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A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

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good and pleasant that Bret●ren dwell together in unity it persumes all as the precious ●ynt●●●●●● c. But many that are called Christians are not indeed of this Brotherhood and therefore no wonder they know not what this love means but are either of restless unquiet Spirits biting and devouring one another as the Apostle speaks or at the best only civilly smooth and peaceable in their carriage but rather scorners than partakers of this spiritual love and fraternity are strangers to Christ not brought into acquaintance and union with him and therefore void of the life of Grace and the fruits of it whereof this is a chief one Oh! how few amongst multitudes that throng in as we do here together are indeed partakers of the glorious liberty of the Sons of God or ambitious of that high and happy estate As for you that know these things and have a portion in them that have your communion with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ I beseech you adorn your holy profession and testifie you selves the Disciples and the Brethren of Jesus Christ by this mutual love seek to understand better what it is and to know it more practically Consider that sourse of love that love that the Father hath shewed us in this that we should be called the Sons of God and so be Brethren and thence draw more of this sweet stream of love God is love says the Apostle therefore sure where there is most of God there is most of this Divine Grace this holy love Look upon and study much that infinite love of God and his Son Jesus Christ towards us he gave his only begotten Son the Son gave himself he sweeten'd his bitter cup with his tran●●endent love and this he hath recommended to us that even as he loved us so should we love one another we know we cannot reach this highest pattern that 's not meant but the more we look on it the higher we shall reach in this love and shall learn some measure of such love on Earth as is in Heaven and that which so begins here shall be perfected there Be pitiful be courteous The Roots of Plants are hid under Ground so that themselves are not seen but they appear in their Branches and Flowers and Fruits which argue there is a Root and Life in them thus the Graces of the Spirit planted in the Soul though themselves invisible yet discover their Being and Life in the Tract of a Christian's Life their Words and Actions and the frame of their carriage thus Faith shews that it lives as the Apostle St. Iames teacheth at large and thus Love a Grace of so active a nature that it is still working and yet never weary your labour of love says the Apostle it labours but delight makes the hardest labour sweet and easie and so proper is action to it that all action is null without it 1 Cor. 13. yea it knits Faith and Action together is the link that unites them Faith worketh but 't is by it as the Apostle teaches us by Love so then where this Root is these Fruits will spring from it and discover it Pity and Courtesie They are of a larger extent in their full Sphere than the precedcing for from a general love due to all they act towards all to men or humanity in the general And this not from a bare natural tenderness which softer complexions may have nor from a prudent moral consideration of their own possible falling under the like or greater calamities but out of obedience to God who requires this mercifulness in all his Children and cannot own them for his unless in this they resemble him And it is indeed an evidence of a truly Christian mind to have much of this pity to the miseries of all being rightly principled and acting after a Pious and Christian manner towards the Sick and Poor of what condition soever yea most pitying the spiritual misery of ungodly men their hardness of heart and unbelief and earnestly wishing their conversion not repining at the long-suffering of God as if thou would'st have the Bridge out because thou art over as St. Augustine speaks but longing rather to see that long-suffering and goodness of God lead them to repentance being griev'd to see men ruining themselves and diligently working their own destruction going in any way of wickedness as Solomon speaks of one particularly as an Ox to the Shambles or a Fool to the correction of the Stocks Certainly the ungodly Man is an object of the highest pity But there is a special debt of this pity to those that we love as Brethren in our Lord Jesus these are most closely linkt by a peculiar fraternal love Their sufferings and calamities will move the Bowels that have Christian affection within them Nor is it an empty helpless pity but carries with it the real communication of our help to our utmost power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not only Bowels that are moved themselves with pity but that move their hand to succour for by this word the natural affection of Parents and the tenderer of them the Mother are express'd who do not idly behold and be●oan their Children being sick or distress'd but provides all possible help their bowels are not only stirr'd but dilated and enlarged towards them And if our feeling bowels and helping hand are due to all and particularly to the Godly and we ought to pay this due in outward distresses how much more in their Soul-afflictions the rather because these are most heavy in themselves and least understood and theref●re least regarded yea sometimes more by natural Friends possibly by their bitter scoffes and taunts or by their flighting or at best by their misapplying of proper helps and remedies which as unfit Medicines do rather exasperate the Disease therefore they that do understand and can be sensible of that kind of wound ought so much the more to be tender and pitiful towards it and to deal mercifully and gently with it It may be very weak things sometimes trouble a weak Christian but there is in the Spirit of the Godly a humble condescention learn'd from Christ who broke not the bruised reed nor quenched the smoaking flax The least difficulties and scruples in a tender conscience should not be roughly encounter'd they are as a knot in a silken thread and require a gentle and wary hand to loose them Now this tenderness of bowels and inclinement to pity all especially Christians and them especially in their peculiar pressures is not a weakness as some kind of Spirits take it to be this even naturally is a generous pity in greatest Spirits Christian pity is not womanish yea 't is more than manly 't is divine there is of it natural most in the best and most ingenuous natures but where 't is spiritual 't is a prime lineament of the image of God and the more absolute and disengag'd it is in regard of those towards whom it acts the more like
wills and loves that 's Law and a powerful Law so written on the Heart this Law of Love that it obeys not unpleasantly but with delight no constraint but the sweet constraint of love to forgive a wrong to love even thine enemy for him is not only feisible now but de●ectable that ere while thou thoughtest impossible That Spirit of Christ is all sweetness and love so calms and composes the Heart that peace with God and that unspeakably blessed correspondence of love with him doth so fill the Soul with lovingness and sweetness that it can breath nothing else hates nothing but sin pities the sinner and carries to the worst that love of good-will desiring their return and salvation but to those in whom appears the Image of their Father those their heart cleaves to as Brethren indeed No advantages natural no birth no beauty nor wit draws a Christian's love so much as the resemblance of Christ wherever that is found it is comely and lovely to a Soul that loves him Much communion with God sweetens and calms the mind cures the distempers of passion and pride that are the avowed enemies of love particularly Prayer and Love suit well 1. Prayer disposes to this love he that loveth not knoweth not God saith the beloved Apostle for God is love he that is most conversant with love the spring of where 't is purest and fullest cannot but have the fullest measure of it flowing in from thence into his heart and flowing forth from thence unto his Brethren if they that use the society of mild and good men are insensibly assimilated to them grow like them and contract somewhat of their temper much more doth familiar walking with God powerfully transform the Soul into his likeness makes it merciful and loving and ready to forgive as he is 2. This love disposes to prayer to pray together hearts must be consorted and tun'd together otherwise how can they sound the same Suits harmoniously How unpleasant in the exquisite ear of God that made the ear are the jarring disunited hearts that often seem to joyn in the same prayer and yet are not set together in love and when thou prayest alone thy heart imbitter'd and disaffected to thy Brother altho' upon an offence done to thee 't is as a mistuned Instrument the Strings are not accorded so are not in tune amongst themselves and so the sound is harsh and offensive try it well thy self and thou wilt perceive it how much more he to whom thou pray'st when thou art stirr'd and in passion against thy Brother or not on the contrary lovingly affected towards him what broken disordered unfastened stuff are thy requests therefore the Lord will have this done first the Heart tun'd go thy way says he leave thy Gift and be reconcil'd to thy Brother c. Why is this so much recommended by Christ and so little received by Christians given by him as the cognisance and badge of his Followers and of them that pretend to be so so few that wear it Oh! little real Christianity were more worth than all that empty profession and discourse that we think so much of Hearts receiving the mould and stamp of this Rule these were living Copies of the Gospel ye are our Epistle says the Apostle We come together and hear and speak sometimes of one Grace and sometimes of another and the most never seek to have their hearts enricht with the possession of any of them We search not to the bottom the perversness of our Nature and the guiltiness that is upon us in these or we shift off the Conviction and find a way to forget it when the hour 's done That accursed root self-love that makes man an enemy to God and Men enemies and devourers one of another who sets to the discovery and the displanting of it bends the force of holy Endeavours and Prayer supplicates the hand of God for the plucking of it up Some Natures are quieter and make less noise but till the heart be possest with the love of God it shall never truely love either men in that way due to all or the Children of God in their peculiar relation Among your selves c. That is here the point the peculiar love of the Saints as thy Brethren glorying and rejoycing in the same Father the Sons of God begotten again to that lively hope of glory now these as they owe a bountiful disposition to all they are mutually to love one another as Brethren Thou that hatest and reproachest the godly and the more they study to walk as the Children of their holy Father the more thou hatest them art glad to find a spot to point at on them or wilt dash mire on them where thou findest none know that thou art in this the enemy of God that the indignity done to them Jesus Christ will take it as done to himself truely we know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death So then renounce this Word or else believe that thou art yet far from the Life of Christ that so hatest it in others Oh! but they are but a number of Hypocrites wilt thou say Brethren if they be so this declares so much the more thy extream hatred of holiness that canst not endure so much as the Picture of it canst not see any thing like it but thou must let fly at it and this argues thy deep hatred of God holiness in a Christian as the Image of God and the Hyprocrite in the resemblance of it is the Image of a Christian so thou hatest the very Image of the Image of God for deceive not thy self it is not the latent evil in hypocrisie but the apparent good in it that thou hatest The prophane Man thinks himself a great Zealot against Hypocrisie he is still crying out of it but it s only this he is angry at that all should not be ungodly wicked enemies of Religion as he is either dissolute or meerly civil and the civil man is readily the bitterest enemy of all strictness beyond his own size as condemning him and therefore he cries it down as all of it false and counterfeit wares Let me intreat you if you would not be found fighters against God let no revilings be heard amongst you against any that are or seem to be Followers of Holiness if ye will not reverence it your selves yet reverence it in others at least do not reproach it It should be your ambition else why are you willing to be called Christians but if you will not pursue holiness yet persecute it not if you will not have fervent love to the Saints yet burn not with infernal heat of fervent hatred against them for truly that is one of the likliest pledge of these flames and society with damned Spirits as love to the Children of God is of that inheritance and society with them in glory 2. You that are Brethren and
not through fire and water yea through death it self yea were it through many deaths to go after him 2. Consider as its due so it is made easie by that his suffering for us our burden that pressed us to hell taken off is not all as nothing that is left to suffer or do our Chains that bounds us over to eternal Death being knock'd off shall we not walk shall we not run in his ways Oh! think what that Burden and Yoke was he hath eased us of how heavy how unsufferable it was and then we shall think what he so truly says that all he lays on is sweet his yoke easie and his burden light Oh! the happy change rescued from the vilest slavery and called to conformity and Fellowship with the Son of God 2. The Nature of this Conformity to shew the nearness of it is exprest in the very same terms as in the pattern it is not a remote resemblance but the same thing even suffering in the flesh But that we may take it right what suffering is here meant it is plainly this ceasing from sin so suffering in the flesh here is not the enduring of afflictions which is a part of a Christians Conformity with his head Christ Rom. 8. But this is a more inward and spiritual suffering it is the suffering and the dying of our Corruption the taking away the life of sin by the death of Christ and that death of his sinless flesh works in the Believer the death of sinful flesh that is the Corruption of his Nature which is so usually in Scripture called flesh Sin makes Man base drowns him in flesh and the lusts of it makes the very Soul become gross and earthly turns it as it were to flesh so the Apostle calls the very Mind that is unrenewed a carnal mind Rom. 8. And what doth the mind of a Natural Man hunt after and run out into from one day and year to another is it not on things of this base World and the concernment of his flesh What would he have but be accommodated to eat and drink and dress and live at ease he minds earthly things savours and relishes them and cares for them examin the most of your pains and time and your strongest desires and most serious thoughts if they go not this way to raise your selves and yours in your Worldly condition yea the highest projects of the greatest natural Spirits are but earth still in respect of things truly spiritual all their State Designs go not beyond this poor life that perishes in the flesh and is daily perishing even while we are busiest upholding it and providing for it present things and this lodge of clay this flesh and its interest take up most of our time and pains the most yea all till that change be wrought the Apostle speaks of till Christ be put on Rom. 13. put ye on the Lord Iesus Christ and then the other will easily follow that follows in the Words make no provision for the flesh to fullfil it in the lusts thereof Once in Christ and then your necessary general care for this natural life will be regulated and moderated by the Spirit And for all unlawful and enormous desires of the flesh you shall be rid of providing for these instead of all provision for the life of the flesh in that sense there is another guest and another life for you now to wait on and furnish for in them that are in Christ that flesh is dead they are fr●ed from its drudgery he that hath suffered in the flesh hath rested from sin Ceased from sin ●e is at rest from it a Godly Death as th●y that die in the Lord rest from their labours he that hath suffered in the flesh and is dead to it dies indeed in the Lord rests from the base turmoil of sin it is no longer his Master As our sin was the cause of Christs death his death is the death of sin in us and that not simply as he bear a moral pattern of it but the real working cause of it hath an effectual influence on the Soul kills it to sin I am crucified with Christ says S. Paul Faith so looks on the death of Christ that it takes the impression of it sets it on the heart kills it unto sin Christ and the Believer do not only become one in law so as his death stands for theirs but are in nature so as his death for sin causes theirs to it Rom. 6. 3. This suffering in the flesh being unto death and such a death Crucifying hath indeed pain in it but what then it must be so like his and the believer like him in willingly enduring it all the pain of his suffering in the flesh his love to us digested and went through it so all the pain to our nature in severing and pulling us from our beloved sins and our dying to them if his love be planted in our hearts that will sweeten it and make us delight in it love desires nothing more than likeness and shares willingly in all with the party loved and above all love this Divine Love is purest and highest and works strongliest that way takes pleasure in that pain and is a voluntary death as Plato calls love it is strong as death makes the strongest body f●ll to the ground so doth the love of Christ make the activest and liveliest sinner dead to his sin And as death fevers a Man from his dearest and most familiar friends thus doth the love of Christ and his death flowing from it fever the heart from its most beloved sins I beseech you seek to have your hearts set against sin to hate it to wound it and be dying daily to it Be not satisfy'd unless ye feel an abatement of it and a life within you disdain that base service and being bought at so high a rate think your selves too good to be slaves to any base lust you are called to a more excellent and more honourable service And of this suffering in the flesh we may safely say what the Apostle speaks of the sufferings with and for Christ that the partakers of these sufferings are co-heirs of glory with Christ if we suffer thus with him we shall also be glorified with him if we die with him we shall live with him for ever 3. The actual improvement of this Conformity Arm your selves with the same Mind or thoughts of this Mortification Death taken Naturally in its proper sense being an intire privation of life admits not of degrees but this figurative death this Mortification of the flesh in a Christian is gradual in so far as he is renewed and is animated and acted by the Spirit of Christ he is throughly mortified for this death and that new life joyned with it and here added ver 2. go together and grow together but because he is not totally renewed and there is in him of that corruption still that is here called flesh therefore is
the heart But sure this one thing would make the Soul more calm and sober in the pursuit of present things if their term were truly computed and considered How soon shall youth and health and carnal delights be at an end how soon shall State craft and King-craft and all the great Projects of the highest Wits and Spirits be laid in the dust This casts a damp upon all those fine things but to a Soul acquainted with God and in affection removed hence already no thought so sweet as this helps much to carry it chearfully through wrestlings and difficulties through better and worse they see Land near and shall quickly be at home that 's the way The end of all things is at hand an end of a few poor delights and the many vexations of this wretched life an end of tentations and sins the worst of all evils yea an end of the imperfect fashion of our best things here an end of prayer it self to which succeeds that new Song of endless praises Verse 8. And above all things have fervent charity among your selves for charity shall cover the multitude of sins THE Graces of the Spirit are an entire frame making up the new Creature and none of them can be wanting therefore the Doctrine and Exhortation of the Apostles speak of them usually not only as inseparable but as one But there is amongst them all none more cemprehensive than this of Love insomuch that St. Paul calls it the fullfilling of the Law love to God the sum of all relative to him and so likewise is it towards our Brethren Love to God is that which makes us live to him and be wholly his that which most powerfully weans us from this World and causeth us delight in communion with him in holy Meditation and Prayer Now the Apostle adding here of the duty of Christians to one another gives this the prime yea the sum of all Above all have fervent love Concerning this Consider 1. The Nature of it 2. The Eminent Degree of it 3 The Excellent Fruit of it 1. It is an union therefore called a bond or chain that links things together 2. 'T is not a meer external union that holds in customs or words or outward carriage but an union of hearts 3. 'T is here not a natural but a spiritual supernatural union it is that mutual love of Christians as Brethren There is a common benevolence and good-will due to all but a more particular uniting affection interchangeably one amongst Christians The Devil being an Apostate Spirit revolted and separated from God doth naturally project and work division This was his first exploit and still his grand design and business in the World he first divided Man from God put them at an enmity by the first Sin of our first Parents and the next we read of in their first Child was enmity against his Brother so Satan is called by our Saviour justly a liar and a murderer from the beginning murdered man by lying and made him a murderer And as the Devil's work is Division Christ's work is Union he came to dissolve the works of Satan by a contrary work he came to make all Friends to recollect and reunite all Men to God and Man to Man and both those unions hold in him by vertue of that marvellous union of Natures in his Person and that Mysterious Union of the Persons of Believers with him as their Head so the word Eph. 1. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To unite all in one head Thus his great project in all this he died and suffered for and this he prayed for Iohn 17. and this is strong above all ties natural or civil union in Christ this they have that are indeed Christians this they pretend to have if they understood it that profess themselves Christians If natural friendship be capable of that expression one spirit in two bodies Christian union hath it much more really and properly for there is indeed one Spirit more extensive in all the Faithful yea so one Spirit that it makes them up into one body more intensive they are not so much as divers bodies only divers members of one body Now this love of our Brethren is not another from the love of God 't is but the streaming forth of it or the reflex of it Jesus Christ sending in his Spirit into the heart unites it to God in himself by love which is all indeed that loving of God supreamly and entirely with all the mind and soul all the combined strength of the heart and then that same love first wholly carried to him is not divided or impared by the love of our Brethren 't is but dilated and derived from the other he allows yea commands yea causes that it stream forth and act it self toward them remaining still in him as in its source and center beginning at him and returning to him as the Beams that diffuse themselves from the Sun and the Light and Heat yet are not divided or cut off from it but remain in it and by emanation issue from it Loving our Brethren in God and for him not only because he commands us to love them and so the Law of Love to him ties us to it as his Will but because that love of God doth naturally extend it self thus and acts thus in loving our Brethren after a Spiritual Christian manner we do even in that love our God Loving of God makes us one with God and so gives us an impression of his divine bounty in his Spirit and his love the proper work of his Spirit dwelling in the Heart enlarges and dilates it as self-love contracts and streightens it so that as self-love is the perfect opposite to the love of God it is likewise so to brotherly-love shuts out and undoes both and where the love of God is rekindled and enters the Heart it destroys and burns up self love and so carries the affection up to himself and in him forth to our Brethren This is that bitter root of all enmity in man against God and amongst Men against one another Self Man's Heart turned from God towards himself and the very work of renewing Grace is to annual and destroy Self to replace God in his Right that the Heart and all its Affections and Motions be at his dispose so that instead of self-will and self-love that rul'd before now the Will of God and the Love of God commands all And where it is thus there this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this love of our Brethren will be sincere Whence is it that Wars and Contests and mutual Disgracings and Despisings abound so but that men love themselves and nothing but themselves or in relation to themselves as it pleases or is advantageous to them that 's the Standard and Rule all is carried by interest so thence are stri●es and defamings and bitterness against one another but the Spirit of Christ coming in und●es all selfishness And now according to God what he
Father which is in Heaven to love them that hate you and bless them that curse you 't is a kind of perfection ver 48. He makes his Sun to shine on the Righteous and the Wicked c. Be you like it howsoever Men behave themselves keep you your course and let your benign influence as you can do good to all And Jesus Christ sets in himself these things before us Learn of me not to heal the sick or raise the dead but Learn for I am meek and lowly in Heart And if you be his Followers this is your way as the Apostle here addeth hereunto are you called and this is the end of it agrecable to the way that you may inherit a blessing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowing that Understanding ●right the Nature of your holy calling and then considering it wisely and conforming to it They that have nothing beyond an external calling and profession of Christianity are wholly bliud in this point do not think what this imports a Christian. Could they be drawn to this it were much it were indeed all to know to what they are called and to answer it to walk like it but as one calls a certain sort of Lawyers indoctum doctorum genus we may call the most an unchristian kind of Christians But even they that are real partakers of this spiritual and effectual Call yet are much to seek in this often viewing their rule and laying it to their Life their hearts and words and actions and squaring by it and often posing themselves suits this my calling Is this like a Christian 'T is a main point in any civil Station to have a suitable convenient carriage to a Man's Station and condition that his actions become him but how many incongruities and solecisms do we commit forgetting our selves who we are and what we are called to to what as our duty and to what as our portion and inheritance and these indeed agree together we are called to an undefiled a holy Inheritance and therefore likewise to be Holy in our way to it for that contains all We are called to a better estate at home and called to be sitted for it while we are here to an Inheritance of light and therefore to walk as Children of light and so here to blessing as our inheritance and to blessing as our duty for this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thereunto relates to both looks back to the one and forward to the other the way and the end both Blessing The fulness of this inheritance is reserv'd till we come to that Land where it lyeth there it abideth us but the earnests of that fulness of blessing are bestow'd on us here spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ they descend from those heavenly places upon the heart that precious name of our Lord Jesus powred on our hearts if we be indeed interessed in him as we pretend and we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ we are put in possession of that blessing of forgiveness of sin and in terms of love and amity with the Father being reconciled by the blood of his Son and then blessed with the anointing of the Spirit the graces infus'd from Heaven now all these do so cure the bitter accursed distempers of our natural Hearts and so perfume it that it cannot well breath any thing but sweetness and blessing towards others being it self thus blessed of the Lord it eccho's blessing both to God and Men to his blessing of it and its words and whole carriage are as the smell of a Field that the Lord hath blessed as old Iacob said of his Son's Garments The Lord having spoke pardon to a Soul and instead of the curse due to sin bless'd it with a title to glory it easily and readily speaks pardon and not only pardon but blessing to the advantage even to these that outrage it most and deserve worst of it reflects still on that Oh! what deserv'd I at my Lords hands so many talents forgiven me shall I stick at forgiving a few pence And then call'd to inherit a blessing so every Believer an heir of blessing and not only are the spiritual blessings he hath received but even his largeness of blessing others is a pledge to him an evidence of that heirship as those that are bent to cursing though provok'd yet can look upon that as a sad mark that they are heirs of a curse Ps. 109. 18. shall they not that delight in cursing have then enough of it when they shall hear that doleful word go ye cursed c. And on the other side as for the Sons of blessing that spar'd it not to any the blessing they are Heirs to is a blessedness it self and they to be enter'd into it by that joyful speech come ye blessed of my Father c. Men can but bless one another in good wishes and the Lord in praises and applauding to his blessedness but the Lord's blessing is really making blessed an operative word brings the thing with it Inherit a Blessing Not called to be exempted from troubles and injuries here and to be extoll'd and favour'd by the World but on the contrary rather to suffer the utmost of their malice and be the mark of their arrows of wrongs and scoffs and reproaches but it matters not this weighs down all you are called to inherit a blessing which all their cursings and hate cannot prejudge you of for as this inheriting of blessing binds on the duty of blessing others upon a Christian so it encourages to go through the hardest contrary measure they receive from the World if the World should bless you and applaud you never so loud yet that blessing cannot be call'd an inheritance they fly away and dy out in the air have no substance at all much less that endurance that may make them an inheritance and more generally is their any thing here so to be called the surest inheritances are not more than for term of Life to any one Man their abiding is for others that succeed but he removes and when a Man is to remove from all he hath possess'd and rejoyc'd in here then fool indeed if nothing provided for the longer O! how much longer abode he must make elsewhere Will he not then bewail his madness that he was hunting a Shaddow all his Life time and may be turned out of all his quiet possessions and easie dwelling before that and in these times we may the more readily think of this but at the utmost at night when he should be for most rest when that sad night comes after this day of fairest prosperity the unbeleiving unrepenting sinner lies down in sorrow in a woful bed then must he whether he will or no enter possession to this inheritance of everlasting burnings he hath an inheritance indeed but he had better want it and himself too be turn'd to nothing Do you believe there are treasures that neither Thief breaks
than another and amongst the rest even this in them you escape many even present mischiefs that you see the ways of the World are full of And if you will be careful to ply your Rule and study your Copy better you shall find it more so the more you follow that which is good the more shall you avoid a number of outward evils that are ordinarily drawn on upon men by their own enormities and passions keep as close as you can to the genuine even Tract of a Christian walk and labour for a prudent and meek behaviour adorning your holy Profession and this shall adorn you and sometimes gain those that are without yea even your Enemies shall be constrain'd to approve it 'T is known how much the spotless Lives and patient Sufferings of the Primitive Christians did sometimes work upon their Beholders yea on their Persecutors and perswaded some that would not share with them in their Religion yet to speakand write for them Seeing then that Reason and Experience do joyntly aver it that the Lives of Men conversant together have readily very much influence one upon another for example is an animated or living Rule and is both the shortest and powerfullest way of teaching Obs. 1. Whosoever are in exemplary or leading place in relation to others be it many or few be ye first followers of God set before you the Rule of Holiness and withal the best and highest examples of these that have walkt according to it and then you will be leading in it those that are under you and bent to follow you in so doing will follow that which is good Lead and draw them on by admonishing and counselling and exhorting but especially by walking Pastors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ensamples as our Apostle hath it that they may be stampt aright taking the impression of your Lives sound Doctrine alone will not serve tho the Water you give your Flocks be pure yet if you lay spotted Rods before them it will bring forth spotted Lives in them either teach not at all or teach by Rhetorick of your Lives Elders be such in grave and pious carriage whatsoever be your years for young Men may be so and possibly gray Hairs may have nothing under them but gaddishness and folly many years old habituated and inveterate ungodliness Parents and Masters let your Children and Servants read in your Lives the Life and Power of Godliness the Practice of Piety not lying in your Windows or corners of your Houses and confin'd within the Clasp of the Book bearing that or any such like Title but shining in your Lives 2dly You that are easily receptive of the impression of example beware of the stamp of unholiness and a carnal formal course of profession whereof the examples are most abounding but though they be fewer that bear the lively Image of God impress'd on their hearts and express'd in their Actions yet study these and be followers of those as they are of Christ. I know you will espy much irregular and unsanctified carriage in us that are set up for the Ministry and look round will find the World lying in wickedness yet if there be any that have any sparks of divine light in them converse with those and follow them 3. And generally this to all for none so compleat but may espy some imitable and emulable good even in meaner Christians acquaint your selves with the Word the rule of holiness and then with an eye to that look on one another and be zealous of progress in the ways of holiness choose to converse with such as may excite you and advance you both by their advice and example Let not a corrupt Generation in which you live be the worse by you nor you the worse by it as far as you necessarily ingage to some conversation with those that are unholy let them not pull you into the mire but if you can help them out and let not any custome of Sin about you by familiar seeing gain upon you so as to think it fashionable and comely yea or so as not to think it deform and hateful know that you must row against the Stream of wickedness in the World unless you would be carried with it to the dead Sea or Lake of Perdition take that grave counsel given Rom. 12. be not conformed to this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind which is the daily advancement in renovation purifying and refining every day Now in this way you shall have sweet inward peace and joy and some advantage outward that Men except monstruously cruel and malicious will not so readily harm you 't will abate much of their rage but however if you do not escape suffering by your holy carriage yea if you suffer even for it yet in that are ye happy Ver. 14. 14. But and if you suffer for righteousness sake happy are you And be not afraid of their terrours neither be troubled IN this two things First Even in the most blameless way of a Christians suffering supposed Secondly Their happiness even in suffering asserted 1st Suffering supposed notwithstanding of righteousness yea for righteousness and that not as a rare unusual accident but as the frequent lot of Christians as Luther calls Persecution malus genius Evangelii And this we being forwarn'd to be not only the possible but the frequent lot of the Saints ought not to hearken to the false prophecies of our own self-self-love that divines what it would gladly have and easily perswades us to believe it think not that any prudence will lead you by all oppositions and malice of an ungodly World but many winter blasts will meet you in the most inoffensive way of Religion if you keep streight to it Suffering and war with the World is a part of the godly Man's portion here which seems hard but take it altogether 't is sweet none in their wits will refuse that legacy entire in the World ye shall have trouble but in me ye shall have peace Look about you and see if there be any estate of Man or course of life exempted from troubles the greatest usually subject to greatest vexations as the largest bodies have the largest shadows attending them We need not tell Nobles and rich Men that Contentment doth not dwell in great Palaces and Titles nor full Coffers they feel it that they are not free of much anguish and molestation and that a proportionable train of cares as constantly as of Servants follows great place and wealth riches and trouble or noise signified by the same Hebrew word and Kings find that their Crowns that are set so richly with Diamonds without are lin'd with Thorns within And speak of Men that are Servants to unrighteousness besides what is to come are they not often forc'd to suffer amongst the service of their lusts the distempers that attend the unhealthy intemperance and poverty that Dogs luxury at the heels and the fit punishment of voluptuous persons in
Christ in whom all our rights and evidences hold good his death assuring us of freedom from condemnation and his life and possession of glory the foundation of our hope Heb. 6. 19. If you would have it immoveable rest it there lay all this hope on him and when assaulted fete● all your answers for it from him for 't is Christ in you that is your hope of glory Coloss. 1. 27. Verse 16. 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may be ashamed that falsly accuse your good Conversation in Christ. THE prosperity of fools is their destruction says Solomon none of God's Children die of this disease of too much ease he knows well how to breed them and fit them for a Kingdome he keeps them in exercise but yet so as they are not surcharg'd he not only directs them how to overcome but enables and supports them in all their conflicts and gives them victory One main thing tending to their enablement and victory is this which is here requir'd in the Saints and is withal wrought and maintained in them by the Spirit of God Having a good Conscience c. 1. Two parties here opposed in contest the evil Tongues of the ungodly and the good Conscience and Conversation of the Christian they speak evil of you and falsly accuse you but have you a good Conscience 2dly The success of their contest the good Conscience prevails and the evil-speakers are ashamed They speak evil This is a general evil in the corrupt nature of Man though in some it rises to a greater height than in others Are not Tables and Chambers and almost all Societies and meetings full of it and even they that have some dislikings of it yet readily carried with the stream and for company's sake take a share if not in sending in their word yet lending their ear and willingly hearing the detractions of others and unless it be of their friends or such as they have interest in do insensibly slide into some forc'd complacency and easily receive the impression of calumnies and defamings But the most are more active in this evil can cast in their penny to make up the shot have their taunt or criticisme upon some body in readiness to make up the feast such as most companies entertain one another withal but 't is a vile diet Satan's name as the Syriack calls him an eater of calumnies This tongue-evil hath its root in the heart a perverse constitution there pride and self-self-love an overweening esteem that Men naturally have of themselves mounts them into that Chair gives them a fancied authority of judging others and self-love a desire to be esteem'd and for that end spare not to depress others and load them with disgraces and missensures upon their ruins to raise themselves But this bent of the heart and tongue unrenew'd to evil speaking works and vents most in the World against those that walk most contrary to the course of the World This Furnace of the tongne is kindled from hell as St. Iames tells us and is made seven times hotter than ordinary As for sincere Christians a Company of hypocrites say they who so godly but yet they are false and malicious and proud c. And no kind of carriage in them shall escape there shall be some device to wrest and misname it if they be cheerful in Society that shall be accounted more liberty than suits with their profession if of a graver sad temper that shall pass for sullen severity thus Iohn Baptist and Christ Matth. 11. If they be diligent and wary in their affairs then in the World's construction they are as covetous and worldly as any if careless and remiss in them then silly wi●less bodies good for nothing still somthing stands cross The Enemies of Religion have not any where so quick an Eye as in observing the ways of such as seek after God my remarkers David calls them they that scan my ways as the word is will not let piss the least step unexamined If nothing be found faulty then their invention works either forges compleat falshoods or disguises somthing that lyes open to mistake or if they can catch hold on any real failing no end of their triumph and insultations 1. They aggravate and raise it to the highest 2. While they will not admit to be judged of themselves by their constant walk they scruple not to judge of the condition of a Christian by any one particular action wherein he doth or seems at least to miscarry 3. They rest not there but make one failing of one Christian the reproach of all take up your Devoto's there 's never a one of them the better 4. Nor rest they there but make personal failings of those that profess it the disgrace of Religion it self Now all these are very crooked Rules and gross injustice 1. There is a great difference betwixt a thing taken favourably and the same action misconstrued 2. A great difference betwixt one particular act and a mans estate or inward frame which they either consider not or willingly or maliciously neglect 3. How large is the difference that there is betwixt one and another in the measure of Grace and of their prudence either in their Naturals or in Grace or possibly in both that some who are honest in matter of Religion yet being very weak may miscarry in such things as other Christians come seldome near the hazard of and though some should wholly forsake the way of Godliness wherein they seem'd to walk yet why should that reflect upon such as are real and steadfast in it they were amongst us sayes the Apostle but were not of us Offences of this kind must be but the woe rests on him by whom they come not on other Christians and if it spread further than the party offending 't is to the prophane World that take offence at Religion because of him as our Saviour hath express'd it Woe to the World because of offences they shall stumble and fall and break their necks upon these stumbling blocks or scandals Thou that art prophane and seest the failing of a Minister or Christian and art hardened by it this is a Judgment to thee that thou meetest with such a block in thy Way Woe to the World Its judgement on a place where God makes Religion in the Persons of some to be scandalous 4. Religion it self remains still it self whatsoever be the failings and blots of one or more that profess it it is pure and spotless if it teach not Holiness and Meekness and Humility and all good purely then except against it but if it be a streight golden Re●d by which the Temple is measured then let it have its own esteem both of streightness and preciousness whatsoever unevenness be found in those that profess to receive it Suspect and search your s●lves even in general for this evil of evil-speaking Consider that we are to give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
he still asks what you mean by this those things answer not me do ye think I can find Com●●●● in them so long as my sin is unpardon'd and there is a 〈◊〉 of Eternal Death standing above my head I feel even an impress of somewhat of that hot Indignation some flashes of it flying and lighting upon the face of my Soul and how can I take pleasure in these things you speak of And though I should be sensless and feel nothing of this all my life yet how soon shall I have done with it and the delights that reach no further and then to have Everlasting burnings Eternity of wrath to enter to how can I be satisfyed with that estate All you offer a Man in this posture is as if ye should set dainty fair and bring musick with it to a Man lying almost pressed to death under great weights and ye bid him eat and be merry but lift not off his pressure you do but mock the Man and add to his misery On the other side he that hath got but a view of his Christ and reads his own pardon in Christs sufferings he can rejoyce in this in the midst of all other sufferings and look on death without apprehension yea with gladness the sting is out Christ hath made all pleasant to him by this one thing that he suffered once for sins Christ hath perfum'd the Cross and the Grave and made all sweet The pardoned Man finds himself light skips and leaps and through Christ strengthning him he can encounter with any trouble If you think to shut in his Spirit within outward sufferings it is now as Sampson in his strength able to carry away the Gates on his back that you would shut one withal yea can submit patiently to the Lords hands in any correction Thou hast forgiven my sin therefore deal with me as thou wilt all is well 1. Learn to consider more deeply and esteem more highly of Christ and his suffering to silence our grumbling at our petty light crosses for so they are in comparison of his will not the great odds of his perfect Inno●ency and o● his nature and measure of his sufferings will not the sense of that Redemption of our Souls from death by his death will none of these nor all of them argue us into more thankfulness and love to him and patience in our tryals Why will we then be called Christians it is impossible to be fretful and malecontent with the Lord 's dealing with us in any kind till first we have forgot how he dealt with his dearest Son for our sakes But these things are not weigh'd by the most we hear and speak of them but our hearts receive not the impressions of them therefore we repine against our Lord and Father and drown a hundred great blessings in any little touch of trouble that befalls us 2. Seek surer interest in Christ and his suffering than the most either have attained or are aspiring to otherwise all that is here suffered will not ease or comfort thee any thing in any kind of suffering no though thou suffer for a good cause even for his cause still this will be an extraneous foraign thing to thee to tell thee of his sufferings will work no otherwise with thee than some other common story And as in the day of peace thou regardest it no more so in the day of thy trouble thou shalt receive no more comfort from it Other things you esteemed shall have no comfort to speak to you though you persue them with words as Solomon says of the poor Man's friends yet they shall be wanting to you And then you would sure find how happy it were to have this to turn you to that the Lord Jesus suffered for sins and for yours and therefore hath made it a light and comfortable business to you to undergo momentary passing sufferings Days of tryal will come do you not see they are on us already Be perswaded to turn your eyes and desires more towards Christ. This is the thing we would still press the support and happiness of your Souls lyes on it But you will not believe it Oh! that ye knew the comforts and sweetness of Christ. Oh that one would speak that knew more of them were you once but entered into this knowledge of him and the virtue of his sufferings you would account all your days but lost wherein you have not known him and in all times your hearts would find no refreshment like to the remembrance of his love Having somewhat considered these sufferings as the Apostles Argument for his present purpose Now to take nearer notice of the particulars by which he illustrates them as the main point of our Faith and Comfort Of them here two things 1. Their Cause 2. Their Kind Their Cause both their meriting cause and their final cause 1. What in us procured these sufferings unto Christ. 2. What those his suffering procured unto us Our guiltiness brought suffering upon him and his suffering brings us unto God 1. The evil of sin hath the evil of punishment inseparably ty'd to it We have a natural obligation of obedience unto God and he justly urges it so that where the command of his Law is broke the Curse of it presently followeth And though it was simply in the Power of the supream Lawgiver to have dispensed the infliction yet having in his Wisdom purposed to be known a just God in that way following forth the tenor of his Law of necessity there must be a suffering for sin Thus the Angels that kept not their Station falling from it fell into a Dungeon where they are under chains of darkness reserved to the Iudgement of the Great day and Man fell under the sentence of Death But in this is the difference betwixt Man and them they were not of one as parent or common root of the rest but each one fell or stood for himself alone so a part of them only perisht but Man fell altogether so that not one of all the Race could escape condemnation unless some other way of satisfaction be found out And here it is Christ suffered for sins the just for the unjust Father says he I have glorified thee on Earth In this Plot indeed do all the Divine Attributes shine in their full infinite Mercy and immense Justice and Power and Wisdom Looking on Christ as ordained for that purpose I have found a Ransom says the Father one fit to redeem Man a Kinsman one of that very same Stock the Son of Man one able to redeem Man by satisfying me and fullfilling all I lay upon him my Son my only begotten Son in whom my Soul delights And he is willing undertakes all says loe I come c. We are agreed upon the way of this Redemption yea upon the Persons to be redeemed it is not a roving blind Bargain a price paid for we know not to whom Hear his own words Thou hast given the Son
united by that purest and strongest tie as you are one in your head in your life derived from him in your hopes of glory with him seek to be more one in heart in fervent love one to another in him Consider the combinements and concurrences of the wicked against him and his little flock and let this provoke you to more united affections Shall the Scales of Leviathan as one alludes stick so close together and shall not the Members of Christ be more one and undivided you that can resent it stir up your selves to bewail the present divisions and fears of more suit earnestly for that one Spirit to act and work more powerfully in the hearts of his people 2dly The eminent degree of this love 1. It s eminency amongst Graces above all 2. The high measure of it required fervent love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a high bent or strain of it that which acts strongly and carries far 1. 'T is eminent that which indeed among Christians preserves all and knits all together therefore called Col. 3. the bond of perfection all bound up by it How can they pray together advance the name of their God keep in and stir up all Grace in one another unless they be united in love how can they have access to God or fellowship with him who is love as St. Iohn speaks if instead of this sweet temper there be rancours and bitterness amongst them so then uncharity and divisions amongst Christians doth not only hinder their civil good but their spiritual much more and that not only lucro cessante as they speak interrupting the ways of mutual profiting but damno emergente it doth really damage them and brings them to losses preys upon their Graces as hot withering winds on Herbs and Plants where the Heart entertains either bitter malice or but uncharitable prejudices there will be a certain decay of spiritualness in the whole Soul 2. Again for the degree of this love required it is not a cold indifferency a negative love as I may call it or not willing of evil nor a lukewarm wishing of good but fervent and active love for if fervent it will be active a fire will not be smother'd it will find way to extend it self 3. The Fruits of this Love follow 1. Covering of evil in this verse 2. Doing of good verse 9. c. Covers This from Solomon and here as it s represented to be thus done as a main act of love so love is commended by it as a most useful and laudible act of it covers sins and a multitude of sins Solomon saith as the Opposition clears the Sense hatred stirs strife aggravates and makes the worst of all but love covers a multitude of sins delights not in undue disclosing of Brethrens failings doth not eye them rigidly nor expose them willingly to the eyes of others Now this commends charity in regard of its continual usefullness and necessity this way considering human frailty and that in many things as St. Iames speaks we all offend so that this is still needful on all hands what do they think that are still picking at every appearing infirmity of their Brethren know they not that the frailties that cleave to the Saints of God while they are here doth stand in need of and call for this mutual office of love to cover and pass by who is there that stands not in need of this if none why are there any that deny it to others there can be no society nor entertaining of Christian converse without it giving as we speak the allowance reckoning to meet with defects and weaknesses on all hands covering the failings one of another seeing its needful from each to another Again as the necessity of this commends it and the love whence it flows so there is that laudible ingenuity in it that should draw us to the liking of it 't is the bent of the basest and worthlessest Spirits to be busie in the search and discovery of others failings passing by all that is commendable and imitable as base Flies readily sitting on any little sore they can find rather than upon the sound parts but the more Excellent Mind of a real Christian loves not unnecessarily to touch no nor to look upon them rather turns away never uncover their Brothers sore but to cure it and no more than of necessity must be for that end would willingly have them hid that neither they nor others might see them This bars not the judicial trial of scandalous offences nor the delation of them and bringing them under due censure the forbearing of this is not charity but both iniquity and cruelty and this cleaves too much to many of us they that cannot pass the least touch of a wrong done to themselves can digest twenty high injuries done to God by prophane persons about them and resent it not and such may be assured they are yet destitute of love to God and of Christian love to their Brethren which springs from it The uncovering of sin necessary to the curing of it is not only no breach of charity but is indeed a main point of charity and the neglect of it the highest kind of cruelty But further then that goes certainly this rule teaches the veiling of our Brethrens infirmities from the eyes of others and even from our own that we look not on them with rigour no nor without compassion First Love is witty in finding out the fairest constructions of things doubtful and this is a great point Take me the best action that can be named pride and malice shall find a way to disgrace it and put a hard visage on 't Again what is not undeniably evil love will turn all the ways of viewing it till it find the best and most favourable 2. Where the thing is so a sin that this way of covering it can have no place yet then will love consider what may lessen it most whether a surprize or strength of tentation or ignorance as our Saviour Father forgive them for they know not what they do or natural complexion or at least will still take in humane frailty to turn all the bitterness of passion into sweet compassion 3. All private reproofs and where conscience requires publick delation and censure even these will be sweetned in that compassion that slows from love if such a sore as must not be let lie covered up least it prove deadly so that it must be uncovered to be lanc't and cut that it may be cur'd this to be done as loving the Soul of the Brother Where the rule of consciences urges it not then thou must bury it and be so far from delighting to divulge such things that as far as without partaking in it thou mayest thou must veil it from all eyes and try the way of private admonition and if the party appear to be humble and willing to be reclaimed then forget it cast it quite out of thy thoughts that as much as may
condition in itself though it portended no further Judgment the Lord hiding himself and the Spirit of Zeal and Prayer withdrawn and scarce any lamenting it or so much as perceiving it where our days either of solemn Prayer or Praises as if cause of neither and yet clear cause of both Truly M. B. we have need if ever to bestir our selves are not the Kingdoms at this present brought to the extream point of their highest hazard and yet who lays it to heart Inf. 2. Learn to give God right construction in all his dealings with his Church and with thy Soul for his Church there may be a time wherein thou shall see it not only tossed but to thy thinking covered and swallowed up with tears but wait a little it shall arrive safe This common stumbling stone walk by the light of the Word and the eye of Faith looking on it and thou shalt pass by and not stumble at it the Church mourns and Babylon sings sits as a Queen but for how long she shall come down and sit in the dust and Zion shall be glorious and put on her beautiful Garments and Babylon shall not look for another revelation to raise her again no she shall never rise The Angel took up a Stone like a great Milstone and cast it into the Sea saying Thus with violence shall the great City Babylon be thrown down and shall be found no more at all Be not sudden take God's work together do not judge of it by parcels it is indeed all Wisdom and Righteousness but we shall best discern the beauty of it when we look on it in the frame and when it shall be fully compleated and finisht and our eyes enlightned to take a fuller and clearer view of it than we can have here Oh! what wonder what endless wondering will it command We read of Ioseph hated and sold and imprison'd and all most unjustly but because within a leaf or two we find him freed and exalted and his Brethren coming Supplicants to him we are satisfied but the things that are for the present cloudy and dark our short hasty Spirits cannot learn to wait a little till we see the other side and what end the Lord makes we see Iudgment beginning at the House of God and this perplexes us while we consider not the rest what shall be the end of them that obey not the Gospel God begins the Judgment on his Church for a little time that it may end and rest upon his enemies for ever And indeed he leaves the wicked last in the punishment so as he makes use of them for the punishing of his Church they are his rod Isa. 10. But then when he hath done that work with them they are broken and burnt v. 16. and that when they are at the height of insolency and boasting not knowing what hand moves them and smites his People with them for a while till the da of their consuming come v. 24 25. let the vile enemy that hath shed our blood and insulted over us rejoyce in their present sparing and in mens procuring of it and pleading for it there is another hand whence we may look for Justice and though it may be the Judgment begun at us is not yet ended and that we may yet further and that justly find them our scourge yet certainly we may and ought to look beyond that unto the end of the Lord's work which shall be the ruin of his Enemies and the peace of his People and the glory of his Name Of them that obey not the Gospel The end of all the Ungodly is terrible but especially of such as heard the Gospel and have not received and obey'd it The Word hath in it both Unbelief and Disobedience and these are inseparable Unbelief is the grand point of Disobedience in it self and the spring of all other disobedience and the pity is men will not believe it to be thus They think it an easie and a common thing to believe who doth not believe Oh! but rather who does who hath believed our report were our own misery and the happiness that is in Christ believed were the riches of Christ and the love of Christ believed would not this perswade men to forsake their sins and the World to embrace him But men run away with an extraordinary fancy of believing and do not deeply consider what news the Gospel brings and how much it concerns them sometimes it may be they have a sudden thought of it and they think I will think on it better at some other time but when comes that time one business steps in after another and shuffles it out Men are not at leasure to be saved The Gospel of God His embassy of Peace of Men the riches of his mercy and free love opened up and set forth not simply to be lookt on but laid hold on The glorious holy God declaring his mind of agreement with Man in his own Son his blood streaming forth in it to wash away uncleanness and yet this Gospel not obeyed Sure the conditions of it very hard and the commands must be grievous that they are not hearkened to why judge you if they be The great command is that to receive that Salvation and the other is this to love that Saviour and there is no more perfect obedience is not now the thing and the obedience that is required that love makes it sweet and easie to us and acceptable to him This is proclaimed to all that hear the Gospel and the greatest part refuse it they love themselves and their lusts and this present World and will not change and so they perish They perish what 's that what is their end I will answer that but as the Apostle doth and that is even asking the question over again what shall be their end There is no speaking of it a Curtain drawn silent wonder expresses it best telling it cannot be exprest how then shall it be endured It is true that there be resemblances used in Scripture giving us some glance of it we hear of a burning Lake a Fire that goes not out and a Worm that dies not but these are but shadows to the real misery of them that obey not the Gospel Oh! to be filled with the wrath of God the ever living God for ever What words or thoughts can reach it Oh! Eternity Eternity Oh! that we did believe it This same paralel is continued in the following Verse in other terms for the clearer expression and deeper impression of it Verse 18. And if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the ungodly and sinner appear IT is true then that they are scarce saved even they that endeavour to walk uprightly in the ways of God that 's the Righteous here they are scarcely saved That imports not any uncertainty or hazard in the thing it self to the end in respect of the purpose and performance of God but only the great difficulties and hard encounters in the way
Ierusalems Wall● than for the binding up and healing of it self and in that Psal. that seem's to be the expression of his joy being exalted to the Throne and sitting peaceably on it yet he still thus prays for the peace of Ierusalem And the Penman of that 137. Psalm makes it an execrable oversight to forget Ierusalem ver 5. or to remember it coldly or secundarily no less will serve him than to prefer it to his chief joy Whatsoever else is top or head of his joy as the word is Ierusalems wellfare shall be its Crown shall be set above it And the Prophet whoever it was that wrote that poured out that Prayer from an afflicted Soul comforts himself in this that Zion shall be favoured my bones are consum'd c. But it matters not what becomes of me let me languish and wither away provided Sion flourish tho' I feel nothing but pains and troubles yet thou wilt arise and shew mercy to Sion I am content that satisfies me But where is now this Spirit of high sympathy with the Church sure if there were of it in us 't is now a fit time to act it If we be not altogether dead sure we will be stirr'd with the voice of those late stroaks of Gods hand and be driven to more humble and earnest prayer by it Men will change their poor base grumblings about their privacy Oh! what shall I do c. into strong cries for the Church of God and the publick deliverance of all these Kingdomes from the raging Sword but vile selfishness undoes us the most looking no further if themselves and theirs might be secur'd would regard little what became of the rest as one said when I am dead let the World be fir'd but the Christian mind is of a larger Sphere looks not only upon more than it self in present but even to after Times and Ages and can rejoyce in the good to come when it self shall not be here to partake of it is more dilated and liker unto God and to our head Iesus Christ. The Lord says the Prophet Esay in all his peoples affliction was afflicted himself and Jesus Christ accounts the sufferings of his Body the Church his own Saul Saul why persecutest thou me the heel was trod upon on earth and the head cryeth from Heaven as sensible of it and this in all our evils especially our spiritual Griefs is a high point of comfort to us that our Lord Jesus is not insensible of them This emboldens us to complain our selves and to put in our petitions for help to the Throne of Grace through his hand knowing that when he presents he will speak his own sense of our condition and move for us as it were for himself as we have it sweetly express'd Heb. 4. 15. 16. Now as it is our comfort so it is our pattern Love as Brethren Hence springs this feeling we speak o● Love is the cause of union and union the cause of sympathy and of that unanimity before they that have the same spirit uniting and animating them cannot but have the same Mind and the same feelings And this Spirit is derived from that head Christ in whom Christians live and move and have their being their new and excellent being and so in living in him they love him and are one in him they are Brethren as here the word is their fraternity holds in him he is head of it the first born among many Brethren Men are Brethren in two natural respects their Bodies of the same earth and their Souls breathed from the same God but this third fraternity that is founded in Christ is far more excellent and more firm than the other two for being one in him they have there taken in the other two for that in him is our whole Nature he is the Man Christ Iesus but to the advantage and 't is an infinite one being one in him we are united by the Divine Nature in him who is God blessed for ever and this is the highest certainly and the strongest union that can be imagin'd Now this is a great Mystery indeed as the Apostle says speaking of this same point the union of Christ and his Church whence their union and Communion one with another that make up that Body the Church is deriv'd In Christ every believer is born of God is his Son and so they are not only Brethren one with another that are so born but Christ himself own 's them as his Brethren both he which sanctifies and they who are sanctifi●d are all of one for which cause he is not asham'd to call them Brethren Sin broke all to pieces Man from God and one from another Christ's work in the World was Vnion to make up these breaches he came down and begun the union which was his work in the wonderful union made in his Person that was to work it made God and Man one and as the Nature of Man was reconciled so by what he performed the Persons of Men are united to God Faith makes them one with him and he makes them one with the Father and from these results this oneness amongst themselves concentring and meeting in Jesus Christ and in the Father through him they are made one together And that this was his great work we may read in his Prayer where it is the burden and main strain the great request he so iterates that they may be one as we are one ver 11. a high comparison such as Man durst not name but after him that so warrants us and again ver 21. that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us and so on So that certainly where this is it is the ground work of another kind of Friendship and love than the World is acquainted with or is able to judge of and hath more worth in one drachme of it than all the quintessence of civil or natural assection can amount to The friendship of the World the best of them are but tyed with chains of glass but this fraternal love of Christians is a Golden chain both more precious and more strong and lasting the other are worthless and brittle The Christian ows and pays a General Charity and good will to all but peculiar and intimate friendship he cannot have but with such as come within the compass of this fraternal love Which after a special manner flows from God and returns to him and abides in him and shall remain unto eternity Where this love is and abounds it will banish far away all those dissentions and bitternesses and those ●rivolous mistakings that are so frequent amongst the most it will teach wisely and gently to admonish one another where it is needful but further than that it will pass by many offences and failings and cover a multitude of sins and will very much sweeten Society and make it truly profitable therefore the Psalmist calls it both