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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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God grounded upon the perswasion of his glorious being and the goodnesse of his nature which is not terrible to them but when they consider his mercy is a holy mercy and that it is never dispenc't to the prejudice of his justice though they cannot hate God for his goodnesse directly yet they hate him with it for although he is the perfection of beauty and goodnesse it self yet they being evil there is no congruity or conveniency between God and them they love sin and hate punishment Now God as Author legis by the most strict Laws forbids sin and as ultor peccati inflicts severe punishments from hence it proceeds the most lovely and sweet Attributes of God cannot endear him to them no more than the natural or moral excellencies of a Judge the comelinesse of his person or his wisdome and knowledge can draw forth the love of a Malefactor when he is condemned by him Moreover since the general nature of sin is an eternal contrariety to the nature and will of God the love of it must needs argue the hatred of God for as the Lord Jesus requires an universal chearful and constant obedience as the most clear evidence of love to him if you love me keep my Commandments So the Argument will be as strong to conclude backward If you keep not Gods Commandments you hate him to live in the practice of known sinnes is a vertual and interpretative hatred of God 2. The benefits which God bestows upon us deserve our love How great an endearment did he passe upon us in our Creation we might have been admitted into the lowest form of Creatures and have only enjoyed the life of flies or worms but he made us little lower than the Angels and Crowned us with glory and honour and gave us dominion over all the works of his hands Psal 8.5 Whereas the rest of the Creatures were the acts of his power the Creation of man was an act of power and wisdome in all the rest there was nothing but he spake the word and they were made Psal 148.5 But in the making of man there was a consultation about it Gen. 1. Let us make man he framed our bodies so that all the parts conspire for the ornament and service of the whole Psal 139.15 Thine eye did see my substance being yet imperfect and in thy book were all my members written and therefore Lactantius said truly hominem non patrem esse sed generandi Ministrum man is only the instrument which the Lord doth use for the effecting of his purpose to raise the beautiful Fabrick of mans body Now if we are obliged to expresse the dearest love to our Parents with how much greater reason should we love God who is the fountain of all our beings He hath breathed into man a spiritual immortal rational soul which is more worth than the whole World this is in some sort a spark and ray of Divine brightnesse 't is capable of Gods Image 't is a fit Companion for Angels to joyne with them in the praises of God and enjoy a blessed eternity with them 'T is capable of communion with God himself who is the fountain of life and happinesse The soul is endowed with those faculties which being terminated upon God it enjoys an infinite and everlasting blessednesse The understanding by knowledge rests in God as the first and highest in genere veri the will by love embraces him as the last and greatest in genere boni and so receives perfection and satisfaction which is the incommunicable priviledge of the rational soul Beasts can only converse with drossy and material objects they are confined to earthly things but the soul of man may enjoy the possession and fruition of God who is the Supreme and Soveraign good Now this should inflame our love to God he formed our bodies he inspired our souls Moreover if we consider our lives we shall finde a chain of mercy which reaches from one end to the other of them How many Miracles of Providence do we enjoy in our preservation how many unseen dangers do we escape how great are our daily supplies The provisions we receive do serve not only for necessity but for delight every day we have the provisions of meat and drink not only to cure hunger and all our thirst but to refresh the heart and to make us chearful in our work every houre is filled up with the bounties of God Now what shall we render to the Lord for all his benefits he desires our love this is the most proper return we can make for love is of an opening and expansive quality calling forth the heart our love within should break forth to close with Gods love without the love of obedience in us with the love of favour and bounty in him 'T is a principle of nature deeply implanted in the hearts of men to return love for love nay the very Beasts are not deficient in this Esay 1.3 The Oxe knows his Owner and the Asse his Masters Crib Those Creatures which are of all the most stupid and heavy respect their Feeders and expresse dumb signs of love unto them How much more should we love God who spreads our Table fills our Cup and causes his Sun to shine and his Rain to fall on us 'T is an Argument of Secret Atheisme in the heart that in the confluence of mercies we enjoy we do not look up to the Author of them as if common mercies were the effects of Chance and not of Providence if a man constantly relieves our wants we judge it the most barbarous disingenuity not to repay love to him but God loads us with his benefits every day his wisdome is always busied to serve his mercy and his mercy to serve our necessities but we are insensible and unaffected and yet the meanest mercy as it comes from God hath an excellency stamp't upon it We should upbraid our souls for our coldnesse to God everywhere we encounter sensible demonstrations of his love to us in every moment of our lives we have some pledges of his goodnesse Let us light our Torch at this Mountain of fire let the renewed act of his bounty constrain us to love him we should love him for his excellency though we had no benefit by him nay though he hated us we are bound to love him as he is truly amiable in himself how much more when he draws us with the cords of a man with bands of love whosoever requites the love of God with hatred as every impenitent sinner doth puts off the nature of man and degenerates into a Divel 2. Fear this is that eternal respect which is due to our Creator an humble reverence we owe to him as he is infinitely above us the holy Angels cover their faces when they have the clearest views of his glory Esay 6.1 2 3. The Lord is represented as sitting on a Throne and the Seraphims stood about each having six wings with twain he covered his
Gods part upon supposition of his institution 1. His Justice having received a valuable price for Salvation and this price being made the sinners own in the way of Gods own appointment so that believing sinners may humbly plead with God as a righteous Judge for their Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 3.26 Gods justice being not only secured but obliged in a sense by Faith 2. His faithfulness having in his Word promised Salvation to Faith as hath been shown Secondly On Faiths part the reason why God hath conjoyned certain Salvation with it is because it giveth most glory to God of any thing Rom. 4.20 1 Sam. 2.30 therefore God entailes glory on it peculiarly it honoureth God and God will honour them that have it He that believeth sets to his seal that God is true John 3.33 and every way justifieth and advanceth him Properties and notes of Trial convertible with true Faith 5. Properties and reciprocal where Faith is there is this and that where this and that are there is Faith where Faith is not there these are not c. and farther differencing it from other Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 which is a needful work for there is true and false feigned and unfeigned alive and dead Of these some indeed belong to the former Head of Effects and some of them seem not altogether unsuitable to be referred to this Head The First shall be a more general Note True and saving faith receiveth a whole Christ upon judgement and choice on Gods term●s Lord to rule as well as Jesus to save the object of Faith in the Text no separating what God hath joyned and to have a divided Christ not a whole Christ salvation but not self-denial c. True Faith is a considerate thing that which hath least depth Mat. 13 5. springs up most suddenly the soul sits down and weigheth and casteth up all accompts and compareth all things together misery by sin undonnesse in self termes of salvation self-denial a fundamental one taking up the Crosse following Christ universally sincere obedience and what the world lust or Satan can say to the contrary and saith CONTENT to Gods terms and here the bargain is made the soul trusts God contentedly for his part even priviledge and resolvedly sets about its own part even duty Hence true faith proceeding deliberately upon Gods termes is willing to be tryed by the Word declaring those terms which farther tryal according to the Word follows Secondly True and saving Faith is ush●r'd in by godly sorrow and humility in a good degree though they are farther compleated afterward upon the sense of Gods pardoning and accepting love Ezek. 16.63 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Then shalt thou be ashamed c. Repent and believe Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ this is Gospel order The inconsistency between Faith and Pride Hab. 2.4 is evident in that opposition of the souls lifting up and living by Faith and the hinderance of the Jews believing John 5.44 The Centurions and womans Faith were attended with eminent humility Did not humility and godly sorrow accompany and bring in faith the Law could not be our School-master to bring us to Christ This shutteth out that easie merry proud faith that springs up without the dunging of humility or watering of sorrow according to God Thirdly True and saving Faith is abiding and perseverant and this upon supposition of temptations and assaults for otherwise a mock-faith may have a continuance and men dye in a pleasing dream of ungrounded presumptuous confidence Now it must be such or cannot be saving for as it is said He that believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 Mat. 24.13 so he that endureth to the end shall be saved They that have true Faith have the seed of God abiding in them the prayer of Christ for them are kept by the power of God for he that hath begun a good work will finish it his gifts being without repentance Believing and sealing for security are conjoyned Eph. 1.13 The true believer is the wise man that built on the Rock Mat. 7.24 25. his house therefore stood the good ground that hath de●th of earth Mat. 13. Heb. 10.38 39. that what springs may not wither The just shall live by his faith continue therein and so believe to the saving his soul being rooted and established therein through Christ Col. 2.7 See more of this before under the efficient cause principal and instrumental Fourthly True and saving Faith is growing though this growth be not alway discernable or alike That prayer for encrease of Faith flowed from the very nature of Faith Luk. 17.5 it is the good fight which must be carryed on to a compleat conquest running a race 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 Prov. 4.18 speaking progresse to the finishing our course for the way of the just is as light that shineth more and more to a perfect day Whatever hath life hath growth till it reach a state of consistency 1 John 5.13 Saint John wrote to those that did believe that they might believe Vt credatis credere pergatis which belongs to the last Head fide crescatis Beza in loc i. e. grow in faith according to the general Apostolical precept of growing in all grace The same Author accounts this the most plain and natural interpretation of that of Paul from Faith to Faith Fide Rom. 1.17 quae quotidiè incrementum accipiat confirming it by that of Clement of Alexandria The Apostle speaks not of a double Faith but of one and that receiving growth and perfecting The Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 furtherance of faith Col. 2.7 Phil. 1.25 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 establishing and abounding in the Faith speak encrease and growth in root and branches more fixed habit more frequent acts They therefore that have believed ever since they were born and alway alike never believed at all truly Fifthly True and saving Faith is Purging Act 1 Rom 8.1 4 purifying their hearts by Faith Believing and walking not after the flesh are joyned where there is Faith and much more assurance of Faith there will be heart and body cleansed and washed Heb. 10.22 23 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.4 1 John 3.3 pollutions of flesh and spirit taken away by faith receiving the promise of the undefiled inheritance the believer will purifie himself as he is pure in whom he trusteth and hopeth Living flesh will purge out the Sanies and corruption in it a living Fountain the mud that 's stirred up so living faith And indeeed hereby it is permanent for purity preserveth pure Faith cannot be kept but in a good even a cleane conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Sixthly True and saving faith hath other graces accompanying it in a good measure with a proportionable encrease strength and activity I know some are more eminent for this others for that grace as Moses for meekness Job patience Abraham
of since the Gospel was restored and all other helps both in publick and private should be cut off which God forbid yet this one Book next to your Bible would be a stock of Divinity which might furnish you with the knowledge of the Essentials of Religion and be like Manna to you in the Wildernesse till you come to Canaan To that end therefore that which I would with greatest seriousnesse urge upon you is to get the substance and power of the truths contained in them into your hearts and so to inculcate them especially the general heads of them upon your children and servants that they may be trained up in the knowledge of these vital principles which are of such use for the begetting and increasing of the life and power of godlinesse It will be sad if what was chiefly intended for your use should finde least fruit amongst you and that which is a common good should be not a Monument only but the aggravation of your unfruitfulnesse But I hope better things of you my dearly Beloved and things which accompany salvation though I thus speak The good Lord who hath put this price into your hand give you an heart to prize it and to improve it that you may not receive this grace of God in vain In this hope I commend you to God and to the Word of his grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified I am Yours in the service of the Gospel THOMAS CASE The Preface to the Reader NOt to increase the number of Books already grown into a burden and more apt to distract minds with their variety than to edifie them with their Contents but for a publick testimony to the truth of the Gospel and to inform the ignorant doth this Piece crowd into the World Had many of the Brethren adhered to their own private inclination and first aime in this work these Sermons had only been published by word of mouth to the Auditory that then attended on them To write to the World is apprehended by them as a thing very distinct from preaching to a company of a few broken-hearted Christians who were willing to take this help along with them in their way to heaven and to need more exactnesse of care and preparation But upon the strong importunity of the Auditors some of them persons of great worth and honour carrying with it the face of a Call from God as valid as that which first invited them to the work they were contented against their own private inclination to yield to this way of publication for the profit of others but with these CAUTIONS First That it be signified that it was not intended to make up a Map or Compleat Body of Divine Truths but only to handle some more necessary points till Providence shall give opportunity to consider the rest Secondly That it was not designed to discusse these points in a Polemical but positive way and sutable to a popular Auditory Thirdly That it be understood that the Brethren that preached were not acquainted with one anothers studies but did every one expresse his own sense in the point recommended to him Fourthly That this be not interpreted to be the work of the whole Body of the London-Ministers but of some of them which they represent with the more tenderness Partly that the other very Reverend Brethren who were not employed in this Turn and Course of the Morning Exercise may not be charged with their weaknesses Partly because they have not without some regret observed that the larger English Annotations in which but some few only of the late Assembly together with some others had an hand are generally ascribed to the whole Assembly and usually carry the name of the Assemblies Annotations as if done by the joynt advice of that grave and learned convention Fifthly That since the preaching of these Sermons there hath been no general review but every one took care of transcribing his own Discourse and sending me the Copy accordingly I sent it to the Presse Sixthly That if any of these points seem not to be discussed according to the full latitude and worthiness of the subject it be remembred that each Exercise was to be punctually confined within the straits of an houre in which time there was no room for larger excursions Under the severity of these terms my Brethren have consented that I should if I saw fit expose their labours to publick view which I do with all chearfulnesse Partly that the world may be conscious to our Unity soundnesse in the faith and sobriety af judgement And partly expecting from thence I will say it notwithstanding the restraints their modesty hath laid upon me no small increase and return of fruit The Lord by his good Spirit guide you into all truth Yours in our Lord Jesus THOMAS CASE The particular heads in Divinity discussed in these several Sermons are these SErm I. Introduct Methodical systems of the special points of Christian Religion useful and profitable for Ministers and people Page 1. Serm. II. That there is a God p. 29. Serm. III. The Trinity proved by Scripture p. 65. Serm. IV. The Divine Authority of the Scriptures p. 85. Serm. V. Man created in an holy but mutable state p. 105. Serm. VI. The Covenant of Works p. 120. Serm. VII The fall of man or peccatum originale originans p. 134. Serm. VIII Original sin inhering or peccatum originale originatum p. 149. Serm. IX The misery of mans estate by nature p. 173. Serm. X. Mans impotency to help himself out of misery p. 202. Serm. XI The Covenant of Redemption p. 216. Serm. XII The Covenant of Grace p. 233. Serm. XIII The Mediator of the Covenant described in his Person Natures and Offices p. 261. Serm. XIV Christs Humiliation p. 258. alias 278. Serm. XV. Christs state of Exaltation p. 305. Serm. XVI The Satisfaction of Christ p. 337. Serm. XVII Of Effectual Calling p. 353. Serm. XVIII The true Believers union with Christ p. 377. Serm. XIX The nature of Justification p. 403. Serm. XX. The Believers Dignity and Duty or High Birth and Honourable Employment p. 433. Serm. XXI Saving Faith p. 455. Serm. XXII Repentance not to be repented p. 485. Serm. XXIII Of Holinesse its nature and necessity p. 554. Serm. XXIV Of the Resurrection p. 577. Serm. XXV The Day of Judgement asserted p. 605. Serm. XXVI Of Hell p. 621. Serm. XXVII Of Heaven p. 647. Serm. XXVIII The Conclusion p. 677. The INTRODUCTION 2 TIM 1.13 Hold fast the forme of sound words which thou hast heard of me in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus IT was the Character which our Lord gave of Iohn the Baptist He was a burning and a shining light Such should every Minister of the Gospel be shining with light and burning with zeal Joh. 5.25 he should have an head full of truth that he may disseminate and scatter beams of
yield to a sottish despaire there is some hope when conviction ends in groaning rather than murmuring And you do not fret against the Lords Soveraignty but complaine to him of the naughtinesse of your hearts begging his grace for Christs sake therefore go and lie at his feet and say Lord I have a blinde minde a froward heart none more I shall never of my self flie the evil forbidden performe the good commanded renounce these bewitching lusts take up such a course of service to thy blessed Majesty O take away this stony untractable heart c. You are in Prison but you are Prisoners of hope if you do so 2. To presse the Converted to thankfulnesse we were once in such a pitiful case till God plucked us as brands out of the burning we were utterly miserable and destitute of all good O blessed be God that opened the Prison door and proclaimed deliverance by Christ to poor Captives and not onely proclaimed it but wrought it for us none but an Almighty arme could loosen the Bolts and shut back the many Locks that were upon us Peter when the Angel made his Chains fall off considered the matter Acts 12.12 and went to give thanks among the Saints Oh when there were so many Doors and Bolts upon you such difficulties and disadvantages in the way of your conversion Consider it and bless God for your escape Blessed be the Lord that gave me counsel in my reines Psal 16.7 3. Let us compassionate others that are in this estate poor souls in what a sad condition are they We have not usually such a deep sense of their misery as we should have Israel was to pity strangers because they were once strangers in the Land of Egypt we our selves have been in the house of bondage O pity poor captive souls Especially doth this concern the Ministery they that do induere personam Christi that stand in the stead of Christ should induere viscera Christi put on the bowels of Christ Phil. 1.8 God is my Record how greatly I long after you in the bowels of Christ Jesus when we were ungodly and without strength Christ dyed for sinners and wilt not thou labour for them and employ thy Talent to Edification Oh if we had more weighty thoughts about the worth and danger of souls we would not do the Lords work so sleepily as usually we do but as co-workers with God we would beseech you with all earnestnesse not to receive the grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6.1 Every advantage should be taken hold off as a sinking perishing man if it be but a bough in the waters catcheth at it so should we presse you to improve all closer applications and Ministerial helps and that with compassion and tendernesse as having our selves been acquainted with the heart of a poor impotent captive sinner THE COVENANT OF Redemption OPENED Isa 53.10 When thou shalt make his soule an offering for sinne he shall see his seed c. O Fall the Prophets this Prophet Isaiah was the most Evangelical Prophet * Non tam Propheta dicendus est quam Evangelista Ep. ad Paulam Eustochium tom 3. p. 9. Quanto Propheta hic aliis antecellit Prophetis tanti haec ejus c. 53. edita Prophetia caeteris ejus praestare videtur oraculis Mo●us in Praef. ad com in c. 53. Isaiae Hierome calls him Isaiah the Evangelist Of all the Prophesies of this Prophet that which you have in this Chapter is the most Evangelical Prophesie I do not remember any one piece of Scripture in the Old Testament so often cited in the New Testament as this 53. chapter of Isaiah it being cited there no lesse than eight or nine times The Eunuch you read of in the Gospel was converted by a part of it after God by the Ministry of Philip Acts 8.30 c. had opened his eyes to see Christ held out in it In the whole Chapter you have a most lively and full description and representation of the humiliation death and passion of Jesus Christ which indeed is so exact and so consonant to what hath fallen out since that Isaiah seems here rather to pen an History than a Prophecy That Christ all along is here treated upon Ingenuè pros●●cor illud insum c●put ad fidem Christianam me adduxisse nam plus millies illud caput perlegi c. Joh. Is Levit. vid. Horneb contra Jud. l. 6. c. 1. p. 408. and not the sufferings of the Jewish state I shall not now insist upon Philip when he had this Scripture before him he preached Jesus Acts 8.35 Christ brings it down to himself Mark 9.12 And the matter of it is so convictive from that cleare light that goes along with it that several of the Jews in the reading of this Chapter have been brought over to the Christian Religion as not able to stand out against the light and evidence of it The time allotted for this exercise being but short I must fall upon my work presently I come to that Branch which I am to insist upon When thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin he shall see his seed c. In the verse before you have Christs innocency he had done no violence neither was any deceit in his mouth why then did he undergo so much It pleased the Lord to bruise him and to put him to grief How could the Father salvâ justitiâ deale thus with an innocent person and with his own Son too I answer Christ had now put himself in the sinners stead and was become his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his surety and so obnoxious to whatever the sinner had deserved in his own person and upon this the Father might without any injustice and actually did for the manifestation of the unsearchable riches of his wisdome and love bruise him and put him to grief The Lord Jesus had no sin in him by inhaesion he was holy harmless undefiled Heb. 7.26 c. but he had a great deale of sin upon him by imputation He was made sin that knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 It pleased Christ to put himself thus under our guilt and therefore it pleased the Father thus to bruise him If you ask further what had Christ to encourage him either to or in these sufferings Though there was infinite love in Christ to put him upon all this and to carry him thorough all this yet there must be something more you have therefore here very precious * Mr. B. looks upon these rather as Prophesies than as promises Append p. 39. Verse 10. Ver. 11. Ver. 12. promises made to Christ upon this his undertaking as that he should see his seed he should prolong his dayes the pleasure of the Lord should prosper in his hand he should see the travel of his soul and God would divide him a portion with the great and he should divide the spoile
to it 2. God hath ratified it by the death of his Son A mans last Will as soon as he is dead is in force and cannot then be disanulled The Covenant of Grace is a Testamentary Covenant which by the death of the Testator is so setled that there 's no altering of it Gal. 3.15 c. Hebr. 9.15 16. Again the Covenant of Grace is ratified by the seals which God hath annexed to it What was sealed by the Kings ring could not be altered Esther 8.8 God hath set his seal to this Covenant his broad seal in the Sacraments his privy seal in the witnesse of his Spirit and therefore 't is sure and cannot be reverst And further than all this 't is ratified in and by that Covenant which hath been now opened The Covenant of Redemption betwixt God and Christ secures the Covenant of Grace betwixt God and believers What God promises us he did before promise unto Christ and the F●ther would not make good his promise unto Christ if he should not make good his promises to the Saints And therefore as in other respects so in this also the Covenant may be said to be confirmed of God in Christ Gal. 3.17 with respect to that paction and stipulation that was betwixt them I lay all this before you for the strengthning of your Faith as to the stability of the Covenant of Grace so long as that Covenant stands you are safe and you see there 's no question but that Covenant will stand which God hath set upon such firme pillars This promise in the Text He shall see his seed will assuredly bring every believer into heaven O that faith might triumph in the consideration of this the Covenant of grace is sure Davids Faith did so when death was in his eye and affliction in his eye Yet he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure for this is all my salvation and all my desire 2 Sam. 23.5 When Faith begins to faint look up to this Covenant and reason thus God will not alter his promise to me but to be sure he will not alter his promise to his Son I may fail in such and such conditions but Christ hath been faithful in all every childe of God may take much comfort from this Vse 3 In the third and last place I would have you to enquire what this Covenant of Redemption is to you Here 's a blessed Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son how far are you and I interested in it or like to receive benefit by it Was it universal that all men should have an equal share in it Some very learned men I know tell us of Pactum universale betwixt the Father and the Son Daven de morte Christi c. but I crave leave to differ from them 1. Because that which they make their Pactum universale is rather a Proposition or a Promise than a Covenant as he that believeth shall be saved 2. I know not how to believe that there should be a solemn Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son upon which never any man should be the better Did ever any sinner get any thing by this universal Covenant 3. We may preach the Gospel to all upon an indefinite Proposition He that believeth shall be saved and we need not to assert an universal Covenant for the universal preaching of the Gospel This was the great reason that prevailed with these worthy men to assert such a Covenant I know no Covenant but that special Covenant into which the seed of Christ were only taken I am loth to fall into the dusty roade of Controversies all along in this Discourse where I could not avoide them I have but just cross'd them over and so presently falne in again into some more quiet and private way Passing by therefore this universal Covenant of men more moderate and the universal Redemption of others who go higher I shall only lay down that which I judge to be a great truth viz. That 't is the Elect only who are concerned in this Covenant Such and such persons there were individually considered whom God the Father in his Electing love doth freely give to Christ for these and only for these doth the Lord Jesus engage to lay down his life Redemption on the Sons part shall be no larger than Election on the Fathers part that there may be a perfect Harmony and Agreement betwixt them in their love So then Beloved if you would draw down comfort to your selves from this Covenant you must finde out this that you are the Elect of God chosen of him to be Vessels of his mercy before the world was Christ undertook to give his life only for those whom the Father had first given to him these he only pray'd for and therefore surely these he only dy'd for You 'le say I put you upon a very difficult search 't is true 't is very hard for a man to know his Election but yet it may be known otherwise the Apostle would never have urged this as a duty upon Christians To make their Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Paul knew that the Thessalonians were elected of God 1 Thess 1.4 And he did not know it by Revelation only No he gives another account of it he knew it by way of inference from what he saw of God in them Ver. 5. For our Gospel came not to you in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy Ghost c. If Election may be known by others why not by our selves I grant à parte ante so it cannot be known so the book is cl●sped and sealed and none can open it Rev. 5.3 5. but the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah but à parte post by such and such effects and operations upon the heart so it may be known Several of these might be set before you out of the Word but I 'le only instance in the grace of Faith He that believes is certainly in the number of Gods Elect he 's a chosen Vessel of mercy All the Elect shall believe sooner or later they shall close with Christ upon the termes of the Gospel John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me there 's Election shall come to me there 's Faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed None but the Elect can savingly believe The sum of all then for the clearing up of your interest in this Covenant of Redemption is this Have you the precious Faith of Gods Elect Are your hearts wrought up to a blessed accepting of Christ Tit. 1.1 Have you ever had such a sense of sin and guilt and misery as to go out of your selves and only to rest upon the Lord Christ Do you venture your souls upon his all-sufficient merits And is this Faith a working Faith an heart purifying Faith a sin mortifying Faith James 2.14 a world overcoming Faith a Faith that closes with Christ as a Lord Acts 15.9
procured purchased the price paid received God cannot now recall it Use 5. Study the death of Christ and eye it as the great pillar of your faith in troubles of conscience and settle your selves upon it OF EFFECTUAL CALLING ROM 8.28 To them who are called according to his purpose THe sacred Scriptures are a Paradise or Garden of delights This Epistle to the Romans is a most curious and artificial knot in that Garden this Chapter is the richest division in that knot furnished with sweetest flowres of Consolation antidoting the remnants of corruption that there are in our hearts and the various afflictions that we meet with in the World This Verse that I have read unto you is the fairest flowre in that Division for what can sooner revive a drooping soul than to be assured that all things shall work together for good We saith the great Apostle do not think imagine conjecture but know partly by Divine Revelation partly by our own experience that all things not only all Gifts Graces Ordinances but all Creatures all Providences all Changes Events Occurrences even those things that appear most formidable Homo oppugnans Ferus Diabolus insidians the persecutions of men the temptations of the Divel shall work not singly and apart it may be but together for good For good Yes but it is unto those that be good Hands off wicked and profane wretches you have no part nor lot in these heavenly consolations Away base Swine to your sties to your muck and mire these pearls are not for you Out ye Dogs to the garbidge that lieth upon the Dunghill the childrens bread is not for you We know that all things shall work together for good unto those that love God why so because they are called according to his purpose so Paraeus expoundeth the place and with him I perfectly agree Isa 14.27 That which God hath purposed shall not be frustrated The Lord of Hosts hath purposed and whe shall disannul it his hand is stretched out and who shall turn it back What man will suffer his purposes those purposes that he taketh up with best advice and most mature deliberation to be disappointed if he have power to accomplish them the holy purposes of God as they are ordered and directed by infinite Wisdome so they have infinite power to bring them to passe so that if I can say God hath a purpose to save me I may securely smile at all the attempts of men and devils against me and if I can say God hath Effectually Called me I may be sure God hath chosen me and hath a Purpose to save me for all the links in the golden Chain of salvation are even wrought not one of them wider or narrower than another if God have Chosen he will Call if God Call he hath Chosen Once more if I can say I love God I may be sure I am Called for I cannot love God except I have some acquaintance with him some sense and experience of his love towards me So then all our consolations are ultimately resolved into the Purpose of God this is the basis and foundation of them all that Purpose appeareth by our Effectual Calling and that Calling appeareth to be Effectual by our love to God Hence the conclusion is certain That all things shall work together for good to them that love God to them that are Called according to his Purpose But I forget my self you have heard in former Discourses under what a sad soul-killing disease poor man laboureth in his natural condition you heard likewise of a Soveraign remedy provided in the blood of Christ I am now engaged to speak to the application of that remedy in our Effectual Calling This Effectual Calling according to Saint Augustine is ingressus ad salutem our entrance into a state of salvation the first step whereby God his predestination descendeth to us and we again ascend to the glory predestinated The Doctrine I present from my Text may be this There are some persons in the World that are Effectually Called or which is all one which are Called according to the Purpose of God There is a Call of the Gospel that is not Effectual of this our Saviour speaketh when he saith Many are Called but few are Chosen How many of the poor Ministers of the Gospel may complain of multitudes in this generation saying with the children that sate in the Market place Luke 7.32 We have piped unto you and ye have not danced we have mourned to you and ye have not lamented Neither the delightful airs of mercy nor the doleful dities of judgement have moved you but the Election will certainly obtain and the Call that is according to Gods Purpose reacheth not ears only but hearts also The houre is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God John 5.25 This work of grace is presented to our view in a various dresse of words in the Scriptures it is sometimes a teaching sometimes a drawing sometimes a conversion sometimes a regeneration and all these in divers respects which I cannot stand to unfold Gratia prima Praeveniens Operans In the Schools it is the first grace preventing grace operating grace among Divines of the Reformed way it is an Internal and Effectual Call Vocatio Alta Efficax after the minde of St. Augustine When it is offered to our consideration under this notion it presupposeth two things 1. That natural men stand at a distance from God we do not use to call those that stand hard by us this was once the condition of the Ephesians Ye sometimes were far of sometimes Ephes 2.13 when surely in the time of their unregeneracy far off from whom from Christ from the Church from God and consequently from themselves but how could they be far off from God Zanchius not in spaces of place for God filleth all places with his presence as to his Essence and providential works he is not far from every one of us Acts 17.27 for in him we live and move but as to their hearts and affections all natural men are far from God God is not in all their thoughts they do not know him fear love and delight in him they do not breath after communion with him even when they draw nigh unto him with their lips their hearts are far from him If it sometimes happen that we call those that are at hand then usually they are such as are asleep sin is a deep sleep of the soul and as sleep bindeth all the senses of the outward man so sin all the powers of the inward a man under the dominion of sin can do nothing for God neither can he enjoy any thing from God it may be he dreams of great satisfactions he receiveth from the worlds dainties but when he awaketh his soul is empty Or further if they be not asleep they are such as mind something else than he would have them All
in Christs Regiment whose names are not registred in Aeternitatis Albo Wooden legs of Christs body such as have no true spiritual vital functions and operations Such as have a f●rme of godlinesse but deny the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 Sardys-like they have indeed a name that they live but are dead Rev. 3.2 With th se our Proposition meddles not 2. But true believers i. e. such as are united u●to Christ by Internal Implantation Living fruit-bearing branches John 15.5 Such as have not only Christs picture drawn on their fore-heads but Christs Spirit quickning their hearts Ephes 3.17 Nathanaels Israelites indeed John 1.47 Jews inwardly Rom. 2.29 Such as are really and effectually by the Spirit and Word of God call'd out of a state of sin enmity misery into an estate of grace union reconciliation so that now Christ is in them and they in Christ John 17.21 23. They reposing themselves in Christs bosome by love and Christ dwelling in their hearts by faith These are the Believers our Observation intends Query 2 2. What kinde of union it is that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers Sol. 1. Negatively what kinde of union it is not 1. Not a grosse carnal corporeal union not a union of bodies Christ is in heaven Acts 1.11 3.21 we on earth 2. Not an hypostatical persona● union such as is that ineffable union of the Divine and Humane natures in the person of our Immanuel the Lord Jesus 'T is indeed a union of persons but not a personal union Believers make not one person with Christ but b 1 Cor. 12.13 one body and that not one body natural but mystical True indeed the Church is call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 but that is meant of the whole Church made up of head and members which is Christ mystical Now 't is not rational to apply that to any one single Believer which is proper only to the whole body Besides should there be a personal union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers then would there be as many Christs as Believers But to us as there is but one Father so but one Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 8.6 Add that then very action of Believers would be of infinite value as is the obedience of Christs Humane nature by reason of its hypostatical union 3. Not an essential substantial union not such an union as makes Believers in any wise partakers of the substance of Christs Godhead Those expressions of Nazianzen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of old and English't by some of us of late viz. Being Godded with God and Christed with Christ are harsh and dangerous if not blasphemous To aver that Believers are partakers of the substance of Christs Godhead is to ascribe that to Believers which we dare not affirme of Chrissis Manhood it self concerning which we say that it was inseparably joyned together with the Godhead in one person but yet c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil Chalcedon without the least conversion composition or confusion True indeed Believers are said to be partakers of the Divine d 2 Pet. 1.4 nature but how not of Gods substance which ●s wholly incommun cable but Believers by the exceeding great and precious promises as by so many Conduit-pipes have excellent graces conveyed unto them whereby they are made like to God in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse wherein the Image of God which was stamp't on man at his Creation consists Ephes 4.24 Col. 3.10 4. Not such an union as mounts up Believers to an equality with Christ in any respect He is the blessed and only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords 1 Tim. 6.15 In all things he hath and must have the preheminence Col. 1.18 The best of Saints have but their Ephah their Homer their stint and e Ephes 4.16 measure of excellencies and Divine Endowments But now Jesus Christ in his Humane nature united to the Divine was sanctified and anointed with the Holy Spirit f John 3.34 Psal 45.7 Hebr. 1.9 above measure we have but our mites drams scruples in him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2.3 Our Lord Jesus is his Fathers Gazophylacium the great Magazine and Store-house of infinite excellencies It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 Yea in him dwells all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 Three gradations the Godhead the fulnesse of the Godhead all the fulnesse of the Godhead dwells in Christ bodily 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. not only truly and really in opposition to the Ark and Temple in which the Godhead was typically but personally to distinguish the indwelling of the Manhood of Christ from all accidental extrinsecal and integral unions Thus Negatively 2. Positively What kinde of union it is that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and tru● B lievers g Nostra ipsius conjunctio non miscet personas nec unit substantias sed affectus consociat confaederat voluntates Cypr. Cyprian tells us in the general 't is not such an union as speaks a conjunction of persons or a connection of natures but a consent of wills and confederation of affections but this is too lax and general more particularly therefore it is 1. A spiritual union He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit i. e. one with Christ not in a grosse and carnal but spiritual manner As man and wife united make one flesh Gen. 2.24 so Christ and Believers united by the Spirit and Faith make up one spiritual Christ Believers are made partakers of one and the same Spirit with Christ Christs Spirit is really communicated to them and abides in them 2. A mystical deep profound union This is a great mys ery saith the Apostle but I speak of Christ and the Church Ephes 5.32 We read of three great mystical dazling unions of three distinct persons united in one God 1 John 5.7 of two distinct natures meeting in one person in our Immanuel Luke 1.35 Col. 2.9 of two distinct natures and persons united by one Spirit that 's the union betwixt Christ and true Believers This is a great mystery a deep union Hence it is that it is compared to the mystery of the very Trinity as being like to the union of persons in the Divine nature Christ in the Father Believers in Christ and Christ in Believers Joh. 14.20 So Christ prayes Joh. 17.21 that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Hence may be gathered a likeness though not an equality of union In the union betwixt Christ and Believers is shadow'd out the union betwixt Christ and his Father This is one of the great Arcana Evangelii 't is a mystical union 3. And yet it is a true real union not a fancy only not an imaginary union not like the union of the mouth and meat in a dream Isa 29.8 No but
John 15.4 5. Oh! let 's then labour to see and be truly sorrowful for all our sins and pray Lord Turn thou us Jer. 31.18 and we shall be turned from all our sins and accept of a whole Christ for our only Lord and Saviour oh sith we cannot wash our hands in innocency le ts be washing them daily in the tears of true penitency let 's go to the Fountain open'd to wash in for sin Z●ch 13.1 Isa 30. ult Rev. 20.10.14 15.21.8 and for uncleanness that we may not be cast into the River and Lake of fire and brimstone Oh! let 's now bathe our souls in the blood of Christ that everlasting burnings may not hereafter seize upon us Hence Learn 3. Not to blame Gospel-Ministers for preaching of terrors hereby they would stave us off from running head-long into Hell and bring us to repentance that we may not be cast into that prison where there is no place for repentance 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing the terrors of the Lord we perswade men in love to their precious souls we are bound being assured we must give an account to awake our hearers Hebr. 13.17 lest they forget God and be turned into hell we dare not betray your pretious souls to gratifie you at present Psal 9.17 and indulge you in your sins as the Apostle says We must not for meat destroy the work of God Rom. 14.15.20 for preferment favour or respect from you at present we dare not suffer your immortal souls to perish without warning oh friends be not angry with us the Embassadours of Jesus Christ when we see any of you hastning down the broad way which leads to Hell as sure as we are here now if we then cry fire fire to bring you back You have no more reason to think us your enemies for this warning of you and telling you the truth in love Gal. 4.16 than any of your children have to think the most dear and tender Parents amongst you were their enemies when seeing them through carelessnesse ready to fall into fire or water they should cry out oh take heed Children or you are irrecoverably lost Learn 4. Not to grudge sinners their portion in this World Davids advice should be our practice enforced from this very Doctrine viz. Not to fret our selves at evil doers nor to be envious against the workers of iniquity Psal 37.1 2. 9.17 Prov. 24.20 for they shall soon be cut down as the grasse they shall be turned into Hell their foolish prosperity will destroy them their candle shall be put out and that in a snuff which will never cease stinking why then should we be offended at their prosperity here who are reserved to an extremity and eternity of torment hereafter Mal. 3.15 it is a grosse mistake to call the proud happy or to think the godly most miserable 1 Cor. 15.13.19 because they are here sometimes a little under a cloud The Psalmist was tempted to it but the knowledge of this Doctrine in the Sanctuary Ps 73.3.18 19 did soon rectifie his judgement and made him conclude that God had set them in slippery places to be cast down into destruction Job 20.6 7. and utterly consumed with terrors and perish for ever we had more need to pity than repine at our wicked Neighbours Mat. 19.24 with Luke 16.25 having their good things here when we consider how hard a matter 't is to have good things here with Dives and with Lazarus too hereafter in Abrahams bosome Learn 5. Lastly To admire and be greatly affected with the superlative love of Christ in undergoing that punishment in our stead if we will receive him for our Lord and Saviour which will be extream and eternal torment to all that do refuse him And if he be Judge Mat. 10.14.15 39 40. they who receive not his Embassadors in his Name are of that number Oh! who would not then kiss the Son that believe the wrath of God will inflict these eternal torments Oh! Christians such I wish we may a l be in deed and truth let 's bless and kisse this blessed Son of God that bare for us this insupportable wrath Psal 2.12 1 Thes 1.10 Colos 2.15 Hosea 13.14 1 Cor. 15.54 55. Mat. 23.14 Hebr. 2.3 Gal. 3.13 Hebr. 2.9 even Jesus which delivered us from the wrath to come and triumphed over principalities and over tho Grave and Hell the greatnesse of the damnation we are exposed to by nature doth greaten the salvation purchased by grace Oh! blessed Jesus thou wast cursed here and tasted'st the death that was accursed even this in thy sentence Isa 53.5 7 8. Rom. 8.1 Mark 3.29 with Heb. 6.2 5.9 Acts 2.24 Psal 116 3. John 8.51 thou wast bruised afflicted and broken of God for us but thou was taken from Prison and from judgement and everlasting condemnation for it was not possi●le that Thou shouldst be holden of any pains so that though every Believer shall see a Temporal yet shall he never see Eternal Death but inherit Eternal Life OF HEAVEN MATTH 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world THE Description of Heaven is a work fitter for an Aaron the High Priest of the Most High when upon Mount Hor he is stripping himself of the vile body of sin or for a Moses when on the top of Nebo after a Pisgah prospect * Deut. 34.5 as the Jews comment he died at the * Cant. 1.2 kiss of God refunding that * Gen. 2.7 breath of life and expiring his soul into the bosome of God Nay more fit to be described by a pen taken from the Wing of a Cherubim than the stammering tongue of any mortal man For whoever attempts to speak of an heavenly state while himself is on earth his discourses of that must needs be like the dark dreams and imaginations of a child concerning the affaires of this world while it self is yet swadled and cradled in the womb Yet discourses of Heaven were never more seasonable upon earth When * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dio. Laer. Anaxagoras was accused as not studying Politicks for his Countryes good he replied I have a very great care of my Country pointing up to heaven if ever Christians had cause to make all honest haste to heaven 't is in a sinful and a perverse generation when the waters cover the earth whether should a Dove-like soul fly but to the Ark of God when Gods judgements and his Avengers of blood threaten us on every hand what City of refuge can we run to but the Sanctuary of God when we know not how soon the members of Christs body in conformity to their Head may be called to sweat drops of blood 't is wisdom for us with our bitter hearbs to keep the Passover and to think on that * Luke 22.12 large upper Roome wherein we may be Feasted
Christ said the poor Martyr but I can dye for Christ Love will say to the truth as she said to her Mother in Law Whether thou goest I will go and where thou lodgest I will lodge thy people shall be my people and thy God my God where thou diest I will die and there will I be buried the Lord do so to me Ruth 1.16 17. and more also if ought but death part me and thee Gen. 34.3 Love is the glue that makes the heart cleave to the Object as it is said of Shechem His soule clave unto Dinah the daughter of Jacob. Minuit Felix octa Love is the twist of soules Crederes unam animam in duobus esse divisam it is but one soul that informs Lovers Christians if you would hold fast the truth LOVE IT Love hates putting away 2 Thes 2.11 12 when ever your love begins to decay you are in danger of Apostacy For this cause God shall send them strong delusions to believe lies for what cause why because they received not the love of the truth Christians look to your standing there is much of this judicial blast abroad the generality of Professors have contented themselves w●th and rejoyced in the Light of the Truth and in the Notion of the Truth and in the expressions of the Truth but they have lost their love to the truth Parts without grace hath been the precipice of this evil and adulterous generation the foolish Virgins of this age have got Oyle only in their Lamps but none in their Vessels and so perish 2 Pet. 3.17 You therefore Beloved seeing ye know these things before beware lest you also being led away with the error of the wicked fall from your own steadfastness Let it be your care to receive the truth in the power of the truth in the impressions of the truth upon your hearts in the love of the truth Love the truth even when the truth seems not to love you when it makes against your Carnal interests when it calls for your right eye and your right hand The right eye of your sinfull pleasure the right hand of your dishonest gain when the truth comes to take away all your false Principles and to take away all your false evidences not to leave you worth a Duty or a Church-priviledge not to leave you so much as a Creed or a Pater-noster or a good meaning but casts you out of all which self and flesh hath counted your gain in point of salvation Ezech. 16.5 Phil. 3.7 to the loathing and abhorring of your persons c. Yet even then I say Receive the truth in the love of it God intends you more good in it then you are aware of and therefore say with young Samuel Ure se●a corripe ut ae●ernum parcas Bern. Speak Lord for thy servant heareth and with Bernard do Lord wound me scorch me slay me spare me not now that thou mayest spare me for ever Thirdly There is yet another means Ver. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that is in the verse next to my Text relating to the same duty though under a various expression That good thing which was committed to thee KEEP The good or excellent trust and depositum was either the Ministerial Office with the gifts and graces which Timothy received by Ordination for the edifying of the Church or else The form of sound words here committed to him in my Text whichsoever this duty is incu●cated upon Timothy again and again that he must keep it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 preserve it as under Lock and Key and saith Beza He keeps his depositum that improveth it so that the depositor findes no cause why he should take it away But how shall Timothy or any other Evangelical Minister or Christian be able so to keep it it followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Occupatio est by the Holy Ghost The duty indeed is very difficult but by calling in the help of the Spirit of God Believers shall be enabled to do it and he is not far from every one of them Rom. 8.26 Col. 1.29 for so it follows by the Holy Ghost WHICH DWELLETH IN VS He is IN them as a Principle of life and power by his vertue and influence helping their infirmities and working in them mightily Great is the opposition that Believers meet withall and Satan and this present evill world hath been too hard for many not Professors only but Ministers also men that seemed to be stars of the first magnitude they have proved to be but falling-stars meer Comets that for a time make a great blaze but quickly extinguish They went on from us because they were not of us 1 Joh. 2.19 But real Saints true Believers shall hold out why because greater is he that is in them then he that is in the world 1 Joh. 4.4 keep by the HOLY GHOST THAT DWELLETH IN VS Christians walk in the Spirit and pray for the Spirit cry mightily to God for the continual presence and operation of the Holy Ghost and for your encouragement Luke 11.13 take along with you that blessed promise of our Saviour If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts unto your children how much more shall your heavenly Father give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Now to the King eternal immortal invisible 1 Tim. 1.7 the only wise God be honor and glory for ever and ever Amen FINIS Books Printed for Ralph Smith at the Bible in Corn-Hill THE works of that learned and laborious Divine John Weemse in four Volumes 4. Mr. Byfield on the Collossions fol. Mr. Thomas Edwards Gangraena four Volumes in 4. Ainsworths works fol. And his communion of Saints 12. Dr. Staughtons heavenly conversation 12. Bp. Downam on the Covenant of grace 12. Robins Essayes 12. Mr. Dicksons Exposition on Matthew Mr. Brinsley a learned Treatise of Christs Mediatorship and the souls implantion 8. Mr. Brinsley Brazen Serpent and Christs Membership Mr. Dicksons Exposition on the whole book of the Psalms one Volume 8. second edition Mr. Watsons works viz. 1. The Art of Divine Contentment the fourth edition 2. The Christians Charter shewing the priviledges of believers in this life and the life to come the fifth edition Mr. Ashes Sermon at Mr. Whitakers funeral Dr. Spurstow on the Promise second edition Retorford on the Covenant of grace Mr. Cottons Exposition on the book of Ecclesiastes and Canticles second edition A learned Treatise proving the Deity of the Holy Ghost by Mr. Estwick Mr. Gurnals Christian Armor third Edition Mr. Hutcheson on the Gospel according to St. John in fol. On the twelve small Prophets second edition Mr. Gurnals Christians Armour the second part Dr. Guile on the Canticles AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE Relating to the chief Heads handled in this TREATISE A. ADAM able of Creation to keep the Law p. 108 109. The one man by whom sin entred into the world p. 136.
to disobey him this renders them inexcusable at the last Secondly To those who are Atheists voto in desire Psal 14. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God the heart is the Fountain of desires he wishes there were no God this Atishem springs from the former men live as if there were no God and then wish there were none guilt always begets fear and fear hatred and that strikes at the being of the object that is hated as Malefactors desire there were no Law nor Judge that they might escape deserved punishment Well their desires are as visible to God as their actions are to men and in the day of Revelation there will be a proportion of Wrath answerable to the Wickednesse of their hearts Thirdly To those who are Atheists judicio in opinion these low running dregs of time afford us many of these Monsters for many to reconcile their principles with their practices that they may undisturbedly enjoy their lusts take this as an Opiate potion that there is no God but this is the most irrational and impious blasphemy 1. Irrational for the Name of God is written in so fair a Character upon this universal frame that even whil'st men run they may read it and therefore God never wrought a miracle to convince Atheisme because his ordinary works convince it Moreover the notion of a Deity is so deeply imprest on the Tables of all mens hearts that to deny God is to kill the soul in the eye to quench the very principles of common nature to leave never a vital spark or seed of humanity behinde 't is as if an ungracious soul should deny he ever had a Father He that does ungod God does unman himself 2. 'T is the most impious 't is formally Deicidium a killing of God as much as in them lies but there are no Atheists in hell the Divels believe and tremble he that willingly quenches that light which is planted in his breast he is passing from that voluntary darknesse to a worse like an offender on the Scaffold he doth but blinde his eyes to have his head cut off he goes from inward darknesse to utter darknesse Use 2 Vse 2. Let us stablish our hearts in the belief of Gods Being in the latter times the World is wholly disposed to Atheisme as the Scripture attributes the ruine of the Old World to their Atheisme and Profanesse so it foretells the universal disease of the last Age will be Atheisme and Infidelity Luke 18.8 Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh shall he finde faith on the earth it were impossible there should be such a palpable contradiction between the lives of men and this fundamental of Religion did they with assurance and certainty believe it Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doth good Atheisme is the root of Profanesse moreover the spiritual mysteries of Religion which exceed the flight of reason are opposed by many upon the account of their Atheisme they question the truth of Gods Being and therefore disbelieve supernatural Revelations let us then treasure up this truth First As the foundation of faith for all the truths of Religion spring from this as their common principle the watering of the root will cause the branches to flourish so the confirming of this will render our assent to the doctrine of the Gospel more clear and strong Secondly As the fountain of obedience the true and sound belief of every holy truth always includes a correspondency in the believer to the thing believed and this must descend from the understanding to the affections and the conversation Now the fundamental duties which we are to pay to God are love fear dependance and submission to the will of his Law and of his Providence 1. Love He is the supreme object of love for his excellencies and benefits Psal 5.11 Let them also that love thy Name rejoyce in thee the Name of God imports those glorious Attributes whereby he hath exprest himself to us all the excellencies of the creature meet eminently in him and all their imperfections are removed in him there is nothing unlovely in worldly things how refined soever they be there is an allay of dregs the all that is in them is mixed with corruption but in God the all that he is is perfection in the most glorious creature as a creature there is aliquid nihili some imperfection it is not exactly fitted for the soul but God is the Adequate and compleat object of our love There is such an infinite eminency in God that we are obliged to a proportionable affection the first and great Commandment is Matth. 22.36 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy strength all the kinds and degrees of our love are due to him we must put no bounds nor limits to it in him it must begin in him it must end a remisser love is a degree of hatred we disparage his excellencies by the coldnesse of our affections O had we but eyes to see his beauty how would all the excellencies of the creatures become a very Glow-worme that only glitters in the night Moreover God planted this affection in the nature of man that it might be terminated upon himself as its centre and treasure as our natural faculties are fitted for their several objects the eye for colours the ear for sounds the palate for tasts so love is fitted for God that being as the Soveraign which sways all our powers Love is called pondus animae that sets all the wheels in the clock of the soul a going this sets the understanding a work in the serious contemplation of the Divine excellencies it diverts the thoughts from other things and fixes them on God it excites strong desires and earnest aspirings after him it stirs up zeal which is flamma amoris love in a flame to remove all obstacles which hinder the most intimate union with him it produces joy when the soul reposes its self in God and with infinite sweetness possesses him it causes the greatest diligence alacrity and resolution in all our ways to please him for love is ever the spring and rule of all our actions such as it is such likewise will they be thus we may see that God as there is in him a union of all excellencies challenges the most intense and vehement degree of our love he being only fitted for it and that our love being a superlative affection is only proper to God and therefore to love any creature without God or in an equal manner to him is to Deify the creature to place it in the room of God and so it renders us guilty of Idolatry in a spiritual sense But such is the ignorance of mens minds and the depravednesse of their wills that few there be who love God 't is true there may be something like love in natural men to
it First This book presses holinesse and godlinesse so as never did any in the world before nor since and gives such Arguments for it as never was heard of nor the wit of man could ever have thought of He that would walk in the Wildernesse of Paganism might hear and there spy a flower growing amongst many weeds now and then a Philosopher that gives you some good directions that concern righteousnesse and external behaviour but the Scripture is a garden wherein whatsoever hath been recommended by all the sober men in the world is put together and wherein they were defective that 's there made up for they were defective especially in this one great point deep humility and though you shall finde many things that concern the exercise of some Christian graces yet in the real practice of humility a man would wonder how incredibly they fell short But as for the Scripture what would you have it bids you live soberly righteously godly Tit. 2.12 it bids you lie at Gods feet as his creature to do with you what he will it would have you like God himself that 's the end of the promises that we should partake of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 it bids you be holy as God is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 it charges upon you whatever thing is good is just is lovely Phil. 4.8 it commands your very thoughts it 's so far from suffering you to do hurt to your brother as not to suffer you to think hurt it 's so far from allowing to act rapine and injustice as not to allow to do any thing that savours of coveting it binds the very heart and soul O what a place of universal calmnesse would this world be should all serve one another in love should all study each others good we should never do injury if any did we should forgive him we should endeavour to be perfect as God is Trypho calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore the Jew could not but say the precepts of the Gospel were wonderful great excellent and transcendent indeed Behold the Scripture is a doctrine according to godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 truth according to godlinesse Tit. 1.1 the mystery of godlinesse 1 Tim. 3.16 so that in one word whatever God would think fit for man to do to that God that made him whatever is fit for a sinner to do to a holy God against whom he hath trangressed and between man and man all that is the designe of the Scripture And what the Scripture thus commends it presses by incomparable Arguments shall I name a few 1. Behold God is manifested in the flesh for this purpose 1 Tim. 3.16 Is it nothing sinner that thou wilt live foolishly vainly what wilt thou think to see God dwelling in humane nature to see God live a poor scorned reproached contemned life intimating this great truth that it 's not so unseemly a thing for the Sonne of God himself to live a poor miserable life as 't is for a man to be an impenitent sinner if you remain a wilful and impenitent sinner thou wouldst in thy pride be like God and have no Superiour above thee Behold God condescends and becomes like to thee that if possible he might bring thee back again thou that art a sinner suspectest whether God will do thee good behold how close he comes to thee he dwells in thy own nature 2. Behold the beloved Sonne of God dying upon the Crosse for thee What would you think if any of your Parents should suffer their childe to dye on the behalf of an enemy would you not think it should move that enemy Behold my Sonne in whom I am well-pleased methinks God takes not a quarter of that content in the whole Creation which he does when he speaks of his Sonne yet this Sonne suffered for sinne the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 methinks this love should constrain us 2 Cor. 5.14 Poor soul thou art ready to think God is become thine enemy when sicknesse and death comes thou art ready to say hast thou found me O mine enemy here 's trouble in the world how shall I know whether God intends good Behold it 's beyond peradventure God intends good to a sinner because he dwelt in our nature and his Sonne dyed for us and his Sonne felt pain and infirmity and therefore he may love thee and you need not question any thing of this nature is a hindrance of Gods love the case of a sinner is not so desperate but that a man may be accepted and loved of God for Christs sake will not this move you 3. You have promises of eternal life and threatnings of eternal misery Never did any Philosopher or any other man threaten If you will not observe such and such precepts I l'e throw you into eternal torments nor never did any man say I will give you such glory in heaven but the Scripture does behold life and immortality are brought to light by Christ there 's a future resurrection and this body is like an old house pull'd down by and by it will be a brave building again a spiritual body and we shall shine like the Sunne in the Firmament and be equal to the Angels of God Matth. 13.43 and he like God and Christ Now we know not what we shall be but when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.1 2. And having this hope who would not purifie himself even as God is pure who would not live soberly righteously and godly looking for that blessed hope c If you did but apprehend this glory Tit. 2 13 were not your minde senselesse its impossible you could be quiet without getting an interest in it And how great the day of judgment will be it tells you how our thoughts words and actions and every thing we go about shall come under a severe scrutiny 4. The worth of our souls we minde our bodies but a soul is better than a world The Scripture saith the Sonne of God dyed for souls we never understood so much what souls were wor h as now we do when we see God taking such care and having such designs and thoughts from all eternity 5. The fairest and the most reasonable condition of eternal happinesse and the greatest strength to perform it that 's offer'd in the Gospel Suppose we were sensible we were liable and obnoxious to Gods wrath and could go to heaven and beseech God that he would be pleased not to execute that wrath upon us do but think what terms you would be willing to propose to God would you come and say Lord punish me not for what is past though I intend to do the same thing but he that should say Lord forgive me I am sorry for that which is done and it shall be the businesse of my life to live more circumspectly to thee this is the great thing the Scripture proposes
and off-spring we expected that the beauty of his mind the harmony of his will the holinesse of his desires the absolutenesse of his Soveragnty should have fallen to us as a Princely inheritance and therefore Adam falling it is but just that the entaile of sin and death should be fixed upon us 3. Now the third thing to be opened in the finishing of which the doctrinal part will be dispatcht is to shew that Adams sin is not propagated to us by imitation but by generation against the heretical Pelagian And this shall be briefly coucht under the evidence of a five-fold Argument Arg. 1 Arg. 1. As our Divines seasonably observe Christs righteousnesse is not only proposed to us to be imitated we should then all fall sho t in writing after the copy but those that lay hold on his righteousnesse by faith they are changed and renewed in their minds there is a physical communication of this righteousness they feele the power of his death in the crucifying of their lusts and the vertue of his resurrection in their newnesse of minde and life Rom. 6.5 Phil. 3.10 as the Apostle most pathetically So Adams sin is not only our Copy but our corruption it doth not only seduce but defile our natures not only entice but condemne our persons Adam was not only a sinful pattern but a sinful Parent the plague of his sin hath infected the humane nature not only me but man-kind Arg. 2 Arg. 2. Baptisme that is administred to little ones to our infants it cannot be thought to blot out sins of imitation for they are guilty of none then Baptisme would in vaine be administred to our infants and this raises the feud of Anabaptists against this great truth of Original sin They deny the sin of Infants that they may deny the Baptisme Now we cannot conceive that tha blessed Ordinance of Infant Baptisme should be administred for no designs and purposes and why doth the Apostle call Baptisme the Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3.5 were there no stain in Infants what need of a Laver or of washing Arg. 3. And as Ambrose observes David ait ante usuram lucis Ambrose se accipere originis injuriam David complains that he lay under the stain of original sin before he was blest with the first light of the Sun he was dog'd with native corruption when the womb bore him it bore a living but a leprous childe he was wrap't in sin before he was wrapt in swadling cloaths Arg. 3 Arg. 4. And how many offend in the world who think nothing of Adam they transgresse and look not on his Copy And what is murder so often acted in the world to the earing of an Apple What proportion is there between those two Sins Adams eating of an Apple and Cains shedding of his brothers blood How many transgressours are there in the world that ne-ever heard of his offence or that ever there was such a man in the world whom did Philosophers imitate in their sin that opinionated the world to be eternal as Aristotle and his followers Arg. 4 Arg. 5. And that Argument of a learned man is most considerable Si peccatum originis sit tantùm ab imitatione Paulus non dixisset ex Adamo fluxisse peccatum sed à Diabolo quia ipse peccandi exemplum dedit i. e. If original sin were only propagated in a way of imitation Paul would never have said that sin entred the world by Adam but by Satan for he set the first pattern of sinning And now the doctrinal part is dispatch't I shall only annex some few things for the clearer evidence of this truth Arg. 5 1. If the guilt of Adams sin be not imputed to us why do our Infants of en labour under the wracking torments of some distempers and why often is the Cradle turn'd into a Coffin why come they crying and moaning into the world why doth palenesse of face plenteousnesse of tears and a multiplic●ty of diseases seize upon them as the prisoners of sin Surely God cannot forget the bowels of a Father this could not befall our Infants were not the hand of justice armed with sin and guilt let us not conceive God trying practice upon poor moaning innocents 2. If Adams sin be not inherent in us why have we not free will to good why do we not naturally burn in love to Jesus Christ and flourish with all vivacity in duty why flye we not to the Sanctuary as to our Paradise but on the contrary why do we draw the Chain of a body of death after us Duty is our burden sin our Element Rom. 7.24 the world our beloved the creature our Idol How are we dragg'd to service we flye to sin but are drawn to duty And in a word how come our understandings to be prisons of darknesse our wills stages of rebellion our affections heaps of dung or drosse for naturally we love sin or the creature what was then the inoffensivenesse of infancy thus to envenome our natures how came in the evil heart of unbelief Hebrews 3.12 3. This Truth of original sin was generally held in the Church till Pelagius who liv'd in the fifth Century confirmed by divers Councels in the Primitive times Quis ante Discipulum Pelagii prodigiosum Cael estium reatu praevaricationis Adaegenus humanum negavit esse astrictum Concilio Melevitano Concilio Toletano c. and the sixth Council of Carthage This truth hath been acknowledged by Heathens Plato complained Homines naturâ suâ esse pravos induci non posse ut justitiam colant i. e. That men were naturally very evil and could not be induced to the embracement of what was righteous And Cicero lamentatus est homines à naturâ novercâ in lucem edi Cicero complains that men were brought into the world by nature their step-mother the Heathens themselves universally enjoyned a strict Discipline to curb the ranknesse and untowardnesse of nature Actus ille Adami quo ipse peccavit omnibus imputandus est censendus omnium esse proprius c. A lap Nay this truth hath been confirmed by the most learned of the Papists A lapide in his Comment on the Romans acknowledgeth that that one act of Adams in eating the forbidden fruit wherein he offended is to be imputed to all men and is to be reputed the sin of all men and from hence it comes to passe that every childe of Adam hath contracted a necessity of sinning even with his first breath Nay the very Rabbies have attested this truth and we finde it clearly though sadly witnessed by our constant and much to be bemoaned experiences and here we might suppena and summon two witnesses for the further verification of it our own aversenesse to good and our natural propensity to evil 4. Nor was this truth ever opposed but upon some designe The Pelagians opposed it to maintain the perfection and power of nature which is mans proper Idol The Papists have opposed
the whole earth mans baser part the body but his celestial part his heaven-born soul is contaminated by it the sun moon and stars in it are turn'd into blood 2. This Original sin is diffused derived and communicated 2. Diffusive whereas actual sins are not Personal faults of Parents are not imputed to Children and defile not their Children unlesse imitated or unbewail'd Childrens teeth are not set on edge by the sowre grapes their Parents thus eat but Original sin being the sin of the nature of the Parent becomes the sin of the Child and will be entailed further to the last man upon earth for Children have the nature but not the person of their Parents An Objection answered And let it not seem strange that God should suffer this original sin to be so vastly diffusive that he should not exempt his own people wholly from it There is the same reason that corruption should remaine amongst them which there was for the abode of the Canaanites amongst the Israel of God of old It tryes them and brings them often to Bochim and makes their life a vall y of teares and whilst they go on their w●y weeping and crying unto God by reason of it they beare precious fruit for God does make good come unto believers out of this great evil making it an Antidote against carnal confidence and self-self-love a meanes to exercise their faith and a sure evidence of his own power and presence in the keeping of them Besides it is farre better for us by this occasion to be under the second Adam then ever it could have been being under the first The first Adam was a head of clay of the earth earthly The second Adam is a head of gold 1 Cor. 15.47 The Lord from heaven Though we were made holy in the first Adam yet having a mutable will we might under him perish everlastingly but they that are in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting life a glory beyond what we could have had if we had continued in innocency for under that first Covenant we could have expected only a reward answerable to our own works but under the second we hope for glory in some measure proportionable to Christs merits Though we know not what that glory is yet this we know that when he appeares we shall be like him 1 Joh. 3.2 And in the mean while as the Israelites who were before but Brick-burners and potters by reason of the Canaanites amongst them learn'd the art of warre and became Renowned soldiers so the true Israel of God by this meanes put on their whole spiritual Armour and dayly fight the good fight of faith and become more than Conquerors to conquer a lust being more glorious than to conquer a Kingdome through Christ that strengthens them when these Philistines are upon them as upon Sampson then the Spirit of the Lord comes upon them 〈◊〉 and what lust is able to stand before his Spirit Josh 10 24 25 As Joshuah took the five Kings and shut them up in the Cave at Makkedah till the Battel was over and then slew them So the Lord is pleased to shut up and restrain the corruption of his people in the Cave of their body untill their warfare be finished but then he brings them out and slays them they shall then never see these enemies more And therefore holy Paul who cryes out Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me addes presently I thank God c. as if he had breathed the same breath out in praise which he had taken in in prayer for deliverance so soon does God answer prayer made against this sin according to his will And thus we have seen something towards the explaining of this difficult matter Application The nature of this undertaking being more to informe your judgments than to deal with your affections I shall the rather hope to be excus'd if I be not proportionably so large in the Application which I am now come unto and shall lay down what I intend to speak to under these two heads 1. Of Instruction 2. Of Exhortation to inform your judgment and to quicken your practice 1. If we all have corruption thus by nature inherent in us 1. Use of Instruction it may silence all complaints against God for exposing of us to such wants and miseries at our very entrance into the world and so all along during our continuance in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence come evils was a question which did much puzzle the Philosophers of old here we are resolved of it The evil of sin and sorrow com●s from this root No wonder now that our children are more miserable than the young ones of Beasts or Birds because they are more si●ful 2. Hence it follows that in the very best there is a mixture borh in their principles and actions There was two in Rebecca's womb there are two in their hearts the Old m●n and the New man nature a●d grace flesh and Spirit Hence that striving that ●ombate betwixt them daily The unregenerate person this sin reigns in his body is as a Temple and his soul as a Shrine for this his Diana This keeps the house and all things are in peace In the glorified Saint this sin is wholly done away this unclean thing does not go with him into the new Jerusalem Only the gracious person is the field in whom the flesh warreth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh He is like the Moon which hath its spots when it receives the fullest influence from the Sun sin in him will not dye willingly but as a dying man multiplies his stroaks at his enemy though they are comparatively but weak ones 2. Use of Exhortation For Exhortation let me recommend these following Duties 1. To a right knowledge of this sin 1. Get a right knowledge of thy self according to this doctrine it is folly in men to have travel'd much abroad and to be strangers in their own Countrey It will be found the greatest folly for thee to be never so knowing in other things if thou beest a stranger to thine own heart and dost not know that it is desperately wicked The very Heathens apprehended this precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Know thy self to be of such consequence as to grace it the more they said it came down from heaven I am sure it is Gods message unto you from this truth this day Know your selves unlesse you know your selves thus lost Christs coming will be in vain unto you John 3.4 10. for he came only for the lost sheep Nicodemus had never doubted so much of Regeneration and a new birth had he understood the defilement of his first birth I am afraid there are many Masters in Israel that are ignorant of this still or else they would labour not only to reforme their lives but especially to get new hearts also thou canst not kill one lust unlesse thou layest the Axe
is wrath in Domestique relations And wrath as terribly mixeth in Publick Relations Ministers preach not oversee not are not ensamples to the flock have not experience nor ability or care rightly to divide the Word of truth and muzzle the gain-sayer Misled themselves and mislead others c. Magistrates mind not the things of Christ are tight and vigilant over the good indulgent to the evil Beare the sword in vaine c. Such vials there is much wrath poured through 5. Upon the holy things of God and of his people Ours come not with acceptance to God The Lords not with savour closenesse authority c. to us The very book of the Covenant needs sprinkling Heb. 9.19 The Law which is pure and clean Psal 19.8 9. is made a killing letter 2 Cor. 3.7 The Gospel which is the grace of God bringing salvation Tit. 2.11 is made a savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 the Lords Supper an eating and drinking judgmsnt to our selves 1 Cor. 11.29 and Christ himself is made for falling Luke 2.34 and a stone of stumbling and rock of offence 1 Pet. 2.8 without Christs blood taking away sin the very book of grace had never been opened Rev. 5.4 and though the choicest in it self being opened would never have been useful unto us and sorer wrath cannot be than to curse our very blessings Mal. 2.2 and the very means of grace that they shall be uselesse and for judgment 6. Upon the whole man the person is under the effects of wrath 1. Inslaved to the Divel This is plain 1. From the Scriptures Else converting grac● could not a Col. 1.13 deliver from the power of darknesse nor men be said when b 2 Tim. 2.26 God gives repentance to recover themselves out of the snare of the Divel that were taken captive by him at his will 2. From the likenesse of mans work with Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men of a Trade are ordinarily of a company together but here the rule failes not 1 Joh. 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Divel that is by doing the same work discovers himself of communion with and in thraldome to him The first finders of a Craft are Fathers and Successors and Imitators in the Craft are called children Gen. 4.20 we naturally and freely do the Divels work John 8.44 The lusts of your Father ye will do and have no minde to the Lords work nor can brook the same to be done circumspectly and exactly by others Acts 13.10 Thou child of the Divel enemy of all righteousness 3. From the community of principles the very mind and will of Satan is engraven upon our spirits and expresse themselves inefficacy and obstinacy of sinning These principles are Satans image instead of Gods 4. From the natural mans subjection to the guidance of Satan regenerate persons are led by the Spirit but Satan filleth the hearts of natural men He had possession of Judas his heart and by a piece of mony rides deeper into him and prevails to engage him to betray Christ This is a lamentable branch of the natural mans misery 2. He is banished and separated from God both from conformity to and communion with him and doth electively banish and cast himself forth of the Lords presence This appears 1. From the former point viz. mans fellowship with Satan there cannot be fellowship with God and with Satan together These communions are inconsistent in the same Spirit at the same time in a reigning intense degree 2. From Gods end and his Apostles and Ministers in the writing explanation and application of the Scripture 1 John 1.3 That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. Were this fellowship already in the state of nature there needed not this means of rebringing into fellowship with God Defiers of the evil one with their mouths are not the lesse in league with him in their hearts 3. From the language of the carnal heart Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thee This they speak internally and the desire of their souls is to be rid of God notions of God are a saplesse and burdensome piece of knowledge Rom. 1.18 They did not like to retain God in their knowledge To banish our selves is the heighth of mans sin and folly and to be banished the heighth of the Lords wrath and of mans misery Now do we know what a man loseth in the losse of God that is impossible for any created understanding to conceive The world is a Dunge●n without the Sun the body a carrion without the soul but neither so necessary as God is to the soul A taste of the goodnesse of God made the world and the lives of the Martyrs nothing to them Psal 30.5 In thy favour is life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindnesse is better than life The very heaven of heaven lies in the enjoyment of God and the hell of hell in the losse of him The losse of him is the losse of the Fountain from which all kinde of good doth or can come The losse of the cause is the losse of all the effects of all the blessed affections influences and promises of God The losse of all those blessed hopes that fill the soul with joy unspeakable and full of glory No prayer praises faith love fear or any spark of other grace are to be found in truth upon the hearth of that heart Now the person in league with the Devil and banished from and without God in the world must needs be miserable and accursed 3. He is discontented and unprofitable in every condition Rom. 3.12 They are altogether become unprofitable The Holy Ghost makes a natural man of no more use than rotten things which we cast forth to the dunghill for their unprofitablenesse This is a dreadful ruine that a creature so excellent should become unprofitable to others and very far from comfort to himself in any condition The wife having all for use and the husbands heart hath nothing because not the authority dominion and disposition which is proper to the husband Israel have bread and quailes from heaven and water from the Rock that followed them a table everywise furnished for need and for delight and yet grumble because not meat for their lusts Many have all things very good and the wisdome of heaven could not carve fitter and better things and yet all not good enough Let sin creep in and Adam will not be content in Paradise or the Apostate Angels in heaven but leave their own habitation Go from God and take thy leave and farewell of contentment and satisfaction 4. He is grown a Wolf and Devil to his brethren Biting and devouring Gal. 5.15 tearing pulling catching at advantage flying upon the necks of the weaker Men execute much of the wrath of God in these feuds among themselves so that the Caution is
of Redemption it was from all eternity it was not made when Christ was just coming into the world but from everlasting Two Scriptures seem to hold out this 2 Tim. 1.9 Who hath saved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began Here is the purpose of God here is grace given in Jesus Christ how in the Covenant betwixt the Father and him when was this given before the world began h. e. from all eternity So Tit. 1.2 In hope of eternal life which God that cannot l●e promised before the world began How was this life promised before the world begun but in this everlasting Covenant wherein the Father promised unto Christ eternal life for all his seed I have been speaking to you of a very great mystery of which the Scripture speaks but little signanter we have not the termes but we have the sense and substance of this Covenant of Redemption there laid down If in any assertion I have seemed too bold I am very ready to take shame for i● I am sorry my work did lie in such an untrodden path wherein I have but very few to give me any direction I will shut up all with a little Application And first Application I would from hence stir you up to an high admiration of the great and infinite love of God of God the Father of God the Son what manner of love hath the God of Grace revealed in this Covenant Love that for the freenesse of it and greatnesse of it we should admire in this life as we shall admire it in the life to come Both persons have discovered unconceivable love in this transaction Oh let both of them be admired with the highest admiration 1. Admire the love of the Father we are more apprehensive of the love of the Son than we are of the love of the Father I would not speak any thing to diminish the love of the Son God forbid Oh 't was wonderful superlative love only I would heighten your apprehensions of the Fathers love in the great work of our Redemption Redemption was not only brought about by Christ but the Father had a great hand in it therefore 't is said The pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand And I have found a ransome God so loved the world Isa 53.10 Job 33.24 John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son c. I might instance in several particulars to set out the Fathers love in our Redemption but take only that which I have been upon That the thoughts of God should be upon poor lost man so as to finde out a way for his recovery that he should call his Son and say Come let us consult together I speak after the manner of men Is there no way to be found that man may yet live he is now obnoxious to me and I might throw him into hell but may not I be satisfied and he saved too I am not willing he should utterly perish I say that God should thus set his thoughts on work for wretched man and treat with his Son and strike up a Covenant with his Son and therein lay such a foundation for mans recovery let Angels and men and all creatures adore this love and oh that you would return love for love return your drop for Gods Ocean We must honour the Son as we honour the Father John 5.23 and we must love the Father as we love the Son 2. And then admire the love of the Son too he is willing to engage in this Covenant he knew the termes of it what the Redemption of man would cost him even his life and precious blood yet for all this he willingly and freely binds himself to redeem poor sinners whatever it cost him O the heights depths breadths of this love Ephes 3.18 Blessed Jesus that ever thou shouldst consent to lay down thy life for me to wash away my sins in thine own blood 1 John 3.16 Rev. 1.5 to give thy soul as an offering for sin upon this encouragement and motive that thou mightest s●e such a poor worme as I brought in to God that thou shouldst set thy self as a Skreen betwixt Gods wrath and my poor soul and do and suffer ten thousand times more than what tongue can expresse or heart conceive What shall I what can I say to all this but fall down and wonder at that Love which can never be Fathomed So much for the first thing Vse 2 Secondly This Covenant of Redemption may be improved for the encouraging and strengthning of faith Faith sometimes is ready to question the blessings of the Covenant of Grace and the Continuance or Perpetuity of the Covenant of Grace that 's the great Foundation of Faith and when it staggers about that 't is very sad with the soul Now I 'le lay down two things for the help of Faith 1. The blessings of the Covenant are sure 2. The Covenant of Grace it self is sure First The blessings of the Covenant are sure They are called the sure mercies of David Isa 55.3 Isaiah 55.3 They are sure for Continuance and they are sure for Performance 1. For Continuance common mercies are dying perishing uncertain things but Covenant mercies are stable durable lasting things A great estate may come to nothing Prov. 23.5 Riches are uncertain things Imaginaria in saeculo nihil veri Tertul. 1 Tim. 6.17 And so in all worldly comforts they are but a fashion matters of fancy rather than of reality and they passe away 1 Cor. 7.31 But now grace pardon of sin adoption c. these are blessings that abide for ever Rom. 11.29 2. They are sure also for performance I mean whatever blessing God hath put into this Covenant as 't is full of blessings all shall certainly be made good to believers otherwise God would not be faithful to his Covenant which certainly he will be Men may be false in their Covenants to God but God will certainly be true in his Covenant to men Heaven and Earth shall passe away rather than there shall be the least entrenchment upon Gods truth in the not performing of his Covenant Secondly The Covenant of Grace is sure in it self a Cov●nant firme unalterable never to be broken 't is called an everlasting Covenant Gen. 17.7 Hebr. 13.20 a Covenant that shall stand fast Psal 89.28 a Covenant ordered in all things and sure 2 Sam. 23.5 The Covenant of Grace is so firmly ratified that there can be no nulling of it 1. God hath ratified it by his Oath Gen. 22.16 Hebr. 6.13 Si non credimus Deo promittenti at credamus Deo juranti Hierom Amant Scripturae pro pacto ponere Testamentum Aug. 14 15 16 17 18. His promise is enough but surely h●s oath must put all out of question there 's no room for unbelief now God hath sworn
save Justice was to have its penni-worths out of our Surety and nothing could be abated of blood God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sins that he might be just Rom. 3.25 26. 5. That he that hath the power of death might be destroyed Hebr. 2.14 through death he destroyed him that hath the power of death that is the Divel Satan hath the power of death not as a Judge but as an Executioner and Christs death hath destroyed him not taken away his being or undivel'd him but shatter'd his Forces broken and subdued him The crucifying of Christ was the Divels plot he put Judas upon betraying him the Jews upon accusing him Pilate upon condemning him the Souldiers upon executing him but our Lord out-shot him in his own Bowe and cut off Goliah's head with Goliah's Sword It fared with Satan as it is storied of a certain Souldier who being cu iously inquisitive after the time of his death went to an Astrologer who of a long time would make him no answer till at the length overcome by his importunity he told him that he should dye within three dayes whereat the Souldier being angry draws his Sword and kills the Astrologer for which murder within three dayes compasse he was executed And thus Satan plotting the death of Christ to put by his own ruine promoted and procured it Our Saviours death gave him such a deaths wound as he will never claw off The Lyon is terrible saith Chrysostom not only awake but sleeping And so Christ not only living but dying came off a Conqueror Judg. 16.30 as Sampson at his death pulled down the pillars of the house and made a greater rout among the Philistines than in all his life and therefore it is very observable when the death of Christ approached and being in view Satan perceived how great disadvantage was like thereby to accrue to him and his Kingdome how he laid about and bestirred himself by all means possible to hinder it he put Pet●r upon disswading him Master favour thy self and let not this be unto thee and Christ presently smelt him out in that advice as appears by his rebuke Get thee behinde me Satan Matth. 16.23 Matth. 27 19. he buzz'd dreams into the head of Pila es wife and thereby endeavoured to take him off and divert him from pronouncing the sentence upon him 6. To take away the meritorious cause of death viz. sinne And verily had all the Divels in hell been routed and sin that Divel in the bosome remain'd undisturbed it had been an inconsiderable victory God sending his own Son in the similitude of sinful flesh for sin Rom. 8.3 tha● is by a sacrifice for sin we have such another Ellipsis Hebr. 10.6 condemned sin in the flesh Christ by his blood wrote a● ill of Inditement and Condemnation against sin he sued it to an out-lary and undermi●ed it as to its dominion and damnation Rom. 6.10 in that he dyed he dyed unto sin once The Saints dye unto sin namely by Mortification Verse 11. Reckon ye your selves also to be dead indeed unto sin but thus there was never any alive in Christ but he dyed unto sin namely the utter ruine and undoing of sin The Messiah shall be cut off to finish transgression and make an ●nd of sins Dan. 9.24 There is a double finishing of sin by consummation and by consumption the meaning is not as though Christ compleated that which sinners had left imperfect or varnisht over those sins which came out of their hands rude and unpolished no he could neither put an hand nor set a tool to such work as this but to make an end of sin to eat into the heart and tear out the bowels of it such is Christs hatred of sin that rather than it shall live himself will dye APPLICATION Three Uses may be made of this Doctrine for 1. Information 2. Exhortation 3. Comfort Use 1 1. For Information in foure particulars 1. This lets us see the transcendent and inexpressible love of Christ to poor sinners Let such as can entertain hard thoughts of Christ look upon him as nailed to the Crosse and shedding his blood and then tell me if they do not think him in good earnest in the businesse of saving souls Oh how was his heart set upon sinners that would thus shed his heart-blood for sinners The Rabbins have a saying that upon every apex or tittle of the Law there hangs a Mountain of sense and doctrine In every drop of Christs blood there is an Ocean of love Who loved me Gal. 2.20 and gave himse●f for m The death of Christ was such a demonstration of love as the world never saw When God made the wordl he intended the evidence of his power he ordained hell digg'd Tophet and fill'd it with fire and brimstone and thereby manifested the severity of his j●stice he humbled himself to death and therein his purpose was to demonstrate the transcendency of his love this made the love of Christ of such efficacy and constraining influence upon the Apostle Paul Be ause we thus judge that if one dyed for all than were all dead 2. Cor. 5.14 When Christ once wept at Lazarus his grave by-standers made this inference upon it Behold how he loved him John 11.36 but if weeping at the grave for his death argued such love what love was it then to dye and go down into the grave for Lazarus It were an easie thing to lose our selves in this delightful Maze and Labyrinth of love the righteous Judge of all the world unrighteously accused and condemned the Lord of life was dying the eternal and ver blessed Son of God strugling with his Fathers wrath he that had said I and my Father are one crying out in his bitter agony My God my God why hast thou forsaken me He that hath the keys of hell and death lay sealed up in anothers grave Blessed and dear Saviour whither hath thy love to sinners carried thee Well might the Apostle in an holy rapture and extasie expresse himself in an elegant contradiction when he desired the Ephesians might know the love of Christ which passes knowledge Ephes 3.19 2. Hence learn the horrible and cursed evil of sin there is sure an abominable filthinesse in that which nothing but the blood of God could purge and expiate We may guesse at the depth and breadth of the sore by the plaister that is prepared and applied It s a desperate disease that requires such a desperate cure sin is an infinitely mischievous evil which nothing could remove but infinitely precious blood You that view sin in its right features and proportions take a prospect from Mount Calvary look through the perspective of Christs blood and seriously ponder the bitter and dreadful agonies of the Son of God when he sweat and bled and groaned and dyed under
stream of Christs blood if thou beest imbarqued by faith runs directly into the Ocean of endlesse boundlesse bottomlesse happinesse If thou hast open'd the door of thine heart to let Christ in the blood of Christ hath open'd and unlock'd the door of heaven and thou canst not be shut out A crucified Christ entertained will one day make glorified believers his Humiliation is the ready Roade both to his and his peoples exaltation CHRISTS EXALTATION Phil. 2. 9 10 11. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord to the glory of God the Father THE former Verses-speak of the deep humiliation of Jesus Christ these words contain the Doctrine of Christs most glorious Exaltation If you view Christ in the words before going you will behold the Sun of righteousness ecclipsed but in this Text you will see him shining forth in his strength and splendour The Doctrine of Christs Humiliation leads you to Mount Calvary but this Doctrine will lead you to Mount Tabor to Mount Olivet There you may see Christ standing at the Bar but here you see him sitting on a Throne of Majesty and glory The former Doctrine shews you the Son of man in the forme of a servant but this represents Christ to you the Son of God like himself in the glorious estate of Triumphant Majesty You have heard how Christ died for our sins Rom. 4.25 Rom. 5.10 and how we are Reconciled by his death and now you shall heare how he rose for our justification and how we are saved by his life In his Humiliation there was neither form nor beauty Isa 53.2 Heb. 1.2 nor comliness did appear but now you will see him in the excellency and brightness of his Fathers glory In Christs Humiliation you heare how he was reproached in his Person Name Doctrine Ministry and Miracles but he is now exalted and hath a name given him above every name And whereas in his Humiliation his enemies bowed the knee in scorne to him yet in his Exaltation they must bow the knee with fear and trembling Then they cried after Christ Crucifie him crucifie him but God hath exalted him so as every tongue must confess that Jesus is the Lord to the glory of God And thus Contraries are illustrated by their contraries the sufferings of Christ like a dark shadow to a curious picture Contraria ●juxta se posita magis elucescunt or a black vaile to a beautiful face do make the glory of his Exaltation the more glorious The height of Christs Exaltation is best known by considering the depth of his humiliation the Cross of Christ as one saith being the best Jacobs staff to take the height of this morning Star or rather Sunne of Righteousness breaking forth most gloriously from under a dark Cloud In these three verses we have these Particulars considerable 1. The Connexion between the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore also God hath exalted him 2. The Doctrine of Christs Exaltation laid down God hath highly exalted him 3. The end of Christs Exaltation it was for the glory of God the Father Before we come to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation we will a little consider the connexion of these three Verses with the three preceding Verses viz. 6 7 8. where it is said that Jesus Christ being in the forme of God and thought it not Robbery to be equal with God but made himself of no Reputation and took upon him the forme of a servant and was made in the likeness of men and being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross wherefo●e God also hath highly exalted him c. It is a Question amongst Divines whether the Humiliation of Christ be the Meritorious cause or only the Antecedent of his Exaltation and yet they that dispute this do all agree in this That Jesus did not by his Humiliation and sufferings merit such things as he was invested withal before he suffered for that which is meritorious must alwayes precede the reward and therefore it cannot be said that Christ did merit the personal union of his Divine and Humane Nature nor the happiness of his soul nor his Habitual Graces which He had from the first Moment of his Incarnation Christi humiliatio est exaltationis meritum ejus exaltatio est humiliationis praemium Aug. Hac enim particula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu propter quod meritum Christi denotat quibus sibi suam exaltationem nobis totam salutem promeruit Zanch. in loc First There are some Divines who interpret the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a causal and so hold that Christ by his Humiliation did merit his Exalta●ion and of this opinion was Augustine who calls Christs Humiliation the meritori●us cause of his Exaltation and his Exaltation the r●ward of his Humiliation The Popish wr●ters go generally this way I find also amongst Protestant Writers the Learned Zanchy of this Opinion who upon this Text hath this Note By this Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherefore The Apostle notes the merits of Christ whereby he hath merited his own Exaltation and our Salvation And that which favours this Explication is that saying of the Apostle concerning Christ Heb. 12.2 That for the joy that was set before him he endured the Cross and despised the shame as if having an eye to the Recompence of the Reward enabled Christ to persevere with more patience when he became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross Neither doth it derogate from the freeness of Christs sufferings that he was rewarded for them for even that glory that Christ hath in heaven is for our good and comfort Nor was it out of indigence and necessity that Christ accepts of glory in a way of Reward of his obedience but herein he commended his love the more to us that would so far condiscend and so far even in his Exaltation humble himself to receive glory in the way of obedience which he might have challenged by vertue of his personal union Even as a Prince who though he hath right to a Kingdom by Inheritance and Succession yet he will accept of it as a Reward of his Obedience and Conquest over its enemies 2. But others understand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text not as signifying the Humiliation ●f Christ to be the meritorious cause but only the Antecedent of his Exaltat●on and so they make this particle to be not causal but connective only and so I find some of the Ancient Translations as the Aethiopick Version doth only ioyn the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ together Humilavit seipsum magnificavit
understand here by bowing the knee Answ 1. Some take this literally as the Papists who in their worship bow the knee as often as they heare the Name of Jesus mentioned The Learned Zanchy is of an opinion that some of the Ceremonies in use amongst the Papists might have an innocent Original as their signing with the Cross to show that they were not ashamed of the Cross of Christ with which the Heathens did reproach them and so the standing up at the Creed to note their resolution to strive together for the Faith that was once delivered to the Saints So genuflection to the Name of Jesus was say some in opposition to the Arrians who denyed the Divinity of Christ but whether these things were so innocent at the first seeing they are all of humane institution and have been abused to superstition we have justly laid the use of them aside And this Text cannot be so understood for if by Name we understand the power of Christ then by bowing the knee must be meant our submission and subjection to this power By bowing therefore to the Name of Jesus is understood that obedience and subjection which is due to the Soveraign power and Auhority of Christ Thus when Joseph was exalted to that Dignity and Authority in Egypt Gen. 41.43 Joh. 5.22 23. Mat. 28.18 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2.8 that there was none greater than he but Pharaoh himself They cryed in the streets where Joseph went Bow the knee Thus God the Father gave Jurisdiction and Authority to the Son that they which honour the Father might also honour the Sonne All power saith Christ is given me both in Heaven and in Earth He is the Prince of Life and the Lord of Glory to whom all obedience service and subjection is most due Quest 2. Who are they must bow the knee to Christ and be in subjection unto him Answ All Creatures for the Enumeration is full which Chrysostome thus Expounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc Things in Heaven on Earth and under the Earth i. e. Angels Men and Devils which Theodoret doth more clearly Explain 1. Things in Heaven i. e. good Angels and glorified Saints spirits of just men made perfect 2. Things on Earth all men living both good and bad 3. Under the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 infernalia i. e. Devils and damned spirits All these must bow the knee and must yield subjection unto Jesus Christ I. All knees in heaven shall bow to Christ voluntarily 1. The good Angels they did alwayes honour and obey the Lord Jesus It was the joy of the Angels of Heaven to be Subject and Serviceable unto Jesus Christ 1. Before the Incarnation of Christ an Angel instructed Daniel concerning the Messiah Dan. 9.24 and how long it should be before his coming 2. When the fulness of time was come an Angel comes to the blessed Virgin and said Feare not Mary for thou hast found favour with God Luke 1.30 31. and behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Sonne and call his Name Jesus 3. As soon as ever he was born an Angel brings the glad-tydings of it and a whole Hoste of them who sang together Job 38.7 Luke 2.13 and shouted for joy at the Creation of the world do with a song Celebrate Christs Nativity Glory be to God on High c. 4. When Jesus Christ was in danger to be kill'd by Herod an Angel warnes of the danger Mat. 2.13 and directs his Mother to flee with him into Egypt 5. When he was tempted by Satan forty dayes together a little before he entered upon the work of his Ministry Mat. 4.11 behold Angels came and Ministred unto him 6. When he was in his Agony in the Garden ready to take the cup of trembling out of his Fathers hand there appeared an Angel from heaven strengthening him Luke 22.43 This blessed Creature out of love and duty seeing his Lord and Master in such distress came in to succour him 7. And as the Angels gave the first notice of his Birth so also of his Resurrection an Angel told the woman He is not here Mat. 28.6 he is risen 8. The Angels attended Christs Ascension into Heaven for they told the Disciples Acts 1.11 That as they saw him ascending into heaven so he should come again from Heaven in like manner 9. And with infinite delight did they welcome Christ to heaven where Heb. 1.6 upon his first coming all the Angels did worship him Mat 25.31 2 Thes 1.7 Mat. 24.31 10. And Lastly When Christ shall come at the last day to judge both quick and dead he will come with all his holy Angels with him and shall be Revealed from Heaven with his mighty Angels who then most willingly will be employed to gather together all his Elect from the foure Windes of Heaven Col. 1.16 All this service the good Angels performe unto Christ not only as he is their Creator for by him were created even the things that are in heaven But they yield him this Subjection as he is their Head and Governour Col. 2.10 Eph. 1.21 22. and so he is called the Head of all Principality and Power i. e. Of Angels And this voluntary subjection to Jesus Christ is because they have benefit by Christ though not in a way of Redemption yet they owe their Confirmation unto Christ The good Angels though they were created good and excellent creatures Hoc ipsum quod sancti Angeli ab illo statu beatitudinis in quo sunt mutari in deterius nullo modo possunt non est iis naturaliter insitum sed postquam creati sunt gratiae divinae largitate collatum Aug. de fide ad Pet. Diac. cap. 23. Qui erexit hominem lapsum dedit Angelo stanti ne laberetur Bern. yet as creatures their state is mutable and they had in them a potentiality and a possibility to sin and fall as well as those Angels which left their first station But this possibility is removed by Christ who by his grace did lift up fallen man and by his Powen preserves the Angels that they shall not fall And therefore it is that in a way of thankfulness the Angels in Heaven do bow their knee in Subjection and Service unto Christ 2. As the glorious Angels bow the knee to Christ in heaven so the spirits of just men made perfect the souls departed do in Heaven praise adore and worship the Lord Jesus Christ and do yield voluntary subjection and obedience to him unto which duty they are more carried by a principle of thankfulness that Christ hath Redeemed them this is shadowed out unto us by the Vision of Saint John who having seen the Lord Jesus taking the Book with seven Seales and opening it he heard the Saints in Heaven singing a new Song and saying Thou art worthy to take the Book and to open the Seales thereof for thou wast slain
busie himself about a lump of sin and misery What but meer mercy what but rich and abundant mercy 1. It is meer mercy When by our own merits we were bgotten to death by his mercy he begat us again unto life Cum nostris meritis generati essemus ad mortem sua misericordia nos regeneravit ad vitam Beda Not by works of righteousnesse which we have done but according to his mercy he hath saved us Tit. 3.5 Indeed we cannot do any works of righteousness before our Calling that righteousness which natural men are subject to glory in is rather seeming than real and that which shineth so bright in our own eyes and perhaps in the eyes of other men is an abomination in the sight of God Luke 16.15 God and men do not measure our righteousness by the same standerd men account them righteous that conform to Customes Laws and Constitutions of men if at least they be likewise conformable to the Letter of the Law of God But God reckons none righteous besides those that have a singular regard to the Spirit of the Law if I may so call it which layeth an Obligation upon the inward man as well as the outward which binds the heart as well as the hand and commands not only that which is good but that good be done upon a good principle in a good manner to a good end A pitch of obedience that no natural man can possibly arise to so that in the sight of God there is none righteous Rom. 3.10 Ephes 2.3 no not one We are all by nature children of wrath as well as others Children of wrath we are by our own desert if ever we become Children of Grace it must be by his mercy 2. As by meer mercy so by rich and abundant mercy in God it is that we are called There is a greatnesse of love in the quickning of those that are dead in sins together with Christ There is mercy in that we have our lives for a prey Eph. 2.4 5. mercy in all the comforts and accommodations of life mercy in the influences of the Sun mercy in the dropping of the Clouds mercy in the fruitfulness of seasons mercy in the fulness of barnes the yeare is crowned with the goodness of the Lord but this is a mercy above all mercies That we are called from darkness unto marvelous light and from the power of Satan to the service of and fellowship with the only living and true God other benefits are extended to the worst of men nay the very Devils have some tastes of mercy but this of an Effectual Calling is as I said before communicated to none but those that God hath chosen Other blessings and benefits though they be good in themselves yet they cannot make us good they are but as trappings to a Horse which if he be a Jade make him not go the better but the worse but here God works a marvelous change for the better once the man ran away from God and himself but now he instantly returns once he was a hater a fighter against God but now the weapons of his hostility are laid down and he thinks he can never do enough to express his love once he was darkness but now he is light in the Lord once dead but behold he lives Finally Other blessings and benefits can never make us happy but as they finde us miserable so they leave us we may and are too apt to bless our selves in them yet God never intended to bless us in the sole enjoyment of them But oh how happy is that man that God hath effectually called to himself his bosome shall be his refuge in all storms his grace his sufficiency in all temptations his power his shield in all oppositions But let the Text speak All things shall work together for his Spiritual and Eternal good Before I part with this Point I shall acquaint you with an Exposition of my Text utterly inconsistent with the Doctrine I have delivered and the truth it self and very unworthy of the Authours of it This it is That here we are said to be call'd not according to Gods purpose Chrys Theod. Theoph. but according to our own purpose to hear and obey his call And perhaps upon this the Papists have grounded their merit of congruity but this must needs fall if we consider but this one thing among many that those that have been farthest off the Kingdome have been fetcht into it and those that have not been farre from the Kingdome of God have never come nearer it God doth not alwayes take the smoothest but the most knotty pieces of Timber to make pillars in his house He goes not alwayes to places of severest and strictest Discipline to pick out some few there to plant in his House but he goes to the Custome-House and calls one thence to the Brothel-House and calls another thence And if yet you insist upon the purpose of man as an inducement to the call of God pray tell me what was Sauls purpose when God met with him in the way to Damascus Had he any other purpose than to persecute the Disciples of the Lord Enough of that Question 5. By what means are we Called Sometimes without means as in persons not capable of the use of them there is highest Caution amongst the people of God to avoid that sin nay the very appearance of limiting the holy One of Israel Sometimes by contrary means the greatness of a sin being ordered by God to set on the conversion of a sinner as when a man is wounded with the sting and healed with the flesh of a Scorpion Gaffarel or as when we make triacle of a Viper a most poysonous creature to expel poyson Sometimes by very unlikely means as when by some great affliction we are brought home to God which in its own nature one would think should drive us farther from God as there is no question but it doth the Reprobates who are ready to tell all the world what King William Rufus told the Bishop if the partial Monk do not belye him God shall never make me good by the evil I suffer from him Nunquam me Deus bonum habebit pro malo quod mihi in●ulerit Edmerus in Hist Ser. 2. de Spirt Sanct. tom 4. or which is yet more unlikely when we are brought home by prosperity God overcoming our evil with his good heaping as it were Coals of fire upon our heads and so melting us into kindly contrition Gerson in a Sermon of his tells us of a most wicked Priest that when he was preferr'd to a Bishoprick became exemplarily holy but such a Convert is rara avis seldom to be found Alwayes this work is carried on by weak means Thus I have heard it credibly reported that a sentence written in a window and accidentally read by an inveterate sinner pierc't his heart and let out the corruption thence the sentence was that of Austin
can they but rejoyce in them and sing of the mercies of the Lord for ever Why are you not more careful to walk worthy of this Grace There is a Decorum Ephes 4.1 a seemlinesse that appertains to every Calling This made Scipio that he would not accept the offer of an Harlot because he was General of the Army And when Antigonus was invited to a place where there was none of the best Company he was well advised by one to remember he was a Kings Sonne When you suffer your selves to be drawn away by your lusts to be ensnared by the World to be captivated by the Divel you forget the Decorum that should attend your Christian Calling Remember I beseech you First That it is a Holy Calling and therefore be ye also Holy in all Manner of Conversation Methinks it should sound as harshly in our ears to hear of a dark Sun as a wicked Christian Secondly It is an High Calling Do you live High Scorne Basenesse Blush to appear in your Old Raggs To be seen Catering for your Lusts as you use to do Crown your selves with the Starres Cloath your selves with the Sunne Tread the Moon under your Feet Let the Gospel be your Crown Let Christ be your Cloathing Let the World be your Foot-stool Let Hidden Manna be your constant Dyet Keep Open House to all Comers Set your Spiritual Dainties before them Bid them feed Heartily and Welcome And for Discourse Tell them what great things God hath done for your Souls Thirdly It is an Heavenly Call Let your Conversations be in Heaven you have a good Correspondent there Maintain a constant Trade and Traffick thither Expect Returns thence Lay up your Treasure there where neither Moth nor Rust doth corrupt nor can Thieves break through and steal Be alwayes preparing for your passage thither Fourthly It is an Immutable Call Do not droop and hang your Heads for the Changes and Mutations there are in the World The Foundation of God standeth sure though the Foundation of States be Overturned Overturned Overturned the Lord knoweth who are his and will cause all things to Work together for their good But what if now there be many amongst you that are not Effectually Called In the third and last place I addresse my self to them Men and Brethren if you have any sense of the excellency of your Immortal Souls any Love to them sutable to that excellency any care and solicitousnesse sutable to that love Do not resist the Holy Ghost Make the best Use you can of the Means of Grace To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your hearts If he now Knock at the Door of your hearts and you will not Open you know not how soon you may come to Knock at the Door of his house and he will not Open. Diog. Laertius Thal. It is Reported that Thales one of the Grecian Sages being urged by his Mother to marry told her at first it was too soon and afterward when she urged him again he told her it was too late Effectual Vo●ation is our Espousal unto Christ all the time of our life God is urging this Match upon our Souls his Ministers are still wooing for Christ if now we say it is too soon for ought we know the very next Moment our Sunne may set and then God will say it is too late They that are not Contracted to Christ on Earth shall never be Married to him in Heaven THE TRUE BELIEVERS Union with CHRIST JESUS 1 COR. 6.17 But he that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit YOU have lately seen the Portraicture of our Lord Jesus drawn as it were at length Introduction both as to his Person and Offices together with the Means and Mann●r how he hath dearly purcha'st Redemption for us Method now requires that we lay before you how that Redemption and the benefits thereof come to be effectually applied unto us There we had the balme of Gilead and the plaister spread what remains but that it be now applied There we had a Bethesda an healing Fountain open'd but the Pool of life heals not unlesse the Patient be put in and the Angel of the Covenant Stir the waters Salvation for sinners cannot be obtain'd without a pu●chase this purchase is not significant without possession this possession not to be procured without application this application made only by union this union clearly held forth in the Text viz. He that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit Coherence In the close of this Chapter our Apostle seriously dehorts his Corinthians from that grosse that soul-polluting sinne of Fornication His Arguments which he lets flie as so many Barbed Arrows at the fifth Rib of Uncleanness are drawn 1. Partly from the end to which the body is appointed The body is for the Lord Ver. 13. The body was made for the God of holinesse therefore not to be prostituted to Lust and uncleannesse Ver. 19. The Holy Ghosts Temple ought not to be converted into a Stye for Satan That 's the first 2. Partly from that honour which by the Lord to our bodies is vouchsafed Know ye not that our bodies are the members of Christ Ver. 15. Believers bodies are the members of Christ therefore not to be debauch't so far as to be made the members of an Harlot This second Argument is back't and amplified by the words of the Text He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit q. d. There is a near and dear union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true believers much what resembling that which is betwixt the head and members Only here 's the difference that union is carnal this spiritual He that is joyn'd to the Lord is one Spirit i. e. he is spiritually one or one with the Lord in Spirit therefore ought not to be one with a strange woman in the flesh Having thus beaten up and l●vel'd our way to the Text I shall not stand to shred the words into any unnecessary parts but shall extract out of them such an Observation as I conceive strikes a full eighth to the minde of the Spirit of God in them And 't is plainly this Observation True Believers are closely united unto Christ Iesus The word which we render a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Agglutinatus joyned imports the nearest strictest closest union This truth I shall endeavour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cleanly to explain solidly to confirme practically to appy 1. For the Explication of this truth Explication It will be of consequence to lay before you Query 1 1. Whom we understand by true believers Sol. 1. Not such as are united unto Christ by a meer external prosession Sacramental admission or presumptuous perswasion Such as these are said to believe in Christ John 3.23 and yet they are such so hollow so false that Christ dares not trust them Ver. 24. These are dead Branches John 15.2 Saplesse stakes in the Churches hedge Reformad●'s and Hangby's only
pro nobis suscepit sine meritis malis poenam ut nos per illum sine b●nis meritis consequermur gratiam Aug. merits which are as fully imputed to Believers for Justification as if his sufferings had been by them endured or the debt by them satisfied In his life and graces by habitual and real infusion and in-dwelling of his Spirit to Sanctification 1 Cor. 1.2 In his priviledges and dignities such I mean as are communicable Is he a King a Priest So are Believers Rev. 1.6 A Royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2.9 Is he a Son an Heir by Nature Saints are so by Adoptior Joint-heirs with Christ Rom. 8.17 In his Victories Believers are more than Conquerours through him Rom. 8.37 In the midst of their enemies insultations and their own distresses yea even in and by death it self the victory is still theirs In his Triumphs and Glory they share with him in his Throne all that Believers are is from the Grace of Christ 1 Cor. 15.10 All that they do is from the strength of Christ Phil. 4.13 So that they do not so properly live as Christ in them Gal. 2.20 On the other side Christ communicates in the Believers graces affections duties He gathers myrrhe and spice out of their Gardens eats of their honey and honey-comb Cant. 5.1 Their man-drakes are laid up for their Lord. As they live in the Spirit so they walk in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 They tune their souls to his key their p Cant. 2.14 voice is sweet in his Ears their countenance is lovely in his Eyes all that Believers are is from Christ and therefore all that Belivers have is to Christ What they receive in Mercy they return in Duty Thus from this mutual communion we conclude a close and dear union And now our Proposition being thus cleared and confirmed I descend to the third thing promised and that is 3. Application which I shall couch under these foure Heads viz. Information Examination Consolation Exhortation 1. Information Are believers thus closely united unto Christ Hence see 1. The crimson Tyrian tincture the scarlet dye of their sin who oppo e oppress persecute true believers Poor souls little do they think or know what they do viz. that they wound Christ through believers sides Believers are united unto Christ therefore when the seed of the Serpent q Gen. 3.15 bruises their heel it must needs have an influence on Christ their head who though he hath no passion yet hath he much compassion and in all their afflictions is afflicted Isa 63.9 In touching them they touch the apple of his eye Zech. 2.8 Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Acts 9.4 so cryes the Head in heaven while Saul treads on the foot on earth 2. Hence learn the heighth length depth and breadth of the love of Christ that passeth knowledge to believers beyond and above all others in the world Oh Beloved that the Lord should leave other plants in the woods and waste ground let them alone in the Wildernesse suffer them to grow up to be fit fuel for eternal flames and make choice of them who by nature are as wild r Rom. 11.17 olives as the worst and ingraffe them into himself who is the True O●ive and make them partakers of his fulnesse that he should cull them out who are by nature dead in trespasses and sinnes and implant them into himself raise them up together and make them sit together in heavenly places with himself Oh this speaks love beyond expression beyond imagination This argues grace riches of grace exceeding riches of grace Eph. 2.1 4 5 6 8. 3. Observe hence not only the love which Christ vouchsafes to but the high honour which he casts upon believers Was it an honour for Mordecai to be cloat●ed with Ahashuerus Royal apparel to ride on the Kings H●rs● having the Royal Crown on his head Esther 6.11 what an honour then was it for a poor Esther to be taken into the Kings bed and bos●me Esther 2.17 If it seemed not a light thing in Davids eyes but rather an high dignity to be son in law to a King what is it then to be united to a God the highest pitch and pinnacle of honour This the Ela the Neplus ultra of true dignity an honour not vouchsaft by God to those glistering Courtiers of heaven the Angels True indeed they are Christs servants subjects not his members To which of the Ang ls said he at any time Thou art bone of my bone flesh of my flesh C●rist took not on him the nature of Angels but is united to the seed of Abraham Heb. 2.16 4. Hence we conclude the stability fixednesse perseverance of the Saints in their estate of grace Here here believers is a firme basis on which to build the Sai●ts c●nstant progresse in the paths of holiness till they fully arrive at their Port of happinesse True believers are united unto Christ They live in Christ and Christ in them their life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 Therefore mauger the malice and power of all unruly corruptions from within of all subtile temptations violent assaults decoying smiles or threatening frowns from without they must and shall persevere s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kept as by a Garrison Kept they are and shall be by the power of that Christ to whom they are united through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Whil'st there is sap in Christ their root it shall ascend into the true Branches Joh. 11.16 and 4.14 Let the raine descend and the floods come and the winds blow and beat upon these living stones these spiritual Houses they shall not t Mat. 7.25 Isa 26.4 fall totally finally for they are built on that Rock of Ages True believers are Christs Members and should he lose the least of them he would be a maimed an imperfect Christ 1 Cor. 12.27 Of those whom thou hast given me I have not lost one Joh. 17.12 True Believers are Christs Spouse married to him and whatever men have done or may do Christ will not give a Bill of utter Divorce Jer. 3.14 5. See here a rational solid ground for the Protestant Doctrine of the imputation of Christs righteousness and the merit thereof to true Believers against the cavils and calumnies of the Pharisaical self-justifying Papist Our union unto Christ is the great foundation on which we build our communion with Christ Christ is united to believers one with them their Head their Surety who in conspectu fori is but one person with the debtor and this by his own voluntary undertaking the debtors consent and the Judges approbation therefore 't is rational just equal that what our Christ our Head Representative Surety hath done and suff●red for us and that not only bono nostro for our good but loco nostro in our stead should by God our Judge be imputed to us That since our Head and Surety was made sin for us who knew no sin we should be
of a reason God sends his Gospel proclaiming Acts 3.19 Repent ye and be converted that your sinnes may be blotted out His Ministers proclaiming We then are Embassadors of Christ 2 Cor. 5. as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled unto God Why dost thou hate thy soul and say I will not why wilt thou not Is it because it doth not concern thee or because eternal life and death are trifles small little things not worth thy considering or doth any body hinder thee No no our Saviour gives the true account Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life Let me entreat this small request of thee for Gods sake for thine own take the next opportunity and spend half an houre alone let thy spirit accomplish a diligent search pursue this inquiry to some issue am I justified or no if not what will become of me if it should happen sometimes such things fall out that I should dye now presently I cannot promise my self that I shall see to morrow morning Thus go on and bring it to something before thou leavest give not over till thou art not only clearly convinced of but heartily affected with thy guilt not only to see but feel thy self to be the man who art undone without an interest in this justification Be in good earnest thou canst not mock thy God and is there any wisdome in mocking and cheating thy own soul What thou dost do it heartily as unto the Lord as for thy life as one that would not rue thy self-deceiving folly when it cannot be recalled and if thou art hearty and serious in these reflexions 1. Thou wilt deeply humble thy self before the Majesty of the Judge of all the earth with that self-abhorrence and confusion that becomes one who feels himself even himself being Judge most righteously condemned 2. Thou wilt sollicite and assail the Throne of Grace with all redoubled favours and holy passionate importunities of prayer and supplication giving God no rest till he hath given thee his Spirit according to his own promise Luke 11.13 Ezek. 36.26 27. To help thee to performe the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant plead his own promise with him Wrestle with him for a broken and clean heart for faith for repentance unto life for these are not of thy self they are the gift of God let him not go till he hath blessed thee with these blessings in Christ Jesus This will confound every sinner at the day of Judgment that when he might have had grace yea the Spirit of grace for asking he either asked not or if he did it was so coldly as if he were contented enough to go without Now if thou art in good earnest God is I assure thee in full as good earnest as thou he is ready to meet thee Try but once whether it be in vain to seek him all that ever tryed found it good to draw near to God and found him easie to be entreated he useth not to send the hungry empty away He that commands us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling he it is that worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.12 13. Secondly To them that are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Let me beseech them 1. To walk worthy of God who hath called them to his Kingdome and Glory to adorn their holy profession take the Exhortation in Pauls words Col. 2.6 As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him Receive not this grace of God in vain the interest of your comfort obligeth you hereunto hereby you will know that you know him that you are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 that there is no cond mnation to you if you walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit and herein will your Father be glorified John 15.6 if ye bring forth much fruit 2. To live up to the comfort of their state 1 John 3.1 Ye are already the sons of God it doth not yet appear what you shall be Who shall lay any thing to your charge it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 Go eat thy bread with joy and put on thy white rayment God now hath accepted thy works Eccles 9.7 8. I conclude this particular and the whole discourse with the happy effects and fruits of Justification which every Believer hath as good a right and title to as the Gospel it self the Word of the God of truth can give him as I finde those sweet effects and consequences set down in my Text and the words next following it 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ 2. By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 3. And not only so but we glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience 4. And patience experience and experience hope 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Wherefore the righteous shall be glad in the Lord and all the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64.10 THE BELIEVERS DIGNITY and DVTY LAID OPEN In the High-Birth wherewith he is PRIVILEDGED And the honourable Employment to which He is called John 1.12 13. But as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God IN this Chapter Christ the principal Subject of the Gospel is admirably and Seraphically described 1. By his Divintiy as co-eternal and co-essential with the Father verse 1. 2. 2. By his discovery or manifestation 1. In the work of Creation ver 3. 10. 2. In the work of common providence ver 4.5 9. 3. In the work of gracious providence he being in the world and coming to his Church as our Immanuel God incarnate ver 11. 14. 3. By his entertainment which was 1. Passive his entertainment was poor the world knew him not ver 10. He was as a Prince disguised in a strange Country the Church sleighted and rejected him as Rebels do their natural Prince ver 11. And such entertainment Christ meets with at this day in his Truths Ordinances Graces Ministers and his poor members c. Object Was not Christ entertained by them what else means their harbouring him at Capèrnaum their flocking after him admiring of him seeking to make him a King c. Answ True they entertain'd him for a while civilly and formally upon self-interest but not spiritually by saving Faith Love and Obedience John 6.26 Matthew 11.21 23. Quest 1. Did Christ find no entertainment at all Answ This rejecting of Christ was not universal some did
Faith c. yet in good measure must other graces accompany for this is an indispensable duty to add to Faith temperance 2 Pet. 1.5 patience brotherly kindnesse Faith with many other graces are called in the singular number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fruit of the Spirit because connex and inseparable Gal. 5.22 Besides that the growth and strength and activity of other graces have dependance upon it both as it pleads with Christ in prayer for all and pleads with the soul to act stir up and abound in all Abrahams faith had self-denial accompanying it there will be patience for he that believeth will not make hast See more tending to this under the fifth effect of faith Let not men speak of their faith then when other graces are no way suitable Seventhly True and saving Faith is working and fruitful though love and good works are not the form of it as the Papists plead yet it alway hath love accompanying Gal. 5.6 James 2.17 Eph. 1.15 and worketh by love and without works is dead Per opera consummatur fides non ut formatum per suam formam sed ut forma per suas operationes actus primus per actum secundum Alting Faith alone justifieth but Faith which justifieth is not alone Bona opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum They that are in Christ Jesus by Faith are described by walking in Christ and according to the Spirit Quomodo accipitur fide quomodo ambulatur in eo ad praescriptum voluntatis ejus vitam instituendo ex ejus Spiritu vivendo Zanch. in Col. 2.6 Faith is obediential Rom. 16.26 and cannot but be so for he that believeth really his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord cannot in reason and holy ingenuity 1 Cor. 15.58 but think it meet he be fruitful and abounding alway in the work of the Lord Alii cogitant pii credunt Aug. for others they do but think not know the greatness and certainty of the reward Yea indeed that assurance I before spake of proceeds from Faith through obedience By this we know that we know him know put for believe Zanch. in loc as Isa 53.11 if we keep his Commandments I shall therefore according to St. Pauls command to Titus affirm constantly this as a faithful saying Tit. 3.8 That they which have believed must be careful to maintain good works Eighthly True and saving Faith trusting God for the greater will trust him for lesser mercies To them that through Christ do believe in God 1 Pet. 1.21 this will seem forcible arguing and a necessary inference He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up I believe for me Rom 8.32 how will he not with him give me also all things freely God hath made all sorts of promises to true Faith and accordingly many of the Servants of God have expressed confidence in God when things have gone worst with them they would not be afraid what man can do unto them nor of evil tidings Psal 11.7 their hearts were fixed trusting in the Lord The just's living by Faith is true in this sence also Gal. 2.20 and that of Pauls living the life in the flesh by the Faith of the Son of God hath much in it Though I know natural timorousness and living too much the life of sense may occasion some worldly fears in a Believer as boldness of temper carelesness false confidence may much bear up an unbeliever Yet in great measure their pretences to faith are questionable I might say their faith is but pretence who say they can trust God with their Souls but will not trust him with bodies and estates Ninthly 1 Pet. 2.7 Vers 8. Isa 53.2 Cant. 5.9 True and Saving Faith makes Christ very precious to them that believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but to the unperswadable he is a stone of stumbling without form or comeliness they ask the believer What is thy beloved more than another And no wonder for none but the believer hath a cleared eye to behold things that a●e spiritually discerned Tolle meum tolle Deum Psal 34.8 Psal 104.34 None but he hath that special interest which inhanceth the price and valuation None but he hath that experience by which it is tasted and seen that the Lord is good But sight propriety and experience will make him inestimably precious and the meditation of him sweet Faith that seeth his necessity seeth also his excellency and takes him not upon constraint but choyce Those things that are ●pposite to true Faith are of two sorts 6. Opposites First Such as speak the soul void of it and are simply inconsistent with it Secondly Such as actively war against it and repel it These I shall call Contrarily Opposite those Privatively Opposite though the terms may seem not fully suitable to all the particulars Some things are Privatively Opposite to true and Saving Faith Privatively as relating to the Vnderstanding others as to the Will others as to the Life First As to the Vnderstanding and Assent 1. Ignorance bilndness darkness of the inconsistency of which with Faith see before of the Word the Instrumental Cau●e This either is invincible Ignorance Act. 17.30 where means of cure are wanting Or Vincible which carelesness sloath or affectation causeth for there are some persons willingly and wilfully ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 Joh. 3.19 and love darkness 2. Unperswadableness to assent to the truth of the Word and Promise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Impersuasibilitas Rom 11.30 31 When men are not satisfied in the grounds of believing and so assent not wherein yet somtimes there is a battery shaking the Assent and by parley bringing near a surrender Act. 26.28 an almost perswasion which yet is ineffectual 3. Error in Fundamentals especially those that concern Faith Christ the Promises Justification and salvation Corrupt minds are reprobate concerning the Faith 2 Tim. 3.8 Therefore doubtful Disputations Rom. 14.1 where on one side is error are dangerous to the weak Secondly As to the Will Affections and Consent Heb. 2.3 1. Unbelief not accepting the good things promised through ignorance or careless neglect of great salvation 2. Disbelief when men through dissatisfaction with the reasons to believe or through pride stubbornn●ss uncompliance of spirit Joh 5 39 40 44. WILL not come to Christ for life will not submit to the righteousness of God Thirdly As relating to Life practice and profession 1. Heresie is Privatively Opposite Such as joyn obstinacy and promulgation to their errors 2 Tim 2.16 whose words eat like a gangrene Tit 3.10 are to be rejected as men void of and enemies to the Faith 2. Apostasie from the truth and profession of the Gospel called denial viz. after knowing and owning These never were of the Faith 1 Joh 2.19 else would they not have gone from it This is a dangerous thing drawing
unto the Lord and when provoked by others it is to return to the Lord their God Hosea 14.1 and when God calleth and chargeth their Repentance with hypocrisie it is with this complaint They cryed but nat unto me and they returned but not unto the most High Hosea 7.14 16. The Gospel penitent turneth not from sin to sin as do the profane nor from sinful rudenesse to common civility or only moral honesty as do the civil honest man but unto piety acts of Religion unto God God is the sole object of his affection and adoration the true penitent is prostrate at the feet of God as him only that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sin And pliable to the pleasure of God as him only that hath prerogative over him the whole man soul and body is bent for God and pursueth communion with and conformity to God not only doth Repentance turn us from what is grievous and contrary to God but unto that which is agreeable and acceptable God the minde returneth from the devising of evil to the review of the minde and will of God Psal 1. v. 1 2. from sitting in the seat of the scorneful unto meditating on the Law of God night and day his earnest out-cry is Lord Acts 9.6 what wouldest thou have me to do for he is transformed in the spirit of his minde to prove what is the good and acceptable will of the Lord Rom. 12.3 and full well knoweth it is life eternal to know God 1 Pet. 2.2 and Jesus Christ and therefore having once tasted that the Lord is gracious he as a new-born babe desireth the sincere milk of the Word Gods Word is his great delight and beautiful in his eyes are their feet that bring glad tydings from Zion Rom. 10.15 The will and affections return from all evil unto a resolution and ready acceptance of the good and acceptable will of God not only doth the Gospel penitent pray Wherein I have done amiss do thou shew it me I will do so no more but also speak Lord for thy servant heareth for it is wholly resolved into the will of God approving what is good prizing every act of worship and purposing an exact observance of it sincerely praying Let thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven and accounting it his meat and drink to do the will of God his desires and affections run out to God and God alone there is nothing in all the earth to be compared with God nor any in heaven acceptable to the soul besides God Psal 73.25 The Lord becomes his very dread and delight he rejoyceth in the Lord and continually feareth before him such are his affections now towards God that he can leave all to follow him father mother sisters brethren wife children lands houses nay life it self becomes nothing in respect of God A Gospel penitent stands convinced that if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him 1 Joh. 2.15 And if any man love any thing better than Christ he is not worthy of him Matth. 10.37 and so he accounteth all things drosse and dung in comparison of Christ Phil. 3.7 The Lord is his chiefest among ten thousand his all in all and so his outward man is ready in the utmost of endeavours to do the will of God he is wholly resigned to Divine pleasure to do or suffer any thing God shall not enjoyne what his attempts and utmost industry shall not be to performe or inflict what he shall not in patience and silent submission endure Repentance is no other than the obedience of faith 1 Pet. 1.2 the penitent Romans do obey from the heart the forme of sound words unto them delivered or as the Greek bears it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into which they are delivered as in a mold which leaves its shape and impression on that which passed through it Rom. 6.17 For the stony heart removed the Law of God is imprinted in the soul the Spirit of Repentance maketh us walk in Gods way Ezek. 3.26 and to do his Statutes The command of God carrieth the truly penitent contrary to the commands of men nay corrupt dictates of their own soul J seph dare not sin against God for all Potiphars possession nor Daniel slack his devotion for fear of a Lyons Den nay it is irksome to a penitent Peter to be once and again provoked to obedience as half angry he cannot but cry out John 21.17 Why Lord thou knowest I love thee he is ready to execute Divine prescription against the utmost of opposition he never desireth other Apology than whether we obey God or man judge ye for Christ is exalted to be Lord and King to give Repentance c. Not only doth he believe but is also ready to suffer for the sake of Christ he is contented to be at Gods carving as unworthy any thing under sharpest sorrows he is dumb Psal 39.9 and openeth not his mouth because God did it in saddest disasters he complains not because he hath sinned against the Lord 2 Sam. 16.10 let Shimey curse him he is quiet nay grieved at the instigations of revenge for that God hath bid Shimey curse in all his actions and enjoyments he is awed by and argueth not against God However he may with Hezekiah slip and fall in his life time yet the support of his soul at death is Lord Remember I have walked before thee with an upright and perfect heart and have done that which was right in thine eyes Isa 38.3 And with Paul he may finde a Law in his members rebelling against the Law of his minde yet can thank God that with his minde he serves the Law of God Rom. 7.25 So that true Gospel Repentance doth not only convince and cast down but change and convert a sinner sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are necessary and essential parts but not the whole or formality of Repentance no that is a turning from sin all sin unto God only unt● a God it indulgeth not the least iniquity nor taketh up short of the Lord it stayeth not with Jehu at the extirpation of Baal but with Hezekiah and Josiah Rest reth the Passeover the worship of the Lord and that is the fourth thing considerable in the nature of Repentance Conclusion 5 The fifth and last conclusion is Confession of sin and prayer for its pardon are constant concomitants of true Repentance The true penitent is not only the sinner of sense but of hope and therefore a supp●iant at the Throne of Grace prostrate at the foot-stool of mercy confessing sin and suing for pardon freely accusing and fully condemning it self before God every penitent soul comes to God like Benhadad to the King of Israel wi●h an Halter about his Neck praying Forgive us our trespasses David is no sooner brought to Repentance by Nathan but he is brought on his knees before the Lord with an I hav●
glory of God be it spoken since this Exercise was first set up such a moneth hath not been known in this City A word of Exhortation What now remaineth men and brethren but that the Ministers of the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros praef Cat. Nostrum est dicere vestrum vero agere Dei autem perficere Gospel having done their work in holding out unto you a Form or Model of sound words you stir up your selves in the strength of Jesus Christ to do yours and what is that but that which is commended here to Timothy That you hold fast the form of sound words which you have received of them They have held it forth it concerns you to hold it fast First see therefore that you hold it fast in your understandings My brethren in this Moneths Exercise you have had many of the chief Heads and Points of the Christian Faith unvailed to you * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem ut supra Non existimes institutiones istas homiliis esse similes c. Sed haec quae per ordinem tradimus documenta c. not only as so many single truths and several precious Jewels to lie by you but that to which possibly most of you have been strangers hitherto as far as the design could well suffer Methodized as it were into a Chaine of Pearls to weare about necks truths fitly joyned together and compacted into a body by that which every joynt supplyeth Now your duty is to wear this Chain or Bracelet carefully that it may not be broken Your labour must be to imprint this Method of truth in your mindes and judgements by vertue whereof you may be able to know them in their Series and Connexion and when you hear any of these Points handled in Sermons you may be able to know one truth from another where they are to be fixed in the Orb of Divinity and so to refer them to their own proper place and station which will prove to be a greater advantage to your proficiency in the knowledge of Christ then you can easily believe It is observable Rom. 8.28 when the Holy Ghost having hinted effectual calling as the ground of that blessed truth that all things work for good to those that love God yet he mentions it again in the very next verse and why but to shew us what place it obtains in the golden chain of salvation how it takes its room between Predestination and Justification Whom he did predestinate them also he CALLED and whom he CALLED them he justified of so great moment it is not onely to know Gospel-truths but how to posture them in their proper rank and file where every truth is to stand This advantage in a great measure you have had by this Moneths Exercise see that you improve it to the clearing of your understandings in the Method of Gospel Doctrines Secondly Hold them fast in yor Memory Truely the Order of this Moneths Exercise if you be not wanting to your selves will not contribute lesse strength to your memories than light to your understandings The truths themselves have been a Treasure given you by your heavenly Father and the Method will serve you for a sack or purse to keep them in and truely it would be a labour neither unprofitable nor uncomely to take so much paines your selves and to teach your Families to do so too scil to Conne this Model without book and the Lord teach you to get them by heart You may once a week or so revolve them thus in your minds I. There is a God II. The Scriptures are the Word of God III. In the God-head there be three Persons or Subsistencies Father Son and Holy Ghost God blessed for ever IV. God Created man in a perfect but in a mutable estate V. The Covenant of works God made with man in his innocency VI. Original sin in the first spring of it in Adams first transgression VII Original corruption derived from thence into mans nature VIII Mans liablenesse to the curse or the misery of mans state by nature IX Mans impotency to help himself out of this estate X. The Covenant of Redemption or the transaction between God and Christ from all Eternity about mans salvation XI The Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel XII Christ the only Mediatour between God and man considered in his Person Natures and Offices XIII Christs state of Humiliation XIV Christs state of Exaltation XV. Christs satisfaction to Divine Justice XVI Effectual calling XVII Vnion with ●hrist XVIII Justification by Christs Righteousnesse XIX Son-ship to God consisting in Adopition Regeneration XX. Saving Faith XXI Repentance XXII Holinesse XXIII The Resurrection XXIV The last Judgement XXV Hell XXVI Heaven Christians this and other such like Catalogues or Formes of the Articles of Christian Faith imprinted upon your memories will be of great benefit and service to you Do ye serve your memories and your memories will serve you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros praef Catechis labour to get them so imprinted upon your memories that they may never be blotted out Thirdly Hold fast yea hold forth these precious Truths delivered to you in your lives and conversations Christians let it be your care and behold it shall be your * Deut. 4.6 wisdom in the eyes of all the beholders to live this morning Exercise the glory whereof hath filled this Assemblie for a moneth together To engage and quicken you herein let me mind you of one rare advantage this Model carrieth with it above most of the acute and learned Treatises of Schoolmen or solid Tractates of Catechetical Divines who have taken great paines in opening and stating the Principles of Christian Religion The Reverend Divines who have travelled in this service of your Faith have in their several Sermons with singular skill and piety brought down Principles unto practice and improved all their Doctrines to Vse and Application wherein they have shewed themselves Workmen that need not be ashamed wise Builders that know how to handle the Trowel as well as the Sword and that made it their design to build up their hearers in holinesse as well as in knowledge The School and the Pulpit met together the Doctor and the Pastor have kissed each other Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci. They have not discust the Doctrines of Faith in a jejune frigid speculative way only but what they cleared to the judgment they wrought it home upon the heart and affections with such warmth and sweetnesse as that the hearers seem'd for the present to be carried into the mountain of transfiguration where they cryed out with Peter It is good for us to be here So that although their Sermons were very large yet the greatest part of their Auditories thought they had done too soon and went away praising God that had given such gifts unto men Oh let it be your care dearly Beloved that as this Model hath been
delivered unto you so you may be delivered into it Rom. 6.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Form of doctrine into which ye were delivered Efficacius vitae quam lnguae testimonium Ber. Confession Bernard What a sore judgement will abide such as suffer all these morning influences to passe away as water over a swans back that come the same from these morning visions they came to them How shall we escapt if we neglect so great salvation Hold it forth I say Christians in your lives the Conversation is a better testimony to the truth then the confession I have met with a general vote in the Auditory that attended this morning Ordinance that these Sermons might be Printed that so what hath once past upon your ears might be exposed to your eye whereby you might stay and fix upon it with the more deliberation Whether I may prevail with the Brethren or no for their second travel in this Service I know not There is one way left you wherein you may gratifie your own desires and Print these Sermons without their leave though I am confident not without their consent and that is PRINT THEM IN YOVR LIVES AND CONVERSATIONS Live this morning Exercise in the sight of the world that men may take notice you have been with Jesus You have been called up with Moses into the Mount to talk with God Now you come down oh that your faces might shine that you would commend this morning Exercise by an holy life that you may be manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ ministred by VS 2 Cor. 3.3 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven Matth. 5.16 To that end Take along with you these two great helps in the Text FAITH LOVE Hold fast the form of sound words in FAITH and LOVE I know some Expositors interpret these as the two great COMPREHENSIVE HEADS of sound words or Gospel-Doctrine in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith and Love Faith towards God and Love towards men Faith the summe of the first Table and Love of the second or Faith in Christ and Love to Christ or Faith as comprehending the Credenda things to be believed Love as comprehending the Facienda things to be done But I am sure it is not against the Analoge of Faith or the Context to improve these two as Mediums to serve this command of holding fast sound Doctrine And so in the entrance it was propounded as the fourth Doctrine scil Faith and Love are as it were the two hands whereby we hold-fast the Form of sound words 1. Faith First then Christians look to your Faith that is an hold-fast grace which will secure your standing in Christ As unbelief is the root of Apostacy and falling back from the Doctrine of the Gospel Heb. 3.12 So Faith is the spring of Perseverance 1 Pet. 1.5 Kept by the power of God through faith to salvation Faith keeps the Believer and God keeps his faith Now faith keeps the believer close to his Principles upon a two-fold accompt Faith realizeth Gospel-truth 1. Because faith is the grace which doth REALIZE all the Truths of the Gospel unto the soul Evangelical Truths to a man that hath not faith are but so many prettie Notions which are pleasing to the fancy but have no influence upon the Conscience they may serve a man for discourse but he cannot live upon them suffering Truths in particular are pleasing in the Speculation in times of prosperity but when the hour of temptation cometh they afford the soul no strength to carry it through sufferings and to make a man go forth unto Christ without the Camp bearing his reproach Heb. 13.13 But of Faith saith the Aposte it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen faith makes all Divine Objects although very Spiritual and subtile in their own nature faith makes them I say so many realities so many solid and substantial verities it gives them a being not in themselves but unto the believer and of invisible it makes them visible as it is said of Moses he saw him that was invisible How by faith verse 23.24 that which was invisible to the eye of nature was visible to the eye of faith Faith brings the object and the faculty together Heb. 11.27 Hence now men yet in their unregeneracy though haply illuminated to a high degree of Gospel-Notion in time of tribulation will fall away and walk no more with Jesus because through the want of Faith Divine Truth had no rooting in their hearts all their knowledge is but a powerlesse notion floating in the brain and can give no reality or subsistence to Gospel-verities Knowledge gives lustre but Faith gives being knowledg doth irradiate but Faith doth realize knowledge holds ou● light but faith adds life and power It is Faith my Brethren whereby you stand 2 Tim. 1.12 Faith is that whereby a man can live upon the truth and die for the truth I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Look to your Faith Christians For again Faith fetcheth strength from Christ Secondly Faith will help you to fetch strength from Jesus Christ to do to suffer to live to die for Jesus Christ and the truths which he hath purchased and ratified by his own blood Phil. 4 13. I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me Faith invests the soul into a kind of Omnipotency I can do all things Other mens impossibilities are faiths triumph Faith is an omnipotent grace because it sets a work an Omnipotent God In the Lord I have righteousness and strength is the boast of faith Isa 45.24 Righteousnesse for Justification and strength for Sanctification and for carrying on all the duties of the holy life this is insinuated in my Text Hold fast c. in FAITH which is in CHRIST JESVS So that if it were demanded How shall we hold fast the answ is by Faith how doth faith hold fast in Christ Jesus scil as it is acted by and as it acts upon Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is a Fountain of strength Psal 71.16 and that strength is drawn out by faith hence Davids Resolve I will go in the strength of the Lord God I will make mention of thy Righteousnesse even of thine onely 2. Love The second grace which you must look to is LOVE Love is another hold-fast grace I held him and would not let him go said the Spouse of her Beloved Cant. 4.3 I tell you sirs Love will hold fast the truth when Learning will let it go the reason is because Learning lieth but in the head but Love resteth in the heart and causeth the heart to rest in the thing or person beloved I cannot dispute for