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A43568 Christ displayed as the choicest gift, and best master: from Joh. 4. 10. Joh. 13. 13. Being some of the last sermons preached by that faithful and industrious servant of Jesus Christ, Mr. Nathaniel Haywood, sometime minister of the gospel at Ormschurch in Lancashire. Heywood, Nathaniel, 1633-1677. 1679 (1679) Wing H1757; ESTC R218948 147,704 290

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understand what the Father hath given us in him and what good things he himself offereth to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Water in several places hath different significations Here and in the Apocalypst saith Grotius I doubt not but that it signifies the Evangelical Doctrine as it contains those things which are necessary and sufficient to obtain eternal life And many of the Fathers differ not much from this who take it to mean the water of Baptism as it is a solemn profession of that Doctrine Piscator and others take it to be meant of the holy Spirit as appears by the 14 vers A well of water springing up to eternal life Joh. 7.39 So Cyril saith it signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickening gift of the Spirit But with Hammond I conceive it denotes the Grace of God exhibited in Christ. So Theophylact 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the grace of the holy Spirit And Calvin all the whole Grace of renovation aqua viva not metonymically as quickning water but metaphorically saith Piscator because 't is ever springing never failing not like standing or dead water One general Doctrine ariseth from the whole Text as it stands related to the Context That Iesus Christ is meek and gracious slow to anger and full of compassion bearing with the ignorance and folly perverseness and resistance of them he intends to save How often did this woman provoke him how long did she withstand him what feminine artifices doth she use to elude breaking jests making captious fallacies as one disposed to slight and jeer whatever he spake c. yet he would take no denial from her but presented his gracious design as one that heard not O the unutterable treasure of Grace in Christ which all her provocations could not overcome In all this discourse we may read our stiffness and stubbornness Christs gentleness and goodness 1. Doct. Christ is the gift of God 2. Doct. One great reason why men refuse Christ and their own salvation is because they know him not Ignorance is the cause of rejecting Christ and his Grace this keeps souls from him Christ and holiness have no enemies but the ignorant did men know what Christ is and what the love of God was in giving him they must have iron-hearts indeed if they could despise and resist him If thou knewest c. 3 Doct. The blessed Son of God made himself very poor stooped exceeding low for the good of sinners And who it is that saith unto thee give me to drink He was Lord of Heaven and Earth the world was his and the fulness thereof the fowls of the mountains the beasts of the forrest and the cattel upon a thousand hills yet he begs a little cold water of a poor woman to quench his thirst O astonishing condescension deep humiliation Blessed Jesus whither did thy love to sinners carry thee 4. Doct. Knowledg in the mind makes way for a spontaneous motion of the will and affections the understanding is to the will as the needle to the thread If thou knewest thou wouldest When the understanding is enlightned with eye-salve and hath clear apprehensions of Christ as transcendently excellent then the Will puts forth it self in its strongest desires after him as the eye transmits the beauty it beholds to the heart so when there is an assent to the things revealed of Christ in the Word when we do with open face behold as in a glass the glory of the Lord in the Gospel then we are ready to accept of him and his Grace with suitable affections this is plain in the connexion in the Text and from the latter sweet connexion Thou wouldest have asked I would have given c. 5. Doct. If we can but rightly ask Christ will readily give ask and have is the language of the Gospel The Grace of God is free but it must be begged He will be inquired of and sought unto for that he intends and promises to give though this woman was a Samaritan yet he would not deny her living water had she desired it of him We must be touched with the knowledg and sense of our maladies and poverty before we will seek the remedy Therefore the Lord inviteth not the drunken but the dry not the full but the hungry that they may eat and drink To what end should Christ be sent unto us with the fulness of the spirit unless we were empty and 't is not enough to feel our wants so as to see our need of help from another unless the hope of present or near help be added thereunto because if we only see and feel our wants we should do nothing else but groan under our miseries and pine away with sorrow but this is true and profitable knowledg of the Grace of God when we know that the same is offered to us in Christ and that it is reached unto us by his hand and so our hearts are inflamed with vehement propassions and desires after it 6. Doct. Grace is the gift of Christ he is the fountain whence this water flows I would have given thee living water Christ gives grace to them that ask it of him as we should ask spiritual blessings ardently and importunately so he gives them most freely and liberally Ioh. 6.27 7. Doct. True Grace never fails those that once have it shall never lose it whoever drinks of this water of life which Christ gives shall never perish 'T is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denoting the perpetuity everlastingness of it Grace is sure and the priviledges of it are sure this is the advantage of spiritual comforts that they do not only satisfie our desires but secure us against our fears Once in Christ and for ever preserved in Christ. This certainty of Grace the comfort of a Christian is not respectu rei but Dei One of the Fathers brings in the flesh saying Ego deficiam I will surely fail and miscarry and the world Ego decipiam I will intice and deceive them and Satan Ego eripiam I will snatch and carry them away But God saith Ego custodiam I will keep them there lyes our safety and security he hath said I will never leave them nor forsake them 1. Doct. Christ is the gift of God Christ in a peculiar and eminent manner is termed Gods gift It is the common mode and fashion of great persons to give rich and magnificent gifts suitable to their state and quality regarding more what becomes them to give than their petitioners to ask or receive The great Alexander could tell his suitors whom he had more astonished than relieved with his bounty and favour That though the thing might be too great for them to receive yet it was not too great for Alexander to give If dust and as●es can speak and think at this rate O how large is the heart of God! The great and glorious God out of his infinitely overflow●ing love and unsearchable riches of Grace hath conferred upon poor lost self destroying
and Master to guide and govern your hearts and thoughts and lives by his Laws and Statutes and is it your ordinary purpose desire and endeavour to obey him even when he commands the hardest duties and those which most cross the desire and interest of the flesh and 't is your sorrow when you break your resolutions herein then Christ is yours But if you are only content to be saved by him from Hell when you dye in the mean time he shall command you no further than will stand with your credit or pleasure or worldly estate and ends and did never heartily consent that he should rule over you nor resign up your souls and bodies to be governed and disposed by him nor took his Word for a Law and Rule of your thoughts and actions but if he would give you leave you had rather live after the world and flesh than after the Word and Spirit he is not yet yours though you may in words call him Lord and Master yet in your works you deny him He is his Friend and Disciple that keeps his commandments Iohn 15.7 14 but they that would not hearken to his voice would none of him he gave them up to their own hearts lusts Psal. 8.11 3. Have you received the Spirit of Christ The Apostle makes the former and this characters of such as have received Christ. 1 Joh. 3.24 He that keepeth his commandments dwells in him and Christ in him hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us Well then do ye obey the Laws of Christ and walk in his ways conform to his example and live the life of Jesus He that doth not thus may say he abides in Christ but he doth but say so 't is not so in truth and reallity 1 Joh. 2.6 He that saith he abides in Christ ought to walk as he walked Further Let me ask you the question the Apostle asked the Disciples at Ephesus Acts. 19.2 Whether have you received the Holy Ghost If God have given Christ to you Christ hath given you his holy Spirit For if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 1 John 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit The Spirit not as residing in Christ but as given to us is an evidence that we have received Christ. Well then let every one of you be now inquisitive and put such interrogatories as these to himself Have I the Spirit is he given to me doth he dwell in my soul have I the spirit of illumination and revelation Eph. 1.17 Do I see such things as I never saw before as the inexpressible vileness and loathsomness of sin the greatest beauty in holiness c. Have I the spirit of life in Christ Jesus to quicken me and raise me up from the dead Rom. 8.2 2 Cor. 3.6 Have I felt the spirit of conviction to convince me of sin righteousness and judgment Iohn 16.8 The spirit of grace and supplication stirring up to and assisting in that heavenly duty of Prayer Zech. 12.10 The spirit of holyness to sanctifie me 1 Pet. 1.2 to mortifie my sins and corruptions Rom. 8.13 and work up my heart to all holy obedience Ezek. 36.27 Am I renewed in the spirit of my mind is Gods Image repaired in me am I transformed into the same image from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord Am I growing in grace perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord Do I walk in all Gods Ways and Statutes freely regularly constantly Am I willing to sacrifice an Isaac a Benjamin an Absolom a Delilah Herodias and hew with Samuel delicate Agag in pieces or with David keep my self from mine own iniquity Is the old man dead the flesh with all its cursed retinue mortified do I detest and loath every sin in thought word and deed and that not so much for its effects as for its nature and hate it rather as Hell than for Hell Enquire what do you find of these high and gracious operations o● the spirit in your selves he is always an active working Spirit is he so in you Doth he raise your hearts to heavenly things and draw forth your souls to Christ O deal faithfully with your own souls let the search be deep and thorow go to the bottom of your deceitful h●arts bring things to an issue be sure that you be not mistaken 4. If Christ be received there will be a more earnest intent desire and breathing of soul after him he that hath once tasted the sweetness of his grace and seen the splendor of his beauty will be so far from being satisfied that he will still more and more thirst after him the more excellency the soul apprehends in him the more vehement and restless are his desires towards him Thus it was with the Spouse Cant. 2.3 4 5 ●he had a glance of him and cries out As the Apple-tree among the trees of the wood so is my beloved among the sons Here the Spouse seems to be strongly moved with affection and before her beloved had well ended his speech breaks out into an affectionate Elogy of him which she is not able to express but conquered with her own passion she sits down and breathes for comfort I sate down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste Here the soul receives and applys Christ with sweet rellish to her palate comfort to her heart He brought me to the banqueting house and his banner over me was love she still tasts more of the riches of his Grace and what was the effect of this did she surfeit with eating his fruit and banquetting no she is more ravisht with desire Stay me with flagons comfort me with apples for I am sick of love I am wounded nay slain as some Interpreters with love which by the sweet vehemency and insatiability of it makes the heart to burn and weep groan and sigh to forget all and drive away all but him on whom alone she fixeth and would rest but cannot center till she enjoy him in glory till then she is sick and weary and lives not in her self but in him in whom her life is hid As Plato defines love an ardour or flame of a soul dead in its own body and living in another One thus writes to his friend I have for the present a sick life much pain and love-sickness for Christ. O what would I give to have a bed made to my wearied soul in his bosom O when shall we meet O how long is it to the dawning of the marriage-day O sweet Lord Iesus take wide steps O my beloved come leaping over the mountains of separation O that he would fold the heavens together like an old cloak and shovel time and days out of the way and come away Well have you pain and sick-nights for Christ do your thoughts continually run on
such a jewel all the treasures upon earth could not bear proportion to him nor make reparation for the loss of him I know the true Believer shall never lose Christ because Christ will never suffer him to be lost but he may do that which may tend to the losing of him though through grace he shall not be actually lo●t and he may do that which may deprive him utterly of the sense evidence and comfort of this gift though his propriety in it remain firm and sure 'T is true a Saint shall never be left so to himself or his sin as that sin shall bereave him of his jewel his Christ but may and often doth steal away the key of his cabinet his evidence and assurance Cant. 5.5 6. I opened to my beloved but my beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone Thus you see Christ sometimes withdraws himself from them that dearly love and earnestly desire him for as he is said when pleased to gratifie his people with his grace and assistance strength and deliverance to come out of heaven his dwelling place Isa 26. ult and 64.1 So he is said to return thither when he forbears to put forth and exercise his grace and to shew his mercy and loving kindness to them Hos. 5. ult Isa. 18.4 he is said to hide his face in regard of his special grace and love and in regard of intercourse and communion with his Church not totally but in part not finally and for ever but for a moment a small moment he shortens his hand in his wonted operations and ceaseth to be so intimate and familiar with his servants and seems to be a stranger to them and their condition and this he does for divers good reasons and considerations 1. Christ leaves them sometimes because they will not open to him when he knocks at the door of their hearts either they are not at leasure or busied about other matters and employments or are too much setled upon their lees sloath and security hath seized upon them Cant. 5.2 3 4. 2. He does it for tryal that he may make an experiment of his Churches love to him and faithfulness in his service to see whether his people can abide to be without him or will serve and follow him frowning as well as smileing As a Father may leave his dear Child and stand behind the door to see what it will do So God exercised Iob David Heman Asaph and others the Wife is tryed in the long absence of her Husband 3. To raise and quicken them more to love and desire him for though the absence of fuel doth diminish the fire yet commonly the absence of Lovers doth increase and heighten love and makes it more impatient and restless Cant. 5.8 This made the Spouse sick of love and her soul failed she could not bear it Isa. 26.9 With my soul have I desired thee in the night 4. To cure formality in believers and to remove all trusting to resting in or relying on any thing besides himself and that the soul may not be satisfied with any thing below himself As a Father sometimes le ts go his hold that the Child may see his dependance upon him The Children of Israel were exceedingly formalized in their Devotion they only looked at the external Sacrifices but did not frame their doings to turn unto God Hos. 5 6. Therefore he takes this course with them They shall go with their flocks and with their herds to seek the Lord but they shall not find him He hath withdrawn himself from them i. e. they shall go after their accustomed manner of sacrifices but God hides himself because he will bring them off their formality and security So if we trust in outward Ordinances and lay too much stress upon them the time may come when we shall use them and seek God in them and not find him because of formality 5. That he may teach them to live by faith not to be too much dejected but believe that he is near to them but behind the Wall Cant. 2.8 9. He is kept off from the soul by the wall of sense and carnal reason that the soul may improve his faith in looking over this wall as Iob did Iob 19.25 26 I know that my redeemer lives c. Isa. 50.10 He will come and will not tarry 6 That his presence may be more esteemed and valued when re-injoyed there is often a remisness and abatement in love to Christ but when he is lost and found again we shall watch better over our selves and set a higher price on him than before we have need sometimes to be taught the worth of mercies by the want of them post frigora dulcior ignis when we know what it is to want his presence we learn to esteem it Post tempestatem dulcior securitas How sweet is a calm after a storm Christs favourable Aspect is more sweet and acceptable when the sun-shine thereof begins to break forth again after some black and bitter tempest of desertion Now since there is some danger of losing Christ in these respects we had need look to our selves and do all we can to retain him with us for our help I shall lay down some motives and then directions as in the first branch 1. To perswade us to this I shall use no other arguments or motives but only to tell you what Christ is to the soul and so it may see what it deprives it self of by losing him 1. Keep him for he is thy life Whoso findeth him findeth life Prov. 8.35 and 3.18 She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her and happy is every one that retaineth her speaking of wisdom under which notion Christ is commended to us So Prov. 4.13 Take fast hold of instruction let her not go keep her for she is thy life He saith I am thy life and the length of thy days with him is the fountain of life he is the only well-spring of life and all blessedness How sweet is life skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life he 'l part with any thing every thing rather than life When many of Christs followers forsook and walked no more with him Will ye also forsake me said he to his Apostles Peter answered for himself and the rest Lord whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life Joh. 6.68 q. d. Lord if we leave thee we leave our life and all our comfort we forsake our own mercy and judg our selves unworthy of everlasting life had we no other reason 't is motive enough to stay with thee and keep close with thee to consider that our lives are hid in thee eternal life and consequently all that 's dear to us the quintessence of all happiness is with thee 2. Keep him for he is thy light how sad and miserable is it to walk in darkness if you let Christ go you eclipse your own light 't is night when
use of him here and hath now taken him home to himself His afflictions temptations oppositions were above the ordinary rate which as they assimilated him to his Master so they promoted his greater usefulness here and fittednes for heaven the lintel-stones and pillars of the new Ierusalem suffer more knocks of Gods hammer and tool than the common side-wall stones God wearied him out of this world and made heaven welcome wish him not here again but labour to improve this dreadful breach by remembring his Doctrine imitating his exemplary practice and understanding Gods design in this so amazing stroke search out that Achan that hath troubled your camp lay to heart sin reform your lives live up to the Doctrines you have been taught and do these in particular which are here presented to your view and I am confident will be acceptable to you though wanting the warming-accent of his lively voice which was full of sparkling spirits you must see his face hear his voice no more in your solemn assemblies but yet this Elijah as he mounted up to heaven in a chariot of fire dropped down this paper-mantle amongst us which by the spirit of grace concurring may divide the swelling-waves of Jordan I mean separate betwixt precious souls and those abominations which at this day overflow all banks and bounds Oh that Gods Spirit may by these conduits convey spiritual life and marrow into your souls that you may live though Ministers die they die civilly naturally may you live spiritually eternally This servant of God spent himself as a candle to give you light if ever it might be said of a mortal man as of our Saviour The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up it may be said so of this choice servant of God who spent and was spent for souls who counted not his life dear unto him that he might finish his course with joy in labours more abundant But I purposely wave what concerns his person at present leaving a rough draught of his smooth life to a fitter season All I shall add is to give a brief account of these ensuing Treatises As to the printing of them though Solomon caution his Son against making and reading many Books Eccles. 12.12 yet that only sounds a retreat to luxuriant wits in a scribling age as to writing upon some subjects or for vain glory but doth not simply condemn writing Books which hath been the key of discipline an Herauld of the Gospel and a notable mean to propagate true Religion As for these discourses upon common subjects I pickt them out of a vast bundle of variety of excellent discourses upon such accounts as these 1. Because I do not remember any such full Treatises upon these heads 2. Yet they are needful and useful pleasant and profitable 3. They are handed out in a taking-method and manner 4. His heart was much carried out in preaching Christ to sinners he professed most delight in it these Sermons then are the lively idea of his Gospel spirit 5. God made them savoury and delectable in their first verbal delivery and why not upon a second review 6. This servant of God is likely to preach no more but hereby being dead he yet speaketh 7. The importunity of such friends as deserved to be gratified extorted this labour of love to the souls of sinners nor shall it repent us to expose it naked to the worlds censures so it may by Gods blessing profit any For Treatises themselves though carried on by way of similitude and resemblance yet are not therefore to be despised or rejected the Prophets used similitudes Lumen supernum nunquam desendit sine indumento Rab. Cup. in Synt. Apost p. 177 178. Christ preacht much in Parables and this way sweetly instills Truths with delight and clearness into the mind and affection so that Cyprian's caution be well regarded that they be not stretcht too far He instanceth in leaven I may instance in this gift of God Iesus Christ is not so a gift but that he is also a Lord not to be ruled by us but to rule us To us a Son is given Isa. 9.6 but how that yet the government might be upon his shoulder As he is the Lords Christ so he is Christ the Lord who will rule where he rests and reign where ever he is received he will be Lord as well as Life a Master as well as a Treasure he will sway his righteous scepter over us as well as vouchsafe his glorious benefits to us he expects we should be his servants as well as his friends we must be the Lords Nethinims given to God yea by our selves as we expect this blessed Donative from God he that will not be ruled by his golden scepter shall be crushed by his iron rod. And as Iesus Christ is a gift so he is food bread of life heavenly manna yet this must not be stretcht too far for in this he is contrary to ordinary corporal food for though he feed souls he turns them not they him into his holy heavenly nature Christ as the gift of God is the matter of this feast Christ as Lord is the master and maker of this feast All this must be understood suitable to the majesty of the Son of God and according to the nature of Metaphors otherwise saith Cyprian If they were the same they were not examples but the things rather which they illustrate But all these similitudes fall infinitely short of the perfection of him who is above finite excellencies Nec similitudinem substantiae in facturis suis habere potest ille qui factor est omnium All I shall add further on this account is that caution of his in a like case Et jam hoc loco mundior auditus requiritur purior sensus Let your senses be raised to spiritual objects Having hinted a few words concerning the Author and Treatises give me leave having this fair opportunity to be speak the once constant attenders upon this good mans Ministry and those are either sinners or Saints As for unconverted sinners that attended such powerful awakening preaching and have sitten out these loud calls and pathetical intreaties and rational Interrogatories Perswasives Expostulations I may now say Lord have mercy upon you your case is miserable hath your Minister killed himself to save your souls and yet will you not be saved have you worn him to the stumps and quenched his natural light with your spiritual deadness Have you stifled all those convictions you have had under his Ministry And have you not reason to fear that Gods Spirit will strive with you no more Where will you find such another upright Nathaneel such a rouzing Boanerges such a melting Barnabas Shall he that studied travelled sweat wept sigh'd and suffered be brought in as a testimony against you He was mighty in prayer were you stupid when he wrestled with God for you and was loath to be put off without a soul at a Sermon Did you look about
fulness fulness of the Godhead not in shadows types representations as Gods presence filled the Temple Camp Mount but bodily that is essentialiter presentialiter potentialiter in regard of essence presence and power the expression is yet more Emphatical fulness dwells in Christ not sometimes but always there there 's a fulnes in the Sea but 't is ebbing and flowing a fulness of the Moon but it is growing and decreasing a fulness in the creature but it is going and coming up and down but in Christ is not only but dwells fulness yea in Christ dwells all fulness there was a fulness of beauty in Absalom but not a fulness of truth and sincerity a fulness of wisdom in Solomon but not of constancy and stedfastness he gave his heart to pleasure and folly A fulness of Policy in Achitophel but not of holiness and faithfulness to his Prince yea it proved fulness of folly to hang himself A fulness of strength in Sampson but not of faith and courage of mind he was strong in body but soft and impotent in mind and was overcome by a woman There 's Ahiatus and some emptiness in every creature yea an Angels fulness sits neighbour to pure nothing But in Christ is all fulness The Ark or holy Chest in the Tabernacle did typifie Christ in whom God hath treasured up all perfection of wisdom grace power goodness and mercy for by this fulness beza understands the accumulation or heaping up of all divine gifts in a most copious and plentiful manner which the Schoolmen call habitual grace distinct from the grace of union God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him He anointed him with the oyl of gladness above his fellows But this ri●h treasure is not hid this full ark not locked up for from the fulness overflowing in Christ all Believers receive their sufficiency and fulness Ioh. 2.16 Of his fulness we all receive and grace for grace that is grace answerable to every communicable grace in Christ. If there be light in the Sun the air cannot be dark if there be sap in the stock the branches cannot be dry If there be fulness in the fountain the streams cannot be empty Therefore the Apostle prays Eph. 3 19 That they might be filled with all the fulness of God that is the Divine fulness which is diffusive and communicable that Christ in whom dwells all fulness may dwell in their hearts by faith that they may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bread●h and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledg and might receive abundance of grace and that his grace may more than over abound towards them 3. Christ is a most ●ind gift a gift of love there is a wonderful and astonishing Philanthropy kindness and love of God towards man appearing in his giving Christ Tit. 3.5 It is not the gift many times but the love and good will of the giver that makes it excellent in the eye of the receiver Now Christ is a most excellent incomparable gift flowing out of a bottomless boundless fountain of pure and dear love Ioh. 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son c. He so loved that is so admirable was his love that it cannot be expressed nay it far exceeds our highest conceptions Gods love was herein as himself infinite incomprehensible and everlasting in the womb of this love Christ was conceived and thence brought forth When God made the world he intended to give an evidence of his Power in ordering and governing all Creatures even the most ungovernable He manifests his infinite Wisdom he appointed the Lake of fire and brimstone to declare the severity of his Justice but he gave his Son to be by his own death the Redeemer of lost sinners and herein his purpose was to demonstrate to the world the transcendency of his love This is the highest expression and fullest demonstration of his love to the Creature not only that ever was but that ever can be for in this love God only acts to the uttermost he never shewed so much of his Power Wisdom and Wrath but he could have shewed more But he hath no greater instance of his love than Christ to give such a Son for such sinners O the superlative matchless unlimited love and grace of God transcending the reach of the highest finite capacity He had done exceeding well for man as he made him at first for he put him into a very good estate stampt his own Image upon him made him above all other Creatures to be his favourite but he foolishly sinned and fell and lost all his happiness Well what did God now do did he let man alone shut up his bowels against him fall upon him with his utmost wrath Did he say Nay since it is thus let him even rise as he hath fallen since he would be so foolish as for a trifle to break with me let him die and rot and perish for ever I 'le do no more for him c. O no! not such a word or thought did pass from the gracious God towards his miserable Creature But will he pardon him without satisfaction no sin shall be punished but the punishment shall be laid on his Son O the height of Justice and so the sinner shall be acquitted O the depth of mercy There is more of mercy in pardoning this way than in absolute pardoning Meer pardon and salvation it self had not so much of mercy and love in them as what was in giving Christ. 'T is more for a King to put his Son in the Traytors stead and take the Malefactors chains and suffer than just to pardon c. God might have redeemed us another way but he could not shew so much love another way God gives many rich gifts and royal favours to his people together with Christ as so many tokens and pledges of his love But herein is the very top and zenith of love the greatest evidence imaginable of Gods bounty and goodness God commendeth his love towards us as unparallel'd in that when we were sinners Christ died for us Rom. 5.8 Herein he lays open and naked to us the tenderest bowels of mercy and love infinite goodness here makes free love swell without it self like a boundless River impatient of its banks 't is a love that could not flow within its own channel O! the boundless breadth the bottomless depth of the love of God in Christ a Sea of love is nothing it hath a bottom a Heaven of love is nothing it hath a brim but infinite love hath no bounds 't is unfathomable unsearchable and incomprehensible 4. Christ is a most rich gift in him are hid all the treasures of wisdom knowledg Col. 2.3 he is the pearl in the field 〈…〉 ine of pure gold and therefore he cour 〈…〉 poor Church of Laodicea to buy of him tryed gold that she may be rich Rev. 3.18 He is
the inexhausted fountain of all those streams of blessedness that flow forth all the Creation over the eternal Spring and Well-head of all those fresh Seas and Oceans of all the swelling-tides and bottomless depths of unutterable riches of grace and love to all his elect He must needs be rich who sets up and enriches so many thousand Bankrupts that had not only wasted their goods but sold themselves into slavery and bondage he pays their ransoms buys out their liberty and purchases Crowns and Kingdoms for them It would beggar all the Angels in Heaven to pay down the ransom of one soul yea to purchase the pardon of one sin The redemption of the soul is precious the soul of the meanest man alive is of more worth than a world as he himself tells us who went to the price of souls What then shall we think of Christ who saves so many millions of souls Hence in Scripture the richest things on earth are made use of to shadow out the riches of Christ. Under the title of wisdom he saith Prov. 8.18 19 Riches and honour are with me yea durable riches and righteousness My fruit is better than gold and my revenue than choice silver And Prov. 3.16 Length of days are in her right hand and in her left hand riches and honour Eternity hath the honour of her right hand riches are the left-hand blessings of wisdom The riches of Christ are not ordinary things not perishing riches but unsearchable and inexhaustible Eph. 3.8 There are unsearchable riches of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to be traced out never to be drawn dry Though all true believers have all their debts paid and are all maintained and advanced by his riches and at his cost and charges yet there is no lessening of this treasure that 's never the emptier Sumit unus sumunt mille quantum isti tantum illi neque sumptus absumitur One believer draws water of life and a supply of all needful blessings out of this Well of Salvation and a Thousand gracious souls do the like and the One draws as much as the Thousand yet the Well is never drawn dry As the Apostle Paul speaks of his over-abundant grace confesses he was dipt in a sea of mercy One Paul obtained as much grace even so whole and compleat a ransom without diminishing as would have saved a world Grace reigns 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is rich and Lord of all 5. Christ is a most precious gift He is more precious than rubies and all the things that thou canst desire are not to be compared unto him Imagine what you will name what you can and 't is unworthy to stand in comparison with Christ who is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon him and happy is every one that retaineth him Prov. 3.15 18. It 's too true there are not a few that set light by Christ and can see no beauty or comliness in him that they should desire him but to them that believe he is precious 1 Pet. 2.7 The wise Merchant understood his worth which made him sell all that he had with joy with a very good will so far from sticking and wavering so far from changing his mind that he persists in his resolution with a chearful heart that he might purchase this Pearl of great price Mat. 13.44 The Apostle Paul was at one with himself Yea doubtless I count all things but loss and dung 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dogs-meat that I may win Christ Phil. 3.8 Let burning hanging all torments befall me tantumodo ut Christum nansciscar so I may get Christ saith Ignatius Could we give you a particular view and account but that 's impossible of every excellency and all the high perfections that are in Christ you would find him precious in all the parts of his Mediatorship in his person in his natures in his offices in all his gifts and graces Look on him as Mediator and there he shines forth most gloriously and appears to be the most peerless and precious thing in the world as Prophet he is most precious Enoch Noah Moses Elisha David c. were excellent and precious men in their times but were types of Christ he as far excels them as the substance doth the shadow He is Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of eminency and exellency above all other Prophets they spake to the ear he to the heart they searched out the mind of God he came out of his bosome and saith Counsel is mine and sound wisdom I am understanding Prov. 8.14 So as Priest he is most precious this office is the most excellent part of his mediation he could never have opened our eyes as Prophet nor ruled our hearts as King had he not died for us O the death and blood of Christ this Lamb of God! how precious of what infinite value The death of a Man is more precious than of a Beast of a King than of many Men of Christ more than a thousand Kings Thousands of Rams and ten thousand Rivers of Oyl had been nothing to the price Christ paid See in the Hebrews how far Christs Priesthood excels all that went before him He alone is an everlasting Priest offering but once sufficient for all gone to Heaven c. and he is Sacrifice Priest Temple Altar and all in one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Never was there on earth a King so precious as Christ though all good Kings are precious he is over all King of kings and Lord of lords his kingdom spiritual over all hearts consciences over all nations ages all sorts and ranks of men from generation to generation he is head and King alone without either Collegue in the largeness of his dominions or Regent in his minority or Vice-roy in his absence How precious is grace one dram of it better than all the treasures in the world Now he is the fountain of it full of grace and truth so Truths Ordinances so Comforts Promises all that belongs unto him very precious 6. Christ is a most pleasant gift Nothing more desirable and amiable than Christ to sinners Excellency is the attractive of desire beauty draws the eye that affects the heart and delight following love makes very delightful Now Christ is altogether lovely Totus ipse in universum delectabilis desiderabilis all throughout from top to toe desirable and delightful the cheif among Ten thousand matchless and incomparable To say nothing of his bodily features though Historians report Christ to be very beautiful as man As God he is the perfection of beauty 't is true beauty is not formally in God yet it is in him eminently and by way of Analogy for if beauty be good and a desirable perfection in the creature it must needs be in the infinite God as the perfection of the effect is in the cause If Roses and Lillies be fair he must be fair that created them but in another kind if the Sun Moon
and Stars be beautiful the lovely Lord that made them must contain their beauty in the highest measure beauty in God is the amiableness and loveliness of his nature and all his infinite perfections as this pleasantness offers it self to his own understanding and the understanding of men and Angels So that as bodily beauty satisfies the eye and so acts on the heart to win love So the Truth of the Lords nature and all his Attributes offered to the understanding and mind drawing from them admiration and love is the beauty of God The Prophet speaks of it with admiration How great is thy beauty Zech. 9.17 David makes it his one thing that he may behold it Psal. 27.4 David desires no other life but to stand beside God and behold with the eye of his mind and faith God in his Nature and Attributes as he reveals himself to the creature Now this beauty of God shines forth to us in Christ 2 Cor. 4.7 who is the brightness of his Fathers glory and the express character of his person Heb. 1.3 When Moses was to behold God he was hid in the Rock while his glory passed by and that Rock was Christ. You sometimes see beauty that ravishes the heart of the beholder in the children of men O! but Christ is fairer than the Sons of men Psal. 45.2 on which place Austin thus descants To us Believers the heavenly Bridegroom seems to be most fair every way fair in Heaven fair on Earth fair in the Womb fair in the Cradle fair in his Miracles fair in his Doctrine fair in his Stripes fair on the Cross fair in his very Grave To make up a beauty is required 1. A good complexion fairness in colours So Christ is pure white and red Cant. 5.10 white in his Divine Nature which was the brightness of his Fathers substance Red in his humanity being of the same substance with the first Adam who was made of Red Earth White in his holiness Red in his blood and sufferings White in his own immaculate innocence and purity Red by the imputation of our sins which are like scarlet and Crimson White in his goodness and free grace to humble sinners but Red and bloody in his severity to his enemies that will not that he reign over them His effigies was so beautiful that no Painter could ever draw him because of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divine lustre and grace that shone in him His countenance is as Lebanon excellent as the Cedar Cant. 5.15 and 1.16 the Spouse cryes out wondering Behold thou art fair my beloved yea pleasant that is lovely and amiable 2. As he is fair in Coulors so he is comly in proportion and integrity of parts If a person have never so good colours yet if any part be wanting or be not an agreement of parts in regard of quantity scituation and stature 't is no beauty but an error of nature But Christ is beautiful for features for infiniteness and sweetness of order and proportion is so spread over his nature and attributes that nothing can be added to him nothing taken from him He is the fulness of the godhead the perfection of beauty Cant. 5.10 to the end His head is as most fine gold his locks bushy and black as a raven his eyes as the eyes of doves his cheeks as a bed of spices his lips like lillies c. O what a pleasant harmony and specious consent of parts is here yea he is altogether lovely Here she breaks off her praises in a general Elogy which no words can express enough q. d. Alas what is this I have spoken I am too barren and empty of language I know not what to call him but do you that hear me imagine or name any thing that is most desirable most worthy to be loved longed for and admired and that is he he is the desire of all Nations This pleasant and delightful gift is set forth in Scripture by something that pleases all the inward senses Here 's beauty to delight the eye O! how blessed are they who see the King in his beauty Here 's Myrrh Aloes and Cassia sweet perfumes to the spiritual smell Psal. 45.8 He is a bundle of myrrh Cant. 1.13 His voice is most sweet and pleasant to the ear Cant. 2.8 The voice of my beloved so taken with the sweetne●s of it that she speaks in broken language His lips like lillies dropping sweet smelling myrrh Cant. 5.13 How sweet is he to the taste Cant. 2.3 I sate down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste of an excellent rellish wine milk honey fatted calf c. are but shadows of this He 's a delicate Banquet The kisses of his mouth and hidden manna are most delectable to the spiritual touch Cant. 1.2 The sense and experience of his mercy the assurance of his love the sealing of his Spirit O how sw●et to a thirsty soul O taste and see that the Lord is gracious and transcendently amiable and pleasant as Mr. Rutherford Suppose all the corns of sand in all the earth and shores all the flowers herbs leaves and twigs of trees since the creation all the drops of dew and rain that the clouds send down all the stars in heaven all the joints hairs and drops of blood of all men that have been are or shall be were all rational creatures and had the wisdom and tongues of Angels to speak of the beauty and loveliness of Christ they would in all their expressions stay millions of miles on this side Christ and his excellency 7. Christ is a most useful gift In this respect he is the one thing needful and were there no other excellency in him this were enough to commend him to us he is so useful that we cannot be without him Though a gift were never so rich pleasant and precious in it self yet if the excellency in it may not be made use of and it be not good and fit for us it is not much valued But this gift of God is so admirable good for our use that he seems to be fitted and dressed and made all for our use in regard of his Mediatorship that office is wholly for us and our benefit He was born lived died rose again sits on Gods right hand as Advocate and comes to judgment for our sakes and for our good He is God and Man Prophet Priest and King A Saviour a Redeemer a Surety an Advocate a Mediator Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification c. all for use to us lost and perishing sinners He is a jewel indeed but not locked up in heaven to be made use of by none Christ is shadowed forth in Scripture by Head Vine Milk Water c. now what more necessary and useful to men than these Who could reconcile us to God when we were enemies but Christ in his blood Rom. 5.10 Who could justifie us in the sight of God when we were sinners but Christ by his righteousness Rom.
my husband my lot my portion Who will give me to drink of this Well of water springing up to eternal life this fountain of living waters this pure river that flows from the Throne from the heart of God Canst thou hear so much though infinitely short of his worth and not desire him Dost thou indeed believe that all this is true and yet thy soul not hunger and thirst after him Are these faithful sayings and is not he worthy of all acceptation Is it possible for a rational creature to hear of such a bottomless treasure of such a boundless pleasure and not covet the enjoyment of it O man where are thy wits What 's become of thy reason Art thou a man or a bruit If thou knewest the gift of God and what it is that is offered thee thou wouldest scorn the highest honours the sweetest pleasures the greatest riches yea trample upon all the Crowns and Kingdoms of this world for it It 's an inestimable priviledg that thou art a creature capable of so vast a happiness it 's the astonishing wonder of Heaven and Earth that God would give a Son such a Son to be thy Saviour what could he give more or better and it 's a special favour that the Gospel hath been sent to thee to reveal this great mystery to offer this excellent gift to thee and now when it is tendered wilt thou refuse it Wilt thou neglect and undervalue Christ or wilt thou not rather give it all humble and thankful acceptance Reflect upon those twelve incomparable properties and characters of this gift methinks though I have spoken but little yet I have said enough to one that will let his reason judg to draw out thy most vehement desires after this gift Yet I will add these Considerations more 1. Consider who it is that offers this gift to thee Christ is the gift of God in a peculiar and eminent manner so therefore were there no other reason thou must take it The worth greatness and excellency of the Donor is an argument to move us to take the gift we regard not so much what it is as from whom it is If thy Father or thy Prince offer a gift to thee would'st thou durst thou deny it If thy dearest Friend should send thee a token wouldest thou slight it Now look on the best of men in all his Excellencies in himself relations to thee and thy dependance on him consider in him all that faithfulness goodness greatness or any thing else that would most move thee to take a gift from his hands and there is infinitely more cause to accept this gift at the hands of God The great and glorious God the King of kings Lord of lords and God of gods the blessed Majesty of Heaven the first Cause the original Being self-sufficient all-sufficient absolutely perfect uncapable of any addition or diminution humbles himself to offer this gift to thee 'T is the high and lofty One that inhabits Eternity to whom millions of ages are but as one day who is boundless in his Being Omnipotent in his Power unsearchable in his Wisdom unconceivable in his Grace and infinite in all his Perfections He who dwells in that light inaccessible before whom the Angels the highest of Creatures vail their faces to whom the whole Creation is nothing less than nothing and vanity This God is he that made thee and all things of nothing supports all things influences all things and is all things and infinitely more than all things He is the God in whose hands thy life is and who is acquainted with all thy ways who is of infinite holiness and perfectly hates all wickedness of unlimited power able to avenge himself on thee every moment and turn thy soul and body into Hell Of infinite justice a jealous God who will by no means clear the guilty against whom thou hast sinned and been an offence and provocation to him all thy days and is thine enemy according to strict justice 't is he whose favour is life and whose frown is death and hell c. The height of a person that bestows a favour and the meanness and unworthiness of the object on whom it is bestowed as it doth exceedingly advance and heighten the Grace and goodness of him that doth it so it mightily aggravates the sin and danger of him that despiseth and refuseth it See that ye refuse not him that speaketh from heaven for if they escaped not c. Heb. 12.25 O what infinite grace and goodness is it for this great God to take so much notice of man and do so much for him What admirable wonderful condescension is it for the most High the God of Heaven and Earth that God whom the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain to manifest such respect to vile polluted dust and ashes yea to them that are rebels and traytors against his Majesty and thereby worthy of hell as once to offer his blessed only begotten Son to us as a Saviour Well may we with David be amazed at it and cry with admiration Psal. 8.14 O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy name in all the earth who hast set thy glory above the heavens And adds What is man that thou art mindful of him and the son of man that thou visitest him That so glorious a Lord should mind poor silly weak frail dying man sinful filthy polluted wretched miserable man could not but affect his heart with admiration and astonishment If a friend or neighbour thy equal do offer thee a kindness though but small how ill does he take it if thou accept it not O what horrid indignity dost thou offer to God what dishonour is it to all his Attributes if thou refuse this transcendent gift 2. Consider what it is that is offered to thee when this gift of God Jesus Christ is offered to thee To explain this fully would require the tongue nay exceed the skill of an Angel none can tell what Christ is but Christ himself all those particulars I mentioned speak somewhat of him but not the thousand thousandth part of that excellency that is in him This let me tell thee when Christ is offered to thee the greatest good that ever was that ever will be that ever can be is offered thee There never was nor can be the like offered thee 't is the best gift that ever was received or given in the world more than Heaven and Earth more than the whole world more than millions of worlds is offered thee He who is offered to thee is the Well of Salvation the Lord of Life the Author of all Consolation an Hive of sweetness a Paradise of pleasure an Heaven of joy He is the richest grace the dearest love the surest friend the highest honour the vastest treasure the exactest beauty the chiefest good the fullest felicity He is a comprehensive and universal good not one but all good riches honours pleasures friends relations health life earth heaven the world the other world all
garden Cant. 4.16 and now lo here I am to answer the longing expectation of thy blessed Soul which doth even pant and thirst after me who am the health of thy countenance and thy God Psal. 42.11 My company thou dost affect I see 't is most sweet and pleasant to thee and my company thou shalt have here I am to be with thee as thou didst pray and desire I come to eat thy pleasant fruits and bring with me the inexpressible comforts of my Spirit do thou eat and drink Yea drink abundantly O beloved 2. Be willing to be with him in reading much and often in the book of God where thou maist find this precious pearl as in a field what else saith the Prince of Anhalt is the whole Scripture but the swadling-clothes of the child Jesus the Apostle Col. 3.16 right well terms the word of God the word of Christ because he is the matter of the whole and the contents of all the Bible shadowed in the Law and shewed in the Gospel Vnam vocem habent duo Testamenta the word of the Lord contains nothing but the word which is the Lord. Austin How vainly do men look for immediate inspirations when ordinary means is afforded and others forbid the reading of the Scriptures and call Pictures and Images Lay mens books 3. Be willing to be with him in the Communion of Saints Who are a garden inclosed Cant. 4.12 in which Christ doth shew himself most graciously by their savoury speeches and holy conversations emblematizing and representing in a proportionable degree that most admirable ravishing fairness and pleasantness that is in Christ himself let these then be the excellent ones of the earth in whom is all your delight Psal. 16.3 Attend his Ordinances which are the conduits to convey Christ to us though others pretend to be above them yet keep ye under them if ye would keep Christ to put the pitcher above the rock is not the way to take water O let your fellowship be with the Father and with the Son 3. Shake off sloth ease and security indulge not your selves love not your carnal ease be not drunken with the pleasures of the flesh nor surfeit with the profits of the world nor intoxicated with pomp and honours set not your affections on things below let not down your watch be not secure nor high-minded Rom. 3.3 Cant. 5.2 3 4 5 6. you have there Christ knocking at the door of her heart with importunity and tender vehemency for admission and he moves and solicites Open my sister my spouse c. every word an argument a talent weight of love and does Christ call and knock and beg at the door of our souls to enter O what vile ingratitude is it to shut him out Doth he solicite and entreat so many ways by his Word and Ordinances Rod and admonitions and motions of his Spirit what inexcusable obstinate madness is it to drive him away Is any thing so worthy to be harboured there as he and is it not an imcomparable honour that he should vouchsafe to come under our roof She aggravates her fault because of his importunity But observe her idle excuses and vain frivolous pretences for not opening to him vers 3. I have put off my coat how shall I put it on What absurd and sluggish inconveniences does she plead making that her apology which should be her shame in casting off those garments of holiness and spiritual duties which should ever adorn her and growing weary of her nuptial robes which she should ever wear And the other is like unto it I have washed my feet how shall I defile them This is spoken after the manner of those hot Countries where they used to wash constantly before they composed themselves to a setled rest or before they sat down to eat By this custom the Church would excuse her somnolency and negligence as if there were trouble or danger in rising up to entertain him Sad shifts A Christian should endure more for Christ than a little cold or unseasonable diligence One spark of Hell will burn up all these cloaks and fair pretences In the fourth verse Christ proceeds further since knocking would not serve outward means and moral arguments will not prevail he works inwardly and effectually by the powerful visitations and motions of the Spirit which is called the finger Mat. 12.28 compar'd with Luk. 11.20 Then her bowels were moved in her or for him Here 's the great effect of spiritual visits of Christ and the close and lively workings of his Spirit in the heart then she arose and her hand● dropped with myrrh active and vigorous endeavours should accompany inward motives and suggestions of grace the feet should make haste and the hands be diligent and operative for this is to oyl the lock and make the soul dextrous and prompt to all duties of holiness Vers. 6. You have the effect of her sloth I opened to my beloved but my beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone or he was gone he was gone which duplication is more passionate and denotes the expedition and certainty of his absence for which she is much troubled and like a sad widow wrings her hands and crys out he is gone c. my soul failed when he spake or melted or went out of me for his words which he had used to me I was exanimated and astonished O take heed of sloth 4. Hold fast the word of truth keep the mystery of faith in a pure conscience and then you keep Christ. Take heed therefore of all Opinions that are opposite and destructive to the truths of Christ he will not lodg where his truth is thrust out by errours What was it that brought ruin to the ancient Churches of Greece but this they gave way to fond opinions some to Iewish fables some to the Doctrine o● Balaam and of Devils and of the Nicholaitans as you read in the second or third Chapter of Revelation and Ecclesiastical History Preserve every truth of Christ according to its moment and weight the dust of Gold is precious 't is dangerous to be careless in the lesser truths Better heaven and earth should be blended together saith Luther than one dust of Gods Truth should perish If you hearken to Satan and Seducers this will be a little one and that shall be a little one till you have little'd away all the principles of faith Count not those small things as the men of the world do for which the children of God have ventured their all Martyrs were not so prodigal of their lives but they knew what they did when they durst not give place for a moment O beware of errour if you would keep Christ let men be in the eyes of the world in righteousness Saints in holiness Angels in zeal like Christ himself If damnable errours be the ground of their Catechisms and their opinions be heretical they cannot keep Christ amongst them receive and retain his faithful Ministers and
enemies Col. 1.21 Those that are afar of are made nigh by the blood of Christ he hath broken down the partition-wall and slain the enmity Ephes. 2 16 17 18. If thou hast some dear friend who bestows a gift on thee in token of his dear love and respect to thee and there should be afterwards some disagreeing and falling out betwixt you wouldst thou shew this gift a pledg of league and amity c. thus hold up Christ to God 3. Or though it be not thus yet thou wantest the sense and feeling of his love and art comfortless in the want of it O then make use of Christ in this case who is able to make all Consolations abound and fill thy soul with joy and peace in believing He hath said Ioh. 14.18 I will not leave you comfortless Tristatur aliquis nostrum veniat in cor Iesus Is any man sad saith Bernard let that sweetest name Jesus come into his heart and so he shall have that peace and comfort that the world cannot give neither can the world take it away from him Christ is a most soveraign Cordial apply and use him and your joy will be full 4. Or art thou terrified in Conscience and groaning under the insupportable burden of a wounded spirit art thou affrighted with accusing and condemning thoughts O go to Christ who as he can make peace in the Court of Heaven so he can create peace in thy heart and still the crys of Conscience and make a calm there also though the waves roar and the winds blow c. thy soul shall have peace in him which passeth all understanding Col. 1.20 And will say in me ye shall have peace be of good cheer let not your hearts be troubled though your hearts ake and tremble yet he is greater tha● your hearts who is nigh to justifie you Isa. ●● 8 so that you may triumph with the Apostle Who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died Rom. 8.34 Expect no peace in laying aside Christ. 5. Are you afraid of death and judgment to come in this case also make use of Christ. It 's reported by Cassander that in ancient times sick and weak dying persons were directed and accustomed to make use of Christ at that time especially interposing him betwixt them and Gods Judgment saying these words Lord we put thee the death of our Lord Iesus Christ betwixt us and thy judgment But what need we look into Historians the Scriptures shew what languishing souls and drooping spirits must do Psal. 23.4 5. Though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death yet I will fear no evil c. Christ hath destroyed him that had the power of death Heb. 2.4 taken out the venome and malignity of it Death lost its sting in Christs side And now O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory 1 Cor. 15.55 57. Or fearest thou judgment look to Christ and thou shalt not die the second death but he will raise thee up at the last day Ioh 6.49 50. Having Christ thou maist stand in judgment and lift up thy head with joy for 't is the day of thy Redemption then the redeemed of the Lord shall return with joy everlasting and you shall appear with him in glory 4. Fourth Branch of Exhortation Be ●ery thankful for him yea let your whole soul go out in thankfulness be ever praising and magnifying God for his unspeakable mercy in Christ your Sacrifice your Redeemer your Saviour often call upon your sluggish hearts and say Bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy name Psal. 103.1 and 116.12 What shall I render to the Lord for this the greatest of all his benefits O be thankful not in a common ordinary formal manner but in the most lively enlarged and raised manner that is possible where the mercy is high and great the thankfulness must bear some proportion to it O let your apprehensions be widened to conceive the vastness of this mercy that your affections may be more enlarged to praise God for it O how shall we get our hearts affected with it what thankfulness can be enough for such a gift should not the whole soul be summon'd in to give its most united acknowledgment of so signal a mercy for God to give his only begotten Son to be a Saviour for sinners Here 's the wonder of wonders God never did the like before and he 'l never do the like again and blessed be his name there is no need he should It would have been admirable mercy if God would have sent some other person upon this Errand to redeem and save undone sinners If send he will why did he not send an Angel or body of Angels to try their skill and see what they could do Nay why did he not send an Angel as once he did with a flaming sword in his hand to keep off sinners from the Tree of Life O this did not comport with his gracious designs though it did too well with the creatures merit therefore he would not do it no his own Son shall be pitcht upon he is the person whom God will send Surely here was love great love great to the degree of infiniteness Millions of Angels were nothing to one Son to one such Son his first-born his only begotten Son the Son of his love who lay in his bosom had been his delight from everlasting O astonishing mercy O admirable goodness and condescention how may we cry out here Lord what is man that thou art thus mindful of him and the Son of man that thou makest this account of him Psal. 8.4 and 144.3 or as Iob 7.17 What is man that thou shouldest magnifie him and that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him Here was God so loving so as can never be expressed never be comprehended Ioh 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believed on him might not perish but have everlasting life The Heavens and the Earth were once called upon to be filled with astonishment because of the ingratitude of a sinful people Isa. 1.2 May not now Heaven and Earth Angels and men all creatures whatsoever be called upon to be filled with astonishment because of the stupendious love of God! O Christians what influence hath this upon your dull and sluggish hearts what are you made of that you are no more in the sense of it drawn out in blessing loving admiring and adoring of God Pray if there be any holy ingenuity in you take some pains with your selves that you may be much more affected with it and give not over till you have such thoughts and affections upon Gods giving his Son raised in you as may in some measure answer to those thoughts and affections which you shall have about it when you shall be in Heaven The Angels never reaped that advantage that we do yet they were at praising-work as soon as ever Christ was born
other services tot domini quot vitia every lust calls for his attendance and many times contrary lusts at once as when Pride bids let flye Covetousness cryes hold whereby the poor man is infinitely distracted between a lothness to deny either and the impossibility of gratifying both 7. 'T is a happy service if well done fullness and eternity of happiness is the reward of it Matt. 24.46 Blessed is that servant whom his Lord finds so doing 1 Tim. 4.8 'T is profitable unto all things having the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come John 12.26 If any man serve me let him follow me and where I am there shall my servant be if any man serve me him will my father honour That Euge in the end Well done thou good and faithful servant thou hast been faithful over a few t●ings I will make thee ruler over many things enter thou into the joy of the Lord will infinitely chear and revive the heart of Gods painful and faithful Servant Improve this for your comfort in all your distresses and comfort your selves with these words FINIS Books printed for and are to be sold by Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and Three Crowns in Cheapside SERMONS on the whole Epistle of Saint Paul to the Colossians by Mr. I. Daille translated into English by F. S. with Dr. Tho. Goodwi●'s and Dr. Iohn Owens Epistles Recommendatory An Exposition of Christs Temptation on Matth. 4. and Peters Sermon to Cornelius and circumspect walking By Dr. Tho. Taylor A practical Exposition on the 3d Chapter of the first Epistle of Saint Paul to the Corinthians with the Godly mans choice on Psalm 4. v. 6 7 8. by Anthony Burgess Christianographia or a description of the multitudes and sundry sorts of Christians in the world not subject to the Pope by Eph. Pagit Dr. Donns 4 to Sermons being his 3 Volumes Pareus Exposition on the Revelations Choice and practical Expositions on 4 select Psalms viz. The fourth Psalm in eight Sermons The forty second Psalm in ten Sermons The fifty first Psalm in twenty Sermons The sixty third Psalm in seven Sermons Forty six Sermons ●pon the whole eighth Chapter of the Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Romans Both by Tho. Horton D. D. late Minister of Saint Hellens An Analytical Exposition of Genesis and of twenty three Chapters of Exodus by George Hughes D. D. Books 4 to The Door of Salvation opened by the Key of Regeneration by George Swinnock M. A. An Antidote against Quakerism by Steph. Scandret An Exposition on the five first Chapters of Ezekiel with useful observations thereupon by William Greenhil The Gospel Covenant opened by Pet. Bulkley Gods holy-Mind touching matters moral which he uttered in ten Commandments Also an Exposition on the Lords Prayer by Edward Eston B. D. The Fiery-Jesuit or an Historical-Collection of the rise encrease doctrines and deeds of the Jesuits exposed to view for the sake of London Horologiographia optica Dyaling universal and particular speculative and practical together with a description of the Court of Arts by a new Method by Sylvanus Morgan Regim●n sanitatis salemi or the Regiment of Health containing directions and instructions for the guide and government of mans life A seasonable Apology for Religion by Matthew Pool Separation no Schism in answer to a Sermon preached before the Lord Mayor by I. S. The practical Divinity of the Papist discovered to be destructive to true Religion and Mens souls by I. Clarkson An Exercitation on a question in Divinity and Case of Conscience viz. Whether it be lawful for any person to act contrary to the opinion of his own Conscience formed from arguments that to him appears very probable though not necessary or demonstrative The Creatures goodness as they came out of Gods hand and the good-mans mercy to the bruit-creatures in two Sermons by Tho. Hodges B. D. Certain considerations tending to promote Peace and Unity amongst Protestants Mediocria or the most plain and natural apprehensions which the Script●re offers concerning the great Doctrines of the Christian Religion of Election Redemption the Covenant the Law and Gospel and Perfection The Saints triumph over the last enemy in a Sermon at the Funeral of Mr. Iames Ianeway by Nath. Vincent The vanity of man in his best estate in a discourse on Psal 39.5 at the Funeral of the Lady Susanna Keate by Richard Kidder M. A. The Morning-Lecture against Popery or the principal errors of the Church of Rome detected and confuted in a Morning-Lecture preached by several Ministers of the Gospel in or near London Four useful discourses 1 The art of improving a full and prospero●s condition for the glory of God being an appendix to the art of Contentment in three Sermons on Philip. 4.12 2 Christian submission on 1 Sam. 3.18 3 Christ a Christians life and death is gain on Philip. 1.21 4 The Gospel of peace sent to the sons of peace in six Sermons on Luke 10.5 6. by Ieremiah Burroughs Dr. Wilds Letter of Thanks and Poems A new Copy-Book of all sorts of useful h●nds The Saints priviledg by dying by Mr. S●●t The new World or new-reformed Church by Doctor Homes The Vertuous Daughter a Funeral-Sermon by Mr. Brian The Miracle of Miracles or Christ in our Nature by Dr. Rich. Sibbs The unity and essence of the Catholick Church-visible by Mr. Hudson Dr. Prideaux's Fasciculus controversiarum Theologicum Brightman on Revelations Canticles and Daniel Seamans-Companion Canaans Calamity The intercourse of Divine Love between Christ and the Church or the particular Believing soul in several Lectures on the whole second Chap. of Cant. by Iohn Collins D. D. Large 8 vo Heart-Treasure or a Treatise tending to fill and furnish the head and heart of every Christian with Soul-enriching-treasure of truths graces experiences and comforts The sure mercies of David or a second part of Heart-treasure Heaven or Hell here in a Good or Bad Conscience by Nath. Vincent Closet-prayer a Christians duty all three by O. Heyword A practical discourse of Prayer wherein is handled the nature and duty of Prayer by Tho. Cobbet Of quenching the Spirit the evil of it in respect both of its causes and effects discovered by Theophilus Polwheile The re-building of London encouraged and improved in everal meditations by Samuel Rolls The sure way to Salvation or a Treatise of the Saints mystical Union with Christ by Richard Stedman M. A. Sober Singularity by the same Author Heaven taken by Storm The mischief of sin both by Tho. Watson The Childs Delight together with an English Grammar Reading and Spelling made easie both by Tho. Lye Aesop's Fables with morals thereupon in English-Verse The Young-mans Instructor and the Old-mans Remembrancer being an Explanation of the Assemblies Catechism Captives bound in Chains made free by Christ their Surety both by Tho. Doolittle Eighteen Sermons preached upon several Texts of Scripture by William Whitaker The Saints care for Church-Communion declared in