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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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Object 2 knowledge of God they have no sense of spiritual things nor are they the better for our instructions 1. We read in Scripture of children who by vertue Answ 1 of instruction have had their tender years sanctified Timothies Mother and Grand-mother taught him the Scriptures from his Cradle 2 Tim. 3.15 And that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures Timothy sucked in Religion as it were with his milk we read of young children who cried Hosanna to Christ and did trumpet forth his praises Matth. 21.15 And sure those children of Tyre had some seeds of good wrought in them in that they shewed their love to Paul and would help him on his way to Sea-shoar Acts 21.5 They all brought us on our way with wives and children Saint Paul had a Convoy of young Saints to bring him to take ship Answ 2 2. Suppose our counsel and instruction doth not at present prevail with our children it may afterwards take effect The seed a man sowes in his ground doth not presently spring up but in its season it brings forth a crop he that plants a Wood doth not see the full growth till many years after If we must not instruct our children because at present they reap not the benefit by the same reason we should not baptize our children because at present they have not the sense of baptisme nay by the same reason Ministers should not preach the Word because at present many of their hearers have no benefit Answ 3 3. If our counsels and admonitions prevail not with our children yet we have delivered our own souls There is comfort in the discharge of conscience we must let alone issues and events duty is our work success is Gods All which considered should make parents whet holy instructions upon their children they who are of the Family of God and whom he hath adopted for children will endeavour that their children may be more Gods children than theirs they will travail in birth till Christ be formed in them A true Saint is a load-stone that will be still drawing others to God Let this suffice to have spoken of the signs of Adoption I proceed SECT 5. Discovering Gods love in making us children THE next particular to be discussed is the love of God in making us children 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God! God shewed power in making us creatures but love in making us sons Plato gave God thanks that he had made him a man and not a beast but what cause have they to adore Gods love who hath made them children the Apostle puts an ecce to it behold * O aeterna vera charitas Aug. That we may the better behold Gods love in making us children consider three things 1. We were deformed Ezek. 16.6 8. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood it was the time of love Mordecai adopted Esther because she was fair but we were in our blood and then God adopted us he did not adopt us when we were cloathed with the Robe of innocency in Paradise when we were hung with the jewels of holiness and were white and ruddy but when we were in our blood and had our leprous spots upon us the time of our loathing was the time of Gods loving 2. As we did not deserve to be made children so neither did we desire it No landed man will force another to become his heir against his will if a King should go to adopt a beggar and make him heir of the Crown if the beggar should refuse the Kings favour and say I had rather be as I am I would be a beggar still the King would take it in high contempt of his favour and would not adopt him against his will Thus it was with us we had no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or willingness to be made children we would have been begging still but God out of his infinite mercy and indulgence not only offers to make us children but makes us willing to embrace the offer * Psal 110.3 Behold what manner of love is this 3. Which is the wonder of love that God should adopt us for his children when we were enemies If a man would make another heir of his Land he would adopt one that is near akin to him no man would adopt an enemy but that God should make us children when we were enemies that he should make us heirs to the Crown when we were Traytors to the Crown oh amazing astonishing love Behold what manner of love is this We were not akin to God we had by sin lost and forfeited our Pedigree we had done God all the injury and spight we could defac'd his image violated his Law trampled upon his mercies and when we had angered him he adopted us What stupendious love was this such love was never shewn to the Angels when they fell though they were of a more noble nature and in probability might have done God more service than we can yet God never vouchsafed this priviledge of Adoption to them he did not make them children but prisoners they were heirs only to the treasures of wrath * Rom. 2.5 Use Let all who are thus nearly related to God stand admiring his love when they were like Saul breathing forth enmity against God when their hearts stood out as Garrisons against him the Lord conquered their stubborness with kindness and not only pardoned but adopted them 't is hard to say which is greater the mystery or the mercy this is such amazing love as we shall be searching into and adoring to all eternity the bottom of it cannot be fathomed by any Angel in heaven Gods love in making us children is 1. A rich love it is love in God to feed us but it is rich love to adopt us it is love to give us a Crumb but it is rich love to make us heirs to a Crown 2. It is a distinguishing love that when God hath passed by so many millions he should cast a favourable aspect upon thee most are cut out for fuel and are made Vessels of wrath and that God should say to thee Thou art my son here 's the mirrour of mercy the meridian of love Who O who can tread upon these hot coals and his heart not burn in love to God SECT 6. Declaring the honour of Gods children 6. THE sixth particular is the honour and renown of Gods children for the illustration of this observe two things 1. God makes a precious account of them 2. He looks upon them as persons of honour 1. God makes a precious account of them Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight c. A father prizeth his childe above his Estate How dearly did Jacob prize Benjamin his life was bound up in the life of the Lad Gen. 44.30 God makes a precious valuation of his children
the nature of the Sun is light so Gods nature is love The three persons in the Trinity are all love 1. God the Father is love Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that God should part with Christ out of his bosome the Son of his love and lay this jewel as it were to pawn for our salvation oh unparalleld love never was such love showed to the Angels 2. God the Son is love how did Christ love his Spouse when he died for her his sides drop'd blood his heart drop'd love such a vein of love was opened in him that our sins could not stench love was the wing on which Christ did fly into the Virgins womb Christ incarnate hre was love covered over with flesh and Christ on the Cross here was a book of love laid open before us to read in Per vulnera viscera 3. God the Holy Ghost is love his appearing in the likeness of a Dove show'd his nature the Dove saith Pliny is an amicable creature it is without gall what are all the motions of the Spirit but tenders of love what is the Zeal of the Spirit but the print of love why doth this blessed Spirit as a suitor come a woing to sinners but that they may know he is in love thus all the persons in the Trinity are love and the more we shine in the grace of Love the more we resemble the God of Love 6. Argument enforcing love is from the sweet Relations we stand in one to another we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-Citizens Ephes 2.19 we all expect one heaven we shall shortly live together and shall we not love together we are souldiers of the same band 2 Tim. 2.3 ours must be the fight of faith not the fight of contention our strife must be who shall love most we are branches of the same Vine and shall we not be united we are stones of the same building and shall we not be cemented with love nay we are brethren Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are brethren why do ye wrong one to another Use 1. I might here take up a lamentation and steep my Use 1 words in tears to consider the decay I had almost said the funerals of this grace among Christians Terras Astraea reliquit the fire of brotherly love is almost ready to go out instead of the fire of love the wildfire of passion I have read of one Vitalis who hazarded his life to succour his distressed friend but sure such Vitales are dead in this age fratrum quoque gratia rara est The Text saith See that ye love one another but our times have made a bad Comment upon this Text how do Christians reproach censure maligne one another the Text saith love fervently but they hate fervently instead of the bond of love behold the apple of strife we live in the frigid zone the love of many waxeth cold Many live as if they had been born upon the Mountains of Bether the Mountains of division and as if they had been baptiz'd in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Do the wicked unite nay do the Divels unite there was in one man a Legion which is according to Varro seven thousand six hundred twenty two shall there be more harmony among Divels than among Christians For these divisions of the godly there are great thoughts of heart Oh Christians turn your hot words into salt tears how do the enemies of Religion insult to see not only Christs Coat but his Body rent for these things let our eyes run down Consider the ill consequence where love is wanting the absence of this grace brings forth divisions and they are dangerous For 1. Divisions bring an opprobrium and scandal upon Religion they make the wayes of God evil spoken of as if Religion were the fomenter of envy and sedition Julian in his Invectives against the Christians said that they lived together as Tigers rending and tearing one another and shall we by our animosities and contentions make good Julians words this will make others affraid to embrace the Christian Faith There is a story in Epiphanius of Miletius and Peter Bishop of Alexandria both Confessors of the Orthodox Religion both condemned to suffer who being together in prison upon a small difference sell into so great a Schisme that they drew a partition between each other in the prison and would not hold communion in the same worship of Christ for which notwithstanding they both suffered which division grew scandalous and did more hurt than their persecution did good 2. Divisions advance Satans Kingdom The Divel hath no hope but in our discords * Nibil spei nisi per discordias Cornel. Tac. St. Chrysostom observes of the City of Corinth when many zealous converts were brought in Satan knew no better way to damme up the current of Religion than by throwing in a bone of contention and dividing them into parties one was for Paul and another for Apollo but few for Christ Use 2. Be Exhorted to cordial and fervent love See that Use 2 ye love one another Exhort Oh that this sweet spice might send forth its fragrant smell among Christians Oh that the Branch 1 Lord would rain down some of these silver showers of love upon the hearts of Christians which are for the most part like the Mountains of Gilboa which have none of this heavenly dew upon them They say of the stones of the Temple they were so closely cemented as if there had been but one stone in the Temple it were to be wished that the hearts of Christians were so sweetly cemented in love as if there were but one heart Let me commend this grace of amity and love to Christians under a double notion 1. As you are members of a body politick The whole nation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Political body now it should be with the body Politique as it is with the natural body all the members of the body have a sweet sympathy they all work for the good of the whole that there be no Schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12.25 So it should be in the body politique 2. You are membra Ecclesiae members of the Church of God you bear Christs Name you wear his Livery therefore you must be sodred together in affection It is a sad Omen and presage when the joynts of the same body shall be loosed and the knees shall smite one against another If yet men will live at variance nourishing a Viper in their bosoms I shall offer two things to their serious consideration 1. An uncharitable person is an unregenerate person Titus 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts living 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in malice and envy as if he had said Before grace came we were fill'd and ready to burst with this poyson of malice the Apostle describing a natural condition calls it the gall of bitterness Acts 8. He that lives in bitter strife is in the gall bitterness A
children of God are servants to the Angels 2. Gods children are above the Angels because Christ by taking their nature hath ennobled and honoured it above the Angelical * Naturam humanam nobilitavit Aug. Hebr. 2.16 He in no wise took the nature of Angels God by uniting us to Christ hath made us nearer to himself than the Angels the children of God are members of Christ Eph. 5.30 This was never said of the Angels how can they be the members of Christ who are of a different nature from him Indeed Metaphorically and improperly Christ may be called the head of the Angels as they are subject to him 1 Pet. 3.22 But that Christ is head of the Angels in that near and sweet conjunction as he is the head of believers we nowhere finde in Scripture in this respect therefore I may clearly assert the children of God have a superiority and honour even above the Angels though by Creation they are a little lower than the Angels yet by Adoption and Mystical Union they are above the Angels Use How may this comfort a childe of God in midst either of calumny or penury he is a person of honour he is above the Angels A Gentleman that is fallen to decay will sometimes boast of his Parentage and Noble blood so a Christian who is poor in the world yet by vertue of his Adoption he is of the Family of God he hath the true blood-royal running in his veins he hath a fairer Coat of Arms to shew than the Angels themselves SECT 7. The high priviledges of Gods children 7. THE seventh particular to be explained is To shew the glorious priviledges of Gods children and what I shall say now belongs not to the wicked it is Childrens bread The fruit of Paradise was to be kept with a flaming Sword so these sweet and heart-ravishing priviledges are to be kept with a flaming Sword that impure sensual persons may not touch them There are twelve rare Priviledges which belong to the children of God 1. If we are children then God will be full of tender Privi ∣ ledge 1 love and affection towards us a father compassionates his childe Psal 103.13 Like as a father pitieth his children so the Lord pitieth them that fear him Oh the yearning of Gods bowels to his children Jer. 31.20 Is Ephraim my dear son Is he a pleasant childe my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. Towards the wicked Gods wrath is kindled Psal 2.12 Towards them that are children Gods repentings are kindled Hosea 11.8 Mercy and pity doth as naturally flow from our heavenly Father as light doth from the Sun Object 1. But God is angry and writes bitter Object 1 things how doth this stand with love Answ Gods love and his anger towards his children Answ are not opposita but diversa they may stand together he is angry in love Rev. 3.19 As many as I love I rebuke and chasten we have as much need of afflictions as Ordinances A bitter Pill may be as needful for preserving health as a Julip or Cordial God afflicts with the same love as he adopts God is most angry when he is not angry † his hand is heaviest when it is lightest * Deus irascitur cum non irascitur Bern. affliction is an argument of son-ship Heb. 12.7 If you endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sons Oh saith one * Hos 4.14 sure God doth not love me I am none of his childe because he doth follow me with such sore afflictions Why it is a sign of childship to be sometimes under the Rod God had one son without sin but no son without stripes God puts his children to the School of the Cross and there they learn best * Correctio est effica● virtutis gymnasium God speaks to us in the Word Children be not proud do not love the world walk circumspectly * Ephes 5.15 But we are dull of hearing nay we stop the ear Jer. 22.21 I spake to thee in thy prosperity but thou saidst I will not hear Now saith God I shall lose my childe if I do not correct him then God in love smites that he may save Aristotle speaks of a Bird that lives among Thorns yet sings sweetly Gods children make the best melody in their heart when God hedgeth their way with thorns Hos 2.14 Afflictions are refining Prov. 17.3 The fining pot is for silver and the furnace for gold * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Fiery Trials make golden Christians afflictions are purifying Dan. 12.10 Many shall be tryed and made white We think God is going to destroy us but he only layes us a whitening Some Birds will not hatch but in time of thunder Christians are commonly best in affliction God will make his children at last bless him for sufferings the eyes that sin shuts affliction opens * Oculos quos peccatum cl●u dit plena aperi● when Manasseh was in chains then he knew the Lord was God 2 Chron. 33.13 Afflictions fit for heaven first the stones in Solomons Temple were hewen and polished and then set up into a bu●lding First the Saints who are called lively stones * 1 Pet. 2.5 must be hewen and carved by sufferings as the corner stone was and so made meet * Col. 1.12 for the celestial building and is there not love in all Gods fatherly castigations Object 2 Object 2. But sometimes Gods children are under the black clouds of desertion is not this far from love Concerning desertion I must needs say this is the saddest condition that ●an betide Gods children when the Sun is gone the Dew falls when the Sun-light of Gods countenance is removed then the Dew of tears falls from the eyes of the Saints In desertion God rains hell out of heaven to use Calvins expression The arrows of the Almighty are within me the poyson whereof drinketh up my spirits Job 6.4 This is the poysoned arrow that wounds to the heart Desertion is a taste of the torments of the damned God saith in a little wrath I hid my face from thee Isa 54.8 I may here glosse with Saint Bernard Modicum illud vocas Domine Lord dost thou call that a little wrath when thou hidest thy face is it but a little What can be more bitter to me than the eclipsing of thy face God is in Scripture called a light and a fire the deserted soul feels the fire but doth not see the light But yet thou who art adopted mayest spell love in all this They say of Hercules his club that it was made of the wood of Olive the Olive is an emblem of peace so Gods club whereby he beats down the soul in desertion hath something of the Olive there is Peace and Mercy in it I shall hold forth a spiritual Rain-bow wherein the children of God may see the love of their Father in the midst of the clouds of desertion
like an untamed Heifer which will not endure the yoke but kicks and flings or like a wilde Bull in a net Isa 51.20 Thus to a person in the state of nature Christs commands are grievous Nay to a childe of God so far as corruption prevails for he is but in part regenerate Christs Laws seem irksome the flesh cries out it cannot pray or suffer the Law in the members rebels against Christs Law only the spiritual part prevails and makes the flesh stoop to Christs injunctions A regenerate person so far as he is regenerate doth not count Gods Commandments grievous they are not a burden but a delight Divine commands are not grievous if we consider them first positively in these eight particulars 1. Positively 1. A Christian consents to Gods commands therefore they are not grievous Rom. 7.16 I● consent to the Law that it is good What is done with consent is easie if the Virgin give her consent the Match goes on chearfully A godly man in his judgement approves of Christs Laws * Rom. 7.12 and in his will consents to them therefore they are not grievous a wicked man is under a force terror of conscience hales him to duty he is like a slave that is chained to the Gally he must work whether he will or no he is forced to pull the Rope tug at the Oare but a godly man is like a free subject that consents to his Princes Laws and obeyes out of choice as seeing the equity and rationality of them Thus a gracious heart sees that beauty and equity in the commands of heaven as draws forth consent and this consent makes them that they are not grievous 2. They are Christs comands therefore not grievous Take my yoak Matth. 11.29 Gospel commands are not the Laws of a Tyrant but a Saviour The husbands commands are not grievous to the wife it is her ambition to obey this is enough to animate and excite obedience Christ commands As Peter said in another sence Matth. 14.28 Lord if it be thou bid me come unto thee upon the water So saith a gracious soul Lord if it be thou that wouldest have me mourn for sin and breath after heart-purity if it be thou dear Saviour that biddest me do these things I will chearfully obey Thy commandments are not grievous A souldier at the word of his General makes a brave onset 3. Christians obey out of a principle of love and then Gods commandments are not grievous Therefore in Scripture serving and loving of God are put together Isa 56.6 The sons of the strangers that joyne themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the Name of the Lord c. Nothing is grievous to him that loves love lightens a burden it adds wings to obedience an heart that loves God counts nothing tedious but it s own dulnesse and slownesse of motion love makes sin heavie and Christs burden light 4. A Christian is carried on auxilio Spiritus by the help of the Spirit and the Spirit makes every duty easie Rom. 8.26 The Spirit helpeth our infirmities The Spirit works in us the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both to will and to do Phil. 2. When God enables to do what he commands then his commandments are not grievous if two carry a burden it is easie the Spirit of God helps us to do duties to bear burdens it draws as it were in the yoke with us If the Scrivener guides the childs hand and helps it to frame its letters now it is not hard for the childe to write If the Loadstone draw the iron it is not hard for the iron to move if the Spirit of God as a Divine Loadstone draw and move the heart now it is not hard to obey When the birds hath wings given it it can flie Though the soul of it self be unable to do that which is good yet having two wings given it like that woman in the Revelation * Rev. 12 24. the wing of faith and the wing of the Spirit now it flyes swiftly in obedience Ezek 11.1 the Spirit did lift me up The heart is heavenly in prayer when the Spirit lifts it up The sails of a Mill cannot move of themselves but when the wind blows then they turn round when a gale of the Spirit blows upon the soul Now the sails of the affections move swiftly in duty 5. All Christs commands are beneficial therefore not grievous Deut. 10.12 13. And now O Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to love him to keep his Statutes which I command thee this day for thy good Christs commands carries meat in the mouth of them and then surely they are not grievous salvation runs along in every precept To obey Christs Laws is not so much of duty as our privilege all Christs commands centre in blessednesse Physick is in it self very unpleasant yet because it tends to health no man refuseth it Divine Precepts are to the fleshy part irksome yet having such excellent operation as to make us both holy and happy they are not to be accounted grievous the apprentise is content to go through hard service because it makes way for his freedome The Scholar willingly wrastles with the knotty difficulties of Arts and Sciences because they serve both to enoble and advance him How chearfully doth a believer obey those Laws which reveal Christs love That suffering is not grievous which leads to a Crown This made Saint Paul say I take pleasure in infirmities in persecutions 2. Cor. 12.10 6. 'T is honourable to be under Christs commands therefore they are not grievous The precepts of Christ do not burden us but adorn us * Omnia quae praestari jubet Christus non onerant nos sed ornant Salv. 'T is an honour to be employed in Christs service How chearfully did the rowers row the Barge that carried Caesar the honour makes the precept easie a Crown of gold is in it self heavy but the honour of the Crown makes it light and easie to be worn I may say of every command of Christ as Solomon speaks of wisdom Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a Crown of glory shall she deliver to thee 'T is honourable working at Court The honour of Christs yoake makes it easie and eligible 7. Christs commands are sweetned with joy and then they are not grievous Cicero questions whether that can properly be called a burden which is carried with joy and pleasure * Utrum onus appellandum quod laetitiá fertur Cicero When the wheeles of a Chariot are oyled they run swiftly when God poures in the oyle of gladnesse how fast doth the soul run in the wayes of his commandments Joy strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength and the more strength the lesse wearinesse God sometimes drops down comfort and then a Christian can run in the
affectio no waters must quench it Doctr. Christians must love one another cordially and fervently Col. 3.14 Above all these things put on charity 1 Pet. 4.8 Above all things have fervent charity among your selves as if the Apostle had said whatever you neglect do not neglect this grace Hierom reports that when St. John was old he was fain to be led up into the Pulpit and there he repeated these words Little children love one another and then came down from the Pulpit Oh that this grace of love were engraven as in letters of gold upon our hearts by the finger of the Holy Ghost Here the question will be asked what love is I answer Love is a sweet and gracious affection whereby we wish the good of another and promote his welfare as our own Love is a sacred fire kindled in the heart by the Spirit like that fire which came from heaven 2 Chron. 7.1 I shall endeavour to preserve this fire in Christians hearts as the fire the Vestal Virgins kept in Rome that it may not go out There are several Arguments to enforce Love upon us 1. We must love virtute praecepti by vertue of Command Joh. 13.34 A new Commandement I give unto you that ye love one another Love is both a new Commandement and an old 'T is an old Commandement because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Law written in the heart of man by the pen of nature as with the point of a Diamond And it is old because it is written in the ancient Statutes and Records Levit. 19.18 Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self I am the Lord and yet it is a new Commandement 1. Because newly purged from Pharisaical glosses before it was love thy neighbour but now it is love thy enemy Matth. 5.44 here is a new Comment upon an old Law 2. Love is said to be a new Commandement because of a new Edition it came out of the new mint of the Gospel and was pressed by a new example Joh. 13.34 As I have loved you so that it is not Arbitrary but a duty 't is a new Commandement and an old The second Argument enforcing love is the excellency of this grace it is a lovely grace * Color gratiae purpurcus ob scurior esset si n●n charitate vestiretur Ber. all the other graces seem to be Eclipsed unless love shine and sparckle forth in them Faith itself hath no beauty unless it work by love the tears of repentance are not pure unless they flow from the spring of love Love is the Jewel Christs Bride weares it is the Diamond in the ring of the graces love is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysostom calls it This is the grace that seasons all our actions and makes them savoury love is aroma amp opo balsamum it is like musk among linnen which perfumes it So love makes all our Religious services 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sweet Odour to God Ephes 5.2 Prayer is compared to incense Psal 141.2 Now incense if it be laid on the Altar and have no fire put to it doth not smell so sweet the incense of Prayer doth not cast such a fragrant smell unless kindled with this fire of love love is the badge and cognizance of a true Saint Joh. 13.35 By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye love me another not if ye work miracles but if ye love one another by this livery ye are known to belong to me St. Bernard calls love ros gratiae the sweet dew that distills from a Christian and refresheth all whom it drops upon love is the golden clasp that knits hearts it is opus signinum the cement that soders Christians together it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bond of perfectness Col. 3.14 if this bond be broken all falls to pieces Love is radix omnium bonorum it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 * Omne praeceptum ad charitatum refertur Aug. All the duties of the first and second Table Piety toward God and Equity towards our neighbour are comprehended in this Thou shalt love O how sweetly doth the Apostle Paul descant and paraphrase upon this grace how doth he extoll it he plaies aswell the Oratour as the Divine how doth he delineate this grace of love how doth he pensil and draw it out to the life in all its beauty and spiritual embroidery That he may extoll this grace 1. First he doth it exclusive he shows that the most glorious things are nothing without it * Aug. Si desit charitas frustra habentur coetera ● Cor. 13.1 Though I speak with the tongues of men If a man could speak in so many Languages as Mithridates of whom it is said he understood 22. sundry Tongues if he had the golden mouth of Chrysostom if he could do with his Oratory as the Poets fain Orpheus did with his Harp move the very Rocks and stones yet without love it were nothing Nay saith the Apostle though I speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the tongues of Angels and have not charity I am become as sounding brass or as a tinkling Cymbal Were it not a brave thing to have the eloquence of Angels yet this without love were but Cymbalum tinniens the tinkery of the Cymbal to love as Christians is better than to speak as Angels And though I understand all mysteries and all knowledge ver 2. If a mans head were a Library of all learning if he could know all that is knowable if he could with Solomon discourse from the Cedar in Lebanon even to the Hysop and hath not charity hoc aliquid nihil est all is nothing Knowledge without love makes a man no better than a Divel And though I have all faith so that I could remove Mountains Were it not admirable to have the Faith of Miracles to unhinge Mountains to cast out Divels to take up Serpents and drink poison and it should not hurt us Matth. 16.16 Yet if I have no charity I am nothing Nullius sum pretij I am of no account with God the Miracles of faith without the mystery of love profit nothing And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor ver 3 Suppose I give away all my Estate in Almes yet without love it avails me nothing 't is like a Lamp without Oyle And though I give my body to be burned and have not love it is nothing the fire of Martyrdom avails not without the fire of Charity Let a man come to Church pray receive Sacraments yet if his heart burn in malice it is but going to hell in a more Saint-like manner O quam pulchra charitas Oh how precious a jewel saith Austin is love how rare a grace that if this be wanting all other ●hings though never so glorious are in vain 2. The Apostles sets forth this grace of love Positive by deciphering its nature and excellency 1. Charity is kind
malitious person is of no a kin to God for God is love he knows nothing of the Gospel savingly for it is a Gospel of peace we read in Scripture of the bond of peace Ephes 4.3 and the bond of iniquity Acts 8.23 him whom the Gospel hath not bound in the bond of peace Satan hath bound in the bond of iniquity 2. Uncharitableness is a leaven that sowres the whole lump 1 Cor. 5.8 1. It sowres your good qualities Naaman an honourable man a mighty man in valour but he was a Leper 2 King 5.1 that but was like a dead fly in the Oyntment it spoiled all the rest So it may be said Such a man is a man of parts a man of great moral endowments he is just affable temperate but he is a leper he will not be in charity he payes every one their own but there is one debt he will not pay though he rot in hell for it viz. the debt of love this is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a brand of infamy upon him 2. Uncharitableness sowres your good duties you pray and come to Church but refuse to be tyed in a knot of amity what profit is there of all your seeming devotion we are bid to lift up pure hands without wrath 1 Tim 2.8 The uncharitable person doth not lift up pure hands in prayer but leprous hands bloody hands 1 Joh. 3.16 Whosoever hates his brother is a murderer Prayer saith Chrysostom may be compared to a fine Garland the hands that make a Garland had need be clean So the heart that makes a prayer had need be clean wrath and anger do sully a Christians prayers and will the Holy God touch them the uncharitable man poisons his own prayers and will the Lord accept of a poisoned sacrifice Oh that all this might at last perswade to cordial and fervent love let us turn all our censuring into praying let us pray to God that he would quench the fire of contention and encrease the fire of fraternal love among us let us pray that the Lord would heal our Schismes repair our breaches that he would make us like the Cherubims with our faces looking one upon another let us pray that God will make good that promise that we shall serve him with one consent or * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the Hebrew with one shoulder and that this may be the golden Motto written upon England Cor unum via una one heart and one way * Jer. 32 30. 2. It Exhorts us that as we would be amicable to all Branch 2 so especially that we would love those who are of the houshold of Faith viz. the Saints and people of God Exhort Psalm 16.2 We must love as God loves he loves them most who are like him he loves piety though it be espoused to poverty so must our love run out especially to those who have the image and superscription of God upon them Joseph loved all his brethren but Benjamin most the people of God must have a Benjamins portion in our love The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3.17 which we must love and prize they are called the apple of Gods eye Zach. to show how tender they should be in our eye The Saints are partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 not by an incorporation into the Divine Essence but by a conformity to the Divine likeness these we must love amore complacentiae with a love of complacency and delight These are near alied to Christ by faith they are of the blood Royal of heaven these must be higher in our thoughts and deeper in our affections than others Hierom loved Christ dwelling in Austin When I say the Saints must have the largest share in our love I mean not all that call themselves Saints such as under a mask of holiness commit sin hypocritical Saints * Quid tibi prodest vocari quod non es Aug. but such as the Scripture calls Saints such as excel in vertue Psal 16. such as walk humbly with God Mich. 6.8 such as have aliquid Christi as Bucer saith something of Christ in them these Saints must we place our entire love upon Indeed there is that in them which may excite and draw forth love they have the beauty of inherent holiness and they have an interest in the unspotted holiness of Christ which may be a sufficient loadstone to draw love to them But what shall we say to those who instead of loving the people of God because they are Saints hate them ea ratione because they are Saints as Tertullian Confessio nominis the very confession of the Name of a Christian was enough to bring them into an odium and was laid against them as a matter of crime It was said of Aristides that he was banished out of Athens quia justus because he was just Sanctity is the thing that is reproached and hated in the world wicked men Panther-like would tear the picture of God drawn in the New man let one have all kind of accomplishments Learning Morality Piety though men will love him for his Learning and Morality they will hate him for his Piety Holiness is become the crime the Serpent is known by his hissing they are the seed of the Old Serpent that hisse at Religion Let me speak my mind freely There is generally among men a secret antipathy against the power of godliness they are for some showes of devotion they keep up a form but such as have a spirit of zeal and sanctity shining in them their hearts rise against let me tell you there is not a greater sign of a rotten and divellish heart than to hate a man for that very thing for which God loves him namely his holiness 'T is an high affront to abuse the Kings Statue what vengeance think we shall they be counted worthy off who maligne and do what in them lies to tear in pieces the image of the living God Oh take heed of this the hating the grace of the Spirit comes near to the despighting of the Spirit of grace To conclude let us beg the spirit of amity and unity that we may love one another especially that we may be endeared in our affections to them who are of the family of God and whose names are enrolled in the book of life The good Practitioner Ioh. 13.17 If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them IN this Chapter our Blessed Saviour the great Doctor af the Church falls upon teaching his Disciples he taught them 1. Doctrinâ by doctrine ver 34. A new Commandement give I unto you that ye love one another Christ was now going out of the world and as a father when he is dying leaves a charge with his children that they love so our Saviour leaves this solemn charge with his disciples that they did love one another 2. He taught them emblemate by embleam ver 4. he took a Towel and girded himself Thus teaching them by a
the first link of the chaine in his hand hath the whole chaine The Saints have the Spirit of God in them 2 Tim. 1.14 The Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us How can the blessed Spirit be in a man and he not blessed a godly mans heart is a Paradise planted with the choicest fruit and God himself walks in the midst of this Paradise and must he not needs be blessed 2. The Saints are already blessed because their sins are not imputed to them Psal 32.2 Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity Gods not imputing iniquity signifies Gods making of sin not to be 't is as if the man had never sinned the debt-book is cancel'd in Christs blood and if the debtor owe never so much yet if the creditor cross the book it is as if he had never owed any thing Gods not imputing sin is that God will never call for the debt or if it should be called for it shall be hid out of sight Jer. 50.20 In those days the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none and the sins of Judah and they shall not be found Now such a man who hath not sin imputed to him is blessed and the reason is because if sin be not imputed to a man then the curse is taken away and if the curse be taken away then he must needs be blessed 3. The Saints are already blessed because they are in Covenant with God This is clear by comparing two Scriptures Jer. 31.33 I will be their God and Psal 144.15 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord This is the crowning blessing to have the Lord for our God impossible it is to imagine that God should be our God and we not blessed This sweet word I will be your God implies 1. Propriety that all that is in God shall be ours his love ours his Spirit ours his mercy ours 2. It implies all Relations 1. Of a Father 2 Cor. 6.18 I will be a Father unto you The sons of a Prince are happy how blessed are the Saints who are of the true blood Royal 2. It implies the relation of an Husband Isa 54.5 Thy Maker is thy husband The Spouse being contracted to her husband is happy by having an interest in all he hath The Saints being contracted by faith are blessed though the solemnity of the Marriage be kept for heaven 3. It implies terms of friendship They who are in Covenant with God are Favourites of heaven Abraham my friend Isa 41.8 'T is counted a Subjects happiness to be in favour with his Prince though he may live a while from Court how happy must he needs be who is Gods Favourite 4. The Saints are already blessed because they have a Reversion of heaven as on the contrary he who hath hell in Reversion is said to be already condemned John 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already He is as sure to be condemned as if he were condemned already So he who hath heaven in Reversion may be said to be already blessed a man that hath the Reversion of an house after a short Lease is run out he looks upon it as his already this house saith he is mine So a believer hath a Reversion of heaven after the Lease of life is run out and he can say at present Christ is mine and glory is mine he hath jus ad rem a title to heaven and he is a blessed man that hath a title to shew nay faith turns the Reversion into a Possession 5. The Saints are already blessed because they have Primitias the first fruits of blessedness here We read of the earnest of the Spirit and the seal 2 Cor. 1.22 and the first fruits Rom. 8.23 Heaven is already begun in a believer Rom. 14.17 The Kingdome of God is peace and joy in the Holy Ghost This Kingdome is in a believers heart Luk. 17.21 The people of God have a prelibation and taste of blessedness here As Israel tasted a bunch of grapes before they were actually possessed of Canaan So the children of God have those secret incomes of the Spirit those smiles of Christs face those kisses of his lips those love-tokens that are as bunches of grapes and they think themselves sometimes in heaven Paul was let down in a basket Acts 9.25 Oftentimes the Comforter is let down to the soul in an Ordinance and now the soul is in the Suburbs of Hierusalem above a Christian sees heaven by faith and tasts it by joy and what is this but blessedness 6. The Saints may be said in this life to be blessed because all things tend to make them blessed Rom. 8.28 All things work for good to them that love God We say to him that hath every thing falling out for the best You are an happy man the Saints are very happy for all things haue a tendency to their good prosperity doth them good adversity doth them good nay sin turns to their good every trip makes them more watchful their maladies are their medicines are not they happy persons that have every wind blowing them to the right Port 7. A Saint may be said to be blessed because part of him is already blessed he is blessed in his head Christ his head is in glory Christ and believers make one body mystical their head is gotten into heaven Use 1. Inform. Branch 1. See the difference between Use 1 a wicked man and a godly Inform. let a wicked man have never so many comforts still he is cursed let a godly man have Branch 1 never so many crosses still he is blessed let a wicked man have the candle of God shining on him Job 29.3 let his way be so smooth that he meets with no rubs let him have success yet still there is a curse entailed upon him you may read the sinners Inventory Deut. 28.16 17 18. He is not more full of sin than he is of a curse though perhaps he blesseth himself in his wickedness yet he is heir to Gods curse all the curses of the Bible are his portion and at the day of death this portion is sure to be paid but a godly man in the midst of all his miseries is blessed he may be under the cross but not under a curse Branch 2. It shews the priviledge of a believer he Branch 2 not only shall be blessed but he is blessed blessedness is begun in him Psal 115.15 You are blessed of the Lord Let the condition of the Righteous be never so sad yet it is blessed he is blessed in affliction Psal 94. Blessed is he whom thou chastenest Blessed in poverty James 2.5 Poor in the world rich in faith Blessed in disgrace 1 Pet. 4.14 The Spirit of God and of glory resteth upon you This may be a cordial to the fainting Christian he is blessed in life and death Satan cannot supplant him of the blessing Branch 3 Branch 3. How may this take away murmuring and melancholy from a child of
without cutting or forcing Mary Magdalens repentance was voluntary she stood weeping Luke 7. She came to Christ with ointment in her hand with love in her heart with teares in her eyes God is for a freewil-offering he loves not to be put to distrain 2. Gospel-mourning is spiritual that is when we mourn for sinne more than suffering Pharaoh saith Take away the plague he never thought of the plague of his heart A sinner mourns because judgement follows at the heeles of sinne but David cries out my sinne is ever before me Psal 51. God had threatned that the sword should ride in circuit in his family but David doth not say the sword is ever before me but my sinne is ever before me The offence against God troubled him he grieved more for the treason than the bloody axe thus the Penitent Prodigal Luke 15.21 I have sinned against heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and before thee he doth not say I am almost starved among the husks but I have offended my father In particular our mourning for sinne if it be spiritual must be under this threefold notion 1. We must mourn for sinne as it is an act of hostility and enmity Sinne doth not only make us unlike God but contrary to God Levit. 26.40 and that they have walked contrary unto me Sinne doth affront and resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Sinne is contrary to Gods nature God is holy sinne is an impure thing sin is contrary to his will if God be of one minde sinne is of another sinne doth all it can to spight God The Hebrew word for sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies rebellion a sinner doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now when we mourn for sinne as it is a walking Antipodes to heaven this is a Gospel-mourning nature will not bear contraries 2. We must mourn for sin as it is a piece of the highest ingratitude it is a kicking against the breasts of mercy God sends his Sonne to redeeme us his Spirit to comfort us we sinne against the blood of Christ the grace of the Spirit and shall we not mourn We complaine of the unkindnesse of others and shall we not lay to heart our own unkindnesse against God Caesar took it unkindly that his son Brutus should stab him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou my son may not the Lord say to us these wounds I have received in the house of my friends * Zach. 13.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Theocr. Israel took their jewels and ear-rings and made a golden Calfe of them the sinner takes the jewels of Gods mercies and makes use of them to sin ingratitude dies a sin in grain hence they are called crimson sinnes Isa 1.18 sinnes against gospel-Gospel-love are worse in some sence than the sinnes of the Divels for they never had an offer of Grace tendred to them Diabolus peccavit in innocentia constitutus ego vero restitutus ille perstitit in malitia Deo reprobante ego vero Deo revocante ille obduratur ad punientem ego vero ad blandientem sic uterque contra Deum ille contra non requirentem se ego vero contra morientem pro me ecce cujus imaginem horrebam in multis aspicio me horribiliorem Anselm de Casu Diab Now when we mourn for sin as it hath its accent of ingratitude upon it this is an Evangelical mourning 3. We must mourn for sinne as it is a Privation it keeps good things from us it hinders our communion with God Mary wept for Christs absence John 20.13 they have taken away my Lord. So our sinnes have taken away our Lord they have deprived us of his sweet presence Will not he grieve who hath lost a rich jewel When we mourn for sinne under this notion as it makes the Sun of righteousnesse withdraw from our Horizon when we mourn not so much that peace is gone and trading is gone but God is gone Cant. 5.6 My beloved had withdrawn himself this is an holy mourning the mourning for the losse of Gods favour is the best way to regaine his favour If thou hast lost a friend all thy weeping will not fetch him again but if thou hast lost Gods presence thy mourning will bring thy God again 3. Gospel-mourning cogit ad Deum it sends the soul to God When the Prodigal sonne repented he went to his father Luke 15.18 I will arise and go unto my father Jacob wept and prayed Hos 12.3 The people of Israel wept and offered sacrifice Judg. 2.5 Gospel-mourning puts a man upon duty the reason is because in true sorrow there is a mixture of hope and hope puts the soul upon the use or means That mourning which like the flaming sword keeps the soul from approaching to God and beats it off from duty is a sinful mourning 't is a sorrow hatch'd in hell such was Sauls grief which drove him to the Witch of Endor 1 Sam. 28.7 Evangelical Mourning is a spur to prayer the childe who weeps for offending his father goes into his presence and will not leave till his father be reconciled to him Absalom could not be quiet till he had seen the Kings face 2 Sam. 14.32 33. 4. Gospel-Mourning is for sin in particular Dolosus versatur in generalibus It is with a true penitent as it is with a wounded man he comes to the Chyrurgion and shews him all his wounds here I was cut with the Sword here I was shot with a Bullet So a true penitent bewails all his particular sins Judg. 10.10 We have served Baalim they mourned for their Idolatry And David layes his finger upon the sore and points to that very sin that troubled him Psal 51.4 I have done this evil he means his blood-guiltiness a wicked man will say he is a sinner but a child of God saith I have done this evil Peter wept for that particular sin of denying Christ Clemens Alexandrinus saith he never heard a Cock crow but he fell a weeping there must be a particular Repentance before we have a general pardon 5. Gospel-tears must drop from the eye of faith Mark 9.24 The father of the childe cryed out with tears Lord I believe our disease must make us mourn but when we look up to our Physitian who hath made a playster of his own blood we must not mourn without hope believing tears are precious when the clouds of sorrow have overcast the soul some Sun-shine of faith must break forth the soul will be swallowed up of sorrow it will be drowned in tears if faith be not the bladder to keep it up from sinking though our tears drop to the earth our faith must reach heaven after the greatest rain faith must appear as the Rainbow in the cloud the tears of faith are botled as precious wine Psal 56.8 6. Gospel-Mourning is joyned with self-loathing the sinner doth admire himself the penitent doth loath himself Ezek. 20.42 Ye shall loath your selves in your own sight for all your
then tell me if there be not enough in it to draw forth tears I know not what name to give it bad enough one calls it the Divels excrement sin is malorum colluvies it is a complication of all evil it is the spirits of mischief distilled 1. Sin dishonours God it denies Gods Omnisciency it derides his Patience it distrusts his Faithfulness sin tramples upon Gods Law slights his Love grieves his Spirit 2. Sin wrongs us 1. Sin shames us Prov. 14.34 Sin is a reproach to any people sin hath made us naked it hath plucked off our Robe and taken our Crown from us it hath spoiled us of our glory nay it hath not only made us naked but impure Ezek. 16.6 I saw thee polluted in thy blood Sin hath not only taken off our cloth of gold but it hath put upon us filthy garments Zach. 3.3 God made us after his likeness Gen. 1.26 but sin hath made us like the Beasts that perish Psal 49. ult We are all become brutish in our affections nor hath sin made us only like the Beasts but like the Divel John 8.44 Sin hath drawn the Divels picture upon mans heart 2. Sin stabs us the sinner like the Jaylor draws a Sword to kill himself * Acts 16.27 he is bereaved of his judgement and like the man in the Gospel possessed with the Divel he cuts himself with stones * Mark 5 5. though he hath such a stone in his heart that he feels it not Every sin is a stroak at the soul tot vitia tot vulnera so many sins so many wounds every blow given to the Tree helps forward the Felling of the Tree Every sin is an hewing and chopping down the soul for hell-fire if then there be all this evil in sin if this forbidden fruit hath such a bitter Core it may make us mourn our hearts should be the Spring and our eyes the Rivers 2. If we would be Mourners let us be Orators Beg a spirit of contrition * Da Domine Deus cordi mee poenitentiam oculis lachrymarum fontem Austin pray to God that he will put us in mourning that he will give us a melting frame of heart let us beg Achsahs blessing Josh 15. Springs of water Josh 15.19 Let us pray that our hearts may be spiritual limbecks dropping tears into Gods bottle Let us pray that we who have the poyson of the Serpent may have the tears of the Dove the Spirit of God is a Spirit of mourning let us pray that God would poure that Spirit of grace on us whereby we may look on him whom we have pierced and mourn for him Zach. 12.10 God must inspirare before we can suspirare he must breath in his Spirit * Velle bonum nisi gratiae adminiculo non possumus Aug. de grat lib. arbit before we can breath out our sorrows the Spirit of God is like the fire in a Still that sends up the dews of grace in the heart and causeth them to drop from the eyes 'T is this blessed Spirit whose gentle breath causeth our spices to smell and our waters to flow and if the spring of mourning be once set open in the heart there can want no joy as tears flow out comfort flows in which leads to the second part of the Text they shall be comforted CHAP. XI Shewing the comforts belonging to Mourners Matth. 5.4 They shall be comforted HAving already presented to your view the dark side of the Text I shall now shew you the light side they shall be comforted Where observe 1. Mourning goes before comfort as the launcing of a wound precedes the cure the Antinomian talks of comfort but cries down mourning for sin he is like a foolish Patient who having a Pill prescribed him licks the sugar but throws away the Pill The Libertine is all for joy and comfort he licks the sugar but throws away the bitter Pill of Repentance if ever we have true comfort we must have it in Gods way and method sorrow for sin ushers in joy Isa 57. I will restore comfort to him and to his Mourners That is the true Sun-shine of joy which comes after a showre of tears we may as well expect a crop without seed as comfort without Gospel-mourning 2. Observe that God keeps his best wine till last first he prescribes mourning for sin and then sets abroach the wine of consolation the Divel doth quite contrary he shews the best first and keeps the worst till last First he shews the wine sparkling in the glass then comes the biting of the serpent Prov. 23.32 Satan sets his dainty dishes before men he presents sin to them coloured with beauty sweetned with pleasure silvered with profit and then afterwards the sad reckoning is brought in He shewed Judas first the silver bait and then struck him with the hook This is the reason why sin hath so many followers because it shews the best first first the golden Crowns and then come the Lyons teeth Rev. 9.7 8. But God shews the worst first first he prescribes a bitter potion and then brings a cordial they shall be comforted 3. Observe Gospel-tears are not lost they are seeds of comfort while the penitent doth poure out tears God poures in joy if thou wouldst be chearful saith Chrysostom be sad * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Psal 126.5 They that sowe in tears shall reap in joy It was the end of Christs anointing and coming into the world that he might comfort them that mourn Isa 61.3 Christ had the oyle of gladness poured on him as Chrysostom saith that he might poure it upon the Mourner well then may the Apostle call it a repentance not to be repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 A mans drunkenness is to be repented of his uncleanness is to be repented of but his repentance is never to be repented of because it is the inlet to joy Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Here is sweet fruit from a bitter stock Christ caused the earthen Vessels to be filled with water and then turned the water into wine John 2.9 So when the eye that earthen Vessel hath been filled with water brim full then Christ will turn the water of tears into the wine of joy Holy mourning saith Saint Basil * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil is the seed out of which the flower of eternal joy doth grow The Reason why the Mourner shall be comforted is 1. Because Mourning is made on purpose for this end Mourning is not prescribed for it self but in ordine ad aliud that it may lay a train for comfort therefore we sowe in tears that we may reap in joy Holy mourning is a spiritual medicine now a medicine is not prescribed for it self but for health-sake so Gospel-mourning is appointed for this very end to bring forth joy 2. The spiritual Mourner is the fittest person for comfort When the heart is broken for sin now it is fittest for
time of drought so neither is any man to dispute or quarrel with God when he stops the sweet influence of comfort but ought rather to acquiesce in his sacred will But though the Lord might by vertue of his Soveraignty with-hold comfort from the Mourner yet there may be many pregnant causes assigned why Mourners want comfort 1. In regard of God 2. In regard of themselves 1. In regard of God He sees it fit to with-hold comfort 1. That he may raise the value of grace We are apt to esteem comfort above grace therefore God locks up our comforts for a time that he may inhance the price of grace when farthings go better than gold the King will call in farthings that the price of gold may be the more raised 2. God would have his people learn to serve him for himself and not for comfort only it is amor Meretricius an Harlot love to love the husbands money and tokens more than his person such as serve God only for comfort do not so much serve God as serve themselves of him 2. That Gods Mourners want comfort it is most frequently in regard of themselves 1. Through mistake which is two-fold 1. They go not to the right spring for comfort they go to their tears when they should go to Christs blood it is a kind of Idolatry to make our tears the ground of comfort Mourning is not meritorious it is the way to joy not the cause Jacob got the blessing in the garments of his elder brother true comfort flows out of Christs sides our tears are stained till they are washed in the blood of Christ John 16. ult In me peace 2. Mistake is that Mourners are priviledged persons and may take more liberty they may slacken the strings of duty and let loose the reins to sin Christ hath indeed purchased a liberty for his people but an holy liberty not a liberty for sin but from sin 1 Pet. 2.16 Ye are a Royal Priesthood a peculiar people ye are not in a state of slavery but Royalty What follows do not make Christian liberty a cloak for sin Ver. 16. As free and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness If we quench the sanctifying Spirit God will quench the comforting Spirit sin is compared to a cloud Isa 44.22 This cloud intercepts the light of Gods countenance 2. Gods Mourners sometimes want comfort through discontent and peevishness David makes his disquiet the cause of his sadness Psal 43.5 Why art thou cast down O my soul why art thou disquieted within me A disquieted heart like a rough Sea is not easily calmed 't is hard to make a troubled spirit receive comfort this disquiet ariseth from various causes sometimes from outward sorrow and melancholy sometimes from a kind of envy Gods people are troubled to see others have comfort and they want it and now in a pet they refuse comfort and like a froward child put away the breast Psal 77.2 My soul refused to be comforted Indeed a disquieted spirit is no more fit for comfort than a distracted man is fit for counsel and whence is the Mourners discontent but pride as if God had not dealt well with him in stopping the influences of comfort O Christian thy spirit must be more humbled and broken before God empty out his golden oyle of joy 3. The Mourner is without comfort for want of applying the promises he looks at that sin which may humble him but not at that Word which may comfort him The Mourners eyes are so full of tears that he cannot see the promise the vertue and comfort of a medicine is in the applying when the promises are applied by faith they bring comfort Hosea 2.19 Isa 49.15 16. Faith milks the breast of a promise That Satan may hinder us of comfort it is his policy either to keep the promise from us that we may not know it or to keep us from the promise that we may not apply it Never a promise in the Bible but belongs to the Mourner had he but the skill and dexterity of faith to lay hold on it 4. The Mourner may want comfort through too much earthly-mindedness by feeding immoderately on earthly comforts we miss of heavenly comforts Isa 57.17 For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth and I hid me The earth puts out the fire earthliness extinguisheth the flame of divine joy in the soul an Eclipse is per interpositionem corporis Lunaris when the Moon which is a dense body comes between the Moon is an Emblem of the world Rev. 12.1 when this comes between then there is an Eclipse in the light of Gods face Such as dig in Mines say there is such a damp comes from the earth as puts out the light of a candle earthly comforts send forth such a damp as puts out the light of spiritual joy 5. Perhaps the Mourner hath had comfort and lost it Adams Rib was taken from him when he was asleep Gen. 2.21 Our comforts are taken away when we fall asleep in security the Spouse lost her beloved when she lay upon the bed of sloath Cant. 5.2 6. For these Reasons Gods Mourners may want comfort but that the spiritual Mourner may not be too much dejected I shall reach forth the cup of consolation Jer. 16.7 and speak a few words that may comfort the Mourner in the want of comfort 1. Jesus Christ was without comfort therefore no wonder if we are our comforts are not better than his he who was the Son of Gods love was without the sense of Gods love 2. The Mourner hath a seed of comfort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 97.11 Light is sown for the righteous Light is a Metaphor put for comfort and it is sown Though a child of God hath not comfort alwayes in the flowre yet he hath in the seed though he doth not feel comfort from God yet he takes comfort in God 3. A Christian may be high in grace and low in comfort the high Mountains are without flowres the Mines of gold have little or no corn growing on them a Christians heart may be a rich Mine of grace though it be barren of comfort 4. The Mourner is heir to comfort and though for a small moment God may forsake his people Isa 54.7 yet there is a time shortly coming when the Mourner shall have all tears wiped away and shall be brim-full of comfort this joy is reserved for heaven and this brings me to the second particular SECT 2. Showing the mourners comforts hereafter 2. COMFORTS HEREAFTER 2. Comforts hereafter They shall be comforted Though in this life some interviews and love-tokens passe between God and the mourner yet the great comforts are kept in reversion in Gods presence is fulnes of joy There is a time coming the day-star is ready to appear when the Saints shall bathe themselves in the river of life when they shall never see a wrinkle on Gods brow more but his face shall shine his
lips drop hony his arms sweetly embrace them The Saints shall have a spring-tyde of joy and it shall never be low-water the Saints shall at that day put off their mourning and exchange their sables for white robes Then shall the winter be past the rain of tears be over and gone * Cant. 2.11 12. the flowers of joy shall appear and after the weeping of the Dove the time of the singing of birds shall come This is the great consolation the Jubily of the blessed which shall never expire in this life the people of God taste of joy but in heaven the full vessels shall be broach'd There is a river in the midst of the heavenly Paradise which hath a fountain to feed it Psal 36.8 9. The times we are cast into being for the present sad and cloudy it will not be amisse for the reviving the hearts of Gods people to speak a little of these comforts which God reserves in heaven for his mourners They shall be comforted The greatnesse of these celestial comforts is most fitly in Scripture expressed by the joy of a feast mourning shall be turned into feasting and it shall be a marriage-feast which is usually kept with the greatest solemnity Rev. 19.9 Blessed are they which are called into the marriage-supper of the Lamb. Bullinger and Gregory the great do understand this Supper of the Lamb to be meant of the Saints supping with Christ in heaven * Ibi gratia sine merito charitas fine modo Bernard Rev. 14.13 men after hard labour go to supper So when the Saints shall rest from their labours * Ibi gratia sine merito charitas fine modo Bernard Rev. 14.13 they shall sup with Christ in glory Now to speak something of the last great Supper It will be a great Supper 1. In regard of the Founder of this Feast God it is the Supper of a King therefore sumptuous and magnificent Psalm 95.3 The Lord is a great God and a great King above all gods Where should there be state and magnificence but in a Kings Court 2. It will be a great Supper in regard of the cheere and provision this exceeds all Hyperbolies What blessed fruit doth the tree of life in Paradise yield Rev. 2.7 Christ will lead his Spouse into the banquetting-house and feast her with those rare Viands and cause her to drink that spiced wine that heavenly Nectar and Ambrosia wherewith the Angelical powers are infinitely refreshed First Every dish served in at this heavenly Supper shall be sweet to our palate there is no dish here we do not love Christ will make such savory meat as he is sure his Spouse loves Secondly There shall be no want here there is no want at a Feast the various fulnesse in Christ will prevent a scarcity and it will be a fulnesse without surfeit because a fresh course will continually be served in Thirdly they who eate of this Supper shall never hunger more hunger is a sharp sawce the Lambs Supper shall not only satisfie hunger but prevent it Rev. 7.16 They shall hunger no more 3. It will be a great Supper in regard of the company invited Company adds to a Feast and is of it self sawce to sharpen and provoke the appetite Saints Angels Archangels will be at this Supper nay Christ himself will be both Founder and Guest the Scripture calls it an innumerable company * Cedit in solatium beatoram qui eo sanè laetiores quo plures sunt c. Heb. 12. and that which makes the society sweeter is that there shall be perfect love at this Feast The Motto shall be cor unum via una one heart and one way all the guests shall be linked together with the golden chain of charity 4. It will be a great supper in regard of the holy mirth Eccles 10.19 a feast is made for mirth at this supper there shall be joy and nothing but joy Psalm 16. ult There is no weeping at a feast O what triumph and acclamations will there be There are two things at this Supper of the Lamb will create joy and mirth 1. When the Saints shall think with themselves that they are kept from a worse supper The Devils have a supper such an one as it is a black banquet there are two dishes serv'd in weeping and gnashing of teeth every bit they eate makes their hearts ake who would deny them their dinner here who must have such a supper 2. It will be matter of joy at the Supper of the Lamb that the Master of the Feast bids all his guests welcome the Saints shall have the smiles of Gods face the kisses of his lips he will lead them into the wine-cellar and display the Banner of love over them The Saints shall be as ful of solace as sanctity What is a Feast without mirth worldly mirth is flashy empty this shall be infinitely delightful and ravishing 5. It will be a great supper for the musick This will be a marriage-supper and what better musick than the Bridegroomes voyce saying my Spouse my undefiled Take thy fill of love there will be the Angels Anthems * Ibi Angelorum Chori concinnut Aug. The Saints triumphs the Angels those trumpeters of heaven shall sound forth the excellencies of Jehovah and the Saints those noble Queristers shall take down their harps from the willows and joyne in consort with the Angels praysing and blessing God Rev. 15.2 3. I saw them that had gotten the victory over the Beast having the Harps of God and they sing the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb saying Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almighty just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints c. O the sweet harmony at this Feast it shall be Musick without discord 6. This Supper is great in regard of the place where it shall be celebrated in the Paradise of God Rev. 2.7 It is a stately Palace stately 1. For its scituation 't is in excelsis of a very great heighth Rev. 21.8 For its prospect all sparkling beauties are there concentred and the delight of the prospect is propriety that is the best prospect where a man can see furthest on his own ground 3. For its amplitude this Royal Feast shall be kept in a most spacious Room a Room infinitely greater than the whole firmament one Star whereof if we may believe Astronomers is bigger than the whole earth though there be such a multitude as no man can number of all Nations Kindreds People and Tongues Revel 7.9 yet the Table is long enough and the Room spatious enough for all the Guests Aulus Gellius in his 13th Book makes this to be one of those four things which are requisite to a Feast locus electus a fit place The Empyrean heaven bespangled with light arrayed with rich hangings embroydered with glory seated above all the visible orbs is the place of the Marriage-supper this doth infinitely transcend the
it comes to a Duty by Examination and Ejaculation When the Earth is prepared then it is fit to receive the seed when the Instrument is prepared and tuned it is fit for Musick 2. Watching the heart in a Duty An holy heart labours to be affected and wrought upon his heart burns within him There was no Sacrifice without fire a pure Saint labours to have his heart broken in a duty Psal 51.17 The incense when it was broken did cast the sweetest favour Impure souls care not in what a dead perfunctory manner they serve God Ezek. 33.31 They pray more out of fashion than out of faith They are no more affected with an Ordinance than the Tombs of the Church God complains of offering up the blind Mal. 1.8 And is it not as bad to offer up the dead O Christian say to thy self How can this deadness of heart stand with pureness of heart Do not dead things putrifie 3. Outward reverence Purity of heart will express it self by the reverend gesture of the body the lifting up of the eye and hand the uncovering the head the bending the knee Constantine the Emperour did bear great reverence to the Word When God gave the Law the Mount was on fire and trembled Exod. 19.18 The reason was that the people might prostrate themselves more reverently before the Lord. The Ark wherein the Law was put was carried upon bars that the Levites might not touch it Exod. 25.11 14. To shew what reverence God would have about holy things Sitting in prayer unless in case of weakness and having the Hat half on in prayer is a very undecent irreverent practice let such as are guilty reform it We must not only offer up our souls but our bodies Rom. 12.1 The Lord takes notice what posture and gesture we use in his worship If a man were to deliver a Petition to the King would he deliver it with his Hat half on The careless irreverence of some would make us think they did not much regard whether God heard them or no. We are run from one extream to another from superstition to unmannerliness Let Christians think of the dreadful Majesty of God who is present Gen. 28.17 How dreadful is this place this is none other but the house of God and this is the gate of heaven The blessed Angels cover their faces crying Holy holy Isa 6.1 An holy heart will have an holy gesture 6. A pure heart will have a pure life 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. Where there is a good Conscience there will be a good Conversation Some bless God they have good hearts but their lives are evil Prov. 30.12 There is a generation that are pure in their own eyes and yet are not washed from their filthiness If the stream be corrupt we may suspect the spring-head to be impure Aaron was called the Saint of the Lord Psal 106.16 He had not only an holy heart but there was a golden plate on his fore-head on which was written holiness to the Lord. Purity must not only be woven into the heart but engraven upon the life Grace is most beautiful when it shines abroad with its golden beams The Clock hath not only its motion within but the finger moves without upon the Dyal Pureness of heart shews it self upon the Dyal of the Conversation 1. A pure soul talks of God Psal 37.30 His heart is seen in his tongue the Latines call the Roof of the mouth Coelum Heaven He that is pure in heart his mouth is full of heaven 2. He walks with God Gen. 6.9 He is still doing Angels work praising God serving God he lives as Christ did upon Earth Holy duties are the Jacobs Ladder by which he is still ascending to heaven Purity of heart and life are in Scripture made Twins Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within them there is purity of heart and they shall walk in my statutes there is purity of life Shall we account them pure whose Conversation is not in heaven * Phil. 3.20 but rather in hell Micah 6.11 Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights How justly may others reproach Religion when they see it kicked down with our unholy feet a pure heart hath a golden Frontispice grace like new wine will have vent it can be no more conceal'd than lost The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3. because of that shining lustre they cast in the eyes of others 7. A pure heart is so in love with purity that nothing can draw him off from it 1. Let others reproach purity he loves it as David when he danced before the Ark and Michal scoffed if saith he this he to be vile I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 So saith a pure heart If to follow after holiness be to be vile I will yet be more vile Let water be sprinkled upon the fire it burns the more The more others deride holiness the more doth a gracious soul burn in love and zeal to it If a man had an inheritance befallen him would he be laughed out of it what is a Christian the worse for anothers reproach 't is not a blind mans disparaging a Diamond that makes it sparkle the less 2. Let others persecute holiness a pure heart will pursue it Holiness is the Queen every gracious soul is espoused to and he will rather dye than be divorced Paul would be holy though bonds and persecutions did abide him Acts 20.23 The way of Religion is oft thorny and bloody but a gracious heart prefers inward purity before outward peace I have heard of one who having a Jewel he much prized the King sent for his Jewel Tell the King saith he I honour his Majesty but I will rather lose my life than part with my Jewel He who is enriched with the Jewel of holiness will rather dye than part with this Jewel When his honour and riches will do him no good his holiness will stand him instead Rom. 6.22 Ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life SECT 5. Exhorting to heart-purity Use 3 3. LET me perswade Christians to heart-purity the Harlot wipes her mouth Exhort Prov. 30.20 But that is not enough Wash thy heart o Jerusalem Jerem. 4.14 And here I shall lay down some Arguments or Motives to perswade to heart-purity 1. The necessity of heart-purity it is necessary 1. In respect of our selves Till the heart be pure all our holy things are polluted they are splendida peccata Titus 1.15 To the unclean all things are unclean their offering is unclean Under the Law if a man who was unclean by a dead body did carry a piece of holy flesh in his skirt the holy flesh could not cleanse him but he polluted that Hag. 2.12 13. He who had the Leprosie whatever he touched was unclean if he had touched the
inheritance The making one an heir implies a relation to an inheritance A man doth not adopt another to a title but an Estate so God in adopting us for his children gives us a glorious inheritance Col. 1.12 The inheritance of the Saints in light 1. 'T is pleasant 't is an inheritance in light 2. 'T is safe God keeps the inheritance for his children 1 Pet. 1.4 and keeps them for the inheritance 1 Pet. 1.5 so that they cannot be hindered from taking possession 3. There is no disinheriting for the Saints are Coheirs with Christ Rom. 8.15 Nay they are members of Christ Col. 1.18 The members cannot be disinherited but the head must 4. The heirs never dye eternity is a jewel of their Crown Revel 22.5 They shall reign for ever and ever Before I pass to the next here a question may arise How Gods Adopting and mans Adopting differ 1. Man adopts to supply a defect because he hath no children of his own but God doth not adopt upon this account he had a Son of his own the Lord Jesus he was his natural Son and the Son of his love testified by a voyce from heaven Matth. 3. ult This is my beloved Son Never was there any Son so like the Father he was his exact Effigies Hebr. 1.3 The express image of his person he was such a Son as was more worth than all the Angels in heaven Hebr. 1.4 Being made so much better than the Angels so that God adopts not out of necessity but pity 2. When a man adopts he adopts but one heir but God adopts many Hebr. 2.10 In bringing many sons to glory Oh may a poor trembling Christian say Why should I ever look for this priviledge to be a childe of God! 't is true if God did do as a man if he did only adopt one son then thou mightest despair but he adopts millions he brings many sons to glory indeed this may be the reason why a man adopts but one because he hath not Estate enough for more if he should adopt many his Land would not hold out but God hath Land enough to give to all his children John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many Mansions 3. Man when he adopts doth it with ease 't is but sealing a Deed and the thing is done but when God adopts it puts him to a far greater expence it sets his wisdom on work to find out a way to adopt us it was no easie thing to reconcile hell and heaven to make the children of wrath the children of the promise and when God in his infinite wisdom had found out a way it was no easie way it cost God the death of his natural Son to make us his adopted sons When God was about to constitute us sons and heirs he could not seal the Deed but by the blood of his own Son it did not cost God so much to make us creatures as to make us sons To make us creatures cost but the speaking of a word to make us sons cost the effusion of blood 4. Man when he adopts doth but settle earthly priviledges upon his heir but God settles heavenly priviledges Justification Glorification Men do but entail their Land upon the persons they adopt God doth more he not only entails his Land upon his children but he entails Himself upon them Hebr. 8.10 I will be their God not only heaven is their portion but God is their portion 2. Gods filiating or making of children is by the infusion of grace When God makes any his children he stamps his Image upon them this is more than any man living can do he may adopt another but he cannot alter his disposition if he be of a morose rugged nature he cannot alter it but God in making of children doth disponere ad filiationem he doth prepare and sanctifie them for this priviledge he changeth their disposition he files off the ruggedness of their nature he makes them not only sons but Saints they are of another spirit Numb 14.24 They become meek and humble they are partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 SECT 3. Shewing how we come to be Gods children 3. THE third thing is How we come to be the children of God Answ There is a double cause of our filiation or childship 1. The Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or impulsive cause is Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his free-grace We were Rebels and Traytors and what could move God to make sinners sons but free-grace Ephes 1.5 Having predestinated us unto the Adoption of children according to the good pleasure of his will Free-grace gave the casting voyce Adoption is a mercy spun out of the bowels of free-grace it were much for God to take a clod of earth and make it a Star but it is more for God to take a piece of clay and sin and instate it into the glorious priviledge of son-ship How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven 2. The Organical or Instrumental cause of our son-ship is faith Baptism doth not make us children that is indeed a badge and livery and gives us right to many external priviledges but the thing which makes God take cognizance of us for children is faith Gal. 3.26 Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Before faith be wrought we have nothing to do with God we are as the Apostle speaks in another sense bastards and not sons Hebr. 12.7 An unbeliever may call God his Judge but not his Father Wicked men may draw near to God in Ordinances and hope that God will be their Father but while they are unbelievers they are bastards and God will not Father them but will lay them at the Divels door Ye are the children of God by faith faith doth legitimate us it confers upon us the title of son-ship and gives us right to inherit How then should we labour for faith without faith we are creatures not children without faith we are spiritually illegitimate this word illegitimate is 1. A term of infamy such as are illegitimate are looked upon with disgrace we call them base-born Thou who dost ruffle it in thy silks and velvets but art in the state of nature thou art illegitimate God looks upon thee with an eye of scorn and contempt thou art a vile person a son of the earth of the seed of the serpent the Divel can shew as good a Coat of Armes as thou 2. This word illegitimate imports infelicity and misery Persons illegitimate cannot inherit legally the Land goes only to such as are lawful heirs till we are the children of God we have no right to heaven and there is no way to be children but by faith Ye are the children of God by faith Here two things are to be discussed 1. What faith is 2. Why faith makes us children 1. What faith is If faith doth instate us into son-ship it concerns us to know what faith is There is a two-fold faith 1. A more
Therefore I answer 1. In time of desertion God leaves in his children a seed of comfort 1 John 3.9 his seed remaineth in him Answ 1 This seed of God is a seed of comfort Though Gods children in desertion want the seale of the Spirit yet they have the Unction of the Spirit 1 John 2.27 Though they want the Sun yet they have a day-star in their hearts as the tree in winter though it hath lost its leaves and fruit yet there is sap in the root So in the winter of desertion there is the sap of grace in the root of the heart as it is with the Sun masking it self with a cloud when it denies light to the earth yet it gives forth its influence so though Gods dear adopted ones may lose the light of his countenance yet they have the influence of his grace Quest What grace appears in the time of desertion Ans 1. An high prizing of Gods ove If God should say to the deserted soul what wilt thou and it shall be granted to half of the Kingdom he would reply Lord that I might see thee as I was wont in the Sanctuary That I may have one golden beam of thy love the deserted soul slights all other things in comparison it is not gardens or orchards or the most delicious Objects that can give him contentment they are like musick to a sad heart he desires as Absalom to see the Kings face 2. A lamenting after the Lord. 'T is the saddest day with him when the Sun of righteousnesse is eclipsed a child of God can better bear the worlds stroak than Gods absence he is even melted into tears the clouds of desertion produce spiritual rain and whence is this weeping but from love 3. Willingnesse to suffer any thing so he may have a sight of God A child of God could be content with Simon of Cyrene to carry the Crosse if he were sure Christ were upon it he could willingly die if with Simeon he might die with Christ in his armes Behold here the seed of God in a believer the work of sanctification when he wants the wine of consolation Answ 2 Answ 2. I answer God hath a design of mercy in hiding his face from his adopted ones First it is for the trial of grace and there are two graces brought to trial in time of desertion 1. Faith 1. When we can believe against sence and feeling when we want an experience yet can trust to a ptomise when we have not the kisses of Gods mouth yet can cleave to the word of his mouth this is faith indeed here is the sparkling of the Diamond 2. Love When God smiles upon us it is not much to love him but when he seems to put us away in anger * Psal 27.9 now to love him and be as the Lime the more water is thrown upon it the hotter it burns this is love indeed That love sure is strong as death * Cant. 8.6 which the waters of desertion cannot quench Secondly It is for the exercise of grace we are all for comfort if it might be put to our choice we would be ever upon Mount Tabor looking into Canaan we are loth to be in trials agonies desertions as if God could not love us except he had us in his armes 'T is hard to lie long in the lap of spiritual joy and not fall asleep Too much Sun-shine causeth a drought in our graces oftentimes when God lets down comfort into the heart we begin to let down care As it is with Musitians before they have money they will play you many a sweet lesson but as soon as you throw them down money they are gone you hear no more of them Before joy and assurance O the sweet musick of prayer and repentance but when God throws down the comforts of his Spirit we either leave off duty or at least slacken the strings of our Viol and grow remisse in it Thou art taken with the money but God is taken with the musick Grace is better than comfort Rachel is more fair but Leah is more fruitful Comfort is fair to look on but grace hath the fruitful womb now the only way to exercise grace and make it more vigorous and lively is sometimes to walk in darknesse and have no light Isa 50.10 Faith is a star that shines brightest in the night of desertion I said I am cast out of thy sight yet will I look again toward thy holy Temple Jonah 2.4 Grace usually puts forth its most heroical acts at such a time 3. I answer God may forsake his children in regard Answ 3 of Vision but not in regard of Union Thus it was with Jesus Christ when he cryed out my God my God There was not a separation of the Union between him and his Father only a suspension of the Vision * Non suit divulsio unionis sed tantum suspensio visionis Gods love through the interposition of our sins may be darkned and eclipsed but still he is a Father The Sun may be hid in a cloud but it is not out of the firmament The Promises in time of desertion may be as it were sequestred we have not that comfort from them as formerly but still the believers title holds good in Law Answ 4 4. I answer when God hides his face from his child his heart may be towards him as Joseph when he spake roughly to his brethren and made them believe he would take them for Spies still his heart was towards them and he was as full of love as ever he could hold he was faine to go aside and weep So God is full of love to his children even when he seems to look strange And as Moses his Mother when she put her child into the ark of bulrushes and went away a little from it yet still her eye was toward it the babe wept I and the mother wept too So God when he goes aside as if he had forsaken his children yet he is full of sympathy and love towards them God may change his countenance but not break his covenant It is onething for God to desert another thing to disinherit Hosea 8.11 How shall I give thee up O Ephraim c. 'T is a Metaphor taken from a father going to disinherit his son and while he is setting his hand to the Deed his bowels begin to melt and to yearn over him and he thinks thus within himself Though he be a prodigal child yet he is a child I will not cut off the entail So saith God How shall I give thee up though Ephraim hath been a rebellious son yet he is a son I will not disinherit him Gods thoughts may be full of love when there is a vail upon his face the Lord may change his dispensation towards his children but not his disposition he may have the look of an enemy but the heart of a Father So that the beliver may say I am adopted and let God do what
Drunkards who drown reason and stupifie conscience these declare their sin at Sodom they are children indeed but cursed children 2 Pet. 1.14 Use 2 Use 2. Exhortation which consists of two branches Exhort 1. Let us prove our selves to be the children of God 2. Let us carry our selves as the children of God Branch 1 1. Let us prove our selves to be the children of God there are many false and unscriptural evidences 1. Saith one the gravest Divines in the Country think me to be godly and can they be mistaken Are the seers blind Answ Others can but see thy outward carriage and deportment if that be fair they by the rule of charity judge well of thee but what saith God and conscience Are these thy Compurgators Art thou a Saint in Gods Kal●nder 't is a poor thing to have an applauding world and an accusing conscience 2. Oh but saith another I hope I am a childe of God I love my heavenly Father Answ Why dost thou love God perhaps because God gives thee corn and wine this is a mercenary love a love to thy self more than to God you may lead a sheep all the field over with a bottle of Hay in your hand but throw away the Hay now the sheep will follow you no longer So the squint-ey'd hypocrite loves God only for the Provender when this fails his affection fails too But leaving these vain and false evidences of Adoption let us enquire for a sound evidence the main evidence of Adoption is Sanctification Search O Christian whether the work of Sanctification hath passed upon thy soul Is thy understanding sanctified to discern the things which are excellent Is thy will sanctified to embrace heavenly objects Dost thou love where God loveth and hate where God hateth Art thou a consecrated person This argues the heart of a childe God will never reject those who have his image and superscription upon them 2. Let us carry our selves as becomes the children of Branch 2 God and let us deport our selves as the children of the high God 1. In obedience 1 Pet. 1.14 As obedient children If a stranger bid a childe do a thing he regards him not but if his father command he presently obeyes Obey God out of love obey him readily obey every command If he bid thee part with thy bosome-sin leave and loath it Jer. 35.5 I set before the sons of the house of the Rechabites pots full of wine and cups and I said unto them Drink ye wine but they said We will drink no wine for Jonadab the son of Rechab our father commanded us saying Ye shall drink no wine neither ye nor your sons for ever Thus when Satan and thy own heart would be tempting thee to a sin and set cups of wine before thee refuse to drink say My heavenly Father hath commanded me not to drink Hypocrites will obey God in some things which are consistent either with their credit or profit but in other things they desire to be excused Like Esau who obeyed his Father in bringing him Venison because probably he liked the sport of Hunting but refused to obey him in a business of greater importance namely in the choice of his wife 2. Let us carry our selves as Gods children in humility 1 Pet. 5.5 Be ye cloathed with humility 't is a becoming garment Let a childe of God look his face every morning in the glass of Gods Word and see his sinful spots this will make him walk humbly all the day after God cannot endure to see his children grow proud he suffers them to fall into sin as he did Peter that their Plumes may fall and they may learn to go on lower ground 3. Let us walk as the children of God in sobriety 1 Thes 5.8 But let us who are of the day be sober Gods children must not do as others they must be sober 1. In their speeches not rash not unseemly Col. 4.6 Let your speech be seasoned with salt Grace must be the salt which seasons our words and makes them savoury our words must be solid and weighty not feathery Gods children must speak the language of Canaan many pretend to be Gods children but their speech bewrayeth them their lips do not drop as an honey-comb but are like the sink * Prov. 15.2 where all the filth of the house is carried out 2. The children of God must be sober in their opinions hold nothing but what a sober man would hold errour as Saint Basil saith is a spiritual intoxication a kind of phrensie if Christ were upon the earth again he might have Patients enow there are abundance of spiritual Lunaticks among us which need healing 3. The children of God must be sober in their attire 1 Pet. 3.3 Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair and of wearing of gold c. But let it be the hidden man of the heart Gods children must not be conformed to the world Rom. 12.2 't is not for Gods children to do as others taking up every fashion What is a naked breast but a glass in which you may see a vain heart What is spotting of faces but learning the black Art God may turn these black spots into blew walk soberly 4. Let us carry our selves as the children of God in sedulity we must be diligent in our Calling Religion doth not seal Warrants to idleness it was Hieroms advice to his friend to be alwayes well employed Six dayes shalt thou labour God sets all his children to work they must not be like the lillies which toile not neither do they spin heaven indeed is a place of rest Rev. 14.13 They rest from their labours there the Saints shall lay aside all their working-tools and take the Harp and Vial but while we are here we must labour in a Calling God will bless our diligence not our laziness 5. Let us carry our selves as the children of God in magnanimity and heroicalness The Saints are high-born they are of the true blood-royal born of God they must do nothing sneakingly or sordidly they must not fear the faces of men as that brave-spirited Nehemiah Shall such a man as I flie Nehem. 6.11 so should a childe of God say Shall I be afraid to do my duty Shall I unworthily comply and prostitute my self to the lusts and humors of men the children of the most High should do nothing to stain or dishonour their noble birth A Kings son scorns to do any thing which is below him 6. Let us carry our selves as Gods children in sanctity 1 Pet. 1.16 Holiness is the diadem of beauty in this let us imitate our heavenly Father a debauched childe is a disgrace to his father there 's nothing doth more cast a reflection on our heavenly Father than the irregular actings of such as profess themselves his children What will others say Are these the children of the most High is God their Father Rom. 2.24 The Name of God is blasphemed through you
their spiritual accounts they reckon what Religion must cost them and may cost them it must cost them the blood of their sins it may cost them the blood of their lives 2. The fore-thoughts of persecution will be as sawce to season our delights that we do not surfeit upon them How soon may there be an Alarum sounded how soon may the clouds drop blood the thoughts of this would take off the heart from the immoderate love of the creature Our Saviour at a great Feast breaks out into mention of his death Mark 14.3 She hath prepared this against my Burial So the fore-thoughts of a change would be an excellent antidote against a surfeit 3. The fore-thoughts of sufferings would make them lighter when they come * Levius laedunt praevisa mala Grotius the suddenness of an evil addes to the sadness this was ill news to the fool in the Gospel who reckoned without his Host Hac nocte This night shall thy soul be required of thee This will be an aggravation of Babylons miseries Rev. 18.8 Her plagues shall come in one day not that Antichrist shall be destroyed in a day but in a day that is suddenly the blow shall come unawares when he doth not think of it the reckoning before hand of suffering doth alleviate and take off the edge of it when it comes therefore Christ to lighten the Cross still fore-warms his Disciples of sufferings that they might not come unlooked for Joh. 16.33 Acts 1.7 4. Fore-thoughts of persecution would put us in mind of getting our Armour ready 't is dangerous as well as imprudent to have all to seek when the trial comes as if a Souldier should have his weapons to get when the enemy is in the Field Caesar seeing a Souldier whetting his sword when he was just going to fight cashier'd him he that reckons upon persecution will be in a ready posture for it he will have the Shield of Faith and the Sword of the Spirit ready that he may not be surprized unawares 2. Let us prepare for persecution a wise Pilot in a calm will prepare for a storm God knows how soon persecution may come there seems to be a cloud of blood hanging over the Nation SECT 9. Shewing how we may be armed for sufferings Quest HOW shall we prepare for sufferings Answ Do three things 1. Be persons rightly qualified for suffering 2. Avoide those things which will hinder suffering 3. Promote all helps to suffering 1. Labour to be persons rightly qualified for suffering Be righteous persons that man who would suffer for righteousness sake must himself be righteous I mean Evangelically righteous in particular I call him righteous 1. Who breaths after sanctity Psal 119.5 Though sin cleaves to his heart yet his heart doth not cleave to sin though sin hath an alliance yet no allowance Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not a good man hates that sin to which Satan doth most tempt and his heart most incline Psal 119.128 2. A righteous person is one who makes Gods glory his Center the glory of God is more worth than the salvation of all mens soul He who is divinely qualified is so zealously ambitious of Gods glory that he cares not what he loseth so God may be a gainer he prefers the glory of God before credit estate relations It was the speech of Kiliaz that blessed Martyr Had I all the gold in the world to dispose of I would give it to live with my relations though in prison yet Jesus Christ is dearer to me than all 3. A righteous person is one who values the jewel of a good conscience at an high rate good conscience is a Saints Festival his Musick his Paradise and he will rather hazard any thing than violate his conscience They say of the Irish if they have a good Skimmeter a warlike weapon they had rather take a blow on their Arme than their Skimmeter should be hurt To this I may compare a good conscience a godly man had rather sustain hurt in his body or estate than his conscience should be hurt he had rather dye than violate the Virginity of his conscience such a man as this is Evangelically righteous and if God call him to it he is fit to suffer 2. Avoid those things which will hinder suffering 1. The love of the world God allows us the use of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 But take heed of the love of it he that is in love with the world will be out of love with the Cross 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me having loved this present world he not only forsook Pauls company but his doctrine The love of the world choaks our zeal a man wedded to the world will for thirty pieces of silver betray Christ and a good cause Let the world be as a loose garment that you may throw off at pleasure before a man can dye for Christ he must be dead to the world Paul was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 It will be an easie thing to dye when we are dead before in our affections 2. Carnal fear There is a two-fold fear 1. A filial fear when a man fears to displease God * Incidam potius in Geheunam quam peccatum Anselm when he fears lest he should not hold out this is a good fear Blessed is he that fears alway if Peter had feared his own heart and said Lord Jesus I fear I shall forsake thee Lord strengthen me doubtless Christ would have kept him from falling 2. There is a cowardly fear when a man fears danger more than sin when he is afraid to be good this fear is an enemy to suffering God proclaimed that those who were fearful should not go to the Wars Deuter. 20.8 The fearful are unfit to fight in Christs Wars a man possessed with fear doth not consult what is best but what is safest If he may save his Estate he will snare his conscience Prov. 29.25 In the fear of man there is a snare Fear made Peter deny Christ Abraham equivocate David fain himself mad fear will put men upon indirect courses making them study rather compliance than conscience Fear makes sin appear little and suffering great the fearful man sees double he looks upon the cross through his perspective twice as big it is fear argues sordidness of spirit * Degeneres animos timor arguit it will put one upon things most ignoble and unworthy a fearful man will Vote against his conscience fear infeebles it is like the cutting off Sampsons locks fear melts away the courage Josh 5.1 Their hearts melt because of you and when a mans strength is gone he is very unfit to carry Christs Cross fear is the root of Apostasie Spira's fear made him abjure and recant his Religion fear doth one more hurt than the Adversary it is not so much an enemy without the Castle as a Traytor within indangers it 't is not so much sufferings without as trayterous fear within which undoes
Prince of the Divels Art thou ignominiously used so was Christ Mark 14.65 Some began to spit upon him Art thou betrayed by friends so was Christ Luke 22.48 Judas betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss Is thy Estate sequestred and do the wicked cast lots for it so Christ was dealt with Matth. 27.34 They parted his garments casting lots Do we suffer unjustly so did Christ his very Judge did acquit him Luke 23.4 Then said Pilate to the chief Priests and to the people I finde no fault in this man Art thou barbarously dragged and haled away to suffering so was Christ Matth. 27.2 When they had bound him though he came to loosen them they led him away Dost thou suffer death so did Christ Luke 23.33 When they were come to Calvary there they crucified him They gave him gall and vineger to drink the one deciphering the bitterness the other the sharpness of his death Christ under-went not only the blood of the Cross but the curse of the Cross Gal. 3.13 He had an agony in his soul Matth. 26.38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death The soul of Christ was over-cast with a cloud of Gods displeasure the Greek Church speaking of the sufferings of Christ calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unknown sufferings Did the Lord Jesus endure all this for us and shall not we suffer persecution for his Name say as holy Ignatius * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. I am willing to dye for Christ for Christ my love was crucified Our cup is nothing to the cup which Christ drank his cup was mixed with the wrath of God and if he did bear Gods wrath for us well may we bear mans wrath for him 4. Great is the honour we bring to Christ and the Gospel by suffering it was an honour to Caesar that he had such Souldiers as were able to fight with hunger and cold and endure hardship in their marches It is an honour to Christ that he hath such listed under him as will leave all for him it proclaims him to be a good Master when his servants will wear his Livery though it be sullied with disgrace and lined with blood Pauls iron chain made the Gospel wear a golden chain Tertullian saith of the Saints in his time they took their sufferings more kindly than if they had had deliverance * Magis damnati quam absoluti gaudemus Tert. Apolog. O what a glory was this to the truth when they durst embrace it in the flame And as the Saints sufferings adorn the Gospel so they propagate it Basil saith the zeal and constancy of the Martyrs in the Primitive times made some of the Heathens to be Christianized Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine crevit The showres of blood have ever made the Church fruitful Phil. 1.13 Pauls being bound made the truth more enlarged the Gospel hath alwayes flourished in the ashes of Martyrs 5. It is that we have engaged our selves to in Baptism there we took our press-money we solemnly vowed that we would be true to Christs interest and fight it out under his Banner to the death and how often have we in the blessed Supper taken the oath of allegiance to Jesus Christ that we would be his liege servants and that death should not part us Now if when being called to it we refuse to suffer persecution for his Name Christ will bring our Baptisme as an inditement against us Christ is called the Captain of our salvation Hebr. 2.10 We have listed our selves by name under this Captain now if for fear we shall flie from our colours it is perjury in the highest degree and how shall we be able to look Christ in the face another day * Summum crede nefas c. Juvenal sat 10. That oath which is not kept inviolably shall be punished infallibly where doth the flying roule of curses light but in the house of him that sweareth falsly † * Zach. 5.4 6. Our sufferings are light 2 Cor. 4.17 This light affliction c. It is heavy to flesh and blood but it is light to faith affliction is light in a three-fold respect 1. It is light in comparison of sin he that feels sin heavy feels suffering light sin made Paul cry out O wretched man that I am Rom. 7. He doth not cry out of his iron chain but of his sin the greater noise drowns the lesser when the Sea roars the Rivers are silent he that is taken up about his sins and sees how he hath provoked God thinks the yoke of affliction light Micah 7.9 2. Affliction is light in comparison of hell what is persecution to damnation what is the fire of Martyrdom to the fire of the damned it is no more than the pricking of a pin to a deaths wound Who knoweth the power of thine anger Psal 90.11 Christ himself could not have born that anger had he not been more than a man 3. Affliction is light in comparison of glory the weight of glory makes persecution light if saith Chrysostom the torments of all the men in the world could be laid upon one man it were not worth one houres being in heaven and if persecution be light we should in a manner set light by it let us neither faint through unbelief nor fret through impatience 7. Our sufferings are short 1 Pet. 5.10 After ye have suffered awhile or as it is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little our sufferings may be lasting not everlasting affliction is compared to a cup Lam. 4.21 The wicked drink of a Sea of wrath which hath no bottom it will never be emptied but it is only a cup of Martyrdom and God will say Let this cup pass away Psal 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous the rod may be there it shall not rest Christ calls his sufferings an houre Luke 12.53 Can we not suffer one houre persecution is aspera but brevis though it hath a sting to torment yet it hath a wing to flie Isa 35.10 Sorrow shall flie away it is but awhile when the Saints shall have a Writ of ease granted them they shall weep no more suffer no more they shall be taken off the torturing wrack and laid in Christs bosome the people of God shall not alwayes be in the iron Furnace a year of Jubile will come the water of persecution like a Land-flood will soon be dried up 8. While we suffer for Christ we suffer with Christ Rom. 8.17 If we suffer with him c. Jesus Christ bears part of the suffering with us oh saith the Christian I shall never be able to hold out but remember thou sufferest with Christ he helps thee to suffer As our blessed Saviour said John 16.32 I am not alone the Father is with me So a believer may say I am not alone my Christ is with me he bears the heaviest end of the Cross 2 Cor.
wonder Saint Paul was willing to be bound and dye for Christ Acts 21.13 when he knew that Christ loved him and had given himself for him Gal. 2.20 Though I will not say Paul was proud of his chain yet he was glad of it he wore it as a chain of pearle Quest Quest But how shall I get this jewel of assurance Answ Answ 1. Make duty familiar to you when the Spouse sought Christ diligently she found him joyfully Cant. 3.4 The Ordinances are the Lattice where Christ looks forth and gives the soul a smiling aspect As Christ was made known to his Disciples in the breaking of bread Luke 24.35 so in the use of holy Ordinances in the breaking of bread Christ makes a glorious discovery of himself to the soul Christs parents found him in the Temple Luk. 2.46 They who would find Christ with comfort and have the kisses of his lips shall be sure to meet with him in the Temple 2. Preserve the virginity of conscience when the glass is foule you will not poure wine into it but when it is clean so when the soul is cleansed from the love of every sin now God will poure in the sweet wine of assurance * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Socrat. Hebr. 10.22 Let us draw near in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience Guilt clips the wings of joy he who is conscious to himself of secret sin cannot draw near to God in full assurance he cannot come with boldness but blushing he cannot call God Father but Judge assurance is a flowre that grows only in a pure heart before David prayes for joy he first prayes for a pure heart Psal 51.10 Create in me a clean heart O God 3. Be much in the actings of faith the more active the childe is in obedience the sooner he hath his fathers smile if faith be ready to dye Rev. 3.2 if it be like Armour hung up or like a sleepy habit in the soul never look for assurance God will not speak peace to thee when thou art asleep it is the lively faith which flourisheth into assurance Abraham had a vigorous sparkling faith Rom. 4.18 who against hope believed in hope That is against the hope of sense he believed in the hope of the promise and how sweetly doth God manifest himself to Abraham he calls him his friend he makes him of his Cabinet-counsel Gen. 18.17 Shall I hide from Abraham the thing which I do Wouldst thou have Christ reveal his love to thee k●ep faith upon the wing this is the Bird which soars aloft and plucks a bunch of grapes from the true Vine 4. If Christ be all then make him so to Branch 4 you 1. Make Christ all in your understanding be ambitious to know nothing but Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 For I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I judged not I did not think any thing in my judgement worth knowing in comparison of Christ Austin saith of Cicero he liked his eloquence but he could not take so much delight in reading him quia Nomen Christi non erat ibi because he could not finde the Name of Christ there what will all other knowledge avail a man at his death who is ignorant of Christ Si Christum nescis nihil est si coetera noscis What is it to have knowledge in Physick to be able with Esculapius and Galen to discourse of the causes and symptomes of a disease and what is proper to apply and in the mean time to be ignorant of the healing under Christs wings What is it to have knowledge in Astronomy to discourse of the Stars and Planets and to be ignorant of Christ that bright morning star which leads to heaven what is it to have skill in a shop and ignorant of that commodity which doth both enrich and crown what is it to be versed in Musick and to be ignorant of Christ whose blood makes atonement in heaven and musick in the conscience what is it to know all the stratagems of War and to be ignorant of the Prince of peace O make Christ all be willing to know nothing but Christ though you may know other things in their due place yet know Christ in the first place let the knowledge of Jesus Christ have the preheminence as the Sun among the lesser Planets This is the crowning knowledge Prov. 4.18 The prudent are crowned with knowledge 1. We cannot know our selves unless we know Christ he it is who lights us into our hearts and shews as the spots of our souls whereby we abhor our selves in dust and ashes Christ shews us our own vacuity and indigency and untill we see our own emptiness we are not fit to be filled with the golden oyle of mercy 2. We cannot know God but through Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 Out of Christ God is terrible he is a consuming fire it is through Christ that we know God as a friend oh then treasure up the knowledge of Christ he is the golden ladder by which we ascend to heaven to be ignorant of Christ is as if a man were poysoned and there were an herb in the garden could cure him but he is ignorant of that herb 2. Make Christ all in your affections 1. Desire nothing but Christ he is the accumulation of all good things Ye are compleat in him Col. 2.10 Christ is the Christians perfection what should the soul desire less what can it desire more * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignatius Psal 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee David had his Crown and his Throne to delight in I but it was the presence of Christ he chiefly thirsted after without Christ all his other comforts were not only emptiness but bitterness 2. Love nothing but Christ love is the choycest affection it is the purest stream of the soul it is the richest jewel the creature hath to bestow oh if Christ be all love him better than all let your Rivers still run into this golden Sea Every mans heart is set upon his treasure in Christ there are unsearchable riches Ephes 3.8 Though the Angels have lived so long in heaven yet to this day they know not how rich Christ is Take the most precious pearle or Diamond that is and the Jeweller can set the full value of it he can say This is worth so much and no more but the riches of Christ are unsearchable it cannot be said he is worth so much and no more neither man or Angel are able to set the full value of the pearle of price and shall not Jesus Christ lie nearest our hearts shall he not have the cream of our love Consider 1. If you love other things when they dye your love is lost but Christ lives for ever to requite your love 2. You may love other things in the excess but you cannot
Anselm say Let me rather fall into hell than sin wouldst thou keep thy heart environ it with love death cannot break this fence 3. Faith this is call'd a shield Ephes 6.16 The shield Fence 3 fenceth the head guards the vitals this blessed shield of faith preserves the heart from danger The shield defends all the Armour the Helmet and Breast-plate The shield of faith defends the other graces the Breast-plate of love the Helmet of hope the Girdle of truth When Satan strikes at a Christians heart faith beats back the blow and wounds the head of the old Serpent 1 Pet. 5.9 Whom resist stedfast in faith faith is the best safeguard faith brings in peace Rom. 15.13 Peace in believing And peace fortifies the heart Phil. 4.7 The peace of God shall keep your heart 4. A good conscience The heart is placed in the midst Fence 4 of the body and as it is strongly secured with ribs about it so it hath a film over it in which it is kept call'd by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the ribs about the heart which fence it I may compare the graces to the film in which the heart is kept I may compare a good conscience this keeps the soul that nothing can annoy it Murus Aheneus esto c. Good conscience is a brazeen wall about the Castle of the heart these are the fences that keep the heart Answ 9 9. If you would have your hearts kept beg of God that he would keep them for you set not about this work in your own strength but look higher go to God he is the great Lord-Keeper Psal 121.5 The Lord is thy Keeper * Utinam ut mihi semper à dexteris fis bone Jesu Bern. it is good to go alwayes with such a Keeper this is the reason none of the Saints are lost because the Lord is their Keeper 1 Pet. 1.5 Who are kept by the power of God Every Ward hath a Guardian to keep him choose God for thy Guardan they are safe whom God keeps lock up thy heart with God and give him the Key Motives to heart-custody The Motives that may perswade us to look after the keeping of our hearts are these 1. If we do not keep our hearts the Divel will keep them shall we let Satan have them when a rude Army gets into a Town what work do they make what Rapines Plunders Massacres when Satan possesseth hearts he carries them at last violently as he did the Swine into the Sea Satan is first crafty then cruel 1. He is crafty his work is to fish for hearts and he is very subtile he hath his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his policies and stratagems 2 Cor. 2.11 1. He observes the humours of the body and layes sutable baits the Divel cannot know the heart but he may observe the temper and constitution * Novit Diabolus cui illecebras carn● ingerat cui virus invi diae insundat omnium discurit mores Leo. he tempts a sanguine man with beauty a covetous man wich gold as the Husband-man knows what ground is fit for Barley what for Wheat Satan hath not been a Tempter so long but by this time hath gained experience having commenced Master of his black Art 2. Satan baits his hook with Religion he tempts to sin under a pretext of piety thus transforming himself into an Angel of light He tempts some to make away themselves that they may not live any longer to sin against God Who would suspect Satan when he comes as a Divine and quotes Scripture Thus cunningly doth the Divel angle for hearts 2. Having once gotten his prey he is cruel his cruelty exceeds the rage of all Tyrants we read of Hannibal Antiochus Nero who caused the Christians to be put in Coats laid over with pitch and brimstone burning all night that they might be a living Torch to them that passed by this is nothing to the unparallel'd barbarisme and cruelty of Satan his name is Apollyon Devourer he rent and tore the man in whom he was and threw him into the fire Matth. 17.15 If he was so fierce when he was chained what will he do when he hath full power when he had taken away all Jobs Estate smitten his body full of soars and thrown the house upon his children yet all this was in the Divels account but a touch of the finger Job 1.11 If the touch of his finger be so heavy what will the weight of his loyns be Oh then if Satan be so subtile in fishing for hearts and so savage when he gets mens hearts let us have a care to keep our hearts if we do not keep them Satan will keep them for us and then see what havock he will make 2. He that keeps his heart keeps his peace whence are our perturbations and disquiets but from the neglect of our spiritual watch he that keeps his heart all day may lie down in peace at night Psal 4.8 What a comfort will this be to a Christian in every condition in a low condition when he thinks thus with himself Though I have lost my friends and estate yet I have kept my heart in a sick condition we shall shortly be chained to a sick-bed but when a Christian shall keep his bed it will be no small comfort to him that he hath kept his heart in a dying condition death may take away the life but not the heart that jewel God layes claim to and it is kept for him The heavenly race 1 COR. 9.24 Know ye not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that ye may obtain REligion is a business of the greatest importance the Soul which is the more Noble and Divine part is concern'd in it and as we act our part here so we shall be for ever happy or miserable the advice of Solomon in this case is most seasonable Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest Eccles 9.10 The business of Religion requires our utmost zeal and intension Mat. 11.12 1. Sometimes the work we are to do for heaven is set out by striving Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait gate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strive as in an agony strive as for a matter of life and death so Cornelius à lapide though we must be men of peace yet in matters of Religion we must be men of strife 't is an holy strife a blessed contention indeed the Apostle saith Let nothing be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through strife but though strife doth not do well among Christians yet it doth well in a Christian he must strive with his own heart or he will never get to heaven 2. Sometimes our work for heaven is compared to wrestling Ephes 6.12 We wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers c. Our life is a
all our burdens to supply all our wants there can be no defect in that which is infinite Use 1 Use 1. Information And it hath six Branches Inform. Branch 1 1. It shews us the glorious fulness of Jesus Christ He is all in all Christ is a Panoply a Magazin and Store-house of all spiritual riches you may go with the Bee from flowre to flowre and suck here and there a little sweetness but you will never have enough till you come to Christ for he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all in all Now in particular Christ is all in six Respects 1. Christ is all in regard of righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 He is made to us righteousness The Robe of innocency like the vail of the Temple is rent asunder ours is a ragged righteousness Isa 64.6 Our righteousnesses are as filthy rags As under rags the naked body is seen so under the rags of our righteousness the body of death is seen we can defile our duties but they cannot justifie us but Christ is all in regard of righteousness Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to them that believe * Domine Jesu ego sum peccatum tuum tu es justitia mea Luth. That is through Christ we are as righteous as if we had satisfied the Law in our own persons Jacob got the blessing in the garment of his elder brother so in the garment of Christ our elder brother we obtain the blessing Christs righteousness is a coat woven without seam 2 Cor. 5. ult We are made the righteousness of God in him 2. Christ is all in regard of Sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 He is made to us Sanctification Sanctification is the spiritual enamel and embroydery of the soul 't is nothing else but Gods putting upon us the jewels of holiness the Angels glory by it we are made as the Kings daughter all glorious within Psal 45.13 This doth disponere ad coelum it doth tune and prepare the soul for heaven it turns iron into gold it makes the hea● which was Satans Picture Christs Epistle The Virg●● ●●●her 2.12 had their dayes of purification they 〈◊〉 first to be perfumed and anointed and then they were to stand before the King we must have the anointing of God 1 John 2.27 and be perfumed with the graces of the Spirit those sweet odours and then we shall stand before the King of heaven there must be first our dayes of purification before our dayes of glorification what a blessed work is this a soul beautified and adorned with grace is like the coelum stellatum the firmament bespangled with glittering stars O what a Metamorphize is there I may allude to that Cant. 3.6 Who is this that comes out of the wilderness with myrrhe and frankincense and all the powders of the Merchant So who is this that comes out of the wilderness of sin perfum'd with all the graces of the Spirit Holiness is the signature and engraving of God upon the soul but whence is this Christ is all he is made to us Sanctification he it is that sends his Spirit into our hearts to be a refiners fire to burn up our dross and make our graces sparkle like gold in the Furnace Christ ariseth upon the soul with healing under his wings Mal. 4.2 He heals the understanding and saith Let there be light he heals the heart by dissolving the stone in his blood he heals the will by filing off its rebellion Thus he is all in regard of Sanctification 3. Christ is all in regard of Divine acceptance Eph. 1.6 He hath made us accepted in the Beloved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath made us Favourites so Chrysostom and Theophylact render it through Christ God is propitious to us and takes all we do in good part A wicked man being out of Christ is out of favour as his ●oughing is sin Prov. 21.14 so his praying is 〈◊〉 ●●ov 15.8 God will not come near him his brea●● infectious God will hear his sins and not his prayers but now in Christ God accepts us Eccles 9.7 Go thy way eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart for God now accepts thy works as Joseph did present his Brethren before Pharaoh and brought them into favour with the King Gen. 47.2 so the Lord Jesus carries the names of the Saints upon his breast and presents them before his Father so bringing them into repute and honour through Christ God will treat and parly with us he speaks to us as Isa 62.4 Thou shalt no more be termed forsaken but thou shalt be called HephꝪibah for the Lord delighteth in thee Through the red glass every thing appears of a red colour through the blood of Christ we look of a sanguine complexion ruddy and beautiful in Gods eyes 4. Christ is all in regard of Divine assistance a Christians strength lies in Christ Phil. 4.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I can do all things through Christ Whence is it a Christian is able to do duty to resist tentation but through Christs strengthning * Nunquam Caesar tanto impetu civitates oppugnavit quanto Satan conscientias piorum Luther Whence is it that a sparkle of grace lives in a Sea of corruption the storms of persecution blowing but that Christ holds this sparkle in the hollow of his hand Whence is it that the roaring Lyon hath not devoured the Saints but that the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah hath defended them Christ not only gives us our Crown but our Shield he not only gives us our garland when we overcome but our strength whereby we overcome Rev. 12.11 They overcame him that is the accuser of the Brethren by the blood of the Lamb. Christ keeps the Fort-royal of grace that it be not blown up Peters shield was bruised but Christ kept it that was not broken I prayed for thee that thy faith fail not Luke 22.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it be not in a total Eclipse The Crown 〈◊〉 all the Saints victories must be set upon the head of Christ Rom. 8.38 In all these things we are more than Conquerors through Christ Write the name of Michael upon all your conquests 5. Christ is all in regard of pacification when conscience is in an agony and burns as hell in the sense of Gods wrath * Job 6.4 now Christ is all he poures the balm of his blood into these wounds he maketh the storm a calm Christ doth not only make peace in the Court of heaven but peace in the Court of conscience he not only makes peace above us but within us Joh. 16. ult That in me ye might have peace in me tanquam in fonte saith Cyprian all our golden streams of peace flow from this fountain John 14.27 Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you Jesus Christ not only purchased peace for us but speaks peace to us he is called the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 Peace
is a flowre of his Crown he whispers his love to the soul and sends his Spirit that blessed Dove which brings an Olive-branch of peace in its mouth John 16.7 The peace which Christ gives is peace in trouble Micah 5.5 And this man shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come into our Land and tread in our Palaces Kings can proclaim war in a time of peace but Christ proclaims peace in a time of war Oh how sweet is this peace 't is pax supra pacem as Bernard saith Austin calls it serenitas mentis a sweet calm and sabbath in the soul it is a foretaste of glory it is a bunch of grapes from the true Vine which chears the heart it passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Thus Christ is all in regard of pacification he makes peace for us and in us this honey and oyle flows out of the Rock Christ 6. Christ is all in regard of remuneration he it is that crowns us after all our labours and sufferings he dyed to advance us his lying in the wine-press was to bring us into the wine-celler he is gone before to take possession of heaven in the name of all believers Hebr. 6.20 Whether the fore-runner is for us entred even Jesus Christ is gone to bespeak a place for the Saints John 14.2 He makes heaven ready for them and makes them ready for heaven Thus Christ is all in regard of remuneration Rev. 22.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me 2. If Christ be all it shews us what a vast disproportion Branch 2 there is between Christ and the creature there is as much difference as between ens and nihil Christ is all in all and the creature is nothing at all Prov. 23.5 Wilt thou set thine eyes on that which is not The creature is a non-entity though it hath a physical existence yet considered theologically it is nothing 't is but a gilded shadow a pleasant fancy when Solomon had sifted out the finest flowre and distill'd the spirits of all created excellency here 's the Result ALL WAS VANITY Eccles 2.11 The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Vain signifies empty O quantum est in rebus inane We read the earth in the Creation was void Gen. 1.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so are all earthly comforts void they are void of that which we think is in them they are void of satisfaction therefore they are compared to wind Hos 12.1 A man can no more fill his heart with the world than he can fill his belly with the aire he draws in Now the creature is said to be nothing in a three-fold sense 1. It is nothing to a man in trouble of spirit if the spirit be wounded outward things will give no more ease than a Crowne of gold will cure the headache 2. The creature is nothing to a man that hath heaven in his eye when Saint Paul had seen that light shining from heaven surpassing the glory of the Sun Acts 26.13 though his eyes were open he saw no man Acts 9.8 so he that hath the glory of heaven in his eye is blinde to the world he sees nothing in it to allure him or make him willing to stay here 3. The creature is nothing to one that is dying a man at the houre of death is most serious and is able to give the truest verdict of things now at such a time the world is nothing 't is in an Eclipse the sorrow of it is real but the joy imaginary Oh then what a vast difference is there between Christ and the creature Christ is all in all and the creature nothing at all yet how many damn their souls for nothing Branch 3 3. It shews whether the soul is to go in the want of all go to Christ who is all in all Dost thou want grace go to Christ Col. 2.3 In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge Christ is the great Lord Treasurer go then to Christ say Lord I am indigent of grace but in thee are all my fresh springs fill my Cistern from thy Spring Lord I am blinde thou hast eye-salve to anoint me I am defiled thou hast water to cleanse me my heart is hard thou hast blood to soften me † * Quicquid ex me mihideest id repletur ex vulneribus Christi Aug. I am empty of grace bring thy fulness to my emptiness In all our spiritual wants we should repair to Christ as Jacobs sons did to their brother Joseph He opened all the store-houses Gen. 41.56 and gave to his Brethren corn and provision for the way Gen. 42.25 Thus the Lord hath made Christ our Joseph our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 2.3 In him are hid all treasures * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostom Oh then sinners make out to Christ he is all in all and to encourage you to go to him remember there is in him not only fulness but freeness ho every one that thirsts come ye to the waters Christ is not only full as the honey-comb but he drops as the honey-comb Branch 4 4. If Christ be all see here a Christians Inventory how rich is he that hath Christ * Qui habet habentem omnia habet omnia he hath all that may make him compleatly happy Plutarch reports that the wife of Phocion being asked where her jewels were she answered My husband and his triumphs are my jewels so if a Christian be asked where are his riches he will say Christ is my riches A true Saint cannot be poor if you look into his house perhaps he hath scarce a bed to lie on 1 Cor. 4.11 Even to this present houre we both hunger and thirst and are naked and have no certain dwelling place Come to many a child of God and bid him make his will he saith as Peter Acts 3.6 Silver and gold have I none yet he can at the same time make his triumph with the Apostle 1 Cor. 6.10 As having nothing yet possessing all he hath Christ who is all When a believer can call nothing his he can say all is his The Tabernacle was covered with Badgers skins Exod. 25. yet most of it was of gold so a Saint may have a poor covering ragged cloaths but he is inlaid with gold Christ is formed in his heart and so he is all glorious within 5. How should a Christian sit down satisfied with Branch 5 Christ Christ is all What though he wants other things is not Christ enough if a man hath Sunshine he doth not complain he wants the light of a Candle hath not he enough who hath the unsearchable riches of Christ I have read of a godly man who being blinde his friend asked him if he was not troubled for the want of his sight he confessed he was why saith his friend Are you troubled because you want that which flies have when you have that which Angels have so I say to a