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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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where is much forgiven there is much love Luk. 10.43.47 where we have a thousand forgiven we shall be ready to forgive an hundred Ephes 4. ult 2 He purges filth If our hearts be purified from uncleannesse and sinfull distempers there the heart runs clear in love and there dwels 1 Pet. 1.21 But if the heart be full of mud it will run foul in hatred 3 He works love If we love our brethren it must be from the love of God in us if there be love it is from God if there be hatred it is from the Devill Judg. 9.23 it is said That he sent an evill spirit between Abimilech and the men of Shechem Where Satan dwels he will set all on fire all hatred and wrath is from hell and it will so kindle that it will consume one another Fire from hell doth not warm it scorcheth Ephes 4.17 If we give way to sinful wrath we give place to the Devil Love cannot be from the Devil 2 This love is not from the world Jam. 4.4 3 This is not from our flesh Jam. 4.5 Therefore it must spring from God who makes peace pardoning our sins and mortifying our corruptions Quest But may there not be peace where Satan is Luk. 11.21 Answ He dwels in peace but a false peace for the wrath of God lyes on that soul as a mans house when it is on fire he being asleep he sleeps but not securely 2 This peace is a peace of a mans own conception Obj. There may be much peace and much love and I have known much true hearted love amongst men that have nothing but the light of Nature much more where is the light of Gods common grace shall we say God dwels not here Answ The Spirit speaks not of civill love but of such a love as wherein God dwels pardoning sin and mortifying sin which he never doth in natural men there may be found good nature in men but that love which evidences pardoning and healing of sin is not found in natural men this love differs from carnal love 1 This love reacheth not to the body onely but to the soul Lev. 19.16 17. If we love not the soul of our brother our love is not true love 2 Christian love reacheth to strangers and enemies as well as neighbours and friends good natured love may reach to strangers but not to enemies 3 Christian love will be stronger to our brethren then worldly love though Christian love may be damped yet it will over-flow good natured love that comes from a little fountain a little thing will stop it but Christian love springs from heaven and no man can make a dam to stop it Vse 1. Of tryal of Gods fellowship with us whether God dwell in our hearts or no where God once dwels he always dwels John 10.27.28 who shall put him out he is stronger then all Quest How shall I know whether God dwell in my heart or no Answ Ask thy soul whether God dwell in thee or no not good natured love but that love which desires peace of conscience and purity of thy owne heart and of thy brothers 2 Cor. 7.8 9 10. 2 This should teach us all to walk in a frame of brotherly love to abound in tenderness of spirit to one anothers souls not to provoke one another to wrath and seduce from ways of salvation but to be helpful one to another in our spiritual estate God loves to lye in a bed of love God will not dwell where love dwels not therefore keep open house for the spirit of love God is where he loves and he loves to be where love is wrath malice and hatred smoaks God out of doors a man performs no duty pleasing to God while wrath is in his heart Doct. That such as love in brotherly love the love of God is perfect in such vers 16 17. His love is perfect in us he doth not mean that love which God hath shed abroad in our hearts for there is no love of God but is perfect in every man but his love is perfect that is that love by which we love God If our love be not wanting to our brethren our love is perfect towards God What is meant by perfect Perfect is diversly taken sometimes it is taken for sound and unfaigned thus Amaziah did not that which was good in the sight of the Lord with a perfect heart 2 Chron. 15.2 But David and good King Hezekiah did that which was good in the sight of the Lord with a perfect heart 2 King 18.3 that is without hypocrisie and rottennesse Let a man professe love to God and not love to his brother his love is not true but hypocritical but if a man unfeignedly love his brother he doth soundly love God a man cannot finde God pardoning his sins healing his infirmities but he will love his brethren and do good offices to them 2 Perfect is all one with entire as a childe is then said to be perfect when he hath all the parts of a man this perfectnesse is opposed to that which is maimed so his love is perfect which is entire to God and man All our duty is to love God and to love our neighbour as our selves 1 John 4.21 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to walk humbly with thy God that is to expresse thy love to God and to do justice and love mercy that is to our brethren Mic. 6.8 This is perfection of spirit Rom. 13.10 Therefore saith the Apostle He that loves fulfills the Law the law of the first and second Table and God would have the chiefest part of our love to him expressed in our love to our brethren 1 Cor. 13.12 the chiefest of those is love we do God more honour by faith and hope but we edifie the Church more by love so that God requires as we see 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. our love to him to be expressed by doing good to the sons of men Hence our Saviour will reason with the sons of men at the last day Come ye blessed of my Father Matth. 25.34 to the end so that all the love God expects we should shew to him should be poured out to our brethren if thou be righteous what dost thou then give to God Job 35.6 7 8. 1 Cor. 11.10 I have abounded more then they all saith St. Paul by the grace of God and that good was by doing many good offices to the Brethren hence God would have all the sons of men to serve him in their general callings with such graces 1 Cor. 16.14 as they may shew forth in their particular callings in doing all their duties in love when David was earnest with God for the pardoning of his sins Psal 51.8 vers 18. and 12.13 shewes you that as he would spend himself in Gods praise so he would labour to bring on others in the ways of grace 3 Perfection of degrees which he
means here and though no man is perfect in all degrees yet he is more and more perfecting he is on the growing hand Ephes 4.15 16. As no member can grow in the body except it be knit to the body by joynts and sinews so Col. 3.14 in the body of Christ love is the bond that knits us together to God and our brethren 1 Cor. 18. and 13.1 2 3. 4 A thing is perfect when it is expert thus Ezra 7.8 so is a mans love to God perfect to any good office a loving Christian is a perfect Christian you cannot set him to any good duty but he is perfect to it love oyls the wheels of his affections and sets him on that which is helpful to his brethren and hence it is that when our Saviour would set Peter on to feed his lambs he would lead him on to this work by propounding this question whether he loved him or no John 21.15 16 17. he pressed upon him this love every time he asked him his love required him to feed his lambs 2 Cor. 4.15 The love of Christs constraineth Paul to be ready for doing and suffering A man that goes about a businesse with ill will he always bungles it 5 A thing is then perfect when it is durable so is it with a mans love it is durable if it be nourished with love to our brethren if it make a man ready to be doing good offices to his brethren this will make it not onely grow and continue but also to abound for ever Ephes 2.4 5 6 7. If love continue not the Church will not continue that is the whole body of Christians the body of faithful Ministers and people the Church will be removing if love begin to remove Vse 1. A signe of the truth of our love we must have as great a care of the truth of our love to our brethren as of faith and repentance from dead works How shall we know our love is perfect to God How stands your love to the brethren If your love be closed up from your brethren then your love is very unsound or very sick so much love so much life and so much failing in your spiritual love so much failing in your spiritual life Gal. 5.6 Faith works by love and that avails much with God we must receive the Sacrament oft that we may be strong in love according as our love works so works our faith 2 It exhorts us all to the love one another for by this means God dwels in us and his love is perfected in our hearts As you desire therefore that your love to God may be found entire and thriving in your soules give your selves to the unfaigned love one of another edifie one another in love 3 Comfort to such a man as knows he is of a loving heart his love to God is perfect you may know your love to God is perfect if your love be sound to your brethren 1 JOHN 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit THey that love their Brethren they have a two-fold benefit they have Gods Spirit dwelling in them and they know it Doct. That such as love one another to them God hath given of his Spirit What is meant by this that God hath given us of his Spirit 1 It implies that God hath given us that spirit of grace that accompanies salvation this branch of that spirit that dwelleth in God Numb 11.25 Moses spirit was not diminished though God did communicate it to the seventy Elders God did cause it to be inlarged in them that were in the place of Magistracy with him so who so loves dwels in God and the same spirit of love do they communicate to their brethren so that they walke by the same rule and aim at the same end The fruit of the Spirit is love Gal. 5.27 But the works of the flesh are adultery c. They that walk in love have received of the Spirit they have received of the Spirit of the holy Ghost for the Spirit lusts against envy Judg. 9.22 23. Vse 1. It teacheth us there is no love to be found towards our brethren but amongst spiritual men for if we love one another there is a Spirit of God in us where the Spirit is not there is no love Love is not a fruit that grows upon thorns or on such a stock as nature brings forth the old Olive Object But many of Gods servants bring forth sowr fruit which will neither benefit themselves nor others therefore how is it said that Gods Spirit is in them Answ They have sowr Oyl distilling from the old stock for there are many branches in us that suck sowrnesse from the old stock though there be a spirit of love in Gods children yet many times it doth not run forth But when you see Christian love expressing it self it springs not from nature but the Spirit of God 2 A ground of much comfort to any soul that doth finde his spirit suppled with any compassion If you can finde your spirits mourning for the evill case of your brother it is a signe that Gods Spirit is in you 3 Labour we to preserve our hearts in brotherly love for love is a fruit of the Spirit of God so much as a mans heart runs sowr and hard so much doth he damp the lively Spirit of God which the Lord hath shed abroad in his heart therefore as we desire that God would for ever keep us in a good estate and that his Spirit should not be grieved by us we must keep this Spirit of love that is the Comforter when we grieve the Spirit of God we shall have grief enough If the Spirit of comfort that is in us be uncomfortable how great is that dis-comfort Doct. That such to whom God hath given of his Spirit of love they maintain mutual entire and constant fellowship with God and they know it God dwels in us which is more then to have God to dwell with us if God did but dwell with us it would argue much happinesse but this is more for God to dwell in us We are not onely near one another and branches one of another but one body with another he abides in us as the head we in him as the members Quest What is this We know it Answ This act of knowledge is more then an act of faith men may believe more to be true then they know Heb. 11.3 By faith we understand the world was made faith understands a thing to be done and so we may be perswaded of the truth of a thing Something we know by reason which by sence we cannot know if it be not evident by sence and reason we cannot know it the meaning is we have evident sence and evident reason for it Reason 1. Is taken from the evidence of sence when God hath shed abroad into our hearts a spirit of love we shall see and feel the favour
unto Christ Doe you sanctifie him in your hearts Zach. 12.10 If you be obedient children unto God you shall injoy intire fellowship with God 3. Of comfort to such as have prevailed with their hearts and lives to make such a confession Doth any man desire everlasting life Let him look up to Christ there is none from whom you should look for salvation but Christ wrestle with God by prayer that you may find Christ in all the Ordinances you partake of so shall you be sure to have God dwelling in you and you in him so shall you not goe from home whither soever you goe 1 JOHN 4.16 And we have known and believed the love that God hath to us c. THese words contain a third argument to prove a proposition laid down vers 12. That they that love one another God dwels in them and the argument is taken from the knowledge and faith that such have of the love that God hath towards them and it stands thus they that have known and believed the love that God hath to them such dwell in God and God in them but they that love one another do know and believe the love that God hath to them Ergo Doct. That loving Christians doe discern the love that God hath to them as well by knowledge as by faith We have known and believe the love that God hath to us this love is wrapt up in the bosome of the Father and no man can discern either love or hatred by any outward thing but yet this love is manifested by faith and knowledge faith and knowledge are both acts of the judgement for both are Scientia axiomatis certi the knowledge of a certain truth for it is not divine Faith unlesse it be of such a truth Cui subesse falsum non potest Quest How thou doth faith and knowledge differ Answ Faith is the judgement of a certain truth but certain by divine testimony whether of the Spirit or of the Word the apprehension we have of a truth by the authority of a divine testimony is faith but knowledge is the judgement of a truth certain not only by a divine testimony but either by sense or experience or evident reason experience is but an observation of divers Sciences and so most of the rules of practicall Art are knowne by experience or by evident reason such are Mathematical rules gathered by certain principles of evident reason such therefore as love one another have a certain perswasion of Gods love to them by some divine 〈…〉 3 A loving 〈…〉 love of God to him by evid●●● reason by artificial argu● 〈…〉 judgement of Gods love to him First From 〈…〉 in a Christians heart when he is once be● 〈…〉 exhorts them to be loving and ge● to a● 〈…〉 ●metimes foolish disobedient and 〈◊〉 one another Iames 〈◊〉 do you think the Scripture speaks in vain the 〈…〉 in us lusteth after envy the frame of our natural temper lusteth after envy emulation as the sparks flye upward 〈◊〉 therefore we find this temper subdued that we can think well and speak well and doe good mee● to our brethren way this is an evident argument that God hath shewed love to us or 〈◊〉 the could never have so freely loved others 2. From the knowledge 〈…〉 may have of 〈…〉 in Christ because they see us expressin● 〈…〉 Iohn 13. 〈…〉 this shall all men know that ye are the Disciples if 〈…〉 men forward and ready 〈◊〉 ●elpfulnesse to their 〈…〉 ●ill say surely he is 〈◊〉 that company i● therefo●● 〈…〉 to be Christ 〈…〉 may not 〈…〉 it our selves ●●ay not 〈…〉 discern love to 〈…〉 all 〈◊〉 world knows it Vse 1. Of refuta●●● of ●●●e Popish 〈…〉 that faith is rather defined by 〈…〉 the evidence of things not seen but we 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 well stand together 〈◊〉 we 〈◊〉 know a 〈…〉 we can believe when Steven saw Christ 〈◊〉 at the right 〈…〉 what did he not then believe it For that place Heb 〈…〉 not a definition of faith but a description of 〈…〉 of the 〈…〉 that it makes things evident that we 〈…〉 as by faith 〈…〉 though we 〈…〉 his feeling 〈…〉 not his faith but helpeth it John 20.27 28. 2. Bellarmine and most of the 〈◊〉 say that 〈◊〉 i● spectalis misericor●●● is not 〈…〉 but praesumpti●●● certainly their errour is presumptuous for doth not the Apostle plainy say We 〈…〉 the love that God hath to as Vse 2. This may be a strong 〈…〉 to be abundant in love and tender heartednesse one to another little doth a man know how he disturbs the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 own conscience that disturbs another mans peace true it is 〈…〉 wrong his brother in evill 〈…〉 hard speeches in doing evill 〈…〉 and he goes 〈…〉 other times and thinks all is right as 〈…〉 that the Lord is departed from him so that there is as 〈◊〉 difference betwixt himself now and himself at other times as betwixt a man found and a man fainting away with some evill disease or betwixt a Vine of September and December formerly full of sap and 〈…〉 now dead and 〈◊〉 Why what 's the matter the heart is so straight and heavy Why our bowels have been shut up towards our brethren and therefore God shuts up his favour and helpfulnesse from us therefore we hear much and profit little receive the Sacrament often and little good done as you desire therefore to keep Gods love fresh and springing up in you so let love to your brethren grow up and spring in you Many a soule is in feare and doubts of Gods love to him Why what must he doe Why stir up your love to God and your brethren and God will manifest his love to you 〈◊〉 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth against judgement If a man have an heart pitying the miseries of others whether in their bodies or in their souls at the day of judgement when others tremble and quake merciful men shall rejoyce Matth. 5.7 1 JOHN 4. ●● God is love and he that 〈…〉 in 〈…〉 1. The 〈…〉 contain a 〈…〉 those 〈…〉 one 〈…〉 as he 〈◊〉 said down 〈…〉 and ther●● 〈…〉 words 〈…〉 parts 〈…〉 1. The 〈…〉 2. The 〈…〉 constant 〈…〉 dwell 〈…〉 one an another 〈…〉 God observe 〈…〉 〈…〉 part of him whosely 〈…〉 it is called it that is the object 〈…〉 Christ 〈◊〉 the object of 〈…〉 Psalm 7●●● In the 〈…〉 not but it 's 〈◊〉 to in 〈◊〉 there 〈…〉 lovely 2. God is love effect 〈◊〉 he is the 〈…〉 of love 1 〈…〉 Christ is called Wisdome because he gives 〈…〉 so God 〈…〉 if there be a 〈…〉 to 〈◊〉 1 John 4 ●● and so if any shew love to 〈…〉 3 God is love 〈…〉 God full of love and mercy we 〈…〉 is wisdome it selfe or love it selfe without a 〈…〉 Aco●deus non predicatur de 〈…〉 man wisdome or a 〈…〉 but ●●re God transcends all 〈…〉 abstracts God is love from where may be 〈…〉 it's of the divine Essence we may 〈…〉 God is a Spirit that
is it 's not a 〈…〉 but love is essential and natural to him 〈…〉 and wisdome 2. It implyes the simplicity of Gods nature 〈…〉 but free without mixture he is without all causes 〈…〉 himself from himself and by himself and 〈…〉 compounded of causes so 〈…〉 not compounded 〈◊〉 subjec● 〈…〉 is one thing and his 〈…〉 wisedome are 〈…〉 is no reason of this 〈…〉 works but not of 〈…〉 Vse 1. This may exhort us all 〈…〉 forgot 〈…〉 the world for the love of God many 〈…〉 because they shall lose the 〈…〉 by 〈…〉 may be 〈…〉 for if a mans wayes please 〈…〉 make 〈…〉 be at 〈◊〉 with him and then much more 〈…〉 lose the love of all thy friend 〈…〉 more by Gods love then 〈…〉 of love is nothing to the God of 〈…〉 but God is love it selfe and in injoying of God 〈…〉 injoy●●● 〈…〉 of love love passing knowled●● 〈…〉 you never met with love in the world but you might 〈…〉 but Gods love is like a bottomlesse depth without bounds or bottom● you can neither know the beginning nor end of therefore 〈…〉 in 〈…〉 say more truy then Medea did of Jason Non magna relinquam 〈…〉 I shall not lose great love but follo● great love Vse ● To teach all 〈…〉 is God is 〈◊〉 cannot be so 〈◊〉 as to be 〈…〉 strive to 〈…〉 love Let all 〈◊〉 he dont in love 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 Be yo● 〈…〉 your 〈…〉 Father is perfect Matth. 〈…〉 us be kin● 〈…〉 injurie upon 〈…〉 Luke 1●●3 4. 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 would 〈…〉 be so As Christ argue●● 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 us reason God is love and ●●●●fore they that worship 〈…〉 him in love Matth. 5.22 2● 〈…〉 any unkindnesse betwixt 〈…〉 in his 〈…〉 God 〈…〉 in your hearts 〈…〉 that we can perform righteously 〈…〉 14. let all d●●●● be per●●● 〈…〉 had power to save any but 〈…〉 3. If God be love then the 〈…〉 and therefore the more we live we hatred the more we walk in 〈…〉 our selves firebrands of all Doct. ● 〈…〉 entire and constant 〈…〉 Constancy 〈◊〉 abiding in 〈…〉 he not only dwels with God 〈…〉 which implyes intirenesse and 〈…〉 〈…〉 of God 〈…〉 Apostle infers it God is love 〈…〉 all the well placed love in that 〈…〉 Chariot of God whereby he convey 〈…〉 when he she is abroad his love in our hearts and 〈…〉 which extend as well to the soule as the 〈…〉 Carnall love is neither of God nor from Go● 〈…〉 love which is indeed called charity whe● that 〈◊〉 God com●●●●cates himselfe to such a soule as the root to the 〈…〉 the groun●● of it is from the immediate presence of God where 〈…〉 such a presence as whereby the holy Ghost lives in the 〈…〉 Gal. 5.22 Love 〈◊〉 a fruit of the Spirit John 1● 34 〈…〉 〈…〉 and aptnesse that 〈…〉 such a sould to grow up by 〈…〉 Love is of an edifying nature 1 Cor. 〈…〉 admonish 〈…〉 it edifiers much especially if it be 〈…〉 there 〈…〉 on both sides both in speaker and 〈…〉 you 〈◊〉 savingly it 's love that puts life into 〈…〉 3. From the 〈…〉 to 〈…〉 his love there more aboundantly where he finds 〈◊〉 walking in love no creature partakes of the boundlesse love of God 〈…〉 are grounded 〈◊〉 love Eph. 3.17 18 19. Let but saith towards Christ 〈…〉 our brethren abound in us and we shall have a large 〈…〉 to us According to the capacity of the receiver so is the thing received 〈◊〉 no grace is of so inlarging a nature as love is so that if we abound in love then we become of a fathoming and comprehending nature so that we comprehend the height and breadth and length and depth of Gods love towards us Vse 1. It exhorts us all not only to the love but the constant love of our brethren this is the benefit of it you shall have constant and abiding fellowship with God we should not only grow in love but grow rooted in love let no grace be so eminent in you as love if God had said he dwels in wisedome how should it have provoked men to study for wisdome but God doth not say he dwels in knowledge for what then should the ignorant do He dwels not in honour and riches for what then should poor men do But he dwels in such an house as the poorest may build to God an house of love therefore above all indowments and gifts of soul or body have a speciall care to grow rooted in love a man may have a world of wit and yet God not dwell in that wit a man may have abundance of wealth honours and beauty and yet God not in them but if you ask where God dwels I answer God dwels in love There are four places wherein God is said to dwell 1 In the highest holy place 2 In an humble heart Isa 57.15 3 Christ dwels in our hearts by faith Ephes 3.17 4 God dwels in a loving heart so that if you would know where God dwels it 's one of these three graces humility in faith or love How should this provoke us as David saith never to give sleep to our eyes or slumber to our eye-lids till we have built God an habitation of love in our hearts Psal 132.3 4 5. Set up a loving heart and there will God dwell for ever whereas if your hearts be envious and hateful and bitter little doe you know what an evill spirit dwels there and instead of comfort you shall find such horrour and anguish that you may plainly discern surely God is not in this place Ephes 4.26 if you sleep in wrath the Devil rests with you Vse 2. Of consolation to every loving heart if God hath given you an heart to love our brethren with true spirituall love take God home with you God dwels in thy heart and more then that thou dwellest in Gods heart so that hadst thou testimony of no other grace yet canst thou find an hearty love in thee thou hast a Tabernacle for the most High to dwell in 1 JOHN 4.17 Herein is our love made perfect that we may have boldnesse in the day of judgement c. THese words depend on vers 12. where he promiseth a double benefit to them that love one another God dwels in such which he proved by four arguments before the second benefit now that if we love one another Gods love is perfected in us this he inlargeth in these following verses and shews wherein it 's perfect and how that it is perfect he proves from the boldnesse they have in the day of judgement and the argument stands thus They that may have boldnesse in the day of judgement in them is love perfected but loving Christians may have boldnesse in the day of judgement Therefore The assumption he proves thus They who are in the world as God himselfe is they may have boldnesse in the day of judgement but they who love one another are in the world as God himselfe is Doct. Those in whom is found
grows perfecter every day such a man still grows in fruitfulnesse he grows ready to every good work Joh. 15.2 so that the love of God is perfected in him by obedience As a fruitfull Tree the more it sticks his root downward into the ground the faster it grows so a Christian the more he sticks his root on Christ the faster it grows And so the Husbandman will have more care of a fruitful Tree to prune it he hath no such care of a sower barren Tree but if a Tree be fruitful he cuts off all superfluous Boughs that hinder the increase of such a Tree so a man that is fruitful in Gods Commandments he doth not only stick his root his faith and hope deeper in Christ but the Lord himself is willing to cut down all those noysome Lusts that suck away the sap of grace if God see a man set himself fully to follow God and keep his Commandments the Lord will cut off all cumberances all corruptions all things that hinder the growth of grace Vse 1. For trial of our love to God whether it be perfect or no whether sincere or counterfeit how dost thou finde thy heart affected to Gods Commandments Dost thou look at them as thy way it grieves thee to be out dost thou look at them as thy treasure as most profitable to theee Dost thou look at them as thy ornaments as most honourable to thee Dost thou look at them as the apple of thine eye as thy life most near and dear and precious to thee If thou dost thou hast that love in thee that is perfect without guile perfect in every part of love and in regard of readinesse and constancie but if a man looks at Gods Commandments as a by-path as if he were out of the way if he looks at them as unprofitable and dishonourable if he can break them without any scruple if he would rather part with them all than his life verily the love of God is not perfect in such Vse 2. For direction to all such as desire perfection of love to Christ do any desire to love the Lord Jesus in perfection not only of truth but parts and degrees if he could Why this is the way keep his Commandments take heed of breaking any one of them What is the reason we deceive our selves in our love to Christ We think it is love to Christ if we keep a solemn Feast to him at this time of the year in memory of his Nativity but is there no better Argument nor furtherance of thy love to Christ than this Take heed of it if Christ hath commanded us to deck our bodies and houses if Christ hath commanded us to feast and be liberal you will finde that a great help to further your love to Christ and an evidence thereof but if you go on in any course without a Commandment if you keep such Feasts which end in all excesse and ryot and gaming and playing they begin it may be pretty well but we fall from Religion to civility from civility to intemperance and wantonnesse c. and what is the reason Because we have the custom of our Fathers for it not the Commandment of Christ the Apostle doth not say he that keeps customs his love is perfect but he that keeps Christs Commandments therefore if you would get your love to Christ perfected it must not be by keeping of old customs but by keeping his Commandments what is the reason why the most are so ready to keep such Feasts is it because it is Christs Commandment if it were the more you would find your love perfected you would be more forward to good your spirits grow from one grace to another but because men look at customs they begin in the Spirit and end in the Flesh Take a Christian at the beginning of the Sabbath he findes his heart unlifty to holy Dutie but before it be ended he is so enlarged that he is sorry it is done Why because he obeys a command but if we do any thing out of custom it grows from better to worse so that Christ hath not more dishonour the rest of the twelve Months than he hath these twelve days but would you have your love perfected then frame your lives and courses according to Gods Commandments and then the more you practise the more you may you shall finde your grace growing and your love perfected to every good work be doing Gods will and the Lord will be with you blessed is that soul whom the Lord shall finde doing his Commandments be doing and your doing shall multiply your strength and growth in grace Vse 3 Of Consolation to all such as apply themselves to be doing of Gods Commandments doth a man find himself ordering his ways according to a Commandment if you finde it delightful to you that you would still walk in it you look at it as your way your treasure your ornament c. why this is your comfort the love of God is perfect in you and will grow more perfect so perfect that God covers all your infirmities so perfect that it grows up high to perfection even to all the parts thereof so perfect that God sees you willing and ready to be doing his will so perfect that you resolve to hold on and be constant and if God see you thus moulded to a Commandment and not to customs God will uphold you and help you and strengthen you till he make you perfect which is no small comfort to a soul 1 JOH 2.5 6. Hereby we know that we are in him He that saith he abideth in him ought even so to walk as he hath walked IN Verse 5. you have an obedient Christian set out 1 By his practice he keeps Christs Commandments 2 By his priviledge which is double 1 His love is perfected 2 He knows that he is in Christ 3 Verse 6. here is a duty enjoyned to all men that would professe Fellowship with Christ namely imitation of Christ they ought to walk as he hath walked From the former part of the 5 Verse we have observed Doct. The observation of Christs Commandments is the perfection of our love to Christ Those next words shew the right honouring of Christ and your selves together so as we may honour God and he honour us that is by Knowledge of our Fellowship with Christ and by our duty so to walk as hee hath walked Hereby we know that we are in him By what By the love in us No by keeping his Commandments wee know that we have Fellowship with him though both be coincident so then here is a promise not only of their b●ing in Christ but their knowing that they are in Christ Doct. Sincere obedience to the Word of Christ is both a certain and evident sign of our blessed Estate in Christ Hereby that is by keeping his Commandments we know that we are in Christ Quest 1 What is it to be in Christ Ans We are said to be in Christ in
reasons and such intentives as draw on a lust woe be to them that put away all feare of judgement and so draw on lusts with the cords of vanity Vse 4. To teach us all to wean our selves from these lusts Young men I write unto you love not the World nor the things of the Werld and old men have nothing to doe with them refrain from them apply such corrosives such threatnings such promises Christs death and cut off all occasions of sin root it out challenge your hearts arraign them before God bring them as enemies to your souls and labour to cut them off utterly If any man love ●he world the love of the Father is not in him Doct. It is not the having but the love of the world that keeps our hearts from the love of the Father It is not the having of the World for Davids mountaine was strong Joseph had his will in Aegypt Abraham was rich but though they had the World yet they had not the love of the World Jam. 4.3 4. whosoever is a friend to the World is an enemy to God it is not the Lordship of the World but the friendship of the World that is enmity against God for the time shall come that they that take the Lambs part shall be Princes of the World and Saint James calls the love of the World Adultery as a woman that makes her selfe a friend to another man and bestows that love upon him which her Husband only should injoy is an enemy to her Husband so a man that is a friend to the World or to the lusts of it is an enemy to God alienated from him and he would have them know that there is no worldly covetous man but he knows that his love of the World is enmity against God it is the World that hinders you from the Word and Prayer and good duties Reas 1 From the amplitude of that love which we owe to God which cannot therefore be divided to others Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul and minde and strength Mat. 22.37 then we must love the World no further than it may help us in his service and we may imploy it to his advantage if we love it more we sin against the great Commandement if we must love the Lord with all our heart and mind and strength then what sorry weake affection is due to the World even an heartless faint love all our love and vigour of our spirits is to be set on God now if a man love the World he cannot thus love God for if he love the World his first and chiefest care is for wealth and riches and then it may be he will a little look towards God first let me bury my Father first let me stock my Farm and try my Oxen and then if I have any time I will come to the Feast 2 A covetous or a lustfull or a proud man when he hath the World and the lusts thereof he is fully satisfied with his portion without God Psal 17.8 so Luk. 12.19 Soul take thine ease thou hast goods laid up for many years he wraps up the comforts of his soul in these outward things if he have wealth or pleasure he is content without God the more he hath of the World the lesse he cares for God as the Moon when it is at the full it is most opposite to the Sun so is it with a worldly man 3 The love of the World will make a man part with God rather than with the World he will rather part with Grace and Heaven too than leave the World he will rather part with eternal life than his wealth as the young man in the Gospel Mat. 19. from 16. to 22. he had rather part with Christ and an expresse promise of heaven than part with his possessions so we see how the love of the World keeps us from the love of God Notable is that speech of Christ Mat. 6.24 No man can serve two Masters c. God and this World are as two Masters such is the amplitude of Gods service that he that serves God as he ought hath no time to serve the World No man that hath a servant but he looks that his whole time should be spent in his service so if we spend any time in the service of the World we cannot be servants to God Indeed if services be subordinate we may serve many so we may seek and take pains for the World but be sure it be in subordination to Gods service look that it may make you more free to Gods service Vse 1. To discourage any man from the love of the World there is no greater discouragement than to say If we love the World the love of the Father is not in us As if a Father come to a childe and say if you love such a young man or woman you cannot love me and I shall take you for my utter enemy and you shall never make it up againe would not any ingenuous childe rather than he would be an enemy to his Father part with any so when God saith If you love the World you cannot love me I shall look at you as my enemies were not this enough to make any christian out of love with the World therefore chuse whether you will love God or the World if you love the one you cannot love the other therefore it is not a matter of frugality or providence to love the World for I say If any man loves the World he makes the World his God therefore covetousnesse is called Idolatry Col. 3.5 a mans belly may be his God the love of the World is directly against God the love of God requires all your hearts souls and strength therefore no part to be set on the World Vse 2. It may exhort Christians to mortifie their love to the World you must either crucifie your love to the World or to God If you love the world you cannot love God if you love God you cannot love the world you cannot serve God and Mammon Motives 1 If a man can but withdraw his mind from the World he may be Master of the field in any temptation that befals him what is the World all that is in the world is either profit or pleasure or credit and we regard the World no further so that if thou beest weaned from thy profit or pleasure in meat or drink or Pastime if thou beest weaned from credit thou shalt bereave Satan of the weapons he fights against thee with for how doth he keep men back from Religion but that it will not stand with his credit and applause in the World what hinders them from holy duties but love to their profits and pleasures therefore could but a man wean himself from them he might easily overcome the wicked one how did Josephs Mr. work on him was it not from pleasure and if Joseph be content to leave the lusts of the flesh he
Peter James and John Mat. 26.41 when Christ called on them to watch and pray he comes and finds them sleeping what saith he the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak even then when he had most need and themselves also of watchfullnesse they fell into drowsinesse and so fell into Temptation that they all left Christ and Peter especially Simon sleepest thou whom Sathan desires to winnow For thee now to Sleep is a Lust of the Flesh Let us therefore so look at Sleep and Ease as that we must give account of It s a common fault of Gentlemen that live of their own Means they may Live at Ease and rest they think what is a Gentleman but his Ease and Pleasure God forbid that we should be like that Fool in the Gospel Soul take thine Ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years you must not think that God hath given great means and estate to live at ease the glorious Angells are ministring Spirits doing their duties with all agility and chearfullnesse Adam who was Lord of the world yet was set to till the ground from the highest creature to the lowest all have employments appointed them by God Dangers of Idlenesse 1 It will bring you to poverty that you shall be suddenly Beggars and that without remedy 2 It distempers your Bodies and Stomachs 3 It will make your Souls naked and ragged that is plain the field of the sluggard is over-grown with Thorns and Thistles all your impatience vanity idlenesse all your dullnesse unprofitablenesse in your life it springs from your sluggishnesse of heart you have not stirred up your spirits 4 It will make you a Brother to a great waster you waste your outward patrimony and your patrimony of Grace when Peter was once fallen into drowsinesse how wofully was he bankrout how poor and naked Simon sleepest thou and we see Temptation came on him suddenly and strongly 5 Such as do their businesse with a slack unbent hand cursed be that man if you see a sluggish hand God leaves him to himself he curses both himselfe and his businesse therefore be diligent and fruitful and strengthen your selves you shall finde the blessing of God going along with you prospering your estates and Souls Thus we see what are the Lusts of the flesh they are such as the body affects and is satisfied with as intemperancy incontinency love of pastime and love of idlenesse and sleep these are the lusts of the flesh Now for the Reasons why we should wean our selves from these Lusts which may be as so many motives to disswade us from them Rea. 1 All these Lusts are so many Enemies to our Souls 1 Pet. 3.11 they are the diseases of our Spirits now if we satisfie any disease in our body wee feed the disease and make it worse So wee cannot satisfie any of these Lusts but the more we feed them the stronger they grow They are like the Dropsie the more you drink the more you may so satisfying encreases the disease the more you obey a Tyrant and submit your selves to him the more authority he claims over you and the more will be Lord it over you so if you once give up your selves to obey these lusts and let them reign they will Lord it over you and keep you in greater subjection Rom. 6.12 so that when a man pleads for his Lust but this once that I may fullfill my Lust and I hope I shall never do it again but I will bid farewell to it if I now take leave to go into evil Company for one merry meeting I shall hereafter deal with them no more why take this course against a Lust do but once give way to any Lust and instead of satisfying it you will adde fuell to it this will be a way to ingage you to a further commission of that lust many have a conceit may I but now tipple with a customer and get a good bargain I will give it over why give but once way to a lust and it will make such a gap that all the lusts in the Forrest may break in make but one little crevise in the bank of the Sea thinking to abate the rage of the Sea why it will make it wider and overflow all so if you give but a little way to a lust to a little Gluttony or Intemperancy you will never give over modo modo non habent modum the more fuel you give the stronger the fire of lust burns Reas 2 The heavy distempers that bodily lusts put upon the soul of man they do aggravate the diseases that Christians most complain of it is the common complaint of Christians oh the deadnesse and dullnesse and hardnesse and coldnesse of my heart and spirit oh that I could but get a soft heart why the lust of the flesh so overcharges our hearts and makes them so heavy that we have no desire to good Luk. 21.34 take heed that your hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you shall find that whereas our spirits have been enlarged and comforted in Gods ordinances and in his service it is strange how little affection or comfort we find in these if our hearts be overcharged with Intemperancie or Wantonnesse or Voluptuousnesse or Idlenesse it is like lead at a Birds heels what we feed on we grow into the nature of it let a man feed on earthly things he grows earthly and unsavoury so if a Christian gives way to any sensuality he shall find his spirit grow so sensual and worldly that it is made very unfit for spiritual things Reas 3 From the end of these lusts if we affect any pleasure of the World for it self it is a lust of the flesh to cleave to the Creatures now we shall find that none of these lusts commend us to God neither meat nor drink nor pastime nor sleep if we affect any thing for it self it never commends us to God or makes us draw near to him though we had all these pleasures in the largest measure as Paul saith of them 1 Cor. 8.8 now if these draw us not to God but many a poor soul that wants these hath far more fellowship with God than such as enjoy abundance thereof why then a Christian should thus reason am not I a whit the nearer God for these why then should my heart affect them 4 Nay as they do not commend us to God so 1 Cor. 6.13 Meat for the belly and the belly for meat they are all corruptible both the chear we affect and our bellies both corruptible therefore let us set our minds on eternal incorruptible things Vse May dehort both old and young from affecting the lusts of the World you see from the Father they are not but from the World and the means to help us against these lusts are 1 Abstain from fleshly lusts as Peter speaks Rom. 13.14 make no provision for the flesh take heed of all occasions I have made a Covenant with mine eyes saith Job not
to look upon a Maid Job 31.1 so for drink Prov. 23.31 Prov. 4.15 it is a notable means of mortification to withhold the blood and spirits from flowing into that member thereby in a good measure they stupifie it Secondly Use some course to stupifie that part Thirdly Cut it off would you mortifie lust Beware of all occasions if such meats or drinks wilt make you Gluttons or Drunkards meddle not with them and so you shall hinder influence to these lusts apply the death of Christ the threatnings of God and so when it begins to stupifie cut it off better it is to want all the sinful pleasures of this life than having of them to be cast into Hell 2 Refrain from bringing forth fruit of these lusts the more fruitful a Tree grows the more sap and strength it draws and strikes deeper into thee earth so let sin once grow fruitful bring forth acts it will get deeper hold and grow so rooted that it will reign in you if you avoyd all occasions and yeeld not to satisfie the least of them it will soon be gone if a strange Dogg comes in if you feed him he stands waiting for one piece after another but if you beat him he is gone where he may finde better entertainment so if lusts find that they can have no entertainment they cannot get one morsell no yeilding to them but repulsing they will be gone from you where they may finde better welcome 3 When thou findest any lust of the flesh arising in thee turn the strength of it to a Spiritual end A man hath an affection to meat or drink what saith Christ I have meat and drink that ye know not of though he were very faint and hungry yet when he saw a company come he attended not to his meat and drink but there was Spiritual food and that comforted and refreshed him so art thou troubled with lust after Women and God calls thee not to Marriage why turn the strength of thy affection to another that is white and ruddy the fairest of ten thousand The more you set your heart to consider how amiable and beautiful and excellent he is you shall finde he will so satisfie your heart that you will finde little content in any other thing besides As the Sun if it shine hot on a fire it puts it out so the love of Christ if it once shine in your hearts and fill your souls with light and joy unspeakable and glorious you shall finde all base Kitching lusts were they never so vehement the Sun of Righteousnesse will soon eat them out so for love of idlenesse and rest let but a Soul consider what comforts he ever found in the favour of God when his left hand was under him and when God held him up in his everlasting Arms do but consider how sweet was one hour of that inward peace you found then above all outward comforts you shall easily see that though your body should never finde rest more yet this inward peace will so satisfie you that you will be ready to say with Paul I have enough I have learned in all these to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-sufficient that I need not more Phil. 4.11 12. 4 Walk faithfully and constantly in your general and particular Callings the reason why a Christian grows carnal and sensual is because either in Gods Ordinances or his particular Calling hee was not spiritually minded walk in the Spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.16 be spiritual and heavenly in Prayer in hearing the Word in your Calling and you shall finde your lusts decay otherwise he that rusheth into occasions of sin needlesly he tempts the Devil to tempt him so that whereas the Devil might otherwise be much weakened and not so able to overcome if we invite occasions and rush into such places where Satan reigns we thrust Weapons into Satans hand and a man never ordinarily leads himself into temptation but he falls let Peter go into the High Priests Hall he shamefully denies his Master before he come out therefore take heed of running into occasions of sin 2 Refrain from the fruits of sin and grow Spiritually minded look after Spiritual objects when we are carried to Sensual objects when we are carried to delight in pleasures and pastimes why let us remember Blessed is the man that hath not walked c. Psal 1.1 2 3. but his delight is in the Law of the Lord he recreates himself his Soul in that such a man shall be as a tree planted by the rivers of water ever sucking sap and grace from the Ordinances that so he grows up but contrary such a one as runs into occasions and fullfills his ●●sts he shall be as a barren Heath and parched Wildernesse his leaf and fruit blasted We come now to the second sort of lusts Doct. Young and old are to be weaned from any lusts of the eye By the lust of the Eye is meant Covetousnesse or inordinate desire of profit 1 Because the Eye makes us covet it as Achan Josh 7.21 2 Because the eye in some measure is glutted with the sight of it Obj. Why doth he not speak of lusts of the Ear for 2 Tim. 2.4 there is an itching Ear thus the Athenians Acts 17 21 and so some have a strong affection to Musick and never well without it this is a lust of the Ear and why is not this reckoned as well as the lust of the eye Aquinas makes this Objection and answers it thus That these lusts stand not so much on the bodily eye as the imagination but the man may as well desire curiosities by the Ear as the Eye make us covet what it sees Answ The answer therefore is the Eye is the seat of sundry Faculties 1 It may be referred to the Understanding and Imagination for that is in the Soul Psal 33.18 2 The hope of a man is translated to his Eye 2 Chron. 20.12 sometimes pity Thine eye shall not spare Deut. 13. sometimes disdain expresseth it self in the eye sometimes pride Prov. 30. in a lofty look and the eye is put oft for the desire of the heart when the eye looks long after it Matth. 5.28 there is a desire that reacheth to something Psal 54. Psal 92.1 Mine eye also shall see my desire upon mine enemies not onely hopes but desires are ever in the eye It is true therefore that the desire of Melody is a lust of the flesh desire of news to satisfie curiosity affection of vain preaching tends to satisfie the pride of life for the lust of all outward senses as far as they satisfie the Senses and Body they belong to the lusts of the flesh but a longing earnest desire after profit is Covetousnesse which is a lust of the eye Q. 1. Wherein stands the lust of the eye A. Either when it is set on wrong objects or in excessive measure or to a wrong end and these the Scripture aims at if the
also between morall and spirituall between things of God and Satan and the World The second manifestation of this difference is the inclination of the end of the one and of the other By their fruits ye shall know them Mat. 7.20 Gal. 5.19 Obj. Cannot an hypocrite passe so as that he cannot be discerned What say you of Judas he was not discerned of a long time Mat. 26.22 for every of the Disciples began to suspect themselves 2 Cor. 1.13 14 15 16. Again Gods people carry things so weakly and the pulse of Gods grace beats so weakly as if no life and strength were in them 1 Kings 19.17 18. Psalm 12.1 Answ Sometimes hypocrisie is spun with so fine a thread and it is so well dyed as that you can hardly discern any difference And sometimes grace is so low in the heart as that you cannot discern it This is true but it is but for a time Judas at length was plainly known to have been but a theef 2 Tim. 3.8 9. Jannes and Jambres can do miracles as well as Moses and Aaron but in time they shall be discerned 1 Tim. 5.22 45. Lay hands suddenly on no man for if he prove not pure thou shalt be pertaker of his sins and all the hurt he doth Some mens sins lye open before hand i. e. before the judgement of the Church others follow after they cannot be hid God will have them made manifest in due time Luke 12.2 There is nothing so secret but it will be discovered If you put leaven into five pecks of meal it will not alwayes lye hidden but in time break forth Vse 1. An argument of just reproof to good men and bad If after a while we know not our selves 2 Cor. 13.5 As if it were a dangerous sign of a mans separation from God if after so long a time of the Apostles preaching they knew not what was in them 2. This reproves the Popish Doctors that say no man can discern his owne estate They alledge that place Eccl. 9.1 2. A man cannot know by outward things whether he be in Gods favour or not If a man come in a sheep-skin I shall take him to be a sheep Mat. 7.16 to 20. 3. To teach every one to take heed of a devillish spirit or any unrighteous course of life for though a man may hide it long yet at length it will be known It is as impossible that a mans want of love should not be known as for a man to keep fire in his bosome and it not to break out Psalm 36 2 3 4. 4. Of exhortation to all that are born of God not alwayes to smoother grace God will have your grace manifest and that to edifie withall 2 Cor. 12.7 Do not content your selves with close and houshold Christianity but manifest of what spirit you are It was commendable in Elizabeth to hide her selfe six moneths Luke 2.6 When she was stirring with childe then she visited her Cousen Mary So if God have wrought any conception of grace in our hearts it doth well to be concealed a while lest like the stony ground in time of persecution it should fall away When thou art sure there is a manifest work of Gods Spirit in thy heart then manifest thy selfe Doct. Not onely commission of sin but negligence of a Christian course of life is a manifest signe not of a child of God but a child of the Devil Mat. 3.10 Every tree that brings not forth good fruit is cut down and cast into the fire Psalm 36.1 3 4. There is no fear of God before their eyes How shall this appear to David He hath left off to do good he doth not shun evill but if an evill matter comes in his way he sets himselfe to work it Psal 116.12 He doth not study as David did What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits He that sets not himselfe in a good course is not the childe of God but of the Devil Reas 1. His wayes bear the image of Satan he was set in a good estate but he ceased to do good and set himselfe in a course now not good 2. From the necessary fruitfulnesse of the seed of God wheresoever it is Psalm 1.2 3. A childe of God is working in his minde and heart and alwayes doing good 3. From the hinderance which such put upon others that would do be ●r if such were removed Acts 13.10 The Devill is alwayes an impediment of good Luke 13.7 8 9. A man if he can do good and do not he cumbers the ground therefore cut him down Vse 1. To reprove the ignorance of such people that conceive if they do no body any harm they hope God will accept them but if it go badly with them what will become of whoremongers and adulterers c. Can you say you have devised good and watched your opportunity to be doing good This is a comfort to you But do not comfort your selves meerly in your innocency from evill without doing good 2. To teach us all as ever we desire an evident mark to our selves that we are children of God to turn Poets of righteousnesse it is the seed o● God that sets you a work God requires that we should be doing good with our estates that when we go hence we may say as John 17.3 4. Father I have finished the work that thou hast given me to doe 2 Kings 20.31 2 Chron. Rehoboam did evil in the sight of the Lord because he prepared not his heart he studyed not to do good Neither he that loveth not his Brother Doct. Not onely the hatred of our Brother but the want of love to our Brethren is a signe not of a childe of God but of the devill John 13.35 1 Kings 18.17 18 Reas 1. From the constant practise of God Is there any one of them which he hath adopted whom he loves not Mat. 10. ult And observe the contrary practice of Satan there is no childe of God but he is estranged from and sits loose from 2. From the want of knowledge of God 1 John 4.8 He knows not c. Here is a double reason 1. He hath not experience of Gods love 2. God is love When the Sun shines upon a stone wall though it be cold yet it reflects the heat back again upon every person So there is none that hath felt the warmth of Gods love upon his soul but though his heart were cold before yet he reflects it upon all 2. God is love It is a property inseparable from the nature of God he love● to communicate good 3. From the like condition of all Brethren He that loves not his Brother because he is a Brother he loves none at all He that loves not one of a mans children because he is born of such a man loves none of them A man may hate a Brother for some sinister respect as Joseph's Brethren it was a certain signe they were not born of God though afterward they
Vse 2. To reprove those that are close-handed and close-hearted Though a man should doe something for company sake and out of vain glory yet if he give not out of love and compassion how dwells the love of God in such a man 3 Comfort to poor men that are in need God so far takes their parts as that he thinks there is no love to God in him that loves not and helps not his Brother not that people should be idle and sturdy worke a slack and beg with a sturdy hand 1 JOHN 3.18 19. My little children let us not love in word neither in tongue but in deed and truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him THe Apostle exhorting to brotherly love useth divers arguments The third argument is taken from the security of such mens consciences that love in truth But a man say I may be decieved To this St. John answers If our own hearts condemne us not God will lesse condemne us Doct. That the love of christians one to another ought not to be verball or in world onely but in deed and in truth Not in tongue but in the truth of inward affection and deed and performance Psal 16 2 3. He confines not his love to them but that all is an universality of the Subject no part in him but expresseth love to them He loves them in his words thoughts carriages in his whole man Psal 122. two last verses 2 Sam. 1.26 His heart was dearly affected to David passing the love of women in affection action 1 Sam. 18.3 He loved him as his owne soul Reas 1 From the unprofitablenesse of lip love it will neither doe thee good nor thy Brother It is an empty love Let us not love with an empty love Jam. 2.15 16. This will doe our brother no good to pitty his nakednesse will doe him no good nor us either because as is our love to our Brother such is Gods love to us No man can assure himselfe of his hearty receiving Gods reall love unlesse he loves his brethren really and heartily 2. From the unsuitablenesse of this verball love to Gods love towards Christians Luke 1.78 Isa 55.3 It is an hearty love reall John 13.10 He loves his enemies Rom. 3.8 8.32 Vse 1. To reprove all such love as falls short of reality Some fall short of Lip-love cannot afford their Brother a good word or a good work when they know a word in season might be of such use for the maintaining of the innocency or honour of a man not a blossome of love grows upon the tongue 2. Such as give good words but their hands are withered and that ariseth from withered affections Prov. 23.7.8 He saith Eat and drinke but his heart is not with thee 2 Pet. 1.27 He shews every man wants ability to love his Brother if his heart be clogged with any base lust of envy coveteousnesse wantonnesse c. If there be any Kitchin lust it will not endure this heavenly fire Doct The sincerity of our love to our Brethren is the security of our consciences and estates before God Vse 1. To reprove the Popish doctrine That it is impossible to have a certainty of salvation The Apostle saith here We assure our hearts before God 2. Of exhortation unto brotherly love in sincerity and to grow up in it A man may give all that he hath and yet not know love Get your hearts purified from all lusts The Word of God will purifie you Psal 119.9 You shall finde a fresh spring of love bubling up and streaming forth and though your Brethren cannot recompence it to you yet you shall have peace 3. See here a means to seal confidence and beliefe of hearts Cleanse your hearts from sin that hinders brotherly love 4. Of comfort to those that love the Brethren heartily you may be assured of your good estates 1 JOHN 3.20 21. For if our heart condemn us God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God THese two Verses declare the good or evill estate of a man according to the good or evill report of our consciences Doct. According to the verdict or testimony of our consciences God will save us or condemn us at the last day If our hearts condemn us God knows more by us to condemn us By heart here is meant conscience For S. John here speaks an Hebraism The Old Testament hath not conscience onely the New Prov. 15.15 2 Sam. 24.10 If our conscience record we are innocent God in Heaven will record it Titus 3.10.11 Reas 1. From the office of coscience which hath a fivefold work 1 Conscience useth to be an observer and spyer of what a man is and what a man doth Prov. 14.10 Another knows not what a man is but himselfe doth Conscience is a good companion of the good the worst of the bad Prov. 15.15 A good conscience is a feast There is good company where a good conscience is No man knows so well as his conscience doth 2 Conscience is a regester of what we have done long ago 1 Kings 2.44 Whereto thy heart is privy He means his conscience Gen. 42.20 21. 3 Conscience is a witnesse and will either accuse or excuse Rom. 2.15 Excuse in well-doing accuse in ill-doing Heb. 13.18 Rom. 14.12 2 Cor. 1.12 4 Conscience is a Judge either to clear or condemn 1 Cor. 4.3 Gen. 20.5 5. It is an Executioner of what God gives judgement and sentence It goes before Gods judgement and witnesseth Mat. 27.4 5. But after Gods sentence and his word Conscience doth execute it Rom. 8.15 then Conscience poures upon us horrors and terrours which is a forerunner of hell onely differing in measure and durance Thus Conscience doth to good men upon some occasions So David when he had numbred the people 2 Sam. 24.10 I have done very foolishly he speaks with some bitternesse of heart Acts 2.37 This is called pricking of heart Prov. 18.14 A wounded spirit who can bear Why doth God put such a faculty into men 1. That God might manifest his being There is no stronger evidence of Gods being For to whom doth it witnesse Is it not to God Before whom doth it condemn or to whom is it an executioner if there were no God 2. His own providence And we must not think that God mindes not things below if he did not why is Conscience afraid and comforted if God did not look into Conscience 3 For Gods justice that he might magnifie it God proceeds in his Judicial course without any witnesse but Conscience If God have none to bear witnesse how shall he magnifie his justice in condemning secret sins 4. Gods mercy If God be angry with a man it is an advantage to a man that he knows it Acts 9.6 Heb. 9.14 As Conscience doth determine here so will God in another world Conscience is Gods Vicegerent set up
out of his sight though it was good yet it did not speak the truth concerning David Thirdly There is a conscience which is neither good nor quiet such was Judas his conscience Mat. 27.3 4. Fourthly There is a conscience both good and peaceable which walks in Gods commandements and if he slip out of Gods commandements he looks at himselfe as out of the way he finds refreshments in walking in Gods ways he could not by any means part with Gods commandements he had rather part with his life and all that he hath But on the contrary if a man keep not Gods commandements he is so far from making scruple of any sin that he allows himselfe in any sin yea in all sin Vse 2. It exhorts us all to take the right way to keep Gods commandemens and to keep a good conscience Obj. What shall we get by this Answ In keeping Gods commandements is great reward You shall keep a good house at home and favour in heaven A good conscience is worth keeping it will uphold thy heart against all discouragements thou shalt meet withall in the world and thou shalt have peace with God by keeping his commandements you shall keep a good conscience which is a continuall feast The peace of a good conscience is the greatest blessing in the world nothing in the world can take it away A man may keep all other things and yet not a good conscience but without a good conscience what good will they all doe thee at the last day Wherefore above all things have a care to keep it it will be more joy to thee then all worldly contentments Psal 4.6 7. 3. This may be matter of comfort and consolation to every such soule that hath a care to keep Gods commandements for such a man keeps Gods favour in heaven and a good conscience on earth which is a continuall feast 1 JOHN 3.23 And this is his commandement that we should believe on the Name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another as he gave us commandement IN this Verse he shews you what this commandement is in keeping of which we obtain the grant of our prayers This is his commandement that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and that we love one another Doct. That in stead of loving God with all our hearts the great and first commandement now is that we believe in the Name of the Lord Jesus When the holy Ghost would rank all the commandements under two heads he reduces them to these two First That in stead of loving God with all our hearts we must believe in Jesus Christ Secondly In stead of loving our neighbour as our selves that we love our Brethren as Christ commands When Christ was demanded what was the first and great commandement he answered Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and the second is like unto this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Mat. 22.36 to 39. But the Apostle John he sums up the commandements in these two He saith not here these are the commandements but this is the commandement As if he should have said there is no more commanded of God 2 Tim. 1.13 Keep a pattern of wholsome words which is the sum of them Faith and love in Christ Jesus Q. What is meant by the Name of Jesus Christ Ans Here is not meant the letters or syllables of the Name of Jesus There is no other name under heaven whereby we can be saved but by the Name of Jesus Acts 4.12 It were superstition to believe there were virtue in the letters or syllables of the name Jesus He means there is no person under heaven whereby we can be saved but onely by him who is named the Lord Jesus As it is Gen. 13.4 Abraham called on the name of the Lord that is upon the Lord Phil. 2.10 The Apostle saith At the name of Jesus every knee shall bow So Isa 45.24 there you may see what is meant by the Name Jesus and what is to bow to the Name Jesus Rom. 14.11 To bow to or worship the Name Jesus is to worship the Person of Jesus He doth therefore add Name to the Lord Jesus because we do believe in Christ by those attributes given to him it is by Christ we are saved Now if we did not consider him as a Priest a Prophet and a King he could not have saved us these offices of Christ are the name of Christ Q. What is meant by believing in his Name A. There are three acts of Faith in believing in the Name of the Lord Jesus 1. To be perswaded of his goodnesse and promises Doubting is opposed to faith Rom. 4.20 Doubting and perswasion are acts of the minde 2. Faith is an act of a mans will whereby he trusts on the name of the Lord Jesus Not to beleeve in God is not to trust on God for his salvation Psal 78.22 Credere in Christum 1 Pet. 2.6 is as it were to rowle our selves upon Christ There are two things in Gods promises 1. Truth 2. Goodnesse Vnderstanding believes the truth will accepts and closes with the goodnesse These be acts about a promise 3. There is a true faith but yet weak which doth not reach to those and yet reach to believeing in his Name and hath salvation by his Name which is when a man can abide by the Lord and will not away till he blesse him like Jacob Gen 32.26 This is the same with drawing neer to God Psal 73.28 A man draws neer to God when he is willing to forake all his lusts and can find no satisfaction in earthly things but onely in the Lord. Reas 1. It is a work of greater honour to God to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ then to love God when we know him to be our friend When a Christian doth first begin to believe in Christ he doth not take God as a friend but as an enemy now to cleave to God when he is an enemy is more then to love God when he is a friend unto us For a soul to throw it self on God when he is terrible and seems as an angry God now not to let him go till he shews us mercy is a famous thing The faith of a weak Christian becomes more famous then the love of a strong Christian The one hath had the experience of Gods love the other never felt the warmth of Gods Spirit in the heart 2. This doth magnifie the grace of God because such a soul as believes in Christ doth rely on Christ for every blessing he doth not trust on the best graces he hath received he doth not trust on his own faith but he trusts on Christ for the favour of God and he believes that for his sake every promise shall be fulfilled This great commandment gives God Christ all the honour 3. Because by faith we rest on God for all the good we stand in need of Rom. 4.16 4. From the wickednesse of
conscience nor shew how to lay hold of eternall life and to make their calling and election sure and if they speak of heavenly matters at any time they see such speak but with a cold affection and therefore they goe home and not affect them but when a godly Minister preaches in an heavenly manner he being moved by a godly principle his conversation is in Heaven Phil. 3.20 he talks of Heaven Mat. 12.35 A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Vse If Ministers would know their own spirits let them consider what doctrine they deliver what end they aime at and what are their hearers and so by this means they will easily discern their own spirits 1 JOHN 4.7 8. Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God c. IN the words and the verse following the Apostle exhorts his hearers and himselfe to mutuall love one of another the occasion is from what he had delivered verse 6. In the words First An exhortation to mutuall love between Ministers and people Secondly A reason to presse this on them 1 From the Originall of their love that is from God 2 From the Estate of such who love they are born of God and know God 3 From the evill estate of such as doe not love they know not God this is proved by an argument from Gods Nature for God is love Doct. That it is the part of godly Ministers to exhort themselves and their godly hearers to mutual love both the people to love their Ministers and the Ministers their people When our Saviour was about to leave the charge of the souls of his people to Peter he asked him three severall times whether he loved him John 21.15 16 17. that so out of his aboundant love to Christ he might feed his sheep 1 Thes 5.13 esteeming him they would love him for his work sake Heb. 10.24 the Apostle exhorts them to provoke one another to love Heb. 13.1 whatsoever happens he would have brotherly love to continue so St. Peter exhorts 1 Pet. 1.22 Reas 1. From the Covenant that stands between Ministers and people they are partakers of one baptisme members of one and the same body 1 Cor. 10.17 1 Cor. 12.27 therefore they should inlarge themselves one to another Eph. 4.16 they should love one another because God hath incorporated them into one body 2. Because they doe not receive mutuall edification except all be done in love for all edification is wrought by love Knowledge puffeth up but love edifieth therefore let all things be done in love mutuall love is both profitable and comfortable 3. Want of love is the sowring of a Ministers spirit 2 Cor. 12.20 it saddens him when he sees the people envying one another when the body is full of swellings and inflammations the medicines and plaisters laid on doe not heal a man must first allay the inflamations so when a Minister sees swelling amongst his people what he preacheth is spilt upon the ground 4. If people walk not in mutuall love the Minister shall lose his portion 1 Thes 5.13 from them he shall lose his estimation among them for they will not profi● by any Ordinance of God but wax cold Vse 1. This exhorts Ministers to make it their main and principall work to alla● swellings and to knit together all the Members of a Congregation in one spirit and mutuall love as God knits them together in one body as we desire to grow up together in the graces of Gods Spirit let us love one another where there is no love there is no edifying all graces fall short of edifying where love is wanting 1 Cor. 13.1 2. 2 To exhort the people of God to receive this exhortation of love not to suffer any dissention to be found among them Heb. 13.17 you cannot be inflamed with hatred but your Minister shall lose his portion of love Doct. That the springing of our love from God should move Ministers and people to mutual love Love is the chiefe lesson Christ gave to his Disciples when he went out of the world John 13.35 36. 2 Tim. 1.13 a man may assoon lose his inheritance in the Lord Jesus as lose his love to his brethren if God set love in my soule and man unset it I shall destroy the work of God in my soule Vse 1. Take heed of wrath if love be of God whence then is hatred that is from the enemy of God Eph. 4.26 27. if we keep leaven long it will sowre so this anger will degenerate into hatred Obj. You will say You will not hate your brother but yet you will have nothing to doe with him Answ When a man affects not Communion with his brother nor communication of good to him such a man doth hate his brother 2. If we would have any comfort in our hearts we must have a care that nothing that befalls betwixt us and our brethren should take away our love from them if we suffer a fire of wrath to kindle in us we doe as much as in us lies to destroy our own souls Cant. 7.7 8. Much water cannot quench love therefore love is an heavenly fire hatred a fire from hell Majus lumen extinguet minus Doct. That the love to our brethren is a pledge of our birth-right John 13.34 Reas 1. It is the nature of God and by this means thou partakest of the D●vine Nature Rom. 5.5 2. Love is a fruit of faith by which we receive Christ Gal. 5.6 Vse 1. This condemns such of deep prodigality as suffer love to decay so much you lose of your love to your brethren so much you lose of your love to God and so much you lose of the evidence of your inheritance 2. Preserve your love to your brethren and you preserve your inheritance your brotherly love is a pledge of your inheritance 3. Of comfort to such souls as abound in their love to their brethren so much love so much grace so much hope of an everlasting inheritance if your love decays your faith and hope of salvation decays Obj. But a little thing frets my soul and I am not so soon healed being fretted some flesh is hard to heal so is it with some mens spirits What shall I doe to uphold my brotherly love Answ 1. Keep your love to God and so you shall preserve your love to your brethren forgive your brethren and God will forgive you Mat. 18. ult 2. Keep your hearts clean love will not long rest in an unclean heart 1 Pet. 1.22 because love is an heavenly fire 1 JOHN 4.8 He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love Doct. THat according to our love or want of love to our brethren such is our knowledge or want of knowledge of God What is it to know God The Apostle bears witnesse of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.5 that they abound in knowledge so that they fall
short of no gift yet 1 Cor. 1.10 he complains that there is schism among them therefore there may be knowledge of God and yet want of love to our brethren Answ 1. The knowledge that is there spoken of is a knowledge that enlightens the understanding that puffes up and swims in the brain it sinks not into their hearts and affections 2. There is a knowledge that reacheth to the heart and life of a man a man is said not to know when he doth not acknowledge Psal 1.6 The Lord knows the way of the righteous the Lord approves affects and delights in their way when a man doth not regard he is said not to know Mat. 7.23 Known unto God are all his works Acts 15.18 3. There is a knowledge that doth expresse its selfe in action Know you the God of thy Fathers 1 Chron. 18.9 1 Sam. 2.12 the Sons of Eli they knew not God though Priests yet knew not the way of Religion because they were wicked children without yoak they are not acquainted with the wayes of the Lord. Reas 1. From the nature of God both in his attributes and works both expresse in abundance that those that know God cannot but love their brethren for no attribute doth so much expresse the nature of God as this of love 2 If we know God and be acquainted with God there will be some likenesse between God and us if we see God loving godly Ministers and hearers so will we Gal. 6.10 3. From the impression which the love of God makes in our hearts Rom. 5.5 our hearts are like to a stone-wall in a cold day the wall is cold always but warmed on a Sun-shine day 4. From our love to God What causeth you to love God if for this because he pardons your sins and saves your soules this a man may doe by a spirit of false love he that loves God truly will love him for his goodnesse not onely to us but to others Vse 1. This may be a ground of tryall of our love and fellowship with God if you find in your hearts an unfeigned love to godly Ministers if you make Gods serv●nts the men of your delight you need no better evidence from Heaven that you are beloved of God Obj. I am acquainted with many godly Ministers and good men Answ Consider whether thou lovest them for thy own sake because they may be helpfull to thee this is from self-self-love but dost thou love a Minister or a Christian for his goodnesse sake for his likenesse to God for his graces and vertues this is a signe thou lovest him not for thy sake but Gods 2. This exhorts every such soule as desires fellowship with God to be acquainted with God to love their brethren you come to the Ordinances of God and you finde not Christ you come into Christian Communion and find little comfort know this that according to your love to your brethren such is Gods love to you if there be any strangenesse in you to any brethren this will make God strange to you all the affections we find in prayer in reading preaching or any Ordinance of God they will prove but delusions if we love not our brethren 1 JOHN 4.9 In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the world that we might live through him THe second Argument to move us to brotherly love is taken from the example of God the Fathers love to us ward A third argument is taken from the benefit which such receive which walke in love among themselves The benefit is twofold 1 They have fellowship with God they see the face of God and find God dwelling within them to verse 16. The second benefit is they grow up to perfection without love there is no growth of grace These words then contain an argument to move us to love our Brethren and it 's taken from Gods love Wherein we have 1 The manifestation of Gods love 2 The Object towards us 3 The evidence thereof because he sent his Son 4 The place whereto he sent his Son and that is into the world as also with the end that we might live through him In this was manifested the love of God towards us Doct. That God doth not only bestow love upon his people but it is his good pleasure to manifest it Rom. 5.8 Psal 98.2 3. Isa 52.10 There is the mighty power of God by which he overcomes all our sins by which he redeemeth us Luk. 3.6 All flesh shall see the salvation of our God yea more then all flesh for it is manifested 1 To the Angels Luke 2.13 14. 2 To mens consciences Rom. 5.8 Gal. 2.20 God commonly gives us no gifts but he is willing his Spirit should shew unto us his love 3 This love of God is manifested to the rest of mankind Rev. 3.9 Reas From Gods glory Luke 2.14 the high praises of God were in their mouthes Jerusalem shall be comforted because God will make bare his arm in the redemption of his people Isa 52.9 10. 2 If God did not reveal our salvation to us it would be no comfort to us but when it is manifested it is a ground of joy 3 It 's a means to draw on many men into the unfeigned love of God which otherwise might be left in darknesse Zech. 8.23 When the love of God is manifested to the children of men it doth raise them up to seek God Cant. 5.16 therefore the daughters of Jerusalem are provoked to seek Christ Jesus with the rest of his people when they discern what a gracious God he is to them that cleave to him in a conjugall affection Psal 106.45 this encourageth them that are coming on in the wayes of grace and discourageth them that doe not and convinceth them that are of the Synagogue of Satan who know that he is the Lord. Vse 1. This should teach the servants of God not only to bear an hidden love but also a manifest love to Christ now indeed are the time wherein men need not be ashamed to manifest their love but if times grow hard then men will come to Christ by night as Nicodemus did but God requires if he manifest his love to your conscience that you should make it known to the world and not to be like Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Joh. 9.38 39. If we be ashamed of him in the world he will be ashamed of us before his Father Mark 8 38. when Christ hung on the Crosse Joseph came in boldly to Pilate and asked the body of Jesus Mark 15.43 which shewes you that where there is truth of grace though it be close at the first coming on yet when there is danger indeed every man will put forth himselfe to bear witnesse to the truth Doct. That God bare love to us before he sent his Son to reconcile us to himself The sending of Christ into the world was out of free love for his love moved him
to send Christ Rom. 5.8 John 3.16 Christ saith God so loved the world that he gave hu only begotten Son into the world c. Reas He dyed for us to make an atonement for us Christ did not come unsent he was sent before he went Heb. 5.45 Quest How can this be seeing the death and blood of Christ is the Originall of our reconciliation Rom. 5.10 Rom 3.24 25. Answ 1. Christ by his blood wrought reconciliation because God loved us before yet we loved not him before for there must be a mutuall fellowship in reconciling us to God 2 Cor. 5.16 not so much in reconciling himselfe to the world in the 20. verse he saith we pray you in Christs stead which shewes you that Christs blood did not so much reconcile God to us as us unto God that we seeing the blood of Christ shed for us we might be stirred up to love God who out of the abundance of his compassion takes a course that we may be brought unto him 2 Because though he did bear love to us before yet his love was secret and he did not breake forth into a manifestation of his love to us untill he sent his Son into the world though God did love us with an everlasting love Jer. 31.3 yet God did not manifest it to our conscience neither could it stand with his Justice so to doe untill he had given his Son the Lord Jesus Christ to dye for us Quest What kind of love was it that God bare to the world in that he sent his Son Tit. 3.5 was it his love towards mankinde by which he did love the whole world or a peculiar love which he bare to the people of the Election of grace Joh. 3.16 The Arminians say that he bare a love to the World and this love was generall to all before the sending of Christ and therefore all may be saved The truth is that God bare a love to the world a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reaching to all but he bare an antient love to his owne people had he onely bore a generall love as they say all men might have perished for if God sent his Son that whosoever believed should be saved was it in the will to believe or not yes say they he gave them means but they might will or not if this was a generall love then there was a greater love then the sending of Christ which is contrary to Scripture Greater love then this hath no man Vse 1. Let us magnifie the love of God to us in Christ we esteeme much of ancient love it like wine is the best God loved us before he did send Christ before the foundation of the world was laid Jer. 31.3 This love was without reason on our parts for we were enemies to him 2 This exhorts us to accept this love shall God send his Embassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 and shall we still stand out with God 3 If God so loved the world we ought to love one another Doct. God sending his only begotten Son into the world is a manifest token of Gods love to us John 3.16 God so loved the world this love is manifest 1 If we consider that God doth not only send us bodily bread every day but the bread of eternall life not so much the gift as the giver himself 2 Consider upon what tearmes we stood with God when he sent us his on Even then when we provoked him to his face and were enemies to his Majesty Rom. 5.8 3 Consider we that God looked not at the Angels but the seed of man God passed over Angels left them in chains of darknesse Heb. 2.16 but of man he said shall he fall and not rise again Consider we were strangers and enemies to God dead in sins and trespasses and so we did neither desire nor deserve love yet us he hath reconciled Col. 1.21 Ephes 2.4 5. 4 Consider Christ who was sent had it been a morsell of dayly bread it had been a great mercy but in Christ he sent an horn of salvation Psal 89.19 Luke 1.69 Consider Christ not as a servant but a Son and a well-beloved Son in whom he was well pleased and such a Son as thought it no blasphemy to think and say he was equall with God Phil. 2.5 6. 5 Consider whither God sent his Son into the world our salvation could not be wrought in heaven it was no place for suffering no place for a man to be born in therefore needfull that Christ should come down Consider the world did not put on Christ that honour which was due unto him but rather dishonour a Crown of thorns Consider the more the world knew him the more they hated him in heaven they adore and honour him but you have known me and hated me saith he John 15.18 This is the heir come let us kill him Vse 1 Learn hence to acknowledge the Divinity of the nature of Christ he is called the only begotten Son of God therefore of the same nature with God Phil. 2.5 6. 2 This shewes you the love of the Father to us in that he sends his Son to be a ransom for us when all other signes fail you if God give you his only Son that is a true token of Gods love Eccles 9 1. 3 This shewes us the woeful misery that we naturally ly in when as Christ must come down from heaven or else we could not have heen saved no man nor Angel could doe it 4 This should stir us all up to accept of this love of God that God sends forth such a manifest token of his love to us and shall not we accept of it We should accept a small gift from a Prince 5 To perswade us all that if God gives Christ he will deny us nothing Rom. 8.32 we may goe boldly to the throne of grace and he will fill our mouthes 6 This should cause us to returne back again to God manifest pledges of our love to him let us give body and soul to God since he hath not been wanting in his love to us doth not love require love Psal 116.12 Train we up our children to know God and draw we as many as we can to know God there is no greater dishonour to God then to refuse this manifest love of God The end for which God sent his Son into the world was that we might live through him Doct. That our life was the end why God sent Christ Or thus God therefore sent Christ that we might live by him Joh. 1.10 11. Quest What is the life that Christ came to procure for us Answ 1. A life of Gods favour in poynts of Justification sanctification and consolation that is the chiefest life for the soul of a christian the manifestation of Gods love to his conscience though God loved us before he sent Christ yet we knew not so much there is a life of Justification Rom. 5.18 that is the pardon of our sins In his favour is life Psal 30.5
The Sun is the life of many Vermine take away the Sun and they dye as flyes but when the Sun shines in its season they live let God take away the Sun-shine of his favour from us we can neither pray nor preach we live a life of grace of holinesse Prov. 16.14 15. Rom. 8.2 Ephes 2.4 5. there is life enougst in Christ to procure us life 2 There is a life of glory of which it is said John 10.27 28. That Christ gives to his sheep eternall life 1 Cor. 15.4 5. John 5.24 28 29. so many whose souls receive life by the Word of the Gospel their bodies shall rise to eternall life How did Christ procure us this life He procured this by his death Rom. 5.9 10. while we were yet enemies we were yet reconciled by the death of Christ We received life of grace and holinesse by his means I will pour out my Spirit of grace upon all flesh Reas 1. It was unpossible our corrupt nature should fulfill any law of God Rom. 8.4 Gal. 3.21 2 The glory of Christ requires that as the Father quickneth so he also John 5.21 Vse 1. This shewes us what our condition is without Christ if God send Christ that we might live through him then in Gods fight without Christ we are dead as dead flyes dead wormes in a cold frost we are utterly dead without true peace we are like thorns that give a blaze but we lye down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Christ is our life without him we can doe nothing we are not able to put forth any spirituall action 2 Let us try our estates Whether can we say that God sent his Son into the world and hereby manifested his love to us Doe you live in Gods sight without him we are but dry bones untill we can say we live in Christ we cannot say we have any sense of Gods favour 3 It teacheth such as have any evidence of life in Christ Joh. 10.10 to come into Gods presence as dry bones intreat God that he would so speake the word as that those dry bones may live 4 To teach all such as have received this manifest token of Gods love to acknowledge the Lord Christ to be their life Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain now Paul is crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and now for him to live is Christ now every day he lives he doth the more expresse Christ 1 JOHN 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Doct. THe love of God to us was not procured by our love to him but his own good pleasure he therefore loved us because it pleased him So that in these words we have the freenesse of Christs love he loved us freely because he loved us when we loved not him we did not begin in love to him but he to us and this is set out by the effect and end of it the pardon of our sins What is that love God bare to us before we loved him Answ There is a threefold principle of love which God magnifies and manifests to his people before they love him 1 That love whereby he chose us to life and to redeem us by Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 and the choyce to life was not according to workes but free grace 2 Gods love in redeeming us by Christ was before any love of ours to God Joh. 3.16 3 His love prevented us by effectually calling us drawing implies unwillingnesse therefore it prevented all good affections in us he must draw us out of presumption then out of despair Reas From the difference between the care of Gods love and of our love self love is so ●iveted in our hearts that we cannot love any unlesse it be for some cause concerning us a natural man loves none any further then tends to profit or pleasure but a Christian is inlarged to all Gods children he loves them all and the ground of this is because we know such to be incorporated into the same body with us and so as we see them in some kind our own and so we should never have loved God unlesse we had found his love to us Object A christian comes off freely to many ●ffices of love to them that love not him Answ True but it is because he knows God can abundantly recompence it they sometimes may lay down their lives for their brethren and for the Truth but they know that Christ hath done it for them before 2 From the eternity of Gods love now Jer. 31.3 an everlasting love can have no cause the cause is alwayes before the effect no temporall thing can be the cause of an eternall love 3 From the end of Gods love that he might bring us to walke in love Ephes 1.4 Tit. 2.14 The love of God to his people of old is a fir president to all his children Deut. 7.8 9. compared with Deut. 9.4 5 6. Vse 1. Refutes a popish and Arminian conceit that God chooseth none to life but out of foreseen faith and good works else he had chosen none to life but this is a mercenary love let a servant labour never so hard yet he knows he shall be well paid at the years end and therefore it is servile love this is that love which they would put upon God 2 It exhorts all to begin betimes to love God begin never so soon God hath prevented us Rom. 11.35 it was an early love of Josiah at twelve years of age when he sought after God but Gods love was up before him you cannot be in your love before him though you begin as soon as you are warm in the womb John Baptist was very early when he leaped for joy in the womb yet Gods love was before him an Angel had appeared to his Father and had promised a blessing before John was begotten 3 To teach old people if God have prevented them with love long before how should this stir them up to love God and to be humbled for the want of love to God that hath loved them so long Shall we be to seek in our love to God and cleave to worldlinesse in our old times and let God stay till our children be provided for What an unworthy dealing is this with God This should exhort all Gods servants that have had experience of Gods love to acknowledge the freedome of Gods love Job by Gods testimony was a man that feared God and eschewed evill What saith the Devill Doth Job serve God for naught No but though God had stript him of all as he did yet he had shewed such marvellous love to his soul as that he had just cause to love God for ever if God should not have bestowed on him one dram of wealth 4 This should teach Gods children to be as observant in love to Gods children as God is to them to love them freely to doe kindnesse to them freely Psal 16.2 3.
of God shining in our hearts the mercy of God pacifying our souls so that now we do not onely believe the promises belonging to us but the feelings of Gods love is a manifestation of Gods grace John 14.21 22. If any man love me saith Christ and keep my Word my Father will love him and we will come in to him and make our abode with him As we grow in love so the comforts of Gods Spirit grow in us The ground of this reason is taken from Gods nature who is love God is not said to be faith or hope but love and the more any man hath received of love the nearer doth he come to God and the readier is he to be doing good offices and to be helpful Reas 2. From the cause of love we know God dwels in us and wee in him because we have received a Spirit of love We could not receive a spirit of love if we did not receive a spirit of faith Gal. 5.6 We could not love our brethren if we had not faith to believe in Christ Now where faith is there Christ dwels Ephes 3.17 This reason is from the cause of love Vse 1. Of consolation to loving Christians they have manifest experience and knowledge of Gods love Hereby we know that God dwells in us and we in him The benefit of a loving spirit is this that it keeps fellowship with God and that entire fellowship A loving man doth not onely believe that he hath fellowship with God but he knows it he hath evident reason for it 2 To teach such as want the goodnesse of the promises they are not sensisible of Gods favour they have no sensible experience of it they may be perswaded that God will shew them mercy at the end but yet they do not know it If thou wilt know the fellowship between God and thy soule then pray more that the Sprit of love may dwell in thee as thy love grows so shalt thou grow in sensible experience of Gods love to thee God crowns faith with trust and confidence and assurance but he crowns love with experience If you want experience of Gods love then think surely there is some weed of envy wrath and hatred from which if thou cleanse thy heart thou shalt not onely have assurance but experience 3 This refutes the Papists that say a man cannot know that God dwels in him this is an evident signe that they have neither faith nor love if they had faith they should have assurance if love they should have experience 1 JOHN 4.14 And we have seen and doe testifie that the Father sent the Sonne to be the Saviour of the world Doct. THat such as love one another they have seen and do beare witnesse of the Father sending his Son to be a Saviour of the world John 13.4.5 Reas This word sight is more then believing for the Apostle put a difference between them 2 Cor. 4.3 We believe that Christ sits at the right hand of God but we have not seen it when he saith They have seen he would have you know that they have had experimental knowledge all sight is an act of sense and riseth from some ground of reason reason is from sensible feeling which every loving soule hath found that God hath sent his Son to be a Saviour of the world a Christian knows that except his heart be warmed with the love of God he cannot love his brethren The woman in the Gospel of whom Christ asked a little water when she saw that Christ was the Messiah and had convinced her of her sins John 4. she left her water pots vers 20. and ran into the City and saith to the men Come see a man that hath told me all that ever I did is not this the Christ Vers 29. and vers 39 40. When the Samaritans were warmed with his words they besought him to stay amongst them and many of them believed in him so that so much sight of Christ so much love Reas 2. From the knowledg that such have of Gods love unto themselves the Lord hath sent his Son to save the world the Lord hath sent his Son into the world to save us from his own wrath and shall we bear wrath and malice towards those that are his a Christian will be ashamed that his heart should be wrathful and malicious he will be reconciled to his hrethren when a Christian walks in love he hath seen the Saviour of the world and hath known him for that makes him love them because God sent his Son to save them They bear witnesse If a man refuse the love of his brethren he denies that God sent his Sonne to be a Saviour of his brethren from his wrath God sent his Sonne to save us from hell death and the grave and from all evill we may meet with God hath promised to with hold no good thing from them that feare him but if death and sicknesse be good we shall have them Psal 84.11 Now if we with-hold any good from our brethren we bear witnesse that Christ came not into the world to save them Vse 1. This should teach us to lay down all wrath and hatred and to be discouraged from harbouring any such distempers in our souls for else you proclaim before God Angels and men that God did did not send his Son to be a Saviour for shall Christ come to save his people from the wrath of God and from the Devil and shall he not free his people from my wrath Either make Christ a whole Saviour else make him no Saviour at all If Christ save from any evill he will save from all Agrippa was a Christian in part but Christ was not a Saviour in part 2 To exhort every soule to be loving to their brethren the more you abound in love to your brethren the more you testifie that God sent his Sonne into the world to be a Saviour and the more love will God expresse to your soules 3 Of consolation to such as love all men but especially to such as are of the houshold of Faith such a man hath seen that God hath sent his Son to be a Saviour of the world As Gods will is they shou d be saved so for his part his will is they should be saved such a man may be perswaded that God hath forgiven him his sins 1 JOHN 4.15 Whosoever shall confesse that Jesus is the Son of God God dwelleth in him and he in God THe 14 and 15 verses contain an argument of Gods love dwelling in us the proposition is laid down vers 14. the assumption vers 15. Doct. The confession that Jesus Christ is the Son of God is a true note or pledge of our mutual entire and constant fellowship with God They have entire fellowship because they doe not onely dwell one with another but one in another as members in the body as branches in the root Whosoever shall confesse Jesus c. So that this is one mark of
Gods adversaries Heb. 10.27 Reas 4. Consider the subject of all this fear and torment and that is the conscience and heart of man the judgement and will the will that before was most tough and obstinate of all the faculties these torments make it soft and tender therefore it s said Josiahs heart melted at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34.17 Job 23.16 the heart is made raw and tender that look at raw flesh would be against the fire so the tender raw conscience is anguished with this fire of Gods wrath according to that old saying He that would goe to heaven must sayl by hell gates Vse 1. To stir up all such who have any of their friends thus exercised to pity and compassionate them Is it nothing to you that passe by that Gods hand lies so sore on him to him that is afflicted pity should be shewn by his friends but they forsake the fear of the Almighty Job 6.14 Even as some Sea-men at their first voyage they can pity those that are Sea sick and tost but afterward they grow sencelesse so when Christians first lanch out themselves into this troublesome condition they could have pityed others in the like case but through custome men forsake the fear of the Almighty for though commonly these fears be safe yet they may end in despair and therefore pity should be shewed them Job never cryed out for help in the losse of his children or estate but when Gods hand touched his soul then he called upon all that feared God to pity him and indeed God is very sensible of all such as compassionate them why if ever God send them comfort he will restore comfort likewise to their mourners Isa 57.78 for those torments are not alwayes safe except you finde then mixt with some spark of faith and love but however God looks that if he be angry we should fear Vse 2. From those that are thus afflicted learn to be sensible of your estate and doe not think this estate desperate for this torment may be healed and therefore let labour in this case to seek out for healing is a man in torment and wi●● 〈◊〉 live and die what in torment and not seek out for help Quest How shall help my selfe in this case Answ 1. God would hereby have you know something which you never considered before know therefore and see that is an evill thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God we have gone on obstinately and cast aside Gods yoak therefore thy own wickednesse shall corrrect thee therefore know and see and learn by it to see the danger of sin and if thou begin to be tendable there is hope this torment will end well know that it is an evill to provoke God to such fierce anger for as you have prest God Amos 2.13 so he will presse you 2. Confesse thy sins to God lay open thy wayes and set them in order before him and by this means you will finde an unmeasurablenesse of ease Psal 32. to 6. he that confesseth his sins shall finde mercy Prov. 28.13 And with this confession adde prayer for pardon and healing of thy sins and God ordinarily will heal such Hos 14.3 4 5. Job 33.27 28. 3. Use the Ordinances the Word the Sacraments Christian Communion these are of speciall use to quiet the afflicted conscience Isa 57.19 I create the fruit of the lips peace God by the lips of his Ministers secretly drops sweet balm and so in the Sacrament behold the bloud of the New Testament shed for thee for such souls especially is Christs bloud and for Christian Communion read Job 16.5 The movings of my lips should have asswaged your griefe he would have spoke words which should have been as balm or oyl to a Christian soul 4. Bow your hearts to wait on God patiently as he hath waited on you the soul is ready soon to wax weary and to say Wherefore should I wait on the Lord any longer Isa 50.10 Tarry but a while and he that shall come will come and will not delay 5. Prize the least expression of Gods mercy to thy soul praise him for dealing thus with thee that he would take such pains with thee First Blesse him that thou art yet on this side hell crying for mercy it s a greater blessing then all the Devills or damned have Secondly It s another fruit of Gods love to thee that he hath applyed a fit medicine to the frame of thy spirit Jer. 2.17 Thou drinkest but of the cup thou brewest thy selfe that God should thus hedge thee in with his hands and break thy heart and lay it on so sure this is such a mercy as we cannot be sensible of Thirdly Another fruit of Gods love is that hereby he cuts you off not onely from the wildnesse and loosenesse of thy heart but from taking further day with him we are ready to put off repentance from time to time to the cool of the day and the evening of our age but when God imbitters our soules with this torment of conscience then we should stand out no longer but the soule longs and cryes for mercy this night before the morning then they could wish no greater blessing then Gods favour Psal 4.5 6. 〈…〉 such 〈…〉 in 〈…〉 is not 〈◊〉 to brook the 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 ●roken th● 〈…〉 〈…〉 out take 〈…〉 us 〈◊〉 what an 〈…〉 back 〈…〉 with 〈…〉 fell 〈…〉 part of 〈…〉 found 〈…〉 from 〈…〉 and ●udg● 〈…〉 is not 〈…〉 full 〈…〉 not●rious 〈…〉 there 〈…〉 ●ound hearted 〈…〉 〈…〉 is a double 〈…〉 ●he day of judgement of 〈…〉 〈…〉 When a man i● afraid of 〈…〉 men 〈…〉 ever so right and 〈…〉 men 〈…〉 ●9 〈…〉 of ●en bringeth a f●●r 〈…〉 ●●ese are ●●sound 〈◊〉 a 〈…〉 no● though 〈…〉 in the midst of the shadow of death 〈…〉 〈…〉 which is unbeliefe for faith 〈…〉 Eph. 〈…〉 We have accesse with confidence 〈…〉 therefore which 〈◊〉 fear in unbeliefe Rev. 2● 8 ●elievers together that 〈◊〉 that believe● not Gods 〈…〉 or goo● 〈…〉 fearfull heart 〈…〉 this fear it drives us from God men ●●ossest with 〈…〉 ●hall cry to the Mountains to cover them from the 〈…〉 Rev ● ult So when 〈…〉 sinned he hid ●●elfe from the presen●e of the Lord. 3. From the ●●bject of this 〈◊〉 which is an expectation of some evill terrible to him If therefore the creature look at God as terrible and to be feared it s a signe they are not sound in love for they that love Christ love his appearing the Spirit and the Bride say Come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a 〈…〉 heart for 〈◊〉 look on Christ as comfortable and his ●●esence ●● joyfull and good for th●● 4. From the adjunct of fear ●●r brings torment 〈…〉 with it 〈◊〉 a kind of torment in the soule but love brings 〈…〉 and joy and 〈◊〉 therefore this properly argues that where fear 〈◊〉 heart is not found 〈◊〉 How 〈…〉 passe then that some that are of
fear him but it casts out all tormenting fear it casts out the fear of the day of judgement and so consequently of Gods wrath 2 Thes 3.5 He prays that the Lord would direct their hearts into the love of God Why what is the fruit of that And into the patient waiting for of Christ when a mans heart is once directed to the love of God he is prepared to wait for the coming of Jesus Christ Jude vers 21. Keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ unto eternall life So much love as you keep in your hearts towards God so much expectation you keep in your hearts against the day of his appearing the like may be said of keeping our hearts in love to our brethren Jam. 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth against judgement Reas 1. From the proper nature and effect of love Love thinks no evill 1 Cor. 13.5 This is the work of love in the heart it bows the heart to take all in good part that God doth against it so that though we find much disquiet and anguish and torment yet love makes the soul take all in good part so that it thinks no evill of God For particulars 1 The soul thinks thus though I feel much smart and anguish yet I cannot but think it well that God should apply such corasives to my wrankled festered wounds 2 The soul takes it well that God shews him all the danger before times of sicknesse or death that he shews him this out of Hell and awakes him before he comes there it 's a great mercy that I have yet time of mercy that Hell hath not swallowed me up but that he hath given me so fair a warning to prevent it 3 A loving soule takes Gods dealing in this kind in very good part as being a notable preservative against many sinful distempers he should have fallen into by these anguishes he drives me from the world and putting off GOD for after-times this makes us seek God speedily there is no man when grace knocks at his heart that quite rejects the motion but defers it but these tormenting fears are like hooks in a fishes belly they draw us to God presently 4 The soule takes it in good part in that by these fears of conscience he is brought better to attend on Sermons to be conversant in the Scripture more to like good company better This though it quite casts not out tormenting feare yet it makes all to be taken in good part for that the soule hereby grows more meek and lowly and by this means he begins to find rest to his soule When a man begins to take Christs yoke and beare it patiently and learn of him to be meek and lowly he finds rest to his soul then he is not in torment 2 Effect of true hearted love it stirres up a man to seek him whom I ● soul loveth and the very seeking prepares the heart to rest for such a soule when he hath found Christ will not let him go till he be possessed of his love Cant. 3.4 Whereas the soul that wants love runs away from God as Adam and Cain Saul fled from God in their distresse but love is in the midst of all these tormenting feares gathers up the soul that it runs not to musick nor mirth or any evill means to quiet it but provokes the heart to seek God by all good means and so casts out fear 3 Love of God makes us afraid of all sin and conscionable to obey in all things All that love God hate sin love maketh us hate sin and affects us with a desire to keep Gods Commandements and to be doing good John 14.23 Now both these lead to tranquility Psalm 79.10 11. There is a double ground of comfort to those that begin to hate evill out of love to God First The Lord preserveth such a soul Secondly Light is sown for such which in time will sprout up to manifest comfort therefore Psalm 79.12 he saith Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous Love likewise provokes us to be fruitful in goodnesse and if we be so Christ promiseth that he will manifest his favour and familiarity to such John 14.23 Reas From the object of love which is alwayes some good and if the soule love good God will be good to it Psal 79.1 Truly God is good to Israel In the midst of many fears and doubts and griefs in the midst of all like the Sunne through a cloud he breaks out yet God is good to Israel Now when a man in the midst of evill can looke at God as good this makes way to quiet all as he expresseth vers 24 25.28 29. When the heart conceives of God as good it scatters all doubts und fears wherewith the soule is possest that though his heart and flesh faile yet God is his portion for ever Vse 1. Of direction to them that have to deale with troubled spirits where they may apply comfort a man comes and complains bitterly of the burthen of his soule Why as yet there is no sure ground of applying of comfort but when you can discern any fruit of love in their expressions if you finde them taking all in good part and blessing God that by this meanes he is pleased to break them off from their owne sinful wayes and draw them closer to himself then you may safely apply comfort but otherwise if you see men murmuring against Gods hand why truly that feare hath torment and that soul is not sound-hearted This is true love to love God when he is angry and to take it in good part that God should deal frowardly and crabbedly with a froward and ●●ooked heart Vse 2. For them that find their hearts overwhelmed with fears doubts and yet are unwilling to come to his frame of spirit that think they have not lived so badly as some have done convince them they have deserved more then this that so they may take all in good part 〈◊〉 then if they be possest of Gods love in this and apprehend ●● there is way 〈◊〉 ●●mfort and peace Vse 3. For you that finde disturbance and anguish of soule it may be a ground of consolation and direction to you 〈…〉 heart pricked with the torment of sin consider how thou findest thy 〈…〉 to God doth thy soul say to God in 〈◊〉 deepest anguishes as 〈…〉 Thy● art just in all that is come upon us thou hast done righteously but we have done foolishly Dost thou take it in good part and blesse God that in very faitfulnesse to thy soul he hath afflicted thee If thou 〈…〉 thy self to God and puttest thy mouth in the dust willing to be turned any way so that he will set thee in a good way Why then there is a spirit of love in thee which in time will cast out all fear there are now 〈◊〉 of light and joy sown which ere long will sprout forth to thy endlesse comfort Vse 4. May teach them
fear in love then if there be no fear there is no fear of falling away Vse 2. Of direction to poor souls against those 〈…〉 and fears of their hearts if we would be quit● of all those cares and grie● 〈…〉 g●●p in love to God to your brethren for there is no fear in love 〈…〉 therefore from all hatred of God learn to take all Gods d●g● in good part as proceeding from his love to your souls Look at all th●se fears and anguishes he puts you to as wholsome for your spirits and the very apprehension of Gods love to you in these will quiet your consciences and scatter those fears Grow up likewise in love to your brethren lay aside all wrath and revenge be tender-hearted and merciful unto them and thus growing in love you shall grow in fearlesnesse Vse 3. Shews the fearful estate of a hateful heart as there is no fear in love so there is nothing but fear in hatred he that findes his heart estranged from God and 〈…〉 love to his brethren why when troubles comes fears increase What is 〈◊〉 reason natural men are so afraid of death and judgement Why because they have hateful spirits whereas a loving soule prays for the hastning of the day of judgement Come Lord Jesus come quickly But an hateful spirit knows the Lord Jesus comes to take vengeance on all his hateful carriages and hard speeches and therefore he trembles at judgement Yea this hatefull disposition is more dangerous to the soule then any sinne besides Let a godly man be defiled with many sins fall into divers weaknesses and frailties yet because he maintains a loving heart to God and his people they do not eclipse his boldnesse David confesseth That the iniquities of his heels compassed him about yet because he kept his heart sincere and upright to God he dares be confident wherefore should I be afraid whereas on the contrary let a man walk never so justly and honestly and do many good things yet if the heart be estranged from God have no fellowship with him nor his Saints let death and judgement come because his heart is not possest of Gods love therefore he is opprest with many fears and anguishes Vse 4. Of consolation to every loving heart if thou findest thy heart possest with love to God and his Saints that there is none in heaven or earth that thou desirest in comparison of him and for the Saints they are the ●ly men of thy delight if thou beest afraid thou art much too blame If thou discernest ●ods love in thy heart bid farewel to groundlesse fears Object But will a loving heart say Have not I just cause to fear do you not see how loosely I walke how often I trip and fall in my Christian course Answ There is no causes of fear Wherefore should I feare in the day of evill when the iniquities of my heels compasse me about These are causes to make me love love God the more that pardons these fallings and to hate sin the more but they ought to weaken thy confidence for there is no fear in love 1 JOHN 4.19 We love him because he first loved us THese words depend on the former words vers 17. he delivered this truth that those that are sound-hearted in love may have boldnesse against the day of judgement this he proves from the resemblance that is between God and a loving heart 2 from the contrariety betwixt fear and love there is no fear in love which he proves 1 From the eff●●● of love perfect love casts out fear 2 From the ●nct of fear Fear hath torment therefore love that is a quiet peaceable gr● cannot stand with it 3 From the ●oundnesse of fear he that fears is not perfect in love The fourth argument is taken from the cause of love which is Gods love to us if we love God because God loved us first then perfect love casts out fear but we do so Ergo. For this is the nature of love it makes us look at God as good and merciful to us and therefore love casts out all fear of evil from the hand of God In this 19 verse observe two parts 1 The freedom of Gods love to us he loved us not because we loved him but he first loved us 2 The root and spring of our love to God is Gods love first to us preventing us For the first part observe Doct. 1. The love of God to us is altogether free un-prevented and un-deserved on our part If the question be why God loved us it was not because we had done him any service of love but he loved us before we loved him 2 Tim. 1.9 He called us not according to our works but according to his free purpose and grace Deut. 7.7 8. The Lord did not set his love upon you because you were more in number then any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the Lord loved you So Deut. 9.4 5. he loved them because he loved them and therefore surely without prevention or desert on our parts Reas 1. From the removal of such causes of love as might prevent God on our parts if there be any cause on our parts he loved us either out of foreseen faith or good works but from neither of these not from foreseen faith for it 's the love of God to us that produceth faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed so that our faith springeth from Gods love choosing us to life nor for our good works for we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works so that good works did not cause Gods ordaining us to life but Gods ordaining us to life causeth good works so that faith and good works are not causes but fruits of Gods love to us Reas 2. From the eternity of Gods love to us Je. 31.3 I have loved you with an everlasting love Now if Gods love be eternal before the world was then it was not for our sakes who were made after Ephes 4.5 Nothing temporal can be the cause of that which is eternal our love and faith began in time his love was eternal Obj. Though our love and faith began but now yet he fore-saw it from eternity and therefore it might move him to set his love on us Answ It 's all one with God whether you have respect to that which is now or what he knows will be hereafter so a wise man serves a Prince not out of meer affection to the Prince but because he loved himselfe first for he fore-saw if he served him carefully he should have abundant recompence Now to the wise man it 's all one whether he have respect to the future foreseen recompence or to the present and therefore still his service is mercenary therefore when God loved us it was not for any thing we did or was foreseen to be done by us for then we had not loved him because he first loved us but he
16. 3 From the transitoriness of the World and the contrary permanency of the love of God v. 17. Q. 1. What is the World A. The World is taken Four ways and all incident to this place 1 For the frame and fabrick of Heaven and Earth and all the Creatures Act. 17.24 So love not the world that is not the Creature 2 The wicked of the world Joh. 15.19 and though he doth not here intend them yet we are to seperate our selves from them 3 The World is taken for the Fashions and Customs of the world Be not transformed after the world Rom. 12.2 4 The world is taken for those endowments and benefits the World affords as Riches Honours Profits and Pleasures c. Jam. 4.4 These three are chiefly aimed at Love not the Creature love not the Fashions and Customs of the world love not the Profits and Pleasures of the world Obj. May not we love the Creature are not all the Creatures very good Gen. 1. ult are we not exhorted to do good to all must we not then love all Gal. 6.10 what then is the love of the world which is here forbidden A. Love is such an affection of the heart whereby a man affects communion with the Creature and communion of good to it as the love of Money is when we love it for it self This love is double 1 Amor concupiscentiae when a man covets the thing for the thing it self for the gain of it 2 Amor amicitiae which is when I not only desire communion with it but communication of good to it The first is chiefly here forbidden when I affect the World or the things of the World for themselves for its own sake and not for Gods that it may be a furtherance to Gods service when we love the world rather than God when we desire it though we be without God and rejoyce in it for it self this is the love of the world here forbidden Q. What is meant by the things of the World A. 1. Not the Creatures for that is included in the world Act. 17.24 and it appears by verse 16. that by the things of the world he means the lusts of the world not only lusting after women but such an affection whereby we are carried after any Creature inordinately that is lust Rom. 7. Gal. 5.17 and again the Creatures are of the Father but he speaks of such things as are not of the Father Love not the World he writes to old men and young men such as are most subject to it Doct. The World is not to be beloved of young or old I write unto you Fathers love not you the World I write unto you young men love not you the World St. James is sharp in this p in t Jam. 4.3 4. where he reproves them as Adulterers that love the World those that are friends to the world are enemies to God Obj Are not all the Creatures of God good and ought we not to be merciful to our Beasts Ans Hee doth not forbid mercy or love to Beasts or Creatures but hee would not have your love terminated in them bounded in them he would not have you rejoyce or delight in the Creature before you have part in the Creator for if you affect these things for themselves the love of God is not in you Reas 1 From the enmity that is in the Creature it self against the Creator ever since the fall there lyes this vanity on the Creature that it emptyes our souls of Grace and love to the Creator and from all Gods ordinances 1 In hearing the word if it be possible the world will keep you back let God propound a Feast of fat things One makes an excuse he hath hyred a Farm and he must go see it another hath bought yoaks of Oxen and he must go try them a third hath married a Wife and he cannot come Luk. 14.19 20 2 If a man break through this and come to the ordinances hee shall find that the world is a great enemy to him there Ezek. 33 21 22. his heart is drawn after profits and pleasures it may be it will make you despise what you hear as the Pharisees did they scoffed at Christ as a poor man himselfe who had not felt the sweetnesse of the world and this is the enmity of the world 3 If you should hear the Word and attend to it and delight something in it yet the World will so damp you or choak you that all the seed will be smothered Mat. 13.22 while we busie our selves here and there in the World the Word is gone and Grace is gone this is the enmity of the World Vse 1 It may serve to teach all young and old to take up this exhortation love not the World no man is addicted to the World but he is in more slavery and bondage than any gally-slave whose hands may be bound and his feet shackled but his heart is free and he desires freedome from that slavery but a worldly man is imployed and busied in the World and his body is a slave to it and not only so but his very mind and heart is a captive to the World hee cannot be free to any good and spiritual imployment neither can he so much as desire freedome from this slavery what a miserable thing is it to see a man imployed altogether for his body and estate and have no heart at all to that which is good O! they may not be suffered to come to sermons they have other things to attend to for men to be thus inthralled it is a misery and if they come to the Word yet the World fills their heads that either they cannot attend to it or if they do after they are gone the World steals all away therefore I say again love not the World if riches increase set not your hearts upon them nor count them your chiefest good but be sure first to seek the Kingdom of God and if God bestow any worldly blessings upon you take it as a pledge of his love and be thankfull to him and acknowledge your own unworthinesse Gen. 32.10 as Jacob there did and make them a means to help you forward in Gods service as it is with Seamen the deeper and wider the Sea is the more free they are and lesse carefull so if you have abundance of wealth to swim and wallow in you must use more liberty in good courses and take no care for winds and storms you have Sea-room enough set not your hearts on them but go on in a more speedy course of Christianity Vse 2 A sign of trial whether thou love the world or no Dost thou love the world for it self Dost thou think it well with thee if thou hast the world and not well if thou hast not the world doth all thy content rest in the world like the rich man in the Gospel then thou lovest the world but if thou regard the world no further than it may help thee
restrained it from any fellowship with them 2 As Chirurgions apply Corrosives so Christians to mortifie their lusts apply such Corrosives may subdue their lusts Rom. 8.13 If ye walk after the flesh ye shall dye but if ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live either kill your lusts or else you will kill your souls therefore mortifie your lusts through the Spirit that you may live which is a notable Corrosive to mortifie them by the Spirit of God so another Corrosive is when a man applies the threatnings of God to his soul and against his Lusts if you shall lay to heart all the dangers of your lusts it will eat out the corruption of the flesh Another special Corrosive is the Death of Christ when we consider Christ dyed for us and we are dead in him how then should we live any longer to sin Rom. 6.1 to 6. 3 As Chirurgions cut off that Member that is thus mortified so Christians that they may not love their lusts must cut off those lusts and cast them away Matth. 18.8 9. were our lusts as near and precious to us as our right eye were they never so convenient or necessary even as our right hand though we should dis-inable our selves in our Callings yet cut them off it is better you should be lame in your businesse better you should goe with reproach and shame in the world than at length be cast body and soul into Hell fire cut off the members of sin which are as near and dear and necessary unto you as right eyes and hands in regard of your worldly employments yet away with them mortifie them Like to this phrase of Mortifying is the Crucifying of the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 they that are in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have crucified the whole body of sin partly in the affections which are not sinful in themselves but as they are inordinate but they keep in their affections and passions in such order that they sinne not in anger or joy or love c. and partly their lusts of the flesh also covetousnesse pride vanity wantonnesse they are crucified they look at all their lusts as Crucifying Christ and they look up to Christ for the pardon of sin and so also for the healing of sin for pardoning and healing goes together Hos 14.3 4. 1 Joh. 1.7 8. they that are Christs looking up to the vertue of Christs Death they find their lusts not only pardoned but healed crucifying of our lusts hath some resemblance with Christs Death as 1 They attach Christ seek him out and are content to give money rather than to find him so will a Christian doe in regard of his lusts 2 He layes them open as enemies to Caesar to the great God and desires vengeance on them 3 He considers that Christ is dead for him and he is crucified with Christ therefore what hath he to doe to live to the world or the lusts thereof Reas 1. Why all should be weaned from lusts from the enmity which these lusts have against God which is a sufficient motive to weane us from the world Gal. 5.17 if they be enemies to God then a Christian hath reason to hate them as enemies to his best friend and indeed he cannot love God and those lusts too He that loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him he is not fit for any duty he that loves the world cannot accomplish the will of the Father every lust hinders spiritual duties hearing of the Word Prayer receiving of the Sacrament any one lust tolerated or lived in hinders all Spirituall duties Reas 2. From the enmity they have against our souls 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved as strangers and pilgrimes abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against your souls they fight against your souls and so fight that either you must kill them or they will kill your souls either mortifie them or they will mortifie your souls either captivate them or they will captivate your souls Therefore seeing they are so contrary to God and any Spiritual life and our own souls as we would not have our lusts hinder our peace with God and eat out our grace as we would maintain our communion with God and the life of our souls Love not the world nor the lusts of the world Vse 1. To teach us it is not enough for us to abstaine from outward gross sins but love not your lusts thou mayest refrain from the outward acts of sin but yet thy heart may be strongly affected towards sin and thou mayest delight therein if thou dost thou lovest the world and the things of the world therefore labour to cleanse your selves from secret lusts Circumcision was the cutting off the fore-skin of a secret member and yet God would have another Circumcision more secret and that is of the heart we must not content our selves with outward reformation but circumcise our hearts Levit. 3.3 4. God took speciall care that he might have all the Kidnies and Fat the Kidnies and Fat are our strongest desires and lusts why when we come to offer Sacrifice we must bring them before the Lord and burn them there is no savour so sweet in Gods nostrils as the burning of our strongest lusts the more our lusts stink in our nostrils the more sweet smelling savour it is to God so long as our lusts smel sweet in our nostrils so long we are loathsome to God Vse 2. It must teach us it is not enough to cut off some lusts but those that we love most a good husband that hates prodigality you shall not need to exhort him to frugality so prodigality cannot endure covetousnesse it hates basenesse and pinching he cannot abide it it is not his own lust so another he cares not for this pride and bravery so he may ly close at the pot or an Harlot why this is no great matter to cry out against those lusts that are not ours but it is a Christian duty not to love our own lusts covetousnesse is not thy lust but if prodigality be thy lust doe not thou cry out against covetousnesse and thou which art covetous doe not thou stand out against another mans prodigality but strive against thy own covetousnesse there are lusts which are to us as Eves apple fair to the eye such lusts as our souls lust after Rev. 18.14 look thou to these lusts which thy soul lusts after let them depart from thee Vse 3. This reproves our aptnesse to cherish and nourish our own lusts when we are commanded not to love them to mortifie them not to make provision for them if we then provide for them we are justly to be reproved Job 24.15 Prov. 7. Woe be to them that draw iniquity with the cords of vanity and sin as it were with Cart-roaps Isa 15.18 that take occasion to fulfill their sins that draw them on with Cart-roaps that give way to such
over-masters that temptation what made David fall but the lust of the flesh what made Peter deny his Master was it not fear of death what made D●mas forsake Paul was it not love of the World so that there is no temptation but it is headed with the World if it be not pointed with the World it can doe little so that if the Prince of the World come and find nothing of the world in us or love to profit or pleasure or credit he can doe nothing as Christ when he saw he had no love to these things he had nothing to doe with him Vse 3 Of consolation to every soul who though he be busie in the World yet loves not the World it is not the having of the World nor the having of the lusts of the World that makes you enemies to God but the love of them so that you may have the World and the lusts thereof and yet have God too so that you love them not but desire to mortifie them and crucifie them let God see that your heart and strength and the vigour of your spirits be towards God not for your own lusts but for Gods service and then though a man have the World and many lusts in him against his will these doe not seperate him from the love of the Father 1 JOHN 2.16 For all that is in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the World IN the former ver the Apostle diswaded both old and young from the love of the World and the things of the World that is the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life And he diswades them from this from a threefold reason 1 Love not the World for it evacuates the love of God in us verse 13. latter end 2 The lusts of the World are not of God but of the World verse 16. 3 The third reason why we should not love the World and the lusts thereof is from their nature and original they are not permanent but passe away Doct. All the sinfull dispositions and courses of the World are of these three sorts either the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye or the pride of life This Text is a sufficient warrant though there be no other such division in Scripture for every Word of God is perfect therefore all the sinfull dispositions and wayes of the World are either the lusts of the flesh of the eye or pride of life Lusts of the flesh are such as are stirred up by the flesh which being obtained our bodies find comfort such pleasure as we find in meat and drink or women in intemperancy or incontinency Lusts of the eye are such as satisfie the sences and that is called covetousnesse and they are called lusts of the eye because the eye is only satisfied with them Pride of life is the affecting of a mans own carnall excellency when he looks only at himself and hath an high conceit of himself Reas 1 From the observation of what the heart is set upon when it is drawn aside to any concupiscence either credit leads a man or profit and pleasure leads him Jam. 1.14 every man is drawn aside of his own concupiscence if to credit that is pride of life if to Profits that is lust of the eye if to Pleasure that is lust of the flesh Reas 2 From the answer of such objections as might be made against this Obj. 1 You may say there are many sins which fall not under this division as when a man grows contentious it may be neither for profit nor pleasure nor pride Ans No contention but springs from pride Prov. 13.10 a carnal affecting of his own excellency makes him contend Object 2 Atheisme or superstition no profit or pleasure or credit in it so prophanesse what profit or pleasure or credit in swearing Ans All the sins against the first table fall either under Atheisme or Superstition or Prophanesse and all these proceed from disobedience which is want of feare and reverence of God which is nothing else but pride doe you see any Creature neglect Religion surely it is from pride of heart Psal 10.3 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seeke after God so superstition comes from pride though it seems to be done in humility and devotion Col. 2. ult Micah 6.6 7 8. doe not come before him with your own inventions and think to please him for it is nothing but pride so for prophanenesse as swearing or Sabbath-breaking it comes from pride so when Pharaoh said who is God I know him not it proceeded from pride Exod. 9.17 so whensoever men breake off the bonds of Gods service and will not be held in this springs from pride of heart that they will not be subject to the Lord. Obj. Indulgence to Children as in David and Eli when they cannot find in their hearts to give them a bad speech doth this spring from pride or profit or pleasure is it not rather meeknesse and mildnesse Ans Such indulgence alwayes proceeds from pride thou hast honoured thy children above me 1 Sam. 2.29 when a man should ra●her see God dishonoured than his Children or his Children honoured than God this is a great measure of pride Object 4. What say you to timerousnesse when out of very fear a man neglects Religion as Peter denyed his Master for fear it was neither for pleasure or profit or pride or whence comes Cains or Judas his despaire comes this from pride Ans This springs from pride of heart when a man grows so timerous for was it not for his self confidence that God left Peter to such basenesse of spirit and when he preferred his own pleasure and safety was not this a lust of the eye so Pilate what made him afraid of Caesar was it not love of his own safety did he not honour himselfe before God and was not that pride and from whence came Cains despair was it not from his pride against his Brother he envied his Brother and what was that but pride and for Judas his despair it is from pride of heart in that God is not in a mans heart if he find not comfort in himselfe he will not seek it in God but seek it rather in an halter this is pride this is pride that he cannot brook such horrours of conscience as God inflicts had he had an humble soul he would have contented himself and looked up to Christ for pardon as well as many that crucified him all basenesse of spirit and timerousnesse proceeds from pride that makes a man afraid to offend such great men it is because they would not loose their credit and honour and is not this pride aut servit humiliter aut superbe dominatur ejusdem spiritus est basely to serve or proudly to domineer Let us survey the whole Law of God and all sins will fall
4 When we look at a wrong end when as in our pastime we look at no higher end than our own pleasure whereas Paul saith Whatsoever ye do do it for the glory of God we should hereby be the better fitted for Gods service Lastly When we abuse our pastime in regard of gain though carding were lawfull yet to make a gain of it Aristotle could reprove it as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for pastime should be for our delight and not to make a gain of it is not a vendible matter to pay for our pastime that a man should sell his pastime is filthy lucre indeed if you play for no more than you would spend betwixt you or give to the poor it is not unwarrantable but to make a gain of recreation is an abuse of the pastime The last lust of the flesh is the lust of Idlenesse or ease or sleepinesse for it is the body that craves sleep and ease and is satisfied with it sleep begets drowsinesse and case begets Idlenesse now these both young and old are to be weaned from Q. 1. How is a man carried inordinately to ease or sleep First Either in unseasonable objects or secondly In excessive measure or thirdly when we use them not to a right end 1 When we sleep at such times as are unseasonable to sleep and be drowzy 1 In holy duties when we are so drowzy that we cannot attend to them the very inclination to sleep is now a sinfull lust this lust fell heavily on Eutiches Acts 20.29 an heavy sleep fell on him and an heavy hand of God followed it which shewed his judgement though he restored him because he would not have such assemblies scandalized but alwayes some hand of God or other falls on them either in body or soul however the spirit gets such a cold by such sleepinesse and drowsinesse that a man findes it lustfull 2 So in the duties of a mans calling if a man be drowzy this is a lust of the flesh Prov. 10.15 He that sleeps in harvest is a shamefull Son he shames himselfe and his Master and indeed the fitnesse of his work implies that in harvest he should be at it early and late not but that a man may take a little sleep to fit him for his work but when the Sun is risen and calls him to his businesse he loves his bed this is a lust of the fl sh and this is called deceitfull working Cursed is he that doth his work deceitfully that is with such deceit as comes from slacknesse for so it is interpreted Prov. 10.14 and the Metaphor is taken from a bow that is slack bent which deceives Psal 68.57 a man never reaches the mark he aimes at because it is not strongly bent so when a mans heart is not strongly bent to his businesse he will never reach to his businesse throughly to purpose and so it is a deceitfull work cursed is he that aimes at any businesse with a slack bent hand Prov. 29.9 He that is sloathfull in his businesse is Brother to a great waster a sloathfull man and a prodigal are both of one womb bred of the same lust of the flesh and so wasts that which he might have increased Eccl. 4.5 6. Better is an handfull with ease c. saith the sluggard but such a one shall come to beggery Prov. 26.21 Idlenesse will cloath a man with rags rags will be their rayment Prov. 19.15 he doth not onely mean that an Idle person shall want outward means but were he of better means yet he shall finde his body shall be so distempered that he shall have no stomach to his meat so that an idle person shall either want meat or a stomach to eat it when as a diligent shall have both but that is not all for it may be extended to the soule by rising late and being drowzy he is so distempered that he either omits good duties or else he findes no favour nor life nor strength in them In Gods ordinances we complain of sluggishnesse but is not the fault in our selves better fares a sluggish soul with an handfull with ease c. so a sluggish man rosteth not that which he catcheth in hunting it hath no warmth no spirit in it our bodies and souls should be as a burnt sacrifice therefore must not be cold and to this end he exhorts us not to be sluggish in businesse Eccl. 9.7 whatsoever thou doest doe it with all thy might therefore when we have any work to doe that requires diligence yea though it were to slaughter the enemy as he understands it Jer. 48.10 Cursed be he that doth the work of the Lord deceitfully that keeps back his sword from blood 2 It is a lust of the flesh when a man is carried to sleep above due measure Prov. 5.9 10 11. poverty comes on such a one suddenly and strongly most mens natures require seven hours sleep some eight and that is the most and if we observe it we shall finde the same distempers arise from too much sleep that arise from want of sleep it makes the body drowzy and the brain dull and makes a man unfit for any thing 3 This love of Sleep and Rest is a lust of the flesh when we use it not to a right end now the end of all Sleep and Rest is to refresh the Spirit and strengthen the body and help digestion like the unbending of a Bow to make it stronger if a Bow stand always bent it weakens it therefore so much Sleep as may help digestion and comfort and refresh a mans body and spirit God allows God knows all the Comforts of this life are little enough to uphold us against vexations and discouragements but when a man is grown to love Sleep and Ease a little more Sleep a little more Slumber one ease after another and never looks how to imploy it to Gods service now he propounds no right end but we ease our selves that we may be eased and never look further than Ease and Sleep and so we rest in the Creature and never look up to God to whom all our Ease and refreshment should tend otherwise it s a Lust of the Flesh because we look no further but to satisfie the Flesh Prov. 26.14 As a door sometimes turnes this way and that way but is never off the Hinges so a sluggard would tosse himself from one side to another the door hath some end in turning upon the Hinges to open and shut but a Sluggard doth no good by it but rowls himself from one side to another after he is satisfied with Sleep but cannot get up and then when he is up hee doth nothing but rowl himself from one thing to another hee hath no setled businesse to imploy himself about but takes care what to do he goes from one Company to another from one Game to another till he shuts out the day and then he returns to his Rest and Ease and sleep again as it was with
commit Adultery and slay Uriah and after that to number the people Ans He may erre through infirmity as a man in a Journey he propounds no other end but to goe on but yet he goes out of the way sometimes through ignorance and carelesnesse but then when he knows it he makes the more hast to get in again so a Christian he aims at a good course even wayes but sometimes through heedlesness or ignorance he falls into by wayes but when he knows it he makes hast to recover himselfe and the cause why he goes aside is because he doth not the Will of God but his own will Vse 1 Justifie the Doctrine of the perseverance of the Saints and confutes the contrary opinion of their Apostacy for every Christian doth the Will of God now he that doth the Will of God abides for ever such make Gods Will their meat and drink and so they lead an everlasting life they feed on everlasting food Joh. 6.26 they have neer union with Christ they are such as fulfill Gods Will and therefore he will fulfil their desire Vse 2. A ground of direction to all such as would find comfort in Life and Death if you follow the lusts of the World they will not last alwayes Conscience accuseth God will judge you Eccles 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth c. so Riches endure not always nor Honour therefore though a man now pride himselfe in his youth or riches or lusts why these will not hold time will come when you shall be weary of all these but would you abide for ever why this is the way doe Gods will and then thou chusest that part which shall never be taken from thee Luke 10. two last verses Psal 125.1 2. let a man be doing Gods Will he shall never dye there is no man but would have his Estate confirmed to perpetuity from age to age why all the lusts of the World continue but for a while but would you turne all to perpetuity be doing Gods Will and then you shall abide for ever so would you heal all the fleeting unstablenesse of our spirits sometimes you are much inlarged sometimes as much straitned sometimes you have vigour of Spirit and sometimes you are dull and quite out of frame what is the reason all this is because thou art out of the way and therefore the Star hath left thee as it did the Wise men when they went out of the way to Bethlehem to goe to Jerusalem even so when thou art in the way to Bethlehem to seek Ch●ist and give up thy selfe to such courses as leads to him why all this while the comfortable power of the Spirit shall goe with thee but when thou consultest with flesh and blood to satisfie any lust of the World the Star will leave thee till thou come into the way again so if you walke in the even wayes of God you shall find your selves always enlarged though sometimes more sometimes less yet alwayes so much as is sufficient for your present condition Vse 3 Of consolation to every obedient Christian that breaks off from his own will and sets himself with all his power to doe Gods Will and is grieved when he doth any thing against it why this is your comfort that is an everlasting way which leads to eternity He that doth the Will of God shall never see Death that is with fear or danger nay he shall stand as a Mountaine that shall not be shaken which is a great blessing for a poor Christian Obj. May not mountains be shaken and removed are they not shaken by Earthquakes so may not Christians be shaken and removed are they not tossed up and down in the World and never in a setled condition Ans Mountains may be shaken and removed Isa 54.10.11 and Christians may be tossed in their outward Estate but yet though Mountains remove and hills be shaken yet Gods loving kindnesse shall never depart from them Now from the scope the Apostle aims at observe thus much Doct. The disproportion that is betwixt the World and the lusts thereof and the Children of God that doe his Will ought to weane them all from the love of the World and the lusts thereof John 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth as who should say this meat is corruptible and you corruptible but that meat I give you is eternall and will nourish eternall life in you Quest Wherein stands the disproportion between the World and the lusts thereof and those that doe Gods Will 1 The World and the lusts thereof are transitory and fading neither continue at a stay nor last long but all perish But he that doth Gods Will the more he doth it the more he is strengthned and confirmed and supported to everlasting life 2 The World it selfe and all the things thereof are ordinarily bodily and sensuall and not heavenly take all the frame of the Creatures they are bodily things and all the comforts of them tends to sensuall life What will it profit a man to win the whole World and loose his own soul implying a man may have all the World and yet loose his own soul it never feeds a spirituall heavenly life but there is a spirituall eternall bread that feeds to everlasting life it is not for a body to nourish a spirit nor earthly things heavenly not can a transitory thing feed everlasting life Q. 1. Why should this disproportion wean us from the love of the World and the lusts thereof what is the ground 1 From the vanity that is found in all these things they are bodily and transitory it is impossible they should nourish heavenly and permanent life therefore godly men should withdraw their affections from them inordinately Isa 55.2 why doe you lay out your money for that which satisfieth not and for that which is not bread why doe you spend cost and pains about that which is not bread which will never satisfie your souls but your souls in the midst of them may be as Pharaohs lean Kine hungry and empty of grace void of good things Reas 2. From the corruption these things will put upon our spirits if we set our love and lust on them it will be as a running Issue which will empty us of all goodnesse either they will draw us from comming to the Ordinances I have married a wife and cannot come or secondly they will fill our hearts with cares when we come Ezek. 33. ult or else after we are gone they will choak the Word of God so that they draw away our hearts from spirituall food 2 There is a power in them to assimilate us to themselves what we feed on we are like unto feed on wild meats you will be wild men feed on grosse meats your spirits will be more grosse and dull feed on light meats your spirits will be more quick and agill so if a man feed on the World glut himself with the World he can relish nothing but the
A. 1. This comes from want of thorow and entire fellowship with the Lord Jesus for though they may have much joy and comfort in the Members of the Church yet it is but a Land-flood all that joy and grace may be dried up unlesse they partake of that Fountain which never fails and as the Lord told Samuel They have not rejected thee but me they have rejected so see you any departing from the Church they departed from Christ and union with him first Dan. 11.34 35. many cleave to him but feignedly Heb. 12.13 when a man haults between falshood and truth or God and his lusts he will be turned out of the way 2 From the stumbling-blocks they meet with in 1 The Church first persecution Matth. 13.21 that makes some offended 2 Hard Doctrin Joh. 16.66 the Doctrin of Purity seems harsh Doctrin to them so the Doctrin of Predestination offends some 3 There fall out some admonitions or reproofs to be dispenced to the Members of the Church now if they come with proud unmortified spirits they will be offended at them and fly back again this was the cause of Simon Magus his Apostacy when Peter reproved him sharply he could not brook it but fell off and set up a false Doctrin and lying miracles to subvert the Apostles Doctrin some depart from others because they think themselves more holy than others Isa 65.5 either they give offence to others or others to them Vse Shews us our duty not to rest our selves satisfied in that we are Members of the Church we may live in the Church and partake of the ordinances yet after fall off therefore be sure that you give up your selves first to the Lord and then to the Church otherwise keeping any pride or covetousnesse in our hearts it will make us fall off pride will make us take offence at others and others at us and covetousnesse will make us fall off when we meet with persecution and losse of goods and liberty for Christ therefore come with humble and mortified hearts and give up your selves to Christ and then you shall not easily give offence to others and will be content to part with any thing for Christ and so will continue Members of the Church Doct. 2 Such as depart from the Church were never Members of the Church They were not of us that is of the Apostles nor of us that is of such whose sins are forgiven them either old men or young or Children Q. What is the Church or who are the Church 1 The Church is called a company of Saints because they are holy in heart and practice 1 Cor. 14 13. 1 Cor. 1.2 2 The Church is called an elect people 3 They that are indeed of the Church are such as shall be saved Acts 2 ult as all those that were in Noahs Ark were saved so all those that are true Members of the Church Grounds 1 From the near fellowship such have with the Catholique Church and so certainly are of the number of the first born written in heaven Heb. 12.23 therefore Christ saith all his sheep hear his voice Joh. 10.2 3 4.16.27 28. and none shall pluck them out of his hand Those that are truly Members of the particular Church are likewise Members of the Catholique my finger which is a part of my hand is a part of my whole body 2 From the fellowship such have with the head Christ all the true Members receive nourishment from the head Col. 2.18 19. therefore they not holding to the head fall into vain speculations therefore those that depart from the head fall from the Church Ephes 4.15 16. and being knit to the head they are joyned with such bands of the spirit and bands of ordinances that they all partake of one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 so 1 Cor. 12.13 1 Cor. 10.6 7. and so in all their prayers they pray for the whole Church Our Father thy Will be done of us we have a tender care of all the Church knit together in one Love one Faith one Hope one Baptisme so that those that are truly knit cannot fall off Vse 1 To reprove an Error of the Romish Church that do maintain that wicked men may be true Members of the Church but we say that those that fall off were never true Members of the Church and yet they hold that many fall off and yet were true Members but they might indeed depart from their Church but never from any true Church if they do depart from the Church they were never true Members of the Church they were not of Christs sheep for he will keep them that none of them shall fall off We say therefore that such were not true Members but ill humors and superfluous excrements of the body and therefore no wonder though they fell off But you will say some there are that continue faithfull friends to the Church and never fall off from them are there not some that are ornaments and maintainers and supporters of the Church yet have no truth of Grace in their hearts are not they Members of the Church They have the place of Members but are not true Members a glasse eye may be an ornament to the body and a wooden Legg a support to the body yet are no true Members so such may be ornaments and supporters of the Church yet no true Members but as a glasse eye or a wooden legge these though they cleave to the body yet they are not joyned by nerves and sinews neither animated by the head so these are not tyed to the Church by the spirit of God or bond of Faith and Love but some external ligaments as honour or profit in the Church Vse 2 It may teach us what to judge of such men as have been sometimes very forward and zealous Professors but afterwards they sit loose from Religion and fall off from the Saints and grow enemies to the Church they were never true Members of the Church Stella cadens nunquam stella cometa fuit never any Star fell the Church is compared to Heaven Christians to Stars when we think we see a Star fall it is no Star but a meteor drawn up by the heat of the Sun which when the heat of the Sun is withdrawn falsl so if you see any Stars fall from the Church they were some sluggish meteors that by the heat of Gods ordinances were raised up and inflamed but after the heat was a little dissolved they fell away if any fall they were never any true Stars in heaven but blazing meteors Vse 3 It may teach us never to rest in any fellowship or society of the Church till we are knit by the spirit to God and Christ so that every ordinance knits you nearer to Christ and to his Members and every conference quickens your affection to the Church and theirs to you come not therefore to the Fellowship of the Church for custome or credit or to satisfie friends these are but as glasse eyes and woden leggs
came to good And they that did not love Joseph for his goodnesse sake could not love Jacob nor Abraham A man may hate and distaste some injury offered but if once the corruption of any childe of God shall prevaile with me to hate him more then his goodnesse to love him it is a sign there is a distemper in my heart Vse 1 See a manifest difference between the children of God and of the Devil If there be any Brother thou lovest not from whom thy heart is girded up whom thou canst not affect thou art not born of God I know provocations may be such as may weaken affections and turn the streams as that it shall not run so fully nor strongly yet a childe of God dares not allow himselfe but he doth take a course to remove matters of enmity and he takes himselfe as much bound to hate himselfe for neglect of his Brother as he found cause to neglect his Brother A man may be angry towards those he loves without sin But this want of love will do more injury to your spirit then the injury that is done to you A man may be angry but when his passion is over his love returns again What is it not to love any brother There are two things in love 1. A Communion with them 2. A communication of good to them In some things a man desires communion with others other things there be wherein though a man desires not communion with them yet he desires communication of good to them Vse 1. This should exhort us to stretch our love universally to every soul You were better bestow your love upon some base hypocrite then restraine your love from some poor Christian You cannot neglect one Christian but it will hazard your whole generall estate In judgement of Charity if they abstain from grosse sins and do good duties we think well of them and we had better lose our love upon them then neglect a childe of God Psal 35.12 14. And indeed it is not lost for it shall return into his bosome It is a signe I love a man if I love his picture so though a man should be an hypocrite yet if we love the shew of grace it is a signe we love grace indeed Never say thou lovest a Christian unlesse thou lovest the picture of a Christian What a miserable thing is the want of this such a man is not born of God but of the Devill And what a poor case is a man in that makes his spirit the spirit of Satan 1 JOHN 3.11 For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning that we should love another THe Apostle in the former verse had given us two manifest differences between the children of God and of the Devill The latter mark the Apostle proves to be a manifest difference It is a message and an ancient one which we have received of God as who should say He that is born of God will hear the Word of God But this is a message The duty of brotherly love is set out by a message and that by its adjunct from the beginning Doct. That when we read or hear the Word of God we should look at it as a message sent from God This Phrase is no where used but in 1 John 1.5 And what saith Saint John of it shewing what Christ delivered at large The Apostle sets the stamp of message upon it Reas 1. From the scope of all the Scripture Whatsoever is written is written for our instruction Rom. 15.4 There is not in Scripture something for some men of parts and other things for meaner men but all things are for our comfort and instruction If we read the Magistrate to be called to such and such duties it is for our instruction for our comfort that we may know what care God hath of us no calling but redounds to our benefit Whether I read threatnings commandements promises they are all a message to me though every threatning belong not to me yet thus far it doth to keep me from such and such sins and terrifie others And so though promises belong not to thee because thou art not in the state of grace yet 't is good for thee to know them that those promises may break thy heart to see what mercies thou neglectest 2. From the office and calling of the Pen-men of Scripture Mal. 2.7 2 Cor. 5.10 Vse 1. Of direction to those that either hear or read the Word Deut. 17.14 God calls the King to read it once a day If thou takest up the Book of God thou takest a bundle of messages as if God should round thee in the ears Understandest thou what thou readest Thou shalt read it in vain if thou look not at it as a mess a ge We are wont to receive the message so much the better by how much it comes from great men or friends 2. In hearing or reading the Word of God we must be led on to a twofold duty 1. To receive all with reverence Judg. 3.20 Acts 10.33 2. Whensoever thou hearest the Word of God consider how far it pertains to thee though all Scripture be for my comfort to know yet I must apply it to my selfe so far as it concerns me receive it as bread of my portion chew upon it Heb 4.3 God requires of us that we doe mix the Word with faith Obj. The Minister doth not know the frame of my heart therefore how should he know what to say to me I am a stranger to him Answ It is true If he speak out of his own minde and fancy many times we think that things are spoken by suggestion from neighbours true oft-times it is so but God knows better how such a thing is useful to us then we do 2 Kings 9.5 3 This should teach us conscionably to obey the Word it is a message sent from God therefore take it not ill at the messengers hands nor cavil at it For a Prince is not so to doe though an Herald of Arms come and pronounce open Wars against him he comes and goes peaceably telling the message of his Prince The Lord makes this a cause of captivity 2 Chron. 36.15 16. 4. This should exhort all to get them Bibles if they have none and if they have them every day to read something There are two wayes of parley between God and our selves 1. When we speak to God in prayer 2. When God speaks to us in his Word It is a fearefull thing when there is such strangenesse between God and us that he should seldome hear of us and we seldome hear of him Doct. The love of another is an ancient message that God hath sent us and hath continued to send us from the beginning He saith not in the beginning but from the beginning which implyeth a continuance of it I Theff 4.9 Rom. 15.10 Writing a Law he wrote nothing else but a Law of God Gen. 4.6 Thus God complains of Cain why dost thou lowre
to expresse and abound in love taken from the great love of God to us Doct. The death of Christ for us is the manifestation of his love to us Such a manifestation as makes it a certain and known truth that he loves us Rom. 5.10 1 Joh. 4 10. He gave his Son to be a propitiatory sacrifice Eph. 4.5 Gal. 2.20 Reas 1. From the greatnesse of Christs self-deniall That which commends love is this to bestow so great matters and to come off freely with it Joh. 15.12 Greater love then this can no man expresse then to lay down his life for his friend But Christ did it for his enemies 2 Cor. 3.8 2 It farther magnifies his love if we consider the great benefit we receive as reconciliation pardon of sins 1 Joh. 4.10 Secondly adoption of Sons Gal. 4.4 5. Such favour as to be accepted as his Sons and Daughters 2. Our corruptions are deaded and mortified Heb. 9.14 Gal. 1.14 Wc are crucified to the world to all objects that draw us to sin temptations and snares 4 Christian liberty that by virtue of Christs death we should be delivered from the curse of the Law Col. 2.13 from the enmity we stood in against the Church Eph. 2.14.15 16. from hell and feare of death Heb. 2.14 that we should have liberty to call God Father enter into his Sanctuary have confidence our prayers are heard have assurance when we dye that we shall enter into the holy place that we shall have right and liberty to the Creation Rrm. 5.1 2 3. Heb. 12.19 This benefit will appear if we consider how miserable our estate had been If Christ had not done this we had been in our sins under the guilt of them and in horror and anguish of spirit 5 How freely hath God done it We gratified God with no kindnesse Some will recompence a small kindnesse with a great reward Rom. 11.35 But all we have done hath been to abuse every mercy of God to his dishonor Col. 1.10.20 Vse 1. It reproves such weaknesse of Gods servants in time of temptations that can see no love of God because he doth not gratifie them with something in this life Gods servants many times doe want necessaries the world abounds withall therefore David hath cleansed his heart in vain Psal 73. But what though Gods servants never see good dayes Yet here is abundant rich and inestimable love that when you were enemies strangers children of wrath Christ dyed for you God hath shewed you more love then the Angels for he laid not down his life for the Angels Heb. 11.14 And if he had done so he had laid down his life for his friends who never displeased him 2 To teach such as abound in outward things not to content themselves therein Eccl. 4.2 We can perceive neither love nor hatred by those outward things Psal 17.14 Labour you to say that God hath laid down his life for you ●●se you cannot say he loves you 3 It teacheth us that the death of Christ was not the cause of Gods love Gods love is more antient then the death of Christ Where shall we lay the foundation of Gods love but in eternity He hath loved me and given himself for me Gal. 2.20 Gal. 3.16 Obj But doth not God attribute his love to the death of Christ 1 John 4.10 Rom. 3.24 25. Eph. 2.14 15 Col. 2.21.27 Answ In a double respect Christs death is said to make this reconciliation Hereby he hath slain the enemy and hatred on our part that we might be no more enemies to him Obj. But Christ is sent not only to make reconciliation on our part but propition on Gods part Answ 'T is true Christ by his death hath made a way whereby God might shew his love to us whilest sin was in the way he could not shew it Many a Father bears a tender affection to a childe yet will not seem to regard him shuts him out of doores and though he be intreated yet he thinks it not meet for him to expresse his love he will have his childe humble himselfe acknowledge his faults and will send some body to perswade his Son to humble himselfe So God sends his Son out of love to take a course that he might shew us favour notwithstanding his justice 4 Of exhortation to take a view of Gods love that we may be able to say freely We perceive the love of God Rest not in any spirituall duty nor in any common gift till you know that Christ dyed for thee How shall I know this Some will say that Christ dyed for all and so all may know True the sufficiency of Christs death reacheth to all but none can say Christ dyed for him till he find in his soul some fruits of the death of Christ 5 To encourage Gods servants to expect offices of love from God to us and ours all his dayes He hath given his Son what would you have more Psal 84.11 Lay hold on this love of God and plead with him upon his love All blessings are wrapt up in his Son Gal. 4.4 As God in fulnesse of time sent his Son so will he every other mercy 6. To teach us to abound in love to God and to his children hatred against sin Give up all to God work for him suffer for him he loves us being strangers and enemies Doct. Christian men ought to be ready to lay downe their lives for their Brethren The exemplary love of Christ in laying down his life for us ought to provoke us in like sort to lay down our lives for our Brethren Rom. 10.3 4. The Apostle doth extoll the love of Aquila and Priscilla as if all the Church and himselfe were bound to them that were so ready to lay down their lives Phil. 2.17 If I be poured out as a drinke-offering R●as From the example of our blessed Saviour He laid down his life for us This is an imitable practice of Christ this is none of his miraculous works but one wherein he sets forth himself as a pattern to us 2. To this add Christs command which binds us to the imitation of this John 13 34. 3. From the neer fellowship of our brethren with Christ We fulfill the sufferings of Christ for his Body Col. 1.2 4. He calls them Christs sufferings Christ suffered in him and he for Christ in his Saints 4. From the subordination of Gods eminentest servants to the Church of God as Christ is for God so Paul and Cephas for the Church God hath subordinated the life of his servants to the Church and the Church to Christ and Christ to God Christ the head of the Church the Church the head of the Members Phil. 2.17 5. From the rule of love God hath given in ancient time Levit. 19.18 We must love our neighbour as our selves Many a christian will lay down his life for himselfe therefore must in some cases lay down his life for the Church A man will lay down his life for his
own salvation and for honour therefore how much more for God and for the honour of Religion In what cases is a man to lay down his life Answ The Apostle meanes we should be ready to doe it for the service of the Church if it cannot be otherwise 1. In heat of persecution to confirme the faith of the people of God who would be ready to think much if he shou●d withdraw himselfe though he might escape yet a minister or eminent person is bound to goe before in sufferings So Paul if he be poured out as a dr nke offering every drop of blood in his body poured out if it be for the strengthning of the faith of weak christians he rejoyceth Phil. 2.17 The stronger must lay down their lives for the confirmation of the faith of the weaker 2. There may be a case wherein the weaker are to lay down their lives for the stronger Aquila and Priscilla were ready to lay down their lives for Pauls life they thought it better to expose themselves to the utmost extremity then that Paul should be hurt I must not spare my own life if it may be serviceable to God and the Church Rom. 16 4 5. 2 Sam. 21.16 17. 18.3 3. When we perceive it would much advantage the glory of God that we should rather perish then our brethren Rom. 9.2 3. He could wish himselfe accursed for the Jewes even his soul for a sacrifice Thus Moses Exod. 32.33 4. When a man doth see that the wrath of God is kindled against others for his sin he must rather offer himselfe to death then that that evill should be upon them that converse with him Jonah 1.22 2 Sam. 24. in David Vse 1. Learn we from hence to justifie our selves and others If we should be called to lay down our lives to suffer for our Brethren here is a direction how to suffer Phil. 2.5 God hath given us a commandement to love our Brethren as our selves Also God hath subordinated the members of his Church to the body of it 2. To teach us that though it be lawfull to fly in time of persecution yet if it cannot be without weakning the Church wherein we live we must in heart live and dye together 3. To teach ministers when they are called by God for the service of any Congregation not to dispense with themselves for air or health fearing the cutting short of his dayes You must not live from your meanes Either never take such a charge or make account you must hazzard your lives for the people of God unlesse upon tryall it appears you may doe more good in some other place 4. It reproves such as are so far from laying down their lives as that they will not lay down their estates nor the superfluities of their estates for their Brethrens necessities 1 Sam. 25.11 How shall such ever perswade themselves that Christ dyed for them 5. A ground of such thankfulnesse that God should not only give Christ to dye for us but also would have christians to be fitted to lay down their lives for their Brethren 1 JOHN 3.17 But whoso hath this worlds good and seeth his Brother hath need and shutteth up his bowels of pitty and compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him Doct. THere dwells no love of God in such a mans heart as having this worlds goods stretcheth not out his hand to help the necessity of his Brother What is it to have the worlds good In the Originall it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the life of this world this worlds living whereof to live whereof to maintain his life Bowels of compassion Because compassion is an affection of griefe and love stirred up in us by the sight and sence of one anothers misery as if we suffered with them our compassion is stirred up as well as theirs Heb. 13 3. To shut up bowels is to withdraw the affections and the stirring of the entrails A man many times hath little means to help but if he have not bowels to worke for him how dwells the love of God in such a man This is a peremptory question utterly denying all Reas 1 From the nature of love Such is love that God dwells in it 1 Joh. 4.26 There is no affection wherein God reveales himselfe more then in love 1 Cor. 13.4 Love is bountifull ready to be doing good succouring others in their need 2 Consider the nature of Brethren 1 They are more worthy then our estate one of their souls cost more then all our estates yea more then all the world How dwels the love of God in us if we love the world more then our Brother 2 Look at our Brother as a member of Christ hungry thirsty naked harbourlesse We could not but love Christ wheresoever we did see him Mat. 25.40 and they are members of our own body 1 Cor. 12.25 26. Vse 1. Of instruction and rules to order our lives aright or any work of mercy 1 Who shall relieve his Brother Answ He that hath this worlds goods that can live he must open his heart and hand This therefore will reach not onely to mens superfluities but if we can but live if we have but what we labour and sweat for Ephes 4.28 We must not only labour for our selves but give to him that hath need 2 Cor. 8.3 4 5. Luke 21.34 8.3 Joh. 13.28 29 12.6 2. To whom must we be helpfull Answ He must 1 Be a Brother 2 Have need 3 Every Brother Gal. 6.10 Beggars that are unable to labour and would gladly labour they must be relieved Luke 16.20 21. or such as though they doe labour yet cannot get a living 2 Thess 3.10 2 A brother that hath need Eph. 8.18 1 Tim. 5.4 5 Such are poor indeed as have neither hands friends nor maintenance A man is said to be in need not onely when he is utterly cast downe but when he is falling 3 Every Brother one as well as another Eccl. 10.2 Job 31.19 4 Consider the matter out of which we must give out of this worlds good Eccl. 10.1 When we have unjustly gotten we must restore Prov. 5.16 17 5 The time when we must give when we see our Brother hath need that we may see it our s elves bestowed It is a vanity to leave almes after our death to be bestowed by others 1 Sam. 20.15 2 Sam. 16.4 19. If we give almes while we are alive we shall have the benefit of them the loynes of the poor shall blesse us and though they have no heart to pray for us yet the warmth of their loyns will blesse us When we are dead their prayers will do us no good Luke 16.8 9. 6 Give alms with compassion give from within as well as from without Isa 58.10 2 Cor. 9.7 Give heartily let your bowels work 7 Give almes out of love to God fetch your love deep even from the love of God who hath given thee a hand to give and him to receive
our nature and impossibility to love God before we trust God and before we be perswaded that our sins are forgiven The end of the commandement is love Whence comes this love From faith unfained 1 Tim. 1.5 John 14.1 Christs disciples were much troubled because he was to leave the world but he labours to comfort them saying Believe in God believe also in me but verse 6. No man must think to believe in God before they believe in Christ Vse 1. This reproves a sinfull error of the Doctors of the Church of Rome who say that Faith may be severed from Love A man may believe in God and yet not love him Which is contrary to this great commandment We do no sooner believe in God but we love him 2. To exhort every soul as they would desire to do any thing pleasing to God to make this their greatest duty to believe in the Lord Jesus Faith and Love are correlatives Let no man flatter himself in this That he is born of good parents that he lives in the bosome of the Church and that he enjoyes Gods ordinances but trust thou on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ Psal 9.10 Now we cannot trust on God before we know him 3. It teacheth this That this believing on the Name of Jesus Christ is a divine thing For Christ Jesus is no creature but equall with the Father John 14.1 4. Of comfort to every soul that believes in the Name of the Lord Jesus He fulfils this great commandement Is not this a great comfort to a man when he knows there is little that he can either do or suffer but yet this he is perswaded of that he abides in Christ Jesus and trusts in God Doct. 2. The second great commandement is that we love one another When the scribe asked Christ What was the greatest commandement of the Law Mat. 22.36 Christ answers him And the second is like to it Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self John saith here to love one another Reas 1. From the large extent of it The is no duty or office of love which we perform to man but is comprehended in this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 Love not your neighbour and you break all the commandements of God 2. Because whatsoever we do perform without love is unprofitable As without faith no duty profits Heb. 4.2 So without love we cannot profit our Brethren 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. Neither can we profit our selves The Apostle exhorts that all be done in love 1 Cor. 16.14 Love edifieth Ib. 8.1 3. Love makes all other duties honourable to our Brethren They are best entertained of those for whom we do any office of love By love we should serve one another Gal 5 13 Love makes a Nurse very painfull about her childe you shall not have so much service from any servant you keep as that service a Nurse performs she doth it freely and readily love will make us serviceable without measure Vse 1 Let us all be stirred up to have great respect to this great cammandement If it be a worke of love it is that which God requires By love we perform all the commandement of God at once Love is the fulfilling of the Law Whatsoever a man doth without love it neither profits himself nor his brother Whatsoever duty you performe to any Brother if you do it not out of love you will soon be weary of it that is the truest hearted duty that is performed in love avoyd we therefore such occasions as hinder us from loving one another which is sometimes strangenesse sometimes enmity sometimes because of the wickednesse of others sometimes self-love For the first avoyd strangenesse one towards another God loved us when we were strangers to him Col. 2.1 So ought we Consider also we may be strangers It 's an ill quality in a dog to fly on strangers It is a Nabal-like nature to neglect any office of love to a stranger 1 Sam. 25. 2. We must love those that are our enemies Rom. 5.10 Thus did Christ whilest we were enemies he dyed for us Will a man hate such a member as is painfull to him No he will rather labour to heal it Shall we not be compassionate to those members that make us sick or disquiet us 3. We must in no wise hate those that do evill in Gods sight or ours but rather pity them 2 Thes 3.14 15. 4. The fourth enemy of love to our Brother is self-love We must love our selves but we must not determinate our love in our selves When men cannot love others but for themselves such men may have a forme of godlynesse but deny the power of it 2 Tim. 3 1 2 3 to 5. The greater any cammandement is the more ready we are to break it But as we desire our prayers should prosper in heaven so let us love one another and let us do all that we do in love This will do both our selves and others good 2. Love we our Brethren in obedience to Gods commandement this must be the rule of our love There are many cankers in love which this love in obedience to Gods commandment heals 1. All carnall love springs from our nature and so we love no farther then serves our owne ends but love in obedience to Gods cammandement is spirituall 2. If our love be not from a commandement it is faithlesse now whatsoever is not of faith is sin Therefore our love must be in obedience to Gods commandement 3. There is an immoderate love which is not out of conscience to God 4. There is a licentious love which is lawlesse but our love must be ruled by the commandement of God We must love where and because God hath commanded us 5 There is an inconstant love When men will love fervently for a time be ready to put me in their bosome but after a while their love grows cold These love according to their minde Gal. 4.14 to 17. This is not according to the rule 3 Let us love the Lord our God so much the more because he is carefull to lay this commandement on us though a stranger an enemy a wicked man God cannot endure the rank breath of hatred As he hath commanded us This is the rule of our love How is thar We ought to love our Brethren as Christ hath loved us Joh. 13.34 16.12 Doct. The rule of our love one to another is not now as we love our selves but as Christ hath loved us Indeed the rule in the Law was Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self Lev. 19 18. But now a new commandement so called because it is given by a new rule As he hath given commandement 1 Christ denyed his own case and pleasure that he might save us from pain 2 He denyed himself in his owne profit He laid downe his owne soule 2 Cor. 8.9 He laid down both earthly and heavenly profits that we through him might be
our Brethren such an effectual means for the obtaining of our prayers Ans 1. Love enlargeth us to forgive injuries done unto us and that moves God to forgive us our trespasses To forgive us a work of love 2 Love is ready to give Acts 10.4 God was ready to give ear to the prayer of Cornelius because he was ready to give alms 3 There be to whom we can give little but yet there is a good opinion and esteem to be had of them Now this is a fruit of love to esteem well of our Brethren and to judge charitably and this prevails with God to have a good conceit of our prayers If we be estranged and alienated from our Brother in ill conceits we shall finde God to be estranged to us This was the fault of Job's friends they had an hard conceit of him which was for want of love and this provoked God against them Mat. 5.23 24. God will accept of no prayer as long as he sees in us a harsh conceit of our Brother Vse 1. To exhort us in the Lord when we go about any such duty as prayer is to present it up unto God in the spirit of faith and love They are such special graces as without them no prayer can be accepted Let us but labour to grow up in these two faith towards God and love to our Brethren and then whatsoever we ask being darted up by these two shall find acceptance with God Vse 2. Of consolation to every soul that comes in any measure with faith and love before God we shall not put up any petition but we shall finde God ready to answer it 1 JOHN 3.24 And he that keepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us VErs 22. The Apostle hath taught us a notable priviledge of keeping Gods commandements and that is the obtaining the grant of our petitions vers 23. he tells us what commandements they be In this verse he lays down another benefit which we have by keeping Gods commandements that is fellowship with God God dwels in us and we in him This verse consists of two parts 1 The benefit of obedience to Gods commandements God dwels in us and we in him 2 The means by which we know that God dwels in us and that is by himself for a Christian might else doubt of it Doct. That an obedient Christian keeps mutual entire and constant fellowship with Christ He is an obedient Christian that keeps the commandements of God as his way 1 John 7 8. As his jewels Prov. 6.21 As the apple of his eye Prov. 7.2 3 4. As his life Prov. 16.19 To keep them as commands implies obedience out of sence of superiority in the commander inferiority in the person commanded He that keeps the commandements in such a manner hath true fellowship with God God dwels in him and he in God Reas From the effect Our keeping of Gods commandements is a meanes to keep fellowship with God John 14.23 God will come and keep house with us and refresh and comfort us If a Christian shall grow up in obedience to Christ then Christ his Husband will lop off his superfluous branches that so he may bring forth more fruit then he did before he will comfort us with the consolations of his holy Spirit he will come in and sup with us Neh. 8.10 The more comfort the more strength Comfort comes from confortare to strengthen the more strong a Christian is the more cheerfully he performs Christian duties like as the Sun is said to come forth like a gyant rejoycing to run his race Psal 19.4 A weak man soon faints and is weary but a strong man goes through his businesse cheerfully Vse 1. It reproves a Popish clamour They say Protestant Christians can do no good works because we deny all merit in them like as our Saviour teacheth us when we have done all we can we must say we are unprofitable servants we do not deserve our daily bread but as Jacob confesseth we are lesse then the least of his mercies Gen. 30.1 Is there no use of good works except they merit Is there no use of gold because it doth not justifie us Is not thi● encouragement enough for us to be doing good works seeing thereby we shall maintain mutual entire and constant fellowship with God Yea we say that God also will at the last day recompence us though not for our works yet according to our good works We do not merit any thing at Gods hands by our good works because we do receive strength from him for the performance of them 2 This may shew every Christian just ground of encouragement to keep himself close to Gods commandements in keeping of them is great reward For we keep in Christ Jesus and we keep mutual and entire and constant fellowship with the Father and so we shall finde him as an Husband-man taking pains with us keeping us from evill and cleansing us from those corruptions which will make us stink in his nostrils and this he will do because he sees us taking pains and employing that stock of graces which he hath bestowed on us By this means God will make our lives comfortable and will multiply graces in us in a great measure and give us more strentgh to make us yeeld more obedience unto him And whereas other Christians lives are very obscure we shall shine forth as the Sun at noon day therefore those Christians much wrong themselves that think themselves bound to no commandment though they would do as God requires yet they would do it freely and not as commanded But why then doth John bid us keep his commandments and promise such blessings to us if we do keep them A good man would be doing good duties though God did not command him but yet he must therefore do good duties because God commands him 3 Those Christians are reproved that walk loosely with God who keep not Gods commandements as they would keep their way their jewels the apple of their eye their life such Christians fall short of that great reward which God promiseth Whence is it that Christians are wanton proud covetous Is it not because they do not keep Gods commandements For else God would keep their hearts and cleanse their spirits 4 This may be an use of comfort to such Christians as have regard to the commandements of God and to walk more close with God on Gods holy day such shall have God dwelling with them and working all their works for them God will play the good Husband-man about them he will prune them from all loose distempers that hang about their souls he will give us more wisdome then our Teachers and by this means we shall come before him with Christian boldnesse and confidence and we may expect to receive strength of grace whereby we may runne with cheerfulnesse the way of his commandements Hereby we
us 2 This shewes the exact justice of God though he be infinitely compassionate and gracious yet he will be satisfied and yet rather then the creature should perish in suffering God in his infinite wisdome devised a mean how all our sins should be done away 2 This sets forth the wonderfull miserable estate that we had plunged our selves into so great as that all the men in world and all the Angels in heaven because finite creatures could not have delivered us 3 This shewes us what course to take to have our sins pardoned If God have sent his Son to be a Propitiation for our sins we must take the same course that they did of old Levit. 4.4 we must confesse all our sins and offer up Christ and intreat God that Christs blood may speake better things then the blood of Abel 4 This may be a ground of tryall whether we have found Christ Jesus to be a Propitiation for our sins see whether his blood hath been sprinkled on thy soul so that now thou findest peace in thy soul But how shall I know whether I have found true peace for there is a peace when the strong man armed keeps the house Luk. 11. Answ Satans peace is not a peace which passeth understanding Phil. 4.7 Gods peace doth when a man hath peace which passeth understanding it is such a peace as is carefull to preserve it selfe and 〈◊〉 then a man will loos it he will loos all the world 5 This is a comfort to all such souls for whose sins Christ is a propitiation he makes now the Father to be reconciled to them and well pleased with them 1 JOHN 4.11 Beloved if God so loved us we ought also to love one another This is the conclusion of the argument stirring up to the love of one another here heaven and earth meet as it were in one exhortation Doct. Such love of God to us is a president and pattern of like love in us to our Brethren How did God so love us So as is described in the two former verses set forth to be 1. a manifest love vers 9. Gal. 4.4 2 A bountifull and large love he spared not his Son he sent him out of his bosome into the world a man will not send his Son into an ill air 3 When we loved not God when we were enemies and strangers he cast about how he might by sending his Son reconcile us to himselfe this is free gracious love so we should love one another in manifest bountifull gracious love see some Scripture pressing this president Ephes 5.1 2. if he hath so loved us as he hath given himselfe an offering of a sweet savour the more good offices should we doe to Gods people expose our selves to in jury for them Ephes 4.32 Reas 1. This argument is of great force as the Apostle applies it both to the subject and object of this love 1 In regard of us that are beloved of God children should be like the parents therefore the Apostle presseth the argument from our near conjunction with God Ephes 5 1. and the resemblance that ought to be between God and us Mat. 5.44 45. as we look to approve our selves as children of such a kind gracious tender hearted Father so to be to our Brethren 2 In regard of us as loved of God there is an equity required in our giving and receiving Mat. 10.8 as we have received love so give Mat. 18.33 34. Oughtest not thou to have forgiven c. ought we to be so rigorous to our brother when God is so gracious to us 3. From the just recompence of love we owe to God that hath loved us where we sow more seed we look for a more plentifull harvest Matth. 25.28 not to give God his own with advantage is a part of unjustice in us our love cannot much reach to God but as David Psal 16.2 3. 1 Cor. 12.7 the members of the body serve for the help of the body pour all Gods love upon his Saints David inquires if there be any left of Jonathans house that he might shew kindnesse to 2 Sam. 9.2 the kindnesse of the Lord as if David had been bound to it by the Lord. 2 Look at them that are to be loved since they have received such love we are to love them from the firmnesse of Gods love to them which we cannot reverse therefore to be beloved of men and Angels Numb 23.20 he hath blessed and I cannot reverse it my curses cannot pierce through Gods blessing towards them it 's a vain thing to hate there where God hath blessed we may say How can I hate where God hath not hated He hath loved and I cannot reverse it it is not for the creature to be so sawcy malepert to dare to bestow his hatred where God his love and blessing when Isaac had blessed Jacob the younger brother Gen. 27.33 34. though Esau did intreat him and fought it with tears though his own affection we●t that way yet he would not reverse it 3 From the danger that may befall our selves if we love not where God hath loved 2 Chron. 19.2 3. The wrath of God hath gone out against his children when they have loved where God hath hated So when we hate where God hath loved the wrath of God is gone out against us What displeasure did befall Jehosaphat was he not a prosperous Prince there were only some few ships broken in going to Tarshish he met with no great matter of wrath but yet because he joyned in league and affection with Ahab Gods enemy wrath was gone out and did not return in vain but fell foul upon his children his eldest son proved a persecutor As Jehosaphat put forth love to Gods enemies so his own bowels hated Gods children So if we shall be straight hearted where God hath loved Gods wrath is gone out against us and will finde either us out or our children Vse 1. Reproves all such strangenesse or enmity that is found in Gods people towards the brethren one would think they should love one another that have Gods love shed abroad in them yet this exhortation shews they are backward in this duty When Gods people are young beginners and new come on then they think they can never love Christ nor his servants enough so Mary Luke 7.47 when her sins were now forgiven her many debts forgiven her she loved the creditor much but St. John implies that his old age had need of this exhortation what through love of the world themselves and their lusts the people of God grow cold in their love to God and his servants This argument of love St. John doth presse in all this Epistle and the danger of the contrary is great you renounce the resemblance of your heavenly Father you are not like him you cannot love them so manifestly freely and largely as God hath loved us we expose our selves to the losse of the sense of our comfort This is one reason why we
call in question our hopes of eternal life because we love not our brethren 2 To exhort us to put this will of our heavenly Father in execution Christ did shew us an example in his life death urged it upon his Disciples God hath bequeathed a testimony of love from our hearts to our brethren Rom. 13.8 this is a due debt we must pay it out of our hearts and if we do not so no wonder if our wills be not executed As God loves us manifestly graciously bountifully so should we our brethren Prov. 27.5 1 Cor. 16.14 be bounteous in your love so shall you enjoy peace and comfort to your soules we shall keep the wrath of God from us procure good to others and our selves for many generations Since God hath loved and blessed his people let us love and blesse them and make it our happinesse to be doing his will 1 JOHN 4.12 No man hath seen God at any time If we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfected in us IN these words the Apostle stirs us up to brotherly love and that from the benefit of it which is two-fold 1 Fellowship with God vers 13 14 15 16. 2 From the perfection of his love to the end both mentioned in the 12 Verse The fellowship we have with God is invisible No man hath seen God a any time How can we love God since we never saw him We never saw our own souls nor ever shall yet we know that such we have and without such we could not subsist No man hath seen God Doct. That our fellowship with God and Christ it is not outward and visible but inward and consists in love Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time no man hath had speech face to face with God the Father the onely begotten Son that lay in the bosome of the Father hath revealed him 1 Tim. 1.16 He dwels in that light that no eye can attain unto whom no man hath seen nor can see his light is so glorious that no man can behold it when Moses desired to see God face to face God answered None could ever see him and live Exod. 33.10 Obj. Jacob saw God when he wrestled with him Gen. 32.24 Jacob saw not God the Father but Jesus Christ he is called an Angel and Hosea cals him an Angel Chap. 12.4 2 No man hath seen the Son in his glorious presence in the presence of his Nature and Essence But Moses saw God face to face Exod. 33.11 Answ He did not see his glory vers 18. though in some sence he saw his face Moses saw Gods back parts but his face he could not see vers 23. What is meant by Gods back parts That is spoken of God according to the manner of men Numb 12.8 Quest What was it that Moses saw when he saw Gods glory Answ That he should see him in a glorious resemblance he should see him in his attributes which did wonderfully affect Moses that glorious similitude was such as that it was wonderful glorious so that it did make his face to shine vers 35. And as the out-side was glorious so was the in-side of Moses heart inlarged which made him go in and out before the people in this manner they saw Christ Matth. 17.1 to 5. they were so affected they knew not what they said Quest Why cannot we see Gods face and live Ans First from the frailty of flesh and blood The presence of God would swallow us up we are not capable of beholding God the Father Son or holy Ghost when we are in heaven we shall be changed 2 From the sinful corruption of humane nature his glorious presence which is a consuming fire would consume us When Isaiah saw God in a similitude but in a glimpse of his presence then said he Isa 1.5 Woe is me for I am undone because I am unclean he was afraid of his life though he saw God but in a similitude Vse 1. To teach us how to understand many places of Scripture that speak of Gods manifesting himself to any understand not God the Father but Jesus Christ assuming a humane body they saw him face to face or spake mouth to mouth or they saw a similitude of God his glorious attributes 2 Be willing to put off mortal infirmities so shall we see God face to face Phil. 1.23 2 Cor. 12.1 2 3 4 5. 3 Of tryal whether we have communion with God or no 1 You never heard God the Father nor the Son God hath now delivered all his counsell in his Word by his Son yet we may have familiar sensible affectionate communion with God Heb. 1.1 2 We may finde God revealing himselfe to our hearts and consciences Psal 73.24 25. That he is the chiefest joy other feares and cares take us not up Heb. 11.27 4 It stirs us up to the love of our brethren No man hath seene God at any time but have communion with him and communion of love God loves his people we have communion with God Psal 16.2 3. The Papists ask for Images can there be any better resemblance of the Father then the Son his Image and in loving and having communion with Gods Image that is like him they kill his living Images to honour dead Images It is the greatest love we can shew to God to love his Image Doct. Where love dwels God dwels for God is love Vers 16. What is it for God to dwell or abide in us God is said to dwell not where he is but where he loves to be and so doth a man Now God loves to be where love is God loves not to be where malice and discontent is God being a God of peace loves to dwell in a place of peace or else he dwels not God indeed is all the world over if we go to Hell he is there if to Heaven he is there but yet he doth not dwell every where Isa 57.15 If where the Devill dwels all that he possesseth is in peace much more God who is the God of peace loves to be where peace is keeps that peace which passeth understanding There is a two-fold peace that passeth understanding 1 The peace of that soule whose sins are pardoned Phil. 4.7 2 The peace of that soule whose sinnes are mortified now where God is where God keeps the soul there is peace that passeth understanding both pardoning sin and mortifying corruption When Jacob was with Laban and Joseph in Potiphars house all was well much more will all be well where God himself is Reas 1. From Gods nature for God is love where sparks flye out of the Chimney there is fire so where you see love in the lips carriage and heart of a man there is the presence of the blessed God 2 From Gods operations Where God dwels he pardons sin and purifies the conscience or prospers the outward man and there is a spirit of love in that mans heart where God freely pardons there is much forgiven
when other mens hearts shall quail and tremble for fear and shake like the leafs of a tree Isa 7.2 then a loving Christian may lift up his head with joy because then he knows his love shall be consummate and when others are ashamed of their riches learning and honors he is not ashamed of his love a loving Christian is safe and bold both in life and death look at all the straights of a Christian if they be upon any ground it s for want of love he that neglects this duty of love God and his conscience will take him by the throat and exact the due debt because he walked with a private spirit in the publique world whereas if we doe but walk in a spirit of love and helpfulnesse to our brethren and learn to walk with a publique spirit neglecting private respects the Devill and thy conscience shall find nothing to accuse thee of but thou shalt meet death and judgement in the face without fear or shame 1 JOHN 4.18 There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not made perfect in love VErse 17. he ●roved that such as love one another may have boldnesse in the day of judgement this he proved 1. From the likenesse to God v. 17. 2. He proves it from the contrariety that is betwixt fear and love There is no fear in love which he proves by an effect of love perfect love casteth out fear and therefore perfect love and fear cannot stand together this he proves by a double argument 〈◊〉 fear 1. Fear hath ●●●ments therefore love a peaceable grace casts out fear 2. Because he that feareth is not perfect in love therefore he that is perfect in love fears not In this 18. verse 1. Observe the estate of a soul troubled with fear and that is a state of torment 2. The unsound and uncomfortable condition of such a soul he is not perfect in love 3. The remedy of this estate perfect love casts out fear 4. The exemption of perfect love from all fear or the comfortable condition of a soul so healed by love There is no fear in love Doct. A fearfull conscience lies in torment Fear hath torment and he speaks of the fear of death but specially of judgement where that fear is there is torment the word translated torment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is elsewhere so translated Mat. 25. ult The torment here spoken of is such a kinde of torments as hell is not for measure but for kind For the handling of this we may see what the Scripture speaks of this torment in the severall descriptions and metaphors First This torment is sometimes called pricking of conscience Acts 2.37 they were pricked at their hearts with fear and shame for sin though but a little before they scoft at the Apostle v. 13. yet now they were struck with such torments as they knew not what to doe Secondly It s called a wounding of the spirit Prov. 18.14 which wounding is a larger gash then pricking and so implyes more anguish fear and shame Thirdly It is compared to the sting of a Scorpion Rev. 9.5 the Jesuites doe so sting men with torments of hell and horrour of conscience and God gave them not power to heal themselves again hence they thought every thing little enough to satisfie their conscience and so they suck out their estates in building Hospitalls and bestowing on their Cloysters Fourthly The wrath of God in the soul is compared to venomed arrows Job 6.4 Fifthly This torment is called the rending of the heart Joel 2.13 Rend your hearts and not your garments the heart and thoughts are so rent and distracted that one thing will not hang by another David calls this melting of spirit Psal 119.28 as if the heart were like wax and Gods wrath like burning fire therefore a man in this case is in a bitter estate Job 13.26 Thou writest bitter things against me Isa 38.15 I shall goe mourning in the bitternesse of my soul for this the soul is troubled Psal 77. and sorely vexed Psal 6.3 Why doth a soul lying in fear lye in torment Reas 1. Consider this fear in the effects of it this fear sometimes brings men into trembling of body so that all the spirits flie inward 2. If it continue it leads oft times to inward Consumptions of body or burning Agues Hab. 3.16 Psal 30.4 5. 3. Sometimes it causeth terrible dreams which doe amaze and affright us Job 13.14 4. It causeth wearinesse of life so that a soule long exercised with this kind of fear cryes out in bitternesse and heartily wisheth for death Job 7.15 My soul chooseth strangling rather then life if he might have his choyce he would rather choose strangling then life there are worse effects then those proceeding from this fear when Satan sets on withall against us 1. Sometimes Satan so follows us with fears and horrours that though a man be o● a large measure of patience yet he is able to bear no longer but breaks out in impatience Cursed be the day that ever I was born Job 3.1 2 3. and this is a sinfull effect 2. It breeds in some a flying from the presence of 〈◊〉 that they dare not read or pray they are afraid the earth should swallow 〈◊〉 up and God suddenly consume them so Cain when he was pursued wit●●orror of conscience he fled from the presence of God from Adams family from the Church 3. This fear sometimes brings destruction when the soule is so wearied with sence of horrours with cares and watchings that the brain growes frenzy so that you can be able to doe them no good till God puts in his help Psal 88.15 16. This was Hemans case through the terrours of God he was distracted yet when God healed his spirit he grows one of the wisest men upon the earth except Solomon 4. Sometimes upon this fear follows despaire the soul is perswaded it shall never see the light of Gods countenance again but that its utterly cast off Psal 3.6 7. Psal 77. but this was but for a time but sometimes this despair is finall as Judas his was 5. From hence followes sometimes selfe-murther as in Judas Mat. 27. Reas 2. From the properties of this fear its incomprehensible when Job would expresse it he could not tell how to set it forth but O that my afflictions were laid in the ballance Job 6.2 3. Lam. 1.12 13. Is there any sorrow like my sorrow 2. It s insupportable A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 the stoutest heart is not able to stand under it 3. It s immoveable nothing in the world is able to remove it no balm can cure the conscience but the bloud of Christ Reas 3. From the causes of this fear which are two 1. The sence of Gods wrath here and the expectation of greater hereafter Psal 90.11 Who knows the power of thy wrath 2. A terrible expectation of violent fire to consume
loving spirits are full of fears and terrours as Jo●● 4 So Heman and Paul compla●● 2 Cor. 7.5 that 〈…〉 without and terrours within if such glorious Saints may be fea●●st will you say they were unfound Answ There may be found such fears even in Gods Saints that have ●●perience of his love 〈◊〉 and the world experience of their love 〈◊〉 consider what kind 〈…〉 it is the fears differ much from 〈…〉 of unfound hearts First The fears of the godly spring not so 〈◊〉 from the expectation of death and hell as from some inwa●● trouble for want of Gods favour Psal 80.3 4. Turn us again 〈…〉 thy 〈◊〉 to shine and we shall be saved it s for want of the 〈…〉 that they so grieve otherwise we read not of the fears 〈…〉 judgement now here is a great difference 〈…〉 of love mixt with 〈◊〉 fears 〈◊〉 it s the love of God they 〈…〉 the contrary 〈…〉 is not so much affected for the way 〈…〉 for the sence 〈…〉 and judgement and expectation 〈…〉 Secondly to the 〈…〉 there is 〈…〉 ma●● 〈◊〉 support 〈…〉 thought within ●e 〈…〉 heart he hath no 〈…〉 wrath 〈◊〉 mixt with 〈…〉 but sus●● 〈…〉 for 〈…〉 Thirdly ●●here 〈…〉 the effect 〈…〉 from God as 〈…〉 from 〈…〉 other means 〈…〉 ●tresse sometimes 〈…〉 sometimes he 〈…〉 as run to an 〈…〉 science falls to 〈…〉 But the fear of 〈…〉 use 〈◊〉 right me 〈…〉 his 〈◊〉 came 〈…〉 exceedingly What 〈…〉 he to Wiches ●●●●laters No 〈◊〉 himselfe to seek the Lord 〈…〉 him for help 2 Chron. 20.3 So 〈…〉 seem very 〈…〉 will throw themselves into his armes they run to the horns of 〈…〉 these if they 〈◊〉 ●●erish will the 〈◊〉 and indeed the heart 〈…〉 found in love then when it 〈…〉 and it argues the 〈…〉 cleave to him when we see 〈…〉 Obj. May we not find many 〈…〉 defie death and judge●● 〈…〉 no more afraid of hell then if it were a ●●le Answ True there are such ●●terous spirits the●●either 〈…〉 man are not afraid of hell and ye● 〈◊〉 from any 〈…〉 differs from the boldnesse of Christians For 〈…〉 First It s without root Secondly Without fruit whereas the true 〈…〉 Christians proceeds from faith in Christ Eph. 3.12 Rom. 5.1 2 3. 〈…〉 from searednesse and benummednesse of conscience 〈…〉 such neither fear God nor 〈◊〉 whereas the boldnesse 〈…〉 them reverence God and fear sin the more Thirdly Their fearle●nesse is fruitlesse th●y are not more fruitfull by it but more licentious and such men ordinarily at death are desperately licentious then halter or dagger or any thing to rid them out of the horrour of conscience Vse ● May teach all them that will be possest with a spirit of boldnesse and confidence let them maintain sound hearted live to their brethren and indeed there is no 〈◊〉 that befalls Gods servants ●ut it proceeds either from bemudding themselves with the world or else for want of love to their brethren As a wi●● when her husband hath been long abroad and her heart hath gone after her lovers his coming is the lesse welcome she could 〈◊〉 his comming defer'd so when we have let our hearts run loose from God and our brethren why then our hearts grow full of doubts and fears gladly could we desire that God would defer his coming and respite us a little that we might recover our selves before we go hence and be no more seen therefore as you will finde your hearts comfortable and unmoveable at death and judgement when the Mountain quake and the Seas roar would you then be chearfull grow up in love to God acquaint your selves with him let your desires be toward ● him and withall joyn the love of your brethren or else his coming will be uncomfortable Even as children when their Parents have been abroad and they have fallen out and fought and hurt one another 〈…〉 their Fathers coming which otherwise would have been 〈…〉 if you fall out with your brethren and stain their good names and wrong them you still finde your hearts afraid of Gods coming and would gladly have God to defer it a while It 's a direction therefore to all the sons of men how to be prepared for death and judgement it is not building Hospitals that will fit you for it but this is the best way love God and love your brethren and you cannot dye uncomfortably No man dies more fearfully then a contentious or covetous man a wrangling contentious man never dies with peace and comfort if therefore thou findest an heart afraid of death and judgement if thou wouldst help this labour to cleanse out all enmity and want of love Vse 2. Of consolation to such as finde their hearts fearful and uncomfortable and yet find their hearts sound in love to God and their brethren why consider if there be not an evill root of bitternesse in you and if thou findest thy heart free from envy and wrath and hatred then consider what good offices thou dost labour not only to be sincere but to 〈◊〉 up to fruitfulness and if God give you to see that your fear is rather for want of his favour then for hell and wrath this is not the fear of hypocrites Isa 33.14 but proceds from want of experience Vse 3. It is a ground of much comfort to those that are either fearlesse of death and judgement or sound in love if thou findest thy fearlesnesse arise from longing after God and making thee more fruitful Why it s an evidence that thou art sound-hearted in love And again if thou findest a loving heart why thou hast a just ground of fearlesse boldnesse soundnesse of love and boldnesse goe hand in hand And how should we labour for that grace that will help us against all fears and doubts Wee have formerly heard of the torment of feare and the hypocrisie of fear Now the third thing is the remedy of this feare But perfect love casteth out feare Doct. 3. True hearted love to God casteth out all feare of evill from the hand of God So that though at first the conscience of a young Christian be fearful of the wrath of God and judgement yet as love grows so feare is casting out Perfect love casts out feare he means not without imperfection For we know but in part and love but in part but he speaks of love without hypocrisie and dissimulation True-hearted love fears no evill from the hand of God Now this love casts out feare Not as soon as ever it comes into the soule but by little and little as a man that goes to cleanse a pit he cannot do it presently but he is casting it out till it be all cleansed Fear is a deep pit compared to the sinking into deep mire now love comes to cast out this fear but it 's not done the first hour but by little and little it will get rid of all fear it doth not cast out the fear of God for the more we love him the more we
had loved us because we first loved him 2 In Scripture account that which comes after is not the cause of that which went before therefore our love coming after cannot be the cause of Gods love going before To Abraham and his seed were the promises made not by works or obedience to the Law for the Law was given four hundred years after Gal. 3.17 and therefore God had not respect to it as the Apostle argues So that which we have done four thousand years after the world was made cannot be the cause of Gods love before the world was Rom. 9.12 13 14. If the Apostle there had not excluded foreseen works his arguing had been of no effect for he speaks not onely of what was then but hee considered nothing that might be afterwards as the cause of his love Vse 1. To refute those that make Gods love to us depend upon our love to him they expresly blot out this Scripture to say that any one is beloved of God for his fore-seen faith is to say that God loved us because we first loved him which is expresly contrary to this Text so that if we enquire the cause of Gods love to us we must seek it in God not in our selves for he loved us because he loved us Vse 2. May teach us to love God betimes for you can never begin too soon but he hath prevented you you can never begin so early but he hath been up before you what a shame is it for men to deferre this till 30. 40. 50. yeares till their old age God was up betimes to manifest his love to you and will not you begin to love God till you are going out of the world Vse 3. To such as have already given their love to God let them learn to maintain their love and increase it a man is wont to make much of an old friend Thine own friend and thy Fathers friend forsake not Prov. 27.10 Why God is the ancientest that ever thou hadst he loved thee before thou wert before thou knewest what the world was or what love was therefore love him again Vse 4. Of consolation to such as have experience of Gods love towards them if God loved us before we loved him when we were strangers and enemies then surely he will not cast us off for our infirmities in our after loves it may be we may be loose and sinful but God loved us at first not for our goodnesse neither will he cast us off afterward for our wickednesse Yet this is no encouragement to licentiousnesse for God knows how to put us to anguishes and straights and crosses and yet reserve everlasting life for us There is never a servant of God but had he cast him off for his failings he had never been saved none but have failed in many things and abused Gods grace but God knows how to heal such distempers and yet reserve his mercy to us if he began to love us before we loved him then as he was first in love so he will be last Vse 5. May teach us to be free in our love to God and our brethren Mat. 10.8 Freely ye have received freely give God loved us when we loved not him So though men prevent you not with love yet prevent you them and if they provoke you be fast in your love be like God in your love begin first and continue last and so come off freely in your love to God be content to part with all for him for when shall we be able to give more to God then he hath given us If you ask In quo consistit efficacia gratiae What makes grace effectual to any soul the answer is the love of God to us Doct. 2. The preventing love of God to us is the effectual cause of our love to God The love he here speaks of is such a love as casts out feare of judgement and therefore must needs be a securing love 1. Objectivè By setting us a pattern of love but that 's not all for all have read and heard of the great love of God to us 2 Physicè by working something in us which makes us to love him Jer. 31.3 With loving kindnesse have I drawn thee and this is not onely a moral drawing by propounding some suitable object as an horse is drawn by a lock of Hay for that 's a leading rather then a drawing but Gods drawing us is not onely by propounding fit arguments but by a physical or rather hyper physical work of his Spirit he makes us of unwilling to be willing to follow him objects do not give us a new heart but God is said to give us a new heart Ezek. 36.26 this he works 1 By striking us with shame and horrour for our sins so that we are brought heartily to grieve for them and when he hath drawn us to the suburbs of hell then he shews us the glad tidings of salvation and withal gives us a believing heart to long after them to embrace them and to assure our selves of them Reas 1. From the efficacy of Gods gracious work there is no work of God in us but it works in our hearts the like suitable work If God choose us for himself then we choose him for our God we choose him his Word and favour and promises above all treasure Gods election of us stamps on us an election of him Hath God purchased us at a dear rate then we learn to purchase Christ at a dear rate though with the losse of all we have Doth God call any of us to be his sons then we learn to call him Father Hos 2.1 to 3. In what wayes he walks towards us we begin to walk towards him but ever God begins first Psal 27.8 When God saith to a soul Seek my face then it answers Thy face O Lord will I seek If God go on in a constant course of helpfulnesse by his Spirit to us then we go on in a constant frame of grace towards him Jer. 32.40 I will not turn away from them and then he will put his feare in our hearts that we shall not turn from him So that Gods work ever leaves some impression of the like frame in us if God first love us then we learn to love him Vse 1. To reprove the Papists and Pelagians that have attributed the efficacy of grace to other causes If you should ask the Pelagians of old their followers at this day what is the reason why Peter accepts Gods love Simon Magus refuseth it They would say the one was willing to accept the offer the other not Well then the efficacy of grace consists in our wils then we begin first Many of the Papists say the same but the more moderate amongst them ask them why Peter accepts grace Simon Magus refuseth it they say the grace offered was sufficient for them both but God offered it to Peter in a fit time and place when his heart was free from temptation but it was offered
keeps nothing but what it converts to its own nourishment so a Christian cuts away every superfluity if it be a thing of no purpose or no use to his calling though it may to others this he abandons James 1.21 But that knowledge which may be either necessary or expedient for him that a Christian retains a Christian casts out that chiefly which is contrary to grace 1. Doubtings for that is contrary to the life of grace 2. It casts away all presumption and selfe-dependance perfect love casts out fear and patience strives against frowardnesse and every grace against its contrary so that he may grow up to full holinesse the life of grace casts out the life of the world so much of the world as is cumbersome to his spirit so much a Christian lays down A fifth act of life is the begetting of his kind nature grows up to this ability though at first it be but weak so grace no sooner moves or grows or feeds in any measure but it hath a minde to beget others as soon as ever the woman of Samaria began to be acquainted with Christ she ran to all her neighbors and tells them she had met with one that told her all that ever she had done Is not this the Christ John 4.29 This is the nature of spirituall life as soon as they are well begot themselves they are ready to beget others Indeed a Christian may hide himselfe a while but as soon as he is assured of life himselfe he propagates the same to others John 1.41 to 46. When one Disciple was called he goes and calls another to come and see Psal 51.10 11 12 13. David professeth that if God will but assure him of mercy and establish him therein then he will teach others Gods ways and sinners shall be converted unto him he that is once converted himselfe his care is to convert others to God Try your selves by these signes Doe you finde your selves moving a life of grace growing up therein feeding upon Christ expelling the enemies of life and drawing on others to the same life these are evident signes of life if you finde it not thus there is no true signe of the life of grace in you 3. This life may be discerned by the properties of it by finding of which we may discern of our spirituall life And there are three principall properties of life 1. Where ever life is there is some warmth When Elisha had stretched himselfe over the dead childe the flesh of the dead childe began to wax warm a signe of life 2 Kings 4.34 So the presence of the Spirit united to the soul of man is the cause of all spiritual heat Rom. 12.11 Fervent in spirit Therefore the Spirit is compared to fire Mat. 3.11 1 Thes 5.19 Quench not the Spirit A signe that the Spirit is of a fervent nature So 2 Tim. 1.6 I put thee in remembrance to blow up the graces of Gods Spirit A Metaphor taken from blowing up the fire with bellows all which imply that the Spirit of Christ communicated to Christians is a fervent spirit Where there is no warmth there is no life If our spirit begin to wax warm it s a signe of spirituall life as the two Disciples that went to Emaus said Luke 22.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whilest he spake those things Implying the Word hath a power to quicken and warm and heat the spirit of a Christian This same warmth and heat is exprest divers wayes 1. The very knowledge of a Christian is warm whereas in all others the knowledge is cold and meerly speculative without any life or power There is a zeal according to knowledge and there is a knowledge according to zeal The zeal that is not according to knowledge is a rash vaine zeal Rom. 10.2 So it is a cold empty knowledge that hath not zeal with it John was a burning and a shining light shewing every severall condition what they should doe but he burnt up the hypocrisie and lusts of the body and inflamed their affections with zeal and warmth as Herod heard him gladly Where there is truth of light and knowledge there is burning The knowledge of a Christian makes him fruitfull in a Christian course 2 Pet. 1.8 So that whatever he knows either necessary or expedient for him to doe he will doe it and he will cause others to doe their duties that belong unto him such is the heat of his spirit that he will not suffer his Brother to lie in sin Lev. 19.17 Now another man knows many things but doth them not nor thinks he is bound to doe them but a Christians knowledge is of that nature that it will not suffer him or his Brother to lie in any sin True Christians are thought oft-times to be more busie then needs 2. There is warmth in our breath as long as there is life in us there is breath and that breath is warm so if there be any spirituall life there is alwayes some warm breathing some warmth in his breathing towards God there is alwayes some warmth in his prayers the prayers of hypocrites are but cold and empty and vanish away but there is alwayes some breath of life in a good mans prayers even then when we know not what to pray for or how to pray yet then there is alwayes something in him that expresseth warmth his very sighings and groans come from some kinde of heat and life Rom. 8.16 2. As their breathing towards God is warm so they breath warmth one towards another so that in their conference if they speak of the things of the Word they doe not speak slightly and overly without any affection but they speak of them with reverence and fear and love and affection 3. There is that kinde of warmth in him as that thereby he doth not onely affect the Word but he is able to digest it in some measure there is no life but there is some power to digest something if not strong meat Psal 119.20 My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to thy judgements So Psal 42. My soul panteth after thee This very panting and breathing of the soul after God so unites the soul unto God that thereby he digests something that inables him to walk before God in the land of the living whereas an hypocrite is hopelesse to any good 4. If things be warm the more they lye together the more warmth and heat cold logs laid together heat not one another but two or three brands put together are enough to kindle an heap of wood so take a Christian that is very cold and almost benummed yet put him to two or three more and one word kindles another and their spirits are more and more inflamed more fit to pray and fitter to admonish and comfort and help forward one another 1 Pet. 4.8 Fervent love among Brethren so kindles one another that they are inflamed to any good offices but when Christians are disjoynted they lose all
both sensible and experimentall knowledge of Gods favour and breeds certain knowledge of the hearing and having our petitions granted hearing that is of Gods accepting them Verba sensus cum affectu effectu sunt intelligenda and having that is of the performing and fulfilling of our desires chiefly of the ends and aims of our prayers Vse 1. Serves to take off our hearts from confidence in any worldly thing and incourages them to believe on the name of Jesus Christ why because hence you shall not only be assured of salvation which yet is more then all the travails and p lgrimages and devotions of our Fore-fathers could reach unto but by believing on the Name of Christ you shall have confidence that all your prayers are heard Vse 2. For them that doe believe in Christ here is a method whereby they may be assured of the granting their petitions 1. Make sure your adoption for that breeds much assurance in prayer 2. Meditate much on Christ that Christ is your Advocate and atonement for your sins 3. Labour for a Spirit of faith and hope and fear and obedience and so you shall grow up to confidence and knowledge that your prayers are granted Many a Christian falls short of this confidence because he considers not who helps him to make his prayers who makes intercession for him or else he is wanting in some of those graces and so his prayers are full of doubtings Vse 3. Of consolation to all that believe on Christ why This is our confidence that whatsoever we ask according to Gods will he heareth us How comfortable then is the condition of a beleever Be his estate never so miserable his wants never so great if he can but pray well he may goe on comfortably 1 JOHN 5.16 16. If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is not unto death he shall ask and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it All unrighteousnesse is sin and there is a sin not unto death THese words contain a third motive to stir us up to believe on Christ and that is from another benefit we shall thereby be enabled to bestow on our Brethren and that is our prayer for him shall give him life Observe in them 1. A promise to such as shall pray for their Brother that sins a sin not unto death he shall give him life 2. An exception or restraining a mans prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it 3. The prevention of an objection vers 17. All unrighteousnesse is sin and the wages of all sin is death Kom 6. ult And therefore this promise is of none efect for every sin is unto death Unto this St. John answers vers 17. 1. By granting all unrighteousnesse is sin yet there is a sin not unto death not but that every sin deserves death but every sin doth not cut off all hope of recovery but as Christ said of Lazarus his sicknesse Joh. 11.4 it was not unto death yet he dyed but he means it was not irrecoverable because he was raised to life again so every sin is unto death but every sin is not irrecoverable but that a man may be raised up out of it into life Doct. A beleeving Christian is not to hide his eyes from beholding and observing the sins of his Brethren If any man see his Brother sin he may see it and ought to see it Gal. 2.14 St. Paul did not turn away his eyes from seeing Peters dissembling but took notice of it and reproved him Heb. 3.12 13. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe He speaks not only of a mans selfe but of his Brother that ye have not an evill heart and therefore he propounds a means to help them and that is exhorting one another This the Apostle exhorts us to Heb. 10.24 Reas 1. From the love we owe to our Brethren God requires larger love towards our Brethren then towards our Oxe or Asse and yet God requires that if we see them lying under their burthen we should help them up Deut. 22.4 Now if God require so much help to their beast much more to our Brethrens souls that if we see them going astray or sinking under the burden of sin we should raise them up again 2. From the love we owe to our selves this benefit we shall reap by it we shall learn to keep better watch our selves when we see our Brethren fall Rom. 11.20 We must not by their falls grow high-minded and pride our selves that we are not so bad as they but their falls must be our fears Q. With what eyes should we look at the falls of our Brethren Answ 1. Look not at them wirh a partial or hypocriticall eye Mat. 7.3 4 5. But we must so look at the mote in their eye as to see a beam in our own we should see as great sins in our selves or greater if God did not restrain us for we all have the same root of evill and should break out into as bad distempers as any if God did not hold us back 2. We must not observe them with a curious and censorious eye for that is an imbred curiosity in us that we love to be prying into other mens sins not to heal them but to censure them This St. James reproves ch 3.1 2 3. Be not many M sters that is be not of a Master-like spirit be not busie in every mans matters and censorious of them 3 Look not at them with an envious malicious eye This Jeremiah complains of ch 20.10 All my familiars watched for my haltings That 's an envious eye when a man watches for an advantage to undermine his Brother 4. There is a wanton eye 1. When a man is not humbled at the sight of his Brothers sins but puft up by it like the proud Pharisee Luk. 18.9 10. he built his comfort on the falls of others This the Apostle reprehends in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 5.2 That there was fornication among them and yet they were not humbled but puft up they magnified themselves that they were honester men 2. A man sees his Brothers sin with a wanton eye when he thereby grows to imitate him if such a man venture into such a course I hope I need not stick at it This God gtievously complains of in the Church of Judah that though she saw what her treacherous Sister Israel had done and that God had therefore cast her off yet she feared not but went and played the Harlot also Jer. 3.7 8. Now all those heads of seeing our Brothers sins ought to be far from us Vse 1. Hence learn not to neglect the falls of our Brethren as if they belonged not to us and we would neither meddle nor make with them This was Cains spirit Am I my Brothers keeper Gen. 4.9 We should look at
whose consciences are tormented what course to take for comfort 1 Look at Gods good providence to thee in trying thee and proving thee that he may do thee good in the latter end 2 As you have cause to take all in good part so learn to seek him carefully Again take heed of sin and be doing what good you may strive to be more fruitful in good services to God and offices of love to your brethren and certainly this unfeigned love will lead to peace Vse 5. Hence see the estrangement of wicked men from the wayes of peace Rom. 3.17 The way of peace they have not known 1 They cannot think that torment and fear should be the way of peace if they see a man in this case 2 They would put off such fears with 〈◊〉 company but if they see such a man seeking God earnestly praying and hearing the World carefully they cannot think this is the way of peace will you blesse God and dye when he is ready to swallow you up The way of peace they have not known salvation is far from them Psal 118.155 Vers 18. There is no fear in love c. We come to the fourth thing the exemption of perfect love from all fear Doct. 4. An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of feare of evill from God He speaks of the fear of death and judgment so much love as is in our hearts so much freedome and boldnesse against the day of judgement a loving heart feares not wrath nor jugement nor hell Psal 23.4 When once I look at God as my Shepheard and love him and follow him Why then though I walke through the vale of the shadow of death I will feare none evill though I walk in neer danger of death for if the shadow follow me the body is not farre off yet I will fear no evill Psal 49 4 5. David makes open proclamation to all men to hear and hearken there is the solemnity of the audience the matter is It 's a parable and dark mystery and yet a word of wisdome and understanding Why what is this parable that all the world should take notice of Why this is it Wherefore should I be afraid when the iniquity of my heels do compasse me about that is the iniquity of my foot-steps the tripping of my steps or the iniquity of my heels that is the fears and dangers that follow him at the heels yet wherefore should I feare An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of fear of evill from God Psal 3.6 I will not be afraid of ten thousand of people that shall compasse me about Why what makes him so confident Because the Lord is my shield and lifter up of my head vers 3. So that we see that a Christian possest of the love of God stands not in the feare of judgement or hell nay more not of his sinfull failings Psal 49.5 Reas 1. From the nature of fear and the 〈◊〉 oval of it fear is a troblesome affection in the expectation o● 〈◊〉 evill Now 〈◊〉 the removal of feare two things must be done 1 There must 〈◊〉 evill towards him 2 He must 〈…〉 this Now to him that feareth God no evill is towards such a one Psal 〈…〉 There shall no evill befal thee Now to whom is this promise made 〈…〉 Because he hath set his love upon me therefore I will deliver him I will set him on high far above all dangers and evils indeed sicknesses may befall him and 〈…〉 and imprisonments but what ever befals under the nature of evill that shall not come nigh him As no evill is towards him 〈◊〉 ●e must know this that no evill shall befal him Now a Christian that loves God he knows that no evill shall befal him Psal 56.3.9 What time I am afraid I will trust on thee When I cry unto thee thou shalt cause mine enemies to 〈◊〉 their backs this I know for God is for me So that a Christian not onely finds security from danger but knowledge of it too Nay further the childe of God is so farre from fearing any evill to come nigh him that he knows all those things that are counted evill shall turn to his advantage Rom. 8 28. So Phil ● 1● where he tels you what wrong false Apostles did him on purpose to adde afflictions to his bonds Well saith he I know this shall turn to my salvation through your prayers upon a double ground he comforts himself against all their malignities 1 He knows the more they afflict him the more will the Church pray for him 2 That the more he is tempted the more will God supply by his Spirit Quest How do they know that no evill shall befal them Answ 1. From the love of God shed abroad in their hearts Rom. 5.1 to 6. 2 From the presence of God for him in his worst times And if God be for him who can be against him Rom. 8.31 3 From the interest he hath in the blood of Christ which hath cleansed him from all his sins so that he doth know that God will follow him as a deliverer from his sins so that the soule though burthened with many sins yet fears not Psal 44.5 4 From a knowledge he hath of all the promises as belonging to him which are a stay and support to his soul Psal 56.3 4 10 11. Psal 84.11 he knows God will be a Sun and a shield to him 5 From the knowledge that he hath from the integrity of his conscience which is as a brazen wall against all evils 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience 6 The prayers both of his own soule and other Christians are for him so that through them he is confident no evill shall befal him Psal 56.9 Phil. 1.19 7 He is imboldned against dangers from the supportance of Gods Spirit in his worst times Phil. 1.19 Psal 5. So Psal 46. God is a present help in the time of trouble when trouble is near at hand yet God is nearer as it was sometimes with Elisha he saw the Mountain full of Chariots and Horse-men 2 King 6.17 Though there were not such a multitude constantly about him yet when an Army of the enemies come an Army of Angels come as soon It hath been an ancient opinion that every true Christian hath a particular Angel to deliver him why this is certain when dangers come there never want Angels without nor Gods Spirit within nor the prayers of his servants for us and therefore we have no cause to fear Vse 1. This is a notable ground upon which that heavenly truth is built of the perseverance of Saints and a bulwark against Apostasie if a loving heart be without fear of the day of judgement he is without fear of falling away Obj. True as long as he keeps perfect to his love but may he not fall off from his love and so from his good estate Answ The Apostle ●ith there is no