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A59685 The sound beleever, or, A treatise of evangelicall conversion discovering the work of Christs spirit in reconciling of a sinner to God / by Tho. Shepard ... Shepard, Thomas, 1605-1649. 1645 (1645) Wing S3133; ESTC R3907 171,496 360

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the man should offer to hold any part of it backe we will not abate him any thing we will have it all because it cost deare I tell you pardon of sin peace with God the adoption of sonnes the spirit of grace perseverance to the end the kingdome of glory the riches of mercy have beene bought for you by a deare and great price the precious blood of Christ and therefore if the justice of God should hold back any thing or thy owne unbeliefe tell thee these are too great and many for so vile a creature as thou art to enjoy yet abate the Lord nothing say thou art vile yet Christs blood that bought not some but all these is very precious and therefore take them all to thy selfe as thy portion for ever and blesse the Lord as David doth Psal. 16.7 that gave thee this counsell Whiles you are in peace it may be you may neglect so great salvation but the time of distresse and anguish may come wherein you may feel a need of all even of those hidden depths of mercy above your reach and reason and therefore as bees gather in your honey in summer time and with Ioseph lay up in these times of plenty wherein the exceeding riches of grace is opened and poured out at your heeles for those times of approaching famine and for those many yeers of spirituall desertion and distresse wherein you may think Can it stand with the honour of God to save such a poore sinfull creature as I am what iron heart is not drawn by this love for the Lord to invite you to possesse 〈◊〉 or nothing Dives in hell was desirous of a drop to coole his tongue and behold the very depths and seas of grace are opened for thee to come in and partake of if the Lord Jesus should be offered unto thee to pardon some sinnes but not all to pardon all sinnes but not to heale thy nature also or to heale some back-slidings but not all to supply thy spirituall wants but not outward also as may be best for thee or to supply outward but not inward and spirituall if he should offer to doe thee good in this life but not in death nor after death you might refuse to come in but when all is offered all that mercy which no eye ever saw to pitty thee all that love wherewith Abraham David Paul c. were embraced now to refuse to come up and possesse these how can you escape the sorest vengeance of a jealous God that neglect so great salvation Oh Lord what extremity of anguish and bitternesse wilt thou one day be in when the contempt of this grace glowing upon thy conscience shall presse thee downe with these thoughts I am now under all misery but I might have had all Gods grace all Christs glory but wretch that I am I would not Me thinks if your owne good hereby should not draw you yet the exceeding great glory the Lord shall have hereby should force you to accept of all this grace for if thou didst receive a little grace beleeve a little mercy toward thee this makes thee sometime exceeding thankfull doth it not and the very hope of more makes thy heart break forth into a holy boasting and glorying in Christ Who is a God like unto thee Suppose therefore you drank in all and received all that which the Lord freely offers should not the Lord be exceedingly magnified then couldst thou containe thy selfe then without crying out Oh Lord now let thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seene and my soule hath now possession of thy salvation wouldst not call to the hills and seas and earth and heavens and Saints and Angels to break forth into glorious praises and blesse this God But what have I to doe to come that am so poore and empty and full of woes and wants and sinnes never was any so miserable and blind and naked as I. If Faith commeth for all to Christ and fetcheth all from him then never be discouraged because thou hast nothing to bring unto him let all thy wants and miseries be arguments and motives therefore to come unto him Revel 3.17 18. Because thou art poore and naked nay because thou knowest it not and art not affected with it therefore come unto me and buy eye-salve and gold and white rayment Lord pardon my sinne saith David because it is great have mercy upon me for I am consumed with griefe and am in trouble Let mercy and truth continually preserve me for innumerable evills have compassed mee round about Let us returne unto the Lord because hee hath wounded us I am a dogge therefore let me have crums said the woman of Canaan oh this is crosse to sense and reason and we cannot beleeve while we are so exceeding poore empty vile that the Lord should look upon us but beloved you little think what wrong you doe to your selves the Lord Jesus hereby for by this means Christ is not so much exalted nor the creature humbled both which concurring in faith make those acts of faith most precious for while you stand upon something and would have something to bring to Christ you hereby exalt your selves but when you come with sense of nothing else but woes and wants and see Christ now making of you welcome oh this is not only mercy but ravishing mercy If you should come with sense of somewhat to Christ and to see his love to you you might glorify mercy in the height and length and breadth of it but not in the depth of it unlesse you see it reaching its hand to you when you are fallen into so low and poor a condition as nothingnesse and emptinesse and misery it selfe And therefore doe not come to Christ only for the benefits of the covenant but for the condition of it also when you feele a want of faith it selfe as Hezekiah did Isay 38.14 Lord I am oppressed undertake for me 1 Kings 8.57 58. Doe not undertake to fulfill any part of the covenant or any condition in it or any duty required of thee of thy selfe but goe empty to Christ and say as David Lord I will run the wayes of thy salvation if thou wilt set my heart at liberty Psal. 119.32 33. Quicken me and I will call upon thy name Psal. 80.18 Be strong in the Lord and the power of his might but not of thine owne But I come for all and am never a whit the better but as poor and miserable still as ever I was If the Lord keeps you poor and low yet the same motive that made thee come let it make thee stay it may be the Lord sees thou wouldst grow full and lifted up if he should give thee a little therefore keeps thee low better be humble then full and proud Let us goe unto the Lord because hee hath wounded broken and slaine us But they might object we doe come but find no help no cure
of it And is not this matter of great consolation to all those who feele themselves utterly unable to beleeve you think the Lord would give peace and pardon life and mercy if I could beleeve oh consider the Lord hath undertaken in the Covenant of Grace to worke in all his the condition of the Covenant as well as to convey the good of it Ier. 31.31 32 33 34. He hath done this for others by an irresistible power Heb. 12.1 2. Look up to Jesus the author and finisher of your faith he came out of his Fathers bosome not onely to give life by his death but to enable his to eat and close with him by Faith that they might never dye Iohn 6.50 so that the Lord may work it in thee it is true also he may not yet it is unspeakable comfort to consider that if the Lord had put it over unto thee to beleeve it is certaine thou shouldst never have beleeved but now the work is put into the hand of Christ that which is impossible to thee is possible nay easie with him hee can comprehend thee when thou canst not apprehend him this is exceeding sweet when thy body is sick and soule is deserted incredible things to be beleeved are propounded an impossible work to thy weaknesse urged upon paine of Gods sorest and most unappeasable wrath to consider it is not in me but in the Lords owne hand and it is his office his glory to work faith and as the Apostle speakes to shew mercy unto them that are shut up not onely under sinne but also unbeleefe Rom. 11.32 But why hath the Lord made thee feele thy inability to beleeve truly the end of our wants is not to make us sin and shift for our selves but to aske and seek for supply and the end of the continuance of those wants is that we should continue to aske and seek And dost thou thinke thou shalt seek to the Lord by his owne hand to create faith and fetch thee in and will not the Lord take his time to work it He that beleeves saith the Apostle Rom. 10.11 shall not bee ashamed why so because the Lord saith he who is over all is rich unto all that call upon him verse 12. If thou hast not a heart shut up from asking of it the Lord who hath power hath not a heart shut up towards thee from working it But withall be thankfull exceedingly all you whose hearts the Lord hath drawne and overcome he came to his owne people the Jewes and would oft have gathered them but they would not and therefore he forsook them and left their habitations desolate oh how oft would the Lord have gathered you and you would not yet the Lord hath not forsaken you but called you in whether you would or no the Lord hath taken many a man at his first word and left him at the first repulse shaken off the dust of his feet against him presently Mat. 10.14 without any more intreaties to accept of him yet though thou hast not only refused but even crucified the Sonne of God yet hee hath not been driven from thee but his bowels have been oft kindled together when he hath been ready to give thee up when thou hast been under the hedges and in the high-wayes that lead to death didst never think of him nor didst desire him yet hee hath compelled thee to come in hee hath made thee feel su●h an extream need of him and made himselfe so exceeding sweet that thou hast not been able to resist his love but to cry out Lord thou hast overcome me with mercy I am not able to resist any more nay which is more wonderfull when thou hast been gathered and gone from him and lost thy selfe and him also againe and it may be hast bin offended at him yet he hath gone before thee into Galilee and gathered thee up when thou hast been as water spilt upon the ground what should be the cause of this but only this the work of faith lies upon him both to begin and finish he must gather in all his lost sheep and therefore hee hath put forth an irresistible power of his Spirit upon thy heart which must carry thee captive after him I am afraid my faith hath been rather presumption a work of my owne power then faith wrought by the Spirits power how may I discerne that If you are wrapt up in Gods Covenant if any promise be actually yours it is no presumption to take possession by faith of what is your owne dost thou seriously will Christ and resolve never to give the Lord rest untill he give thee rest in him then see Rev. 22.17 Whosoever will let him take of the water of life Dost thou thirst after Christ then read Esay 55.1 〈…〉 Iohn 7.37 If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink When Christ saw their faith Mat. 9.1 2. what said he Sonne be of good cheere thy sinnes be forgiven the word signifies be confident It is no presumption to beleeve pardon of sinnes now thou art come unto me not onely for the healing of thy body but especially for pardon of sinne It is the great sin of many Saints when they doe thirst and beleeve and come to Christ and so are under the promise of grace yet they think it presumption now to believe and take possession of all those treasures that be in Christ but look that the Lord should first make them feele and then they will beleeve whereas faith should now receive and drinke in abundantly of the fulnesse of Christ shall it be accounted presumption for any man to eat his owne bread and drink his owne drink and put on his owne cloathes the promise makes Christ and all his benefits your owne therefore it is no presumption to apply them Suppose you cannot find your selfe within any promise and you see no reason to beleeve onely you have the Lords call and command to beleeve doe you now in conscience and obedience to this command or to Gods invitation and intreaty in the Gospell beleeve because thou ●●rest not dishonour God by refusing his 〈◊〉 thou dost therefore accept o● it this is no presumption unlesse obedience be presumption nay the most acceptable obedience which is the obedience of Faith Iohn 6.38 For what was the ground on which those 3000 beleeved Acts 2.38 39. c. Peter said Repent that you may receive remission of sinnes now what followes they that gladly received the word were baptized Oh that word repent i. e. as Beza expounds it return to God and come in was a most sweet word to them and therefore they received it this was no presumption either for Peter to exhort them to repent or for them to take the Lord as that godly man said at his first word I know there is a subjection to the Gospell arising only from slavish fear and carnall hopes Psal. 66.3 Psal. 18.44 this may bee in presumptuous reprobates but
serve him without fear in holines in all the rules of the first Table and righteousnesse in all duties of the second Table all the dayes of our life that all this should not be out of a spirit of bondage and slavish feare but without feare i. e. Feare of our enemies sin death wrath and so consequently out of love to him that hath delivered us that one would wonder it should ever enter into the heart of any Christian man that hath tasted the love of Christ as to think that there is no use of the Law to one in Christ and that because they are to live the life of love to Christ that therefore they are not to looke to the Law as the rule of their love expresly crosse to the letter of the Text Ioh. 14.15 If yee love me keep my Commandements which Commandements are not onely faith and love to the Saints but love to enemies and spirituall obedience unto the morall Law in a farre different manner and measure then as the Pharisees instructed the people in those dayes as you may see Matth. 5.17 T is true indeed obedience to the Law is not required of us now as it was of Adam it was required of him as a condition antecedent to life but of those that be in Christ it is required onely as a duty consequent to life or as a rule of life that seeing hee hath purchased our lives in redemption and actually given us life in vocation and sanctification we should now live unto him in all thankfull and fruitfull obedience according to his will revealed in the morall Law T is a vaine thing to imagine that our obedience is to have no other rule but the Spirit without any attendance to the Law the Spirit indeed is the efficient cause of our obedience and hence we are said to be led by the Spirit Rom. 8.14 but it is not properly the rule of our obedience but the will of God revealed in his word especially in the Law is the rule the Spirit is the wind that drives us in our obedience the Law is our compasse according to which it steares our course for us the Spirit and the Law the wind and the compasse can stand well together Psal. 143.10 Teach me to doe thy will O God there is Davids rule viz. Gods will revealed thy spirit is good there is Davids minde that enabled him to steare his course according to it the Spirit of life doth free us from the law of sin and of death but not from the holy and pure and good and righteous Law of God Rom. 8.1 2 3. The blood of Christ by the Spirit cleanseth us from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9.14 not to serve our owne selves or lusts or wills to doe what wee please the law indeed is not a rule of that by which we are to obey viz. of our faith yet it is the onely rule of what we are to obey we are not to performe acts of obedience now as Adam was to doe viz. by the sole power of inherent grace but we are to live by faith and act by faith for without me you can doe nothing Ioh. 15.5 we are not united to Christ our life by obedience as Adam was to God by it but by faith and therefore as all action in living things comes from union so all our acts of obedience are to come from faith from the Spirit on Christs part and from faith on our part which make our union Noah built by faith Enoch walked with God by faith Iosuah and his Souldiers fought by faith Abraham travelled dwelt in his tents lived and dyed by faith they acted according to the rule but all by the power of faith It is a weak reasoning to imagin a man is not bound to pay his debts because he is to goe unto another for the money Obedience is our debt wee owe to Christ Luk. 17.10 though wee are to goe to Christ poore and weake and feeble to enable us to pay T is true Christ hath kept the law for us and are we therefore free from it as our rule No verily Christ kept the law for satisfaction to justice and so we are not bound to keepe the Law he kept the Law also for imitation to give us a copy and an example of all holinesse and glorifying God in our obedience and thus Christs obedience is so farre from exempting us from the Law as that it ingageth us the more having both rule and example before us 1 Ioh. 2.6 He that saith he abideth in him ought to walke as he walked 1 Pet. 1.14 15 16. T is true the Law is writ in a beleevers heart and if he hath a Law within what need he say some look to the Law without when as our Saviour and David argued quite contrary Psal. 40.7 8. I come I delight to doe thy will it being written of me that I should doe it because thy Law is within my heart this argues that you are not to attend the Law unwillingly as bond-men and slaves but willingly and gladly because the Law even the Law of love is in your hearts 1 Ioh. 5.3 The place alledged by some for this liberty from the Law viz. the Law is not made for a righteous man 1 Tim. 1.9 if well considered fully dasheth this dreame in pieces for there were divers Jewish Preachers of Moses Law and they had a world of scruples and questions about it verse 4. and Paul and others were accounted of as men lesse zealous because they did not sound upon that string so much away saith Paul with those contentions questions for the end of the commandement is not scruples and questions but charity and love i. e. both to God and men out of a pure heart and faith unfained vers 5. and saith he The Law is very good when used lawfully that is for this end and out of these principles vers 8. t is not talking but doing and that out of love which is the end and scope of the Law so that note by the way you may as well abolish love as abolish the Law love being the end and scope of the Law But to proceed The Law is not made saith he for the righteous i. e. for the condemnation of the righteous i. e. of such as out of a pure heart and faith unfeined love God in the first Table love to shew all duties of respect to man in the second Table and therefore they of all other men have no cause to abolish the Law as if it was a bug-beare or a thing that could hurt them but it s made for the comdemnation of the Lawlesse Anomians as the originall word is or if you will Antinomians transgressors of the first command and disobedient transgressours of the second command for ungodly and sinners transgressours of the third command for unholy and prophane transgressours of the fourth command for murderers of fathers and mothers of the fift command for
man-slavers of the 6. for whoremongers and defilers of mankinde of the 7. for men-stealers of the 8. for Lyars of the 9. and for those that in any thing walke contrary to sound doctrine the purity of the Law and will of God of the 10. So that this place is farre from favouring any of those that run in this channell of abolishing the Law as our rule No beloved the love of Christ will constrain you to embrace it as a most precious treasure It is the observation of some that in the Preface to the Morall Law Exod. 20.1 2. the Lord reveales himselfe to bee the Lord their God that brought them out of the Land of Egypt the very scope of which words is to perswade to a reverend receiving keeping of that good Law this Law all nations are bound to observe because he is Iehovah the Lord but to be thy God in speciall Covenant and that redeemed thee from Egypt and from that which was typified by it this belongs to none but unto them especially that are already the people of God and therefore of all other people in the world they are bound to receive it as their rule for obedience doth not make us Gods people or God our God but hee is first our God which is only by the Covenant of grace and thence it is that being ours and we his we of all others are most bound to obey To conclude they that stick in these bryers therefore cry downe the law as a Christians rule because by this means a Christian shall find no peace because he is continually sinning against this Law the Law therefore say they will be alway troubling of him I answer first a corrupt heart and putrid conscience can have no peace by the Law Isa. 57.21 there is no peace to the wicked and it is good it should be so 2. A watchfull Christian may Psal. 119.15 Great peace have they that keepe thy Law Hezekiah had it when he desired the Lord to remember how he had walked before him with a perfect heart Isa. 58.1 2 3. Paul found it the testimony of his conscience bearing him witnesse was his rejoycing herein 2 Cor. 1.12 3. If a Christian ignorant of maintaining his peace with God by faith in his justification notwithstanding all the errors in his obedience and sanctification if I say hee wants his peace shall wee therefore break the Law in pieces if a secure Christian that walkes loosely want peace by the accusations of the Law t is Gods mercy to him to give him no peace in himselfe while he is at truce with his lust 4. That peace will end in dismall sorrow which is got by kicking against the Law it is but dawbing for a man to keep his peace by shutting his eyes against the way of peace a servant may have peace in his idlenesse by thinking that his Master requires no work from him and by hiding his talent yet what will his Lord say to him when his day is ended and he comes to reckon with him at Sun-set bring the Law into thy conscience in point of justification it will trouble conscience for there only Christs righteousnesse Gods grace and the promise are to be looked on and our own obedience holines laid by in the dust but bring it before thee as a rule of thy sanctification and as thy copy to write after and to imitate and aspire after that perfection it requires it will then trouble thee no more then it doth a child who having a faire copy set him to write after and knowing that he is a sonne is not therefore troubled because he cannot write as faire as his copy hee knows if he imitates it his scribling shall be accepted howsoever though his Father may chastise him with rods if he be carelesse to imitate yet he will never cast him therefore off from being his sonne The truth is this it argues a most gracelesse carnall wretched heart for a man to cast by Gods rules because attendance to them is his trouble and torment which unto a gracious heart are life and peace and sweetnesse All the wayes of wisdome to him are wayes of pleasantnesse and her paths peace And it is Gods common curse upon them that love not the truth in these dayes that because sin is not their sorrow nor breach of rules their trouble that therefore the observance of the Law and attendance unto rules shall bee their burden and trouble they feele not the plague in their owne hearts and therefore reproofes plague them and commands are a plague and a torment to them crooked feet and crooked wills make men tread awry in such corrupt opinions All the called ones of God are therefore to live this life of obedience and that out of love which I call the life of love Gal. 5.6 for else circumcision availes nothing nor uncircumcision no nor faith it selfe unlesse it be of this nature as that it works by love there is much obedience and externall conformity to the Law in many men but the principall difference between these formalities and the obedience of the Saints is love the obedience of the one ariseth from selfe-love because it pleaseth themselves and suits with their owne ends the other from the love of Christ because it pleaseth him and suits with his ends 1 Cor. 13.4 c. 1 Iohn 5.3 Wherein doth and should this life of love appear In these five particulars In thinking and musing much on Christ and upon his love and on what you shall doe for him he that saith he loves another and yet seldome thinks on him or will seldome give him a good look when he meets him certainly deceives himselfe the least degree of love appeares in thinking on what we love because the loving kindnesse of God was better then life unto David hence hee did remember him upon his bed and meditate on him in the very night Psal. 63.3.6 they that feare the Lord i. with a sonne-like feare where love is chiefly predominant are such as think upon his name Mal. 3.16 We have thought of thy loving kindesse oh Lord in thy Temple Psal. 48.9 Thou that canst spend dayes nights weeks months yeares and hast thy head all this time swarming with vain thoughts and scarce one living thought of Christ and his love that didst never beat thy head nor trouble thy selfe in musing oh what shall I doe for him nor in condemning thy selfe because thou dost so little verily thou hast not the least degree of this life of love In speaking and commending of him is it possible that any man should love another and not commend him not speak of him if thou hast but a Hawk or a Ho●●d that thou lovest thou wilt commend it and can it stand with love to Christ yet seldome or never to speak of him nor of his love never to commend him unto others that they may fall in love with him also you shall see the Spouse Cant
5.9.16 when she was asked what her beloved was above others shee s●ts him out in every part of him and concludes with this he is altogether lovely because thy loving kindnesse saith David is better then life my lips shall praise thee and I will blesse thee whiles I live Psal. 63.3 4. can it stand with this life of love to be alway speaking about worldly affayres or newes at the best both week-day and Sabbath day in bed and at boord in good company and in bad at home and abroad I tell you it will be one maine reason why you desire to live that you may make the Lord Jesus knowne to your children friends acquaintance that so in the ages to come his name might ring and his memoriall might be of sweet odour from generation to generation Psal. 71.18 if before thy conversion especially thou hast poysoned others by thy vaine and corrupt speeches after thy conversion thou wilt seek to season the hearts of others by a gracious sweet and wise communication of savory and blessed speeches what the Lord hath taught thee thou wilt talke of it unto others for the sake of him whom thou lovest In being oft in his company and growing up thereby into a familiar acquaintance with him can we be long absent from those we love intirely if we may come to them can we love Christ and yet be seldom with him in Word in Prayer in Sacraments in Christian Communion in Meditation and dayly Examination of our owne hearts in his providences of Mercies Crosses and Tryals for Christ is with us here but those two wayes in his Ordinances or Providences by his holy Spirit Lord saith David I have loved the habitation of thy house and the place where thine honour dwelleth Psal. 26.8 The ground of which is set down vers 3. Thy loving kindnesse is before mine eyes my soule longeth for thee as in a land where no water is that I might see thee as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary the reason of it was because thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal. 63.1 2 3. In doing much for him and that willingly did not Jacob love Rachel how did hee expresse it his seven yeares service in frost and snow in heat and cold by day and night were nothing to him for her sake whom hee loved Shall I serve the Lord saith David of what cost me nothing And when he had prepared many millions for the building of the Temple yet he accounted it a small thing for his sake whom hee loved 1 Chron. 29.3 he gave it out of his poverty as he speakes this is love to keep his Commandements and those are not grievous 1 John 5.3 In suffering and enduring any evill for his sake I confesse it is not every degree of love that will carry a man hither yet where there is great and singular love for a good man one may be willing to dye Rom. 5.7 assuredly if there be any love to Christ it will in time increase to this measure it will think ten thousand lives too little to lay down for Christs sake that laid down his precious life for him What tell you me saith Paul of bonds and imprisonments I am ready not only to be bound but to dye for the sake of Christ at Jerusalem my life is not dear to me no more then a rush at my foot that I may finish my course with joy for thy sake we are killed all the day long Rom. 8.36 I tell you the love of Christ will make you fall down upon your knees and blesse the Lord that he will accept of such a poore sacrifice as thy body is though it be burnt to ashes and thou wilt blesse him againe and againe that whereas he might have left thee in thy sinnes to have troden him and his glory and grace under foot as he hath done thousands in the world yet that he should call thee to share in this honour not only to doe but to suffer for his sake Now the good Lord perswade all our hearts unto this fruitfull obedience and life of love Oh you young men you have a faire time before you to doe much for Christ in how pleasing will it bee to him to see such young trees hang full of fruit You aged men have now one foot in your grave and you have forgotten the Lord Jesus most of your time and your time which now remaines is very little and then your lampe is out your Sun is almost set and all your work is yet to be done for Christ oh therefore awaken now at last before you awaken when it is too late you rich men have abilities and wherewithall to set forward Christs Kingdome in the Townes and Villages where you live you poore men may doe much by ardent and instant prayers day and night for the advancement of the Lord Jesus You Husbands Wives Masters Servants remember if you are not good in your places you are not good at all what ever your profession be a good woman but a froward wife a good man but a haire-braind curst husband a good servant but a very sore tongue these cannot well stand together If you have any love to Christ the life of love will make you move best in your proper place oh therefore love much and so think much and speak much of and converse much with and doe much and suffer much for the Lord Jesus Christ content not your selves with doing small things for him that hath done and suffered much for you if you can doe but little yet set God on work by being fervent and frequent in prayer not only that Christ may be honoured in your selves but also in your families and in all Churches and Kingdomes of the world If you cannot doe much yet maintaine alive a will to doe much which is accepted as if you did 2 Cor. 8.12 If thou art a poore man and hast nothing to give yet keep a heart as liberall as a Prince if you can doe but little your selves yet encourage others that may thou art not a Preacher called to convert soules yet doe thou encourage the messengers of Christ in their worke by thy prayers counsell help and at last day the conversion of soules shall be attributed unto thee as well as unto them if thou canst not doe any good yet prevent what evill thou canst in thy place to keep oft judgments at least to delay them mourne thou for other mens sins as if they were thine owne that so the Lord may pity and pardon them and it may bee convert them who shall doe more good it may be then ever thou canst doe let the Lord Jesus be in thy thoughts the first in the morning and the last at night doe what thou canst nay goe continually to him to enable thee to doe more then thou of thy selfe canst and mourne bitterly and lament dayly what thou hast not done either through want of ability or will remembring his love to thee
that he came out of h●s Fathers bosome for thee wept for thee bled for thee powred out his life nay his soule to death for thee is now risen for thee gone to heaven for thee sits at Gods right hand and rules all the world for thee makes intercession continually for thee and at the end of the world will come againe for thee who hast loved him here that thou mightest live for ever with him then But is this our life in these evill and luke-warme times How many bee there that beleeve in Christ that they may live as they list If to drink and whore and scoffe and blaspheme if to shake a lock and follow every fond fashion if to crosse and cringe before a piece of wood if to be weary of the Word and outwardly zealous for long prayers if to seek for purity of ordinances in Churches and to maintain impurity in hearts in shops in families if to set our hearts upon Farmes and Merchandizes and so to bee covetous if to set up our owne selves and parts and gifts with a secret disdaine of Gods Ministers if to cry downe learning and set up ignorance if to set up Christ and destroy sanctification and obedience if to be a sect-master of some odde opinions if to cracke the nut of some superlunary and Monkish notions and high-flown speculations if to heare much and do little if to have a name to 〈◊〉 and yet dead at the heart if this be to li●e the life of love we have many that live this life the Lord Jesus wants not love if this be to love But oh woe unto you if you thus requite the Lord foolish people and unwise The Lord knowes we may complaine as Paul did Every man minds his owne things and none the things of Iesus Christ none in comparison of that huge number that thinke they are religious enough if they be baptized and say that they beleeve in Jesus Christ verily the time drawes neere wherein the Lord will come for fruits from his Vineyard and if he findes it not assuredly he will not be beholding to us for obedience he can raise his glory out of other people and there carry his Gospel to them who shall bring forth the fruits of it the Lord will shortly lay his axe unto the root of our tree and if wee will not serve the Lord in this good Land in the abundance of peace and mercy we shall serve our enemies in hunger cold and nakednesse if we will not serve him in love we must serve our enemies in feare doe not think that the Lord will bee put off with venerable names and titles shadowes and pictures what is most mens profession at this day but a meer paint which may serve to colour them while they live but will never comfort them unlesse conscience bee asleep when they come to dye Oh ●y●e heed of such formality I can never think enough of Davids expression Psal. 119.167 I have kept thy Commandements and I love them exceedingly should he not have said first I have loved thy Commandements and so have kept them Doubtlesse hee did so but he ran here in a holy and most heavenly circle I have kept them and loved them and loved them and kept them if we love Christ we also shall live such a life of love in our measure and his Commandements will be most deare when himselfe is most precious FINIS A TABLE OF the principall Contents A. ADoption what it is pag. 280 The manner thereof 282 B. Beleevers in a blessed condition 251 C. Conviction of sinne wrought in every Beleever 6 What that sin is which the Lord first convinceth of 9 How the Lord doth convince the soule of sinne 23 What measure and degree of conviction God workes in all his 32 Conviction of sin to be first preached 34 96 A sad thing to stand out against conviction 36 Meanes of conviction 39 Compunction immediately followes conviction 45 The Necessity thereof 48 Rules observable about compunction 49 Wherein it doth consist 65 What measure of compunction God workes in the Elect. 84 How and where the Soule should come to Christ. 177 Meanes of enabling the Soule to come to Christ. 239 In what manner we should come to him 248 E. What evill in sinne God most affects the heart withall 89 A three-fold evill of sinne 91 F. Feare of Gods displeasure necessary to conversion and wherein it consists 66 The nature of Faith 156 The efficient cause thereof 163 The subject matter of Faith 173 The Forme thereof 178 The end of Faith 198 The ground and meanes of Faith 215 How to discern Faith from presumption 169 Whether an absolute testimony of actuall favor and justification be not the first ground of Faith 227 G. Glorification what it is 313 Greatnesse of mens sinne in not comming to Christ. 246 H. Humiliation for sinne what it is 125 What need there is of it 126 What meanes the Lord useth to worke this 129 What measure of Humiliation is necessary 138 Wherein to expresse Humiliation 150 I. A Christian is not justified before faith is sought 107 Sanctification does not goe before justification 109 What true justification is 253 Who is it that justifieth and why 256 The meanes whereby the Father justifieth 257 Who are the persons the Lord doth justifie 261 L. Loosening from sinne how wrought in the soule 88 A life of Love requisite in beleevers 328 The life of Love appears in 5. things 338 The Law not to be slighted 334 P. How Christ doth save by his Power 4 Audience of Prayers a speciall priviledge 305 What are those Prayers that Christ will hear 306 Why God heareth Prayers 311 R. A double Resistance of grace in men 100 Regenerate and unregenerate how differenced 194 Reconciliation with God wherein it consists 274 S. What is it to see sinne 43 Sense of Mercy cannot turn a soule to Christ without the Sight of sinne 59 Sorrow for sinne accompanies Conversion wherein it consists 73 Separation from sin wrought in Beleevers 82 What true Sanctification is 289 The benefits thereof 294 V. Union unto Christ goes before Communion with him 101 Whether Vocation doth not goe before Iustification 102 Vocation is not all one with Sanctification 113 The nature of true Vocation 217 The necessity thereof 224 How it is a ground of Faith 225 W. The Whole soul goes to Christ in conversion 183 How to know when the Whole soule comes to Christ. 190 FINIS See the Sincere Convert Quest. Answ. Quest. Ans. Con. 1. Rom. 3. Quest. Answ. What those particular sinnes are which the Lord convinces men of in thei● conversio●● ●on 2. ● Con. 3. Answ. Luk. 19 4● Esay 6.9 How God gives a reall sight of sinnes H●s 4.4 Psal. 51.3 Lam. 3.51 Job 33.16 17. Vse 1. Lam. 2.14 Prov. 1.23 Vse 2. Psal. 36.2 Vse 3. 1. Help 2. Help 3. Help 2 Cor. 5.10 Vse 4. 1 Sam. 25.32 33. Joh. 16.7 Levit. 19.17 Obj. Ans. 1. 2. 3. ●onah 3.5 Answ. 1. Rule 2. Rule 3. Rule 4. Rule 5. Rule 6. Rule 7. Rule 8. Rule Joh. 16.20 Hos. 6.1 2 3. Reas. 1. 2 Cor. 7.10 1 Cor. 5.2 1 Cor. 15.17 Pro. 28.13 Obj. Ans. 1. 2. Cor. 7.1 2. Reas. 2. Mat. 9.21 Jer. 2.31 Luke 14. Luke 15.17 Ram. 5.6 7 8. Col. 3.7 2 Cor. 5.14 Reas. 3. Mat. 9.13 Luk. 4.18 Luk. 15 7. Reas. 4. Quest. Answ. Acts 9.6 Acts 16. Psal. 10.5 Acts 16. Psal. 9.20 Rom. 8.15 Amos 3.8 Luk. 23.40 Judg. 2.1 Jer. 31.18 Hos. 6.1 2. Zach. 12.11 Cap. 13.1 Eccles. 7.26 Psal. 38.1 ● Prov. 18.14 Psal. 32.2 3. Psal. 40.12 Jer. 31.19 Da● 9.12 Jer. 3. ult Matth. 10.37 Hos. 6.1 2. Psal. 51.8 2 Chron. 53.11 12. Lam. 3.44 Psal. 39.10 11. Esay 5.8.5 Esay 58.5 Prov. 28.13 J●b 33.15 16 17. Answ. Hos 6.1 Joh. 5.40 Quest. Answ. Jer. 8.11 Quest. Answ. Mat. 10.37 Acts 3.26 Quest. Answ. Luk. 15.7 Esay 33.6 Heb 7.25 Esay 56.8 Vse 1. 1. Cons. Scho. orth Spec. cap. 30 31 32. 2. Cons. 3. Cons. 4. Cons. 5. Cons. Jer. 4.3 4. Vind. grat p. 7 11 13 John 14.3 4 5. Gal. 2.20 Vse 2. Vse 3. Esa. 43.4 Vse 4 Jer. 30.15 Esay 57.16 Answ. Answ. Phil. 3.7 Gal. 2.19 Answ. Rom. 7.9 10 11. Lam 1.16 1 Cor. 11.31 Levit. 10.3 Answ. Vse 1 Vse 2. Quest. Answ. 1. 2. Vse 3. Deut. 6.19 4. Answ. Rom. 10.9 10. Rom. 8.28 Ps. 36.7 Object Answ. 1. 2. 3 Acts 10.43 1 Pet. 1.8 John 6.64.65 Heb. 4.18 19 20. Object Answ. Heb. 11.11 Esay 55.1 2. Mat. 21.28 Psal. 62.5 Psal. 81.12 13. Quest. Answ. Heb. 4.1 Object Answ. Ps. 116.7 Eph. 3.14 18. Object Answ. Ps. 25.11 31.9 Psal. 40.11 12. Hos. 6.1 2 Obj. 1. Answ. Hos. 6.2 3. Rom. 1.17 Rom 8.30 1 Pet. 2.9 2 Thes. 2.14 Joh. 20.31 1 Cor. 1.21 with 26 Joh. 5.29 2 Thess. 2.12 13. Isay 55.1 2. 2 Cor. 5.19 20. Mark 16.15 Luc. 14 17 Vse Joh. 1● 22 Answ. 1. 2. 3. Act. 2.39 13.47 4. 5. Quest. Answ. Quest. 1 Answ. 2. Answ. 3. Answ. Esay 43.25 4. Answ. 2 Cor. 5.20 5. Answ. 6. Answ. Rom. 4.5 Esa. 4.1 2. Isa. 54.10 1 Cor. 3.22 Isa. 56.5 Mat. 6.31 32. Rom. 8.14 Tit. 3.5 2 Cor. 5.17 Rom. 2.28 2. 1 Pet. 1.14.15.16 Act. 9.31 Mic. 4.5 Deut. 18.18 19. Col. 3.3 Rev. 4.10 11. Prov. 3.17 Quest. Answ.
and they heare and know their sins are many their estates bad and that iniquity will be there ruine if thus they continue yet all Gods light is without heat and it is but the shining of it upon rocks and cold stones they are frozen in their dregs be it knowne to you you have not one drop of that conviction which begins salvation Before I passe from this to the second work of compunction let me make a word of application If the Spirit begins thus with conviction of sin then let all the Ministers of Christ co-work with Christ and begin with their people here bee faithfull witnesses unto Gods truth and give warning to this secure world that the sentence of death is past and the curse of God lyes upon every man for the least sin Lift up thy voyce like a Trumpet was the Lords words to Isaiah Isay 58.1 and tell them of their sin Those Bees wee call drones that have lost their sting When the salt of the earth the Ministers of Christ Matth. 5. have lost their acrimony and sharpnesse or saltnesse What is it good for but to be cast out your hearers will putrify and corrupt by hearing such doctrines only as never search When the Lord inflicted a grievous curse upon the people Ezek. 3.26 the Lord made Ezekiel dumbe that hee should not be a reprover to them What was the lamentation of Ieremy thy Prophets have seen vaine and foolish things for thee and have not discovered thine iniquity how would you have the Lord Jesus by his Spirit to convince men must it not bee by his word verily you keep the Spirit of Christ from falling down upon the people if you refuse to indeavour to convince the people by your word Other doctrines are sweet and necessary but this is in the first place most necessary Beware of personating beware of bitternesse and passion but oh convince with a spirit of power and compassion and hee that shall bee instrumentall unto Christ in this or any other work for Christs sake unto him the Lord will be the principall agent and by him will attaine his own ends finish his great work gather in his scattered sheep who are in great multitudes throughout the Kingdome scattered from him if once they be throughly convinced that they are utterly lost and gone out of the way May not this also be sad reproofe and terrour to them that stand it out against all means of conviction and will not see their sin nor beleeve the fearfull wrath of God due to them for sin not a man scarce can be found that will come to this conclusion I am a sinfull man and therefore I am a dead I am a condemned man but like wild beasts fly from their pursuers into their holes and thickets and dens their sinfull extenuations excuses and apologies for sin and for themselves and if they bee hunted thither and found out there then they resist and article against that truth which troubles them They flatter themselves in their owne eyes untill their iniquities be found most hatefull Many a man dislikes the text the use especially the long use wherein his sinne is toucht and his conscience tost especially if it be his darling sin his Herodias his Rimmon especially if withall he thinks that the Minister meanes him he will not see it nor confeste it especially if hee apprehends he shall lose his honour or his silver shrines and profit by it he will not see his ●in that he may not be troubled in conscience for his sin that so he may not be forced to confesse and forsake his sinne and condemne himselfe for it before God and men Oh Lord I mourne that I can scarce meet with a man that either cares to be or will be convinced but hath something alway to say for himselfe their sins are not so great they are not so bad but have some good and therefore have some hope and if God be mercifull it is no great matter though they be exceeding sinfull or some such thing their mouths are not stopped to say nothing for themselves but guilty There is lesse conviction in the world in this age then many are aware of For I believe that all the powers of hell conspire together to blind mens eyes and darken mens minds in this great work of Christ Principiis obsta it is policy to stop Christ in his entrance in this first streake upon the soule but oh little doe you think what you doe herein and what woe you work to your selves hereby dost thou stifle and resist the first breathings of Christs Spirit when he comes to save thee what hurt will it be to know the worst of thy condition now when there is hope hereby of comming out of it who must else one day see all thy sins in order before thee to thy eternall anguish and terrour Ps. 50.21 When the Lord shall say to thee as unto Dives Remember in thy life time thou hadst thy good things remember such a time such a place such a sin which then you would not see But now thou shalt see what it is to strike an infinite God Remember thou wast forewarned of wrath to come but thou wouldest not beleeve thy selfe accursed that so thou mightest have felt thy need of him that was made a curse to blesse thee and therefore feele it now oh you will wish then that you had knowne this evill in that your day What dost thou talke of grace thou thinkest thou hast grace when as thou hast not the first beginning nay not the most remote preparation for it in this work of conviction what should wee doe for such as these but with Ieremy Ier. 13.17 if you will not heare my soule shall weep in secret for your pride Oh be perswaded therefore to remember your sins past and to consider of your wayes now All the prophanenesse of thy heart and life all the vanity of thy youth Eccles. 11.9 all your secret sins all your sinnes against light and love checks and vowes all that time wherein thou didst nothing else but live in sin thus Gods people have done Ezek 6.9 thus all the elect shall doe oh consider the Lord remembers them all and that with griefe of heart against thee because thou forgettest them Hos. 2.7 Hee that numbers thy haires and tels the sparrowes that fall numbers much more thy sins that fall from thee they are written down in his black book They are not trifles for hee minds not toyes the bookes must bee opened oh reckon now you have yet time to cal them to minde which it may be shall not continue long it is the Lords complaint Ier. 8.6 of a wicked generation that hee could heare no man say What have I done Winnow your selves as the word is Eph. 2.1 Oh people not worthy to be beloved I pronounce unto you from the eternall God that ere long the Lord will search our Ierusalem with candles he will
come with a sword in his hand to search for all secure sinners in city and country unlesse you awaken hee will make inquisition for blood for oaths for whoredomes which grow common for all secret sins we are frozen up in oh be willing be but willing that the Lord should search you and convince you now in this evening time of the day before the night come wherein it wil be too late to say I wish I had considered of my waies in time of all sins none can so hardly stand with uprightnesse as a secret unwillingnesse to see and be convinced of sin Iohn 3.20.21 The helps and meanes for attaining hereunto are these Bring thy soule to the light desire the Lord in prayer as Iob did What I see not oh Lord shew me Iob. 34.32 Set the glasse of Gods law before thee look up in the ministery of the word unto the Lord and say Oh Lord search me the Sunne of this holy word discovers motes on the Sabbath day attend to all that which is spoken as spoken unto thee then examine thy selfe when thou hast leisure When David saw Psal. 19. how pure the law was he cryes out Who knowes his errors Look upon every conviction of thy conscience for sin as an arrest and warning given from the Lord himselfe for sometimes the word hits and conscience startles and saith This is my sinne my condition yet how usuall is it then for a man to put a merry face upon a foule conscience how oft doe men think this is but the word of a man who hath a latitude given him of reproving sin in the Pulpit and wee must give way to them therein or else their hearts rise and swell against the man and word also and why is it thus because hee thinks it is man only that speaks whereas did he see and believe that this was a stroke a warning an arrest a check from the omnipotent God would he then grapple think you with him would it passe lightly by him then When Eli heard Samuel denounce sad things against his house It is the Lord said Eli 1 Sam. 3.18 when Paul saw Jesus speaking Why pers●cutest thou me Acts 9. he falls downe astonished and dares not kicke against the pricks any longer An arrest in the Kings name comes with authority and awes the heart of the man in debt Doe not judge of sinne by any other rule but as God judgeth of it according to the rule of the word by which all mens wayes shall be judged at the last day what made Saul 1 Sam. 15. extenuate his sin to Samuel he judged not of it as the Lord in his word did For had hee done so hee would have seen disobedience to a command as bad as witchcraft as Samuel told him which also made his proud heart sink and say I have sinned remember for this end these Scriptures Rom. 1.18 Rom. 2.9 Rom. 6.23 Gal. 3.10 by which thou maist see either I must dye in the state I am or God himselfe must lye Remember that an angry look or word is murder in Gods account a wanton eye an unchast thought is Adultery before a holy God before whose Tribunall thou must give an account of every vaine thought and word And therefore doe not judge of sinne by the present pleasure gaine honour or ease in it for this is a false rule Moses forsook the pleasures of sin for a season Heb. 11.25 Nor yet by not feeling any punishment for it for God reserves wrath Nahum 1.2 till the day of reckoning Nor yet by the esteem that others generally have of it who make no more of wounding the Sonne of God by sin then they doe of crushing vermine under their feet Nor yet by the practise of others Every man sins and therefore I hope I shall doe as well as others Nor yet by seeing thy selfe better and thanking God thou art not as other men it may be so thou didst never steale nor whore nor murder as yet that is not the question but hast thou had any one vaine thought in prayer hast thou heard one Sermon unprofitably hast thou sinned then know God spared not the Angels that sinned and how wilt thou escape unlesse the Lord dye for thee Nor yet lastly judge of it by thy own opinion of God in thinking God is like unto thee that as thou makest light of it so hee maketh lesse Psal. 50.21 Oh take heed of judging the evill of sin by any of these rules oh remember all men are apt to thinke of themselves better then they are Are we also blind say the Pharisees take heed that by judging of sin by these false rules you deceive not your selves Let this lastly be a use of thankfulnesse to all those whose eyes the Lord hath opened to see and so convinced you of your sinnes When David was going in the heat of his Spirit to kill Nabal and Abigail met him and stopt him what said he Oh blessed bee the Lord for thy counsell so when thou wert going on in the heate and pursuit of thy sin toward eternall death that the Lord should now meet thee in thy way and convince thee of thy folly and so stop thee what a world of sin else wouldst thou have committed how vile wouldst thou have bin oh say therefore Blessed be that Minister of the Lord and blessed for ever be the name of the Lord that gave me that counsell It is said Christ will send the Comforter to convince of sinne is it a comfortable thing to see sin yes it shall one day bee matter of unspeakable comfort to you that ever you saw sin that ever he shewed thee that mystery of iniquity in thy heart and life those arcana imperii those secrets of the power and dominion of sinne over thee Thou shalt not hate but reprove thy brother If the Lord should secretly keep thy sinne glowing in his owne bosome against thee and never reprove thee for it nor convince thee of it no greater signe of Gods everlasting hatred against thee Oh it is infinite love that he hath called thee aside and dealt plainly and secretly with thee and will you not be thankfull for this The Lord might have left thee in thy brutish estate and never made known thy latter end never have told thee of thy sinne or stood before it comes It may be you will say If I felt my sinne and were deeply humbled for it I could then be thankfull that ever I saw it what is it to see sin This is a favour the Lord shewes not to all mankind many have no meanes to bring them to the knowledge of it and those that have yet are smitten with a deep sleep under those meanes that they know not when death is at their doores nor what sin meanes and this it may be is the condition of some of thy poore friends and aquaintance that think it strange that thou runnest not
evidence of favour from any Christian obedience or sanctification in holy duties or that a Christian should profanely cast off all duties because they cannot save themselves by them No no the Lord will search with candles one day for such sonnes of darknesse and exclude such foolish virgins that have neither oyle in their vessels nor light in their lamps I onely speak of that good that righteousnesse which is rested in without Christ and lifts up men above Christ which in deed in truth is not true righteousnesse but only a true shadow of it And therefore as Beza well observes from Rom. 9.32 Why did not Israel that followed after righteousnesse attain it Because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the Law they were not fruits of sincere obedience to the Law but as it were the works of the Law now this saith the Apostle verse 33. is the stumbling stone in Sion Christ will have all flesh vaile and be stript naked and made nothing before him before they shall ever be built upon him now this men stumble at they must bring something to him they will not be vile emptinesse and nothingnesse that he may be all to them verily observe your selves you shall find if there be little humiliation there is little of Christ if much humiliation much of Christ if unconstant humiliation uncertain fruition of Christ if reall humiliation reall possession of Christ if false humiliation imaginary fruition of Christ. Know it you cannot perish if you fall not short here you must perish if you do Be exhorted therefore to lye down in the dust before the Lord and under the Lord nay intreat the Lord that he would put thee upon his wheele and mould thy heart to his will why will you rest in any good you have Oh remember thy father was a Syrian ready to perish and thy selfe polluted an infinite endlesse evill What ever good thou dost is it not a polluted stream of a more polluted spring Nay suppose the Spirit works any good in thee yet is it not polluted by thy unclean heart Nay suppose any actions should be perfect yet remember the Lord spared not the Angels that sinned perfection present cannot satisfie Justice for pollution past Cry out therefore and say Oh Lord now I see not onely that my sinne is vile but that my self and all my righteousnesse is vile also and now though the Lord stands at a distance speaks no peace heare 's no prayers yet because thou art very vile lye downe under him that if he will he may tread upon thee and thereby exalt himselfe as well as lift thee up and exalt thee Be not carelesse whether the Lord help or no but be humble not to quarrell in case he should not For 1. Suppose thou art not onely miserable but sinfull and the Lord thou sayst takes it not away yet remember that to quarrell with God for withdrawing his hand is a sin also Lam. 3.39 and wilt thou adde sinne to sinne 2. Why art thou quiet and still when the Lord denyes thee any common mercy Is it not because the Lord will have it so Now look as we say of him that hates sin as sin that he hates all sinne so he that is meekned with Gods good pleasure in any one thing because of his good pleasure in it upon the same ground will at least desire to stoop in every thing Suppose therefore it be the Lords good pleasure to deny thee mercy I grant you must pray for it yet with submission to the good will of the Lord saying The Lords will is good but mine is evill otherwise thou hast no meeknesse in any thing that art not meekly subject to his will in every thing 3. The greatest pride that is in man appeares here for suppose the Lord should deny thee bread or water or clothes was it your duty to murmur now nay was it not pride if the heart would not lye down and say Lord I am worthy to have my bread pluckt from my mouth and my clothes from my back Now if it be pride to murmur in case the Lord denyes you smaller matters the offals of this life dost not thou see that its far greater pride for thee to sink and quarrell with him if he denyes thee greater and the things of another life is he bound to give thee greater that doth not owe thee the least Suppose a begger murmur at thy doore if thou dost deny him bread or a cup of drink wilt thou not account him a proud stout begger but if thou givest him that and then he quarrell and murmur at thee because thou dost not give him a thousand pound or thy whole estate when he asks it will you not say I never met with the like insolencie the Lord gives you your lives blessed be his name but you aske for treasures of grace and mercy thousands of pounds Christ himself and all that he is worth and the Lord seems to deny you and now you sink and grow sullen and discontent and quarrell and murmur at God not directly but secretly and slily may not the Lord now say Was there ever such pride and insolency And therefore as Christ spake of himselfe Iohn 12.24 25. A corne of wheat cannot live unlesse it die first so know it you shall never live with Christ unlesse you die and perish in your selves unlesse you be sowne and lye under the clods of your owne wretchednesse faith will never spring up in such a soule As t is in burnings the fire must be first taken out before there can be any healing so this impatient spirit which torments the soule must first be removed before the Lord will heale thee 4. Consider the approaching times I do beleeve the Lord at this day is comming out to shake all nations all hearts all consciences all conditions and to teare and rend from you your choicest blessings peace and plenty both externall and internall also for there is need of it our age growes full and proud and wanton a mans price is falne in the market unlesse his locks and new fashions commend him to the world Oh consider when God comes to ●end all from you then you may finde a need of the exercise of this duty it may be the time is comming wherein you shall have nothing to support your hearts you shall find rest in no way but this I know assurance of Gods love may quiet you but what if the Lord shake all your foundations and deprive you of that what will you doe then and therefore as Zephany cap. 2.3 having foretold of the evill day cryes unto his hearers Seeke meeknesse yee meeke of the earth seek meeknesse so say I to you for you will find all little enough Come downe from thy throne and be the footstoole and threshold of Christ Jesus before the dayes of darknesse come upon you be content to be a cipher a stepping-stone the very offall of the
world But you will say Wherein should I expresse this humiliation and subjection Bee highly thankfull for any little the Lord gives Lam. 3.22 23. Be humble and judge thy selfe worthy of nothing when the Lord denies and verily you shall find the Lord Jesus ere long speaking peace unto you and giving you rest in his bosome that now art quietly contented to lye still at his feet For some helps thereunto 1. Remember whose thou art viz. the Lords clay and he thy Potter and therefore may doe with thee what he will Rom. 9.20 2. Remember what thou art viz. a polluted vessell a kind of infinite endlesse evill as I have oft said see the picture of thy own vilenesse in the damned in hell who are full and shall through all eternity powre out all manner of evill Iob 40.3 4. 3. Remember what thou hast been and how long thou hast made warre against Christ with all thy might and heart and strength why should the Lord the●efore choose thee before others Ier. 3.5 when as aske thy conscience was there ever such a wretch since the world began as thou hast been 4. Remember what thou wilt be fit for no use to Jesus Christ good for nothing but to pollute his holy name when thou medlest with it and why should the Lord take up such a dry leafe Isay 64.6 and breath upon such a dry bone 5. Remember how good the Lords will is even when it crosseth thine he shall have infinite glory by all his denials to thee of what thou wouldst he shall gaine that though thou losest thy peace and quietnesse that good which thy foolish sinfull will desires at his hand Iohn 12.27 28. and if so blessed be his name let God live but let man dye and perish that he may be exalted of vile man 6. Remember the sweet rest thou shalt have by this subjection to the Lord nothing is mans crosse but mans will a stubborn will like a stubborne heifer in the yoake galls and frets the soule Learn meeknesse saith our Saviour of me in taking my yoake on you and then you shall find rest Hell would not bee hell to a heart truly humbled Sometimes you find inlargements then you are glad sometime none then you sinke sometimes you have hope of mercy then you are calme sometimes you lose your hopes then the Sea workes when the Lord pleaseth you then you are well but if a little crosse befall you then your spring is muddy and a little thing troubles Oh be humble vile in thine owne eyes and verily such uncertaine fits of peace and trouble are done and the dayes of all your mourning are now ended Of thankfulnesse to all those whom the Lord hath truly humbled Time was when the Lord first convinced you that so long as you could make any shift find rest in any duties you would never lye down at Christs feet now the Lord might have left you to have stumbled at that stumbling-stone and to have stuck in those bushes but you may see that the Lord will save you even then when you would not be saved by him and especially take notice of two passages of Gods dealings with you wherein usually you find matter of discouragement rather then of acknowledgment of Gods goodnesse to you therein 1. That the Lord hath withdrawn all feeling of any good which it may be once you felt and that the Lord hath let out more of the evill of your hearts then ever you imagined was in them nay so much evill that you think there is none like unto you who hast now no heart nor power to stirre think defire will or doe any thing that is good oh blesse the Lord for this for this is Gods way to humble and empty and make thee poor the Lord saw though it may be you did not that you rested in that good you felt and was or would be lifted up by these and therefore the Lord hath broke those crazy cr●tches famisht now brought you downe to nothing made you like dry desarts all the hurt the Lord aimeth at in this being only to humble you and though these desertions be bitter for the present yet that by these he might doe you good in your latter end Oh brethren the Apostle stands at a stay and desires the Corinthians to consider You see your calling saith he 1 Cor. 1. Not many mighty not many wise but things that are not doth he call that no flesh might glory The Lord saith Moses Deut. 8.2 3. suffered thee to want that was the first and then fed thee that he might prove thee and humble thee remember this saith he So say I to you remember this mercy that when the Lord makes you worst of all not really but in your own eyes that then the Lord is about this glorious work 2. That the Lord hath kept you it may be a long time too from sight and sense of his peculiar love one would wonder why the Lord should hide his love so much so long from those to whom he doth intend it the great reason is because there is in many a one a heart desirous of his love and this would quiet them if they were sure of it but they never came to bee quieted with Gods will in case they think they shall never partake of his love but are above that oppose and resist and quarrell with that unhumbled under that the Lord therefore intending to bestow his favour onely upon a humbled sinner he will therefore hide his face untill they lye low and acknowledge themselves worthy of nothing but extremity of misery unworthy of the least mercy The people of God Lam. 1.16 cry out that the comforter which should refresh their soule was farre from them what was Gods end in this you shall see the end of it verse 18. the Lord is righteous here the Church is humbled for I have rebelled or as Sanctius reads it I have made his mouth bitter that the Lord speaks no peace to me but bitter things The cause is in my owne selfe and therefore if he never comfort me nor speak good word unto me yet he is righteous but I am vile and you will find this certain that as the Lord therefore humbles that he may exalt so the Lord never refuseth to exalt in hiding his face but it is to humble And is this the worst the Lord aimes at and will you not be thankfull why are you then discouraged when you find it thus with you doe not say the Lord never dealt thus with any as with me suppose that the reason then is because the Lord sees never had any such a high heart as thou hast but oh be thankfull that notwithstanding this he will take the pains to take it downe Thus much for humiliation I come now to the fourth and last which is Faith SECT 5. The fourth and last act of Christs power is the worke of Faith THe Lord having wounded
there is a subjection arising from the sense of the sweetnesse and exceeding goodnesse of Gods call and promise Psal. 110.2 3. As a woman that is overcome with the words of her loving suitor the man is precious and hence his words are very sweet and overcome her heart to think why should such a one as I be lookt upon by one of such a place it is no presumption now but duty to give her consent so it is here when the Lord is precious and his words oh accept me oh come to me are exceeding sweet and hereupon out of obedience gladly yeelds up it selfe to the Lord takes possession of the Lord this is no more presumption then to sanctifie a Sabbath or to pray or heare the word because the Lords commands are herein very sweet If Repentance accompanies Faith t is no presumption to beleeve Many know they sinne and hence beleeve in Christ trust to Christ and there is an end of their faith but what confession and sorrow for sinne what more love to Christ followes this faith truly none nay their faith is the cause why they have none for they think If I trust to Christ to forgive them he will doe it and there is an end of the businesse Verily this hedge faith this bramble ●aith that catches hold on Christ and pricks and scratches Christ by more impenitency more contempt of him is meere presumption which shall one day be burnt up and destroyed by the fire of Gods jealousie Fie upon that faith that serves onely to keep a man from being tormented before his time Your sins would be your sorrowes but that your faith quiets you But if faith be accompanyed with repentance mourning for sin more esteem of Gods grace in Christ so that nothing breaks thy heart more then the thoughts of Christs unchangeable love to one so vile and this love makes thee love much and love him the more as thy sin increaseth so thou desirest that thy love may increase and now the stream of thy thoughts runne how thou mayst live to him that dyed for thee This was Maries faith who sate at Christs feer weeping washing them with her teares and loving him much because much was forgiven who though shee was accounted a presumptuous woman by Simon and Christ himselfe suffered in his thoughts for suffering of her to come so neare unto him yet the Lord himselfe cleares her herein and justifies her before God and men many a poor beleever thinks if I should beleeve I should but presume and spin a spiders web of Faith out of my owne bowels and hence you shall observe this not beleeving stops up the work of repentance mourning and love and all chearfull obedience in them and on the contrary if they did beleeve it would be with them as themselves think many times if I knew the Lord was mine and my sins pardoned oh how should I then blesse him and love him and wonder at him how would this break my heart before him c. now I say let all the world judg if that which thou thinkest would be presumption be not rebellion because it makes thee worse and stops up the Spirit of grace in thee Whereas that Faith which lets out those blessed springs of sorrow love thankfulnesse humblenesse c. what can it bee else but such a saving faith as is wrought by the Spirit because it lets in the Spirit more abundantly into a dry and desolate heart 2. The subject or matter of Faith This is the second thing in the description of Faith the soule of an humbled sinner is the subject or matter of Faith I doe not meane the matter out of which Faith is wrought for there is nothing in man out of which the Spirit begets it but that wherein Faith is seated I meane also the habit of Faith not the principle of it for that is out of man in the Lord Jesus who is therefore called our hope as wel as our strength the soule therefore is the subject of Faith called the heart Rom. 10.9 compared with Mat. 6.21 for we cannot goe or come to Christ in this life with our bodies we are here absent from the Lord 2 Cor. 5. but the soule can goe to him the heart can bee with him as the eye can see a 1000 miles off and receive the species or image of the things it sees into it so the soule inlightned by faith can see Christ a farre off it can long for choose and rest upon the Lord of life and receive the lively image of Christs glory in it 2 Cor. 3. ult If Christ were present upon earth the soule not the body onely could truly receive him Christ comes to his elect only by his Spirit and hence our spirits only are fit to receive him and close with him thousands heare Christ outwardly that inwardly are deafe to all Gods calls their spirits see not tast not feel not it is therefore the soule that is the subject of Faith and I say it is an humbled empty soule which is the subject for a full proud nbroken spirit cannot nay will not receive Christ as wee have proved and therefore Luke 14. the servant is commanded to bid the poore halt and blind and lame to come in they would not make excuses as others did they that were stung to death with fiery Serpents were the only men that the brasen Serpent was lifted up for them to look upon and so be healed Iohn 3.14 and therefore the promise doth not run If any man have wisdome let him aske it but if any man want wisdom Iames 1.5 so if any man want light life want peace pardon want Christ and his Spirit let them aske and the Lord will give away with your mony if you come to these waters to buy and take freely If any man would be wise let him be a foole saith the blessed Apostle an empty nothing a soule in a perishing helplesse hopelesse condition is the subject of faith such only feele their need of Christ are glad at the offer of Christ and therefore such only can and will receive Christ and come unto Christ by faith and truly if we had but hearts the consideration of this might be ground of great comfort confidence unto all Gods people whose soules come unto Jesus Christ for that which was in Thomas Iohn 21. is in all men naturally if we could see Christ with our eyes and feel him with our hands and embrace him as Mary did with our arms if we could heare himselfe speake we could then beleeve as they said if he will come from the Crosse so we say if he will come downe from heaven thus unto us we will then beleeve if we want this we fear we may be at last deceived because we want sense and cannot come to close with our eyes and hands the objects of our faith but oh consider this point we are made partakers of Christs life and salvation by him only yet
eternall righteousnesse that never can be lost if the Lord should make thee as perfectly righteous as once Adam was or Angells in heaven are and put on thy royall apparell againe thou wast in danger of losing this and of being stript naked againe but now the Lord hath put your righteousnesse into a safer hand which never shall be lost Heb. 9.12 Dan. 9.24 By this you please God and are more amiable before him then if you had it in your selfe doe not say this is a poore righteousnesse which is thus out of my selfe in another why doe you think righteousnesse in your selfe would be best is it not because hereby you think you shall please God Suppose thou hadst it yet thy righteousnesse should be at the best but mans righteousnes but this is called the righteousnesse of God which cannot but be more pleasing to him then that in thy selfe 2 Cor. 5.20 what is Angelicall righteousnesse to the righteous-of God t is but a glow-worm before the Sunne the smell of Esaus garments the robes of this righteousnesse of the Sonne of God are of sweeter odour then thine can be or ever shall be Eph. 5.1 2. tis said By faith Abel Enoch c. pleased God their persons were sinfull their owne duties were weak yet by faith in this they pleased God thou thinkest when thou goest to Prayer if I had no sinne but perfect holinesse in me surely God would heare me I tell you when you bring this offering of Christs righteousnesse the Lord had rather have that then all you can doe you bring that which pleaseth him more then if you brought your owne For aske thy owne conscience if it be possible for the righteousnesse which is done by thy self to be more pleasing to God then the righteousnesse of the Sonne of God the Lord of Glory himselfe done and perfected for thee 7. By this you glorifie God exceedingly as Abraham beleeved Rom. 4. and gave glory unto God In the Lord shall all the seed of Israel be justified and shall glory Esay 45.25 For 1. By this you glorifie him perfectly in an instant for you continue to doe all that the Law requires that instant you beleeve The Apostle propounds the Question Rom. 3.21 whether a Christian by faith doth make void the Law No saith the Apostle but we establish the Law How is that Paraeus shews three wayes One is this because that perfect righteousnesse which the Law requires of us we performe it in Christ by faith So that in one instant thou continuest to doe all that the Law requires and hence ariseth the impossibility of a true Beleevers apostacie as from one principall cause They that deny satisfaction by Christs doing of the Law because by our own works and doings we cannot be justified before God may as well deny satisfaction by Christs sufferings because by our owne sufferings we cannot be justified our obedience to the Law in way of suffering is as truly the works of the Law as our obedience in way of doing 2. By this you glorifie Gods justice what ever Justice requires to be done or suffered you give it unto God by faith in Christ. 3. By this you glorifie grace and mercy Ephes. 1.7 for by this meanes mercy may over-abound toward you and you may triumph in it as sure and certaine to you What a blessed mysterie is this Doth it not grieve you that you cannot glorifie God in your times and places Behold the way if thou canst not doe it by obedience thou maist by faith and thereby make restitution of all Gods glory lost and stolne from him by thy disobedience to him By this you have peace in your consciences by this Christs blood is sprinkled upon them and that cooles the burning torments of them Rom. 5.1 The commers unto the Leviticall sacrifices and washings types of this offering of Christ could not thereby be perfected and bee without the guilty conscience of sinne none of your duties can pacifie conscience but as they carry you hither to this righteousnesse but the commers to this have no more terrours of conscience for sinne I meane they have no just cause to have any this Rain-bow appearing over your heads is a certaine signe of fair weather and that there shall be no more deluge of wrath to overwhelme thee By this all miseries are removed when thy sinnes are pardoned there is something like death and shame and sicknesse but they are not it 's said Isay 33. ult There shall be none sicke among them why so because they shall be forgiven their iniquities T is no sicknessse in a manner no sorrow no affliction if the venome sting and curse be taken away by pardon of sinne thy sicknesse sorrow losses death it selfe is better now then health joy abundance life you may here see death hell grave swallowed up in victory and now tread upon the necks of them 1 Cor. 15. You may see life in death heaven in the deepest hell glory in shame when thou seest all thy sinnes done away in the blood of Christ Jesus This is the blessednesse of all you poore beleevers and commers to the Lord Jesus what should you doe but beleeve it and rejoyce in it If the wicked that apply this righteousnesse presumptuously say Let us sinne that grace may abound and make no other use of forgivenesse but to run in debt and sinne with a license Why should not you say on the other side Let me beleeve and owne my portion in this righteousnesse that as my sinnes have abounded so my love may abound as my sinnes have been exceeding great so the Lord may be exceeding sweet as my sinnes continue and increase so my thankfulnesse glory in God triumph over death grave sinne through Christ may also increase as you see righteousnesse in Christ for ever yours so you may from thence expect from him such a righteousnesse as may make you righteous also as hee is righteous Tremble thou hard-hearted impenitent wretch that didst never yet come to Christ nor feele thy need of him or prize his blood this is none of thy portion all thy sinnes are yet upon thee and shall one day meet thee in the day of the Lords fierce wrath when he shall appeare as an everlasting burning before thine eyes and thou stand guilty before him as chaffe and stubble SECT 2. Secondly Reconciliation This is the second benefit which in order of nature followes our Justification although sometime in a large sense it is taken for the whole work of Justification strictly taken it followes it Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God i. e. not onely peace from God in our consciences but peace with God in our reconcilement to him and his favour toward us Being justified we shall be saved from wrath i. e. not onely the outward fruits of wrath but wrath from whence those come Christ is first King of Righteousnesse then King of Peace Heb. 7.2 for is not finne the cause of
Gods anger must not sinne therefore bee first removed in our justification before wee can have Gods anger allayed in our reconciliation so that as in our justification the Lord accounts us just so in our reconciliation himselfe being at peace with us hee accounts us friends indeed our meritorious reconciliation is by Christs death as the Kings son who procures his fathers favour toward a Malefactor who yet lyes in cold irons and knowes it not and this is before our justification or being Rom. 5.9 but actuall and efficacious reconciliation whereby we come to the fruition and possession of it is after our justification Rom. 3.24 25. Christ is a propitiation by faith and here the Malefactor hath tidings of favour if he will accept of it Ephes. 2.15 17. and of this I now speake God and man were once friends but by finne a great breach is made the Lord onely bearing the wrong is justly provoked Isa. 65.2 3. man that onely doth the wrong is notwithstanding at enmity with him and will not bee intreated to accept of favour much lesse to repent of his wrong Ier. 8.4 5 6 7 8. the Lord Jesus therefore heales this breach by being mediator between both he takes up the quarrell and first reconciles God to man and man to God in himselfe in redemption and after this reconciles God and man by himselfe in or immediately upon our justification This Reconciliation consists in two things chiefly 1. In our peace with God whereby the Lord layes by all acts of hostility against us Rom. 5.1 2. In love and favour of God I doe not meane Gods love of good will for this is in election but his love of complacencie and delight for till we are justified the Lord behaves himselfe as an enemy and stranger to us who are polluted before him but then he begins thus to l●ve us 1 Ioh. 4.10 16. Col. 1.21 22. A Gardiner may intend to turne a Crab-tree stock into an an Apple-tree his intention doth not alter the nature of it untill it actually be ingraffed upon so we are by nature the children of wrath Ephes. 1.3 The in●ention of God the Father or his love of good will doth not make us children of favour and sonnes of peace untill the Lord actually call us to and ingraffe us into Christ and then as Christ is the delight of God so we in him are loved with the same love of delight Peace with God and love of God are different degrees of our reconciliation A Prince is at peace or ceaseth warre against a rebell yet he may not bring the Rebell before him into his bosome of speciall favour delight and love but the Lord doth both towards us enemies strangers Rebels devils in our reconciliation with him Oh consider what a blessed estate this is to be at peace with God It was the title of honour the Lord put upon Abraham to bee the friend of God Isa. 41.8 I am not able to expresse what a priviledge this is t is better felt then spoken of as Moses said Psal. 90. Who knowes the greatnesse of his wrath So I may say who knowes the greatnesse of this favour and love 1. That God should be pacified with thee after anger this is exceeding glorious Isa. 12.1 2. What is man that the Lord should visit him or looke upon him though he never had sinned but to look upon thee nay to love thee after provocation by sinne after such wrath which like fire hath consumed thousand thousands and burnt downe to the bottome of hell and is now and ever shall be burning upon them Oh blessed are they that finde this favour 2. That the Lord should bee pacified wholly and thorowly that there should be no anger left ●or you to feele The poore afflicted Church might object against those sweet promises made her Isa. 27.1 2 3. that she felt no love You are mistaken saith the Lord Fury is not in me vers 4. Indeed against bryars and thornes and obstinate sinners that prick and cut me to the very heart by their impenitencie I have but none against you Out of Christ God is a consuming fire but in Christ he is nothing else but love 1 Joh. 4.16 and though there may bee fatherly frownes chastisements reproofes and rods though hee may for a time hide his face shut out thy prayers deferre to fulfill promises c. yet all th●se are out of pure love to thee and thou shalt see it and feele it so in thy latter end Heb. 12.8 9. Never did David love Ionathan whose love exceeded as the Lord loves thee from his very heart Now thou art in Christ by faith 3. That the Lord should be pacified eternally never to cast thee off againe for any sinnes or miseries thou fallest into this is wonderfull Those whom men love they forsake if their love be a●used or if their friends be in affliction they then bid them good night but the Lords love and favour is everlasting Isa. 9.7 The mountaines may depart out of their places and the hills cast downe to valleys but the Lords kindnesse never shall never can He hath hid his face a little moment whiles thou didst live in thy sinne and unbeleefe but now with everlasting mercy he will imbrace thee nay which is more the abounding of thy sinne is now the occasion of the abounding of his grace Rom. 5.20 thy very wants and miseries are the very causes of his bowels and tender mercies Heb. 4.15 16. Oh what a priviledge is this Did the Lord ever shew mercy or favour to the Angels that sinned Did not one sinne cast them out of favour utterly Oh infinite grace that so many thousand thousands every day gushing out of thy heart against kindnesse and love nay the greatest dearest love of God should not incense his sorest displeasure against thee I the Lord that powred out all his anger upon his own Son for thee and for all thy sinnes cannot now poure out nay he hath not one drop left though he would to poure out upon thee for any one sinne 4. That the Lord should be thus pacified with enemies a man may be easily pacified with one that offends him a little but with an enemy that strikes at his life as by every sinne you doe this is wonderfull yet this is the case here Rom. 5.7 8. 5. That the Lord should be pacified even with enemies by such a wonderfull way as the blood of Jesus Christ Rom. 5.7 8. this is such love as one would think the infinite wisdome of a blessed God could have devised no greater by this v. 6. he commanded and set out his love which though now it grow a stale and common thing in our dayes yet this is that which is enough to burst the heart with astonishment and amazement to thinke that the party offended who therefore had no cause to seeke peace with us againe should finde out such a way of peace as this is woe to the world
that despise this peace 6. That being thus pacified you may come into Gods presence with boldnesse at any time and aske what you will I wonder what he can deny you if he loves you Rom. 5.2 and which is yet more that now all creatures are at peace with you Iob 5.23 as when the Captaine of the Army is pacified none of his souldiers must hurt or strike that man nay that hereby all your enemies should be forced to doe good to you Oh death where is now thy sting I have oft wondred if Christ hath borne all our miseries and suffered death for us why then should we feel any miseries or see death any more and I could never satisfie my owne heart by many answers given better then by this viz. that if the Lord should abolish the very being of our miseries they should indeed then doe us no hurt but neither could they then doe us any good for if they were not at all how could they doe us good now the Lord Jesus hath made such a peace for us as that our enemies shall not only not hurt us but they shall be forced himselfe ordering of them to doe much good unto us all your wants shall but make you pray the more all you sorrowes shall but humble you the more all your temptations shall but exercise your graces the more all your spirituall desertions shall but make you long for heaven and to bee with Christ the more it is now part of your portion not only to have Paul and Apollos and world but death it self● to doe you good Oh Lord what a blessed estate is this which though thousands living under the Gospel of peace heare of yet they regard not they can strain their consciences in a restlesse pursuit of the favour of men and in seeking worldly yet peace to this day though born enemies to God never spent one day it may be not one houre in mourning after the Lord for favour from him nor care not for it unlesse it be upon their owne tearmes viz. that God would be at peace with them but they may still remain quietly in their sins and war against God and thence it is that the Lord will shortly take away peace from the whole earth and plague the world with war and blood-shed and as it is in Zach. 11.6 deliver every man into the hand of his neighbour and into the hand of his King and they shall smite the Land even for this very cause for despising the peace and reconciliation with God you might and should have accepted in the Gospell of peace SECT III. Thirdly Adoption This is the third benefit which in order of nature followes our reconciliation whereby the Lord accounts us Sons and gives us the Spirit and priviledges of Sons for in order we must be first beloved before we can be loved so as to be accounted Sons 1 Iohn 3.1 2. for the Lord of unjust to account us just in our justification is much but for the Lord to account us hereby as friends this is more but to account us Sons also this is a higher degree and a farther priviledge and hence our Adoption followes our Faith Iohn 1.12 Gal. 3.26 and if Adoption then the Spirit of Adoption much lesse doth not precede Faith By Christs active obedience our Divines say we have right unto life by Adoption wee have a farther right the one destroyes not the other for a man may have right unto the same thing upon sundry grounds we know there are 2 sorts of Sons 1. Some by nature borne of our own bodies and thus wee are not Sonnes of God but children of wrath 2. Some by Adoption which are taken out of another family and accounted freely of us as our Sons and thus Moses was for a time the sonne of Pharao●s daughter and of this Son-ship by Adoption I now speak the Lord taking us out of the family of hell to be his adopted Sons Christ is Gods Son by eternall generation Adam by creation all believers are Sons by Adoption Now Adoption is two-fold 1. Externall whereby the Lord takes a people by outward covenant and dispensation to be his Sons and thus all the Jewes were Gods first-borne Exod. 4.22 and unto them did belong the Adoption Rom. 9.4 5. And hence their children were accounted Sons as well as Saints and holy 1 Cor. 7.14 Ezech. 16.20 21. but many fall from this Adoption as the Jewes did 2. Internall whereby the Lord out of everlasting love to particular persons in speciall he takes them out of the family of Satan and by internall love and speciall account reckons them in the number of Sons makes them indeed Sonnes as well as calls them so Isaac by speciall promise was accounted for the seed Rom. 9.8 and of this we now speak Now this is double 1. Adoption begun 1 Iohn 3.1 2. ●OW we are the Sons of God To some of which though Sons indeed yet the Lord behaves himselfe toward them for some time and for speciall reasons as unto servants exercising them with many feares Gal. 4.1 2. some spirits will not bee the better for the love of their father but worse and therefore the Lord keeps a hard hand over them to others the Lord behaves himself with more speciall respect in making them cry with more boldnesse Abba Father Rom. 8.15 16 who will be more easily overcome and bent to his will by love 2. Adoption perfected when we shall receive all the priviledges of sons not one excepted Rom. 8.23 where we are said to wait for our Adoption the Redemption of our bodies By the first we are sons but not seen nor known such 1 Iohn 3.1 2. By the second we shall be knowne before all the world to be such we now speak principally of Adoption begun whereby we are sons in Gods account and by reall reception of the Spirit of Sons the manner of this Adoption is thus 1. God loves Jesus Christ with an unspeakable love as his only Son and as our elder brother 2. Hence when we are in Christ his Son he loves us with the same love as he doth his own Son 3. Hence the Lord accounts us sonnes Eph. 1.5 6. Gods love is not now toward us as to Adam his son by creation viz. immediately diffused upon us but in loving his owne Son immediately hence he loves us and hence adopts us and accounts us children Oh that the Lord would open our eyes to see this priviledge Behold it saith Iohn 1 Iohn 3.1 stand amazed at it that children of wrath should become the Sonnes of the most high God for a begger on the dunghill a vagabond runnagate from God a prodigall a stranger to God whom the Lord had no cause to think on to be made a Son of God Almighty If Sons then the Lord doth prize and esteem you as Sonnes if a man hath twenty sonnes he esteems the poor●st least sick child he hath more then all his goods and servants
those depths of grace glory immediate vision God shall be all in all The soule shall now enjoy 1. The accomplishment of all promises which wee see not here made good unto us 1 Cor. 15.24 then you shall have restitution of all these at times of refreshing wherein your sinnes shall be publikely blotted out from the presence of the Lord Act. 3.19 If Iosuah said Ios. 23.14 when the peoples warfare was ended See if the Lord hath been wanting in one word to you Much more will the Lord Jesus say unto you then 2. Then you shall receive a full answer to all your prayers all that grace holinesse power over sinne Satan fellowship with God life of Christ blessing of God which you sought for and wept for and suffered for here you shall then see all answered 3. Then you shall finde the comfort of all that you have done for God Revel 14.13 you works in this sense shall follow you you shall then infinitely rejoyce that ever you did any thing for God that ever you thought of him spake to him and spake for him that ever you gave any one blow to your pride passions lusts naturall concupiscence c. you shall then enjoy the reward of all your sufferings cares sorrowes for Gods Church fastings and dayes of mourning whether publikely or secretly for Gods people 2 Cor. 4.17 the same glory God hath given Christ the Lord shall at that time give unto you Ioh. 17.22 it shall not be with us there as it was with the wicked Israelites who when they came into the good land of rest they then forgot the Lord and all his workes past no no all that which GOD hath done for you in this world you shall then looke backe and see and wonder and love and blesse and sucke the sweet of for evermore it s a fond weak question to thinke whether we shall know one another in heaven verily you shall remember the good the Lord did you here by what meanes the Lord humbled you by what ministry the Lord called you by what friends the Lord comforted and refreshed you and there you shall see them with you doe you thinke you shall forget the Lord and his workes in heaven which it may be you tooke little notice of and the Lord had little glory for here Fourthly consider the glory of the company and fellowship you shall have here 1. Angels Heb. 12.23 24. they will love you and comfort you and rejoyce with you and speake of the great things the Lord hath done for you as they did on earth to the Shepherds Luk. 2.10 Be not afraid said the Angel Mat. 28.5 I know yee seeke Jesus So will they say then be ever comforted you blessed servants of the Lord for we know you are loved of the Lord Jesus 2. Saints you shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdome of God be taken into the bosome of Abraham into the bosomes of all the children of Abraham and there we shall speake with them of the Lords wonders of his Christ and Kingdome Psal. 145.11 and every sentence and word shall be milke and hony sweeter then thy life now can be unto thee we shall know and love and honour one another exceedingly 3. The man Christ Jesus when Mary cla●pt about him 1 Ioh. 20.17 Let me alone said hee touch mee not I am not yet ascended to my Father As if he had said saith Austin then shall bee the place and time wherein we shall embrace one another for evermore Never was husband and loving wife so familiar one with another as the Lord Jesus will bee not carnally and in an earthly manner but in a most heavenly glorious yet gracious manner with all his Saints Come yee blessed will hee then say to them wee shall then ever bee not onely in the Lord but with the Lord saith Paul 1 Thes. 4. ult 1 Thes. 5.10 Just as Moses and Elias in his transfiguration that talked with him which was a glimpse of our future glory so shall we then Luk. 12.37 and you shall then see that love of his that blessed bosome of love opened fully which the Apostle saith passeth knowledge Ephes. 3.19 I need not tel you of our fellowship with the Father also when the Son shall give up the Kingdome to him that he may be all in all Fiftly consider the glory of your worke there which is onely to glorifie this God 1. You shall then live like Christ in glory we shall speak and think all with glory 1 Iohn 3.1 2. our strings shall be then raised up to the highest straine of sweet melody and glory 2. You shall then blesse him Eph. 1.6 Eph. 4.13 and that with ravishment you shall come then to the full acknowledgement of the Sonne of God you shall see and say all this is the work and grace of Christ and then shall cry out Oh let all Angels Saints ever blesse him for this What should I speak any more You will say Is this certaine Can this be so Yes assuredly for Christ is gone to prepare this place and glory for you Ioh. 14.2 3. We have also the first fruits of this glory which we feele sometimes whereby we see and taste and drink and long for more of that joy unspeakable and peace that passeth understanding that triumph over the rage and working power of remaining corruption that darke vision of God and holy glorying and boasting in him as our everlasting portion c. which cannot be delusions and dreams which never feed but ever leave the deceived soule hungry but are realities things indeed which satiate the weary soule and fill it up with the very fulnesse of God himselfe Eph. 3.19 and therefore t is certaine that we shall have the harvest that thus taste of the first fruits and the whole summe paid us faithfully that have already the earnest penny The Lord also sits us for this as the Apostle disputes 2 Cor. 5.4 5. What means the Lord to deny our requests in many things as long as we live what is his meaning not to let us see the accomplishment of many of his promises is it because he is unfaithfull or b●cause he would let us know there is a day of refreshing he hath reserved for us and would have us look for wherein we shall see it hath not been a vaine thing for us to pray ● or him to promise why doth he afflict us and keep us more miserable both by outward sorrowes and inward miseries then any other people in the world doth he not hereby humble us empty us weane us from hence and make us as it were vessels big enough to hold glory which we hope for in another world But you will say Can this glory be thus great We see t is certaine it shall be so but shall it be so exceeding great and endlesse Yes verily because 1. The price is great which is paid for it Eph. 1.14 t is a purchased
possession by the blood of Christ we enter into the holy of holies a price of infinite value must bring a kind of infinite glory 2. We are by Christ nearer to God then Angels are whose glory wee see is very great 3. Shall not our glory be to s●t out the glory of Christ 2 Thes. 1.10 and if so then it his glory be exceeding great ours must bear a due proportion and be very very great also 4. Doth not God pick out the poore and vile things of the world to be vessels of glory 1 Cor. 1.27 and is not that an argument that he intends exceedingly to glorifie himselfe on such to raise up a most glorious building where he layes so low a foundation 5. Are not we loved with the same love as he hath loved Christ Iohn 17. ult and shall not our glory abound then exceedingly 6. Is not the torment and shame of the Reprobates to be exceeding great and grievous doth not God raise them up to make his power known Rom. 9.23 What then shall we think on the contrary of the glory of the Saints wherein the Lord shall set forth his power in glorifying them as hee doth the glory of his power in punishing others and therefore 2 Thes. 1.9 the punishment of the wicked is exprest by separation of them from the glory of the Lords power because that in the glory of the Saints the Lord will as I may so say make them as glorious as by his power ruled by wisdom he is able to make them This is therefore the great glory of all those whom God hath called to the fellowship of his deare Sonne and which is yet more blessed be God the time is not long but that we shall feele what now we doe but heare of and see but a little of as we use to doe of things afar off We are here but strangers and have no abiding city we look for this that hath foundations and therefore let sinne presse us downe and weary us out with wrastling with it let Satan tempt and cast his da●ts at us let our drink be our teares day and night and our meat gall and worm wood let us be shut up in choaking prisons and cast out for dead in the streets nay upon dung-hils and none to bury us let us live alone as Pelicans in the wildernesse and be driven among wild beasts into deserts let us be scourged and disgraced stoned sawn asunder and burned let us live in sheep-skins and goat-skins destitute afflicted tor●ented as who looks not for such dayes shortly yet oh brethren the time is not long but when we are at the worst and death ready to swallow us up we shall cry out Oh glory glory oh welcome glory If our miseries here be long they shall be light if very bitter they shall be short however long or short they cannot be to us long who look for an eternall weight of glory Who would not that considers of these things despise this world and set it at his heeles who hath all these priviledges and benefits with Christ in his eye who would not abhor a filthy lust to enjoy such a Christ who would ever look back unto his flesh-pots or fathers house that hath such welcome made him the first moment he comes to the Lord Jesus in having present fruition of some of these benefits but present right unto all fruition of some by feeling of all by faith But oh the wrath of God upon these times that either see not this glory or if they doe despise so great salvation Christ and pardon and peace adoption grace and glory is brought home to our doores but their price is falne in our market and we think it better to be without Christ with our lusts then to be in Christ with his benefits The reproach of Christ was dearer to Moses as great a Courtier and as strong a head-piece as our times can afford then all the riches and honours of Egypt but the grace and peace and life and glory of Jesus Christ is viler to us then the very onyons and leeks and flesh-pots of Egypt if you had but naked Christ our life for a prey in these evill times you had no cause to complaine but infinitely to rejoyce in your portion but when with Christ you shall find all these benefits and priviledges comming in as to your portion and yet to despise him Assuredly the Lord will not beare with this contempt alway Away to the mountaines and hasten from the townes and cities of your habitation where the grace of Christ is published but universally despised you blessed called ones of the Lord Jesus for the dayes are comming wherein for this sinne the heavens and earth shall shake the sunne shall be turned into darknesse and the moone into blood and mens hearts failing for feare of the horrible plagues which are comming upon the face of the earth Dreame not of faire weather expect not better dayes till you heare men say Blessed is he that commeth in the name of the Lord who thus blesseth his with all spirituall blessings in Christ Eph. 1.3 I now proceed to the last CHAP. III. All those that are translated into this blessed estate are bound to live the life of love in all fruitfull and thankefull obedience unto him that hath called them according to the rule of the morall Law Psal. 40.7 8. THe Lord doth no sooner call his people to himselfe but as soone as ever he hath thus crowned them with these glorious priviledges and given them any sense and feeling of them but they immediately cry out Oh Lord what shall I now doe for thee how shall I now live to thee they know now they are no more their owne but his and therefore should now live to him If you aske Moses after all the love and kindnesse the Lord had shewne Israel what Israel should doe for him you shall see his answer full Deut. 10.12 13. And now O Israel what doth the Lord require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God and to love him and serve him with all thy heart and to keepe his Commandements which I command thee this day for thy good If you aske Paul as Evangelicall a Christian as ever lived what now we are to do when we are in Christ hee answers punctually 2 Cor. 5.14 15. The love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that Christ dying for those that were dead they that live should not live unto themselves but unto him that dyed for them and rose againe If we aske Peter the question to what end the Lord hath called us out of darknesse into his marvelous light he expresly tells you it is to shew forth the vertues of him that hath so called 1 Pet. 2.9 If wee be doubtfull whether this be the Lords minde the Lord himselfe resolves it by Zachary Luk. 1.74 and tells us that t is his oath That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies wee should