Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n beget_v love_v only_a 2,697 5 6.4558 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Nathan came to declare the good purpose of God towards him in raising up him and his posterity to glory see how humbly and in a self-emptied manner he addressed himself to God Who am I and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto As if he should say Oh Lord what am I and my family the meanest and most unworthy and wilt thou doe this to me Yea as if this were a small thing thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while to come and hast regarded me after the estate of a man of high degree What can David speake more Yea as it is 1 Sam. 7. he saith Is this the manner of men O Lord God implying that onely God vouchsafeth mercy to such as are unworthy As then he who would build high must lay a deep foundation So he that would exalt God on high must lay himselfe low And if it be thus for temporal mercies we are not worthy of a crumme of bread and though with Dives we should begg for a drop of water it might be denied us Then how much more in spiritual mercies if God bestow them upon us Shall not our affections be greatly kindled in blessing of God Take that fountain of all mercies the giving of the Lord Christ to believers to worke out their salvation by being made a curse for them How diligent is the Scripture to put an account as it were upon every passage therein That it should be as impossible for a believer to thinke of this love of the Father to us and not be ravished with it as for a man to carry hot coales in his bosome and they not burn him For the Scripture aggravateth it from the person who died for us even the onely begotten Sonne of God John 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Sonne He so loved it if God would have denied any thing to mankinde it would have been this who would not think that he should rather suffer all men to be damned then to give up his Sonne to death And yet what astonishing love is here Dared a poor sinner of himself ever thought to have begged such a thing at Gods hand Rom. 8. 32. He spared not his owne Sonne Certainly thy heart may be amazed more than the Queene of Shebaes in seeing of Solomon's glory in meditating on this God to give his own Sonne his onely begotten Sonne his Sonne out of his bosome all which are aggravating circumstances If all the parts of the body if all the haires of thy head were turned into tongues could they speak enough of this goodnesse of God As God said to Abraham Now I know thou lovest me because thou hast not withholden thy onely sonne from me How much more may we conclude from Gods giving his Sonne to us As the Scripture aggravateth it thus from the quality of the person so also from the quality of those for whom Christ was thus given and that is for enemies and adversaries And here is an aggravating circumstance to enflame thy heart Rom. 5. 6. When we were without strength when we were enemies To die for righteous men to die for godly men would not have been such an aggravation but for sinners and enemies this is wonderfull Here then is another coale from the Altar to warme thy heart with when thou wouldest blesse God for Christ againe The Scripture to aggravate this mercy doth consider to what end he is given for us that is To die for us to die an ignominious death to be made accursed for us to bear the punishment of our sinnes upon himselfe This also doth deeply sinke into the heart This is like oyle to the Chariot wheeles of the soul This is like the Spirit in Ezekiel's wheele Thy heart cannot be quiet but it will exceedingly dilate it self in blessing of God for him That whereas he who would be our Saviour must purchase our salvation at so deare a rate yet he doth willingly make his soul an offering for our sinnes Lastly The Scripture aggravateth this comparatively That Christ did not take upon him the nature of Angels Heb. 2. 16. He did not so love them he died not for those Apostate Angels who yet were more glorious creatures than man and if redeemed would have brought God more glory but it was for sinfull wretched and weak man But this mercy of God in Christ can never be comprehended in the depth breadth and length thereof it being like Ezekiel's waters that will ascend higher and higher even till it covers our head We may instance in a second spiritual mercy viz. of Conversion or Effectual Calling us out of the damned world Oh the soul can never be affected with this How much doth it delight to speak of his owne vilenesse and unworthinesse once that so the riches of Gods grace in calling of us may be the more exalted We see it in Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. how willing he is to speak what a blasphemous persecutour he had once been even the greatest and chiefest of sinners and therefore in him the grace of God was manifested even for the ages to come To this purpose also 1 Corinth 15. 8 9 10. he speaketh debasing himself That he was not meet to be called an Apostle because he persecuted the Church of God This discriminating and differing grace of God whereby God chooseth thee a poor contemptible worme and passeth by others many in the same Towne in the same family of the same profession yet converting grace layeth hold on thee and not on another As our Saviour said There were many widowes at that time besides she of Sarepta yet the Prophet was sent to her alone This comparative worke of grace passing by others and taking thee when if God would have regarded Externals or Internals there were richer there were more learned there were lesse vicious must for ever enlarge the soule yea so astonish her that she will cry out What shall I say to these things A third Aggravation of Gods mercy that the people of God take notice of is From the time and season that God doth it In the fullnesse of time God sent his Sonne And the Wiseman saith God doth every thing beautifull in its season To have mercy out of its due time is to give bread instead of stones It is like good Physick but not administred in its proper season Now the observing Christian who loveth to seek out the workes of God towards him and studieth all Gods dispensations towards him doth in this respect finde out infinite matter of praising of God that the Lord should put off to helpe so long that he should let Lazarus die and be buried all this is to make the soule affected with the seasonable timing of a mercy To have a mercy in its season maketh it a double mercy Onely you must remember that Gods seasons and fit opportunities are not alwayes well discerned by us We are ready to thinke
disparagement to it The Scripture is in a style full of Efficacy and Majesty sutable to God who speaks it and therefore the very Heathen could say That Moses wrote his History like one that was of God And for the Method also that some are Historical some Prophetical some Moral all this is from the Wisdome of God Therefore it 's prophane arguing on Bellarmin's part who saith That if God had intended the Bible to be Rule of Matters in Faith it would have been put into some other mould like a Catechisme or some Body of Divinity But what arrogancy is this to prescribe to the Spirit of God And this may satisfie us in that Question made by some Why Paul did write thus in an Epistolary way Why it was by way of Epistles that he wrote rather than in another manner For although some give Reasons as Because it was the way of the greatest and most learned to answer to questions propounded by others Hence we have the rescripta and responsa prudentium Or because it 's a more familiar way and apter to beget love Hence Gregory called the whole Bible An Epistle sent from the Omnipotent God to Mankind Though I say these Reasons be given yet it 's best to acquiesce in the Wisdome of God Fourthly Christians should not willingly enter into those Disputes which are apt to be raised about the Authority of the Bible and how we come to know they are the Books of God Austin spake fully to this when he acknowledged that God had taught him that such were not to be heard who would say Unde seis hos libros c. How do ye know these Books to be from the Holy Ghost and that the Authours thereof were guided by him For this is the first principle of Christianity We cease to be Christians if we deny the Authority of them So that as in all Arts there are the prima principia which are not to be questioned and are indemonstrable So is the Scipture to Christians They are like the Sunne that is visible by its own light And indeed it would be a vain attempt to undertake such a proof to a Christian seeing nothing can be apprehended of greater Authority with him than the Scripture it self Therefore the people of God should stop their ears against all such Disputes For it was the Devils way of old to make Eve question the truth of Gods Word Yet In the fifth place Because the importunity of Papists and Heretickes yea and sometimes the Devil himself who doth assault Gods own children In this very point it is good to consider these particulars First That we have as great a testimony to believe that the Books of the Scripture were written by those holy men to whom they are ascribed as we have to believe any works were made by humane Authours That Plato's works were made by Plato that Tully's works were made by Tully thus that Paul's Epistles were made by him Yea we have farre greater reason for there were miracles wrought by most of those who wrote those Books which could not but confirm their Authority in writing whereas Plato and Aristotle these never wrought any miracles Now then if there were no more this is something That there is not so much reason to doubt of these Books as made by such men then of any humane Authour that ever wrote And as thou hast no doubts there so neither may any be made here But In the second place We must go higher for this is but an Humane testimony and so only begets an Humane Faith They introduce Humanity in stead of Christianity who affirm We believe that there was such an one as Jesus of Nazareth upon no higher motives then that there was such an one as King Henry the Eighth Therefore this principle once granted as it must be then it will necessarily follow That we must receive the matter therein as the word of God and not of man For this being their Writings and they therein declaring that they are sent of God and that their Doctrine is of Heaven it must necessarily follow That the ultimate motive of our Faith is that Divine Revelation and Authority appearing therein So that if this be cleared in an humane way that such men there were once and they wrote those things as the malicious adversaries who wrote against them do confess then they therein declaring of whom they come and from whence inabled we do no longer receive their works as we do humane works but as the word of God Humane Faith may make way for a Divine Faith but this Divine Faith cannot be ultimately resolved into it And if to this In the next place you adde The wonderfull Doctrine informing us about God and the way of reconciliation of a sinner with him as also the purity and holiness of the promises the excellency of the reward promised and the terrible threatnings denounced as also the fulfilling of predictions spoken of many years before the miracles wrought to confirm it the Universal Consent of all Christians in those Books except some doubt for a while about a few which was afterwards quickly removed as also the patient Martyrdom of many millions to testifie this truth These and other things may abundantly quell all those Disputes and atheistical reasonings that may rise in thy heart But that these may perswade thee Thou art earnestly to pray for the Spirit of God which alone worketh a Divine Faith in us in and through the Word without which though all those Arguments be spread before us yet we remain Atheists or Scepticks Use Is this Epistle then of Divine Authority Is it not so much Paul as God by Paul Take heed then of rejecting any duty or truth contained therein Among other passages take notice of that 2 Cor. 4. 15. He that is in Christ is a new creature old things are passed away all things are become new If this be received as a Divine Truth then what will become of you who yet lie in your old lusts and sinnes Is this Gods Word Oh tremble then thou that hast thy old rags upon thee None is in Christ but a new creature Is not this place enough to convert the whole Congregation Do ye need any more to cast off all your former impieties But how long shall we complain Who believeth Gods word SERM. IV. What an Apostle was Christ in the building of his Church used extraordinary Officers but did not follow the Model of the Jewish Government What were the Properties and Qualifications of an Apostle 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. THe next thing considerable is Paul's description from his Office and that is an Apostle He nameth his Office thereby to be received with Authority And that they might honour his Calling it being of great consequence for those who come in the Name of the Lord to be assured of their Calling The word Apostle is sometimes used more
Lastly Here are Consolations And although these are of greater concernment in the particular to every Believer because the joy of the Lord is his strength hereby also he walketh thankfully and fruitfully yet let him take heed of being narrow and sparing in using them for others comforts For if thou art a Minister of the Gospel then thy work is not only to convert but to comfort not only to bring out of sinnes but out of fears and dejections Thus the Apostle at the last verse in this Chapter We are helpers of your joy Consider that not only what is acquired by study but what also is inspired by God into thy soul may be of admirable efficacy to others Though Christs Sermons and Parables were like a two-edged sword mightily dividing between true grace and hypocrisie yet Isa 50. 4. he expresseth his Ministry by this to speak a word in season to the weary and this he calleth the tongue of the learned We call it Learning to alledge the Ancients to be full of Greek and Hebrew to empty out the bowels of School-learning yea some are so simple as to account studied words and composed language rare Learning whereas speech is like the Arrow that is not commended for studs of gold or Jewels on it but if it hit the mark Thus that is Oratory which is most proper to effect the end of our speech To make the sinners weep the hard heart to tremble and the sad to be comforted You see it 's the tongue of the learned to do this Doth then God give thee comfort be not thou wanting then to support and comfort the feeble-minded It may be thou art a kind of a spiritual Dives full of consolations and thinkest thou hast store enough laid up for thee both to live and die with take heed lest some poor Lazarus would be glad of thy crums and thou dost not give to him SERM. XLII That those only can make fit applications of Spiritual things to others who have an Experimental knowledge of them in their own souls 2 COR. 1. 4. That we may be able to comfort those that are in any trouble THere remaineth a second Doctrine contained in the final cause why God comforts his people viz. That they may be able to comfort others From whence there is this Observation obvious That those only are able to make fit applications to the souls of others who have had the experimental working of Gods grace upon their own souls That we might be able implying otherwise there would not be that sufficiency and fitnesse in us which ought to be To discover this consider First That there is a two-fold knowledge of divine and spiritual things The one is speculative and meerly Theoretical when we know them yea and it may be give a sound and firm assent to them And such are all those learned men who are very Orthodox and wonderfully able to maintain the truths of Christ against all opposers whatsoever Such as these are God raiseth up many times as eminent Pillars in the Church But because this is not enough to salvavation therefore in the second place there is a saving affectionate practical and experimental knowing of truth whereby we do not only believe such things but by believing we do love and embrace the truths we know We do credendo amare we have a faith which worketh by love Now it must be confessed that the condition of those who are only Orthodox and no more is much to be pittied and lamented To write against Arminians and others about the work of Gods grace in Conversion and yet never experimentally to have this upon their own souls So to treat of Justification and Christ yet not at all to have the saving and sweet operations of these things upon their souls is greatly to be bewailed To be like the builders of Noah's Ark that proved a place of rest and refuge in the time of the deluge for others when they themselves had no advantage by it But it is no wonder that such excellent knowledge and of such admirable lovely use in the Church be not saving while it goeth no further because practice and doing is the end of all Theological knowledge If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them Joh. 13. 17. So that this experimental and practical knowledge of divine things is that which compleateth the former To know Christ so as to have him to know regeneration so as to be born again this is the glory of all knowledge Hence is that Commandement 2 Cor. 13. 5. To examine our selves to try our selves whether we be in the faith and in Christ or no. The latter word signifieth to make an experience or an experimental tryal of grace in us So that if you had a man who could speak like an Oracle in all the points of Divinity who was a very Miracle in respect of learning yet he is but a tinckling cymbal and speaks in the matters of Religion like a Parrot not rightly or fully apprehending of them till he hath inwardly tasted of the sweetnesse of them Secondly This saving experimental knowledge doth differ in its whole kind and is of another nature in a moral consideration from a meer Orthodox or bare speculative knowledge I shall not enter into a large dispute concerning the difference between illumination in a temporary believer although now we are not so much speaking of the habitus fidei as Theologiae which may be in learned knowing men and that which is in a true convert We shall suppose it for a truth from Heb. 6. That those who were inlightned yea and had some experimental workings of which a non yet they had not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they had not the things that hold fast salvation and therefore the Apostle hoped for better things They therefore so differ that take a man who doth only know divine things by Books by Sermons by reading of Authours and was not at all acquainted wih the Spirits effectual teaching by the Word and let him at last come to have these things set home upon him by an effectual demonstration of Gods Spirit let him know these things as the truth is in Jesus which the Apostle mentioneth Eph. 4. and he will then cry out acknowledging that he never knew any thing till then That he was in the dark that he had but a learned kind of folly that he spoke of these things as men do of Countries which they see in Maps only by a general knowledge having never travelled to see the Countries themselves There is such a fuller power accompanying this practical knowledge that the former was but a shadow to this substance Observe many men Do they not read the Scripture Do not they go from Chapter to Chapter But till it be the ingrafted Word in them they have the images and pictures of things not the things themselves In the third place That is not to be called
the Gospel when they cannot have Christ and their Mammon any longer when their Dagon and Ark will consist no longer together then you shall see all that poison vomited at the mouth which before lay close up in the heart then they will desire no Ministry no Gospel rather than be deprived of their gain SERM. LX. A further Discovery of such who take up Religion meerly from carnal motives and worldly respects 2 COR. 1. 8. Of our trouble which came to us in Asia THe word of God purely preached with the faithfull Ministers thereof meet with no greater opposition in the world then from such who regard Religion no further than it maketh for their carnal interests This truth hath been in part opened and because every Christian unregenerated doth upon some false and carnal motive or other take up the profession of Christ whereby when he is put to the denial of that earthly respect he can then no longer hold but breaketh out in opposition to the pure wayes of Christ Therefore it is very usefull to give further Characters of such who regard Religion only upon inferiour and worldly respects And First Such are led with corrupt respects and in time of temptation will prove adversaries to the Ministers of the Gospel who are not of a ready and prepared spirit to take up the Crosse and to follow Christ in whatsoever condition he shall command such who are Christs Disciples onely in the Summer time while there are Halcyon dayes and times of plenty and encouragement to be a Christian These when they are urged to part with all to suffer and to be undone for Christ then they turn into any thing they will oppose and contradict that way which once they did imbrace and admire yea they will become persecutours of such instruments of Gods glory which once they did honour and all this ariseth from the earthly and carnal heart which made them at first look to Gods wayes Phil. 3. 18. Paul did with tears and even weeping speak of such Who were enemies to the crosse of Christ who minded earthly things So that by Pauls example we see it is a thing to be bitterly monrned about when we see men hopefully professing the true way of Christ and then when adversity and persecution doth arise they presently can change and turn their faith again They can withstand and contradict what once they pleaded for and all because they are resolved to save themselves They think Gain is godlinesse Such an one as this is an object greatly to be pitied and mourned over he loveth his ease his liberty his advantages more than Christ and so is no wayes fit to be his Disciple And for this reason it is our Saviour doth so oft-ten plainly and in Parables urge all to consider upon what termes they take up the profession of his name he foretelleth them of all the hardship and difficulties they must encounter with that so they may not prove enemies at last who in the beginning seem'd to be friends Wonder not then to see this fall out often in the Christian Church that those who were once friends and went with us unto the house of God afterwards to become like so many Hazaels to those who fear God Alas their earthly advantage and the present world hath made them change their opinions and affections They never at first did own Christ upon sincere and pure motives and therefore not being able to suffer for Christ they set against him and this alwayes falleth out that he who is an Apostate from the true profession of Christ doth become a cruel and bloudy enemy of that way he once walked in Omnis Apostata est osor sui ordinis All Apostate persons whether in Doctrine or Practice are implacable adversaries to truth and holinesse This hath been experimentally proved in all ages and one reason is because hereby they would be revenged upon those from whom they have departed for their guilty conscience telleth them they have justly incurred the censure of the godly They have lost their repute and esteem their good name is blasted and this maketh them study all opposition and malignity that may be Look then to thy motives at first to those termes thou didst professe Christ at the beginning if it was any humane or false motive if it was not such an entire and enduring principle that will not make thee stand upon a Rock immovable Let any winds or tempests arise as great a friend and as forward a well-wisher as now thou seemest to be for good things Had we a propheticall discerning we might with the Prophet look stedfastly upon thee as he did on Hazael and weep to think what enmity and mischief thou mayest create to such as fear God This man taketh up the old Rule Ama tanquam osurus He loveth this way of Christ so as thinking his outward advantages may sometimes or other make him hate it Secondly Such regard Religion only in a carnal way Who though they may acknowledge some principles of the Christian Religion yet at the same time maintain some damnable or heretical Doctrines that doe overthrow the very foundation Such as these take up Religion with carnal motives and so in time become cruel enemies to the faithfull Guides that are in Gods Church Wonder not that I make an Heretick to regard Religion after the flesh for Galat. 5. 20. Heresies are reckoned a fruit of the flesh Insomuch that Austin made it an ingredient into the definition of an Heretick that he either beget or propagate false opinions Alicujus temporalis commodi causâ for some temporal advantage And although we cannot say thus of all because God in just judgement doth deliver up some who receive not the truth in the love of it to efficacy of errour to strong delusions that they should believe a lie 1 Thess 2. 10 11. yet this very delusion upon their judgement this errour and blindness upon their mind is of the flesh For you must know that the flesh or to be carnal doth not in the Scripture signifie the pollution upon the sensitive and bodily part only but also upon the intellectual and rational It 's a fleshly mind as well as fleshly affections Thus all such who though they do retain some principles of the Christian faith doe yet believe other damnable Doctrines these are Religions only in a carnal respect and thereupon when occasion serveth do manifest the rancour and malice that is in their heart against the truths of Christ Ecclesiastical History informeth us of the bloody cruelty which the Arrians exercised against the Orthodox when they had power in their hands The Paganish persecutions were not much superiour to the Heretical Yea as it is said amongst brethren discord is the more vehement and flaming than any other So it is amongst those that pretend to be of the same Church of God So that we ought to walk humbly and to pray earnestly unto God to keep our hearts to
of death is thus sinfull when it putteth thee upon sinne so when it maketh thee omit any duty that God requireth thou darest not confess God and his truth in the midst of a perverse generation thou darest not be valiant for the truth nor plead for righteousness this fear is excessive Love to God love to his glory should cast out the fear of death Observe then thy self in dangers or temptations how thou findest thy fear to put thee upon sinfull compliances or omissions and presently as Jehoshaphat in the midst of a battel being in great danger cried out unto God for help so do thou to be delivered from this sinfull fear that is a deadly enemy encompassing thee about Secondly Thy fear about death is sinfull when it is immoderate and disquieting of thee so that thou doest not walk with a cheerfull quiet and calm spirit So that although it may not put thee upon any sinfull or unlawfull enterprize yet if it fill thee with anxieties with trepidations so that it depriveth thee of that Evangelical joy and peace in this excess it is a sinne All that are truly godly Being justified by faith they are to have peace in their hearts yea they are to rejoyce alwayes in the Lord but the inordinate fear of death causeth this Sunne to be in an eclipse and as men subject to swooning fits or convulsions cannot go with that courage and confidence up and down as those who are freed from such distempers Thus also the slavish and immoderate fear of death putteth millstones about our neck is a continual Ephialtes upon the soul filleth the spirit with heaviness whereby that Evangelical life and Gospel-conversation that we are called unto is seldome or never exercised Observe then thy self doth such fears of death make thy soul full of tumults and distractions Doth it oppose any Evangelical grace or retard the Spirit of Adoption upon thy soul Then humble thy self know thou sinnest against God and pray for the mortification of it and this thou art to do though it doth not make thee put out thy hand to any evil way though it doth not make thee omit any known duty For as worldly and distrustfull cares though lodging only in the heart are greatly displeasing to God though we do not thereby fall into covetous and unjust wayes yet the very cares and distractions of the heart are forbidden as appeareth by that reproof given to Martha by our Saviour himself Luke 10. 41. Martha Martha thou art troubled about many things but one thing is needfull Thus it is also in fears though thou art not instigated thereby to unlawfull wayes to preserve thy self yet the distractions and divisions of thy heart are offensive to God Therefore as the Apostle saith Phil. 4. 6. Be carefull in nothing but let your requests be made known to God Let prayer rebuke all storms and tempests of sinfull cares so in nothing be fearfull no not about death it self but commit thy self by prayer to God to whom the issues of life and death do belong Thirdly This fear of death is sinfull when it excludeth better and more profitable and seasonable fear The Scripture doth frequently command a fear of God and the serving of him with godly trembling Psal 2. 11. Yea the whole work of grace is expressed in this That God will put his fear in our hearts Jer. 32. 40. If then this fear of God did more prevail and rule in our hearts we should not fear diseases and death so much as we do The fear of God would put a due moderation upon all the powers of the soul This would regulate the fear of all other things so that we dare not fear otherwayes than God hath commanded then this natural fear is compatible with gracious fear For as our love to the creatures must be animated and regulated by our love to God so that we are never to love any thing that thereby our love to God may be abated or diminished Thus it must be in fear we are never to dread any thing further than it is consistent with the fear of God therefore it may fall out sometimes that the fear of God may justly put us upon the fear of death as when we walk negligently coldly and formally when we do not make up our daily accounts with God when we do not make our daily peace with God with renewed repentance and faith If we live in this manner then we have good cause to fear death because we are unprovided for it it seizeth on us before we are prepared and the fear of God may justly put us into this fear of death For we know how great holy and just God is how dreadfull his appearance will be at the day of judgement and all that we can do it must be done before death then the night is come and none can work To repent to bewail our unprofitableness our neglect of the seasons of grace in hell will then be as unprofitable as Esau's teares when he had lost his birth-right There is therefore a just and holy fear about death lest it should take us not doing the work of God lest it should come so unexpectedly that we be forced to cry out with him Inducias usque ad mane O spare me till to morrow Let one live another day to make peace with God and the fear of God will put us upon this fear as the Apostle said 2 Cor. 5. 11. Knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men Thus it is here Knowing the terrour of the Lord that he is greater than our hearts that if they condemn us then God will much more This will put a fear of death upon us because that is nothing but the presenting of our souls in his presence We read Judg. 6. 23. and in many other places when God made any glorious apparition the persons who beheld it were so amazed and stricken with the sense of their imbecillty that they thought they should die presently and shall not the thoughts about death that it 's the dislodging of the soul and bringing it immediately before God strike much terrour into us This holy and reverential fear about death is laudable and is the fruit of the fear of God but when this fear of death maketh thee fear God the less or hindereth thee in the service of him then cast this Hagar out of doors Fourthly The fear of death is sinfull when it doth proceed from a sinfull cause If the fountain be bitter then the stream is bitter Now there are these sinfull causes of the fear of death 1. When it proceedeth from an inordinate love of life An excessive love of life doth alwayes beget an immoderate fear of death So that we may judge of the sinfulness of fear by the sinfulness of love If thy heart be not mortified and crucified to the world if thy heart be not loosned and weaned from earthly comforts and this maketh thee afraid to die this is
might beget one Son why not more while I say thy Imperfect low Soul is arguing after this matter fly from these temptations of Reason as Joseph from his Mistress captivate thy understanding to Scripture-testimony hide thy head in this cloud as it were and put off thy discussion of it till thou come to that perfect Academy in heaven where we shall no longer know in part but compleatly and perfectly Hence those Hereticks who deny Christs his Godhead that they may the more securely indulge themelves in these Blasphemous Doctrines make Reason the Judg of all Controversies in Faith The Scripture must be submitted to reason not Reason to Scripture This Reason is made the standard to weigh all things by But Bernard said well quid tum contra rationem c. What is so much against Reason as to think to comprehend by reason the things above reason Such Pigmeis cannot measure the Pyramides Yet this is not spoken as if that it were against true and solid Reason that the Infinite God should have a Son it is one thing to be above Reason another thing to be contrary to it Now the cause of all that unhappy miscarriage in this matter is because we are apt to judg of God according to our thoughts of a man When we hear of the Father and his only begotten Son we are apt to think it must be so in the Divine nature as it is with the humane we apprehend all alike But thou must know as the nature of God is incomprehensible so is this begetting of his Son Thou that art not able to comprehend the nature of God how canst thou reach to the manner of the Begetting of his Son Let us therefore satisfie our souls with the belief that it is so not daring curiously to search into the manner how lest like moaths flying about this light we be at last consumed by it 6. That we may the more firmly believe this truth of Christs being the Son of God we are to remember that the Scripture maketh this Antichristianism So that he is an Antichrist that denyeth the Son to be God 1 John 2. 22 23. He is Antichrist that shall deny the father and the son Whosoever denyeth the Son the same hath not the father Here we see that these are inseparable the Son and the Father he that denieth the one must necessarily deny the other for they are essential Relatives depending upon one another The Jews the Turks they hold one God but because they deny Christ to be the Son of God they deny the Father It is not enough to acknowledg one true God but we must also acknowledg him to be the Father of Christ and Christ to be his Son without this there is no Eternal life to be had as 1 John 5. 20. We are in him that is true even in his Son Jesus Christ This is the true God this is Eternallife The Socinians also differ but gradually in their impiety from the Turks and therefore no wonder if some of them have fallen into Mahumetisme for they make Christ to be a meer man though a constituted Lord and God and therefore they deny the Father and the Son and although they pretend it is their conscience that out of reverence and regard to the honor of God the Father they dare not affirm the Son to be equal God with him yet it is plain that there is no jealousie between Father and Son in point of honor but the Father commands us to honour the Son and the Son also to honour the Father For how clear is that John 5. 23. That all men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father And therefore all those Blasphemous Doctrines which tend to the Dishonour of Christ as the Son of God do also tend to the dishonour of God the Father So that it is no wonder if he be made an Antichrist that doth so For their is a political Antichrist who opposeth Christ in his Offices and while pretending to Christ doth oppose Christ such is the Pope of Rome and a Doctrinal Antichrist and they are those who deny Christ either to be God or man When therefore you hear how much this pestilential Doctrine of Socinianism prevaileth that men dare boldly plead against the Godhead of Christ tremble at it humble thy self under the want of love to the truths of God take heed of pride self-conceit contempt of the faithfull Guides God hath set over thee for those sinnes do hurry men headlong into everlasting Perdition those spiritual Judgments of God upon mens parts and intellectual abilities are the most dreadfull of all 7. The spirit of giddinesse and contradiction is justly fallen upon those who have denied this essential Deity of Christ insomuch that one party will not acknowledg the other Christian For some of them hold that because Christ is not truly God therefore he is not to be praid unto neither doth Religious Adoration belong to him The other they affirm because he is an appointed Lord over the whole world and so though not a God by nature yet by Office and seing that the Father hath given him the Dominion of the world therefore Prayer and all Divine Worship is to be attributed unto him Volkelius the Socinian handling this Question de ver â Relig. lib. 4. c. 11. Whether it be lawfull to pray to Christ declareth his minde in two Assertions 1. That we may lawfully pray unto Christ alwayes And 2. That we are not alwayes bound to it yet addeth that we might deservedly be thought not worthy of the Christian Name if we should refuse to call upon him But all this is meer impiety for it is impossible to call upon God the Father and not also to call upon Christ and when one Person is prayed unto the other is not neglected but included And therefore how those Socinians by their Principles can maintain the Religious Adoration of Christ against Franciscus David let them look to it Let us proceed to make Use of this Is Christ the Son of God Then with the Scripture let us admire that Love and condescension of the Father who sent his only Son to become a most ignominious and accursed man for our sakes The Mystery of the Doctrine and the Mystery of his love are both incomprehensible the one is above our understanding the other above our affections What may not God exspect from us who hath done so much to us God made man God made weak miserable and crucified man to redeem us from our sinnes What strong Obligations doth this lay upon us to make us for ever to abhor all sin All the Arguments of moral Philosophers against sin are but like a wooden dagger to this Goliahs Sword Here is fire enough to melt the toughest iron Was God made man to remove sin and shall thou yield thy self up to it What remedy will prevail if this do not SERM. CXXI
man but a damned man that desireth this oyl to be poured into his wounds 3. As it is a spiritual Salvation so it is an efficacious full salvation Hence he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the abstract Salvation it self and we have an excellent Expression He is able to save those to the uttermost that come unto him Heb. 7. 25. He is not an half saviour he doth not save in part It is true this salvation is not in one instant perfected it is done by degrees the Lord doth not perfectly save us from the spot and blemish of our sinnes There is the guilt of sin the power of sin the filth of sin Now even in this life Christ doth save us perfectly from the guilt of sin so that Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus as also from the power of sin he delivereth us so that Sin shall not have dominion over us because we are under grace only for the presence of sin and the lusts thereof exciting and tempting these are left as the Jebusites in the land Christ could perfect his Salvation in one instant but for wise ends he doth it by degrees With him it is easie to save there is no difficulty in it Indeed this salvation is purchased upon hard termes he was willing to be in those Agonies and conflicts he was willing to dy that ignominous death that we might be saved so that he himself seemed to be lost a while that he might save us otherwise by his death he hath obtained a plentifull Salvation There are no sinnes too many or too great from which he cannot save It is true we meet with an expression 1 Pet. 4. 18. That the righteous are scarcely saved which some indeed apply to a temporal deliverance that they do hardly escape outward afflictions for the Apostle had formerly spoken that Judgment must begin at the house of God But if we apply it to the spiritual Salvation of a godly man then it is true even a godly man is scarcely saved Not that there is want or any defect in Christ not that his blood can difficulty do it but because the way to Salvation is so straight a way so contrary to flesh and blood and the Oppositions are so many to retard and divert that therefore he is hardly saved Were it not for the preserving Grace of God keeping of us when we do not keep our selves it is impossible that the most holy man should be saved Yet if we consider Christ himself the Saviour the godly soul may take so much encouragement from his Fulness and see more in him to save then can be with his sinnes yea if all the sinnes of the world were likewise upon his score to condemn and destroy him In the next place let us consider Who they are to whom he is a saviour For though he be a saviour yet it is not of all men the greater part not only of mankinde in the general but of such as are within the Church will be damned Therefore the Apostle distinguisheth mankinde into two sorts of persons 2 Cor. 3. 15. the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as are to be saved and such as are to perish not that this doth redound to the blame of any Decrees of God about the salvation of some men only or to the particularity of Christs death as if some had a desire and would have been saved but Christ would not save them but because in the men to perish their own sinnes do indispose them for salvation and they do wilfully and obstinately thrust it away far from them And then the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are such who by the meer grace of God are saved from Hell that would have been damned as well as others only the Grace of God did from the first to the last preserve them for this Blessedness In this sense it is Act. 2. 47. The Lord added to the Church such as should be saved Not that this word denoteth a present Disposition where by a man doth escape the sinnes of the world though all that are saved shall do that but the mercifull Grace of God pulling them out as he did Lot from Sodom for there it s said When he lingred the Lord being mercifull to him So it is here we are unwilling to come out of this Sodom unwilling to be delivered from our lusts and so are unwilling to be saved But God being mercifull to us by his omnipotent power he changeth our hearts and maketh us of refractory and unwilling ready and obedient Well then who are these saved ones A great Question and necessary For would it not be more than all the world to finde thy self one in the number of these saved ones when thousands and thousands shall perish in everlasting flames I shall not enlarge in this but give some brief Descriptions of them First It 's some of mankinde that he cometh to save not any of the Apostate Angels which doth infinitely commend the love of this Saviour to lost man The Apostle taketh notice of this aggravation Heb. 2. 16. For verily he took not upon him the nature of Angels Who would not have thought Christ would come rather to save lost Angels than lost men Angels are of more noble and excellent natures than men Angels if saved would have done God more service and brought him more glory than men We see if a learned if a great man in place and power be converted how much he may do for God beyond an inferiour man and then much more would a saved Angel have done than the most able men Yet such was the love of God that his only Son must come from his bosome to save lost man But Secondly It is not all lost men that he cometh to save but the humbled sinner the repenting and believing sinner He must be a sinner for if he were not so he needed not a Saviour hence he saith Matth. 9. 13. He came not to call the righteous but sinners to Repentance that is either such as thought themselves righteous that were presumptuously confident thereof or else as others those that are indeed righteous if any such could be Christ came not to them Hence this consideration of being a sinner is not to discourage thee is not to keep thee off from a saviour for if thou wert not a sinner thou didst not need a Saviour Who should come to a saviour but a sinner to the Physician but the sick Hence Paul comforted himself under this when he had been such a Persecutor and Blasphemer that Christ came to save sinners whereof he was chief 1 Tim. 1. 15. But I add it must be the humbled sinner the wounded sinner that feeleth himself perishing as the Disciples in the waters feeling themselves ready to sink cryed out Master save us we perish Matth. 8. 25. So it must be
of God like Peters Angel doth break up all the strong bars of any prison we are in any difficulty we are afflicted with As Dalilah gathered Sampson loved her when he would manifest where his strength was so may we assure our selves of Gods love to us by revealing his promises oh if you bring the promises you binde the hands as it were of the Almighty he can do nothing against his promises when therefore any thoughts of Gods Majesty of Gods purity and holinesse may affright thee run to his promise and as the people of Israel when amazed under the terrible lightnings and thundrings at Gods presence in giving the Law cried out Let not God speak any more to us but Moses so do thou let not thy Majesty speak thy Justice speak thy Holinesse speak but thy Promise let that speak and we will hear Lastly The freenesse of Gods grace is made very glorious and resplendent in the promises of grace Free-grace is more than love or goodnesse and bounty for Adam while in the state of integrity had those but free-grace is only where a miserable and hopelesse sinner is Now to such an one belong only curses and threatnings when therefore in stead of a threatning like a roaring lion to devour thee thou meetest with a gracious promise to embrace thee this must needs rejoyce thy heart Go to the spring head of every promise and thou wilt finde it to be alone free-grace The Scripture useth these Arguments as equivalent to have a thing by grace to have it by a promise and to have it by faith for grace is the originall and fountain Promises are on Gods part the active and communicative means faith on our part is the receptive and applicative so that when we enjoy any mercy by Gods promise thereby is excluded all works and all boasting and thus God is altogether exalted and man debased Again if we come to the second particular there we shall see how that our Amen subscribed to the promises or our firm beleeving in them doth give glory to God and this is the more to be pressed because we are apt to have low thoughts of faith as we see in Popery where Charity is far preferred before it and withall to beleeve is accounted an easie thing Thus also the Papists charge us as if we made the way to heaven a broad way because we say they must beleeve that is the soul and life of all And further it is good to presse this because the people of God look upon faith as was hinted before only as their ease not as bringing any glory to God Hence though they never doubt whether they should repent of sinne or love God yet they do very much doubt about their duty of beleeving Now all this preposterousnesse ariseth from the want of consideration in this particular that Faith giveth glory to God as well as procureth mercies to our selves yea to beleeve in the promise is the great and signall eminent way of giving glory to God First because by beleeving in Gods promises we thereby proclaim our dependance upon him in all things that we live both spiritually and corporally upon him only so that faith in this consideration is the great duty of the first commandment That requireth us we should have no other Gods besides him Thus faith doth it taketh off from all supports of sence of second causes of all humane advancements and setleth us upon the promise of God alone Now must not this needs give glory to God when God alone is set up no creature no other help is looked upon This is that which maketh faith in the promises so difficult because it is so hard to be weaned from the breasts of the creature we know not how to swimme without these bladders Though we have ten thousand promises to support us yet one crosse providence doth more to unsettle us then all these promises to confirm and quiet us Some have observed that all the letters in the Name Jehovah are literae quiefcentes teaching us thereby to rest our souls alone upon him it may be that is too curious howsoever faith may be called the acquiescent or quietative grace therefore to beleeve in the promises is to give glory to God Secondly By beleeving in the promises we glorifie God because hereby we manifest him to be truth it self the supream and infallible truth Therefore the Scripture maketh the contrary to this a very hainous sinne highly dishonouring God as when it is said John 3. 33. He that receiveth the testimony of Christ which is by faith hath set to his seal that God is true Then on the contrary he that doth not receive it he setteth to his seal that God is a lyar Oh execrable blasphemy so much unbeleef is so much giving the lye to God and if this be so hainous a sinne then beleeving doth God as much honour And truly it must be unpardonable if we who do upon a mans promise rest our selves contented and never doubt of the performance especially when a just and honest man that we should not much rather rely upon God of whom the Scripture saith It is impossible he should lye Thirdly Herein doth beleeving in Gods promise so exceedingly glorifie God because it exalteth that Evangelicall way of our justification and salvation which God above all things purposed for his own glory The works of Creation are for the demonstration of Gods glory Whether we eat or drink we are to do all for the glory of God But the way of mans salvation is in a more signall and eminent manner ordered for Gods glory This is the mystery that hath astonished all the world This is that glorious truth which the Angels desire to search into more and more Now by faith this glory of God is published and acknowledged Take the despairing sinner look upon the damned in hell do they give God the glory of his grace and of his wisedom and mercy Do they with cordiall ravishments speak of the unsearchable riches of Gods grace in Christ No they cannot do it therefore the Beleever only is he who giveth God the glory due to him for all Gospel-wayes and all Evangelicall Priviledges Therefore hath God exalted Faith above all its fellow-graces because that above all graces doth give God the glory due to him Indeed in the state of Integrity their love of God had the preheminence as it shall also have in Heaven but in the state of grace there Faith hath the Excellency God hath taken off the royal Crown from that Vasthi and put it upon this Esther this despicable grace as it were and which hath no Pomp at all in it Only as it is said of Christ who being poor made many rich So this poor grace doth not onely enrich us but every way advanceth the Glory of God Insomuch that from the unbeleever God hath no more glory than if he had never sent his Sonne into the world No more