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

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their spiritual accounts they reckon what Religion must cost them and may cost them it must cost them the blood of their sins it may cost them the blood of their lives 2. The fore-thoughts of persecution will be as sawce to season our delights that we do not surfeit upon them How soon may there be an Alarum sounded how soon may the clouds drop blood the thoughts of this would take off the heart from the immoderate love of the creature Our Saviour at a great Feast breaks out into mention of his death Mark 14.3 She hath prepared this against my Burial So the fore-thoughts of a change would be an excellent antidote against a surfeit 3. The fore-thoughts of sufferings would make them lighter when they come * Levius laedunt praevisa mala Grotius the suddenness of an evil addes to the sadness this was ill news to the fool in the Gospel who reckoned without his Host Hac nocte This night shall thy soul be required of thee This will be an aggravation of Babylons miseries Rev. 18.8 Her plagues shall come in one day not that Antichrist shall be destroyed in a day but in a day that is suddenly the blow shall come unawares when he doth not think of it the reckoning before hand of suffering doth alleviate and take off the edge of it when it comes therefore Christ to lighten the Cross still fore-warms his Disciples of sufferings that they might not come unlooked for Joh. 16.33 Acts 1.7 4. Fore-thoughts of persecution would put us in mind of getting our Armour ready 't is dangerous as well as imprudent to have all to seek when the trial comes as if a Souldier should have his weapons to get when the enemy is in the Field Caesar seeing a Souldier whetting his sword when he was just going to fight cashier'd him he that reckons upon persecution will be in a ready posture for it he will have the Shield of Faith and the Sword of the Spirit ready that he may not be surprized unawares 2. Let us prepare for persecution a wise Pilot in a calm will prepare for a storm God knows how soon persecution may come there seems to be a cloud of blood hanging over the Nation SECT 9. Shewing how we may be armed for sufferings Quest HOW shall we prepare for sufferings Answ Do three things 1. Be persons rightly qualified for suffering 2. Avoide those things which will hinder suffering 3. Promote all helps to suffering 1. Labour to be persons rightly qualified for suffering Be righteous persons that man who would suffer for righteousness sake must himself be righteous I mean Evangelically righteous in particular I call him righteous 1. Who breaths after sanctity Psal 119.5 Though sin cleaves to his heart yet his heart doth not cleave to sin though sin hath an alliance yet no allowance Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not a good man hates that sin to which Satan doth most tempt and his heart most incline Psal 119.128 2. A righteous person is one who makes Gods glory his Center the glory of God is more worth than the salvation of all mens soul He who is divinely qualified is so zealously ambitious of Gods glory that he cares not what he loseth so God may be a gainer he prefers the glory of God before credit estate relations It was the speech of Kiliaz that blessed Martyr Had I all the gold in the world to dispose of I would give it to live with my relations though in prison yet Jesus Christ is dearer to me than all 3. A righteous person is one who values the jewel of a good conscience at an high rate good conscience is a Saints Festival his Musick his Paradise and he will rather hazard any thing than violate his conscience They say of the Irish if they have a good Skimmeter a warlike weapon they had rather take a blow on their Arme than their Skimmeter should be hurt To this I may compare a good conscience a godly man had rather sustain hurt in his body or estate than his conscience should be hurt he had rather dye than violate the Virginity of his conscience such a man as this is Evangelically righteous and if God call him to it he is fit to suffer 2. Avoid those things which will hinder suffering 1. The love of the world God allows us the use of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 But take heed of the love of it he that is in love with the world will be out of love with the Cross 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me having loved this present world he not only forsook Pauls company but his doctrine The love of the world choaks our zeal a man wedded to the world will for thirty pieces of silver betray Christ and a good cause Let the world be as a loose garment that you may throw off at pleasure before a man can dye for Christ he must be dead to the world Paul was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 It will be an easie thing to dye when we are dead before in our affections 2. Carnal fear There is a two-fold fear 1. A filial fear when a man fears to displease God * Incidam potius in Geheunam quam peccatum Anselm when he fears lest he should not hold out this is a good fear Blessed is he that fears alway if Peter had feared his own heart and said Lord Jesus I fear I shall forsake thee Lord strengthen me doubtless Christ would have kept him from falling 2. There is a cowardly fear when a man fears danger more than sin when he is afraid to be good this fear is an enemy to suffering God proclaimed that those who were fearful should not go to the Wars Deuter. 20.8 The fearful are unfit to fight in Christs Wars a man possessed with fear doth not consult what is best but what is safest If he may save his Estate he will snare his conscience Prov. 29.25 In the fear of man there is a snare Fear made Peter deny Christ Abraham equivocate David fain himself mad fear will put men upon indirect courses making them study rather compliance than conscience Fear makes sin appear little and suffering great the fearful man sees double he looks upon the cross through his perspective twice as big it is fear argues sordidness of spirit * Degeneres animos timor arguit it will put one upon things most ignoble and unworthy a fearful man will Vote against his conscience fear infeebles it is like the cutting off Sampsons locks fear melts away the courage Josh 5.1 Their hearts melt because of you and when a mans strength is gone he is very unfit to carry Christs Cross fear is the root of Apostasie Spira's fear made him abjure and recant his Religion fear doth one more hurt than the Adversary it is not so much an enemy without the Castle as a Traytor within indangers it 't is not so much sufferings without as trayterous fear within which undoes
ashes an unbeliever is like Reuben unstable as water he shall not excel Gen. 49.4 A believer is like Joseph who though the Archers shot at him his Bowe abode in strength Cast a believer upon the waters of affliction he can follow Christ upon the water and not sink cast him into the fire his zeal burns hotter than the flame cast him into prison he is enlarged in spirit Paul and Silas had their prison-songs Psal 91.13 Thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and the Adder A Christian arm'd with faith as a coat of Male can tread upon those persecutions which are fierce as the Lyon and sting as the Adder get faith Quest Quest But how comes faith to be such Armour of proof Answ Answ Six manner of wayes 1. Faith unites the soul to Christ and that blessed head sends forth spirits into the members Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ c. Faith is a grace lives all upon the borrow as when we want water we go to the Well and fetch it when we want gold we go to the Mine so faith goes to Christ and fetcheth his strength into the soul whereby it is enabled both to do and suffer hence it is faith is such a wonder-working grace 2. Faith works in the heart a contempt of the world faith gives a true map of the world Eccles 2.11 Faith shews the world in its night-dress having all its jewels pul'd off faith makes the world appear in an Eclipse the believer sees more Eclipses than the Astronomer faith shews the soul better things than the world it gives a sight of Christ and glory it gives a prospect of heaven as the Mariner in a dark night climbs up to the top of the Mast and cries out stellam video I see a star so faith climbs up above sense and reason into heaven and sees Christ that bright morning star and the soul having once viewed his superlative excellencies becomes crucified to the world oh saith the Christian shall not I suffer the loss of all these things that I may enjoy Jesus Christ 3. Faith gets strength from the promise faith lives in a promise take the fish out of the water and it dies take faith out of a promise and it cannot live the promises are breasts of consolation the childe by sucking the breast gets strength so doth faith by sucking the breast of a promise When a Garrison is besieged and is ready almost to yield to the enemy Auxiliary forces are sent in to relieve it so when faith begins to be weak and is ready to faint in the day of battel then the promises muster their forces together and all come in for faiths relief and now it is able to hold out in the fiery trial 4. Faith gives the soul a right notion of suffering faith draws the true picture of sufferings what is suffering saith faith it is but the suffering of the body that body which must shortly by the course of nature drop into the dust Persecution can but take away my life an Ague or Feaver may do as much now faith giving the soul a right notion of sufferings and taking as it were a just measure of them enables a Christian to prostrate his life at the feet of Christ 5. Faith reconciles providences and promises as it was in Saint Pauls voyage providence did seem to be against him there was a cross winde did arise called Euroclydon Acts 27.14 but God had given him a promise that he would save his life and the lives of all that sailed with him in the Ship Ver. 24. therefore when the winde blew never so contrary Paul believed it would at least blow him to the Haven so when sense saith Here is a cross providence sufferings come I shall be undone then saith faith all things shall work for good to them that love God Rom. 8.28 This providence though bloody shall fulfill the promise affliction shall work for my good it shall heal my corruption and save my soul Thus faith making the winde and tyde go together the winde of a providence with the tyde of the promise enables a Christian to suffer persecution 6. Faith picks sweetness out of the Cross faith shews the soul God reconciled and sin pardoned and then how sweet is every suffering The Bee gathers the sweetest honey from the bitterest herb Saepe tulit lassis succus amarus opem So faith from the sharpest trials gathers the sweetest comforts faith looks upon suffering as Gods love token Afflictions saith Nazianzene are sharp arrows but they are shot from the hand of a loving Father faith can taste honey at the end of the rod faith fetches joy out of suffering John 16.20 Faith gets an honey-comb in the belly of the Lyon it finds a jewel under the cross and thus you see how faith comes to be such Armour of proof above all taking the shield of faith a believer having cast his Anchor in heaven cannot sink in the waters of persecution 2. Suffering grace is love get hearts fired with love to the Lord Jesus love is a grace both active and passive 1. Love is active it layes a Law of constraint upon the soul 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constrains me love is the wing of the soul that sets it a flying and the weight of the soul that sets it a going love never thinks it can do enough for Christ as he who loves the world never thinks he can take pains enough for it love is never weary it is not tired unless with its own slowness 2. Love is passive it enables to suffer a man that loves his friend will suffer any thing for him rather than he shall be wronged The Curtii laid down their lives for the Romans because they loved them love made our dear Lord suffer for us per vulnera viscera as the Pelican out of her love to her young ones when they are bitten with Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them again so when we had been bitten by the old Serpent that Christ might recover us he did feed us with his own blood Jacobs love to Rachel made him almost hazard his life for her Many waters cannot quench love Cant. 8.7 No not the waters of persecution love is strong as death Cant. 8.6 Death makes it way through the greatest oppositions so love will make its way to Christ through the Prison and the Furnace But all pretend love to Christ how shall we know that we have such a love to him as will make us suffer 1. True love is amor amicitiae a love of friendship which is genuine and ingenuous when we love Christ for himself there is a mercenary and meretricious love when we love divine objects propter aliud for something else a man may love the Queen of truth for the jewel at her ear because she brings preferment a man may love Christ for his head of gold * Cant. 5.11 because he enricheth with glory
end of the Creature to bring glory to God better lose our lives than lose the end of our living 3. The fuller we are of Fruit the more we are like Christ who was full of grace and truth Joh. 1.14 he received Spirit without measure Joh. 3.34 This Tree of life was ever bearing and he brought forth several sorts of Fruit Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification c. The more we are filled with the fruits of righteousness the more we resemble the Sun of Righteousness We were elected to this end to be made like Christ Rom. 8.30 and then are we most like this blessed Vine when we bear full clusters 4. The more fruit a Christian brings forth the more will Christ love him Now saith Leah will my husband be joyned unto me because I have born him three sons Gen. 29.34 When we bear much fruit now will Christs heart be joyned to us If Christ builds a nest of comfort it is in those Trees which fructifie most though the Lord Jesus doth accept of the truth of grace yet he commends only the degrees of grace Matth. 8.10 I have not found so great faith no not in Israel he sets a trophy of renown upon that Faith Christ will pardon a weak Faith he will honour a great Faith It was not a sparckle of love Christ commended in Mary Magdalen but love flaming Luke 7.74 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 she loved much Christians would you be as that beloved Disciple which leaned on the bosome of Jesus would you have much love from Christ let him have much fruit from you 5. Bearing much fruit will usher in abundance of comfort into the soul in these two Exigences 1. In the hour of tentation Satan wiil be sure to besiege the weakest Christian all his darts fly that way and a strong tentation may overcome a weak faith but a flourishing Faith stands like a Cedar and is not blown down by the wind of tentation a strong Faith can stop the mouth of the Divel that roaring Lion 1 Pet. 5.9 2. Store of fruit will give comfort in the hour of death a little danger will make us above the danger of death but degrees of grace will make us above the fear of death O what joy will it be on the death-bed when a Christian can bring his sheaves full of Corn when he can show his five Talents that he hath gained by trading when there is not only a drop or two of Oyle but his Lamp full of Oyl what though the Divel show God our debts if we can show him our fruit O how sweet will death be it will not be interitus but introitus not a destruction but a deliverance * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Death like a whirlwind may blow down the tree of the body but it cannot blast the Fruit of our graces The Trees of Righteousness carry their fruit with them Rev. 14.13 Their works follow them The Christian who abounds in holiness may say as Simeon Luke 2.29 Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace He who bears but a little fruit departs in safety but he who bears much fruit departs in peace 6. Consider what need we have to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 putting forth still more Fruit our graces are yet in their non-age indeed in heaven this Doctrine will be out of season we shall not need to hear it then we shall have done growing being arived at our full stature then our light shall be clear and our love perfect but while we live here there is something * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lacking in our faith 1 Thes 3.10 therefore we had need encrease the stock of grace and bring forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more fruit Our grace is eclipsed with sin our Faith is full of unbelief now as when the Sun is Eclipsed it is by degrees getting out of the Eclipse and it shines brighter and brighter till it recover its perfect lustre so it must be with us we must be getting out of the Eclipse till we shall arrive at our perfect lustre in glory 7. He who doth not encrease to more fruitfulness will soon be on the losing hand he that hath not more faith will quickly have lesse non progredi est regredi Rev. 2.4 Thou hast left thy first love It is with grace as it is with fire if it be not blown up and encreased it will soon decay Such as thrive not in their spiritual estate we may perceive sadly to decline Though a Christian cannot lose the seed of grace 1 John 3.9 yet he may lose the actings of grace and the comfort therefore bring forth more fruit no sooner doth a Christian begin to stand still but you may perceive him going backward 8. The more your fruit is encreased the more your glory will be encreased he whose pound gained ten was made Ruler over ten Cities Luke 19.16 17. If you would have your Crown hung full of jewels let your boughs be hung full of fruit 4. The last use is of Direction I shall lay down some Use 4 means to fruitfulness Direction 1. Be sensible of unfruitfulness Many might have been fruitful in grace if they had not conceited themselves so he that thinks himself fruitful enough is barren enough be sensible of your wants 't is better to complain than presume 2. If you would be fruitful remove those things which will hinder fruitfulness 1. Cherishing any secret lust in the heart sin lived in is like Vermin to the tree which destroyes the fruit grace cannot thrive in a sinful heart In some soil plants will not grow the cherishing of sin is the withering of the Fruit. 2. The love of riches The cares of the world choaked the seed Matth. 13. The love of sin poisons the Fruit the love of riches choaks it This is like a blast upon trees it destroyes the pretious Fruits of godliness Love not the world 1 Joh. 2.15 3. The third means to fruitfulness is weeping for sin Moisture helps germination in trees holy tears do water the trees of God and make them more fruitful Mary Magnalen a weeping plant how fruitful was she in love to Christ moist grounds as your Marshes are more fertile the soul that is moistened and steeped in tears is most frugiferous never did Davids graces flourish more than when he watered his Couch with tears When the Plant hath been pricked whereby it lets forth gumm or tears it is fuller of Fruit and the Fruit is sweeter That Christian who hath been pricked at heart for sin whereby he lets forth plenty of tears beareth the sweetest Fruits of grace Moisture helps fruitfulnesse 4. If you would be fruitful often apply the blood of Ch●ist and the Promises 1. Apply the blood of Christ Naturalists say that blood applyed to the Root of some trees makes them bear better Sure I am the blood of Christ applyed to the heart makes it flourish more in holiness None so fruitful as a Believer
I know saith St. Paul whom I have believed 2 Tim. 1.12 there was the applying blood to the Root of the tree and how fruitful was he in zeal love to Christ Heroical courage 2 Cor. 12.15 He that believes Christ dyed for him never thinks he can do or suffer enough for Christ When we read and pray now we do but water the Branches when we believe now we water the Root of the Tree and make it fruitfull 2. Apply the Promises Husbandmen have an art to comfort the spirits of the Root to make the tree bear better Apply the Promises these are for comforting the spirits of a Christian and then he puts forth fruit more vigorously It is an experiment in nature the Root of the Pine tree watered with wine doth cause it to flourish the Promises are as wine to water the Trees of Righteousness whereby they spread and augment more in grace Ever preserve the spirits of the tree if you would have it bear a pensive dejected soul is less fruitful but when through the Promises a Christians heart is cheared and comforted now he is enriched with pleasant fruits Camphire and Spiknard and Frankincense he is like a Tree laden with fruit 5. Another means to fruitfulness is humility The low grounds are most fruitful The Valleys are covered with Corn Psal 65.13 The humble heart is the fruitful heart It is observed in some Countreys as in France that the best and largest Grapes which they make their wine of grow upon the lower sort of Vines The largest and fairest Fruits of the Spirit grow in a lowly Christian 1 Pet. 5.5 God gives grace to the humble St. Paul calls himself the least of Saints yet he was the chief of the Apostles The Virgin Mary was low in her own eyes Luke 1.48 but this lowly Plant did bear that blessed Vine which brought the Fruit of salvation to the world 6. If you would be fruitful in grace be much in good conference Mal. 3.16 Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another There is an observation some have concerning the Sympathy of Plants some plants will bear better near other trees than when they grow alone as is seen in the Myrtle and Olive This holds true in Divinity the trees of righteousness when they associate and grow near together thrive best in godlinesse The communion of Saints is an excellent means for fruitfulness Christians encrease one anothers knowledge strengthen one anothers Faith clear one anothers evidences When the Trees planted in Gods Orchard stand at a distance and grow strange one to another they are less fruitful 7. If you would be fruit-bearing trees be near the waters of the Sanctuary Jer. 17.8 He shall be like a tree planted by the waters and that spreadeth out the roots by the River her leaf shall be green nor shall it cease from yeilding fruit The Word preached will not only make us knowing Christians but growing Christians Ministers are compared to Clouds Isa 5.6 their Doctrine drops as the rain and makes the trees of God fruitful Those that sit under these silver drops the wind of the Spirit blowing are like that flock of sheep Cant. 2.4 whereof every one bears twins and none is barren among them I wonder not that they are barren trees and nigh unto cursing * Heb. 6.8 that are not under the droppings of the Sanctuary a Christian can no more be fruitful without Ordinances than a tree without showres 8. And lastly if you would fructifie apace go to God and desire him to make you fruitful God is call'd the Husband man John 15.1 and he hath an art above all other Husbandmen they can plant and prune trees but if they be dead they cannot make them bear God can make the barren tree bear he can put life into a dead tree Ephes 2.5 It is not Pauls planting but the Spirits watering must give the encrease Pray to God to make you fruitful though it be by affliction oftentimes God makes us grow in grace this way Hebr. 12.11 No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness The bleeding Vine bears best It is an observation that the pulling off some of the blossoms of a tree makes the fruit fairer the reason is because the sap hath the less to nourish some Writers say they have known a tree by having too many blossoms hath blossomed it self dead The notion holds true in a Scriptural sence God by pulling off some of the blossoms of our outward comforts makes us bring forth fairer fruit some have so blossom'd in prosperity that they have blossom'd themselves into hell It is an ancient experiment that the planting of some tender trees near the West sun doth them hurt and parcheth the Fruit the Sun being so extream hot Too much prosperity like the West sun doth Christians much hurt and parcheth all good affection Jer. 22.21 Oh pray to God that he would make you fruitful though it be by bleeding Say as Luther Lord wound where thou wilt prune and cut me till I bleed so that I may have my Fruit unto holiness and my end everlasting life Rom. 6.22 The perfume of Love 1 Pet. 1.22 See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently THE holy Scripture makes the love of the brethren the surest note of a man that shall go to heaven 1 Joh. 3.14 and I find Christ and his Apostles beating much upon this string of love as if this made the sweetest musick and harmony in Religion The consideration whereof hath put me upon this subject All the graces have their beauty but there are some that do more adorn and set off a Christian in the eye of the world like some of the Stars that shine brighter as humility and Charity These two graces like pretious Diamonds cast a sparkling lustre upon Religion I have designed to speak of the last of these at this time See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently Love is a Grace alwayes needful therefore never out of season though too much out of use My Text like the River of Eden * Gen. 2.10 parts it self into four Heads 1. Here is a Commission or charge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See that ye love 2. The Extent of this Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One another 3. The Manner of this Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with a pure heart 4. The Degree of this love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fervently 1. Love purely that is opposed to Hypocrisie Love must be with the heart it must not be a complement which is like a painted fire dissembled love is worse than hatred 2. Love fervently that is opposed to Neutrality love must flame forth it must not be as the smoaking flax but as a burning Lamp so much the Hebrew word for love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports an ardent and zelous affection * Ardens vehemens
the nature of the Sun is light so Gods nature is love The three persons in the Trinity are all love 1. God the Father is love Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that God should part with Christ out of his bosome the Son of his love and lay this jewel as it were to pawn for our salvation oh unparalleld love never was such love showed to the Angels 2. God the Son is love how did Christ love his Spouse when he died for her his sides drop'd blood his heart drop'd love such a vein of love was opened in him that our sins could not stench love was the wing on which Christ did fly into the Virgins womb Christ incarnate hre was love covered over with flesh and Christ on the Cross here was a book of love laid open before us to read in Per vulnera viscera 3. God the Holy Ghost is love his appearing in the likeness of a Dove show'd his nature the Dove saith Pliny is an amicable creature it is without gall what are all the motions of the Spirit but tenders of love what is the Zeal of the Spirit but the print of love why doth this blessed Spirit as a suitor come a woing to sinners but that they may know he is in love thus all the persons in the Trinity are love and the more we shine in the grace of Love the more we resemble the God of Love 6. Argument enforcing love is from the sweet Relations we stand in one to another we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-Citizens Ephes 2.19 we all expect one heaven we shall shortly live together and shall we not love together we are souldiers of the same band 2 Tim. 2.3 ours must be the fight of faith not the fight of contention our strife must be who shall love most we are branches of the same Vine and shall we not be united we are stones of the same building and shall we not be cemented with love nay we are brethren Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are brethren why do ye wrong one to another Use 1. I might here take up a lamentation and steep my Use 1 words in tears to consider the decay I had almost said the funerals of this grace among Christians Terras Astraea reliquit the fire of brotherly love is almost ready to go out instead of the fire of love the wildfire of passion I have read of one Vitalis who hazarded his life to succour his distressed friend but sure such Vitales are dead in this age fratrum quoque gratia rara est The Text saith See that ye love one another but our times have made a bad Comment upon this Text how do Christians reproach censure maligne one another the Text saith love fervently but they hate fervently instead of the bond of love behold the apple of strife we live in the frigid zone the love of many waxeth cold Many live as if they had been born upon the Mountains of Bether the Mountains of division and as if they had been baptiz'd in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Do the wicked unite nay do the Divels unite there was in one man a Legion which is according to Varro seven thousand six hundred twenty two shall there be more harmony among Divels than among Christians For these divisions of the godly there are great thoughts of heart Oh Christians turn your hot words into salt tears how do the enemies of Religion insult to see not only Christs Coat but his Body rent for these things let our eyes run down Consider the ill consequence where love is wanting the absence of this grace brings forth divisions and they are dangerous For 1. Divisions bring an opprobrium and scandal upon Religion they make the wayes of God evil spoken of as if Religion were the fomenter of envy and sedition Julian in his Invectives against the Christians said that they lived together as Tigers rending and tearing one another and shall we by our animosities and contentions make good Julians words this will make others affraid to embrace the Christian Faith There is a story in Epiphanius of Miletius and Peter Bishop of Alexandria both Confessors of the Orthodox Religion both condemned to suffer who being together in prison upon a small difference sell into so great a Schisme that they drew a partition between each other in the prison and would not hold communion in the same worship of Christ for which notwithstanding they both suffered which division grew scandalous and did more hurt than their persecution did good 2. Divisions advance Satans Kingdom The Divel hath no hope but in our discords * Nibil spei nisi per discordias Cornel. Tac. St. Chrysostom observes of the City of Corinth when many zealous converts were brought in Satan knew no better way to damme up the current of Religion than by throwing in a bone of contention and dividing them into parties one was for Paul and another for Apollo but few for Christ Use 2. Be Exhorted to cordial and fervent love See that Use 2 ye love one another Exhort Oh that this sweet spice might send forth its fragrant smell among Christians Oh that the Branch 1 Lord would rain down some of these silver showers of love upon the hearts of Christians which are for the most part like the Mountains of Gilboa which have none of this heavenly dew upon them They say of the stones of the Temple they were so closely cemented as if there had been but one stone in the Temple it were to be wished that the hearts of Christians were so sweetly cemented in love as if there were but one heart Let me commend this grace of amity and love to Christians under a double notion 1. As you are members of a body politick The whole nation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Political body now it should be with the body Politique as it is with the natural body all the members of the body have a sweet sympathy they all work for the good of the whole that there be no Schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12.25 So it should be in the body politique 2. You are membra Ecclesiae members of the Church of God you bear Christs Name you wear his Livery therefore you must be sodred together in affection It is a sad Omen and presage when the joynts of the same body shall be loosed and the knees shall smite one against another If yet men will live at variance nourishing a Viper in their bosoms I shall offer two things to their serious consideration 1. An uncharitable person is an unregenerate person Titus 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts living 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in malice and envy as if he had said Before grace came we were fill'd and ready to burst with this poyson of malice the Apostle describing a natural condition calls it the gall of bitterness Acts 8. He that lives in bitter strife is in the gall bitterness A
lived a very civil life go home and mourn because thou art but civil many a mans civility being rested upon hath damned him 'T is sad for men to be without repentance but 't is worse to need no repentance Luke 15.7 9. Tears are but finite 't is but awhile that we shall Motive 9 weep after a few showres that fall from our eyes we shall have a perpetual sunshine in heaven the bottle of tears is stopt Rev. 7. ult God shall wipe away all tears when sin shall cease tears shall cease Psal 30.5 Weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning in the morning of the Ascension then shall all tears be wiped away Motive 10 10. The benefit of holy mourning the best of our commodities come by water 1. Mourning doth make the soul fruitful in grace When a showre falls the herbs and plants grow Isaiah 16.9 I will water thee with my tears O Heshbon I may allude to it tears water our graces and make them flourish Psal 104 10. he sends his springs into the vallies that is the reason the vallies flourish with corn because the springs run there where the springs of sorrow run there the heart bears a fruitful crop Leah was tender-eyed she had a watry eye and was fruitful the tender-eyed Christian usually brings more of the fruits of the Spirit a weeping eye is the water-pot to water our graces 2. Mourning doth fence us against the Divels Tentations Tentations are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fiery darts Ephes 6.16 because indeed they set the soul on fire Tentations enrage anger inflame lust now the waters of holy Mourning quench these fiery darts wet powder will not soon take the fire when the heart is wetted and moistned with sorrow it will not so easily take the fire of Tentation tears are the best Engines and Water-works to quench the Divels fire * Faciem nostram debemus magis lachrymis rigare quaem lavacris and if there be so much profit and benefit in Gospel-sorrow then let every Christian wash his face every Morning in the Lavor of tears † 11. And lastly to have a melting frame of spirit is Motive 11 a great sign of Gods presence with us in an Ordinance 't is a sign the Sun of righteousness hath risen upon us when our frozen hearts thaw and melt for sin it is a saying of St. Bernard By this you may know whether you have met with God in a duty when you find your selves in a melting and mourning frame we are apr to measure all by comfort we think we never have Gods presence in an Ordinance unless we have joy herein we are like Thomas unless saith he I shall see in his hands the print of the nails I will not believe John 20.25 So are we apt to say Unless we have incomes of comfort we will not believe that we have found God in a duty but if our hearts can melt kindly in tears of love this is a real sign that God hath been with us as Jacob said Gen. 28.16 Surely the Lord is in this place and I knew it not So Christian when thy heart breaks for sin and dissolves into holy tears God is in this duty though thou knowest it not Methinks all that hath been said should make us spiritual Mourners perhaps we have tryed to mourn and cannot but therefore as a man that hath digged so many fathoms deep for water and can find none at last he digs till he finds a spring so though we have been digging for the water of tears and can find none yet let us weigh all that hath been said and set our hearts again to work and perhaps at last we may say as Isaacs servants Gen. 26.32 We have found water When the herbs are pressed the watery juyce comes out these eleven serious Motives may press out tears from the eye Quest But may some say My constitution is such that I cannot weep I may as well go to squeeze a Rock as think to get a tear Answ But if thou canst not weep for sin can'st thou grieve Intellectual mourning is best there may be sorrow where there are no tears * Curae loves loquuntur ingentes stupent the Vessel may be full though it wants vent it is not so much the weeping eye God respects as the broken heart yet I would be loth to stop their tears who can weep God stood looking on Hezekiahs tears Isa 38.5 I have seen thy tears Davids tears made Musick in Gods ears Psal 6.8 The Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping 'T is a sight fit for Angels to behold tears as pearls dropping from a penitent eye CHAP. IX Shewing the hindrances of mourning Quest BUT what shall we do to get our heart into this mourning frame Answ Do two things 1. Take heed of those things which will stop these Channels of mourning 2. Put your selves upon the use of all means that will help forward holy mourning 1. Take heed of those things which will stop the current of tears there are nine hindrances of mourning Hindr. 1 1. The love of sin the love of sin is like a stone in the pipe which hinders the current of water the love of sin makes sin taste sweet and this sweetness in sin-bewitcheth the heart Saint Hierom saith it is worse to love sin than to commit it A man may be overtaken with sin Gal. 6.1 And he that hath stumbled upon sin unawares will weep but the love of sin hardens the heart keeps the Divel in possession in true mourning there must be a grieving for sin but how can a man grieve for that sin which his heart is in love with oh take heed of this sweet poyson the love of sin freezeth the soul in impenitency Hindr. 2 2. Despair despair affronts God undervalues Christs blood damns the soul Jerem. 8.12 They said there is no hope but we will walk after our own devices and we will every one do the imagination of his evil heart This is the language of despair there is no hope I had as good follow my sins still and be damned for something despair presents God to the soul as a Judge clad in the garments of vengeance Isa 59.17 Judas his despair was in some sense worse than his Treason Despair destroys Repentance for the proper ground of Repentance is mercy Rom. 2.4 The goodness of God leads thee to Repentance But despair hides mercy out of sight as the cloud covered the Ark Exod. 39. Oh take heed of this Despair is an irrational sin there is no ground for it the Lord shews mercy to thousands why mayest not thou be one of a thousand the wings of Gods mercy like the wings of the Cherubims are stretched out to every humble penitent though thou hast been a great sinner yet if thou art a weeping sinner there 's a golden Scepter of mercy held forth Psal 103.11 Despair locks up the soul in impenitency 3. A conceit
this true hunger are blessed and may take comfort in it Object 2. But my hunger after righteousnesse is so Object 2 weak that I fear it is not true Answ 1. Though the pulse beats but weak it shows Answ 1 there is life and that weak desires should not be discouraged there is a promise made to them Matth. 12.20 a bruised reed he will not break a reed is a weak thing but especially when it is bruised yet this bruised reed shall not be broken but like Aarons dry rod bud and blossome In case of weakness look to Christ thy high-Priest he is merciful therefore will bear with thy infirmities he is mighty therefore will help them Answ 2. If thy desires after righteousnesse seeme to Answ 2 be weak and languid yet a Christian may sometimes take a measure of his spiritual estate as well by the judgement as by the affections What is that thou esteemest most in thy judgment Is it Christ and Grace This is a good evidence for heaven it was a signe Saint Paul did beare entire love to Christ because he esteem'd this Pearl above all he counted other things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but dung that he might win Christ Phil. 3.8 Object 3 Object 3. But saith a child of God That which much eclipseth my comfort is I have not that hunger which once I had Time was I did hunger after a Sabbath because then the Manna fell I called the Sabbath a delight I remember the time when I did hunger after the body and blood of the Lord I came to a Sacrament as an hungry man to a Feast but now it is otherwise with me I have not those hungrings as formerly Answ 1 Answ 'T is indeed an ill signe for a man to lose his stomach but though it be a signe of the decay of grace to lose the spiritual appetite yet it is a signe of the truth of grace to bewail the losse 't is sad to lose our first love but it is happy when we mourn for the loss of our first love Answ 2 2. If thou hast not that appetite after heavenly things as formerly yet be not discouraged for in the use of means thou mayest recover thine appetite the Ordinances are for the recovering of the appetite when it is lost in other cases feeding takes away the stomach but here feeding on an Ordinance begets a stomach SECT 6. Containing a persuasion to spiritual hunger Use 5 Use 5 IT exhorts us all to labour after this spiritual hunger Exhort Parum est justitiam velle sed esurire quod ingens desiderium prae se fert Novarinus Hunger lesse after the world and more after righteousnesse say concerning spiritual things Lord evermore give me this bread Feed me with this Angels food That Manna is most to be hungred after which will not only preserve life but prevent death John 6.50 that is most desirable which is most durable Riches are not for ever Prov. 28.24 but righteousnesse is for ever Prov. 8.18 The beauty of holinesse * Psal 110.3 never fades the robe of righteousnesse * Isa 61.10 never waxeth old Oh hunger after that righteousnesse which delivereth from death Prov. 10.2 This is the righteousnesse which God himself is in love with Prov. 15.9 he loveth him that followeth after righteousnesse All men are ambitious of the Kings favour alas what is a Princes smile but a transient Beatitude This sunshine of his royal countenance soone masks it self with a cloud of displeasure But thou who art endued with righteousnesse art Gods Favourite and how sweet is his smile Psal 63.3 Thy loving-kindnesse is better than life SECT 7. Containing an excitation to spiritual hunger TO perswade men to hunger after this righteousnesse consider two things 1. Unlesse we hunger after righteousnesse we cannot obtain it God will never throw away his blessings upon them that do not desire them If a King shall say to a Rebel Do but desire a pardon and thou shalt have it if through pride and stubbornnesse he disdains to sue out his pardon he deserves justly to die God hath set spiritual blessings at a low rate Do but hunger and you shall have righteousnesse but if we refuse to come up to these termes there is no righteousnesse to be had for us God will stop the current of his mercy and set open the sluce of his indignation 2. If we do not thirst here we shall thirst when it is too late if we do not thirst as David did Psal 42.2 my soul thirsteth for God we shall thirst as Dives did for a drop of water Luke 16.24 They who thirst not for righteousnesse shall be in perpetual hunger and thirst they shall thirst for mercy but no mercy to be had Heat encreaseth thirst when men shall burn in hell and be scorch'd with the flames of Gods wrath this heat will encrease their thirst for mercy but there will be nothing to allay their thirst O is it not better to thirst for righteousnesse while it is to be had than to thirst for mercy when there is none to be had Sinners the time is shortly coming when the draw-bridge of mercy will be quite pulled up I shall next briefly prescribe some helps to spiritual hunger 1. Avoid those things which will hinder your appetite As 1. Windy things When the stomach is full of wind a man hath little appetite to his food so when one is fill'd with a windy opinion of his own righteousness he will not hunger after Christs righteousnesse he who being puff'd up with pride thinks he hath grace enough already will not hunger after more These windy vapours spoil the stomack 2. Sweet things destroy the appetite so by feeding immoderately upon the sweet luscious delights of the world we lose our appetite to Christ and Grace You never knew a man surfeit himself upon the world and sick of love to Christ while Israel fed with delight upon Garlick and Onions they never hungred after Manna the soul cannot be carried to two extremes at once as the eye cannot look intent on heaven and earth at once * Oculus non potest caelum terram simul inspicere Cyprian so a man cannot at the same instant hunger excessively after the world and righteousness the earth puts out the fire the love of earthly things will quench the desire of spiriritual 1 John 2.15 Love not the world the sin is not in the having but in the loving 2. Do all that may provoke spiritual appetite There are two things provoke appetite 1. Exercise a man by walking and stirring gets a stomack to his meat So by the exercise of holy duties the spiritual appetite is encreased 1 Tim. 4.7 Exercise thy self to godlinesse Many have left off Closet-prayer they hear the Word but seldome and for want of exercise they have lost their stomack to Religion 2. Sawce Sawce whets and sharpens the appetite there is a twofold sawce provokes holy appetite 1.
the Lees well refined and it shall be said in that day Lo this is our God we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation Spiritual mercies are not only worth desiring but waiting for 3. If God should not fill his people to satisfaction here yet they shall be filled in heaven the Vessels of their desires shall be filled as those water-pots Joh. 2. up to the brim MATTH 5.7 Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy CHAP. XV. Containing a Discourse of mercifulness THese Verses like the stairs of Solomons Temple cause our Ascent to the Holy of holies We are now mounting up a step higher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed are the merciful c. There was never more need to preach of mercifulness than in these unmerciful times wherein we live It is reported in the life of Chrysostom that he did much preach on this subject of mercifulness and for his much pressing Christians to mercy he was called of many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Almes-preacher or the Preacher for mercy our times need many Chrysostoms Blessed are the merciful Mercy stands both in the Van and Rear of the Text in the beginning of the Text it stands as a Duty in the end of the Text it stands as a Reward The Hebrew word for godly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies merciful the more godly the more merciful the Doctrine I shall gather out of the words which will comprehend and draw in the whole is this That the merciful man is a blessed man Doctr. As there is a curse hangs over the head of the unmerciful man Psal 109.6 7 8 9 c. Let Satan stand at his right hand when he shall be judged let him be condemned and let his prayer become sin let his children be fatherless and his wife a widow let his children be continually vagabonds and beg let the Extortioner catch all that he hath and let the stranger spoil his labour let there be none to extend mercy to him let his posterity be cut off and in the generation following let their name be blotted out let the iniquity of his fathers be remembred with the Lord and let not the sin of his mother be blotted out Why what is this crime Ver. 16. Because he remembred not to shew mercy c. See what a long Vial full of the plagues of God is poured out upon the unmerciful man So by the Rule of contraries the blessings of the Almighty do crown and encompass the merciful man 2 Sam. 22.26 Psal 37.26 Psal 41.1 The merciful man is a blessed man For the illustrating this I shall shew 1. What is meant by mercifulness 2. The several kinds of mercy 1. What is meant by mercifulness I answer 1. Quid misericordia it is a melting disposition whereby we lay to heart the miseries of others and are ready on all occasions to be instrumental for their good Quest 1. How do mercy and love differ Answ In some things they agree in some things they differ like waters that may have two different spring-heads but meet in the stream Love and mercy differ thus Love is more extensive the Diocess that Love walks and visits in is larger Mercy properly respects them that are miserable Love is of a larger consideration Love is like a friend that visits them that are well Mercy is like a Physitian that visits only them that are sick Again Love acts more out of affection Mercy acts out of a principle of conscience Mercy lends its help to another Love gives its heart to another Thus they differ but Love and Mercy agree in this they are both ready to do good Offices both of them have soundings of bowels and healing under their wings Quest 2. Whence doth mercy spring Answ It s spring-head riseth higher than nature Mercy taken in its full latitude proceeds from a work of grace in the heart naturally we are far enough from mercy the sinner is a bramble not a Fig-tree yielding sweet fruit 'T is the Character and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a natural man unmerciful Rom. 1.31 A wicked man like Jehoram hath his bowels fallen out * 2 Chr 21.19 Therefore he is compared to an Adamant Zach. 7.11 because his heart melts not in mercy Before conversion the sinner is compared to a Wolf for his savageness to a Lyon for his fierceness * Isa 11.6 to a Bee for his sting Psal 118.12 to an Adder for his poyson Psal 140.3 By nature we do not send forth oyle but poyson not the oyle of mercifulness but the poyson of maliciousness Besides that inbred unmercifulness which is in us there is something infused too by Satan the Prince of the aire works in men Eph. 2.2 He is a fierce Spirit therefore called the red Dragon Revel 12.3 And if he possesseth men no wonder if they are implacable and without mercy what mercy can be expected from hell so that if the heart be tuned into mercifulness it is from the change that grace hath made † * Col. 3.12 When the Sun shines then the ice melts when the Sun of righteousness once shines with beams of grace upon the soul now it melts in mercy and tenderness thou must first be a new man before a merciful man thou canst not help a member of Christ till first thou thy self art a member 2. The several kinds of mercy 2. Quotuplex misericordia or how many wayes a man may be said to be merciful Mercy is a Fountain that runs in five streams we must be merciful to the 1. Souls of others 2. Names of others 3. Estates of others 4. Offences of others 5. Wants of others SECT I. Shewing that mercy is to be extended to the soules of others 1. WE must be merciful to the souls of others this is Spiritualis Eleemosyna a spiritual Almes Indeed soul-mercy is the chief the soul is the most precious thing it is a vessel of honour 't is a bud of eternity 't is a sparkle lighted by the breath of God 't is a rich Diamond set in a Ring of clay the soul hath the blood of God to redeem it the image of God to beautifie it it being therefore of so high a descent sprung from the Ancient of dayes that mercy which is shewn to the soul must needs be the greatest This soul-mercy to others stands in four things 1. In pitying them If I weep saith Austin for that body from which the soul is departed how should I weep for that soul from which God is departed Had we seen that man in the Gospel cutting himself with stones and fetching blood of himself it would have moved our pity Mark 5.5 To see a sinner stabbing himself and having his hands imbrued in his own blood should cause relentings in our bowels our eye should affect our heart God was angry with Edom because he did cast off all pity Amos 1.11 2. Soul-mercy is in advising and exhorting sinners
that doth bewitch and it is much to see men divorced from it this is some fruit of the Ministry to civilize but there may be a forsaking of sin yet no heart-purity sin may be forsaken upon wrong principles 1. From Morality Moral Arguments may suppress sin I have read of a debauched Heathen who hearing Socrates read an Ethick Lecture of Vertue and Vice though he came with a purpose to deride Socrates yet he went away changed and did no more follow his former Exorbitancies Cato Seneca Aristides seeing a beauty in Vertue did lead unblameable lives 2. From Policy A man may forsake sin not out of respect to Gods glory but his own credit Vice will waste his Estate eclipse the honour of his Family therefore out of policy he will divorce his sin 3. From Necessity Perhaps he can now follow the Trade of sin no longer the Adulterer is grown old the Drunkard poor his heart is to sin but either his purse fails him or his strength as a man that loves Hunting but his Prison-fetters will not suffer him to follow the sport This man who is necessitated to put a stop to sin doth not so much forsake sin as sin forsakes him But now he is pure in Gods eye who abhors sin Psal 119.104 I hate every false way This is excellent indeed because now the love of sin is crucified A hypocrite may leave sin yet love it as the Serpent casts her coat yet keeps her sting but when a man can say he abhors sin now sin is killed in the root a pure heart abstains from sin as a man doth from a Dish that he hath an antipathy against This is a sign of a new nature when a man hates what once he loved and because he hates sin therefore he fights against it with the sword of the Spirit as a man that hates a Serpent seeks the destruction of it 4. A pure heart avoids the appearance of evil 1 Thes 5.22 Abstain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from all shew of evil A pure heart avoids that which may be interpreted evil He that is loyal to his Prince not only forbears to have his hand in Treason but he takes heed of that which hath a shew of Treason A gracious heart is shy of that which looks like sin When Josephs Mistriss took hold of him and said Lie with me he left his garment in her hand and fled from her Gen. 39.12 He avoided the appearance of evil he would not be seen in her company Now a pure heart avoids whatever may have the suspition of sin 1. In regard of himself and that two ways 1. Because the appearance of evil is oftentimes an occasion of evil Effeminate Daliance is an appearance of evil and many times occasions evil Had Joseph been familiar with his Mistriss in a wanton sporting manner he might in time have been drawn to commit folly with her Some out of Novelty and Curiosity have gone to hear Mass and afterwards have lent the Idol not only their ear but their knee In our times are there not many who have gone with itching ears into Sectarian company and have come home with the plague in their head When Dinah would be gadding she lost her chastity Gen. 34.2 A pure heart fore-seeing the danger avoids the appearance of evil 'T is dangerous to go near an Hornets Nest The men who went near the Furnace were burned Dan. 3.22 2. Because the appearance of evil may eclipse his good name A good name is a precious oyntment 't is better than fine gold Prov. 22.1 It commends us to God and Angels which riches cannot do * Opera salutis sine fama boni odoris non satis praelucent Hierom. Now a godly man avoids the appearance of evil lest he wound his good name what comfort can there be of life when the name lies buried 2. A pure heart avoids the suspition of sin out of reverence and respect to the holiness of God God hates the very appearance of evil God abhors hypocrites because they have no more than the appearance of good and he is angry with his children because they have so much as the appearance of evil A gracious heart knows God is a jealous God and cannot endure that his people should border upon sin therefore he keeps aloof off and will not come near the smell of infection 3. A pure heart avoids the shew of sin in regard of the godly The appearance of evil may scandalize a weak brother A gracious heart is not only fearful left he should defile his own conscience but lest he should offend his brothers conscience were it only in a thing indifferent yet if it be an appearance of evil and may grieve another we are to forbear * 1 Cor. 10.25 28. For when we sin against the Brethren and wound their weak conscience we sin against Christ 1 Cor. 8.12 The weak Christian is a member of Christ therefore the sinning against a member is a sinning against Christ 4. A pure heart avoids the very appearance of evil in regard of the wicked The Apostle would have us walk wisely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 towards them that are without 1 Thes 4.12 The wicked watch for our halting how glad would they be of any thing to reproach Religion Professors are placed as Stars in the highest orb of the Church and if there be but the appearance of any Excentrick or irregular motion the wicked would presently open their mouths with a fresh cry against Religion Now to a godly heart the fame and honour of the Gospel is so dear that he had rather dye than impeach or eclipse it by this then let us try our selves whether we are pure in heart Do we avoid the least apparition of sin alas how many run themselves into the occasions of sin they tempt the Divel to tempt them some go to Masks and Comedies the very fuel and tentation to lust Others frequent Erroneous Meetings and truly God oft in just judgement leaves them to the acts of sin that do not avoid the appearance of sin Psal 106.35 They were mingled among the Heathen and learned their works Pure hearts flie the occasion John would not endure the company of Cerinthus in the Bath as Nicephorus notes Polycarp would have no conference with Marcion the Heretick but called him Primogenitum Diaboli the Divels first-born Basil saith that the Christians in his time avoided the Meetings of Sectaries 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the very Schools of Errour Oh avoid the appearance of evil the Apostle bids us to follow those things which are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of good report Phil. 4.8 5. A pure heart performs holy duties in an holy manner This holy manner or due order consists in three things 1. Preparing the heart before a duty An unholy heart cares not how it rusheth upon an Ordinance it comes without preparation and goes away without profit The pure heart is a prepared heart it dresseth it self before
God is good to such as are of a clean heart 7. Heart purity makes way for heaven the pure in heart shall see God Happiness is nothing but the quintessence of holiness purity of heart is heaven begun in a man holiness is called in Scripture the anointing of God 1 John 2.27 Solomon was first anointed with the holy oyle and then he was made King 1 Kings 1.39 The people of God are first anointed with the oyle of the Spirit and made pure in heart and then the Crown of glory is set upon their head * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar And is not purity to be highly valued it lays a Train for glory purity of heart and seeing of God are linked together 8. The examples of those who have been eminent for heart-purity the Lord Jesus was a pattern of purity John 8.46 Which of you convinceth me of sin in this we are to imitate Christ we are not to imitate him in raising the dead * Non mundos fabricare non mortuos susci●ere Aug. or in working miracles but in being holy 1 Pet. 1.16 Besides this golden pattern of Christ we are to write after the fair copy of those Saints who have been of a Dove like purity David was so pure in heart that he was a man after Gods heart Abraham so purified by faith that he was one of Gods Cabinet-counsel * Gen. 18.17 Moses so holy that God spake with him face to face what were the rest of the Patriarchs but so many plants of Renown flourishing in holiness The fathers in the primitive Church were exemplary for purity Gregory Nazianzene Basil Augustine they were so inlaid and adorn'd with purity that envy it self could not tax them * Stabilitatem habuerunt in fide sanctitatem in opere therefore as Caesar wished he had such Souldiers as were in the time of Alexander the great so we may wish we had such Saints as were in the Primitive times so just were they in their dealings so decent in their attire so true in their promises so devout in their Religion so unblameable in their lives that they were living Sermons walking Bibles real Pictures of Christ and did help to keep up the credit of godliness in the world 9. Heart-purity is the only jewel you can carry out of the world Hast thou a child thou delightest in or an Estate you can carry nothing out of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 Purity of heart is the only commodity can be with comfort transported this is that will stay longest with you usually we love those things will last longest we prize a Diamond or piece of gold above the most beautiful flower because fading heart-purity hath perpetuity it will go with us beyond the grave SECT 6. Means for heart-purity BUT how shall we attain to heart-purity 1. Often look into the Word of God John 15.3 Now ye are clean through the Word Psal 119.140 Thy Word is very pure Gods Word is pure not only for the matter of it but the effect because it makes us pure John 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth thy Word is truth By looking into this pure Chrystal we are changed into the image of it the Word is both a glass to shew us the spots of our souls and a lavor to wash them away the Word breaths nothing but purity it irradiates the mind it consecrates the heart 2. Go to the Bath There are two Baths Christians should wash in 1. The Bath of tears * Lavacrum lachrymarum Go into this Bath Peter had sullied and defiled himself with sin and he washed himself with penitential tears Mary Magdalen who was an impure sinner stood at Jesus feet weeping Luk. 7.38 Maries tears did wash her heart as well as Christs feet Oh sinners let your eyes be a fountain of tears weep for those sins which are so many as have passed all Arithmetick this water of contrition is healing and purifying 2. The Bath of Christs blood * Lavacrum sanguinis this is that fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness Zach. 13.1 A soul steeped in the brinish tears of Repentance and bathed in the blood of Christ is made pure this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the legal washings and purifications were but Types and Emblems representing Christs blood this blood layes the soul a whitening 3. Get faith 'T is a soul-cleansing grace Acts 15.9 Having purified their hearts by faith The woman in the Gospel that did but touch the hem of Christs garment was healed a touch of faith heals If I believe Christ and all his merits are mine how can I sin against him we do not willingly injure those friends which we believe love us Nothing can have a greater force and efficacy upon the heart to make it pure than faith faith will remove Mountains the Mountains of pride lust envy faith and the love of sin are inconsistent 4. Breath after the Spirit it is called the holy Spirit Eph. 1.13 It purgeth the heart as Lightning purgeth the Aire That we may see what a purifying vertue the Spirit hath it is compar'd 1. To fire Acts 2.3 Fire is of a purifying nature it doth refine and cleanse mettals it separates the dross from the gold the Spirit of God in the heart doth refine and sanctifie it it burns up the dross of sin * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 2. The Spirit is compared to wind Acts 2.2 There came a sound from heaven as of a mighty rushing wind and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost The wind doth purifie the Aire * Ventus aerem expurgat when the Aire by reason of foggy vapours is unwholsome the wind is a Fan to winnow and purifie it Thus when the vapours of sin arise in the heart vapours of pride and covetousness earthly vapours the Spirit of God ariseth and blows upon the soul and so purgeth away these impure vapours The Spouse in the Canticles prays for a Ga●e of the Spirit that she might be made pure Cant. 4.16 3. The Spirit is compared to water John 7.38 39. He that believeth on me out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living water but this spake he of the Spirit The Spirit is like water not only to make the soul fruitful for it causeth the desert to blossome as the Rose Isa 32.15 Isa 35.1 But the Spirit is like water to purifie Whereas before the heart of a sinner was unclean and whatever he touch'd had a tincture of impurity Num. 19.22 when once the Spirit comes into the heart it doth with its continual showres and lavors wash off the filthiness of it making it pure and fit for the God of the spirits to dwell in 5. Take heed of familiar converse and intercourse with the wicked One vain mind makes another one hard heart makes another the stone in the body is not infectious but the stone in the heart is One profane spirit poysons another Beware of the
changeth the soile and makes it peaceable How can faith grow in an unpeaceable heart for faith works by love Impossible it is that he should bring forth the sweet fruits of the Spirit who is in the gall of bitterness if a man hath received poyson into his body the most excellent food will not nourish till he takes some antidote to expel that poyson Many come to the Ordinances with seeming zeal but being poysoned with wrath and animosity they receive no spiritual nourishment Christs body mystical edifieth it self in love Eph. 4.16 There may be praying and hearing but no spiritual concoction no edifying of the body of Christ without love and peace 9. Peaceableness among Christians is a powerful loadstone to draw the world to receive Christ not only gifts and miracles and preaching may perswade men to embrace the truth of the Gospel but peace and unity among the Professors of it When as there is one God and one faith so there is one heart among Christians this is as Cummin seed which makes the Doves flock to the windows The Temple was adorn'd with goodly stones Luk. 21.5 This makes Christs spiritual Temple look beautiful and the stones of it appear goodly when they are cemented together in peace and unity 10. Unpeaceableness of spirit is to make Christians turn Heathens 't is the sin of the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implacable Rom. 1.31 They cannot be pacified their hearts are like Adamant no oyle can supple them no fire can melt them 't is a Heathenish thing to be so fierce and violent as if with Romulus men had suck'd the milk of Wolves 11. To adde yet more weight to the Exhortation it is the mind of Christ that we should live in peace Mark 9.50 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have peace one with another Shall we not be at peace for Christs sake if we ought to lay down our life for Christs sake shall we not lay down our strife for his sake To conclude if we will neither be under counsels nor commands but still feed the peccant humour nourishing in ourselves a spirit of dissention and unpeaceableness Jesus Christ will never come near us The people of God are said to be his house Hebr. 3.6 Whose house are we c. When the hearts of Christians are a spiritual house adorned with the furniture of peace then they are fit for the Prince of peace to inhabit but when this pleasant furniture is wanting and instead of it nothing but strife and debate Christ will not own it for his house nor will he grace it with his presence who will dwell in an house which is smoaky and all on fire SECT 4. Shewing some helps to peaceableness Quest HOW shall we attain to peaceableness 1. Take heed of those things which will hinder it There are several impediments of peace which we must beware of and they are either outward or inward 1. Outward as whisperers Rom. 1.29 There are some who will be buzzing things in our ears purposely to exasperate and provoke among these we may rank Tale-bearers Lev. 19.16 The Tale-bearer carries reports up and down the Divel sends his letters by this Post the Tale-bearer is an Incendiary he blows the coals of contention Do you hear saith he what such an one faith of you Will you put up such a wrong will you suffer your self to be so abused thus doth he by throwing in his fire-balls foment differences and set men together by the ears we are commanded indeed to provoke one another to love Hebr. 10.24 but nowhere to provoke to anger We should stop our ears to such persons as are known to come on the Divels Errand 2. Take heed of inward lets to peace As 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-self-love 2 Tim. 3.2 Men shall be lovers of themselves And it follows they shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fierce Ver. 3. The setting up of this Idol of Self hath caused so many Law-suits Plunders Massacres in the World All seek their own Phil. 2.21 Nay it were well if they would seek but their own Self-love angles away the Estates of others either by force or fraud Self-love sets up Monopolies and Enclosures it is a Bird of prey which lives upon rapine Self-love cuts asunder the bond of peace lay aside Self The Heathens could say Non nobis solum nati we are not born for our selves 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pride Prov. 28.25 He that is of a proud heart stirreth up strife Pride and Contention like Hippocrates Twins are both born at once A proud man thinks himself better than others and will contend for superiority Joh. 3.9 Diotrephes who loveth to have the preheminence A proud man would have all strike sail to him Because Mordecai would not give Haman the Cap and Knee he gets a bloody Warrant signed for the death of all the Jewes Esther 3.9 What made all the strife between Pompey and Caesar but pride their spirits were too high to yield one to another When this wind of pride gets into a mans heart it causeth sad Earth-quakes of division The Poets fain that when Pandora's box was broke open it fill'd the World with diseases When Adams pride had broken the box of Original righteousness it hath ever since fill'd the World with debates and dissentions Let us shake off this viper of pride humility soders Christians together in peace 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 envy envy stirreth up strife the Apostle hath linked them together 1 Tim. 6.4 Envy strife Envy cannot endure a Superiour this made the Plebeian faction so strong among the Romans they envied their Superiours An envious man seeing another to have a fuller Crop a better Trade is ready to pick a quarrel with him Prov. 27.4 Who can stand before envy Envy is a vermin that lives on blood take heed of it peace will not dwell with this inmate 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Credulity Prov. 14.15 The simple believeth every word A credulous man is akin to a fool he believes all that is told him and this doth often create differences As it is a sin to be a Tale-bearer so it is a folly to be a Tale-believer A wise man will not take a report at the first bound but will sift and examine it before he gives credit to it 2. Let us labour for those things which will maintain and cherish peace As 1. Faith faith and peace keep house together faith believes the Word of God the Word saith Live in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 And assoon as faith sees the King of heavens Warrant it obeyes faith perswades the soul that God is at peace and it is impossible to believe this and live in variance nourish faith faith knits us to God in love and to our Brethren in peace 2. Christian communion There should not be too much strangeness among Christians the primitive Saints had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love-feasts * Tertul. The Apostle exhorting to peace brings this as an
like an untamed Heifer which will not endure the yoke but kicks and flings or like a wilde Bull in a net Isa 51.20 Thus to a person in the state of nature Christs commands are grievous Nay to a childe of God so far as corruption prevails for he is but in part regenerate Christs Laws seem irksome the flesh cries out it cannot pray or suffer the Law in the members rebels against Christs Law only the spiritual part prevails and makes the flesh stoop to Christs injunctions A regenerate person so far as he is regenerate doth not count Gods Commandments grievous they are not a burden but a delight Divine commands are not grievous if we consider them first positively in these eight particulars 1. Positively 1. A Christian consents to Gods commands therefore they are not grievous Rom. 7.16 I● consent to the Law that it is good What is done with consent is easie if the Virgin give her consent the Match goes on chearfully A godly man in his judgement approves of Christs Laws * Rom. 7.12 and in his will consents to them therefore they are not grievous a wicked man is under a force terror of conscience hales him to duty he is like a slave that is chained to the Gally he must work whether he will or no he is forced to pull the Rope tug at the Oare but a godly man is like a free subject that consents to his Princes Laws and obeyes out of choice as seeing the equity and rationality of them Thus a gracious heart sees that beauty and equity in the commands of heaven as draws forth consent and this consent makes them that they are not grievous 2. They are Christs comands therefore not grievous Take my yoak Matth. 11.29 Gospel commands are not the Laws of a Tyrant but a Saviour The husbands commands are not grievous to the wife it is her ambition to obey this is enough to animate and excite obedience Christ commands As Peter said in another sence Matth. 14.28 Lord if it be thou bid me come unto thee upon the water So saith a gracious soul Lord if it be thou that wouldest have me mourn for sin and breath after heart-purity if it be thou dear Saviour that biddest me do these things I will chearfully obey Thy commandments are not grievous A souldier at the word of his General makes a brave onset 3. Christians obey out of a principle of love and then Gods commandments are not grievous Therefore in Scripture serving and loving of God are put together Isa 56.6 The sons of the strangers that joyne themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the Name of the Lord c. Nothing is grievous to him that loves love lightens a burden it adds wings to obedience an heart that loves God counts nothing tedious but it s own dulnesse and slownesse of motion love makes sin heavie and Christs burden light 4. A Christian is carried on auxilio Spiritus by the help of the Spirit and the Spirit makes every duty easie Rom. 8.26 The Spirit helpeth our infirmities The Spirit works in us the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both to will and to do Phil. 2. When God enables to do what he commands then his commandments are not grievous if two carry a burden it is easie the Spirit of God helps us to do duties to bear burdens it draws as it were in the yoke with us If the Scrivener guides the childs hand and helps it to frame its letters now it is not hard for the childe to write If the Loadstone draw the iron it is not hard for the iron to move if the Spirit of God as a Divine Loadstone draw and move the heart now it is not hard to obey When the birds hath wings given it it can flie Though the soul of it self be unable to do that which is good yet having two wings given it like that woman in the Revelation * Rev. 12 24. the wing of faith and the wing of the Spirit now it flyes swiftly in obedience Ezek 11.1 the Spirit did lift me up The heart is heavenly in prayer when the Spirit lifts it up The sails of a Mill cannot move of themselves but when the wind blows then they turn round when a gale of the Spirit blows upon the soul Now the sails of the affections move swiftly in duty 5. All Christs commands are beneficial therefore not grievous Deut. 10.12 13. And now O Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to love him to keep his Statutes which I command thee this day for thy good Christs commands carries meat in the mouth of them and then surely they are not grievous salvation runs along in every precept To obey Christs Laws is not so much of duty as our privilege all Christs commands centre in blessednesse Physick is in it self very unpleasant yet because it tends to health no man refuseth it Divine Precepts are to the fleshy part irksome yet having such excellent operation as to make us both holy and happy they are not to be accounted grievous the apprentise is content to go through hard service because it makes way for his freedome The Scholar willingly wrastles with the knotty difficulties of Arts and Sciences because they serve both to enoble and advance him How chearfully doth a believer obey those Laws which reveal Christs love That suffering is not grievous which leads to a Crown This made Saint Paul say I take pleasure in infirmities in persecutions 2. Cor. 12.10 6. 'T is honourable to be under Christs commands therefore they are not grievous The precepts of Christ do not burden us but adorn us * Omnia quae praestari jubet Christus non onerant nos sed ornant Salv. 'T is an honour to be employed in Christs service How chearfully did the rowers row the Barge that carried Caesar the honour makes the precept easie a Crown of gold is in it self heavy but the honour of the Crown makes it light and easie to be worn I may say of every command of Christ as Solomon speaks of wisdom Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a Crown of glory shall she deliver to thee 'T is honourable working at Court The honour of Christs yoake makes it easie and eligible 7. Christs commands are sweetned with joy and then they are not grievous Cicero questions whether that can properly be called a burden which is carried with joy and pleasure * Utrum onus appellandum quod laetitiá fertur Cicero When the wheeles of a Chariot are oyled they run swiftly when God poures in the oyle of gladnesse how fast doth the soul run in the wayes of his commandments Joy strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength and the more strength the lesse wearinesse God sometimes drops down comfort and then a Christian can run in the
your Estates above your Relations that man doth not deserve Christ at all who doth not prize Christ above all Jesus Christ is an incomprehensible blessing whatever God can require for satisfaction or we can desire for salvation is to be found in Christ oh then let him be the highest in our esteem no writing shall please me saith Saint Bernard if I do not read the Name of Christ there The Name of Christ is the only musick to a Christians ear and the blood of Christ is the only cordial to a Christians heart 2. If Jesus Christ be all then make sure of Christ Branch 2 never leave trading in Ordinances till you have gotten this pearle of price in Christ there is the accumulation of all good things oh then let not your souls be quiet till this bundle of myrrhe lie between your breasts Cant. 1.13 In other things we strive for a propriety This house is mine these jewels are mine and why not this Christ is mine There are only two words which will satisfie the soul Deity and Propriety Quid est Deus si non est meus saith Austin What was it the better for the old world they had an Ark as long as they did not get into the Ark And that I may perswade all to get Christ let me shew you what an enriching blessing Christ is 1. Christ is bonum transcendens a supreme good put what you will in the ballance with Christ he doth infinitely out-weigh Is life sweet Christ is better he is the life of the soul Col. 3.4 his loving-kindness is better than life Psal 63.3 Are Relations sweet Christ is better he is the friend sticks closer than a brother 2. Christ is bonum sufficiens a sufficient good he who hath Christ needs no more he who hath the Ocean needs not the Cistern If one had a Manuscript that contained all manner of learning in it having all the Arts and Sciences he need look in no other book so he that hath Christ needs look no further Christ gives grace and glory Psal 84.11 The one to cleanse us the other to crown us as Jacob said It is enough Joseph is yet alive Gen. 45.28 So he that hath Christ may say Luther it is enough vivit Christus Jesus is yet alive 3. Christ is bonum adaequatum a sutable good in him dwells 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all fulness Col. 1.19 He is bonum in quo omnia bona he is whatever the soul can desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Christ is beauty to adorn gold to enrich balm to heal bread to strengthen wine to comfort salvation to crown Christ is quicquid appetibile if we are in danger he is a shield if we are disconsolate he is a Sun he hath enough in his wardrobe abundantly to furnish the soul 4. Christ is bonum sanctificans a sanctifying good he makes every condition happy to us he sweetens all our comforts and sanctifies all our crosses 1. Christ sweetens all our comforts he turns them into blessings health is blessed estate is blessed relations are blessed Christs love is as the pouring sweet water on flowres which makes them cast a more fragrant perfume A wicked man cannot have that comfort in outward things as a godly man hath he may possess more but he enjoyes less he who hath Christ may say This mercy is reached to me by the hand of my Saviour this is a love-token from him an earnest of glory 2. Christ sanctifies all our crosses they shall be medicinal to the soul they shall work sin out and work grace in Gods stretching the strings of his Viol is to tune it and make the musick better Christ sees to it that his people lose nothing in the Furnace but their drossie impurities * Quod durum fuit pa●i memi nisse dulce est Sen. Trag. 5. Christ is bonum rarum a rare blessing there are but few that have him the best things when they grow common begin to be slighted when silver was in Jerusalem as stones 1 Kings 10.27 it was apt to be trod upon Christ is a jewel that few are enriched with which may both raise our esteem of him and quicken our pursuit after him those to whom God hath given both the Indies he hath not given them Christ they have the fat of the earth but not the dew of heaven and among us Protestants many who hear of Christ but few that have him Luke 4.25 Many widows were in Israel in the dayes of Elias when the heaven was shut up three years and six months but unto none of them was Elias sent save unto Sarepta a City of Sidon unto a woman that was a widow There are many in this City who have Christ sounded in their ears but few who ha●e Christ formed in their hearts O how should we labour to be of this few they who are Christless should be restless 6. Christ is bonum selectum a select choice good God shews more love in giving us Christ than in giving us Crowns and Kingdoms God may give us other things and hate us but in giving Christ he bestows the highest pledge of his love God may give the men of the world bona scabelli as Austin saith the blessings of the foot-stool but in giving Christ to a man he gives him bona Throni the blessings of the Throne what though others have a crutch to lean on if thou hast a Christ to lean on Abraham sent away the sons of the Concubines with gifts but he gave all he had to Isaac Gen. 25.5 God may send away others with a little gold and silver but if he gives thee Christ he gives thee all that ever he hath for Christ is all and in all Psal 145.16 Thou openest thy hand and satisfiest every living thing in bestowing the world God doth but open his hand but in bestowing Christ he opens his heart Christ is a crowning blessing 7. Christ is bonum fine quo nihil bonum he is such a good as without which nothing is good without Christ health is not good 't is fuel for lust riches are not good they are golden snares Ordinances are not good though they are good in themselves yet not good to us they profit not they are as breasts without milk as bottles without wine nay they are not only a dead letter but a savour of death without Christ they will damn us for want of Christ millions go loaded to hell with Ordinances 8. Christ is bonum permanens an enduring good other things are like the Lamp which while it shines it spends the heavens shall wax old like a garment Psal 102.26 But Jesus Christ is a permanent good with him are durable riches Prov. 8.18 They last as long as eternity it self lasts 9. Christ is bonum diffusum a diffusive communicative good he is full not only as a vessel but as a spring he is willing to give himself to us if indeed Christ should say he would have
wonder Saint Paul was willing to be bound and dye for Christ Acts 21.13 when he knew that Christ loved him and had given himself for him Gal. 2.20 Though I will not say Paul was proud of his chain yet he was glad of it he wore it as a chain of pearle Quest Quest But how shall I get this jewel of assurance Answ Answ 1. Make duty familiar to you when the Spouse sought Christ diligently she found him joyfully Cant. 3.4 The Ordinances are the Lattice where Christ looks forth and gives the soul a smiling aspect As Christ was made known to his Disciples in the breaking of bread Luke 24.35 so in the use of holy Ordinances in the breaking of bread Christ makes a glorious discovery of himself to the soul Christs parents found him in the Temple Luk. 2.46 They who would find Christ with comfort and have the kisses of his lips shall be sure to meet with him in the Temple 2. Preserve the virginity of conscience when the glass is foule you will not poure wine into it but when it is clean so when the soul is cleansed from the love of every sin now God will poure in the sweet wine of assurance * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Socrat. Hebr. 10.22 Let us draw near in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience Guilt clips the wings of joy he who is conscious to himself of secret sin cannot draw near to God in full assurance he cannot come with boldness but blushing he cannot call God Father but Judge assurance is a flowre that grows only in a pure heart before David prayes for joy he first prayes for a pure heart Psal 51.10 Create in me a clean heart O God 3. Be much in the actings of faith the more active the childe is in obedience the sooner he hath his fathers smile if faith be ready to dye Rev. 3.2 if it be like Armour hung up or like a sleepy habit in the soul never look for assurance God will not speak peace to thee when thou art asleep it is the lively faith which flourisheth into assurance Abraham had a vigorous sparkling faith Rom. 4.18 who against hope believed in hope That is against the hope of sense he believed in the hope of the promise and how sweetly doth God manifest himself to Abraham he calls him his friend he makes him of his Cabinet-counsel Gen. 18.17 Shall I hide from Abraham the thing which I do Wouldst thou have Christ reveal his love to thee k●ep faith upon the wing this is the Bird which soars aloft and plucks a bunch of grapes from the true Vine 4. If Christ be all then make him so to Branch 4 you 1. Make Christ all in your understanding be ambitious to know nothing but Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 For I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I judged not I did not think any thing in my judgement worth knowing in comparison of Christ Austin saith of Cicero he liked his eloquence but he could not take so much delight in reading him quia Nomen Christi non erat ibi because he could not finde the Name of Christ there what will all other knowledge avail a man at his death who is ignorant of Christ Si Christum nescis nihil est si coetera noscis What is it to have knowledge in Physick to be able with Esculapius and Galen to discourse of the causes and symptomes of a disease and what is proper to apply and in the mean time to be ignorant of the healing under Christs wings What is it to have knowledge in Astronomy to discourse of the Stars and Planets and to be ignorant of Christ that bright morning star which leads to heaven what is it to have skill in a shop and ignorant of that commodity which doth both enrich and crown what is it to be versed in Musick and to be ignorant of Christ whose blood makes atonement in heaven and musick in the conscience what is it to know all the stratagems of War and to be ignorant of the Prince of peace O make Christ all be willing to know nothing but Christ though you may know other things in their due place yet know Christ in the first place let the knowledge of Jesus Christ have the preheminence as the Sun among the lesser Planets This is the crowning knowledge Prov. 4.18 The prudent are crowned with knowledge 1. We cannot know our selves unless we know Christ he it is who lights us into our hearts and shews as the spots of our souls whereby we abhor our selves in dust and ashes Christ shews us our own vacuity and indigency and untill we see our own emptiness we are not fit to be filled with the golden oyle of mercy 2. We cannot know God but through Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 Out of Christ God is terrible he is a consuming fire it is through Christ that we know God as a friend oh then treasure up the knowledge of Christ he is the golden ladder by which we ascend to heaven to be ignorant of Christ is as if a man were poysoned and there were an herb in the garden could cure him but he is ignorant of that herb 2. Make Christ all in your affections 1. Desire nothing but Christ he is the accumulation of all good things Ye are compleat in him Col. 2.10 Christ is the Christians perfection what should the soul desire less what can it desire more * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignatius Psal 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee David had his Crown and his Throne to delight in I but it was the presence of Christ he chiefly thirsted after without Christ all his other comforts were not only emptiness but bitterness 2. Love nothing but Christ love is the choycest affection it is the purest stream of the soul it is the richest jewel the creature hath to bestow oh if Christ be all love him better than all let your Rivers still run into this golden Sea Every mans heart is set upon his treasure in Christ there are unsearchable riches Ephes 3.8 Though the Angels have lived so long in heaven yet to this day they know not how rich Christ is Take the most precious pearle or Diamond that is and the Jeweller can set the full value of it he can say This is worth so much and no more but the riches of Christ are unsearchable it cannot be said he is worth so much and no more neither man or Angel are able to set the full value of the pearle of price and shall not Jesus Christ lie nearest our hearts shall he not have the cream of our love Consider 1. If you love other things when they dye your love is lost but Christ lives for ever to requite your love 2. You may love other things in the excess but you cannot
were requisite as none but Christ could give 3. Christ came as a Physitian out of the sweetness of his Nature he is like the good Samaritan who had compassion on the wounded man Luke 10.33 A Physitian may come to the Patient only for gain not so much to help the Patient as to help himself but Christ came purely out of sympathy there was nothing in us to tempt Christ to heal us for we had no desire of a Physitian nor had we any thing to give our Physitian as sin made us sick so it made us poor so that Christ came as a Physitian not out of hope to receive any thing from us but was prompted to it out of his own goodness Hos 14.4 I will heal their back-slidings I will love them Love set Christ awork not only his Fathers Commission but his own Compassion moved him to his spiritual Physick and Chyrurgery King David banished the blinde and lame out of the City 2 Sam. 5.8 Christ comes to the blinde and lame and cures them it is the sounding of his bowels that causeth the healing under his wings 3. The third particular is That Christ is the Only Physitian Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other c. There 's no other Physitian besides Verinus Non plures medici sed satis unus erit The Papists would have other healers besides Christ they would make Angels their Physitians all the Angels in heaven cannot heal one sick soul indeed they are described by their wings Isa 6.2 but they have no healing under their wings Papists would heal themselves by their own merits Adam did eat that Apple which made him and his posterity sick but he could not finde any herb in Paradise to cure him our merits are rather damning than healing to make use of other Physitians and medicines is as if the Israelites in contempt of that brazen Serpent which Moses set up had erected other brazen Serpents O let us take heed of that turba medicorum Indeed in bodily sickness it is lawful to multiply Physitians when the Patient hath advised with one Physitian he desires to have others joyned with him but the sick soul if it joyns any other Physitian with Christ it surely dies 4. How Christ heals his Patients Answ There are foure things in Christ that are healing 1. His Word is healing Psal 107.20 He sent his Word and healed them His Word in the mouth of his Ministers is healing when the Spirit is wounded in desertion Christ doth create the lips that speak peace Isa 57.19 The Word written is a Myrothecium or Repository in which God hath laid up Soveraign oyles and balsomes to recover sick souls and the Word preached is the pouring out of these oyles and applying them to the sick Patient He sent his Word and healed them We look upon the Word as a weak thing What is the breath of a man to save a soul but the power of the Lord is present to heal Luke 5.17 Christ makes use of his Word as an healing medicine the Receits which his Ministers prescribe he himself applies he makes his Word convincing converting comforting Caution Not that the Word heals all to some it is not an healing but a killing Word 2 Cor. 2.16 To the one we are a savour of death unto death Some dye of their disease two sorts of Patients dye 1. Such as sin presumptuously though they know a thing to be sin yet they will do it Job 24.13 They are of those that rebel against the light this is dangerous * Num. 15 30. David prays Psal 19. Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins 2. Such as sin maliciously when the disease comes to this head the Patient will dye Hebr. 10.29 But to them who belong to the election of grace the Word is the healing medicine Christ useth He sent his Word and healed them 2. Christs wounds are healing Isa 55.3 With his stripes we are healed Christ made a medicine of his own body and blood the Physitian dyed to cure the Patient * Ille Colaphizatus lauceatus spinis corenatus in cruce suspensus ut per ejus mortem nobis medelam pararet Aug. in Evang. Joh. The Pelican when her young ones are bitten by Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them Thus when we were bitten by the old Serpent then Jesus Christ prescribes a Receit of his own blood to heal and restore us Sanguis Christi salus Christiani * Corpus Christi est aegris medicina languorem sanans sanitatem servans Bern. The blood of Christ being the blood of him who was God as well as man had infinite merit to appease God and infinite vertue to heal us This this is the balme of Gilead that recovers a soul which is sick even to death Balm as Naturalists say is a juyce which a little shrub being cut with glass doth weep out This was anciently of very precious esteem the favour of it was odoriferous the vertue of it Soveraign it would cure ulcers and the stinging of Serpents * Pliny This balm may be an emblem of Christs blood it hath a most Soveraign vertue in it it heals the ulcer of sin the stinging of tentation it merits for us justification Rom. 5.9 O how precious is this balm of Gilead by this blood we enter into heaven 3. Christs Spirit is healing the blood of Christ heals the guilt of sin the Spirit of Christ heals the pollution of sin the Spirit is compared to oyle it is call'd the anointing of the Spirit Isa 61. to shew the healing vertue of the Spirit oyle is healing Christ by his Spirit heals the rebellion of the will the stone of the heart though sin be not removed it is subdued 4. Christs rod is healing Isa 27.9 Christ never wounds but to heal the rod of affliction is to recover the sick Patient * Unguento utitur medicus item ferro igue Bern. Davids bones were broken that his soul might be healed God useth affliction as the Chyrurgion doth his Launce to let out the venome and corruption of the soul and make way for a cure Quest But if Christ be a Physitian Quest why are not all healed Answ 1. Because all do not know they are sick they Answ 1 see not the sores and ulcers of their souls and will Christ cure them who see no need of him many ignorant people thank God they have good hearts but that heart can no more be good which wants grace than that body can be found which wants health 2. All are not healed because they love their sickness Answ 2 Psal 52.3 Thou lovest evil many men hug their disease Augustine saith before his conversion he prayed against sin but his heart whispered Non adhuc Domine Not yet Lord he was loth to leave his sin too soon how many love their disease better than their Physitian while sin is loved Christs medicines are loathed 3. All are not
heart sometimes seems to be in a good frame but it soon alters set the water on the fire it boyles set it in the open Aire it freezeth Those good affections which boyle in the Church often freeze in the Shop one day a Christian is quick and lively in prayer another day like the Disciples heavy and sleeping Luke 22.45 At one time a Christian is like David when he danced before the Ark with all his might 2 Sam. 6.14 At another time like Sampson when his hair was shaved and his strength went from him Judges 16.19 When the gold hath been made pure in the fire it remains pure but it is not so with the heart when it hath been purified in an Ordinance it doth not remain pure it gathers new soile and dross The heart is one day humble next day proud one one day meek the next day passionate one day quick in its motion towards heaven the next day the clock is set back 't is with the heart as with a sick mans pulse which alters almost every quarter of an houre The heart being so full of variation and inconstancy it is needful to keep the heart with all keeping the heart like a Viol will soon be out of order therefore we must often scrue up the strings and keep the instrument in tune that we may make melody in our heart to the Lord * Ephes 5.19 3. The heart must especially be looked to and watched because the heart is the fountain of all our actions and purposes the heart doth either sweeten or poyson all we do the heart is the spring which makes the current of our life run either pure or muddy the heart is the Throne either of sin or grace If the root be soure no sweet fruit can grow upon it so if there be a root of bitterness springing u●n the heart * Hebr. 12.15 it is impossible that our services should give a sweet rellish As in the natural body the heart is the fountain of life if the heart lives the whole body lives if the heart be tainted and poysoned the body dies So it is in a spiritual sense if the inner man of the heart be holy then the thoughts and actions are holy if the soul be earthly and impure the actions receive a bad tin●ture In Religion the heart is all we judge of mens heart by their actions God judgeth of mens actions by their hearts the heart differenceth actions Amaziah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2 Chron. 25.2 But of Asa it is said his heart was perfect all his dayes 2 Chron. 15.17 It is the heart gives the denomination to a thing now if the heart be the spring which makes our actions good or bad then the heart is chiefly to be watched and tended preserve the spring pure keep thy heart with all diligence Use 1 1. It shews a difference between the godly and the wicked Inform. the hypocrite looks most to externals he keeps his actions from blotting he sets a watch before his lips the godly man sets a watch before his heart his main work lies within doors he sees the first ebullitions and risings of sin and grieves for them he labours to set his heart right the heart is the Altar which sanctifies the gift Use 2 Reproof 2 If we are to keep our hearts with all keeping then it reproves four sorts of persons 1. Such as have no care at all about their hearts they will have a care to keep their land that it be not morgaged but no care to keep their hearts Salvation and blessedness depend upon the keeping of the heart yet how few mind their hearts they let the Divel get into their hearts The Shepherd keeps his Flock the Physitian keeps his Receits the Lawyer keeps his Evidences the Merchant keep his Wares the Covetous man keeps his gold but few that keep their hearts Quest Quest Why do not men keep their hearts Answ 1 Answ 1. Because they study not the preciousness of them what a treasure is the heart it is divinely ennobled it is capable of glory but few know the worth of this jewel 2 Men keep not their hearts because they are taken up Answ 2 in keeping other things Cant. 1.6 My own vineyard have I not kept Many a man may say I have been cumbred about the world I have been keeping my estate tending my lusts but my own heart hath been neglected my own vineyard have I not kept Judas was keeping the bag when he should have kept his heart 3. Men keep not their hearts because they keep themselves Answ 3 in sloth to keep the heart requires diligence and few are willing to put themselves to the trouble but should not a Merchant keep his books of account because he finds some trouble in it 4. Some think their hearts are so good that they need Answ 4 not spend time about them to keep them Many a bold sinner is presumptuously confident of heaven he thinks he wants nothing but taking possession hence it is he never looks into his heart or searcheth his evidences till it be too late 2. It reproves them who when they should be keeping their hearts fall asleep Mat. 13.25 While men slept the enemy came and sowed tares When men are asleep and neglect their spiritual watch the Divel comes and sowes poysonful seeds in their hearts seeds of malice pride lust they say when the Dragon is asleep a jewel is taken out of his head so the Divel takes away this jewel of the heart while men sleep in security 't is death for a Souldier to fall asleep upon his guard 3. It reproves them who instead of keeping their hearts have suffered them to be stollen away The love of the world hath stollen away mens hearts we may make an hue and cry after hearts Satan catcheth mens hearts with a golden bait this this is the reason why preaching the Word doth so little good Ministers preach to mens ears but the world hath stollen away their hearts 4. It reproves those who keep half of their heart but not all they have affections to good things but let out some rooms of their heart to sin H●rod did many things but he let out one room of his heart to the Divel he lived in incest * Ubi regnat peccatum non potest regna●e Dei regnum Au● The true mother would not have the childe divided God will not endure to have the heart divided he will have the whole heart kept for him Use 3 3. It exhorts Christians to keep their hearts Merchants complain of losses at Sea Exhort but whatever we lose if we can keep our hearts we shall do well enough Keep thy heart with all diligence This is I confess an hard work Eliah found it easier to shut heaven by prayer than to shut his heart from evil thoughts * Facilius est coelum obse●a●e quam
affectio no waters must quench it Doctr. Christians must love one another cordially and fervently Col. 3.14 Above all these things put on charity 1 Pet. 4.8 Above all things have fervent charity among your selves as if the Apostle had said whatever you neglect do not neglect this grace Hierom reports that when St. John was old he was fain to be led up into the Pulpit and there he repeated these words Little children love one another and then came down from the Pulpit Oh that this grace of love were engraven as in letters of gold upon our hearts by the finger of the Holy Ghost Here the question will be asked what love is I answer Love is a sweet and gracious affection whereby we wish the good of another and promote his welfare as our own Love is a sacred fire kindled in the heart by the Spirit like that fire which came from heaven 2 Chron. 7.1 I shall endeavour to preserve this fire in Christians hearts as the fire the Vestal Virgins kept in Rome that it may not go out There are several Arguments to enforce Love upon us 1. We must love virtute praecepti by vertue of Command Joh. 13.34 A new Commandement I give unto you that ye love one another Love is both a new Commandement and an old 'T is an old Commandement because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Law written in the heart of man by the pen of nature as with the point of a Diamond And it is old because it is written in the ancient Statutes and Records Levit. 19.18 Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self I am the Lord and yet it is a new Commandement 1. Because newly purged from Pharisaical glosses before it was love thy neighbour but now it is love thy enemy Matth. 5.44 here is a new Comment upon an old Law 2. Love is said to be a new Commandement because of a new Edition it came out of the new mint of the Gospel and was pressed by a new example Joh. 13.34 As I have loved you so that it is not Arbitrary but a duty 't is a new Commandement and an old The second Argument enforcing love is the excellency of this grace it is a lovely grace * Color gratiae purpurcus ob scurior esset si n●n charitate vestiretur Ber. all the other graces seem to be Eclipsed unless love shine and sparckle forth in them Faith itself hath no beauty unless it work by love the tears of repentance are not pure unless they flow from the spring of love Love is the Jewel Christs Bride weares it is the Diamond in the ring of the graces love is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysostom calls it This is the grace that seasons all our actions and makes them savoury love is aroma amp opo balsamum it is like musk among linnen which perfumes it So love makes all our Religious services 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sweet Odour to God Ephes 5.2 Prayer is compared to incense Psal 141.2 Now incense if it be laid on the Altar and have no fire put to it doth not smell so sweet the incense of Prayer doth not cast such a fragrant smell unless kindled with this fire of love love is the badge and cognizance of a true Saint Joh. 13.35 By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye love me another not if ye work miracles but if ye love one another by this livery ye are known to belong to me St. Bernard calls love ros gratiae the sweet dew that distills from a Christian and refresheth all whom it drops upon love is the golden clasp that knits hearts it is opus signinum the cement that soders Christians together it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bond of perfectness Col. 3.14 if this bond be broken all falls to pieces Love is radix omnium bonorum it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 * Omne praeceptum ad charitatum refertur Aug. All the duties of the first and second Table Piety toward God and Equity towards our neighbour are comprehended in this Thou shalt love O how sweetly doth the Apostle Paul descant and paraphrase upon this grace how doth he extoll it he plaies aswell the Oratour as the Divine how doth he delineate this grace of love how doth he pensil and draw it out to the life in all its beauty and spiritual embroidery That he may extoll this grace 1. First he doth it exclusive he shows that the most glorious things are nothing without it * Aug. Si desit charitas frustra habentur coetera ● Cor. 13.1 Though I speak with the tongues of men If a man could speak in so many Languages as Mithridates of whom it is said he understood 22. sundry Tongues if he had the golden mouth of Chrysostom if he could do with his Oratory as the Poets fain Orpheus did with his Harp move the very Rocks and stones yet without love it were nothing Nay saith the Apostle though I speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the tongues of Angels and have not charity I am become as sounding brass or as a tinkling Cymbal Were it not a brave thing to have the eloquence of Angels yet this without love were but Cymbalum tinniens the tinkery of the Cymbal to love as Christians is better than to speak as Angels And though I understand all mysteries and all knowledge ver 2. If a mans head were a Library of all learning if he could know all that is knowable if he could with Solomon discourse from the Cedar in Lebanon even to the Hysop and hath not charity hoc aliquid nihil est all is nothing Knowledge without love makes a man no better than a Divel And though I have all faith so that I could remove Mountains Were it not admirable to have the Faith of Miracles to unhinge Mountains to cast out Divels to take up Serpents and drink poison and it should not hurt us Matth. 16.16 Yet if I have no charity I am nothing Nullius sum pretij I am of no account with God the Miracles of faith without the mystery of love profit nothing And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor ver 3 Suppose I give away all my Estate in Almes yet without love it avails me nothing 't is like a Lamp without Oyle And though I give my body to be burned and have not love it is nothing the fire of Martyrdom avails not without the fire of Charity Let a man come to Church pray receive Sacraments yet if his heart burn in malice it is but going to hell in a more Saint-like manner O quam pulchra charitas Oh how precious a jewel saith Austin is love how rare a grace that if this be wanting all other ●hings though never so glorious are in vain 2. The Apostles sets forth this grace of love Positive by deciphering its nature and excellency 1. Charity is kind
ver 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Love is a munificent bountiful grace it is full of good works it drops as the honey-comb 2. Charity is not puffed up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it be bountiful it is not proud love is a humble grace like the violet though it perfumes the Aire yet hangs down its head love laies aside the Trumpet and covers it self with a vail love conceals its own worths and saith as Paul 2 Cor. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though I be nothing 3. Charity seeketh not her own ver 5. The Apostle complains Phil. 2.21 All men seek their own but love seeketh not her own This is a diffusive grace and wholly spends it self for the good of others 1 Cor. 10.33 It is reported of Pompey that when there was a great dearth in Rome Pompey having provided great store of corn abroad and ship'd it the Mariners being backward in hoysing up sail by reason of a tempest Pompey himself sets forward in the storm using these words Better a few of us perish than that Rome should not be relieved * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here was publick spirit love seeks not her own it makes a private Christian a common good Love is a grace that dwells not at home it goes abroad it makes frequent visits it looks into the condition of others and relieves them * Quid prodest misereri inopis nisi alimoniam ei Largiaris Amb. Love hath one eye blind to wink at the infirmities of others and another eye open to spy their wants 4. Charity is not easily provoked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not in a Paroxysme it burns not in anger it is meek and calm never taking fire unless to warm others with its benigne beams of mercy it gives honey but doth not easily sting 3. The Apostle sets forth the excellency of this grace of love Comparative by laying it in the ballance with other graces ver 13. And now abideth faith hope charity these three but the greatest of these is charity He compares love with faith and hope and then sets the ctown upon love indeed in some sense Faith is greater than charity 1. Ordine causalitatis in respect of causality faith is the cause of charity therefore more noble for as Austin saith * Quicquid pulchritudinis in arbore ex radice proficiscitur though the root of the tree be not seen yet all the beauty of the branches procee'ds from the Root So all the beauty that sparckles in love proceeds from the Root of Faith 2. Faith is more excellent than charity Ratione beneficij Faith is a more beneficial grace to us for by faith we are ingraffed into Christ and partake of the fatness of the Olive Faith fetcheth in all the strength and riches of Christ into the soul Faith puts upon the soul the embroidered Robe of Christs Righteousness in which it shines brighter than the Angels but in another sence love is greater than faith 1. Respectu visibilitatis because Love is a more visible grace then Faith Faith lies hid in the heart Rom. 10.9 Love is more conspicuous and shines forth more in the life Love discovers the soundness of Faith as the even beating of the pulse shows the healthful temper of the body Faith bows the knee to Christ and worships him love opens its treasures and presents unto Christ gifts Gold and Frankincense c. 2. Love is greater than Faith Respectu durationis in regard of continuance 1 Cor. 13.8 Charity never faileth we shall lay down our body of flesh and see God face to face faith and hope shall be no more but love shall remain While we live here we have need of Faith this is our Jacobs staff to walk with 2 Cor. 5. We walk by faith but we shall set this staffe shortly at heaven door and love only shall enter within the vail * Chrys in 1 Cor. Hom. 34. So you have seen the sparkling of this Diamond and thus doth the Apostle no less elegantly than divinely set forth the beauty and orient lustre of this grace 3. The third Argument pressing Christians to love is this is Decus ornamentum Evangelij it sets a crown of honour upon Religion it renders the Gospel lovely in the eyes of the world it was an honour to Religion in Tertullians time when the Heathens could say Ecce quam mutuo diligunt see how the Christians love one another Psal 133.1 Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity it is like the pretious oyntment upon the head that runs down to the skirts of Religions Garments O what a blessed sight it is to see Christians link'd together with the silver link of charity the Church is Christs Temple the Saints are living stones 1 Pet. 2.5 how beautiful is this Temple when the stones of it are cemented together with love it was said of the first Temple there was no noise of hammer in it and oh that there might be no noise of strife and division in Gods Church could we see unity and verity like the Vine and Elm mutually embracing could we see the children of Sion spreading themselves as Olive plants round about their Mothers table in an amicable and peaceable manner how should this adorn Religion and be as a lure to invite and draw others to be in love with it what is Religion but Religation a binding and knitting together of hearts we are knit to God by Faith and one to another by love 4. The fourth Argument is the necessity of love love is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a debt now debts must be paid Owe nothing to any man but love Rom. 13.8 The debt of love differs from other debts 1. When a debt is paid we receive an Acquittance and are to pay it no more but this debt of love must be alwayes paying in heaven we must be paying this debt love to God and the Saints there is no discharge from this debt 2. Other debts may be dispensed with we forgive a debt sometimes as that Creditor did in the Parable Matth. 18.27 The Lord of that servant was moved with compassion and forgave him the debt But this debt of love is by no means to be dispensed with it must be paid if we do not pay this debt God will come upon us with an arrest and throw us into hell prison 3. In civil debts between man and man the more they pay the less they have but in this debt of love it is quite contrary the more we pay the more we have the more grace from God the more love from others love like the widdows oyle encreaseth by pouring out by paying other debts we grow poor by paying this debt we grow richer 5. Love makes us like God God is love 1 Joh. 4.16 a golden sentence Austin saith the Apostle doth more commend love in this one word God is love than Saint Paul doth in his whole Chapter as
malitious person is of no a kin to God for God is love he knows nothing of the Gospel savingly for it is a Gospel of peace we read in Scripture of the bond of peace Ephes 4.3 and the bond of iniquity Acts 8.23 him whom the Gospel hath not bound in the bond of peace Satan hath bound in the bond of iniquity 2. Uncharitableness is a leaven that sowres the whole lump 1 Cor. 5.8 1. It sowres your good qualities Naaman an honourable man a mighty man in valour but he was a Leper 2 King 5.1 that but was like a dead fly in the Oyntment it spoiled all the rest So it may be said Such a man is a man of parts a man of great moral endowments he is just affable temperate but he is a leper he will not be in charity he payes every one their own but there is one debt he will not pay though he rot in hell for it viz. the debt of love this is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a brand of infamy upon him 2. Uncharitableness sowres your good duties you pray and come to Church but refuse to be tyed in a knot of amity what profit is there of all your seeming devotion we are bid to lift up pure hands without wrath 1 Tim 2.8 The uncharitable person doth not lift up pure hands in prayer but leprous hands bloody hands 1 Joh. 3.16 Whosoever hates his brother is a murderer Prayer saith Chrysostom may be compared to a fine Garland the hands that make a Garland had need be clean So the heart that makes a prayer had need be clean wrath and anger do sully a Christians prayers and will the Holy God touch them the uncharitable man poisons his own prayers and will the Lord accept of a poisoned sacrifice Oh that all this might at last perswade to cordial and fervent love let us turn all our censuring into praying let us pray to God that he would quench the fire of contention and encrease the fire of fraternal love among us let us pray that the Lord would heal our Schismes repair our breaches that he would make us like the Cherubims with our faces looking one upon another let us pray that God will make good that promise that we shall serve him with one consent or * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the Hebrew with one shoulder and that this may be the golden Motto written upon England Cor unum via una one heart and one way * Jer. 32 30. 2. It Exhorts us that as we would be amicable to all Branch 2 so especially that we would love those who are of the houshold of Faith viz. the Saints and people of God Exhort Psalm 16.2 We must love as God loves he loves them most who are like him he loves piety though it be espoused to poverty so must our love run out especially to those who have the image and superscription of God upon them Joseph loved all his brethren but Benjamin most the people of God must have a Benjamins portion in our love The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3.17 which we must love and prize they are called the apple of Gods eye Zach. to show how tender they should be in our eye The Saints are partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 not by an incorporation into the Divine Essence but by a conformity to the Divine likeness these we must love amore complacentiae with a love of complacency and delight These are near alied to Christ by faith they are of the blood Royal of heaven these must be higher in our thoughts and deeper in our affections than others Hierom loved Christ dwelling in Austin When I say the Saints must have the largest share in our love I mean not all that call themselves Saints such as under a mask of holiness commit sin hypocritical Saints * Quid tibi prodest vocari quod non es Aug. but such as the Scripture calls Saints such as excel in vertue Psal 16. such as walk humbly with God Mich. 6.8 such as have aliquid Christi as Bucer saith something of Christ in them these Saints must we place our entire love upon Indeed there is that in them which may excite and draw forth love they have the beauty of inherent holiness and they have an interest in the unspotted holiness of Christ which may be a sufficient loadstone to draw love to them But what shall we say to those who instead of loving the people of God because they are Saints hate them ea ratione because they are Saints as Tertullian Confessio nominis the very confession of the Name of a Christian was enough to bring them into an odium and was laid against them as a matter of crime It was said of Aristides that he was banished out of Athens quia justus because he was just Sanctity is the thing that is reproached and hated in the world wicked men Panther-like would tear the picture of God drawn in the New man let one have all kind of accomplishments Learning Morality Piety though men will love him for his Learning and Morality they will hate him for his Piety Holiness is become the crime the Serpent is known by his hissing they are the seed of the Old Serpent that hisse at Religion Let me speak my mind freely There is generally among men a secret antipathy against the power of godliness they are for some showes of devotion they keep up a form but such as have a spirit of zeal and sanctity shining in them their hearts rise against let me tell you there is not a greater sign of a rotten and divellish heart than to hate a man for that very thing for which God loves him namely his holiness 'T is an high affront to abuse the Kings Statue what vengeance think we shall they be counted worthy off who maligne and do what in them lies to tear in pieces the image of the living God Oh take heed of this the hating the grace of the Spirit comes near to the despighting of the Spirit of grace To conclude let us beg the spirit of amity and unity that we may love one another especially that we may be endeared in our affections to them who are of the family of God and whose names are enrolled in the book of life The good Practitioner Ioh. 13.17 If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them IN this Chapter our Blessed Saviour the great Doctor af the Church falls upon teaching his Disciples he taught them 1. Doctrinâ by doctrine ver 34. A new Commandement give I unto you that ye love one another Christ was now going out of the world and as a father when he is dying leaves a charge with his children that they love so our Saviour leaves this solemn charge with his disciples that they did love one another 2. He taught them emblemate by embleam ver 4. he took a Towel and girded himself Thus teaching them by a
to be gray-headed in Religion what a credit when it shall be said of him His last works are better than his first Revel 2.19 A good Christian is like wine full of spirits which is good to the last drawing A Limner makes his last work more compleat and curious blessed is that man who the nearer he is to death moves swifter to the heavenly Center FINIS THE TABLE Alphabetical A. ABusers of their souls page 462 Acceptance through Christ 422 Adoption wherein it consists 291 Afflictions no sign of Gods anger 321 322 Afflictions light 395 Angels in some sence inferiour to Saints 319 Anger opposite to meekness 133 Appearance of sin to be avoided 242 Appearing of Christ 579 Arguments to brotherly love 618 Assurance to be laboured after p. 437 Assurance though feisible yet difficult to be attained 440 It is useful 441 How this jewel of assurance may be had 442 B. BAlm of Gilead 490 Beauty of grace 511 Blessedness in reversion 17 Wherein blessedness doth not consist 18 Wherein it doth consist 24 Believe a blessedness to come 27 The godly in some sense blessed in this life 31 32 Blood of Saints pretious 317 C. CHearfulness 588 Childship a state of freedom 332 Children of God 290 291 They labour to make others Gods Children 310 They have boldnesse in Prayer 331 All things turn to their gaod 335 They shall never finally perish 338 They should endeavour to carry themselves as Children 343 Christ the best of Preachers 2 Christ our Righteousness 421 Christ a most transcendent blessing 432 Christ a soul-Physitian 485 Why a Physitian 486 The best Physitian 493 Christs love to his Patients 495 Christ can cure a relapse 504 Christianity no disgraceful thing 60 The nature of Christianity 363 Christians should shine forth in their Relations 594 Comforts belonging to mourners in this life 108 111 In the life to come p. 125 Commands of God not grievous 402 Concatenation of the Graces 38 Conversation must be pure 246 Covetousness a multiplying sin 234 235 D. DAnger of despair 98 99 Dangerous to phancy sin less than it is 101 Deceit of the heart 538 539 Dead in sinne healed by Christ 498 Debt of love differs from other debts 624 Degrees of fruit 607 Deriding holiness a fatal sinne 237 Desertion 323 Differences between true and false desires 194 195 Differences between the Christian race and other 559 Divisions dangerous 626 E. EMissaries of Satan 8 Examples of meekness 143 Excellency of grace 516 Excellency of the mourners comfort 113 Exhortation ton to mutual love p. 627 F. FAith in our heavenly Physiitian 505 Faith makes us Children 952 Faith a suffering grace 381 How faith enables to suffer 382 Fences about the heart 550 Fear an enemy to suffering 370 Fickleness of the heart 540 Flesh not to be listned to 371 Forethoughts of sufferings 366 Forgiving of injuries 138 Forsaking of sinne may have its deceits 241 Fruitfulness 591 Fruit in the season 595 Exhortation to fruitfulness 604 Fulness of Christ 417 G. GOod Conscience 373 Glory proportioned to the service we do for God 65 Godly have cause to long for death 61 Gospel-precepts facill compar'd with the severity of the Law 409 Grace severally taken in Scripture 512 Grace not bestowed on all p. 514 Grace quickneth the soul 516 Grace enricheth 517 Grace adorneth 518 Grace a Spiritual perfume 520 Grace the ballast of the soul 523 Grace fits for glory 523 524 How grace is to be obtained 526 H. HArdness of heart dangerous 87 Heart-custody 529 Heart kept with all kind of keeping 531 At all times 534 Heart the Fountain of our actions 541 Motives to heart-custody 552 Hindrances of the successe of the Word 9 10 Honour of Gods children 315 Honour to suffer for Christ 391 Hope of a Christian 576 Hope and Faith differenced 577 Signs of a true hope 583 How Christ heals 489 Hunger of the soul described 153 A reproof of those who have no spiritual hunger 156 Who hunger after unrighteousness 160 Signs of Spiritual hunger 162 Helps to spiritual hunger p. 170 Hungry shall be filled 172 173 I. IMpure hearts deciphered 229 230 Interest in Christ to be laboured after 431 Joys of heaven resembled to a feast 116 K. KEeping the heart 531 Kingdom of heaven excells other Kingdoms 56 57 How we may know we belong to it 62 Thoughts of this Kingdom sweetens poverty 66 Knowledge alone will not make a man happy 633 634 L. LIfe to be denied for Christ 377 Loss of the soul foolish 464. Fatal 465 Love of God in making us his children 313 Love to be centred on Christ 445 Love to Gods Children 307 Love of the world an enemy to suffering 369 Love among Christians 616 617 M. MAlice mental murder 134 Manner of the Spirits comforting p. 111 112 Manner of our seeing God in heaven 259 Means of a Spiritual cure 507 Meekness what it is 132 Motives to meekness 145 146 Directions for meekness 152 Mercifulness 180 Mercifulness to mens souls 183 Names 188 Estates 193 Offences 194 Wants 195 Exhortat●●n to mercifulness 206 Motives to mercifulness 210 Rules about showing mercy 218 Ministers must take all opportunities for soul-service 6 Ministers Seedsmen 7 Their dignity 12 Ministers under the torrid zone of persecution 354 What need there is of Ministers in the Church 477 Misery of a Christless person 428 Mourners are blessed 67 Sin the object of mourning 69 What is not the right mourning for sin 70 What is the right mourning p. 72 Mourn for the sins of others 80 For the miseries of the Church 82 Seasons of mourning 83 Degrees of mourning 85 Motives to mourning 91 Hinderances of mourning 98 Helps to mourning 106 N. NAmes of others not to be wronged 188 189 Nicities in Religion too much minded 159 This discovers want of appetite ibid. O. OBjections of sinners answered 501 502 Opposites to meekness 133 Opposite to mourning 86 Ordination needful for Preachers 4 5 6 Outward things not suitable to the soul 20 Not durable 21 P. PAssions to be watched over 548 Patience abused grows furious 105 Patience a Christians Armour of proof p. 386 Peaceable mindedness 269 Motives to it 277 Peace-makers blessed 285 People to encourage their Ministers 14 15 Persecution 347 VVhy it must be 351 352 What that persecution is which will not make a man blessed 358 What that is will make him blessed 359 A reproof to such as refuse to suffer persecution 364 To such as inflict persecution 365 How to prepare for persecution 368 Persecution cannot hinder blessedness 397 Poverrty of spirit 41 How poverty of spirit differs from humility 42 How from self-denial ibid. Why Christians must be poor in spirit 43 Signs of poverty of Spirit 47 Practice of Religion makes us happy 638 What it is hinders practice 642 Pretiousness of the soul 451 Pride of spirit dangerous 45 Priviledges of Gods Children 320 Procrastination dangerous 103 Promises made to suffering p. 388 Purity of heart 222 Why we must be pure 224 Why the heart must be 226 Purity the souls beauty 227 Signs of a pure heart 238 An exhortation to peart purity 248 Means for heart purity 254 R. REasons why mourners want comfort 122 123 Reasonings of the flesh dangerous 379 Recompencing good for evil 140 141 Regarding iniquity what it is 231 Regeneration 301 Rejoycing in Christ 448 Religion a Race 554 Reproof to be taken kindly 479 Reverence in Gods worship 245 Rewards for Christs Martyrs 399 Righteousness what it implies 154 Righteous person who 368 S. SAints perseverance 524 Saints glorified are Kings 53 Scandals p. 415. Self-denial needful for suffering 375 Scripture to be resorted to 374 Signs of Gods Children 298 Signs of sincerity 238 Sins commands grievous 411 Sin a deadly evil 106 Sin a soul desease 469 How resembled to sickness 469 470 Sin the worst sickness 475 Sick souls think themselves well 481 The reasons of that mistake 482 Sin spreads over the whole soul 470 471 Sin a spiritual sleep 545 Soul more precious than a world 458 Spirit of Adoption a Spirit of supplication 302 303 Sufferings of Christ 392 Suffering-graces 381 T. TEaching 330 Tears pretious 92 Tenderness of heart 299 Thankfulness for Christ 450 Thoughs to be watched over 549 Tongue-persecution 350 Torments of the damned unexpressably grievous 412 Trial of grace p. 526 Truth to be prized 373 V. VAnity of the Creature 425 Vindication of the Church of England 200 Vision of God in heaven glorious 260 It will be speedy 264 Unbelief how great a sin 233 Unfruitfulness 600 Unmercifulness reproved 203 Unworthiness should not keep us from Christ p. 501 W. WAant of love reproved 625 Watchfulness needful in prosperity 537 Witness of the Spirit 305 Word of God healing 489 Works commendable 201 Z. Zeal 305 FINIS
God Wilt thou repine and be sad when thou art blessed Esau wept because he wanted the blessing Gen. 27.38 Bless me even me also O my Father and Esau lift up his voice and wept But shall a child of God be immoderately cast down when he hath the blessing Adam sin'd in the midst of Paradise how evil is it to be blessed and yet murmure Branch 4 Branch 4. What an encouragement is this to godliness we are all ambitious of a blessing then let us espouse Religion Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. But you will say this way is everywhere spoken against 't is no matter seeing this is the way to get a blessing Suppose a Rich man should adopt another for his heir and others should reproach him he cares not as long as he is heir to the Estate So what though others may reproach thee for thy Religion as long as it entails a blessing upon thee the same day thou becomest godly thou becomest blessed CHAP. IV. MATTH 5. ● Blessed are the Poor in Spirit HAving spoken of the general notion of blessedness I come next to consider the Subjects of this blessedness and these our Saviour hath decyphered to be the Poor in Spirit the mourners c. But before I touch upon these I shall a little Preface or Paraphrase upon this Sermon of the Beatitudes 1. Observe the Divinity in this Sermon which goes beyond all Philosophy The Philosophers use to say contrarium contrarium expellit one contrary expels another but here one contrary begets another poverty useth to expel riches but here poverty begets riches for how rich are they that have a Kingdom mourning useth to expel joy but behold here mourning begets joy They shall be comforted Water useth to quench the flame but the water of tears kindles the flame of joy Persecution useth to expel happiness but here it makes happy Blessed are they that are persecuted These are the sacred Paradoxes in our Saviours Sermon * Evangelicam Philosophiam à Parado●is inchoavit Dominus ●nd Cl●● 2. Observe how Christs Doctrine and the opinion of carnal men differ They think beati divites blessed are the rich The world would count him blessed who could have Midas wish that all he touch'd might be turn'd into gold But Christ saith Beati pauperes blessed are the poor in spirit The world thinks Blessed are they on the Pinacle but Christ pronounceth them blessed who are in the Valley Christs reckonings and the worlds do not agree 3. Observe the nature of true Religion Poverty leads the Van and Persecution brings up the Reare Christianus quasi Crucianus Every true Saint saith Luther is heire to the Crosse Some there are who would be thought religious displaying Christs Colours by a glorious profession but to be poor in spirit and persecuted durus hic sermo they cannot take down this bitter pill they would weare Christs Jewels but wave his Crosse these are strangers to Religion 4. Observe the certain connexion between grace and its reward they who are poor in spirit shall have the kingdom of God They are as sure to go to heaven as if they were in heaven already Our Saviour would encourage men to Religion by sweetning Commands with Promises he ties duty and reward together As in the body the veines carry the blood and the arteries the spirits so one part of these Verses carries Duty and the other part carries reward As that Scholar of Apelles painted Helena richly drawn in costly and glorious apparel hung all over with orient pearl and precious stones So our Lord Christ having set down several qualifications of a Christian poor in spirit pure in heart c. draws these heavenly vertues in their fair colours of blessednesse and sets the magnificent crown of reward upon them that by this oriency he might the more set forth their unparallel'd beauty and entice holy love 5. Observe hence the concatenation of the graces poor in spirit meek merciful c. where there is one grace there is all As they say of the Cardinal vertues virtutes sunt inter se connexae the vertues are chained together so we may say of the graces of the Spirit they are link'd and chain'd together he that hath poverty of Spirit is a mourner he that is a mourner is meek he that is meek is merciful c. The Spirit of God plants in the heart an habit of all the graces the new creature hath all the parts and lineaments as in the body there is a composition of all the Elements and a mixture of all the humours The graces of the Spirit are like a Row of pearl which hang together upon the string of Religion and serve to adorn Christs Bride This I note to shew you a difference between an hypocrite and a true child of God The hypocrite flatters himself with a pretence of grace but in the mean time he hath not an habit of all the graces he hath not poverty of spirit nor purity of heart whereas a child of God hath all the graces in his heart at least radically though not gradually These things being premised I come in particular to those heavenly dispositions of soul to which Christ hath affixed blessedness And the first is POVERTY of SPIRIT Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Chrysostom and Theophylact are of opinion that this was the first Sermon that ever Christ made therefore it may challenge our best attention Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Our Lord Christ being to raise an high and stately Fabrick of blessedness lays the foundation of it low in poverty of Spirit but all poverty is not blessed * Non omnis paupertas beata B●ugensis I shall use a four-fold distinction 1. I distinguish between Poor in Estate and Poor in Spirit there are the Divels poor poor and wicked whose cloaths are not more torn than their conscience There are some whose poverty is their sin who through Improvidence or Excess have brought themselves to want these may be poor in Estate but not poor in Spirit 2. I distinguish between spiritually Poor and Poor in spirit he who is without grace is spiritually poor but he is not poor in Spirit he knows not his own beggery Rev. 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art Poor He is in the worst sense poor who hath no sense of his poverty 3. I distinguish between Poor-spirited and Poor in spirit They are said to be poor-spirited who have mean base spirits who act below themselves 1. As they are men such are those Misers which having great Estates yet can hardly afford themselves bread who live sneakingly and are ready to wish their own throats cut because they are forced to spend something in satisfying Natures demands This Solomon calls an evil under the Sun Eccles 6.2 There is an evil which I have seen under the Sun a man to whom God hath given Riches so that he wants nothing for his soul of all that he desireth yet
give them a Kingdom above all the Princes of the earth nay far above all heavens God thinks nothing too good for his children We many times think much of a tear a prayer or to sacrifice a sin for him but he doth not think much to bestow a Kingdom upon us How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven and Trumpet forth the prayses of that God who hath crowned them with loving kindness Infer 3 3. It shews us that Christianity is no disgraceful thing Wise men measure things by the end what is the end of godliness it brings a Kingdom a mans sin brings him to shame Prov. 13.5 Rom. 6.21 What fruit had ye in those things whereof you are now ashamed but Religion brings to honour Prov. 4.8 it brings a man to a Throne a Crown it ends in glory it is the sinners folly to reproach a Saint 't is just as if Shimei had reproached David when he was going to be made King it is a Saints wisdom to contemn a reproach say as David when he danced before the Ark I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 If to pray and hear and serve my God be to be vile I will yet be more vile This is my excellency my glory I am doing now that which will bring me to a Kingdom O think it no disgrace to be a Christian I speak it chiefly to you who are entring upon the wayes of God perhaps you may meet with such as will reproach and censure you binde their reproaches as a Crown about your head despise their censure as much as their praise remember there is a Kingdom entailed upon godlinesse Sin draws hell after it grace draws a Crown after it 4. See here that which may make the people of God Infer 4 long for death then they shall enter upon their Kingdom Indeed the wicked may fear death it will not lead them to a Kingdom but a Prison hell is the iayle where they must lie rotting for ever with the Divel and his Angels To every Christlesse person death is the King of terror but the godly may long for death it will prefer them to a Kingdom When Scipio's father had told him of that glory the soul should be invested with in a state of immortality why then saith Scipio do I tarry thus long upon the earth why do I not hasten to die * Tully in Somn. Scip. Believers are not perfectly happy till death When Croesus asked Solon who he thought happy he told him one Tellus a man that was dead a Christian at death shall be compleatly installed into his honour the anointing oyle shall be poured on him and the Crown-royal set upon his head The Thracians in their funerals used musick The Heathens as Theocritus observes had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Funeral banquet because of that felicity which they supposed the parties deceased were entred into The Saints are now heirs of the Kingdom James 2.5 Doth not the heir desire to be crowned Truly there is enough to weane us and make us willing to be gone from hence The Saints eate ashes like bread they are here in a suffering condition Psalm 141.7 Our bones are scattered at the graves mouth as when one cutteth and cleaveth wood upon the earth When a man hewes and cuts a tree the chips flie up and down here and there a chip so here a Saint wounded there a Saint massacred our bones flie like chips up and down for thy sake are we killed all the day long Rom. 8.36 But there is a Kingdom a coming when the body is buried the soul is crowned Who would not be willing to saile in a storm if he were sure to be crowned as soone as he came at shore How is it that the godly look so gastly at the thoughts of death as if they were rather going to their execution than their Coronation though we should be willing to stay here awhile to do service yet we should with Saint Paul desire to be dissolved and be with Christ The day of a believers dissolution is the day of his inauguration SECT 5. Containing a scrutiny and tryal whether we belong to this Kingdom Use 2 BUT how shall we know that this glorions Kingdom shall be setled upon us at death Trial. 1. If God have set up his Kingdom within us Luke 17.21 The Kingdom of God is within you by the Kingdom of God there is meant the Kingdom of Grace in the heart Grace may be compared to a Kingdom it swayes the Scepter it gives out Lawes there is the Law of love Grace beats down the Divels garrisons it brings the heart into a sweet subjection to Christ Now is this Kingdom of Grace set up in thy heart Do'st thou rule over thy sins Canst thou binde those Kings in chaines * Psal 149.8 Art thou a King over thy pride passion unbelief Is the Kingdom of God within you While others aspire after earthly greatnesse and labour for a Kingdom without them do'st thou labour for a Kingdom within thee Certainly if the Kingdom of Grace be in thy heart thou shalt have the Kingdom of glory If Gods Kingdom enter into thee thou shalt enter into his Kingdom But let not that man ever think to reign in glory who lives a slave to his lusts 2. If thou art a believer thou shalt go to this blessed Kingdom James 2.5 Rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith is an heroical act of the soul it makes an holy adventure on God by a promise this is the crowning grace Faith puts us into Christ and our title to the Crown comes in by Christ By Faith we are borne of God and so we become children of the blood-royal By Faith our hearts are purified Acts 15.9 and so we are made fit for a Kingdom rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith paves a Causey to heaven believers die heirs to the Crown 3. He that hath a noble Kingly spirit shall go to the heavenly Kingdom set your affection on things above Col. 3.2 Dost thou live in mundo supra mundum in the world above the world The Eagle doth not catch flies she soars aloft in the aire dost thou superna anhelare pant after glory and immortality Hast thou a brave majestick spirit an heavenly ambition dost thou mind the favour of God the peace of Sion the salvation of thy soul Dost thou abhor that which is sordid and below thee Alexander would not exercise at the Olympick-games Canst thou trample upon all sublunary things Is heaven in thy eye and Christ in thy heart and the world under thy feet He who hath such a Kingly spirit that looks no lower than a Crown he shall dwell on high and have his throne mounted far above all heavens SECT 6. A serious exhortation to Christians Use 3 USE 3. Exhortation And it hath a double aspect it looks Exhort 1. towards the wicked Is there a Kingdom to be had a
joy God poures the golden oyle of comfort into broken Vessels the Mourners heart is emptied of pride and God fills the empty with his blessing the Mourners tears have helped to purge out corruption and after purging physick God gives a Julip The Mourner is ready to faint away under the burden of sin and then the bottle of strong water comes seasonably The Lord would have the incestuous person upon his deep humiliation to be comforted lest he should be swallowed up with over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 This is the Mourners priviledge he shall be comforted the Valley of tears brings the soul into a Paradise of joy a sinners joy brings forth sorrow the mourners sorrow brings forth joy John 16.22 Your sorrow shall be turned into joy The Saints have a wet seed-time but a joyful Harvest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall be comforted SECT I. Showing the mourners comforts here NOw to illustrate this I shall show you what the comforts are the mourners shall have These comforts are of a divine infusion and they are two-fold either Here or Hereafter * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 1. Comforts here 1. COMFORTS HERE They are called the consolations of God Job 15.11 That is Great comforts such as none but God can Give they exceed all other comforts as far as heaven doth earth The root on which these comforts grow is The blessed Spirit he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter John 14.26 and comfort is said to be a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Christ did purchase peace the Spirit speaks peace Quest How doth the Spirit comfort Answ Either Mediately or Immediately 1. Mediately By helping us to apply the Promises to ourselves and draw water out of those Wells of salvation we lie as dead children at the breast till the Spirit helps us to suck the breast of a Promise and when the Spirit hath taught Faith this Art now comfort flows in O how sweet is the breast-milk of a Promise 2. The Spirit comforts immediatly The Spirit by a more direct act presents God to the soul as reconciled it sheds his love abroad in the heart from whence flows infinite joy Rom. 5.5 The Spirit secretly whispers Pardon for sin and the sight of a Pardon dilates the heart with joy Matth. 9.2 Be of good chear thy sinnes are forgiven thee That I may speak more fully to this point I shall show you the qualifications and excellencies of these comforts which God gives his mourners 1. These comforts are real comforts the Spirit of God cannot witness to that which is untrue There are many in this age do pretend to comfort but their comforts are meere impostures the body may as well swell with wind as with flesh a man may as well be swelled with false as true comforts * Distinguendum est inter Gaudia Veritatis Vanitatis Aug. The comforts of the Saints are certain they have the seal of the Spirit set to them Ephes 1.13 2 Cor. 1.22 A seal is for confirmation when a Deed is sealed it is firme and unquestionable When a Christian hath the seal of the Spirit stamped upon his heart now he is confirmed in the love of God Quest Wherein do these comforts of the Spirit which are unquestionably sure differ from those which are false and pretended Answ Three ways 1. The comforts of Gods Spirit are laid in deep conviction John 16.7 8 and when he that is the Comforter verse 7. is come he shall reprove or as the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall convince the world of sinne Quest Why doth conviction go before consolation Answ Conviction fits for comfort by conviction the Spirit doth sweetly dispose the heart to these two things 1. To seek after Christ When once the soul is convinced of sin and the hell that follows it now a Saviour is precious When the Spirit hath shot in the arrow of conviction now saith a poor soul where may I meet with Christ In what Ordinance may I come to enjoy Christ saw ye him whom my soul loves All the world for one glimpse of my Saviour 2. The Spirit by conviction makes the heart willing to receive Christ upon his own termes man by nature would article and indent with Christ he would take half Christ he would take him for a Saviour not a Prince he would accept of Christ as he hath an head of gold Cant. 5.11 but not as he hath the government upon his shoulders Isa 9.6 But when God le ts loose the spirit of bondage and convinceth a sinner of his lost undone condition now he is content to have Christ upon any termes When Paul was struck down to the ground by a spirit of conviction he cries out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9.6 Let God propound what Articles he will the soul will subscribe to them Now when a man is brought to Christs termes to beleeve and obey then he is fit for mercy when the Spirit of God hath been a Spirit of conviction then it becomes a spirit of consolation when the plough of the Law hath gone upon the heart and broken up the fallow ground now God sows the seed of comfort Those who brag of comfort but were never yet convinced nor broken for sin have cause to suspect their comfort to be a delusion of Satan It is like a mad mans joy who fancies himself to be King but it may be said of his laughter it is mad Eccles 2.2 The seed which wanted depth of earth withered Matth. 13. that comfort which wants depth of earth deep humiliation and conviction will soone wither and come to nothing 2. The Spirit of God is a sanctifying before a comforting Spirit as Gods Spirit is called the Comforter so he is called a spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Grace is the work of the Spirit Comfort is the seal of the Spirit the work of the Spirit goes before the seal the graces of the spirit are compared to water Isa 44.3 and the comforts of the spirit are compared to oyle Isa 61.1 First God pours in the water of the spirit and then comes the oyle of gladnesse The oyle in this sence runs above the water Hereby we shall know whether our comforts are true and genuine Some talk of the comforting spirit who never had the sanctifying Spirit they boast of assurance but never had grace these are spurious joyes these comforts will leave men at death they will end in horror and despair Gods Spirit will never set seal to a Blank First the heart must be an Epistle written with the finger of the Holy Ghost and then it is sealed with the Spirit of Promise 3. The comforts of the Spirit are humbling Lord saith the soul What am I that I should have a smile from heaven and that thou shouldest give me a privy seal of thy love The more water is poured into a Bucket the lower it descends the fuller the ship is laden
with sweet spices the lower it sails the more a Christian is filled with the sweet comforts of the Spirit the lower he fails in humility the fuller a Tree is of fruit the lower the bough hangs the more full we are of the fruits of the Spirit joy and peace Gal. 5.22 the more we bend down in humility St. Paul a chosen Vessel * Acts 9.15 fill'd with the wine of the Spirit * 2 Cor. 5.1 did not more abound in joy than in lowliness of mind Eph. 3.8 Unto me who am less than the least of all Saints is this grace given c. He who was the chief of the Apostles calls himself the least of Saints Those who say they have comfort but are proud they have learned to despise others and are climb'd above Ordinances their comforts are delusions the Divel is able not only to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.4 but he can transform himself into the Comforter 'T is easie to counterfeit money to silver over brass and put the Kings image upon it the Divel can silver over false comforts and make them look as if they had the stamp of the King of heaven upon them the comforts of God are humbling though they lift the heart up in thankfulness yet they do not puff it up in pride 2. The comforts God gives his Mourners are unmixed they are not tempered with any bitter ingredients worldly comforts are like wine that runs dregs there is that guilt within checks and corrodes in midst of laughter the heart is sad Prov 14.13 Queen Mary once said if she were opened they would find Callis lying at her heart if the breast of a sinner were anatomized and opened you would find a worm gnawing at his heart guilt is a Wolf which feeds in the breast of his comfort a sinner may have a smiling countenance but a chiding conscience his mirth is like the mirth of a man in debt who is every houre in fear of arresting the comforts of wicked men are spiced with bitterness they are worm-wood wine Hi sunt qui trepidant ad omnia fulgura pallent Hor. Cum tonat exanimes primo quoque murmure coelum But spiritual comforts are pure they are not muddied with guilt nor mixed with fear they are the pure wine of the Spirit what the Mourner feels is joy and nothing but joy 3. These comforts God gives his Mourners are sweet Eccles 12.7 Truly the light is sweet so is the light of Gods countenance How sweet are those comforts which bring the Comforter along with them John 14.16 Therefore the love of God shed into the heart is said to be better than wine Cant. 1.2 Wine pleaseth the palate but the love of God chears the conscience the lips of Christ drop sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.13 The comforts God gives are a Christians Musick they are the golden Pot and the Manna the Nectar and Ambrosia of a Christian they are the Saints Festival their banquetting stuffe so sweet are these Divine comforts that the Church had her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fainting fits for want of them Cant. 2.5 stay me with flagons Metonymia Subjecti pro adjuncto the flagons are put for the wine by these flagons are meant the comforts of the Spirit the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies all variety of delights to show the abundance of delectability and sweetnesse in these comforts of the Spirit Comfort me with Apples Apples are sweet in taste fragrant in smell so sweet and delicious are those Apples which grow upon the tree in Paradise These comforts from above are so sweet that they make all other comforts sweet health estate relations they are like sawce which makes all our earthly possessions and enjoyments come off with a better relish So sweet are these comforts of the Spirit that they do much abate and moderate our joy in worldly things he who hath been drinking spirits of wine or Alkermes will not much thirst after water and that man who hath once tasted how sweet the Lord is Psal 34.8 and hath drunk the cordials of the Spirit will not thirst immoderately after secular delights Those who play with dogs and birds it is a signe they have no children such as are inordinate in their desire and love of the creature declare plainly that they never had better comforts 4. These comforts which God gives his mourners are holy comforts they are call'd the comforts of the holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Every thing propagates in its own kind * Omne agens operatur secundum naturam agens the holy Ghost can no more produce impure joys in the soul than the Sun can prduce darknesse he who hath the comforts of the Spirit looks upon himself as a person engaged to do God more service Hath the Lord looked upon me with a smiling face I can never pray enough I can never love God enough The comforts of the Spirit raise in the heart an holy antipathy against sin the Dove hates every feather that hath grown upon the Hawke so there is an hatred of every motion and temptation to evil he who hath a principle of life in him opposeth every thing that would destroy life he hates poison so he that hath the comforts of the Spirit living in him sets himself against those sins which would murder his comforts divine comforts give the soul more acquaintance with God 1 John 1.4 Our fellowship is with the Father and his Sonne Jesus 5. The comforts reserv'd for the mourners are filling comforts Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy John 16.24 Ask that your joy may be full When God pours in the joyes of heaven they fill the heart and make it run over 2 Cor. 7.4 I am exceeding joyful the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I overflow with joy as a Cup that is filled with wine till it runs over Outward comforts can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle Spiritual joyes are satisfying Psal 63.5 My heart shall be satisfied as with marrow and I will praise thee with ioyful lips Davids heart was full and the joy did break out at his lips Psal 4.7 Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart worldly joyes do put gladnesse into the face 2 Cor. 5.12 they rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the face but the Spirit of God puts gladnesse into the heart divine joyes are heart-joyes Zach. 10.7 John 16.22 Your heart shall rejoyce a believer doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God And to show how filling these comforts are which are of an heavenly extraction the Psalmist saith they create greater joy than when wine and cyle encrease Psal 4. Wine and Oyle may delight but not satisfie they have their vacuity and indigence we may say as Zach. 10.2 they comfort in vaine outward comforts do sooner cloy than chear and sooner weary than fill Xerxes offered great rewards to him
Thy sin thy neighbour is not so bad in offending thee as thou art in not forgiving him thy neighbour in offending thee doth but trespasse against a man but thou refusing to forgive him dost trespasse against God 2. Thy danger thou who art implacable and though thou may'st smother the fire of thy rage yet wilt not extinguish it know that if thou dyest this night thou dyest in an unpardoned condition if you will not believe me believe Christ Mark 11.26 If you do not forgive neither will your Father which is in heaven forgive your trespasses He who lives without meeknesse dies without mercy 3. Branch of meeknesse is in recompencing good for evil this is an higher degree than the other Matth. 5.44 Love your enemies do good to them that hate you pray for them which despightfully use you Rom. 12.20 If thine enemy hunger feed him 1 Pet. 3.9 not rendring evil for evil but contrarywise blessing This three-fold cord of Scripture should not easily be broken To render evil for evil is bruitish to render evil for good is divellish to render good for evil is Christian The Heathens had this maxime Nemini laedere nisi lacessitus injuriâ they thought it lawful to wrong none unlesse first provoked with an injury but the Sun-light of Scripture shines brighter than the lamp of reason Love your enemies when grace comes into the heart it works a strange alteration when a sciens is ingrafted into the stock it partakes of the nature and sap of the Tree and brings forth the same fruit take a crab ingraft it into a Pepyn it brings forth the same fruit as the Pepyn so he who was once of a sowre crabby disposition given to revenge when he once partakes of the sap of the heavenly olive he bears generous fruit he is full of love to his enemies Grace allays the passion and melts the heart into compassion as the Sun draws up many thick noxious vapours from the Earth and Sea and returns them in sweet showres so a gracious heart returns all the unkindnesses and discurtesies of his enemies with the sweet influences and distillations of love thus David Psal 35.13 They rewarded me evil for good but as for me when they were sick my cloathing was sackcloth I humbled my soul with fasting c. Some would have rejoyced he wept some would have put on scarlet David put on sackcloth this is the rarity or rather miracle of meekness it retorts good for evil thus we have seen the nature of meekness SECT 1. Shewing the Character of a true Saint IT shews us the badge of a true Saint he is of a meek Use 1 candid spirit he is not easily provoked he takes every thing in the best sense and conquers malice with mildness I would to God all who profess themselves Saints were bespangled with this grace We are known to belong to Christ when we wear his Livery he is a Saint whose spirit is so meekned that he can smother prejudices and bury unkindnesses a passion of tears doth better become a Christian than a passion of anger every Saint is Christs Spouse Cant. 4.8 It becomes Christs Spouse to be meek if any injury be offered to the Spouse she leaves it to her husband to revenge 't is unseemly for Christs Spouse to strike SECT 2. Containing a Swasive to meekness Use 2 LET me beseech all Christians to labour to be eminent in this superlative grace of meekness Exhort Zeph. 2.3 Seek meekness Seeking implies we have lost it therefore we must make an hue and cry after it to find it Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God meekness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put it on as a garment never to be left off Meekness is a necessary ingredient into every thing 1. It is necessary in instruction 2 Tim. 2.25 In meekness instructing c. Meekness conquers the opposers of truth meekness melts the heart soft words are softning 2. Meekness is necessary in hearing the Word Jam. 1.21 Receive with meekness the ingrafted Word he who comes to the Word either with passion or prejudice gets no good but hurt he turns wine into poyson and stabs himself with the sword of the Spirit 3. Meekness is needful in reproofs Gal. 6.1 If a man be overtaken with a fault restore such an one with the spirit of meekness The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put him in joynt again if a bone be out of joynt the Chyrurgion must not use a rough hand that may chance break another bone but he must come gently to work and afterwards bind it up softly so if a brother be through inanimadvertency overtaken we must not come to him in a fury of passion but with a spirit of meekness labour to restore him I shall lay down several Motives or Arguments to meeken the spirits of men 1. Let me propound examples of meekness Motive 1 1. The example of Jesus Christ Matth. 21.5 Thy King cometh unto thee meek Christ was the samplar and pattern of meekness 1 Pet. 2.23 When he was reviled he reviled not again His enemies words were more bitter than the gall they gave him but Christs words were smoother than oyle he prayed and wept for his enemies he calls to us to learn of him Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek Christ doth not bid us saith Austin learn of him to work miracles to open the eyes of the blind to raise the dead but he would have us learn of him to be meek if we do not imitate his life we cannot be saved by his death 2. Let us set before our eyes the examples of some of the Saints who have shined in this grace Moses was a man of unparallel'd meekness Numb 12.3 Now the man Moses was very meek above all the men which were upon the face of the earth How many injuries did he put up when the people of Israel murmured against him instead of falling into a rage he falls to prayer for them Exod. 15.24 25. The Text saith they murmured at the waters of Marah sure the waters were not so bitter as the spirits of the people but they could not provoke him to passion but petition Another time when they wanted water they fell a chiding with Moses Exod. 17.3 Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up out of Egypt to kill us and our children with thirst As if they had said if we dye we will lay our death to thy charge Would not this exasperate sure it would have required the meekness of an Angel to bear this but behold Moses his meekness he did not give them an unbecoming word though they were in a storm he was in a calm they chide but he prayes Oh that as the spirit of Elijah did rest upon Elisha so that some of the spirit of Moses this meek man or rather earthly Angel may rest upon us Another eminent pattern of meekness was David when Shimei cursed David and Abishai one
might have set Christ and salvation at an higher price but he hath much beaten down the price Now as this shews the sweetness of Gods Nature he is not an hard Master so it shews us the inexcusableness of them who perish under the Gospel What Apology can any man make at the day of judgement when God shall ask that question Friend why didst thou not embrace Christ I set Christ and grace at a low rate if thou hadst but hungered after righteousness thou might'st have had it but thou didst slight Christ thou hadst such low thoughts of righteousness that thou wouldst not hunger after it how dost thou think to escape who hast neglected so great salvation The easier the terms of the Gospel are the sorer punishment shall they be thought worthy of who unworthily refuse such an offer Branch 2 2. It shews us a true Character of a godly man he hungers and thirsts after spiritual things Isa 26.9 Psal 73.25 A true Saint is carried upon the wing of desire 't is the very temper and constitution of a gracious soul to thirst after God Psal 42.2 In the word preached now he is big with desire these are some of the pantings of his soul Lord Thou hast led me into thy Courts O that I may have thy sweet presence that thy glory may fill the Temple This is thy Limning house wilt thou draw some sacred Lineaments of grace upon my soul that I may be more assimilated and changed into the likeness of my dear Saviour In prayer how is the soul filled with passionate longings after Christ prayer is expressed by groans unutterable Rom. 8.26 The heart sends up whole Vollies of sighs to heaven Lord one beam of thy love one drop of thy blood SECT 2. Containing a Reprehension of such as do not hunger after Righteousness Use 2 IT reproves such as have none of this spiritual hunger they have no winged desires Reproof the edge of their affections Branch 1 is blunted honey is not sweet to them that are sick of a Feaver and have their tongues imbittered with Choler So those who are soul-sick and in the gall of bitterness find no sweetness in God or Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sin tastes sweeter to them they have no spiritual hunger That men have not this hunger after righteousness appears by these seven Demonstrations 1. They never felt any emptiness they are full of their own righteousness Rom. 10.3 Now the full stomack loaths the honey-comb this was Laodicea's disease she was full and had no stomack either to Christs gold or eye-salve Rev. 3.17 When men are filled with pride this flatuous distemper hinders holy longings as when the stomack is full of wind it spoils the appetite none so empty of grace as he that thinks he is full he hath most need of righteousness that doth least want it 2. That men do not hunger after righteousness appears because they can make a shift well enough to be without it If they have oyle in the Cruse the world coming in they are well content grace is a commodity that is least missed you shall hear men complain they want health they want Trading but never complain they want Righteousness if men lose a meal or two they think themselves half undone but they can stay away from Ordinances which are the Conduits of grace Do they hunger after righteousness who are satisfied without it nay who desire to be excused from feeding upon the Gospel-banquet * Luke 14.18 sure he hath no appetite who entreats to be excused from eating 3. It is a sign they have none of this spiritual hunger who desire rather sleep than food they are more drowsie than hungry some there are who come to the Word that they may get a nap to whom I may say as Christ did to Peter Mark 14.37 Couldst thou not watch one houre 't is strange to see a man asleep at his meat others there are who have a deep sleep fallen upon them they are asleep in security and they hate a soul-awakening Ministry while they sleep their damnation slumbereth not 1 Pet. 2.3 4. It appears men have no spiritual hunger because they refuse their food Christ and Grace are offered nay pressed upon them but they put away salvation from them as the froward child puts away the breast Psal 81.11 Acts 13.46 Such are your Phanaticks and Enthusiasts who put away the blessed Ordinances and pretend Revelations That is a strange Revelation that tells a man he may live without food these prefer Husks before Manna they live upon Aery Notions being fed by the Prince of the Ayre 5. 'T is a sign they have none of this spiritual hunger who delight more in the garnishing of the dish than in food these are they who look more after Elegancy and notion in Preaching than solid matter it argues either a wanton palate or a surfeited stomack to feed on sallets and kickshaws neglecting wholsom food 1 Tim. 6.3 4. If any man consent not to wholsome words he is proud knowing nothing c. The plainest truth hath its beauty they have no spiritual hunger that desire only to feast their fancy of such the Prophet speaks Ezek. 33.32 Thou art to them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voyce and can play well on an Instrument If a man were invited to a Feast and there being Musick at the Feast he should so listen to the Musick that he did not mind his meat you would say Sure he is not hungry so when men are for gingling words and like rather gallantry of speech than spirituality of matter it is a sign they have surfeited stomacks and itching ears 6. They evidence little hunger after righteousness that prefer other things before it viz. their profits and recreations If a boy when he should be at dinner is playing in the street it is a sign he hath no appetite to his meat were he hungry he would not prefer his play before his food So when men prefer vain things which cannot profit before the blood of Christ and the grace of the Spirit it is a sign they have no palate or stomack to heavenly things 7. It is a sign men have no spiritual hunger when they are more for Disputes in Religion than Practicks Robertus Gallus thought he saw in his dream a great Feast and some were biting on hard stones when men feed only on hard questions and controversies * 1 Tim. 6.3 4. like some of the Schoolmens utrums and distinctions as whether one may partake with him that hath not the work of grace in his heart whether one ought not to separate from a Church in case of male-administration what is to be thought of Paedobaptism c. when these Niceties and Criticisms in Religion take up mens heads neglecting faith and holiness these do pick bones and not feed on the meat Scepticks in Religion have hot brains but cold hearts did men hunger and thirst after
not like the Medlar which is never good till it be rotten A covetous man may be compared to a Christmas-box he receives money but parts with none till death breaks this box in pieces then the silver and gold comes tumbling out Give in time of health these are the Alms which God takes notice of and as Calvin saith putteth into his book of accounts 6. Give thankfully They should be more thankful Rule 6 that give an Alms than they that receive it We should saith Nazianzene give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a thank-offering to God that we are in the number of Givers and not Receivers Bless God for a willing mind to have not only an Estate but an Heart is matter of gratulation MATTH 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God CHAP. XVI Describing Heart-purity THE holy God who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity calls here for heart-purity and to such as are adorned with this jewel he promiseth a glorious and beatifical Vision of himself they shall see God Two things are to be explained 1. The nature of Purity 2. The subject of Purity The nature of Purity 1. The nature of Purity Purity is a Sacred refined thing it stands diametrically opposite to immunditia or whatsoever defileth we must distinguish of purity 1. There is a Primitive Purity which is in God Originally and Essentially as light is in the Sun Holinesse is the glory of the Godhead * Septuag Exod 15.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glorious in holiness God is the Pattern and Prototype of all holinesse 2. There is a created Purity Thus holinesse is in the Angels and was once in Adam Adams heart had not the least spot or tincture of impurity We call that wine pure which hath no sophistication and that gold pure which hath no drosse mingled with it Such was Adams holinesse it was like the wine which comes from the grape having no mixture but this is not to be found on earth we must go to heaven for it 3. There is an evangelical purity when grace is mingled with some sin like Gold in the Oare like aire in the twilight like wine that hath a dash in it like fine cloth with a course list like Nebuchadnezzars image part of silver and part of clay Dan. 2.35 This mixture God calls purity in a Gospel-sence as a face may be said to be fair which hath some freckles in it Where there is a study of purity and a loathing our selves for our impurity this is to be pure in heart Some by pure in heart understand chastity others sincerity Psal 32.2 But I suppose purity here is to be taken in a larger sence for the several kinds and degrees of holiness they are said to be pure who are consecrated persons having the oyle of grace poured upon them This Purity is much mistaken 1. Civility is not Purity a man may be cloath'd with moral vertues justice prudence temperance yet go to hell 2. Profession is not purity a man may have a name to live and yet be dead Rev. 3.1 He may be swept by civility and garnished by profession yet the Divel may dwell in the house The blazing Comet is no Star The Hypocrites tongue may be silver yet his heart stone Purity consists in two things 1. Rectitude of minde a prizing holinesse in the judgment Psal 119.30 2 Conformity of will an embracing of holinesse in the affections Psal 119.97 A pure soil is cast into the mould of holinesse holinesse is a blood runs in his veines The subject of Purity 2 The subject of purity The Heart Pure in heart Purity of heart doth not exclude purity of life no more than the pureness of the fountain excludes the purenesse of the stream But it is call'd Purity of heart because this is the main thing in Religion and there can be no purity of life without it A Christians great care should be to keep the heart pure as one would especially preserve the spring from being poysoned In a Duel a man will chiefly guard and fence his heart so a wise Christian should above all things keep his heart pure take heed the love of sin doth not get in there lest it prove mortal Doctr. Christians should above all things breath after heart-purity 1 Tim. 3.9 Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience justification causeth our happinesse sanctification evidenceth it Reasons for 1. Purity 2. Heart-purity 1. Reasons for Purity The Reasons for Purity are 1. Purity is a thing called for in Scripture 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy It is not only the Minister bids you be holy but God himself calls for it what should the holy God do with unholy servants 2. Because of that filthy and cursed condition we are in before purity be wrought in us we are a lump of clay and sin mingled together sin doth not only blind us but defile us it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filthiness James 1.21 And to shew how befilthying a thing it is 't is compar'd to a plague-soar 1 Kings 8.38 To spots Deut. 32.5 To a vomit 2 Pet. 2.22 To the infants tumbling in blood Ezek. 16.6 To a menstruous cloath Isa 30.22 which as Hierom saith was the most defiling thing under the Law All the legal washings which God appointed were but to put men in mind of their loathsomnesse before they were washed in the blood of Christ If all the evils in the world were put together and their quintescence strain'd out they could not make a thing so black and polluted as sin doth a sinner is a Divel in mans shape When Moses his Rod was turn'd into a Serpent he fled from it would God open mens eyes and shew them their deformities and damnable spots they would be afraid and flie from themselves as Serpents This shews what need we have of Purity When grace comes it washeth off this hellish filth of Ethiopians it maks us Israelites it turns Ravens into Swans it makes them who are as black as hell to become white as snow 3. Because none but the pure in heart are interested in the Covenant of Grace covenanted persons have the sprinkling with clean water Ezek. 36.25 Now till we are thus sprinkled we have nothing to do with the new Covenant and by consequence with the new Jerusalem If a Will be made only to such persons as are so qualified none can come in for a part but such as have those qualifications So God hath made a Will and Covenant that he will be our God and will settle heaven upon us by entaile but with this clause or proviso in the Will that we be purified persons having the clean water sprinkled upon us Now till then we have nothing to do with God or mercie 4. Purity is the end of our election Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us that we should be holy not for holinesse to holinesse Rom. 8.29 Whom he did foreknow he also
did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son God predestinates us to Christs image which image consists in righteousnesse and true holinesse Ephes 4.24 So that till thou art holy thou canst not shew any signe of election upon thee but rather the Divels brand-mark 5. Purity is the end of our redemption if we could have gone to heaven in our sins Christ needed not have died Why did he shed his blood but to redeem us from a vain conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 19. and Titus 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people Christ shed his blood to wash off our filth the Crosse was both an Altar and a Lavor Jesus Christ died not only to save us from wrath 1 Thes 1. ult but to save us from sin Matth. 1.21 Out of his sides came water which signifies our cleansing as well as blood which signifies our justifying 1 John 5.6 The truth is it were to make the body of Christ monstrous if the head should be pure and not the members 2. Reasons for heart-purity 2. Why Purity must be chiefly in the heart 1. Because if the heart be not pure we differ nothing from a Pharisaical Purity the Pharisees holinesse did consist chiefly in externals their 's was an outside Purity they never minded the inside of the heart Matth. 23.25 Wo unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye make cleane the outside of the cup and of the platter but within ye are full of extortion and verse 27. Ye are like unto whited Sepulchres which indeed appear beautiful outward but are within full of dead mens bones The Pharisees were good only in superficie they were not Albi but dealbati whited over not white they were like a rotten post laid in Vermilion colour like a fair Chimny-piece guilded without but within nothing but Soot O such Hypocrites Salvian complains of who had Christ in their mouths but to no purpose we must go farther be pure in heart like the Kings daughter all glorious within Psal 45.13 Else ours is but a pharisaical purity and Christ faith Matth. 5.20 Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven 2. The heart must especially be kept pure because the heart is the chief seat or place of Gods residence God dwells in the heart he takes up the heart for his own lodgings Isa 57.15 Ephes 3.17 therefore it must be pure and holy A Kings Palace must be kept from defilement especially his Presence-chamber The heart is Gods Presence-chamber How holy ought that to be If the body be the Temple of the holy Ghost † * 1 Cor. 6.19 the heart is the Sanctum Sanctorum Oh take heed of defiling the room where God is to come let that room be washed with holy tears 3. The heart must especially be pure because it is the heart sanctifies all we do if the heart be holy all is holy our affections holy our duties holy The Altar sanctified the gift * Mat. 23.19 the heart is the Altar that sanctifies the offering The Romans kept their springs from being poysoned the heart is the spring of all our actions let us keep this spring from poyson be pure in heart SECT 1. Shewing the true beauty of the soul 1. SEE here what is the beauty that sets off a soul in Use 1 Gods eye viz. Purity of heart Inform. Thou who art never so beautiful art but a spiritual Leper till thou art pure Branch 1 in heart God is in love with the pure heart for he sees his own picture drawn there Holinesse is a beam of God it is the Angels glory They are pure virgin-spirits take away purity from an Angel and he is no more an Angel but a Divel thou who art pure in heart hast the Angels glory shining in thee thou hast the Embroydery and Workmanship of the Holy Ghost upon thee The pure heart is Gods Paradise where he delights to walk 't is his lesser heaven the Dove delights in the purest Aire the Holy Ghost who descended in the likeness of a Dove delights in the purest soul God saith of the pure in heart as of Sihon Psal 132.14 This is my rest for ever here will I dwell God loves the fairest complexion the pure in heart is Christs Bride decked and bespangled with the jewels of holiness Cant. 4.9 Thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes Thine eyes that is thy graces these as a Chain of Pearl have drawn mine heart to thee of all hearts God loves the pure heart best Thou who dressest thy self by the glass of the Word and adornest the hidden man of thy heart * 1 Pet. 3.4 art most precious in Gods eyes though thou mayst be blear-eyed as Leah lame as Barzillai yet being pure in heart thou art the mirrour of beauty and mayst say Yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord Isa 49.5 How may this raise the esteem of purity this is a beauty that never fades and which makes God himself fall in love with us SECT 2. That Christians must not rest in out-side purity Branch 2 2. IF we must be pure in heart then we must not rest in outward purity civility is not sufficient a Swine may be washed yet a Swine still civility doth but wash a man grace changeth him civility like a Star may shine in the eyes of the world but it differs as much from purity as the Chrystal from the Diamond civility is but strewing flowers on a dead corps a man may be wonderfully Moralized yet but a tame Divel how many have made civility their saviour Morality may as well damn as Vice a Vessel may be sunk with gold as well as with dung Observe two things 1. The civil person though he will not commit gross sins yet he is not sensible of heart-sins he discerns not the Law in his members Rom. 7.23 He is not troubled for unbelief hardness of heart vanity of thoughts he abhors Jayle-sins not Gospel-sins 2. The civil person hath an aking tooth at Religion his heart riseth against holiness the Snake is of a fine colour but hath a deadly sting The civil man is fair to look to but hath a secret antipathy against the ways of God he hates grace as much as vice zeal is as odious to him as uncleanness so that civility is not to be rested in The heart must be pure God would have Aaron wash the inwards of the Sacrifice Lev. 9. Civility doth but wash the out-side the inwards must be washed Blessed are the pure in heart SECT 3. Shewing the signs of an impure heart LET us put our selves upon the Trial Trial. whether we are Use 2 pure-hearted or no. Here I shall do two things to shew the signs of 1. An impure heart 2. A pure heart 1. An ignorant heart is an impure
heart to be ignorant of sin Signs of an impure heart or Christ argues impurity of heart Nahash the Ammonite would enter into Covenant with the men of Jabesh-Gilead so he might thrust out their right eyes 1 Sam. 11.2 Satan leaves men their left eye in worldly knowledge they are quick-sighted enough but the right eye of spiritual knowledge is quite put out 2 Cor. 4.4 Ignorance is Satans strong hold Acts 26.18 The Divels are bound in chains of darkness Jude 6. So are all ignorant persons impossible it is that an ignorant heart should be good it is knowledge makes the heart good Prov. 19.2 That the soul be without knowledge it is not good For any to say though their mind be ignorant yet their heart is good they may as well say though they are blind yet their eyes are good In the Law when the plague of Leprosie was in a mans head the Priest was to pronounce him unclean This is the case of an ignorant man the Leprosie is in his head he is unclean That heart cannot be very pure which is a Dungeon Grace cannot reign where ignorance reigns an ignorant man can have no love to God Ignoti nulla cupido he cannot love that which he doth not know he can have no faith knowledge must usher in faith Psal 9.10 he cannot worship God aright John 4.22 Though he may worship the true God yet in a wrong manner ignorance is the root of sin blindness leads to lasciviousness Ephes 4.18 19. Prov. 7.23 Ignorance is the mother of pride Revel 3.17 It is the cause of Error 2 Tim. 3.6 and which is worst an affected ignorance aliud est nescire aliud nolle scire Many are in love with ignorance * Non modo ducem non quaerunt sed oblatum respuunt Bern. they hug their disease Job 21.14 2 Pet. 3.5 Ignorant minds are impure there is no going to heaven in the dark 2. That heart is impure which sees no need of purity Revel 3.17 I am rich and have need of nothing Not to be sensible of a disease is worse than the disease you shall hear a sick man say I am well I ayle nothing there are some who need no Repentance Luk. 15.7 Some sinners are too well to be cured heart-purity is as great a wonder to a natural man as the new-birth was to Nicodemus Joh. 3.4 'T is sad to think how many go on confidently and are ready to bless themselves never suspecting their condition till it be too late 3. He hath an impure heart who regards iniquity in his heart Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me In the Original it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if I look upon sin that is with a lustful look sin-regarding is inconsistent with heart-purity Quest What is it to regard iniquity Quest Answ 1 Answ 1. When we indulge sin when sin not only lives in us but we live in sin Some will leave all their sins but one Jacob would let all his sons go but Benjamin Satan can hold a man by one sin the Fowler holds the Bird fast enough by a Wing or Claw Others hide their sins like one that shuts up his Shop-windows but follows his Trade within doors Many deal with their sins as Moses his mother dealt with him she hid him in the Ark of Bulrushes as if she had left him quite but her eye was still upon him and in conclusion she became his Nurse Exod. 2.9 So many seem to leave their sins but they only hide them from the eye of others their heart still goes after them and at last they Nurse and give the breast to their sins 2. To regard iniquity is to delight in iniquity A child of God though he sins yet he doth not take a complacency in sin Rom. 7.15 What I hate that do I but impure souls make a recreation of sin 2 Thes 2.12 They had pleasure in unrighteousness Never did one feed with more delight on a dish he loves than a wicked man doth upon the forbidden fruit This delight shews the will is in the sin Et voluntas est regula mensura actionis 3. To regard iniquity is to lay in provision for sin Rom. 13.14 Make not provision for the flesh Sinners are Caterers for their lusts 't is a Metaphor taken from such as make provision for a Family or victual a Garrison The Greek word there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a projecting and fore-casting in the mind how to bring a thing about This is to make provision for the flesh when one studies to gratifie the flesh and lay in fuel for lust Thus Amnon made provision for the flesh 2 Sam. 13.5 He fains himself sick and his sister Tamar must be his Nurse she must cook and dress his meat for him by which means he defiled the breasts of her Virginity it is sad when mens care is not to discharge conscience but to satisfie lust 4. To regard iniquity is to give it respect and entertainment as Lot shewed respect to the Angels Gen. 19.2 He bowed himself with his face toward the ground and said behold now my Lords turn in I pray you c. When the Spirit of God comes it is repulsed and grieved but when tentation comes the sinner bowes to it sets open the great Gates and saith Turn in my Lord this is to regard iniquity 5. He is said to regard sin that doth not regard the threatnings of God against sin We read of seven thunders uttering their voyce Rev. 10.3 How many thunders in Scripture utter their voyce against sin Psal 68.21 God shall wound the hairy scalp of such an one as goes on still in his Trespasses Here is a thundering Scripture but sinners fear not this thunder let a Minister come as a Boanerges cloathed with the spirit of Eliah and denounce all the curses of God against mens sins they regard it not they can laugh at the shaking of a Spear * Job 41.29 this is to regard iniquity and doth argue an impure heart 4. An unbelieving heart is an impure heart The Scripture calls it expresly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an evil heart of unbelief Hebr. 3.12 An unbelieving heart is evil summo gradu 't is full of the poyson of hell Unbelief is omnium peccatorum colluvies the root and receptactle of sin 1. Unbelief is a God-affronting sin 1. It puts the lye upon God it calls in question his power * Psa 78.19 20. mercy truth 1 John 5.10 He that believeth not hath made God a lyar And can a greater affront be cast upon the God of glory 2. It makes us trust to second causes which is a setting the creature in the room of God 2 Chron. 16.12 Asa in his disease sought not to the Lord but to the Physitians He relied more on the Physitian than upon God Saul seeks to the Witch of Endor O high affront to lean upon the Reed and neglect the Rock
up as it did Korah and Dathan These are Divels covered over with flesh they have damnation written on their foreheads Lucian who in the time of the Emperor Trajan had professed Religion afterwards became so profane as to make a mock at the Christians and by his jeeres and taunts went about to rend Religion at last he himself was rent asunder and devoured by dogs When the scab of the Leper did appear he was to be shut out of the Camp Levit. 13.9 Those who flout at Religion if God give them not repentance are sure to be shut out of the Camp of heaven SECT 4. Shewing the signes of a pure heart Signs of a pure heart I Shall next shew you the signs of a pure heart 1. A sincere heart is a pure heart Psal 32.2 In whose spirit there is no guile There are four Characters of a sincere-hearted Christian 1. A sincere heart serves God with the whole heart First He serves God with the heart The Hypocrite doth but make a shew of obedience Jer. 12.2 Thou art near in their mouth and far from their reins there may be a fair complexion when the Lungs and Vitals are rotten The Hypocrite is fair to look on he hath a devout eye but a hollow heart but he who is sincere his inside is his best side In the Law God would have the inwards offered up Levit. 4.11 A good Christian gives God the inwards when he prays his heart prays 1 Sam. 1.13 Hannah prayed in her heart In his Thanksgivings the heart is the chief instrument of praise Psal 111.1 Then is the sweetest musick when we make melody in our hearts to the Lord Col. 3.16 Secondly The sincere Christian serves God with the whole heart Psal 119.2 Hypocrites have a double heart Psal 12.2 An heart for God and an heart for sin Hos 10.2 Their heart is divided God loves a broken heart but not a divided heart an upright heart is a whole heart the full straine and torrent of the affections runs out after God a sincere heart follows God fully Num. 14.24 2. A sincere heart is willing to come under a trial Psal 139.23 Search me O God and try me That mettal is to be suspected which men are afraid to bring to the Touch-stone a sound heart likes the Touch-stone of the Word he is for a searching Ministry Hypocrites are veritatis lucifugae * Tertul. they flie from that light which would discover sin they hate that Physick of the Word which meeting with their ill humours begins to make them sick and trouble their conscience A gracious soul loves that preaching best which makes an Heart-Anatomy 3ly A sincere heart dares not act in the least against his conscience he is the most magnanimous yet the most pusillanimous he is bold in suffering Prov. 28.1 but fearful of sin Gen. 39.9 He dares not get an estate by sinful shifts or rise upon the ruines of another Jacob got his fathers blessing by fraud but that is not the way to get Gods blessing Fourthly a sincere heart is a suspitious heart The Hypocrite suspects others and hath charitable thoughts of himself the sincere Christian hath charitable thoughts of others and suspects himself he calls himself often to account O my soul hast thou any Evidences for Heaven are they not to seek when they should be to shew Is there no flaw in thy Evidences thou mayest mistake common grace for saving Weeds in the Corn-fields look like flowres The foolish Virgins Lamps looked as if they had oyle in them O my soul is it not so with thee The sincere soul being ever jealous playes the Critick upon himself and doth so traverse things in the Court of conscience as if he were presently to be cited to Gods Bar. This is to be pure in heart 2. A pure heart breaths after purity If God should stretch out the golden Scepter and say to him Ask and it shall be given thee to half the Kingdom he would say Lord a pure heart let my heart have this inscription Holiness to the Lord let my heart be thy Temple and do thou dwell in it Lord what should I do in heaven with this unholy heart what converse could I have with God or Angels A gracious soul is so in love with purity that he prizeth a pure heart above all blessings 1. Above riches he knows he may be cloathed in purple and fine linnen and yet go to hell * Divitiae sunt in sinistra Domini Bern. he is content to be poor so he may be pure he knows heart-purity is a special Certificate of Gods love the pure in heart shall see God 2. Above gifts gifts do not at all set us off in Gods eye a pure heart is the jewel Matth. 15.28 O woman great is thy faith It was not her Rhetorical language Christ was taken with but her faith Hypocrites have had rare gifts Saul had the spirit of Prophesie Judas no doubt could make an Elegant Oration Hypocrites have come into Gods Church loaden with Egyptian gold videl Humane learning There may be Illumination without Sanctification A small Diamond is better than a great deal of brass A little grace excels the most flourishing parts Now if the out-goings of thy soul are after holiness thou desirest rather a pure heart than an eloquent tongue thou hast the oyle of the Spirit poured on thee and thou shalt be crowned with a sight of God 3. A pure heart abhors all sin A man may forbear and forsake sin yet not have a pure heart 1. He may forbear sin as one may hold his breath while he dives under water and then take breath again And a man may forbear sin 1. For want of occasion The Gun-powder makes no noise till the fire be put to it the Clock stands still till the Weights are put on Let a tentation come which is like the hanging on of the Weights and the heart goes as fast in sin as ever 2. He may forbear sin formidine poenae for fear A man forbears a Dish he loves for fear it should bring his disease upon him of the stone or gout There is a conflict in a sinner between the passion of desire and fear Desire spurs him on to sin but fear as a Curben-bit checks him nor is it the crookedness of the Serpent he fears but the sting of the Serpent 3. He may forbear sin out of a design he hath a plot in hand and his sin might spoile his plot Some rich heir would flie out in excess but he carries it fair to prevent a cutting off the Entail How good was Joash while Jehoiada the Priest lived Prudence as well as Conscience may restraine from sin 2. A man may forsake sin yet not have a pure heart it is a great matter I confess to forsake sin so dear is sin to men that they will part with the fruit of their body for the sin of their souls † * Micah 6.7 Sin is the Dalilah
it comes to a Duty by Examination and Ejaculation When the Earth is prepared then it is fit to receive the seed when the Instrument is prepared and tuned it is fit for Musick 2. Watching the heart in a Duty An holy heart labours to be affected and wrought upon his heart burns within him There was no Sacrifice without fire a pure Saint labours to have his heart broken in a duty Psal 51.17 The incense when it was broken did cast the sweetest favour Impure souls care not in what a dead perfunctory manner they serve God Ezek. 33.31 They pray more out of fashion than out of faith They are no more affected with an Ordinance than the Tombs of the Church God complains of offering up the blind Mal. 1.8 And is it not as bad to offer up the dead O Christian say to thy self How can this deadness of heart stand with pureness of heart Do not dead things putrifie 3. Outward reverence Purity of heart will express it self by the reverend gesture of the body the lifting up of the eye and hand the uncovering the head the bending the knee Constantine the Emperour did bear great reverence to the Word When God gave the Law the Mount was on fire and trembled Exod. 19.18 The reason was that the people might prostrate themselves more reverently before the Lord. The Ark wherein the Law was put was carried upon bars that the Levites might not touch it Exod. 25.11 14. To shew what reverence God would have about holy things Sitting in prayer unless in case of weakness and having the Hat half on in prayer is a very undecent irreverent practice let such as are guilty reform it We must not only offer up our souls but our bodies Rom. 12.1 The Lord takes notice what posture and gesture we use in his worship If a man were to deliver a Petition to the King would he deliver it with his Hat half on The careless irreverence of some would make us think they did not much regard whether God heard them or no. We are run from one extream to another from superstition to unmannerliness Let Christians think of the dreadful Majesty of God who is present Gen. 28.17 How dreadful is this place this is none other but the house of God and this is the gate of heaven The blessed Angels cover their faces crying Holy holy Isa 6.1 An holy heart will have an holy gesture 6. A pure heart will have a pure life 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. Where there is a good Conscience there will be a good Conversation Some bless God they have good hearts but their lives are evil Prov. 30.12 There is a generation that are pure in their own eyes and yet are not washed from their filthiness If the stream be corrupt we may suspect the spring-head to be impure Aaron was called the Saint of the Lord Psal 106.16 He had not only an holy heart but there was a golden plate on his fore-head on which was written holiness to the Lord. Purity must not only be woven into the heart but engraven upon the life Grace is most beautiful when it shines abroad with its golden beams The Clock hath not only its motion within but the finger moves without upon the Dyal Pureness of heart shews it self upon the Dyal of the Conversation 1. A pure soul talks of God Psal 37.30 His heart is seen in his tongue the Latines call the Roof of the mouth Coelum Heaven He that is pure in heart his mouth is full of heaven 2. He walks with God Gen. 6.9 He is still doing Angels work praising God serving God he lives as Christ did upon Earth Holy duties are the Jacobs Ladder by which he is still ascending to heaven Purity of heart and life are in Scripture made Twins Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within them there is purity of heart and they shall walk in my statutes there is purity of life Shall we account them pure whose Conversation is not in heaven * Phil. 3.20 but rather in hell Micah 6.11 Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights How justly may others reproach Religion when they see it kicked down with our unholy feet a pure heart hath a golden Frontispice grace like new wine will have vent it can be no more conceal'd than lost The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3. because of that shining lustre they cast in the eyes of others 7. A pure heart is so in love with purity that nothing can draw him off from it 1. Let others reproach purity he loves it as David when he danced before the Ark and Michal scoffed if saith he this he to be vile I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 So saith a pure heart If to follow after holiness be to be vile I will yet be more vile Let water be sprinkled upon the fire it burns the more The more others deride holiness the more doth a gracious soul burn in love and zeal to it If a man had an inheritance befallen him would he be laughed out of it what is a Christian the worse for anothers reproach 't is not a blind mans disparaging a Diamond that makes it sparkle the less 2. Let others persecute holiness a pure heart will pursue it Holiness is the Queen every gracious soul is espoused to and he will rather dye than be divorced Paul would be holy though bonds and persecutions did abide him Acts 20.23 The way of Religion is oft thorny and bloody but a gracious heart prefers inward purity before outward peace I have heard of one who having a Jewel he much prized the King sent for his Jewel Tell the King saith he I honour his Majesty but I will rather lose my life than part with my Jewel He who is enriched with the Jewel of holiness will rather dye than part with this Jewel When his honour and riches will do him no good his holiness will stand him instead Rom. 6.22 Ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life SECT 5. Exhorting to heart-purity Use 3 3. LET me perswade Christians to heart-purity the Harlot wipes her mouth Exhort Prov. 30.20 But that is not enough Wash thy heart o Jerusalem Jerem. 4.14 And here I shall lay down some Arguments or Motives to perswade to heart-purity 1. The necessity of heart-purity it is necessary 1. In respect of our selves Till the heart be pure all our holy things are polluted they are splendida peccata Titus 1.15 To the unclean all things are unclean their offering is unclean Under the Law if a man who was unclean by a dead body did carry a piece of holy flesh in his skirt the holy flesh could not cleanse him but he polluted that Hag. 2.12 13. He who had the Leprosie whatever he touched was unclean if he had touched the
when we come to heaven only at present I shall lay down these nine Aphorisms or Maxims 1. Our sight of God in heaven shall be a transparent sight here we see him per aenigma through a glass darkly 1 Cor. 13.12 But through Christ we shall behold God in a very illustrious manner God will so far unvail himself and shew forth his glory as the soul is capable to receive if Adam had not sinned yet it is probable he should never have had such a clear sight of God as the Saints in glory shall 1 John 3.2 We shall see him as he is now we see him as he is not he is not mutable not mortal there we shall see him as he is in a very transparent manner then shall I know even as also I am known 1 Cor. 13.12 that is clearly Doth not God know us clearly and fully then shall the Saints know him according to their capacity as they are known as their love to God so their sight of God shall be perfect 2. This sight of God will be a transcendent sight it will surpass in glory such glittering beams shall sparkle forth from the Lord Jesus as shall infinitely amaze and delight the eys of the beholders Imagine what a blessed sight it will be to see Christ wearing the Robe of our humane nature and to see that nature sitting in glory above the Angels If God be so beautiful here in his Ordinances Word Prayer Sacraments if there be such excellency in him when we see him by the eye of faith through the prospective glass of a promise O what will it be when we shall see him face to face when Christ was transfigured on the Mount he was full of glory Matth. 17.2 If his transfiguration were so glorious what will his inauguration be what a glorious time will it be when as it was said of Mordecai we shall see him in the presence of his Father arrayed in Royal apparel and with a great Crown of gold upon his head Esth 8.15 * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There will be glory beyond Hyperbole if the Sun were ten thousand times brighter than it is it could not so much as shadow out this glory in the heavenly Horizon we shall behold beauty in its first magnitude and highest elevation there we shall see the King in his glory * Isa 33.17 All lights are but Eclipses compared with that glorious Vision Appelles pensil would blot Angels tongues would but disparage it 3. This sight of God will be a transforming sight 1 John 3.2 We shall be like him The Saints shall be changed into glory as when the light springs into a dark Room the Room may be said to be changed from what it was The Saints shall so see God as to be changed into his image Psal 17. ult Here Gods people are black'd and sullied with infirmities but in heaven they shall be as the Dove covered with silver wings they shall have some rayes and beams of Gods glory shining in them as a man that rowles himself in the Snow is of a Snow-like whiteness as the Chrystal by having the Sun shine on it sparkles and looks like the Sun so the Saints by beholding the brightness of Gods glory shall have a tincture of that glory upon them not that they shall partake of Gods very essence for as the iron in the fire becomes fire yet remains iron still so the Saints by beholding the lustre of Gods Majesty shall be glorious creatures but yet creatures still 4. This sight of God will be a joyful sight Acts 2.28 Thou shalt make me glad with the light of thy countenance After a sharp Winter how pleasant will it be to see the Sun of righteousness displaying himself in all his glory Doth faith breed joy 1 Pet. 1.8 In whom though now you see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable If the joy of FAITH be such what will the joy of vision be the sight of Christ will amaze the eye with wonder and ravish the heart with joy If the face of a friend whom we intirely love doth so affect us and drive away sorrow O how chearing will the sight of God be to the Saints in heaven then indeed it may be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your heart shall rejoyce John 16.22 And there are two things which will make the Saints vision of God in heaven joyful 1. Through Jesus Christ the dread and terror of the Divine Essence shall be taken away Majesty shall appear in God to preserve reverence but withal Majesty cloathed with beauty and tempered with sweetness to excite joy in the Saints We shall see God as a friend not as guilty Adam did who was afraid and hid himself * Gen. 3.10 but as Queen Esther looked upon King Ahashuerus holding forth the golden Scepter * Esth 5.2 surely this sight of God will not be formidable but comfortable 2. The Saints shall not only have vision but fruition they shall so see God as to enjoy him Aquinas and Scotus dispute the case whether the formalis ratio the very formality and essence of blessedness be an act of the understanding or the will Aquinas saith Happiness consists in the intellectual part the bare seeing of God Scotus saith Happiness is an act of the will the enjoying of God but certainly true blessedness comprehends both * Illi acu rem tangunt qui in visione amore Dei simul consistere volunt beatitudinem Dr. Arrows it lies partly in the understanding by seeing the glory of God richly displayed and partly in the will by a sweet delicious taste of it and acquiescence of the soul in it we shall so see God as to love him * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so love him as to be filled with him the seeing of God implies fruition Matth. 25.21 Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord not only behold it but * Non tantum aderit gloria sed incrit Bern. enter into it Psal 36.9 In thy light we shall see light there is vision Psal 16. ult At thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore there is fruition So great is the joy which flows from the sight of God as will make the Saints break forth into triumphant Praises and Hallelujahs 5. This sight of God will be a satisfying sight Cast three worlds into the heart and they will not fill it but the sight of God satisfies Psal 17.15 I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Solomon saith the eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccles 1.8 But there the eye will be satisfied with seeing God and nothing but God can satisfie The Saints shall have their heads so full of knowledge and their hearts so full of joy that they shall find no want 6. It will be an unweariable sight Let a man see the ra●est sight that is he will soon be cloyed when he comes into a Garden and sees delicious walks fair Arbours
lax general faith When we believe the truth of all that is revealed in the holy Scriptures this is not the faith which doth priviledge us in sonship the Divels believe all the Articles in the Creed 'T is not the bare knowledge of a medicine or believing the Soveraign vertue of it will cure one that is ill This general faith so much cryed up by some will not save this a man may have and yet not love God He may believe that God will come to judge the quick and the dead and hate him as the prisoner believeth the Judges coming to the Assizes and abhors the thoughts of him Take heed of resting in a general faith you may have this and be no better than Divels 2. There is a special faith fides quâ creditur when we do not only believe the report we hear of Christ but rest upon him embrace him taking hold of the horns of this Altar resolving there to abide In the body there are venae sugentes sucking veins which draw the meat into the stomack and concoct it there So faith is the sucking veine which draws Christ into the heart and applies him there This is the filiating faith by this we are made the children of God and wherever this faith is it is not like physick in a dead mans mouth but is exceeding operative it obligeth to duty it works by love Gal. 5.6 2. Why Faith makes us children why not as well other graces Repentance Love c Answ 1. Because Faith is instituted of God and honoured to this work of making us children Gods institution gives Faith its value and validity it is the Kings stamp makes the Coyne passe currant if he would put his stamp upon brass or leather it would go as currant as silver The great God hath authorized and put the stamp of his institution upon Faith and that makes it pass for currant and gives it a priviledge above all the graces to make us children 2. Faith makes us children as it is the vital principle Hab. 2.4 The just shall live by faith All Gods children are living none of them are still-born now by faith we live As the heart is the primum vivens the fountain of life in the body so Faith is the fountain of life in the soul 3. Faith makes us children as it is the uniting grace it knits us to Christ the other graces cannot do this by faith we are one with Christ and so we are akin to God being united to the Natural Son we become adopted sons The Kindred comes in by Faith God is the Father of Christ Faith makes us Christs Brethren * Hebr. 2.11 and so God comes to be our Father SECT 4. Setting forth the signs of Gods children 4. THE fourth particular to be discussed is To shew the signs of Gods children it concerns us to know whose children we are * Aut filii Dei aut filii Diaboli Aug. Austin saith All mankind are divided into two Ranks either they are the children of God or the children of the Divel † 1. The first sign of our heavenly son-ship is tenderness of heart 2 Chron. 34.27 Because thy heart was tender A child-like heart is a render heart he who before had a flinty hath now a fleshy heart A tender heart is like melting wax to God he may set what seal he will upon it this tenderness of heart shews it self three wayes 1. A tender heart grieves for sin a child weeps for offending his father Peter shewed a tender heart when Christ looked upon him and he remembred his sin he wept as a childe Clemens Alexandrinus saith he never heard a Cock crow but he wept * Da mihi Domine in hoc exilio lachrymarum fontem quem super omnem d●litiarum copiam ●surio Aug. l. de contrit cord And some learned Writers tell us that by much weeping there seemed to be as it were Channels made in his blessed face The least hair makes the eye weep the least sin makes the heart smite Davids heart smote him when he cut off the Lap of King Sauls garment What would it have done if he had cut off his head 2. A tender heart melts under mercy Though when God thunders by affliction the rain of tears doth fall from a gracious eye yet the heart is never so kindly dissolved as under the Sun-beams of Gods mercy see how Davids heart was melted with Gods kindness 2 Sam. 7.18 Who am I O Lord God and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto there was a gracious thaw upon his heart So saith a childe of God Lord who am I a piece of dust and sin kneaded together that the orient beams of free-grace should shine upon me Who am I that thou shouldest pity me when I lay in my blood and spread the golden wings of mercy over me The soul is overcome with Gods goodness the tears drop the love flames mercy hath a melting influence upon the soul 3. A tender heart trembles under Gods threatnings Psalm 119.120 My flesh trembleth for fear of thee 2 Chron. 34.27 Because thy heart was tender and thou didst humble thy self before God when thou heardst his words against this place and didst rend thy clothes c. If the father be angry the child trembles When Ministers denounce the menaces and threats of God against sin tender souls sit in a trembling posture this frame of heart God delights in Isa 66.2 To this man will I look even to him that trembleth at my word a wicked man like the Leviathan is made without fear Job 41.33 He neither believes the Promises nor dreads the Threatnings let judgement be denounced against sin he laughs at the shaking of a spear he thinks either that God is ignorant and doth not see or impotent and cannot punish the mountains quake before the Lord the hills melt the rocks are thrown down by him Nahum 1.5 But the hearts of sinners are more obdurate than the rocks an hardned sinner like Nebuchadnezzar hath the heart of a beast given to him Dan. 4.16 a child-like heart is a tender heart the stone is taken away 2. The second signe of son-ship is Assimilation Col. 3.10 Ye have put on the new man which is renewed af-the image of him that created him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the child resembles the father Gods children are like their heavenly Father they bear his very image and impresse wicked men say they are the children of God but there is too great a dissimilitude and unlikenesse the Jews brag'd they were Abrahams children but Christ disproves them by this argument because they were not like him John 8.40 Ye seek to kill me a man that have told you the truth which I have heard of God this did not Abraham You Abrahams children and go about to kill me Abraham would not have murdered an innocent you are more like Satan than Abraham ver 44. ye are of your father the Divel Such as are
Object 2 knowledge of God they have no sense of spiritual things nor are they the better for our instructions 1. We read in Scripture of children who by vertue Answ 1 of instruction have had their tender years sanctified Timothies Mother and Grand-mother taught him the Scriptures from his Cradle 2 Tim. 3.15 And that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures Timothy sucked in Religion as it were with his milk we read of young children who cried Hosanna to Christ and did trumpet forth his praises Matth. 21.15 And sure those children of Tyre had some seeds of good wrought in them in that they shewed their love to Paul and would help him on his way to Sea-shoar Acts 21.5 They all brought us on our way with wives and children Saint Paul had a Convoy of young Saints to bring him to take ship Answ 2 2. Suppose our counsel and instruction doth not at present prevail with our children it may afterwards take effect The seed a man sowes in his ground doth not presently spring up but in its season it brings forth a crop he that plants a Wood doth not see the full growth till many years after If we must not instruct our children because at present they reap not the benefit by the same reason we should not baptize our children because at present they have not the sense of baptisme nay by the same reason Ministers should not preach the Word because at present many of their hearers have no benefit Answ 3 3. If our counsels and admonitions prevail not with our children yet we have delivered our own souls There is comfort in the discharge of conscience we must let alone issues and events duty is our work success is Gods All which considered should make parents whet holy instructions upon their children they who are of the Family of God and whom he hath adopted for children will endeavour that their children may be more Gods children than theirs they will travail in birth till Christ be formed in them A true Saint is a load-stone that will be still drawing others to God Let this suffice to have spoken of the signs of Adoption I proceed SECT 5. Discovering Gods love in making us children THE next particular to be discussed is the love of God in making us children 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God! God shewed power in making us creatures but love in making us sons Plato gave God thanks that he had made him a man and not a beast but what cause have they to adore Gods love who hath made them children the Apostle puts an ecce to it behold * O aeterna vera charitas Aug. That we may the better behold Gods love in making us children consider three things 1. We were deformed Ezek. 16.6 8. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood it was the time of love Mordecai adopted Esther because she was fair but we were in our blood and then God adopted us he did not adopt us when we were cloathed with the Robe of innocency in Paradise when we were hung with the jewels of holiness and were white and ruddy but when we were in our blood and had our leprous spots upon us the time of our loathing was the time of Gods loving 2. As we did not deserve to be made children so neither did we desire it No landed man will force another to become his heir against his will if a King should go to adopt a beggar and make him heir of the Crown if the beggar should refuse the Kings favour and say I had rather be as I am I would be a beggar still the King would take it in high contempt of his favour and would not adopt him against his will Thus it was with us we had no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or willingness to be made children we would have been begging still but God out of his infinite mercy and indulgence not only offers to make us children but makes us willing to embrace the offer * Psal 110.3 Behold what manner of love is this 3. Which is the wonder of love that God should adopt us for his children when we were enemies If a man would make another heir of his Land he would adopt one that is near akin to him no man would adopt an enemy but that God should make us children when we were enemies that he should make us heirs to the Crown when we were Traytors to the Crown oh amazing astonishing love Behold what manner of love is this We were not akin to God we had by sin lost and forfeited our Pedigree we had done God all the injury and spight we could defac'd his image violated his Law trampled upon his mercies and when we had angered him he adopted us What stupendious love was this such love was never shewn to the Angels when they fell though they were of a more noble nature and in probability might have done God more service than we can yet God never vouchsafed this priviledge of Adoption to them he did not make them children but prisoners they were heirs only to the treasures of wrath * Rom. 2.5 Use Let all who are thus nearly related to God stand admiring his love when they were like Saul breathing forth enmity against God when their hearts stood out as Garrisons against him the Lord conquered their stubborness with kindness and not only pardoned but adopted them 't is hard to say which is greater the mystery or the mercy this is such amazing love as we shall be searching into and adoring to all eternity the bottom of it cannot be fathomed by any Angel in heaven Gods love in making us children is 1. A rich love it is love in God to feed us but it is rich love to adopt us it is love to give us a Crumb but it is rich love to make us heirs to a Crown 2. It is a distinguishing love that when God hath passed by so many millions he should cast a favourable aspect upon thee most are cut out for fuel and are made Vessels of wrath and that God should say to thee Thou art my son here 's the mirrour of mercy the meridian of love Who O who can tread upon these hot coals and his heart not burn in love to God SECT 6. Declaring the honour of Gods children 6. THE sixth particular is the honour and renown of Gods children for the illustration of this observe two things 1. God makes a precious account of them 2. He looks upon them as persons of honour 1. God makes a precious account of them Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight c. A father prizeth his childe above his Estate How dearly did Jacob prize Benjamin his life was bound up in the life of the Lad Gen. 44.30 God makes a precious valuation of his children
Therefore I answer 1. In time of desertion God leaves in his children a seed of comfort 1 John 3.9 his seed remaineth in him Answ 1 This seed of God is a seed of comfort Though Gods children in desertion want the seale of the Spirit yet they have the Unction of the Spirit 1 John 2.27 Though they want the Sun yet they have a day-star in their hearts as the tree in winter though it hath lost its leaves and fruit yet there is sap in the root So in the winter of desertion there is the sap of grace in the root of the heart as it is with the Sun masking it self with a cloud when it denies light to the earth yet it gives forth its influence so though Gods dear adopted ones may lose the light of his countenance yet they have the influence of his grace Quest What grace appears in the time of desertion Ans 1. An high prizing of Gods ove If God should say to the deserted soul what wilt thou and it shall be granted to half of the Kingdom he would reply Lord that I might see thee as I was wont in the Sanctuary That I may have one golden beam of thy love the deserted soul slights all other things in comparison it is not gardens or orchards or the most delicious Objects that can give him contentment they are like musick to a sad heart he desires as Absalom to see the Kings face 2. A lamenting after the Lord. 'T is the saddest day with him when the Sun of righteousnesse is eclipsed a child of God can better bear the worlds stroak than Gods absence he is even melted into tears the clouds of desertion produce spiritual rain and whence is this weeping but from love 3. Willingnesse to suffer any thing so he may have a sight of God A child of God could be content with Simon of Cyrene to carry the Crosse if he were sure Christ were upon it he could willingly die if with Simeon he might die with Christ in his armes Behold here the seed of God in a believer the work of sanctification when he wants the wine of consolation Answ 2 Answ 2. I answer God hath a design of mercy in hiding his face from his adopted ones First it is for the trial of grace and there are two graces brought to trial in time of desertion 1. Faith 1. When we can believe against sence and feeling when we want an experience yet can trust to a ptomise when we have not the kisses of Gods mouth yet can cleave to the word of his mouth this is faith indeed here is the sparkling of the Diamond 2. Love When God smiles upon us it is not much to love him but when he seems to put us away in anger * Psal 27.9 now to love him and be as the Lime the more water is thrown upon it the hotter it burns this is love indeed That love sure is strong as death * Cant. 8.6 which the waters of desertion cannot quench Secondly It is for the exercise of grace we are all for comfort if it might be put to our choice we would be ever upon Mount Tabor looking into Canaan we are loth to be in trials agonies desertions as if God could not love us except he had us in his armes 'T is hard to lie long in the lap of spiritual joy and not fall asleep Too much Sun-shine causeth a drought in our graces oftentimes when God lets down comfort into the heart we begin to let down care As it is with Musitians before they have money they will play you many a sweet lesson but as soon as you throw them down money they are gone you hear no more of them Before joy and assurance O the sweet musick of prayer and repentance but when God throws down the comforts of his Spirit we either leave off duty or at least slacken the strings of our Viol and grow remisse in it Thou art taken with the money but God is taken with the musick Grace is better than comfort Rachel is more fair but Leah is more fruitful Comfort is fair to look on but grace hath the fruitful womb now the only way to exercise grace and make it more vigorous and lively is sometimes to walk in darknesse and have no light Isa 50.10 Faith is a star that shines brightest in the night of desertion I said I am cast out of thy sight yet will I look again toward thy holy Temple Jonah 2.4 Grace usually puts forth its most heroical acts at such a time 3. I answer God may forsake his children in regard Answ 3 of Vision but not in regard of Union Thus it was with Jesus Christ when he cryed out my God my God There was not a separation of the Union between him and his Father only a suspension of the Vision * Non suit divulsio unionis sed tantum suspensio visionis Gods love through the interposition of our sins may be darkned and eclipsed but still he is a Father The Sun may be hid in a cloud but it is not out of the firmament The Promises in time of desertion may be as it were sequestred we have not that comfort from them as formerly but still the believers title holds good in Law Answ 4 4. I answer when God hides his face from his child his heart may be towards him as Joseph when he spake roughly to his brethren and made them believe he would take them for Spies still his heart was towards them and he was as full of love as ever he could hold he was faine to go aside and weep So God is full of love to his children even when he seems to look strange And as Moses his Mother when she put her child into the ark of bulrushes and went away a little from it yet still her eye was toward it the babe wept I and the mother wept too So God when he goes aside as if he had forsaken his children yet he is full of sympathy and love towards them God may change his countenance but not break his covenant It is onething for God to desert another thing to disinherit Hosea 8.11 How shall I give thee up O Ephraim c. 'T is a Metaphor taken from a father going to disinherit his son and while he is setting his hand to the Deed his bowels begin to melt and to yearn over him and he thinks thus within himself Though he be a prodigal child yet he is a child I will not cut off the entail So saith God How shall I give thee up though Ephraim hath been a rebellious son yet he is a son I will not disinherit him Gods thoughts may be full of love when there is a vail upon his face the Lord may change his dispensation towards his children but not his disposition he may have the look of an enemy but the heart of a Father So that the beliver may say I am adopted and let God do what
he will with me let him take the rod or the staffe 't is all one he loves me 2. The second adoptional priviledge is this if we are Privi ∣ ledge 2 children then God will bear with many infirmities A father bears much with a child he loves Mal. 3.17 I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him We oft grieve the Spirit abuse kindnesse God will passe by much in his children Numb 23.21 he hath not seene iniquity in Jacob his love doth not make him blind he sees sin in his people but not with an eye of revenge but pity He sees sin in his children as a Physitian doth a disease in his Patient He hath not seene iniquity in Jacob so as to destroy him God may use the rod 2 Sam. 7.14 not the Scorpion O how much is God willing to passe by in his children because they are children God takes notice of the good that is in his children and passeth by the infirmity God doth quite contrary to us we oft take notice of the evil that is in others and over-look the good Our eye is upon the flaw in the Diamond but we observe not its sparkling But God takes notice of the good that is in his children God sees their faith and winks at their failings 1 Pet. 3.6 Even as Sarah obeyed Abraham calling him Lord the holy Ghost mentions not her unbelief and laughing at the promise but takes notice of the good in her viz. her obedience to her husband she obeyed Abraham calling him Lord. God puts his finger upon the fears and infirmities of his children how much did God wink at in Israel his first-born Israel oft provok'd him with their murmurings Deut. 1.27 but God answered their murmurings with mercies he spared them as a father spares his son 3. The third priviledge is this If we are children Privi ∣ ledge 3 then God will accept of our imperfect services A Parent takes any thing in good part from his child God accepts of the will for the deed 2 Cor. 8.12 oftentimes we come with broken prayers but if we are children God spels out our meaning and will take our prayers as a grateful present a father loves to hear his child speak though he doth but lisp and stammar Isa 38.14 Like a Crane so did I chatter Good Hezekiah looked upon his praying as chattering yet that prayer was heard ver 5. a Sigh and groan from an humble heart goes up as the smoak of incense Psal 38.9 My groaning is not hid from thee When all the glistering shews of Hypocrites evaporate and come to nothing a little that a child of God doth in sincerity is crowned with acceptance a father is glad of a letter from his son though there are blots in the letter though there are false spellings and broken English O what blottings are there in our holy things what broken English sometimes yet coming from broken hearts it is accepted though there be weaknesse in duty yet if there be willingnesse the Lord is much taken with it Saith God it is my child and he would do better Ephes 1.6 He hath accepted us in the beloved Privi ∣ ledge 4 4. If we are children then God will provide for us a father will take care for his children he gives them allowance and layes up a portion 2 Cor. 12.14 so doth our heavenly Father 1. He gives us our allowance Gen. 48.15 The God which fed me all my life long unto this day Whence is our dayly bread but from his dayly care God will not let his children starve though our unbelief is ready sometimes to question his goodnesse and say Can God prepare a Table See what arguments Christ brings to prove Gods paternal care for his children Matth. 6.26 Behold the fowles of the aire they sow not neither do they reap yet your heavenly Father feedeth them Doth a man feed his bird and will he not feed his child Luke 12.27 Consider the Lilies how they grow they toyl not they spin not if then God so cloath the grasse c Doth God cloath the Lilies and will he not cloath his Lambs 1 Pet. 5.7 the Lord careth for us As long as his heart is full of love so long his head will be full of care This should be as physick to kill the worm of unbelief 2. As God gives his children a viaticum or bait by the way so he laies up a portion for them Luke 12.32 It is your Fathers good pleasure to give you a kingdom our Father keeps the purse and will give us enough to bear our charges here and when at death we take shipping and shall be set upon the shore of eternity then will our heavenly Father bestow upon us a Kingdom immutable and immarcessible lo here a portion which can never be summed up 5. If we are children then God will sheild off dangers Privi ∣ ledge 5 from us a father will protect his child from injuries God ever lies Sentinel to keep off evill from his children 1. Temporal evil 2. Spiritual evil 1. God screens off temporal evil There are many casualties and contingencies which are incident to life God mercifully prevents them he keeps watch and ward for his children Psal 7.10 my defence is of God Psal 121.4 he that keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep The eye of Providence is ever awake God gives his Angels charge over his children Psal 91.11 a believer hath a guard of Angels for his life-guard we read of the wings of God in Scripture as the breast of his mercy feeds his children so the wings of his power cover them how miraculously did God preserve Israel his first-born he did with his wings sometimes cover sometimes carry them Exod. 19.4 He bare you as upon Eagles wings an emblem of Gods providential care the Eagle fears no Bird from above to hurt her young only the Arrow from beneath therefore she carries them upon her wings that the Arrow must first hit her before it can come at her young ones Thus God carries his children upon the wings of Providence and they are such that there is no clipping these wings nor can any Arrow hurt them 2. God shields off spiritual evils from his children Psal 91.10 There shall no evil befall thee God doth not say no afflictions shall befall us but no evil Quest Quest But sometimes evil in this sense befalls the godly they spot themselves with sin Answ Answ But that evil shall not be mortal as quick-silver is in it self dangerous but by oyntments it is so tempered that it is killed so sin is in it self deadly but being tempered with Repentance and mixed with the sacred oyntment of Christs blood the venemous damning nature of it is taken away Privi ∣ ledge 6 6. If we are children then God will reveal to us the great and wonderful things of his Law Matth. 11.25 I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these
but true love is when we love Christ for his loveliness namely that infinite and superlative beauty which shines in him † * Jesus propter Jesum Aug. as a man loves sweet wine for its self 2. True love is amor desiderii a love of desire when we desire to be united to Christ as the fountain of happiness love desires union the soul that loves Christ is ambitious of death because this dissolution tends to union Death slips one knot and tyes another 3. True love is amor benevolentiae a love of benevolence when so far as we are able we endeavour to lift up Christs name in the world as the wise men brought him gold and franckincense Mat. 2.11 so we bring him our tribute of service and are willing that he should rise though it be by our fall In short that love which is kindled from heaven makes us give Christ the preheminence of our affection Cant. 8.2 I would cause thee to drink of spiced wine and the juyce of my Pomgranates If the Spouse hath a cup which is more juycy and spiced Christ shall drink off that indeed we can never love Christ too much we may love gold in the excess but not Christ the Angels do not love Christ to his worth Now when love is boyled up to this heighth it will enable us to suffer love is strong as death the Martyrs first burned in love and then in fire 3. The third suffering grace is patience * Ga●●et patientia duris Lucan patience is a grace made and cut out for suffering * Sine ferro flamma Martyres esse possumus fine patientia non possumus patience is a sweet submission to the will of God whereby we are content to bear any thing that he is pleased to lay upon us Patience makes a Christian invincible it is like the Anvil that bears all stroaks We cannot be men without patience passion doth unman a man it puts him beside the use of reason we cannot be Martyrs without patience patience makes us endure James 5.10 We read Rev. 13.2 of a beast like unto a Leopard and his feet were as the feet of a Bear and the Dragon gave him his power c. This Beast is to be understood of the Antichristian power Antichrist may be compared to a Leopard for subtilty and fierceness and on his head was the name of blaspheming ver 1. which agrees with that description of the man of sin 2 Thes 2.4 He sitteth in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is God and the Dragon gave him power Ver. 2. that is the Divel and it was given to him to make war with the Saints Rev. 13.7 Well how come the Saints to bear the heat of this fiery trial Ver. 10. Here is the patience of the Saints patience overcomes by suffering A Christian without patience is like a Souldier without arms faith keeps the heart up from sinking patience keeps the heart down from murmuring patience is not provoked by injuries it is sensible but not peevish patience looks to the end of sufferings this is the Motto Deus dabit his queque finem As the Watchman waits for the dawning of the morning so the patient Christian suffers and waits till the day of glory begins to dawn upon him faith saith God will come and patience saith I will stay his leasure these are those suffering graces which are a Christians Armour of proof 8. Treasure up suffering promises the promises are faiths bladders to keep it from sinking they are the breast-milk a Christian lives on in time of sufferings they are honey at the end of the Rod hoard up promises 1. God hath made promises of direction that he will give us a Spirit of wisdom in that houre teaching us what to say Luke 21.15 I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adversaries shall not be able to gain-say nor resist You shall not need study God will put an answer into your mouth this many of Gods sufferers can set their seal to the Lord hath on a sudden darted such words into their mouths as their enemies could easier censure than contradict 2. God hath made promises of protection Acts 18.9 No man shall set on thee to hurt thee How safe was Paul when he had Omnipotency it self to screen off danger and Luke 1.18 There shall not an hair of your head perish Persecutors are Lyons but chained Lyons 3. God hath made promises of his special presence with his Saints in suffering Psal 91.15 I will be with him in trouble If we have such a friend to visit us in prison we shall do well enough though we change our place we shall not change our Keeper I will be with him God will hold our head and heart when we are fainting What if we have more afflictions than others if we have more of Gods company Gods honour is dear to him it would not be for his honour to bring his children into sufferings and leave them there he will be with them to animate and support them yea when new troubles arise Job 5.19 He shall be with thee in six troubles 4. The Lord hath made promises of deliverance Psal 91.15 I will deliver him and honour him God will open a back-door for his people to escape out of sufferings 1 Cor. 10.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He will with the tentation make a way to escape Thus he did to Peter Acts 12.10 Peters prayers had opened heaven and Gods Angel opens the prison God can either prevent a snare or break it Psal 68.20 To God the Lord belong the issues from death He who can strengthen our faith can break our fetters the Lord sometimes makes the enemies instruments of breaking those snares which themselves have laid Esther 8.8 5. In case of Martyrdom God hath made promises of consolation John 16.22 Your sorrow shall be turned into joy there is the water turned into wine Acts 23.11 Be of good chear Paul In time of persecution God broacheth the wine of consolation cordials are kept for fainting Philip Lantgrave of Hesse professed se divinas Martyrum consolationes sensisse Stephen saw the heavens opened Acts 7.56 Glover that blessed Martyr cryed out at the stake in an holy rapture He is come he is come meaning the Comforter 6. Promises of compensation God will abundantly recompence all our sufferings in this life an hundred fold and in the world to come life everlasting Matth. 19.29 This Austin calls the best and greatest usury our losses for Christ are gainful Matth. 10.39 He that loseth his life for my sake shall finde it These suffering promises should we treasure up and by holy meditation suck sweetness and strength out of them 9. Set before your eyes suffering examples look upon others as patterns to imitate Jam. 5.16 Take my Brethren the Prophets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an example of suffering affliction Examples have more influence upon us than precepts the one instruct the
nothing to do with us we are not in his Commission he is not sent to such sinners as we then we might despair but he is willing that we should have him he calls Come unto me all ye that are weary he would fain have the match made up between us and him oh that we were but as willing as Christ is Now then if there be all this variety of excellency in Jesus Christ * Multifaria suav●tatis dul cedo exube●at in pectore Domini Jesu Bern. it may make us ambitiously desirous of an interest in him Quest But how shall I get a part in Christ Answ 1. See your need of Christ know that you are undone without him How obnoxious are you to Gods eye how odious to his nature how obnoxious to his justice O sinner how near is the Serjeant to arrest thee The Furnace of hell is heating for thee and what wilt thou do without Christ 't is only the Lord Jesus can stand as a screen to keep off the fire of Gods wrath from burning thee Tell me then is there not need of Christ though Christ be offered to sinners yet he will not have his love abused he will not throw away himself upon such as see no need of him see thy self wounded and then Christ that good Samaritan will poure in wine and oyle into thy wounds think often of that Scripture John 3.18 He that believeth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is condemned already He that dies in his sin not laying hold on Christ by faith is as sure to be condemned as if he were condemned already 2. Be importunate after Christ Lord give me Christ or I die As Acsah said to her father Caleb Josh 15.19 Thou hast given me a South land give me also springs of water So should a poor soul say Lord thou hast given me an estate in the world but this South-land will not quench my thirst give me also springs of water Give me those living springs which run in my Saviours blood Thou hast said Let him that is athirst come and whosoever wil let him take the water of life freely Rev. 22.17 18. Lord I thirst after Jesus Christ nothing but Christ will satisfie me I am dead I am damned without him oh give me this water of life When the blind man was importunate Jesus stood still Luke 18.40 and wrought a cure upon him verse 42. Christ cannot deny a praying soul As the tender mother opens the breast when the child cries for it so when an humble thirsty sinner cries importunately to heaven God will open the breast of free-grace and say Here take my Christ be satiated with him let him be to thee all in all both for food and medicine 3. Be content to have Christ as Christ is offered a Prince and a Saviour Acts 5.31 Be sure you do not compound or indent with Christ Some would have Christ and their sins too Is Christ all and will you not part ●●th something for this all Christ would have you part with nothing but what will damn you if you keep namely your sins Vomit up this poyson by repentance and Christ will pour in the wine of his blood to chear your heart There are some bid fair for Christ they will part with some sins but keep a reserve Jacob would let all his sons go but Benjamin whereas if you leave but one sin in your heart it will be as an Egge for Satan to brood upon If a man part with many lovers and retain the love but of one Harlot he is an Adulterer so if thou partest with many sins and dost retain the love but of one sin thou hast an adulterous heart and Christ will not make up a match with thee Doth that man think he shall have Christs love that feeds sinne in a corner O part with all for him who is all Part with thy lusts nay thy life if Christ calls 3. It exhorts us not only to get Christ but to labour Branch 3 to know that we have Christ Exhort 1 John 2.3 hereby we know that we know him This reflex act of faith is more than the direct act Some Divines call it sensus fidei the perception or sensible feeling of faith now concerning this knowledge that Christ is ours which is the same with assurance I shall lay down these four Corollaries or conclusions 1. That this knowledge is feasible it may be had 1 John 5.13 These things have I written to you that believe that ye may know ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God The meaning is the Apostle wrote to these believers that they might know they were believers and might be assured Christ was theirs Indeed the Papists deny this certainty of knowledge it is inserted in one of their Canons Anathema sit Let him be Anathema who holds assurance But that we may arrive at it I shall evince by these demonstrations 1. Why else doth God bid us make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 if assurance may not be had and to prove our selves whether we are in the faith 2 Cor. 13.5 if we cannot come to this knowledge that Christ is ours The Greek word there for proving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to boar or pierce thorow a piece of mettal to see whether it be gold within or no a Christian may thus pierce his heart by examination and self-reflection to see whether Christ be formed within him or no. 2. What are all the signes which the Scripture gives of a man in Christ but so many ciphers if the knowledge of this interest may not be had 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the brethren and 1 John 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit Here are two 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 evident characters of a man in Christ now these signs are in vain if assurance may not be arrived at 3. There are some duties enjoyned in Scripture which to perform is utterly impossible if the knowledge of an interest in Christ be not attainable we are bid to rejoyce in God Phil. 4.4 and to rejoyce in tribulation 1 Pet. 4.13 How can he rejoyce in suffering who doth not know whether Christ be his or no 4. Why hath Christ promised to send the Comforter John 14.16 whose very work it is to bring the heart to this assurance if assurance that Christ is ours may not be had Therefore in Scripture we read of the seal of the Spirit Ephes 1.13 The earnest and first-fruits 2 Cor. 1.22 Rom. 8.23 The promise of the Comforter were in vain the earnest and witness of the Spirit were but phantasmes and nullities if the assurance of union with Christ be not feasible 5. Some of the Saints have arrived at this certainty of knowledge therefore it may be had Job knew that his Redeemer lived Job
19.25 And Saint Paul had this assurance 2 Tim. 1.12 Gal. 2.20 Yea may some say Paul was an eminent believer a Christian of the first magnitude no wonder if he had this jewel of assurance nay but the Apostle speaks of it as a case incident to other believers Rom. 8.35 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who shall separate us from the love of Christ He doth not say Who shall separate me but us so that by all it appears that a believer may come to spell out his interest in Christ Caution 1. Not that the Saints have alwayes the Caution 1 fame certainty or that they have such an assurance as excludes all doubtings and conflicts there will be flowings and ebbings in their comforts as well as in their graces was it not so in David sometimes we hear him say Gods loving-kindness was before his eyes Psal 26.3 As it is a Proverbial speech I have such a thing in my eye I see it just before me but at another time Where are thy loving-kindnesses Psal 89.49 A Christian hath not alwayes the same Plerophory Saint Paul at one time sets up the Trophies of victory and sings his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or triumphant song Rom. 8.37 We are more than Conquerors At another time how did the Plumes of his confidence fall and he was as a man in the midst of the Sea strugling with the waves and crying out for help Rom. 7.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O wretched man that I am c. A Saint in this life is like a ship at Anchor which though safe yet it may be sometimes tossed upon the water these doubtings and convulsions God suffers in his children sometimes that they may long the more for heaven where they shall have a constant spring-tyde of joy Caution 2. Not that all believers have the same assurance Caution 2 1. Assurance is rather the fruit of faith than faith Now as the root of the Rose or Tulip may be alive where the flowre is not visible so faith may live in the heart where the flowre of assurance doth not appear yet this is sure there is so much wrought in the heart of every believer by Gods Spirit as he can bottom his hope upon as for instance a high prizing of Christ an acquiescence in Christ a rejoycing in his image a delighting in his word the weakest believer hath so much to shew as he would not part with for a world 2. Assurance is difficult to be obtained it is a rare jewel but hard to come by not many Christians have this jewel 1. God sees it good sometimes to with-draw assurance from his people that they may walk humbly through the corruption of our nature we are apt to abuse the richest mercies the Moth breeds in the finest cloth the Worm in the sweetest fruit pride is apt to breed in this sweet fruit of assurance It is hard for Christians to want assurance and be content and to have it and be humble 2. Satan doth what he can to way-lay and obstruct our assurance he is called the red Dragon Rev. 12.3 And how doth he trouble the waters of a Christians peace If the Divel cannot keep a believer from heaven he will do what he can to keep him from an heaven upon earth he will wrack him with fears and disquiets If he cannot blot a Christians evidence yet sometimes he casts such a mist before his eyes that he cannot read his evidence the Divel envies that God should have any glory or the soul any comfort 3. That we want assurance the fault for the most is our own we walk carelesly neglect our spiritual watch let go our hold of promises comply with temptations no wonder then if we walk in darkness and are at such a loss that we cannot tell whether Christ be ours or no our uneven carriage grieves the Spirit whose work it is to seal up assurance if we quench the graces of the Spirit no wonder if God quench the comforts of the Spirit 3. Assurance is very sweet this wine of Paradise chears the heart how comfortable is Gods smile the Sun is more refreshing when it shines out then when it is hid in a cloud for want of this knowledge Christ is ours we often hang our Harps upon the Willows and sit as Israel by the Rivers weeping Psal 137.1 2. A man that hath a rich Mine of gold in his Field yet if he doth not know it is there he cannot take the comfort of it One that hath a great Estate befallen him beyond the Seas yet if ignorant of it he is as if he had no such Estate Hagar had a Well of water by her but her eyes being held that she saw not the Well she sat weeping it is the knowledge of an interest gives comfort Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour not a Saviour but my Saviour The Rabbins say that Moses dyed with a kiss from Gods mouth he that knows Christ is his hath a kiss from Christs lips he dyes triumphing assurance puts a man in heaven before his time 4. Assurance is very useful it will put us upon service for Christ 1. It will put us upon active obedience assurance will not as the Papists say breed security in the soul but agility it will make us mount up with wings as Eagles in holy duties faith makes us living assurance make us lively if we know that Christ is ours we shall never think we can love him enough or serve him enough 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constrains us Assurance is like wings to the Bird like oyle to the Lamp like weights to the Clock it sets all the wheels of obedience a going assurance is a whetstone to the graces it stirs up hope love zeal faith makes a Christian walk 2 Cor. 5.7 assurance makes him run Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength Assurance breeds such joy in the soul as doth derive and issue forth strength for duty 2. Assurance will put us upon passive obedience Rom. 5.3 5. We glory in tribulation because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts He that hath Christs love shed into his heart will be willing to shed his blood for Christ he who knows Christ is his will come to him with Peter upon the waters he comforts himself with this though he lose all for Christ he shall find all in Christ Mr. Fox speaks of a woman in Queen Maries dayes who when the adversaries threatned to take her husband from her she answered Christ is my husband when they threatned to take away her children she answered Christ is better to me than ten sons when they threatned to take away all from her saith she Christ is mine and you cannot take away him from me that man who is assured Christ is his will hazard the loss of all for him he knows though he may be a loser for Christ he cannot be a loser by Christ for Christ is all and in all No
unsent for Isa 65.1 I am found of them that sought me not He doth prevent us with mercy he entreats us to be healed if Christ had not first come to us and with the good Samaritan poured in wine and oyle we must have dyed of our wounds 3. This Physitian lets himself blood to cure his Patient Isa 53.5 But he was wounded for our transgressions per vulnera viscera through his wounds we may see his bowels 4. Our repulses and unkindnesses do not drive Christ away from us Physitians if provoked by their Patients go away in a rage and will come no more We abuse our Physitian thrust him away we bolt out our Physitian yet Christ doth not forsake us but comes again and applies his Soveraign oyles and balsomes Isa 65.3 I have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people Christ puts up wrongs and incivilities and is resolved to go thorough with the cure Oh the love of this heavenly Physitian 5. Christ himself drank that bitter cup which we should have drunk and by his taking the potion we are healed and saved Thus Christ hath shewn more love than ever Physitian did to the Patient 5. Christ is the most cheap Physitian sicknesse is not only a consumption to the body but the purse Luke 8.43 Physitians fees are chargable but Jesus Christ gives us our physick freely Medicipecuniis Christus autem precibus placatur he takes no fee Isa 55.1 Come without money and without price He desires us to bring nothing to him but broken hearts and when he hath cured us he desires us to bestow nothing upon him but our love and one would think that were very reasonable 6. Christ heals with more ease than any other other Physitians apply pills potions bleeding Christ cures with more facility with a word Christ made the Divel go out with a word speaking Mark 9.25 So when the soul is spirituall possessed Christ can with a word heal nay he can cure with a look When Peter had fallen into a relapse Christ looked on Peter and he wept Christs look melted Peter into repentance it was an healing look If Christ doth but cast a look upon the soul he can recover it Therefore David prayes to have a look from God Psal 119.132 Look thou upon me and be mercifull unto me 7. Christ is the most tender-hearted Physitian He hath ended his Passion yet not his compassion How doth he pity sick souls He is not more full of skill than sympathy Hos 11.8 My heart is turned within me Christ shews his compassion in that he doth proportion his physick to the strength of the Patient Physick if it be too sharp for the constitution endangers the life Christ gives such gentle physick as shall work kindly and savingly Though he will bruise sinners yet he will not break the bruised reed Oh the soundings of Christs bowels to poor souls that feel themselves heart-sick with sin He holds their head and heart when they are fainting he brings the cordials of his promises to keep the sick Patient from dying away Christians you perhaps may have hard thoughts of your Physitian Christ and think he is cruel and intends to destroy you but O the workings of his bowels towards humble broken-hearted sinners Psal 147.3 He heals the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds Every groan of the Patient goes to the heart of this Physitian 8. Physitians oft prescribe such physick as is prejudicial to the Patient in two cases 1. Eitheir in case they finde not out the cause of the disease and then they may give that which is contrary hot things in stead of cooling Or 2. In case they do finde out the cause they may give that which is good for one thing and bad for another As it falls out when the liver and spleen are both distempered the physick which helps the liver may hurt the spleen But Christ alwayes prescribes that physick which is suitable and withal he blesseth the physick * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys hom de ●oen If the disease of the soul be pride he humbles it with affliction God turned Nebuchadnezzar to grasse to cure him of his Tympany If the disease of the soul be sloth Christ applies some awakening Scripture Matth. 12.11 Luke 13.24 1 Pet. 4 18. If the disease be the stone of the heart Christ useth proper medicines sometimes the terrors of the Law sometimes mercies sometimes he dissolves the stone in his own blood If the soul be fainting through unbelief Christ brings some Scripture-cordial to revive it Matth. 12.20 A bruised reed he will not break Isa 57.16 I will not contend for ever neither will I be always wroth for the Spirit should fail before me and the souls which I have made Thus the Lord Jesus alwayes prescribes that physick which is proper for the disease and shall work effectually to the cure 9. Christ never fails of success Physitians may have skill but not alwayes success Patients often dye under their hands but Christ never undertakes to heal any but he makes a certain cure John 17.12 Those that thou gavest me I have kept and none of them is lost Judas was not given to Christ to be healed but never any who was given to Christ did miscarry Quest Quest How shall I know that I am given to Christ to be cured Answ Answ If it be with thee as with a sick Patient who sees himself dying without a Physitian Art thou undone without Christ dost thou perceive thy self bleeding to death without the balm of Gilead then thou art one of Christs sick Patients and thou shalt never miscarry under his hands How can any of those be lost whom Christ undertakes to cure as he poures in the balsome of his blood so he poures out the perfume of his prayers for them John 17.11 Holy Father keep through thy own Name those whom thou hast given me Satan could never upbraid Christ with this that any of his sick Patients were lost 10. Other Physitians can only cure them that are sick but Christ cures them that are dead Ephes 2.1 You hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins A sinner hath all the signs of death on him the pulse of his affections doth not beat he is without breath he breaths not after holiness he is dead but Christ is a Physitian for the dead of every one whom Christ cures it may be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was dead and is alive again Luke 15.32 11. Christ cures not only our diseases but our deformities The Physitian can make the sick man well but if he be deformed he cannot make him fair Christ gives not only health but beauty Sin hath made us ugly and mishapen Christs medicines do not only take away our sickness but our spots he doth not only make us whole but fair Hosea 14.4 I will heal their back-slidings ver 6. his beauty shall be as the Olive-tree Jesus Christ
never thinks he hath fully healed us till he hath drawn his own beautiful image upon us Cant. 2.13 Arise my fair one fair with justification fair with sanctification Christ doth not only heal but adorn he is called the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4.2 Not only because of the healing under his wings but because of those Rayes of beauty which he puts upon the soul Rev. 12.1 12. And lastly Christ is the most bountiful Physitian Other Patients do enrich their Physitians but here the Physitian doth enrich the Patient Christ prefers all his Patients he doth not only cure them but crown them Rev. 2.10 Christ doth not only raise from the bed but to the Throne he gives the sick man not only health but heaven 1 Good Newes this day there is balm in Gilead Use 1 there is a Physitian to heal sin-sick souls the Angels that fell had no Physiti●● sent to them we have there are but few in the world to whom Christ is revealed they that have the gold of the Indies want the blood of the Lamb but the Sun of righteousness is risen in our Hemisphere with healing in his wings If a man were poysoned what a comfort would it be to him to hear that there were an herb in the Garden could heal him if he had a gangrene in his body and were given over by all his friends how glad would he be to hear of a Chyrurgion that could cure him O sinner thou art full of peccant humours thou hast a gangren'd soul but there is a Physitian that can recover thee There is hope in Israel concerning this though there be an old Serpent to sting us with his tentations yet there is a Brazen Serpent to heal us with his blood Use 2 2. If Christ be a Physitian then let us make use of this Physitian for our diseased souls Luke 4.40 When the Sun was setting all they that had any sick with divers diseases brought them unto him and he laid his hands on every of them and healed them You that have neglected a Physitian all this while now when the Sun of the Gospel and the Sun of your life is even setting bring your sick souls to Christ to be cured Christ complains that though men are sick even to death yet they will not come or send to the Physitian John 5.40 Ye will not come to me that ye might have life In bodily diseases the Physitian is the first that is sent to in soul-diseases the Physitian is the last that is sent to But here there are many sad Objections that poor souls make against themselves why they do not come to Christ their Physitian Object 1 Obj●ction 1. Alas I am discouraged to go to Christ to cure me because of my unworthiness just like the Centurion who sent to Christ about his sick servant Luke 7.6 Lord trouble not thy self for I am not worthy that thy thou shouldest enter under my roof Christ was coming to heal his servant but the Centurion would have slaved off Christ from coming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not worthy So saith many a trembling soul Christ is a Physitian but who am I that Christ should come under my roof or heal me I am unworthy of mercy as Mephibosheth said to King David 2 Sam. 9.8 What is thy servant that thou shouldest look upon such a dead Dog as I am Now to such as have their hearts broken with a sense of their unworthiness and are discouraged from coming to Christ to heal them let me say these five things by way of reply 1. Who did Christ shed his blood for but such as are unworthy 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners Christ came into the world as into an Hospital among a company of lame bed-rid souls 2. Though we are not legally worthy we may be evangelically it is part of our worthiness to see our unworthiness Isa 41.14 Fear not thou worme Jacob. Thou mayst be a worme in thy own eye yet a Dove in Gods eye 3. Though we are unworthy yet Christ is worthy we do not deserve a cure but Christ hath merited mercy for us he hath store of blood to supply our want of tears 4. Who was ever yet saved because he was worthy What man could ever plead this title Lord Jesus heal me because I am worthy What worthiness was there in Paul before his conversion what worthiness was there in Mary Magdalen out of whom seven Divels were cast but free-grace did pity and heal them God doth not find us worthy but makes us worthy 5. If we will never come to Christ to be healed till we are worthy we must never come and let me tell you this talking of worthiness savours of pride we would have something of our own had we such preparations and self-excellencies then we think Christ would accept of us and we might come and be healed this is to see our Physitian oh let not the sense of unworthiness discourage * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 go to Christ to be healed Arise he calleth thee Mark 10.49 Object 2 2. Objection But I fear I am not within Christs Commission I am not of the number of those that shall be saved and then though Christ be a Physitian I shall not be healed Answ 1 Answ 1. We must take heed of drawing desperate conclusions against our selves 't is high presumption for us to make our selves wiser than the Angels All the Angels in heaven are not able to resolve this question Who are elected and who are reprobated Answ 2 2. Thou that sayest thou art not within Christs Commission read over Christs Commission see who he comes to heal Luke 4.18 He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Hath God touched thy heart with remorse dost thou lay to heart thy Gospel-unkindnesses dost thou weep more out of love to Christ than fear of hell then thou art a broken-hearted sinner and art within Christs Commission a bleeding Christ will heal a broken heart Object 3 3. Objection But my sins are so many that sure I shall never be healed I am sick of many diseases at once Answ Answ Thou hast the more need of a Physitian one would think that was a strange speech of Peter to Christ Luke 5.8 Depart from me for I am a sinful man O Lord rather Lord come near to me Is it a good Argument to say to a Physitian I am diseased therefore depart from me No therefore come and heal me Our sins should serve to humble us not to beat us from Christ I tell you if we had no diseases Christ would have no work to do in the world Object 4 4. Objection But my disease is inflamed and grown to a Paroxysme my sin is greatly heightned Answ Answ The playster of Christs blood is broader than thy sore 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin The blood of the Lamb takes away the poyson of the Serpent all diseases are alike
used Jobs wife as a Ladder by which he would have scaled the impregnable Tower of Jobs faith Still retain thy integrity a cutting kind of speech as if the Divel had said God hath pull'd down thy hedge he hath smitten thee in thy children and art thou so sensless as still to serve and worship God what hast thou got by his service where are thy earnings what hast thou to shew but thy Boiles Throw off Religion Curse God and dye Satans physick alwayes poysons Mal. 3.14 Ye have said It is vain to serve God and What profit is it that we have kept his Ordinance We have mourn'd and fasted and have almost fasted away all we have we will fast no longer When a mans estate is low and his spirit troubled now Satan begins to throw in his Angle and oftentimes Satan makes use of poverty to put a man upon indirect courses Agur fear'd his heart in poverty Prov. 30.8 9. Oh keep thy heart in adversity beware of taking the forbidden fruit 5. Keep thy heart in time of prosperity The Moon the fuller it is the more remote it is from the Sun and oftentimes the more full a man is of the world the further his heart is from God Deutr. 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked 't is hard to abound in prosperity and not abound in sin a full cup is hardly carried without spilling the Trees are never more in danger of the winde than when they blossome pride idleness luxury * Multos felicitas p●ratai● pa● vict●s reddidi● are the three daughters which are bred of plenty Sampson fell asleep in Dalilahs lap millions in the lap of prosperity have slept the sleep of death Agur prayed Give me not riches Prov. 30.8 He knew his heart would be ready to run wilde the worlds golden apple bewitcheth When God sets an hedge of prosperity about us we had need set an hedge of caution and circumspection 3. Reasons enforcing heart-custody 3. The next thing is why we must be so careful about keeping of our hearts the Reasons are 1. Because the heart is a slippery piece Jer. 17.9 The heart is deceitful above all things in the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart is a Jacob above all things the heart is a supplanter if we are not very cautious and watchful our hearts will put a cheat upon us There is deceit in coyne in friends in books but the heart hath an art of deceiving beyond all 't is a desperate impostor * Grande profundum est homo Aug. the way of the heart is like a Serpent upon a Rock O the pleats and folds the subtilties and labyrinths of a self-deceiving heart Let us a little trace the heart in its fallacies and stratagems and see if there be not reason to lie sentinel continually and set a strong guard about it The heart will deceive us about things sinful lawful religious 1. The heart will deceive us about things sinful 1. The heart will tell us sin is but small and being small it is venial 2. The heart will apologize for sin masking over bad transactions with golden pretences 3. The heart will tell a man he may keep his sin and keep his Religion too 2 Kings 17.33 They feared the Lord and served their own gods The heart will secretly suggest to a man thus as long as he goes to Church and gives almes he may secretly indulge corruption as if duty gave a man a Pattent and License to sin 4. The heart will quote Scripture to justifie sin 1 Cor. 9.20 22. To the Jewes I became as a Jew that I might gain the Jewes I am made all things to all men c. This Text the heart will bring for sinful compliance O subtile heart that canst finde out Scripture to damn thy self though Saint Paul in things indifferent would conform to others that he might save their souls yet he would not to gratifie them violate a Law or deny an Article of his Greed and if the heart is so treacherous being alwayes more ready to excuse sin than examine it what care and circumspection should we use in keeping our hearts that they do not decoy us into sinne before we are aware 2. The heart will deceive us about things lawful in two cases 1. It is lawful to endeavour to preserve our credit A good name is a precious oyntment but under a pretence of preserving the name the heart is ready to tempt a man to self-seeking and make him do all to get a name John 12.43 Thy loved the praise of men more than the praise of God 2. It is lawful to take comfort in estate and relations Deutr. 26.11 But the heart will be ready here to overshoot how oft is the wife and childe laid in Gods room the full stream of the affection runs out to the creature and scarce a drop of love to Christ this is the deceit of the heart it makes us offend most in lawful things more are killed with wine than poyson they are afraid of poyson but take wine in the excess Gross sins affright but how many surfeit upon lawful things when we overdo we undo 3. The heart will deceive us about things religious 1. Our duties 2. Our graces 1. Our duties The heart will tell us it is enough to come to Word and Sacrament though the affections are not at all wrought upon this is like the Salamander which lives in the fire but as Naturalists say it is never the hotter Will this be any Plea at Gods bar to tell the Lord how many Sermons you have heard surely it will be the bringing of Uriahs letter it will be an evidence against you How subtile is the heart to plot its own death and bring a man to hell in the way of duty 2. Our graces the heart is like a flattering glass that would make the hypocrite look fair the foolish Virgins thought they had oyle many strongly conceit they have grace but have none The hypocrites knowledge is no better than ignorance 1 John 2.4 He hath illumination but not assimilation he is not made like Christ The hypocrites faith is fancy he believes but his heart is not purified * Acts 15.9 he pretends to trust God in greater matters but dares not trust him in lesser he will trust God with his soul but not with his estate Well if the heart be thus deceitful what need have we with all keeping to keep the heart do with the heart as with a cheater we will trust a cheater no further than we can see him the heart is a grand cheater it will supplant and cozen try it but do not trust it Prov. 28.26 He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool 2. We must excubias agere keep the heart with watch and ward because it is not only false but fickle God complains of Israel that their goodness was as the early dew Hos 6.4 The Sun ariseth and the dew vanisheth the
heart let thy delight be in them that excell in vertue Psal 16.3 The Saints carry the Lanthorn of the Word along with them it is good to walk with them that carry the light Answ 3 3. If you would keep your heart watch over your passions the heart is ready to be destroyed by its own passion as the Vessel is to be overturned with the Sail the heart doth sometimes sink in sorrow swell with anger and abound excessively with carnal joy Diagoras seeing his three sons in one day crowned Conquerors dyed for joy Passion transports beyond the bounds of reason 't is a kind of phrensie that possesseth Lay the curben-bit of restraint upon your passions or your hearts will run wilde in sin take heed of enflaming your spirits as a man would avoid those wines and strong waters that may heat his blood cut off all occasions that may awaken this FURY take away the fuel that feeds this fire When this viper of passion begins to gather heat pray it down Prayer saith Luther takes down the swelling of the soul and abates the heat of inordinate affections How dangerous are these fiery exhalations Moses in a passion spake unadvisedly with his lips Psal 106.33 A man in a rage is like a ship in a Tempest that hath neither Pilot or Sails or Oars to help it but is exposed to the Waves and Rocks how many have lost their hearts in a storm Answ 4 4. If you would keep your heart keep all the passages to your heart he that would keep a City keeps the Forts and Outworks keep especially the two Portals of the heart fast the eye and the ear 1. Keep the eye the eye oft sets the heart on fire Job did make a Covenant with his eyes Job 31.1 * Voluit reducere speciem sensus externi ad tandem speciem cum inte●o The Serpent sometimes creeps in through the Window or Casement into a Room the old Serpent the Divel creeps through the Casement of the eye into the heart the eye is taster to the appetite First Eve saw the Tree was good for food then she took of the fruit Gen. 3.6 Look to the eye some of the Heathens have pulled out their eyes because they would not be enticed by impure objects I say not pull out the eye only keep the Portal shut the Romans never did let their prisoners go abroad but their Keepers went with them never send thine eyes abroad but send their Keepers with them 2. Keep the ear much sin is conveyed to the heart through the ear the Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 corrupt communication Eph. 4.29 Because impure discourse corrupts and poysons the heart Keep thy ear open to God and shut to sin deafen thy ears to the lies of the slanderer and heretick let not him have thy ear who comes to rob thee of thy heart 5. If you would keep your heart get Christ into your Answ 5 heart Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your heart Nothing can hurt but sin if Christ be in the heart he will purifie it his Spirit is the refiners fire Mal. 3.2 If Christ be in the heart he will adorn it he will bring in the rich furniture of his graces and so beautifie the hidden man of the heart 1 Pet 3.4 If Christ be in the heart he will defend it the Castle of the heart can never be taken if Christ be in it Let Satan dig his Mines lay his Train of powder shoot his Balls of wilde-fire if the Lord of Hosts pitch his Tent in the heart it can never be taken by storm 6. If you would keep your hearts have a care to keep Answ 6 your thoughts Jer. 4.14 How long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee What though you set a watch before the door of the lips if you let your heart run out in vain impure thoughts the heart is the presence-chamber which is to be kept for God vain thoughts defile the Room and make it unfit for God to come into The thoughts make way for sin while the mind is musing the heart burns David let his heart rove into wanton thoughts and that made way for the act of adultery 2 Sam. 11.4 Thoughts are Purveyers for sin they do first start sin and then the heart hunts it Answ 7 7. If you would keep your heart keep your accounts well bring thy heart often to trial put queries to thy heart O my heart what dost thou whether goest thou see what work lies undone what sin thou hast to bewail what grace to strengthen search thy evidences examine thy title to Christ 2 Cor. 13.5 Traverse things narrowly in thy soul see if there be no sin countenanced search as Israel did for Leven keep a Diary in thy heart see how things go in thy soul be not a stranger at home for want of this p●lying with the heart many are kept in the dark and understand not the true state of their souls they live known to others but dye unknown to themselves O what wisdom is it for a Christian to be much with his own heart he that would keep his Estate must keep his Account-books well Christian redeem time every day to turn over the book of conscience trade with thy own heart it will be stealing out to sin call it often to account Seneca would every night when his candle was out ask himself what he had done that day often reckonings keep God and the conscience friends Answ 8 8. If you would keep your heat set fences about your heart those who would keep fruit or flowers fence them in There are foure Fences we should set about our hearts to keep them Fence 1 1. The fear of God Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long As in natural fear the spirits recoil to the heart to keep it so the fear of God preserves the heart fear puts an holy awe upon the soul and keeps it from sinful excursions fear bolts the door of the heart against vanity Prov. 16.6 By the fear of the Lord men depart from evil As a Noble-mans Porter stands at the gate to keep out every thing that is unseemly from being brought into the house so the fear of God stands as an armed man at the gate of the heart to keep out tentations from entrings fear lies sentinel it stands as a Watchman on the Tower and looks every way to see what danger is approaching fear will not admit any thing into the soul which is dishonourable to God 2. Love without fear makes us presume and fear Fence 2 without love makes us despair the love of God is the most forcible Argument to prevail with an ingenious spirit Thus love argues Hath God given me Christ hath he joynted me in the promises hath he setled a Reversion of heaven upon me and shall I walk unworthy of this love shall I voluntarily sin against this God No I will rather dye than sin this made
Anselm say Let me rather fall into hell than sin wouldst thou keep thy heart environ it with love death cannot break this fence 3. Faith this is call'd a shield Ephes 6.16 The shield Fence 3 fenceth the head guards the vitals this blessed shield of faith preserves the heart from danger The shield defends all the Armour the Helmet and Breast-plate The shield of faith defends the other graces the Breast-plate of love the Helmet of hope the Girdle of truth When Satan strikes at a Christians heart faith beats back the blow and wounds the head of the old Serpent 1 Pet. 5.9 Whom resist stedfast in faith faith is the best safeguard faith brings in peace Rom. 15.13 Peace in believing And peace fortifies the heart Phil. 4.7 The peace of God shall keep your heart 4. A good conscience The heart is placed in the midst Fence 4 of the body and as it is strongly secured with ribs about it so it hath a film over it in which it is kept call'd by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the ribs about the heart which fence it I may compare the graces to the film in which the heart is kept I may compare a good conscience this keeps the soul that nothing can annoy it Murus Aheneus esto c. Good conscience is a brazeen wall about the Castle of the heart these are the fences that keep the heart Answ 9 9. If you would have your hearts kept beg of God that he would keep them for you set not about this work in your own strength but look higher go to God he is the great Lord-Keeper Psal 121.5 The Lord is thy Keeper * Utinam ut mihi semper à dexteris fis bone Jesu Bern. it is good to go alwayes with such a Keeper this is the reason none of the Saints are lost because the Lord is their Keeper 1 Pet. 1.5 Who are kept by the power of God Every Ward hath a Guardian to keep him choose God for thy Guardan they are safe whom God keeps lock up thy heart with God and give him the Key Motives to heart-custody The Motives that may perswade us to look after the keeping of our hearts are these 1. If we do not keep our hearts the Divel will keep them shall we let Satan have them when a rude Army gets into a Town what work do they make what Rapines Plunders Massacres when Satan possesseth hearts he carries them at last violently as he did the Swine into the Sea Satan is first crafty then cruel 1. He is crafty his work is to fish for hearts and he is very subtile he hath his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his policies and stratagems 2 Cor. 2.11 1. He observes the humours of the body and layes sutable baits the Divel cannot know the heart but he may observe the temper and constitution * Novit Diabolus cui illecebras carn● ingerat cui virus invi diae insundat omnium discurit mores Leo. he tempts a sanguine man with beauty a covetous man wich gold as the Husband-man knows what ground is fit for Barley what for Wheat Satan hath not been a Tempter so long but by this time hath gained experience having commenced Master of his black Art 2. Satan baits his hook with Religion he tempts to sin under a pretext of piety thus transforming himself into an Angel of light He tempts some to make away themselves that they may not live any longer to sin against God Who would suspect Satan when he comes as a Divine and quotes Scripture Thus cunningly doth the Divel angle for hearts 2. Having once gotten his prey he is cruel his cruelty exceeds the rage of all Tyrants we read of Hannibal Antiochus Nero who caused the Christians to be put in Coats laid over with pitch and brimstone burning all night that they might be a living Torch to them that passed by this is nothing to the unparallel'd barbarisme and cruelty of Satan his name is Apollyon Devourer he rent and tore the man in whom he was and threw him into the fire Matth. 17.15 If he was so fierce when he was chained what will he do when he hath full power when he had taken away all Jobs Estate smitten his body full of soars and thrown the house upon his children yet all this was in the Divels account but a touch of the finger Job 1.11 If the touch of his finger be so heavy what will the weight of his loyns be Oh then if Satan be so subtile in fishing for hearts and so savage when he gets mens hearts let us have a care to keep our hearts if we do not keep them Satan will keep them for us and then see what havock he will make 2. He that keeps his heart keeps his peace whence are our perturbations and disquiets but from the neglect of our spiritual watch he that keeps his heart all day may lie down in peace at night Psal 4.8 What a comfort will this be to a Christian in every condition in a low condition when he thinks thus with himself Though I have lost my friends and estate yet I have kept my heart in a sick condition we shall shortly be chained to a sick-bed but when a Christian shall keep his bed it will be no small comfort to him that he hath kept his heart in a dying condition death may take away the life but not the heart that jewel God layes claim to and it is kept for him The heavenly race 1 COR. 9.24 Know ye not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that ye may obtain REligion is a business of the greatest importance the Soul which is the more Noble and Divine part is concern'd in it and as we act our part here so we shall be for ever happy or miserable the advice of Solomon in this case is most seasonable Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest Eccles 9.10 The business of Religion requires our utmost zeal and intension Mat. 11.12 1. Sometimes the work we are to do for heaven is set out by striving Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait gate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strive as in an agony strive as for a matter of life and death so Cornelius à lapide though we must be men of peace yet in matters of Religion we must be men of strife 't is an holy strife a blessed contention indeed the Apostle saith Let nothing be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through strife but though strife doth not do well among Christians yet it doth well in a Christian he must strive with his own heart or he will never get to heaven 2. Sometimes our work for heaven is compared to wrestling Ephes 6.12 We wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers c. Our life is a
are slow-paced in Religion who creep but do not run their motion is like the motion of the eighth Sphere slow and dull they should be like the Sun in the firmament which is swift when they are like Sun on the Dial which moves very slow many Christians move so heavily in the wayes of God that it is hard for standers by to judge whether they make any progress or no they are hasty in their passion but slow of heart to believe Luke 24.25 what haste did Israel make in their march when Pharaoh was pursuing them what need have Christians to expedite their race when the Divel is behind pursuing and ready to overtake them and make them lose the prize we read in the Law that God would not have the Asse offered in sacrifice he hates a dull temper of soul the Snaile was accounted unclean Levit. 11.30 the slow-paced Christian will be taken tardy at last and misse of the prize Branch 4 4. It reproves those who begin the race of Christianity but do not persevere to the end of the race they faint by the way Ye did run well who did hinder you that ye should not obey the truth Gal. 5.7 the Crown is set upon the head of perseverance he that runs half the way and then faints loseth the Garland 'T is sad for a man to come near to heaven and then tyre in the race as it is to see a ship cast away in sight of the shore Nay what shall we say to them who do worse than tire in the race they run backward into the way of profanesse as Julian Gardner and others there is no going to heaven backward such do cast reproaches upon the wayes of God better never begin the race than run back 2 Pet. 2.21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness then after they have known it to turn from the holy Commandement A Souldier that runs from his Colours and lists himself in the enemies Regiment if he be taken must expect Martial Law Heb. 10.38 If any man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him God will bear with infirmity but he will punish treachery wrath shall smoak against the Apostate fury will display itself in its bloody colours indeed in War there is a retreating sometimes which if it be done politickly and to the enemies disadvantange it is called an honourable retreat but in a race to heaven there must be no retreats these are not honourable retreats but damnable retreats whosoever draws back it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to perdition Heb. 10. ult 3. Let all Christians be exhorted to run this heavenly Use 3 and blessed race of Religion Exhortat what Arguments shall I use to perswade look upon other creatures wing'd with activity and then Christian shame thy self Look into the firmament and see the Sun as a Gyant running his race Psal 19.5 and dost thou stand still look into the Aire see the birds soaring aloft and mounting towards heaven look into the earth see the Bees working in the Hive look upon the Angels they are swift in obedience look upon other Christians near thee thou shalt find them their race reading at praying weeping and hast thou nothing to do look upon thy precious time time runs and dost thou stand still look upon the wicked how quick are they in sin and shall they run faster to hell than thou dost to heaven nay look upon thy self how industrious art thou for the world rising early compassing Sea and Land and yet how stupid and heartless in the matters of salvation wilt thou run for a feather a bubble and not run for a Kingdom To quicken your pace in godliness consider what the prize is we run for it is a Crown of glory * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This incircles all blessedness within it there will soon be an end of our race but there will be no end of our Crown this blessed reward should quicken u● in the race but how shall we run the race so as to obtain 't is sad to run in vain Phil. 2.16 this brings to the next Use 4 Direction 4. I shall prescribe some Directions about this heavenly race 1. Take heed of those things which will hinder you in your race As 1. Shake off sloth idleness is pulvinar Diaboli the sluggish Christian will never win the race he is asleeping when he should be running sloth is the rust of the soul 't is the disease of the soul a sick man cannot run a race Prov. 12.27 The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting he will rather fast than hunt for Venison oh shake off sloth abandon this idle Div●l if ye intend a race 2. Throw off all weights There are two sorts of weights we must throw off 1. The weight of sin Heb. 12.1 Let us lay aside every weight and the sin that doth so easily beset us and let us run the race The Prophet David felt this weight Psal 38.4 Mine iniquities are gone over mine head as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me If we do not throw off this weight by repentance it will sink us into hell A man cannot run a race with a burden upon his back an unclean person cannot run the race of holiness a proud man cannot run the race of humility a self-willed man cannot run the race of obedience O Christian unburden thy soul of sin through off this weight if thou intendest to lay hold on the Crown 2. The second weight the Spiritual Racer must throw off is the world This is a golden weight which hath hindred many and made them lose their race So far as the world is a weight throw it off I say not lay aside the use of the world but the love of it * 1 Joh. 2.15 When the golden dust of the world is blown in mens eyes it blinds them that they cannot see their race 3. Discard false Opinions about this race as 1. That the race is easie many a man thinks he can run the race from earth to heaven on his death-bed O sinner thou that say'st the race is easie art a stranger to the Christian race Thou art dead in sin till a supernatural Principle of grace be infused Ephes 2.1 is it easie for a dead man to run a race to run the way of Gods Commandements is against nature and is it easie for a man to act contrary to himself is it easie for the water to run backward in its own channel is it easie for a man to deny himself to crucifie the flesh to behead his beloved sin oh take heed of this mistake that the Christian race is easie Do you know what Religion must cost you and what Religion may cost you 2. The second false Opinion we must beware off is that the race to heaven is impossible there is so much work to do that sure we shall never win the race Cyprian
the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground blessed shall be thy basket and thy store c. If thou shalt keep the Commandements of the Lord thy God c. He that hath a fruitful Heart shall have a fruitful Crop God will make him to thrive in his Estate And his basket shall not only be full but blessed God will bless what he hath Here is not only the Sack full of corn but money in the mouth of the Sack 2. Spiritual blessings Exod. 19.5 If ye will obey my voice indeed then ye shall be a peculiar Treasure to me above all people You shall be my Portion my Jewels the Apple of my eye I will give Kingdoms for your ransome Jer. 7.23 Obey and I will be your God I will make over my self to you by a deed of gift What a Superlative distinguishing mercy is this Psal 14.4 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord. 3. Eternal blessings Heb. 5.9 Christ became the author of Eternal salvation to all them that obey him It is a salvation that bears date to eternity Oh then who would not be in love with obedience while we please God we pleasure our selves * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer II. We are ready to say as Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.9 But what shall we do for the hundred Talents Ye see brethren you are no losers by Obedience who did ever kindle a fire on Gods Altar for nought Mal. 1.10 3. I shall lay down some Rules to help Christians in Use 3 their Obedience Direction that it may be the Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God Obedience must have these four Ingredients in it It must be cordial Deutr. 26.16 The Lord thy God hath commanded thee to do these statutes thou shalt therefore keep and do them with all thy heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.17 Ye have obeyed from the heart * Obedienta non servili metu sed cordis affectu servanda non timore poenae sed amorae justitiae Obedience without the heart is like fire on the Altar without Incense The heart is the seat of Love and 't is Love perfumes every duty The heart makes service a Free-will offering else it is but a tax Cain brought his sacrifice not his heart it was rather a mulct than an Offering Without the heart our Religion is like the Angels assuming dead bodies those bodies did eat and drink and walk but they had no soul to animate them They did movere not vivere how many do but assume the duties of Religion Obedience without the heart is hypocrisie How canst thou say I love thee when thy heart is not with me Judg. 16.15 2. Obedience must be extensive it must reach to all Gods Commandments 1 King 9.4 Luke 1.6 Quest But who can arrive at this Answ Though we cannot keep all Gods Commandements Legally yet we may Evangellically A good Christian 1. Consents to the equity of the whole Law Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and just and good he sets his seal to every Law 2. He doth make conscience of every Law David had respect to all Gods Commandments Psal 119.6 his eye was upon all every command hath such authority upon a Christian that he knows not how to dispence with it though he fail in every duty yet he dares not neglect any duty 3. A child of God desires to keep every command Psal 119.5 O that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes what a child of God wants in strength he makes up in will Rom. 7.18 To will is present The regenerate Will stands bent to all Gods Precepts 4. The gracious soul mourns that he can do no better when he fails he weeps O wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 O this unbelieving heart how am I clog'd with corruption The good I would I do not Thus doth a Child of God lament his failings and judge himself for them and this is in a Gospel sense to keep every Law Unsound hearts as they are slight in their obedience so they are partial some duty they will dispense with some sinne they will indulge in this thing the Lord pardon thy servant 1 King 5.18 The Hypocrite will walk in some of Gods statutes not in all like a foundred Jade that will not set all his feet upon the ground but favours one foot Such foundered Christians there are who halt and limp and favour themselves in some things though it be to the hazard of their souls Herod could as well die as leave his Incest True obedience is universal as the Papists say we owe to our Mother the Church an Unlimited subjection its true here we owe to our God Unlimited obedience 3. The third Ingredient into obedience is Faith Heb. 11.6 Without faith it is impossible to please God therefore it is call'd the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 Abel is said by faith to offer up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abetter sacrifice than Cain Sacra solet magnis rebus inesse fides Faith is a vital principle without it all our services are dead * Sicut in arbore quicquid pulchritudinis inest ex radice proficiscitus ita in anima quicquid decorum ex fide Aug. Therefore the Scripture speaks of dead works Hebr. 6.1 But why must this silver thread of faith run through the whole work of obedience I answer because faith looks at Christ in every duty and so both the person and offering is accepted Ephes 1.6 He hath accepted us in the beloved We are not accepted through our duties but through the beloved Faith looks at the Merit of Christ to take away the guilt and the Spirit of Christ to take away the filth which cleaves to the most angelical services thus it procures acceptance The High Priest under the Law looked at Christ in all when he offered up the Sacrifice he laid his hand upon the head of the beast slain which did point at the Messiah Exod. 29.10 So Faith laies its hand in every Gospel-sacrifice upon the head of Christ his Blood doth cleanse and the sweet Odours of his Intercession do perfume our holy things Now Faith looking up to Christ in every Duty finds acceptance Nay Faith doth not only look at Christ but it unites to Christ as the Siens is graffed into the stock Believers are part of Christ Christ and the Saints make one body Mystical no wonder then if God casts a favourable aspect upon those services which Believers present to him 4. Obedience must be constant Revel 2.26 He that keepeth my works unto the end to him will I give the morning star Faith must lead the Van and Perseverance must bring up the Rear There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something still remaing for a Christian to do Non currenti sed vincenti datur corona Aug. and he must not leave work till the night of death comes on Mnason of Cyprus an old Discilple Acts 21.16 what an honour is it for one
hearts and then stands and warms himself at the fire When boystrous winds are up we use to talk of Conjurers Sure I am when mens spirits begin to bluster and storm the Divel hath conjured up these winds Discords and Animosities among Christians bring their godliness much into question for the wisdom which is from above is peaceable gentle and easie to be entreated Jam. 3.17 SECT 3. Containing an Exhortation to peaceable-mindedness Use 3 BE of a peaceable disposition Rom. 12.18 If it be possible Exhort as much as lieth in you live peaceably with all men The Curtains of the Tabernacle were to be looped together Exod. 26.3 4. So should the hearts of Christians be looped together in peace and unity That I may perswade to peaceable-mindedness let me speak both to Reason and Conscience 1. A peaceable spirit seems to be agreeable to the natural frame and constitution man by nature seems to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peaceable creature fitter to handle the Plough than the Sword other creatures are naturally arm'd with some kind of weapon wherewith they are able to revenge themselves The Lyon hath his Paw the Boar his Tusk the Bee his Sting only man hath none of these weapons he comes naked and unarmed into the world as if God would have him a peaceable creature Candida pax homines trux decet ira feras Man hath his Reason given him that he should live amiably and peaceably 2. A peaceable spirit is honourable Prov. 20.3 It is an honour for a man to cease from strife We think it a brave thing to give way to strife and let loose the reins to our passions oh no it is an honour to cease from strife Noble spirits are such lovers of peace that they need not be bound to the peace 't is the bramble that rends and tears whatever is near it the Cedar and Fig-tree those more noble Plants grow pleasantly and peaceably peaceableness is the Ensign and Ornament of a noble mind 3. To be of a peaceable spirit is highly prudential Jam. 3.17 The wisdom from above is peaceable A wise man will not meddle with strife it is like putting ones finger into an Hornets Nest or to use Solomons similitude Prov. 17.14 The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out water To set out the folly of strife it is as letting out of water in two respects 1. When water begins to be let out rhere is no end of it so there is no end of strife when once begun 2. The letting out of water is dangerous If a man should break down a Bank and let in an Arme of the Sea the water might overflow his Fields and drown him in the Flood so is he that intermeddles with strife he may mischief himself and open such a Sluce as may ingulph and swallow him up True wisdom espouseth peace a prudent man will keep off from the bryars as much as he can 4. To be of a peaceable spirit brings peace along with it a contentious person vexeth himself and eclipseth his own comfort he is like the Bird that beats it self against the Cage he troubleth his own flesh Prov. 11.17 He is just like one that pares off the sweet of the Apple and eats nothing but the Kore So a quarrelsome man pares off all the comfort of his life and feeds only upon the bitter Kore of disquiet he is a self-tormentor the wicked are compared to a troubled sea Isa 57.20 And it follows there is no peace to the wicked Ver. 21. The Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no joy to the wicked froward spirits do not enjoy what they possess but peaceableness of spirit brings the sweet Musick of peace along with it it makes a calm and harmony in the soul therefore the Psalmist saith it is not only bonum but jucundum not only good but pleasant to live together in unity Psal 133.1 5. A peaceable disposition is a God-like disposition 1. God the Father is call'd the God of peace Hebr. 13.20 Mercy and peace are about his Throne he signs the Articles of peace and sends the Ambassadors of peace to publish them 2 Cor. 5.20 2. God the Son is call'd the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 His name is Emmanuel God with us a name of peace his Office is to be a Mediatour of peace 1 Tim. 2.5 He came into the world with a song of peace the Angels did sing it Luk. 2.14 Peace on Earth he went out of the world with a Legacy of peace John 14.27 Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you 3. God the Holy Ghost is a Spirit of peace he is the Comforter he seals up peace 2 Cor. 1.22 This blessed Dove brings the Olive-branch of peace in his mouth Now a peaceable disposition evidenceth something of God in a man therefore God loves to dwell there Psal 76.2 In Salem is Gods Tabernacle Salem signifies peace God dwells in a peaceable spirit 6. Christs earnest prayer was for peace he prayed that his people might be one John 17.11 21 23. that they might be of one mind and heart And observe the Argument Christ useth in prayer it is good to use Arguments in prayer they are as the feathers to the Arrow which make it flie swifter and pierce deeper Affections in prayer are as the fire in the Gun Arguments in prayer are as the Bullet the Argument Christ urgeth to his Father is Ver. 22. That they may be one even as we are one There was never any discord between God the Father and Christ though God parted with Christ out of his bosome yet not out of his heart There was ever dearness and oneness between them Now Christ prays that as he and his Father were one so his people might be all one in peace and concord Did Christ pray so earnestly for peace and shall not we endeavour what in us lies to fulfill Christs prayer how do we think Christ will hear our prayer if we cross his 7. Christ not only prayed for peace but bled for it Col. 1.20 Having made peace through the blood of his Cross Pacem omnimodam he dyed not only to make peace between God and man but between man and man Christ suffered on the Cross that he might cement Christians together with his blood as he prayed for peace so he payed for peace Christ was himself bound to bring us into the bond of peace 8. Strife and contention hinder the growth of grace Can good seed grow in a ground where there is nothing but thorns and bryars to be seen Matth. 13. The thorns choaked the seed When the heart is as it were stuck with thorns and is ever tearing and rending can the seed of grace ever grow there Historians report of the Isle of Patmos that the natural soile of it is such that nothing will grow upon that Earth A froward heart is like the Isle of Patmos nothing of grace will grow there till God