good and happiness it ever expects Alas saith the soul I have formerly rested on worldly things I looked upon them as the only real sure excellences that I had to enjoy but now I find they are vain things deceitful things no better than reeds of Egypt vanity of vanities and nothing is real sure excellent on this side God and Christ Cant. 6.2 and therefore I will rely upon him and none but him it is only God is an all-sufficient good it is only Christ that is the rock that will never fail on him will I role my self unto him will I make an absolute resignation of all I will betrust him with all I have and all I am I will commit all unto him for ever and ever 4. As faith relyes all upon God in Christ so it apropriates all God and all Christ unto it self I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine there is a mutual propriety betwixt Christ and the Church and betwixt Christ and the soul Christ hath a propriety in me Psal 73.35 and I have a peculiar propriety in Christ Christ is mine so as I have none in the world so mine whom have
believers to partake abundantly of what is in him he cannot abide that any should content themselves with a present stock of grace Christ is not as a stream that fails or as a channel that runs dry Christ is not as water in a ditch which hath no living spring to feed it no no Christ is the fountain of life he is the chief ordinance of life that ever God set up I know there are other means of Christs appointment but if thou wilt live at the spring and dri●● in there yea drink abundantly according to the overflowings of this fountain O the life and growth of life that would come in Oh the vertue of Christ's resurrection that Christ's Spirit meeting and assisting would flow into thy soul for thy vivification Thus for directions now for the encouragements of our faith to believe in Christ's resurrection 1. Consider the excellency of this object A sight of Christ in his beauty and glory would ravish souls and draw them to run after him the wise Merchant would not buy the pearl till he knew it to be of excellent price great things are eagerly sought for Christ raised Christ glorified is an excellent object O who would not sell all to buy this pearl who would not believe 2. Consider of the power vertue and influence of this object into all that golden chain of priviledges if Christ be not raised you are yet in your sins 1 Cor. 15.17 18. then they also which are fallen a sleep in Christ are perished From the resurrection of Christ flows all those priviledges even from justification to salvation The first is clear and therefore all the rest 3. Consider that Christ's resurrection and the effects of it are nothing unto us if we do not believe it is faith that brings down the particular sweetness and comforts of Christ's resurrection unto our souls it is faith that puts us in the actual possession of Christ's resurrection whatsoever Christ is to us before faith yet really we have no benefit by it until we believe it is faith that takes hold of all that Christ hath done for us and gives us the actual enjoyment of it oh let not the work stick in us what is Christ risen from the dead and shall we not eye this Christ and take him home to our selves by faith the Apostle tells us that he that believed not hath made God a lyar 1 Joh. 5.10 because be believeth not the record that God hath given of his Son Unbelief belyes God in all that he hath done for us O take heed of this without faith what are we better for Christ's resurrection 4. Consider of the tenders offers apparitions that Christ raised makes of himself to our souls when first he arose to confirm the faith of his Disciples he offers himself and appears to Mary Magdalen to the other women to Peter Thomas and all the rest and all those apparitions were on this account that they might believe Joh. 29.31 these things are written that ye might believe In like manner Christ at this day offers himself in the Gospel of grace and by his Spirit he appears to souls Methinks we should not hear a Sermon of Christ's resurrection but we should imagine as if we saw him whose head and haires are white like wool as white as snow Rev. 1.14 15. whose eyes are as a flame of fire whose feet are like unto fine brass as if they burned in a furnace whose voyce is as the sound of many waters or if we are dazled with his glory methinks at least we should hear his voyce as if he said fear not I am the first and the last I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Amen q. d. Come Ver. 17 18. cast your souls on me it is I that have conquered sin death and hell for you it is I that have broke the serpents head that have took away the sting of death that have cancelled the bond of the hand-writing against you that have in my hands a general acquittance and pardon of your sins come take it take me and take all with me see your names written in the acquittance that I tender take out the copy of it in your own hearts only believe in him who is risen again for your justification O my soul what sayst thou to this still sweet voyce of Christ shall he who is the Saviour of men and glory of Angels desire thee to believe and wilt thou not say Amen to it Oh how should I blame thee for thy unbelief what aspersions doth it cast on Christ he hath done all things well he hath satisfied wrath fullfilled the Law and God hath acquitted him pronounced him just faith is contented he can desire no more but thou sayst by unbelief that Christ hath done nothing at all unbelief professeth Christ is not dead or at least not risen from the dead unbelief professeth that justice is not satisfied that no justification is procured that the wrath of God is now as open to destroy us as ever it was Oh that Christ should be crucified again in our hearts by our unbelief come take Christ upon his tenders and offers embrace him with both armes SECT VI. Of Loving in Jesus in that Respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurection surely if we hope in Christ and believe in Christ we cannot but love Christ if Christ's resurrection be our justification and so the ground both of our hope and faith how should we but love him who hath done such great things for us she that had much forgiven her loved much and if by vertue of Christ's resurrection we are Justified from all our sins how should we but love him much but that I may let down some cords of Love whereby to draw our loves to Christ in this respect let us consider thus Love is a motion of the appetite by which the mind unites it self to that which seems good to it You may object that Christ is absent how then should our souls be united to him but if we consider that objects though absent may be united to the powers by their species and images as well as by their true beings we may then be said truly to love Christ as raised though he be absent from us come then stir up thy appetite bring into thy imagination the Idea of Christ as in his resurrection present him to thy affection of Love in that very form wherein he appeared to his Disciples as gazing upon the dusty beauty of flesh kindleth the fire of carnal love so this gazing on Christ and on the passages of Christ in his resurrection will kindle this spiritual love in thy soul Draw near then and behold him Is he not white and ruddy the chiefest among ten thousands is not his head as the most fine gold are not his locks bushy Cant. 5.10 11 12 13. and
his praise and bidding him welcome into glory and am I sinning here on earth and by my sins crucifying again and again the Lord of glory O that I might ascend with Christ O that I were now on the wing towards heaven Oh what is it that hinders my ascension but this clog of clay so long as this body remains a natural body I cannot ascend oh therefore that the change were come Oh that this natural body were spirituall that this corruptible had put on incorruption and this mortal had put on immortality then could I move upwards as well as downwards such is the supernatural property of a glorified body that it ascends or descends with equal case or if this be not possible for my present condition if this body if mine must first descend before it ascend if it must down into the grave before it go up into glory why yet Oh that my better part were on the wing Oh that my soul were mounting upwards Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver my soul from this body of death or if the union be so strong for a while that neither soul nor body can really or substantially ascend Phil. 1.23 yet O that I were still ascending in a spiritual way O that my affections were still on things above and not on things beneath yea I could wish a nearer union even by a dissolution why Christ is ascended and I would fain be where Christ is though it cost me dear I desire to be dissolved I desire to depart and to be with Christ which is for better 2. Let us see Christ sitting down at the right hand of God and so desire to sit with him when Christ sate down it was not in his own pure Personal right simply as it is his inheritance Eph. 2.5 6. but with relation to his Saints and Members He hath quickened us together wtth Christ and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus I confess Christ's sitting at God's right hand as taken for the sublimity of his power is not communicable unto us for that is Christs own prerogative to which of the Angels said he at any time Heb. 1.13 Sit on my right hand Yet his sitting in heaven as it is indefinitely expressed is in some sort communicable unto us for he sate down as a common person thereby shewing that we were to sit down with him in our proportion Rev. 3.21 Him that overcomes I will grant to sit with me in my Throne even as I also overcame and am set down with my Father in his Throne Christ sits in his Fathers Throne and we sit in Christ's Throne Christ sits at the right hand of God and w● sit at the right hand of Christ Oh how desirable is this The Mother of Zebedees Children understood this mystery very darkly Mat. 20.21 22 23. yet worshipping Jesus she desired a certain thing of him what thing why grant saith she that these my two Sons may sit the one at thy right hand and the other on thy left hand in thy Kingdom Christ blamed them because they know not what thy asked and yet he tells them that to sit on his right hand and on his left is given to them for whom it is prepared of his Father O my soul desire after this for this is worthy of thy desire this is a great thing an high exaltation another manner of honour than any that this world affords Courtiers desire no more but to sit at the Princes right hand but O the vertue of Christ's Session that thereby thou shouldst sit at the right hand of God! this is the very height and excellency of heavens glory only take heed of apprehending it after a carnal and natural way this very exaltation consists in the Image of God and communion with God it is the spiritual part and power and glory of heaven if any thing be desirable above another surely this above all Eph. 1.20 21. what that Christ should be exalted above all Principalities and Powers and mights and dominions and every thing that is named in this world and in the other what that Christ should sit down in his Fathers Throne Eph. 4.10 in the highest part of Heaven far above all heavens and that I a poor worm dust and ashes should sit with him in Heaven should be one with him in glory should be as near him in honour and happiness as such a poor creature is possibly capable of Oh how should I but hunger and thirst after this if I might have a wish I would not wish low things why this is the very top and height and quintessence of Heaven Christ in his Fathers Throne and I in Christ's Throne in desiring this I desire all and therefore whatever thou givest or denyest Lord give me this and I have enough for ever 3. Let us see Christs mission of his holy spirit and so desire a share in that gift we cannot expect to sit with Christ but we must first have the spirit of Christ and therefore as we would have that let us desire after this The greatest gift we can expect in this world is the spirit of Christ Consider O my soul all things here below are either temporal or spiritual things and of things spiritual this is the sum the in-dwelling of the Spirit O Lord give me thy self and that contains all gifts O give me the spirit Psal 4.6 and thou canst not but with him give me all things there be many that say saith the Psalmist Who will shew us any good earthly things are desired of many but is any thing on earth to be compared with this gift from heaven if it were only the beauty of holiness it were certainly a most desirable thing if we rightly understand it holiness though but one effect of the spirit is a most rare thing holiness fills the soul with joy peace quietness assurance holiness entertains the soul with feasts of fat things and of refined wines holiness carries the soul into the banqueting-house of apples and flaggons holiness gives the soul a dear communion with God and Christ holiness brings the soul into a sight of Christ an access to him a boldness in his presence holiness admits the soul into the most intimate conferences with Jesus Christ in his bed-chamber in his galleries of love and that which is an argument of more beauty than all the creatures in the world have besides holiness attracts the eye and heart and longings and ravishments the tender compassions and everlasting delights of the Lord Jesus and if holiness be thus lovely Oh what is the holy spirit it self what is the Rise the Spring the Fountain of holiness what O my soul that not only grace but the spirit of Christ should dwell in thy spirit that thou shouldst be God's building and that not as the rest of the world is for his creatures to inhabit 1 Cor. 3.9
2 Cor. 6.16 Cant. 7.5 but as a Temple for himself to dwell in as a Gallery for himself to walk in Oh what longings Oh what pantings and gaspings Oh what faintings and swoonings should there be in thy spirit after this Spirit Come holy spirit O come and dwell in my soul I know thou wilt make the place of thy feet glorious if I have but thy presence I shall be all glorious within O come come holy Spirit SECT IV. Of hoping on Jesus in that respect 4. LEt us hope in Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars thus was the Apostles Prayer Rom. 15.13 Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and Peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost could we abound in hope that Christ's Ascension Session and Mission of his Spirit did belong to us we should never be ashamed Hope maketh not ashamed Rom. 5.5 O then let us look to our hope and be sure that it be of the right stamp which in reference to every of these passages we may examine thus As 1. If Christ's Ascension be mine then am I ascended with Christ I mean not in respect of any bodily Ascension for that must not be untill the last day nor in respect of any essential substantial soul-ascension for that must not be before the separation of soul and body at our deaths-day but in respect of our spiritual ascension for so we may ascend into heaven by faith and love though for the present we are on earth Col. 3.1 2. if ye be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth If Christ our Head be ascended then we that are his Members must needs follow after him in our affections Christ tells us Where our treasure is there will our hearts be also Mat. 6.21 If Christ our Treasure be ascended into heaven our loves our affections our hearts will follow after him and if our hearts be in heaven no question but we our selves both souls and bodies shall at last ascend when Christ ascended we ascended virtually with him now we ascend spiritually and at last we shall ascend bodily for he that ascended shall descend and then we shall meet him in the ayr and so shall we be ever with the Lord. 1 Thes 4.17 In the mean time to maintain our hope let us ascend dayly by faith and love and this is our character that Christ's Ascension is truly ours 2. If Christ's Session be mine then am I set down with Christ in heavenly places I mean not bodily but by faith which faith makes it as sure to my soul as if I had a foot already in heaven Faith is the substance of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 and the evidence of things not seen By faith I now sit in heavenly places in that I verily believe I shall do it one day my hope is now certain in that I am as sure of that I look for as I am of that I have already received it is the common objection We see it not As the Apostle said of Christ We see not yet all things put under him but he presently answers We see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels crowned with glory and honour Heb. 2.8 9. and so we may be sure the thing is as good as done for if he be above all must come under in like manner we see not our selves in present possession but we see Christ crowned and our selves sitting with him virtually and therefore at last we shall see our selves actually crowned and sitting together with Christ in heavenly places In the mean time faith takes possession of the Kingdom of Heaven saith makes the soul even now to converse with God 1 Tim. 6.19 and Christ and Saints and Angels Faith layes hold upon eternal life it puts the soul as it were into heaven and sets it down at the right hand of Christ and this is our character that Christ's Session is truly ours 3. if Christs spirit be mine and sent to me then have I both the person and train of the spirit of Christ it is the having the spirit and the working of the spirit in me that is my evidence of the Spirits mission I look upon this as the greatest Question and the weightiest and most important case of conscience that can be propounded or known of us viz. Whether the spirit of Christ doth reside in us or whether we have a well-grounded hope to say of our selves that we have the in-dwelling of the spirit of God Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God saith the Apostle and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Cor. 6.19 And again Know ye not that your bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost In this Question he seems to put it out of Question that true Christians should know and in right temper do know that the spirit of God dwells in them if we know not this we cannot know that we have any part in Christ because the holy spirit is the principal bond of our union betwixt Christ and us if we know not this we cannot know that we are justified for we have nothing to do with Christ's Righteousness by which we are justified untill by our spiritual union Christ is made ours if we know not this we cannot know we are the adopted Children of God for it is the spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 whereby we cry in our hearts Abba Father if we know not this we cannot know that we are sanctified for it is the spirit which is the beginner and perfecter of our sanctification if we know not this we cannot know that our prayers are heard for it is the spirit that helps our infirmities Rom. 8.26 and that makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered if we know not this we cannot know whether we are in error or truth or whether our religion which we profess be true or false for it is the spirit who enlightens us and teacheth us and leadeth us into all truth if we know not this we cannot know our own comforts for he is the only true Comforter from whom all sound comfort springs Come then and put we our selves to the trial Let us search whether we have the spirit of Christ which we may resolve if we will not deal deceitfully with our own hearts by these following signs 1. The Spirit of Christ is the spirit of illumination if he dwell in us he will enlighten our eyes reveal to us those saving truths of God as they are in Jesus But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost John 14.6 1 Joh 2.20 v. 27. whom the Father will send in my name he shall teach you all things But ye have an unction from
is this had not Christ said it how could I have believed it admire O my soul at this aim of Christ the meaning of his exalting himself it was to exalt thee and the meaning of his exalting thee on this manner it is to m●nifest to all the World what the Son of God is able to do in raising so poor a creature to so rich a glory O the end of Christ's sitting at God's right hand hereby th● Saints are Christ's ass ssors Lord's of the higher house the Kings Peers to judge the World with him Christ divides as it were the throne with them I appoint unto you a Kingdom as my Father hath appointed unto me Luk. 22.29 30. that you may eat and drink at my table in my Kingdom and sit on thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel 3. Christ sent down the Holy Ghost that he might dwell in our souls endow us with gifts and graces that he might comfort us seal us unto the day of redemption fit us for glor● amongst the many ends for which Christ sent down his holy spirit I shall insist only on these two 1. That he might help us to cry Abba Father and make us to come boldly to the Throne of grace as Chil●ren to a Father It is the spirit that tak●s us by the hand and leads us to the Father when others stand at a distance and cannot come near As a Princes Son is admitted at all times though others are kept our by O●ficers and Guards so though there be never so much darkness and fire and terrour about God yet the adopted child who hath received the spirit of adoption can say make way there and let me come to my Father guards are appointed to keep out strangers but not Sons And no wonder for the spirit makes intercession for us Rom. 8.26 with groanings which cannot be uttered the spirit teacheth us what to pray and how to pray as ●e ought the spirit puts a courage and boldness into the hearts of his S●ints even to admiration this appears in that sometimes they have beset God with his promises that he could no way get off Quicken me according to thy word Psal 119.25.28.29.116.169 And strengthen me ac●ording to thy word And be mercifull unto me according to thy word And uphold me according to thy word And give me understanding according to thy word And sometimes they have beset God with their challenges of his Justice Faithfulness and Righteousness so David Deliver me in thy righteousness Psal 31.1.35.24.119.40.143.1 And judge me according to thy righteo●sness An quicken me according to thy righteousness And in thy faithfulness answer me and in thy righteousness Why this is the ●pirits work he helps our infirmities he imboldens our spirits in their approaches to God surely it is one end of the spirits mission Be●ause ye are sons Gal. 4.6 God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts crying Abba Father I will not deny but that bastards strangers without the Covenant having no right to God as their Father may yet petition God as a subdued people do their Conqueror or as Ravens cry to God for food or as some howl upon their beds for Corn and Wine but they cannot pray Hos 7.14 in right Prayer there is not only required gracious ingredients in the action but also a new state of adoption and filiation many speaks words to God who do not pray many tell over their sins who confess not their sins to God many speak good of God who do not praise God thousands claim Fathership in God where there is no Sonship nor ground in the thing it self A new nature is only that best bottom of Prayer that takes it off from being a taking of God's Name in vain Now this is the fruit of the spirit and one of those ends of the spirits mission 2. That he might guide us into all Truth I mean into all necessary Fundamental saving Truths in this respect we have need of the spirit in these dayes He it is that Dictates to us which is the true Religion he it is that transcribes upon our hearts that which was before onely written in our books he it is that not onely reveals truth from without but imprints it also on the soul as a man doth a seal by impressing it on the wax 1 John 5.10 to this purpose saith the Apostle He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself how in himself I answer 1. In that the Spirit gives him a habit of faith 2. In that the Spirit causeth him to bring it forth into act 3. In that the Spirit stamps on the soul all those other impressions of desire hope love joy or whatever else we call the new nature so that now there is a new nature within him he hath new thoughts new designs new desires new hopes new loves new delights he drives a new trade as it were in this world for another world he is become in Christ a new Creature 2 Cor. 5.17 Old things are passed away and all things are become new And from hence we may soundly argue the truth of our religion Mark this as the Written word is the testimony without us so are these impressions of the spirit the testimony within us by which we may know every necessary truth as it is in Jesus this is the meaning of the Apostle He that believeth hath the witness in himself unbelievers have indeed a testimony without them but believers have a double testimony one with out and one within and this witness within us will go with us which way soever we go it will accompany us through all straits and difficulties The external testimony may be taken from us men may take from us our Bibles our Teachers our Friends or they may imprison us where we cannot enjoy them but they cannot take from us the Spirit of Christ this witness within is a permanent setled habituate standing witness O what an excellent help is here that a poor Christian beyond all the furniture of the most Learned Men that want this testimony of the spirit of Christ surely this advantage will exceedingly furnish us against all temptations to any errour that is plainly contrary to the essentials of religion One of our late Divines puts a case Mr. Baxters Spirits witness to the truth of Christianity If the Devill or any seducer would draw us to doubt whither there be indeed a Christ or whither he did rise again ascend sate down at God's right hand and thence sent down the holy Ghost what an excellent advantage is it against this temptation when we can repair to our own hearts and there find a Christ or a Spirit of Christ within us O saith the sanctified soul have I felt Christ relieving me in my lost condition delivering me from my captivity reconciling me to God and bringing me with boldness into his glorious presence and now
his holy Spirit and thou mayest go singing to thy grave a lively saith in such particulars would set a soul in heaven even whilest yet on earth SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars much hath been said already of Christ's Conception Birth Life Death Resurrection such Arguments of love as are enough to swallow up souls in love to Christ again O the treasures of love and wisdom that have been opened in former passages but as if all those were not enough for God see here new Gold mines new found out Jewels never known to be in the world before opened and unfolded in Jesus Christ Here are the incomes of the beams of light most inaccessible here are the veins of the unsearchable Glories of Jesus Christ as if we saw every moment a new heaven a new treasure of love the Bosom of Christ is yet more opened the new breathings and spirations of love are yet more manifested See! Christ for us and for our salvation is gone up to Heaven is set down at God's right hand and hath sent down the holy Ghost into our hearts in the pouring out of these Springs of Heavens love how should our souls but open the mouth-wide and take in the streams of Christ's Nectar Honey and Milk I mean his sweet and precious and dear love-breathings We have heard of Christ's invitations Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden but suppose Christ had never outed his love in such a love-expressing Come to me Mat. 11.28 yet Christ himself in these glorious particulars is such a drawing object the very beauty of Christ the very smell of the Garments of Christ very capacious and wide Heaven of Christ's exaltation are intrinsecally and of themselves such drawing ravishing winning objects that upon the apprehension of them we cannot chuse but love Christ as Gold that is dumb and cannot speak yet the beauty and gain of it cryeth aloud Come hither poor creature and be thou made rich so if Christ should never open his lips if he should never gently move Open to me my sister my love my dove my undefiled Cant. 5.2 for my head is full of dew and my locks with the drops of the night yet the Glory the Power the Soveraignty of Christ the exaltation of his Person and the magnificence of his Gifts should even change our souls into a Globe or mass of Divine Love and Glory As it were by the Spirit of the Lord. 2 Cor. 3.18 Two things I shall instance in which may be as the Load-stones of our love to Christ the first is his glory and the second his bounty 1. For his Glory no sooner was he ascended and set down at God's right hand but John the Divine had a sight of him and oh what a glorious sight Rev. 1.13 14 15 16. He was cloathed with a garment down to the feet and girt about the paps with a golden girdle his head and his hairs were white like wooll as white as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire and his feet like unto fine brass as if they burned in a furnace and his voice as the sound of many waters and he had in his right hand seven stars and out of his mouth went a sharp two edged sword and his countenance was at the Sun that shineth in his strength when John saw him thus he swoons at his feet but Christ for all his Glory holds his head in his swoon saying fear not I am the first and the last I am he that liveth and was dead ver 17 18. and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and hath the Keys of hell and of death A glorious Christ is good for swooning dying sinners would sinners but draw near and come and see this King in the chariot of love and come and see his beauty the uncreated white and red in his sweet countenance he would certainly draw their souls unto him Nay say that all the damned in hell were brought up with their burning fiery chains to the utmost door of Heaven could we strike up a window and let them look in and behold the Throne and the Lamb and the Troops of glorified spirits cloathed in white with Crowns of gold on their heads and Palms in their hands singing the eternal praises of their glorious King oh how would they be sweetned in their pain and convinced of their foolish choice and ravished with the fulness of those joyes and pleasures that are in Christ's face for evermore surely much more may this glory of Christ warm thy heart O my soul what an happiness were it to see the King on his Throne to see the Lamb the fair Tree of Life the branches which cannot for the narrowness of the place have room to grow in For the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain him What an happiness were it to see love it self and to be warmed with the heat of immediate love that comes out of the precious heart and bowels of this princely and royal Standard-bearer as yet thou canst not must not see these sights there 's no seeing the King thus in his beauty till thou comest to glory for then and then only must thou see him face to face and yet the Idea and Image of this glory is seen and may be seen of every true believing soul enough may be seen by an eye of faith to kindle in thine heart a flame of love to the Lord Jesus Christ Oh who can think of the glory that is in this dainty delightful One and not be swallowed up in love Who can think of Christ's sitting at God's right hand and sparkling in this glory round about and casting out beams of glory through East and West and North and South through Heaven and Earth and Hell and not love him with the whole heart soul and might I remember one dying and hearing some discourse of Jesus Christ Oh said she speak more of this let me hear more of this be not weary of telling his praise I long to see him how should I but long to hear of him Surely I cannot say too much of Jesus Christ in this blessed subject no man can possibly hyperbolize had I the tongues of Men and Angels I could never fully set forth Christ it involves an eternal contradiction that the creature can see to the bottom of the Creator Suppose all the sands on the Sea-shore all the Flowers Herbs Leaves twigs of Trees in Woods and Forrests all the Stars of Heaven were all rational creatures and had they that wisdom and tongues of Angels to speak of the loveliness beauty glory and excellency of Christ as gone to Heaven and sitting at the right hand of his Father they would in all their expressions stay millions of miles on this side Jesus Christ O the loveliness beauty and glory of his Countenance can I speak or you
hear of such a Christ and are we not all in a burning love in a seraphical love or at least in a conjugal love O my heart how is it thou art not love sick how is it thou dost not charge the daughters of Jerusalem as the spouse did Cant. 5.8 I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love 2. For his bounty no sooner was he ascended and set down at God's right hand but he gives gifts unto men and he sends down the holy Ghost This was the Gift of gifts I shall only weigh two Circumstances in this Gift either whereof both dignifies and casts a sparkle of bounty from the Giver into the heart of the Receiver to move him to love As One Circumstance is the greatness of the Giver certainly the preheminence or dignity of any principle ennobleth and enhanceth the effect a gift coming from a great Person carries ever a scent with it of a certain greatness and relisheth either of excellency or superiority or nobility or all It is storied of Charles the fifth that in his wars being ever prest with want of money and so unable to remunerate the services of divers Dutch Captains and Nobles whom he had entertained he used after any great exploit performed by them to call together his Nobles and Camp into such a field and there in the presence of them all to take a Gold chain from about his own neck and to put it about the neck of such a Captain or such a Collonel and so to embrace him and to give him thanks for his gallant service why this they esteemed a greater favour being Circumstanced by such a Person in such a way than if in very deed he had given them a sufficient pay or remuneration O they valued that Chain more than many bushels of the like Gold the very Person of the Emperour hanged at the Chain such a precious Jewel as in warlike conceits a million of Gold could not countervail O my soul if an Emperour thus gained the affections of men how shouldst thou but love Christ the great Emperour of Heaven and Earth Numb 11 17. it was he that gave thee his Spirit it was he that took off the Spirit which is upon him so is the expression of God to Moses and put it upon thee and doth not the Person of Christ the Dignity of Christ inhance the value of the gift as all gifts are signs of love so the love of a great Personage and the gifts issuing from such a love ought more to be accounted than any gifts of any meaner person whatsoever 2. Another Circumstance is the greatness of the Gift this argueth greatness of good will and consequently deserveth a correspondence of a semblable affection Now what greater gift had Christ in store than to give his own spirit the spirit proceedeth from him and is the same essence with himself the spirit is the third Person of the true and only God-head proceeding from the Father and the Son and coeternal coequal and consubstantial with the Father and the Son this appears by those divine Attributes and Properties which are attributed and communicated to the holy spirit As 1. Eternity God never was without his spirit Gen. 1.1 2. In the beginning God created heaven and earth and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters 2. Omnipotency because he together with the Father and the Son createth and preserveth all things By his Spirit he hath garnished the heavens Job 26.13 33.4 1 Cor. 12.11 1 Cor. 2.10 the Spirit of God hath made me and all these things worketh that one and the self-same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he will 3. Omnisciency or the knowledge of all things For the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God 4. Immutability or unchangeableness Men and brethren Acts 1.16 Rom. 5.5 this Scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the holy Ghost spake 5. Infinite mercy or love God is love and the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us 6. Holy indignation even against hi●●en sins They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit Isa 63.10 Acts 5.3 4 9. Eph. 4.30 why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye to the holy Ghost thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God a plain Text for the Divinity of the holy Ghost How is it that ye have agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord Grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption I might add Miracles Mat. 12.28 28.19 1 Tim. 4.1 2 Cor. 3.38 and the institution of Sacraments and Prophesies and Gifts and Graces as the effects of his Divinity I cast out devils saith Christ by the Spirit of God and baptize in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost And the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith And we are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. See now how the holy spirit is God coeternal coequal and consubstantial with God the Father and God the Son is not this a great gift yea as great a gift as possibly can be given what can he more than to give himself and to give his spirit O the bonds of love that are upon man towards Christ in this respect Come my soul and take a view of the Glory and Bounty of Jesus Christ if thy heart be not all brass and iron and stone if there be any fleshiness softness or pliableness in it why then how shouldst thou chuse but love if either beauty or bounty if either Majesty or magnificence can draw thy affection Christ will have it for in him is all O let him be thy all surely if thou hast any thing besides himself he is the Donor of all he is the beauty of all the sum of all the perfection of all yea he is the Author Preserver and Finisher of all SECT VII Of Joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in these particulars there is not a particular under consideration but 't is the object of a Christians joy As 1. How should it heighten my joys and enlarge my comforts when I do but consider that Christ is ascended into glory by this it is clear and evident that Christ is accepted of the Father for me or otherwise he should never have been received into Heaven if any frown had been in the face of God surely Christ coming so near God he should have had it if any exception had been against his satisfaction any flaw in our pardons surely Christ should have heard of it yea without question he must have been turned out of Heaven until he had made a full payment of our debts
conversation is in heaven Phil 3.20 I do not know any one thing wherein we can be more like to Christ exalted whiles we are upon earth than to have our hearts our affections our conversations with Christ where he is now then if we be vertually risen with Christ and ascended with Christ and set down with Christ in heavenly places let us spiritually ascend and sit down with him in these respects certainly there is a proportion in our heavenly conversation oh let our conversations be in Heaven In prosecution of this I shall examine these Quaeries 1. What do we mean by our conversation in heaven 2. Why must our conversation be in heaven 3. By what means must we come up to this conversation in heaven 1. By our conversation in heaven I mean our aim at heaven as heaven is our home so our eye is there whatever we do our end our scope is to fit us for heaven and to lay in for heaven We look not saith the Apostles at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen 2 Cor. 4.18 for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal We look not that is we aim not at things which are seen invisible things are the only scope and aim of a gracious soul 2. By our conversation in heaven I mean our communion with Christ in heaven Truly our fellowship is with the Father 1 John 1.3 and with his Son Jesus Christ As it is amongst friends that converse together they act mutually for the comfort one of another there is a mutual embracing and opening of their hearts to one another at every turn so in our conversings with Christ there is a communion or a mutual acting of the soul upon Christ and of Christ upon the soul we let out our hearts to Christ and he lets out his heart to us especially when we are with Christ in his Ordinances it 's not enough to call upon God and to use some broken-hearted expressions but oh what communion have I with Jesus Christ I cannot be satisfied except I taste and see how good the Lord is I cannot be quiet except I hear somthing from Heaven this morning Why this is an heavenly conversation 3. By our conversation in Heaven I mean our living according to the Laws of Heaven in all our ways we must still enquire What rule is there from Heaven to guide me in these ways such and such a thing I have a mind to but will the Law of Heaven justifie me in this have I any word from Jesus Christ to guide me in this sometimes indeed my lust my own ends and the common course of the world was my rule but now I dare not act but according to the Will and Scepter of Jesus Christ now I am guided by the Laws of Heaven Why this is an Heavenly conversation 4. By our conversation in Heaven I mean our thoughts and meditations of Heaven and heavenly things When I awake saith David I am always with thee Psal 139.18 the hearts of believers are frequently upon their heavenly treasures as it is storied of Queen Mary that a little before her death she told them if they ript her open they would find Call is in her heart so it may be said of them whose conversation is in Heaven if you rip them up you shall find Heaven in their hearts not a day passes over their heads without some converse with Heaven without some thoughts or meditations of heaven and heavenly things 5. By our conversation in heaven I mean our affections on heaven or on Christ in heaven Set your affections on things above i.e. set your desires loves hopes joys Col. 3.2 breathings on heavenly things our affections are precious things and are onely to be set on precious objects oh what a shame is it to set our affection on the things of this life have we a Kingdom a God a Christ a Crown in Heaven to set our affections upon and shall we set them upon dross and dung and such base things are not all our pleasures and vanities base in comparison of Christ O be not we so base to set our affections on earthly things but rather on God and Christ and this is our heavenly conversation 6. By our conversation in Heaven I mean our tradings our negotiations for Heaven even whilest we are upon Earth the word in the Original points at this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our trading is in Heaven though our bodies be not there yet our tradings are there we carry and behave our selves in this life as free Denizons of the City of Heaven our City whereof we are Citizens and whereunto we have right is in Heaven above in this respect we trade not for strifles as other men do but we trade for great things for high things we merchandize for goodly pearls even for God and for Christ who sitteth at the right hand of God We see now what is meant by our conversation in Heaven 2. Why is the conversation of the Saints in Heaven 1. Because they know full well that the Original of their souls came from God and Heaven the body indeed was of the dust of the ground but the soul was the breath of God so it is said of the first man God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life Gen. 2.7 and man became a living soul The soul had a more heavenly and divine Original than any of the other creatures that are here in this neather World and when God works grace in the soul and so it begins to know it self and to return to it self it then looks on all things here below as vile and as contemptible things it then looks upward and begins to converse with things sutable to its Original As it is with a child that hath a noble birth if transported into another Country and there used like a slave there set to take channels or as the Prodigal to feed swine while he is there and knows not his Original he minds nothing but to get victuals and to do his work that he is set about but if once he come to know from whence he was that he is indeed born heir to such a Prince in such a Country O then his thoughts and mind and longings will be altered O that I were in my own Country O that I were with my Father in his Court Even so it is with the souls of the Sons of men they are the birth as I may so speak of the great King of Heaven and Earth and though by the fall of man they came to be as slaves to Satan yet when God is pleased to convert the soul then he discovers thus Oh man thou art born from on high thy soul is as it were a sparkle of God himself thou art come from God and thou art capable of communion with God even with God the Father and God the Son and God the Holy
continueth ever hath an unchangeable Priesthood and the work of his Priesthood is interpreted ver 25. To make intercession for ever The meaning of this is that God would not have him continue to be a Priest in title only or in respect onely of a service past and so to have only the honour of Priesthood perpetuated to him out of the remembrance of what he once had done But God would have him to enjoy as the renown of the old to a perpetual spring of honour by this new work of intercession and so to preserve the verdure of his glory ever fresh and green and the sum of the Apostles reasoning is this that seeing himself was to be for ever so his work of Priesthood should be for ever that so his honour might be preserved and continued for ever also 5. It is Christ's love to his Saints his heart is so inamoured with his Saints that therefore he intercedes for them for ever Love is as strong as death it is never weary of doing good for the party beloved now Christ's Saints are Christ's love My sister my love Cant. 5.2 Mal. 3.17 John 15.19 Isa 43.20 my dove the Saints in Christ's books are so many jewels And they shall be mine saith the Lord of hoasts in that day when I make up my jewels the Saints are Christ's only choyce the very flower of the Earth You have I chosen out of the world and ye are my people my chosen All the World is Christ's refuge and Kings are but morter to him onely the Saints are Christ's chosen they are they whom the Lord in his eternal councels hath set a part for himself But know saith the Psalmist that the Lord hath set apart him that is Godly psalm 4.3 The Saints are Christ's image i.e. the resemblance of Christ in all that which is his chief excellency I mean in his righteousness and holiness as if I would take the picture of a man I would not draw it to resemble his back-parts but as near as I could I would draw it to life the very face and countenance so are the Saints the very picture the image the draught of God in his top excellency The Saints are in covenant with Jesus Christ and therefore in nearer relation than any others hence it is that they are called the portion of God the treasure of God the peculiar people of God those that God and Christ satisfie themselves in those that God and Christ have set their hearts on the children of God the Father the very Spouse and bride of God the Son in some respect nearer than the Angels themselves for the Angels are not so married to Christ in a mystical union as God's people are now is it any wonder that those who are so very dear to Christ should be in the prayers of Christ if they were so much in his heart that sometimes be shed his blood for them will he not now intercede for O yes to this end he carries them on his breast or heart as near as near may be that they may be in a continual remembrace before the Lord for ever his very love compels him to this office to intercede for them 6. It is Christ's delight to intercede for his Saints before the world was Prov. 8.31 Psalm 40 7 8. His delights were with the sons of men and when the fulness of time came then said he Lo I come in the volume of the book it is written of me I delight to do thy Will O my God and what was that but to be with the sons of men he knew that was his Fathers pleasure and in respect of himself he had a delight to live with them and to dye for them and no sooner he entred into Heaven but there he delights to officiate still in behalf of the sons of men he carries their names on his heart there and though some of their persons be on earth and he in his bodily presence is in Heaven yet distance of place cannot deaden his delights in the remembrance of them he is ever minding his Father of his people in the neather world he tells him that they are his all in all upon the earth all his joy and all his delight and all his portion as men use to give portions to their children so God having but one Son by eternal generation he hath given the Elect unto him as his portion and hence he makes it his great business in Heaven to provide mansions for his portion to take up God's heart for his portion to beg favour and love for his portion Here 't is the joy of Christ in Heaven in going to his Father and telling him Why Father I have a small portion yet on earth and because they are on earth they are still sinning against thy Majesty but I have suffered and satisfied for their sins and hither am I come to mind Thee of it and contiunally to get out fresh pardons for new sins come look on my old satisfaction didst Thou not promise Isa 53.11 12. is it not in the Articles of agreement betwixt Thee and me that I should see of the travel of my soul and should be satisfied didst Thou not say that because I poured out my soul therefore Thou wouldst divide me a portion with the great and the spoyle with the strong O my Father now I make intercession for the transgressors give me out pardons for an hundred thousand millions of sins Thou hast said and sworn that Thou hast no pleasure in the death of sinners and it is my pleasure my joy my infinite delight to save sinners these are my seed my portion my redeemed ones and therefore let them be saved Thus Christ intercedes and his delight in his Saints as knowing it to be his Fathers mind draws him on to this intercession indeed this reason hangs upon that primary and first reason it is God's will that Christ should intercede as it is Christ's delight to do the will of his Father in Heaven I delight to do thy Will O my God 7. It is Christs compassion that causeth intercession Christ is such an high Priest Heb. 4.15 saith the Apostle as cannot but be touched with the feeling of our infirmities He was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin When he was on earth he felt our infirmities frailties miseries and as a man that hath felt the Stone or Gout or Fever or especially that hath felt soul-troubles cannot but compassionate those that are in the like condition so Christ having had the experience of our outward and inward sufferings he cannot but compassionate us and hence it is his very compassion's moving that he intercedes to his Father in our behalf It is observed that the very office or work of the High-Priest was to sympathize with the people of God onely in the case of the death of his kindred he was not as others to sympathize or mourn but Jesus Christ goes beyond all
men nor the best Ministers under Heaven escape them Are they not all say they † I lately received a paper wherein the Quakers gave the Ministers of Christ these following names Conjurers Thieves Robbers Antichrists Witches Blind guides Devils Lyars Baal's Priests Sir-Simonds Dissemblers Vpholders of the seven headed and ten-horned beasts a Viperous and Serpentine generation bloody Herodians Blasphemers Scarlet-coloured beasts Babylons Merchants Busie-bodies Whited Walls Painted Sepulchres Ravening Wolves Persecutors Tyrants Greedy dogs Pharisees Wolves Dogs Hirelings Priests of Baal Covetous Carnal Damned and what not Are they not all say they as the Devil said of Joshua cloathed with filthy garments defiled totally utterly defiled with the pollutions of Babylon Christian when you hear this language learn you to conform to Christ go you first to God with the Lords own plea Now the Lord rebuke thee O Satan even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee Zach. 3.2 And then go on in vindication of their persons and their cause are they not precious gracious holy able shining and burning lights it may be some of their persons have been faulty but say of such Is not this a brand newly pluck'd out of the fire failings and humane frailties have been in the best yea in most of the Prophets and Apostles but shall we therefore condemn to hell the generation of God's dear Children or howsoever it may be with their persons yet is not their cause and office of Christ's own institution in this respect he that despiseth you despiseth me saith Christ and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Luke 10.16 Are not the Ministers of Christ as stars in the right hand of Christ they that would do them any deadly harm must pluck them thence Christians conform you to Christ in this point you see how Satan stands at the right hand of our Joshua's to resist them now then plead you their cause and answer the Adversaries accusations 6. Christ by his intercession saves us to the uttermost Heb. 7.25 O let us serve him to the uttermost surely all we can do is too little to answer so great a love as this Oh Christians why should it be esteemed a needless thing to be most rigorously conscionable and exactly circumspect Christ payed our debt to the uttermost farthing drunk every drop of our bitter cup and now presents all unto his Father by way of intercession and saves us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 throughly to the uttermost why should not we labour to perform his service and to fulfil every one of his commandments throughly and to the uttermost also certainly there is a duty which concerns us Christians as to be hot in Religion Rev. 3.16 to be zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 to walk circumspectly or precisely as the word carries it Eph. 5.15 to be fervent in spirit Rom. 12.11 to strive to enter in at the strait gate Luke 13.24 to contend for the faith Jude 3. with an holy kind of violence to lay hold upon the Kingdom of heaven Mat. 11.12 Oh what ever men should be afraid of taking God's part too much or fighting too valiantly under the Colours of Christ of being too busie about the salvation of their own souls of being singular as they call it in the duties of Religion I observe men are content to be singular in any thing save in the service of God you desire and labour to be singularly rich and singularly wise and singularly valorous and singularly proud but you can by no means endure singularity or eminency in zeal and the Lord's service in matters of Religion you are resolved to do as the most do though in so doing you damn your own souls Mat. 7.13 O come and learn this lesson of Christ he saves us to the uttermost and let us serve him to the uttermost with all our hearts and with all our souls and with all our might Thus far we have looked on Jesus in his intercession our next work is our last work which is to look on Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his coming again the very end of time to all eternity he hath no more now to do but to judge the Saints and to lead them into glory and to deliver up his Kingdom to his Father and so to live with his redeemed ones for ever and ever and ever LOOKING UNTO JESUS In his Second Coming Book X. Part VII CHAP. I. Job 19.25 27. I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth Whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another SECT I. Of Christ's preparing for Judgment AND is not yet all done O the unwearied patience love mercy free grace of Christ in carrying on this mighty work he begun it before the beginning of the world since then he hath been labouring in it about six thousand years and now the time of restoring being come he will perfect what he hath begun and bring on the other end of the Golden chain Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called Rom. 8.30 and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified In this piece also as in the former we shall first lay down the object and then give directions how to look upon it The Object is Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in his coming again to earth and taking up with him all his Saints into Heaven In this work I shall set before you these particulars 1. Christ's preparing for judgment 2. Christ's coming to judgment 3. Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment 4. Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day 5. Christ's sentencing or judging the Saints for eternal glory 6. Christ and the Saints judging the rest of the world 7. Christ and his Saints going up into Heaven when shall be the end of this world 8. Christ surrendring and delivering up the Kingdom to God even the Father 9. Christ's subjection to the Father that God may be all in all 10. Christ notwithstanding this being all in all to his blessed saved redeemed Saints to all eternity 1. For his preparing for judgment When once the number of all his Elect shall be compleated and the work of his intercession shall be at an end then immediately will follow these particulars As Rev. 16.17 1. A great voice comes out of the Temple of Heaven saying it is done It comes out of the Temple of Heaven that we may understand it to be the voice of Christ And if this speech be directed unto God it is as if Christ had bespoke his Father thus And now John 17.12 O my Father I have done that office of the Priest-hood which by agreement we erected is now at an end here I have sate at thy right hand interceding for my Saints ever since my ascension and of all that thou hast given me by
of earth other and wept so will this discovery in the appearances of Christ bring a sweet confusion upon the Spirits of Saints then shall a Saint fall at the feet of his Saviour and weeping say O my Jesus thou art my Father Brother Husband Self while there were other things I loved other things besides thy self but alas they are everlastingly gone and have left me alone yet now thou ownest me O my Jesus thou breakest my heart oh I cannot but weep out tears of love and tears of joy at this appearing O welcome welcome sweet Jesus into these clouds oh welcome welcome sweet Jesus into this neather world In these Clouds I must leave our Saviour for a while and the rather because I believe he will descend no lower onely before I pass one word of Use to all his Saints Vse You see him still upon his old design though the world now end yet hitherto there is no end of his great transaction his first coming and his second coming is to save your souls his first coming was to purchase his second to give you the possession of Salvation What are you not glad of this Gospel-news that Christ will come at last from this Empyreal Throne to his judgment-seat to give you the possession of salvation is not the promise of his coming comfortable is it not comfortable to believe in him and to hope for him why muse then what comfort will it be to see his person with all his glorious train coming for you Psal 50.1 2 3 4. The Mighty God the Lord hath spoken and called the Earth from the rising of the Sun to the going down thereof out of Zion the perfection of beauty hath God shined our God shall come and shall not keep silence a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about him he shall call to the heavens from above and to the earth that he might judge his people It is indeed a most terrible day unto the wicked but oh how sweet and pleasant and comfortable to his Saints Christians do we not long to have Christ's Spirit come into our souls with life do we not droop while Christ is absent from our souls are not the feet of them beautiful that bring glad tydings of peace and of salvation by Jesus Christ Oh then what will it be to see the King not in his Embassadors but in his own person coming for us to fetch us into Heaven if we have but a dear friend returned from some far Country how do all run out to meet him with joy Oh saith the child my father is come saith the wife my husband is come and shall not we when we see our Father our Husband our Head our Saviour returning with great glory and glorious Majesty cry out he is come he is come shall not we at the first view of him in his clouds cry out O yonder is he whose blood redeemed us whose Spirit cleansed us whose prayers prevailed for us whose Law did govern us yonder comes he in whom we trusted and now we see he hath not deceived our trust yonder is he for whom we waited long and now we see we have not waited in vain I verily believe thus it will be with us one day we shall have comfort then oh let us comfort our selves with these words and ever and anon cry Come Lord Jesu come quickly Cant. 8.14 make hast my beloved and be thou like to a Roe or to a young Hart upon the Mountain of spices SECT III. Of Christ's summoning of the Elect to come under judgment 3. FOR Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment no sooner is he in the clouds his Throne of judicature but there he stands and thence he sends his holy Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds from one end of the heaven to another Christ's summons are effectual if he will have the elect to meet him they must come to this purpose he sends his Angels and they return with his Saints back again to the judgement-seat In the carrying on of this affair we shall discuss these particulars 1. His mission of the Angels 2. The manner of the mission 3. The resurrection of the world 4. The collection of the Saints wherein 1. whence 2. whither they are gathered 1. For Christ's mission of his Angels he shall send his Angels This was their office from their first creation they were still sent of God this way and that way and indeed herein is one difference betwixt Christ and the Angels he was to fit on God's right hand but they were sent abroad to Minister to the Saints and people of God Heb. 1.13 14. To which of the Angels said he at any time sit on my right hand until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool are they not all Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation Now according to their office Christ puts them upon imployment at this day q. d. O my Angels you that wait upon me that excel in strength Psal 103.20 Psal 50.5 that do my commandments and hearken to the voice of my Word go your wayes now into all the four winds of the World gather all my Saints together unto me those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice search into all the dusts of the earth and leave not behind one dust that belongs unto any Saint search into the bottom of the Sea see what becomes of those drowned bodies of my dear ones if either worms have eaten those in graves or fishes have devoured them in the deep why now restore them am not I as able to recover them as I was to create them is it not as easie for me to raise the dead as to make Heaven and Earth and all of nothing go then and gather together all those dusts and let every dust be brought home to its own proper body and compact those dusts as soft as they are into solid bones and prophesie upon those bones and say unto them O ye dry bones hear the word of the Lord thus saith the Lord behold I will cause breath to enter into you and ye shall live Ezek. 37.4 5 6. and I will lay sinews upon you and cover you with skin and put breath in you and ye shall live and ye shall know that I am the Lord why this is my will and pleasure and therefore be gone O my Angels do your office what have not I commanded you 2. The Mission or commission or dismission given the Angels swift messengers of his will fall on the execution and to that purpose immediately they sound the Trumpet so it follows And he shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Here is the manner of their mission they go and as they go they give a shout what this shout is or how it is
us close to Christ and to the Banner of Christ who would not march under this Banner and adhere to him that but reads over these summons of souls at the last dreadful day SECT IV. Of Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day 4. FOR Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day no sooner are the Saints lifted up and set before the Judge but these things follow 1. They look and gaze and dart their beams and reflect their glories on each other Oh the communications Oh the darting of beams betwixt Christ and his Saints look as when two admirable persons two lovers meet together their eyes sparkle they look on as if they would look through one another So Christ and his Saints at first meeting they look on as if they would look through one another And such is the effect of these looks that they give a lustre to each other by their Looks Did not Moses face shine when he had been with God and shall not the faces of the elect glitter and shine when Christ also looks on them nor stays it there but as they shine by Christ so shall their shine reflect on Christ and give a glory to Christ and this I take it to be the meaning of the Apostle That when Christ shall come 2 Thes 1.10 he shall be glorified in his Saints not onely in himself but in his Saints also whose glory as it comes from him so it redounds also to him For of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and to him are all things 2. They admire at the infinite glory and beauty and dignity and excellency that is in Christ The glory they reflect on him is nothing to the glory that is in him Oh when these Stars the Saints shall but look upon Christ the Son of righteousness they exceedingly admire So the Apostle When he shall come 2 Thes 1.10 he shall be glorified in his Saints and he shall be admired in all them that believe All that believe shall break out into admiration of Jesus Christ they shall at the first sight observe such an excellency in Jesus Christ as that they shall be infinitely taken with it here we speak of Christ and in speaking we admire but how will they admire when they shall not onely speak or hear but see and behold him who is the Express image of God Heb. 1.3 and the brightness of his Fathers glory O the lustres that he casts forth each way is not his very body more sparkling than the Diamond before the Sun yea more than the Sun it self now shining at noon-day how should the Saints but wonder at this sight Oh there is more beauty and glory in Jesus Christ than ever their thoughts or imaginations could possibly reach there is more weight of sweetness joy and delight in Jesus Christ than either the seeing Eye or hearing Ear 1 Cor. 2.9 or the vast understanding Heart which can multiply and add still to any former thoughts can possibly conceive every soul will cry out then I believed to see much glory in Jesus Christ when ever I saw him I had some twilight or Moon-light glances of Christ on Earth but O blind I O narrow I that could never have faith opinion thought or imagination to fathom the thousand-thousand part of the worth and incomparable excellency that I now see in him Why this causeth admiration when we see more than ever we could expect the Saints shall then cry out and say I see more ten thousand times more than ever I expected I see all the beauty of God put forth in Christ I see the substantial reflection of the Fathers light and glory in Jesus Christ I see thousands of excellencies in Jesus Christ that never were revealed to me before This is the very nature of admiration it is eve● wondering or admiring at some new and strange thing the glory of Christ will then exceed all former apprehension O they admire to see the King in such a beauty they admire to see the Judge in such a glittering and glorious Robe of Majesty they admire and they cannot but admire 3. They adore and magnifie the grace and glory of Jesus Christ as it is said of the twenty four Elders that they fell down before him that sate on the Throne and worshipped him that liveth for ever and ever and cast their Crowns before the Throne saying thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory Rev. 5.10 and honour and power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created So all the Saints now advanced to come up to Christ and to stand before the Throne they fall down before Christ and they worship him that lives for ever shouting and singing about Jesus Christ and setting out his glory Rev. 7.9 10 11 12. grace and goodness After this I beheld saith John and lo a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations and kindred and people and tongues stood before the Throne and before the Lamb and cryed with a loud voice saying salvation to our God which sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lamb and all the Angels stood round about the Throne and about the Elders and the four Beasts and fell before the Throne on their faces and worshipped God saying Amen blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever and ever Amen Saints and Angels will both give glory to Jesus Christ that day every elect man will then acknowledge here is Christ that shed his blood for me here is the Saviour that laid down his life for me here is the Sacrifice that gave himself a propitiation for me here is the Person that mediated and interceded and made peace for me here is the Redeemer that delivered and redeemed me from the wrath to come Rev. 19 7. and then they begin those Hallelujahs that never shall have end Hallelujah and again Hallelujah and Amen Hallelujah for the marriage of the Lamb is come and his wife hath made herself ready 4. Christ welcomes them into his glorious presence if the Father could receive his Prodigal but repenting with hugs and kisses how will Christ now receive his Saints wh●n they come as a Bride to the solemnization of the marriage his very heart springs as I may say at the sight of his Bride no sooner he sees her and salutes her but he welcomes her with such words as these O my love my dove my fair one come now and enjoy thy Husband Hos 2.19 20. many a thought I have had of thee before I made the world I spent my infinite eternal thoughts on thy salvation when the world began I gave thee a promise that I would betroth thee unto me in righteousness and in judgment in loving-kindness in mercy and in faithfulness It was I that for thy sake was incarnate and lived and died and rose again and ascended and since my
Paradise Oh what a goodly sight is here In this meditation I may see with John Rev. 21.2 The new Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven prepared as a Bride adorned for her husband Down comes Christ and down come the Angels and down come the spirits of the just made perfect and as they come along see how they shake the Heavens and dim and dark the very lights of Heaven see what a flood of fire goes before them see how they pass into the cloud where Christ makes a stand and erects a Throne for himself to sit on Sure 't will be a guilded glorious cloud when Christ with all his celestial servants shall sit upon it a mornings cloud guilded with the beams of the Sun is admirably fair and shining but what a shining cloud is that where the Sun of righteousness with all his morning stars do sit and shine here 's enough to dazzle my eyes and to take up my thoughts O my soul think on it 3. Consider Christ's summons of the Elect to come under judgment no sooner in the cloud but He shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds from the one end of heaven to another Will not this be a strange sight to see Christ a coming with Trumpets sounding before him causing all the dead to awaken out of their sleeps of death the very sound of this Trumpet was ever in Jerom's ears Arise ye dead and come to Judgment and no question but thy ears shall be filled with the blast thereof the Trumpet shall found that shall bp heard over all the World and then shall the dead arise out of their graves and every Saints soul shall re-enter into his own body by vertue of the resurrection of Christ their Head Can I pass this meditation without some reflection on my self O my soul how joyfully wilt thou greet thy body when thou shalt enliven it again how wilt thou say O my dear Sister whom I left behind me in the dust when I went to Heaven how sweet is thy carcass how comely is thy countenance how do I enter into thee and animate thee and I will never more leave thee thou wast my yoke-fellow in the Lords Labours and my companion in persecution and wrong now shall we enter together into our Masters joy see lift up thy head behold Jesus Christ yonder sitting in the cloud and lo here the Angels waiting on us and coming to take us with the rest of the Saints into the Air to meet our Redeemer there Could I but realize this summons this resurrection this meeting of the soul and body and going with the Angels into the judgment-seat oh how would it work and what work would it make within 4. Consider Christ and the Saints meeting at the judgment day oh how shall the Saints look and stare and gaze at the beauty of Jesus Christ oh how will they break out into admiration at the first view of those glories which never before appeared on this side Heaven is not this he will they say of whom we read so often that he was fairer than the sons of men that he was white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousands that his countenance was as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars glorious as when the Sun shineth in his strength but was ever the half told us of what now we see and behold O the super-excellent transcendent beauty of this Son of righteousness O the treasures of loveliness in this Jesus Christ never seen before And thus as they admire so they adore now they begin those Hallelujahs that never never shall have end they fall at the feet of Christ and the Lord Christ takes them up with his hands and folds them in his arms oh what mutual reciprocal salutations are these betwixt Christ and his members oh my head and oh my body oh my husband and oh my spouse oh my dear and oh my darling never two lovers met with such heat of love as Christ and his Saints come saith Christ and sit you down here at my right hand and let the world be on my left hand it was otherwise with you in your life-time my gold and my jewels were then cast in the dust you were then cloathed with infamy and the vilest of men were then guilded with honour but now I will set all right now the dust shall be swept away and the jewels of my Kingdom shall be gathered up now the Goats shall be driven into the desart and you who are the Sheep shall be brought into my fold Oh my soul what a meeting is this what a sight will this be to behold the Saints in this condition and thy self amongst them couldst thou but realize this one very passage it were enough to quench thy lust and to kindle a flame of pure love in thy heart to Jesus Christ it is a quickning rouzing rising rejoycing consideration 5. Consider Christ sentencing the Saints for eternal glory then shall the books be opened and all the good works of the Saints shall be revealed and made known and then shall the Judg from his Throne of Majesty in the sight and hearing of all the world pronounce that sentence Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world Mat. 25.34 q. d. Come my Saints come with me into glory come now from labour to rest from disgrace to glory from the jaws of death to the joys of eternal life for my sake ye have been railed on reviled and cursed but now it shall appear to all those cursed Esaus that you are the true Jacobs that shall receive the blessing and blessed shall you be come now and possess with me the inheritance of Heaven where you shall be for love Sons for birth-right heirs for dignity Kings for holiness Priests come you may boldly enter in for my Father hath prepared and kept it for you ever since the first foundation of the World was laid O my soul dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast been at the feet of Christ in the beauty of holyness and there tookest in those droppings of his spirit which were better to thee than the feasts of Kings dost thou not remember when sometimes thou hast had the very beams of light darted from the face of Jesus Christ when he whispered to thy soul the forgiveness of thy sins saying Fear not thy sins shall not hurt thee I am thy salvation oh what joy was then what meltings movings stirrings leapings of heart were then in thy bosom but was that joy any thing to this or to be compared with this that was a drop but here 's an Ocean here 's fulness of joy oh what leapings of heart what ravishments will be within when thou shalt see thy self in the arms of Christ and shalt receive words of life from the mouth of Christ in the face of
all the World what a thing will this be when Christ shall pass a sentence of death on others and speak words of life unto thee when thou shalt see him frowning upon the world and oh those frowns will break the heart and shalt behold him smiling in the fulness of his love upon thy self that Christ at such a time should be delighting-thee with all the imbraces of love and with this sweet invitation to Heaven Come thou blessed inherite the Kingdom it were enough to a spirit a soul half dead the very meditation of this must needs be sweet 6. Consider Christ and the Saints Judging the rest of the world no sooner are the Saints sentenced but Christ turns to the wicked and bids them go into everlasting fire in which sentence the Saints shall joyn with Christ himself Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the World 1 Cor. 6.2 when the Saints appear it is not only by a Summons but with commission not only to be judged but to judge not only shall they stand at Christs right hand but they shall sit down on the Throne of the Son of God to judge the wicked Angels and the World O the torment O the vexation of wicked men and Devils when they shall see those very men whom they scorned oppressed persecuted to be now advanced not onely to glory but to be their judges it is as if some Noble man had wronged some Poor man and that the King should therefore deliver the Noble man into the power of the poor man Psal 112.10 to take his own revenge Surely The ungodly shall see this and be grieved he shall gnash with his teeth for indignation and melt away but on the contrary Psal 58.10 The righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his foot-steps in the blood of the ungodly O my soul dost thou believe this truth and art thou confident that thou shalt sit with Christ on his very Throne to judge the World why then be joyfull in afflictions exercise thou patience in the censures and judgments of the World know thou for thy comfort that there is a turn and time of judging and therefore say 1 Cor. 4. ● With me it is a small matter that I should be judged of you or of man's Judgment as the original hath it of man's day Is it not enough to command patience if God's day be at hand when I shall judge my unjust judges hark what the Apostle saith Jam. 5.7 8 9. Be patient Brethren unto the coming of the Lord behold the Husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it untill he receive the early and latter rain be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh behold the judge standeth before the door Come exercise patience let the World be judging if they will needs slander reproach and persecute thy soul they had better abuse any judge on earth than thee though thou art the poorest weakest meanest of God's Saints upon the earth they will know one day that they have abused their own judge in abusing thee And therefore be thou quiet silent patient Say as David let him alone and let him curse yea let him judge for the Lord hath bidden him it may be the Lord will look on mine affliction and will requite good for his Judging this day this is his day but the day of the Lord is my day and then shall I sit with Christ on his Throne to judge the World Oh the sweet that I may suck from this hony-comb of Christ and his Saints judging the World 7. Consider Christ and his Saints going up into Heaven No sooner hath he done his work with the World and sent them away but then he shall conduct all his flock like a faithful shepherd to their fold then shall he go with all his troops following him into Heaven Hath not Christ said so If I go away I will come again John 14.3 and receive you unto my self that where I am there you may be also O those songs of joy and shouts of praise that will fill the World at that day And thus as they go along Heaven opens unto them and they enter in what welcomes they have there is past my telling if we may imagine and guess O the welcome that Christ will give Come my spouse and come my dear come all my Saints here be those Mansions that I went before to prepare and make ready for you here be those everlasting habitations wherein you and I will dwell together here is your Fathers house the building of the wall is all of Jasper Rev. 21 18. and the worst piece of it is all of pure Gold like unto clear Glass why this is your home your house made without hands here you and I will spend our time eternity it self in joying enjoying and beholding of each other And as thus Christ salutes them so will the Angels those Created Citizens of Heaven salute them too for if joy be in Heaven at the conversion of one sinner what joy will there be at the glorification of all these Saints what welcome entertainment will the Angels give to these new guests at their first enterance into Heaven O my soul if thou art one of them that shalt have this welcome what wilt thou say when thou art admitted in thither if weeping were in Heaven wouldst thou not weep for joy sure these things are no fictions of man's brain but truths and realities and as they are true and real so they are exceeding full of joy all the excellencies of this World are but a dream in comparison of them even the Sun in its brightness is but darkness to this glory that shall then be seen Come think over these things and be so enlarged in thy thoughts that before they go thou mayest feel the sweet and taste of this goodness of the Lord. 8. Consider all the several transactions that will follow in Heaven then will Christ present all his elect to God his Father then will he give in all his commissions which he hath received from his Father Then will the Son himself be subject to the Father that God may be all in all I cannot stay to enlarge on these Onely remember though God may be all in all that excludes not Christ for he also is All in all to all his Saints even to all eternity Immediate visions and fruitions of Christ as God is the very top of Heavens joy Christ is all and in all Christ is the center of Heavens happiness Christ is the well-spring that fills the capacities of Saints and Angels Christ is the object of happiness it self there is as much happiness in Christ as happiness is what ever belongs to glory is in Christ In him dwels all the fulness whatever excellency is in Heaven it is in Christ not onely in perfection but connexion for all those
be one person and in that person he was born and lived and died and rose again and ascended into Heaven there now he hath been sitting sending down the Holy Ghost and interceding for his Saints for above one thousand six hundred years And in this last work he will continue till the end of the World and then he will come again to judge the World and to receive his Saints to himself that where he is they may be with him to see and enjoy him to all eternity This is the epitome of all I have said onely in every particular I have set down Christ's actings towards us and our actings towards Christ in various formes and out-goings of his love he hath acted towards us and in various formes and out-goings of our souls we have been taught fitly and suitably to act towards him Now in all these actings How doth the free grace of God in Christ appear Ye are saved by grace Ephes 2.5 saith the Apostle Eph. 2.5 the decree the means the end of our salvation is grace and onely grace The decree is grace and therefore it is called the election of grace Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 3.24 Rom. 6.23 Eph. 1.7 Eph. 2.7 the means are of grace and therefore we are called according to his grace and we are justified freely by his grace And the end is of grace for eternal life is the gift of God both beginning and progress and execution is all of grace This is the riches of his grace the exceeding the hyperbolical riches of his grace the conclusion of all is this God's free grace which was first designed will at last be manifested and eternally praised by Saints and Angels the same free grace which from the beginning of the age of God from everlasting drove on the saving plot and sweet design of our salvation will at last be glorified to purpose when Heavens inhabitants will be ever digging into this golden-mine ever rolling this soul-delighting and precious stone ever beholding viewing enquiring and searching into the excellency of this same Christ and this free grace Now all is done shall I speak a word for Christ or rather for our selves in relation to Christ and so an end if I had but one word more to speak in the World it should be this Oh let all our spirits be taken up with Christ let us not busie our selves too much with toyes or trifles with ordinary and low things but look unto Jesus Surely Christ is enough to fill all our thoughts desires hopes loves joys or whatever is within us or without us Christ alone comprehends all the circumference of all our happiness Christ is the pearl hid in the large field of God's Word Christ is the scope of all the Scriptures all things and persons in the old World were Tipes of him all the Prophets foretold him all God's love runs through him all the gifts and graces of the Spirit flow from him the whole eye of God is upon him and all his designs both in Heaven and Earth meet in him Eph. 1.10 the great design of God is this That he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him All things are summed up in one Jesus Christ if we look on the creation the whole world was made by Christ if we look on providences all things subsist in Christ they have their being and their well-being in him Where may we find God but in Christ where may we see God but in this essential and eternal glass 2 Cor. 4.6 Heb. 1.3 Christ is the face of God the brightness of his glory the express image of his Fathers person the Father is as it were all Sun and all Pearl and Jesus Christ is the substantial rayes the eternal and essential irradiation of this Sun of glory Christ outs God as the seal doth the stamp Christ reveals God as the face of a man doth reveal the man so Christ to Philip He that hath seen me hath seen the Father q. d. I am as like the Father John 14.9 as God is like himself there is a perfect indivisible unity between the Father and me I and the Father are one one very God he the begetter and I the begotten Christ is the substantial Rose that grew out of the Father from eternity Christ is the essential wisdom of God Christ is the substantial Word of God the intellectual birth of the Lord 's infinite understanding Oh the worth of Christ compare we other things with Christ and they will bear no weight at all cast into the ballance with him Angels they are wise but he is wisdom cast into the ballance with him men they are lyars lighter than vanity but Christ is the Amen the faithful witness cast into the scales Kings and all Kings and all their glory why he is King of Kings cast into the scale millions of tallents-weight of glory cast in two Worlds and add to the weight millions of Heavens of Heavens and the ballance cannot down the scales are unequal Christ out-weighs all Shall I yet come nearer home what is Heaven but to be with Christ what is life eternal but to believe in God and in his Son Jesus Christ where may we find peace with God and reconciliation with God but onely in Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 where may we find compassion mercy and gentleness to sinners but onely in Christ it is Christ that takes off infinite wrath and satisfies justice and so God is a most lovely compassionate desirable God in Jesus all the goodness of God comes out of God through this golden pipe the Lord Jesus Christ It is true those essential attributes of love grace mercy goodness are onely in God and they abide in God yet the Mediatory manifestation of love grace mercy and goodness is onely in Christ Christ alone is the Treasury Store-house Magazene of the free goodness and mercy of the God-head In him we are Elected Adopted Redeemed Justified Sanctified Saved he is the ladder and every step of it betwixt Heaven and Earth he is the way the truth and the life he is honour riches beauty health peace and salvation he is a suitable and rich portion to every man's soul that which some of the Jews observe of the Mannah that it was in taste according to every man's pallate it is really true of Christ that he is to the Soul whatsoever the soul would have him to be All the spiritual blessings wherewith we are enriched are in and by Christ God hears our prayers by Christ God forgives our iniquities through Christ all we have and all we expect to have hangs onely on Christ he is the golden hinge upon which all our salvation turns Oh how should all hearts be taken with this Christ Christians turn your eyes upon the Lord Look and look again unto Jesus Why stand ye gazing on the toyes of this World when such a Christ is offered to you in the Gospel can the World dye for you can the World reconcile you to the Father can the World advance you to the Kingdom of Heaven As Christ is all in all so let him be the full and compleat subject of our desire and hope and faith and love and joy let him be in your thoughts the first in the morning and the last at night Shall I speak one word more to thee that believest Oh apply in particular all the transactions of Jesus Christ to thy very self remember how he came out of his Fathers bosom for thee wept for thee bled for thee poured out his life for thee is now risen for thee gone to Heaven for thee sits at God's right hand and rules all the World for thee makes intercession for thee and at the end of the World will come again for thee and receive thee to himself to live with him for ever and ever Surely if thus thou believest and livest thy life is comfortable and thy death will be sweet if there be any Heaven upon Earth thou wilt find it in the practise and exercise of this Gospel-duty in Looking unto Jesus A Poem of Mr. George Herbert in his Temple JESV JESV is in my heart his sacred Name Is deeply carved there but th' other week A great affliction broke the little frame Ev'n all to pieces which I went to seek And first I found the corner where was J After where ES and next where V was graved When I had got these parcels instantly I sate me down to spell them and perceived That to my broken heart he was I ease you and to my whole is JESV FINIS