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A66441 Philanthrōpia, or, The transcendency of Christs love towards the children of men Laid down by the apostle St. Paul, in Ephes. 3. 19. A treatise formerly preached, but now enlarged and published for common benefit. By Peter Williams, preacher of the Gospel. Williams, Peter, preacher of the Gospel. 1665 (1665) Wing W2750A; ESTC R220006 194,887 304

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her love of Christ consumed all her corruptions and whereas elementary fire may be quenched the love of Christ is a coelestial flame Many Waters cannot quench it neither can the Floods drown it v. 7. It could not be extinguished or abated by the calamities which she underwent for his sake And in the last place It was so sincere and incorrupt as that it could not be bribed by any treasure If a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would be contemned The Apostle Peter could appeal to Christ himself in the case when he demanded of him the third time * Joh. 21.17 Simon Peter lovest thou me Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee The same Apostle witnesseth concerning Believers to whom he wrote that they did love the Lord Jesus 1 Pet. 1.8 yea though they had never seen him m Multum est amare eum quem de facie non noveris Grot. in loc It is much to love one whom we never saw and yet these loved Christ whom they never saw from what they had heard of him by the preaching of the Apostles and from what they knew and tasted of him by faith Faith is not as n Fides non est nuda otiosa frigida notitia sed inflammat cor ad amorem Christi Qui verè in Christum credant eundem etiam diligunt Gerh. in Petr. p. 78. Gerhard notes on that place a naked idle cold knowledge but inflames the heart with the love of Christ they who truly believe in Christ do also love him That Woman who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 called a sinner Luke 7.37 whatever her name was for it was not Mary Magdalen though she be so called in the Contents of that Chapter in our Bibles as a learned o D●spaigne Shibboleth p. 11. c. French-man observes She I say having experienced the great love of Christ in forgiving her many sins did love him again yea she loved much v. 47 p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist ad Rom. p. 89. Ignatius who saw Christ in the flesh being about twelve years old when he was Crucified thus wrote to the Romans Believe me that I love Jesus who gave himself for me and a little before in the same Epistle he writes q 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ibid. p. 88. My Love is crucified making Christ the only object of his love They were the dying words of r Melch. Adam Vit. Ger. Theol. p. 154. Luther I bless thee heavenly Father that thou hast revealed Jesus Christ unto me whom I have believed whom I have professed whom I have loved whom I have glorified t Wards Sermons 8. p. 15. Wals. None but Christ p. 64. Mr. Welsh a Suffolk Minister being in a deep muse after some discourse that had passed of Christ and tears trickling abundantly from his eyes before he was aware being urged for the cause thereof confessed ingenuously It was because he could not draw his dull heart to prize Christ aright nor to love him enough And it was a high expression of devout Herbert in his Poems * Herb Poems p. 40. Ah! my dear God! though I am clean forgot Let me not love thee if I love thee not Nor is this to be wondred at for his love constrains them and truly u Amat non immerito qui est ama●us sine merito amat sine fine quia sine principio se cognoscit amatum Bern. Epist 107. he loves deservedly who was loved without desert he may well love without end who knows himself to have been beloved without beginning as the Father speaks w Wall None but Christ p. 64. Indeed our cold love of Christ would be almost as great a wonder as his great love to us and might make us justly fear that we never savingly knew him I hope by this time you are sufficiently convinced of the reasonableness of knowing Christ so as to love him which methinks should make every one of you breath after Christ and his love in the language of the Seraphical Doctor x Ei● dulcissime Jesu transfige saluberrimo vulnere amoris tui medullas animae meae ut verè ardeat langueat liquefiat solo desiderio tuo deficiat Bonaven Solilo cap. 2. Well sweetest Jesus strike through the inmost parts of my soul with the most wholesome wound of thy love that it may truly burn and be sick of love and melt and faint with desire of thee only Thus much by way of motive to perswade your love CHAP. VII 2. Direction how Jesus Christ is to be loved WOuld you have a Guide for your love I shall in some few particulars direct you how you should love the Lord Jesus Sect. 1. 1. The first general Direction respects the quality of it grounded on Ephes 6.24 LOok that your love be such for quality as the Apostle makes the character of true love to Christ which hath the blessing entailed upon it Ephes 6.24 Grace be with all them that love the Lord Jesus in sincerity so it is in the Text of our Bibles and in the Margin With incorruption In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which because it hath been variously interpreted I shall first open the words and then deduce what I intend from them y Optat incorruptibilitatem id est immortalitatem coelestē gloriam in vitā aeternâ Pisc in loc Piscator takes this as a distinct blessing which the Apostle prayes for on the behalf of these Ephesians He had before prayed for Peace Love with Faith and Grace and here sayes he he wisheth for them incorruptibility that is immortality and heavenly glory in the life eternal z Ad immortalitatem vel cum immortalitaté vitâ videlicet aeternâ metâ ejus gratiae quā pro fidelibus precatur Bez. Beza renders it Ad immortalitatem or Cum immortalitate To or with immortality and refers it to Grace in the beginning of the Verse as if the meaning were Grace be with them that love the Lord Jesus unto immortality that is eternal life which is the end of that grace which he begs for Believers To this sense is the Syriack Version by Temellius a Gratia quae non corrumpitur Trem. Grace which is not corrupted And b Sic maneant in gratia quod non decidant ab ea sed perveniant ad gloriam quae est gratia consummata Lyr. in loc Lyra's note agrees hereunto who sayes the Apostle here prayes That they may so abide in grace as not to fall from it but to reach unto glory which is grace consummate and made perfect c Incorruptibilem hanc gratiam oppo●o ego An●themati illi aeterno quod Paulus alibi denuncial adversus eos qui non diligunt Dominum nostrum J●sum Christum Rolloc in loc Rolloc understands it in this sense opposing this incorruptible grace to that eternal curse
indeed Christians should in their prayers and desires be reaching after that both in respect of grace and comfort for themselves and others which they shall not fully enjoy till they come to heaven Thus Paul for himself reached after such a measure of holiness as the Saints shall have at the resurrection of the dead k Phil. 4.11 That perfection of holiness that ac●ompanieth the estate of the resurrection Trap. If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead And thus he prayes here for these Ephesians That they might know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge and be filled with all the fulness of God Sect. 4. BY this time I hope you perceive the Apostles meaning He prayes The sense of the Apostles Prayer that these Ephesians might know that is know more with more clearness certainty experience and assurance of the love of Christ that singular eminent excellent love which yet in it self is so great that it is without the reach of humane understanding even that which is most sanctified to comprehend it fully in the dimensions of it Having given you this account of the words The Observations raised the Observations which I might draw from them are three That the love of Jesus Christ to mankind is an exceeding great and incomprehensible love 1. It is called love passing knowledge The knowledge of this love and improvement therein ought to be the study of every Christian in this life 2. The Apostle prayes for it as that which they should long and labour after for themselves Acquaintance with Jesus Christ in the greatness of his love is an excellent help to stedfastness in the profession of the Gospel amidst all the difficulties and discouragements of the world 3. That is the ground of his prayer It is the first of these which I mainly intend yet in the handling of this I shall have occasion to speak something of the other two CHAP II. The Point then is this THat the love of Jesus Christ which he hath shewed to the Children men Doct. is an exceeding great and incomprehensible love A love that passeth knowledge Sect. 1. An Introduction to the handling of the Doctrine THE very first letter of his Name is wonderful Isa 9.6 and he is as wonderful in his love as in any thing else This is the Golden Mine in the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 There are unsearchable riches in Christ Eph. 3.8 and this is the vein that runs through all these riches The Apostle calls Godliness a mystery a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.16 and this love of Christ is the golden string that runs through all these mysteries and on which they hang together l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ultimus scopus aedeoque centrum Scripturae ad quod omnia referuntur est Christus Jesus Gech Exeg de Sacr. Scrip. p. 27. As Christ is the Center of the whole Scripture so the love of Christ is the Center of all that vast circumference of good things which poor Christians have or hope for by him A love as far beyond the thoughts and understandings of men to comprehend as it is beyond their merits to deserve so that in handling hereof I may say as a m Chrysost as he is cited by Mr. Trap on the Text. Father doth upon the same subject I am like a man digging in a deep Spring I stand here and the water riseth upon me I stand there and the water still riseth upon me and no hopes of ever fathoming this Abysse of love But if you say Why then do you take such a subject in hand I answer Though we can never know it all yet we may and must grow in the knowledge of this love of Christ and dive into this Sea that hath neither bank nor bottome and where as in the Salt Waters the deeper the sweeter So that the mysterious depth and unsearchableness of this love is no Supersedeas to our studying and preaching nor to your hearing and learning of it We cannot preach Christ but we must preach love for he is Love you must give us leave therefore to speak of it though we do but balbutire stammer it out for we can do no more we can tell you that it is exceeding great though how great it is we cannot tell only because it passeth knowledge you cannot think we speak too highly of it for n Christus non patitur Hyperbolen Christ admits of no Hyperbole and if we speak not all you cannot blame us for who can declare it neither Men nor Angels And yet in speaking and hearing of it we may say It is good to be here that when we cannot comprehend this love of Christ we may be comprehended by it which is worth our labour In the prosecution of this point The Method propounded I shall shew you what love I mean and give you arguments of its incomprehensibleness and so apply it Sect. 2. What love here meant In general TO shew you what love I mean I told you it was the love of Christ before and I mean in general his Redeeming love that love which he hath manifested and magnified in the redemption and salvation of sinners which work lay mainly on the hands of Christ as to the management and accomplishment of it a work appointed and undertaken on purpose to magnifie love and grace as the work of Creation was to magnifie power which it doth in an unspeakable and unconceivable manner More particularly In particular 1. I mean that love of the Lord Jesus whereby when from all eternity he was the darling and delight of his Father o Prov. 8.30 ever by him as one brought up with him and was daily his delight v. 31. rejoycing alway before him yet even then his delights were the Sons of Men. p Hoc tamèn foelicissimo non abstante quem apud patrem fruebar statu sic filiis hominum delector ut cum iis versari lubet benedictiones omni genere communicare Cartwright in loc Notwithstanding his most blessed condition with his Father yet so great was his Philanthropie his love to mankind that he was so delighted in us as to be willing to converse with us and communicate all kind of blessings to us 2. That love whereby he so freely and readily undertook the great and costly work of fallen mans recovery that when man could not help himself and all the Angels in Heaven were not able to administer sufficient help for his restoration but mans redemption had ceased for ever in respect of any possible assistance from the creature to advance and effect it then he willingly submitted to it q Psal 40.6 7. 8. Heb. 10.5 6 7. that when sacrifice and offering burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin would not do then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God Yea it was his delight to do this will of God in saving
suam erga ipsos neque plane talem qualis esse solet dilectio a creaturâ promonans sed talem esse qualis est creatoris ipsius Dei amor Nota igitur Christum non tantum nos priorem dilexisse ut est nos diligimus eum quia ipse nos dilexit prior 1 Joh. 4.19 sed etiam talem esse ejus erga nos amorem qualis est ille Dei amor hoc est infinitum incomprehensiblem c. Rolloc in Johan p. 796. It signifieth sayes Rolloc in loc that his love towards them was not common and ordinary nor such as is wont to proceed from the creature but it was such as is the love of God the Creator himself Note therefore that Christ did not only love us first as it is 1 John 4.19 We love him because he loved us first but also that his love towards us is such as is that love of God that is infinite and incomprehensible The love of Christ towards his own as Mr. Hutcheson observes in his Comment on this place Doct. 3. is matchless and can be resembled by no love on earth but is like his Fathers love to him as being eternal sincere and intimate incomprehensible infinite and unchangeable as the other is Let Gerhards note on the place seal up this testimony i Colligitur autem ex hoc ultimo exhortationis argumento quod Christus omnes verè credentes summo ineffabili amore prosequitur si quidem ita diligit eos ut ipse a patre diligitur quo nihil quicquam dulcius nihil jucundius cordi pio contrito nunciari potest quid enim ulterius desiderare possumus si certi sumus nos ita a Christo diligi ut ipse a patre diligitur quàm nemo dubitare potest esse summam ineffabilem dilectionem c. Gerh. Harm p. 1010. We may gather from hence sayes he that Christ loves believers with the highest and ineffable love seeing he loves them so as he is loved of the Father than which nothing can be declared more sweet more pleasant to a godly contrite heart for what can we desire more if we are assured that we are so loved of Christ as he is loved of the Father Who can doubt but that it is the highest and ineffable love There is indeed a difference in this That the Father loveth Christ our Mediator as God per naturam naturally because coëssential and coëqual with himself as Man per gratiam unionis by the grace of Union because the humane nature is assumed into the person of the Word But Christ loves believers by grace and adoption But there is an agreement in this That first as the Father loved Christ from eternity so Christ hath loved us from eternity Secondly As the Father loves Christ truly sincerely and ineffably so Christs love to us is true sincere and ineffable Thirdly As the Father out of love bestowed all blessings upon Christ as Man so Christ out of love bestoweth blessings of all kinds upon us Fourthly As the Father loveth Christ constantly and for ever so Christ also loveth us constantly and for ever so that upon the whole matter we may conclude as Mr. Cartwright doth his Comment on this place k Quamobrem verè dicitur Eph. 3.19 Amorem Christi omnem humanam intelligentiam superare Cart. Har. p 930. That it is truly said as it is in the Text That the love of Christ passeth all knowledge That 's the second Argument Sect. 3. Arg. 3 MY third Argument for the exceeding greatness and incomprehensibleness of the love of Christ shall be drawn from the infinite fulness of it in respect of its dimensions l Col. 1.19 It hath pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell and all fulness of love as well as any thing else The Apostle speaks something of the dimensions of it in the Verse preceding the Text v. 18. where he ascribes length and depth breadth and height to it and thence concludes it to be a love which passeth knowledge I know that some of the Ancients have applied this to several things which I willingly omit as not conducing to my present purpose nor indeed agreeable to the Apostles scope which is to magnifie the love of Christ and engage the Ephesians in the study of it and therefore m Paulus nihil per istas dimensiones intelligit quàm Christi charitatem de quā continuò post Calv. in loc Quos termi ●os ad Christi dilectionem transfort Aret. Longe satius videtur ut hae dimensiones ad illam ipsam Dei Christique charitatem referantur cujus praemissa subjectae est mentio Bod. in loc p. 398. Calvin with other Expositors conceive that the Apostle understands nothing by these dimensions but the love of Christ of which he speaks so immediately after Only the Question is From whence the expression is taken First Some think it may be an allusion to the heaving and waving of Offerings among the Jews under the Law which you find mentioned Exod. 29.26 On which words n Vide Fagium in locum Fagius in his Annotations upon the Chaldee Paraphrase hath this note out of the Hebrew Doctors That there was a double Ceremony used in some of the Jewish Sacrifices and particularly in this which was for the consecration of their Priests The one was an heaving upward and downward and this was called Terumah from Rum Elevare to heave The other was a moving forward and backward on the right hand and on the left that is from East to West and then from North to South and this was called Tenuphah from Nuph Agitare to wave Thus the shoulder of the Ram of Consecration was to be heaved and the breast waved before the Lord v. 26. 27. called therefore the Heave-offering and Wave-offering These Ceremonies according to o Vide Lyr. in loc Cartwr Annot. in Exod. p. 382. Rabbi Solomon were thus performed Moses did put his hands under the hands of Aaron and his Sons who held the things that were to be offered and first lifted them upward then drew them downward and afterwards drew them Eastward Westward Northward and Southward The Jews had a good meaning in these Rites p Ad designandum quòd ea ●fferebant Deo qui coelo terrae quatuor orbis partibus dominatur Lyr. Cart. Fag ut suprà for hereby was signified That God was the Lord of Heaven and Earth And we may make a good use of it our selves q Ainsworth on the place If Ministers would learn from hence how with all their heart and with all their strength they should give themselves unto the Service of God in his Church with much labour and manifold afflictions even as the Prince of our salvation was consecrated also through afflictions 2 Cor. 6.4 c. Heb. 2.10 And if both Ministers and People would learn how with raised and enlarged hearts and minds they
to be a meer Ignoramus in the things of Christ and e Maxima pars eorum quae scimus est minima pars eorum quae nescimus that the greatest part of what he knows is but the least part of that which he knows not The devout Author of the Contemplations of Divine love concealed himself and set them forth under the name of Idiota and Idiot it may be from an humble apprehension of his own ignorance of that love which he wrote of But this is not to be understood as arising from any defect on the Spirits part as if he were not able to teach this love perfectly but on our part because being finite and frail creatures we are not subjects capable of receiving it fully as it is Indeed if Christ should let forth himself in the sulness of his love towards his Saints considered in their present mortal and imperfect estate they were never able to bear it but must use the language of Christ to his Spouse according to our Translation f Cant. 6.5 Turn away thine eyes from me for they have overcome me though as spoken by Christ it is otherwise interpreted by g Ainsworth in loc Expositors And therefore God is wont to reserve the fullest draught of this sweetest Wine till last to strengthen his Children against Satans assaults which are usually fiercest towards their latter end and to sweeten their passage hence which is accompanied with such admirable effects as is a further evidence of the greatness of that love from whence it proceeds which is the second Branch of the Argument 2. The present fruits and effects of what Believers do attain unto in the knowledge of Christs love are many times so great as do undoubtedly argue the love it self to be far greater If the fruits of this love be such as pass understanding this love it self must needs do so much more Quod efficit tale illud est magìs tale And yet so it is The Apostle makes mention of such things as h 1 Cor. 2.9 Malo simpliciter intelligere Dei gratias quae fidelibus quotidiè conferuntur Calv. in loc Trap. eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man prepared by the Lord for them that love him which is primarily to be understood of those Favours and Love-tokens which God bestows upon his people here that Gospel-joy and present comforts which Saints have in this life that praemium ante praemium for he reserves not all for the life to come but gives a few Grapes of Canaan in this Wilderness Thus in another place he makes mention of i Phil. 4.7 the Peace of God which passeth all understanding which Believers experience whiles they are here below to the keeping their hearts and minds as in a Garrison against all assaults And another k 1 Pet. 1.8 Apostle tells us of a joy unspeakable and full of glory which believers have from Jesus Christ and the sense of his love apprehended by faith The present peace comfort and joy of a Christian in this life is many times unspeakable and unconceivable that passeth all understanding how much more then that love which influenceth all this If there be so much in the fruit the effect the stream what is there in the root the cause the fountain Surely the love of Christ must needs be exceeding great when the shedding of it abroad into the hearts of his people by his Spirit in a little more than ordinary measure whiles they are upon earth doth so transport them into an extasie of unexpressible joy and consolation as sometimes it doth especially those discoveries of himself and manifestations of his love which he makes to some of his special Favourites towards their dissolution which I hinted before and shall here give a double instance of it in two famous Christians the one is of l M. Leighs Sermon at the Funeral of Mrs. Brettergh p. 16. 17. Mr. John Holland an eminent Minister of the Gospel in his time He the day before he dyed as often before so then more eagerly called for a Bible saying Come O come death approacheth let us gather some flowers to comfort this hour which being brought he turned with his own hands to the eight Chapter of the Epistle to the Romans and giving the Book to a stander by bid him read At the end of every Verse he made a pause and gave the sense of it Having thus continued his Meditation and Exposition for the space of two houres or more on the sudden he said O stay your reading what brightness is this I see Have you light up any Candles To which he that stood by answered No it is the Sunshine for it was about five a Clock in a clear Summers Evening Sunshine saith he nay it is my Saviours shine Now farewell World welcome Heaven the Day-star from on high hath visited my heart O speak it when I am gone and preach it at my Funeral God dealeth familiarly with Man I feel his Mercy I see his Majesty whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth but I see things that are unutterable The other is of m This is in her life which was written by a Friend and joyned with the Sermon fore-mentioned and another Sermon upon the same occasion Mrs. Katharine Brettergh a gracious Gentlewoman of the Family of the Bruens in Cheshire She in the beginning of that Sickness whereof she dyed had a very sore conflict with Satan who prevailed so far as to bring her into great doubt and fear concerning her condition but it pleased God before her death to bruise Satan under her feet and to make her more than a Conquerour filling her with joy and peace in believing so that the joy of her heart broke out at her lips in such expressions as these Whiles her Husband read the 17th Chapter of John when he came to the ninth Verse she cryed out O Lord Jesu dost thou pray for me O blessed and sweet Saviour how wonderful how wonderful how wonderful are thy Mercies Then reading the 22d Verse with marvellous joy she uttered the words of David many times over I confess before the Lord his loving kindness and his wonderful Works before the Sons of Men for he hath satisfied my soul and filled my hungry soul with goodness When he came to the 24th Verse she said Now I perceive and feel the countenance of Christ my Redeemer is turned towards me and the bright-shining beams of his mercy spread over me And then again remembring some passages in that Chapter she said O my sweet Saviour shall I be one with thee as thou art one with thy Father and wilt thou glorifie me with that glory which thou hadst with the Father before the World was And dost thou so love me who am but dust and ashes to make me partaker of glory with Christ What am I poor wretch that thou art so mindful
COnsider how strongly this love o● Christ is urged in Scripture and from thence you may see further reason to love him He is not content barely to propound and prescribe it but useth such arguments a● may allure or affright draw or drive perswade or force you to observance and obedience 1. As if there were something valuable in your love he doth invite and encourage you to love him by the great and precious Promises which he hath made unto it c Haec precatio vice oraculi habenda est c. Calv. in Ephes 6.24 That Apostolical benediction Ephes 6.24 may be understood in the nature of a Promise the words are Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity Now Grace is as large a word for Blessing as Love for Duty of the same extent in the New Testament with Peace in the Old d Hebraeorum usitata salutatio erat Pax tibi At post patefactum redemptionis humanae mysterium in quo fontem gratiae Deus aperuit humano generi gratiam etiam adjungebant Dav. in Coloss p. 11. The form of Blessing among the Jews was Peace be unto you Gen. 43.23 but when the Mystery of Mans Redemption was revealed in which God opened a fountain of Grace to mankind it was changed into Grace be unto you as appears in the Epistles where Grace is wished by the Apostles unto Christians either by it self or in conjunction with Peace by way of Amplification By this Grace is meant the e Morn Exercise Part. 2. 40. pag. 218. Blessing of the Eternal God f Pink's Tryal of a Christians sincere love to Christ on that Text. All those precious Mercies and glorious Benefits which flow from the grace and favour of God It s a short but comprehensive word and contains all good in it yet this grace in its greatest fulness and utmost latitude is wished for and shall be bestowed on all those that love the Lord Jesus in sincerity To this you may add Joh. 14.21.23 He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father c. In these two Verses there are four things promised to those who truly and obedientially love the Lord Jesus 1. There will be no love lost to lay it out upon Christ you shall have it again with advantage for if you love him so as to keep his Commandments Christ hath promised love for love his Fathers love his own love for your love He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him g Gerh. Har. in loc which is not to be understood of a general but special love not of first love but after love not of a love of benevolence but of friendship and complacency he will so shed abroad his love into your hearts by the Holy Ghost that you shall know and feel and taste the love of the Father and Son towards you which appears further from that which is promised afterwards Christs love to such as love him will not be an empty and idle but a full and operative love For 2. He sayes he will manifest himself to you I will love them and will manifest my self to them He will deal with you as with Friends and will make known to you whatsoever shall be necessary for your salvation John 15.15 he will impart a fuller knowledge of himself to you by the spirit of Wisdome and revelation Eph. 1.17 and larger tastes of his love You shall be kissed with the kisses of his mouth Cant. 1.2 brought into his Banqueting-house and his Banner over you love under the shadow whereof you shall sit with great delight and his fruit shall be sweet to your taste Cant. 2.3.4 He will so manifest himself in a way of love to his people as to give them occasion to cry out with that holy man * Aliquando intromittis me in affectum multùm inusitatum introrsùs ad nescio quam dulcedinem quae si perficiatur in me nescio quid erit quod vita ista non erit Aug. Conf. lib. 10. cap. 40. At some times thou inwardly infusest into me a delight that I am not usually acquainted with a sweetness of I know not what kind which could it be once perfected in me it should be I know not what manner of height which this life shall never arive unto Such manifestations will Christ give of himself to those who love him as none know but they who experience them nor can they themselves sufficiently express them But then 3. He sayes further that his Father and he will come unto you We will come to him that is We will make secret and sweet approaches to such a sould by the spirit for the further enlightning quickning comforting supporting and strengthning of him till he be sealed up to the Day of Redemption This is a great matter yet not all for 4. He promiseth that his Father and he will make their abode with you and make our abode with him whereby is signified the continuance and duration of that grace which is shown by the Father Son and Holy Ghost when they come to a beloved and loving soul They will not come as Sojourners but as Dwellers not turn aside to tarry with you for a night but abide with you for ever Now what greater thing can be promised unto or bestowed upon the Sons of men in this life than that which is comprehended in these words and yet these are promised to the love of Christ so that if a man should set his love to sale he cannot do it to more profit and benefit to himself than by laying it out upon Christ who is most rich and liberal in his rewards to his people for their love as appears from what hath been said though there be more yet even that which neither eye hath seen● nor ear heard nor can enter into the heart of man to conceive which the Apostle sayes is prepared for those that love the Lord 1 Cor. 2.9 And if any evil befall them that also through the skill and care of their wise Physician Venenum pro remedio who can make a soveraign Treacle of the most deadly poyson shall co-operate for the good of those who love God according to the Promise Rom. 8.28 But these I leave to be enlarged in your own Meditations and pass on 2. If this golden Key of the Promises open not the door of your hearts to let Christ into the possession of your love behold the iron Hammer of the Threatnings ready to force it open Mens dead dull and disingenuous spirits need this as well as other wayes and Christ is so resolv'd upon our love that he will leave no means unattempted to procure it Know therefore that it is not an arbitrary matter whether you love Christ or no for necessity lies upon you and woe be to you if you love him not Love
which the same Apostle denounceth in another place of which I have spoken before against those who love not the Lord Jesus Some understand this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for that which is in our own Translation In sincerity Thus d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod alias verti salet immortalitas hic sonat integritatem ac sinceritatem animi vacantis omni corruptelâ vitiorum Eras in loc Erasmus whose note is That though this word is wont to be elsewhere rightly rendred Immortality yet here it signifies integrity and sincerity of a heart free from all sinful corruption e Subindicare voluit Paulus tunc demùm omni corruptelâ fore vacuum cor hominis si omni hypocrisi caret Calv. Calvin follows this sense and sayes that the Apostle useth this word to signifie that then is the heart of man void of corruption when it is without hypocrisie Several f Videsis Vorstium Bodium Baldvinū Hemingiū in loc others follow this sense but I passe them over Some understand the words according to the sense of the Margin with incorruption that is with constancy and continuance Thus the Greek Scholiast as I find mentioned by Bodius expounds it of a perpetual and incorruptible love which fails not nor is diminished but grows and is encreased day by day till it come to the highest pitch of perfection And thus g Significatur is qui nullâ vi nullis precibus nullis illecebris se corrumpi id est a recto abduci patitur Talis animi status hic dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 potestque hoc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verti constantèr Grot. in loc Grotius who sayes it may well be rendred Constantly and that such a one is signified by it as will not suffer himself to be corrupted nor drawn away from that which is right by any force intreaties or allurements whatsoever h Intelligo de constantiâ sinceritate Aret. in loc Others I find who take in both these latter Interpretations and understand it both of sincerity and constancy too Believers sayes a i Fergusson on the place late Writer are here described from this that they love the Lord Jesus in sincerity or incorruption that is not for a time only but constantly not in hypocrisie or shew only but sincerely and really And truly there is such a near and necessary conjunction betwixt these two that they cannot well be separated for that which is sincere will be constant and that which is constant is sincere especially seeing the word signifies both and therefore hence I would direct you as ever you would obtain that grace favour and all good which in this Apostolical benediction is annexed unto it that you look your love to Christ be for the quality of it sincere and stedfast pure and permanent without reservation and without recidivation Sect. 2. The first Branch of the first Direction That it be sincere 1. LOok that your love to Christ be a sincere love for that may be one sense of the word k So it is in our Translation as I shewed you before Quest But how shall I know that my love to Christ is sincere Answ I shall not handle the case at large yet I shall give you some characters of such a love which may give you some light in this matter and for those who desire further satisfaction I shall refer them to the l Reynolds on Psa 110. p. 59. c. Pinks Tryal of Christians love to Christ the three last Sermons especially Morn Exercise Part 2. Serm. 9. p. 218. Authors quoted in the Margin where they may find the case more fully and largely resolved The Characters which I shall give are these 4 Characters of sincere love to Christ 1. Sincere love of Christ is spiritual in its principle and constitution It is not founded in Nature but Grace and springs not from custome education formal profession external communion or an historical faith but it is begun in a deep sense of our infinite wants and miseries without Christ The first character It is Spiritual together with his suitableness sufficiency and readiness to relieve and rescue us and it is carried on and further strengthned and encreased by evidence of our propriety and interest in him Unfeigned love is the daughter of unfeigned faith Now this faith as it believes what Christ is in himself abundantly able and willing to answer all the necessities of the soul works a love of desire after him and as it applies and brings home all this with some clearnesse and evidence to the soul so it works a love of complacency This is the first Character and of great concernment for if ever you would make good your love to Christ you must make good the ground and principle of it 2. Sincere love is Cordial in the exercise of it 1. It is with the heart The second Character It is Cordial O thou whom my soul loveth sayes the Spouse Cant. 1.7 m Quem ex animo diligo Mercer in loc Whom I love with my very soul n Ainsworth It notes the unfeignedness and fervency of her love Sincere love is not complemental but cordial it stands not in outward expression but intimate affection When Christ wooes for your love he bids you give him your heart Prov. 23.26 and sayes as Jehu did to Jonadab 2 Kings 10.15 Is thine heart right as my heart is with thine heart if this be wanting he values not all your good words but will say as Delilah did to Sampson Judg. 16.15 How canst thou say I love thee when thy heart is not with me 2. It is also with the whole heart Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind sayes our Saviour Mat. 22.37 There is no love befitting God but such a love He loves a broken but cannot endure a divided heart he will have all or none We should love Christ infinitely and because we cannot we must love him unfeignedly which we do not unlesse we love him with our hearts without halting and with our whole hearts without halving o Dr. Preston of Love p. 155. The Lord will have the whole stream of your affection desires intentions and endeavours to run to him there must not a rivulet run out of it it must not be drained away but the whole stream must be all bestowed upon himself there must be no division there but he must have all and there is good reason for it for he hath loved us with his whole heart and his whole soul Jer. 32.41 Christ then must be the Center of all the affections of your whole heart if you would love him sincerely as you ought to do The third Character It is Chaste 3. Sincere love is chaste love The love of a soul to Christ is of the nature of Conjugal love which when it is chaste hath these properties
IX ANd so much for that second direction con-the Measure of your love to C●rist I sh●●l adde but one more which concerns the expressing of your love to Christ in his present distance from you 3. The third Dir●ction concerns the expressing of our love to Christ Expresse your love to Christ in his present distance from you by your love one towards another and towards all men according to the Apostles distribution 1 Thes 3.12 Sect. 1. By love to all men 1. A Christians love is to extend is self to all men This our Saviour intends when he bids us every one love our neighbour as our selves Mat. 22.39 Where by Neighbour we are not to understand only our own country m●n kindred and friends a Pareus Musc Grot. Perkins Wh●te in loc Spanhem D●b Evan● vol. D●b 138. according to the corrupt gl●sse of the Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 5 43. but all men to whom we may be 〈◊〉 according to Christs own sence in the Parable Luke 10.30 c. And so a Stranger nay an enemy may be our neighbour b Ham. Pract. Cat. edit 5. p. 53.40 Grot. in Luc. 10.33 Salmer in Parab Tract 16. for such were the Jews to the Samaritans c Proximus non sanguinis propinquitate sed rationis societate pensandus est in quá soccii su●● omnes homines Aug. Epist 52. mihi pag. 267. There is a propinquity of nature as well as of Blood and this neighbourhood is to be esteemed according to the former and not only according to the latter d Ille cui à nobis praebend●m est vel à quo nobis praebendum est officium misericordiae rectè proximus deci●ur Aug. de doct Christiana Edit Calixt quarto lib. 1. cap. 30. So that he is rightly called our Neighbour to whom we may shew or from whom may be sh●wn unto us any office or work of mercy e M●nt on James pag. 260 261. Thus all mankind is according to the expression of Scripture our own flesh Isaiah 58.7 Our bloud Acts 17.26 And by vertue of this affinity of nature our love is to reach unto all We must do good unto all Gal. 6.10 as God himself doth whose mercies are said to be over all his works Psal 145.9 That is they are spread as ●n Expansum or Firmament over the whole Creation which he makes appear by doing good to all And according to the Rule of the Gospel we are to bear such a love to our Neighbour in this extended sence as we do to our selves we being bound to desire and end●avour their good by vertue of their manhood and humane nature as we would our own that is with the same heart and in the same way that we would pursue our own good we are engaged to persue theirs though not in the same measure and proportion It is a likeness of quality not of equality of kind not of degrees which our Saviour requires when he sayes Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self Thus our love is to extend it self 1. To those who are farre from us and strangers to us as well as to those who are next us Gaius is commended for his love to strangers 3 John 5. That which we do to our own● for affections sake let us do to others that are strangers to us for humanities sake saith f Quod praestamus nostris per affectum praestemus alienis per humanit atatem Lact. de vero cultu lib. 6. cap. 12. ●●hi pag. 347. Lactantius 2. To those who are bad as well as to those who are good g 〈◊〉 apere 〈…〉 erea●us nemo tame● est à benefic●●s charita●●s exclude●dus Fulg. Ser. de charitate p. 506. Though in this work of love some ar● to be preferred before others yet none are to be excluded A wicked man is partaker of the humane nature and under a possibility of being made partaker of the Divine nature and therefore to be loved you were as he before conversion and God can convert him and make him as you are and therefore love him Hereby you will imitate your heavenly Father Who maketh his Sunne to rise on the good and on the bad and maketh his rain to fall on the just and on the unjust Mat. 5.45 It s true that David sayes he did hate those that hate the Lord Psal 139.21 and so will every good man but h Vir pius odit improbum sed perfecto odio perfectum autem odium est quod nec justitiâ nec scientiâ caret id est ut nec propter vitia homines oderis nec vitia propter homines diligas Dav. in Coloss p. 31. as a learned man observes He hates them with a perfect hatred now sayes he perfect hatred is that which neither wants justice nor knowledge that is so as neither to hate mens persons for their vices sake nor yet to love mens vices for their persons sake 3. To enemies as well as friends and indeed this is proper to Christianity All men will love their friends sayes i Amicos d●ligere omnium est inimicos autem solorum Christianorum Tert. ad Scap. Tertullian but Christians onely will love their enemies k Jenkins on Jude part 1. p. 131. To be kind to the kind argues civility to be unkind to the unkind argues corruption to be unkind to the kind argueth divelishness to be kind to the unkind argueth Christianity l Dav. in col ibid. This doth especially evid●nce the force and efficacy of love for as that fire is hottest which warms not onely those things which are near but also those which are at a distance so is that love the most perfect and lively wich reacheth not onely to friends but also to enemies m Robinsons Essayes pag. 145. Let therefore the grace of God herein especially triumph over our corruption that whereas by nature we would be loved of them whom we hate by grace we may love them which hate us This is a great work of grace indeed yet most necessary for all Christs Disciples for we have his command to love our enemies to bless them that curse us and to do good to them that hate us and to pray for them that despightfully use us and persecute us Mat. 5.44 besides which we have his example he loved us when we were strangers and a far off Ephes 2.12 13. yea ungodly sinners and enemies against him Romans 5.6 8 10. Colos 1.21 Now the consideration of this that we were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures living in malice and envy hatefull and hating one another and that then the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared unto us this according to the Apostles arguing Titus 3.2 3 4. should have a mighty influence upon our spirits to the melting and moulding of them into love and meekness towards all men even those who are ungodly and strangers yea enemies unto us but I
passe this and come to speak of Christians love one to another Sect. 3. 2. A Christians love is most eminently to be manifested towards the Saints By love o● the Saint●s especially all the Saints Col. 1.4 all In quibus aliquid Christi videmus in whom we see any thing of Christ as it is reported Bucer's was Though Christian love be very extensive yet there is an order to be observed in that extent Next unto Christ his Saints must have the highest Room in our hearts and our choisest chiefest love is to be reserved for them a Jenkins on Jude Part. 1. page 133. Though a love of benevolence is not to be denied to the bad yet our love of Complacency must be set upon the good Though the Holy Ghost hath exempted none from being the Object of our Beneficence whereby our love is expressed we must do good to all yet there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an especially put upon the houshold of faith They must have a special preferment in our affection and a preheminence in the fruits of it Galatians 5.10 b Ut ca object● melius videntur quae su●t magis in lace posita quia lux est formale ob●ectū vis●s sic illi homines magis amantur qui sunt Deo magis conjuncti quia Deus est formale propriū objectum charitatis Dav. in Col. p. 30. Nor is it without reason that the Saints should be more loved by us than others because that which is the formall reason of love is most conspicuous in them for as those objects are best seen which are most in the light because light is the formall object of sight so those men are most to be loved who are nearest to God because God is the formall and proper object of love c Sanctior est copula cordium quàm corporū Bed The bond of grace is more eminent than the bond of nature and d Sanct●ora membra sunt ma●ori charitate amplectenda Aug. where there is the most holiness such are to be embraced with the most love thus e Beatus qui amat te amicum in te inimicum propter te Aug. Conf. lib. 4. cap. 9. page 73. Though all men are to be loved for Christs sake even enemies and wicked men yet believers are to be loved in him and happy is that man who thus expresseth his love to Christ This is a matter of such concernment and consequence among Christians that I shall crave leave to expatiate a little in venting the thoughts and desires of my heart about it And here I could wish that I had occasion to say to the Christians of this Generation as the Apostle doth to the Thessalonians 1. Thes 4.10 As touching Brotherly love you need not that I write unto you for ye your selves are taught of God to love one another and indeed you do it But alas its f A complaint of the want of love among Christians otherwise It was said of the Christians in Tertullians time g Tert. Apol. cap. 39. p. 47. Vide ut invicem se diligant See how they love one another Then there was so much love that it was Ad stuporem Gentilium To the wonder of the Gentiles but now there is so little that it is Ad pud●rem Christianorum To the shame of Christians We live in the last and worst days of the world 2. Timoth. 3.1 in which as our Saviour foretold Mat. 24.12 iniquity abounds and the love of many waxeth cold It was the conjecture of h Meritò primum Dei judicium fuit in aquâ contra ardorē luxuriae ultimum vero judicium erit in igne contra teporē charitatis Ludolph de vitâ Christi Part 2. cap. 87. one That as Gods first judgment against the old World was by Water against the heat of Lust so his last judgment upon the World that now is will be by Fire against the coldness of Love Which if true we may fear that great and terrible day is not far off seeing the hearts of men yea of good men are so cold in love one towards another Oh! my friends for the enmities and animosities the envy and strife the divisions and dissentions the hatred and wrath which have been and are among Christians themselves not only in other places but even in England a place of the greatest light and profession whereby they maligne censure reproach despise oppose bite and devour one another there are at least ought to be great searchings of heart and Oh! that my head were waters and my eyes fountains of tears to weep day and night for the want of love in the Christians of this generation towards one another Hear a little some of the complaints which have been made and not without cause about it The fire of brotherly love sayes i Wats Perfume of Love pag. 625 626. one is almost ready to go out scarce any sparks of it yet remaining among us but instead of the fire of love the wild-fire of passion rageth vehemently and is predominant Many live as if they had been born on the mountains of Bether the mountains of division and as if they had been baptized in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Alas sayes k Baxters Saints Rest Edit 4. Part 1. p. 138. 135 133. 136. another that Turks and Pagans can agree in wickedness better than Christians in the truth that Bears and Lions Wolves and Tigers can agree together but Christians cannot that a legion of Devils can agree in one body and not the tenth part of so many Christians in one Church I read indeed in Pagan writers that Christians were as cruel as Bears and Tigers against one another Amm●anus Marcellinus gives it as the reason of Julians policy Am. Marcell 〈◊〉 Juliani in proclaiming liberty for every party to profess and preach their own opinions because he knew the cruell Christians would then most fiercely fall upon one another and so by liberty of conscience and by keeping their Children from the Schools of learning he thought to have rooted out Christianity from the earth But I had hoped his accusation had come from the malice of the Pagan writer little did I think to have seen it so far verified Did I ever think to have heard Christians so to reproach and scorn Christians and men professing the fear of God make so little conscience of censuring vilifying slandering and disgracing one another Lord what Devils are we unsanctified when there is yet such a nature remaining in the sanctified Such a Nature hath God in these dayes suffered to discover it self even in the godly that if he did not graciously and powerfully restrain they would shed the blood of one another and no thanks to us if it be not done It was a just charge and sad complaint made by l Hildersham on Psal 51. p. 691. a Reverend and holy man more than thirty years agoe which
Author y Non satis est credere quòd Dominus Deus sit nisi credas quòd Dominus Deus tuus sit Fer. ibidem hath it a little after That it is not enough to believe that Christ is Lord and God unless we believe that Christ is Lord and our God Thus the Apostle Paul Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me See how he applys to himself the love of Christ and the fruits of it This is so clear as the adversaries themselves cannot deny but that many choice ones have had a full and satisfying light springing in upon their souls and clearing their eternal condition to them but then they say it is by way of extraordinary revelation a speciall priviledge vouchsafed to some few of Gods choicest Worthies by a rare indulgence And yet as to the matter in hand the way and manner of the Apostles expressing themselves in this particular shews that this is not a priviledge peculiar only to a few but common to all believers I shall bring two places to prove this the one is 1 John 4.16 the other Rom. 5.5 in both which places besides their asserting the thing it self the great point of assurance in most significat tearms they speak of it in the plurall number and make mention only of common means for obtaining of it Let us consider the places In the one place sayes the Apostle John We have known and believed the love that God hath to us In the other place sayes the Apostle Paul The love of Christ is shed abroad into our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Now both the one and the other do 1. Assert assurance John speaks of knowing the love of God and the word he useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Significat ve●e certò solide cognoscere Leighs Crit. sacr to know truly and certainly and it is a knowledge with Application We know the love that God hath to us Paul speaks of the shedding abroad the love of God which is no other than witnessing of this love to our hearts as a Dei dilectio effusa dicitur id est abundamer t●s●ata hominum animis Grot. in loc Grotius observes The sence of this love wher●by we perceive that we are beloved by him and tast that he is gracious as b Charitas Dei dicitur effusa in cordibus nostris quia sc●sus illius charitatis est effasus ●ea●imus e●im ●os à D●o diligi gustamus quàm bon●● s●●vis est Dominus Gerh. in loc Gerhard notes It is a Metaphoricall expression and can signifie nothing else than this for as c Quod larg●t●r effunditur in corda no●tra id corda replet quod corda replet id non potest anlatere quin certissi●●e sentiatur Pare●s in loc Pareus hath it That which is plentifully poured out into our hearts doth fill our hearts and that which doth fill our hearts cannot be hid but must certainly be perceived by us And they do 2 Expresse it in such a way as shews it to be a thing not peculiar to some few but common to many for first It is expressed plurally not I know the love of God to me as of one but we know the love of God to us as of many besides himself and The love of God is shed abroad not into my heart only but into our hearts intimating that it was not peculiar to himself but common to other believers with himself And then Secondly They both mention a common means of obtaining it John mentions faith We have known and believed that is as d Cognovimus credendo talis enimnotitia non nisi fide percipitur Calv. in loc Calvin observes We have known by believing because such a knowledge springs from faith Now though all men have not faith 2 Thes 3.2 yet all true Christians have and such a faith as is capable of improving into assurance And then Paul mentions the Holy Ghost the love of God is shed abroad into our hearts by the Holy Ghost whereby we come to know the things that are freely given us of God 1 Cor. 2.12 Now all who have reall interest in Christ are partakers of this Spirit for If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his All have him as a Sanctifier and many have him as a Sealer So that this assurance of Christs love is not so peculiar unto some nor vouchsafed to them in such an extraordinary way but that others may attain unto it Seeing therefore it hath been attained by others and is attainable by you in an ordinary way let the consideration of it quicken your endeavours after it Indeed it is not a thing which will be done Sedendo votis by sitting still and wishing for it no it will cost you labour and diligence 2 Pet. 1.10 before you come to it but think not much of a little pains to obtain that which will make such abundant recompence for the pains bestowed about it when it is obtained Content not your selves therefore with a low measure of faith but go on from faith to faith till you come from affiance to confidence so as to know the love which God hath unto you And beg beg hard the Spirit of Christ which is promised to those who ask him Luke 11.13 that you may know the things which are freely given you of God and particularly this love having it shed abroad into your hearts by the Holy Ghost given unto you 2. Such a knowledge of Christs love when attained is exceeding sweet and comfortable I confesse your future safety and happiness lyes in this that Christ loves you but your present comfort lyes in your knowing that he loves you e Robinsons Essayes p. 11. He whom God loves though he know it not is an happy man but he that knows it knows himself to be happy and that is most comfortable It 's true that the love of Christ in it self is better than Wine sweeter and more delightfull than all earthly delicates and creature-comforts whatsoever but it is not sweet to us till it be shewed and sealed manifested and assured by the kisses of his mouth which are the tokens and pledges of his love which made the Church so earnest in desiring of them Cant. 1.2 Indeed there is no comfort without it Quid est Deus nisi meus What is God if he be not mine is a true saying and what is the love of Christ to me if I have no share in it And there is but little difference as to present comfort betwixt having no share in it and not knowing whether we have or no. A condemned man that hath his pardon granted though he shall not die yet he hath little comfort in his life till he know it And though a Christian who is beloved of Christ shall not perish yet
ascribe glory to him to whom it of so much right belongs Luke 2.14 His heart hath been enlarged in love towards you and you are not straightned in him Oh! be not straightned in your own bowels but be you also enlarged in love and thankfulness unto him If the love of Christ be implanted in our hearts it will spring out at your lips and your mouths will shew forth his praise q If your Souls have been satisfied with this marrow and fatness o Ps 63.5 your mouths will praise him with joyfull lips Whereas he whose heart and lips are not filled with blessing and praise to Christ for his love gives clear evidence against himself that he hath neither part nor lot in this matter He never tasted of the love of Christ who is not thankfull for it Sect. 4. By way of Obligation to holiness and obedience 4. BY way of Obligation to Holiness and Obedience Know the love of Christ so as thereby to be restrained from sin and constr●i●ed to duty and service And here I would say two things 1. The love grace and mercy of Christ which he hath manifested in undertaking for us as our M●diator and Redeemer is the strongest motive that can be to Holiness and Obedience This is that which the Scripture useth Rom. 6. The scope of that wh●le Chapter is to advance Holinesse and Obedience and the prime and principall motive which he useth thereunto is the Grace of God in Christ Ver. 1. Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid And ver 15. Shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace God forbid It s the Devils Logick to argue from grace to sin from love to looseness which the Apostle casts off with abhorrency as unworthy to be entertained by an ingenu●us gracious heart so much as in thought they are ungodly men who thus turn the grace of God into lasciviousnesse Jude 4. Again Rom. 12.1 2. I beseech you Brethren by the mercies of God that you present your Bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable which is your reasonable service and be not conformed to this world c. You see here that the mercies of God are the strong bonds by which the Apostle would draw these Romans from following the World in the corruptions and lusts of it and engage them to service and obedience and indeed the most naturall and proper inference from mercy is duty and seeing our infinite misery hath met with the infinite mercy of our God to relieve us in it redeem us from it what other can be the result of it with a serious Christian but the yeelding up of himself to the God of his mercies Thus 1 Cor. 6 20. Ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods The love of Christ in going to the price of our Redemption should be a strong obligation to us to glorifie him with those Bodies and Souls which he hath Redeemed at so dear a rate Thus the Apostle Peter exhorting to holinesse 1 Pet. 1.14 15 16. as obedient children not fashioning yours●lvs according to the former lusts in your ignorance but as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of Conversation c. makes the love of Christ in shedding his blood for them the great Motive Ver. 18 19. Forasmuch as you know that you were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious blood of Jesus Christ So Cap. 4.1 He makes the love of Christ in dying for us a strong reason why Christians should conform to his crosse by crucifying their lusts Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves with the same mind This love of Christ is so strong a Motive to Holinesse and Obedience r Nisi plusquàm ferrei simus facere non poterimus quin totos nos devoveamus Christo dum reputamus quanto amore nos prosectutus est quum mortem pro nobis subiit Calv. in 2 Cor. 5. that unlesse we are more hard than iron we cannot but devote our selves wholly to Christ when we consider how greatly he loved us when he shed his blood and laid down his life for us 2. The Love of Christ in the wayes whereby he hath expressed it to us especially in dying for us and rising again is the most effectual means to promote our holiness and obedience s Wal none but Christ pag. 68. I have read That five Monks were studying what was the best means to mortify sin One said to meditate on Death the second to meditate on Judgement the third to meditate of the joyes of Heaven the fourth to meditate on the torments of Hell the fifth and last to meditate of the love and sufferings of Christ Which indeed is the best means of all There are bands of love called by the Prophet The cords of a Man Hos 11.4 because the most proper means to prevail with and work upon Man who is a reasonable creature with these bands of love the Lord Jesus draws us from sin to himself and service as in the forementioned place and Jer. 31.3 These held the Apostle Paul fast bound to his duty and kept him from deviating and wandring from Christ see 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of God constraineth us He had before been speaking of the force that fear had to make him solicitous in the service of Christ because of the account which he was to give ver 10 11. And now he mentions the force of love the love of Christ which he shewed in dying for us and this sayes he constrains us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It hems us in on every side as men in a besieged City or as beasts in a pinfold as t Leighs Crit. sacr in verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some deduce the Metaphor that we cannot make an escape u Metaphora est in verbo constringendi quânotatur fieri non posse quin quisquis mirificum illum amorem quem testatus est nobis Christus morte suâ verè expendit reputat quasi ei alligatur arctissimo vinculo constrictus se in illius obsequium addicat Calv. in loc Or it keeps us fast bound as with cords and bands fortiter yet ●uaviter not forcedly but freely that we cannot turn aside to the crooked wayes of sin and disobedience to the displeasing of Christ but must go that we are led by him in the wayes of obedience and holinesse x Totos possidet ac regit amor Christi ut ejus affiatu quasi correpti agamus omnia Bez. in loc It hath the possession and rule of us so as we are acted by its influence and instinct Now the love of Christ is an effectual means of holinesse and obedience two wayes by Argument and by Power 1. By Argument This is clear by the forecited passage of the Apostle 2 Cor. 5.14.15 Where
before his Nat. Hist confess by whom I have profited The reason of the silent Dedication foregoing made to many Friends in general without mention of any one in particular if any be inquisitive about it was this because that * The Lady Mary Lister Relict of Sir William Lister of Thornton in Craven in Yorkshire who exchanged this life for a better Aug. 14. 1664. truly honourable person to whom it was intended * Isa 57.2 was entred into peace and brought to rest in the bed of silence before I could get it published and thereby made uncapable of it but infinitely to her advantage who I verily believe was taken from studying to know the love of Christ on Earth that she might be filled with all the fulness of God in Heaven where I leave her and having given this account of my self I shall add what I have to say concerning the present work and its this It was never intended to please the captious but to profit the conscientious nor to tickle the fancies of the curious but to warm the hearts of the devout and pious and therefore I have studied * Nos qui rerum magis quàm verborum amatores utilia potiùs quàm plausibilia sectamur c. in scriptiunculis nostris non lenocinia esse volumus sed remedia c. Salv. de Gub. Dei Praes p. 2. sound matter rather than fine words and to be profitable rather than plausible So that if you are nice and delicate and seek after strong lines quaint expressions high notions and * 1 Cor. 2.4 the enticing words of mans wisdom here is not for you but if you are serious and sollicitous for savoury and wholsom Truths these I can promise you which meeting with a quick appetite and good digestion may through the blessing of God to be * John 6.63 Spirit and life to your souls And that they may be so I would advise every one of you that when you begin to read this Book you would at least send up some short Ejaculation to that God * Hos 14.8 from whom all our fruit is found that there may be a blessing in it to our selves and all others into whose hands it shall come in the attainment whereof I shall think my labour well bestowed and abundantly recompensed especially if you will gratifie with your remembrance at the Throne of Grace the unworthy Author who is Your Servant for Jesus sake PETER WILLIAMS YORK December 24. 1664. The Contents of the Book CHAP. I. Sect. 1. THe coherence of the Words Page 1 Sect. 2. The several Readings Page 2 Sect 3. The meaning of the Words Page 6 The Objections answered which are made against the sense asserted Page 10 Sect. 4. The sense of the Apostles Prayer Page 13 Three Observations raised ibid. CHAP. II. The first Observation Page 14 Sect. 1. An Introduction to the handling of it ib. The Method propounded Page 15 Sect. 2. What love is here meant in general Page 16 More particularly ibid. Sect. 3. The three first particulars Page 18 Sect. 4. The fourth particular Page 20 Sect. 5. The fift particular Page 23 Sect. 6. The sixth particular Page 25 CHAP. III. The greatness of Christs love confirmed by Arguments Page 27 Sect. 1. The first Argument ibid. Sect. 2. The second Argument Page 30 Sect. 3. The third Argument Page 34 Sect. 4. The fourth Argument Page 40 CHAP. IV. Sect. 1. The fifth Argument Page 51 Sect. 2. The sixth Argument Page 54 Sect. 3. The seventh Argument Page 61 Sect. 4. The eighth Argument Page 63 CHAP. V. The Application of the first Vse for exhortation to labour to know this love of Christ Page 67 Sect. 1. The Preface to the handling of it ibid. Sect. 2. Directions about our knowledge of Christs love 1. That it be an affectionate knowledge Page 71 Sect. 3. The first Branch of the first Direction That it be a knowledge accompanied with love to Christ Page 73 CHAP. VI. Reasons why we should love Christ Page 75 Sect. 1. The first Reason ibid. Sect. 2. The second Reason Page 78 Sect. 3. The third Reason Page 88 Sect. 4. The fourth Reason Page 98 CHAP. VII Rules for our love to Christ Page 103 Sect. 1. The first Rule about the Manner ib. Sect. 2. The first Branch of the first Rule That it be sincere Four Characters of sincere love Page 106 Sect. 3. The second Branch of the first Rule That it be stedfast and constant Wherein this constancy appears Page 112 CHAP. VIII Tbe second Rule The Measure Page 113 Sect. 1. Christ to be loved above enjoyment Page 114 Sect. 2. Christ to be loved above Relations Page 118 An Objection answered ibid. Sect. 3. Christ to be loved above our lives Page 125 Sect. 4. Objections answered Page 134 CHAP. IX The third Rule about expressing our love to Christ Page 145 Sect. 1. By love to all men Page 146 Sect. 2. By love to the Saints especially Page 149 Sect. 3. Mutual love commanded by Christ Page 157 Sect. 4. Christs Prayer for it Page 165 Sect. 5. One main end of instituting the great Ordinance of the Supper Page 172 CHAP. X. The second Branch of the first Direction Let your love run to him by desire and rest on him by delight Page 182 Sect. 1. Desire after Christ ibid. Sect. 2. Rest on him by delight Page 185 Sect. 3. Let trust and fear be attendants Page 191 Sect. 4. Objections answered Page 194 Sect. 5. Objections answered Page 199 CHAP. XI The second Direction about our knowledge of Christs love That it be an effectual knowledge Page 201 Sect. 1. By way of Application with experience and assurance to our selves Page 201 Sect. 2. By way of Admiration Page 208 Sect. 3. By way of Gratulation Page 213 Sect. 4. By way of Obligation Page 216 CHAP. XII The third Direction That it be a progressive knowledge Page 232 Sect. 1. In respect of our selves Page 233 Sect. 2. In respect of others Page 241 CHAP. XIII General motives to know this love of Christ Page 246 Sect. 1. The double evidence that it carries with it Page 247 Sect. 2. The influence it hath Page 251 Sect. 3. A Question answered Page 255 Sect. 4. The second Vse for Caution Page 264 Sect. 5. The last Vse for consolation Page 271 The transcendency Of CHRISTS Love towards the Children of Men. EPHES. 3.19 The former part of the Verse And to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge CHAP I. Sect. 1. THese words are a branch of the Apostles Prayer for the Ephesians The coherence of the Text with the Verses foregoing begun at the fourteenth Verse and reaching to the end of the Chapter made indeed upon design but a holy and good one viz. To prevent their fainting at his present tribulations for the Gospel v. 13.14 I desire that you faint not at my tribulations for you which is your glory For this cause I bow my knees unto the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ c. And because he knew that the experimental knowledge of the love of Christ would be a special means to keep them close to Christ and his Truth notwithstanding all discouragements therefore among other things he prayes That they being rooted and grounded in love might be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height And as it is in the Text to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge which love duly and rightly taken in would tend to their establishment as good rooting doth to a Tree and a firm foundation to a Building for so the words a Radicati propper agriculturam fundati propter aedificationem Aug. Epist 120. mihi p. 697. Duae similitudines quas adhibet exprimunt quàm firma constans debeat esse in nobis charitas Paulus vult cam penitùs animis nostris infixam esse ut sit quasi benè fu●datum aedificium profunda plantatio Calv. in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rooted and grounded in the 17th Verse do import Sect. 2. The several Readings BUT I come to the words themselves and I meet with several readings and interpretations of them among Expositors which I shall mention and pitch upon that which I conceive most agreeable to the Apostles meaning in this place 1. The Syriack Translation as I find it rendred by b Ut cogn●scatis magnitudinem cha●itatis Christi Trem. Tremelius runs thus That you may know the greatness of the love of Christ This is good those two words passing knowledge being supplyed by one word greatness yet it seems to be defective for according to the sense of this place there is not only a positive but a superlative greatness in the love of Christ an exceeding greatness as is expressed concerning Gods Power Eph. 1.19 2. The vulgar Latine runs thus Scire etiam supereminentem scientiae charitatem Christi which Erasmus from the ambiguity of the word scientiae being both the Genitive and Dative Case is doubtful how to paraphrase whether according to the Dative Case To know the love of Christ which is greater than can be known or according to Ambrose which excelleth or hath the preheminence of our knowledge or else according to the Genitive Case To know the excellent love of the knowledge of Christ c Posterior sensus magis quadrat ad Graecum sermonem Eras in loc but he enclines to this latter sense as most agreeable to the Greek Of this Reading I shall speak more under the next Head and in the mean time I have this to say against Erasmus his drawing of the Vulgar Translation to this sense That I much question whether it be agreeable to the mind of that Interpreter whoever he was for its likely if he had intended any such thing he would have otherwise placed the words not Scire supereminentem scientiae charitatem Christi but Scire supereminentem charitatem scientiae Christi Besides the great Patrons of this Translation I mean the Papists carry the sense quite another way at least those which I have seen as Dion Carthus Estius Tirinus A Lapide of whom more afterwards 3. The next Reading is that which was even now mentioned Vtque sciretis eximiam dilectionem cognitionis Christi And that you may know the excellent love of the knowledge of Christ Nor is Erasmus single in owning of it d Hieron●mus interpretatur eximiam dilectionem cognitionis Ch●isti Bez. in loc Beza fathers it upon Hierome e Det vobis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inquit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut intelligatis excellent●m atque superemin●ntem amorem illius cognitionis Christi Hoc est qu●m cùm ad cognitionem sui nos vocavit exhibuit ac declaravit nobis Christus Heins in loc Heinsius contends stiffly for it and expounds it to this sense That the Apostle prayes for their knowledge and understanding of that excellent transcendent and unspeakable love which Christ exhibits and declares to the Sons of Men when he calls them to the knowledge of himself f In his verbis potest esse trajectio quasi dicat Apostolus excellentem Dei charitatem in ipsâ Christi cognitione quae nobis contigit elucere Vorst Schol. in loc Vorstius is not against it and expounds it to the same sense g Summam illam dilectionem Dei scilicet proximi quae ex cognitione Christi oritur Grot. in loc Grotius allows it and gives this sense of it That they might know that is experience in themselves that love of God and their Neighbour which ariseth from the knowledge of Christ He tells us of a M. S. in which the words are thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sayes that it seems there were some Copies in Hierome's time which had it thus because he so expounds it And our English Annotator who treads in his steps Dr. Hammond makes mention of a M. S. of the Kings wherein the words are so placed And indeed if the words were so read in all or the most Copies it were indisputably on their side but seeing it is otherwife I crave leave to dissent and reserving all due reverence to the learned Authors forementioned to conclude with Beza h Quidam in hoc explicando loco frustrà se torserunt ut Hieronymus qui interpretatur eximiam dilectionem cognitionis Christi obscuro sensu trajectione ità violentâ ut admitti certè non possit Beza in loc That those who go this way do but in vain trouble themselves to produce an obscure sense of the words not without a more violent transposition than can be well admitted especially seeing they may be carried without any straining to a better sense another way 4. Another Reading is that of Ambrose who renders it Scire etiam supereminentem scientiam charitatis Christi as if it were not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And thus Augustine reads it in his 120th Epistle mihi p. 697. To know the transcendent knowledge of the love of Christ But this requires a greater mutation of the words than the former to make it good nor do I find or hear of any Original Copy to countenance it as the other hath Besides this Augustine mentions it only in transitu and though Ambrose thus renders the words yet his Comment is wholly agreeable to the sense I aim at if it were his which yet i Bellar. de script Eccles p. 64. Geth Patrolog p. 281. Rivet Crit. Sacr. lib. 3. cap. 18. many learned men do question I shall produce instances from him afterwards and in the mean time shall leave this and come to that which I conceive to be the main 5. In the last place therefore Beza reads the words thus Cognoscere charitatem illam Christi omni cognitione superiorem which our English Translatours follow and render it as you read And to know the love of Christ which
consentiens atque etiam cum eo quod scripsit suprà vers 8. Bez. in loc Beza commends this as a plain exposition altogether agreeing with the foregoing Metaphor and with that which was written in the 8th Verse of the unsearchable riches of Christ y Haec Graecorum expositio est eademque facilis perspicua ut non sit opus aliorū duriores minùs probabiles interpretationes hùc adferre Estius in loc Estius in like manner commends it as the exposition of the Greek Interpreters and that both easie and plain so that there is no need of adding any other more difficult and less probable interpretations Nor do I find any thing opposed so considerable as to disswade me from assenting to them in this Exposition As for what is objected by that late Reverend and learned z Dr. Hammond on the place Annotator of our own who thinks this cannot probably be the meaning of the place that this passing knowledge should signifie unsearchable and unintelligible because the Apostle at the same time prayes that they may know it it hath been long since answered nor do I think it sufficient to invalidate this interpretation Yet lest it should lye still as a stumbling block in the Readers way I shall endeavour the removal of it and so proceed to that observation which I mainly intend In this sense therefore the words contain an Orthodox Paradox for the Apostle gives the love of Christ this character That it passeth knowledge and yet at the same time makes it his prayer for these Ephesians That they might know it and both true nor doth he make a vain prayer which I shall labour to clear in these particulars 1. The love of Christ passeth the knowledge of every natural man His natural capacities can never reach the understanding of it it is not obvious to sense and reason nor can a humane knowledge comprehend how or why it should be or what it is a Paulus scientiam hic statuit quae sit omni notitiâ superior me●itò nam si hùc facultas humana conscenderet frustrà peteret nunc Paulus ipse a Deo donari Calv. in loc Object If it did not exceed the comprehension of mans natural abilities the Apostle would never have prayed for it as a gift from God And if he have a notion that it is as he may from the light of Scripture yet his natural corruptions keep him from any saving acquaintance with it from any taste and experience of it 1 Cor. 2.14 The blindness of his mind keeps him that he cannot know it and the emnity of his heart keeps him that he will not receive it But he writes to believers and prayes for them such as he calls Saints and faithful in Christ Jesus Chap. 1.1 Answ They were a visible Church wherein probably all the members were not real Saints though in the judgement of charity he writes to them and prayes for them as such But grant they were all real Saints yet the love of Christ might be said to pass their knowledge For 2. Though by the help of the Spirit every believer doth know and that not only notionally but experimentally by spiritual sight taste and feeling the love of Christ for the Spirit of God doth make believers b 1 Cor. 2.12 Rom. 5.5 know the things that are freely given them of God and c Quisque spiritu Dei fretus pro modulo suo tantum percipiat quantum est satis ad salutem Bez. in loc sheds abroad this love of Christ into their hearts so that every one who is partaker of the Spirit of Christ doth according to his measure perceive as much of this love as is sufficient to their salvation Yet their present condition being imperfect they cannot now perfectly comprehend this love in its fulness and dimensions for d 1 Cor. 13.12 what we know we know but in part and what we see we see but as through a glass darkly in this life The perfect knowledge of this love is reserved for Heaven though even there Christ in his love will be e 2 Thes 1.10 admired as much as apprehended and therefore I think f Charitatē hanc Christi mens humana capit non capit atque in eo capit quòd rapitur in admirationē videt aliquid superesse quod persentiscere quidèm potest attamen nonità percipere ut possit explicare totum Camer de Eccles mihi p. 220. Et in Myroth p. 250. Camero states the matter right when he sayes The mind of man even of him who is most spiritual and most clearly enlightened for to him I apply it doth receive this love of Christ and doth not receive it receiving it so as to be drawn into admiration seeing alway somewhat remaining which he can perceive indeed but yet not so as to be able to explain the whole of it Thus he And to this sense doth g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in loc Theophylact expound this place for propounding this Question Seeing it passeth knowledge how shall we know it he gives this Solution First The Apostle sayes indeed that it passeth knowledge that is humane knowledge but you shall know it not by humane knowledge but by the Spirit Again He doth not say that you shall know this love how great it is but only that it is great and passeth all knowledge And h Nullus sapiens est adeò in hâc vitâ qui possit perfectè lantam charitatem considerare sed in futuro saeculo scietur haec charitas Ansel in loc Anselm excludes the best from a perfect understanding of it here There is none so wise sayes he in this life who can perfectly consider so great love but in the world to come it shall be known Object But if they knew the love of Christ already in part and could not know it perfectly to what purpose doth he pray for it Answ To very good purpose For 3. That knowledge which the Saints have of the love of Christ in this life is capable of further measures and degrees i Etsi in hâc vitâ praesenti plenum hujus rei nec sensum nec cognitionē assequamur tamèn eo usque per spiritum Dei sanctum in ejusdem sensu apprehensione proficimus ut ex ipsâ effectuū magnitudine causam fontē hunc dilectionis majorē immensiorē esse in Deo ipso statuamus quàm ut ab ullo corde humano ab ullo intellectu creato tota ejus amplitudo capi possit contineri Bodius in Ephes p. 401. and though they could not know it perfectly here yet they might know more of it and know better what they had already known and this is that which the Apostle prayes for that they might have a further and fuller measure of knowledge of this love of Christ which in it self is so great as that it cannot be perfectly known in this life and
lost man and this Law though a sanguinary Law to him and that which was to cost him his hearts-blood his life was within his heart as the Psalmist expresseth it He was content to be a bored Servant for the good of mankind Mine ears hast thou opened or digged sayes he in his Type v. 6. an allusion r Perfodisti aures id est me tibi jure perpetuo mancipatum tenes Allusio ad morem de quo Deut. 15.17 Grot. in loc as some think to that custome among the Jews mentioned Exod. 21.6 Deut. 15.17 who bored the ears of their Servants who liked and were willing to abide in their service That when he looked and there was none to help and he wondered that there was none to uphold then his own arm brought salvation to allude to that of the Prophet ſ Isa 63.5 t Goug● on Heb. p. 433. As his divine power made him able to effect what he offered so his love and pity moved him to offer his aid for mans Redemption Sect. 3. 3. THat love whereby be took our nature upon him u Heb. 2.16 not the nature of Angels but the Seed of Abraham w 2 Cor. 8.9 That he who was rich should for our sakes become poor that he x Joh. 1.1 14. who was the Word with God in the beginning and was God should be made flesh and dwell among us that he who was the eternal Son of God should in the fulness of time y Gal. 4.4 5. be made of a Woman whom himself had made that he z Phil. 2.6 7 8. who was in the form of God and thought it no robbery to be equal with God should make himself of no reputation and take upon him the form of a Servant and be made in the likeness of men and be found in fashion as a man This was love and this love was exceeding great a Deus amore venit ad homines venit in homines factus est homo Amore D●us invisibilis servis suis factus est similis Aug. Man cap 21. It was in love only that God came unto men into men was made man in love the invisible God was made like to his own Servants However his other Attributes of Majesty Power and Glory were eclipsed yet this of Kindness and Love had a great and clear Epiphany b Tit. 3 4. The kindness and love of God our Saviour towards man appeared sayes the Apostle c Velat●o Dei t●tis revelatio charitatis The veiling of his Deity was the revealing of his love d Ubi enim Dei inn●●s●it humani●as jàm ●●n●gni●as ●atere non pot●st Bern. in Epiph. Ser. 1. mihi p. 19. And when his humanity was made known his kindness could not be concealed nor was it ordinary kindness and love neither for as that devout Father goes on e In quo magis commendare poterat benignitatem suam quàm susc●piendo carnem meam meam inquā non carnem Adam id est non qualem ille habuit ante casum Quid tan●operè declaret m●sericordiam ejus quàm quòd ipsam suscepit miseriam Quid ità pietate plenum quàm quòd Dei Verbum propter nos factum est foenum D●mine quid est homo quia reputas cum aut quid apponis erga cum cor tuum Hic attendat homo quanta sit cura ejus Deo hinc scial quid de eo cogitet aut quid sentiat Quanti fecit te ex his quae pro te factas est agnosce ut appareat tibi benignitas ejus ex humanitate Quanto enim minorem se sec ●in humanitate tanto majorem exhibuit se in bonitate quanto pro me vilior tanto mihi charior est Bern. ubi suprà Wherein could he commend his love more than by taking my flesh mine I say not Adams I mean that which he had before the Fall What can so much declare his mercy as his taking upon him misery it self What is so full of goodness as that the Word of God should be made withering grass for our flesh is no better Isa 40.6 7. Lord what is man that thou shouldest magnifie him that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him Job 7.17 Here man may consider how great Gods care is of him hence he may learn what to think what to conceive Acknowledge O man how much he esteemed thee by what he was made for thee that his kindness may appear to thee from his humanity for by how much the less he made himself in his humanity by so much the greater shewed he himself in his goodness and by how much the lower he is made for me by so much the dearer he is to me Thus he and with him I conclude this particular Sect. 4. 4. THat love whereby he took our sins upon him f Gal 4.4 was made under the Law g 2 Cor. 5. ult made Sin for us h Gal. 3.13 made a Curse for us i Rom. 8.3 He was sent in the similitude of sinful flesh and though he had no sin of his own yet k Isa 53 6. the iniquities of us all were laid or made to meet upon him insomuch as l Ch●istus summus peccator non quòd ipse commiserit peccata sed quòd ea à nobis commissa susc perit in corpus suum Luth. Loci Com. Clas prim p. 35. 36. Luther sayes he was the chiefest of sinners not that he committed any himself for he knew no sin but because he took upon himself the sins which we had committed and bore them in his own body on the tree for the satisfaction of divine Justice as our Sponsor and Surety Thus he was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief but he bore our griefs and carried our sorrows he was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him he was oppressed and afflicted numbred with transgressors his soul was made an offering for sin and poured out unto death but it was for the transgressions of his people that he was thus stricken as the m Isa 3.3 4 5 7 8 10 12. Evangelical Prophet hath it n Phil. 2.8 Thus he humbled himself and became obedient to death even the death of the Cross and redeemed us o 1 Pet. 1.18 19. not with corruptible things as silver and gold but with his own precious blood There are three things saith p Bern. Serm. de Pass mihi p. 33. Bernard to be more especially considered in the Passion of Christ The Suffering it self the Manner and the Cause in the Suffering his Patience in the Manner his Humility in the Cause his Love is commended Here was love then It was not a forced but a free undertaking I lay down my life saith q Joh. 10.15 v. 18. he for the sheep no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self and the
Lord Jesus was exceeding abundant towards me with faith and love which is in Christ Jesus and then as if he wanted words to express his gratitude he breaks out into those significant expressions of his affection z vers 17. Prae ardore erumpit in istam exclamationem quia doerant verba quibus suam gratitudinem exprimeret Nā Epiphonemata praecipuè locum habent ubi abrumpere orationem cogimur quia rei magnitudo superat Quid aut èm Pauli conversione admirabilius Quanquàm nos simul omnes admone● suo exemplo nunquàm de gratiâ divinae vocationis esse cogitandum quin tandèm efferamur admiratione Calv. in loc To the King eternal immortal invisible the only Wise God be Honour and Glory for ever and ever Amen Sect. 6. THat love whereby through his a Joh. 17.11 c. Heb. 7.25 intercession grace b Joh. 10.27 28 29. power spirit and c Heb. 1.14 Psal 91.11 12. 1 Pet. 1.4 5. ministration of Angels he keeps those whom he hath thus called and converted unto that Kingdome Glory Inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away which he hath d Heb. 9.12.15 purchased and is reserved in heaven for them whither he entered as their e Heb. 6.20 fore-runner for them f Joh. 14.2 going before to prepare a place for them from whence g Acts 3.19.21 when the times of refreshing and restitution of all things shall come h 1 Thes 4.16 he will descend with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the Trump of God and i John 14.3 will come again and take them with all his members to himself that where he is they may be also not being satisfied as not being compleat without them who are k Eph. 1.23 his body the fulness of him that fills all in all A matter of strong consolation to believers that all they have by Christ is not confined to this world for l 1 Cor. 15.19 if in this life only we had hope in Christ we were of all men most miserable and that their hopes and reversions by Christ in the world to come are so secured by him that they are as safe and sure as if they were in hand and present possession All which is the fruit of admirable love m Bishop Reynolds on Psal 110. mihi p. 233. 40. for the foundation of all our mercies present or future enjoyed or expected is an overflowing of love in Christ without stint or measure a turning of heart a rowling and sounding of bowels a love which surpasseth knowledge which is as much beyond the thoughts or comprehensions as it is above the merits of men To conclude this As there was an infinite price laid down to purchase Heaven and glory for us and an infinite powerlaid out in calling and keeping the Elect to the possession of the purchase so it was and is no less than infinite love that enclined Jesus Christ to lay down that price and still enclines him to lay out that power on the behalf and for the benefit of dearly bought and as dearly beloved souls This is the love that I mean and if the devout and diligent Reader would be further affected with it I referre him to the holy Rapture of Bishop Hall on this subject first Printed in a small Volume with another Treatise called Christ Mystical and now inserted in the third Volume of his Works in Folio CHAP. III MY next work is to give you the Arguments 2 The incomprehensibleness of Christs love cofirmed by Arguments by which the incomprehensible greatness of this love of Christ may be confirmed and demonstrated And they are such as these Sect. 1. IT must needs be great and incomprehensible Arg. 1 love passing knowledge because it is the love of Christ It was said of Gideon Judges 8.21 As the man is so is his strength and it must be said of Christ As he is so is his love Now he being an infinite person his love must needs be infinite love or else he would not love like himself He was Man indeed that he might be capable of loving us in such a way as we needed but he was God also that he might accomplish the ends and designs of his love which were our Redemption and Salvation now Christ being God and so infinite in his nature which is a piece of every Christians Creed and those who deny it now will * Quos suo tempore compescet aeternus Dei filius Aret. Probl. loc 3. p. 11. feel it to their shame and sorrow another day that love which is in him and inseparable from his Essence for God is Love 1 John 4.16 is undoubtedly infinite and as soon may n Infinitū secundum quod infinitum est ignotum Bed Ax. Philos p. 97. finite creatures such as we are comprehend that which is infinite as be able to comprehend this love of Christ Alas there are lower and lesser things which puzzle and non-plus the most reaching head among us and how shall we then be able to reach this o Vide Lessi● librum de summo bono p. 54. c. Glanvils Vanity of Dogmatizing The natural Works of Creation and Providence have many secrets which we cannot dive into many riddles which we cannot unfold for p Job 5.9 he doth great things and unsearchable marvellous things without number Who can answer the Quaeries put by the mighty God to q Job 38.39 40 41 Chapters Job r Eccles 11.5 Who knoweth the way of the Spirit or how the bones do grow in the Womb of her that is with Child The formation quickning growth of a Child in the Womb is a mystery to us Who is there that is fully acquainted with the introduction nature and workings of his own soul which as now it is is ſ Jer. 17.9 deceitful above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Who can see the t Ezek. 1.16 wheel within the wheel the secret spring of Providence that moves and turns the many and seemingly cross revolutions in the world u Psal 77. ●9 Who can trace Gods way in the Sea and his path in the great Waters and his footsteps which are not known and how then w Job 11.7 8 9. can we by searching find out God can we find out his love to perfection It is as high as Heaven what can we do It is deeper than Hell what can we know The measure thereof is longer than the Earth and broader than the Sea to allude to that of Zophar to Job How can we understand the love of Christs heart who are such strangers to the lusts of our own hearts for x Psal 19.12 who can understand hsi errours sayes the Kingly Prophet Let him that thinks to attain unto it first y Isa 40.12 measure the Waters in the hollow of his hand and mete out the Heaven with a span and comprehend the
should be conversant in the things of God as the learned r Moralem considerationem qui addunt mihi probantur agitatione pectoris armi exaltatione monitos nos suisse toto pectore opere invigilandum esse divinis excitato semper animo Rivet in Exod. mihi p. 1157. Rivet points us unto who also tells us that ſ I●terpretes Christiani eum Ritum ad Christum ●eferent ut indicetur quàm latè pateat ejus ben●ficium meritum quae sit regni ill us ampli●udo Idem ibid. Christian Interpreters refer this Rite to Christ that hereby may be shown how largely the merit and benefits of Christ do extend and what is the amplitude of his Kingdome t Vide B●z Grot. Bod. in loc Beza and Grotius think that the Apostle might have respect hereunto in this place and so doth Bodius 2dly Others take it to be a Metaphor drawn from u Quae addita hic sunt a Mathematicis d●sumpta sunt qui solidum corpus ferè sic definiunt quòd habeat latitudinem longitudinem prefunditatem quos terminos ad Christi dilectionem transfert Aret. Thus Ba●dvin Rolloc c. on the place Mathematicians who make the dimensions of solid bodies to be the bredth and length and depth which dimensions the Apostle transfers to the love of Christ and one more than is usually attributed unto bodies viz height w Infinitae re●nquenda sunt ab arte Bed Ax. Philos p. 99. for indeed the love of Christ is beyond all natural dimensions but whether it hath respect to one or the other or both of these the application of these dimensions to the love of Christ according to the sense of Interpreters will serve abundantly to confirm that which I bring it for Thus therefore it is expounded by divers of them First That the length of Christs love notes its eternity and that both a parte ante backward thus he sayes I have loved thee with an everlasting love Jer. 31.3 and his delights were with the Children of Men before they had a being or the World its beginning Prov. 8.31 And also a parte post forward thus it s said Having loved his own which were in the World he loved them to the end John 13.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in perpetuum for ever according to x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gerh. Har. in loc è Chrysost Chrysostomes gloss he continued alway loving them Thus according to the Hebrew La Netzech and Le Gnolam in finem and in aeternum are all one as Psal 103.9 and as y Dr. Goodwin The heart of Christ in Heaven c. p. 8. one observes the scope of this speech is to shew how Christs heart and love would be towards them even for ever c. You have both put together Psal 103.17 where the mercy of the Lord is said to be from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him Secondly The breadth of Christs love notes its extent unto all the Elect in all Ages of whatever Nation sex or condition without any respect of persons Thus he is said to be the same yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 and would have all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth that is all ranks and sorts of men 1 Tim. 2.4 wherefore he bids his Apostles go and teach all Nations and preach the Gospel to every creature Mat. 28.19 Mark 16.15 For there is no difference betwixt the Jew and the Greek but the same Lord over all is rich in mercy to all that call upon him Rom. 10.12 There is neither Jew nor Greek Circumcision nor Vncircumcision Barbarian Scythian Bond nor Free Male nor Female but Christ is all in all and they are all one in Christ Jesus Col. 3.11 Gal. 3.28 Thirdly The depth of it notes its condescension to the lowest depths to draw sinners from thence of which the Psalmist speaks Psal 86.12 13. I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart and I will glorifie thy Name for evermore for great is thy mercy towards me and thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest Hell Fourthly The height of it notes its reaching up to the joyes of Heaven and happiness and carrying up souls thither I will come again and take you to my self that where I am there may you be also John 14.3 Father I will that those also whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am that they may behold that is enjoy my glory John 17.24 You see the Dimensions of Christs love Now let a poor Christian set himself about the meditation of this love in these its dimensions he may sooner lose himself than find out this love to perfection Alas if a poor finite short and dim-sighted creature begin to look backward into eternity past to find out the rise of this love and then look forward into eternity to come to follow the reach of it how soon must he be fain to sit down and aknowledge himself far short and utterly uncapable of ever reaching the length of it If he again consider how much love every poor sinner needs and how the love of Christ hath filled and furnished so many thousands and millions of elect souls in all ages past hitherto till it hath lodged them safely in glory and then consider again how many more are yet to spend upon it unto the end of the world he will rather cry out in admiration Behold what manner of love is this how great how unmeasurable than be able to say he hath measured the breadth of it And then if he consider from how great a * It is worthy of that ejaculation of the devout Bishop Hall in his Rapture p. 186. Oh love and mercy more deep than those depths frō which thou hast saved me and more high than that Heaven to which thou hast advanced me depth of misery it redeemeth and to how great a height of happiness it raiseth poor sinners viz. from a close Prison to a choice Palace from a low Dungeon to a high Throne from pressing Chains to a pleasing Crown from the blackest darkness to the brightest light from intolerable torment to unspeakable joy from most grievous bondage to the most glorious liberty from doleful and cursed communion with damned Spirits to delightful and blessed communion with God in every person and glorified Saints and Angels from a state beyond expression or conception for shame and misery to a state unspeakable and unconceivable for glory and happiness in a word from the lowest Hell to the highest Heaven he may well conclude with the Apostle That it is a love which passeth knowledge sooner may the deepest head the clearest eye the largest heart be swallowed up of this love than be able to comprehend it fully in these dimensions for as * Dilectio Christi nobis proponitur in cujus meditatione nos exerceamus dies ac noctes in quā nos
cannot see directly as it is nor know perfectly in this life Indeed ours have advantage of theirs in point of clearness but still the representations which we have are by mediums not immediately which we cannot bear Thus throughout the Scripture we have the love of Christ to his people shadowed out under the resemblance of such relations as are nearest and most obvious to us and best known by us As of a ſ Isa 40.11 Joh. 10.11 Shepherd to his Flock of a t Isa 49.15 Heb. 2.13 Mother to her Children of a u Ephes 5.23.30 Head to the Body of one w Joh. 15.14 Friend and x Heb 2.11 Brother to another of a y Eph. 5.25 26 27. Husband to his Wife c. Now God doth hereby condescend to speak to us as it were in our own Idiom and language that we might have some glimpse of that love reflected through these relations which we cannot fully conceive nor understand as it is in it self To which I add this also That the main end of Christs coming in the flesh and taking our nature upon him was to bring himself nearer to us not only that he might be capable of expressing his love to us in such a way as we needed by dying and suffering for us but also that we might be more familiarly acquainted with his own and his Fathers love towards us as he gave an z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 1.18 Exegesis and declaration of it in our nature which in it self passeth knowledge 2. For Application The love of Christ appears to be great and incomprehensible forasmuch as after it hath been declared and represented in that plain and familiar way which you have heard of yet so far short are we of understanding it to any good purpose by our own reason and abilities of nature that without the help of the Spirit we cannot attain unto any saving knowledge of it This therefore is the great work which the Spirit hath to do in the Church and for which he proceeds from the Father and the Son namely to bring the Elect to a sight taste and experience of this love of Christ and to lead them on unto further measures and higher degrees in this knowledge and experience till they attain perfection To this end our blessed Saviour being to leave the world leaves a promise of the Holy Ghost to supply his absence Joh. 16.7 and he tells us what his office and business should be both in reference to to the World and in reference to Believers In reference to the World that were yet Strangers his business was to bring them to Christ to know and taste of his love and that by convincing them of sin righteousness and judgement v. 8 9 10 11. In reference to Believers that were already called and converted his business was to bring them to further acquaintance with Jesus Christ and fuller experience of his love Thus he tells them v. 14. a Nequè enim nos illuminat Spiritus ut abducat vel tantillum a Chrislo sed ut thesauros illos qui in Christo sunt absconditi reseret In summâ non aliis quàm Christi divitiis nos locupletat Spiritus ut ejus gloriam per omnia illustret Calv. in loc He shall glorifie me for he shall receive of mine and shew it unto you He shall give you further insight into the mysteries of my love which I could tell you of my self but that you cannot bear them now v. 12. The Apostle confirms this who tells us That as no man knows the things of a man but the spirit of man which is in him so no man knows the things of God but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.11 But how then come any of us to know them Why sayes he God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit v. 10. who is therefore given to believers that they may know the things that are freely given them of God b Apostolus per Dei dona ipsum Christum imp●imis imò fere unum intelligit quum nihil nobis nisi in Christo sit la●gitus Bez. in loc v. 12. and among other things they come to know the love of Christ and to know it more abundantly by the Spirit for sayes the same Apostle The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given to us Rom. 5.5 The first sight and further tastes of the love of God in Christ is from the Holy Ghost Now as the gift of the Spirit is in it self a great gift of love and indeed next to the gift of Christ the greatest the Evangelist makes it equivalent to all good things Luke 11.13 compared with Mat. 7.11 so it argues the love of Christ to be exceeding great that the glorious Spirit of God is given on purpose to bring us to acquaintance with it If we were able to comprehend it of our selves there would be no need of the Holy Ghosts influence and assistance to bring us to the right understanding of it That 's the fifth Argument Sect. 2. Arg. 6. MY next Argument is this The love of Christ must needs be a love passing knowledge because those who have attained to the highest pitch in the knowledge of this love do yet fall far short of knowing it to perfection in this life and yet the present fruits and effects of what they do attain unto are very great and incomprehensible This Argument hath two Branches and both tend to confirm the truth in hand 1. Those who have attained to the highest pitch in the knowledge of this love of Christ do yet fall far short of knowing it to perfection in this life which is an undoubted evidence of its incomprehensible greatness Alas it is but little very little which the best of Saints do know of it here upon Earth in comparison of what is to be known and shall be known of it by them in Heaven Even Paul himself who went as far as any in the knowledge of Christ and his love yet confesseth that he c 1 Cor. 13.12 saw but through a glass darkly and knew but in part When he speaks of Christ he speaks of him as one in whom are d Eph. 3.8 unsearchable riches and when he mentions the love of Christ in the Text he he calls it a love which passeth knowledge Ask a Saint that hath had the fullest and longest knowledge and experience of Christ and his love and he will tell you he hath gotten no more than what leaves him admiring the fulness which is in Christ which he is never able to comprehend he will tell you of a plus ultrà still which which he can never reach an Abysse of love which he can never fathome It pleaseth him indeed to live and dye in the study and meditation of it yet without hopes of coming to the perfect knowledge of it though he should live Methuselahs age he will confess himself at last
of me Oh how wonderful how wonderful how wonderful is thy love Oh thy love is unspeakable that hast dealt so graciously with me Oh I feel thy mercies and oh that my tongue and heart were able to sound forth thy praises as I ought and as I willingly would do Afterwards she had these expressions Now blessed Lord thy comfortable presence is come yea Lord thou hast had respect to thy Handmaid and art come with fulness of joy and abundance of consolations O blessed be thy Name O Lord my God! Again a Christian Friend coming to see her and marvelling at her exceeding joyes desired the continuance of them whereupon she burst out and said Oh the joyes the joyes the joyes that I feel in my soul oh they be wonderful they be wonderful they be wonderful And again not long after she said to a Minister who came to see her Oh! my soul hath been compassed about with terrours of death fear within and fear without the sorrows of Hell were upon me knots and knorres were upon my soul and a roaring Wilderness of woe was within me but blessed blessed blessed be the Lord my God who hath not left me comfortless but like a good Shepherd hath he brought me into a place of rest even to the sweet running Waters of Life that flow out of the Sanctuary of God and he hath led me into the green Pastures where I am fed and exceedingly comforted c. Oh! blessed be the Lord Oh! blessed be the Lord that hath thus comforted me and hath brought me now to a place more sweet unto me than the Garden of Eden Oh the joy oh the joy the delightsome joy that I feel Oh how wonderful how wonderful how wonderful is this joy Oh! praise the Lord for his mercies and for this joy which my soul feeleth full well Praise his Name for evermore And thus she continued till at last she slept in the Lord. Now from all this put together I conclude That seeing the love of Christ shed abroad in the hearts of his people hath such admirable effects to the filling of them with such unspeakable joy and comfort and seeing it is but little in comparison which the highest best and most priviledged Saints do know and taste of this love here below surely this love must needs have an exceeding great and incomprehensible fulness in it self That 's the sixth Argument Sect. 3. MY next Argument is this Arg. 7. It appears to be a love which passeth knowledge because when the spirits of just men shall be made perfect in Heaven where they shall know and receive most of this love yet even then they shall not be able to comprehend all of it but rather be comprehended by it It s true that in Heaven the capacities of the Saints shall be enlarged to the utmost and they shall be filled according to that enlargement they shall want nothing to make them perfectly blessed they shall have as much of this love in the beatifical fruits of it as they can hold and shall be able to hold incomparably more than now they can but yet even then and there they will not be able to hold it all for that which is infinite can never be comprehended by that which is finite there being no proportion betwixt them So that what is said of the joy of our Lord in Mat. 25.21 is true of the love of our Lord it s too big to enter into us therefore we must enter into it As a large Vessel put into the Ocean takes in of the water till it be full yet cannot contain it all but when it can hold no more is swallowed up so the Saints who here sip and taste of the love of Christ shall in Heaven drink more of it till they be everlastingly swallowed up by it Jesus Christ even at his second coming when he shall take up his Saints to be where he is Joh. 14.3 to behold that is enjoy his glory Joh. 17.24 will even then be admired in all them that believe 2 Thes 1.10 admired for that love which brought them thither and admired for that glory which they shall enjoy there as the fruits of this love n Dr. Sclater on Thes p. 50. The measure of the glory will be so great as shall fill the enjoyers with wonder at the grace beholders with no less than admiration at the power of the bestower When a glorified Saint shall consider himself raised from the dust yea the dunghill to sit with Princes to be made like and equal to the Angels to see God and enjoy an exceeding and eternal weight of glory when he hath deserved no such matter but the contrary and thousand yea millions of men his equals if nos his betters passed by how will it fill such a one with extolling and admiring the rich grace and love of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ We our selves sayes o Nos ipsi sentimus effundi amorem Dei in corda nostra c●piosâ copiâ per Spiritū Sanctum qui datus est nobis sed totum semèl comprehendere in hâc vitâ non possumus In alterâ verò vitâ stupebimus ad admirabilē illam dilectionem neque tamen etiam tùm animus creaturae etiam glorificatae poterit infinitam illam totam comprehendere quae in Deo est saltèm id scimus quòd illâ charitate toti implebimur cùm Deus erit omnia in omnibus Rolloc in Joan. p. 7●6 Rolloc do now perceive the love of God to be shed abroad in great plenty into our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us but we are not able to comprehend it altogether at once in this life And in the life to come we shall be amazed at that admirable love though even then the mind of a glorified creature shall not be able to comprehend all that infinite love which is in God Yet this at least we now know That we shall be altogether filled with that love when God shall be all in all To conclude this how exceeding great must that love needs be which the Saints in glory shall not be able fully to comprehend That 's the seventh Argument Sect. 4. MY last Argument Arg. 8. wherewith I shall conclude what I have to say as to the Doctrinal part of this Proposition is this The love of Christ must needs pass all humane p Omnem superat cognitionem nempè humanam adeoque Angelicam Zanch. in loc ut suprà for it surpasseth all Angelical knowledge The Angels being purae Intelligentiae of pure Intelligences and of larger capacities than the rest of the creatures do know more than we yet their knowledge is but like that of the creatures finite and limited q Certissimum est Angelos etsi multa sciant m●l a lamen etiam nescire Estius in Sentent lib. 2. dist 7. p. 75. though by their natural knowledge they know many things yet not all things There are many things
which they are ignorant of they know not the hearts of men 1 Kings 8.39 nor many things to come Isa 41.23 nor the time when the Day of Judgement shall be Mat. 24.36 This great mystery of Christ and his love in redeeming and saving of Man the very Angels themselves knew not at the first for as the Apostle speaks Eph. 3.9 It was from the beginning of the World hid in God nor could they have known it at all by a natural knowledge If all the Angels in Heaven had sate in counsel from the beginning of the World to this day for contriving a way to save man salvâ Dei justitia they could never have found it out nor could they have known it when it was contrived if he who contrived had concealed it but they came to know it at the first by revelation from God How soon it was revealed to them is not revealed unto us and therefore cannot be determined by us yet this appears that the knowledge which they had of it by revelation was not compleat at first but was improved by observation and experience * Leigh's Body of Divinity p. 271. Hence that distinction of the knowledge of Angels among the Schoolmen into Natural Revealed and Experimental Their natural knowledge was improved quoad speciem by Revelation by it they know that which they knew not before and their knowledge by revelation was improved quoad gradum by Experience by it they knew in fuller measure what they knew before they knew the substance of it by revelation but the circumstances of it more clearly and fully by experience and observation Gods revealing it to them at first in the general hath made them more eager in pursuit of the particulars hence it is said 1 Pet. 1.12 That the Angels desire to look into the mystery of Christ and the Gospel and the words there used are emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an earnest strong and unsatisfied desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a diligent and accurate inspection to look and pry narrowly by stooping down to see the inside of things that are obscure and under cover It 's thought to be an allusion to the posture of the Cherubims which were put upon the Mercy-seat with their faces looking down into it Exod. 25. Now there are two wayes especially by which the knowledge of Angels in the Mystery of Christ and his love seems to be improved 1. By the Church This is clear from Ephes 3.8 9 10. where the Apostle tells us that the manifold Wisdome of God is made known by the Church to the Principalities and Powers in heavenly places that is the Angels so called r Angel● sic id ò nuncupantur quòd Deus per ipsorum manum suam potestatem virtutem dominationë exe●ceat Calv. in Eph. 1.21 because of their Princely power under God over the Kingdomes of the World and this he sayes was one intent of his preaching the Gospel If it had not been for the Churches sake that God would reveal so glorious a mystery the Angels in Heaven must have been for ever ignorant of it and after they had received notice of it by private revelation from God yet was their knowledge of it encreased by Gods dispensations to and in the Church by reason whereof the Church was ſ Pauli autem verba hunc habent sensū quòd Eccl●sia ex Judaeis pariter ac gentibus collecta qu si speculum sit in quo contemplantur Angeli mirificam Dei sapientiam quam priùs nescierant Calv. in Eph. 3.10 a glass in which they saw and observed the manifold Wisdome of God and got further and fuller experience of the mystery of Christs love and our redemption thereby Thus by the Prophecies and Promises of the Old Testament and by the performances and preaching of the New and by the Providences and Ordinances of both whereof the Church was the seat and center the Angels came to further acquaintance with Christ and the way of mans salvation by him which they desired to look into 2. By Christ himself by beholding and attending upon him in our nature both as humbled on Earth and exalted to glory in Heaven This is that which the Apostle reckons as a part of the great Mystery of Godliness 1 Tim. 3.16 that Christ was seen of Angels They knew Christ was to come into the World by Divine Revelation they knew more of him by those Prophetical Praedictions which were made of him more yet by attending upon him ministring unto him whiles he was in our flesh upon Earth carrying on the Work of our Redemption and yet more by beholding of him now he is glorified in Heaven sitting in our nature at his Fathers right hand And yet even now they know not all of Christ and his love towards us there is that in Christ which dazles the sight and exceeds the comprehension of the glorious Angels Now if the love of Christ passeth their knowledge surely it must needs surpass ours And thus I hope I have sufficiently cleared and confirmed the truth of my Assertion That the love of Jesus Christ is exceeding great and incomprehensible CHAP V. I proceed now to Application Applic. THE first and main Use which I shall make of this point Vse 1. The first Use of Exhortation to labour to know the love of Christ shall be to turn this Prayer of the Apostle for these Ephesians into an Exhortation unto every one that shall read these lines that he would make it his great business study and endeavour to know the Lord Jesus and that in his love Sect. 1. MY great desire The Preface to the handling of it and design is to bring you nearer to Christ and to that end I lay before you this grand attractive of his love to draw you unto more acquaintance and familiarity with him and it therefore I first preached and now publish it and I make it my earnest request to you all to whom this shall come that you would not lay aside this advice which I now give you of studying this love of Christ and getting a sound saving knowledge of it especially seeing it is a matter of so general so great and necessary concernment so general as that none can exempt himself so great as that your All depends upon it and so necessary as that you are undone without it This is the great business of a Gospel Minister for himself and his People to study know and preach Jesus Christ This was Pauls determination among the learned Corinthians 1 Cor. 2.2 to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified for indeed this was the end of his Apostleship as he tells the Ephesians Chap. 3. 8. to preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ All our studies and preaching which are not Christ directly or reductively are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things by the by and will not tend to any comfortable account at
last We may please our selves and it may be those that hear us too by preaching other things but we shall not save our selves and those that hear us unless we pre●ch Jesus Christ We are but Prevaricators in our office if Jesus Christ be not the Vnum Magnum nay the Vnum Maximum in our Ministry This is also the great business of every Christian for himself to know Jesus Christ our life depends upon it according to our Saviours own words Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent For the excellency of this knowledge the Apostle Paul counted all things but dross and dung Phil. 3.8 This is the one thing necessary without which all a mans other knowledge will but hasten and heighten his condemnation Si Christum discis nihil est si caetera nescis Si Christum nescis nihil est si caetera discis Englished thus If Christ thou know it will suffice Though else thou knowest naught If Christ be hid thou art not wise Though all else thou be taught Now the love of Christ is the main matter to be studied and known by every one who would study and know Jesus Christ and indeed we cannot miss of love in the study and knowledge of Christ for Christ is love His Name his Natures his Offices his Doctrine his Life his Death his Priviledges his Ordinances his All have a deep tincture of love in them and this love is to be known and that it may be known to be studied by us by all of us even the best of us If you say We hear this often enough Object and know this well enough I answer * Nunquàm satis dicitur quod nunquàm satis discitur That is never said enough Answ which is never learned enough And though you know the love of Christ do you know it as you ought to know it If you do not you must go over it again that you may know it better and you do not know Christ as you ought nor his love as you ought until you have him and it by heart You who know most and best are yet to seek you know but in part there are all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge hid in Christ Col. 2.3 unsearchable riches Ephes 3.8 which can never be traced and found out You may be all your time searching and digging into them and yet though you should live never so long not come to the bottome at last but must breath out your soules with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the conclusion oh the depth for this is a love which passeth knowledge Object If you say that it is an heartless hopeless work which I put you upon when I bid you study to know the love of Christ seeing it passeth knowledge Answ I Answer That it 's true the love of Christ is such as passeth knowledge the riches of Christ are unsearchable riches but yet the unsearchable riches of Christ should not make us idle but active in digging and searching them out as far as we can the unknowable love of Christ should not deaden and straiten but quicken and enlarge our appetite to endeavour after as full a knowledge as we may What wise man will stand still or go back because he cannot finish his journey in a day Will not men dig for Gold because they cannot get to the bottome of the Mine And shall we refuse to know as much as we can of this love of Christ because we cannot comprehend as much as there is Far be it from any of us to cherish any such thought for the checking whereof consider 1. That you may know enough of Christ and his love to serve for your souls salvation which its your great interest to mind and look after as the great end of your being 2. You shall not need fear to be cloyed and glutted in the study of this love Varietas delectat variety delights and there is so much variety in this one subject the love of Christ as renders the study of it very delectable 3. The deeper you go in this love of Christ the sweeter yea if as * Plut. Moral Tom. 2. Lat. 8. mihi p. 117. Plutarch notes Eudoxus was content to be burnt up by the Sun if he might have liberty first to stand so near as to learn the figure magnitude and form of a Star how much more and better should a Christian be content to enter upon and proceed in the search study knowledge and understanding of this love of Christ till he be at last swallowed up of that which he is never able fully to comprehend Sect. 2. IN the prosecution of this Exhortation I shall do these two things 1. I shall direct your knowledge that you may not mistake about it 2. I shall excite you to it by the encouragements which the Apostle layes down about the Text that you be not disheartned so as to decline your duty in this particular By way of Direction which is needful 1. Directions about our knowing the love of Christ for all knowledge of the love of Christ is not sufficient and saving there is a general notional speculative historical knowledge which will be prejudicial and not profitable in the end though this be good as far as it goes yet where there is no more it is not sufficient Those who know the love of Christ in the notion only for Discourse sake or for a Professions sake only will fall as short of Heaven as the most ignorant person yea those who know the love of Christ no better than thus will but descend the more learnedly into Hell and incurre the more severe condemnation Now that you may not mistake here nor miscarry hereafter in this business of knowing the love of Christ I shall direct you to mind the qualifications of your knowledge and I shall mention three Direction 1. That it be affectionate knowledge 1. Look that your knowledge of the love of Christ be Cognitio affectiva an affectionate knowledge let it not swimme in your heads only by empty Notions but sink down into your hearts in sweet savoury warming and lively affections towards him And Sect. 2. 1. SEE that you have such a knowledge of Christ and his love The first Branch of the first Direction That it be a knowledge accompanied with love as is accompanied with love to him True love is grounded in knowledge and true knowledge hath love built upon it Though your heads be never so full of the knowledge of Christ yet if your hearts be not also full of love to him it will neither be acceptable to Christ nor profitable to your selves The Apostle tells us how little the understanding of all mysteries and all knowledge will profit a man without love 1 Cor. 13. for as the t Multa scilic●t laudabilia atque admiranda possunt in homine reperiri quae sine
charitatis medullis habent quidèm pietatis similitudinem sed non veritatē habent Prosper ad Ruf. de grat lib. arbitr mihi p. 125. Father observes There may be many commendable and admirable things found in a man which without the marrow of love have indeed a shew but not the truth of godliness Love is the great affection of Union it is gluten animi the cement of the soul Though u Scientia foris stat dilectio intrat Lyr. in Eph. 3.19 knowledge stand without and gives us a view of Christ yet its love that enters in clasps about him and cleaves to him So that notwithstanding all our knowledge Christ and we shall still abide strangers and the distance remain till love bring us together which is the bond of perfectness that is w Q●od vinculum est perfectissimum animos scilicet conjungens Grot. in loc the most perfect bond because it doth joyn hearts together Col. 3.14 x Dr. Reynolds of the Paso●s p. 96. So that herein Divine Love hath the same kind of vertue with Divine Faith that as this is the being and subsisting of things to come and distant in time so that is the union and knitting of things absent and distant in place as Christ and Christians are he being in Heaven and they on Earth whom yet having not seen they love 1 Pet. 1.8 and by love are united to him and become one spirit with him 1 Cor. 6.17 And therefore * O foelix hominum genus Si vestros animos amor Quo coelū regitur regat Boet. de Consol Phil. lib. 2. mihi p. 47. O happy you whose hearts by love Are rul'd which rules in Heaven above Give me leave here a little to commune with you about your love to Christ and to shew you why and how you should love him the one to move you to it the other to guide you in it CHAP. VI. 1. WOuld you have a reason for your love Reasons and Motives for loving Jesus Christ Truly were it so with you as it should be this fire would burn into a flame without blowing but the truth is mens hearts have lost their ingenuity else there would not need so much adoe to perswade them to that which is not only their duty but their priviledge it being indeed an honour that Jesus Christ will give us leave to love him Consider therefore because need so requires those * Hos 11.4 bonds of love which your Lord hath cast forth to draw in your hearts to the love of himself Sect. 1. 1. The first Reason for our love to Christ IT 's the sum of all that the Lord requires of you and the best of all that you can return unto him 1. It 's the sum of all that he requires of you As love from Christ is the top of your happiness so love to Christ is the sum of your duty The whole Law is briefly comprehended all the Commandments which are exceeding broad and of vast extent Psal 119.96 are summ'd up and epitomized in this single word this sweetest Monosyllable Love y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In summā ac compendium reducitu● nàmtota Lex nihil aliud is quàm amo●em Dei proximi praec●pit B●z in loc Rom. 13.9 Love is the sum and substance of what we owe to God and Man the short summary and compendium of a Christians whole duty whence the Apostle calls the observance hereof the fulfilling of the Law v. 10. and the z Hoc praeceptum Dei amandi alterum amandi proximi dicuntur Hebraeis summae magnae Grot. in loc Jews called the Commands of loving God and our Neighbour The great Summes Now as the Servants of Naaman said to him 2 Kings 5.13 so say I to you If the Lord had commanded you some greater thing would you not have done it If he had required you to sacrifice your Children to burn your bodies to ashes would you not have done it how much more then when he bids you give him only your hearts your love 2. It 's the best of all that you can return unto him a Amor est primum maximum donum quo nihil magis donari potest cùm per ipsum caetera omnia donantur Lessius de summo bono lib. 2. cap. 6. p. 134. See Jenkins on Jude Part 1 mihi p. 140. 4. and Manton on Jude p. 117. Amor ubi venerit caeteros omnes in se traducit captivat affectus Amor per se sufficit per se placet propter se Ipse meritum ipse praemium ipse causa ipse fructus ipse usus per amorem enim conjungimur Deo Aug. Man cap. 18. mihi p. 234. Love is the best thing that the best man ever gave to Christ It 's love that doth engage all besides and sweetens all that is engaged Love is Queen Regent in the soul and all other Graces Gifts Duties Services attend her beck and serve her interest and are welcome before the Throne according to the strain of love that is in them Love is the kernel of every gift the beauty of every performance the marrow of every duty the lustre of every ●race the salt which seasons every Sacrifice ●ithout which the exquisitest service is but a ●ead carkass embalmed The greatest gift with●ut love is rejected the least with it is accept●d Love is an act of grace of it self other ●hings are not acts of grace without love as Almes yea Martyrdome it self is nothing with●ut love 1 Cor. 13.3 but small things are made ●reat by love A Cup of cold Water Mat. 10. A Widows Mite Luke 21. find acceptance ●s coming from love It 's love whereby a Chri●●ian comes nearest to God who is love and ●e who dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God ●n him 1 John 4.16 It s love which removes ●im furthest from hypocrisie for in this only the ●ypocrite cannot imitate him he can speak and ●o and suffer but he cannot love and the want ●f this spoils all It s your best nay it s your All ●ts all that the Apostle desires Christians may re●urn to God for the mercy and peace bestowed on ●hem Jude 2. b Solus amor est ex omnibus animae motibus sensibus at● affectibus in quo potest creatura etsi non ex aequo respondere auctori vel ipsi mutuam rependere vicem Aug. Manual cap. 18. mihi p. 233. It s only love of all the moti●ns and affections of the soul by which the Crea●ure though not in a way of equality can answer his Creator and make any return to him And its only by love that the Redeemed of the Lord can return unto him their Redeemer for his great love in working Redemption for them And therefore seeing you can do no better nor more for Christ it is but reasonable that you should love him But that 's not all For The second Reason Sect. 2. 2.
lovely and delectable And indeed so he is If there be any thing unlovely in him do not love him but because he hath Omnes rationes amabilitatis he is maximè diligibilis as the Schoolmen speak He is most to be beloved because he hath all grounds of amiablen●ss in him What is it which is most taking with you which is not in him 1. Is it Beauty He is white and ruddy the chiefest the Standard-bearer among ten thousand Cant. 5.10 Fairer than the Children of Men Psal 45.2 h Pulchritudinem Christi fuisse eximiam omnimodam dubitare nesas est Rivet in Psal 45. pag. 214. Fol. It s a hainous and detestable thing to doubt of his excellent and perfect beauty He is the brightness of his Fathers glory and the express Image of his person Heb. 1.3 2. Is it Riches He is proprietor and possessor of unsearchable riches according to the Apostle Ephes 3.8 He is appointed Heir of all things Heb. 1.2 3. Is it Honour God hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 higher than the Kings of the Earth Psal 89.27 King of Kings and Lord of Lords is the Name written on his Thigh and Vesture Rev. 19.16 The Lord of Glory as he is called in 1 Cor. 2.8 The King of Glory as David styles him Psal 24.7 that is a most glorious Lord and King by an usual Hebraisme 4. Is it Power and Authority All power that is * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 belong both to him as those places intimate authority is given to him in Heaven and Earth Mat. 28.18 he hath a power whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself Phil. 3.21 5. Is it great Wisdome and Vnderstanding In him are hid all the treasures of Wisdome and Knowledge Col. 2.3 He hath not a little Wisdome but treasures of Wisdome all the treasures of Wisdome 6. Is it Goodness of disposition He may be better than Titus Vespatian called Deliciae generis humani The delight and darling of mankind How earnestly doth he invite and beseech poor sinners to come in to him that they may be saved Isa 55.1 c. Mat. 11.28 2 Cor. 5.20 Vide Watsons Sermon of Christs loveliness passim How patiently doth he wait for their acceptance of his offers of grace Rev. 3.10 even till his head be filled with dew and his locks with the drops of the night Cant. 5.2 How readily doth he embrace and heartily welcome those who come in to him though they have been Prodigals and stood out long against his entreaties Luke 15.20 c. How sadly doth he resent the delayes and denyals of obstinate sinners with sorrow in his heart Mark 3.5 with tears in his eyes Luke 19.41 and lamentable complaints in his mouth Verse 42. Mat. 23.37 John 5.40 all which shews what a gracious disposition he is of 7. Is it Sweetness of Conversation That which was said of Saul and Jonathan 2 Sam. 1.23 They were lovely in their lives is much more true of Christ His life was purer than the Sun-beams as Chrysostome speaks his life was a fair Copy without any blot his lips never spake a word amisse Psa 45. Luke 4.22 John 7.46 his feet never did tread one step awry he went about doing good Acts 10.38 his whole life was a pattern of good works 8. Is it Vsefulness to others Herein he is most eminent He is our Light The Sun of Righteousness more useful than the Sun in the Firmament Mal. 4.2 He is our Life our life of grace and comfort here springs from him John 1.16 Luke 2.25 and so doth our life of glory hereafter Col. 3.4 John 17.22 24. In a word He is our All. i Omnia ad salutem necessaria in omnibus fidelibus sanctificatis Christo copulatis Dav. in Col. p. 306. All that is necessary to salvation in all the faithful that are sanctified and united to him Col. 3.11 k Watsons Sermon on the Text. p. 420. All good is eminently in him and all good is conveyed derivatively from him He is made unto Believers a Paradise a Tree of Life a Jewel a Crown c. yea l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar Hom. 31. mihi p. 410. All in all as Macarius speaks Even Christ crucified though to the blind world the greatest stumbling block and Rock of offence yet to them who have their senses rightly exercised to discern him is most amiable When he is to the Jews a stumbling-block and to the Greeks foolishness even then to them who are called both Jews and Greeks it is Christ the Power of God and the Wisdome of God 1 Cor. 1.23.24 which made the Apostle resolve to know and to glory in nothing but Christ crucified the Cross of Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 and Gal. 6.14 The more bloody he was for us the more lovely should he be to us because therein he shewed most love to us m Sihs Bowels open'd p. 374. By how much the more he was abased for us this makes him the more lovely that out of love he would abase himself so low When greatness and goodness meet together how goodly is it And likewise because from hence ariseth our greatest benefit and advantage Christs Cross is our Crown his Passion the ground of our hope and expectation his shame our glory his pain our ease his curse our blessing his stripes our healing his confinement our liberty his condemnation our justification his suffering our reigning his death our life for his Cross was the atonement of Divine wrath the condemnation of sin n ●●ux Christi est clavis Pa●adisi Damasc the opening of Heaven which was shut against us Well then lay these things together and if it appear that Jesus Christ is thus lovely there is no question but he deserves to be loved by you especially if you take in the other consideration upon which he deserves your love and that is 2. Upon the account of his love to your selves It 's true o Tam bonus est pulcher in se Deus ut licet non amasset nos nec benefecisset nec fecisset amandus esset supra omnes ematores benefactores conditores nostros imo etiamsi adisset nos malefecisset N●irem de Adorat in Spir. Verit. p. 369. that Christs goodness and amiableness is such as that it deserves our love though he had never loved us nor done good to us yea after he hath loved us p Quia bonus est in se D us plus debemus amare quam quia nos amat benefacit Idem p. 375. we ought to love him more because he is good and amiable in himself than because he loveth us and is beneficial to us But though the loveliness of Christ be sufficient to deserve our love and we can never love him at so high a rate as his amiableness deserves
to the tuition of Angels Love him by whom thou art so much beloved mind him who mindeth thee seek him that seeketh thee love thy Love by whom thou art loved who hath prevented thee with his love and is the cause of thy love But because we cannot so much as love him without his influence let us go to him as he doth b O ignis qui semper ardes nunquam extingueris O amor qui semper ferves nunquā tepescis accende me accendor totus a te ut totus diligam te Minus eenim te amat qui tecum aliquid amat quod non propter te amat Diligam te Domine quoniam tu prior dilexisti me Aug. Solil p. 164. O fire which alway burnest and art never extinguished O love which art alway hot and never coolest kindle me let me be wholly enflamed by thee that I may wholly love thee for he loves thee too little who loves any thing with thee which he doth not love for thee Lord let me love yea with thine help I will love thee because thou hast first loved me Let Anselme conclude this matter who thus breaths after a loving Saviour c Certe Domine quia fecisti me debeo amori tuo meipsum totum quia me red●misti debeo meipsum totum quia tantum promittis debeo meipsum imo tantum debeo amori tuo plus quam m●ipsum quantum tu es major me pro quo dedisti teipsum cui promittis teipsum Fac precor Domine me gustare per amorem quod gusto per cognitionem sentiam per affectum quod sentio per intellectum Plus debeo quam meipsum totum sed nec plus habeo nec hoc ipsum possum per me reddere totum Trahe me Domine in amorem tuum hoc ipsum totum Totum quod sum tuum est conditione fac totum tuum dilectione Ansel Medit. de Gen. Hum. cap. 7. mihi p. 269. 16. Inter opera Tom. 3. mihi p. 199. Fol. Surely O Lord because thou hast made me I owe my whole self to thy love because thou hast redeemed me I owe thee my whole self because thou promisest so much I owe thee my whole self yea I owe to thy love as much more than my self as thou art greater than me for whom thou hast given thy self and to whom thou promisest thy self Cause me O Lord I beseech thee to taste that by love which I taste by knowledge let me feel by affection that which I feel by understanding I owe thee more than my whole self but I neither have more nor can I give thee this wholly of my self Lord draw me and that wholly into thy love All that I am is thine by condition make me all thine by love and affection Thus he And now lay these things together His loveliness in himself his love towards you surely it will strongly conclude that he deserves your love which should be a strong incentive to you to love him Give me leave to add one motive more and I have done Sect. 4. The fourth Reason 4. ALL true believers who have a saving knowledge of Christ and experienced his love towards themselves do and cannot but love him The Church testifies this saying to him in her conference with him Cant. 1.3 4. The Virgins love thee The Vpright love thee The Virgins that is d Ainsworth on the place those chosen called and faithful ones who with chaste and pure minds serve the Lord only and worship him in spirit and truth and stand with Christ on Mount Sion whom you find described Rev. 14.3 4. These love the Lord for the odour of his good ointments which they perceive by his Word and Spirit they love him because he first loved them and hath shed abroad his love in their hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given to them It is said of the Israelites Numb 33.29 e Trap on the place That they removed their Tent from Mithcah which signifies Sweetness to Hashmonah which signifies Swiftness to teach us saith one that the Saints have no sooner tasted of Christs sweetness but they are carried after him with incredible swiftness For as f Amor Dei amorem animae parit cam intendere sibi facit Aug. Man p. 236. Austin observes The love of God doth breed and bring forth the love of the soul and makes it to be intent upon himself The Upright that is g Ainsworth those who have upright hearts and righteous conversations These upon the remembrance of the love of Christ manifested by his Sufferings Death Resurrection Ascension and the graces and benefits flowing from them to his Church do love him that is are confirmed and encreased in love to him more and more h Robotham on Cant. p. 80. As fire is encreased by adding of fuel unto it so is our love to Christ upon fresh and new manifestations of his great love towards us That the Church her self did love Christ is clear from the whole Book of Canticles i Watsons Christs loveliness p. 435. which is nothing else but a Divine Epithalamium or Marriage-Song in which are all the strains of holy love set forth in the purest Allegories and Metaphors such as do represent that dear affection and union which is betwixt Christ and his Church She calls him her Beloved Cap. 2.3 nor did she love him from the teeth outward as we say but with a love fetch'd as deep as the bottome of her heart O thou whom my soul loveth sayes she Cap. 1.7 k Jeanes Scholast pract Divin Part 1. on Col. 1.19 p. 221. The remembrance of his love to her had such an impression upon her heart as to make her sick of love Cant. 2.5 l Sibs Bowels open'd p. 305. A sickness not unto death but unto life a sickness that never ends but in comfort and satisfaction It wrought in her a love of a most powerful and unconquerable influence a love as strong as death Cant. 8.6 a love as forcible and irresistible as death trampling upon and breaking through all difficulties that occurre in performance of duties unto or undergoing of sufferings for Christ A love inflamed into jealousie and this jealousie as cruel or hard as the Grave as it there follows that is as inexorable unto all the enemies of Christ unto her most profitable and pleasant sins her darling and most indulged lusts A love of the same nature with fire the coales thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame ibid. For 1. As Fire is the hottest of Elements so her love of Christ was more solidly intense than her love of any creature whatsoever She was as it were all of a fire with the love of him 2. As the motion of fire is upwards towards Heaven so the Churches love of Christ was as a fiery Chariot whereby she was carried up into Heaven 3. As fire burns all things combustible so
1. That it is a Personal love a love of the Person more than his portion p Meretricius amor est plus annulum quā sponsum amare It is the love of a Harlot to love the Ring more than the Husband Our love of Christ must be a personal love we must love him more than his He indeed sayes q Amat profecto castè qui ipsum quem amat quaerit non aliud quicquam ipsius Bern. Ser. 7. in Cant. p. 138. Bernard loves chastely who seeks him whom he loves not any other thing which he hath It s adulterate love to love the priviledges and blessings of Christ above himself and as r Greenham p. 516. one of our own speaks If we love not Christ more than his benefits we are not worthy of him A Christian doth and may lawfully love the Ordinances Priviledges Graces and Benefits which come by Christ but yet he loves Christs person more than these and above all these so that if there were not any of these in hand or in hope yet would he look upon Christ as altogether lovely and love him without these ſ Nobilis amator non quiescit in dono sed in me super omne donum Thom. A ●emp de Imit Christ lib. 3. cap. 6. mihi p. 153. That is the noble lover who rests not in any gift received from Christ but rests in Christ above every gift so the devout A Kempis brings in Christ speaking to the soul 2. That it is a love of the Person considered in the utmost extent of that relation of a Husband that is not only as a Cherisher and Preserver but also as a Head Guide and Lord. Thus a Christians sincere love to Christ respects and is carried out to whole Christ not only as Jesus to Save but also as Lord to Rule It looks at Christ as Mediator and loves him in all the offices of his Mediatorship not only as t Isa 55.4 Eph. 5.23 Col. 2.6 Witnesse but also as Leader and Commander not only as Saviour of his Body but also as Head of his Church not only as Priest to satisfie and intercede but also as Prophet to teach lead and guide and as King to Rule govern and exercise dominion As the Heart must not be divided which is the principle of our love so Christ must not be divided who is the object of our love As we must love with the whole heart so we must love a whole Christ or not at all Take it for a clear truth sayes one That if thou lovest not Christ as thy Soveraign Lord u Morn Exercise Part 2. p. 229. if thy heart be not knit to him as thy High Priest with God if thou hast not affectionately entertained him as thy Master and Teacher in a word if thou art not consecrated unto God by Christ if thou art not a loyal Subject and a willing Disciple love in sincerity doth not dwell in thee 3. That it is an unshared and incommunicable love When a Woman is married to an Husband if she love him sincerely as she ought he hath no Corrivals in her affection but she gives him her whole love and doth not divide it betwixt him and others her heart is set upon him more than all the World besides so it is with a Christian who truly loves Christ He hath none in Heaven but Christ and there is none on Earth that he desires besides him Psal 73.25 His Motto is that of the w Lambert Martyr None but Christ None but Christ As Christ is all in all to him so he is all in all his affections for Christ x Reynolds on Psal 110. p. 74. The fourth character It is Real As the rising of the Sun drowneth all those innumerable Stars which shined in the Firmament before so the beauty of this Sun of Righteousness doth blot out or else gather together unto it self all those scattered affections of the soul which were before cast away upon meaner objects This is chaste love and the third Character of that which is sincere 4. Sincere love is real love not not in word and in tongue only but in deed and in truth If that be required in our love to Christians as it is 1 John 3.18 surely it must not be omitted in our love to Christ Our Saviour himself makes this the proof of our love If you love me keep my Commandments John 14.15 And again He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me v. 21. And again If a man love me he will keep my words v. 23. So John 15.14 You are my friends if you do whatsoever I command you You see then That exhibition of works is the probation of love as the y Probatio dilectionis est exhibitio operis Bern. in Coen Dom. Ser. 8. Father speaks It s in vain for men to talk of loving Christ if they do not walk after him in a free chearful universal and constant obedience to his Commandments z Leighs Crit. Sacr. in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some derive the Greek word for love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because love is alway operative As Fire is the most active Element so Love is the most working Grace Indeed a Amor si non operatur non est Greg. Love if it be not operative is not at all b Qui praecepta Dei contemnit Deum non diligit neque enim regem diligimus si odi● ejus leges habemus Isid He doth not love God who contemns his Precepts as we love not a King when we hate his Laws c Vide Hardy on John Part 2. p. 472. 473. We cannot approve the sincerity of our love but by the reality of our obedience He who loveth Christ sayes d Qui diligit Christum probat sectatur ea quae Christo grata esse novit atque odit fugit quae Christo minimè placere novit Contra verò ubi non est Praeceptorum Christi observatio ibi non est vera dilectio quamvis multa sit de dilectione gloriatio c. Gerh. Har. mihi p. 925. Gerhard doth approve and follow those things which he knows to be acceptable unto Christ and doth hate and avoid such things as he knows will by no means please him On the other side where there is not an observance of Christs Precepts there is no true love of Christ though there may be much boasting of it Deeds speak more strongly than words If a Wife should boast that she loves her Husband and in the mean time oppose him in all things she will never be able to perswade her Husband nor any others that she truly loves him So those who boast that they love this heavenly Husband the Lord Jesus and in the mean time trample his Commandments under their feet do but deceive themselves The true and noble love of Jesus as a e Amor Jesu
nobilis ad magna operanda impellit ad desideranda semper perfectiora excitat Amor onus non sentit labores non reputat plus affectat quam valet Amor onus sine onere portat omne amarum dulce ac sapidum efficit A Kemp. de Imit Christi lib. 3. cap. 5. mihi p. 149. 150. devout man speaks doth inforce to the doing of great things and doth excite to the desire of more perfect things Love feels no burden reckons not of labours and affects more than it can do It bears a burden without burden and makes every bitter thing sweet and savoury True love of Christ is real and operative not only full of affection to him but also of action for him expressed in obedience to his Commandments These are the Characters of sincere love and it will concern you to look that your love be thus sincere Sect. 3. The second Branch of the first Direction That it be stedfast constant 2. LOok that your love to Christ be a stedfast and constant love for that may be another sense of the * So it is in the Margin of your Bibles With incorruption word as was shewed before (*) Roberts Evidences p. 21. Two Characters of constant love The first is That it be Inviolable True love of Christ is a long-lasting yea an everlasting affection it will not waste putrifie worm-eat or decay but is incorruptible Now there are two things which go to the making up of this stedfast constant love 1. It must be Inviolable such as will not be corrupted Man hath more Suitors for his love than one Christ sues for it and Satan sues for it and neither will be satisfied without it only with this difference that Christ will have all or none but Satan will be content with a part if he cannot get the whole he is willing to have it divided for thereby he knows he shall have all at last because Christ will not be put off with a piece of the heart nor accept of half our love Now as Christ sues by the Word so Satan sues by the World but when once Christ hath gained the love of a mans heart in good earnest to himself not all the baits which Satan layes for him nor all the fair promises which he makes to him from the Worlds Trinity f 1 Joh. 2.16 Ambitiosus honos opes foeda voluptas Haec tria pro Trino Numine Mundus habet the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride the pleasures profits preferments of this life can bribe or corrupt him in his love to Christ but he remains inviolable against all these Now he can say having loved him and tasted of his sweetnesse unto all other temptations and allurements from the creature Frustrà blanditiae venitis ad me They are no more to him than they are to a dead man for such a one is he to the World and all the flattering enticing blandishments of it as Paul said he was g Quia nihil ad mortuum pertineat Calv. in loc Gal. 6.14 I am crucified to the World This is one Branch of the character of true love to Christ as it is set down Cant. 8.7 If a man would give all the substance of his House for love it would be utterly contemned which though Ainsworth interpret to the sense That neither Love nor any other Grace can be purchased by money yet ordinarily it is interpreted to such a sense as will serve the end I bring it for viz. That the soul which is truly affected to Jesus Christ will not be perswaded out of it by any thing which this World can afford Thus Mercer h Opibus non ducitur aut quaestu Ecclesia ut a Christi amore discedat cum omnia sua propter Christum parata sit relinquere Merc. in loc The Church is not drawn by riches or gain to depart from the love of Christ seeing she is ready to leave all she hath for Christ To the same purpose one of our own i Jac●so● in loc If a man though the wealthiest man in the World should proffer a Christian all his wealth to hire him to abandon his love and loyalty to Christ he would look upon it with scorn and indignation with contempt and detestation A true Believer will part with all he hath for Christs sake but he will not part with Christ for all the World Such a one was Luther who could not be tempted by all the fair promises which the Romanists made him of Honour and Wealth to abate of his zeal and affection for Christ and his Truth but answered all their temptations with this noble resolution k Contemptus est Romanus furor favo● Melch. Adam in vita Lutheri p. 114. The fury and favour of the Romish Party is by me alike contemned So that when one asked Why they did not stop his mouth with Silver or Gold another answered l Hem● Germana haec Bestia non curat Aurum ibid. p. 158. Alas this German Beast cares not for Gold Such a one was the noble Marquess of Vico who having left his Countrey Relations and Estate for Christs sake and Religion and having withstood several temptations to return was at last assaulted by a subtile and importunate Jesuit who among other things made him fair offers of money if he would return home but he resolutely repelled this Temptation in these words m Crashaw's gracious life of Gal. Carao p. 211. Let their money perish with them who esteem all the Gold in the World worth one dayes society with Jesus Christ And such a love as this must we have to Christ if we would be constant to him The second is That it is Invincible 2. It must be Invincible such as cannot be conquered As Christ hath threatnings to enforce our love as well as promises to entice it from the Word so hath Satan from the World to keep or call off our hearts from Christ He hath a frowning as well as a smiling World threats as well as promises force as well as flattery and where he prevails not by the one he will make use of the other but now where a soul is fully bent and fixed in love to Christ it will * Gen. 49.24 abide in strength against this as well as the other by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob. This love in the heart of a Christian is a fire that hath a most vehement flame which many waters cannot quench nor the floods drown as it is expressed Cant. 8.6 7. Where n Anisworth Jackson Robo●ham in loc by Waters and Floods according to a usual Metaphor in Scripture 2 Sam. 22.17 Psal 32.6 Psal 42.7 are meant many and sore afflictions persecutions troubles and temptations and so that which is intended is That no threatnings afflictions and persecutions can beat off the Spouse from the love of Christ The love of Christ
wherewith the Saints are inflamed is such as cannot be quenched with any calamities or persecutions whatsoever Thus Mercer takes it o Persecutiones possumus ●ccipere adversatorum terrorem minas ne hae quidem amorem Ecclesiae in Christum extiguere possint minùs bland t●ae illecebrae Merc. in loc By Waters and Floods sayes he we may understand Persecutions and the terrour and threats of Adversaries even these cannot quench the love of the Church to Christ how much less can flatteries and allurements do it To this purpose is that of the Apostle Rom. 8.35 ad fin What shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or Sword c. I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor things present nor thingt to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. I know these words are generally taken by p Grot. Vorst Calv. Bez. Eras Pareus Pisc Expositors for that love with which the Lord loveth us yet some of the q Ambros Ansel Theoph. Ancients take them for that love which we have towards him And r Nec inepta nec impia est sententia Pet. Mart. in loc Peter Martyr though he follow it not sayes it is no ill or unfit sense I think Deodat doth well who takes in both senses What grief or calamity can make us doubt that Christ hath withdrawn his love from us and make us cease loving him So he and the Commentators forementioned on that place in the Canticles do make this Scripture parallel with that And it is a great truth that as none of these things can make Christ cease loving those whom he hath once loved so neither can they make a Christian cease loving of Christ whose heart is sincerely pitch'd upon him in a way of love It is every ones duty ſ Qui non est paratus omnia pati ad voluntatē stare dilecti non est dignus amato● appellari Opo●tet amantem omnia dura amara propter dilectū lib n●èr amplecti nec ob contraria accid●ntia ab eo deflecti A Kempis de Imit Christi lib. 3. cap. 5. p. 152. He who is not ready to suffer all things and to stand to the will of his beloved is not worthy to bear the name of a lover It becomes him who loves to embrace willingly all hard and bitter things for his sake whom he loves nor for all contrary occurrences to be turned aside from him And it is the property of every upright Christian This hath been verified in the whole noble Army of Martyrs in all Ages who have with the strongest resolution and most invincible stedfastness entertained all the threats and torments of their enemies rather than deny Christ or be separated from his love Upon this account they have been tortured not accepting deliverance that they might obtain a better resurrection Others had tryal of cruel mockings and scourgings yea moreover of bonds and imprisonment They were stoned they were sawn asunder were tempted were slain with the Sword they wandred about in sheep-skins and goat-skins being destitute afflicted and tormented as you have it Heb. 11.35 36 37. Thus the t Nec retardali estis ab a●itormentorum metused ipsis tormentis magis estis ad aciem provocati sortes stabiles ad maximi certaminis praelium prompta devotione prodistis Cypr. Epist 9. Father speaks of the Martyrs and Confessors in his time as good Souldiers of Jesus Christ That they were not retarded from the battel by fear of torments but were more provoked to the battel by those very torments coming forth strong and stedfast with ready devotion to that battel which had the greatest conflict u Ita animati ut incorruptam fidei firmit●tem non blanditiae decipiant non minae terreant non cruciatus ac tormenta devincant Nec plus ad dejiciendum potest terrena poena quam ad erigendum tutela diviua Nor did flatteries deceive nor threats terrifie nor pains and torments overcome the incorrupt firmness of their faith which wrought by love as true faith doth Gal. 5.6 Nor was any earthly punishment more able to cast them down than Divine protection was to raise them up w Tolerâstis usque ad consummationem gloriae durissimam quaestionem nec cessistis suppliciis sed vobis potiùs supplicia cesserunt Idem ibid. Steterunt torti torquentibus fortiores pulsantes ac laniantes ungulas pulsata ac laniata membra vicerunt Inexpugnabilem fidem superare non potuit diu saeviens plaga repetita quamvis rupta compage vis●crum torquerentur in servis Dei jam non membra sed vulnera Idem ibid. They endured the most grievous Inquisition to the consummation of their glory nor did they yield unto punishments but punishments rather yielded unto them And a little after The tormented stood stronger than their tormentors their beaten and torn members overcame those instruments of cruelty wherewith they were beaten and torn Cruel stripes of long continuance and often renewed could not overcome their impregnable faith no not though their very bowels were digged out and not so much the members as the wounds of the servants of God were tormented In another place having written to some Martyrs they return him an answer wherein among other things they tell him x Hostes veritatis non tantum non perho●rescimus sed provocamus inimicos Dei jam hoc ipso quòd non c●ssimus vicimus Epist 26. inter Cypr. Epist Now we are not only not afraid of the enemies of the Truth but we provoke them and in this very thing that we yield not to the enemies of God we overcame them And a little before they tell him That it was the Trumpet of the Gospel which animated them to this combat And among other places these are two there mentioned which gave them great encouragement He that loveth Father or Mother more than me is not worthy of me Mat. 10.37 and that fore-cited Rom. 8.35 c. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ c. It was their love to Christ which made them invincible in all their sufferings for Christ and this was an evidence of the truth and rightness of it that it was stedfast and invincible I might give you innumerable instances of this as many Martyrs so many instances I shall content my self with naming two or three Ignatius whose heart was enflamed with love to Christ as I hinted before kept this fire in amidst the waters and floods of Persecution which he met with Hear what he sayes whiles he was a Prisoner a little before his suffering y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist ad Roman Edit Usser mihi p. 86. Now I begin to be a Disciple I care for
plea Thy Father did command before he died saying So shall ye say to Joseph Forgive I pray thee now the trespass of thy Brethren c. Gen. 50.16 17. When Christ took leave of his Disciples he left this as his last charge that they should love one another and let us see how he propounds and sets this home that it might take place with them John 13.34 35 You may take the rise of this Discourse from the 33 verse where he gives this sweet and kind compellation Little children and he doth it to make the easier way for what he had to propound to them As if he had said p Gerh. Harm p. 849. It becommeth obedient children to bear in continuall remembrance the words of their dying Father and it is but necessary for you who are my children to keep and carry about with you for ever fixed in your hearts this which as my dying legacy I bequeath to you of loving one another When he coms to the matter you may see how he fils his mouth with Arguments as many arguments almost as words A new commandement I give unto you that ye love one another c. You see 1. It is a commandement q Gerh. p. 852. not a bare advice and counsell which he leaves as an arbitrary matter for them either to do or not to do according to their own will and pleasure but he binds them to it by a weighty and serious command Now r Intonante divino praecepto ●on objiciendū sed obediendum Tert. When the sound of a divine precept enters into our ears we must leave off objecting and fall to obeying 2. It is a commandement of his own prescribing a commandement I give unto you s Gerh. ubi supra I who am your one and only Master Mat. 23.8 10. I to whom your audience and obedience hath been bespoken by a voice from the excellent glory Mat. 17.5 2 Pet. 1.17 I whom you own as your Lord and Master John 13.13 I command you to love one another and therefore it concerns you who are my Disciples and followers to observe me herein Again 3. It is a commandement which I give unto you as a special token and priviledge t Gurnal Christian Arm. part 2. p. 424. He was now taking his farewell of them and this was as the streakings of that milk wherewith he had fed them never dropt a sweeter discourse from his blessed lips he saved his best wine till last He was now making his last will and among other things which he bequeaths to his Disciples he takes this commandement as a Father would do his seal-ring off his finger and gives it unto them Yet this is not all for 4. He gives it them not barely as a commandement but as a new Commandement A new commandement give I unto you u Wats Perfume of Love p. 618. Which is not to be understood as if it were so new as never to have been heard of before for it it was as old as Moses written in the ancient Statutes and Records Lev. 19.18 Nay as old as Adam written in the Heart of Man by Nature as with the point of a Diamond in which respects it was an old commandment And yet new 1. Because Excellent for the Hebrews call that New Novum Hebraicâ dicitur phrasi non quia novum sed quia praestantissimū Mald. which is Excellent Psal 33.3 a new song there is an excellent song and a new commandement here is a most excellent commandment as if he had said I have given you many commandments whiles I have been conversant with you but now I give you one which is instar omnium one instead of all one most excellent this of love Again new 2 Because renewed thus the Jews use to speak that which is renewed they call new thus Jer. 26.10 the new gate there is the gate that was but repaired and Ezek 36.26 the new heart is the renewed heart This commandement of loving one another Christ here calls a new commandment coming forth now in a new edition corrected and enlarged corrected and amended from the false glosses and corruptions of the Scribes and Pharisees and enlarged from his own example as it follows in the next words As I have loved you that ye also love one another Before it was only Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self now it is Love one another as I have loved you And yet he hath not done for 5. it is a commandment strengthend with the most forcible Motives 1. The first is in the words even now mentioned That you love one another as I have loved you This Motive is drawn from his own example his love which he hath shewed unto us and there are two things in Christs example which may engage our love one to another for from his Love towards us 1. We have the strongect Reason and ground for our love to Christians x Particula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ponitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est quia ego vos ditexi ideò aequum est ut vos invicem diligatis Gerh. Har. p. 855. So some take this As here for Because as if the meaning were Because I have loved you it is but equal and reasonable that you should love one another Thus he propounds his own love towards us in taking our nature upon him coming in flesh living so lovingly and kindly among those with whom he conversed and at length sealing up all with his blood and death as a strong Obligation to us to love one another and so indeed it is What can be greater y G●rnals Christian Armour Part 2. p. 424. What should not the love of Christ command a Christian if it were to lay down his life for the brethren would it be denied how much less when it is only to lay down our strifes and animosities and to embrace one another in love If Christ your Master and Lord your Head and your King hath thus loved you who are but Disciples Servants Members and Subjects much more ought you to love your fellow-servants members and subjects 2. We have the highest and best Rule and pattern for our love to Christians Christ by his love to us hath not only given us an Argument why but also a Direction how we should love one another and we are bound to conform to him herein He that saith he abideth in Christ ought himself also so to walk as Christ also walked 1 John 2.6 and We must walk in love as Christ also loved us sayes another Apostle Ephes 5.2 We must follow Christ in his love though we cannot do it passibus aequis We must write after his copy though we cannot make such fair Characters We must love one another as he loved us though we can never love as much as he in the same manner though we fall short in the measure z Gerh. Ub. supra p. 855. J●●●es Schol. pract Divinity Part
1. in his Treat of Christs fulness p. 226. And here there are these things in which our love of Christians should be conformable to Christs love towards us 1. The love of Jesus Christ towards us was a free love he loved us when we deserved it not without consulting his own profit or advantage but only minding our salvation and hereby he hath taught us to love one another freely not respecting our own profit but the will and command of God paying it as a debt not to purchase some benefit to our selves thereby not lo●king at our own things herein but at the things of others the good and benefit of those whom we love more than our own 1 Cor. 10.24 Philippi 2.4 2. The love of Jesus Christ towards us was a true and reall love he did not feign and c●unterfeit a love to us but did truly love us it was not complementall but cordiall it was not verball but reall He went about doing good and suffering evil for our sakes all his life long Acts 10.38 Heb. 12.3 and then gave himself for us his blood his life out of his great love to us Ephes 5.2 and hereby he hath taught us to love one another sincerely and really without dissimulation Romans 12.9 unfeignedly 1 Peter 1.22 not in word and in tongue only but in deed and in truth also 1 John 3.18 There must be a work and labor in our love 1 Thes 1.3 Heb. 6.10 so as that we must perform all offices of love and kindness to the Saints Our love towards them must be expressed by sympathizing with them in all conditions Rejoycing with them that do rejoyce and weeping with them that weep Rom. 12.15 Distributing to the necessities of them that want as we are able and opportunity is offered to us Rom. 12.13 Gal. 6.10 1 John 3.17 James 2.15.16 Bearing with them in their infirmities Gal. 6.2 Forbearing of them and forgiving of them when they offend us Ephes 4.32 Col. 3.12 13. Yea laying down our lives for the brethren as the case may be and need sometimes requires 1 John 3.16 Rom. 16.3 4 Phil. 2.17 18. We must not count our very lives too dear for the brethren a Cotton upon John p. 262. Roberts Bel. Evid p. 232. when the laying of them down may be serviceable to the glory of God and the good of his Church and the sparing of them would be prejudicial both wayes 3. The love of Jesus Christ towards us was a constant love Having loved his own which were in the world he loved them to the end John 13.1 Whom Jesus Christ once loves he loves for ever nor do the unkindnesses of his Children tire him out and make him cease loving of them They may make him hide his face from them but not set his heart against them b Herberts Poems The Bag. p. 145. Storms are the triumph of his art Well may he close his eyes but not his heart Now hereby he teacheth us to be constant in our love one to another to continue and persevere in our love to the end Heb. 13.1 yea to abound and increase more and more as the Apostle prayes 1 Thes 3.12 Our love of the Brethren should be perpetual and not be altered interrupted and abated by their petty unkindnesses much lesse by the greatest and most miserable change of their outward condition Proverbs 17.17 Thus have we from the love of Christ both a Reason and a Rule for our love to one another and by both a strong obligation thereunto 2. The second Motive it laid down in the 35. verse By this shall all men know that you are my Disciples if you have love one to another This is the grand Character of Christianity without which all our profession will come to nothing There is a great Emphasis in the words which tends to the stronger enforcing of that which he brings it for c Gerh. Harm p. 856. Dr. Pierce Sermon on the place mihi p. 405. He doth not say Hereby you shall be my Disciples but hereby it shall be known for we are made Disciples by faith but manifested to be so by love Nor doth he say hereby I shall know that you are my Disciples for he knew all men and needed not that any should testifie concerning man John 2.24.25 Nor doth he say hereby you shall know that you are my Disciples though that be true 1 John 3.14 but hereby others shall know Nor doth he say hereby they shall ghesse and conjecture but hereby they shall know as by a sure and infallible sign Nor doth he say hereby your Discipleship shall be known as a special secret to very few but as the Sun in his Meridian all men shall know it Nor doth he say that all men shall know that you are my Servants and brethren but my Disciples whiles you observe my precepts and follow my example as Disciples should do Nor doth he say that hereby all men shall know that you seem to be my Disciples in a disguise but that you are so without a fiction Lastly he doth not say your Discipleship shall be known by the assembling your selves in the house of Prayer your crying Lord Lord your shewing signs and wonders working miracles or casting out Devils in my Name your being Orthodox in judgment and jumping together in your opinions but by this it shall be known as a Token which never failes If you have love one to another So that this is the Badge of Christianity and Character of every true Christian to love one another d Charitas est quaed im forma informans alias virtutes adeò ut aliae sine charitate informes sint virtutum quasi simulachra Rolloc in Col. 3.14 without which all our Profession Priviledges and Performances are nothing in the account of Christ. One would think our Saviour had by this time said enough to engage all Christians to love one another but he hath not yet done and therefore if you passe on to the fifteenth Chapter you will find him go over it again and again In the twelfth verse sayes he This is my Commandment that you love one another as I have loved you e Gurnals Christian Arm. Part 2. p. 425. As if he would signifie to them that as he had one Disciple who went by the Name of the Disciple whom Jesus loved So he would have a darling Commandment in which he takes some singular delight and that this should be it viz. Their loving one another And for a Conclusion ●e goes over it again in the seventeenth verse These things I command you that you love one ●nother intimating that this one thing was ●ll things all that ever he had spoken to them ●nd given them in charge were either com●rehended in this or to be referred to it Thus ●ur Saviour enjoyned and enforced this duty of ●ove among Christians this was his Doctrine which he preached to and pressed upon his Disciples and in them upon our selves
of minds and friendly society Hence it is that all our Companies and Fraternities in Cities have their Guild-halls where they meet and ●●asts likewise at certain times for the main●aining of love and amicable correspondence Therefore this Sacrament was called by the Ancients Synaxis a collection gathering together or assembling the faithfull namely in●o thatVnity which Christ by his Merits ●urchased by his Prayer obtained and by ●is Spirit wrought in them 3. This makes that Sacrament agreeable ●o its Type the Jewish Passover which was not only a Feast of Remembrance but also a Feast of Love It was Commanded to be one whole Lamb and eaten in one Family and not to have one bone of it broken to signifie that there should be allVnity and no Schism or Rupture in the Church which is Christs Body The bread also was to be eaten without Leaven which might signifie how far they should be removed from the swelling of passion and sowreness of malice who did eat of the same unleavened-bread And the Apostle makes this application of it to Christians in reference to this Supper 1 Cor. 5.7 8. 4. The Rites in use among the Primitive Christians which were annexed to this Sacrament do clear this Their Holy Kisse Romans 16.16 which the Apostle St. Peter calls the Kisse of Charity 1 Peter 5.13 Their Love-Feasts Jude 12. which as x Caena nostra de nomine rationem sui ostendit vocatur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id quod dilectio penes Graecos est Tert. Apol. cap. 39. p. 58 See Jenkins on Jude pt 2. p. 256 269 Tertullian observes carried their Nature in their Name called so to signifie and strengthen Love among Christians Their collections for the poor 1 Cor. 16.1 2. These were all in Testimony of Love and for the preservation of Charity among Christians 5. Our Saviour himself put this out of doubt for immediately before he ordained this Sacrament he gave his Disciples an Example of love in washing their feet which was for their instruction to teach them to love and condescend to one another John 13.15 You see by this that one end of the Lords Supper was for the advancement of love among Christians nor is there any sin more contrary to this Ordinance as y Non est peccatum Sacramento Eucharistiae aequè adversúm atque discordia Luth. Loci com clas 2. p. 141. Luther notes than dissention z Ushers Ser. before the Parl. on 1 Cor. 10.17 p. 8 9 p. 13. Christians therefore should remember that as oft as they come to the Lord table so oft do they enter into new bonds of peace and tie themselves with firmer knots of Love together this blessed Communion being a sacred Seal not only of the union which we have with our Head by Faith but also of our Conjunction with the other members of the body by Love And therefore it is a lamentable thing Dolendum quidem est quum nos pauci numero idem profiteamur Evangelium sacrae Coenae occasione quam praecipuum inter nos unitatis vinculum esse decebat in varias sententias distrahi Calv. Epist fol. mihi pag. 246. to behold how this Holy Sacrament which was ordained by Christ to be a bond whereby we should be knit together in unity is by Satans malice and the corruption of Mans disposition so strangely perverted the contrary way that it is made the principall occasion of that woefull distraction which we see among Christians at this day and the very fuell of endlesse strifes and contentions Beloved these things ought not so to be though so they have been and still are and Oh! that Christians would at length lay it to heart that Christs end and design in this Ordinance may be accomplished by their mutual love one to another and disappointed by their differences and dissentions Now lay all these together Christs Preaching and Prayer and Passion and appointing this Ordinance for the knitting of Christians hearts together in love and judge you whether they are not a sufficient obligation to all those who profess his Name have tasted of love from him and bear any real love to him again to see that they love one another with a pure heart fervently 1 Pet. 1.22 With the heart sincerely and unfeignedly without complement hypocrisie or dissimulation With a pure heart pure in it self being purified by faith Acts. 15.9 purified in obeying the truth through the Spirit 1 Pet. 1.21 pure in its love loving not for carnal but holy ends and seeking the soul-good of one another in the first place And all this fervently the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Leighs Crit. Sacr. Gerh. in loc p. 136. which notes both the Intention of love that it be with all the might and likewise the Extention of love that it be constant without cessation or interruption Thus should Christians love one another and that for Christs sake who hath deserved and doth expect it at our hands to whom we cannot better express our love at this distance than by loving those who stand in so near a relation to him and are placed in such vicinity to us that they may be called his Proxies to receive the fruits of our love to himself in his absence from us And therefore for a close give me leave to renew my Exhortation to you and to beseech yea conjure you in the words of the Apostle Paul to his Philippians Chapter 2. 1 2. If there be therefore any consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any bowels and mercies fulfill ye my joy that you be like minded having the same love bring of one accord of one minde You see it's love and unity and unanimity the Subject which I have in hand which he exhorts unto and Oh! how eloquent and emphaticall how strong and cogent is he in those arguments which he useth for the pressing of it I am perswaded sayes b Reynolds Serm. on the place page 2. one that th●re is scarce in all the Scripture to be found an Exhortation wherein the duties required are set on with more invincible obsecration with more melting and conquering perswasion than in these words For the uniting of the Pilippians hearts sayes c Ut Philippensium animos componeret ôquam sacro fascino usus est Ipsa suada credo si loqui posset non potuisset 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ubi quot verba tot tela quae nimirum animos nostros percellant sodicent lan●inent Mortoni sententia de pace procurand inter ●vangel pag. 25. another he useth a kind of holy charm and inchantment I believe Perswasion it self could not speak more perswasively where there are as many weapons as words able to work upon any heart not possest with an iron sinew Let us take a short view of his Arguments If there be any Consolation in Christ d Reyno●ds Ubi su●●● p. 27 c. Where is there Consolation
but in and by Christ who is called the Consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 and wherein stands this Consolation by him but in being our Peace-maker making peace and accord betwixt God and man betwixt a man and himself and betwixt Man and Man Here lyes the Spring of all your Comfort and if you have drawn Waters of Consolation hence with joy and would draw more be like-minded having the same love for how can you expect Comforts from Christ if you minister discomforts unto one another If any Comfort of Love If you have ever found sweetness in the love of God in the love of Christ in Brotherly love If you ever received comfort by my love to you if you desire to return any comfort back by your love to me shew the power of that love which is to unite the mind hearts souls judgments and affections of Brethren one unto another through want whereof you will deprive your selves of one of the sweetest comforts of Christianity If any fellowship of the Spirit If you know and have experi●nced what it is to have e 2 Cor. 13.14 Communion with the Spirit in his f Joh. 16.8 Convincing g 2 Thes 2.13 Sanctifying h John 14.26 Teaching i Rom. 8.14 Leading k Rom. 8.26 Strengthening l John 14.16 Comforting and m Rom. 5.5 Confirming influences as a Spirit of n Ephes 1.17 18. Wisdom and Revelation as a Spirit of o Rom. 1.4 Zech 12.10 Grace and Holiness as a Spirit of p Isa 11.2 Counsell and Knowledge as a Spirit of q John 16.13 Truth as a Spirit of r Isa 11.2 2 Tim. 1.7 Might and Power as the ſ John 14.16 Comforter as a t Rom. 8.16 Witnesse and u Ephes 1.13 Seal and x verse 14. Earnest If you have ever found the benefit of Communion of Saints and know what it is to have fellowship with them in the same Relations Principles Ends Interests Gifts Graces Ordinances Providences Priviledges Hopes of which y 1 Cor. 12 4 7 11 12 13. Ephes 4.3 4 5 6.15 16. Col. 2.19 the Spirit of Christ is both the Vinculum and Vehiculum knitting and uniting the whole Body of Saints to their Head and the Members one to another furnishing every Member with supplies and influencing with life and power for communicating of those supplies for the good of one another and of the whole If these things are so and you have any sense and experience of them it will be your great concernment to love one another because as there is nothing doth more further and strengthen your fellowship with the Spirit and by the Spirit with one another than Love doth so there is nothing doth z Ephes 4.30 31 32. Mat. 12.25 more weaken and obstruct both than divisions and dissentions If any Bowels and Mercies In Christ towards you if his tender heart have been wide open to refresh you In you towards me if you have any sympathie with a suffering Apostle with a Father in bonds In me towards you if you have ever found in me the compassions of a Father In you towards your Brethren if you will not be like Judas a Disciple without Bowels whose Bowels gushed out a Brother without Natural affections shew this tender-heartednesse in being like-minded one to another having the same love The Bowels are wrapped round as it were within one another and so should the hearts and affections of believers be Fulfill ye my joy Afflictions I have enough already you need not by your dissentions add more A Prisoner in bonds expecting the s●n●ence of Death the sword of Persecution but ●hese things trouble me not I can rej ice in Dungeons in Bonds in Deaths if it go well with the Church of Christ I prefer Jerusalem above liberty and life and my chiefest joyes This would cumulate and compleat my afflictions this would be heavier than my chain darker than my prison sharper than my sword worse than a Nero unto me if you my Children should wound my soul with your dissentions God hath used me as a means of much joy to you in using me as an Instrument to administer the Consolations of Christ the Comforts of Love the Fellowship of the Sp●rit the Bowels of Christianity unto you And God hath used you as a means of much joy to me Your fellowship in the Gospel my joy Chapter 1.4 5. Your faith in Christ your readiness to suffer for his Name my joy Your care of me and supplying my wants once and again my joy Chapter 4.10 16. These things are the beginnings of joy Would ye Compleat it would you make my soul run over with comfort Would ye Crown me with Glory and Joy O then mind the same things have the same love and then I have all I abound and am full There is no greater joy to a Minister of the Gospell than to hear that his Children walk in the Truth John 3.4 You see how the Apostle fills his mouth with arguments that the hearts of these Philippians might be filled with love one towards another And I shall resume all that hath been said into an heap of Arguments for the re-inforcing of this duty There is Consolation in Christ there is Comfort of Love there is a Fellowship of the Spirit there are Bowels and Mercies there is the joy of many faithful Ministers of the Gospell to be fulfilled there is a great Ordinance in one main end of it to be observed there is the Purchase of Christs Blood to be obtained there is his Prayer to be answered and sealed there is his Example to be imitated there is his Love to be returned there is his Commandment to be obeyed there is our Discipleship to be manifested in the truth and power of it and therefore it is but equall and reasonable nay simply necessary for all those who bear the Name of Christians to love one another and I beseech you do it yea abound and increase more and more And the Lord who is the God of Love and peace 2 Cor. 13.11 make you to increase and abound in love one towards another and towards all men To the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God even our Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all his Saints 1 Thes 3.12 13. which though we ●ail of here upon earth yet this is some relief ●nd comfort that it shall be fully and com●leatly obtained in heaven where all darkness ●hall be removed from the minds of Gods ●eople and all corruption from their hearts ●he cause of present strifes and contentions and nothing but love and concord shall sway and ●ear rule for ever where Luther and Zuin●lius and all dissenting Brethren shall be ●ade friends and agree well together as a Si non amplius in his terris te visurus sum ●bi tamen conveniemus ubi Luthero cum Zuinglio optime convenit Melch. Adam in vitâ
goodness mixed with love Hosea 3.5 You see then that it is a meer slavish fear from which the people of God are redeemed so as that it shall not have the sole prevalency in their service though there will be some mixture of it with their love and will have some prevalency in their service in their present imperfect estate And this I take to be the true sence of this place Sect. 5. OBject 2. But it may be said where there is love there is none of this fear for there is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear as the Apostle hath it 1 John 4.18 Answ 1. It s true r Hildersh on Psalm 51. p. 365. that in love there is no such fear nothing is more contrary to the nature of love than these fears are but in the person that hath true love these fears may be 2. Perfect love will cast out all these fears and the perfecter our love to God is the more it will cast out these fears deliver us from them but the love of the best of Gods servants is imperfect and will be till we come to heaven for there and there only are the Spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 Having removed these Objections which may be of use for the convincing of some that fear is not so Anti-evangelicall as they are apt to mistake it to be and for the comforting of others who are ready to conclude against themselves because of those remainders of servile feare which they find in their hearts I resume my exhortation and renew my request unto you to fear the Lord. Suppresse all slavish fear as much as may be but cherish Reverential and Filial fear Fear the Lord and his Greatness so as to stand in awe of him and take heed of offending him in any thing and fear the Lord and his Goodness so as to be carefull to please him in all things There is one way of accomplishing both these and that is the way of Love nor can there be a better G●t your hearts inflamed with love towards Christ and that will suppress slavish fear for it casts out the fear that hath torment 1 John 4.18 perfect love casts it quite out and according to a Christians growth in love will this fear decay in him But it will promote Reverential and Filial fear ſ In quantum quisque amat in tantu● timet As far as a man loves Christ so far will he thus fear him for t Res soliciti ple●● timoris amor Love is full of that fear which makes a man solicitous to avoid what may offend and follow what may please him whom we love And you have as much reason to question the truth of your love from the defect of Reverential and Filial fear as from the excesse of Slavish fear And thus I have at last dispatched this first Direction concerning your Knowledge of the Love of Christ that it be Affectionate so as to love him in the Manner and Measure and to Express that Love in the Way prescribed so as to Desire and Delight in him to Trust in him and Fear before him I proceed to what remains CHAP. XI 2. LOok that your knowledge of the love of Christ be Cognitio ●ffectiva Direction 2. That it be an effectuall knowledg let it not be an empty barren ineffectual knowledge but such as is full fruitful and effectual And that these four wayes Sect. 1. 1. BY way of Application Experience By way of application with assurance to our selves and Assurance Content not your selves with the knowledge of Christ and his love at a distance but reach aster such a knowledge as may bring all home to your selves Be not satisfied to know that Christ is the Saviour of the world and hath born great and wonderful love to the Sons of Men but labor so to know his love and salvation as to apprehend appropriate and apply all to your own comfort and benefit To know within your selves as the Apostle speaks Heb. 10.34 to know in all your hearts and in all your souls as Joshua speaks Josh 23.14 viz. sensibly evidently experimentally assuredly that he is your Saviour stood in your room bore your sins and suffered Gods wrath for you whereby God is as well pleased with you as if you had suffered for them in your own persons in hell eternally that he bare a special love to you in particular and that you have a reall interest in a sure title to the priviledges and blessings which he out of his infinite love hath purchased at so dear a rate for poor sinners Such a knowledg as this would I have you look after and to help you forward herein there are two things which I would propound for your Encouragement 1. Such a knowledge of Christs love is attainable A Christian may know the love of Christ with assurance of his interest in it u Culverwels White Stone p. 134. This indeed is a most excellent truth the flos lactis the very cream of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that sincere milk which is to nourish souls 't is the budding and blossoming of happiness the Antedating of heaven the prepossession of glory and therefore envied us by Satan who by his Romish instruments would wrest it out of our hands But we have more clear light from Scripture to discern the truth of what we hold in this particular than to be easily cheated of so fair a Jewel of our Crown as if it were counterfeit Here we see so many eminent Christians both in the Old and New Testament setting their Seals to this truth by their own experience that we cannot but subscribe to it Ab esse ad posse is a fair Argument and I shall use no other to prove what I assert Other Christians have attained a certainty in their knowledge of Christ and his Love not only Objectivè that there is a Christ and that there is such a love but also Subjectivè that this Christ is theirs and this love theirs And therefore so may you That others have is clear In Job 19.25 you may hear Job appropriating a Redeemer to himself I know that my Redeemer liveth He asserts his interest in Christ as his Redeemer and therefore no wonder if he be so confident of his being acquitted at Gods Tribunal as he is Chapter 13 18. I know that I shall be justified A believer then may arrive at assurance full assurance of interest in Jesus Christ Such an Application did Thomas make to himself when he cried out John 20.28 My Lord and my God See sayes x Vide Dei mirabilia quis credidisset ex tàm pertinaci incredulitate tantam futuram fidem Fer. in loc Ferus on the place the wonderful things of God who would have believed that so great faith should have risen out of such obstinate unbelief which he had discoverd just before And what should this teach us but as the same
his life will be full of trouble and his heart exceedingly tormented and disquieted if he know it not and though he go to heaven it will not be with such full sail he will not have an entrance administred so abundantly as otherwise it might f Wall None but Christ p. 52. Good and evil affect not till it be apprehended Job lamented not all his losses till a messenger related them to him nor did Jacob rejoyce that Joseph was alive till he knew it Who joyes in an inheritance fallen to him till he know it nor can we joy in Christ as a Saviour nor in his love till we know him to be our Saviour and that he hath loved us The best knowledge of the Sun is by seeing its light and feeling its influence the knowledge of Hony is by tast and the best knowledge of Christ and his love is by tasting and seeing that he is gracious Lay both these together and they may be a strong inducement to make you look after a knowledge of the love of Christ by way of Application Experience and Assurance which is the first particular Sect. 2. By way of Admiration 2. BY way of Admiration Know Jesus Christ in his love so as to admire him and it We are wont to supply the defect of our apprehensions about great and extraordinary matters with admiration now what more worthy of our admiration than Jesus Christ whose Name is wonderful Isaiah 9.6 and his Love which as the Text tells us passeth knowledge He is Wonderful in his Person and in his Works and no lesse wonderful in his Love which doth influence all his works of Wonder for our good We admire Mysteries which g Mysteriū est sacrum secretum secretam habens intelligentiā Dav. in Col. p. 132 are holy secrets hardly understood and surely then we have reason to admire Christ to whom the great Mystery of godliness is reducible for what is it according to the Apostles account 1 Tim. 3.16 but God was manifested in the flesh justified in the Spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into Glory All which are meant whatever some have delivered to the contrary of Christ and as Hierom said of the Revelations Quot verba tot Sacramenta I may say of these words As many words so many mysteries and as many mysteries so many matters of admiration Study and meditate upon the Lord Jesus and his love as much as you can that you may have some understanding of him and it but when you have gone as farr as you can there will be still Plus ultrà The riches that are in Christ are unsearchable riches Ephes 3.8 The love that he hath manifested unto us is unknowable love the dimensions of it for height d●pth length a●d breadth are unmeasurable verse 18.19 And therefore when you are at a losse in your search stand still in holy silence and fall to admiring what you fall so infinitely short of apprehending Admire him in his Philanthropie his love to mankind in general That the eternall Son of God should set his heart upon the Sons of Men and love them them rather than the Angels them when fallen as well as the Angels when ungodly rebels and enemies that he should love them so as to leave his Glory which he had from all eternity with his Father and be made flesh for them and lead a life full of miseries and necessities and a● last die a shameful painful accursed death for ●hem to pay their scores to Divine Justice and to bring in everlasting Righteousness eternal Redemption and Sal●ation for them This is strange and extraordinary love worthy ●o b● admired for no reason c n be given of it h● love● us thus because he loved us and upon no ●ther a●count Here then is a fit place to cry out with David Psalm 8.4 Lord what is man that thou art mindful of him or the son of man that thou visitests him What is man Enosh forgetful man as h Propriè obliviscen●em Enosh denotare videtur Euseb De praepar Evang. l. 11. mi●i c. 4. p. 148. Eusebius w●ll have it deriving it from Nashah which signifies to forget forgetful of thee and of thy benefits towards him Or rather i Homo dicitur Enosh sed demum post ae●umnosum conditionem autegr●ssae praev●●cat●● culpâ i● mun●u i roduct●●● ca vox ●am homi●em 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inop●ae variae mole●●ori mor●is nec●ssitu● moriendi ut ve●bo dicem adversis rebus obnoxium connotat Martinius Lexic Philol. in Praef. 〈◊〉 Sickly mortall miserable man as others who better derive it from Anash which signifies to be sick and in misery What is this man that thou shouldst be mindfull of him not so as barely to remember him but so as t● shew eminent care and kindnesse to him as words of memory in the hebrew language do import according to the learned k Rivet in loc Rivets observation on the place and what is the Son of Man the Son of Adam the Son of him whose originall was earth and dust as the word Adam signifies who by his Apostacy and rebellion had forfeited thy favour and love What was he that thou shouldst visit him not with a grievous but gracious visitation not to punish and destroy him as he had deserved but to redeem and save him What matchlesse admirable love was this Admire his singular special love to your souls you who are believers That when others after all this are left without the knowledge of Christ and his love he hath made it known to you by his Word and Gospel that when thousands among whom you live who hear of Christ and his love and have offers of both made unto them are left with the reins on their own necks to follow lying vanities and forsake their own mercy to refuse resist and rebel against all the off●rs of grace and you have hearts and natures as full of emnity and opposition against Christ as any and have manifested so much and gone on to maintain it for some time more or lesse yet the Lord hath at length turned the stream taken the stone out of your hearts overcame the resistance of your froward Spirits made you willing in the day of his power and drawn you effectually to run after him and close with him so that you are now in Christ partakers of his love having it shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost given unto you and are under his care and keeping till you come to receive the end of your Faith the salvation of your souls to be filled with all the fulnesse of God to see him face to face whom now you see through a glasse darkly and to be for ever satitfied from that Fountain of love immediately whence you have but small snips and tastes through the Conduits of Ordinances here Is not this strange love and can any other
the same Gospell and embrace the same Christ with themselves 1 Pet. 3.1 whereas their evill conversation opens the mouths and heardens the hearts of evill men against Christ and his wayes Rom. 2.24 2 Pet. 2.2 Look then That your conversation be such as becometh the Gospell Phil. 1.27 That you be blamless and harmless the Sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse Nation shining as lights in the world Phil. 2.15 That you deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and live soberly and righteously and godly in this present world Tit. 2.12 That as he which hath called you is holy so you be holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 2.15 Take heed that your lives be not contradictory to your prayers lest you pull down with the one hand more than you build with the other but let all go together fervent prayers solemn instructions and an holy life whereby you may become hopefully instrumental for propagating the knowledge of Christ unto others Thus look that your knowledge of the love of Christ be not only Affectionate and Effectual but also Progressive in those two particulars which have been mentioned And this is all which I have to say by way of Direction in this point of knowing the love of Christ CHAP. XIII General Motives to labour after this knowledg of Christs Love THere is yet one thing more to be done before I shut up this Vse and that is to lay down some Motives for the exciting of you to look after this knowledge of the love of Christ This indeed hath been done already but the former Motives have been suited to the particulars through which we have gone what I have now to add will respect the whole matter the knowledge of Christs love in general And these Motives shall be only those encouraging ones which are laid down by the Apostle within the veiw of the Text that you may not be disheartned from the pursuit and persecution of that to which you have been exhorted Now these are drawn 1. From the Evidence that this knowledge of Christs love gives unto 2. From the Influence that it hath upon those that have attained unto it Sect. 1. 1. FRom the Evidence which this knowledge of Christs love gives unto those who have attained unto it 1. Labour to know this love of Christ as you have been directed for this will be an evidence of your present Saintship I gather it from what the Apostle speaks ver 18. That you may be able to comprehend with all Saints c. All that bear the name of Christ should study to know the love of Christ it is their duty but onely such as are partakers of Christ and are real Saints are able to comprehend it All they are able not all alike but every one according to his measure all in part not any perfectly and only they e Jennes Scholast Pract. Div. Vol. 1. Of Christs fulnesse pag. 223. The knowledge of Christs love is the priviledge of the Saints common to all believers yet so proper and peculiar to them as that it belongs to none but Saints So that if you have an effectionate effectuall growing knowledge of the love of Christ then you are Saints but on the other side if you live in ignorance of the love of Christ or content your selves with a notional ineffectual stinted knowledge of it you can have no evidence of your Saintship Many are called to be Saints which yet cannot be called Saints some are called Saints which yet are not Saints if you would be Saints indeed as well as called to be such or called such be sure you be not found without the knowledge of the love of Christ and such a knowledge as hath been propounded to you 2. It will be an Evidence of your Title unto and interest in that Glory which is to be revealed in the World to come This follows upon the former for those who are gracious Saints on earth may be confident they shall be glorious Saints in heaven whereas those who are not Saints here cannot be saved hereafter Without sanctification no salvation 2 Thes 2.13 Without holiness no seeing the face of God Heb. 12.14 And this is evidenced from a true knowledge of Christ for this the Apostle makes the end of his praying that these Ephesians might know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge viz. That they might be filled with all the fulness of God as it immediately follows the Text. Which though some understand of that which is to be enjoyed here yet I rather take it as relating to the glory and happiness of heaven For though it hath pleased the Father that in Christ should all fulness dwell Col. 1.19 and all believers do from his fulness receive grace for grace John 1.16 and they are compleat in him Col. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled in him the same word with that in the Text and that in this life yet you must understand it aright f Bodius in Ephes p. 402. They are compleat in him not in themselvs but in him who is their Head and they by vertue of Vnion with him as Members with their Head may lay claim to his fulness Again they are compleat with such a fulness as is agreeable to their present state that is they have found in him all things requisite to their perfect Redemption Justification Sanctification Adoption and eternal Salvation so that they need not go out to any other to make up what is wanting in him And therefore taking it in reference to eternal glory it is not meant of a simple and absolute compleatness but of such as so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in some sence only that is initiall not perfect by faith and hope not full fruition jure potiùs quàm re by right to it rather than possession of it They are compleat in him as expectants of a glory to come not as spectators of a glory that is present as militant not as triumphant as passing towards not reigning in their heavenly country with a fulness competent to their present condition not with all the fulness of God which is not enjoyed by any till they come among the Spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 which is only in heaven g Fergus on the place p. 214. So that the Apostle when he speaks of being filled with all the fulness of God seems to aim at the setting forth of that most glorious and blessed estate of believers in heaven where the Saints shall have the most immediate and fullest enjoyment of God that they are capable of h Jeanes ubi suprà p. 224. There will be a full knowledge of God in the beatifical vision the full Image of God a full participation of the Divine Nature a full union with and fruition of God full and immediate influences from God according to that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.28 where he sayes God shall be all in all that is in all
the elect he shall be vice omnium instead of all Ordinances to their souls and instead of all means and helps to their bodies And I saw no Temple therein saith Saint John Rev. 21.22 23. for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the Temple of it And the City had no need of the Sun neither of the Moon to shine in it for the glory of God did lighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof The meaning of the place is that God shall immediately by himself supply the room of all external means unto his glorified Saints in heaven There they shall be filled with all this fulness of God Though the Saints even in heaven shall not take in all of God for that is impossible for finite creature● yet as much as is possible for them they shall and as much as is nec●ssary to make them perfectly blessed here when they have gotten most there is something yea much wanting but then they shall be filled as full as they can hold The Vessels of glory will then be enlarged to take in more than now is possible for them and according to that capacity they shall be filled with all the fulness of God Now forasmuch as this knowledge of the love of Christ which hath been treated of is a good evidence of right and title to this blessed condition it may be a strong Motive to you to labour to be filled with the knowledge of the love of Christ here that you may be filled with all the fulness of God hereafter Sect. 2. 2. FRom the Influence which it hath upon all those who have attained unto it Now a right knowledge of the love of Christ hath a strong influence upon Christians as a preservative to keep them from fainting at the tribulations which accompany the Gospel their own or others This may be gathered from the whole scope of the Apostle in the latter part of this Chapter In the 13th verse he desires these Ephesians that they would not faint at his tribulations h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not shrink back i Leighs Crit. sacr 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vinci à malo Animum despondere quasi pedem in certamine referre succumbere Gerh. Har. p. 564 as cowards in battel nor give place in afflictions and dangers as the word imports Not be overcome of the evils of sufferings which accompany the Gospel in the preaching and professing of it so as to yield and go back from their duty Now that they might not he prayes for them verse 14 15 c. For this cause I bow my knees c. And there are three things which he prayes for them that they may be kept from fainting 1. Coroboration and Confirmation by the Spirit of God verse 16. That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man 2 A further Vnion with Jesus Christ verse 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith 3. Intimate acquaintance with Jesus Christ in his love verse 17 18 19. That you being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bredth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge In which words there are three things observable 1. That as a Tree or House cannot stand fast and firm against boisterous winds and storms unless the one be well rooted and the other have a sure foundation so neither can a Christian hold out in those Trials which he is like to meet with in his course unless he be well rooted and grounded 2. That the root and foundation whereon a Christian is kept firm and stedsast in times of trial and trouble is Love That ye being rooted and grounded in love which some take for our love to God but rather it is meant of Gods love in Christ Christs love to us for as i one well notes Our love is rather a branch than a root it is the love of Christ in which we take firm rooting that nothing can shake us and therefore we are said to be rooted in him Col. 2.7 3. The way whereby Christians come to be rooted and grounded in love is by the knowledge of it such a knowledge whereby they apprehend and apply it to themselves and have the comfortable experience of it in their own hearts Thus the Apostle goes on That you may be able to comprehend with all Saints c. and to know the love of Christ c. So that by vertue of the coherence of this part of the Apostles prayer with his design in making of it this must be a true inference k Baine on Eph. p. 412. l Jeanes ubi suprà p. 224. That a feeling efficacious knowledge of Christs love and the dimensions thereof will embolden and hearten the Saints in their own and others sufferings and as a soveeign cordial keep them from all despondency and sinking of Spirit There are other places to prove this The Church Cant. 2.4 sayes Christs love was a banner over her His banner over me was Love m Engl. Annot. the larger on the place Jackson also on the place l The preaching of the Gospel or Christ in the preaching of the Gospel is a Standard Banner or Ensign displayed Isa 11.10 whose Motto or Device is Love and among others this may be one reason Because as Souldiers are by their Banner and Ensign encouraged heartned to fight manfully against their enemies and not to shrink but keep close to their colours in hope of Victory so by the discovery of Christs love in the Gospel Christians who have faith to apprehend and apply it are emboldened to withstand couragiously all their spiritual enemies and are continually supported and inwardly strengthened and so are enabled to hold out unto the end under all the trials and troubles which they meet with in assured expectation of Victory at the last But I return to our Apostle who in two other places doth confirm this truth not by barely asserting that it is so but by laying down the grounds and reasons why it is so One place is Rom. 5. In the 3d. verse you hear him speak of glorying in tribulations We glory in tribulations So far were they from fainting under them that they gloryed in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a high word and the same which he useth in reference to hope of the glory of God in the foregoing verse A Christian hath ground of glorying in his Present crosse as well as in his future crown n 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 12.10 Non modo aequo moderato animo sumus sed etiam magna laetitiâ perfusi Bez. in loc Gloriari est gestu verbis exultare Par. in loc The word signifies contentment with taking pleasure in and exultation under suff●rings We are so far from sinking under tribulations by
themselvs the most excellent graces such as patience is Afflictions do minister matter and occasion for patience and they call for patience and through the blessing of God sanctifying these afflictions and helping a Christians infirmities by his Spirit patience is produced whiles a Christian is helped to consider 1. That these afflictions come from the providence of God that God who is his Father who sends them in love and for his good 2. That hereby he is conformed to his Head Jesus Christ 3. That there are great and precious promises made unto them and that there shall be a gracious issue out of them in due time Nor is it barely produced but also increased and perfected for as Habits are perfected by Acts so are graces perfected by exercise And patience experience This is the second good Fruit. Now many and manifold are the experiences which Christians have by bearing afflictions and that 1 In respect of themselves Thus they experience 1. How depraved their nature is whereby if God should leave them they would murmur and complain quarrel and blaspheme instead of suffering patiently when they are afflicted 2 How weak they are in themselves who would sink under the least burden if not supported by divine manutenency 3. In what state and condition they are spiritually that they are the children of God because conformed to Jesus Christ in the Image of his sufferings which all Gods children are predestinated unto Rom. 8.29 and because they are enabled to bear them as children with patience and submission 4. What grace they have though grace be in them and known to be there by the Lord yet it is not so well known to themselves and others as when it is drawn out now afflictions are a notable means to draw it out and give them the experience of it x Nos enim sumus tanquàm quae dam aromata quorum odor nisi ea contuderis non sentitur sumus velutilapides Pyritides qui non exerunt vim eam quam habent ad comburendum nisi cum premuntur digitis Mart. in loc For we are like some kind of spices who yield not their fragrant smell till they are beaten we are like y D● Pyritide vi●esis Plin. Nat. hist lib. 37 cap. 11. Nicols A●c Gem. p. 236. fire-stones who shew not their burning quality till they are rub'd with ones fingers 2. In respect of God They experience 1. His Wisedome in ordering their afflictions for them in their nature measure and continuance 2. His Power and all sufficiency in upholding and strengthning of them 3 His Mercy and goodnesse in passing by their infirmities and not dealing in strictnesse and severity with them 4 His Faithfullnesse in not leaving them in their distresses not suffering them to be tempted above what they are able and making a way for their escape 1 Cor. 10.13 3. In respect of the sufferings themselves they experience what they are and know how to carry under new troubles without fear and dread and how to advise and comfort those who are in the like condition z Pareus in loc As a souldiewho hath endured the brunt of many a battle hath run through many hazards and endured many hardships gets experience in war and is called an expert souldier because he doth not so much fear dangers and enemies and knows how to manage military affairs which one that is raw and untrained doth not so Christians grow expert by the afflictions which they indure and by being inured to them can tell the better how to deal with them So that they will esteem that a light burden which others that are but young beginners judge almost intollerable and will carry away with ease that which others groan and are ready to sink under And experience hope This is the third good Fruit. Hope that as he hath been with them in troubles past so he will be with them now a Heb. 13.5 and never leave them nor forsake them for the future but will be b Ps 48.14 their God and guide unto the death That there shall be an end at last of all their sufferings and that a glorious end c Tim. 2.12 that having suffered with Christ they shall reign with him d James 1.12 Rev. 2.10 that having endured temptation and been faithfull unto the death they shall receive the Crown of Life e Rev. 7.14 15. that having come out of great tribulation and washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb they shall be before the Throne of God and serve Him day and night in his Temple f that the triall of their faith should be found to praise and honour and glory 1 Pet. 1.7 at the appearing of Christ not according to their merit but according to his gracious promise And hope maketh not ashamed This is the Crown of a Christians hope that it shall not meet with disappointment and end in shame and confusion to him that hath it as other hopes do Worldly hope from men is often frustrated because bottomed upon a slippery foundation the words and promises of a mutable creature that may deceive whence arose that German proverb g Sperare expectare multos reddit stultos Pisc in loc That hope and expectation makes many fools The wicked hypocrites hope from God himself is sure to be disappointed because grounded on their own vain and false opinions therefore compared to the giving up of the ghost Job 11.20 to the spiders web which shall be cut off Job 8.14 These hopes make ashamed but so doth not the hope of a true Christian because being set upon an unmoveable basis the infallible word of the God of truth and proceeding from the full assurance of faith and being cherished and strengthened by the earnest of Gods Spirit in their hearts it shall most ●erta nly be accomplished Now lay all this together and if those who know the love of Christ do enter into tribulation justified from Guilt and at peace with God and being in can look through it to a● Eternity of glory with joyful hope and confidence and do reap so many sweet fruits from it for the present it need not be doubted but such have sufficient to keep them from fainting in a day of trouble The other place which I shall but name is Rom. 8.35 37 38 39. where we find the Apostle so far from fainting under tribulations that he triumphs over them upon the knowledge and sense of Christs love and that upon a double account 1. Because a true believer is never the lesse beloved by Jesus Christ notwithstanding all his sufferings What shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famin or nakedness or perill or sword verse 35. that is none of these shall and verse 38 39. 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
mixture of mercy or pity with those who now despise and refuse his love c Prov. 1.26 28. He will laugh at their calamity and mock when their fear cometh Then shall they call upon him but he will not answer they shall seek him early but they shall not find him Nor 2. shall they ever be able to escape it d Rev. 6.16 Though they call to the mountains to fall on them and the rocks to cover them that they may be hid from the face of him that sitteth on the Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb it shall not secure them Nor 3. shall they be able to abide it as it is unavoidable so it is intollerable Wicked men e P●● 2.12 perish from the way if his wrath be kindled but a little how then shall they abide it when it is throughly kindled when that f 〈◊〉 6.17 great day of his wrath is come who shall be able to stand for even of present wrath it is said g Nahum 1.6 Who can stand before his indignation and who can abide the fierceness of his anger his fury is poured out like fire and the rocks are thrown down by him And the sting of all is this 4. That there will never be any end or mitigation of it The Wrath of God is often compared to fire and this wrath to come which I am speaking of is h Mat. 3.12 unquenchable fire and the burnings of it i Isa 33.14 everlasting burnings It is wrath that shall k John 3.36 abide upon unbelievers and never be taken off to eternity Now l Ps 50.22 consider this you that forget God and slight Jesus Christ and neglect the great salvation which is offered to you lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver you One would think that what hath been said should be sufficient to startle and awaken the most secure sinners And the Lord make it effectual to that end and purpose unto all such into whose hands this shall come Sect. 5. THe last Vse is by way of Consolation The Vse 3 consideration of the greatness of Christs love may administer abundance of comfort to the Saints who know it By way of Consolation to those who have a right knowledg of the love of Christ so as to have an interest in it If the love of Christ be so incomprehensible as you have heard then you need not fear to be supplied Your wants and necessities are many and great its true but there are unsearchable riches of love in Christ from whence you may have enough for your relief Notwithstanding all the communications which have been made of Christs love to the Saints in all ages and generations past he is as full as ever and will be as long as there is a Saint on this side heaven to need him he may be imparted but cannot be impaired he is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Hebrews 13.8 What is it that troubles you against which you may not find strong Consolation from the love of Christ 1. Is it Sin that troubles you so that you bewail it and mourn and grieve for it and go bowed down all the day long because of it Truly this is the only thing that can justly create trouble to a Christian but this doth it necessarily because of the evil of it nor can he claim a title to the love of Christ to whom sin is not grievous for though the Gospel tells us That where sin hath abounded there grace much more abounds Rom. 6.20 yet it is only there where the sin that hath abounded in the life in the commission of it doth abound in the heart conscience in contrition for it detestation of it But yet even here there is relief from the love of Christ so far as to keep you from dejection desperation though not from a due sense and deep humiliation for 1. Is it the Guilt of your many and great sins which affrights you Consider there is love enough in Christ to pardon them Christs love can cover a multitude of sins and will cover all the sins of penitent sinners If mans love will do this 1 Pet. 4.8 Prov. 10.12 much more Christs whose wayes are not as our wayes nor his thoughts as our thoughts for as the heavens are higher than the earth so are his wayes higher than our wayes and his thoughts than ours Isaiah 55.8 9. he means his thoughts and wayes of mercy and so sayes the Psalmist expresly Psalm 103.11 As the heaven is high above the earth so great is his mercy toward them that fear him She was a great sinner of whom he said Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her The eye of favour and love as the m Favoris oculus velut nox est ad omnem labem Arab. prov ut citat a Culv. Act of Obliv p. 34. Arabick proverb hath it is as the night to every fault to hide and conceal it that it be not seen 2. Is it the power of your corruptions which you groan under and desire deliverance from There is love enough in Christ to subdue them Mich. 7.19 and by the law of the Spirit of life to make you free from the law of sin and death Romans 8.2 love enough to sanctifie you throughout and thoroughly throughout 1 Thes 5.23 as well as to justifie you 2. Is it Temptations from Satan that trouble you There is love enough in Christ to pity you because of them He was in all points tempted as we are yet without sin and therefore is such an High-priest as is touched with the feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4.15 love enough to help and succour you in them for In that he himself suffered being tempted he is able also to succour them that are tempted Hebrews 2.18 love enough to save yout out of them for the God of Peace will bruise Satan under your feet shortly Romans 16.20 3. Is it the Snares and Dangers of this World that trouble you Know that as he had love enough to give himself for us that he might redeem us from this present evil world Gal. 1.4 so he hath still love enough to make you partakers of his victory which he hath obtained over the world John 16.33 and to make you conquerors over it by faith 1 John 5.4 and in the mean time to keep you from the evil of the world though he doth not take you out of it John 17.15 4 Is it the Duties and Difficulties of your course which trouble you not in themselves but because of your weakness and infirmity by reason whereof you cannot deal with them There is love enough in Christ to help your infirmities by his Spirit Rom. 8.6 to assist you in your duties Phil. 4.13 to support you under and carry you through all the difficulties of your pilgrimage to be continually with you and hold you by the right hand to guide you with
he shews how himself and others came to be constrained by the love of Christ and that is by way of Argument The love of Ch●ist saiyes he constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead and that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again As if he had said when we set our selves seriously to consider the love of Christ in the eminent greatness of it as carrying him to the Cr●sse the Grave to Death for us we find out and conclude upon the●e two things 1. The miserable condition of the objects of it for if one died for all we determine thus That then were all dead y Morte scilicet peccati per quod irae Dei aeternisque poenis facti obnoxii quid enim attinebat pro omnibus mori nisi omnes reas mortis invenisset Calixt in loc dead in sin and thereby liable to the wrath of God and eternal punishment for why should he else die for all if he had not found all in a state of death 2. The Holiness of the end of it And that he died for all that they who live c. This is our holy reasoning and reckoning that the end of his love in dying for us was that they who live who by his favour and benefit are redeemed from warth and damnation should not henceforth live unto themselves not order their lives according to their own will nor serve the lusts and desires of the flesh but unto him that died for them and rose again that is be ruled wholly by his will and dedicate themselvs to his service living for his use and glory and renouncing whatsoever is contrary to him Now this says he constraineth us These are arguments so full and forcible that we are surrounded by them no gap left open for sin and licentiousness but we are wholly bound up and constrained in service obedience to him who hath thus loved us 2. By Power As there is an Argument in the love of Christ engaging Christians to holiness and obedience so there is a vertue and power flowing from thence which doth enable believers thereunto The death and resurrection of Christ wherein his love most eminently appeared is not only the meritorious and exemplary cause of our dying to sin and living to God but also the efficient cause of it by a secret power and vertue issuing from thence to those that believe z Nam ut humanitatem Verbo unitā virtute Verbi excitavit à morte sic etiàm nos sibi unitos insitos eâdem virtute exuscitat ad novam vitam gratiae Dav. in Colos p. ●07 For as the Humanity being united to the Word was by the power of the Word raised from the dead so those who are united to him and implanted in him are by the same power raised from the death of sin to the life of grace That there is such a power is clear from Phil. 3.10 where the Apostle shews that the height of his ambition was to know Christ yet not by a notional and empty but a powerful and effectual knowledge That I may know him and the power of his resurrection that is a Brinsley Mystical Implant p. 191. a power and vertue flowing from his resurrection working the like effect in himself in raising him to the life of grace here and glory hereafter And the fellowship of his sufferings b Calv. in loc Not only that which is external and stands in the bearing of the Cross but also that which is inward and stands in the mortifying of the flesh and the crucifying ●f the old man And this by being made conformable unto his death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conformis factus or Configuratus c Brinsley ubi suprà p. 132. Not conforming my self by way of imitation but being made conformable by a power out of my self the power and vertue of Ch●ists death d Nā quisquis hoc facit non idagit propriis viribus sed cum Christo sepultus est in Christo resurrexit est igitur in Christum insitus Spiritu Christi vivificatus Dav. in Col. p. 207. For whosoever conforms to Christs death and resurrection by dying to sin and rising again to newness of life doth it not by any power or ability of his own but is buried with Christ and raised in Christ and is therefore implanted into him and quickened by his Spirit Now this power and vertue is drawn forth from Christ by Faith as appears from Col. 2.12 Buried with him in Baptism wherein also you are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God who hath raised him from the dead In which words we have the outward Sign which doth represent a Christians communion with Christ in his death and resurrection and that is Baptism As also the inward Grace whereby a Christian comes to be really conformable to Christ in both by the death of sin and life of grace and that is Faith which is set forth both in it self as it is the Instrument whereby we become real partakers of the benefits of Christs death and resurrection which are signified in Baptism And also in its Author and Worker which is God called therefore Faith of the operation of God to distinguish it from a false faith of our own fancying and likewise in its Exercise for it pitcheth upon the power of God put forth in raising of Christ from the dead and thence derives a power for the raising of the soul from the sptritual death in sin to a spiritual life of grace that is the meaning of that clause which is added who hath raised him from the dead as the e Objectum particulare quod fides potissimùm hâc in re intuetur est Dei potentia excitans Christum ex mortuis pro salute nostrâ Dav. in loc p. 208. Reverend Davenant hath observed Now what is all this for Christians but to perswade you to labour after such a knowledge of Christ and his love as may be effectual to your Holiness and Obedience And I beseech you be not satisfied without it for 1. Without this you cross and thwart Jesus Christ in one main end and design of his love in undertaking acting and suffering for us which was not loosness and licentiousness but holiness and obedience that we might serve him as well as be saved by him and that we might be saved from sin as well as from wrath and from the filth and power of sin as well as the guilt and condemnation of it Why was he manifested in our flesh but to take away our sins and that h● might destroy the works of the Devil 1 John 3.5.8 Why was he called Jesus but that he migh● save his people from their sins as you find it f See Hopkins Treat on that Scripture Mat. 1.21 Why did he sanctifie himself by