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A43727 Apokalypsis apokalypseos, or, The revelation revealed being a practical exposition on the revelation of St. John : whereunto is annexed a small essay, entituled Quinto-Monarchiæ, cum Quarto Omologia, or, A friendly complyance between Christ's monarchy, and the magistrates / by William Hicks ... Hicks, William, 1621-1660. 1659 (1659) Wing H1928; ESTC R20296 349,308 358

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christians and churches do much abate and fail in their first zeal and love to Christ and his ways in a short progress of time after their conversion or from their first entertainment of the Truth Paul did much complain of the church of Galatia in this particular at their first entertainment of the truth they were so full of affections and zeal that they were even ready to pull out their eyes to do Paul service who was their great Apostle yet shortly after he complains of them as if they had entertained another Gospel and exclaims O foolish Galathians who hath bewitched you It seems Ephesus was much faulty herein and so were divers others of the primitive churches and therefore the Apostles were very urgent and pressing in their preachings to maintain love alive and of the three eminent Gospel graces Faith Hope and Charity charity has the precedency First in regard it hath a more extensive object then the other two faith and hope respects only God and eternal glory as their object charity hath not only God for its object but the Saints also Secondly it hath the precedency in that love abideth in glory when faith and hope ceaseth Thirdly it is as the soul and life unto other graces faith it self is but as a dead carcass unless it be enlivened by love To know and entertain the Gospel and its truth is an excellent gift and quality yet if we do not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Receive the truth in the love thereof we may know so much as may justly condemn us for our unproficiency but not save us for want of love Indeed I could wish that this were still a paradox That the love of christians is waxed cold for it was once a hard saying to be a christian and to want love I have read that some christians of the first ages after Christ were so famous amongst their heathen adversaries for this grace of love that they were ready even to die one for another whereof their very enemies taking notice with approbation when they would commend the love of any they would say proverbially that it was like the love of christians but now O christians Quantum mut ast is ab illo It was far otherwise with you at your first coming to the truth then it is now then every one loved one the other for the truths sake At the first breaking out of light in England from under Antichristian clouds and darkness every one had his breast on fire for the promotion of truth and godliness Presbyterian Independent and Anabaptist were then all under the notion of Puritans and Non-conformists zealous for the common cause of advancement of Christ and his Gospel what is the cause that ye have now left your first love both towards God and towards one another Is God and Truth grown less lovely then at first Or were you mistaken then in the right objects of your love I rather fear of the both that the God of the world hath blinded you when ye seek to advance every one his particular interest by rearing one the other most uncharitably as bears not as christians who are meek full of bowels of compassion easily to be entreated c. Have ye not one Lord one Faith one Baptism one Spirit one Scripture one common hope of Salvation and yet look upon one the other as the Jews did on the Samaritans and that for some small differences in circumstantials of Religion It would better besuit christians to be like the good Samaritan that will be ready to pour oyl and wine into the wounds of their afflicted brethren not vinegar and gall which was the work of those that piercd Christ not of his followers and disciples Tantane Ira Fratrum Sed praestat motes componere fluctus In the next place all sorts of christians have sadly experienced the truth of this position that they have forsaken their first love Where is the love of the Presbyterian to his Geneva model as if it had been the very Elixar of all church Discipline Was he not even fire and sword against Episcopacy that stood in his way as a bar to the advancement of his Form and now Episcopacy being down and the aspect of authority benigne towards them yet how remiss and cold are they in setting up their Elders I believe they fear the Iure Divine of it and therefore will not move a foot farther without a Soveraign hand for to support it but all this shows they have much abated in their first love Next What is become of the ardent affections and frequent private and publique exercises and assemblings of the Independents Were they not the only men in the world in their first appearance that carried the face and judgement of Saints yet now how remiss and cold they are grown all see How formal or rather carnal are some of them become that were once as fire in the hearth and in the sheaf ready to warm and enflame all that came by by their ardent affections and duties Yea are not many of them that would not be satisfied otherwise but with hewen stones for the building of the Temple evidentially visible Saints for the House of the Lord now content and sit down satisfied in a parochial congregation of a mixed multitude the tenth whereof if so much be good wheat amongst the pile of chaff that answereth that part which they have for their maintenance they may account themselves most happy ● And lastly How is the great zeal of the Anabaptists so called slaked There was a time when they would compass Sea and Land to make a proselyte at their first appearance how strict they were to Discipline and Order that they might justly be called above all others the Disciplinarians Yet now how remiss they are unto it all know by a too large toleration of errours amongst them And how flat their zeal is for the promotion of the truth all see yea strange how they are changed from their first principles who at first loved one the other as christians and for the Truths sake yet now who more worldly or haughty then they Therefore seeing ye have all come short of your duty and made a defection from your first love take the exhortation of the Spirit in the next verse Verse 5. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen and repent and do thy first works or else I will come unto thee quickly and will remove thy Candlestick out of his place except thou repent The Spirit sets a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Memento home on the affection and zeal-fallen church of Ephesus and to re-mind her of her first state and condition when she had a greater measure of zeal and love both towards God and his Saints then now she had that that consideration might so work upon her as to make a renovation in her affections and to be-think her self of a recovery of that measure of zeal and love which once she had and bring forth such fruits
them is charity its precedency lies in this 1. In that it perfumes and enlivens all the other graces faith it self is dead without it And to suppose a faith without love is to suppose a man without a soul The gifts of prophesies tongues and miracles are but barren and usless things without this 2. This hath for its object both God and Man we exercise our faith and hope only towards God and his promises but our charity is extended both towards God and Man And therefore love is called Rom. 13.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulfilling of the Law it is the whole sum and hinge on which the commandements turn In this one word charity both the Tables of the decalogue are abridged 3. It excells in that it is the greatest note of our interest in God and Christ Faith is that giveth right unto the promises but love is that giveth life to faith It is the very soul of all our graces If we gave our bodies to be burnt for Christ and had not charity it will profit nothing 1 Cor. 13.3 By this we know that we are passed from death to life because we love the Brethren 1 John 3.14 and Ia. 1.12 The Crown of life is promised to them that love God and Rom. 8.28 Love is made the very discovery of effectual calling and election 4. Love excells in that it is the perfection of the Law it is the very end of the Commandments 1 Tim. 1.5 and were Love but perfect in us it would make us perfect Keepers and Observers of the Law both towards God and Man Love knits the Members of Christs Body together and so perfects his Body It unites us to God and so maketh the perfecting of divine love in us 1 John 4.12 17. and here it is we are commanded twice to put on love above all things 1 Pet. 4.8 and Col. 3.14 but once above all things to take the shield of faith 5. And lastly when faith hope patience and all other graces ceases charity abideth Love is not only a portion for the Saints in this life but in the other also then we shall love God and Christ when faith and hope ceaseth therefore justly did Christ in this place and the Apostle in 1 Cor. 13.13 give it the precedency above al other Graces of the Spirit 2. Love brings forth another grace service external worship and obedience him whom we love we obey we serve we honour and worship The service of love is most intense and effectual When Christ communed with Simon Peter John 21. and asked him thrice Simon Son of Jonas lovest thou me Yea Lord thou knowest it saith Peter Christ answered feed my sheep The more love that Peter manifested the more service and duty was put upon him Services that we perform to God not out of love but formality or custome are but as scabbed or lame Sacrifices under the Law which the Lord hated Right ends in our services are First Love and zeal to God's glory Secondly Love to the obedience of God's commandments Thirdly Love to the edification of others These ends makes us a true and sincere worship love goeth through all and is the fulfilling of the Law 3. Thyatira is approved for her faith made lively and effectual by love True faith is never seperated from love they go hand in hand together but love hath the precedency for the reasons aforesaid though faith is first in order of nature for faith is that grace that gives the first being unto a christian but love is the perfection of that being There must be first a knowledge of God and assent unto his truths which is the first act of faith before we can love that God or his Truths but withal I say there is so inseperable union between these two graces no sooner hath faith a being and a body but love comes to animate it to make it sound lively and perfect Observ hence Note That it is not a bare opinion or entertainment of the truth that is a true lively faith but that that worketh by love Many will one day say we have prophesied in thy Name taught in thy Name cast out devils in thy Name professed and beleived thy truths and yet the Lord will say unto them I know you not and all for want of this grace of love towards God and his Saints A sound and true faith contains in it these three principal ingredients that gives the very form and being to it First A sound distinct knowledge of the thing believed I know and am perswaded saith Paul Rom. 14.14 Persons that are ignorant of Gods promises and of the word of eternal life can never believe aright Secondly A firm perswasion strongly assuming the heart As a sound believer must not be an ignorant soul so must he not be a wavering-minded man but must have an undeceivable certainty and truth in that he does believe Thirdly A confident resting and rejoycing with satisfaction unto the Soul surely looking to enjoy that it does beleive True faith hath these four acts and degrees in it 1. Knowledge 2. Assent 3. Adherence and 4. Assurance A believer may have the three first acts and want the latter and a sound beleiver and a justified person Though God for causes to himself known may never give the grace of Assurance yet that faith that only knows God distinctly to be a God of salvation in his promises to repentant sinners through Christ and so takes him and adheres unto him in the love and truth thereof doubtless that soul shall never be a cast-away though God's presence of assurance and joyful satisfaction be never manifested unto him If we be saved it is enough though God reserves his comfortable presence and inward love for us unto another world 4. Thyatira hath another excellent grace and that is Patience or sufferance with patience as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 carries it in the Greek A wicked man may suffer affliction but not suffer with patience without murmuring swearing or blaspheming as the godly doth The wicked may haue patience perforce and unwillingly when he cannot help it the afliction being above his reach to remedy but the godly is patient as it is an effect of love because he loveth much he is ready to suffer much with constancy and patience as Jacob served two seven years hardship for his beloved Rachel so a faithful soul is ready to suffer all afflictions chearfully and with much patience all the years of his life because he loves God and Christ and so accounts the afflictions of this life not to be valued with the glory that shall hereafter be revealed to all those that love God 5. Thyatira was a growing fruitful church her latter works were more then her first done upon better grounds and better principles From whence Note Observ That the gracious works of the more grown Christians doe exceed those of the younger sort in soundness The Neophites or young Christians may be more zealous
bodies and spirits Well then try your faith and profession whether it be dead or formal or active or living by these few particulars it is not a naked assent or unactive outward profession will serve turn this is dead and liveless yea twice dead and to be plucked up by the roots Jud. 12. dead in your first natural condition and dead in your hypocritical profession for by this it appeareth never to be otherwise with you But a lively faith is a working faith by and through the influence of Christ and his spirit being zealous of good works and all for Christ's sake and his glory Paul's whole life Phil. 1.21 was as it were consecrated to Christ for to me to live is Christ says he that is my life is Christ's for his uses his purposes and his glory In short a true and lively faith works by Christ by the continual supply and influence of his spirit and for Christ and with aim at his glory Observ 2. 'T is very usual for dead Formalists to carry a higher hand in outward profession then the real Christian Sardis pretends highly to faith and to a name that she lived beyond her sister churches and the name was only that she aimed at for in the truth of grace she was no better then dead and rotten It is not very usual still among dead and carnal christians to boast of their christianity their baptisme their church their external ordinances and the like They needs would satisfie themselves in the name of christians as the carnal Jews that said they were Jews and were not vers 9. So unto these carnal Formalists the name of christians is pleasant to them yet still are enemies to the true Saints of God and the power of godliness and the reason of this is in that they perceive they want the true working faith which is only acceptable unto God all being naturally self-lovers they would needs content themselves and God too if they might with a guilded sophisticate and dead faith and profession which is to be had at an easier rate then the true one which should commend them unto God and denominate them his Saints in the eye of the world but this faith is too short for such a work being dead false and liveless as a carcass without a soul but that is the faith that justifieth and Christ accepteth that worketh by love 1 Thes 1.3 Vers 2. Be thou watchful and strengthen the things which remain that are ready to dy for I have not found thy works perfect before God Esto vigilans as Beza reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and I should rather take it in the active sense Be thou awake or awake thou then be watchful for it it argues the state of life and activity to be watchful watch and pray but to awake it only shows a dormant dead and sleepy state wherein the church of Sardis was for she bore the name that she lived but she was as good as dead therefore Christ tels her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rouse up thy self from thy sleepy state and strengthen the things which remain re-inforce revive and stir up those small remaining sparks of graces that are ready even to give up the very last gaspe within thee and though thou thinkest and maist have a conceit of thy self that thou art something in that thou hast an external profession and name that thou livest yet I must tell thee saith Christ I have not found thy works perfect before God Hence Note Observ A state of sin is a great impairing and consumption unto the life of grace Sardis is brought by it even to death's door her graces that were once eminent are come thereby to some smal remainders and they too almost extinct and neer the grave and though death it self I mean spiritual hath not yet seized her yet she is somwhat neer it she is under the shadow of death for she sleeps and is called to awake and to stir up the remainders of life that is in her least she takes her last sleep by the spiritual death of grace here and eternal death hereafter Sin is to the soul as sickness is to the body 1. It carries with it its distemperatures and disorders of the soul 2. Ugliness and deformity it is compared to the Leprosie under the Law 3. Grief and pain as sickness causes grief to the body so sin causes horror and anguish unto the soul 4. It causes weakness for the more sin the more weakness and disability to spiritual duties We were without strength saith the Apostle Rom. 5.6 weak feeble souls in the things of God whilst we were in sin and the state of nature 5. Every sickness of the body tends to the death of the body so every sin tends to the death both of body and soul eternally The only remedy that we have against this poyson and sting of sin is to hasten to Christ by faith who is the Phisitian of our souls and by whose stripes we are healed Object But is it not said here to Sardis to awake and strengthen the things that remain that are ready to dye Was it not in the power of Sardis to awake her self recover her self and renew her graces without going to Christ by faith I answer Negatively Christ is set up for that very end not only for a propitiation If any man sin we have an Advocate but it is also from his influence and from him as the Fountain of life whereby all our graces are maintained and kept alive For the life I live as the Apostle says is by the life of the Son of God If Christ should withdraw his gracious presence from our souls we should never awake out of sin nor do our first works or renovate our selves by repentance Secondly This duty to awake and renew their graces was set on those of Sardis that had already received the first grace and Christ by faith for it is here said strengthen the things which remain therefore they had a being though a sorry one and those that have received grace from Christ are in a capacity to work from the power of that grace Having received the promises saith the Apostle that is Christ the great end and object of the promises cleanse your selves go on in the work of sanctification in the power of Christ for all our gracious acts are to be done in and through his continued power and influence Thirdly When we are commanded to awake strengthen and renew our selves by repentance c. they must be always taken to be as inseparable parts of a lively faith for we cannot awake from sin unless we first look upon Christ in the promises neither can we possibly renew or restore our falne graces before we first eye God in Christ out of whose fulness we receive grace for grace Therefore in vain to set home spiritual duties on persons that have not first received light and life from Christ Christ is the first work that must be offered and
in part to come written without that is plain for discovery open to the view All which imports that Iohn was to write of the then present state of Affairs and of the churches which was plain and open and as of things that are and also of the future state of things which are as a book written within sealed and secret in respect of their futurity 2. Another Note hence is That God's true Prophets and faithful Ministers will commend no more to the observation of their churches as visions from God then what they have really seen and hath been discovered from God unto them They are not to come with the word of the Lord in their mouth and pretend visions from God like the false prophets in Ier. 14 whiles their mouths and hearts are full of lying vanities Iohn writes no more then what he saw to the seven churches nor discovers no more then what he saw was then present or should come to pass in after time What we haue seen and heard saith the Apostle we speak and are bold to preach and to commend unto you Christ's Ministers should press no more then what they are assured are experienced truths I doubt me every opinion concerning outward forms of Government Discipline and the like will not at last appear to be visions of God which some do now a days so hotly contend for it may be one day said unto such hot-spurs Boanerges sons of Thunder who required such things at your hands whiles you let the greatest works as of love righteousness and judgement lie prostrate at your feet as if they did not concern you Vers 20. The mysterie of the seven Stars c. Christ in the last verse to make things plain unto John and to give him a taste of the discovery of those mysteries in his book interprets the mystery of the vision of seven Stars and of the seven Candlesticks presented unto his sight in the precedent 12 and 16 verses and he calls it the mysterie of seven Stars and candlesticks because indeed unto John it was a secret and hidden thing what those figures of stars and candlesticks did mystically mean or represent and unto John it would be still a mysterie if Christ himself had not here interpreted Hence Note That this book of Revelations is made clear obvious and manifest by a diligent observation and a right applicationof the mystical characters and figures of each vision Christ himself in this verse hath made the first enterance and essay on this account He tells us that the seven Stars in his right hand and the seven golden candlesticks do mystically represent the seven Angels or Messengers of his churches and the seven candlesticks the churches themselves In the seventeenth chapter Christ is more large in interpreting the mysterie of Babylon the great the mother of harlots c. All which connotes unto us Observ That the wise observant christian may attain unto the revelation and discovery of the mysteries of this book of Prophesies by the help of the Spirit of God upon a diligent enquiry thereinto The Spirit says often in the second and third chapters Let him that hath an ear hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches and in chap. 13. vers 18. Here is wisdom let him that hath wit count the number Here is the mind that hath wisdom cap. 17. v. 9. so that it is for him that hath an ear an intelligent understanding ear and wisdom a wise heart to consider that is fit and capable to open and apply aright the mysteries of this book It is a mystery therefore difficult to all but unto the spiritualized eye and unto the mind that hath wisdom but it should not therefore be accounted presumption in such to undertake this essay seeing it hath pleased Christ to give us the first fruits himself in opening the mysteries of the vision of the seven stars and the seven golden candlesticks which is as an enterance into the whole and since he hath interpreted unto us that by the seven stars are meant the seven Angels of the churches by the seven golden candlesticks the seven famous Asian churches by the woman arrayed in scarlet the mother of harlots in the seventeenth of the Revelations to be the great City that reigneth over the Kings of the earth and the Beast with seven heads and ten horns to signifie a Government Empire or Kingdom on seven Mountains where the great harlot reigneth under ten Kings why should it be thought strange rash or presumptuous to interpret the rest of the mystical figures and hyeroglyphick characters of this book according to their natural and genuine tendency and as they are opened and applyed in other prophetical writings by one and the same Spirit of Prophesie whose wisdom it was ever from the beginning to represent the risings progress and downials of the great Empires and Kingdoms of the word by such dark and mysterious figures and representations unto God's servants his Prophets And conceive one great reason of this dark and mysterious carriage of the Spirit is That the Intendments of God towards the Powers and Kingdoms of the world may be revealed and made known but unto few such as have spirits sutable and wills to conform to the will of God in all things for if those great events and revolutions of State were made vulgar and known unto all it would raise innumerable combustions in the world and great sufferings and afflictions to the children of God from those Powers that they live under for whose sakes these great concussions and subversions of States and Kingdoms do come to pass that Christ's and their Interest may be exalted at the last 2. Note That it is the Spirit of Christ in his Word that makes known and opens the secrets of all Divine mysteries unto his servants Christ discovers unto John those mysteries of stars c. It is this Spirit that searcheth into the deep things of God He shall take of mine as Christ saith John 16.15 and shall show it unto you and hence he is called the Comforter because he makes the love of the Father and the grace of Christ which was before-hand hid in the bosome and counsel of God manifest unto poor souls and so sheds abroad the love of God in their hearts by faith The discovery of Divine mysteries are too high a work for the ablest and wisest person in his natural capacity without the help of Christ's Spirit for they are spiritually not carnally to be discerned But to proceed The mysterie of the seven stars Christ interprets to be the Angels of the seven churches Stars in all prophetical writings do signifie persons of eminency and honour and in Heraldry it is accounted the most noble sort of blazoning peculiar alone to the Armory of Princes The Angels of the seven churches or rather Messengers for so the Greek word signifies because they come with the best message and news that ever came to man to wit the glad tydings of
Mountains to fall upon them and hide them from the face of him that sits upon the Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. This is the terrible and unknown name of Christ which no man knoweth but Christ himself which one day he will manifest when all his enemies are made his footstool and takes the Kingdom unto himself O let this thy Kingdom come and blessed is he that shall sit down with Christ in his Kingdome Observ 2. Christ is very zealous and intense on the punishment of delinquent Churches Christ comes all in a fiery posture against Thyatira and withall tels her ver 22 23. that for suffering Jezabel within her Behold I will cast her into a bed and them that commit adultery with her into great Tribulation except they repent of their deeds And I will kill her children with death c. Christ when he whipped out of the Temple the buyers and sellers Jo 2. did it so zealously that for that very act it was formerly prophesied of him The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up How zealous was Christ in his carriage and ready to punish all those delinquent Asian churches He tels Ephesus in the first place Except she repent and recover her first love and do her first works he will come quickly and remove her candlestick out of its place To Pergamus he saith Repent or I come quickly against thee with the sword of my mouth How zealous was Christ against the zeal-fallen church of Laodicea cap. 3. 15 16. I know thou art neither hot nor cold I would thou wert cold or hot so then because thou art lukewarm I will spew thee out of my mouth You see Christ will not spare his delinquent churches but come quickly against them except they repent And this proceeding of Christ with his Churches answers to this apparition of his to Iohn who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire and feet like burning brass cap. 1. 14 15. Vers 19. I know thy works and charity and service and faith and thy patience and thy works and the last to be more then the first All those graces here mentioned by the Spirit and found in the church of Thyatira are to be understood of true ●eal graces not only so in appearance and opinion but in truth and sincerity and therefore Christ before he fals on the charge against her first he gives an approbation and an encouragement to her graces and in effect tels her 'T is true O church of Thyatira I must acknowledg thy works of grace as thy true love towards me which hath produced and brought forth in thee the happy fruits of thy zealous service and thy faith enlivened by love together with thy constant patience under sufferings for my names sake and by this it appeareth that thou hast received the truth in the love thereof and withal I must add unto thy praise that there is a growth and improvment in those gracious works and the last to be more then the first That is Though thy first works were done out of much zeal yet the latter were done on more certain and sober grounds of knowledg and sincerer ends then the first and therefore as thou hast made an improvement of thy graces so thou art more in esteem and thy works also then at the first By the way here Observ We may Observe Though the Church of Thyatira be never so blame-worthy yet Christ will give her her due and set too his Seal of approbation to all that is sound and righteous in her It seems there were graces sufficient in Thyatira to denominate her a golden candlestick and a church of Christ notwithstanding Christ had a few things to say against her it savors not of the Dove-like spirit of Christ and love when any shall be so rigid as will not acknowledg such societies to be churches of Christ because some imperfections in them either in doctrine or manners though otherwise abounding in works of holiness as love to God and his Saints and faith towards Jesus Christ zeal towards God's worship and service and in suffering for Christ's sake Doubtless with some rigid persons in these days the churches of Pergamus and Thyatira would be unchurched and anathematized by them had they but authority over them though Christ had set his Seal upon them and marked them as golden candlesticks As in a natural body some members may be rotten and dead and yet a lively body So in those spiritual bodies politiques there may be som members rotten and dead at the root yet the body still an organical body and no great hinderance to the whole And again in a natural body there may be a catholique disease seasing upon every part and member of the body which may render it very uncapable for its seruices and yet still a lively body So it may be in a church a body politique it may be catholiquely sick and infected with some venomous disease some pestifferous doctrine or other and yet a church still though a decrepid infirm and lame one but when the disease comes to be mortal leaprous or incurable it is time then to cry out Sum impurus sum impurus Procul hinc procul ite For the words I know thy works and thy loue c. Here we see the good works that God does approve of in his people and does also render them as approved Saints both unto themselves and the whole world Christ alone is the publique approved person in the room of all his members in the sight of God as unto justification and perfect righteousness yet before these graces does appear in the Saints to evidence their calling they are but the children of wrath as well as others Election does secure our eternal estate but before the spirit of grace comes to evidence it by faith that worketh by love sin and death hath dominion over us And though we are heirs of all in God's predetermination yet differ we not at all from servants in the state of unregeneracy yea therein we are slaves and captives to sin and Satan These gracious works are called thy works though they are the gifts of God and wrought by his spirit in us yet God's goodness does call them ours because they are acted by the instrumentality of our souls as passing through our wils affections and understandings and here love or charity is put in the first place among all the graces of the Spirit Whether love in order of nature is before faith I shall not here dispute only thus much I say that all generally grant that faith's first act is an assent to the truth as unto a proposition now unless love come in to ingrediate the affection unto the truth proposed it will only be but a bare opinion and never come to a lively faith Secondly I say love is here proposed as first in order as being the most excellent Gospel grace 1 Cor. 13. throughout Now abideth faith hope and charity but the greatest of
peace through Jesus Christ and therefore beautiful are their feet and so may rightly be represented mystically or figuratively by those lightsome and noble creatures the stars but to prevent tediousness in repetition I refer to the Notes on the precedent sixteenth verse where I have fully discussed the same subject And the mystery of the seven golden Candlesticks Christ interprets to be the seven Churches to wit in Ephes Smyrna Pergamus c. In Exodus 25. amongst the Adorements and Instruments of the Tabernacle God commanded M●ses to make a Candlestick of Beaten Gold Christ in this verse takes up the Figures and Types of seven golden Candlesticks to represent mystically his Tabernacles with men his seven famous Asian Churches wherein his glorious presence did most resplendently appear for it is said verse 13. That he appeared in the midst of them in great luster glory and splendour Golden Candlesticks are fit Types and Emblemes to represent Christ's churches First In respect of their choicest mettal they are golden Candlesticks Observ Christ's churches are of that precious allay and temper that they excel all other assemblies in the world Others of the world though never so great and eminent are but as Lead or Tin but those like precious gold Secondly Gold is the most tryed and refined mettal that is so are Christ's churches they go under seven fold refinements They have tryals from God and man Refinements by afflictions refinements by the Spirit of Grace whereby their dross is done away and so become most precious and shining gold Thirdly Gold is the most noble dearest and highest esteemed mettal amongst men so Christs churches are the most highly respected by God of all creatures the world was made for their sakes yea they are the right heirs that is that have the more especial right by blessing promise and compact unto the world and the good things thereof whether things present or things to come why all is yours if Christ be yours 1 Cor. 3.23 Fourthly It is the most extensive and ductible of all mettals so Christ's churches they have the largest bowels of true charity of any sort of people in the world for they will endeavour the conversion and pray for it even of their very enemies Fifthly Gold is the most weighty of all mettals Christ's churches are of the greatest weight with God all others are but as the dust of the ballance in comparison of them they are of such weight with God that they are to stand in the gap to stay the hand of God when he goes out to execute his judgements If two or three righteous persons be in a City God will not destroy it for their sakes Sixthly and lastly Gold is most fair and shining of all mettals so Christ's churches they are most shining in their graces they are not guilded Candlesticks but golden ones yea beaten ones as that of the Tabernacle was Thou art all fair saith Christ to his Spouse in Cant. 1. my Love behold thou art fair behold thou art fair like a Lilly among the Thorns so is my Love among the daughters Cant. 2.2 In the next place consider the Types and Figures the seven Candlesticks that are the emblemes of those seven Churches and how they suit fitly for this purpose all know The proper work of Candlesticks is to contain and hold their shining lamps or candles as in Exod. 25.37 And thou shalt make the seven Lamps thereof and the Lamps thereof shalt thou put thereon to give light toward that that is before it As the golden Candlestick of the Tabernacle was to have seven lamps or lights to give light to all that was before it so these seven golden Candlesticks those seven Asian churches have their seven Lamps or lights therein which number denotes perfection to enlighten all that was before it they have also their seven Angels seven faithful Messengers Ministers or Ambassadors of Christ's Word and Truth to enlighten every soul that comes with a teachable heart before them Hence Note Observ That every church of Christ as the candlestick of the Tabernacle Exod. 25.37 ought to have their shining Lamps in them that is Ministers and Teachers that are both godly and faithful ones Each one of the seven Asian churches had its Angel its light its Lamp within its candlestick and a church without these lights these Angels is as a candlestick without its lamp or light standing for ornament and fashion sake but wanting much of its honour life light and service which those Lamps and lights would yeild unto it for Christ hath placed in his church some Apostles some Evangelists some Prophets some Teachers some Pastors some Elders and all for the edifying and compleating of his Body the church Churches thus organized with their Angels and Ministers are most comly yea that high expression in Cant. 6.4 may be well applyed to such Thou art beautiful O my Love as Tirza comly as Jerusalem terrible as an Army with Banners Amidst those seven golden candlesticks that had their Angels or Lamps shining within them Christ made his glorious appearance in the likeness of the Son of man verse 13. The discoveries of Christ's ways and presence both in the way of grace and judgement are most clearly to be learn'd and discern'd amongst his churches that have their Angels Ministers and Teachers shining most bright in their life and doctrine in the midst amongst them and like to this was the advice which Christ himself had given to the Spouse in the Canticles chap. 1.7 8. when she had lost or could not find her Beloved Tell me O thou whom my soul loveth where thou feedest Where thou makest thy flocks to rest at Noon His answer is If thou know not thou fairest among women Go thy way forth by the footsteps of the flock and feed thy Kids beside the Shepherds Tents Therefore O thou the beloved of my soul cause my soul that by its wandrings have long missed thee to seek for thee among thy golden candlesticks in thy Ordinances and holy Assemblies in the midst whereof thou dost appear that my soul which languisheth may be comforted with Apples and stayed with Flaggons with spiritual comforts and refreshments from thy self who dwellest in the gardens and feedest thy flocks beside the Shepherds Tents Observ 2. That Christ's churches are his chiefest Treasuries here on earth of light and truth If souls desire to come into the true light and truth of God where should they rather repair then unto those golden candlesticks whose proper service is to hold forth light unto all comers Christ is found walking in the midst of them verse 1● and therefore where the Sun runs its course there must needs be light in that Firmament and much glory and for this reason in this place these seven famous Asian churches are represented by the figures of seven golden candlesticks and also in Zach. 4.3 c. the ancient church of the Jews is represented by a golden candlestick with seven Lamps
church of Christ in Ephesus yet I presume on good grounds that most or the greatest part of Ephesus cryed up Great was Diana of the Ephesians and though there were churches of Christ in Rome Corinth Smyrna Pergamus and other places mentioned in Scripture yet we know by good history that the National Worship and Religion was Ethnick unto Jupiter Mars Sol Venus c. yet indeed I confess a Church may be called the National church as that of Ephesus of England of France of Scotland c. in respect of the church constituted and made up of members or persons of that Nation but herein we have no difference the controversie is not about words but things really differing among themselves as when they affirm every individual and singular parochial church of England to be particular churches of Christ as parts of the whole and the whole to be the National church of England constituted of its singular parts If all England Scotland France be the church what room is left for the world and the profane therein The church may be denominated of England Scotland France c. but not all England Scotland France to be the church there is great difference in those expressions but of this I shall say no farther at present Having done with the Inscription or direction To the Angel of the Church of Ephesus the next thing is write for the better observation of the things that follow These things saith he that holdeth the seven Stars in his right hand who walketh in the midst of the seven golden Candlesticks That the church of Ephesus and the rest may know from whom this subsequent message comes tell them that it is from him that holdeth and keepeth in his fatherly hand of protection his faithful Ministers and Pastors which are as stars in the Firmament of his churches for glory Peruse the sixteenth verse of the first chapter more fully to this purpose And who walketh that is is in active posture ready to observe all the doings whether good or evil of all his churches and therefore he is said to walk in the midst of his seven golden candlesticks consult more at large with v. 13. 20. of c. 1. From Christ's posture of walking in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks or the seven Asian churches note That Christ is very intent with an eye of providential observation and that for their good over all his faithful churches This is not the time of his sitting on the Throne of judging the world but of walking in the midst of his golden candlesticks viewing the order of his churches and to see whether they are proficients under the means of grace according to that of the Canticles cap 6. 11. I went down into the garden of Nuts to see the fruits of the Valley and to see whether the Vine flourished and the Pomgran●tes budded Christ is now viewing his churches graces taking delight therein and to encourage them to perseverance that the crown may be unto them that overcome and also takes a special notice of their backslidings and lays them before their eyes in the deceitfulness thereof that they may loath them and return unto their God by a holy repentance And this is but a confirmation of his promise at his departure left as his last comforting Legacy with his afflicted church Matth. 28.20 That though he was ascended into the highest heavens yet in his providential eye over them and by his Spirit teaching directing counselling supporting and comforting them he would be ever with them unto the end of the world Verse 2. I know thy works and labour and thy patience and how thou canst not forbear them which are evil and hast examined them which say they are Apostles and are not and hast found them Lyars Verse 3. And hast born and hast patience and for my names sake hast laboured and hast not fainted In the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have seen thy works for the better and more perfect taking knowledge of them Our knowledge is mixt and joyned with much imperfections and at best is but a mixt act of our understanding and affections and so to know a thing by a human capacity is to understand it and the nature thereof in the highest notion that its capable of comprehension and often by reason of the darkness in the understanding the affections or will are misplaced and so become erroneous and sinful for a mind not well informed or an ignorant soul can very hardly be a good or a godly one for without this light the judgement and affections will be often led astray to that which is only good in appearance and to contemn that which in it self is really good and perfect but here is no fear of imperfection of knowledge in this person Christ who is one with the Father God from everlasting and therefore all our works are patent and open before him his judgement or affections cannot be misled to approve of things and works that should not or disapprove of works that are worthy to be approved He is God and cannot be deceived on any false pretences he sees our works as they are in themselves and in the very nature of them with all their circumstances We see and know things by mediums mixtly weakly and imperfectly He sees and knows things simply absolutely and most perfectly the eye it self cannot want sight nor the Sun want light neither can the Creator of all things in this present temporal world or his church this spiritual world be ignorant of any of his or their handy works Christ sees and knows the works of the church of Ephesus fully what are approvable and what are disapprovable in them Hence Note That Christ is a most just and equal censurer of his churches works He forbids to call darkness light or light darkness he tells the church of Ephesus that he knows their works of travel patience and sufferance for his Name sake and so places his favourable aspect and complacency thereon and yet what is evil in them he cannot bear without a reproof as 't is defection or failure in its first love and ardent affections which the church of Ephesus bore to Christ and his Truths at their first conversion or entertainment of the Gospel amongst them vers 4. Christ also tels the church of Sardis and Laodicea that he knows their works but in another tone not of approbation but of reproof and censure he said to Sardis cap. 3. 1. I know thy works for thou hast a name that thou livest but thou art dead and in verse 15. he falls upon Laodicea and tells them I know thy works that thou art neither cold nor hot I would thou wert cold or hot Christ will not palliate or lay cushions under great ones elbows and prophesie smooth things unto them nor to the churches that bears them whilst they are most rotten in the root and heart Had not God a controversie of old with his Israel for this
sacrificing the Saints which they term heretiques or schismatiques and troublers of their peace and union but when you meet such a fiery persecuting spirit in any that pretend to Christ judge of it whence it is by these Scriptures Gal. 5.20 Col. 3.12 13. So great hath been the malice of false Prophets and false Teachers ever against the true Saints that they have never rested till they have got their blood shed It was the Pope and his false Prelates and Priests that first filled all Europe with blood it was the same cursed progeny that brought so many precious souls to the stake and faggot in Queen Maries days otherwise of her self as History testifies of nature good enough Quere But it may here be queried for what things ought we to suffer with patience and constancy and not to faint under the burden thereof I have partly formerly answered this question in the ninth verse of the first chapter I shall here add one word more for the rectifying the judgment and keeping the conscience undefiled herein First Know that every soul is strictly obliged to observe all the Laws of God whether Moral Natural or Positive and to undergo all sufferings whatsoever rather then to dishonour God by the breach of the former or neglect his worship by the contempt of the latter We are not only bound under persecutors to keep the conscience undefiled in not committing gross sins as Idolatry c. but also we are obliged to perform all our positive christian duties though we suffer for it as we find that Daniel gave a testimony in this case though to the hazard of persecution to extremity and would not forbear his three times a day solemn prayers and that upon his knees in his chamber and his windows open towards Jerusalem though he knew his enemies might by that means surprize and accuse him and cause him to be cast into the Den of Lions yet did he hold himself bound daily to the Law of outward Worship though the looking to Jerusalem was but a ceremony ordained by God upon Solomon's prayer 1 Kings 8.9 Also the Macchabean Worthies did not think that persecution did or could discharge them from the strict observing even of the Ceremonial Law of not eating Swines flesh but for it endured all extremity of torments as the Story relates and for it are justly ranked among the Worthies of the old Testament who lived and died in faith Heb. 11. So jealous is God not only for the preservation of his Moral Laws but even of those Ceremonial and Ritual Laws that after he hath discovered his Will about them and commands them they forthwith become morally positive Laws and obligent until their repeals from the same authority are manifested and cleared Therefore by this Judge what a lax and loose Religion does Hobbs his Leviathan prescribe unto us to submit to any Religion that the chief or soveraign Magistrate shall dictate to us and that it is not christians duty to suffer for any Article but for that that Jesus Christ is the Messias so subjecting almost the whole will of God in morals and positives unto the will of man But as to this let us like true christians pray Libera Domine nos a malo Verse 4. Nevertheless I have somwhat against thee because thou hast left thy first love We have heard the vertues and graces of the Church of Ephesus and how she had a just and honourable approbation for them yet notwithstanding there is a tang in the end which shows some defection in her and after all her commendations there is a Nevertheless follows close in the heels thereof with somwhat to be said against her just as it is often said of the good Kings of Israel in the book of Kings That they walked and did uprightly in the sight of God as David the King but withal there is added a but But they departed not from the sins of Jeroboam that made Israel to sin Hence by the way Note Observ That the purest churches and the best christians are not altogether exempted from stains but have their spots and blemishes as well as resplendent graces It was the Spouse condition in Cant. 1.5 where she describes her self and saith I am black but comly O ye daughters of Jerusalem as the Tents of Kedar as the Curtains of Solomon Let us out survey the first churches and christians to elucidate and confirm this truth and seeing they stood neerest the light even the Sun of Truth and his Twelve illustrious radiating Signs his Apostles in my judgement they are to be reputed the soundest and the purest yet see whether we read not of their Maculae or spots as well as of their shining graces The church of Corinth was a famous church yet she had her failings contaminating the holy feasts and their Agapees with surfetting and drunkenness and besides the foul errors of false Apostles as denying the Resurrection c. The church of Galatia was not much inferiour in her wantonnizing after liveless ceremonial fancies and pressed them as necessary with Christ unto salvation and when Paul opposed them herein for whose sake they once were ready to pull out their eyes to do him good yet now for crossing their capricious whimsies is become their greatest adversary The churches of Ephesus Pergamus c. had their several encomiums for their graces yet there were some things chargeable on them for waxing cold in their first love for admitting the Doctrine of Balaam Nicolaitans Jezabel c. If we descend from bodies collective to individual persons we shall find the same lot befal unto all consider Noah Job David Peter c. but I desire not to rake up the faults of the Saints which are not left upon record to encourage to sin but to be presidents of the grace of God and as examples for encouragement unto repentant sinners Because thou hast left thy first love Some difficulty seems in these words whether by first love be intended Christ whom the church of Ephesus had left Or that first ardent affection and zeal which she bore to Christ at her first conversion The latter Interpretation to me is clear Because the church of Ephesus had not withdrawn her self from the faith of Christ as is evident by the two precedent verses for it was for Christ's sake and his truth that she had suffered much both from wicked persons and wicked teachers therefore as long as her faith was sound she could not be said to have left Christ as her first Love and taken a new love or new object of her faith But that for which she is charged as faulty is that she hath left her first love that is her first zeal and fervent affections which she bore to Christ and his Ordinances at her first conversion and this is plain from the next verse where she is commanded to repent and to do her first works From hence observe Observ That it is frequently seen that many true and faithful
properly The first Paradice may serve to typifie or represent the second Paradice or new Church-state or heaven which Christ will restore unto his faithful ones before the ultimate day and end of all See more on the 21 and 22 chapters Verse 8. And unto the Angel of the Church in Smyrna Write these things saith the first and the last which was dead and is alive Verse 9. I know thy works and tribulation and poverty but thou art rich and I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews and are not but are the Synagogue of Satan Christ having finished his charge to the church of Ephesus goes on on the same account with the church of Smyrna and commands the Angel or chief Pastor or Minister of the said church who as Ireneus testifies was Policarpus scholar unto S. John to write those things for them to take notice of which he was about to discover to them The person that gave out these discoveries and charges to the churches is here plainly manifested to be Christ who was dead and is alive as in v. 18. of the precedent chapter more fully The matter of the discovery is wholly of encouragement and approbation I know thy works and tribulation and poverty but thou art rich that is I know thy works thou church of Smyrna and the trouble affliction and tribulation that thou endurest by reason of the opprobrious scandalous and reviling speeches which those cast out against thee which call themselves Jews and are not And I know thy poverty and scantiness in worldly riches but I add withal thou art rich in spiritual graces and though thou art accounted poor in this world yet thou hast treasures abiding for thee in heaven And withal I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews and are not but are the Synagogue of Satan As if he had said I also know and take notice of the reviling speeches that those which call themselves Jews and so perhaps were so by blood and yet are not true Jews true spiritual Israelites but rather by reason of their unbelief and malicious practises and persecution of the truth and the professors thereof are the very divel 's disciples and of the Synagogue of Satan Here is a two-fold knowledge or several acts of one and the same knowledge and far different the one from the other The one is a knowledge of approbation love and complacency the other of hatred and abhorrency Christ knows the works of the church of Smyrna of her tribulation persecution and poverty and loves her and honours her for it Christ also knows the works of her adversaries of blasphemies reproaches and enticements to evil against the true Professors of godliness and not only hates them for it but sets a character of ignominy upon their head for ever for what may be more reproachful or stigmatizing then for those that think themselves somwhat in the church of God that call themselves Jews the keepers of the Oracles and mysteries of God yet indeed to be justly numbred among the disciples of the Synagogue of Satan that is of the divel 's church for the word Synagogue in the Greek signifies so much as Convention Meeting or Church which is commonly used now in the worser sense which was appropriated first chiefly to the Jewish Pharisaical and Priestly meetings and called the Jewish Synagogue but Christians having renounced the name and thing have appropriated to their meetings or conventions a more significant name to wit the Church Ecclesia and leaves the Synagogue to unbelieving Jews Antichrist and the Divel to nourish their Disciples in From Christ taking knowledge with approbation of the works and tribulations of the church of Smyrna see the Notes on v. 2. of this chapter to which I refer But from this verse explained one Note shall be Observ That a poor afflicted and persecuted church of Christ is more dear precious and rich in his eye then all other the potent rich and mighty Societies in the world Christ looks upon the latter but with an eye of common providence as the Sun shineth and shower falleth on the field of the righteous and unrighteous alike herein there is no distinction of love or mercy God equally dispenseth those common gifts equally alike unto all neither is any one to be accounted godly or ungodly elect or reprobate from the abounding or want thereof for some godly have abounded and others have wanted herein But the church of Christ they have distinguishing mercies their afflictions and tears are treasured up in a bottle of remembrance for a reward and crown unto them they are as the apple of his eye his jewels members of his mystical body and therefore must needs be dear unto him for no man ever hated his own flesh for them the world was made and is preserved and continued to this day for their sakes and I dare be bold to affirm if there were none of his elect members on earth the world would soon see its night and period and forthwith relapse to its primitive and everlasting chaos or at least pass away and perish that its place be no more found Christ is still walking amongst those golden Candlesticks viewing their order and takes his delight in those Gardens and Beds of Spices and so gets up early into these Vinyards to see if the Vine flourish whether the tender Grape appear and the Pomgranates bud forth Cant. 7.12 his delight was ever to be with the children of men and takes much pleasure not only in seeing and smelling the savoury exercises and spiritual sacrifices of the more grown christians but also takes much complacency in viewing the growth production and fruitfulness of younger christians and leads them gently by the hand by his doctrine and discipline until at last they are brought unto the Wine-cellars of his love where he bids them to take their fill of love but by the way comforts them with apples and stays them with flaggons till at last he bring them home unto himself purified and cleansed by the purgatory of afflictions and tribulations as gold seven times tryed by the fire of the Chymister The genuine use of this is to demonstrate the danger of persecution of Christ's members or churches to all persons in the world They are his members and in as much as it is done to one of them it is done unto himself and better a milstone were hanged about the neck of such offenders and cast into the Sea then to offend one of his little ones The reasons that Christ's churches though afflicted scorned or persecuted are so dear and precious to him are First Because they are his Members and it is most natural to love ones self for he that loves not himself cannot love another and we are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Secondly Because of their graces and unction we having received all of his fulness grace for grace and of the same anointing with himself though in an
inferiour measure The same oyl that was poured on Aarons head ran down to the skirts of his garments so the same unction of the Spirit that was poured on Christ is in some measure poured on all his inferiour members and therefore most dear and beloved to him Omne simile gaudet simili Thirdly By reason of Union Christ and his Members bei● one by a mystical and spiritual union they must needs be most dear and precious to him Fourthly and lastly the great reason that Christ's Saints and churches are most dear unto him is In that he hath laid down his own most precious life for them for greater love then this was never shown in that he died for us even whiles we were fighters against God and enemies by evil works Observ 2. Another Note is That though the world looks upon the faithful distressed churches of Christ as a broken poor and forsaken people both in outward estates and intellectuals also yet God sets another rate upon them and accounts them rich wise mighty comly beautiful and as the most accomplished people in the world Is not this a strange Paradox to the infatuated worldling But it is not so strange as true Christ here calls his poor afflicted Smyrna rich for she was rich indeed with spiritual graces that their persecuting adversaries were ignorant of she was rich in immortible Treasures laid up for her service in heaven above where moth could not corrupt or thi●●●reak thorow and steal which her blaspheming enemies never dream'd of what wise worldling does think a poor afflicted christian wise He looks upon him so far beneath himself that from his Machiavilian plots and counsels he tells the wise and prudent christian soul Procul hinc proculate prophani Yet God tells them plainly That the wise of the world are taken in their own snare whilst true wisdom is justified of her children And God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty c. 1 Cor. 1.27 28 29. The wise of the world think themselves a wise politique and highly contriving Statists when they have brought the Saints of God and the whole world under their feet and subjection but the Saints of God know no such wisdom but that wisdom which is of God the eternal Word and Christ who of God is made to us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption that no flesh should glory in his presence The great Potentates of the world think with their Alexandrian Armies as a Torrent to carry all before them Alas they are deceived there are others more mighty then they the poor afflicted churches of Christ can do more with their prayers and using their interest with God then all the Armies in the world they can pray for legions of Angels and they are ready at their commands Witness the host of Sennacherib destroyed by an Angel at the prayers of Hezekiah and Isaiah the Son of Amos 2 Chron. 32.20 How many heathen Armies do we read of in Histories were defeated by the faithful prayers of the godly or at least their force diverted another way A poor despised chri● David with a sling and pebble can do more by the prayers of faith then Goliah with his spear Oh! how happy and fortunate were the Captains and Armies of this our Nation whiles the prayers of the faithful in the land continued fervent for them The Bowe and Sword of the mighty had then no power to destroy for the presence of our God was in the midst of them for a defence unto them in all their warlike undertakings Oh therefore ye soveraign Governours take heed how ye offend these little ones of Christ that they may not avert their prayers from you make good your interest with Christ and his Saints and be one with them in faith and prayers then never fear the boisterous storms or waves that are emitted from the Pillars of Hercules to our Albion shores which will prove but as the daylie surges that washes our rocks and clifts and so dash themselves into froth and vanish Next the gaudy Gallant of the times thinks himself the most fair and comly of all God's creatures and looks upon a sober and prudent christian as a despicable creature in respect of his gay Worship whiles God himself sets another character upon both The one is clothed with the white garments of Christ's righteousness and is all fair with the beauties of holiness whiles the other is only covered and ●●●hed with the excremental extravagancies and menstruosities of small earthy brutish and despicable creatures and at best do serve but in the room of Fig leaves to be somwhat more honourable badges of their sin and misery it is a shame to glory in that which are the ever-living Ensignes of their sin and shame and seeing the Lillies of the field do exceed even Solomon in his bravery little reason to glory in those rags of ours Next the Glutton that makes his belly his god and fareth deliciously every day conceives he hath a heaven on earth and that the poor afflicted christian comes far short of his happiness in that he hath not that fulness every day in the varieties of Viands and Festivals that he enjoys But alas this wretched Dives never considered that a poor christian hath other food to eat then he ever knew of he hath spiritual Manna bread from heaven and the wine of Paradice that he is quite ignorant of that he that eateth thereof shall never hunger or thirst more Lastly the wisdom of the world looks upon the distressed disciples of Christ as fools wittols and ma● men and thinks them to be so indeed But on the contrary the judicious christian knows the wisdom of the world to be foolishness and madness to purpose for who but fools and mad-men would perversly run on in the ways of destruction as the wisdom of the world does prompt unto Whilst Christ's faithful ones though suppressed and broken by afflictions and tribulations yet do walk in the way of life and shine as Stars in the Firmament of their Churches and Graces Observ 3. That the sharpest persecution comes from such as are the highest pretenders to truth and godliness The Jews were such that boasted much of their div●●●cles and priviledges from Abraham Luke 3.8 yet ●ere the most inveterate and bitter adversaries to the Gospel of Christ and to the primitive Apostolical churches of any persons in the world Witness their reproachful blasphemies which consisted not only against Christ himself but against his members also They reproached him that he had a divel and that by Beelzobub he did his miracles and cast out divels yea their malice was not only to him living but reached him after his crucifiction and resurrection that if possibly they could destroy or weaken the faith of his disciples and withal hinder the promulgation of the truth and to that
wheresoever Idolatry is admitted into a church looseness and lasciviousness presently follows Errour is fruitful and one brings forth another Assoon as the church of Pergamus maintained the eating of things offered unto idols which is the service of divels presently they joyn hands with the obscene sect of the Nicolaitans when the Israelites joyned to the sacrifices of Baal Peor Numb 25. they became shameless and presently fell on the Midianitish women in Ezek. 8.14 we shall read that there were Jewish women weeping for Tammuz that is as some read it Adonis or an idol or image of Adonis who was a great lover of Venus and slain by a Boar in whose memory there were celebrated yearly solemnities in which were the weepings of women or as Junius has it it was Osyris an Idol of the Egyptians and Phoenicians in whose rites they forgot all bounds of modesty and discovered their nakedness to the Idol So corrupt is false worship and idolatry that it and filthiness do usually walk hand in hand together in most part● 〈◊〉 ●he jurisdiction of Rome but especially Italy and Spain ●ein the greatest and most notorious idolatries are committed and countenanced there are the greatest obscenities both in words and actions yea and that commonly practised among them which is unnatural and Sodomitish and not so much as to be named among christians so it was so here once within our memories with us as soon as we had tasted the same grapes of Rome lust was soon promoted both in Court and Country Quest But if you here demand wherein lies the mischievousness and grievousness of this sin of Idolatry I answer 1. All Idolaters they forsake the true God 2. They change the glory of the incorruptible God into the form of creeping things 3. They thrust out the Ordinances of God from their holy places and at last God himself 4. They slight God and his help in extremities and call to their idols that see not hear not nor understand as the Papists do to S. Anthony S. Francis c. 5. They become prodigal towards their idols as the Adulterer thinks nothing too much for his harlot so they nothing too much for their idolatrizing worship witness the church of Rome 6. They become unclean and Nicolaitans which thing God hates 7. They become fools infatuated and delivered over to a reprobate sense whilst they disclaim the great infinite glorious holy and all-wise God and in the room thereof adore Batts Oxen Moles Owls c. and that which is worse little pieces of dead wood mettal and the like carved and framed by the hand of the workman and this is the just hand of God upon all Idolaters who receive not the truth in the love of it and therefore God gives them over to strange delusions and believe a lye Observ 7. The last Note from these words shall be That it is one of the difficultest undertakings of the Ministry of Christ to take off or wean either new planted Churches or newly reformed ones from their old false worships and practises Some of the new planted churches as of Pergamus Corinth and other of the Gentiles thought that they might still participate of their former sacrifices of divels and their idolathites and of Christ's Table also but the Apostle Paul was very bitter against such in 1 Cor. 10.20 21. and the Spirit here also falls foul upon them and sets a check upon the Pergamitish church for entertainment of such doctrines What ado had Paul also to take off the believing Jews from their circumcision and Mosaical rites they would needs have the observation of all the ceremonial Law and paedagogy of Moses joyned to Christ for justification and so make Christ of none effect no less then a full council of Apostles and Elders were sufficient to remove this stumbling block out of the way Acts 15. and what a difficult business it was in the first Reformation to reform up fully all the world knows what uproars commotions and civil wars there were in K. Edward the sixth's days when the Mass-book was but turned into English as some of K. Edward's counsellors advised our Cornish Rebels who were then in Arms for their old Mumpsimus and Popish worship And surely Luther nor Zuinglius nor Calvin could go on with a thorow Reformation in Germany France or other places in respect of the unpreparedness and unsutable state and condition of the Nations among whom they begun the Reformation being so long time setled and fixed upon their old lees it was a very difficult work for them to go farther thorow with it then was fit and competent for that generation who always reserved some reliques remains and smacks of Popery though the main works were beaten down and therefore some heady people of those times that would not condescend in any thing or have providential carriage towards the weaker and darker sort of people would reform things even to the height and full pitch of Reformation according to the primitive pattern but the people of them ages being not able to bear it it caused much trouble to the church and through intemperate zeal much hinderance and obstruction to the begun reformation and advantage to the enemy But since in many places and Nations of the reformed this reformation hath made a further progress by some steps yet still amongst most of the reformed not only in this Nation but elsewhere there are some remains of the old false worship and practises and a lusting after them so strong a desire we have to the imitation of our predecessors practises be they never so corrupt yet blessed be God for that reformation we enjoy and liberty to profess and practise the ordinances of God according to the most undefiled and purest pattern that we judg agreeable to the Gospel of Christ What shall us desire more on our own parts Or what greater blessing can we expect from God by the sword of the Magistrate then to be protected secured and countenanced in the ways and worship of God according to a good conscience If the Ministers and Churches will not reform in such a day when publique Edicts are gone forth from Cyrus to set Israel free I wonder when they will fall upon it Do they expect the Magistrate to command and compel all unto the work Alas this is not the generation that all will be fit for such a work in a whole Nation or Kingdom no never will there be such a golden age until Christ himself shall come with the fan in his hand to purge his garner and take the Kingdom unto himself Is not the church a Lilly among thorns If the whole Nation be the church where are the thorns Are they the other neighbour Nations about Alas they are Lillies too churches on that account as well as you Are they the gentle Nations as Turks Persians Antichristians and Popish Nations As Italians Spanish French c Alas they are no Thorns to you the reformed Nations are in equal ballance
be only in name and outward or whither inward and sincere they are the Masters of the Assemblies and the experienced Elders of the church and therefore are and ought to precede and excel all others in every spiritual work and service whatsoever Observ Another Note hence is That the Spirits's Method is first to convince of sin before it manifests its remedy against sin The whole saith Christ need not the Physitian but the sensible sick and wounded Christ first convinces Sardis that she had only a Name that she lived but was dead before he lays down her remedy in the third ver in bringing her to repentance so he deales with Pergamus Thyatira and other delinquent churches also It is an Anti-scriptural Method of some that preach up faith and repentance unto a sinful and backslidden people before they have first fully convinced them by the Spirit in the Word that they are under bondage sin and misery This is no legal Method as the Antinomists do conjecture but of a spiritual and Gospel spirit for unless we be first sensibly convinced of our loss and misery by sin how should we looke for a Saviour or salvation by faith in Christ All the primitive converts that we read of were first pricked unto their hearts for sin before they asked What shall we do to be saved Acts 2. But to return to Christ's charge against Sardis I know thy works for thou hast a Name that thou livest but thou art dead as if he had said Thou hast a name a reputation that thou livest that is that thou art a faithful professing church and livest in me by faith but thou art dead that is not altogether dead for then it was in vain to put her afterwards to strengthen the remainder of grace but as good as dead low weak and infirm and that faith and profession which thou pretendest to be in thee is but as a dead profession and liveless faith Hence Note Observ That though Churches may carry a fair outward profession and a common reputation of faithful ones yet they may be very hipocritical and no better then dead liveless and rotten at the root This church at Sardis had a name that she lived but she was dead her graces were even at deaths dore yet still would keep up the Name of a christian church Who higher in profession and name then the church of Rome Doth she not take unto her self and go under the name of Catholique as if she had been the only church that holds the general faith delivered unto the Saints And yet what church more dead and rotten then she Notwithstanding our nominal faith and common-reputed christianity among us yet we may be dead to all motions and operations of all true spiritual life in the church of Smyrna cap. 2. 9. they were those which said they were Jews but they were not and Christ tels them I know the blasphemy of them that say they are Jews are not but are of the Sinagogue of Satan It is a kind of blasphemy and dishonour done unto God when under the cover of profession we endeavour to excuse our errors and profaness Open opposition is less dishonorable unto God then impure and dead lives under the vizor of profession Mat. 21.28 29. That froward Son in the Parable was less guilty that said he would not do the will of his Father then he that said I will and did it not James resolves the Question in that Interrogation of his cap. 2. 14 What doth it profit if a man saith he hath faith and hath not works can faith save him meaning a dead nominal faith without fruits and works So would I put the question here what will the pretended faith and christianity of our nominal and national christians profit or advantage them The Divel hath such a faith that is only in the tongue and the lip and yet fare nough from salvation or the grace of God these formal outward graces are so far from bringing in any real comfort or hope of glory in the future to the souls that only have them that they bring in real disadvantage and loss unto them for they argue a conviction of the truth yet a refusal thereof in the love and power thereof And secondly it hath been always a harder work of the Ministry to bring pretended and formal professors unto the power of godliness then open Harlots Publicans and Sinners witness the Pharisees of old in Christ's days and the National Formal Jews who would boast of their carnal priviledges and of having Abraham to their Father and the Oracles and Temple of God among them somwhat like the late Levitical Prelatical Tribe among us and yet who more blind and dead then they unto true spiritual knowledg And who more eager persecutors and enemies to Christ his ways and Saints then those Formal National Jews who say they are Jews and are not but are of the Sinagogue of Satan But to give you a test and taste to try whither your profession and faith be a living profession and faith or not First True and lively faith uniteth us to Christ and draweth life and vertue from him I live by faith in the Son of God Gal. 2.20 You know there is life in a body by the notions and beating of the pulses A living faith will be active and discover it self in some gracious effects and operations If Christ be in you he will live in you he will not be dead and idle but be moving in you to gracious duties and operations for there is none liveth in Christ but he bringeth forth much fruits Io. 15.5 It is true faith may not always be alike lively and active but where it is true and real it will be always living and though you be not sensible of its activity yet you will be sensible of deadness and complain under it which is a signe of a living faith though not a lively one Secondly Where this true faith is there will be its constant concomitant that forcible principle love See cap. 2. 19. Affection followeth perswasion and where love is there will be service and worke for faith worketh by love for when we apprehend by faith God's love in Christ to us it begets in us a return of love and acts of services and thankfulness to God True faith will not be idle but will be a working faith and will produce that labour of love mentioned Heb. 6.10 1 Thess 1.3 Thirdly A living faith must needs be active being wrought by the quickning spirit of Christ help engageth to action and where the spirit of Christ shall worke who shall resist his power Fourthly Where true faith is there will be high aimes to glorifie God for it will not be so dis-ingenious to take and receive mercies from God but it will study how to give and render unto God due praises and glory for it for we are not redeemed by Christ to live unto our selves but to glorifie God in our souls
the more glory it will be capable of and filled with hereafter Every Vessel shall have his fulness in glory but every one acording to its capacity as there is a glory in the Stars Moon and Sun and one differing from another in glory yet every one hath their fulness So in the Kingdom o● glory when God giveth to every one according to his works every one shall have the reward of their works eternal happiness but some shall sit upon twelve Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel all shall be shining Stars but some of a greater Magnitude then others But to proceed For I have not found thy works perfect before God It was not a legal perfection that Christ could not find in Sardis he did never seek for that absolute perfection in them that would be in vain seeing they were so full of Imperfections But yet this intimates that the faithful christians and their works may be perfect before God although they are not found perfect in Sardis yet may be found perfect in others that are more sound and godly For the clearing of which understand that sometimes in Scripture perfection is taken for sincerity and uprightness as Gen. 17.1 Walk before me be thou perfect that is upright sincere as Iob 1.1 he was a man that was perfect and upright one that feared God and eschewed evil he was a plain simple man honest at the heart in this sense the works of Sardis were not perfect before God they were not honest sincere and upright according to his will they were Hypocritical in name shew and appearance only not in truth and sincerity Secondly Perfection may be taken 1. As respecting our justification Or 2. Our sanctification The first of these in a strict sense is a compleat perfection for the Saints are compleat in Christ their head as unto justification and from all sin and the guilt thereof there is not one sin left which is not washed away by his blood in this respect they are perfect By one offering Christ hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 Then Secondly There is a perfection of sanctification and holiness And that is 1. In the respect of the beginnings and parts thereof 2. In respect of the prevailing degree thereof 3. In respect of the aimes thereof 4. In respect of the duration and perseverance of it 5. In respect of others First the Saints in this life have a perfect beginning of holiness as to its parts because it begins in every part they are sanctified throughout in soul body and spirit 1 Thes 5.23 though every part be not throughout sanctified by reason of the imperfection of mediums by which they are sanctified yet they are sanctified in every part throughout in understandings wills affections desires memories thoughts and hearts Secondly They have every grace in their souls not only in the truth thereof but in the prevailing degree thereof as when faith love patience humility c. overcome infidelity hatred impatience pride and other their opposite vices and evils So when this work of sanctification is begun in all parts thereof it may be said a perfect work in beginning and when it comes to the prevailing degree thereof it may be called a perfect work having prevailed against its contrary Thirdly They are likewise perfect in respect of their aims and desires God accepts the will for the deed and he that aims and strives for perfection God accepts as perfect though mixed with much imperfections Christ could not find the works of Sardis perfect in this sense neither Fourthly They are likewise perfect in respect of their duration Apostacy from the faith and truth will loose the honor of perfection and makes their crown to wither when a righteous or perfect man turneth to iniquity all the righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned Ezek. 18.24 Fifthly In respect of others the Saints are perfect souls compare them unto the guilded out side formal christians and they are gold and perfect in respect of them and so Christ could not find the works of Sardis perfect before him as those of Ephesus Smyrna c. Hence Note first Observ 1. The great cause that our works are not perfect but defective before God is for want of honest sincerity in them Sardis was blamed for this very thing and for want of this grace she carried a fair name that she lived in her pretended graces but she was dead there was no sincerity and truth in them If we suppose a man to worship God in all his Ordinances and avoid all outward evil yet if there be double-heartedness in his spirit all is cast off by God as abominable Sincerity is that that gives perfection to every grace it is the very truth and spirit of every grace as when we believe we must believe sincerely when we love we must love sincerely and cordially when we sorrow or repent it must be done sincerely that is truly fully without any mixture or hypocrisie for a double minded man God doth hate Sincere quasi sine cera without wax without composition and as the word here beares it in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have not found thy works full there was somwhat wanting within to make them compleat and perfect without this ingredient grace of sincerity all our duties are but as sounding Brass and a tinckling Cimbal But add sincerity unto the least and most imperfect of our duties and they will become in the esteem of God most perfect God accepts a Lamb from Abel offered in sincerity rather then clouds of Incense and thousands of Sacrifices from a wicked and profain Cain Yea if it be but a widdows mite or some Goats hair coming from one that is sincere God looks upon it as a rich present and calls the presenter thereof perfect Truth of grace and sincerity is our perfection here but in the world to come we shall have perfection in the highest degree as well as the perfection of sincerity and truth of grace in this life therefore let us so walk before God as becometh perfect ones Observ 2. It is the Saints duty that they aim and press after perfection in all their graces works and duties The church of Sardis was worthily blamed for want of this perfection her works were not full and entire there was somwhat wanting and therefore blame-worthy and imperfect First They are to press after the perfection of justification by faith and evidenced by love and works and so make their election and justification sure unto their own souls and manifest it unto others also Secondly To seek after perfection in all graces and parts of christianity in souls bodies and spirits to be perfect intire wanting nothing Ja. 1.4 as ye abound in every thing in faith and utterance and knowledg and all diligence see that ye abound in this grace also to wit charity 2 Cor. 8.7 There must not one necessary grace be wanting in true Saints though
Christ's own white rayment to cover their shame and nakedness think it sufficient that they have their silken coats or their formal Rochets a call from a rich personage and some Lording Prelates and then all is well but alas they see not that they are miserable and naked for all this Though I should not contemn moderate and modest garments yet Elijah in his hayrie mantle or John Baptist in his leather girdle and garment of Camels hair in the way of Christ will attain the honour of true Prophets unto themselves whilst the silken Priests in their own way lye naked unto the shame and contempt of all I speak not this to the reproach of any but to discharge my conscience like a good Phisitian must ly ope the wound and search it fully before he 'll cure it or like a faithful Pilot that will discover the dangerous shelves and Rocks to all passengers that they may avoid the danger and if I be judged by any to have said too much herein or beside the purpose I answer in the words of Paul in 2 Cor. 5.13 For whether we be beside our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your sakes Christians 3. In the last place Christ adviseth Laodicea To anoint her eyes with Eye-salve Indeed she was dark and blinde to purpose and therefore had need of Eye-salve to make her see the way to everlasting happiness And where is she to get it But from Christ who applyeth the whole remedy for her disease Gold to relieve her poverty white Rayment to cover her nakedness and Eye-salve to cure her blindness Hence Note Observ That they that will truly see the way to eternal life must come to Christ to receive Eye-salve from him He is given as a covenant to open the eyes of the blinde and to lead them in the paths of life it s in vain to go to our own prudence or carnal wisdom that would more entangle us and lead us out of the way according to that saying of Christ in John 9.39 I am come into this world for judgement that they that see not should see and that they that see that is in their own wisdom should be made blinde Christ made an Eye-salve for the cure of a blinde person in John 9.6 of his spittle and clay of a compound matter proceeding from his mouth and the earth whereby he made the blinde man see Christ somwhat follows the same method in his compositions of Eye-salves which he uses towards his spiritual blinde souls that he takes to cure first he gives us the knowledge of our selves and of our own earthy matter and that we savour in our unregeneracy nothing but of earth and earthliness Next he brings us to the knowledge of himself and his Word which proceedeth out of his mouth and so makes us an happy composition and Eye-salve whereby we see our poverty our shame and nakedness and all our spiritual wants and also where remedy is to be had to heal and to save us from all our maladies and indeed this is as great a blessing as Christ can bestow upon us to be truly sensible and to have a clear sight of our condition it is the next step to amendment it is ignorance and blindness that makes us err and go astray but true saving knowledge will keep us close to God's commandments If we take any other Eye-salve to anoint our eyes with save what Christ hath prepared for us in the Panacea or Treasury of his Word we may take Bird-lime instead of Eye-salve which will close our eyes the faster They are not the traditions of men nor the wisdom and understanding of the wise that will make this precious oyntment but it is a spiritual quintessential extraction and oyntment drawn out by the Spirit of Christ out of the holy Limbeck of his Word and applyed by him unto the blinde Patient that will make him see the glory of God and his grace and to praise him for it unto eternity Vers 19. As many as I love I rebuke and chasten be Zealous therefore and Repent If it be demanded how this verse coheres or hath relation to the precedent discourse I answer Very much it being added as a motive reason or argument to the church of Laodicea to use the remedy which Christ counsels her unto If Christ will not spare his own children when they refuse his counsel it is time for them to look about to be more zealous and repent And secondly To assure her That though Christ comes with a most bitter chastisement against her for her sin yet it is as a father in love with the rod of wholsome discipline as admonition reproof correction c. That the man of God may be perfected and prepared to every good work 2 Tim. 3.16 and if all will not do Christ hath another rod a bitter rod even for those his professed children too a quite casting off and spewing them out of his mouth for ever Quest But how can Christ be said to love such that he so bitterly chastiseth I answer Christ chastiseth his children not to destroy them but to bring them to amendment and to save them if possibly he may Christ's rod of Discipline is not a destructive rod but according to that of David With thy rod and staff thou hast supported me and therefore he tells Laodicea here that she should not despair of his gracious acceptance for the great punishment that was coming on her for he tells her that they are such as he loves whom he rebukes and chastens and therefore adds Be Zealous and repent if she expects his fatherly goodness to be continued towards her Here are two degrees of this chastisement Reproof and a Smiting Whence Note Observ When the word of reproof will not serve turn to reclaim obstinate sinners a smiting chastisement must be added thereunto If the word of reproof will not fasten on a Delinquent the stroke of Discipline must but always in Christ's order and method not presently passionately and rashly but advisedly soberly and in love according to the advice of the Apostle after the second or third admonition that is after several ways taken for his recovery and all in vain then such an obstinate sinner is to be rejected and chastised with the sharp rod of Discipline What else is to be expected after Christ's long admonitions and reproofs towards us but that he should come with his sharp rods and chastisements towards us when all his convincements will do us no good nor his rebukes draw any profit or fruits of amendment from us Surely if he do love us he will chasten us which is another Note Observ 2. That as many as Christ loves them he chastens If we be children and not bastards his rod shall walk among us Heb. 12.7 8. Think it not strange when the Saints of God are afflicted chastised and corrected it is because they are children because they are sons and beloved of
stands little in stead unto the Papists and their champion Bellarmine in his book of Grace and Free will cap. 1. to maintain from hence their Pelagian doctrine The power of mans Free-will before conversion unto Faith and amendment For Bellarmine therein triumphantly interrogates were not he foolish that would knock at his neighbours door if he knew for certain that there were no man within that could open It is true it were so but Bellarmine for all his great learning herein is much mistaken Christ here knocks at a door where there was one within that was able to open the party was only asleep he was not dead or quite departed from his house and therefore he knocks and calls unto him to awake and open unto him like the Spouse in the Canticles 5.2 She was asleep when her beloved came and knocked saying Open to me my Sister my Love my Dove my Undefiled So Christ comes to the church of Sardis vers 2. and bids her to awake and strengthen the things that remain and commands Laodicea to open unto him who had a power and ability to open though it was grown weak and remiss and therefore had need of a knocking a vigorous call to rouse her up unto her duty And therefore Bellarmine is quite mistaken when from hence he asserts That Christ bids the reprobate and unregenerate to open to him it is only a believing church a backslidden luke-warm believing church that he bids to rise up and open to him it is not one altogether dead but a sleepy careless luke-warm church that he stirs up to this duty of opening to him Secondly I answer Though it were granted Bellarmine that Christ somtimes knocks at the doors of Reprobates and unregenerate persons and calls to open to him though they neither will or can open to him yet Christ may do this as often he does without any impeachment to his wisdom he hereby shows what their duty is and requires it from them and justly he may though they are not in a possibility to perform it they having forfeited and lost their ability by their own fault not only in their common parent the first Adam but also by walking in the same steps of disobedience with him and Christ is not bound by any Law to restore it again unto them And therefore Christ in the last place does often call to open to him upon the very reprobate themselves as in a judiciary way for the aggravation of their condemnation upon their refusal according to that of John 15.22 If I had not come and spoken to them they had no sin but now they have no cloak for their sin Thus much in answer to Bellarmine and his doctrine of Free-will and the power of the meerly natural man in the works of grace and faith which are in the first place to be wrought by the Spirit to be nourished by the Spirit to be consummated and perfected by the same Spirit But to proceed If any man hear my voice and open the door I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me As if Christ had said If any man will be obedient to the word of my mouth opening the door of their hearts yeilding obedience to my many and earnest solicitations I will then come and dwell in that soul and impart my self unto him and sup with him that is communicate and have mutual fellowship with him and he with me Note hence Observ 1. That it is the Saints highest priviledge to have fellowship with Christ and he with them Where there are those heavenly intercourses there is a heaven upon earth or earth ascending into heaven and heaven coming down upon earth persons hereby do become the Temples of the holy Spirit I will come in to him saith Christ that is Christ will dwell in him spiritually really operatively by his grace and he shall dwell in me that is by faith and so such become and are made the sons of God Luke 19.5 and are made partakers of his holy nature Is it not a great shame to our christian churches to deny themselves this great priviledge in not hearkning to the voice of Christ or opening the door unto him It is true we are ready to hearken to the voice of Christ so far as stands with our interest that we may not be accounted heathens abroad in the world and indeed that is all if it will amount so far for the ordinance of preaching is no distinguishing Ordinance Go Teach all Nations and the Ordinances of Prayer and Praise are but natural duties which all persons in the world are bound unto as well as christians but where is the opening the door to Christ in his especial distinguishing Ordinances Where is the mutual feasting supping and communicating between Christ and his churches in his holy Ordinances of the Supper tasting and feeding on the several and various gifts of the Spirit of Christ in his members Where is the improving of his Discipline Where are his Gardens enclosed Are not all like a Forrest or Wilderness without any culture or hedge about them 'T is true there are some few gardens whose savoury spices and precious ointment does cast a sweet smelling savour abroad but their tender Grapes are but weak and it is to be feared if God's mercy prevent not that either the little Foxes will undermine them or the wild Boar root them out I speak it according to my judgement and conscience that our contentation and sitting satisfied under a formal and luke-warm preaching and some other natural duties only will be a means to provoke God to spew us out of his mouth for our half way Religion the one ought to be done and the other not left undone we ought to have a respect to the whole will of God not so far only as our carnal wisdom thinks sufficient and no farther It was once and not long since a just complaint That common Prayer and other church Discipline and Episcopal Ruling had thrust out of doors a true preaching and divers other holy Ordinances of Christ But observe the change now it is to be feared that preaching will silence and invalidate many other of the Ordinances of Christ and render them useless to us Therefore we are to hearken to the voice of God the whole voice of God and open to it if we expect Christ to come in and to sup with us and we with him We are first to hearken to his Word open the door to him of our hearts in the preaching thereof then we are to proceed and not sit still as those silly ones that are ever learning and never coming to the knowledge or practise of the truth we are to go on to the work of perfection that is to walk in all the Ways and Ordinances of Christ which will build up our souls unto the measure of a perfect man in Christ and make us wise indeed unto salvation Lastly I conceive there is more in these words I
and good works as formerly she did as the true effects and issues of that love or else c. Hence Note Observ That the contemplation of grace is the only Gospel motive unto true repentance The commemoration of God's former gracious dealing unto a backslidden soul will operate very strongly if not judicially hardned to recal him unto his God The straying prodigal experienced this truth in himself Luke 15.17 when he came to himself and considered how that many hired servants in his fathers house had bread enough and yet he starving for hunger it made him to reflect upon that full and gracious condition when he was as an obedient son with his father which moved him to set on the resolution to be a Trewant no longer but to arise and go unto his Father and say Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee If any thing will break the course of sin and recall the heart unto its first love the consideration of the former gracious dealings of God with it will effect it It will reason thus with it self was it not better with me when I kept close to God then now it is since I have broken with him Was not my soul more at peace within it self when I was more zealous of God's glory and of keeping his commands then now when I am more remiss and colder in my affections both towards God and christian duties Was not then my food more spiritual and my delights more heavenly then now when I am clogg'd with the vanities of this world and the bewitching lusts thereof Had I not then a freer access to God and of a freer spirit in my approches crying Abba Father then now having strayed from him instead thereof having a spirit of bondage and of fear In short when I kept close with God did not a face of heaven as it were appear in all my performances and relations but now having departed from him all is turned into hell and bitterness against me Surely those considerations of grace formerly received will work more upon an ingenious spirit then any thundring Legal threats whatsoever yet I add if these will not do Christ hath another course and method and can come judicially and remove his candlestick from amongst such obstinate and unrepentant sinners Observ 2. Another Note is That true Gospel repentance consists not only in changing the mind but of practise and conversation also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rescipicite to wax wiser or repent do not only consist to grow wiser in the judgement but in the choice of the practical affections also If the will be not right as to its objects as well as the judgement it will not denominate a true repentant The church of Ephesus was right as to her faith for which she suffered in patience yet her practise and affections were not streight for which she had the check and commanded to do the first works works of love works of charity works of piety which formerly she had been zealous in In true repentance there is a Terminus a quo and Terminus ad quem Turn ye turn ye every one from the abomination of his ways there is the terminus a quo but this is not all a negative righteousness will not serve turn but there must be Terminus ad quem a positive righteousness also There must be a doing of the first works of holiness and godliness towards God and of love and righteousness towards all but more especially towards the houshold of faith These are the adequate ingredients of true and Gospel repentance It is a gross deceit in many that think that they have believed sufficiently and they have repented sufficiently when they have altered their judgment or at least their weather-cock opinion from one external form unto another as when an Episcopal man is become for a Presbyterie O most kind and benigne Sun-shine quoth he but when a Presbyterian turns Independent in judgement he presently cries out that heaven is opened unto him never considering that the kingdom of heaven does consist in godliness and righteousness but in outward forms of worship which if rightly regulated somthing of each might be rightly admitted to make a just composure In the next place some think their repentance very sound when they have changed one errour for another when of an Arminian or Pelagian are become Antinomists rightly so termed denying and opposing the morality of the Law as a rule of duty obliging unto christians when of an Arrian or Antitrinitarian are become Tridheites or worshippers of three Gods c. So corrupt is the heart of man that will make his own opinion an Idol and all that looks not that way nor brings any flowers to that sacrifice and yet otherwise apparently gracious shall neither have the title of a true believer or a repentant soul amongst them Therefore with all such I would leave this Scripture as a Signet upon their finger Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent and do thy first works Observ 3. Another Note from the authority of the person Christ that gives this memento is That Christ's commands in his Word should be very powerful and efficacious to bring us unto repentance Shall Christ be our Anamnestes or Remembrancer and set our faults before us by his Spirit in the Word and shall not our hearts be molten for it Shall he call from heaven to us in his ever-living word of Prophesie and shall we not intend or hearken to that heavenly vision He gave but one glance on Peter reflecting on his unkindness and denial which caused Peter to turn aside and weep bitterly And shall he not only look upon us with his daylie providential acts of goodness and mercy which leadeth unto repentance but give us line upon line and precept upon precept and yet not return by repentance It is the signe of most obdurate hearts and of stiff-necked sinners But some will say We want wills to it and if Christ gave wills as well as commands we should readily follow him I answer first Where Christ lays his commands on his chosen ones he also gives there the first grace of his Spirit to enable to obey that command and we know the Spirit may be opposed and the Spirit may be quenched and is so often by our own defects and by reason of the abundancy of corruptions so that the want of wills to good things proceed from our own base and corrupt wills not for want of power from Christ who commands us to them but take notice though the operations of the Spirit may by the Elect themselves be opposed darkned and quenched partially but not totally and finally but at last will get the victory in bringing forth the work of God unto perfection Secondly It is in vain for persons in an ●nregenerate state to complain for want of wills for before Christ moves thereon by his Spirit of grace they cannot rightly will any good thing or work but the first grace being given